HomeMy WebLinkAbout1986-04-01 - Orange Coast Pilot. ...
TUESDAY, APRIL 1, 1986
-Judge won '~_rule OUt Alcala exeCutiOD -Jury selection to. tn W nesday for
n$w trial in kidnap-murder of younggtrl
•. > vtctlon.
The former death row inmate was
retUmcd to court Monday u at-
tomeya bepn prepe.ration1 (or the
retrial. Jury eelection is scheduled to
beajn. Wednetday.
He ·~ accused of lridnaJ>Pl.QI for the death penalty.
Samaoe near the teatbore in Hunt-But Deputy Distnct >,~~Tom
U\p>n Bach on June 20, 1979, and OoetbaJ1saidSanuoe~wbile
takiq her to the San Bemardioo onberwaytobl.Jletlellom-leseom
Mowitains where ber remains~ he claimed the littleftwould "°'
who were bypnottZCd by police dur-
Ul& the SamJoe invatipuon. · ·
BJ STEVE MARBLE o1 ... ....,~ ....
A Superior Court judae refused
Monday to dismiss' ~ penalty
alleptio°' apinst Rodney JJimes AJc:a1a. who ia facina a teCQnd trial for
the 1919 kidnas>-murder ofa I 2-year-
, old Hun~on Beach Jirl.
The alayma of Robin Christine
KCAAc6•mpa
Ca.rdlnala Jeff Ball and
Robbi Valentine laold
tlaelr tro~ after Lollla'rille t Dake
.72--89 to wm the NCAA
Claampl~p. Bl
Cout \ .
VandaJa deraJI a freight
train by putting logs on
th&tfacka./ Al
Callf ornla
Young Soviet glrl pans
"Rocky1V" during her
Southland visit./ AS
World
Bodies of plane crash
•lctlma are recovered In
Mexican wilderness./ M
>--
Entertainment
UC 1rvfnewUI offer a blend
of erotic poetry and hor-
rific theater Saturday ./17
INDEX
Advice and Games
Births
Bull9tln Board
Business
Claaalfled
Comics
Death Notices
Entertainment
In the Service
Opinion
Police log
Publlc Notices
Sport a
Tetevtslon
Weather
\Weddings
B5
AS
A3
A8-10
87-9
86
810
84
AS
A7
A3
810
81-3
84
A2
A6
OMV collects $1 lM
irt amnesty program
By dte A110datecl Presa '
Califomia•s Depanment of Motor
Vehicles did a land office business as
thousands of delinquent motorists
took advantqe of the final day of a
special amnest.Y to pay their late car
resist.rations wtt.bout being penalized.
(Pl--... DllV I A2)
Samsoe is one of Oranse County's
moat sensational murder cases and
pmered extensive publicity durina Al~'s fl!tt ~urder trial su yean ago.
Alcala was sentenced te die in the
state gas chamber ror the crime, but
won a repreive in 1984 when the state
Supreme Court overturned his con-
All together now .•.
The former UCLA student bean
faint reteml>laooe to the Iona-haired
man who~ eentenced to die in 1980
after onfy four hours of jury delibera-
tion. Now 42, Alcala tw short black
hair flecked with sray. He appeared
studious u be examjned lepl papen ·
durina the procecdinp. "
found about two week.a later. have missed for an
Keith C. Monroe, one of Alcala's "Dance was her · . S wan1tid to
attorneys, asked Judae ~naJd . be a dancer," said Goet.baJs after
McC.artin to• diunisa the kidnap Mon~ .. s~ted SemtOe m.iabt
dwp qainst his client Monroe have ~Y ditched ber ballet clus
said there 11 DO tanpble proof the 12-if off'en:d a ride by a IU'anlltf.
year-okl airl was forcibly a~ucted. M · n refuaeCt to drop the
Without the kidnap chaije\, the kidnap and also refuted to
cue apimt Alcala woUld not qualify di two proeecutioo !'itness
. But the WimeMet, both of whom
al1etc they •• Ak:a1a in the be9Cb area near the time of Sumoe'• ~ppearanc.e. will not be pmnjued
to identify Alcala an court once the
trial besiAs, McCartin rukd.
~said he wU DO\evrpilcil
by Mc:Cartin'a stipul&lion becaUIC of
a n:icetlt Supreme COurt rulins wtiicb
states that people who bave been
hypnotized do not ftl!lb CRldiMe
(Pleue ~ ALCAJ,,A/ .d) . •
y ideriliigl~-ans
for OC freeway
spark concern _.
BJ PHIL SNEIDER.MAN °' ..............
Plans to widen the Santa Ana
Freeway north of Irvine drew con-
ocms about traffic hazards and hifb-
w.ay noiso durina a public bearing
conducted in Irvine Monday night by
state transportation officials.
At the bearing. the Irvine Co .• Oranae County•s JaraeSt landowner
and developer, oflercd to help fund
improvements at the junction of the
Santa Ana and San Dieao tn:eways to
miuc:e dangerous lane~
Representatives of Irvine 1 Colony
community raised concerns about
freeway noise and asked that widen-
ina be done north of the existina
travel lanes.
The hearing was held to obta.in
comments on several options for
widening the Santa Ana Freeway
(Intent.ate 5) between Newpon Av-
enue in Tustin and the jUDCtioowith
the San Diego Freeway (lnt.cntate
405) in Irvine. Doualas Stroup, an associate Cft-
vironmental planner with the Cali-
fornia Deoartment of Transpor-
tation., Aid Caltrans is coo.aiderin& ~from one to t.bRe laDes in eac.6
directJOn aJona this. stretch. Rescrv-ina some of the new lanes for vehicles
containina more than one person al'°
is beina considered, be said.
New routes
~-. woa'tease
bottlenecks
BJ LISA MAHONEY °' .............
Fewer than half of the proposals to1
eliminate bottlenecks expected &om
the contruction o( najor toeds
throuab the &stem and Foothill
corricfon wilf wort.. accordina to a
preliminary analysis releaxd Mon.-
day. I
Althouah final recommeO::::':: of the controversial .. Bo
Analysis" are about two months
away, a status report provided to the Oranae County Transportation Com-
mission shows that only five or 13
pn:JpOICd fieeqy con.netton or roed
ur:>IJIMlino would actually relieve tia16c pfOblems expcicud once the
two new corridon are,epm~· Tbc f.utiron
tatioa &:4 would~nlt ~san~ Ana and Riwnidle. The
Foothill Trampartatiod .
(Pleue-n&SWAY8/A2)
ltYeD a l~troll throaO the park 90metlJDee 91>Ut ded.8f'ona u Claerl
Boyt dlaco•ered Monday. Ber attendon la
dl'rided between nephew Taylar Tra..-en, S,
and 1olden retrlner Barry on a p.thway
abcn'e Corona del llar'a llaln Beach.
the widening options ranae in cost the displacement of about 40 homes
from an estimated $27 miUion for and bu.sine,te1 in Tustin. Stroup said.
adding a lane in each direction to ~-The Caltrans planner said com-
.SI 06 million for adding threc npA' men ts on the proposal will be col-
lanes to each side. Adding more t6an I~ through May 9. Stroup said
one lane would require the purchase state and federal officials are expected
of adjoining property and could mean (Pleue ... WIDENDIO/A2)
·Poli.ti calf oe
asks sheriff
for records
,By LISA MAHONEY
Of ................
Linda Lea Calligan says Sheriff-
Coroner Brad Gates is the best person
to prove her contention that violent
crimioaJs arc confine<J in the low-
security tents at the James A. Musick
Honor Farm in El Toro.
Calligan's attorney, Lee Sterlin&..
bas subpoenaed Gates for the arrest
and conviction records of every
inmate -both past and present -
confined there smcc a tent city was
erected in late June.
Sterlins said the records will back
up one portion of Calligan's can-
didate's statement. which Gates has
gone to court to have stricken as false
and mislqading.
Caltiaan, a Sheriff's Department
•oJ'
Linda Lea CallfCan
patrol sergeant, is butting heads with
her boss over the job he ba~ held for
the last 12 yea.rs.
Gates filed a writ of mandate in
{Pleue .ee OPPOIU1'T I A2)
Dates of Harvest Festival
prompt anti-Semitic clai~
Scheduling of popular Irvine eveiifOn
Rosh Hashana deliberate, says senator
port and/or sponsorship of the Bf PHIL SNEIDERMAN Harv~t Festival." _ °' ... .,..,,......, • Jewish leaders said the present
State Sen. Paul Carpenter. (). · schedule would prevent observant Cyp~ is accusing Irvine Harvest Jews from participating jo the event.
Festival directors of "blatant preju-Rosh Hashana, the Jewish New
dice and bigotry'' for "deliberatel)o!" Year. is ccle.brated one or two dan by
scheduling the popular event to different denominations .. It 1s con-
coincide with the Jewish holiday s1dercd one of the holiest times in the
Rosh Hashana. Jewi!11 calendar.
In a March 27 letter to Irvine This ye.ar, 1t begins the evening of
Mayor David Baker and his fellow Oct.•3,... the same day as the kickoff
council members. Carpenter said, "I of the Harvest Festival.
would urge you to disassociate your-Reprtsentatives of the city and the
selves With this anti-Semitic or-festival denied the allegations of
pnization and rescind all city sup-prejudice.
.. The board is not anu-Sem.Jtic,"
said Doug Bodlon. president of the
festival "If (Carpenter) knew the
board. he would not have said tb.aL
"I honestly and genuinely believe
the people with the festival are good
people. volunteers who are only
interested in doinJ somethina &OOd
for the community," said "Mayor
Baker. who was president of the
festival in 1979 and 1980. "I'm sure
the senator 1s well-intentioned, but I
will tell you that the IJ'Vlne Harvest
Festival 1s not ant1-Scm1t1c."
The festival's executive board has
scheduled a speaal meeting Thun-
day evening to discuss the scheduling
problem.
But festival president Bodkin
~a med that chanain~ the dates of this
(Pleue..ee 8£1'ATOR/A2)
Child recovering alteT mountain lipn attack i~ park
~ / . when a mountain lion leaped from ty that would explain the attack. lion . Meanwhile. pmc officials m north
By STEVE ~BLE some bushes in Ronald Caspers The incident 1s believed to be the Parks and game officials carher San Dtqo County issued a mo~nta1n °' ... Dlllf,......,. RCJional Park and crabbed her head first mountain hon attack on a human theonzcd th~t starvation or dJscasc hon alert after a man reported that a
A 5-year-old El Toro Jirl ~ho was in its jaws. . · in California in 77 years. according to may havt driven the cat to attack. hon 'ttacked and killed his pct poodle
mauled by a mountain µon l~t The lion was shot and killed the a spokesman for the state Depart-The count>: park, situated east of on Easter Sunday
month was moved o~~ of in~11ve following day. ment of fish and Game. San Juan ~p1s.trano. has been clo~ Mountain hon s1ght1ng.."i have
care today as hercond1t1on contJnued A Los Anaeles veterinarian who "Everythina-thafs of any import· to the pubbc SU'ICC the attack and is steadtl) increased 10 the past year.
to improvc1 a nursing supervisor examined the animals's carcass said ance has been looked st." said Los not scheduled to re--opcn until Apnl ·pm~ officials said
reponed. Monday that the larse cat has no Anscles vetennanan HJ. Holshuh. 25 Game offic1als are check.Jn& for The El Toro 1.1rl. who mav lose an
Laura Small was mauled Mud\ 23 traceable disease or other abnormali-who perfonn9'1 a ncctopsy on ti}t' more hons. (Pieue eee A TT ACK/ A2)
Newport peclce· ma'.icher ~~ps f ~it~
At 1 g d nted Marlene.K"taiichu 3,235 miles away to Wuhinaton, ~archers were aware that fund-
-pAUL
IRCHIPLEY
Caterer
sued over
food hazard n , Un au , 1 ~ D.C. tallln& efTons had oome up shot1 -
~ T S rH a~ t t k Two weeks before the March l far short. stays In crOS.-::>-.µ. ..~nnamen re •tart. she jolncd other PRO-PeM>e They beard about CtlJCS alona tht' ---=:......3.-----·.;.__ ... -marcberut trainJnacamps in the San way that would refuse them cntrancr
When Newpon Beach resident trek on a quest for a nuclear-free ~ndo Val'9 and at Onffith Park and camp space because the of"8nit.a·
Marlene Kitajcbuk committed world. where her ideahsm was strcnJthencd t1on lacke4 insurance
hcnelf to a n1a..month walk 1CrOU She took a leave of abeence from u she ~ed with othen committed tf fkt, JUSt two days out of Los
America. she was f\.all of ideaUsm. her job. fully aware her boSlel aod co-to endint the n'tclear arms race. Anaeles. they faced that dilemma 1n
She wanted to help Ctl9C the woikcn were skeptical about such • And at the aila eendofT from Los C1aremont.
hopeless feeUng she bad encountered commiunent. She storpd all of her Anadcs Cit)' Kall, where several But K.Jt~chulc.'s resolve was
in othetl -including her o~ belonai~ and pve up her com-thou•nd wcll-wiahcn joined the stRncthcned, rather than weakened.
children -that nuclear war 11 fortable lifestyle. marchers, K.iajchuk was ccatatic when churches offered meals. people
1nevitab&c. With the help of her ea-husband about the trip and the strtnsth of the o~ ucr"thcir borne~ and a local
Sbe dccidod to join 1 proJected John, Ki~uk. S4. launched a ' marchcn· resolve. h1ah IChool held a ratl v for the s ()()() voluntcen bf1n~ souaflt by train1na prosram to whip hentlflnto AJmoat 1mmedaately. bowe\ltr marchers.. People Rachint o..t,for PeaQe... °"' 11\atte-fot the lS.mile-per~y walks problems mounted for the 111-fai;i T-. week.a Into thr v.11lk . 10 tht'
PRO-P~ to tab 0-~\,\Jltr:y ... ttiM twentuaUy-ould take the lf"OUP campa1an. 1nhM01table Mo10 vc l>cscrt. ' -'"
' \ •
.
--tm.--~---~ --
Focus ON THE NEws
marthen encountered foul weathea.
A• about \M same time, the PRO.
Peace orpniotton turned belly up
A thousand marchers wertt
ttrandcd 10 the ddsen. Hal'Sh rains
and fierce winds trashed their tent
camps
~vcral marchen.. 10cludmg K.1ta·
JChuk, suffe~ from hypothcmi1e
Ap1n he wa wtk.·amt'd 1nrn a
(Pleue ... P&AC&/A2)
Ir '
' -··
By TONY SAAVEDRA ..................
A catenna service owned by a
former Costa Mesa city counCJlman
and his wife wu sued Monday by t.bc
Dlstnct .. ttomey's Offi.ot afta-IC~
, t'nl cus•omen la.4't year rq>onedly
contJacted food poison1ns.
The complaint. flied by the 11'2.'·
cy'1 consumer prot«t1on unit, M>
cused Santa Ana-based Lori•a
Kitchen of ~lhng .. potentially bu-
:ardous food'' that ~ad not been kept
(Pleae-.CA~U)
' .
(
;
J ~
.-
·. * °'8nge OoM1 OAILV PILOT/ T~. AprO 1, 1988
PEACE MARCHER KEEPING THE FAITH •••
~Al
sfranae(a borne~ I.be and otbers
'WCre nuned blc.k to health.
Meanwhile. tmpon&ot support
equipqient wts ~. includ·
ina waler tank trucks, kitchen trucks,
medical nns and other vehicles.
ttundn:ds of'marchen summdcrcd
and went home, their JUC>lvc shat·
tered by poor plannina. lack or funds
and the stark rdliz.atioo that the
march-would be difficult. even baz.
ardous.
Thoae who stayed were lectured to
and warned that their ideatistjc
visions for a nudcar-ftee world were
meaninj.less if they couldn't keep
themselves alive.
A doctor warned them about betng
meni.aJly, physically and.emotionally
sttong enough to carry on.
"I've seen people tum into ravina
lunatics over the smallest· things.
There's going to be times on this
march when everybody breaks.
"If it happens consistently, you're
endangering life, your own and every-
body else's. If you can't do tt, go
home." he said. Many .did.
Nevertheless, on Easter wectcnd,
340 marchers were on the road again.
During their two-week layover
outside of Barstow, Kilajcbuk had
another scare when she developed
hypothermia, which a doctor m1s-
q1agnoscd as a minor stroke.
.. l'vc learned this Newport Beach
woman has got to protect herself," she
said.
5he re-cupcratc<1 rwc.-r •he weekend.
"' nt.""""-"T-,n::--.~-~'l::"llr. They've forincd a mob11c city aovem·
ment to oversee the march and are
still hopina the world's nuclear
powen will heed theac c.all for an end
to nuclear weaponry.
Marlene IUtajcb uk
and Monday searched for a ndc to
rtjoin her comrades on the march.
· They are about halfway between
Barstow and Baker. Although they
still plan on walldng to the nation's
capital: their immediate goaf is Las
Vegas where other volunteers are
ramng funds and preparing to join
them. . , • •
The marchc:rs have regrouped
Utldcr a new banner, the Great Peace
Match for Nuclear Disarmament Inc.
The new organization has raised
$60,000 slnc.-e 1t was founded. enough
to tct them to Las Vegas,
spokeswoman Elizabeth Fairchild
told the Associate<t Press.
Throuah it aJI. Marlene Ki~chuk
~as rcma10cd commaued. If any-
lhin&. bercommatment scems~trona-
cr than ever. J
"Even though everything looks
very bleak -equipment being re-
possessed. the staff not being paid -I
feel it's all necessary in order for us to
know and reaffirm m our beans
where we're going. why we're here
and how staunch our commitment
is." Kitajchuk said. "Mine is .com-
pletely reaffirmed on a daily basis.
"I can't tell you how strongly I feel,
even thou$h it's chaotic. The spirit of
the group as fantastic._
"We are the strength. PRO.Peace
may have gone under, but we arc the
strcnith," she said.
AH o(the negauve press and lack of
finandal support haven't dimmed
the visjoo shared by the remaining
marchers.
"It's been tira1oing to say the least,"
IGtajchuk said.' ''As much as the
ne~people tried to get negative
responses from US, Oil the whole WC
were sincere and serene in our belief
m what we're doang.•
"We ha'¥e the faith, and that's
what's imponant."
FREEWAYS WON'T EASE CRUSH •.• l
From Al
would WDrw:!. !5?:•.!!.!l ;wd central
Orange County.
A Foothill Boulevard freeway con-
nector linking the Eastern and Foot-
hill transponation comdors with the
Garden Grove and Costa Mesa
freeways would ease traffic conges-
tion in pontons of Irvine, Tustin and
Orange that will be afTccled by
construction of the new freeway
comdors. a study by Gruen As.
sociates concludes.
The connector could be all above
ground or partially underground, the
study said.
A connt!Cto_r at La Coljoa Road
would help mett the future needs of
east and westbound traffic. It said.
Building elevated roads along the
Santa Ana and Costa Mesa freeways
and extentljng the Orange Freeway to
the San Diego and Corona del Mar
frcc1¥a ys woulC! also improve traffic
now. according to the study .• ,
Chapman A venue and Sant1aat>
Creek freeway connectors wou1d
provide lmli relief while none of the
proposed arterial upgrades woold
improve the travel picture signifi-
cantly, lhe study sa1d.
Future upgrading of si~ artenals
was studied. They are Santiago Ca-
nyon Road, I 7lh Street/La Colma
Road. Chapman ·Avenue, Irvine
Boulevard. · Walnut Avenue and
Moulton Parkway.
Shar:on Greene. manager of techni-
cal programs for the transpon.at1on
commission. warned that funher
study 1s needed before any alternative
I$" reJCCtcd. .
The commission will spend the
next 30 to 60 days trying to "narrow
10 the focus" of future studies., then
bnng us recommendations to the
planning commission. she SCJi~.
Possible solutions to tlte·· fratTic bottlenec~ pro)ected by future free-
way cons'r'rucuon have bee.n poorly
received by property owner5 who
would be affected by th~m. QrC!l,,ne
said. .
rn m·any cases, effects on the
community •and~"nv1rontnel')l arc
predicted to ~ h · · '
tonstrucuori f a "Foottr1ll
ALCALA RETRIAL ... ..
From Al
I :P
Boulevard freeway connector .,.,ould
displace between 420 and 470 homes,
a school, a church and 12 businesses.
Use of La Colina Road for a
freeway connector would cost 590 home~ two churches and a school.
Aod extension of the Orange Free-
way flas "considerable displacement
potential." accor(!iog to the Gruen
study1 As ·~i~ruptive ~s: proP?sed bot-
tleneck solutjons ~ould be. doing
nothink will overlo~d the Sltfita Ana
Freeway . and and;al streets that
paraHel ii.; the report ~id.
The freeway as already ovec ca-
pacity by about 65.000 vehicles a day
and side street alternatives are heavi-
ly used a~well, Gn;~ne ~id.
~ .
DMV ...
F1omA1
OMV offic1a~ "reported they col-
· ltctcd" en· l~st $ 1 m1lhon Monday
from SOJlle 5,000drivers, bringmg th~·
(otat co"-ceted sin~ the pr~m
be&sn Jan. I to 'more than S 11 m 111 ion
frlll.m 85.000 motorists with expired
license pf11tes. The DMV's 158 field
offices remained open unt1l 6:JO p.m.
Monday to handle the overflow, 90
minutes ~yond their usual closing
witnesses. Alcala's lawyeri; will be now be·. ume. '
TheJudgealso cleared the way for a permitted to call Dove a\1' .. defense. • The unus~al action marked the
iroup of former Orange County Jail witness: ~· di' me the S\ate has provided an
inmates to testify that Alcala made Alcala's 1980 conviction was over-1a program to entice delln-
mcnmmating statements to them. turned by~be Supreme Court whkfi q yers: In 1985. California
One of the inmates, Robeo Dove, ruled Jurors-1n the original t'nal collected' some S 144 million in a ~hould not have been allowed to hear similar amel)sty for dehnq.uenl sales now claims_lhat Alcala did not make ev1<Jence that Alcala comm1ued a and income taxes.
an) confessional statements and that pnor .;$Cxual.,attack on a teen-age girl. "Every office in the state, has been
he and other rnmj)!es fabncated the -Alcala also is a suspect in a long-Jammed." said Al LIVlngs\on, chief con~ions . tn hb~ of wino.mg standing New York murder case but depu1y director. "Many people will
favorable treatment rom authomies. charges have never been filed a~inst probably·be in the buildings when the
r o even the balance. McCartm said him. doors close'' to finish the paper work.
SENATOR LEVELS BIGOTRY CHARGE ..•
From Al
year's c"ent. Oct 3-5. would be
dinicuh
He said contracts Wlth a carni val
ha .. e been signed and the Irvine
Hilton has been reserved for the
Han e'>t Moon Ball Holding the
fest1\'al earlier would create carnival
conflicts with the Los Angeles County
~air. Scheduling 11 latcrwould put tht'
fec;t1\'al dates in the annual rainy
c;ca .. on. which has caused the festival
to lose money 1n the past.
The lnrne Harvest Fesuval. begun
in 197 5, prov~des enteruunment and
fund-raising opportun1t1es for com-
mumt) groups. Last year's thrce-da:r
l!"ent drew almost 50.000 visitors.
I he festival 1<; managed by an
independent board, but Assistant
< 11~ Manager Paul Brady Jr said the
city provides the locanon (Heritage
Park) and staff ass1'itancc
For the past seven years. the
festival has been held lhe fir<;t
weekend in October This places 11
near the ume of the Jewish High Hol>
Days of Rosh Hashana and Yorn
K1ppur.
.\ conflict aro~c in 1984 when the
festival co1nc1ded with Yorn K1ppur
When the 1986 fest1v,al wa<; 'iChed-
uled, the t1m1ng of the Jew1c;h hol-
idays was considered. "but 11 JUS1
didn't c;hck in," !Mild fesuval presi-
dent Bodkin.
Sen. Carpenter 1<1 not Jewish. and
his district docs no11nclude Irv me. In
a telephone 1nterv1ew from Sacra-
mento. Carpenter said ~mcnter was
brought to his attention by a .friend.
Steve Edclma~ of the Ant1-Defa-
mat1on League of Oranie County.
"He gave me the history of the
scheduling of the event, and I was
outraged." Carpenter said ... 1 wonder
how th·ey would feel 1f a Jewish city
council were to schedule a .functio n
dunng Christmas?"
Irvine is said to have one of Orange
Countf s fastest growing Jewish com-
munities, although no specific figures
were available.
The city has a synagogue. but five ·
other temples in adjacent c1t1es also
serve Irvine residents.
One focal JeWlsh leader. who asked
not to be identified, said the festival
organizers might be guilty of in-
scnsit1v1ty in their scheduling but
said descnb1ng them as ant1-Semit1c
was "prtmature."
OPPONENT SUBPOENAS SHERIFF ...
From Al
Orange ( ounty Supenor Court
March 24 demanding that Calligan
delete portions of her 200-wo rd
candidate's statement because they
are untrue.
( omm1ss1oner (sale Hickman re-
fu o;ed 10 have the disputed matenal
immediately stnken because Calligan
hadn't had time to respond to Gates'
complaint. Instead. she set a Wcdncy.
da~ hearing before Judge-Jud11h
R)an
Gates took issue with Calligan over
accusations that he 1llcgally owned an =£ Daily Pilot
MAIN OFFICE
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Irvine smgles har. was 1molved in a
cover-up 1n the felon y drunken
dnvmgarrcst oftwo deput1es and wa~
convicted ofa federal cnme.
He also obJe<:ted to a claim by
Calligan that he houses violent m-
mates m temporary tents at the honor
farm and that the tents have cost the
county $5. l m11I1on.
Calligan filed her response to
Gates· wnt on Fnday. then followed
up with a subpoena Monday after-
noon. Sterhng stuchccess to the arrest
and conviction records for Musick
inmates ar~ necessary since there 1s a di~ of opinion as to the type of
cnnftnals housed there
Gates was not available for com-
ment. \
Sterling also subpoenaed another
county official -Auditor-Contro llet
S.E. Lewis. Lewis has been asked to
provide all records penaining to lhe
temporary facaltty at the honor farlR.
Sterling said the records wiU prove
that taxpayer5 dad foot a $5. l million
btll for the tent~.
Di lly Piiot
Oeftvery
la Qu1r1ntMd
(;1u,1..i-~1~Mfl o.-. \ "°"'"'• M ?•11• Justcall 642-6086
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don't you hke? ~all the number above and your
message Will . be recorded, transcnbed and de·
livered to the appropriate editor
Th.e same l-4--hour aniwcnna service may b(
used tQ record letters to the editor on any topic
Contnbutors to o ur Letters column must include
their name and telephor\c number for venfication
Tells us what's on your mind
'
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Clrculetlon
Tele~
A WMthtr tyfttm 1h8l IP'tnidtld rein ICtoel ~ exb•••
eouthetn end Of theltat• tetty today moved Mlt, meklng WWI for moetty amny lki. o. Soutti.m CellfomlL 1
Another low..pr...ure ayattm ... txpected to mow 4o'wn
tr,om off the COMt of the Plldftc Norttwwtet. bringing QU9t)' wind
and a r.w.ctouda tonight end Mrtv Wedl"9edey, eccotdlnQ to the
National WMther s.Ntce. No r~n wu expected trom the new
dl'1urbanoe.
AIOng the 0rang9 Cout th«• wOI be low doudt tonight end
Wedne.dey morning b«7omlng felr In the attemoon. Loeel gutty
north to northWelt wind• W.Onteday. Hight Wednteday In the
mid eo. to mid 70.. Ovwnlght Iowa upper 40a to upper 50a.
From Point Conoaptton to the Mtxlcen Bordet -Inner
watera: Light vwlabfe wind nlQlll Md ~ilour_t.becomlng
weet to eouthweet 10 to 18 knofi th11 ~ Wltlft to 2-foot
wind w111M. Wind• weet to northweet 12 'o 22 knot• Wednteday
Jfternoon and 9¥9nlng. W•terty IW9ll 1 to 3 feet. Low doud9
tonight and W9dneeday morning dMt1ng Wedneactay after-
noon.
•• -4 . ,,
27
WIDENING PLANS FOR FREE.WAY ...
FrOJ1'1,A l ...
to approve one of the widenrng plans
by next September, with construction
to begin by 1989.
Hugh Fitzpatnck. the Irvine Co.'s
. senior director for transportation.
said his firm believes the widening
project must ;llso address traffic
hazards· aJ the >unction of the two
freeways. He said the current des1gn
forces motorists to make abrupt lane
changes where the freeways merge.
F1tzpatnck said the Irvine Co.
offered to pay $200.000 for additional
environmen\al studies of that junc-
tion. ·
He said the company also is willing
10 discuss delay111g payment for
adjacent property needed for freeway
Wldcning to help fund improvements
at the Junction.
Fitzpatrick acknowledged that re-
designing the so-called confluence
where the freeways meet would
benefit the Irvine Co.'s nearby Spec-
trum development.
But be added, '~Improvements to
the confluence have regional import-
ance. It would ·make. the whole
freeway system work better~··
Caltrans planner Stroup said the
state is considerii,J.f.be Irvine Co.'s
offer, but be said improvetnents at the
junction of the freeways tould dclay
and significantly increase the costs of
the 1-5 widening. He 'SI.id the con-
fluence improvements may have to
be considered as a separate f>roject.
Also testifying at Mondar shearing
were residents of 'Irvine s Colony
community, 475 homes located south
of the Santa Ana · Freeway between
and west of Culver Drive.
Fran Llsact t, boa.rd sc.crctary of the
Colony Oub Homeowners Associa-
tion, said residents want any widen·
ing of the freeway to take place north
of the ex1sung lanes an an un-
developed area. rather than south of
tlle freeway and closer to homes.
She said residents also Wint a
sound wall built to shield Colony
homes from freeway noise. ;.. -....
Liggett acknowtedged that both
prQposals wol.ild increase the cost of
the wi~erti n~. project, but added.
"We're talk.ing about people -
they're talk.ing about cconom1cs "
ATTACK ••.
From A l
eye be,ptusc of the attack, 1s now hstod
in stable condition at Mission Com-
munity Hospital 1n M1ss1on YicJO.
"She's do1na quite well now and 1s
being moved to a pediatric ward,··
said hospital spokeswoman Jao
Walker.
CATERING SERVICE FACES LAWSUIT ..•
From A l
properly refngerated.
Wendy Brou¥)1. the deputy district
attorney handling the case. said the
catering operation was investigated
by county health officials after about
six people suffered food poisoning
la~t summer from eating meals sold
by Lon 's Kitchen vendors.
Brough would not identify the
victims, but said one of tbem had to
be ·taken to the hospital. She was
unaware of any major illnesses
caused by the allegedly tainted food.
sold at temperatures above the state
maximum of 45 degrees Fahrenheit.
Many fOQ.ds sold from the com-
pany's catcnl'lg wagons. such as dairy
products, meats, chicken. tuna, tur-
key, macaroni salad and salad dress-
ing. are classified as "potentially
hazardous" -meaning they attract
mfcctiQusortoxic micro-organisms 1f
not properly refrigerated.
Vendor5 from the 13-ycar-old ser-
vice sell sandwiches and other lunch
fare to deskbound office workers
I .
' -~·
(
' throughout Orange County. Bro ugh from violating food temperature
said. standards until a ruling is made on the
She added that it is not the first suit.
time counf1' officials have taken legal Eric Johnson was in hnc to be
action agarnst Lori's Kitchen and mayor of Costa Mesa when he lost his
owners Eric and Char Johnson. bid for a second term on the City
The Johnsons pleaded guilty in Counc1l 1n November 1984.
1977 to a misdemeanor cbarge for a His wtfe. Char. declined to com -
si milar violation, said the deputy mentth1s morning on the latestact1on
district attorney. They were given a taken against the family business.
$100 fine and two years' probation, "Our attorney h.as not seen· the
"It has been an ongoin-problem," complaint. Until he does. and J talk to
she said. adding that offiClals from the him, r just don't feel comfortable
county Health Care Agency and the commenting." she said.
District Attorney's Oflfcc had been m In 1984. the Johnsons won a court
contact with the Johnsons over the battle against efforts by tbe lrvme Co
last few months hoping to settle the .,.."°~~late the vendor in exchange fo;•
matter out of court. penn1ss1on to sell sandwiches in
Brough ,aid the latest action, a civil company-owned bu1ldangs s~it. i~ secldng damages ofS2,500 per The development com~ny want-
v1olatJon and a court order that food ed Lori's Kitchen to pay a' SI 200 sol~ by Lori's IGtchen be properly en tty fee and SIJJl a license agreem'ent.
refngerated. • Irvine Co. officials said at lhe time
A May 7 heanna has been ached-that control over vendors was
ufbd. o~ .tho-~unty's rcque~t for a needed, among orher things. to
prehmmary mJunctaon against the protect the company from being
vendor, proh1bitmg the company liable in case of food poisoning.
A Linen Jacket and Pants
that inoorporates a style from
the past into an updated
sihouette that compliments
the woman DEsgn by f inrty
n bef ry and whrte
WESTCUFF PLAZA, .r
NEWPORT BEACH, CA
(714) M2-70l1
' .
.............. z .................................. __ .-•. _. ..... .._ ____ .....;:;..;.;.... __ ~~~
. ..
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•
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;
BJ PAUL AAClllPLEY °'.,.....,........., The train traveled another mile before
Trains runnins between San Dies<> and 1tawina near Alicia Parkway.
pQ1Cqer trains u well u &eilbt ·~ Santa ~a-ewt&Om Lol~boislilld
Southbound Amtrak.a from Lot A.qe.Jet ,tbe clerailod car t.c:k onto the uacb aod
~stopped in Santa Ana Where pllten· the train ttSUIJ!ed ht~ ~ 7:1'2~ Monaq>' wattrft'ont restaurant in Ne~rt
Beach will hose a arand openina and casino niaht
benefit for the Easter Seal Society of Oranie County
Thursday.
Loa Anacles are back on track today after Enaincert inapccti• the train found the
vandals placed lop on the t.racb in El Toro reat wheels of the first car behind the
.Morl<Uy .~I a Santa Fe frei~t car enf.nes bad jumped the tracks.
sen boarded bUJeS for me remainder or . p.m .• Elmer aid.. • . . ~ -
·"'-· j th Sheri,fr1 dR>uua pnwided Cn)'llf ~ u~lf oumey aou · trol but 'no ltn:etf ~ bioek$14 by IM
Northbound putenten were pliced on stalled train, he aid. · Tickets, at SSO, wiU include a ~ounnet dinner
and SI 00 in play money for gambhna at the craps,
roulette and blaclrjack tables. The grand prize is a
trip for two to Monte Carlo ..
111d "usma niloor damqe to the rails. It l.s a very teriou.s matter. Someone
. ' . was tryina to detail the train. It is ~iblc • The 6~ train was tranh~a ~uth to cause a chain reaction," said Tom
butet in Oceanside to complete their trips Damaee to the tncb wu aU.nor, and
to Loa Aqtlet. ercwt were to complete repain «>day. •
about 3S mph at S:30 p.m. when it hit two , Buckley 1 Santa Fe spokesman.
lop that ttad been placed on the ~kl near :· The ~ment occurred on the main
the El Toro Road overpass, said Otanie line tracks: which are used by Amtrak
A Santa Fe spokesman •id 14 Amtrak Althoup the lJ'ICb will be ope6,
tratns travel the Lot AJ>aelet-San Diqo offidalt uid train• will bavt'tO aJow down
routedaily, butontyoneortwofttiabuuse while puajq lhtouab the ~ Call 64.6-S22S for reservations and further
information. the line each day. Valley.
HB board ch•IJ6• meeting
The board oftrustcefoflhe Huntinston Beach
Union Hiah School Dfstrict bas announced t.h1t its
re&\,llarly acbeduled fl'!elin& 6f April 8 bas been
ch•nged to Wednesday at 7 )>.m. in the board room
oflhe Education Center, 10251 Yorktown Ave. -"
Thereafter, the meetings wit1 continue to be
held on the sec9nd and fourth Tuesday of each
month.
Adult educatlon-offered :--
Thc sprina trimester of the Laguna Beach Adult
Education program is now under way throu&h June
6. Registration will be held in class the first two
weeks of the trimester, thi5 week and next.
There is no charge for English as a second
lan~agc but a tuition fee ofS30 will be charged for
all other cou~s. There is no tuition for minors or
adults in the ttigh school diploma granltng program.
All classes arc exmpt for those age 62 •nd over.
Complete schedules may picked up at the local
librarf, the Chamber of Commerce or the Rec-
tcatis.n Department.
Jazzerclse open house
Costa Mesa Jazzcrcise instructor Terri
Callaghan will host an open bouse Saturday at the
Downtown Community Center. 1860 Anaheim
Ave., Costa Mesa.
The .event will includ~ a 30-minutc fitness
lecture and teaching techniques, followed by an
hour-long class. The program 1s scheduled from 2:30
to 4:30 p.m. and further information is available at
S48-4909. Laying down the law " ...., ....... 1'1' .............
Worklng moms' clau at OCC
,. A workshop designed to help women cope with
the stress of being working mothers will be offered
Satu~Y from 9 a,m. to 12:30 p.m. in Room 114 of
the Counie1ing and Admissions BuOding of Orange
Coast College in Costa Mesa.
htare police omcen &et a taate of-a real .. Police Academy" 4urt.ot'
the <>ranee County Law ltnforcement ltzplorer Ad...UOn ANocta-
tlon'• bl-annual academy at the El Toro llartne bue.for bo19 and
atria from 14 to 21. At left. DaTld WW. of Ba.ntf.Jlltoa Beacb 4oee
-paabape, wli.Ue Rue SUn. (rfOt) of tbe lr.....iuter Pollee
Department keepe ~ troope ID lliae wttb aome well-cb09ell worda.
Dr. Nancy )iortsmann. a cltn1cal psychologist.
will conduct the proaram and the fee is S 15. Call
OCC at 432-S880 for details.
Klds' modeling corine set
A class in advanced modcli91 for children and
teens will be presented for six Saturdays. beginning
th11 Saturday, from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. in Room BC-3
ofSaddlcback College in Mission Viejo.
The course will include ins~ct1on m runway
and television modeling, phpt?V'IPhY \professional
makeup and wardrobe and fashion prO"ttuction. The
fee is $40 and funher information is available at
582-4646.
Tuesday. April 1
• S:30 p.m.. HanU.itoa· .Bead Pla.uJq
Comml11IOD, S:30 p.m., City Council Chambcn,
2000 Main St. .
• ·7 p.m., Ocean View School District, district
headquarters, 16940 8 St, Huntington Beach.
2 named to Fair ·Board
Investment broker,
develo ment exec~tlve
selecte by governor
A dcvcfopintnt company executive ~nd
an inves~ent broker were recently ap-
pointed' by Gov. George· Deukmcjian to
t~c Orange County Fair Board.
Bob O ark and Thom W. Thomson
replaced Linda Oelh of Newpon Beach
and Mel Feldmao of Corona dcl Mar.
whote fow--year terms expired roccntly.
The nine-member board -formally
known as the 32nd District Agricultural
Association ·-administers the state-
owned, 160-acre Orange County Fair-
grounds m Costa Mesa.
Holding a bachelor of science dqree
from Cal Poly Pomona, Oarlc also is
director of the Wine Growers of California
and a member of the California Associa·
tion of Wine Grape Growers.
"The fair 1~ an important annual•
community service project," Oark said in ,
a writt-:n. release. "It will be nice to offer
sornethlna to the commurut)l"
. "Fhomton, who rcCeiYed bach'elor
degrees in business law and political
scic~ from the Univcnity of Colorado,
has worked for the past five years with
Coldwell Banker m Santa Ana.
"I Joolc' forward to giving something .
back to the community..," said Thomson.
who lives in Corona del Mar with his wife
Carol. ' ..
• 7:30 p.m., Irvine lJalfled Sclaool District
Board of Education, District Aministration Center,
SOSO Barranca Parkway.
Oark, of San Juan Qlp1strano, oversees
agncult~ral operations on 40,000 acres of
farmland owped by Santa Margarita
Development Co.
He i~ a member of the C1uzeri's
Environmental Quality Advisory Com-
mittee. the Newpon Harbor.Cost.a Mesa
Board of Realtors and the National
Realtors Marke.ting Institute. Bob Clark Thom W. Tholll80D.
• 9:30 a.m .. Oran•e Colmty Board of S.per·
vlaon, HalJ of Administration. 10 Civic Center
Plaza, Santa Ana.
• 6 p.m.~ La(llDa Buell City Coucll, council Masked mauiauders like the Urban life style
chambers, 505_Forest Ave. ·
Wednesday, Aprll 2
By LAURA MERlt
Oth~ ..........
-such as frte handouts from animal
lovers and quick steals from ca~~ishcs.
Tbe raccoons arc also makint'full u~ of
babies at a time. .
When the critters first cafnc to town,
they pushed in the screens on the
aujcvents. After Wauah paid $300 to
replace his screens, the raccoons learned to
tear the shingles ri~t off the roof to make
their way into the msulated allies.
Some residents have complained about
the box traps because they fear for their
cats. "They arc worried their poor little
k1ttcn will get cxclted if it's trapped, .. said
Wauah.
:!'
• 6:30 p.m .. Coaat Commulty C0Ue1e Dtatrtct
Board of Tnatees. District Board Room. 1370
Adam~ Ave .. Costa Mesa.
Masked bandits arc breaking into homes
in San Juan Hills and raising families in the
attics, according to residents.
the community pool. ~
• 7 p.m .• Hutintioa Buell UaJoa Hlp Schol
DlatrlctBoard of Tnateet, I 025 I Yorktown Ave.
• 7:30 p.m., Irvine CommaaJty Services
9tmmml .. lon, City Council Chambers, 17200
Jamboree lJlvd.
• 9:30 a.m .. Oran•e Couty Board of Saper·
vlaora, Hall of Admin1strat1on, I(). Civic Center
Plaza, Santa Ana.
At least four families of raccoons have
chosen to make San Juan Hills their home,
said Gordon Waugh, who owns a triplex
JUSt ofT the San Juan Hills golf course m
San Juan Capistrano.
Bill Frink. operations manager of the
San Juan Capistrano Animal Shelter. said
there are dozens of the masked mauraders
that come down from the hills to take
advantage of the opponunities in the cit y
"One fellow s!tid it looked like water
ballet. When .he shined the flashlight in the
pool, they swam to the sbattow end and got
out of the pool and just.filed~ him.
They are so cute ... said Vi"1ma Waugh
In all, the "cute" little animals have cost
the Waughs about $600 in repairs.
The raccoons move into the attics
through screened vents so they can have
their young in a safe, warm place. said
Frink. Raccoons have "kits" instead of
litters and bear anywhere from three to five
Animal control workers w1ll only take
the a"1mals once captured or killed. said
Virgina Waugh. So homeowners have
built their own box traps and have
captured two raccoons and one smelly
slcunk.
Alf the captured animals ttavc been
taken to nearby Caspers Park. Despite
their relocauon. the raccoons make thctr
way back to the warmth and comfort. oft he
San Juan Hills attics to nuse their young,
taste cat food left out for the neighborhood
pets and cat leftovers shared Wl\h the
raccoons by the residents
---
Pou c£ Lo e
El Toro girl, 17, accuses
taxi driver of raping her
By LAURA MERlt
Of .. ~,... .....
A 27-year-old taxi cabdnvcrwill be
arraigned today in Oranac Coutlty
t entraJ Coun for the rape of an El
Toro airl Friday morn ing on Laguna
Canyon Road.
The Laguna Beach man was ar-
rested Friday after the I 7-year-old airl
accused him of the 3:30 a.m. assault.
said Lt. Al Muir of the Irvine Police
Department.
According to Muir. the girl was
Fountain Valley
Two suspected burglars were ar·
rested Monday momma as they
bcpn pulling out of a dnveway at a
home on the 9400 block of Gui I
Accordina t~ the police rcpon. they
had eniered by climbing over a rear
wall and pryina open a slidina
window. The two allegedly opened
the aaraae. drove thetr car 1ns1dc and
bcpn loading 1t with more than
$2,200 worth of JCwt lry, aud10-v1dco
equipment and other property Ar·
rested were Ramon A G Ganchoro.
21. of Rosemead. and Franc1SC'o
Hemandei A.&mlar. 28. of El Monte ....
Usina 1 shim or 1 coat hanger.
someone broke into 11 West minster
rc411dent'' blue t 9$2 loyota Tcrt't'l
while 1t was parked Monda) n1ah1 111
fountain Valley Huth S<:honl. 1781 ti
• l
walking in SOuth La1una Beach when took place on µguna Canyon Road.
the taxi driver offered her a nde, shenffs deputies took the girl to the
which she accepted. "She voluntanly Laguna Beach police who later turned
got into the car," said Muir. the case over to lrvine police after 1t
The girl claimed he pulled off was determined the cnme took place
Laguna Canyon Road, raped her and ID Irvine. Muir said. .
then drove her to the El Toro Manne In vestigators from both depart·
Base Muir said. men ts questioned the girl and the taxi
She went to the home of her d.nver. Police said the man alleged the
mother. who 1s manied to a Marine, g.irl ofTc~ him sex in lieu of the cab
who then toolc· her to the Orange tare.
County Shenffs Dcpanmcnt. Muir Lt. Tom McCanhey, spokesman at
said. the Oranse County Jail said the taxi
But ~use the cnme allcgedly_..dttvcr is beina held on S2S.OOO bail.
Bushard St. The loss included stcrt'o
equipment wonh $400 • • • An Irvine resident reponed Mon·
day that pan of his boat had been
tolen from the Stor N Lok storage
center at IOSOS Garlield Ave. The
thief unboltcc:f a stem dnve from the
resident's 1973 Glasstron power boat
The loss was estimated at $3. 700
Newport Beach
A suspect who entered a Mangold
aaraie did some damaat to a
Mercedes Benz with a ke y The
vandalism will cost an estimated
$2,000, police said. • • • A buraJar who took a purse from a
Lido (sic homc made off with $221
The buraJar aot into thc hou~ by
prying open the '1dr door of tht-
rt'lldt-nc"
• • • Someonc smashed the &)a~ cover
d1splay1ng menus at Chill's. The &lass
on the outsutt of the West Coast
Hia,.hwa) restaurant was valued at
$60.
Laeun• Beach ...
A Glcnneyrt Strttt business was
buralarized. wt th an estimated loss of
SJ.000. the victim told police Mon-
da) • • • Police responded Monday t~ ""°
ports of a w1ld snake 1n the yard of a
Temple Hills Dnve home. But of-
ficers at the scene were unable to
locate the snake • • • Stereo spe.kers valued at S.550
were stolen Sunday from a locked
home on Squth C O&.~t H 1g.h~y. tht'
v1ct 1m rt"pon~
Although fish is better bait than lunch
meat. the neighborhood cats also COJOY the
fish .
"l think what staned 11 1s the people
feeding thcm1" said Waugh
Irnne
A tool bo' was reponcd stolen from
Chnstamon West Monday afternoon
about 4 p.m. • • • A tan t 977 Dodge maxi "'an was
stolen from a gas station on the 14000
block of Sand Canyone Avenue
Monday 1ust after 3 o.m. • • • A stereo and speakers valued at
$600 and a camera valued at $200
were reponed stolen from a 1984
Volkswagen Rabbit par'ked on the
200 block of Berkeley Monday morn·
ingabout 10 a.m
Coetallaa
Cash' totaling S2.0 I 7 was repon ed
stolen from a cabinet at Ccntuf)
Parking Inc.. 62S Sunflo~er St .
between 8:30 p.m. Sunday and 6 am.
M<Nlday. Entry apparently was made
wtth a key. • • • A wtndow to a car in the 3100 block
of Airway A venue was found
smashed around 2:25 am. Monday in
an apparent attempt to steal a ca~tte
SIC~ • • • A door to M1 Casa Mciucan
Restaurant. 296 E. 17th St., was pned
open dunng ovemiaht closing hours
last week. but entry was not made.
Huntlncton Beach
Someone used a pry tool to enter 1
residence 1n the Rancho Del Re)
Mobile Parle., m the 16000 block of
Monterey and stoic $400 1n food and
liquor and S 100 in m1sccllaneou'I
items. • • • Burglars stoic S20 1n coins from a
p1gay bank m the 7000 bl~ of
Washington • • • Th1eH'' stoic S' 17 7M ID "1dco
taJ>C' from Mobile TV Servi('(' nnd
/ f I
Sales. I 0042 Adams Ave. • • • Someone stole a $202 government
check, a S 15 buclc knife. a S40 radio
and S 13 in cash after prying open a
window of a 1980 Volkswagen Van·
agon in the 400 block of Alabama. •
Burglars pned open a rear patio
sliding door in the t 8000 block of
Libra and stoic a VCR s~mCTa
valued at $2,070. a t)'JXwn~r valued
at S!SO: a $300 microwave ~nd
miscellaneous Items and tools valued
at$1 ,28S
Test drive ends in c r ash
" By LAURA MERK
OflM~Not·"""'
A Laguna Beach automobile mcch·
an1c 1s hsted 1n scnous condition
today after the wheels on a car he was
test dnving Monday locked up.
sending the car into oncoming traffic
on Laguna Canyon Road.
David Howard, 35, suffered mul·
t1ple nb fracturdand was taken to the
1Dtens1 ve ~ unit at Mission Com·
munity Hospital Monday afternoon.
said Jan Walker, ho pital spokesman
Howard WM dnvina a 1982 Toyota
owned by Allan Keith. A teacher in
New Hampton, N.H., Keith was
vacauonina ID C'11lfom1a. said
Laguna Beach motorcycle officer Boh
Van Gorder
Keith, 52 . .,had <.'omplamed the car
had a shak' wheel and taken 11 to
Howard to have 11 checked
When Howard took the rnr on a
dnve down Laguna (an yon Road to
chec'k 11 the wh('Clc; loc ked up~nd1Dg
him skidding acroc;., the highway into
cars travehng wc<.t. said ~g~ Don
Barney
His car colhdt'd with a < ad11lac
driven by Paula Lo ng. 44. Barney
!laid. Long walked awa" from the
accident unharmed be-cau'iC' 'he wM
weanna• scat belt. he addee Howard
was not wtanng a c;cat ~I" ofliocn
said
State worker kills boss, self
By tile Auocl•tf4 Pren
A. disgruntled employee of the Stat<"
Emplo)'ment Development Depart·
ment m Garden Grove fatally shot h1~
supervisor and then k11lcd himself in
front of a dozen stunned collcaaucs,
police said. '
An arjumcnt had flared between
the two men lut wttk. and the aunfilt
foJlowed Monday at .., • m 1n thc
office on' .Garden C rrnv(' Boulevard
police S&t Brue. Rcau,hamp said
t-1dc l vontalez Jr . ~ \. ot West·
m1n<1ter, shot Lou1'I H lump, SO, a farm~ La Habra Cit) c-0unc1lman
who had manqrd the Garden Gro"r
office for th~ years. -...nd t~n
immediately killed htmsclf. WHneun
\aid
The two cxt'hanaed words ju \
before the hootma. 5a1d Anne
Gar'bcfl. ~poke .,..oman for t~ h·
fom1l ".ate pohce. 'INho took over ~
c.tte bcau!C the 4lhoot1na w-. at a !tatc office ...
I
•
-
..
'
AA * °'W91 oo.t OAn.V PILOT/ Tuelit~. April 1,'1988
-. .
Bodies removed from
plane ~rash iii Me:xiCo
. Five Americans among 166 victims;
witnesses describe wilderness tragedy
Ambulan'Cc-s in a small field at
Pomoca took the bodies from the
helicopters to Balbuena Hospital in
the nearby community of Maravatto.
flospit.al director-Eduardo Lleverino
POMOCA, Mexico (AP) --.Hell"' bereaedthere,"saidlgnacioCamllo, said 24 ~jcs had been rcceiv~ at
coptets ferried bodies taken today who has a smalJ farm nearby. Maravat1.o. From there. ~hey will. go
fro th i...... f M · . . to Morelia. the nearest ctty 42 miles m e wrcc-.e 0 a euqaoJl. Angel ~lanos, 43, ~lb b1s-ll0"'---W.t of tnt" c:nah~ _ '
Airlines jet that smashed into""'1l l~d~ W1th fo!1!Je for bis~ COW?• Officials sai4 rescue teams also
mountain peak, killina all 166 ~e said, lt wa~ 9 (a.m.) an~ a httl~ b!t were looking fot-6ight recorders .from
aboard. An airline official said five more. I ~w 1t.1t fell bum1ng. WhilcJt the plane, which could provide vital
Americans were among the dead. was flying. part of the plane came information to determine what hap-
Tbe Boeing 727, en route from loose and fel~ and the other part ~so pened. . ·
Mexico City to Los Anldes with fell. When It fell 1t S9unded ltke Jorge Sanchez, a helicopter pilot
stops in the Pacific resorts of·Pubrto lfwnder, .and when il broke 1t who brought down six bodies, said
Vallana and Mazatlan, hit the 7,792-aounded like thunder .. The ~ that the Jetliner was "in pieces ... The
foot mountain known locally as EJ fell callght fire and 1t was like a largest single pu~ce was the tail, and
Carbon about 90 miles nonhwest of volcano." everywhere there t.tere bodies."
Mexico City .shortly after takeoff The ~use of the crash was not Roben R, Cri.$ler, manager of the
, · Monday morning. known, but Mellicana said the ptlot Mex1cana office in Los Angeles, said
"l!nfortunately., tbcrc are no reponed pressurization probleJDs Monday night that five Americans
surv1vbrs,'' ~exicana · ~po.kcsmTn and so~t permission 10 fly lower and two Canadians were aboard the
Fernando Martinez <;"ortes said ofthe..-shoctJJ before'lhe plane went down. Jet, but he could no\ identify th.cm.
I 5.8 ~ngers and eight crew aboard Helicopters began taking bodies to . U.S. Ert}bassy ~polc~man ,Vincent
fhght 940. a ba~ camp set up in a field iJ\ Hovanec 10 Meiuco City satd Mon-
Witnesscs in this hamlet of ,300" Pomoca Monday. The re!overy oper-day .night tbat ert}bassy oflkia!s had
-pc<)ple at the foot of the hills said the at ion '¥as suspendl!d at nightfall but received no 0Ai~1a_l confirma~on of
plaut ex\)loded "li~e thunder" and resumed today. · · a~ ~erican victims. H~·sa1d ~·~·
was bunung before It crashed. R~yc workers were searching· for o)ti~als ~ere ~t the crash slle to aid m
"l heard two booms like thunder, bodies, putting the remains in bags on the 1dent1ficati~ns.. . .
one up and one down. I and some stretchers and then climbing 1,500 Hovanec said ~rhne. officials re-
others, we climbed up the mountain feet to a ridge near the top of the peak pon~ 25 non-H1span1~ surnames
and we were able to see only P.leces of where only one helicopter can land at were. on t~e pas~ngC?r. hst, ~ut the
plant and a few dead thrown around a time. manifest did not hst c1t12ensh1p~
SoViets say Libya hit three U.S. Planes
TRIPOLI, Libya (AP) -SoV'let sources 10 Tripoli
claJm Libyan missiles tf1t three pilolless American
reconnaissance planes during last wed's confrontation in
the Gulf ofS1dra.
The United States repeatedly has denied Libya's
claims that it shot down three U.S. planes dunng the
confrontation last Monday and Tuesday. Pentagon
sources in Washington sa1d Monday that no drones were
used in the military excn:iscs off Libya.
U.S. oflicials say they destroyed at least two Libyan
patrol boatsarrd made two attacks on a missile base on the
Libyan coast.
The Soviet sources, who spoke on CQndition they not
be 1dent1 fied. said that Soviet radar technicians sawtracks
of the Sov1et-bu1lt SA-5 m1ss1les striking three aircraft
that Libyans thought at the lime were U.S. jet fighters.
Western diplomats m Tripoli say Khadafy ordered
his own fighter planes. to withdraw from the U.S. 6th
Aeet's range before the confrontation began. They said
the planA were moved to the desert of southern Libya
OOUO KEMP. HONORARY COP BOWl VIII CAPT AIM
WITH COSTA MESA POLICE SERGEANT BILL BECHTEL
See local police officers compete in this annual football game to raise money for high
school athletic ~rograms and charities.
COST A MESA & HUNTINGTON BEACH POLICE DEPTS.
vs
GARDEN GROVE, BUENA PARK & FULLERTON POLICE DEPTS.
FRIDAY NIGHT, APRIL 11, 7:30 P.M. at ORANGE COAST COLLEGE'S LABARO STADIUM.
ORANGE COUNTY
COP BOWL
TICKETS· FAMILY PLAN (Admission for 5)-$15
· ADUL TS -$5 CHILOAEN-$3
·~·: Mt>CICO Oty wound 10 am EST
heduled stops
Puerto Vallarta and Mazattal'\
Plane Crashes
With 166 Aboard
Passengers bumped
from ill-fated plane ,
learn news of crash.
'ilipinos
will halt
strike at
MAN ILA (AP) -A tovemment
official said today negouators ~ve
reached an ~ment to end a stnk~
by 22 000 Filipino worken at U.S.
miliWy bases. but a union leader sai~
he must consult members Tor their
final decision.
"The leaders w.eed to end the ~we ,:. um conndent this isiinn. J
Im confident they wiD return to work
tomorrow." deputy Labor Minister
Carmelo Noriel ~ol~ the ~al.Cd
Press aftef f medtahng sess10~
The Filipmo workers at Subic
Naval Base Clart Air Base and a half.
doz.en sm~Jcr U.S. facilities have
been on strike for 11 days:
R()berto Flores. prcsi~ent o~ the
stnking workers' federatton, wd .he
was satisfied with the compromise
proposals drawn up by the ~.J.S.·
Philippine Joint Labor Committee,
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Passen-Statia Moody, 32, of San Diego,
" and would ask the strikers to lift their
barricades.
"I am satisfied, but I need to
consult with them (the·· workers)
before a.deci~ is made," Aores
told the AP. He did not say how the
'1n"M.n members would decide
wheTher to !ccept the proposal
gers who were to have nown on a was crying as she made her way to a
Mexicana Airlines night that crashed telephone to assure her family she was
with 166 people aboard found out safe. -
about the accident when they al'rived "We all thought that it was just afl
bere aboa(.d a rep!acement plane and engine problem," said Moody. who
were w1~a 6Y anxious fnends and was returning home after a nine-day·
relativ . • . vacatton in Mazatlan. "When we got ------------• "They told us in Pueno Vallarta here, we found oufit crashed. l'mJUSt
they made a forced landing," said J 1 m glad to be down here."
Kelley, 19, of Reno as he amved at Passengers said they had heard
Los Angeles International Airport rumors of a plane crash. but didn't
Monday. "No one was really con-find out about the tragedy until
cemed; we didn't know what hap-landing in Los Angeles. None ex-
pened." pressed anger that the airhne hadn't
U.S. pushes
for Spain to
take Marcos Kelley was among those who was 10 informed waiung passengers of the
have boarded the 111-fated Flight 940 crash.
10 Puerto Vallarta and Ma:iatlan. The ··r have no idea what happened on WASHINGTON (AP) _ The
plane, bound eventually for Los the other end," Mexicana spokesman United States bas reo~ned talks with
Angeles, crashed an mountains Jose Puertas said when asked why the h ·b·{-b d sed shortly after tak.mg off from Mexico airline had not told the passengers. Spain on t e possi 1 ity t at epo
City at 8:50 a .m . Monday. Those who were to board the night Philippines President Ferdinand
Airline officials !>aid all 158 passen-an Puerto Vallarta and Mazatfan Marcos might be permitted to move
d 'gh be bo d wa1'ted several hours •fior another there. according to U.S. officials. gers an e1 t crew mem rs a ar The officials, speaking Monday on
died when the Boeing 727 hat the peak plane to Los An~eles. The substitute condition of anonymity, said Spain
of 7, 792-foot El Carbon about 90 Oight, 5940, amved around 4 p.m. has been asked to reconsider its
miles north~st ofMexrco Caty, near PS"T., four hours after Arght 940's decision of two weeks ago to den y
Maravat10. scheduled arrival. refuge to Marcos.
The plane earned seven Amencans Of the crash victims all but three or Marcos has been in Hawaii sin~
and two Canadians. said Robert R. four had intended to Oy only to Feb. 26, a day after his 20-ycar rule
Cngler. managerofMcxicana'soflice Puerto Vallarta and Mazatlan, ended, but he is reportedly unhappy
1....;.;;.he:..:r..=.e·;..,_ __________ ____:P.....:u:..:e:..:rta:.::s~sa:::.Jd:::.·---------, and wants to move to another
country.
In Madrid, Spanish Foreign Minis-
ter Francisco Fernandez Ordonez
said Spain might change its mind 1f
Corazon Aquino, Marcos' successor.
asks Fernandez to reconsider: --____ ,
Fernandez Ordonez spoke to re·
porten before lcavi°' for a five-day
visit to the Philippines, a former
Spa.rush colony. He is scheduJed to
meet Wednesday with Aquino.
Proteatanta attack
catbollca in Belfast
BELFAST, Nonhem Ireland (AP)
-Rampaging Protestant mobs at·
tacked Roman Catho~ and police
in several Northern Ireland towns
today following a clash in Portadown
between police and hundreds of
participants in a banned march.
Authorities reported that 49
people, including I 3 policemen, were
hurt in a confrontation between
hundreds of yoyths and police in
Portadown Monday.
Later. a Protest.ant mob rampaged
through the center of Pon.adown. a ~ii~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ town of 14,000 people located 25 ~ miles southwest of Belfast, smashing
store windows but caus1na no m,..
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COSTAMESA-
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CYPAESS-
9641 Walker St
El TOA0-
23704 El Toro Ad S111te 1
FUlLERTON-
~ 12 S Hart>s>r BlwJ
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HUNTINQTONBEACH-
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PLACENTIA-
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OAANQE-
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Gunshots were fired at a police-
man's home and at a pohce station.
and gasoline bombs were thrown at
the homes of two Catholic councilon
an Belfast, se1d a police official who
spoke on condition he not be 1dent·
ified.
France withdrawing
from duty in Beirut
BEJ'RUT (AP)-::--F.rench observers
pulled out of the truce observation
posts they have occupied in and
around-Octrut &inEe 1984-t-Oday and
the French government said they wiU
be withdrawn from the country. ,
The sudden withdrawal of the 45-
member truce force triB&cred specu-
lation of a breakthrough in effon s to
free some of the Frenchmen held
captive in Lebanon .
But a Foreign Ministry statement
an Pans said the withdrawaJ of the
observer mission was not linied to
the hostages. The statement sa1d the
withdrawal was done because the
situauon an Beirut has changed and th~ force could no longer fulfill its
m1ss1on.
Candle blamed for
London palace fire
LONOON (AP) "!""'" Officials say
they suspect a lighted candle m ay
have started th~ _fire that gutted a wing
of King Henry'Vlll's Hampton Court
Palace, destroyed art galJeries. and
killed one person. '
The blaze that broke out early
Monday an the three-story-south wiOf
of the 16th century building damage<J
pncelcss royal art treasures and
caused m1lhons of dollars of damqe.
However, fire(aahters said they
saved 90 percent of the bu~ a
favorite residence of Brihsh
monarchs unul Oeorac II. who dJed
1n 1760.
Queen Eliz.abcth It, who owns the Pl~ overtookll\I the River Thames
12 md~ west of London, later picked
her way thrOU&h the ~harnid timben
accompenied by . ber heir Pri~
Charles, and sister. Princess
Marpret. Aides said she was ahockcd
and c.lltd the damaae ··dreadful"'
• j •
01ange Coat DAILY PILOTIT~. ~ 1, 1tee
Study shows most slayers Top Court
gc:» free· after seven·years pressed to .
enda, f•n• bid farewell
ames Cagney at funeral
~ ASHINGTON (AP) -More than half the conVlc~•murderen relcued frorn state prisons in 1983
were bac~ on the street after spcndina less than seven ye~ behind ban, says a new 1ovemment study.
The survey of m9~ than 300,000 criminal cases,
released.Monday by the Bureau of Justice Statistics, also
found that 18. percent of those sentenced ·to life ·~ imprison!J'ltht for any cri me SCTVed three years or less
before betn& released.
Convicted murderers accounted for three-quarters of
thole mea~ from life sentences.
Half or the rapists served less than four yeb in
priso9, half of the robbe~ served 21h years.or less, baJfthe
arsonists served less than two yea.n and half the burglars
served less than l 'h yean, according to the study based on
statistics gathered from 30 states.
The median time served by convicu sentenced to life
1mpJ'.isonment was eight years and seven months, and the
median lune served by all offenden in state prisons in the
survey was 19 months, said the report by the bureau ·1 LJ Pb 0 J d Ja W
research ann of the Justice Oepertment. • ' d
The study found that in 19.83, ~68 peop&e with life on so omy sentences were releued from pnaoo tn the 21 states that .
reported fi,&WCS for I.bat ponion of the survey.
Geofll"'fteleuecf the most pe0ple with life sentences.
239; followed by Califorp.ia, 11 7; and Ohio, 113.
The study also (pund that:
•Nearly a fifth of those admitted to pnson were parole violators.
•About haJf'of those &dmined to pnson had been
convicted of bJJJl}ary, robbery or larceny. Of these. 26
percent had been convicted ofburaJary. fourteen percent had~ convic::ted of robbery, and 11 percent had been convtcted o(larceny.
•About one-third of the inmates released from
pnson in 1983 ~iousJy had served time for a felony.
Those who previously served time served about 11
J)C!CCnt longer in prison than those without a previous pnson term.
• W ASHJNGTON (AP) -The Su-
preme Cou~ told that morality and
decency are at stake. must decide
whether consentina adults have a
constitutional right to bomoteXual
conduct in the privacy of their homes.
The court, in a lively ~min-rte
~ument session Monday, wu WJed
to uphold a Georaia sodomy law by
ruJina that no such ri&bt exists.
"~r legal history and our ~
tradiuons have condemned this con-
duct," ~rgia AISlstant Attorney
GcneraJ M1cbacl E. Hobbs sa.td "in
defendm& the state law.
Medicare 'could go bankrupt' by 1996 About half the states oullaw sod-
omy, defined in Geor&Ja as "any
sc~ual act 1ovolv1ng the sex organs of
one person and the mouth or anus-of
another." I
... -~J belo•$10• barrel
Oil prices tumbled belowS 10& b&rreJ today. the lowest 111
and one-third of the cost ju11 (out months qo, caused by
lies, warm weather and peuimiam about the depscseed
fa standard 42-ptlon ban'el of West Tcus lnt.ermedia\e,
and an imponant market indicator fell to $9.9j) in early
York Mercantile Excb.aqe, down ft.Om $10.42"1dooday.
.
'Fed ap' DJ teU• •tatloa 'Shove It' ~ ~ASHl~GTON ~AP) -~ongr~s must either
restnct Mcd1care hosp1taJ. spending or mcrease its tax
income, trustees for the program say, ~ face the
poss!!>_jlity of system bankruptcy by the mid-1990s.
Tfle trustees, who manaJe the $21 birnon trust fund
that pays for the hospital msura.nce program for the
elderlx and disabled.-said the fund could go bankrupt by
1996 1f changes are not made. ·
' The prediction is contained in the annual report by
the board of trustees to Congress. •
In the report. a series of projections are made _that
vary according to possible economic developlJ)ents in
future years.. But the projection foreseeing bankruptcy by
1996 1s considered the middle range, the one-{und
managen rely on most.
Under more optimistic economic conditions the
trustees said, the trust fund ma): remain sotvent f~r 25
years. But under ~ore pessimistic assumptions, they said,
1t could.go bankrupt even earlier -by 1993.
Under the mos\ likely economic condillons, the trust~ sa,id. "bal~nce'1 will require either a 22 percent
reducuonm spending or a 28 percent increase in income.
The court will take iis irutial vote 10
the case ~t a closed meeting of the
justices Wed~sday. and will an-
nounce a decision by Juty:
But Harvard law' professor
Lau~nce Tribe said states .may not
criminalize sodomy between con-
senting. adults merely with "an in-
vocation of the mltjority's morality."
AR<?ADIA1 Fla._ -.A ~untry music dist jockey who said he was "fed up," lock~ himself m ~s st!-ldio and played "Take This Job and Shove ll" at
varying speeds unul pohce escorted him out. Ow-lie Bee bep.n playing the
J.obnny Paycheck hltJUSt after S p.m. Monday and attracted about lSO curious
ltstenen ~the Y:' A.PG-AM and WOKD-fM studios before be left after 7:30
p.m.. said .stallon. s1>9keswoman Dixie Dakos. lanorina the p&eas o~
manaiemcnt and frie.ndi, ~played the son& over and over barricaded inside
the control booth. Amona the complaints he aiRd were that be bad bad to work
on Friday, his 49th birthday. •
SoTiet emluary Katerina LycbeY& 1oee ape over Ktnc Ko°"
" at Unlveraal Stuclloe.
Soviet girl pans 'Rocky IV,'
will vis1t Disneyland today
By tlte Associated Pre11
LOS ANGELES -K.atcnna Lycheva. the I I-year-old peace emissary
from Moscow pronounced .. Rocky IV" a d1stortton of Soviet life and said she
has not seen a~ythmg 1n the United States that her friends at home lack. The
• littJe girl visited Universal Studios Monday and nestled m the gnp of KJng
Kong, the theme park's newest attraction. Her whirlwi~d intmerary schedules
her to visit Disneyland today before ~he lea.ves. the Uni_tcd States for a.~1s1t to
Mexico City. She said she would not ltke to hve m Amenca, and added: So far.
I liavetn ~n a single thing that my fnends don't have." She was matter-of-fact
about today's planned trip to Disneyland. Asked 1f she had asked to go there,
she re~pon~ed, "No. it's on my scheduJe, so I am gomg there ...
Domlaelll recovers from new stroke
SAN DIEoO -Convicted SWlndler J. David Dominelli ap_J>C:8rs to have
recovered from hissccQnd stroke in 18 months and is back in the tCdera.I pnson
in Pleasanton where he's serving a 20-ycar sentence, a federal prosecutor said.
Dominelh 44 is serving time for a scam that cost investors $80 million when
bis La Joll~-~sed J. David & C'o. investment firm collapsed into bankruptcy
He was taken to Valley Memorial Hospital in Livermore, about six miles from
Pleasanton and 50 miles southeast of San Francisco, after he suffered a stroke
and a seizure Wednesday Dommelh reJotned the prison population Fnday,
Assistant U.S. Attorney George Hardy said.
Radioactive waste at dump probed
~ SACRAMENTO -State health officials reported Monday they arc
mvestiga\ina liquid seeping from a Monterey Pa!k dump site that con tams low
levels of radioactive waste. The ~pagt ~as dtsco".ered at the controversial
Opcratina Industries site, authont1es sa.Jd, folloWl.ng reports froJ!l nearby
resident$ who expressed fears that the leakage represented a potential he.alth
threat. Both state health and federal environmental officials st.rcsscd that the
small amounts of radioactive cobalt and perhaps other rad1oacuve clements at
·the landfill posed no danaer to the public.
Ne• qaa.ke &ald part of perilous pattern
MENLO PARK -Government ·scientists say the long, rolling
earthquake that walloped the an Francisco Bay area was part ofa three-decade
pattern that may presqe a repeat of the Great Quake of.1906. The sc.nes of I 0
temblors in the area stron1er than nragn1tude 5 on the Richter scale smce I ~SS
appear to be similar to a 19th century pattern that preceded the devastauna
quake 80 ycan aao. "We're seein& a fundamental change ~n the nature of
se1smicity," Bill Ellsworth. aeophys1cist for the U.S Gcologica~ Survey. said
Monday. "The strams that were relaxed 1n 1906 arc accumulattng agam. We
had about 50 years of relative quiet. but now the faults arc definitely more
active.·•
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Bolsa/Golden \lkst 898-0934 • Diamond Bar 860-1912 • Fullerton 993-1200 • Huntington Beach/Newland 964-6667
Huntington Beach/Seadiff 5:l6-6Sl I • Irvine 8.54-8121 • Laguna Hills no.. 7171 • Laguna Niguel 49&-2880
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LOS ANGELES -A UCLA medical study paid for by the raw milk
industry says that dnnk101 raw milk po5CS enouah of'a heath nsk tt\at thc
product sttauld be s0ld with a wam1n1 label attached. But a spolccsmon for
Aha-Dena Damn. the ntuon's llJ'l'=Sl produttr of certified raw milk.
1mmq111tcly cnUCllesl the UCLA study, which waa rrlca~ today. The nudy
is hktly to provide 'luppon for leg.is1Jlt1on t'CC'~ntly introduC'cd by
Assemblyman Lloyd(, Connelly. [).Sacramento, that would rt-Quirt rnw mill
cartons to be labeled to say. 1n part. that the product "may contain Nl'ICnl\ that
can cai.1se human d1~sc "
Newport Beach 640-16.14 •San Juan Capistrano 493-0601 •Santa Ana 667-2400 •Santa Ana/South Bristol 979-3600 • • -
. al Beach 898-3481 ·Tustin 730-699S
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A
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~ ~ Cout DAILY PILOT/ Tueeday, Aprll 1, 1988
llr. and iln. Sanden
$AlfDltR8-llAllfl>ALA
The Chapman College chapel in
Orange was the setting for the March
I wedding of Irvine residents JoBcUa
Mandala and Rob Sanders. They
greeted I 50 guests at their reception at
the Irvine Hilton following the 'oc r-
emony.
The bride is the daughter of Jbseph
P. Mandala of Downey. She chose
aVictorian style weddmg gown of
ivory satin with a dropped waist aod
accented with rose embroidered lace
on the left shoulder. She wore a wide
brimmed hat of ivory lace and ca med
a colonial nosegay of orchids, step-
hanotis and roses.
William and Theresa Yocum were
llr. and Mn. Theriot
honor attendants. and others 1n the
bridal ~y were ushers Larry Smith
and Bnan Keane. The guest book was
kdpt by Becky Deering.
The bridegroom is the son of Sandy
and Qancy Higday of Yorba Linda.
He is employed by Arrow Sash and
Door in Irvine and h•s wife 1s with
Wes tern· Oigi taJ.
After~ wedding trip to Lake Tahoe.
the couple are residing of Irvine.
TllERJOT-COCiytELL
Melissa Steele Cockrell .and Brian
Kevfo Theriot exchanged wedding
vows on March I in St. Andrew's
Presbyterian Church in Newport
Beach. They greeted 500 guests at
their recepllon an the Lido JsJe Yacht
Oub.
The bride 1s the daughter of
Batbera C~lcrell and the late Monroe
Aleunder Coc~ll She is a decen-
dant of Alexan<Ser Cockrell, the
founder ohhe city of Dallas, Tex. She
wore a traditional-wcddina cown
imported from Franoc and lav15hl y
embroidered with sequins and pearls.
Marisa Wayne was maid of honor,
and other bridal attendants were Jill
Holcomb, Susan DaSilva, Beth
Salv•torc, Renee Martin, Peggy Lech,
Jayhe Braga, Sheri MacGregor, Pam
l}ille, Judy Petenon and Susan Sand-
ers. •
The bridegroom is the son of Mt.
and Mrs. Richard Theriot ofNewpon
Beach. Eric Escher and Jim Hobbs
shared the honor of best man, and
ushers were Bucko Shaw, Tom
Bazacas, JefTKJein, John Orsini, Bob
Hailey. Dennis Theriot, Paul New-
man, Leo Williams and Larry Jessee.
The bride rcdeved a bachelor of
ans dcgrcc from UCLA where she
was affiliated wnh Delta Gamma
soronty. Her husband is a also a
Jr&duatc of UCLA and recieved a
Juris doctorate of law in 1984. He 1s
with the law offices of Roger Aga')e-
nian in Santa Ana and-competes as a
world class runner for Team Adidas.
After a wedding tnp to the Rock-
efeller rcson m the Virgin Islands. the
couple arc residents of Newport
Beach. •
SURBER-HUMPHREY
The Community Congregational
Church in Corona'· del Mar was the
setting t6r the March 8 wedding of
Cynthia Lynn Humphrey of Irvine
and Steve Robert Surber of Costa
Mr. and Mn. Sarber
Mesa One hundred seventy-f'ive
guests attended their reception at the
Bahia Connth1an Yacht Club.
Kenneth Lloyd Humphrey of Lake
Elsinore and Mrs. Gail Humphrey of
Alta Loma are the parents of the
bride. She wore a gown of white satin
with pearls and beading. tThe classic
styling featured a scoop neck, long
sleeves with wnst points and a train.
Marla Humphrey, sister of the
bride. was maid of honor, and
bridesmaids were Claudia Hiatt,
Cheri Handel. Mary Liberatore.
Terry Cohen and Linda Surber.
The bridegroom is th~ son of
Robert J. Surber of Alta LO'ma .and
Mrs. Carol A. Ball of Vista. His
•
9.50o/o*
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home improvement~, special
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time to check out our more
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loans. For more inforrna t i on
follow the arrow to any
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to 8 p.m . And take advan-
tage of our low rates while
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loan hind, L1m11 one rrhi11c I"'' 111.111 I Offrr txp1rr\., II ~'
I ••. MO• 'rlA ... fl-t" .,,,,. I L ____________ .J
Toni Schwarts
The bride 11 the dauabter of Mr.
and Mn. Tony Gianll'C!S<>riO of
Newport Beach. She wore a sown of
wbjte satin accented with lace and
ruffles .cndina in a six-foot ruffled
train. . . , OiQI Gianl"Clorio was her 111tcr 1
maid of honor, and bridesmaids were
Elizabeth Smedley, Kandi Wilks,
Debbie Voncsh, Judy Macedo,
Nancy Lubrano and Nicole
GianlfCIOrio. Attending the' bridegroom were
John Acker ·U best man, and ushers
were Pai BirdweU, Dan Petenon,
Mike and Jim Grigoli, Glenn Saae
and Kevin Jones. He il the son of
Marvin Schwartz of Van Nuys.
After a Hawaiian honeymoon, the
couple are residing in Costa Mesa.
She is office manager for a doctor t:nd
he ita computer company marketmg
execut1ve.
JONE8-llacKEl'fZDt
Crescent Bay Park in Laguna Bcacti
was the settana for the March 2~
brother, Tom Ball, was beE' t man, and wedding of Janet MacKenzie and
ushers were Dwayne A s, Gary Peter Bliss Jones, both of Ncw~rt
Miller, John Cassel, Jim bias and Beach. They greeted 100 guests at
Brett Humphrey. their reception at the Newport Beach
The couple arc residents or'Costa home of the bridegroom's 4)8ttnts.
Mesa after a wedding trip to Tahiti. Or. and Mrs. Donald B. Jones.
She is with the American Cancer The bride is the daughter of Hugh
Society as a communications assis--F. MacKenzie Jr. of Fresno and Mrs.
tant and be is assistant vice president Ann Hodge Magn~n of Costa
of GGS Insurance ,in Huntington Mesa. She wore a tea-le'-Jth gown of
Beach. ivory lace over lavender satin.
SCBWARTZ-
GIANGREOORJO
Toni Dawn Giangregorio of New-
pon Beach exchanged wedding vows
with Floyd Lawrence Schwartz of San
Diego on March 22 in the South Coast
Community Church in Irvine. The
Rev. Tim Timmons officiated at the
ceremony. The couple greeted 380
g~ests at their reception at the Balboa
Pavilion. -
Jan Fitzpatrick and Mikel Olsten
were honor attendants for the bridal
couple and flower girls were Stefany
Jones Olsten and Julia· and Laurel
Jones. Serving as ushers were
1Dou&las Jones and ~drew Lopez ..
Aller a wedding trip to Yosemite
and San Francisco, the cou~le arc
rcStdents of Newport Beach. =fhey arc
both employed by Ponotino Beach
Hotel in Newport Beach as inn-
lceeper/managers.
Wanted-:-Nuptial news
Engagement rings and weddingbellsarealwaysgood n~s ... and thepatly
Pilot wants to share your announcement with thecommuni1y. We make It easy
for you, too!
Firsr,get copjes ofourClllJIPDentpd weddJng forms. You ca.n e1the:r pick -
them up in our lobby at 330 W. Bay St.. Costa Mesa, Monday throuBh Fnday
from 8a.m. to5p.m., or mail your request WJthasramped, self-addressed
envelope to the Wedding Department, Daily Pilot, P. 0 . Bo;rc 1560, Costa Mesa.
Calif. 92626.
.. Engagement news must be submitted at least seven weeks prior to the
wedding. If you have one, include a photo of the bride-to-be with the form.
Weddings will be published after the weddinf date. Quality photos of the
bride or the bridal couple are welcome. Black/white photos arc preferred to
color. I f you wish your photo returned, please put your name and mailing
address oo the back (use a felt-tipped pen, please).
Wedding and engagement news 1s published on a space-available basis.
We can 'tguaranteeyouaspecificdatc for your news, but we try ropubl1sh 11 as
soon as possible.
Two Coast men earn
achievement medals
Spec. 4 Lance R. Hot klD son of Roy
Hoskin of Huntington ~ch, and
PFC KevlD P. Lalor,soo of David and
Denise Lalor of Costa Mesa, have
been decorated with the Army
Achievement Medal. HosJtin, a 1983
Jr&duate of Ocean View High School,
1s an indirect-fi re infantryman with
the 67th Armored Battalion at Fort
Hood. Tex.as. Lalor is a medical
specialist with the 82nd Airborne
Division at Fort Brau. N.C. •••• Scaman Samael E . Soflo, son of Joe
and MarySofioofSanta Ana Heights.
has been accepted to one o( the
Navy's most demanding t~hnical
training programs in the advanced
electronics field. Sofio. a 1985 gradu-
ate of Newport Harbor High School,
entered the school after undergoing
recruit training in San Diego. • • • Scaman Recruit Joa L. Galllon, son
of Loretta Gullion of Huntington
Beach, and Scaman Recruit Jeffery S.
Wa11l1D.aton, son of Donald and
Wilma Washington of Huntington
Beach, have completed recruit train-
ing at the Naval Recruit Command in
San Diego. • • • Sean P. Bland, son ofG. Pat Bland
of Costa Mesa and Jocelyn Bland of
Tustin has been promoted to the
rank of private first class in the Anny.
MEMORIAL MEDICAL CENTER
LONG BEACH
Febnaary U
Mr. and Mrs. Lars Jorgensen, Hunt-
ington Beach, girl
HOAG MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
Februry H
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth CoWl~. New-
port Beach. girl
Mr. and Mrs. Victor Tetrcauh,
Irvine, girl
Ftbn ary !7
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Williams,
Irvine, boy
Mr. and Mrs . David Holland, Hunt-
ington Beach, boy
Marcil I
Mr. and Mrs. Timothy Woolsey,
Costa Mesa, boy
Mr. and Mrs. Armando Avila. Costa
Mesa, girl ~
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Bothe, Hunt-
inaton Beach, girl .
Mr. and Mrs. John Lcvenaood II.
Huntinaton Beach, boy
Mr. apd Mrs. Scott ~oody, Irvine,
boy
Mar~ a
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Puccio, Costa
Mesa. boy
Mard i
Mr. and Mrs. Brian Donnan. Costa
Mesa. airl
Mr. and Mrs. Thomu Becker, Costa
Bland is an infantryman with the
82nd Afrbomc Division at Fort
Bragg, N.C. • • •
Petty Officer I st Class Richard S.
Matllew14 son of Edwina Mathews of
Costa Mesa. rcccntly,retumed from a
five~month deployment to the Indian
Ocean and western Pacific while
stationed aboard the destroyer USS
Oldendorfhome ported in Yokosuka,
Japan. '
• • •
Kart ff. Ko1Jscbet, son of Albert J.
Kozischek of Huntington Bcacb, has
been promoted to the rank of sergeanl
in the Army. Kozischek. a 1982
graduate of Edi son High School. 1s a
heavy construction equipment oper-
ator wilh the 299th Engineer Bat-
talion at Fon Sill. Okla.
• • •
Air Force Reserve Amnan Lewl1
G. Mekbtl, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Gerald Mekbel of El Toro, has
graduated from the Air Force
avionics instrument systems course
at Chanute Air Force Base, Ill.
Mekbel, a 1983 graduate of El Toro
High School, is now serving with the
943rd Consolidated Aircraft Mam-
tenan~ Squadron at March Air Force
Base. Calit
Laguna Hills, boy
Mr. and Mrs. Bnan Gallogly Irvine I . .
f:tr. and Mrs. Charles Fletcher Jr ..
Costa Mesa, boy
Marcil I
Mr and Mrs. William Moody, Costa
Mesa, boy
~r .. and Mrs. Jeffrey Tracy.·Miss1on Viejo, boy
Mr. and Mrs. Ward Conover New-port Beach, girl '
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Hawton Irvine· boy • .
Marcil. 7
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Sills, Irvine, gJrl
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Overcnd
Huntinaton Harbour boy -'
Mr. and Mrs. Randy Recd, Costa Mesa.boy '
Mr. an~ Mrs. Roland Roth, Costa Mesa, air!
Mr. and Mn. William McGrath
Huntinaton Beach, girt •
Mardi
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Oullun
fiuntinaton Beach, prl ·
Mardi t
Mr. and Mn. Michael Resnick, Newpon Beach, boy
Mr. and Mrs. RonaJd Tracy U,Una
Hilli, boy ' m Bank of America @ ~F~r?i ... Robert K••dtJI. 1.-•••.
• ~r. and Mn. Jeffrey Stretton
Mr. an~ Mn. Kennt'h Johnson, lrv1ne, 1Jrl
Marcil It
Mr. and Mra. Frank Hunt Newpc)n Beach, Jitl •
Mr and Mn Daniel Moothart
Minion VieJO. IJrl '
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•Thi• rite" htlwd on 1n owncr~r1f"d 'll1,1n1 ~ITltll'lth v.ar111hlr r.w· l•iAn (w11ho\11 c.1pl with auttlfl\lllf paymt"nl from A Rllnk of l\nw-ma chf'd•ml( .elc..om 11nrl an 1n11111I Mission Viejo, 1Jrl ' intnctt flt(' '11 Q '\11% Thr cs11m11!'d •nm••I J'C'r< rnCAl(t' r•tc would hi·" HJ'~ w11h YIO monthly r-ymc-m' nf $1t1] II\ Thr lcM10 ftt would Ill' 17 .o P•Yahlr •• 11nitlQ11ll011 Marcil 4
Annuil pt'l'omt•~ rite ind p1yfTlC'nU1 onuld ch•oiicr •fttr k"'n "ma•I" ___ -____ _,, Mr. and Mn. Mitche~I Starkweather,
-.-' ' , ~r. and Mn Greaon Hill Hunt· 1nston Beach, boy ' '
Has Khadafy bit
·off mOre than ·
he can chew?
For the better part of a decade, Americans tJ/ve been
grappling with .the problem of how to respond effectively
to international terrorism. .. .... : 1~
Effectively -that'-s been the stick:inJ pomt. We've
spoken angrily about terrorism, callingT the ~ tcrronsts
hoodlums and thugs and threatening to deal hanhly with ·
them. We've made it a mattef ofpolicy that, as a nation,
we will retaliate against tcrroriits. But we liid done little
that was effective against terrorism. W~ aooomplished
virtually nothing by chasing faceless, nameless terrorists
who set offbombs or hijack airplanes or kidnap civilians .
and then ~sap~ into safe havens.
Our policy bas changed dramatically ii) recent
months. T he United States has quit chasing 'shadows
and has tu.med its.anger toward Uie-llllderlying source of
terrorism -the nations that support it with money and
weapons.
Last year, as four men believed to have hijacked the
Achille Lauro cruise ship and murdered U.S. citizen
Leon K:linghoffer were flying to apparent freedom on an
Egyptian airliner, four American fighter planes inter-
cepted the passenger plane and forced it to land in Italy.
The suspects were an;sted and held for trial.
For perhaps the first time since a kamikaze driver
went up with his car bomb, an anti-American terrorist
got a taste of justice. But more significantly, we made it
clear to the Egyptian government that the preservation
of relations between our two nations would not be
enough to make us turn the other cheek ..
We've run out of cheeks.
President RonAijd Reagan took bis get-tough a step
further last montll . when he accepted terror-monger
Moammar K:hadafy's challenge, crossed his so-called
.. Line of Death" and met deadly force with deadly force.
The outcome was predictable -the Libyans sustained
all the casualties -and so was K.hadfy's response. He
threatened to unleash terrorists on American targets
around the globe.
. Aside from ~nning Khadafy's status as -the
dispatcher of terrorism, the threat drew another line the
LibyaJ? leader is daring Reagail to cross. If the attack's.
begin m earnest, our response should be quick, strong
and directed not at the messengers of terror, but at the
one who sends them. If an American airport~s ·bombed
and U.S. intelligence identifies the culprits as emissaries
of Khadafy, we should strike swiftly at Libyan targets.
just as the Israelis would.
We have learned, fiilaliy, that terrorism is not
negotiable. If we are to make the world safe for
Americans, if we are to end the horrible fates of hostages
like Huntington Beach's David Jacobsen, we must cut
off terrorism at its roots. And clearly, that's where we
find Khadafy.
In Libya, be may be a strongman, but in the latger
picture, Khadafy is a minor figure who has created a role
bigger than the power it controls or the respect it
commands. Amencan lives will be lost to this actor with
the infla ted ego unless we prove to him he has bitten off
more than be can chew.
Opinions expressed In this space are t~ of the Dally Piiot. Other vtews.
exprened on this page are those of their author• and artlata. Reader
cemmentla lnvtted. The Dally Piiot, PO Box 1560, Cotta Mesa, 92626. Phone
e.42-6086.
Lupus 6-!0up helps those
who suffer fro11J disease
To the Editor:
There is a disease that 1s more
com mon than muscular dystrophy,
leukemia, or multiple sclerosis. An
estimated l million Americans have
this disease and S,000 Amencans die
from it each year. AJthough anyone of
either sex, any race or any age can get
this disease. it most of\en affects
young women. especially young black
women.
This disease i .. not contagio us and
is not a form of cancer. The disease is
systemic lupus erythematosus. or
SLE. or lupus for short.
Lupus can affect any organ, or
muluple orpos in the body. Symp-
toms vary. but can iocludejo1nt pain,
muscJe aches. skin rash, photo-
sensitivity. hair loss, inflammation of
the membranes around the heart or
lungs. anemia, fatigue, blood ab-
normalities. kidney involvement and
othen.
Paradoiucally .• lupus patients often
look very healthy and well. ~ven
when they •re very ill. This frequently
creates problems with family and
friends who cannot understand how
an~oJ\e who looks so aood aul be ~nously ill . Many lupus patients feel
ORANGE COAST
D1ilyPlat
isolated bccasue of the Jack of
understanding they encounter.
The L.E. Support Oub is a non·
profit organization that publishes a
bi-monthJy journal, the L.E. Beacon.
to help lupus victims. It is cited for its
work with lupus patients in the latest
edition of ''Lupus Erythematosus,"
the textbook by the great lupus expert,
Edmund L Dubois, M.D. and his co-
worker Daniel J. Wallace, M.D.
The LE. Support Oub is a na-
tionwide organization with members
in all .states and several foreign
countries. It ori&jnated in Isle of
Palms, S.C., and is ari offshoot of
Lcanon, the oldeit ol"'lhe national
lupus organizations. The founder of
Lean on serves on the advisory board,
along with a staff of mcd.ical advisors
who screen all articles for medical
accurtcy. ·
Anyone who would like more
infonnatio"n about the LE. Support
Oub should send a sclf~addrened
stamped envelope to: LE. Support
C1ub, 3103 N. Hamett Blvd., tide of
Palms. South Carolina, 2945 I.
,, ... 1"'4
EdltO! , .... , ...
HARRIET MESIC'
~ ~identjcditor
lhn RWJChw...,_,.
ContrOIMf .....,.L.C_.,..
ProduetlOll ~~
'""'" .... MaNQlno fdOor 0...,....,
City Editor ......._ Clfoullltlotl MtNQlt
i..c.... ~ f(tltllf
Cftll ...... 89ot11 Edlt0t
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Mart<•flno OtttctOI
c~~or
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High court may yet affir11J
some e.re~utic,ns this year
T he ambigu ities
in Briggs In itiative
are settled at last
(-THOMAS .: ' Euas
.When Willie ~rown, the flam-.!
boyant Dcmocrattc spealccr of tbe' -ambiguities and the court has now
st.ate Assembly, -predicted last De-resolved most of them," Justic.e
cember that CaJjfomia would sec .. a Grodin ~id. ''To that .extent, obsta-
scries of executions" before the clcs to tl\e implementation of the
November election, there was laugh-death penalty have been eliminated
ter from manyother politicians and a and the major constitutional obsta·
denial from the campajgp commitlee des have been resolved "
working for confinnation of Chief Grodi!1 . added tha~. "I laughed
Justice Rose Bird and four other when W1~he Brown wd there would
judges on the ~tale Supremc·Court. be five ex~utions before ~hi~ fal~; He
Even Brown retracted his off-the-had no ba~1s ~or that prcdict10~.
cuff prediction, which came in a But the JUSUce no.!cd that reviews of
breakfast interview where the speaker death t>cnall)' cases arc almost oon-
also noted that "By the time the fifth ~tantly before the co~rt. ~d ~~w !.hat
person h~,bc:Cn gasSed there win no 1t bas ~lved the ambtgu1t1es of
I I. •.caJ . . the 8n115 measure, prosecutors and onger be the sam~ po 1t,1• capital in trial /:. udg.cs know precisely which the death penalty ISSUC. . • . ' . .
T.odaY there is still copious poli.ticat f~jf~ri~!~ avoid 10 giving instructJons
capital in ~e ~ath penalty. Failure Among the "obstacles·· that
by the ~tate s highest co.urt. to app~ove G rodin said have tripped up judJCS ex~utio~ of. any cnminals smce were instructions to junes which ~hfom1a rcv1~ed the death penalty implied they had no choice but to
in 19~6 remains the crux ~f _the impose the death penally if a defen-c~mpa1gn to den~ confirmauon to dant's intent to kill had been csta~
Bird and ~er hberal colleagues. hshed in some cases, failure by judges
Joseph Grodin and Cruz Reynoso. to tell juries "the full scope of their
The issue remains potent partly discretion as defined by the U.S.
because Brown's prediction hasn't yet Supreme Court" and the "proper
come to pass. But comments from consideration" of the defend.ant's
one of the threatened justices in bac9round and past criminal record.
another breakfast session the other With the rules on those instruc-
day make it seem likely that there will tions now fully clarified in a long
be~me executions soon -or at least series of rulings tbat have set aside
that if there are none, it won't be the death penalty after death penalty,
fault of the state's highest court. Grodin implied the collf't is now
"The Briggs Initiative (which re-ready to affirm some capital
vivcd capital punishment,) had many sententes.
~ .......
It and wh~n it does, only a\)pealS to
the U.S. Supreme Court wdl stand
between the criminals involved and
the long-1anused gas chamber at San
Quentin. r
And if such affirmations :begin to
come reguJarly, it will cut much oftbe
ground from beneath the anti-<:c:u1-
finnation campaign, just as Speaker
Brown predicted. .
.; Should that happen, it would IO. far
toward proving the validity of
another Grodin observation: Tbat
the court's critics haven't really been
reading its decision; but have looked
only at the bottom hne.
"When you invite tJie voten to
look at the bottom line on jud&es in
the same way as they do a legislator's
voting record, it tends to undermine
the judicial process and force jud&es
to vote for a popular line," Orodin
said. •
"But courts must pctfonn a basicaJ·
ly non-majoritarian function. We arc
forbidden to rule on the basis of
majo.rily views." } ·
Yet Grodin acknowledges that
judges are not unlike the pen.on who
"Can't ignore the crocodile in the
bathtub when he goes into the
bathroom to brµsh his teeth. .. That's
another way of sayina they can't
tot.all)' ignore popular views. 4 es-
pcdally when voten arc aroused as
they arc this year.
But those voters may yet be calmed
by a few well-timed death penalty
decisions in keeping with Brown·s
seemingly cynical prediction. If so.
regardless of what Grodin says about
the process havinJ finttly reached
that point by c-0inetdence just oo.w. it
will reinforce this court'S-highly-
polit1cized image. -
Thomas Eu.1· 11 a#Suta Moalca·
baaed coh1mai1t oa state l1Het.
Apfil f odl '·s joke that had
happy_endingfor bad back
April doesn't seem as much fun as Legion used to talk about thi~ and
it used to be. You remember when exc.hange experi,nccs. Well, i!I this
you were a kid you would say to a girl almost final examinroon I made 1t a
classmate. "There·s a spider on your point to maintain a low elevation. In
riosc?"' • · doing so and crawLing at me same
Then when she shrieked an4 ran for time, I misQlaccd a vertcon1and it
a mirror ·you woulo -shout "April hun plenty. '
fool" and everybody would howl with So I started looking for an os-
laughter. · tcopath. One of the first places I
Kids don't Sttm to change much. I checked was our pharmacist.
don't know what thetre doing today, When I ~t to bis drug store and
but l'll bet they're still having fun. told him w at I was look.mg for. he
I do know that when f looked at the waved me hind the screen and
calender this year, I thought about confided to me "You would probably
"Old .Doc" Chamberlaln and his do just .1$ well to go to "Old Doc'
April J::ool's Day "joke" on me in · Cbamberhlin. He's listed as a
1945. chiropractor but he does a good job ...
Upto thatdatc,osteopaths hadbad Well. I went. A linle hc$itantly, I
the jump on chiropractors. In admit. l had never &one to a
Southyn California that was princi· chiropractor before. But in no time
pally due to~ Osteopathic Coll&e of "Old Doc" had me feclina fine.
Physicians and Surgeons in Los I did know enouah about-the tools
Angeles. Bclievw me. a graduate oi the two profC$siona ux to know that 1
that school bad to be an especially had noi bttfl on a chimpnctor's
good healer. They could write bench ·
prcscnpuo ns and do alt tbc thinas an When I cra~ed off tile Oat table ·1
M.D. docs now. And to get an said, .. Doc. yo 're a fraud. You're no
osteopat* licC'nse required a tough chiropractor. Y u're an osteopath."'
examination. Doc chuckJecS.i'So April fool, kad."
Well. this wu right after the end of he said. "What's the difference? You
World War It and fhadjust to moved f~I be'ter, don't jOUT'
to wbat Tom Murphinc insiAls on rhat, of course, 1 did. And bc1na an
calling thi5 .. htst of all pouiblc inveterate newsman first. loot before
coasts." I ever pretended to be a soldier, 1
O nly trouble was tlut, just before l started diuina for the story. It was
went 1na<"tive in the Army. I had ~tty simple.
finished my aonual examination to Doc had been train~ as an os-
mak~ Si¥T'C J still de~rvcd an MOS of teopath but not as an osteopathic
"Infantry llnit Commander." P&S. When ht moved out here from
Pan of this examination was to tht East Coas~, he kntw he would
crawl. I think it was SO yards, under a have to JCl a hocnte 1( f\c wanted to
canopy of machine gun fire. The practice H\ the he.alth liel~
machine auns didn't fire lead bullet~ He d1~~vercd that in C~if0m1a an
They were paper and wa~ dummies. o"eopathk h«n5t was di cult to get
but they could stina1ust the same So competed to, at that 1 time. a
you wetc pretty dam smart to' chiropraC't11: hccn~. So he \took the
ma1nt~in a low fC'3r-end profile cxam1natwn for a ch1roprtctor. but
Some of m y pal$ 1n thr Amencan he went naht nn doing thC' thing.' ah
Wnn1
Bu11ouc1s ·
osteopath does. And I want to say he
did them dam well.
later. a grouP. of citizens who lived
on · ··Goat Hill" decided to in·
corporate • the town. "There was
another group of equally determined
citizens that plain old dictn•t ~t it
incorporated. Among them was Doc
Chamberlain. By this time an attemeted in·
corporation had already failed and
Pop Ludi was fechng pretty tow. He
was happy to "sell our to Dave1Un&
and me. ' f thought I knew how to make a
good newspaper I've alrudy tdtd you
some of the thing~ thl!t made the'
G lobe-Herald pr:ocrcss. So •. Dave and
J decided we would tackle tnoofl)On-
tion once more. Doc Chamberlain
was one of thc-anii5, Apin.
One day he was furious while
talkina with me. Then suddenly he
chan•ed. "Walt.'' he said. "I act so mad at
you I ouabt 10 hate you. Then you say
w mething and make me lauaJI, so I'm
not mad at you any m ore." ·
Wrll. cititen1 like ''Old Doc"
Cham bcrtain arc the k:tnd of which we
'nttd more. A11y city aovemment a.nd
any oounty aovcmment oeed.s to have
n:ally dc\ennined citmms pull1na
against you and the m"ont1cs.
That's so~thlna our 1986 city
aovemmcnu on the Oranae C',oast
should remember
Walter Be~u la ~ PIMt'a
f011wdhl1 peblllHr.
'·
Jnd J(Jjf PH "''f Al':
·NASA
success
based
on risks
Probe h a s bogged
agen cy down . left
it de morallzed
W ASHlNGTON -While Wasb-
lllgton's second-pesaers and hand·
~ ancuiah over the Chalknser
traaedY, other nations are taamblina
to ovcrt.Qe the United Sta1e1 in
sp1ee. Here'• 11rbat bas happened
since the shuttle e~plosion im-
mobiliad me National Aeronautics
and Spece Admirustratio.n.
•The Soviet Union laui>ched a
space station, which will become the
core of a buac spac.e complex., with
laboratories, maout'acturina facilities
and living quarten. By contrut, there
arc mutterinp in Washington about
cancclina the U.S. . s.,.cc station
project -which cotlldn't be
deployed, in any. event. until the
m1d-1990s.
•The Sovieu have offered the''uSt' '
of their Proton rockets, at a launching
pric.e ofS24 million, which customers
may UIC if they set tiTed of waiting for
the U.S. shuttlestotakeoffqain. The
Soviet price per customer is Jess,
incidentally, than it costs for a
shuttJC>launcbed satellite.
•The European Space Aw:ncy bas
launched two satellites into Ofb1t
since the shuttle disaster. Shuttle
customers, left SU'a.Dded by NASA.
have been invited to sign up wi\h the
European agency. It bas offered to
add four more Ariane rocke1
launchings t~ its 1987..gs. sc~.
-•Britain, Francie artd tbe•So"1et ·uruon have ia.....uMd ·wodt on
manned SJ*)eCt'afl The Soviets have
already tes1ed a smaJJ spaceplaoe that
would ride into space atop a booster .
rocket, sprina into orbi1 and then
return to Earth. The Japanese are also
rushin&ahcad with plans to operate in
space .. tven the Chinese have let out
word that their Long March roclccu
are avai,_to cqmmercial cus-
tomers.
All the w • the investigabon of
theCballengerexplooon, fanned into
a national scandal by an qgressivc
press c.orps, hu demoralized NA.SA
and bogged down the U.S. space
pr?l"lm. ·
Report.en have jumptd on NASA
for ignoring wamings that shouJd
have been heeded and taking risks
that may have been· unwise. But
NASA's files are full of self-serving
memos routinely written by cautious
officials to absolve themselves from
blame. If a launch is successful, they
can bask in the acclaim. If it should
faif, they can cite their I-fold-you-so
memos.
NASA would never have landed
men on the moon if the managen bad
heeded all the negative memos. Some
of the warnings now being cited were
written by these chronic objectors.
Since 1hcy object to every launch. the
managers don't know when to take
them senously.
The top peopl.c at NASA have
always been risk·takcn. They have
understood that space pioncenna bu ,
its risks, that nsks go with explo-
r:a,tiQn. that prasrcss has a price. They
.. l\a'1c'lfftn careful to give top prioritlf
to safcgµarding human life. Their
safety record is impressive; by many
measurements, they have actually
made spaoe exploration safer than
airplane or automobile travel. But
accidents will be inevitable on thr
space frontier.
If NASA must guarantee safety, 11
will simply have to stop all space
flights. If NASA officials arc sub-
iected to finscr·pointmi af\er every
mishap. they will st.art pfaying 1t eycn
safer. Enaineers will protett them-
selves by ,citina all thJ ~tunas that
could go wrona !_nd wanuna aaipnst
eve_ry launch. Officjals wil1 be afraid
to ignore tht warnings and wdl no
longer lake risb. knowing there arc
memos m the' file that could come
back to haunt them
Such a play·1t-safe atmosphtrt-
would likely dnvc out of NAS A the
most rcsourttful ~ple who have
kept the United States on the c:utt1n1 cdce of spa<x tcchnOIOJY. About 40
percent of tht top people arc eh.,blc
to retire most of them on full
pension. if they can no lonaernplore
spa.oe without nskana ~rsonal ruin,
they may nmply walk out • Then NASA would . become'
bliahtcd whh the bu.rcatcratic cune n
has so far avo\ded -t,J\e C\ll'IC of•
1ncrtaa and passivity -and become
another Waslunaton struct~ more
1 nteTCSted in a.uJ\ainana 1ttclf than
promottna the national ~.
J•ct ~ M4 .,.... s,., a,.~_, t*Me'rra.
.J
-
•
'
COMPLETE NYSE COMPOSITE TR~.~.!tA~TIC>_NS, A10
Fe·bruary home sales fall 3.8%
Harsh weather blamed for unekpected
drop In other regions; West up 24.8%
WASHINGTON (AP) -New-
bome sales fell an une~pccted 3.8
percent in February. suggesting that
the lowest mortpae-intercst rates of
the decade have yet to translate into a
buy1ng surge.
But housing industry officials said
sales arc already pickmg up dramati-
cally with the beginning of the
traditional spring home-buying
season.
In a report Monday, the Comme~
Department said new single-family
homes sold at a seasonably adjusted
annual rate of 68S,000 in February,
down from 712,000 units an both
January and December.
It was the largest decltne since a 6.5
Passbook account
~ ln terest lid lifted
WASHINGTON (AP)-Federal regulation of consumer bank
deposits ends today with the lifting of the S.S percent interest rate ltd
on passbook savings account.S, but banking industry officials say
maJor changes an these accounts are unlikely.
The elimination of the int~lt'bp<ends'a siit.yea.r.phascout of
federal controls on bank de~s ordered by Congress. ·
But 1us1 because ban~ and other finan~al institutions can now
)tart offering higher 11).terest rates o~ tradi.uonaJ savings accounts
, \tocsn't mean they waif. industry officials said.
"In the current climate of low interest rates, there isn't likel ) to
be much ofa shaft," said Allan Fnedman, a spokesman for the U nited
States League of Savings Institutions.
"There may be few 1nst1tut1ons that have a campaign to o ffer
new higher-interest accounts, but they'll be few and far between It
won't be the nonn," Fnedmao said.
There att currently more than 90 miU1on passbook accounts.
containing wme $305 billion in savings. m the nation's banks and
savings and loan mstitutaons.
pcrcent4rop in October and left sales
at only 1.3 percent above last Febru·
ary's paoe.
Government and private analysts
blamed hard times in the southern
energy.industry regions of the coun-
try, and unusually harsh weather 10
the NortheaS1 and Midwest, for much
of the decline.
The Fe~TWlJ')' figures "suggest that
the markeu are not rcspondina as
quickly to the lower mo~e rates as pco&'tt had expected," said David
Wyss, chief economist for Data
Resources Inc.. an economic forc-
castin~ service. "And that's bad
news.'
"There arc a lot of houses being
started and not sold," Wyss added.
While selling at a slower pac.c, the
price of the average new singlo-family
home rose last month to SI 06,300, up
from $102,400 in January. The me-
dian price -the point at which half
the houses sold for more and half for
less -was $87,300 in February, up
from $86,000 a month earlier. •
H ome sales fell in all regions of the
country exoept the West, where they
were up 24.8 J)ercent. 'fl)e largest
dedine was m the South, a region that
ancludes Texas.
Warren Lasko, executive vice
president of the Mortgage Bankers
Association, caJJed the report "a bat
disappointing."
"Interest rates had already started
down in February. It appears that
home buyers must have waited to
March to make their purchase,"
Lasko added. He said prelinunary
tnd1cat1ons point to a rapid increase
an home sales the past few weeks.
Rates on conventional fixed-term
mortgages have fallen to around I 0
percent, and less in some parts of the
nation..t for the lowest levels since
mid·l'.1178. Rates on Veterans Admin-
istration and Federal Housina Ad·
ministration moJ'tgages arc currently
at 9.5 percent.
James Christian, chjef economist
for the United Leaaue of Savings
Institutions, said, 0 Jt'1 pretty clear
when you look at the composition of
the saJcs that the bis decline is in the
South, most panicularly in the oil
patch. Oil &iveth and oil also taketh
away." ..
"But the prime buying season as
really late March. April, May and
June. And it's starting to look very
solid.!" be ad<fcd. •
Mrchael Surruchrast, chief econ-
omist for the NJattonal Association of
Home Builders, dismissed the signifi-
cance of the decline. "I don't get
excited over one month. We had so
many rainy clays in February," he
said.
" ... March and April arc going to be
great. Builders arc tellinJ us that sales
are the best they've had si nee 1981 ,"
he added.
February's decline followcC! two
m onths in which the pace of borne
sales rema ined the same, at 712,000
units. Sales last rose io November.
when they were up 13.3 percent.
January's levels initially had been
reported as a 4.4 percent rise in sales.
But subsequent ~visions showed that
in January held at the same level
December instead o f increasing.
es last rose in November, wbeo
they were up 13.3 percent.
The Commerce Department said
the February decline left 356.000
un~ld houses -equivalent to a
supply of6.4 months.
Lawler, Felix & Hall move to Jamboree Center ·
The law firm of Lawler, Felix & building vacated by the The TreaHry nsc hotel and a ~staurant. pleted an the fall.
Hall has moved from Cost.a Mesa to Store at The City shopping center an • 1' • • • •
the Jamboree Center an Irvine. sign-Oranie. The 189,000-square-foot The expansion ofBallock's depart-Tbe baslltate for Blolo1kaJ ~-
ing a 10-year, S 1.8 m1lhon lease for bulldal'lg. sold by the J .C. Penny Co.. ment store at Soatll Cout Plat.a has search u d l>evelopment,bac. will use
7,000 square feet of office space at 2 will be transformed into the N.uu1 begun. Plans call for a 93,000-squarc-the services of TT A/Newport to
Park Place • • • City Square offi ce complex. The 20 I-foot add1t1on as well as construction develodp ah marketi!lcalg P!~gr~m
Irvine-based Nexas Development acre' office parlc Wlll include one 8-of a third story to the existing dtrccte at P armaceuu m41 .. et1ng
Corp. h~ purchased a S l_::6....:.:.m:.:.1l:.:.lt~o.:.:.n___:s:....to.:...:ry..:._a_nd_tw_o_4-_st_o...:ry:....b_u_1l_d_1n...::g:...s,:....a_l_ow_-__ b_u_1ld_1_n~g-. _11_1_s_e_x..:..pe_c_tcd __ to_be_c_o_m_-___ .;,_(P_l_a_Mi_eee __ B_U_S_IJU88 ___ /_A_9___,l
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Minimum baJance $1,000; rate and yield above are for SS0,000 balance .
Five different rates for five different balance levels. lllere are many
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Liberty National
Bank names V ~.P.
A.nold Cou~ has been appointed vice president and
manager of the -[Jberty National Bank's Loi ADI~ Commerclal
Baak.in& Cftter. Coggeshall, a Hun~ington ~ch res1dent1 has been
with the Huntington Beach-based Liberty National Bank s1noe 1982. • • • Reid Petenea h~s joined B•bber1 Adverttsta1 ud hbllc ~IJtlou Co .. be'. as art director for. the Costa Mesa-based fmn.
Petencn was previously art director at ~e qooct Galae 4_d,v1.rttata,1
u d Manetta1 of Encino, and has recc.1ved1ndustry a~ds f<?r his
efforts. •I • • Ji · /. \ Dorotaly De Lay has joined the staff of • .J. Stewa,v~ vertlt ... 1
&r h bUc Relatioos, Inc. as aecount coordhfator for the Newport
Beach firm. De Lay was previously media-traffic manager at another
Orange county agency. • • • JIU Slwulon has J01ncd Kerr &r AHocla&es hbUc ~latioa• 6
Advertitla&, blc. of Huntington Beach a~ a pubhc relations account
executive. M ost recently she was a wnter with Bryu llanlwick
AHoda&es in Palos Verdes. • • • Founta10 Valley resident Glen Elmore has been appointed a
first-year member ofTnast Llfe hlHraace Co. of CbJcqo'• Executive
Roundtable. Membership m thcgroue.~ ~1mitcd to those who meet a
quahfying product1on level 1n the pre<:cdmg calendar year. • • • Mark SWJey of Cal'• Camera, Inc. of Costa Mesa.. recently
chaired an educauonal session at the 62nd annual convenuon of the
Pt.oto Mat'ketla1 AHocJaUon IDterutiouJ, in Las Vegas. Stµ.ley's
session focused on "Ho w to Identify the PotenttaJ Miru Lab
Customer." • • • Den.ls P. Kalscllear has been appointed senior vice president of
finance and chief financial officer for Newport Beach-based A.ltCal.
Kalscheur JO ins AirCal after sevetl years with Flying Tl1era and T11er
IDternatlouJ, which he served as vice president and treasurer for the
past three years. . .. '
Staff additions and promotions have been announced for tbc
project development group of Saata Maraartta Co., developing the
Rancho Santa Margarita community to southeast Orange County.
Dave Plaeell bas been promoted from manager to associate director
of project d~velopment, in charge of dtrecung the _design. and
implementauon of the 400-acrc Rancho Santa Marganta Bus10ess
Parle. Paal Jola.nson, fonnerly residential manager. has been
promoted to associate director of project development and Tom Lee
has been hired as project manager for the first phase of the
community's residential development. Lee has been manager of
des1gn/construct1on for Saata Aatta Development Corp. of Newport
Beach. Scott Peot&er as the new manager of pro1ect development
under Placek. coordmaung the first oh.ase of the business park. . . ' Dould M. Jooes of Corona del Mir has JOmed the brokerage
staff of Daam/ Jolmstown Amertcu an Newport Beach. A certified
pubhc accountant and real estate broker, Jones has owned and
operated a financtal and tax consultancy firm foe real estate
developers, synd1cators and investors for the past I 0 years. He also
teaches real estate investment courses for UC lrvlne extension
division. • • •
Frank Maraa, president of Dtvenlfled Eleetrtc of Costa Mesa
has been elected president of the Soetllen Callfon ia Bollden
AHoclatloa of Garden Grove. Vice president as Al Cardoza ofVuce
&r Associates Roqflng in Costa Mesa and Paal Boardman of PrtzJo &
Prtzlo in Fountain Valley 1s treasurer. Maras. who has 20 years in the
construction business, was named to the SC BA board in 1984. • • • Costa Mesa resident Jack R. Ballard, general manager of
Newport Area Travel, hlc., of Newport Beach has been elected
national president of the America.a Board of Professional Travel
Ageah . Ballard is a 30-ycar veteran of the travel industry . • • • Ro1er M. Kramer and StneD a. Franke have JOI ned Motivation
Resoarces Inc. oflrvane as part of an expansion of the firm'screat1ve
SCTVices. Kramer bnngs IS years of expenencc m mottvauon
program planning to has new )Ob as crcattve. director Creative
supervisor Franke comes to C.ahforn1a from the Midwest with five
ycan of experience in the field. The Irvine firm offers adm1nistra11on,
promotion. mcn:handtsc and travel awards. meeting and convention
services.
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~ T. s<>f\\ ha'l/e LJl vorce °"eC l,~~e~fe'l/\O\l\
Reco1 ~ery·i{~:;:'°' -'V, Di'iorced •nd Sep.r1t~
rksh PerJOns of All A1es Op Six Thursdiy Evenings
April 3-May 8 "'\'
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For more tnformaclon, ~116 31·2885 ~~Mon-hi
..
MON EY SEN SE , .
~ -__ .. ~~~~--
~eparat~ fact from fictiOnin. financial de~isioss
Peoole often make inappropriate naoclal decisiont bec;:ause they b .. e
em on fiction~ whkh -via
mmon usqe or fi'equent repctJtion
have taken on the appearance of
ct.
Are you bean_. led astray by
nanciar fictions1 Test yourself by mna lo separate fact from fiction in
e following 10 statements:
• 1. Jf you are like most people,
your house is your most valuable
asxt. Therefore, you should follow
the rule of thumb u$ed by most
insurance companies which suuesu
MuY
RUDIE
that you insur~ your home for at least
80 percent of its replacement value.
Fact or ftction?
•2. Strai&ht term is ithe best lif~
insuraooc because it's Che least eJt-
pensive and is uncluttered by cash
USINESS NOTES ••• ... __ A8
xecutives and ad agency aocou.J new buildin& trends and cost-cutdna
rvice pcnonnel~ .. l methods. • • • Builden and desipen will be able
have plans, sketches, oost estimates
d other project material evaluated
free at an expanded .. Meet the
Experts" workshop June 19-21 dur-
ina the PacUlc Coa1t BatJden Coa-
ferace (PCBC) in San Francisco.
Organized by Arthur Danielian,
president of Dulellu Aaaoctatet
Arc*lteetve ... Pluala1 in New·
pon Beach, the workshop will feature
SO consultants selected from throua'h·
out the western states' who will
provide up-to-date information on
• • •
Costa Mesa Flnt Team Walk-la
Realty reported sales of over $360
million for 1985 -its second year in
a row for more thaQ $300 milhon. ... ,
A new bllli~ method has raised the
price of te1epb~e ca.Us made to areas
more \ban-17 mijts away. The system
wtnt into effed\Marcb 1. Fo' 'um· ~pte. a one-minute caU from Newport
-Beach to1"rabuco pow costs 23 ccnta·
!nstea~of 10 cents. Rates are similar , bctw lr\.ipc and Brea. · ~ . . '
accumulation or mvestments. Fact or
fiction?
• 3. tr }'ou're in• 38•percent tu
bracket 38 pe~of your income
l(>el to Uncle Sam. Fact or fiction?
•4. The position of eucutor of
your estate 11 an imponant one and
sho111d not be left to an un-
koowledseable relative. Fact or fic-
tion? •
• S. A U.S. govemment-auaranteed
bond iaa risk-free investment. F'act or
fiction?
•6. Municipal bonds are a smart
investment for tnYone because they
pay tax·free interest. Fact or fiction?
•7. Gold is the safest investment
because its value bas bee~
univenally for thousands of yean,
Fact or fiction?
68. Bonds are better investments
than stocks because, an the long term,
more conservative investments
outperform the stock markets. Fact or
fiction.
•9. You can purchase any kind of
investment in your lndiv1dual Re·
tirement Account (IRA). Fact or
fictjon?
• 10. You must be self~mployed
full time to open a K.eOlh retirement
account. Fact or fiction? ,
THE ANSWERS: ~
I. Fac:L Most homeowner in-
surance claims are for~ JOMCS;
it's rare that an entire hou~ burm
down or is swept away in a flood.
HowCJYer, insurance companies are
not obltgated to pay the entire
replacement cost for partial d&mlle if clote11 relative. Whtie your cucutor MDte of val4le becaUM of ill m..oty. 1
a home ii iASured ror leta th.an 80 mu11 be tomcone you caa tnm. you The price of.,ad ftUC'lUIJCI from dly pt~nt of its reptacement value. All sboWd alJosivecarcful conti.ckration to day (evec bour to bow) ~ bM
lnturanoe companies. bowev.er 1 arc to that PlftC>n '1 abilh;y (and cmo-bad variatiom of m~ tbaD S.NU ...
ootalike.soreadtbefineprintofl'out tionalJft~ should you die) ounce. Unlas you are~ IO
policy catd\illy. Wt also a aood idea to perform ta.e Wb of executor, i.e. ride out a downturn.. told (aa be a
to re~uate your bomeowneT an~ deiennine the value of your aueu. risky invtstment
lur&Jl()CCVCf'Y fewyean 10 beau.re at is payoutstandinadebts. rnakedjstribu· I . Pkt:lila. Over es~ petjodl. ·~
keeplna pece with the risina cost of tions \0 heirs keep cardul fUlOfdl. the stock iadica have bisioriCally
replacement. · .. S. f1etleL No investment 11 totally outperformed more eontenftive ia-
2. rtedea. When you're youna. risk-free. But U.S. Government-vesunentt. Unfortunately, tbe ~ ....-: atrai&bt term insurance it inexpcn-tlW'lntced bonc:U are u elate u you • formance of an entire stock iaicta ·
sive, but as you ict older, the cost can set. because they are blcked by doesn't provide many ca-s aboQt
ctealatet. TodaY,.. life insurance the full faith and credit of the U.S. how a particular ltOCk Will' do.
comes in many 1orm1 and what iJ aovemment. which b.u the best Cf'Cdit 9. JPkU9a. You can.not Ute your .
riaht for you may not be aoed for .. ratana in the wor1d. This applies-, [RA· funds lO buy life imwuce,
aomeooe else. It's best to discuss your bowev~er to the Ml payment of collectibles, precious metall or iD-
inswance needs with a trusted in-princi and interest at maharh)'. If vestments that uae borrowed money.
auraoce qent or financial consllltant. you ae I the bond in the mark.et before When in doubt, consult your 8CICC>W)-
3. P~ Your aross-income -maturity, you are subject to m<et tant. financial advisor or the lnterUI
tips, interest. dividends risk, mearuna you may receive more Revenue Service.
oed by any number of or less than you paid for the bond.. to. PletMa. You need not be ldf..
ded: , from which you de· 6. Fldlea. Tu.4'ree Jtlunacipal employed fulJ time.You can.put up &o
tcnnm. • e your net ta~blc ineome. bonds aenerally provide a lower rate 20 percent of an~· 1elf-emp10yment
Uncle Sam then uses th.is figure as the of return than many other invest-income into a , or up to
basis for a .prosrcssivc;:income tu -ments. So. if you are in a low tax $30,000, whichever it /
hi&bct increments of income arc bracket, you11 usually set more AJ you can ace, many finanaal old
tax.ed at p-eatcr ratn. You actually spendable income, on an after-tax wives' tales can be milleadiDf. Proper
pay 38 percent only_ . on income basis from a tax.able security. For financial ptaonina takes lelWotk. ~S49,420ond$64,7SO.lf your pcopkinhi11>1¥bndce1S,hoW<ver. phonework,. homework and a aooct net ble income is ssolooo. you're the tax'advantqe more than offsets deal of t.bouabt and consideration.
in tbei 8 percent~ bracket. but you the lower return. Generally, tax-free There 11 nb safe way around it.
really pey Uncle Sam only 21.S municipall>ondsarethebe:ttercho1ce M.aryJ.l\MlelsYke,.-... ,_.
4. PacL Many people' name their tax brackets. 1q fer M~ LJM*, pm:on~ forpcopleinlhe lOpm:onlorh•aher ~~·-
executor timply ~/cboosina their 7. Fled-. Gol4 provides a false ~rce __,a ~~,.JIM!·
_(1Jll!llB!I~--------------,
p:w.:r~i~~~: 11ayl~.~·"' JW f ~5 · ~ he=~~~ the~ billed on v ,,,4 + ~ (Jp ~ .. ~tti;~ biiOW-~ °' 1000 • ~ 11: ~ H: ff s.9'.~~ m -UP
y :-i.~ #:' 1~ ~~ . DOWMS ~Jloc ""1l?t 1! B~ · l ~·~ ~ ..:°th or'n.t re..,~ un Ii Vt Up ,:J 1 -~=l'l: , 1-16 -~ sir H:S
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Central guarantees IRAs two ways. Fint, your iilteest rate
(compounded daily) ii locbd in for the fuD tsm of the 8QCOUnt.
Second~ you are insured by the FDIC up to $100;000.
Whether you'ft ~to ope!'I •new IRA or roll onr an~
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OOn't wait to double your meney. Uncle Smn NY' this offer m\dt
end April 15 . '
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••
. . * lllly Plllt :fUESOAV. APRIL 1, 1911
I
..
• NeverJVerVou·s Pervis p l)lls i~ o·ut .
. . . . . =F-re_s......,,.h_m_a _n-,....le_a_d-s_Lo_u_t_svi_ll_e_ point : performance by All-American guard Johnny
Dawk.in1. ·
laid at io."
Crum said that W'I by desip.
ball away an the early eoina and it was a fut·.JMIOl'd ~
throuabovt Seldom more than 20 leCIOndl were nm off
the 4'He&od ahot dock. Both tt.amJ uted prc:llUle
defente to keep each other off bllance. to national championship Ellison was voted the tournament's MOit Outstand-
ina Player-the fint freshman to win since Utah'• Arnie
Ferrin in 1944. He tcored eight of LouisvUJe's last l S
points and two of hi1 11 rebounds were key grabs in the
final moments.
"We cleared out to go one-on-orie," be wd. ·"Pervis
11 quick,. be took advao\qe.
"He played arcat and H's unbelievable a freshman
can handle this kind of pressurt and play as well as be
did," said Crum, who has been to the Final Four six times.
LouilviUe paid Milt WllPCJ' ~ ... bad a bed -
pme the W'bole pme. But· when I tot lO the line, I fdt
confidmoe. It waf crucial. 1 bad a bard time tryina to stop
Johnny Dawkim."
DALI.AS (AP) -With the national championahip
on the line, ·t.ouiaville and Coach Denny Crum are never
n:JEs about a freshman center. , • m's latest rookie in the middle, aptly nicknamed
"Ne ~Nervous" Pervis Ellison, scoied 2$ points and
dominated the inside Monday ni&bt a.s No. 7 Louiaville
beat top-ranked Duke 72-69 and became the first team to
win s:wo national championships in the 1980s.
°'11lat's wby we call him 'Never NcrvolU Pervis,' "
said sopliomore teammate Herbert Crook.. .. Down tt the
end. when we need rebounda, be sets them."
As for the free throws, Ellison said he hadn't been
sbootina free throws too well in the tournament, "but I
just concentrated. Jt was a one.and-one so after I made the
fint one, I relaxed a little."
Duk,e'a ~ oulleorcd Louiaville JS-13, Warpa·
not aettina bi1 tint field s.oal until theft wu 5:33 lteft in the
pme. That. came on a fastbreak let up by an Ellitoa
blocked abdt, '
.. Sure I r,et nervous, that's just a name somebody put
on me," said the slender player from Savannah, Ga., who
The last one, too, came with a freshman.. Rodney
McCray was in the pivot when the Cardiflals beat UCLA
in 1980.
will be l 9 on Tbund.ay. ·
Ellison put in the rebound off Jeff Hall's missed
i·umper with 41 seconds left and inc:reascd Louisville's
cad to 6S-6S. With 20 seconds left, he sank two more free
throws after grabbing a rebound off a miss by Duk.e's
Duke Coach Mike Knyzewski said Ellison had an
outstanding pme both offensiv,ely and defensively.
"He's a tremendous inside threat. We took their
guards out oftbe pme but be is a threat on defenae, too.
He's like (Navy's DaVid) Robinson, except the people
aro'\and him do even more.
Loui1vilJc1f front line outacorcd Duke's 418-301 bol
more importadtly, Louiaville outrebounded Duke 3~27.
with Crook . 12.
Duke's \f1~n made only S-of-1 S and fe>rw>rd
Mark Alarie 4-of-11 up front for Duke, while auard
Tommy Amaker hit only J..of-10 shots. DaW'kinJ be1d up
bis end by makina IO-of-19.
"I'm a lot happier this time," Crum said .... The last
time there was so much pressure."
With the 6-9 £llison working inside at the close of the
pme, the Cardinafs spoiled Duke's 37-victory season -
the most successful in NCAA hisJ<>ry -and offset a 24-
David Henderson. · . "I don'\ want our guys banJing their beads after this.
"I saw the shot was falling short," Ellison said of
Hall'• miss. ''I jumped for it and I thought I was the only
one who jumped. ! didn't sec anyone around me. I just
They've bad an excellent sea.son and 1t has been an
txceUent four years 'for the seniors."
Duke's pesky lUAJds forced Louasville to throw the
Lowsville went ahead 42_. l on Crook's tap.in,
(Pleue ... LOUJaVILL&/]IS)
Just wasn't in
the Cards for ·
.Carew • • • s1tt1ng,
wa:iting . .
Duke's-Devils Future Hall of Fame
standout isn't betn Shots just wouldn't
fall with the defense
keyed in on Dawkins
DALl.AS (AP) -With the
Louisville defense oonoentrating on
All-American guard Johnny Dawkins
in the final crucial otinutts. bis coach
and tcamlJlltcs said the Duke Blue
Devils should have taken advantage
and rolled to their first NCAA title.
But it never happened.
Dawkins soomd 24 points Monday niabt. but onJy two of them came i.n
the final IS mrnutcs when Louisville
forged ahead and defeated the Blue
~vils 72-69.
t>uke Coach Mike Knyzewski
explained that when opposang de-
fenses try to stop one player it usually
opens the way for others, such as
Mark Alaric and David Henderson.
But this time they oould not ma.kc the
k.el l>Jskets. We took the same shots we always
take and we would take the same
shots apin," Knyzewski sa.id. .. We
played well and extremely hard, but
we did not shoot well." _
Duke shot 2S for 62 from the field
for 40.3 percent, oompared with its
regular-season avera.-Of SI .S per-
cent. Louisville was 29 of SO for SS
percent, including· a 61 percent ~
ond half.
Henderson took over the Duke
offense in the late stages, but the
senior forward, normally a 52 percent
shooter. failed to oonnect on three
crucial attempts.
"I really don't lcnow exactly what
happened," Henderson said. "We
missed some shots wc had been
Mike Mayne
Ger1nans,
U.S. Junior·
pololsts vie
West Germany faces
American team
at Belmont Thursday
LONG BEACH -Much of the
future ofUnited States water polo WlU
be on display Thursday flight as the
Uni~ States Juniors will be show-
cucd 1n an international contest
apinst West Germany.
.. Sprint is scheduled for 8 o'clock at
Belmont Plau here and Coach Rieb
Cono'1 U.S. entry will be tryina to
avcnae a 10..9 loss to this same West
Oerman team an I 98S.
The event marks the first tame a
1uniors' exhibition of thas type has
been held in the United States. World
rankings of a year aao had th~ U.S.
juniors sixth and West Germany
seventh.
Cono. 10 bas sccond year at the
helm ind the aoalie coach of the 198'4
silver medalists at the 1984 Olympic
Oama. wd. "Tra1n1n1 . Wtth the
Oennans is paramount 1n the de·
velopment of our team, and we have
been looltina forward to their v1s1t all
year Iona.
hitting all season long."
Both teams also experienced foul
trouble, which seemed to limit
Duke's inside defense. But Hen-
derson refused to blame those fouls
for Duke's failure to win.
"Both tcamsnad some foul trouble.
But down .the -stretch, Louisville
didn't make (commit) any," he said.
Dawkins said the Slue Devils had
good shots in the final minutes, but
"they just didn't faJI . You have to live
with that"
Duke went seven minutes without
a basket, until only 18 seconds
remained.
''I think that was the key to the
game," said center Jay BiJas. "We had
some reaUr, good shots, shots we
usually hit. '
The Blue Devils said they would
not let their third loss rum their
NCAA-record season of 37 victories.
"It's been a real expcnencc for our
basketball program. J am so pro ud of
ou1 guys and the way ll\ey've bandied
ev.erything." Knyzewski said.
Henderson also spo"'e of a vcat
seuon, but added, "We're disap-
pointed that we came so far and we're
so faraway."
"The thing is, nobody remembers
who was second," Bilas said. "I hope
history is kind to us. We were a good
basketball team. h's something I
tbink we can look back on with a great
deal of pride. We ga vc it our bests bot,
but wc fell a little short. I'm happy just
to have been a part of it."
Duke, which has 6,000 students
compared with Louisville's 20,000, is
a school of preppy intellectuals.
Before Monday night's game, no
Duke team bad won a national
championship in any sport.
Memben of the LoalaYl.Ue Cardillala
whoop It ap followtng 72-69 Ylctory oYer
,., .... , ....
Dake f or the NCAA buketbU.I cba.m-
plonab.lp Monday DICht in Dallu.
.sought ... by anyone
From AP dlsiMatdlH
PALM SPRINGS -Rod Carew,
the seven-time American LQcue
batting champion, bas spent the
sJ)rina at home for the fint time in
more than two .decades, waitina for a
call that hasn't come.
The 40-ycar-old Carew, t.be Aqels'
leading bitter five oflhe put six yean,
wasn't offered a new contract by the
club for 1986.
Carew, a certain future Hall of
F•mer who bu hit .JOO or better in l ~
nQjor leque seasons and bu a career
batttna avcrqe of .328, want.a to play
one more season. Bqt no team bu
cxprcstcd an interest tn him.
.. , bate to &O out this way," Carew
told The Associated Pras Monday in
a telephone interView from his home
~ at Anaheim Hills. .. If rd known last year that it was aoin& to be this way, I
probably would have l'C1ired.
"lf I didn't think I could play, tf I
thouaht I didti't ltiU have it. 1
wouldn't want to play."
Carew led the Anads in hlttina last
seuon with a .280 1veraae. But the
club decided to let tum go and open
the first base Job for rookie Wally
Joyner.
Joyner has been a sensabon during
the exhibition sea.son, bitting well
over 400.
"I aucss I expected 1t," Carew wd.
"I'm 40 rears old and it seems lite
everyone s aoang with youth.
"Im not bitter, but I am dtsap-
pomtcd. I thank I could help a club. I
know I can still hit, and could be a role
player for a team."
Coast rallies for 8-7 victory South Cout •taiJdbJI•
Or .nve CCMlll
Ral'ICTIO S.nri.vo
CYPt'aH
w L oa
• 0 -
' 1 1
Carew made $900,000 last year
with the Angels. and the fcelina that
he auabt want too much money to be
a part-time player could be keepina
other clubs from even talking to ham.
Angels Manager Gene Mauch bu
said that C.arew wasn't offered a new
contract because the team didn't want
to insult him by offering him a salary
commensurate with what his role
would be. a reserve. That ·normally
would be about $250.000 a year.
Pirates complete the first round
with a perfect conference record
Coach Mike Mayne·s Bucs answered with two an the
seventh when Mike Lujan was hit by a pitch and went to
second on Rex Peters' base hit. Rob Gibbs drove in the first
run with a single. then Paul Ellison delivered an RBI-
single.
Cerrito.
Fuller'IOI\
~
Golden West
Mt San Antonio
Comoton
s ) )
4 4 •
4 • •
3 s s
3 s s ) s 5
0 • • Oran3e Coast College's Pirates completed a perfect
first round in South Coast Conference baseball Monday.
pulling out an 8-7 victory over visiting Saddleback
College.
Dave Staton got it started an the eighth with a walk and
advanced on Mark Rasmussen's smgle a(\er Saddleback
had shoved into a 7-5 lpd. .
MaNll't'•~ Or•-Cont •. ~ 7 Mt San Antonio S, Cerrito. •
T .. Y"a c:p..,.. (1:JOI
Gold9fl Wesl at ••ncho SantlePG
~ at ComotOI\
Carew, admitting that be as
financially secure for life, said: "I
don'tunderstand (why no other team
has expressed an interest). Noo~ bas
e ven taken the opportupaty to call and
say. 'Can we work somethmg out?'··
The Pirates, down by 6-3 and 7-S counts late in the
game, rallied with two ruos in the ~vcnth and thrtt in tJie
eW'th to go ahead, then relied on Longo Garcia's rou'tt-~omg performance on the mound to stave off Saddleback
an the ninth inning.
Lujan was hit by another pitch and Breit Webber
drove in a run with a sacrifice fly. setting up Peters' two-run
double down the lef\ field line for the winning margin.
The Pirates had taJccn a 3-1 lead tn the third ilnntng
when Lujan got aboard via an error and advanced on
Webber's single. Lujan scored on Peter's double to nght,
then sacrifice fly balls by Gi.bbs and El Itson sco~d two
F'uWton et Mt San Anronlo
Cvi>rtn at Cerrito. ~· GelMt (1:JO) Or anoe Coasl II C\IV91$
Comoton •' GOIOan West Mt s.an Antonio at Saddlebeek
Ctrrlto. 11 F'utlarlon Longo, who struck out nine and walked five. was
touched for seven runs on nine hits. including a four-run
sixth.
Guillermo Lipson's three-run homer led to the four-
run burst by SaddJeback. which put the Gauchos an to a 6-3
lead.
Peters. a freshman out of Nevada. finished the day
gorng 3 for 5 with 3 RBI and scored twice
Gibbs was 2 for 4 and Joey James. who ente~d with a
.444 average, was limited to one single in four appearances
S.1VNIY'• o-c-> Ful•ton at Or.-CCMISI
Go!Oerl Wesr 11 Ml San Anlonlo
Sed<lla«>eek •' Cerrito. Ranc:hO Santleoo et Comoton
His brother-in-law and agent. Jerry
Simon. saad from h1s offioe at St. P•ul,
Minn · "I can't believe that it'~ a
matter of monc)'. ·•
"It's weird to me that nobody·s
interested an him." added Simon. "I
can't understand why he wouldn't be
(Pleue eee CA.OW fll.2)
Among Corso's 'outfit are four
Orange Coast area types . -Jeff
Ocding and Steve Schroeder out of
Corona del Mar Hiah. Newport
Harbor Hiab product Trevor
Benedict and UC lrvane's Julian
Harvey.
Ocdina is currently at Stanford and
Schroeder and Benedict arc at USC.
Harvey prepped at Lquna Hills.
Other squad members 1ncludc
Cal's Daron Draft, Kirk Evcrist and
Bennett lndart, Long. Beach State's
Matt Orunicson. USC's Robert
Lynn, Stanford's Todd Kemp.
UClA'a Alex Rousseau and Mark
Marettk.J, Navy's Tom Popp, Fresno
State's Mike Osborne, Mark Rad ville ·
of Loyola (Chacqo) and Andy
Gramley of Sheldon H'ilh in Euaenc.
Orcaon.
"'They have an e•c:ellent ball club.
and we look forward to the tnm1na
and the Clhlbttion match, which wiO
showcase two peat future national
teams"
Perez puts
Hewlttout
in seventh
Jr.ffiiddleweight
crown collected
by Santa Anan
Tomu Perez of Santa Ana
stopped Zack Hewin of San
Francisco at 18 seconds of the
seventh round to win the state
junior middleweiaht cham-
pionship Monday niaht at the
Irvine Marriott Hotel.
Perez came out in the seventh
round and threw nearly 30 un-
ana~ punches before n:ferce
Larry Rozadilla halted the bout
ICl1CduJcd for 12 rounds.
Perez.. 15.4, had Hey.ill. 154,
4own twice prior to the knockout.
He floored Hewitt an the first with
a short riaht crott and knocked
him throuah the ropes in the siitlh
with another n&bt.
Hewitt had Perei down la the
fint round. He c.Ujht Perez.
whose feet were tanalcd. wath a
jab and Pcrei fell to the floor
dcspitc not beina hurt. Perez improved has rerord' to
l 5· l Wlth l I knockouts
4. --------------------------------------..-.----------~-----Angels at Big A tonight
-"----• Padres visit Anaheim Stadium:
Candelaria sparkles on mound
MakaDJ their first appcarancx of the c'h1b1t1on
baseball season tont&ht at Anaheim Stadium. we Angels
duel San Diego 1n me fir;t of a home-and-home senc~
with the Padl"C$.
The An$Cls' Kirk McCasklll will oppose San Dtego's
Andy 'Dawkins tonight (Channel 5 at 7.30). The teams
play at Jack Murphy Stadium 1n San D1cgo Wednesday
night with Mike Witt matched agatnst the Padres' Mark
Thurmond.
The An1cls will be trying to maintain the winning
edge they displayed on Monday in their Palm Spnngs
finaJc as Brian Downing slugged has fourth homer of the
spring and three Angel pitchers combined on a 11tvcn-
h.itter an a 5-3 dec111on.
Left-hander John C.andclana, 1n a pivotal tdt for the
sore el6ow which had limned ht}Tl to six prcV1ous innings
th11 spring. went three inn1nas for the Anicls and rcurcd
nine straiJbt men after a game-opening double by San
Dieao's Bap Roberts.
Ron Romanick allowed four hltnll'd tllrce runs, two
of them unearned. tn five annmgs of worK, while Doua
Corbett p1tchc<l the ninth for the Anacls.
· The pme was the la~t of 11 'trat&ht here for tht
An&els, who arc 13-1 1 in CIC'tus League play San Dtc:RO ''
13-13
C'anddana. due to start the An Is' iec.ond pmt of
the rqular ttason. admitted he lacked strength but sa1d
the elbow did not IJVC him tr'ou~k
"I felt a httle •tiff at the end ~ut l felt ~UCT and I'm
not d15COurasc<S t \ a11:· ( an<1clan " ,.1d "My arm
~trcnath ""' thert y~t. hut a'l Iona... I fan 1~mw 'trikn
I'll be all rilh t."
The southpaw has one scheduled prc-scuon stan
rcmatnin&: H_e as to face the Lo!i Angeles Dodgers Friday
n11ht at DocJacr Stadium m the opener of the anftual
frttwar, Series.
"It II be a nace, cool evening. and I'm aomg to extend
ham with confidence," '81d Angels Manager Gene
Mauch.
Candelaria has gone lhrtt innings m each ofhaa thrtt
starts.
Romanick. who entered the game with a 1 45 earned
run ave~. also looked sharp l!I he allowed only a Stevt
Garvey s1ngJe through the fi~t four innings of has five-
anmna stmt. .
"We're ready to play," Mauch wd an 8S!CSStnJ has
team's status as ll broke camp. "A~ soon as~ get {lDJUry·
slowed rehevers) Donnie Moore and Stewart Oibo.rn
zeroes 1n, we'll be set."
* * * Dod6en5.~2
ORLANDO -Orea Brock and Terry Whitfield bit
solo home runs on oonMCUtave pitches to lead the Los
Angeles Dod&e~ to a S·2 cxhib1tion baseball victoty
Monday over the Minnct0ta Twurs.
Lcfthander Jtf'T)' Reuss patched ~ i.nrunp io earn
tus first V1~ory ofthc sprina. Butcher, wbo 11 winlal an
three uru, was the loser
Los Ancelet 1mprovod iu pre1eason record t0 tO.ll.
The Twins. who have lost ICV'f'n of their last eiabt pmea.
are I 0-1 '4
Reul!' effort was has finest of th( pnna. Previou.stJ
he suffered from a vancty of mmoT ailmeou tlw Umi~
h1' performanttt c
r
Scalpers' prices
drop 90 percent
for Final 2 tickets
hom AP 4ltpa&Oa
DALLAS -Minutes before Monday m
niaht's tipoff o( the NCAA Tournament
clwnpionsbip pme, scalpers and aacnts
who had beenaettinaas much a.sS 1,000 for
tickc1' were trying to 'unload remaini°' tickets for SI 00
apiece or less. · · • ·
Although a few scalpers still cla1med to be
• demandina 1200 a ticket, there were no 1.akers among
the shoJ.>pers outside Reunion Arena. where Duke and
Louisville faced off for the championship of college
baftetball.
One of the shoppers. Tom Tolleson of Dallas, said
he was otfcnng no more than $50 per ticket, and
expected to find the three he needed.
"I'm an Arkansas fan," Tolleson said. 'Td really
rather be watching it on TV, but these g.irls wanted to see
II."
Texas Tickets wauskingS 150 for tickets to seats 1n
the up~r level of Reu.n1on Arena, and ,agency owner
Scott Baima said seats m the lower level we re gomg for
$250 on the afternoon of the game
Before the Final Four teams arrived in Dallas. the
agency asked for -and got -S 1.000 for a book ut
tickets for good sc.ats.1!ach book contained one ticlcet to
each o f the semi-final games and the cflamp1onsh1p
game
Baima said those tickets were for some of the best
seats in the house. Most tickets. he said, sold for about
$500 to $750
He said the pncc dropped as fans o f Loui~aana
State and Kansas -teams that lost in Saturday's
semifinal games -sold their final game tickets to the
agency.
Quote of the day
"Dizz)' Dean S)'nd rome I do not want," -
Angels pitcher Ron Romanick, who made the
American Leaeue All-Star team last season. then
suffered a kind of turf-toe anJuf) at the
Metrodomc and went 2-7 the last half of the
season.
Rangerscapturelaugher,9-0-
NEW YORK '-Bnan Maclellan,
. Connon paye $20,000 fine
Connors paid a S~0.000 fine and bepn a r NEW YORK -Veteran Jimmy ~
10.week suapemtoo Mooday, t.he Men's '
International Pro(c:ssfonal Tennis Council ...
said.
The JJ~yeaMld Connors, the world'~ fourth·
ranked men's player, will not be able to ~lay in a
sanctioned tournament until June 9.
"He has paid his fine and said be would begin his
sµspcnsion," John Hewia. director of con.municat1ons
for the Pro Council, said.
Connors was assessed the fine and suspension by
the MIPTC af\cr refusina to continue P,lay durina his
semifinal match apinst Ivan Lend! of Ciechoslovakia
in the Lipton International Players Championships at
f!oca Raton, Fla., Feb. 21. The dispute began over a hne
call on a ball Connon thought was out.
He was fined $5,000 at the time by Ken Farrar, the
chief M IPTC supervisor, and it was 1.aken' from his
earnings of $28, J SO. The additional $20.000 fine and
I ().w~k suspension were levied following an mvestiga-
taon of Lhe incident by M. MarshaJI Happer Ill,
administra'tor of the MJPTC.
ConnQ[s lost a semifinal match Saturday to
eventual champion Boris Becker of West Germany in
the Volvo-Chicago Tennis tournament. He had
planned to 1.ake a bruk from the tour and return in time
for the French Open, the only Grand Slam tournament
he has not won.
Final Four f!:'ture: big arenas
DALLAS -The noise from 16,000 m
excited fans in Reunion Arena was so loud
in the final minute of the Duke-Kansas
NC AA tournament semifinal game that
referee Paul Galvan 'needed a f~orn to be heard.
As 1t' was, his whistle on a cntical charging call was
almost drowned out by the din.
"That's the kind of crowd that makes college
basketball what it is," Louisville's Denny Crum said.
Crum 1s an advocate of playing the tournament in
small arenas an the debate against an NCAA movement
toward holding The Final Four in arenas with at least
30.000 seats. '
"I prefer a Final Four atmosphere in a ~aller
arena I 0 to I overa btg place ," Crum said. ··1 think a big
place detracts from the basketball. But I know why they
want to move to the bi$8er arenas."
The NCAA Division I Tournament Committee
has decided not to award the 1991 Final Four to an
arena with fewer than 30.000 scats.
It will go to either Indianapolis (the Hoosier,
Dome) or Minneapolis (the Metrodome) at a July
meeting.
The lineup for the next four years as: the New
Orleans' Superdome (61.612) next year. Kansas City's
small Kemper Are.na ( 17,0QO) an 1988; Seattle's
Kingdome (40.192) in 1989, and Denver's cozy
... "'.
Perna Elllaon (43). the game'• M09t Valuable Player, dlaha
off to an open teammate in Loul•ville'• run for the title. ·
LoulsVlll~:
TumatiOut
by guards
.big key
DALLAS. (AP) -Louisville's Jeff
Hall and Mill Wqner were cauabt
With theirauatdsdown in the first half
of Monday niaht's NCAA basketball
championship pme.
The two Cardinal backoourt ~y
ers, accordiOJ to Hall, looked •rat
bad in ·the first half, and we were
dcfennined to do somethina about it
in the second half."
Duke's Johnny Dawkins and
Tommy AmakCT combined for 21
points and si,x steals in the first half
while forcina Louisville into 14
turnovers, six by Wasner and Hall.
Jn the second half, Hall and
Wagner each were charsed with only
one turnover, and a box-and-one
defense-featuring Hall against
Dawk.ins limited the Duke All-
America to just two points over the
final 15:52 of play.·
The turnabout helped Louisville
defeat Duke 72-69 for its second
NCAll.basketba.11 title in six years.
r. "They arc a ~t duo," Hall said of
Dawkins and ~-''We knew it
was up to us to do something in the
second half if we-were goina to win
this pmc.
"We knew that the scoring was
being ta.ken care of (freshman center
Pervis Ellison ~~ 25 points) and
that our job was to cut down on the
tumoven and play defense."
The 6-foot-4 Hall, who had a 2-inch
height advantage over Dawkins, said
Lowsville Coach Denny Crum in-
formed him at halftime that he would
use the spec;rat defense against
DawkJns.
"He said. 'Don't let him get the
ball.' Just because he didn't score in
the last 15 minut~'t mean I
stopped him along. though," Hall
said. "He got away from me a couple
times, but other people were there to
pick him up for me.'
~James Patrick and Kell y Miller eac h scored
two goals as the New York Rangers
whipped the New Jc~y De\tls 9-0
Monday night and sohd1fied their hold on the fourth
and final playoff spot in the N HL's Patnck Division
The Rangers' victory gave them a thr1te-potnt lead
over the idle Pittsburgh Penguins as tht" season headed
into its final week. New York has three games left and
Pittsburgh four
Mc Nichols Arena (I 7 .002) in 1990.
Redskins' Grimm arrested B dd • k ; k .... I · ~1~~:£~~i~ g::~i:~"v'?Z~~g~j tel 0 1 c er spar es
The RanJers bombarded Devtlo; rookal' goahc Sam
St. Laurent with 16 shot<; 1n the first penod to take a 3-0
lead. with M1llt"r and Macl ellan '>Coring a goal apiece
from an close
Lazers dealt 8-3 setback
ST. LOU IS -Defender Greg '9
Makowski scored three times and had two
assists, leading the St. Louis Steamers to an
8-3 tnumph Monday night over the Los
Angeles Lazers ma penalty-strewn M ISL contest.
Los Angeles set league records by abc;orbmg 12
penalties for JO penalty minutes St Louis c.apitahzed
on the infractions to ~ore an M ISL-record '><-''en
power-play goals. including five dunng the closing
~nod .
Lazers ( oach Peter Wall was ejected for "v1olen1
behavior" at 11 .28 of the founh quaner fo llowing
earlier ejections the same pc nod of Los Angeles forward
Withe Molano. Lazers defender Cle Koo1mal'\ and
Steamers forward John Nebo Bandovach .
Mahaffey goes over $2 million
PONTE VEDRA. Fla. -John
Mahaffe)' 1s the year''i leading mo ne)
winner on the PGA Tour
I fe's JUSt become the 13th player to go
past S2 millio n in career earnings
He achieved a big goal Sunday. rall)'tng to win the
presug.ious Tournament Players C hampion sh 1 p, gi v 1 ng
him a 10-year e:\empt1on. "which sets me up until rm
4 7 years old and then I can JUSt sneak around until I go
on the seniors tour ... he said
charged with driving while under the
influence.
The 26-year-old Gnmm was arrested by Virginia
State Police on Route 66 an Fairfax County at 2;10 a.m.
March 13. according to General District Court records.
Grimm was charged af\er taking a brcathalyzer
test. records showed. He was released on $500 bond.
CdM's Briggs loses ln finale
BRADENTON, Fla. -Corona dcl ~
Mar Hagh's Make Briggs fell to David
Wheaton of Minnetonka, Minn. an the
championthip match of the boys' 18-year-
old division of the McDonakl's Junior Tennis
Challenge here Sunday.
Bnggs, a Newport Beach resident. was beaten. 6-4,
3-6. 6-4 by Wheaton. Briggs is rated fourth in the nation
while Wheaton is ranked 12th.
Television, radio
TELEVISION
7 JO p m -BASEBALL. San Diego .vs.
Angels. fro m Anaheim Stadium, Channel 5.
RADIO
6· JO p m -PRO BASKETBALL: (lipper-;
at Utah. KC.,IL(l 260). •
7:30 p.m. -BASEBALL: San Diego vs.
Angels. fro m Anaheim Stadium, KMPC (71 0).
7:30 p.m -PRO BASKETBALL: Seattle at
Lakero;. KLAC (570)
WEDNESDAY'S RADIO
10:30 a.m. -BASEBALL: Montreal vs
Dodgers. from Vero Beach. Fla., KABC (790).
Edison 1 OK academic run CAREW ...
~ S d • From Bl set J. IOr un ay at HB Pier playing for somebody All we're ~ looking for 1s a c:ontract that would
A IOK Run for Academic Excel-store~ and Edison H igh (962-1356).
lcnce 1<1 scheduled Sunday at the T he rnursc (If the race. wt11ch
Huntingto n Beach Pi er with a n 8 a m bcgin'i and end'i at the pier, 1s along
\Lan the bake trail and atcess road
The Academic Boosters ( lub of T-roph1cc;, medal\ and desk sets will
Edison High School a<, sponsoring the Ix given an 12 male and 12 female
race w11h proceed-; to be uo;ed an rntcgones with a tutal or 132 pn1cs
~holarsh1ps and enmhmcnt op-a"Warded. The rnurc;c will be manned
portun1tcs fo r students at Fda son. •hy race nfficaal s. with aid stations at
Pre--reg1stered fees arc $1 0 with r • the halt.wcay point and finish llne
shirt. S7 w11hou1 T -shin Fcco; on the C hairrnan of this year's I OK run 1c;
day of the race I beg.inning at 6 30) arc C hut k C1a nt
SlJ with T -<1h1rt and St I without T-Parking as available on streets and
shin. . ofT-s trecl park"1ng an state and city lots
Entry forms are available at c;pono; along Paufic Coast Highway for a fee
make both sides happy."
Carew. who said he as staying in
cond1t1on and figures he could be
back in h1tt1ng form in about a week.
said that afa call doesn't come. he'll be
all nght.
'Tll be content," he said "I'm
"'-nllng a book on hitting. ~orkang on
opening a batting school I keep
myself busy.
"lfl do n't play. I'll take the time to
really enJOY my family, ml children."
said Carew. the father o three girls
and a COilCh for their softball teams.
"It's great io get to see them play,
and to be able to go to their act1v1t1cs
at school. things I haven"t been able to
do an the past."
Carew, sounding disappointed.
said he hasn't heard from manyofh1s
former teammate-;, except for Rcgg.ae
Jackson.
''He's the only one that's kept close
contact." Carew said of the Angels'
slugger "It gjves me a good feeling
that he's concerned ..
Orioles get second co-mplete
game performance in a row
From AP dlspatcbea
Now, maybe the Baltimore Onoles pitchers can do
this well during the regular season.
Mike Boddicker became the second Baltimore
patcher to throw a complete pmc an two days. tossing a
five-hitter Monday as the On oles shut out the New York
Yankees 7-0 in exhibition baseball.
Boddicker's effort, which included three walks and
three strikeouts. came after Scott McGregor beat Atlanta
6-3 on Sunday.
"I spotted the ball pretty well today and threw a
pretty good curve ball," Boddicker said. "I didn't work
behind in the count too often. That 1s important. M)'
fastball is the best one I've had in two years."
Last season was a disaster for the Baltimore pitchers.
who set dubious team records for highest sl.aff earned run
average, most htts allowed and most home runs given up
During the exhibition season, the Onoles' pitchers
have recorded three shutouts.
"A good spring is a confidence builder. Last year.
balls ofTthe end of the bat would sneak through the infield
or ~loop over so meone's head," Bod.dicker said. "But
now the ground balls are going at people."
"Boddicker LS starting to look like his old ~If," said
Baltimore pitching coach Ken Rowe.
The Onoks scored five tames an the fourth inning in
roughing up Yankees starter Joe Naekro, who allowed six
runs on nine h11s over four innings.
Cal Ripken, who drove in two runs. and John Shelby
had three hits apiece for Baltimore
Tl1en t, Royals l: Detroit's Dan Petry continued his
strong spring, going six innin~ and giving up one
unearned run on five hits. Petry 1s 3-0 with a 1.29 earned
run average
The Tigers scored three runs in the second off Kansas
City starter Danny Jackson on singles by Larry Herndon.
Alan· Trammell and Chet Lemon. and a wild pitch.
Blot Jays 7, Mtt1 I: Kelly Gruber led off the bottom
of the I 0th inning by hitting a 3-2 patch for a home run
that gave Toronto its victory over New York. Gruber's
second homer of the spring came off Doug Sisk.
The Mets scored in the top of the ninth to make 1t 6-5
on Kevan Mitchell's solo homer off Blue Jays reliever
Tom Henke. Cesar Cedeno's sacrifice fly tied 11 for
Toronto in the bottom of the ninth.
Rtd Sox 8, Expos t : Tony Armas doubled twice and
singled. an<f .Bill Buckner also had three hits to lead
Boston past Montreal. Boston starter Roger Clemens. hit
hard in his first four outings. went six innings and gave up
two earned runs on six htts.
Rtd1 I, Cardlnab Z: Winning pitcher Joe Price hit a
two-run single. leadin~ Cincinnati over St. Louis. Price
pitched three shutout innings and gave up one hit.
Max Venable homered for the Reds and Ouie Sm 1th
hit a two-run homer for the CardinaJs.
St. Louis beat Cincinnati 2-1 in a 'B' game as Andy
Van Slyke homered. ·
Pirates Z, A1tro10: Larry Mc Williams pitched a two-
hittcrover seven innings and combined with Jim Winn to
shut out Houston. Winn and Std Bream each had RBI
sinites for Pittsburgh. ,
C.bt 5, Brewers 3: Shawon Dunston hit a three-run,
inside-the-park homer and Leon Durham added a two-
run shot to lead Ch1caao over Mtlwauk~. Dennis
Eckersley. 1-3 this spring. became the first Cubs pitcher to
., ...........
Mlnneeota cateher Tl.m Lauclner loou for
the ball aa Dodaer Ala Trenno ecore. in
Monday'• uhlbfdon game.
work seven innings. giving up two runs on live hats.
Rao1era II, Br.vet l : Rookie Bobby Witt pitched five
mnang.s and gave up four singles and an unearned run for
Texas. while Darrell Porter led a 15-hat attack with his
third spnog homer
Greg Hams added two perfect innings and Ricky
Wright and Scott Pattcrwn each added a hitless inning for
the Rangers.
Braves 3, Expos Z: Terry Forster pllched two
scoreless innings and knocked an the wannmg run with a
sin&le in the 10th inning as a ~pltt ~uad of Braves
de(cated Montreal.
Atlanta scored tts o ther two runs on home~ by Dale
Murphy and Billy Sample.
. . PlalUJea ~t Wlaltt Sox l: Fred Toliver pitched six
inning(. allowt~tf<! l);>n four.. hits as Philadelphia
stopped chi~o
The Philltes scored twice 1n the first inning on two-
out singles by Juan Samuel, Make Schmidt, Glenn Wilson
and Von Rayes. .
ladlau t, A's f : Cleveland'~ Don Schulze blanked
Oakland f~r five 1nn1na.s and Mel Hall hit a two-nin
double to highlight the Indians' three-run ~vcnth inning..
Jets use Kings to catapult into pla.yoffs
Winnipeg rips Kings, 5-2: ( anucks would have to lose all of their four tn
order for Los Angeles to make the playoffs.
pme in t~e t.~ird period:· Los An&tlcs Coach Pat
Quinn said. Carlyle and (Mano) Marois played
very stron1 for them "
....
LA ' s playoff hopes fade
INGLEWOOD (AP) -Ray Neufeld scored
three aoaJs and dcfenscman Randy Carlyle added
two Monday rua.ht. leadmg Winn1pq to a 5-2
Vlctory over the Los A'ngeles K.mss that clinched
an NHL playofTberth for the Jets.
With the victory. W1nnipeahas .S8 points with
two aames rema1n1nJ. auunna thcJetaofat kast 1
Courth·plaoe finish 1n the Smythe 01Vls1on. Lo,
Anaeles. meanwhile, had its playoff chan~s
severely crippled
The Kinas have S3 po1nl5 and trail the fourth·
place Vancouver Canuclcs by fo\lr. The K1np
would hive to wm their la!Jt two pmn and the
Neufeld scored his second aoaJ of the aame
and what proved to be the pme·wrnner with 9;S.S
to play an the second period, puumg Winnipea up
~I I
The K1oss JOt a t1p-1n aoal ftom Dave "Tiatr ..
Walhams J'h minutes later to cut the deficit to 1.2,
but Carlyle added his ICCOnd of the pme with $0
$<'.'COnds lcf\ in the period to put the Jets up by t"fo.
Neufeld completed his hat trick wtth ~
empty·nct 1oal ~th 17 IC'Conds remam1na
round out the'°°"°*'
After Neufeld and Carlyle bad Jiven the Jets a
2..0 advant.,e in the first. Berllic Nicholls tror¢<1
for Los ~let to cu1 the marain to a ,oal.
The Kinas tried to put on tome pressure 1n tht
third period, but were thwarted by the Jets.
"Thtywcre veryd1~1plined 1n t.he1rdeftnsavc
. "We wanted the chctkan& P.me ton1aJtt.," W1~n1pca Coach John Ferauson said. "In the third
penod, w~ wanted to shut down the pauina lanes
and not asve up any two-on-on~."
Quinn said the first two powccpla)'• of the
pme ttl the tone for the rest of the cven1na.
"Our special teams have been a problem for us
all year," Quinn said. "We act the first power*olaY
OPJ>Onunaty •nd do nothina. They act one and put
1t in naht ofTthe bet."
0\unn had little optJm1sm for the K.ii\p'
playoft' C~n<lCI
"We have to hop> now," h~ 111d "We have to
wtn t'fllo ind hope Vancouver stubs &heir t~ .. he
\aid ... We're a pmbU"f club. I've aald th~t aJI
•Iona.. ind pmble" don twin very often."
'
i.Oatnme•e Denny Cnun (left) and Dake'e lllke Knysewakl did tbelr ehare of yeJHn• from tile eldelln• wblle Job.nny Dawklm and llllt w.,..er foqbt it oat OD coart.
LOUISVILLE WINS NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP WITH 72-69 VICTORY OVER BLUE DEVILS •••
From Bl ""
whi<:b pvc the CardmaJs the lead tor the first time stnce
they were up 4--0. Dawkins then hit three straight jump
shots, one leading to a three-point play, for a 48"-42 lead.
Alaric made two free throws to match Duke's biggest lead
of the second baJf, 54-48.
Wagner and Thompson each picked up their founh
personal fouls during that period, and the Ca{dinals'
chances seemed dim. '· ~ .... , . .
But EUison paced-.tbe Louisville comeback with the
bdp of Wagner, a 6-5 sen1.0{ who had only two points in
the first half. -
Wlfl'.'CT'S three-point play cut Lowlvillc's defic1t to
61-60 with 5:33 rcmairuna. Henderson then hit two free
throws as EUison picked up bis fourth persodal, but
6Uison came back and bit from inside to cut the deficit
back to one.
Wagner eut Louisvdle ahead when be shook loose
for a layup With 3:22 left. Duke regained t~ lead when
Dawkins made a pair of foul shots but Thompson tllen
pulled the Cardl1lals away for good. ·
Thompson, a 6-7 senior, added 13 points for
LouisviUc, while Crook bad I 0. Wagner. who entered the
pmewith a career total of l ,825 points, scored only mne,
almost six points under bis average.
Dawkins. the leading scorer in Duke's history,
finished with 24 points. Henderson added 14. Alarie l 2
and Amaker 11 .
Louisville. the Metro Conference champion, has
been in four of the last seven Final Fours. It finished
strongly after playing the tou&hcst non-<:<>nfercncc
schedule in the country, winning fl of iu la.st 22 games.
the championship game. They fell "to UCLA ni i 964 aDd
Kentucky in 1978.
Duke jumped to a 15-8 lead with Dawkins hitting 11
points on long and short jumpers. The quickness of
Dawkins and the 6-foot Amaker forced 14 Louisville
turnovers in the fint half.
Amakers10urftce throws-gave Duke iu bigest lead
of the first half, 31-23. LouisviUc's backcourt ofRaU a,nd
Wagner was not a factor, but the Ca.rdinals' rebounding
kept them in the prne. EUison scored three field 1oals, the
last after bis steal, to tic it at 33.
Dawkin.I' jumper with three seconds left pve the
Blue Devils their halftime cushion.
Louisville, the No. 2 seed in the West, knocked off
Drexel, Bradley, North Carolina, Auburn and Louisiana
State to reach the final.
Duke, with a nucleus of four senion who bad been
11-1 7 in their freshman year, took over the No. I ranlcina
after North Carolina's 13-week bold on the top spot was
ended. The Blue Devils only losses were at Nonh
Carolina on Jan. 18 and at Georgia Tech in their next r
game-three days later.
They were top seeded in the East and beat
Mississippi VaUcy St.ate, Old Dominion, DcPaul. Navy
and No. 2 Kansas.
Duke, which didn't shoot particularly well from the
field throu&hout the tournament, made up for it in
previous pmes with rebounding and defense. The Devils
shot on,ly 40 percent from the field, while LouisvilJe hit 58
Dulce has never won an NCAA title. This was ' the
Blue Devils' fifth trip to the Final Four and third loss an
percent. . d . . . But Duke's rebounding ommancc was m1ssmg.
Louisville bad a 39-27 advant.aae on the' boards. Loa1nille playen celebrate followt.Dt 72-69 ftctory OTer Dake for l'fCAA cbampiOD9htp.
Broken collar bone no big deal foTBiggs
ter whipping drugs.
injury is no obstacle
By ED SCHUYLER JR. '* ........
Tyrell Biggs, 10 parn from a broken collar
bone, remembers thinking. "I've got to get the
job done."
So usmg his left band almost exclusively
for ci&ht full rounds because of a broken nght
collarbone, the 1984 Olympic super heavy-
wei&ht champion scored a I 0-round unam-
mous decmon over power-punchmg Jeff Sims
recently.
Tyrell Biggs appears on the verge of
bccomina a hot boxing property.
Bigs is blessed with true bcaywe1ght size
-he stands 6-5. and for the Sims fi&ht weighted
212 pounds. He also might possess the best left
Jib in the division.
But despite a brilliant amateur career m
which he also won a world amateur title, there
were more than a few doubters that be could
sucoccd as a pro.
His amateur style was to move and jab and
only to mix it up when necessary. But while his
style was hi&)lly succcuful. he found himself a
target of boos.
Most boxing fans want to sec a man of
Biags' size slug an opponent into submission or
get beat trying to do it. A m-.jority of fans at
amateur tournaments fail to understand that
the rules reward the number of punches landed
cleanly and do not reward power. A left hook
that puts a man down counts no more than a let\
jab that lands.
"Mentally and physically I'm different
than I was as an amateur," the 25-ycar-old Biags
said. .
And his style 'Is dtlfcrcnt. too.
B1gs. who has a 9-0 pro record with six
knockouts, now ~ts more flat-footed, throws
ANALYSIS
bis nght hand with more authonty and goes to
the body.
Mentally. Bigs has exhibited the kind of
toughness a top pro needs.
He showed in bis e~t-round decmon
over veteran James "Quick' Tillis that he could
take a punch and fight out ofti&ht situations.
He demonstrated a will to win apanst
Sims, who scored 21 of bis 23 victoncs by
knockout.
"Any pro would have gone through Wlth
this," Biggs recalled thinkina late m the fight.
He also admill that when that when he
came off the ropes after beina llit by the punch
that caused the 10jury, be felt momentary pamc
But trainer Georac Benton and manager
Lou Duva calmed hif!l.
"I have conftdenee in what they're telling
me, .. Big.s said. "George said go out there and
use yourlcf\. You can beat him with one hand."
.. After the third round I knew I could win, ..
liaas said.
Biggs jabbed and moved. Bigp stood and
Jibbed and booked off the jab. Heiabbed to the
body. He kept Sims offbalanoe, never aUoWlng
himself to set trapped on the ropes, although he
sometimes stood and fbujllt off the ropes.
"I've made the trans1uon from amateur to
pro,". Bigss said .
The 10Jury is expected to keep Bigs from
worlcing out for three to four weeks and from
sparring for six weeks. But he wasn't scheduled
to fi&ht apin until June or July anyway.
After being examined m New York, 'Biggs
was stopped on the street by people who asked
for hjs autograph and congratulated hm on his
gutty performance.
It was a emotional bt&h for Biggs, who 1s
feehnggood about his boxing future and his hfc.
"Out of the ring my life 1s strai&)lt," said
Biag.s, who has undergone drug rcllab1ht.at1on
After beating a drug problem. what's a
broken collarbone.
Judge rules
in favor
of Clippers
SAN DIEGO (AP) -A federal
JUd&c ruled Monday in favor of the
Los Angeles 0 1ppers 1n a $25 milboo
lawsuit filed by the National Basket·
ball Association contestin1 the
franchise's 1984 move from San
Diego to Los Angeles.
"We arc vindicated," O appen
President Alan Rothenberg said in a
statement issued by the team. "When
we moved from San Diqo to Los
Anaeles in May of 1984, the league
had no lepl basjs whatsoever to
mtcrferc. Today. the federal court has aareed with that pos1t1on.··
The NBA filed the sun during the
summer of 1984. contending the
franchise's relocation Violated the
league's constitution. The suit soupt
S2S million in damages from the
---------------------------------------------------. Clippers and the t:.o~ Anaeles Col-
USFLQB
talking.
with Dallas
DALLAS (AP) -Rqgie Collier,
quarterback of the Orlando Ren-eaadcs of the USFL, met with Dallas
Cowboys offiaals at their trainina
facility .last week, offensive passina
coordinator Paul Hackett confirm~.
The Cowboys first requested and
were annted permission from the
· RcncPdes to speak with Collier.
Hackett uid Monday.
Hackett said he and Collier, who
.• wu drifted by the Cowboys in the
.Uth round in 1983 but opted for the
USFL, had lunch together and Collier
toured the facili~.
Collier could fiaurc prominently in
the Cowboys' _plans should backup
quarterbeck Oary Hoaeboom be trlded. u he bu requested.
"Before I could talk with him, we
requested pemussion from Orlando
and they pnki(jjt," Hackett said. "I
can't call (any USFL players) unless I eet it cleared by the team."
Hackett said be didn't talk about a
contract with Collier. "There arc so many th1~ in-
volved with the USFL," including an
anb·t:ru.St swt ap1nst the NFL that is
cJtpccted to 10 to tnal in April or May.
Kackett noted. "We JUSt wanted to go
by the book." Coller said he also mer Wlth
Cowboys head coact. Tom Landry
and tearri prnidcnt Tex Schramm
"The main purpotc of my visit wu
to meet Paul, and I was very
lmprcaod by him. We tee eye to eyr
on a lot or tlunp," Col her 'l'u.l
Cyclist always felt indestructible
Now pinned in a wheelchatr.:-
little things can mean a lot
McClaldy New1 Service
FORESTHILL -Life's routines often were
met with ~by D,nny "M&Joo" Chandler. Now
more often, .they arc met with frustration, then
impatience.
Chandler the motocross ridtt never worried
about simple thinp that hinder a wheelchair.
Thete was strcnath 1n arms and lep now limp u a
result ofa motorcycle accident nearly four months
a10. Now a six·1ncb curb hu become another
mountain on the road to recovery.
His only limitations uaed to be the demands of
professional ridina-But life u a quadripl~c in a
wheelchair has limitations that test the spint.
There's the inconvenience of rough carpet.
Linoleum is smoother and there's never enou&h
space to maneuver around furniture.
"I never realized the house wu so small,"
Chandler sa)'1.
His wife. Tracy, reminds him that an electric
wheelchair, a vehicle promisina quicker mobility,
1s on the way.
His fmpaticncc shows. "Can't wait," he says.
In -his compe1itivc days, Chandler CQuld
outmaneuver and soar biaher than JUSt about
anyonf who mounted a two-whttlcr.
Many times, Chandler's moves acarcd \he wits
out of wftncs!ICS. · There was the time at a Sean Point Raceway
national motocross race a few yean aao The crowd
noticed ChandJer was tak.\!'J.Jlis motorcycle over a
Jump at a beiS)\t tu beyond 'the rest of the field
"The othen were p:tuna maybe five. six feet
up on their jumps," recalls WtlUam Spencer. the
pubhc 1ddm1 annowncer
"Not Chandler 'we ukcd t1\c crowd if they
wanted to sec Chandler go even higher, and the
rcspof\$C was, 'Yeah, yeah.' So I told them to yell
for it."
The crowd reacted. Chandler sot the message.
On the flaa lap, Chandler wllippcd his m otorcycle
off the uphill jump and sailed it -not over the
nc:d bill, but over the public address man 10 the
tower.
Chandler narrowly missed a comer of the
booth, but came down on safe dirt, opposite the
course he was on, Landin& upri&)ltt he nonchalant-
ly headed his motorcycle for the pit area.
"ThcJump had to be 30 feeti" Spencer says. "It
was the moit spectacUlar thing 'vc ever 1cen."
"He came so cl0te, we could almost read the
serial number on the bottom of bis bike," says
Bruce Aandcn, a fellow announcer.
That wu Danny Chandler -fun-loving.
fcarleaa and crowd-pleasin,.
There was always excitement when Chandler
raced. whether it was at Prairie City OfT-H1&)lway
Vehicle Parlt, the site of the annual Hangtown
Motocrou Clusic, Carlsbed or on the European
circuiL
"And. hm: comes \Maaoo: .. the announcer
would say. AU eyes wo~ld tum to the red-haired
nder from Forathill. To win., be would take nsb.
Many times, the risk would cost him a htJher
finish.
ln 1982, Chandler won the U.S. SOOcc G rand
Prix. the ABC-TV sponsored Su~kers and the
Trophtt des Nations •nd MotoctOtl des Nations
in Europe. He was at the crc$t of his career.
"I was al~ys the one for the other nders to
worry about.," Cha_ndJer uys ... , was like 1 anake:
no one knew when l wu aoma to bite. I was never
counted out "
Too many times, Chandler would take a nsk
and pan somehoc:)y. only 10 make a mistake and
lose his place
"Most IUYI would ~ttlc for fourth or fifth
place. but I'd always try to get one more guy," he
says.
For 1hat, the crowds loved him.
Then at aae 26. as his career waned, the worst
happened. R1dmJ an a Pans supercross last Dec 4,
Chandler took a )Ump at the fimsh hnc hke he had
hundreds of umes before Only this time,
something went wrong.
His motorcvcle spilled
Chandler had~t.aken hundreds of spills over
the years, but had al~ays walked away The siaht of
him ahahngoffdust was not uncommon at places
hke Hanatown.
At Paris, that wasn't the c~sc. Chandler lay
motionless on the v<>und for ~veral minutes
Then came the qoruzma truth. He had suffered a
broken neck.
''He wasn't pvcn much of a chance to make 1t
tbrouah the first n1aht.." says Mike Colhns.
Chandler's business manqcr. "His· rcsp1rato?,
system had •one away . , . thtnp dtdn 't look good. ·
He survived three suraenes, a return tnp
home and 2"'1 months of rcbabthtat.Jon at the Santa
C1ara Valley Medical Center, only to faoe anothtr
pros~t -life as a quadriplqjc,
'I always tbouaftt I was mdcstroctible," he
says.
"Just one little wreck and 1t'1 all gone.
evcryth i na."
The Palaia Omni Sports de Bcroey 1n Pans wu
filkd Wlth 40,000 spectators the n1aJ\t of Dec. 4,
1985. .
Lookma back. Chandler ~lls he felt aood
and~• ready to race that nt&ht But he didn't like
the t.rtck. a small indoor circuit he competed to the
Cow Palace in Daly C'1tv.
Stadium racln& 1, popular in Europe, JUSl hkc
Amcnca. btcautt 1t provide& spectators with
oomfon.ablc 11e1t1~ and a better VICW of the track.
Chandler always bleed tht o uldoon. too. wider
tum allowed for h11 agrcutYC style
iseum Commission
The Clippers and tbc Coliseum
Commission filed a countersuit in
March 1985 seckmg SI 00 million in
dam8'CS· cl8lm1ng the league bad
conspired to terminate the franchi1e.
US. Distnct Court Jud&t Leland
Nielsen on Monday granted a motion
for summary Judgment filed by the
Coliseum Comm1ss1on and the ~
pers to d1sm1ss the N BA's suit.
An NBA official S&Jd Nielsen's
dec1s1on would drag out the final
dec1s1on m the case bcc.ausc the
league will appeal
Clippers
add Jones
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The Los
Anaelcs Chppcn made two rotter
moves Monday, staruna free qcnt
center Ozell Jones to a contract for th~
balance of the 1985-86 NBA lea90fl
and plaetn& veteran swinaman Juruor
Bn<Sacm•n on thc1r 10JU-red hst.
Jones. 25, had ~n pla)'lna with
Mu-la\ Napoli Basket of the ltahan
ProfCSSJonal Lcque where he aver· aacd 13.2 pomu and 8.2 rebounds in
2~ pmn He WIS released by the San
Antonio Spun last October, jus1
before the Stan of thc~ton
In 67 pnies with the pun lut
1C110n, the 6-11 , 235-paund Joea
avtrqed 3 7 points and 3.6 rebou:
perpmc.
Jones v.-a the pun' fourth rowad
draft cbotet ID l 9U aftt-r play\Q& •t •
Cal tatc Fullerton for two yean:lte
bcpn bas collqiate caner at Widd\a
State but ~ to Fulla'\On
after b · sophomore -..iv.u.
• '
.
\.•
•,
* ()range Cou1 DAILY PILOT/ TU.Say, April 1, 1888
-(__ > .
.-A
)j!IHHRN CONPD8NCI hdkDMllM
• L
a•l.all'" 57 11 Porl .. nd ,. ,.
l'tloenlx 1' " SMllle 2' 41
~ 2'I 47
Golden Ste It ti 41
MldWtlf OM..-
Ga
•· Houiron 4' 29 .613
ll·D911-44 JI .517 2
x·01!1ei 40 34 S.1 S'lt
ic·Utell )t 37 Sil 7'"'
SKremento l3 '2 .640 ll
San Anlonlo.. ll '4 47' 14
IAJTilltPC CON,.•l"<:I Aa.llfk DM.-
1·80SIOll
x • Phli.delPflMI
x·NewJerMY
11·WlllllnGton
New York
61 13
49 11
l6 40
3S 40 2'2 Sl
CeMrlll DMMlft
ll·MllweUkff 52 23
a AIMlnll 4' )0
• ·O.iroll 42 JJ
C11vtt1nc:1 21 46
c111ce90 26 49
1no1ene 2S so
•-<llf'Cf*I Nvoff °"111
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474 26
467 16"1 m Jtv.
693
60S 6V>
S60 10
371 nv,
347 26
333 77
.,,·cllnclle<I dlvl.io.> llllt et\d Pl<tvOfl l)ff'tn
t·dlnchtd conference lllle
Merldey'l Sc-
NO Olmet \cnt<IUltd
Tlllltllt'l Ge!Ml
Seellte e1 L.akeo Cllo.en el Utell
Wul'llnoton at Ati.n1e
Solton 11 Cltvetencs
lndlene el O.troll
New Jenev el Ntw Vor~
Chlc•90 al MllweukH
PN>enl• al Oellu
Golden Slele el HOU•lon
S.cre,,,..,lo al Sen .Anlon10
Denver al Porllend
Wednesdev'• aeme•
U11!1 al Cllppen
Oe1rolt al 8 o&ion
Ntw YOf'k et f>nlleoe1on1e
GOlde!I Stett at P1>oenl•
Porllar>d et SealHe
NBA playoff r•ce'
Tne pteyott race •n •t>f NBA t •O"'
teem' lrom tee!\ conlerence Qyal1lv tor tf\f
oleYott\I
Wl;STUtH CONFERENCE
I Lahn S7 11
x·HOUlfOf' ~ N
>.·Denver 4' l I
x·DeNas 40 ~
•·Ulen 3' 37
PorlMlrio l6 39
Secrememo ll 42
Sen An1on10 lJ 411
Phoenhr 19 411
Seetlle 29 4/ ~ 21 '1 Jn Golden Slele 21 41 l6I
• clloclle<I otnofl berll'I
; cllncl'le<I dlv11'°'1 llllt end ot.yofl tienn •
1 cllncneo conierence rifle
REMAIHING GAMES
PORTLAND 11) -Homt 131 .Aorll I.
Dtnver. 9 L A L•"'•" 10. CllOC>el'\ Awa .. <~> Aor11 2. el S.etrlt. 5. 81 Utall, II. et
Goldtn Slete, 13. et San Anlonlo
SACRAMENTO (7) -Homt (4) APrll
S. Phoenl• 1, Delill, 10, Ulel'I, 12, Lektfi
Away (l l .Aorn I el Sen Antonio, J al
L••trs, 9 et Utan
SAN ANTONIO IS) -Home (41 AP•ll 1
Sacramento. 3 Hou\lon, 6. Denver 13
Porllend .Aw()I( Ill AOf'h 9 "t Phoen1a
PHOENIX (9) -Home (5) Aorll 2,
Golden S111e, 4 HO<Jllon, 7 Dtnvtr, 9, Sen
Anronlo, 13 C11ooer' Awev 141 AorH 1. al
Oellu ; S, et Secr11~10 10 e l Denver, 12.
el Hou11on
SEATTLE (61 -H-<ll APfll 2.
Porlltnd. 10 Oe1111,. 12. Goio.tl Srett Awe,.
Il l APfll 1 er L•~ers 5 •' Danas, 9, "' HO<Jslon
GOLDEN ST A TE 161 -Homt 121 Aorol
I Oellas II Potllenc:I Awev (4) Ao<ll I et
HOIS"on, 2 el Pfloenl• S. e l Clioe>el'\. 11 et SHlllt
CLIPPERS 171 -Home (41 Aorll 2
u1an s. Golden Stele 9 Denver 12. Dalla•
Awev Il l Aor11 1 a• Utan. 10 at Por1i.nc:1
13 al Photnl,
EASTEAN CONFEAENCE
1·8o"on 61 11 114
•·Mllwau~ff S2 23 693
•·Plilledtlon1 0 49 11 1>45
x .Allente 44 JO 60S
x Delro11 O lJ 560
•·Ntw Jer\tv 30 40 414
• ·Wu111n111on lS 40 441
C 1avt1end 28 ~ 379
Cl'llCBllO 26 49 347
1no1a na 25 !>O lJ3
Ntw Yor~ n >J ?93
lltl!MAINING GAMES
CLEVELAND '91 Home IJ) .Aorll I
Boston 10 MllweukH 13 Cl'llCOtlO .Awev
15) Apr11 l a • Mllweu-H. 4 al P111111oe1-
111tle 6 ol wun1no1on. 1 11t Oeiroll, 11, el
BO\IOn •
CHICAGO 111 Homf l)J .AOfll S.
Allante 7 M11we1.1~ee. 11 Wunono•on
Awev 141 Aor11 l "' M1lw4u•ee l at Indiana 9 et Allanlo I) ot Clfveleno
INDIANA 71 -HOmf '1 AO'<I 3
Ct11ca110. S. Ot1ro11 Aw av 1 SI ll.or11 a•
Dtiron 1 e t New Yoro. 9 •' Wo,n•nQton
11 e t Pnllao.1on11 12 er Alle n!•
NEW YORI( .,, -Hom .. ) Ao• '
Ne.., JtrHv 1 1nolena II Oe tro•t Awev
' Aor 7 01 Ptl ao.4ot>1e ' at 8ostnn 5 at Ntw Jt rsey 12 al M1twau•et
NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP
Loulsvm. 72, Dulle 69
l at Ddul
LOUISVILLE -Cr~ ~ 9 O l 0
T..,omoso,, 6 I l 3 IJ. En'°" 10 1' 5 6 7S
-Hegner 2·6 S·S 9 Hell 7·4 O O 4 Mr.Swo•"
l 4 1 7 5 Wells O I O·O O 1(1m1>•01 1 11 t> Toteis ?9 SO 14 71 11
DUKE -Htnatr\Oft ~ IS ' 4 14 Al&"" • 11 4•4 12 Siles i J 0·0 4 "'""ker l 10 ~ 6 II Dawkin\ 10·19 4 4 24, F~rr1 I 171
' Wllllem\ 0 I 0 0 0 ~ '"0 0 I 0 I 0 To••·•
15·62 19 71 69
~etfllm-Du~t. l1·J•
Fouled r.Juf-Hfr>Clerio" Alar p
~~001Jrldl-LOYl\vllle )9 ICroo• 171
Ou•t 71 I Alarie 61
Aut\l\-lou11vill~ 1• (rr)<)• ~I Ou;., 11
Amftkf'r 11
To1a1 tou" Lou•wll•e 10 Ci·;~e 7?
Alfenaanc., 16.•93
Hliltl ~
Al·CIF SMALL SCHOOLS
f"\lver, S<tlocll HI. Yr AV~
M 8owllv WMnt~ 6 2 Jt 19 0
M Beuer Vent Tem (fir 6 6 Sr 20 8
D Thor11ton 8tl Aor P•eo 6 1 Jr 11 I
L wnl1e Ro"mOf'd 6 2 So 718
J Facer Oakwood 6 l Sr n 0
N Strul-IT'an\, Linllt l<I (nt 6·6 Sr 16 6
J ()oeriflO Simi v a11av (nt 6· I Sr 7S S
J Jene\ Sliver V1tllv 6 I Sr 1J 7
C Hell\ Hf\.,...le Cl'tr ''en 6·6 Sr 16 9
C HIYl\8\ Wl\llntv S 10 Jr 11 S
D Golllleo Yl\tllve s 10 Sr " 4 p Jame• TemOltton 6 1 Sr 16 6
"'-ef IM y .. , M11•1 Bowley wrmnav
HtGH SCHOOL VOLLEYBALL
Suns.ff LNtue
l.N9&141 W L
EdlM>ft J 0
Fountain V1lltY 7 l
Marine 1 I
U Qvlnte 2 I
ocean View 7 7
Hut11l1111ton BffCll 1 l
Wntmln,,.,. 0 •
w.-...r•~
f'ounreln Yelin 11 (idlton
AMtlne et Wtstmlntl«
Le Qulnl1 et Hut1ll1111ton 9"<11
s.. view lAHUe
L..M9W WL
Htwoort H•rbof S O w~ldoe l 1
Corona dt4 ,.,_., l 2 L~hKh 2 1 'l:•••n<:.. ' 1 Unl..enltv 0 • c~·• ~ o • T'*V'tMltdlm W~io.t I I EtlllftCle ~1 Hat'W 11 Cotti ,.,.... L~ IHdl el Ut!lwn~v
0v ....
WL s I
• I ' )
' t • 1
I 1
0 I
Ovwal
WL
• 0
; J
) 7
J s
0 4
2 s
~ • • . . • •
lxtll•• ........
AlttWIUCA.M I.A AOUI w L ..a. O.troll
Toronto
MllWeUllM
New York
O.klano
T••H ........
Ctlkeeo
Clevtllnd
Belllmore
&otlon
MIMHOll
S..tlte
K1111u1 Cllv
" ' .640 13 I ..61'
11.. t Bl
13 ' .stl 1• 10 m 12 • .s71
12 11 S2J ,, ,, .JOO
12 12 .soo
11 11 .471
10 lJ .OS 10 14 .417
; 14 ,,1 , ,, 341
NATICHtAL LIEAGU8
14
12
Allan!•
Ha•Vorti
Plltlb\Xot>
Sen FrentlKO
Clndnnell
Ptllladalol\MI
Sall oi.oo
SI.Lou!'
~ c11ic..vo
Houston
MonlrMI
10 Sil
' 571 11
12
13
II
I)
9 .S50
lO so
11 SQ
10 S2•
13 soo
10
10
10
11 476
13 43-'
16 lU
NOTE. ScMll•\QUad
\lending\, l!h do nol
• • u 341
1S l4I
count 111
~.,.,~
.,.... S, San Dleoo 3 °""'"' S. MIMe\Ole 1
B0$10n I. Montreal IH I 6
Cincinnati 6, SI LOVI\ 2
Ptllladell>l'lle S, Cn1ct90 Wllltt Sox I
Ottrolt 2, Kania' Cltv I
Allen•• (H ) 3, Monlf .. I (u t 2 ( 10
Inning\)
TtXI\ I , "'Mlole (U) I
Toronto 7, Ne~w York Mel\ 6 110 lnnl/>ll'I
Pittsburgh 2, ston O
8altlmof"e 7, w York Yenllfft O
Claveland 6, a-kltnd 4
Cnke90 C1Jbl S. Mllweul\M 3
Son Frenclico 4, Saa m• 0
Taclay'tGamet I
Sen Dle90 v' A.Mah a1 Anellelri\
Stadium tCll1nne1 S If 1'30) ,
New YO<tf feel' '" Oedl9r\ If Vero 8eocn. Flo
PtliledttPllle '" Bo11on et Wint~ tieven Fill
B1lllmof"e "' Allenla e l Wl\1 Palm
Beech. Fie
Montreat tu > vs Plll11>orllh er Brea
e<>t0<1. Fie I )0 om
Tuas tn l v\ New Yor• YtnllffS (u l
., FI 1..•IJderdele Flt
Ne ... York Ye nkeH "' K•l'IWI Clly " Forl Mv•"· Fie
MOf'lreaf IU ) vs Texu ln l •I Pom·
oa no Fill
C.r!CIOl\lll "' Toronro " Dunedin, FMI De1ro11 vs Hou,1on el Klu lmmee, Fla
Sta•llt •S Cltveleno e1 Tucion
Sen Francisco v\a MllweullM et cnen·
01.,-, Arlt
Oakleno v• GtucellO Cub\ el ,..,.._, Arlt
(n1cego Wiiiie !><>• "' Sr LOIJIS •I St
Petersburg, Fla
WedneldeY'l GelMI
Anveh el Sen 01990 11 11 m I
MontrH I (U ) "' D.-..n •• VIH'o
Btacll , Ft• (1030 aml
Monrreel <u l vs All1n1e el Wt\t Palm
Beecn. F1a
8a1Umore vs Toal 111 Pompano, Fie
Toronto vs Phlieoeionle al Cleerweler
Fie
SI Louis v' Prtlsb1Jr1111 et 8• aoenton.
Flt .
l<ensu Cltv vs (nlceoo While !><>1 <n >
al !>erelOle, Fie
Cincinna ti vs Hou"on el K1u 1mmee,
Fie
Sen F reoc1sco v' Cteveteno el Tuc\Oft
ClliClllO Cvtn v\ 0.kMlnd al F'N>enll
Mllwaullee v\ S.alllt et Temc>e. Arlt
80\lon ..,, OttrOll •• Lektlet\d F MI
C1>1ce90 w"11e !><>• '"' vi Ntw York Ya nkee.\ at For! LeUOtrO•te
Minnt!'\Ole v1 New York Maf\ al SI
Ptt~\OIJl"ll. Fie
Communttv Ct1e9e
Or.,_ CNll I, Seelt9eack 1
Sedeltet>acl\ 001 014 010-7 9 J
Or •llllt C oa" 003 000 73ll-t II 2
Print Tovev Il l Dtv111t Ill •llCI Prell
Garcia eno Elll\on W-Garc10 L-Pr1n1
28-Pt111rs 1occ1 1 Jame1 IOCCI .Staton
tOCC l..IO\On <SI Prell (SI HR-Lto1on
SJ
COMMUNITY COLLEGE
~"' CNSt Conference w
O•anoe Coa~r ~ 9 Renctio Sanrlaoo " CVPf'tU s Cerrito• ' Fullerton ' GPl~en wes1 )
Sad 1t1>ac~ )
Ml Sen Antonio J Comoton 0
Monele'Y' s Sc or fl
Or an11e Cou t 9 Seooteo.o 1
Ml San Antonio S Cerrito\ 4
TedaY'\ QMnft ll:lOl
GOiden wu1 at Rencno !>enlletlO
Seddtet>ec1< e l Comolon
Fu •erton al Mt Sen An•onoo
C vo<en et Cerrtlo\
TllunaY's GemH (1'JOJ
O•a'ltn Coast a l Cyort n
Como1on e t GolOen Wf\I
Mt Se n Antonio 111 SedOltl>ec•
Cerr •os •' Fullerton
Sat\lrcle'Y's Gemt'\ 1-1
Futtt•IO<' ar OranQt Coost
Golden We•• e r Mt Sa~ •nron10
SaO<l<eooc• al Cerr tcis
Rancho Sanlle{IO et Comolon
L
0
2
J
' • 5
5 s
9
HIGH SCHOOL ST AN DINGS
Suns.t LNOUe w L T
Fountain \/ellev ' 0 I
Westminster , I 0 Ocean View I 1 E.dtSOn 1 0 Hun11nv1on 8eacn i 0 Merine ' 0
T ortltiM' 1 Game
GB
• s s s
9
GB
•1
I
I ) ,.,,
l'l'l
EO!lon vs Fountain Vellty el Miit
Souare Perk 11 o·c1oc-I
Wldn9'41Y'I Ge!Ml
Wellmfn\ltr al Merine (J 15 om I
Ocean View vs H.,n11ng1on 8each el
M•lt Souere Perk (7 o m )
FrleleY'• Geme Merine vs Edl1on el Mlle SQuare Per~
l11m
S.lvrdeY's a.!Ml
Founlaln Valle• al Huntlnv1on Beech 11 on-
Oc••" Vltw at W~slmln\tt< I I pm )
S.. View LNgue
W LT Qll
Corona d4tf Mar I I O
Costa MeH 1 I O
E s1anc1e I I O
Le11une 8tacl> I I O
Ntwoort Hert>or I O
!>addi.l>lc~ I 0
Unilltrlllv I 0
Wood~I~ I I 0
WaclniHde\l"t Ge,,,_. l>"U flJ'I\ I
E••e nCle el Coron• det Mar
Le11una &teen et Coi l• Ma"
un1....,11rv et N ... oor1 Herbor
Woodbf'id9t ti Sad<llat>edl
'l'WllV'l 0.mM (J:lS flJ'I\ I
C<>'ont ~ Mar el Unlv~\llv
Co\le ""'" el Woodbf'ldllt
Le11une &ffCl'I •• Seddllbtck
Sa1vrdey'1 co-
Ntwoorl Herbor el E 1l•ocl• ( 1 o m )
l eOune e .. c,., et SoYlll Hillt loon
~11ue 11 em I
..
,.. C:.'1 LAelM
W LT Ga
lrvlnl 2 0 0
D-HIRI 100 ~
II Toro 1 1 0 I
Mluloll Vi.to I 1 0 I ~Ir-Vein I t 0 I l..aeuNI Hiit 0 1 0 I Sin Olmenle O 2 0 7 w ... ...,.} ._ ,, _,
!Nini et Seti Olnwnte ~ Vel/tr( at 0.... HlllS
St Toro 11 L.1euna Hlh flrtilllV'• 0-() ~)
C•olttreno v.-.v et Ir-vine
L99UI* Hiib et Minion Vi.lo
Dene Hlh• al El TOf'O
NHL
CAMltaaLLCOMPlltlNCI
lmvtM DM$llll
v·Edrnon1on
11·Ce1Nrv
V•ncovV«
WlnoloeG
~
W L T ""' OF GA
S. 16 1 llS 417 795
J7 JI 9 13 l33 303
22 41 IJ S1 , .. Jl3
2.6 46 6 SI 2'17 J62
tJ41 1 SJ1n»0
•<hlcaoo X·MlllMIOle
x·SI. Louli
x-Toron10
O.rr011
MWTtl DMllen
37 ll I
l6 32 ' 36 lJ I
2S 4S 6
" s. 6
12 ll6 llJ II 314 19S
IO m 1tl
S6 )C)4 369
3' 256 J9I
WA.LIS COM,IRENCE
... trle* OMtleft
x ·Plllleotll>l'IMI 49 23 4 101 319 231
x-Wulllheton • 22 t. 102 199 251 x-NY (.Nnderl 37 27 12 M 304 261
NY Aanoer1 36 36 s n 110 264
Plttst>vroh 33 JS a 1' 300 21.S
New JtrM\I 26 41 3 SS . 7'4 3SS
Adema DMsien Y·OvffK 42 JO S
Montreal 31 32 7
Boston 36 JO 11
Hertford 37 JS •
81.tHelo l6 JS 6
x·cllnclle<I oievoff 1>er1n
v·cllncl>ed olvlslon !Ille
M9ndllY'• Scares
Winnipeg S, Kines 2
t9 119 :m
13 311 211
83 302 190
79 314 ?91
78 297 290
New York A•-' 9. New JerHv 0
T"""'t'' G•lftff autte1o et Hertford
Detrolr II Q\..oec
• New YOf'k lslender\ •' Pl>IJedttPllla Plll~g" e r We\l'llnuton
Toronto ., St. LOVI\
cnic.eoo 11 Mlnnesol•
Vel'COUver a t Cell>erv
WedrwldeY'sGttnn
WlnnlPtV et Kines
O.troO et Mo!llrHI
New YOl"k 11i.nc1en el Pl1tst1uron
OueOec •I New Jerwv
Pl'llledell>l'l It et New ..W ()(-Rll>lllln
Mlnnnore at ClllctllO
Vancouver •' Ed~lon
NHL IAvoff nices
The Dl•Yoff rece In lht Ne1'°'1el HOOttv
Leeoue (loo lour /Hm• In HCll dlvl•'°'1
auellfv IOf' PltYofti). Note· A11· 1our OleYofl
\DOil In lht Norrl1 OMslon have bffn
ctlnclled
WALES COHFlltENC.£
P11Yic:k~
.. ·Pl'llladttonle
• Weshlnolon
• NY lllellders
NV Renoert
Pllhbvrgll
W L T Ph GF GA.
49 23 4 102 Jl9 231
48 72 6 10'2 199 ?SI
31 11 17 16 l04 261
36 l6 S n 270 ?M
lJ 3S I 74 300 7'S
lltemelMleGernn
NV RANGERS (3) -Home (2) Aorll 2,
Plllleoetollle , 6, PllllOUfCI. Away Ill Aorll S e t We<lnoton~ -•
~ITTS8URQH I~ -Home (2) Aorll 2,
NY I~. S, ~lladele>fll9 Away 12)
Aprll 1 ., Wa'1'11oglonj '· •' NY R.,,_,
v·Outoec:
MonlrHI
BO\ Ion
Hertford
Bvtfelo
Adilnu oMMefl
lf230St9
313271]
36 30 II kl
l7 JS • 71
36 JS 6 7'
ltemelnlne Games
319 211
311 771
302 790
)14 191
111 •2'0
OUE8EC Ill -Horoe 121· Aorll 1.
Dtlroll, S, So\lon Awn I II Aorll 1, 11
New JtrMV
MONTREAL (JI -Horne 121,...Aorll ?.
0.lroll, S, Bvttelo Away (I) ""'" '· el
Buffalo
BOSTON (J I -Home 121 Aorll J,
Toronto, 6, Heriford Awev (II Aorll S, el
Q.,abec
BUFFALO I l l -Home ( l) Aprll 4,
MonlrHI Awev \?). Aprll I. al Harrtoro, S.
e t Montreal
HARTFORD (4) -Home (7) Aorll 1.
BuHelO, s. Toronlo. Away (21 Aorll 3, er
WHllln11ton, 6. el Bo\lon
C~BELL CONFEAENCE
~·Edmonlon
• ·Ce111arv
llencoyver
W•nnlOIQ
Kines
SmvtM OMsi.n
So4 16 ~ I lS 412 195
37 31 ~ t3 333 303
2'2 41 13 S7 266 313
26 46 6 SI 217 362
73 .. 1 SJ 277 llO
ltemelnlnl Gemet WINNIPEG (3) -Home (1)_ Aorll 6,
CelOarv Awev <,I Merell 31, e l lo•
Angell/\, Aorll 7, 11 Lo• AnQeln
VA NCOUVER (4) -Homt (I). AOf'll 6,
Edml>f"ton Aw1Y 1~11 1. el Cell>erY. 7,
., Edmonlon, s. •t LO\ A~
LOS ANGELES m -Home m Aorit 2.
W1nn1ot1:1 S, Vencoyver
" ctlncl'le<I playoff 11er111
or tl•r\Cl\e(j dlVl\IOf' llllt
,Int,..,.., 2 2 1-S
0 2 l>-2
l Winnipeg, !Mvield 71 !Ellell.
Hawercllvll), S:Ol (pp), 2 Winnipeg, Certvlt
IS !Smell. Steen), 19-Sl Penallffl-Ellelt.
Win lllOldlnvl. .se. Wells, LA (holding). J-32.
Niii Win (roYOtllnol. 10:06; Melenion, LA.
\lrveo by Lvkowktl (lnterfaf'enctl, 17.?4
SecMd hrted
J LO\ Anoele\, Nlcl'lolls JS (LedYtrdl.
1 '4. ' Winnipeg. Ne.Mid 23 CTurnblJlt.
BolChmanl, 9:SS; S. Loi A.nveles, Wlttlem\ '.10 !Kennedy, Fox), 13:36; 6 WlnnlPllll.
Cerl\llt 16 (Hew~ctlvk, Smvll. 19:10. Ptnel
tle.-Meroj,, Wlo (tlolcllnol. :54, KlllY, LA
!holding). 4'09, Well\, LA (tlelhlnol. 10:47.
SIMO. WI!> (rouilf'tl®J. 13:36; S\lk9': LA
lhl11'1·\llCklnol, 1':11, Marois. Win Inion·
\llC~lng) 14 11 ,
TMrd hrted
1 Winnipeg, Neufeld 24 (8oscl'lmln.
Carlvltl It '3 (en) Penellles-Herdv, LA
11r1oe>1ngl 9 17, Maro/\. Win OrlPolnol.
I) 48
Sl>Of\ on -1--Wlnnlpeg 11· I l·t-30
I.. Ol An(ll\H 10-11 ·6--27
Power oteY Qpoortunllffl-Wlnnlpeg 1
of S. Los Anoele\ 0 of s
Goant1-Wlnnl1>eo. Heywerd 111
\nC>f\ lS llVH ) LM A""4ft. Mele~
129 Ml
A-9 170
Aeltr tt-Andy Ven Helltmond
Llrlfl~ltYan llotek. llt•ndv Minon
0... ... -.....
DAPCA WHAAP -4.3 eng1tn"""llloi.u,
10 mec!l.eret. It sMeclMed, S acu!Oln, 3 Olut
oercn
DAVIY'S LOCKI .. (........,. IMectll
-13 engltn. 117 bo<llto, >S rock """· 41 be\\ 40 meclt.ff e!. 100 blv. .,., C'fl
All-Paclnc JO acadomlc bu.tetball team
,..ver, ScMee
Sieve Kerr, Ariton•
Novl•n Whll•ltl. Stenford
K•llh Belderslon. Oreoon
Steve WOOdllde, 0rt90fl Stet•
Oevld tuti.r, C.llfofnl•
rlUT T•AM ~ Yr. G Jr G Jr
F So F Sr
F Jr
l•COMD T•AM
..
l .24
).27
Ht J.11
UI
Ci.v Demon. Wunlnvton G Jr 3 l6
ArwN Fl~ Sl~d F Sr 3.15
Cr•lo Jedtton, UCLA F So 3 20
ROd K.iter, USC C Jr 3.1'
9r1eA QulnM'tt, Wul'llneton St•tt F So. 3. H HOMORAaL.a MatmC>ft
~ cr .. llve Writing
Inter. RMtlont
Blotoov
8ualntll euatneu
Blotoov
Hlstorv
Eoonotnki
BullMll
Plycnol09v
MM'k Carlino (Ariton. Sia~). lttc:herd Cheno (Cellfof'*al, JoM Pey1
(St•nford). Eric lteV9f!O (Stwifwd), Steve Brown (Stanford), Trov L.Am.r
(USC).
-
LJIOAn..v .......
( T'llrw9ll Mlt'Cfl ,0 1 ,,,.,Y e.iti zin-m.n 2 Jul! ,,,..,.,
l Pa l lrecllt\'
~ Ctlrfl Jol'lll.0-•
S. Val SklnNr
• Amv Alcoll
"4 .. ,, .. _
79,224
"..lll St,761
1 PetlV SMehen I. Bef\Y 1<1"9
t F'9NIY Pvfl
10 JIM Geddll
11 Avello OkAmoto
12. Holll• ·sracv
SU75 SUt7 . ~.it· •1.m ~.651 / ... ,,
13 Cettly Krauert
14. Alice Alliman
15 Sandri Pelrner
16 OonnY Caoonl
11 Betti O.nlet
lUOt 3.UOI
».01,
37.011 31,843
30,161 2',fOt II Jen Stec>Mnson
It ~"'' Bell9tl 20 BtckY PMrlOll
, ,.,,..
26"'4
,.~ ,,,,,. 21 Muffin S~·o.vnn 22 Llw YOUll9 tl ,,.rel Borann 24. Vicki Fer Don
25 OeOt>fe /NSMY
76. Lori GerbKa
27 JoAnne Carner
11 JudY Dlctilnson if' MYrt Bladlwe4der
30 Jerllvn 8rll'
l l Pelll ltluo
J2 Ce lnv Mor'w
ll Berb Tllomet
34 LIUfle lltlMer
3S AHlton Fll\ney
)6. • )od't lte>tMlhal
37. Stlll>fllnle Farwltl
31. Rosia J-
39. Amy Binz
40 Penny Htrnmel
41. A.lluko Hlk.eoe
42 Pet ,..,.Yen
43. 'HMIW Ferr
411 Jtr>e Crafter
45. Jer>e Bleloc.k
46. Colleen Welker
47. KethY Posttewell
41. Sl'letrln G•lbf'ellll
49 ~'I' Hamlin
SO '0.0 Rlcl'lerd
SI Dete EOOtllno S2. Sll«TI T VI' ner
S3. Ke ttl\' Bek~
S. Rot>ln Wiiton
SS ClndY FIOo
5' c ll'dY Mee* ....
S7 J•,_.. COia
SI. A~Marle Petti
Sf. Lauri P.ienon
60 Und• Hunr
61 Sellv Qullllen •2 S.nclre Hevnla
"3 Kelllv Wltltwortl'I M Beyerly lf.leu
6S DMdet L"ker
'6 snlrteY FurtonG
67 Dawn Coa
61 B1111r1 M11ren1e
69 Allee Ml11er
70. Nancy Le<IOtll«
71 Barb 8unt1owsk y n S.My Little n SIM• Btrtolecclnl
74 'Oll·H .. Ku
75 T11tresa Hen'°'1
16 Le uren Howt n. Bonni• Lauer
71. 81111 Solomo4"t
79, Carole Cl'lert>onnler
IO Clndv Rerlck 81 Mlult McGeor111
12. Mlnc!y MOOr• 83 Lenore MureOka
14 Nency Wllltt·8rtwtr
15. L vnn Adem1
M. DeOl>la HeH
e7 Helll'ltr Drew
9' Kim Snlpman
t9 Jentt AnderM>ft
90 "Temmv Fre<lrlc0.\00
91 LtAM Ct1M1d..,.
92 IMrltne Flovd
'3 C1111v Aevnol<h
94 BlllY Berrell
9S. Jo Ann Wul'lem
96 Marie F lguens·Oolll
97 Nencv Aubin
91 Senc:tre Soutlcl'I
99 'Mlula Berltolll
IOO 8*vlflt!v Devis
•OenotH rookla
aouie
lat '""'"'Marnett)
n .m 20,m
70,251
1t,t75 ,,,,.,
1MS4
''All It ?IS "·"' 11,m
11,0CM
11,m
17..1')
16,'77
16.0SO
IUOI IS,367
15,200
IS,lM
14,432
12.902
12.ns
12.6S9 12,473
ll,7S9
11,Sll
11,()19
10,90'2
10.799
10,026
9.211
9,143
l ,S6J
1,190
l ,IM
7MO
1.Sl7
7.S49
1,n1
7.193
6,943 .....
UlJ
6.61•
6.544
6,S4J
6,.sa
6.A20
6.3.JS
6.2'7
6.07S
5,793
S,661
S,512
S,447
S.089
OS!, 4,8lu
c,J2S
4,192
4, 170
3.765
l.131
),733
l,701 l ,609
UCM J,360
3.113
l .097
3.0S?
2,e13
2100
2722
1.S70 2.soo
2.40S 1.m
JUNIOR MIDDLEWEIGHTS -Tomu
J>1r11 (~ante Ana) Ol1 Zee-Htwllt (Ser>
Francl"O), Tli;O, \4venlll. rOIJnd. tor slelt
lunlor mlddtew1tg111 c111mpton,n10. (Peru
11 15-1. Hewlll Is 14 4)
HEAVYWEIGHTS -Devt Yonko
(Long BHclll KO'd Jol'lnnv Elacoue <Les
V911ul. first roul'ICI IYonlo.o '' 2· I EleCQue I\ I 21
132 POUNDS -Gentro Herl\lnot1 ILO\
Angelel) def Le rrv VIiierreai <FrHnol
un1nlmou' dtc1uon, ''~ roYnd' (HtrMndtl ,, •·O, VIiiarreai 1, 10· ll
132 POUNDS -Necllo Guerrero (Nortll
HoltvwOOd) KO·d Phil 8ro,.n (Sen D1eo<>)
1nlrd round IGYerrero 1, 1·0· I, Brown Is
1·71
160 POUNDS -Lff SenllnelMI (WHI
m1n\ler) KO'd Ktnny Ler\Otl (Aedl•l'ICl•I
lour111 rO<Jr>d (Senllnelle 1, S·O)
160 POUNDS Tony Pallino
(Pe\ldtnll KO'd Drellon Buncll tSen
Dleool, lourlh rOIJnd
M41ndaY'• tranucttclnto
IASa8ALL
.Amtneell LNtue
BAL TIMOR! Ot!IOLES-Treded Sen
Blencl'll. e>ttcher, S1tva Pedle , catcher, aM
• C>lt v« 10 be nemed lel~ 10 Ille Mlnneso1a
Twin• lor Mike Hert. ovttlelde<
CHICAGO WHITE SOX-A1lltd waiver'
on Audy LAIW. oulflalder. fo( Ille O\lf'00\4 of
giving llh concllllonef , .... .,.
CLEVELAND INDIANS-PltC9<1 Tom
Weddell, PllCl'ler. on the IS•daY dl"bled 1111
MINNESOTA TWIN~elHM<I Mafk
Devlc!ion, OIJlflelcter. I nd Alcl'I Ltoell,
A•mon A-o. and tom Burns . Pltcl'ltrs
TORONTO BLUE JA Ys---.Aulllned Aon ~Cl. outflltder, ourrlgf'tt 10 SvrteYMt
ot 111e 1111 .. nallol\ll L"-
~l.-.ue
CHICA.GO CU8S-... lked wel....,., on
Gerv WOOO\, ovlflelder. for llU'POMt of
of\llno l'llm his uncondlflonlll r .......
CINCINNATI lltEOS-Traeled Wevnt Krencl'l~I. lnflelder, 10 IM Montr .. I £Jll)()S
ta< Norm Chlrllon, pitcher
PITTSBURGH PtltA TE~MHlonecl
Dennv Gonte••· third bellfnan, to 1t1e1r
mlnM· ... eut ~mt> •
ST LOUIS CAROINALS--Traeled Tom
Nieto, ~!Cher, to tl'll MonlfM I E•Pos for
Fred MeMktue, lnlkllder C>Ptlontd Jof\n
MC>rrlt end Cvn Ford, oulfllldef't, •llG
Greo IMthewt, Piicher, 10 Lovl1vllle of IM
American Anoct111on Ovlr'91118CI Mllrll
Ron. pitcher, to TucW" ot 1111 Pecllle
Coes• LffO.,.
IA.SICITaALL
..___ .. Ill .... A1Mddlfl
ANGELES CLIPf>EIU-Sloned
01 Jonei, centlf' PIKICI Junia<
I r 111, OV.fd fofwerd, on Ullurecl 1111
tor ,...,,.,no.r of ... '°"
DETROIT ltlSTOHS-AcwMCI to terms
wlln Ci.veil D•tv. Mad coe<tl, on a two· l"r contrecl
"°"M RA.ONO KEENELAND RA C E
COVRSE-..ef'MCI Wiilem C Grltlv P<"I
<*'II
COLl.801 HAM.-OfNSYON.Y-N"'*' ~
Edw11t'd lvllt, '-4 ........ CMCfl
NElltASKA-Named l'rflll Fretdlllle
lfld L'l'IWI Mltdlem Hllttl'\l Mikettld
~
OHIO U ......__ allf't HaM "'llft't
MM!t1"911 c;oact\.
SOUTHWIH 'TIXAS STATl-N.med
Herry LarrellM lle\llatbell tOe(ll
•
v -
, .
Experts~ay
Reds no flash
in the '85 pan
gets the nod
~~~--J.'--::r='---::=-~-c ..over e Dodgers in
rac~forWestflag
From AP dl1paklle1
First in a senes.
The talent is the~ so the key may
be attitude. And dncinnati· Reds
player-manager Pete Rose has a jump
on the others in that department.
"I think if our guys come back with
the same attitude they left with in '85,
we have a good chance of winning the
West," Rose said .
The Dodgers won the National
League West by 5\h games over
Cincmnati last year, but with almost
all the teams in the djvision on the
rise, it's time for a shakeup.
"I just feel we're going to be a lot
stronger club with Bo Diaz for a whole
year, with Buddy Bell for a whole
year, and John Denny a nd Bill
Gullickson," Rose said. "With those
four guys, we ought to be able to make
up the games the Dodgers beat us by
last year."
In 1985, the Reds closed to within
four games bieforc falling back
another l V2 games at the finish. They
were followed, in order, by Houston,
San Diego, Atlanta and San Fran-
cisco.
In 1986. the d1 vision will look more
hkc this:
. )
If 1t weren't for some uncertainty
on the staff of-starting pitchers. the
Braves could giveeitherCincinnati or
U>s Angeles a good run.
Problem is, however, that after
opening-day starter Rick Mahler and
young left-bander Zane Smith, the
rest of the starting jobs still arc in a
state offlui Tanner, as always, has a
bri~t side.
• We've got a lot of arms with equal
major league ability," be said. ·•we
had 13 or I 4 pitchers trying to make
the team, and we could only take I 0. I
can't complain. Some other teams are
hunting for pitchers ...
The most positive note on the staff:
Reliever Bruce Sutter is recovering
nicely from shoulder surgery and
should be a force again.
Cox made two important trades in
the offseason, getting Ozzie Virgil
from Philadelphia to catch and Ted
Simmons from Milwaukee to
strcn~then their No. I prescason
pnonty, the bench.
With Bob Horner healthy and Dak
1. Clnclnnati.~1 Murphy a model of consistency. the
Bell, the third baseman, and Diaz, Braves arc good though fot third.
the catcher. came to the Reds m .
midseason 1985. Then. the Reds went t. SuJ>6ego Yadres
out and got Denny from Philade}1Shla ~"i "fl\e.Padrcs can't help but be a little
and Gullickson from Mon'trcaJ to disorganized this yeai:, at least early
help out rookie 20-$3me winner Tom on. Manager Dick Williams.dug his
Brownin~ and Mano Soto. ' trenches for a battle with the front
"I don t want to go out on a limb.'' office, then went AWOL. He quit
Rose said. "But I'll be very disap.-durin$spring training, leaving the Job
pointed if we don't win the West." of finishing what he stancd to Steve
Even with this now talent. however, Boros. _
the real key could rest with two Boros has at least one bright side -
holdovers, Dave Parker and Nick some pretty good pitching with
Esasky. Parker had 34 homers and starters LaMarr Hoyt, Andy
125 RBI Last year; he needs another Hawkins, Eric Show and Dave
year like that. At the same time. Dravccky. and a strong bullpen with
Esasky needs to improve from the 21-Goose Gossage and comer Lance
homer, 66-RBI season of 1985. McCullers.
"There's a lot of teams that can wrn On the field. the Padres must fill
the Western DIVl.sion," Rose said some infield spots, like third base, but
"h's just a matter of what team stays the real problem is speed. Leon "Bip"
the ttealthiest and what ~ams get the Roberts.. whom the P~ drafted
most 'breaks." out oftbe Pittsburgh organization last
2.Dodgen
"We've managed to do very well m
the pitching department over the
years.," Dodgers Mana,er Tom
Lasorda said. "This year will be no
different."
In fact. on the· strength of their
pitching. many arc picking the
Oodgers to repeat in 1986, s0meth1ng
no West team has done since the
Dod~ers in 1977-78.
With Fernando Valenzuela. Ord
Hershiscr, &b Welch, Jerry Reuss
and perhaps Alejandro Pena m the
rotation, and Ken HoweU, Tom
Nicdenfuer and newcomer Ed Vande
Berg in the bullpen, the Dodgers are
undeniably strong.
A'fld. he reminds, he is better in
other areas. He has Bill Madlock from
the st.an, so Pedro Guerrero won't
havetod~egroundersa.ih1rd. And
Mariano DUncan w11l be the openmg-
day starter at shortstop.
"The division has really changed,"
Lasorda said. "Ifs gotten stronger. I
believe each club has improved a
great deal. I definitely think 1t will be
stronger and more entertaining.··
It could be a close race-one of the
most hotly contested in baseball -
but not too close to c.all
3. Atlanta Braves
There was a changipg of the guard
in Atlanta. Bobby Cox took over b
general manager, and Chuck Tanner
was brought in to manage. Both have
made immediate impressions -Cox
with two key trades and Tanner with
his infectious optimism.
/
December, may help in that area if he
can hold down the second base JOb.
S. Hoaston A1tro1
Playi ng in the Astrodome, the
Amos generally have been a team bu1l~rfor speed. NoU..5~ear, though.
In 1985 .. tbc: Astr&s ·$tole only 96
bases, better m th1tJeaaue than only
San Diego and ~Atlanta. First-year
manaat~llal Lanier spent five ye.ars
as a -~ch with the St. Louis
Cardmals before coming to Houston.
so he rec~nizes the deficiency.
"If you re going to live by bemg
aggressive, you have to take chances,"
he said. "You can't wast for two or
three hits in one mning."
To that end, Lanier will be asking
Bill Doran. Kevin Bass. new acqu1s1·
lion Mickey Hatcher and even vet-
eran Jose Cruz to start running.
Another problem: pitching. After
Mike Scott, Nolan Ryan and Bob
Knepper, there aren't any proven
ma1or league starters.
I. Sao Fruclsco Gluts
There doesn't appear to be any way
~f the cellar this year for the
Gianls, despite some player moves
that could help. They got C.andy
Maldonado from the Dodgers to help
Chili Davis, Dan Gladden and Jell
Leonard in the outfield,., and Juan
Berenguer has been aaaed to the
pitching staff. "'
The starting pitching probably will
give new Manager Roger Craig fits
but at lcast11c has a good bullpen with
the lef\y-righty combo of Mark Davis
and Scott Oarrelts.
Braves cut Forster,
Perez, Barker, Camp
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. (AP)
-The Atlanta Braves cut I I players
from their roster today, including
veteran pitchers Pascual Perez. Len
Barker, Terry Forster and R1ck
Camp.
AJI four were placed on waivers for
the purpose of 11y1na them 0'1triaht
releases. •
The Braves got down to the 24-man
roster required for the stan of the
baseball season next Tuesday, when
they host the Montreal EApos.
Atlanta Manager Chuck Tanner
said silt elayers were optioned to the
Braves' Richmond farm club of the
International Leaaue. They were
outfielders Albert Hall and Brad
Komminsk, catcher Larry Owen •nd
infielders Oera.ld Perry, Paul Runge
and Paul Zuvella.
fn addition, the Braves rclcued
pitcher Peic Falcone, who had retired
followina lhe 198'4 season but decided
to come back th.ls year.
Perez, 28, had a 3. 71 earned run
averqe i.n 17 inninp this sprlna. But
the riabt·~nder was 1-I 3 with a 6. 14
ERA last lealOD and was on the
disabled liJt three times with arm
problems. He also was JU pended last
July by the club for failina to &how up
forapme.
Barlter. JO, who hJs a auaranteed
S2.8S million, three-year contl"l()t.
~as ~3 •':\ the sprin$ with a 5.40 ERA m 20 innings, allowing 25 hits and 12
runs while walking 11 and striking out 12.
The ri&ht-hander underwent sur-
acry followina the 1984 season on bis
riaht elbo'.'Y and manaaed o~ty a I 0.20 reco~d ~th the Bra~es smce being
acquired 1n a trade with Oeveland in
Auaust l 983 for outfielder Brett
Butler, third baseman BOt>Ok Jacoby
and pitcher Rick Bcbenna.
Forster, 34, had a 1.69 ERA this
sprina ~n 10 2-3 innings, allowing
seven hits and two runs. In his three
seasons with Atlanta, the left-hander
had a 7-S recoro. La.st season the fCU~ver was 2-3 with a 2.28 ERA in 59 1nmnas.
Camp_\ ~2. h~ pitched onJy seven
mninas tn11 spnni. with a S 14 ERA
He was 4-6 with a 3.95 ERA last
ICUOn and bad a major leque caTCcT
record of 56-49 in nine seasons with
Atlanta.
On Mo,nday, former Atlanta pitch-
er Phil N1ek.ro, the 30().pme winner
released last wcck by the New York
Yankees, pitched battina snct.Jce for
the 8J'IVC$.
But the team wd it had no 1nternt
in 1111\ina the knuckleball pitcher
who spent the first 20 yean of hi~
careet With the Bravca aod turned 47
today .
' I
•
w~.~rUt' -( arch 2.t-Apri 119): Obttaclcs arc overcome. )'.Ou beat the odd1.
Puzzle pieces All into place, you ~t complete story. Emphasis on presttae,
career, busineu.. vindication. You II pt more money, you'll also locate loat -•nicle. ·
TAURUS (April 20.May 20).: M~ney spent. for home imp~ovement. will
prove wise investment. Domestic adjustment 1s featured, senous consider·
ation i~ given to possible inheritance or loan.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): What appeared t~ be settled is subject to
chanae. Emphasis on need for
diplomacy, patience. Individual who
appeared indifferent w;n now be
enthusiastic, affectionate. Mystery will
be solved and thi will be to your
advantage.
CANCER(June ll-July 22): Tcnns
arc defined, contract is reviewed, part-
nership is seriously considered. Rela-
tionships a.re tested, spotlight is on
lifestyle, residence, marnltstatus.
SYDNEY
01111
LEO (July 2J.-Aug. 22): Emphasis on basic agreements. added
responsibility, need for mectin1deadlines. Love a;ela~i<?nship grows stro.nier.
you'll be asked to accept added obhgation. Older ind1v1dual plays prominent
role. Capricorn is featured.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Emphasis on crcativit>:,. completion of
project, ability to reach wider audience. You~l meet excmng people who
.stimulate, inspire. Emphasis on change, variety, children, intensified love
relationship. _ ,
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Light shines on area previously dark. You
make new st.art, you get to heart o( matters, you pioneer a project. Be direct,
independent, display courage of convictions. Leo, Aquarius play paramount
roles. · -· · d . SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Reunion with family member indicate . .-~· . Intuition is honed to razor-sharpness. First impressions prove correct, you'll
know what to do, where to be at specific moment. Cancer, Capncom.
Aquarius play roles. .
SAGl'M'ARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21 ): What YOll requite w!ll practically_ be
handed you on silver platter. Focus on popularity,. financial op_po~un!ty,
travel, awareness of appearance or body image. Gemini, another sagittanan
figure in ~nario. .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Emphasis on desire, emotional
fulfillment, speculation. vindication of views. You'll~ at .right pl~ce._you'll
be asked to review, revise and remodel. Taurus, Scorpio will play s1gn1ficant ~~ .
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Look benind scenes, give f0;ll rem to
1otellcctual curiosity. Your talent as "character analyst" comes mto play.
Scenario highlights stimulation, dialogue, variety, fhnatiop, romance. Virgo
plays role.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Unusua~ gift is p~sente~ as token of ·
esteem, affection. Family member makes maJor conce$s1on. W 1sh comes ~rue
in unusual mflnncr. Money comes from unorthodox source. Taurus, Libra
fi1ure prominently. . ..
IF APRIL t IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you are dynamic, creat~ve, se!'slt1~e.
awJrc of pulse of public. You have gourmet tastes and possible d1gest1ve
problem. Your mother very likely had more influence on yo~ than your
father. Capricorn, Cancer pcnons play important roles in yo~r h.fe. You a~
affectionate, independent. daring and will fight when cause 1s nght. _You 11
travel more this year, you'll be more aware of appearan~ or bod~ image.
Demands will be made on your time due to added populanty. May will prove
outstanding for you in 1986.
Women increasingly
shedding sleepwear
"'Did you say 31 percent of the
women sleep in the nude?" asks a
client. Market researchers for the
pajama makers said it. Not good news
for them. Only 5 percent of the
women go to bed in pajamas, they
say. But 15 percent choose negligees.
And I 7 percent prefer nightgowns.
Thal leaves 32 percent in the "ot~er ..
department. Underwear. Polo shirts.
Sweat socks.
Q. Little argument here abo~t
stadiums. Where's the biggest roof in
the world?
A. It's a tent. Over the HaJ a1fP<?rt
terminal in Jidda, Saudi Arabia.
Covers I 05 acres. As many as I 00,09<>
Mecca p1lgnms can get under its
shade.
When a backward country moves
from bicycles to motorcycles, that's
good. When it moves from motor-
cycle$ to autos, that's not so good. Or
so says a Taiwan b.usiness sage. The
jump to cars, he thinks. means labor
costs go ur· forcing unskilled indus-
tnes out o busmcss.
Q. What's the normal size ofa full-
grown goldfish?
A. In a crowded ltttle actuanum,
three inches. In a big lake. I 0 maybe
12 rnches. Mr. Goldfish adjusts his
size to his en v1ron ment. more so than
o ther critters.
Many a little theater group in
Burma performs all night. P,ople
show up with blankets. snacks: tea,
and watch the dramas. dances. mu-
PEOPLf
---
L.M.
BOYD
sic1ans until 6 a.m. An expenenccd
world traveler with stripes on his
sleeve says it's a pickup paradjse.
What's _your ~tand on j<>BJi!'g?
Winston Churchill had an opinion
about it: "I get my exercise being a
pallbcare~ for those of my fri~ds who
believed m regular running.. ..
Builders ar~ putting up d~e.llings in
Sinppore with such rap1d1ty that
somebod~_.4,ets a new place to hve
there eve, f ... O minutes.
Q What's the largest natural
freshwater lake west of the M1ssis-
s1pp1?
A. Montana's Flathead.
If the East Coast's last northbound
gjac1er hadn't left so much trash
behind it. there wouldn't be a Long
Island or a Cape Cod. either.
Evei:y third human being relics on
nee-for survival.
L.M. Boyd I• • 1yadlc•t~
col•mJJ11t.
'SurviVcil' comes
in small package
When living got to be real com·
pticatod, someone fiaured out thit we
needed survival kits. They would put
in one compact container aJJ the
thi"4' we needed lo meet every
oonungency or emeraency.
Thus was born the sewmg ~ta that
contain five pastel shades of thread
measurina three inches each, two
buttons thaJ match nothin,g. two
small gold pins and a needle. (BYOG.
Brina Your.Own Glasses.)
The tint-aid kit was a break-
throu&h for people wbo wanted to be
protected apinst the hazards of fun
times and recreation. And you had
two packaaes of bandages, a bottle of
disinfectant that stained your finger
for two years. a jar of ointment and a
roll of adhesive to meet these
challenges. (BYOS. Bring Your Own
Scissors.)
It was predictable that we could
have wnting kits that brought
t<>aethcr in marriage writin1 paper,
pen and envelopes (BYOS. Bring
Your Own Stamps), and beauty kits
that moisturized.. lubricated, erased,
cleansed and excavated dead skin as
you slept. (BYOC. Brina Your Own
Calendar.)
Survival means different things to
different people. My mother custom-
izes her own survival kit which she
takes on vacations. It includes paclc-
&$C$ Of gum, candy ban, breath min~.
discs for acid stomach, .box.cs of
raisins, cookies and beef jerky.
I thought my survival had reach~
the ultimate until an offer arrived in
the mail the other day for a 12-inch
survival knife, touted as an .. ex-
tension of your own hand that you'll
never want to put down."
E1u
BollECI
The knife dad everythina but st.an
the car. It cut paper, split wood and
shattered 'bone. But wait? I said
"survival" knife. At the end of the
handle was a compass so that you
would know which ditcctiob to follQw
to hack your way out olthe Jungle.
There's more!
You had only to unscrew the
compass to reveal an entire
storehouse of life's necessities. Thtre
was a packet of waterproof wrapped
matches, half a dozen fishing books,
sinkers, nylon test fishin.J line, sewing
needle k.it and an 18-inch CABLE
SAW ACTUALLY CAPABLE OF
CUTTING DOWN A SMALL
TREE! Limit: two per family.
If Rambo had had ~t knife, the
war would have been over in· three
weeks.
Somehow, I envisioned the cave
man with one of thcte knivC$. He
probably would have eumined the
book of matches and eaten them,
rubbed two fishing hooks together
and tried to start a fire, cut himself on
the knife, launched the compass from
a bow against warring neighbors, and
used the cable saw to take down
messages in the cave.
Maybe that's why they rrcvcr
survived.
Problem t.eens-may
need TOUGHLOVE
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Our
TOUGHLOVEJroupdiscussed your
column concerning teenagers and the
pain they cause their parents because
of poor choices they make.
My wife and I had to I~ to stop
rescuing our son and. covenng up f~r
him when he $Ot into trouble. in
school, with neighbors and the pohce.
We had to Cay down rules we could
enforce. We needed emotional sup-
port from other parents so we could
stand back and watch our son make
mistakes and let him Lake his lumps.
We bad to learn that our son's self-
dcfeating cnoicC$ were not our fault.
Please continue to tell people about
TOUGHLOVE. We would never
have survived ifit hadn't been for this
terrific concept. tnd there would be
no groups in San Diego if it weren't
for you. -JBW.
DEAR JBW: It'• time lo rec-
ommelld TOUGBLOVE a1a1J1 lo
pareat1 wllo are belq drlvea Ht• by
teeea1en wllo Ue, 1tul, drt.d, do
dope, deep aroud ud refue to Uve
by tile rates of tile lloeae. I •r1e yoe lo
writ~ to tlle ut1oaal lleaclqurten of
TOUGHLOVE. Tiiey will dJreet yoa
to tile aearest groep. If tllere 11 DO
sroep close by tlley will tell yoa taow
to a tart oae. Yoa will IJe amued al tlle
aember of pareett "llo, like yoe, are
la 9H4 of emottou.I Hpport becaaae
of IM utlaoda.J, off-tlle-wall bellav-
lor of tltelr ltldt. Tiie addre11 11
TOtJGBLOVE, P .O. Box IOU,
DoylestoWll, Pa. lltol. Say Aaale
1eat yoa. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: I would
like to sec this in print on behalf of
retail store clerks everywhere. You
have, in the past, sided with the
consumer in lambasting rude and
incompetent salesclerks. but I don't
recall that you ever have been cnllcal
of those who are on the other side of
the counter. I am referring to obnox-
ious customers.
My husband clerks in a bookstore.
Every day he is plagued by mothers
who allow their ch1ldrt1n to tear up
ANN
LANDERS
books and eat ice cream and candy in
the store. Some customers refuse to
stop smoking when aslced. (These
stubborn mules bum boles in our
books and foul the air.) There are
always customers who will not leave
at closing time. They stand around
reading (not buyinJ) books.
Our least favonte customers arc
those who come in and say. "I saw a
book on TY. yesterday. I don't know
the author or the titJe." When asked,
''What is the book aboutr' they say,
"I can't remember, but it wa·s good ...
When my husband replies. "Sorry. I
can't help you," the customer becom-
es annoyed, calls him "stupi.d" an.d
accuses him of not lmowmg t\js
business.
Many retail clerks work long hours.
weekends and many holidays for
minimum wages. You would not
believe how many clerks have college
degrees but can't get better jo~.
Please print this letter and give the
long~suffering bookstore clerks a
helping hand. -B.T. INT AMPA.
DEAR B.T.: Hert'• tlat "llelpla1
laaad" yoa aaked for. I bope 1omeo~
clupt It. • • •
DEAR ANN LANDERS; My
daughter. who is trying hard to lo~
weight, bought a ~ir of gravity boots
and hangs upside down for 15
minutes every day. Could this be
harmful? -WO RRIED IN
PATERSON, N.J.
DEAR PAT: Yoar daapter 1boald
aall lier pllyalclu. Most bealtll pro-
fe11loaal1 uy 10 mlHtt• lll lbat
poaltlu 11 tlle limit ud people witla
tilp blood presaare or eye problem•
1boeld not laan1 ap1ldt doWll at all.
Kennytestshis 'new' voice~ Cheered
By tilt A11oclated Prt11
CHATTANOOGA. Tenn.
Entertainer lteDD,)' R~1e~1
brought the crowd to 1ts feet in his
first concert since su"iery to
remove a small cy1t on his vocal
cords. . di "They sent me to a f nen y
town to try this... be told the
audience of8.800 pthered at the
University of Tennessee-Chat-
tanoop arena.
Roaers, 45. who underwent
surgery Feb. 11 performed an
• hour-Iona set of more than 15
songs. including "Lady." "RubY.
Oon 't Take Your Love to Town,
"She Bchevcs in Mc," "The
Gambler," and "Lucille."
Prlnceu ln Brull
SAO PAULO. Bralll
Rnta1n'' Pnncc~'I Aue toured
Brazil's govemment-controlled
aircraft manufacturer Embraer
for a look at tht Tuoano
turboprop m1htary trainer plane
that w;u he used by the Royal Air
Foi;ce
The pnnces,,. "\5, who ,, on •
fo_µr-day pnvate v1\1t to Rru1l.
v15ite<l the E.mbriaer plant
)
Kenny ROfen
Wednesda} in Sao Jo~ dos
Campos. SS miles from S.o
Paulo.
The T 1.1cnn01 will be built by
Northern Ireland's Short
Bro\ben Company throu&h •
hcensina a.a,rttmcnt With Em-,
.. hraer.
Prtoceee Anne
Sly •too load'
LOS ANGELES -Pop mu-
s1c1an Sly Stoee'• songs a~ not a
hit Wlth \he manager of his
S 1.450..a-month apartment, who
15 tryina to cv1C1 him and his
roommate for l\lleacdly play1na
loud music and failing to pay the
rent
In a Supenor Coun suit filed
last week, the management of the
Oakwood Garden Apartment'I
complains of late-night drum-
ming and loud music in Stone's
rooms. The suit Sttks one
month's back rent and the ev1c-
t1on of Stone. 42. and roommate
D1rryl Arm1troe1.
A spokesman for Stone said
that be has been working on sonp
for a new album. and rccordma
music 1n tht' apartment. The
spokesman said Stone plans to
P9Y the beck rent.
Sixth divorce?
MEMPHI -Rock 'n' roller
Jerry Lee Lewl1 is headed for
d1\orte coun 'INitb his sixth Wlfe
cla1min1 he bloodied her nose
when they al"JUed about his
1ntcmt in other women.
In btt d1vorw petmon. &errie
McCaner Lt!wt1, 23. c1'1m' her
SO.year-old husband has "a quick
and \'IOlent temper and that he
has curscd. th~atcned and struck
her on oet~H10M l09 numcrou~ to
mention."
Ortnge Cou1 DAILY PSLOT/Tueei04'Y, Apf'll 1, 1tee •
, :
'
ALMOST AN APRIL POOi.
~~It her \ uln~rable Ea..,l clt>iltb ----------~~~
NORTH
•-715' ;g7g4 3 •
•KQ662
WEST EAST
•J2 •K9
11 8 5 ., A J 2
9872 v AKQI064
•1097•3 •AS
SOUTH
•AQ10863
-; K Q 10 3
.,,JR
•J
The• b1ddmg
Ea8t South Welt Nonh
2 • 2 + Pus 3 +
3 NT 4 • Pus Pa
Dble -. Pus PaH P .. s
Opemn~ lead Eight uf
On th1!-. day. you rnultl not be
blamed for thinking thl'> hand
ml~t be some sort of Joke Howev-
er. let's hasten to a ~i1re you that it
t ropped up in a rubber bridge game
and East had to exerc:i!I(' great <·arf"
to make sure he was nut lhf' April
Fool
De~p1te Lhe fact he t,ad more
than half the h1~h-cafd points,
· East fottnd that the opponents
bru<thed aside his demand bid and
ended up In game. wruch ht' dou-
bled ln<:1dentally. we hke East's
three no trump rebid-it would
<tu rely be easier to make rune tricks
with his hand than 11 . e<tpel·1ally
ince hi~ partner was marked with
tied or nothing
• a r covered West", openinll
heart (1 with dumrfly's nine, and
East was not delighted with his
pru'\pet ts It seemed there was
unly one fast lrt( k available tn
CHAil.ES
Go1E1
0111
SHUIFf
each s1dP sutt and. since declattr
tould surt>ly get to dummy with a
diamond ruff, tht' prospect.a for a
trump trick wnt> llght However,
West's upening lead ~llS alm<»t
<turely a doubleton. If declarer
could bt> prev~n~ from taking a
qu\dc trump fine se. W~t could
'>core a heart ruff for the setting
trick.
East ro't• witf\ tht> ace of hea~
and declarer dropped the ten Now.
a low heart return would have
killed the defen!M!. Declarer would
ha\ e let that ride to the ~ble's six
to p-rov1de the entry fpr the trump
finesse. The conlra('t would have
'!neaked home
There "'as a -;1mple counter East
returni·d the Ja<'k of heart.'>, and
that wa .. that. Oedarer was stuck
1n his hand If he played trump!'i, he
would -;et up a trick for the deft>nd-
ers in that '>Ult If he led a duamond .
East would wtn azid give his part-
ner a heart ruff (Yes, we know tht"
alternative defense 1s lO play the
Jack of hearts at 1.nck one, set unit
up the '>ame f>O!"ltlon ~ here. but
the lead might have t>..i.en a
'l mgleton l
.... .. .. '::~~.~' S~\t4llA-4t.~s·
-----...... .,. CU'f I.~-----0 ,...,_ ..,.,. °' ....
'""' tcro"'bl«f -ch t..-
low lo '°'"' '°"' ol...ple -dt
~ S C U I E R
1 11 1 r 1
1
.--....H___,A_E ..... E-....V-1 7! WM• d11\ong out In • ..-y ··in . I I' I I . ~·i:,,a:s:~
r-....K..-..N_R..,._u_o...--41 '
. 11 I I I .
cornered sandwich 10 m.iw a
Ir-_H_E_Q_N_u_c--.,-'""' ..
' I I' I · I I 0 ~~::: ~~~!:::::
.,.,.. ~.lop "-..,, No 3 ~
A PP1Nl N llfUO lEIT!tS IN l ~ lH!Sf SQtJAltS
6 IJNS(fA~f AIOVf lfTTU S 10 GfJ 4NSWU
TODAY'S _
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACftOH
1 Chrlstener
6 Atlas. tor one
1 t -Baba
14 ··--et the
office'"
15 Senseless
16 .... sheep. ..
17 Region of
Germany
18 Adulterant
20 Unbr~en
22 Taro, e o
23 Tense
25 Social do
28 Woody fiber
29 Blue moon
30 Clergymen
32 - -hand
~Cutters
39 Made ceriam
42 Lachrymose
43 Loud talkers
45 Weapon
46 Amboshers
49 Sheller
SO Once more
54 Vertebrae
55 Brusque
56 Reception
58 Milk source
60 Cruaadlng
63 Distinction
66 Rubloua
67 Hall
68 Houston
lumlnary
69 Three: II
70 Scathet
71 lrr11able
DOWN
1 Pen par1
2 Moslem t•lle
3 Added up
4 Episode
5 Scnism
8 Headgear
7 Makes
laooed 8 --o'-ahantef"
9 Black bird
10 Nearest
11 Island on
Venezuela
12 Temptations
13 lmpaulve
19 Bathe
21 ··-. S..et as
Apple Cldef"'
23 Stakes
24 Proxy
26 Horse
2 7 lroquolan
language
30 Garege
good I
3 1 Hollywood
lumtnaries
33 Brown shade
35 Thrlee pref
36 Outflows
37 Emperor
38 Icy rain
40 Vast eges
41 Trickle
44 Racier
4 7 Mall es Into
law
48 On Soc Sec.
50 SPl'ightty
51 At no time
52 Turn UkM
53 Mole's kin
55 Nol far away
57 Hen lruh
59 Whlcl'I
6 1 Preceding
62 Paa1ure
&4 T at»e tcraP
65 Actor Rogers
..
..
l
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~
Be Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/ Tueeday. A4:>fll 1, 1~8
THE
FAMILY
CIRCUS
by Bii Keane
"Mommy! There's an April Foo ... I mean,
there's on alligator in the bathtub!"
MARMADUK E by Bt ad Anderson
"Groan now and then so I'll know you're
hurting i ust like me•''
PEANUTS
..
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CR -.... :1Nf, .V..'1
LUNCHE S
GARFIELD
TUMBLEWEEDS
DRABBLE
...
ROSE 18 ROSE
I T~ TUE. L~~l PIE.cf..~
LIV E.R l\NO t-.l0800'f
LiJ~~lE.O IT
I
"lt'a not going to kfll you to stick around 'tll
my mother gets here.~·
;
1
! r
... by Charles M. Schulz
..
" I ~ \!\
by Jim Davis
by Tom K. Ryan
by Pat Brady
BLOOM COUNTY
MOON MULLINS
SHOE
1 w~ l()U M:)v1.0Ni T ~.CDMf.Oij,
. ,
you DoN 'T
BELIEVE ME ?
by Berke Breathed
1J(€ A!RU/6, h 11£
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OF A CA11l1T'llPfl« llfP 11'61
~(AM ~.
=~;..._! /S$.
M*>'. ., ' I
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by Ferd & Tom Johnson
1r1s PoSSIBLE ...
You DIDN'T HAVe·
16 stfow MUCH
IN -moss-D,Ays.
.. '• 1f h
J
by Lynn Johnston
by Jeff MacNally
~TEAL 1141NGS F~ MOTEJh. $K'(LEr< ~~~
IT', ~I.( AW~L.. "™E 9G PfAL ?
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JUDGE PARKER
-----~_. Tl-415 YOUNG WOMAN'S
NAME IS Do"RLENE ' SHE'S A NEW WAIT-
RESS AT n-4E CWB ANO SERVED ME AT
DINNE~ LAST NIGHT ANO THE NIGHT
BEFORE' LAST NIGHT I OFFERED TO
D R IVE HER HOME B ECAUSE SHE DOESN'T HAYE A CAR I ___ _,... .. ~
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
WHEN WE ARl'\IVED AT HER APART·
MENT BUILDING, SHE INVITED ME IN
FOR A CUP OF COFFEE • WHILE THE
COFFEE WAS PER K ING SHE WEN!
IN HER eeDRQOM TO GET I NTO
SOMETHING COMFOR TABLE ANO
M OMENTS LATER HER R OOM ·
MATE CAME IN A WO MAN
~MED VELMA '
by Harold Le Doux
by Tom Batluk
!~I~~ If'6 JIJ6T A Bu~ HAPPE.NI~ WrrH 1.£5,-Of 1..rrn..E. iHIN65 ... HE WA6 lJJA~IN&
VIDEOS ON 1V .. , BOi ~E'5 C~/~ !
DOONESBURY by Gary Trudeau
M. Ht'"4S ~ nrn<J/.'
8UT THIS IS lllAT ~ OIVWfTH
WJW ALL 1Ht /f10N£Y /6.SAIP~
{)/{) Nt@6) FOR.~
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551-0655
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UNIVERSITY
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848-0388
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CINEMAS 891-0567
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WESTBROOK
530-4401
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'10. 1 .. 00
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SADDLE BACK
581-5880
f l 'UA•'t -.o A• RC)C •''(, 0
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VIEJO MAL l
495 6120
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--
, .
Orange C<*1 DAJLY PILOTIT~. Apil 1, 1111 WI
Poetry, ·play probe passions at .t.JCI
UC lf"Vlne u PJCllUU>l a mixture o(
erotic India" poetry and the per.
formaDCle o( a Gothic horror play for
Saturda_J_evcnina.
lO \be: blood of vifliu,
""The Blood CoUn1et1" is a cos nlon piece to Pden' -rbe Mad
San Oiegq poet Steve Kowit anll lluti~/ICtttSI Holly Barte will per.
form Kowit's wort. "Passionate
Journey: Poetry and Mu.sic in the
Erotic Mood.:: at 8 p.m. in the Fine
Arts Vill~ 1 neater.
of Bavaria." io wbjcb be ~y; Ludwia n the eccentric • wbo
ruled toui' 1164 to 18&6 u.anil was
depoeed u inane. Petcn is the olhcr
of more tb&o 20 poetry books and
1everal books oo poetry cnticiam.
Tickets to the on.oiabt-ooJy show
may . be ordcTcd by callina UCI at
856-6616 weekda)ll betweel'f 10 a.m.
ana 3 p.m.
• • •
. Follow10g their pcrl'ormancc, UCI
English ~fe1$0r and poet Robert
Peters will bring to life bis on~oian
play -r'he Blood Countess,., which is
based on the true story of mass
murderess Elm beth Bathory of Hun-,
pry, who allegedly killed more than
700 women because she liked to betbe
Lona Beach's newest playhouse,
the Uprising Theater, will present the
premiere of two ono.act plays ~Y
Marlene Mayer, "Starfish.. and
TV LISTINGS
qi,nwmimtnn; 4 =.~a:v.=w
S 1 Academy Awarelt Walt Dhney'1
OUT OI' A,..•ICA re> -........ mAUYY (0)
SHOWS AT AT t :40 6 l :JO l ·tS 6 t :JO
APIUL POOl,.'S
OAY (•> AT 1 :10 I. 1:40
caoss •OA.CIS cat SHOWS AT l :JO 6 l :JS
CEOTUAY ClnEDOmE ~ lSSJICll-em.,.
S.11i. ""~ f...,
TMK....VPfT ... )
SHOWS AT 1:SI J :SS S:SS 7:SS 6 t :SS
GUll8MO ...... tJt SHOWS AT t :00 J:20 5:40 1:00 6 tO:tS
-<:IHll·ll'I QONl:-
SNAKl! RS A.RI: aACK
STADIUm [;)
Ill llZOiC41t!!t !tr S!tf.,_..
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~.-AUTYte) P'tus Tiie Joum.,, of Natty Q1nr1 (P'O)
s
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~ACAODIY PMIT a .,.,
SHOWS AT I t4.S l :41 5:41 7:4 1 .. ,, .. ,
POUCI ACAOIMY Jr
laACI( IN TaAINtNO ~
li.Jl2'49e.Jttdl .... 11 ..
DOU'\' lnMO
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DOU'\' ITalO
MOUT ...... AU
NITTY IN ,. .. .,..Ill 1•Jio11,..,,..,.,.
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THI CO\OR PUtlf'll f"' 111 "'' .. ., ,,. ,..,. ........ ,..,..,.
LAKEW c .. nter South
Ullll:l4 tHI Joulty I Ofl A"'t
1"'41 Ml 4o4J Ml Ml IMS
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JUST llTWUN ..... .,..,.,
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DAY OU !"tut Sllv~ •uilet fR)
POllCI ACADIMY J t
IACK IN TRAINING CNt
Ml ........... , ....
CA•HIARS 2 MOVll:
A N1W OIHlllATION 191
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OUT Of AHKA IN! , .. .,., .. , ...
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TMI MONIY PfT fNI
'"' aaAKPAll ct.va •
1. "°'111•
2. NAICIO CACM Cit a. ICMOtfTI Of THI CfTY t11
1. .-..TMAM ON ILM nan'""" 2(111 2. DllTA fOKI ..
a. •• • l:t'fJi&1!!
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OUNO MOI ,._.,,.
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NITTY IN f'tM( ,,.,,.
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THI MOMY _.ff !"II
TMI UIAl<PA.ll ClUI 1111
PC>lKI ACADIMY J1
IACI( tH TRMNINO !NI
NIWll'I ttO
ADYINNttl '"'
"Stnyt. .. t.b1I weeUDd.
The sbowl. one aet on a dcaen aod
Lbc other iD the mountains, Wlll be
performed Tbul"lda)'1 tb.rouab S.tur·
da)'1 u.ntil April 19 at 3125 £. 7th St.,
with an I p.m. curtain. Call (213)
438-8922 for tic:kd-1nformation.
••• The La Mirada Civic Tbca&et will pmeot Mark Medoff s .. Ch.ild.ren..of a
Leuer Ood" from Aoril S.-27 with
James Stephens of TV's "The Paper
Cbate, .. who st.an'ed in the Broedtt.<ay
production, reaatina bis role.
Lmda Bove will~ in the play
about the Jove between a deaf woman
and a speech therapilt. Tickeu may
be ordered by callina the theater at
MIA UA""-flO.G.2
• 9'191& 'Mii
UAMIMls
915141
corTAMDA
(O\llWI .......
645025
11. TORO
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........... , ... .. -....... .,., .,._.._,.. ...... :~·
994-6310.
T'be La M.inida thcatct Yo wilJ
offer lbe Americu 8&IJey Comedy
production of .. Fun.oy f"'eet" for a sinale Dttfonnance, Friday as I p.m.
Tbe sliow ii a bad of comedy aDd
duce l.Dd tickeU may be 1ea:a wlCI byr
calli..,, tbe above ftUJDbet.
• r • Aoother' one--Ai&Jit l1aOd ii beina planned tor Saturday when the • tion.aJ towiQa compuy revivina the m1Wr.al .. Bripdooo .. appean at Cal
State Fu.lJatoo.
The .Oranae County ~t wu made i::ble when ~ed
up 1 caDClt date between San Dieeo
and Santa BlttJera on the oornpanfs
touri.QJ ICbedule. Ticket information
is svailable at 713-3 37 I . • • • The lApna Mpulton Playhoute ia ta.kina reaiJt;rations for its sprina
1e11ion of actina clauc::t -two
bfo:sjnnioa and one advanced -&.bat
beain Saum1ay.
Joo Sidoli. Dario GTebel and Cnic
Aemmg are the inst:rw..1on for the eigbt-~k cou.nes. · BccJnni.na st\1·
dents can choose either Monday or
Tuesday. nights from 5:30 to 7: 30
p.m .. while the advanced seuiot1 will
mee1 Saturdays at l 0 Lm.. Call the
playbO\llt at 494-0743 for c:ldails.. • • • Broadway ICtteSS Cort.ill Tayior-
Dunn will present a seminar on the
key to a suoceuful thqter career fOf
three Satwday afternoons ip April It
Turtle Rock Community Put in
Irvine.
The class for aspiring actors and
act.resse1 is priced at $4 S and will be
conduaed from I to 3 p.m. April 12.
t 9 and 26. Pre>-f'Clistrauon is required
by April 7 and may be obtained by
calli"4 660-3881 . More informat.aon
is available at 660-3928. • • • H.iab school apd st"'4icnll and
postaraduates who want an education
In the visual or perfonnina area arc
invited to audition far a place in the
ldyllwild School of Music and the
Arts Saturday, April 12, at the
Festival of ArU Forum Theater. 650
Laguna Canyon Road, Lacuna Beach.
Any student who is qualified to
enter pada eight th.rouch 12 ia
eliglble to enter the aaidemy. Tboee
mt~ should call Tom Bewk:'y at
659·2 l 71 for an appointment and
information rciardina requirements. • • • The An Nova SiDFQ.. under the
dtrection of Chris Robt'."'""'arc looklna
for ~le who ettjoy. singina and
belp1na the March of Dimes.
Robb, a professional voice teacher,
is form.in& a new iinaing sroup for the
purpose of raisiDf money for the
March of Dimes by perf'C?rm tng at
chUTCbes lhd other" func:tion.L Call
Robb at 971-7763 for dclails..
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Bl Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/ Tuesday. ~rll 1. 1988
IT'l llAID TO llLDE LR WAS OllCE SO DIURY Ulll.I
CALL 642-5678 IF CALLING FROM NORTH ORANGE
IF CALLING FROM SOUTH ORANGE
~ IY DIEAll llGllE JUST
BY LOOlllO II TllE tAIY
PIOT'S CUSSHDS.
CLASS.,lfO OFFICE HOURS T~ a.Vice M-f t 00 AM-5 )() PM
SelU<dlly I 00 AM· 11 30 AM
....,._Coun1et M·F I 00 AM·S 00 PM
lat U1 Hfat YH
Sell Y 01r Preptrtrl
C111 C1111iflH,
642-5678
for information
& surprisingly
low cost.
Ital latatt Ftr lalt a.a'at 1111 ltQMt ltetla lllt Ctnu U1 •u 1111 lni•t 2144 l!!J!rl ltacla UH C..ta .... ZIM Cetta.... ltlt
HU Ill OILUTill ua• NW 111111 '600'• home r.,,tal off SPXcioOs 28r 29 •. 2 cer WESTCLIFF CONDO 2BD. 18A, 2271 Pomona. FIRiPLACE-POOL·PATIC> ltaltt/Ctdtt or YOUA praperti.t. NO SBR, MONACO 1259,000. PCH & garage kid t•'•· trplc, vaulted oell-2 bedroom. 2 beth, pool, patio, oerport. quiet X-411Br $585 & 28r MM ..... -.. .... _-....-.___ obllgetlon by TOP F .. !Md Ow1* 7eo-e514 53M191 Agt f.. Inga, pool & Jecunt S850/mo, 780-9640 neighborhood. $825/mo Eutelde 557-2841
Gtatral 1002 PR 0 DUO.ER. C •II ~ l • BEAUTIFUL 3 Br a den/lg ~n:~5~ZoT~~· ReMrW for mid Aprll d• No Pett 5*5805
llllP I OUll PATRICK TENORE .,..5llNl1.J ~ llv rm. houM. OcMn Vu. _ ' 1lgner 314 3ba frplc Eaattlde 2 & 3Bdrm COt-E/tlde 1BR 18A wt•
111 Tiil lfHHlfl 831·129e 270& HILLSID~ OR. $1750/mo. 582-5137 WOOOBAIOOE ·CONDO dthwsher gerge SHO tege S-495-S745/mo. crpta d1hwr In ttnf corn.-
Very cllolce "Bayeld• (End of Ford Road) FOR RENT 2/bd 2/ba, 539-6191 Agt tee W/D hkupa. 2625 Elden. plex. 'se25. •
Cove" End Unit Twnhme Cape Cod Townhome 3Br, COZV bctl oott~. So of end--unlt, covered0carpr1, --Apt #F 646-6519 _ 381 Hamilton. 648-97~
at water' • d g e fem rm, 2~8• w/pool & Hwyk, 2B.R,.~· .... P97)!20f $850/mo. 720-0876 laa Cltatalt 2171 2br 1 ·~ be ... , Co.ta SP"'CIOUS 28R 2b•. e...a.., "Bayfront" w/MI view tennl1 S259K 720-1679 *" "9. • .,vv • .....,. vv " ",,... An elegant & dlltlnctlve woooiJAlOOE'* CONDO, PANoRXUlc &lean view. MeH. Excellent location gerege acrott from PWtl
Adult home S663,400 ftlWLLU-IY IWla Pl,,AN 1 Newport Cr•t °3:i:6'1~ Big c:i~~ lg 2bd, 2ba, cloee to Clean 3bd, 2ba, 1pa. 722-0435 or 673-0282 $700/mo. "4-2087
lllltll a IO.. lBr Condo. Od vi.w. sec C'ondo 38r. Panlal ocean J ' 1
8 =~' Cool/tenn11. covered patio. low yd main, call 28, IB• Clean 2Br 1ea.
640-55801ANYTIMEI bldg, pool, walk to beh. view 8y0wner 138-1833 une '497.1791 mo er king & at or age LUCiiie 498-0500 gart1ge w/d hkup1 $650 IPllllll $~2.500 Xlt tenn1 S725 S.a Cltatalt l 950/mo. 494-1028 or VIII• R~ntals 675-4912 S875/mo. 3B R 2BA Rent 546-04251752-8011 7~ Ev•. laata Aaa 2110 townhouH, encl g.ar. DTU WIE BV OWNER. New Englend C"tl .... 2124 1 • It L 14 . 2br, 1be, upstelra. 712 lndry room. yard. trtaa ••I lu atyl• home. Close to -•••• IC• Nr SCP 2b"'2ba pool home .Shallmar-C, 3 people 763 w . 19th St
IAYFHITLIT ocea.n. $275,000 080 *MOllTllTl* ON T HE BEACH In gourmet Rhch&freeutll• max.S.tty,545-4156. TSLMGMT 642-t603
with private Mn°'t t>Mch u ... PllOE 2-1 400 or 492-4482 38r +den + 2 car gar, Laguna's Unique Tres klda/pet $675 639~19 t and private plef and noat DUPLEX-28r 1be Met\. tncd yd, pets ok $900 ree Ill. N~.lg 2Br 2Ba Mble Agent cost 28A DUPLEX. Great area •UN1QUE COMPLEX'*
Prime action locatlon. So-<>t-PCH. S264,900. ··~n. a.... TELUHT 111-lllO time. 3 pvt bchea. pool. -------New cerpel, palnl, drapes. 1BDAM w/'lr dbl gar $610
Partlally remOdeled 3 521 Carnation. By owner 24 hr MC ate 11575 Yr Stat~ La~HI 2111 garage S650. 559-5001 2BA 1Be w/lrplc, garS710
Bdrm-home can be ex-673-0241 Of 873-1541 Ftr Salt 1100 •SH.ARP Westtlde 2Br IN pref 49~270_. -QUIET patio pool. IP•
pended. One ot a kind C • l e:oaamoor 12x60 2 I)( 1Ba Duplex. Tiie fl00f'1. 3BR 2be EAN VIEW: 2 •WY MYE·lll * NO PETS ' s.49-24.1 ..,_._, •1395000 tlla t11 crpt1 d~ /d hk r • a Ii l 15 car gar, yard, $1850/mo 1 + t +patio, carport, utUa ,.._,.....,. • • • • 1ba w/expand ltv. rm. ' ' w up, -111 r;•t Eves 497-5123 Incl othera evl SSOO Fee UTILITIES PAID. $4CM1. OISTA llU TllPLD Adult Park. 642-1283 gar•. +MC. Must Gg 38R du tenCd .,3 · Avail lmmed No P81• 1 (114) 673-4400 3BA + 2BA + 28A. Two atend credit ..... No pets. a/c, frplc, 'country TILEIEIT lll·lllO BA/patio. 64°2·5341 .
(213) 621-2121 Units have flreplac:ea, all C.atttry Ltt1 770-5929. kitchen, dbl gar. Agt A.fl-'-'•-•-•t_• ___ _
H .... o. ,have patios and la\.lndry. cas,·· 1225 4Bdrm1 1 ·~e. 2223 788-7104 or 681-3437 •Eutllde lBr. new crpt WI IFFD l 111111 "' Just lilted for S235,000, _ Meyer Pl. Huge yrd. No CtrtH ••I llu 2622 1 Adult $535 Credit Want • Mlectlon of g.r .. 1
need quick sale. Drive by ' A nlng Harbor vie: pets $925 Agt 546-6605 ·~ ltacla 2Ht 28 lb , I $806 check req'd. 631 -22•2 llvlng? w. can ofter anr·
1876 Pomona, then call Cemetery lots, aectlon EASTSJDE 28R H~BA 2Br£ End Un11. Prime y:,y, fr~lc,'r;'~~~33 Irle · 28r 1Ba up1tr1 -5? 1 thing trom • 1matl apt fo
for more det all• at Noflh MemOf'lal Gardert 1 • lo Bluff• locetlon Pool See Sat Only 10:00-12·00 Joann Max 2 people No • 4 bdrm houM. If loolt•
722·9730 $2500 obO 64~51 •• 15;a' garage, f!! •· ... ~. grHnbelt Xlnt cond' --pelt $535 Agt 550-1015 Ing In CM, NB, or H8
Lt I •-• lt .., mo. .,..,.._.....__ S1400/mo. 120-9412 2/bd, 2/ba, gar. w/d, new ----lhlnk or u1 flrat tor that •IN UITSIH* ti tr.... Eestalde gorgeous 3Br _ decor. shutters, 714'!r •FREE CABLE TV. Lg 18r choice of Ideal llvlng. Ill •Ill NL llll 2Br 2Ba Condo. 11t Tru:1 Ull a.1 LIT Condo. 2 Frplcs, 2 car JllU 11ATI TRIPLEX Orchid. n-P411S. S 1125. & 2Br Grdn Apts. Pool TSL MGMT &42-1603 l•E Plll l .... E Deed approx B.87~ Lake Pm area of Down-g11age $1150/mo Joyce Frplc S775. 615 lrvlne Ave 548-2525 11-4pm $525-$625 710 W 18th
Corn8f lot aouth of high· Fixed Own« wlll pay townH B Prlnelpalsonly Splllit,Aemax631-1286 PROPERTY HOUSE 3/bd.2/b~.gar,w/d,nflW S63S/mo 2BR 2BA. lrplc, ~~~f.$8~~1o~~1=,
way. 3 bdrm, 2 bllth own-~~~e~ L c~~slSg12~~5·~~: AgJ , Att Spm 536-9533 E'SIDE X-Lg Hse 3br Of' 2 + Bkr 642-3850 decOf • shutters. 714•,.; encl gar' all bltns, near Avail 4/ 1. 548-4508
era unit. 2 bdrm, 2 bath ·a.o-6120/875-4912 8kr I.I Waat.. 11 S den, top condition. bltln •HWFRllT* Orchid. n·pets, $1125. shopping center
Ilg ht and airy apartment • k 11 ch w / re tr I g. nu 1 + 1 + view Newly decor-548-2525. Open 8 lO Center Daaa Ptiat ZI•
separated by lovety yard. Baal. ltacla 1040 C~M DUpiex 2 +3. 3 + 3. cptldrps, dining rm, ated, all blilna. $650 Mo-Sunday 11am-4pm. TSL lllT U2· 110I I
Each has private entry. FOR SALE BY OWNER or 3 + 4. Ooatllled Prlav1e lrplc. 1 blk to CM Mo/Yrty. Hurryll Fee 3BA/2BA fplc.endeck. --1111111111,n-2:~1~~t· ~~;t +
bullt-tn kitchen & leundry 21891 Dlrlgo Cr. 4BA, 2 Party 644-4123 Courtyard $875/mo. no TEUam lll·lllO Indy 2 car gar. retrg nr tB & 2Br fr"' ranna S200 security. I~54 1 room.2-cargarageplus1 ba. New fren<:h dra, new ---pe11722·1661/548-7745 bctlS1275675-6599 r · .,,. ,,_,
space. $425,000 landscape. beautiful. ltatala E.SIDE LG 3BD, 2•,.; BA, *WTlllFF* laundry. pool, cerport. No STUDIO APT W/full kttc i
MARILYN TWITCHELL S 180,000. 963-2323 townhme, mod kite. trplc, 2 + 2 + trple, garage. pets $550 & $850/mo. ba, u111 pd, $450/mo, ..... rt ltacL 1 IHltt/Ct.... 2 car gar. pool, tennis. bltlnt Hurry, saoo. Fee mu WIE 931 w 191h St. S•8·0•92 661-3653 •ft 8pm.
:=!::: • -$1175/mo a.()-6759 nuam Ill 1110 IAYFRllTLIT Eutalde 1Br 18• Old & ...... · • with private sandy beach charming $525/mo Cell But ltacla ~ ~YFHSITAC~~~!llE ~ Gtatral 2102 Lge 3Br 2Ba 2 . story •RENTAL SERVICE• andpr1vateplerandlloat Larry a 546-5880 YILUIE ust 1 NB. 2e• 1BA h .. 1 blk to Condo Yard. garage. 2-4br $1000-$4000/mo lo I SUWlll
759-9100
.t .. • • . ~ • • • . \. '\ •• '
weekl Prlme8o•4 bdrmo+ bch l~d yd 2 car pk"" S 1100 VIiia Rentals F8fgyson/Hehn 642-1183 Prime ac;t n local on EASTSIDE LUXURY In •
--------• house w/1 111ew N · · .. ,,. 6]5-4912 Partlally remodeled 3 Pine Forest. lge 1br, dl w. ·-....... ...---... ._ Bayside Drive w/45' boat avall now $800/mo. yrty. 3BA 3ba Townhouse Bdrm home can be ex-trig gastwtr pd 2 pat101 WIY •n
COLDWeu..
BANl(eRO
sllp. PRICE SLASHED ALSO 2BR 2BA, lower llllllJ CllH'I wtgar & frplc. Super nice, pended One of a kind . ' . .. $600K from appraisal. unll, 1 hse ott . beach. Brand nu 3br 2'-iba 1450 extra cleen w/fusay property S 1 395 000 $58 /mo, adults. no pets. live wtli:f:e< ou have
Low down OK Thlt Is $850/mo, yrty -If Up. fned yd dbl gar owner Best deal In New· • . year lease. 646-0864 •Speci lar apts
GENUINE. Don't miss Ill .llCllS aULn si 150 Pet ok ?22.•62.47 ' port at $1095 No dogs (714) 673-4400 E/slde tBA cottage, frplc. * 1 & , 1 & 2Ba IUl1•
For address & Info call "" llAUIEIEIT u ovE F·ST please 548-8782 atl 5 encl patio. lndry lac. no •Sp • townhOU ... p AT A IC K TE NO A E m " -------pets $550 +sec 845· 7234 * Flreplacee PHllllLlPlllT 631-1266 l14/lll·11ll ot ,., to Nwpl cozy 480, tamlly room, pool. - - --•Prlvale belconlH or 1111 000 COM • Lg 2 ttry 4BA 2BA bungalow wl appls bate tennis, view. $2100/mo, FUA~~br ;J;l~k m1croh 1 ml Oardert petlot
Cape Cod 4 BR den, 4 BA, home Very brlgh t $395 child ok/0< sngl 760-87821975-9889 ~~OOtmo. 6~5-~~3~ ops
I
one huse from the beach S 1650/mo ALSO NB * Hl-1111* SBA. mtn & ctty 1i0htsvu, -~--WIY HT1
Two fireplaces, gorgeous --------·2BR 2BA, lower unit, 1 Near OCC stylish 3br 2ba Phase Ill Harbor Vu Hms LAG 1 BDRM. laundry, *3 Lighted tennl1 court•
throughout Anxloua BAYSHORES, 3 BDRM. 2 hse off bch $850 yrly pool too $755 flat many $1975/mo Agl 640-5664 pool. no pels $525/mo + *2 Swlmmfng poota seller .llOlll aULn others unadvertised ------$300 dep. 842-1401 •Streams & pon<11
• ••.1010 ~~·11~gs~oryg:[1:"'y ~ -., 11a•••EIEIT 539-6190 ees1 Alty tee AYlJL.llU HW ll"E II llW Sorry. no peU -rn -------Lrg 3BA 3BA Twnhse, 2 Ct1ta •na 2624 ' Furni.tllnga evall French doors opening to l1C/lll I 1ll M V Exec hm. •BA 3ba. car gar wtextra pkng ., $625/mo. E/slde 28A Oas for Heating & Cooking
Isn't It time to 1e1 someone
elMsweat the yard work?
It's no swell to hire a helper through ciataltled
large sunny patio, large • tam rm, redwd spa, gdnr blk 10 beach W/D hkup 1100 OFF 1BA, patio, pool, lndry Paid
lot. $449,000 Including Nice 111 guesl hte lbr Incl $1400/mo 546-9950 lrptc SHOO/mo · MOVE IN COST room Close to all
land Owner I Agent, 141P4lrb locatlon $380 Info PLUSH CONDOS w/talls , 114 33rd Lge Cottage TyP41 2BA 149 E Bay
675-3568 539-6191 Agt tee streams Gar wlopr11 TSL MGMT 842-1603 1BA. pV1 patio, w/d hkup, TSL MGMT 842-1603
ILIFFS w/d hkup, new deoor Avt Don't miss 2br S600's ~ar No pets $675/mo Newly remodeled xtra lg
WHY NOT CALL
111·1111
SUWlll YILL.lll 3Br 2Ba. COMPAAEI lalka blaa• 210I now 2br 2ba $900/mo. almost ocean rronl I/yd T L MGMT 842-l803 2br lba S845 3Br H'tBa
COMPARE! S169,0002BR2BA.den,newcarpet, lbr$J00lstmo +$500 gar bluns & more at 111mFHEREIT S745 Carportsw111orege
tee The Property Mart paint . very clean sec 549•2«7 __ 539~190BestRltyfee $525/mo 1BA 1BA, all pool no pets 642-~t_<:_
640-9019 $1500/mo 675-2578 SHARP remodeled 3BA HUGE downatalrs ooean built ins, lndry rm, nr A PIECE OF CAKE 15555 Huntington VII~
Lene, from San QledO
Freeway. nonh on e.aclfl
to McFadden, weet on
McFadden. .ITS •(llCEI lalka +den, pool and lge yard view 3 Bdrm 2 ba with beach & shops. tul~ield llEI n Northslde $1200 Inc llreplace SlfJOO/mo. 735·741 w 18th St WWC9LI 1 ·
A real doll houee Perteet Ptaiaaala 2107 yrd/pool svs 546-2704 Avall now 506 E Ocean~ TSL MGMT 642-1803 .... TIEITS for young couple Large 2 ----.,.._
bdrmw/hardwQOd lloors. *mPS Tl SAii* L O front. Balboa Peninsula 1Bdrm -Apt w/balcony, Beaulllully landscapad. liiiiiiiiii~iiii
trplc, 2 car gar and loads 2 + 2 + gar&gi'\ frplc, But. ltac. 214 Call Denise pool. No pets $495/mo. spacious. All utllltles II
IT'S A PJECE OF .CAKE TO ADVERTISE IN
THE DAILY PILOT'S CLASSIFIED PAGES
PAIVA TE PARTY RA TE (No Cancellet100)
3 /me 5 rime mm1mum
$ 60 per /me Example 3 lmes-:Sdays S9 00
• TfleS(> rates only apply to items advertised lor a price of S 1000 00 v• /PSS
• Price must be mcludea m aa
• Rate does not apply to Commercial accounts or Res/ Estate
• NO CANCELLATIONS OR CHANGES once the ad f18S run Cutomer 1s
Fo~0=~~~,~~~a;;~~ Daily Pl.IOI ....
CALL 142-5878
of charm. Just reduced to bltlns. only $750 Fee 2Br 1Ba, pV1 end yrd at 851-1184 646-3618 paid Pool. gar. no pets.
$214.500 TELEREIT lll-lllO w/gar. Walk to bch $950 -lllS/PETS II 18r 4-Plx. bltns. nu pelnl 2Bdrm tBath $895
-------------897-0862/213-945·5980 3BA I Bl ff d No ""'Is •"lS + dan 301 Avocado 642-9850 Finer Balboa 3br 2be hm -uxury u a con o ""' ..., -.-__ __
styled rite decor lrplc S.at the rush rent 1hls view S 1850 720-1950 716D Shalimar 852-9966
gourmet kit ch 2-gar $420 lbr just blocks 10 LIDO ISLAND-3BR 20 2Bdrm iB4 "Cottage" pV1 ~iekl
S1100 539-6191 Agt tee ~;~~91c~~rt!!'e kit newer. spacious. air:: yard, spring fresh S650
CtrtH •el •ar 21 2 -g _ lovely courtyard, ava11 NO PETS 990-2970 FlllLY APAITIEITS
----------" • 51 t $2000 pl mo Call ----Sparkling clean large apts
*I.EST ••• SE* (mat 2144 Sh 675-5792 Lg E-slde lBr wllots of net for lamllles with 1 or 2
T r aditiona l
R ealty
631-7370
II you're ju1111ar11ng your
own bu11ne11. claullled's a
greet PllC41 to buy ottlce
ul m4tfll
aron wood. Quiet Complex
1Br 1Ba + lrplc, carport. U fu Doll H 28 2B N t C t C d 2bd $535 No pets 990-2970 children. Near park Heat utlla Incl $695 Fee n rn 19 r 1• ~ res on ° paid No P41ts ale, lrplc, mle<o. Yrly lte 2 ~ba, loft, S 1000/mo 1 BR GARDEN APT 3Bdrm 28a $795
TELHER lll·lllO S1250. (619)43-4-2801 722-8440 0< B•0-7033 Slove. refrlg, no pets 2Bdrm 2Ba $730
S520, Call 548-1377 398 W Wiison 63 t-5583
SELL BUY C11t1 •11a 2'24 Ct1ta •11a --------------
WOODLAND VILLAGE through classified through classified
642-5678 642-5678
HIRE FIND
through classified through classified
642-5678 642-5678
APART MINTS
Come & enioy our i<lrdtn slylt aots Quiet. comlorl<lblt llrn1t
close to lrttwa11 & So Coast Plata white only minute~ 10 tilt
beach Garaees aYa1lable NO PUS Pl£.AS£
POOLS • .. Al • LA-Y llOOMI
aACllll.M , ...... .
2 ........ '71 S.'721
GAi, lllAT 6 llOT WATl8 .a. .
... l.Aaaa8IO
Tit. llAllA8MDIT 71t Ml I
• Month-to-month
also available
• Furnished/
unfurnished
· Fitness centers.
tennis. swimming
Models open daily 9-6
Sorry, no pe1s
Newport Beach No
880 Irvine Avenue
lat 161hl
&45-n04
Newporl Beach So
1700 16th Streei
ta1 Dover)
642-Snl
~~.
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• OrMQe Cout DAILY PfLOTITUllCS9y, Aptl 1, f-* -L..... ... lew · nt111at1l1 It l•11t ...... ,... ... Aaaetawb
peuo. ow =·• ::; v.o 8CH """'·IHn'lkr. . n11 mt .
_,,72i i4iM4'1t ~~,'40+, PoOI. TV. H.a. w ··---&-f I, ...
-· ...... 4'4-0461 ~br 2\tbe oondo, flt:::. --· ---~ UnM ,191.-.0~ t.~~ii11&= Gt·2r.o-~~17·. • c:::,~::.,..
IS'7·1nt « 1-.:1113 1o bch, fUm. 290 N.8. prof. m/f ..,_ 3 bd, •Ji:.~:'!
Mi f!ID • S!.,,, Niiie C.M. home for prof !~ ... ~ bwtt. SW, MM111
_., frplo, :_~j "*· '*"°"· • to be .. v ... + eec.. 17MaOI ZA:=~=...,.....,.,..._-end Oii"· --. .,,,.._PG klto SltN. aar..eoN .n 3 • N..Wtlc to bet\ ,,.,, ...... OCEAN ViEW8 Ml ..wie t700 Aft 5:30 ~ .. °"4 . c b • -Ute ~ c.nt. NIA/be In~ fftObii I l'IH, ••una , furn-, 110 Newport Centtt o; =..... llM Mt In H.8 pant, aoroee l3IO+ utl, 722-Mtt. 8M 200. ~t2 mi..,,...,_.._ _ _..._., from beach. Maturt FOR SOiliM&A 6 WINTEAl--------
no. ancJ, ocn w. •mr,:,d gentle m a n ·si.petobotl.M/F~nn OFACE for rent approa !-=~~~~~~~ ...... nrbch1bfn.cel,Cfet.~Ylll prer . Lite cooking, wlb4Ll52SL.ndty&khcll 190 eq. ft HMbOr .,,di~ 1Mn9, CA t271s.fel'7. .,.,, •• IW pply Diiiman'• "" :L.1~. •175. 4M4044 UU/mo. ,.. dep. fee,~ pyt -.tr. 11e lelc•, Cotta,....._ 12!0 FOUH~ Fil.ab, Sllk9Y. Attn MlfYO'Connel. ~ tn -· taurent, tam-Noon: .. lwlt •t M0-6144 Wl\llt(:ndl, 411t. 23114MW118 monu,. Oebbte, 6&WIQO t?e..:~~vtew"f Balter. SALES ExecMIYie f9C1'• ca-~ ~ = 0:: 173-7129 -•et •") Reepori prof M"" 8horee Prof F/30' .. to "" la 2bd -... -. & dfMw to tnek• ..... DUti. fnel t)'plng. ~. m I ™· ti Cf 4*111iillll ... * hm. !WI l315tmo +"' 2bewli.un,M75, fbfkto 600 8Q.~ -POH Found: o°'t -~t•,•d caMe. Fult tJme ~ -.entry&arr.._cell ltMnJ ·. ISM GOid ..._ ......_.,.
AWrlg, ~ htow Utltt 831-33" bch, 87'-tUll, COM. HAReof. :EW · me1e ~~· ~ 4 ment. a.. tr~ & Kinn Mom .. 44·to70 lnrD feat. lt-400. 1ID-0710
•i..ol. HO PETS 54Ml55 Am W/beth + l'louM UM PrOf./F wanted ASAP to , 111..... ~i.7eli.4~8· ety ='~ f«M~ 1119ftlll& NI tll LtidY'1 OOid fWa oi... = 'ct!~700~mo. t:m~hm.:.c~~of ~/~~~~~~ s,,,111 omc. IP*-'°' Found: lrlth Setter 876-8721. ' 9Y '"=~":."' ~ SClm. ondhlce,..llndt 1MO
jf1d. foio P .. a 54~5~ve n/eml{( tttllt. Refe req'd. Quiet rent. Eaat 17th St Full Female. Huntl"Gton Bcl'I. UUI I "'lllW'r 89Cr'ty wlbookk~ ....,... ........ 11~2j~~~jlOO~ot!!M4i:jtul!! 874-7"5 E~ 493--5812 hM 38r 381 Lag Bcl'I MfVloe. Oroee ...... Alie Nr Magnone Atlanta. 11-+ Hper Good typing .nn. Sel+oomm + bene. ... 1 ~:50co-=~·=~ Liell/iliJI Bii ~. 'P~!f n= = tor81p 945--S3M . 982"34~ PEAKtNTERHATIONAL 0tamfw•i11e.wontpro'. • NU.} ~ 2"° ~ loet Slit nr Id I
$2000/moY,,Y. k4-15ai •--• Hugh $49-8211 Ofc Ev llft frtttrtJ LOST Ory/wht 2 yr AIMderlnll'llhMttl'lend cen ng & phonH l:'IDll Nwpt.F•rn b91p/lft •
' .......... 494-21M ' flt~I M/Hueky, named Juno, bMtuyfteld,nMdl25 ~ Oood grOWVI UVU1 lln.ftllml!Tm. AJtlta 7 mo. Piii oel 1*tll.IUTI• llfll• bley91,eea.1ee1. htgNymotlYietedmen potentlal. Non-ernkr. llnllrV Pert&FITime9¥91. ~12
SJepetobeei::h S1350Yrty. Wkly rentela. Low ret• Rrnmtwanted. li75• tum., 400 Sq, Fl §11 ThilC f. LOST: SIAMESE a..1. end women who.,. lltoolmo. nM!27 """1t f .. ~1 ~11."""~ ...... ~-llr MJ-1111 11~5 l Up!MJy. Color ~~o!o~Np1. ~~":'M~Hwy polntmaleca1.8entrlght •b0Ye•Y91'•0 .. uc:utl¥e SECRETARY llllH'IH ~ ".. ------------1 TV, "'-"' MMoe, ftee . .., wipe~. 18 yn. or top pr~--20 hrt.lwlt, ncs. Word Pr~ r~J
*••ya....... coftM. heated Poot l S..tng rmmt ton 2bt 1,IM•. n llT&ll CotllH\ame'MOA'W•t· P«90nlfort"9 w. oe.tng.~orMn• 1DM T~ dUl iAXHSERJUf, • ----••* stepe to OOMn. Khch't 1be Irv. t!Pt w/rc?i atty. FREE~·TANDING ctm. R9wwd 831~145, Compi9teC«ptr::::r to: t20 ~Sult. IU.J PtAHO . .__,wood ~OH-SMOKERS ONLY. =~~= :ro·. :;·}orf·:~ie:: ~.!ShowOf~.!Oftloee ButlneM544-93e7 re:::=,~~. Z.Laguna '2e5l. • ..... -" --lat.I ... ...., f750.Cel7~t3M
"Stunning lg 18r 1BL 0/556-9119El733-07M ._.,_ "-t...,nllrttn. LOST emall t//Netlgteyl M J16.,tJ•·-•1 SEC~ARYFIT UM•WC.. hft.Tlme YAMAHA C.C.... flileno, twnhM fir pin. Frplc, 1111 &II llTIL. Sign tpaculll on W-.tcllfl Po<>dle w/purple cot11r .-..,. Aoc:utate typing for W.P.. 111.f f&IT ~ .....,, ....,._
J>•tlO, pool. Lvty enwon-Wkty r9ntale now ·~ S~-~~ home on Balboa Ml-t111 vtc FWv\118.icer 54S-8098 ~ UIY xlt dlet•PhOne aklllt. •••J ..,.,. EnergeOc; ~ ~ cond. 12295. Me-lM •
ment. Eutbluff. No pelt S12t 50 wtc a up 2214 I~ $485/mo Ind utll. PtlMUb Ent""*-t6c AMt Mgt •P•lll ng and good to condUct • Mn .. lng ~= *775. ALSO, 28' 2~ Nwpt. Blvd. CM 846..1.ws ~. tip, ale. Prof. L~~E:2~RON~ DEL Hl2 for aennte #Id ectl¥e = w/numbert, 831-4MIO ")'OU .. loc*lng for e«tr"• Stucty IOt the Orange -=eoc;'~840-0349 IOllllLINE =~J~:" = ave~ lm::'cJ~ 1/:tt/b~JHJTLffi s ==·~~~ WllY/llln. ~mon:e c:..= c:.:.::~ epotU115~52._"'l'O: ~a trptc~epe'oriro 3028W. P.aftcCout ~ The Hwy, 10:y:43783~~= NEEDED For Proven rHlted ex parlance F~t= =-Bt~. Moun..,_,, l<nOtta 'Berry PleeMn1 ~ 1106ce e 2 BOYS IMKES· Sdlwln 10
beech. Yeerty S 1100/mo. ~Beech. Refrlg-TV IH••lfl ll•HlflH eY/wtcndt 552-9868 ~eight~~ Pr~, PIH U c 111 Rob In :::c.°' c:' :=.;: ::'.d ~ ~ epd UO, MonQooMI~
vine Aentllt 875-4912 112 +Wk 191.nodepoett. For the Roommate you're IJutlLJ 7~7-7900,rHB. t 545-14«. Ttcblcal/Tr.... tMIW -.., Ol**'O' In male•~•. high ecl'lool llOOee 1100. 7i1G-3131
3.8A 2BA, CLOSE TO Hllh ti art =~or-~ed ad Ll'nllY 1111 C.M., H.B. or F.V. Mnlora, oohge students g'1~~28t'r,~ 1 2'124 compatlbll~. 2=;7 Up. Hr oc Airport. sm1 FORs!lf" •MJw/Dntal Ill! UllllU1 5'2-4333 ~on~' 5~,.: au,. laJe
l.tg 2BR 1BA, frplc, gar, l.~!!r:~~1!f:IT Carlttl ftr ltat OfcwatehMp832-4190 S500?~r.~y8pm. Front l~ofc. Wiii ~:,..; ~ -::= ~:~•,::g~~p~ to t:i>-;;, Sat= C..ta... 1114
WI patio, no pet• 1820 2'1tl "'" ~' train. College bkgrnd ll•thea. 667 Ul'tft G1tden Apt, CM. :~oor..~00}~~· :,:: rnsoamc Of nrc: en I 873-2825 or 6&~4!0 3BR 28A hM to lhr In 218'4 [Jal' C g Sl-'-2'1M pret. Npt Bch. FIT .. Mon Satwy+boftue+Apt. Ho ~ -.... . ..._ .._._ .. other lteme Incl lcnlc::lll.. Eltlde CM. "400/mo + · · · • ._ URGENTLY need & wllt , .thr Frt 548-5073 peta 6'2-4914 91111't-4C>m ... ,,.. .... -• .. _ .... SU
3NR 8Mct\ & Udo 8l'lope ll'lr of utlle. 548-3977 garage for rent. MO/MO, llft.D 11 IWPT• PA'(. FOR PHOTOS taken • . -urcUHMC pho,,., CeMla~ttlre. ..,,acq, -.Tl H 11Mt
/BR 2 bth d«Jc d/-..h 556-2844 aft 5pm. (I lmf-) of acddent Comer Of Ill(. n1Uf1 11f1 .... Hom9 ~ ...tcome. 548-0901 C.M ~ 6~age ~~~!"..1!5. 4~ 2!lf..!!!'w· c,o.M*'-P2oot5 • lterlt fl .. I 114 41et St. S2.25,000 .,., L.arlllPYf & PcH, Corona Cltdcal/Offfet Mii Tune up.tmog . ' brs• Ute auto ,..,_ Ind tire For ir..... ...._ Ollll ~ ll'tlM tl'4 ctui,......_ .._,_ ;;tN'a' .,.,M_;,: 8..,. .., +0 'W 873-5211 "" Del Mar on Nov. 121tt, ep. llllfT••ta• expertera .. BUSY lhop, Ml'Vlce. ....port Tire Marano Mon ·Fri. at ~nny new 2/bd condo In ..... ....,..9311 y IJll&IE pro x 3 PM . c 1 11 P -.... good opportunity 1 OOod c.m.. 3000 e. COMt I 4 2 • 4 a as b • t n DT&11111.1
QUlrd Gl1ed, comm pool, Balboa Penln w 3Br 28a. S1orage Spacea AYWllble luiana iaudal (213)807-2111 M-F or 1~ =Co .. ~~ pey. ECONO lUB~ & Hwy. Cofone def Mar. hm·3pm. Or after KJng bed twtn beda: 2 din.
"c. 84-4-1395, 1¥e mag. Stepe to betl. Nltmkr O. Anu 8ayttde VIiiage luiw (714)e7$-2810 P«~ to IWn T'f~ TUNE 1550 Otd Newport llfl.. &-.JC)pm 11 842-Ml'I.. tabtee. c chllr't -.; CJ11w '300 + utlla 873-1827 300 E. CoeetHwy. N.A. Start .. FIT ~ . Bl, CM 831-9148 coffee tac-. ,,_._,. ···~lmst Balboa Penlnatw3Bt 28a. 873-1331 Mon.-Frl.'~ Optu!tin nM .,.... and rental pw90n. Room YH•IUI 'm:!n~~1r'Pa~~~·:: VEHDtMG AOUTe PTfFT Vibrator cNlr, 2·~ L~,3~'!,~~~':W,;..~ StlP9 10 bdl. NttlNcr In llCH for edv.ncement. CU>!Mt thoS> ncte mcprd 84S-4841 ~~~=-=:*.-i~!Z
eloM to bCtl S1500/ S300 ,. utltt 873-1827 c...mw QlW Can Jell TSL MGMT 842-1803 uw m111/electronlc bd for,..._~ Re "*" larnpe & ~
TSL MOMT . 842· ~ Bal. ... 3BR, w/d, get. ll lllt/l!!t QUICI II e HILD c x RE I Lit E lllT ,.. horlzorull .... Metric .~ llLM .,,.,. 350 lair, Coate ~ '7t OU>8 Omeg9.
Avail 4115 1350 + ~ HOUSEKEEKPING In FIT tyWtem. 242 Henne St, ...__.....,,. acoeplied tor MeaaC.t212t~2 or1g. ownr. low rnlea. llWf•t lllllTI utile. N--tmkr 873-1378 lalialll .___1._, ltlMt m ,.,.,.1111 MIN Verde home 2-epm ,._~http OV9f 18 )ft. Cotton. 714/82$-3702 Halrdr....,. & Mani· wa~"'"' PW11wood Apt. t7112 28drm 18a, gerage,,p()OI • ••r•1 .ut In your nelgl'lbOrtlood M-F Cell ~ ,,,_._a/tldteta, Plrlllng cwt8t. M/F *' dlena "'"• ~ • Merl & Women JOROAH AVE. APT 3-A.
laundry. Wst• & gu CdM 2 bdrm h ... tplc, xlnt 2717 Muet be be 11. bondable '9279 atten., otc ate. can SU... llln Slll Aentlla °""J. a. Faun-°""' 18 wtdepend. car & SAT/SUN M . ~108 i*d. '725/mo 860-8213 loc. prof fem. $450/mo. ....v •-& credit wor1hy. F/tlme Child Care needed at 87S-4580 or ~ In tlln V*'I loe. 183-7022 proof<>' Int. tor home ct.1--------
. Ruth 97~5278 -..w 15 Ill L..&.....11... ~---In my Cotta Meea hm call person et 3432 Via &Ill llUI ltY9ry Of The Realst• ._ ..t-SPACIOVS 3BDRM 28A COM F / Nwpt Bch nr Hoag H°"*' W~ .... r~ 650-5318 before 8 Pm Opono II 105, Newpor1 Poeltlofi Iv.II fOf ww M&TY•WlfN New pi paper. ~arn ,.'-'l!!f!l!!---------/vtew. N..,. beech. Oar· em n tmkr lhr lg tel. 1328 If. Why pay rent -·•n ...,,. r ...,,It Bch btwn 3-5:30 · ...--· ~In pereon ~ 1400-eoG/mo for p. T ,-
age. Y"Ji 11250. Avllll ~'t~~!!·~::·~ ownyourownoffloe. "(11t)21Mlll Mother wtth~ng c:tllld, DATA ENTRY ~~~fun~~ BOATS,2900LaFeyette, eerty am hra. 751-4155, ......... 1111 ~~:_.912 1:,!.'7str1~•1• 540-2580Evee8~~ TomL•.~2·HlOO UYlllMA' :';,.:~~~my~~ FIT. must type 50/wpm, NEW SUZUKI motorcar. NewportBwti. 7-11amto~. 1f BXYlii5 c;p;t 'ii
---------COM PrOf mele femk la1lan1/0fflct Int Nan oo Nekt ldMe In-oldl In my L.eguna NIQuee exp ~. n-wntcr pref, :· In auto ..._ or lllT-llTlmlt aatM Llk• MW. CrulM/lttl IPllllll &n ll'lr 28r 2e. uP.~. ~ 2'111 "'1tlont, new prod~a. , home, M-F 3-& r;· Must ~~~~~P. call Cormlef~~~· 23863 El N9"' cc. Tuee-&at, • HU 11500/ot>o. 759--SSM
1 mile to beec:l'I. 842·2357 Apt, wld & carport. No •13U& WsquareF•t. (714)582· 1884. FH have tran.p. 24 1390 · Roolcftetd. Lek~ F~. 14.00fhr,4~787. l vailabte March 31. DONATE bC* a merlM
STEPS-TO BEACH 1Br pett. Nr ooee.n. $525 + 'A 1817 WESTCLIFF bued. ...t1tlc1 3tli W. RmJ Call for appointment. CIRCULATE a PETITION Houwltt•, me1ure wtth equipment. ~tall Y~ G11:rs. No Pit• ~· Avl 4111 . Jl• NwptBcn64t·5032Agt WDYllWNIT RoOsE§lffl Rd BY Mature tor unorganized 110-1001. '504100aday,pddelty, referenc••· can arH ~r'fty < ltat •
se Imo. 8 3-e640 2880 Evet 875-5 BAYFROHT BLDG Soup-Nndwkm =r TAMARA! Dog• cat• buay Reel Elt•t• E.x-IAI-&4&-05151875-3389. code, 3151733-1800 1'::.11~': .. c:.,.1on
VILLA BALBOA: New Femn-1mkr:38R2behM EXECUTIVE SUITES betlonCoaa1Hwy. fllh,blrdt,eto.weicom.di ~~~1 ~-~!1~.,: Full/part time Call lllTlll... Mllllf&ILm r ..
luxury 2BR 2b•.' .. 11 nr S.C P1Za l:MO-t 113 utll St .~5' & UP &42-484-4. tor BIQ MOCNEY MAKI Refs and r.... ratet SctllOntky Bwbeta 540-32e0 appt Elect/Mech At .. mb Efficient non·•moker LU .. ti fil4
amenttlee. 8181«7-2589 h/850-1465 w/875-48e7 CdM di tummer. all ~t. Bob CdM ra. 780-9146. · Entry M ~ Cali 957 2488 · 41JI UJkEA :ft WWW fu Ci .... t• IHI F !Hmklno peta. CM 4br ample ~g. 8:ti~':·..!:;: Dldtmon. 752"2 81 Pr.. _1 ___ , llllllL IFFIOI PUllllT If klll ee1-2n• for appi." EXP -DANISH Olr1 ..,. '40,000 1n U1tea. v-.
hie. WID, 19CUZZJ. 1310 2855Ec.tHwy875-e900 Yam a knit lhop . eatet>-nu...l/ FIT.~.phonee.Vlt'led FIT perm poe, fr1endty ' 1uo.ooo, uaume
28R xtr• IQ baJc:Qny, OOlltl 11111at. Mary 540-7955 .lllhed O'l9I' 1 yr, extt 1o-M•l•i1t1attn SIM ofc dutlee. 557-3200 neighborhood at ore. llLllllf ~,f}~ ~. ~· ,..._at 174,000. W/NB tip. l1et view. walk to bcb, gar., Call l*ore 1 pm. CORONA DEL MAR tttlon In NB. Mutt ...... typing P9ferr9CI, ~r1 Part Time 14 hr. Cal ..-~ Leguna,r., a• I, S133,000 -.. For 0.
new lntlde, avl 413 HB,..., elegant offloe .,,, .. up to Call ~5. M-F 994-5400 ~.P~: TIME · Help manage 1111111. tnlOI t0-7pm, 844-2111. 842~791 ~5 wltctys. 861·7""7-.s.483. tall Qll 873--7229
$865+ dep 768-5211 ..,.n car.., type to lhr 2500 111 Futl49Mce i.. ..,..,, auto cert1ert '°' Dutlee lndud9· Type tlle -----,~-----=:-::=:--:~--,.~...,..,..,.-!~~~!!!==== · 4BR 1~5/mo $150 dep Ample Pertc'g lmmecs ... ;'• LMa 14 The Orange County answer~ wtll 'trlln llUI EASY AeMmt>te Wcwtn CATAMARAN & Tr...,
---.lat-•· ff&.1t25, 983-4904 occupency 873.1eoo . wioo .. __ MONEY f Regleter. 21m-111m, on word proceuor Metur. ~wanted In a S800 per 100. at.. pey-For Sale: Brand ..._ ~ ... · ·-°' Wkdya a wtlends. SS/hr + s 200 · a eetlnQ Card Shoe> Exp "*'t. No E.xp./no ..._ a.-.. •ti Tra-11 Ca'-etlll In
..
1~~/~non-emkr, pvt E:xdualve ~ Pattt In ~~":~~~~ gu anowenoe. Oppty. '°' J.,., ~"f.J';f'· AMI 1°' p;e1, tfn hra. 30-35 O.talla eend Mlf·•d· )J(Tl6tJf iOiid Ch9ny boxu. 14000/oe»o , flu• 2714 $4101 552i:o tennle lrttne. Brand new 0tno. advancement. XJnt ban-Hrt/Wk All out appl-dreuad etamped Wood bed I 4'tl-i 141·7005. BN'r'Ae BEACH 463 2+ mo. , Bldg In pr9'tlgloue omc. = Wu... efltt. N4MMf depend car, HB Real &tat• Ofc, flt cation It 9114 Adame ~. EL.AN VrTAI. Bx -.00 ~ .. .,,.-... -.--IQl'30--.-.Stwtu'--. ' lrttn. M/F"" 38' wooo-Pn. 2000-75oo Sq. Ft. Ina, good drMng record ywfoue dutlea. Incl tome A .. Huntington Bch -803, a.411 e. ... .., .. Ad, ....... • GrMd ~1~e:i 1:fl50· brldQ.~.$300lnci Ava11May15th.Corner0f rv v,11fe,90Undlnwiet-75t-4155betore11em.· errande,gdepetllng~ • · F1.Plerce,n33482. Whn•Wldl•cha9el400, ,...,o.,.~-~MI
• · utllt w/d & 111 Wdbfdge ~rphy & Corporate mente, ha~ '8001< ~ curate typing, attention CJ•/•--"-ti FOREMAH pastel floral ClUINona
.... ~ .... 552~103 Pattt. Bldg tlgnage evlll. ty, NB prime oomm ptop HAVE to detall •must. Hrt flex, ..... uu n• Conttructlon clean up XJnt cond 790-0710 . WESCO MARINE 14' • HWldeome lllow8nce tor nr •lrprt, want loan, call Vera 846-1371. • FTBEAGLASS main ...
&fm8 1 bath SC Plza ar-. Male 50+, room w/pvt tenant lmprmta. Contact l275K 2nd TO. Mon-Fri, ~Spm. Ill.. wlt~OU.SECLta .... ER ,.1. .fl ,., w/tnlter, i1000/obo: •25•+utlle +dep.Ho entr.nroe<;,qutetnon Ter ... at54S-3115 A NEED., ----"'""" 544-1178 pet.. N-emkr. 754-0777 amkr 1375. 55&-0e37 Xlt Rlverlfde Comm ptop, • lfflll IUllTAl'f FIT & PIT 11am-7pm. RHld•ntlal & Comm.fl r-:::::--,...· ---~-R}; · LG Ofb In FuNon lelend 3 yra old, valUed 1585K, Admlnlttratlve Sklll• 1 *'4/Hr to atart. Comer Of 54&-oe21 , FIT, Gd Pey. LES 157 .. 133 Lii...... fill ~ .. ~:,:mrm~" !.!!"'!!; N3Bb Atplri1 b' .. ngt ~·-..lo ll'lr Prof. eulte, library, cont. want '°"' 1tt TD $2251(, Jleod the closs1f1ed pages muat. lefHr. Cell MMI• Wilner & Fairview, S.A. 3 •••1111u1 1111 ..___ ... --NEW 'M rm 2r
WY'" · •" .,.... .... r, "'o.....,,, .. ,..l,w/d rm, Zerox, frM parlllng, bOthptophuttrongten· and you're sure to 1111 ot! 848-2738 blkt to Coet• MeN.-.1 •r .._........, ·-·"'· _..,..,. 1 btl'I $300+ dep. 848-8405 etc '425. 831-6430 11000/mo. JUdy 780-2598 arita. c.JI 714-854-7919. s.,,or SllN 549-5202 PIT, FIT. Flex. hou,._ Up Oryert 175 lo $225. 11130 n '1ock7 epedal. ~ t1'IW lfflOI alll . to 18 hour+ ""* have Superior, CM 831-3197 lnV. 14 ISO 4441
p~ wtlllng to leam. 111111111/lllTI own tranep. 722-i1594 REFRIG. Kenmore 25 cu ft. lll9tll a.m..... .
Typing helpful Starting Day & night lhlfta open .Mll"fllllf. .... F/lr, SIS, almond, le»-I~ Jbe
NI S4-S6 hr. 957·3073 Appty In s>«ec>n belweer 10PM to SAM. S1artt"" maker water dlep.~'ii 1 ~; 3·5pm, Mon thru Fri. 90C ·.. __... • .,..,.,., bo •7 7 .. RAILER. ,..._ Clerk Typtet-Mutt be ac-Brletol Ho .. NB 752·2801 Ulery $4.50 hr. + ban-u-........, o v Shorelln9 curete, mature. com-eftt• 5 day -ts Off Sun-rum new • Set up tor Curnbt llMtrlW Ladacafla1 PWIOn•t•. 5 day 22'Mhr Aletaurarit day & Mondey 4M-6787 -f ~~/~ b ~at Jiiiiiiiii:=;=:i;;;;;/;iiiii BUILD OR REPAIR RESID/COMM'LllNO H A Lancut wic, perm poa, 848-1831· OIOITU. IOYll UllEm 11111.1 I llY Fliifill Perfect tor~-......... $2 40 d HOMEOWNER EXPERTS llOIPTillllY/1.1. • 1 YMr mlnlmun exp. _. LES 957-8133 ..,--race. • per ay ~::.~~~~":& ~: ~7gg.. 'f.Y :"" ~Jlc· Q11denlng Fun Servtc:. lnt/E.xt Acovs. CelHnga. Entry level. ffont office IP-~ th/ft Cal~' $25~ 3 Jibs. 1 INllnall for 44 to
That'eAUyoupayfor #478108Don'64-59'9 Mow~~tr• Uc•288597 83f-9295 peerance Lit• typing mt/llST!a 67~23~!::°defMar 4,!:' ~~:"'WO:· ~~ .... v~-=
3 llnea, 30 day minimum Doon-Repeir·Alt•atlont Uc .:Jslf~~=llat work. 968-27181E Iv mag PAINTER NEEDS WORKI heavy phones, wlll train. •!r-n •• ~~· • ..... ..... 1350. 962-4254 ll,./a--L../ "'Wu
In the Cablnet .. P~Loolc..-c )Obs & ree>elre 544-52': OLIS FINN LANDSCAPE lnt/E.xl, celllngs, retln cab. $750 mo to etart -11~1• ...-_..
SERVICE 35 · Ptant-tprln~n.-(26} yrs exp., work guat Mr Stuart 458-1103 •Patt Time Korleer Uquor. Apply et Country French Dining rm
yra exp Jerry 942-0se7 NEW/REPAIR. Ouallty. No lawn. Hor"tlcult maJ, full Davis Painting 9&4-3637 111111 S. ATIIT 2229 E. Coat Hwy. CdM. Mt o.:oratad by Cen-1-:ll:":':l:'r!P."'!~~l'ftoijim JObe to amell, ~. mllnt. rMt. refa 543-e027 When you went to get rlg11t •Sun & Mon onfy 9-5. Mon-Fr1. Male1'9m. nelllCNfftn Din tbl, buf·
DIRECTORY 1te;i~b;;l;;;;ii,.ittiiii•iiiifor--:0&-·1no--Free•t .. Nc'd·931•23-45 C&BLAWNSERVICE Lie =~~-,,... :c,~~ki~· Ul.Mal&Ykil l.Wllmlt.lll !:p..hu~h .. ~rl~I ~~~~
motherl Meture woman ftad.llL Mow-edgeTwtceamonth eat Cahnytlme962~701 ma110n-,pechdwaytoflnd 64S..5000ext.521 FIT ... Expernec. Orig c:oet $10,000 Wlll 973-1:J3 1 Mon..f'ri'.'~
fOYM lnlanta & toddters. FENCE ~r New I Old 11150to 125 548-5722 what you're looking tOI' For Apptm, call Mpm STAG LIOUOR nr Newport M ii for 15000 EvH · ·
842-IM88 Wood, c:heln "~~tlo't.. EXPERIENCED Gardener co~~~~~~ ~.A~~k. Bw:l'I pier 87~70 875-8781/cty 9G4--0500 o.::~~E ~ ~~
FIT DAYCARE MON-FRI. frM •t. Oreg, 118 10 )ft N.B . CdM area. Free •tlmates. &4~51·8 D , 1.,, Pi•1 I 1• • • • • • • ••: LIUL llUftlYI U . Girt'• bdrm MC S75 Micro 752.51l4 or ~7457 ·
CALL TODAYll
All Fii Liii
Your
hMce Dtrec1cxy
AepreMf'ltetlW
fOf 1 yr old In my E/llde --i L Ouallty yatd care Ron't Marine Hardware d•· 125 Ledlee bike l 2S Dys l:;;:-:-~-=-::,...---.,,--.....--
CM home tranap/refa req. u.-..t. Gardening 642-848e f1griafm ii.ya. H B C M er-.. 241...a 14 Evea 720-0952 SH 0 A E M 0 0 RING
142-4121 Id. IOI 883-4824,842-7328 aft 5. JIMS dORs. 1t20% over F THI INTE .. 10.... mutt haW ·~ CA 11c' DE WANTED On Balboa
Mother wtll babyllt In her cot . or app · ca HANGING/STRIPPING e eat Marine Producta Rust 1on.. Good c:ond. &l8-502-o220
t F t II .... ~ n ~ e W . . HI ·A·WAY COUCH l1!1nd Call Collect
C.M. home, Mon thru Fr1. 848GUNS or 831-0858 BRIC RR. Smail )obs. VISA-MC 673-1512 • PUT TllE IFFICE OLEll • Call John Dey. 84$-171 1 S300 552-8291. ·
Attutlca I! 543-5722 .... ~ Newport, Cott• M .... ANOYS WALLCOVERINQ • v b fl • Roll-A Bed Orig SLIPS AVAIL 25,30,35'40' AEBLowA OR PliNtEB SPRING SPECIAL. 1fr• FENcErnTE5fr•trlm lrvtne. Ref't . 875-3175 1na1a11111on & Removal • ery . usy ~irculation ° ice needs • 1·,:-thr llail\ .. ,10, $103~rr;.. One. S:~ ~2~~o:~T~~8
-Aleo Int/Ext Painting wtt w/ FIT reglltratlon. Dump runt. C.M./N.B. Concret•Patlol & Drlvet, Int. Painting. 548:4013 • pa.rt time elp answering heavy • f« 170. 873-5359
.,.288597 831•9~5 Caplatcano 8Hch Comm. area. Jim Whyte, &42-7208 01 ... block. Cerpentry a .. 1111 'II Im" e phone traffic. We have nice cus-• ~""' 11•·,ult '"''"' •tactl'--.... IOlS •1st. Tr1a1,...1Ma
Da---re. 240-2572 Drywall. Paul 842-3238 tomers' Appli"cants m"•t be n t • d1n•r111r, Your ... Exqulalte Acouatlce~ ,....,.. •OEN. HOME REPAIRS. DEPENDABLE QUALITY e ' ....-. ea •
aprtv.d or remove. Ory· Cltulal lenln· Paint. Drywall. c:.rp.ntry Maeonry work. Oen. clean Workmanship. &42~ 13 e responsible, and have a pleasan1 • wn 11 t-"our DP Sh1pem111er 1000 tttrcytl•/
••II Repalra 8'47-7901 etc. Owy 845--527~ PTL upe, tr• trim, removal Pl •i • telephone personality Some light • ''"" ... 11" rowing machine, hardly lcMttn Hu . ROBIN 8 CLEA.NINO ••HANDYMAN•• guar'd. Stew 835-<4833 •• •• • office work also. Hours are a pprox • t "i•ll 1;42 'Jii7K ,.,, ,.,, UMd 150 850-0121 .,,., ~~~~~~ ..... ~ · 'I--•" c=~~ a thr~~7 Large or tmell. I do tt 1111 STUCCO MASONRY-TILE 24 lw D • tH-1llO e Mon-Fri, 8:00 AM to 1 :00 PM. start. e 1--------A _&pm..______ ·3~t: 1•~ '*• ,W 11:.
w.utue · Pat531·5579ortwmag NoJobto amatl Alltypee. •Allplumblng&heatlng• · sal $ e Eaprll Motor CtoH HOUMCtMnlna 14 yn •xi>. ROF S , Fr• •t. UC 831-2345 • e mg ary is 100 per week Apply boote. az lO, Ilk• "-' Refno' wUhera d rellable.reu.lr••t own P RE IDLSERVICES •ma DRAINSCLEARFroml15 •in person. Mon-Thurs, 2.00 to 4:00 • MOTOR ROUTE S10Q1'41'""970
r•,..,_'· D/W Alcryw~ trana. Pina e4s.eeee Oen. Call Watt tor your home I Feuoeu. Dlapotal, Heeter, • PM. Ask for Ei1"'6n • -...-. ' . repelr nMdl. &42-7990 841-oeor P&R 722-eoee '<.~ a -.. I •ui
Community Appliance. l ... IUll• *A-1--* • • 111 -.. ....
1999 Alter c1ro1erii.Pk w • ...__. ........ 1n I:!-'-1 • !I CLEAN& EXPERT t ORA•1ae COAST 0 • Available In Irvine area.
240-0717 or 522-2323 Oet-;;;;-c:IMnlng":C;.'for Cf RXOuNd .. U6V1Nd OWr 25yw.1~ • •• ,.. AIL y PILOT $ $ ttc1an Mrvlce now. 54U757 Garage a Yard Clnupe Uc. T-118,428 130-1353 33-0J!..BAY ST, COSTA MESA, CA 92626 e 300 to 600. NO COllect-,.,~mfmfbltnn::!m:.-1--------Jon 4MM1'2 .. Aec Mov1HGu • • •NIOUAl OPf"ORTUHITYfMP\.on111 • Ing. 3-4 hours a day. Mon.
1'11-... Al'f HauflnQ. Moving. ~ Ou1c11 a caref\11 T138CM8 •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • .. • thru Friday afternoon. Sat. Fr• .... 1'9fa. 552· n~ ups. 7 [)eye. Loweet ,..... LO AA TES. ~2-o.410 '
tr1tten ca11 Barry, 122-ee13 nanm ......... & Sun. morning. Call
a.I. wits6N I SONS 111,U, ll ... H..... . 642-4333. ask for Kirk.
WEWUlll
IAIEIAll ...LS ~ac1:, ~1 ~t:~i..R~7~: I Lenart s~~~~~ ir---:-~_,......~,....._ Openin1s~ow Avail•ble ORANGE COAST
eterprooftng• 831~1119 30 yn exp: 84&-1740 Tll 111111.. Lie. T124-43e."~f4'42r ...... Piii lllOOE ept.~.,;:cvy-,ot'f:. R0L~1~:~~°" '1:\':S::::b~: NEWWerehoU .. Storege TopQuallty.LowPrtoe CAR ROUTES -J
845-4289 '7am-9pm Spec:lllltt. 552.0421 Lewn Main & Aototllllng. MYll-111 Aw Mt. Lie:. 831·2345 330 W. Bay St. $299.9&
Sprinkler 1n11a11. Repelr. ~rt--..rt..a.A 1 __ .. E•rn E . ..,.,. "-eh
••tract n Freee.timat•~ Byhuorp1eoe~3815 i--..... 1tmt7Ajmfm;-.. A••, ~ -1 1-11 .. 1-! K c T .. EE sE .. VICE 1 * For D•llver11 01 Thi• P•,,.r Dtaig 8«v Br ...._. ..,... . . " " lud ltrri l<artt Slngte Cyl MIC 1
T n ti . Q~ Fffc eommer et &;WeJI Top. Tr1m. Removal. Oull. !l!f!l!ll ff ttftMop9d1 M0wer. N~~·720-9191 s~ 1n Comm'I s.rv. Lie/Int. ff'M •t. ~/Xkiel '°' nc; ~ p«.onai ~ ...
· end 1. ,,... eat. Me-82t:lor 535-MM In_. & Ht• htkpg for Ptupe.:Or · D•ve4M-t111
TY'l)4ng, Word Proc lellnQ, 5'3-et23 .,38312• L~. Sprtnlclera. the elderly (714)133-2000 ·
type&Mtlng. RUSH J08I Sod ~ 20 yrt tn t
OUR SPECIALITY. llllTlllTlll ~ Torty.84'-5124 falaliat lftlllftSnlll:r.'::==
GRAPHICS NEWPORT. All~ Of ~. FIR@ iiXfATINd 8Y A AnOC'dabl9. ~ t>ttft
. l'ao-11tJ llc14178". MO-f5M ~ oteen-up, gen'I arct9'nor fl)'rlottwippy kitchen Cell 722·9.,.,,,.
HUNTINGTON BEACH
F9UNT ~IN VALLEY
INDEPENDENT
-
I ..... malnt, f,_ frfnMna, fr• et · Lie 2~
..... ""' •t.Mauro.H2·ti'73 ~1 MM114 WIM.. ., Deliver 1 day a week. No
0,... time to •tftl..,._. En l F:=!t W!:= ISHJl<AWA LA....,,.,,...... OU CALL HOW t4~t try ,_...,,...,..... "~r"' -,,-AA-IH_BOW....,,...-P-.A_INTIHO...._...-LETTHI! INE IH COiiecting, no SOliClfing. --~-----1ty Norm1n The Doormen Socl. ClMn-upe.. Melnt Ouallty le pottcy SuneNne window cteenlng
LoTt>S 1-2-3 PAYROL1. Oek a Fir. 951.oooR Spttnk .... etc. IS0-4147 55()..M4t JE~ Uc"" Ltd Cell c114> 8'8-5HO Must have dependable car,
Ptdlue> a deltYef"Y. too TIDI Gene. 979-0ss1 .._all A.AA PA1NT1HO 1nt1Eat Per1c Window CtMntng truck or station wagon and .,..,. T~/~ Clean-LOWEST poeelbte prtoe e llao w1llfl ml"'-bllnda ~ •DRYWALL TAPIHQ • '"" new lewnt 751-3478 10 81""" Servtce 182-3235 Newport ar• 720-9101 insurance l'!-.-.... •---.-.--i...-1All Texlvret 6 Acoouettc. ....... ...,.. try a.Moe ,,.. eat KM'! 722·'"4 =----,Upe.,....-..,..,•T=-,_-T=-~-,...-SAL YER PAINTHG Spring Ct.anlng ~
.-mod'l-Addttk>N 8Mf:llno.Aanwwtnt-Heul Lie 1425'24 8alpoa WtndQI# WuNnQ c ALL 8 4 2 -1 4 44 _____ 141-' __ HO_ Mll<I 150-3283 Call ~ny11me 884-2017 • 873 3135
bpeft Oerrpentet. ""91d'I, PllW ILHTlll TrWTr1tn/C*Mnup ~ LA ow PAINT!~ Ask for JoAnne Craney
Costa Mesa. CA
Per Mo.+ Tex
60 L-Pl'(fMntt
Cap Cott 132,280
Cap Red 18,902
• Reeidual $ 11. 188 ,eeeeeeeeeeee ••••••••••••q Total Paymenta ot
: DELIVERY DRIVER I 1J!~1Jet°
e • St•• 139402
: Dally Piiot motor route : II 110E
: available In Huntington : $199 98
: Harbor area. 1-2 hours : ,.., Mo.: Tu
• per afternoon. • so~~-
: Call 642-4333, Monday~ : ~ C,: u.::'
•• Friday 10-5 P.M Ask for •. ~•,a.Mt.ao
A TOUllP.,.,._d • rt. • s12,111 eo • e OACCU
: Orang• Coaat : a• 1'4it1
: Dally Piiot :1 Aa L~ .
: 330 W. Bay 0r1Ye : -----
Comm'I, lfNll/twae Jobel Quality wont, frM eet. Olf~=ntw Int/h t 30 yrt ••rr, . Wf'ty rvn ~~t ~~t wtien 631-322& JOfWI 77J..IOl2 •42&&13 986-7~1 """--"·2873 ref'• •.02. "14 y0vcen ...... •...-·•or your t" ,...._ " .,.. " t 91110 In Cl...ified?
: Coet..,..•• CA :
"•1111!1"111111!!!1111!!!11!!!!••••1111!!!1111!!!1111!!!!!!!1IJ~•~·· • • •• •• • • • ~· • •• • • • • • • ••• ~~~-L.~~~~~-
...
•t
0nnge OoMt DAILY PILOT/ Tueect.ty, April 1, 19&e
4 n.l llM/J13. .......
IHlllD
It ciomea wltt\ budl.C ..it
and redial 11,..._ Yourt fOf lmmed~ de!Mry.
<Stkl a1e1> (Ser# 20-ta> ....
ORANGE COASl
JMP/Nn4141tt
2524 Harbof Coet1 M ...
Ml-1111
•Ylt.V1'117U* TUR BO DIESEL .
Bl.,./blu•. tullr eqpt ,
aunrf • alloy wn1... lilt•
rMtW cond .• SK ml, L ....
()(buy. (800269)
~ fl>Tla gJC Mme( NlJC Jl)JIC( rta£ flJTlC( MJC •JT1C( "8.JC ll)JlC( NI.IC ll)lU TMf07
.. ._... • ,_ ... • OMW CCM*TY a.. 8TAW ~ •11ta. IUWCMll ~ MOT1Cll Ofl
.,._., ....... ,,IRM •I -..C.Al..CGURT a.. MID ACGW Me AHNDOlllDtT ~ (CrTACM*~, (ctrACtOM oUMCiAL) NO(CrfTIC~O~· TIMTU'IULI elllt lflWI. ~ 'I at M "1ed tCA1. nt IY_,..111 Oii UU ~ '1C'"100e "f<>TICI! TO OEnNDAHT NOT!Ce TO CA088-0&-"' T a. te .,. ................ ,.O.e.•11 ' TMl....uAleTA~ ..... llNAm (Avtto 1 AOUNdo)ANNE H MDAHT (Avl10 l IA*° a Aouledo) WAAM-......... ,o:.u~ ... ,.......,._,.__,. ...._......._, ·YIMmllBDeCEHIA The tottowt!'V panona MONIC PA~ au t.10H1C Aou11do) OOTTll! INOTOH CAPITAL.WINC.; YOU AN! ff DCF~J
-,_ --'9 CA .... 11M1 '1. -Of' llA*ATTM llawabendooedlheweof P~ULauA.• PAUl&aA. MoCULL!Yand00£S2Uo THf WILLIAM C ARM· \HlEA A Dlttd Ot r,,_
... ,....., .......... ,.. P1a1n11ff· JiEAITAO& MATIO•AL L"I , ... Ill• FIGttUOUI 8uatn111 MONIC PAUL and OOE.8 t 30.ov~e ... -. sum ~TC:.L~'r"w~ OATEO .AN f7, , • ...., .... -1 .. ._., rew BANI< 1 C""°'1lle corpor. eu.AJeal ca.~ -...,,.,. N & S L TO , tl02 t J through 30 lndulfve Y A ~ 'oPMfNT UN.DI YOU TNCI AiCTIOH
..... tlon . ''"--17 1 .. 'an Sllypattc Cltde IMne CA YOO AA! KING SUED BY CAOSS-COMPLAI· INOTOH Ol!V!L TO ....OT£CT ~
• ,_ .. IMlt .. row• Oetendent AOlfiAT ......... ..,...., • 't27t4 . ' IYP~NllFF (AUd 111911 NANT"(AUd lllllaNiman-CO., INC . W~l~b':' PAOPER'TV, fT MAY M
................ ,.,.., I U AKI. C AT HERIN£ Total admitted .... t. The l'lctlUou1i 8ualneea d•m•nd•ndo) F'EOEAAL dando) LAVERNA BEMIS F~~~l~LMoOAATHY. IOU>ATA"'8Uee.AU.•
...... -. --~ 8.UAA!. end ~ OHi! t tt~.S U,321 ; Tota l Narner-.rtedtoat>ow-DlPOSIT INSUlllANCf DIA Wut Anehelm AA89:.:.:.t.IATU· l'WIHl• IN• YOU NEEO Nrf
...... ...., ... ttlf'OUgfl T!N, ~ lllabllttlee tt7 t70,nt, ~ ftl9d In Orange COvnty on CORPORATION. .. Ae· ~ U\I • EICP\.AHAno.t OF TM! wtJ..,...... ea..~ 60063 ,., peld up 1.4..o.821, Cont· OctOO. ''· fMll FILE NC ~of Hl!AITAO! 9AHK v ....... ::AUM>u VUT~ l.A•o-S::? ~-NATURE OF ~
fllrilMr ..... .._. IN ••&e'*I lngent Surplu1 Note F2tt253 Yeu ....... • CAUMDM :A:: -:•=-= ~R,HV· WILLIAM C PAOC&ONJ AONHSf oew1. oet,_.., 5000000:GrOMpaldlnend NaaYSanclot.eu1vanc1a DAYI.,.. ttw •1R11M11e 111 ,., TOHnl·JOHNM. YOU YOU SHOU.D n-.---..... ,... AmNDm>~ co nt'rtb~ted 1urplu1 Ave ,Vanloe,CAI02tl .. _..•,_le .. a~ ......... it ~:~J~ l!OW,AAD o: ~N::TAL>.WYEA. .. ......... v .. ...., ..... NOncm Yau ....... lb.-t,411, t~.i..-~PlClal IU(ptua Thie bualftael .... oon-.,....rtttetl ,........ •• ~ ....._ _ ....... WA.MINOTOH JA.• MAAJ< °" ~ I, tees. • 10~ .. ... aft ........, rill'I ...... Tiie .._. ,_, ...... Functa NUN!!: UnHllgoed due1ed bV en lndMduel dtlit MUft. A,.._.°'.,._ -" ' ' . ES A.M. Ventugo ..,...
..., .• ,... ............ ~ ......... ~ fund9 (IUl'J)luf) (208 U4): Tllla llltlment -flied A .... -,._ .... not,,....,. l'Olll; ~ 0. PARSONS: l'AAHC Coipolioi1 • ~ .........
• ~""" .... ......, -... ,... ,. o e1n (Loee) trom ~tioni w1111111e County c... of°'' ::,c.,.._. '°"' row .,_. wrttleft ,.....!.'~ ., '-~~Cfa1:H~;ic:~8!:~1~ T~ undlt w ~ • llltiWMJ aerftDeer ..-d ..... .._. (2.ft0,499): lncir.. (0.. ange County on ~ ,..poMe m.i"t•e In Pfoper--,... .. , ,... ' o· PATTi Deed of TM'~ .Mt
1.---~·eo JEEP CJ7. va. auto.
PS/PB.S'ort top. Great
c:ond.$4eo(),84()..2162
111,111 Or ~Offet'I
.,,. IUllll
• ..... eM ..... (lllitM In Ifie 1n1 Mfow. crH .. ) In Capital end 13, 1988 lft ,_,.., le!fal form It JOU WMI the~ to...._, '/OW 0D!uMLET~ A~lgR6oi:s 1 'TO 12, 18M, • ~ ~ .,..~!MM). tryou '6...-theld· Surplu1 during tH6 Pub!Wled Orenoe Co.Mt WWlfeM'*""tohMlrow-• ...._211107of~ReclO('dl ~ de .... "~ vtoe of en lttC>rfMl'y In this 2.955.152; ln1ur1nce In Dally PllOt MarOh I I, te. 25, -.. If ,_ ._ ~ .. row l~OU ARE BEING SUED In IN olb ot the~-t,...,.., .,.. ~,... mattar you thCNld do eo For o • Na ti on ~ Id• April 1, 19" tf ,_ do ll04 !Me ,_ ,...,.,. ... on .... .., rou 1N1 Ud
11 1
Olw1oe =~
cMclal uetM "'-llrl ptue Pfompity 10 Iha! )'OUf writ· 3,700.381; Aooldant I T-o90 ,,,,.,,,... on time, JM 1MJ .... ltl9 oaee. and row BYPLAINdTIFdF:(A) D.EV~~ lllleand,bJ ' M,~ .... Tl
Trac.. 9035 IOOI Quall St .. N.B.
833-9300
de• DtA8 CALPll>AN<>I ten '~M. If any, may be HMth Pfemljuna NONE: In· .._ IM oeae, end row ...... -r end ,,..,_ d•m•n i n ° 1 SulM M. Ceftjnl u. QEU.
IP•r• preaet1tar ""' tiled on time -ence In FOfoe. Callfomta DIDI.,.. lllnllC[ a: _, ~ ~ lftr IMJ bl tllltlf\ w~ l(LINOEA ANO BETTY AT PVllUC AUCTIOH TO
,.._.. ....._ a ,_.. AvtlOt Ueled ha lido .. Bull.-Page 805,97a.090: r -"" Mo11 '9 latett wltMut lwttler •amlnt "--KLINGER Alt HIGHEST BIOOEA fOft
QulneM•ta--.,._ ........ INl111t IJ.,._....,.. Acciden t end llUllll ITATDmffTCW ....... fr4lfft "-~ ~...,.... o:.:::::::..c::-o_ ~(pllYllble•*neof .. 1ttl8•1•10s100 Runa oil 756-9283 •ft 5pm
VW '79 RABBIT 01eM1
spd, aunroof, 11'11/tm
casa, $1~. 548-9922 Una 0.U • W -c111oW1r -era Ud. llift _. premlum1 • Dlreot CalttOfnla A.IA*>OfMllJtr °' OlUft. •._..ate •~ --,..... In 1111otU ~ 0( IN ~lei taleto.iac. M 11 ....._. ..,_ a ...,_ .. Ud. Bullneet P1iQ1 NONE.=" ,..-,. .. ..,_ ..... ,.. .,.,_.._ Yo.i ..wr want le Mtwd -,._ .. • SI-) • ,_ nottl t'Ot'1 ... ~. ... ... ..,...... .................... W• hereby certify I.Nil'"' ":1C:.':i~ .._ ... Yo.i IMJ .... k> ..... ....,_, ,..,.., C"'"-.......... • • .,,.,.,... '° Iha coiny Vu. -..,, YW 'll •••• .. --. MCl'ttla._......._ ... W. le 11...,n nhR...... ebove ltem1 ere In ao-TM following per.ot1I lo oal an ....._, rWt• ew11." r-do 1110t :::wn A= --oe1wt1 COul1houM. 1'IX> aw; c.nr m -• -• c11mf"' OH ••• fer· SI Ult.ad deMa IOlldt• el eordence with the Annul! lleve ~ Ille i.. of -.,. If ,.. do not known M eHornlf, rou ..wr • • ... --~ w... &.111 NIL
176 ooag; Van am/Im /fm c:eas. alarmed. new m •• ,d. d.. • ••• I . I CX>nMto de "" aOooado ... Statement for the YHr Ill• Flctllloue Bu1lne11 "' ......... reu ...... eel ... '"°'"""' ,....,,., ........ ._... ~ Mt '"*°' ,_.~ _:: ~ n101 .. ~ -cw whl 'at 11 tlr•lpalnt, Y«Y clean. ••111°1111 .. ll8ted...,. Mt• a.unto. deberta hacerlo erided Oeoembar 3t. 1985 N~ .. -1., ,.. __ , • ..,. lllterMr......,.,.. ~ • •...., e6d °"'°9 C -"' wrlrieft u11111 -· erlCI ~ ~
90
"" ' mag a, r' ex $7200 0 80 '52-8154 .. la oorte ..._.. • lnmedlatem.ite. de .. ,. made to the lnturance Com-c;Z~ ~<> Hm Aich' • ..... eM ofloe {letM In ltle pMM boot,. .. In :r = :=: .:=, now held by t undW Mid Deed
c:ond. '4300
8
50-
1899 l:-:--:=A.......:..~·....,7,,....1...,1,...m-m_ec:_l_n_/ou-t. -. m1nere. 1u tHpuHta mlalonlr of the State Of Suite 2l0 l~ne Caltfornta h pftw boa*). 0..-de C::-~ wMt .~ Of T~ In fhe P'OC*IY .-... . ...C
a-..a-n, new '"";!Int tlree & motor, II Yelled M ,,_ta "' MCflta. al llsy algul)a. PYede California. purwent to raw 02714 . • 0....-. • .-.. en-,,.._.. .... ~ °T' de ,... fie -In mid County, C4lllbnlt. n.au,,_ ....,. NepWta • ltMlpo, ,_. Mr reoiltradl a tllmpo Donald M FOfdyce Pteel· Tiie F'lc11tlou B II tr..-.... ~ fu-dldal Wied fteM llft ..-o 10U •-delo'tCMIQ lie *Id ........ Clauk1 9045 •tereo Sl595 84M533 .-... et-,, .. ,._... t-TOTtiEDEFeNDANT A dent, Andr-eor..ni. AMt Narne r.r.rred 1!~':: dk:W ll8led a.. un pl&lo de• DIAi CALl.NDARtOI =·=on d!M.:" !!,? LOI
58
ol Trtd 7144, ri ltla I.;;;;;;;;-...--------..,.._..,-....,..,....,. cMlcompllllnthae~nled ~·etaty flled In Or ,..~·-ty de•DIAICAL.aNDANOI para pra•aftttt una MM. ·~ ,. .. o1 Nswpcwt8-11,~ '83 BUICK Wiidcat Auto. SOUTH-COUNTY r olrH OOHI d• tu l)ylhepllllntlffeg.in.tyou.tt Publllhed Orange Cout 1on1a5F1L~F2~ ,.,. ,, .. .,.,., llfte ....,.. .. .afttl a -...... ....,.., Md.c ;;~ tlbmol~
PB/PS, rune good S850 \'OLKSW ... GEN pnpt1dad • ~ ... you with 10 c»fend thll ._ OaltyPllot Marci\31, Aptll t, Mock Petrocllemlcel ,....._. .. _,,.. • """.,.,._ enwtll-1e......,_. ~ _,. ::..= ... "°"' .._ •per Mlp Rlcofdtd In boll
fobo a.a.a 123 n °'i:C: ,..._.. cone, tult, you mu•t. within • 2. 3. 4. t986 Compeny, Inc • I Calttornla ............. '*'-· ~.::-• ':' --CIC*ft. • 314, ~ 27 to • ~ ------& ._ ....,.... .. daya '""' t11i. turnmona '-M-039 corporation 17022 Fitch UN ..,._ 0 UM ltamede no • ,,._.. ~ .__. ,... m~ m..-. In .. Aatn ~la H 1100 ISUZU ::~u Pwde .-ueted lltved on you, n.. wttll 11111 Suite 210 irvtne ClllllOfn..; 1•11••*"' M le ~· ,,..._...,; au ,....,.... _..__':! y ....,.,, ottc:eol INCounty NOOl\Wol _ • llaMet,..,. ........ court 1 written reeponee to 1111\TIC[ 027 t4 · · IP'Oll ccllfti au ,.._ta MCt1W • ~ "'"9 4'U9 -....--. °" 111111 Mid County ALFA
1lU d'fVe. IMl1 .. ......, ... .,,_.o..... tllecomptalnt.un .... youdo fltlll.IC nu ......... __ , _,...,~ ........ 011mfllr oon IH for· to cal • ... .,..,., "-"' The
11
-.._. Md
Anthra, tan teethe<, sun ooe • 11r1 •e•d1, PIMde 16, your defeull wtll be flCnTIOUI llUlailEll ~;d b;':':"~~ con-ovmpllr oon 111 tor· m •I d • d • • 1 e ••I•• -.,. " rou do Mt :::-" ocher common -.lglllllion, It
roof ate ciolt9f PlreOI """-• "" ....,,.., • ref· ent•ed on eppllcatlon o1 tile m 111d•d•1 I• ea I•• ..,...,._.. al •tad .,..... tllt ..,...,,.,, rou..., "' Of the ,.., -' ' 9"lftCt. de ••• .. doe o • plelntlff ind thll court ma.. ...._ 8TA~ Thli 'eout•tement wu ~ ___._._ 11 .,...., ..-. q11e la -'• _..... "' lttotneJ refenll _...,.Of !'!~ ....__ ... ..:-...:::;~ P6's, front 9Wly bar. UN oAdne, de 8)'\lda ..... • 1,.,._ at The following peraona ere with Iha nty Clerll of vo· .,....~ uotle 0..0. a ..... eM of11oe (leled 1ft -...._. ....,... • ---
W arranty, 8700 ml (ne ., dtNGtOflo e.i.. 9:~or',h;i:.7~ .... ~ dotngbuslneau:Plnehurtt •nge Oounty on Fobn.llfY::., • -141 ti ueted no ,._ta thl,.__.boeel). ~~!'.!.~~~
St5,000 650-0121 after ioftloo). r, A p artments, 17011 t3, t988 11 ._ 'Mt>W9'-•ttefnpo o..,_. de.-i. M-.....,.,.. • .__,.__......,
6pm C-No.--~I~~ .. ~~~~·:~~ Pl nehuratl.. Huntington SpH rt Dana THI I,..::.-:'.~,_:: perdetalcaeo,rle~ traoWft eeta o!teoioft' f't-, ~ undnlgfted ~Nllee
LARGE SELECTION OF
NEW & USED BM W'SI
LllllUOl..W
vatuM E SALES
SERVICE & LEASING
3670 N Cherry Av.
LONG BEACH ~ Clle<ry exlt-405)
(71')1Jl-1 lto
Trade-Ins Welcome
OPEN SEVEN DA VS _____ .._
SIMPLY THE BEST
Sales • Service • LeeSlng
EUROPEAN DELIVERY
1540 JAMBOREE AD
NEWPORT BEACH
AdJaceo110 Fashion Island
Open 7 Days a Week
6-40-64•4
SEPWRflllPW
DELIVERY DEPARTMENT
McLAREN'S BMW
M·F tlll 9. S-S tlll 6
626 S Euclid St
Fullerton. CA
714-68() 6300
213-691-6701
THAflC YOU
f;,,~
IN U.S.A.
ANO TRYING HARO£R
TOBE ::J
•SALES
·SERVICE
·PARTS
·LEASING
Af/f,f l IN~! NI J~•
)~; Ill( WI ~ r r ;A) I
£VERY fi'OOCL ' COl.OR
CALLIODAY
Tiie name end lddreM of of w telcl of °' 8each .. CA v2e.47 Balfour. AttOfneyl 11 Law, ,_..., ef oa-. 1 '-~ quttar"' ....,.., .., .,_. dW.t wtad ~ dildaim1 111ft ...., .,,,
Ille court 11· (EJ nomt>re y pr:·°' 0~ =,. 0.Yld N. Tatlel, 15520 811 Anton Blv~, COit• .,,.., lU....,;., 1111 cMneto r otrH ooH• d• 1v de• DIAi CA I lrlcorred,_ o1 lie ..,..
dlreook>n cte le cone ee); qveet::ln Ille complaint. Tustin Vlllege Wfr(. Tultln, MMe .. CA 02628 r otrH OOIH de IU P'ot*dad Nr1 1Y1eo .... pera pre1eftter llftl addreta=-:i.:erld M(iiltoM ~
MUNIC4PAL COURT OF 0.ted MAR 17 t083 CA 92580 P\.lblltned Orange Coat S"OSlllCed ltn avteo Ml--cloftalporpet1ede .. oorte. ,.__ta eecirtt. a """ del • flfl/, CALIFORNIA, COUNTY OF J PETERSON'. CLERK, Corinne S. Teffel, 15520 Delly Piiot Merell 1 t. 18. 25., doNI pot,_,. de la cone. Ellileft otroe ,...lllftoe ... en eeta ocwta.
ORANGE, South Orange BY SHARLE LIPSHIN o.po. Tuatln Vl.llage Wsy, Tultln, April I, 1986 T ".,..x fzleten otroe reqllWtoa ~ Puede .,e Wied UN C#te o Wll lafnade willlcM .. will lie 11\ede. blA
County Judlcl•I Dl1trlcl. ty • CA 92880 ....,.,., ......... .._. ... lllt.d ~..,. '*""'.""....... ......... ftO .. .......,. oovenenl OI wwnw"tty,
30143 Crown Valley Publllhed Orenoe Coat Harald M. Potlnef, 1905 quleraltamera1tna0opdo ~te.tlno-protieodoft; .., ,..., _,, .. .,,_ 0t Im~ l'lQW'dlng
Petkwey, Laguna Niguel. CA Delly Pilot MarCll 1 t, 11, 25, Waet ~•. Santi Ane, CA Mt.IC NOTICE ~le . ., M --• "" ... ;911do, ..,.. l90ttta • ~ dene ... ~•llOn. .:
02877 • AprN I 1986 92704 -• "" ~ puede Mani• • "" Mf'ltdo.,.... Cll"'f "' OOft 111 tor• '° ~ ·Tiie '*'"'· eadr-. and · T--084 Thia bu1lnea1 11 con-IC·2GS1 ...,,._ 1 ""~ de ref· ar-u de .e a11 da • o • "' e I dad•• I a I et e 1 ratnMW1g pMdpej """ Of IN
telephone numb« o1 plaln-ducted by: co-partners NOTICI Of' _.. de ltl 191doe o I llM ~de ayuda ...., epn,.'tcf• .. Ul't9d ..,_ nole(a) NClnd by Nici Dwd
tiff's tttorney, °' plaintiff flta.IC NOTICE David N. Taffel 9UlJC ~" llM oftctM de llYUda legal (•ff el cttr.cterlo t.i.. 4'U9 la ..,.. ~ .., of TMl •. WIO'i .,..,... tlletton.
without an attorney, 11 (El TlllD stetement WU llled (leca. 1101 .. 107 U.C.C., f;.~ ef dtfectorlo t.i.. foftloo). -· .. ~ '" --' nole(t). nombre, fa dlreock>n Y el nu-flCTITIOUI _,..... Wf1ll the County C*1c of Of. TO WHOM IT MAY CON· ) c-No. An'lf7 II ueted M,,.....,.. 1'I advwae. II ""I. ""°" Iha
mero de telafono dal ...._ ITA~ atige County on Mercn 17, CERN c-No. nm The neme ano llddreu of ,..,.,.... • ........, puecte larrTll ot IN Deed °' Trwt,
1t>ogado del dem&ndent•, o The following l*"IOOD are 10&8 Notice 11 gMin to the Tiie neme ano llddr-or the court la IEI nombre y perder et ceeo. r '-,._._ '--c:rwgea llnd ....... Of
del demandente Que no doing ~ u · A.A. All FJOllOI Craoltor1 of CALIFORNIA Ille court ID (El nombte y dlreock>n de •• cort• 11)" quttar au aoeano • .., ._. ''-TIUltle and of ltla 11'\9
tie nee •bogado. .., ~Home Cera. 1e &-P\.obllthed Orange Coat RESTAURANT CONCEPTS. dlrecclon de la cort• el) MUNICIPAL COURT OF , • .,.. CHH de au O'....a by lllid Deed ol T,,.,
HICKEY & NEULANO. At· capade Court. Newport Delly Piiot March 25. APf"ll t, a Callf0f'nl1 Corpor1tlofl', ORANGE COUNTY MUNICI· CALIFORNIA. COUNTY OF IP'D:llhdld l4n ..teo ~ '°'· the amo-;nC r.IOl-
torneys II L-. 2403t El 8Mctl92683 a. l5, t9U T-t"• TraNferOt(a). wflOM bull· PAL COURT STAT~ OF ORANGE. 1275 Nortll clofte',.,..,_dele-'9. -~~·~· TOf'o Road, Sil 250. Laguna K1ren Bllllop Hltlffleld, ~ ,_. addr-11 180e POl'1 CALIFORNIA, HARBOR JU· Berkeley Avenue, FullenOft, Edalen otrol ,...Uhltoe ',. ---r ""°" Mid
Hiiis. CA 92653 Mme H lbove Abbey Pl1ca. Newport OICIAL DISTRICT, 480t CA 92e35, Morth Judicial ........ Pwde que ueted Deed Of Trust llel'*>b'l
DA TE (Feche) JAN t4 Thi• bualneaa It con-Pta.IC NOTICE Beech County of Orange, Jamt>o<M Blvd • Suite 101 Ols1rtc1 ....,. llalfter •"" ........ 1'1aaA.S Ind --.S IO the
t968 dUC1ed by· en lndlvldual S1ate ol Cllllfomla, that a Newport Beacti. CaJlfornr. The name • .adr..a. and ~ ... ltMoort-undlrs~ • wrillan Marv_uet A. Hamlln, tatren Bflhpp Hartfleld flCTITIOUI aua..11 bulk trentter 11 •bout 10 be 92660 tttephOne number of p111n--a "" .eiaaldo • ...-OedarlflOfl Of ~ a
cien.11y k . ...,.... OepUty Tiii• 1111_,, WU flled NAME ITATEMENT mlde to Taco Bell Corp. a Tiie -· addr-. and lllf'a ettOfney, Of plalntllf ....,., a Uft ~. ,.._ o.m.nd lor Sell, and • ......,,
Published Orange Cout with Ille County Clent of Of. The fe>llowing penon1 are C1lllornl1 Corporation, telephone number ol plain-wlthou1 an lltOfney. 11· (El ~ • llbofacloe o 1 ~Of DJMaJI end Eltdloft
Dally Piiot M1rcti ta, 25. 1nge County on Fa~ary doing bullnna u : Coron•-'rr1nslerM(1), wttoM bua!-, tlfrs attOfney, or plalnlllf nombre, la dlrDCCloo y al nv· una oflolna de 8)'\lda ..... 10 Sel.. The ~~
Aprll 1. 8, 1986 24, 1988 · PlClfic Produc;tJon-.. 1451 nHs addrHa It 18808 without en 111omey, rr (El mero de telefono dal ("41 9' dtNCt.,lo t.i.. caeed -!cl,... .. of
T ·097 'I01• Ovall St., Newport Beach, Armstrong Avenue. lf'(lne nombre. 11 dlfDCClon y et nu-1boglldo det <1am1ndente, o lonlcG,. encl Elldion IO set lo be
---------PutSllaned Orange Cout CA 02.863 County of Orange, State ol mero de telelooo del dal demend1nle Que no e .. No. 47Mll recorded In INt CIDUl'ly .... ' Pt8ltC NOTICE Delly Piiot Merch 25, AprH t, Jemei D Swaney 409 Callf0fnl1 ibogltdo d4" demendanla, o tjence et>oglldo, .. ,. LARRY The n1m1 and addr-ol lhe IMli>"OPllty ii tocmh1d.
8, 15, t986 Bolero way, Newport Beach. Tiie proc>eny to be tren .. del a.m1ndante Que no ROTHMAN, Allornay It lhe court 11. (El nomb<e y V~ s.rva COl1»11110i1
FICTTTIOUlllU ... 11 T-t01 CA92663 lerred la located at 17502 I~ aboQado. ee) ROB· L-. 14140 8eecfl Blvd., dlrecelondelecorteM).SlJ. •-Tru11-.
NAME ITATE•NT Thia bu1lneu ts con-17th Stree1. Tu1lln County of ERT G OVERBY, Esq (714) Suite t08, Wea1mlneter. CA PEAIOA COURT OF CALI· 401 Nof1h Brend 81.d.,
Tiie followlng penon1 are P\R.IC NODCE due1ed by· an lndMduet Oranoe. State ol CtJlfOfnle 5-46-5858. JOHN A. NOR· 92683 714/638-5581 FORNIA, COUNTY OF OR-Glenoele. CA ltt203
doing business.. Jam. 0 . Swaney The bulk 1rer11fer ""'" be GARO. Esq . KENDERTON DATE tFecll1) JUL 23 ANGE, 700 CMc c.n1er Teleoflone: 1a1a1500-a4'5 ( 11 FITNESS FOR LIFE (2) FlCTITlOUl llUllNEll Thia 91a1ement wu «led con1Ummeled on Of lttet S L YNC~. Ill, Esq., 150 1985 Drive w .. 1. P 0 Bo11. '38. By· U. Mlle:-"
SPA MANAGEMENT SER-NAME ITATE•NT wtth tile County Clerk of Or-Ille 18th d1y ol APRIL, 1081, P1ulftllno Center, Suite 200, AoOef1 R. ltlll, cien. br Senta Anl, CA 92702-0838 Aulhonzed sq.in
VICES, 23141 lake Center The followfng pereona are enge County on February and c111ms m1y be filed 11 Costa Mese. CA 92628, a.ftdf1 "'41td, 0e9UtY Tiie name. aodr .... and 011te· Merdl 4, 11198
Drive. Leke For HI. CA doing buslneea u 28 1986 WELLS FARGO BANK.NA . MAILING ADDRESS PO Pub119hed OrMQ8 eo..1 ltllephone number o1 plain-..._, 18, 25, AIK. t, t ..
92630 ALM OST ANTIQUES. . ,,__ Etcrow O.p1rtment Re Bo• 9349 Newport Beacll. Dally Piiot Mlteh 25 Aprll 1, tiff's attorney, °' plaintiff Orange Coell Dlil)' Pllol
MlchMI E Mvrrsy, 9582 t93 t Newport BIVd. .rs. Publlllhed Of1nge Cout Eecfow No 602-5 t25. 2323 CA 92660 6 15, t968 without en lltOfney, II (El 1---------H•mlnon ·'.Ave (258). Hunt-Coaia M .... CA 92627 Dally Pilot Merctl 25 Aprtt t North Broactwsy, Sutte •09 DATE (Fecna) JUN 17 T • tOO nombre, la dlrecclon y el nv-PtllJC NOTICl
lngton Beeoll, CA 9211-46 JOhn W Skell 115 Onyit. 8 15 1966 Sente Ana, Ca 92708, Coun-1965 maro de telefono de11--.;..;;.;;..;;;.;...;=.;....;;.;...._ ~~~~~~~~~~ Michael E Mufn y Balboa lll•nd, CA 92662 T • t 11 ty ot Orange, Stete of Cell-J. Pet-C left!, br '· NILIC NOTICE •bogado del demandanle. o FlC'TTTIOUI _,.,.... r. This 1111_,1 wu llled Th11 bualnaH 11 con-lornta ttyrd Deputy def dem1ndan1e Que no N~ ITA~
with tne County Clerk of Of. ducted by en Individual All cra1m1 mu.i be ,.. PYbl'9hed Orange Coat LEGAL NOTICE 11enoe 1bogedo. ee)' Gary J The foltowlng P8f'90nl ate
ange County on Merch 27 JOhn W Skall Ml.IC NOTICE oelwed 11 thlt addr ... by tlle Delly Piiot M1rch 18, 25. ~--IA SOOM!oft, 207 W..t 20111 doing bu91ne$1 _.
1986 This 8tl1_,I wu filed 17111 dsyol APRIL. 1988 un· AP<ll 1, 8, 19&8 UNIFIED SCHOOL Str .. 1. Senta Ana, Ce GMVITY HINGE LOCK F*192 with Ille County Clerk of Or· FICnTIOUI aUtlNEll lest Ille bulk trantler alDO T-09a DtallttCT 92708 (7 t4) ~7891 C 0 M P A N Y • t 5 7 0
Publllhed Orange Coast tnge County on Merch 25, NAllE ITATEMENT Includes Ille tran1fer of NOTICE> IS HEREBY DATE (Fac:ll•I JAN 22 BrOOkllotlow Dmle, Sune
Dally P1101 AP<il t, 8. t5 22 t986 Tiie followlng pert001 ere nquor lk:41n~. tn wfllCh cue P\llUC NOTICE GIVEN lhar Ille Board ol 1000 200. Santi Ane, CA 92705
1966 F~ doing buSlneu u : 111 c:llllma mull be received Educauon ol the Newport. Gary L ~anYllle, Clertl, Oennla K s.on. 1670 T • 114 Published Orange Cout THE FAMILY CLEANERS. ptlor to tile d1ta on wtttch '1CT1TIOUI BU81NEll M ... Unified School Dl9trlc1 by JaMt Young, Deputy BrOOkllollow Oflve. Svltl
Oeil)' Pllol '-Pfll t. 8 15 22 27t0-B West Edinger AV· Ille llqvOf llcenae IS tfln.. NAMI ITATEMENT ol Orange County wlll re-Publllhed Orange Couf 200, s.nta Ana, CA 92706 --D-11D-'fC_NO_T_IC£___ t986 enue, Santa An1. CA 927~ ferred by Iha Depanment of Tiie following persons are ClllMl-led t>lds up 10 11 00 Delly Piiot March 18, 25. Thl1 bullneu la oon-
,-.-, T-t 19 Huy Ou1ng Pham. 8091-B AlcOllOllc Beverage Control doing business u : AM on the 9th day of Aprll. Aprll t. 8. t086 ducted by: 1n lndlvtdual
FICTTTIOUl llU ... 11 --Dt-.. -.,c-ain_T_IC_[ __ BOIN Avenue, Midway City. So '" Ill known to Ille C REATIVE MEETING 1988 ... the Purchulng Of. T-099 DENNIS K. SENFT
TEMENT r~ nu CA 92655 tran1ferM(1), all bu1lne11 CONCEPlS. 195 Hearth· flee of said Sc0001 Dll1rlc1, rnla 1tatemen1 was llled
NAME ST~ Huong Thi Nguyen. 8091-n1mes •nd lddresMt ulled elone, lrvlne, CA 927 14 located et 2985-B Baer with the County Cler1t o1 Of. NABERS The following persona ere F~~:A~:::• B Bolea Avenue, Midway by Tren1leror(1) for tile three Carol L. Moffett, 195 S1ree1. Coate M .. a. CA Pl&IC NOTICE •no' County on Febnlary d~~ ~.:'~A'.: SALES & The followfnn """'raons are City. CA 92655 year1 lu1 put, II dltterent Heerlhalone. Irvine, CA 92626. a1 wl'ilcll time .. Id F""~'l llU•-ii 24, 19a5 CADILLAC .. ,, "" This buslneaa 11 con from the ebove era· none 92714 bld1 wlll be publlcly opened ""'"'"""' -"'1111 LEASING,
212° Croddy doing bualnaa 11· ducted by a gentlfal p11rt· Dated· Merell 4 1086 Helen J Moffalt 1224 and reed Jor NA• ITATIMDfT Herwood, AdlllneoR I
LARGEST SELECTION w~~~t~ A~it~~~~[0i8 BACfd~~c8~~E L.f0 52~~ nerahlp TACO. BELL CORP . • Grenada W1y. San Marcos, AUOIONtSUAL EOUIP-d_;hebufollowfng i>et10n1 •re lerneuer, Attomer• 11
' Huy Quang Pllam. Huong Cellf0f'nl1 Corp , by, DAVID CA 92089 MENT ..,.ng llneu U Law, MO t1twpion C..... ol lale model, low mlleage Eacapade Ct . Newport Royele, Irvine, Ca 92714 Tiii Nguyen RADER Tiiis buitneH 11 eon-All bids ere 10 be In ac-POSTAL PERFECT ,,.AIL· Dfift, IWte IOO, NewlMf1
-Cadlllacs lnOrange Beecn.CA92663 Roy W Brown Jr (Bill) This statement wu llled WELLI 'A"QO IANIC ductedby·co-pertnera cordance wf1h Condltlon1, ING SERVICE. 20t82 a..ct\ CA_,_ BMW 531 1984, low mlles. County! See ua todayt Tiiis bualne11 11 con. 5252 Royar.. Irvine. CA with tile County Cler'k 01 Of. N,A., l!'C"OW DE'AltT· CAROL L. MOFFA n Instructions ind Specltl Bayview, Se.nta Ana Helgllta,' Pubti.h.d Orange Coeat
loaded wltll extras Whl1e 540-9100 ducted by an lndlvtdull 927 t4 ange Co~mly on February •NT: ma N. MOAD· Tiiis 1111ement wu flied callon1 wttfch are on Ille In CA 92707 Delly Piiot Mlfcll t t. 18, 25,
wltan Interior Assume J A Buttalavoll Tiit• builneu is con-20 t966 WAY t IUfTf a IANTA with Ille Cou ty Clet1! o1 Of. Ille offloe of lhe Purchulng Wllllam F Neglet 1708 April 1 tlMMS
monthly lease. no cash 2600 Harbor Blvd Thll statement was llled du<:ted by an lndrv1du11 ~'-AN.t,.' CAL.,0..NIA '2'7ot e Coun; on Fe~ary Direct Of" of said Schoot DI• Pomon1 Senti Ana CA ' T ~73.ll
down Hm 631-3907 Wk I COSTA MESA with tile County Clerk 01 °' ROY BROWN. JR Publllhed Or1nge Coes1 Publl1hed by Orange 2~986 trlct. 2985-B Beer SIT811. 92075
955-885 7 CAOIL' •c .80 <2-.atle, 46K 8T Covnty
00
Merch 27• Tiiis tlltemeni was hied Delly Piiot Mllt'dl t 1 1a. 25, Cout 0111y PllOt AprH 1. ' F102221 Costa MeN, CA 92Cl26 JOhn Cer• Whittenburg. DI-•c 11nnrc
...,. t'"'"' 19 6 ~1 wUh lhe County Clerk of Or Aprll t 1966 t9a6 Published Orange Cout A PerlOfmanoe Bond may 20182 Bayview, Santa Ana .__ __ r-uuu...;..;......;.nu...;..•_,_"-';...._ BMW ·79 3201 wht extra m1 orig ownr llke ,_, .. _.., • ange County on F11Druary T -075x T •118 Dally Ptlol Merctl , t 18 25 be required lllNl<fl9Ctetlon. algllta, CA 92707 FlCTTTIOUa 8"8INlla
clean 4spd, snr1 amt fm $9000, 673-31t1 D:;lyub~l1~~P~r'~'T, 1~;z' 20 1986 F 1 Aprll 1 1986 ' ' · of the Dltlrict Ginger Pope, 201a2 NAIE ITATl..wl
Cass $5700 786-8545 ICHEV CAMARO '84 Ber-t9"6 . 30 491 DIDI •c lllnJJCE Dt-1c NQTlC( T-077 No bidder m1y wltlldr-Bayvleo.o., Sant• Ana. CA Tiie fol.,_,,....,_....,,.
oo Publl911ed Orange Coast ruuu nu rUD\. Ills Bid fOf a period ot lorty-2707 --~'V ..----DATSUN 200 SX 78 56M llnetla E•lt cond Sunr1. T 115 Dally Pflol M1rch • 1 tll 25 nt-•c lllnlJCE nve (45) dsys ,,,., the d•ll This bu11ne11 11 con-doing bus!,_ u:
m1 Gd cond gd tr ens 10K mt $8750 120· 1888 ---------April t t988 FlCm10U9 IUltNEll FlCTmOUI ...,.,.... r uuu nu Mt fOf Ille Opening thereof ueted by a limited partner-EASTWOOD I EAST·
S2200 eves 493-0789 f'ta.IC NOTICE T-067 NAME ITATOIENT tu• ITATHllNT The Boatd of Edvcatlon 01 1p 000 FISHERIES, 250t5 I WE llY W ll&IES The tollowlng pereon1 are The fotlowlng peraona 11e FlCTITlOUI llUllNIU the ,..__,_,.._Meea Unified Wiiiiam F N_._ C9Cle Larie. l.agune Hlllll, DATSUN 77 280Z good FICTITIOUS •UltNEll NILIC NOTICE doing buslnMa u · doing bull,_. u NAMf ITATE•NT ~'Or.1ric:t r_..... the Thia at1tamen1 :'.;'!Med CA 926S3
cond new paint . MUSl USED CARS & TRUCKS NAME STA TE•NT ............. OUI I UllN"'88 BEACH BAWANA, 203 BROOKFIELD PARKER Tiie lollowlng PatDOO• .,. right to reiaM any Of Ill Bid• h Iha County C*1c of Or-Jeffery Scott Eur.oocs,
SELL $2800 OBO COMEINORCALLFOR .-~"" " 42nd, Newport 8each. CA ENVIRONMENTAL EOUIP-dolngbullneNu end not ~fly ~t County on Fel>nlafy 250a5AcaciaLane,Legut\l
631-042010 966-1950/E I Fl(f APPIAIUl The foltowtng persons are NAME STATEMENT 92183 MENT CO. 940 W 18th B~T.~NICAL ARTS. t80 lhe loweet Bid, and to .,.,1~ 4. l988 Hills, CA 02953
DATSUN 80 280,._, ·A re•I OeLILLO dOl:~ A~~nTe;~ ~AK RE. Tiie following Pl<IOfll are T I m o t h y J 1 m e 1 Street, 8ul11 C·4, Coat1 N C Street Tuatln CA any lnlormellty Of lrregul.,I-,_.,.. Blaine Arthur Eutwood,
<.A " CMnJltln doing bullness 11 Pro Halr WaHstrom. 203 42nd. New-M .... CA 92827 92680 p bllatleO Of "--~ 250a5 Acacle Lane. Legune Oaq:iarn
1
Sheepskins. CORDS 47o9 S&Hhore. Care Products 16440 por1 Beacll. CA 92683 David Brooklleld O.Voe. Andrelllt Stuart Durent. ty In an~g: recelYed 1~ Pll M enge ....,.., Hiiia. CA 02953
blue orrgownr a/c pfw
18211
BEACHBLVD ~ry ~~;,;.~~.2~09 Aspen SI , Fovnta1n Valley Thia bualnen 11 con· 940 W 18th StrMI, Suite t60 N "c·· Street. Tuatln. ,,;::c..oJt."J::...J':~ ~I I, f~68arch tl 18·25• Tiiis bu•lneu 11 co~ plb am1lm radlo-'.eass, HUNTINGTON BEACH CA 92708 ducted by an lndtvlduel ~.Cotti M .... CA 92627 CA 02980 Or .... Countr c--.. .. T-07
8
due1ed by; OC>-91rtnen
7 IK m1 xlnl cond $5495 t.el-1017; ICl-1111 Seashore Newport Beactl, Wllllem Lonee Martin, TIM WALLSTAOM Tiii• bu1lne111 11 con· Thi• bualn•sa 11 con-
1
ock« .. .....,.:....,::~ Jeffery Scott Eutwood
(7 t4)675 4451 CHEV VEGA .76 Gcxld C~hl9 business 11 con. 16440 CAIC>en SI Fovnlaln Thia statement wu tlr.d ducted by: an IOEndlvlduel ducttd by en Individual t! (714; ~7"' Thia atetement wu ni.cs
Valley. A 92708 wllh lhe County Clerk of Or-DAVID VOE AN D A E W STU A RT Publlthed Oft Cout P\llUC NOTICE tll tile County C... of Or· JAG 83 XJ6 Vanden Blea cond $850/0bo Call ducted by an •ndMdual Thia bua1ne11 ts con-ange Covnty on February Tlll1 1t1f8mefll wu flied DURANT Dally Piiot Maron~ Aptll
1
noe County on Februlity
MINT blktbone lnt S21K evess.i6·7549 ThiSK:.~.~~':!~erllled ovctedby antnd•vldutl 21, 1966 wlthtlle CountyClefll ofOr-Thia statement wu nled
19
a
6
· • FM:TITIOUl9U ... U 25.1988
6<15-741\)tH 645·4159/W CORVETTE .82 Cross-Fire Wllllam Lance Martin fl01-enge County on Febluery wllh the County Cletk of Or· T-t lO NAMI STATIMINT ,,.,_
with the County Clerk of Of. Thts statement was flied Publltned Orenge Cout 20, t986 ange County on Febrv1ry The fotlowlng pereona are P\.obllthed Orange Co.I Me~~ ~~~t ~:or~~~ x~i ~~~: eng. lul~ equlpj· 7 J(~a ang: County on March 27 wtth the Covnty Clerk of Or· Datly Piiot Mercil 11. 18, 25, 11•1m 21. 1986 Mt.IC NOTICE doing bullneea a : Delly Piiot M11cf\ t 1. t8, 2&, s2JK 213_548•3599 sharp Y
5 54
•
3 3 19 6
FI047'0 enge Covnty on February Aprll t, 1986 Publllhed Orange Coaat fl01W U l TIM ATE p A 0 . prll 1, 19"
Eves
646-4~4 1 Publlslled Ora""" Coaat 24 1986. T-072 Delly Piiot March 11, ta, 25, Publlllhed Orenge Cout NOTICI! °' DUCTIONS, 33051 Celle
PORSCHE
AUDI
CHfVROLFT
Hleh•or Qv.alttv s.1 ... S.r..I<•
CHICK
IVEIUION
MS L C-t Hwy ,.._,_, 9-ch
673-•9••
WELUIE
ALL •AIES
t•lllLI . ......, ..... ,
13881 H1trbor Blvd, G.G
114-2800
TIP 111 PAID '°' p.,,,.,._, ~El«\Z
II MATll&ll
Top M9I oedee PrloN P91d
CALL PETER Of RAY .... ,, ... " .......
2t3or714 837-n33
'
WE Wm' •• • ··•-F101m Aprll I, 1068 Delly Piiot March 11. 18, 25, AVAUM..ITY AvlldOf. Ste A, Sen Juen " Delly Pilot Aprll
1
8. l5
2
2 Publl&lled Orange Coe.st Dt-1c 111nncE T -078 Aprll I, t9a6 OF ANNUAL MJIOftT Ceplatrano. CA 02e75 ~ CLW ISEI CARI t
986
l 113 0111y Piiot M1rc11 25 Aprll t. r-UD\. nu T -089 Pureuant to Section Cttertee Colemen Hedlart, I : •
T-070
See Veno doe Santos 8 '5 1966 FlCTITIOUI iau ... ll 8 t04(d) 01 111e 1n1eme1 ~-31 t 7' Holly, South Leguna
T • 103 DIDI IC NOncc Dl-1c 1111\TICE enue Code, notice II hereby a..cn. CA 02en SMITH Plll.IC NOTICE --------N.-ITATE•NT ,. ,-~ nu gtven lhllt the 1nnv11 report Nlellolae M. MagalOlnle,
THEODORE
ROBINS
FORD
2060 HAUOll BLVD
COSTA MISA 64l OOtO
FORD GRANADA GHIA
'77 gd eond cln, xlras.
55K ml S 1600, 760-1452
LINCOLN 7J Contlnental
Good cond runs oreetl
$1200 646-4542 after 4
_ __;..=;.;..;..;;.....:.;.;;...;..;.;;.;;__ The following pertons .,. FlCnTIOUI M.llMll FICTITIOUI .,..... fOf "" n1e111 )'Nf tiU ol 25771 &M•tone, Laguna LEN C. S MITff,
Ftc:TTTIOU1 IUllNHS Pml.IC NOTICE "°bng :W~~ uR s. E N.U. rrATURNT NAM! ITATEMRNT MARC WRIGLEY HIGH-Hiiia, CA 028n born August 25, UU5,
NA.ME ITATl•NT FICTITIOUI w11•11 TECHNOLOGIES. 170 t The f~ perton• .,. The lollowlng pet"eonl •• HOLT FOUNDATION. I e>rl· Robert M Spena.,, 2405 Ul Three Forks. Mon·
The following persona are NAM( ITATEMENT Whittler Avenue. Coi t• doing bullneea u . doing bualMH H Pro-v1te lound1t1on, II 1v1H•ble •II• M1Jorca, S a n ta.na. Pas.ed away
dOlng butlnMe.. I The following person~ are MeN CA 02627 DC A /DANCE CHEER leulonal Legal Servlci" at the toun<11tlon'1 prlnclpll llmente. CA 02872 M h
29 1986
in l6RENE CHEE AND AS· OOlng bullnNI .. Al PLE Klfk G McElney 427'.. OF AMERICA. 21851 ...... 100 Un<:oln Irvine c...: office fl)( lntpeetlon dllfing Jedi ~. 3305 t Calle a.re •
SOCIATES. t588:i But· SIGN 4 GRAPHIC 27tO S PolnNttle Corona d.f Mftl l1nd •tt1. Huntington tomla927t4 ' regular bualneM llOuf1 0 ¥1ador, Ste A. 5-n Juan C.0.ta Mesa. Survived
tarfleldStreet.Westm1n11er Baker •C Sente Ana, CA CA 02825• • 8eaah,CA92848 Meryt J Klapman, tOUn-1 m.to 4pm by anyctt!Hn reno,CA92875 by l oving wife,
CA •92883 02707 Thi• bu•lnea1 11 con-Lila Mane Kolbly, 2t8$t coin lrvtn• C111tornl1 who ~11 It wtthln t80 1111 bvtlneu It con-Dorothy, o f 50 years; Lorene Rob in Chee., Oat Phuong. 27 tO s ducted by-an lndMdulll ~end 1t11. Huntlngtqn 027 t. • dey. aft« the dlll of this ducted by• llmltM pertn.,. d d
15682 But1erlleld St we11 Baker •C Sente Ana. CA KIRK G MC ELNEY a..c11. CA 9264e Thi• buatn41a1 " con· publlcatlon tlllp ev ote daughter,
mln.ter. CA 928a3 02707 Thi• itatement w .. flied Thll bu11neu 11 con· dUC1ed by an lndlvld 11 Tiie fovndttlon'• prlnclOlt CNt1ee C Hectcan Cy n d I Mau re r:
Thia bu11neaa 11 con-Thll buetna11 11 con-with the County Clerlc 01 Of. ducted by an lndlvldual Meryl J Klapman u office 11 IOCated al 28~55 T1111 •t•tament wu flied grand d a ught e ri,
ducted by •n fndlvldual dueled by tn lf'ldlvldvll County on F410r'uary LIM Mftlle l(otbly Tlll1 1111ement wu filed Cabot Rd., 1207. LlgUnll with the County Ctlftc of Or· L•..-.vn Mau-r·, '1'1-
LOl"ene R Cllel Oat Phuong ~968 ftil1 ll•llMlnt WU lllad wttll tile County Clerll of Or Hiiia, CA Inge County on F•brvairy -J.. • ... • ....
Thi• Ntement wu flied Tiii• llalemenl wu filed • Fll07c1 with Iha County Clertt of Or ange County on Mlltdl 5. Tiie pr1no1pe1 "*'llO" of 28, t9" Du Bois, nephew
wtth the Coon1y C*1t of Or-with the Covnty Ctont 01 Or· Publlthed Orange Cout ange COunty on March 17. lll36 1r. foundation II Jemee R ,__ John F.aUck; ni~, anoe County on March 27. c F br t'" 25 t98t '1027l2 Blram. P. 0 Box 5350, Pvbtlehed Orange Coeat C-'-C.-...11-k Gr t98t ange ountv ori • uary Diiiy Piiot Mtten t I. "· . "*"-P\.lbllthed Orange Coast ~na Nlgull, CA 92e77. Delly Pll01 Mftloll t t , ta. 26. 'UJty CASU<.: • ave-
FJ0482:2 111 1988 f'I01• AprH t, 1088 T 087 Put>llllhed Dr•noe Cout Dally ~·lot Marcf'I 25. Aprlt 1 Telephone (7t4)85t-t53a Aprll t, t968 alde Service ww be
P\.obll1hed Orange CoHt Publlttled Orange Coafl Dally ?ltot Aprll t, 8, 15. 22. 9 15 1988 ' ' Publl1lled by Orenga T~7t held, Tl.lo.day,. April
O&Jly Pllo• Aorll , a. 15, 22. Dally Piiot Merch 18, 25. DI_,,.. lllnTIC£ l 9&e ' . T-to~ Cout 04lly Piiot Aprll 1, 1, 12 noon at Plld& ~~~~~~~~~ 19&8 Aprll' 8 1~ea r~ nu T-t22 988 View Memorial p ... l.. :::; T 118 T-099 T-t20x P1llJC NOTlC( ... .... VW Bug '88, 11rong run---------FICTmOUa .,..... Pta.IC fC>TtCE _ _... ..... -..;;....;.;;.;;...;.;;.;;,.;;..._1 P IH I fl c V l t w
n8f, 1800 motor. good NAMS eTATWlmf'T Nl.IC NOTIC£ PtllJC NOTICE '1CTTTICIW .,...... Mortuary, ~ work eer S550 751-2t37 P\alC NOTICE flta.IC NOTICE ni. tono.tno pwton111e FlCTTTIOUI .,..... ~ eTAftlfllWT ~2700
doing bullMll u 'ICTTTIOUI llU .... 11 NA• IT A TIWNT '1CTITIOUI ....... the 1o110wfng peraona ere Bob ROTITIOUl IUaMll ~nTIOUl IU ... U N£WSLETTER COSUL· ..._ 9TATl"mlfT The IOllOwtng peteona.,.. ...-ITAn.MT ootng t1u91neM.. 1-::.-======-::::-
Pta.IC HOTICE •
IUMMOHI
(CrTACK>H JUOK:IAL)
NOTICf TO DEFENDANT
(A\lltO a Awtlldol VALEN
CIA RANCH MARKET a
Partnenilllp RONNY LIN·
VILLE. lndlvldually and
MIKE HEINRICH, lndMdu
alty,, end Ocl'no Butlneat u
VALENCIA RANCH MAR
KET, llld DOES 1 to 10
YOU ARE BEIN() SVfD
I V PLAINTIFF (A Ud 1111ta
demandando) OOLOEN
WE8'T PU8Ll8HINO INC 1
Cllffomla OMporltlOn
,. ........ CALIJC)M
DAVI .,._ tMt 9111MM41t•
NAm tTATIMENT NA•.,.,...,.., TANlS, •eoo Oorcllelter The lolowlng J)ereof'I .,. doing f)u1in.e. H : The The·~ pet'IOf'8 .,, HIC.·MAA !L.ECTAONIC8. :'
The lotlowlng l*tonl .,. ~ollowlng ""'°"' M• ""'· Cofone dal Mer CA ~ butlMll ... ~... !00 s S.ytront. ~ ~ u. 1702A N•ciotl Clrcle. 'AC9'1C VllW d~1Tbu:~rNis t549 dO:,jg'>(;=U~TINQ 23 ·~~ EJlefl S•mon. eG4 Vl~OHM1~i?Ns~~TE~: ~=:.andU:.'=2E. ,lAJ~"'~W:HfA~ ~~:.thM:~~.181 •• , ..... , ..
Pl11t«1lla Suite 209 Ner;w-Wiid Gooee Cl Newport S..W.,d Rd, CorOfta del (8) ME S. 2405 8 91rc11 CoMt Hyg 1301. H1'WPOF't CoeatHwy,Sulta 7t,Corona E 18tll8t,•~.Coll1Mw. Cemllay•.....,
port 8-ch. CA 0268.3 e.K11, CA 92863 Mar CA 02825 Strwt. 8anta Ane CA 97707 8wtl, Calll 92MO del .,.,, CA 8*& CA 92127 ' a.., • O a k;
Gary W1lat1r Heuett Oeborlll A Tet~I. 23 Anna E Lawl1 4f00 11! P 1nC , 1 Ctlltomltl Mefbl M Unacott. 300 E Or ~ CN111~. fredtndt LOQM H11gtt1., 3500 ,.__ Y19w ~
t549 Ptaoent11, Sul .. 20t WNd Gooee Ct . ~ Ooreheet• Rd. Corona del corporation. ~406 8 kch COl9f Hwa •I01, N9wpor1 '31 Promont~ ~!Mt. t2t f tlttl St . Coeta ...... •••POft liledt
Newport 9eac11 CA 9?8e3 8aech. CA t28e3 Mftl. CA 92e2t St,_, Santl Ane. CA tn07 a..cti. Celt t2tMIO ~ leech, CA •2te0 CA 92t27 I ....... 700 Thts bu1trtfl1 11 con· T1111 bu11neti1 11 con-Tl'll• bvll,,_• 11 con· Thie bu..,,_. It ton· Th&t bul!MM 11 oon-Thia bulfneM la con-Tiii• bull~ le oon I duct~ by en lndMdval dllcted by an lndMdual dvcted bY' ¢01*1'*"' cNctid bY' 1 oorpotat6on dUGlacl w .,, ~ ~ by an lndMcllMI ouetad by ~'*"
HARV w Hl!um Dee>orlh T~I ANNE E LEWIS E c P'itt1, ~t Melvt M Uneoott SUSAN CHAIST°'"t!A '"'"M•evtc:n I
ntta """"*'' .. flled Tb/I "'.,.,.,...,,.. ... fllld fllle lt.tamem .. fllld Thie .,.,_,. -filed TNI ... ,.,.,.,. -fled TNI ltltament ... flted Thia ... ,.,,,.,, -llled wllh 11'11 County C.I! of Or wt111 11'\e County Cllttl of Of. wtttl Ille County 0... of Of. with t"1 County c.11 of Of· wttfl !fie County c.til of Or• wfttt "'1 County C6ettc Of Or· Witt\ the County c.11 of Or·
tnoe County on F*'*Y ~County on Mardi St, .,. County on ~ ange County on ~ 9"0t County on Mitch 7, _,. County on ,ebn.llry ange County on Match 2e. '°· 1Ne 11136 ~5 tfft 20, f"8 ,... I ff, 1Mt flllt ,.,. ,_ . ,... ,.,.., ,_ ,.,.,.., ,_ ~~~~~Coa.f~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
O'elly Pl6ot M8'Cfl '1 18, 25-, Dally Piiot Aprfl t, a t5, n . o.ity Ptlot Manill 't, ti , 29, o.lly Plot~ n. tt. M . Oelfy Plot March 18, 21, Dally Piiot March 't, 18, 2&, ~Plot~ t. l . It. U ,
Aprtl '· t1136 1... Aprl '· ,... • ~ 1. ,... Apri t, 8, toet Aptil t '* ''"
T-oet T·121 T~71 r Oii T-0!5 •T-074 !_t1~7L.:~=:=::::::=:==='::'
•
" t
I
I
'
... .,;:,.
•
•
25~ ..
TUESDAY, APRIL 1, 1986 4
166 peris·h inj~t crash
Americans aboard Mexicana Airlines
727 when it plunged into mountains-
----- ---__..t -
MO RELIA, Mexico (AP) -A Mexicana Airlines office in Los
Mexicana Airlin~ Jet carrying 1 ~6 Angeles, said five Americans and two
people crashed into a. moun~n Canadians were among the victims,
Monday soon after leaving Meiuco but he did not give their names or
City for two Pacific resorts and Los hometowns. He had c-arher said that
Anacles. The airline said everyone seven Amcncans were among the
aboard was killed. victims.
of the The Boeing 727 hit the peak about
Rod Carew ta atlll altt:lDif
and waldn& In bopett ol contlnaln& bla bataeball
career . Bl. ·
Coast
lrvln·e debates fireworks
ban./A3
Orange County Fair
Board gets two new
members./ A3
California
An earthquake rattles th£
Bay Area./ A4
Nation
Medicare fund worse off
than prevtousty thought. __
an audit shows./ AS
Logs on
track
derail
train
Rear wheels Offr et ht
car slip off: Amtrak
pas sengers detoured
By PAUL ARCBIPLEY
Of tMO..,,... .....
A Santa Fe freight car derailed in El
Toro Monday, forcing closure of
thematn ltne between Los Angel~
and San Diego and detours for
Amtrak passengers..
The 65-car train was traveling
southbound at 5:30 p.m. when it hit
two logs that had been placed on the
tracks near the El Toro Road over-
pass, said Orange County Shen trs Lt
Russ Elsner. "
The train traveled another mile
before commg to a stop near Alicia
Parkway.
Engineers 1nspecung the train
found the rear wheels of the first car
behind the engines had Jumped the
tracks.
The derailment occurred on the
main hne tracks, which arc used by
Amtrak pas~ngcr trains as well as
freight trams.
Southbound Amtraks from Los
Angeles were forced to stop in Santa
Ana where passengers boarded buses
for the remainder of their journey
south.
90 miles northwest of Me1uco City,
near Maravatio, on its way to stops in
Puerto Yanan.a a nd Mazatlan. •
An airline statement said the dilat
radioed that he was losing altitude.
and menuoned problem s with cabin
pressure 1n his last mcssafC. A souroc
at the Mexico City -auport said
contact with the jct wa.s lost 14
minutes af\er takeoff.
"Unfortunately, there are no
survivors" Mexicana spolcetman
Fernando MartinC'l Cort.es said of the
T tj.ala of motherhood
l 58 peue~n and eiaht crew mem-
bers on Fli&bt 940. Ile said fedt"ral
bi&hway police were fint at the crash'
site on the 7,792-foot mouotatn
known locally u El Carbon, and
reported that all aboard apparently
were lcilled on impact.
Helicopters bepn taking the bod-
ies down to a bue camp for transport
to Morelia by ambulance. Officials
said crews at the site were looking for
the flight reoordera, but the body
recovery operation was suspended
when da.rk.ncss fell and would be
resunted Tuesday.
Jorae Sanchez, a belicopler pilot
who brouaht down ai.x bodiel, taid
the jetliner wu "in piec:a. -· The
largest li n&le piece wu the WI, and
everywhere there were bodies.~
He said the tail ICCtion wu in 1
clearina on a ridte, with other
wreckau scattered over ~
yards. fie reported the crash started
several small brush fires.
(Pleue._. JSTLIRSR/A2)
Political
foe to call
sheriff
to testify
Sheriff, challenger
battling In court over
(4lmpatgn statements
BJ LISA M.AllONEY °' .............
Lioda Lea Callipn saya Sheriff.
Coroner Brad Gates is the best penoo
to prove her c:onle'Qtion that violent
criminals are confined 1t the low-
secutity tcnU at t.be James A. Musick
Honor Farm in El Toro.
C.alHpn's aaomey, Lee St.ertinl.
has subpoenaed Gates for tbe mat
and conviction records of every
inmate -both put and praent -
confined there nnce a tent city wu
erected in late June.
Sterlin& said the records will
beckup one of the ponioas of
Callipn's candidate's statement wb.ic:6 Gate bas aone to court to hive
stricken u false and mWeactina
CalJipn., I Sheriff I Department
petrol serpnt, is butt.iftl beads with
her boll over the job be bu held for
thec.ia:!.1 ~writ of =1..e· .. in
Orule County Superior Coart
Mardi 2.4 demandiq that <Aflipn
delete portions of her 200-word
candidate's 11.ttemrit becauae they
were un11Ue. Spain again being con-
sidered as a home for
Marcos./A5
World
Northbound passengers were
placed on buses 10 Oceanside to
cOlnf)lcte their tnps to Los Angeles.
(Pl eue eee FREIGHT I A2)
E YeD a lein.rely 8troll tluoaO the park
aometlmea reqalra •pllt dedaf'OD8 u Chert
Hoyt dUco•en Monday while wanrtaa with
nephew Taylor Tra•en, 3, and &olden
retrte•er Barry a~e Corona del llar'•
lla1n Beach.
Commissioner Gale Hictmao ">-
fused IP have the dispu1ed material
im mediately striken became Callipn
hadn't had time to respond co Gata'
complaint. Instead, she 1et a Wednes-
day bearina before Judie Judith
Oil prices plunge to below
$11 a barrel.I A5
Sports
Festival board accused of bigotry Ryan. .
Gates took issue with C.mpn over
accusations that be iUep.lJy oYined an
Irvine sin&)es bat, was involved in a
coverup in the felony drunken driv-
ing arrcs1> of two deputies and was
convicted of a federaf crime. Louisville's Cardinals are
NCAA basketball cham-
pions after defeating
Duke./81
Orange Coast College
rallles for 8-7 win to stay
unbeaten In conference
baseball play./8 1
Afea water polo products
are on display Thursday
night with U.S. Junior
squad./8 1
INDEX
Advice and Games
Births
Bulletin Board
Business
Classified
Comics
Death Notices
Entertainment
In the Servfce
Opinion
Police Log
Public Notices
Sports
Television
Weather
Wed~lngs
85
A6
A3
A8-10
88-9
8 6
8 10
8 7
A6
A7
A 3
8 10
8 1-3
8 7
A2
A6
Scheduling Irvine· s Harvest Festival on
Rosh 1-fashana deliberate , says senator
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN
Of It. D.-, ,... IWt
State Sen. Paul Carpenter, D-
Cypress, is accusina Irvine Harvest
Festival directors of "blatant preju-
dice and bigotry" for "deliberately"
scheduling the popular event to
coincide with the Jewish holiday of
Rosh Hashana.
In a March 27 letter to Irvine
Mayor David Baker and his fellow
council members, Carpenter said. "I
would urge you to d isassociate your-
selves w1th this anti-semitic organiza-
tion and rescind all c1ty support
and/or sp<>nsorshtp of tbe Harvest
Festival.'
Jewish leaders sa,:.d the present
Masked bandits like
county's lifestyle
By LAURA MERK
Oflt.0..,,...lt.fl
Masked bandits arc breaking into homes 1n San Juan Hills and
raising families in the attics, according to residents.
At least four fam1hes of raccoons have chosen to make San Juan
Hills their home, said Gordon Waugh, who owns ~plex JUSt off the
San Juan Hills golf course in San Juan C.apistrano
Bill Frink. operations manager of the San Juan Capistrano Animal
Shelter, said there arc dozens of the masked m auradcrs that come down
from the hills to take advantage of the o pportunities in the city -such
as free hand outs from animal lovers and quick steals from c.at dishes.
The raccoons arc also mabng full use of the community pool.
"One fellow said it looked like water ballet. When he shined the
(Pl eue Me RACCOO!'f8/ A2)
Newport woman on peace
march com:~ •tted to fi o ish
\
Despite h ypothermia . organizations·
demise, her resolve ls firmer tha n ever
When Newport Buch rM1den1
Marlene K1taJchuk committed
hcnclf to a ninC'-month walk across
Amenca, ~he wanted to help craM: the
hopelcnneuabout inevitable nuclear
war she had cnrountertd 1n othen
1nctudin• her own children
Sh' decided to JOtn a PfOJCC"tcd 5.000 voluntttrs b<-ing 'loU&ht b\
,
People Reaching Out for Peace. or
PRO-Peace. to take the cross<ountry
trek 1n 8 QUC!lt for a nuclcar-f ret
world
She took a leave of atncncc from·
her 1ob. full> aware her bo ~'I and co-
workcn weft' '1kept1cal about such n
c-omm ttmcnt She 1torcd •II of her
bclonainas and pvc up her com
'
fortablc I 1 f estylc
With the help of her ex-husband
John, KitaJch uk. 54. launched 1
tra1nin1.prosram to whip herself mto
shape for the I 5-mtlc-per-day waJu
that eventually would take the aroup
3,23S miles &My to Washmaton,
D.C
Two wteks before the March I
start, she JOined other PRO-Peaoe
marchcn at train ma camps 1n the San
Fernando Valley and at Onffith Park
where her 1deahsm was strtnathcncd
as she talked Wlth othcn committed
, ---
schedule would prevent observant
Jews from participating in the event
Rosh Hasbana, the JeWJsh New
Year, is celebrated one or two days by
different de nominations, but is con-
sidered o ne of the holiest times in the
Jewish calendar.
This year, it begins the evenmg of
Oct. 3-the same time as the k1ckofl
of the Harvest Festival.
Representatives of the city and the
festival denied the allegations of
prejudice.
"The board 1s truly not anti-
sem1t1c." said Doug Bodlun. pres1·
dent of the fcsuval. "If (Carpenter)
knew the board. he would not have
said that."
"I honestly and genuinely believe
the people with the festJval arc good
people. volunteers who arc only
interested 1n dom~ something good
for the community," $3td Mayor
Baker. who was president of the
festival in 1979 and 1980 "I'm sure
the senator 1s well-intent1oned. but I
will tell you that the Irvine Harvest
(Pleue eee SENATOR /A2)
He also objected to a claim by
Calligan that be hOU9CS violent in-
mates 1n temporary tents ar the honor
farm and that the tents have cost the
county SS. I million.
Calligan filed her response to
Gates' writ on Frida)' then followed
up with a subpoena Monday after-
noon. Sterlin& said aocess to the arrest
and conviction records for Musick
inmates are necessary since there i1 a
difference of opinion as to the type of
(Pleue eee SBSRD't' / A2)
Study: More than half of convicted
murderers s erve less than 7 years
WASHINGTON (AP) -More
than half the convicted murderer'>
released from state prisons m I 98"'
served less than seven years behind
bars.. says a government study re·
leased Monday.
Half of the rapists released that year
served less than four years in pnson
and the median lime served by all
offenders in state pnsons was 19
mo nths, accordina to the 'itudy of
prison terms in 30 states.
The survey of mort than 300,000
crimmal cases., rel~ by the Bureau
of Justice Statistics, also found that IR
peroent of those sd ftcnced to a term
PAUL
Al CHIPLEY
Focus ON THE NEw s
to ending the nuclear arms race
And 1t thf p la sendofT from lo'I
Anaelcs Ctty Hall where ~veral
thousand well-weshers JOincd the
marchcn. KJ tajchuk was ecstatic
about the trip and the strcnath of the
marthCT"I' rcsolvt
A'tmoo 1mmC'd11telt hnwcvrr.
problems mounted for th<' 111-fatC'd
campe1an
(Pleue tee P&ACE/A 2)
)
of hk 1mpn<;0nment served three
year<i or k'ls heforc being released.
The median time served on a hfe
~ntence I\ f'1ght years and scvrn
months. \aid the report by the bureau.
a research arm of the Justice Depart·
ment
Conv1cte.d murdertrs accounted
for thrtt-quarter~ of those released
from a hfe sentence, while rapists and
robbers accounted for an additional
18 percent Nearly 30 pef'{:ent of those
released Wlth hfe sentences had
preVlously served time in pnson for a
felony conv1ct1on
The ~tudy found that in I Q83. 768
people wtlb hfe sentences were re-
leased from pn son 10 the 2 1 states
which reported fi gures for that part of
the survey.
GcofJla released the most people
WJth hfe sentences, 239j followed by
Cahfom 1a. I I 7. and O hio. 11 3.
Accord1na to the study. more than
93 percent of those adm it1ed or
released from state pnsons three
years ago were men. Male offenden
were more hkely than females to have
violated parole. to have oommitted a
violent cnmc. to have received a
longtr sentence and to' have served
(Pleue ... 8UllVSY / A.2)
Most plans to avoid
fre~~ay bottle~ecks
found unworkable
By LISA MAHONEY
Ot ... OlltJ,... .....
Len than half of the proposals to
ehmmatc bottlenecks upccted from
the contraction of mlJor roadway\
through the Ea~tem ind Foothill
comdof"i wtll work. according to a
prchm1nary anal)'m
Although final rteommendattons
on the controvef11al "BottlenC"Ck
.\nalV1is'. ·are a~ut two months
twa}. 1 s;tatu\ report provided to the
1 1
I '
A.2 Oftnge CoMt DAlLY PILOT/ TUMC!ay, April 1, 1988
J!!!CE MARCHER RESOLVED TO FINIS~ •••
~ were aware that fuod-
nlbioa dforu hid come up 1hon -
fk1hor1.
They beatd about Clue &Iona Lhe
way t.bl1 would Rfu~ them entrance
and camp 1pecc because the orpniu·
lion lactod UllW'lncc.
If fact. jt.iSt lwo days out of Los
Anaelrs, they faced that dtlemma an
Claremont.
But K.it-.,chuk'1 resolve was
s1.tenathened, rather than weakened.
when churches ofTcTCd meals. people o~ned up their homes and a local bi&h school held a rally for the
marchers. .
Two weeks into the walk, 1ft the
1nhosp1table Mojave Desert,
marchers encountered foul weather
cond1t1ons. Al about the same time.
the PRO-Peace orpmzat1on turned
belly up. • _
A thousand marchers were
stranded an the descn. The harsh
rains and fierce winds trashed their
tent camps.
capital, thclr unmedi&te pl &s Lu
V eps where other vohanteen are
ms.ina funds and prep&11n., to Join
them.
The marchers have rqrouped
under a new banner, the Oreat Peace
March for Nuclear Disarmament Inc.
They "ill hope the world's nuclear
powen will he¢d their call for an end
to nuclear weaponry.
They've formed a mobile city
aovemment to oversee the march,
and an e1aht-member Peac.e City
Council wu to be el~ on Mond.O\y.
The new organization has raised $60,000 sinc.e it was founded, enough
to set them to Las Vegas,
spokeswoman Elizabeth Fairchild
told the Aboc1atcd Prns.
Tbrou&h it all, Marlene KitaJchuk
has remained committed. lf any·
th.ina. bet commitment seems strong·
er than ever.
Several marchers. including K.Jta·
JChuk. suffered from hypothcnma. Marlene IUtajcha.k
"Even though everything looks
very bleak -equipment being re·
PoUCSSCd. the staff not being paid-I
feel its all necessary 10 order for us to
know and rcaffinn in our hearts
where we're going. why we're here
and how staunch our commitment
1s," K.JUUchu.k wd. "Mine is com-
pletely reaffirmed on a daily basis.
Apin she was welcomed into a
stranger's ho me where she and others
were nursed back to health.
Meanwl\lle, important support
.cqu1pmeni was repossessed. ll!clud-
mg water tank trucks, kitchen trucks,
medical vans and other vehicles.
H undrcds of marchers sutTCndercd
and went home. thear resolve shat-
tered by poor planning, lack of funds
and the stark realization that the
march would be difficult.
Those who stayed were lectured to
and warned that their idealistic
v1s1ons for a nuclear-free world were
mraningless if they couldn't keep
themselves alive.
A doctor warned them about being
mentally, physically and emohonally
!>trong enol.lgh to carry on.
"I've seen people tum into raving
lunat1cs over the smallest things.
There's going to be times on this
march when everybody breaks.
''If it happens consistentJy, you're
cndanaering life. your own a~very·
body else's. If you can't do it, gp
home," he said. Many did.
Nevertheless, on Easter weekend
.340 marcben were on the road q,ain. Durina tnir two-week layover
outside of Barstow. Kitajcbuk had
another scare when she developed
hyPCnhennia. which a doctor mis.-
diagnosed as a minor stroke.
''l'v.e learned this Newport Beach
woman has got to protect herself," she
said.
She recuperated over the weekend,
and Monday searched for a ride to
rejoin her comrades on the march.
They arc about ba.lfway between
Barstow and Bakor. Although they
stiU plan on walking to the nauon's
"I can't tell you how strongly l f~t.
even lhoufh it's chaotic. The spmt of
the group 1s fantastic.
"We are the strength. PROPeace
may have gone under. but we arc the
strength," she said. •
Allof'the negative press and lack of
financial suppon haven't dimmed
the vision shared by the remaining
marchers.
''It's been draining to SJIY the least,"
Kitajchuk said. ··As much as the
newspcople tned to get negative
responses from us, on the whole ~c.
were \_iocere and serene in our belief
in what we're do ing.
"We bave the faith, and that's
what's important."
JETLINER PLUNGES INTO MOUNTAINS ••.
From Al
~anche1 said witnesses m the crash
area told him ··the airplane already "'"'i burning when 1t came tn. They
said there were two explosions on
impact··
\ J11ghl O\.t'r the crash area in a
1..hanered aircraft re"ealed a pl ume of
"'htte smokr slightly more than
half"'a) up the mountain, and several
small fires around ti ·
I he a1rpon at Mort:ha. capital of
'\11choacan state about 4<i miles west
of the crash site. made arrangements
to rece1 ve the bodtc\ Three hangars
''1.·re convened into makeshift
murguC\, :md a1rl1nr oflk1als n.··
..iur,ted lime, bod~ bags anct other
emergency supplies trom Mexico
City.
One helicopter flew several dozen
plasuc bodY. bags to the crash site.
U.S. Embassy spokesman Vince
Ho~nec said airline officials re·
poned 25 non-Hispanic surnames
were on the passenger hst, but the
manifest did not last c)tizcnsh•P.· "We
have no way of knowing now 1fthere
are any Americans aboard," he said.
Marcy Pazmino, a spokesman in
Los Angeles for government-owned
Mexicana Airlines. said 1t had not
been determined 1f anybody on the
plane was destined for Los Angeles.
It was the worst air disaster si nce a
chart.eTcd OC-8 with a crew of eight
that was carrying 248 U.S. ser-
vicemen home Tor Christmas from
the Middle East cruhcd just af\er
takeoff from Gander, Newfoundla.Ad.
on Dec. 12, and aU perished.
Meucana said Aigbt 940 left
Mexico City at 8:50 a.m. CST (6:50
PST) and was to arrive in Los Angeles
at 12:20 p.m. aft.er stops in Puerto
Vallarta and Mazatlan.
Jose Henonin, an airline spokes-
man in Mexico Ciry, said in a
telephone interview, _"The captain
asked for permission to descend
because they had problems about the
pressunzat1on of the plane.
SURVEY FINDS TERMS REDUCED ...
From Al
lnngrr in pnson
\l ure than 40 pcru•nt of the women
en1enng prison had tx>en con"1cted ot
lar(Cn) forge!') or fraud, mm pared LO
I 5 pcrtent of the men Near!\ 12
percent of the ~o(Tlcn "'ere adm011led
to pnson for drug ollenM"s. compared
to ~l11thtlY more than 8 percent of the
men Nearl) I 5 percent of lhc men
"'err adm1ttf.'d for robben. whale JUSt
o"er 8 percent of the women were
~cntc."11ced for thal cnme
Fifty-four percent of the offender-;
who cn1ered or k t1 one of the 30 state
prt\nn "Y~IC m\ 1n l l/tO were whttc
and 45 percen1 "'l·rc black. Wh1tc'>
and hlackc; cn1l'nng pn,on that ~ear
rctl'l\cd tht• ..aml· a"erage <,entcnccs
onre d1J1ercnt1.''o 1n geographical and
11lknse '11c;tnhu11on~ wl·re taken into
Jll llUnl
• < 11n\1dcnng all oflt•n'>C'> together
thl· ml·d1dn and mean sentence
le nglh<. for hlad<\ ~werr 12 month~
l11ngt•r thdn for ~hllc'> ·· said the
\Ul\l' h\ hurcau \ld\t'>l1c1an!> Allen J
fltd< and Thoma' Hester "Within
1n1k ' 1dual \tatc'> ho"'evcr black~ did
11111 rctel\ c lltn'>t'itcntlv longer
'""1l·mcs than ~h1tec; The 12-monlh
liltrr-·n1.c 1n a'crage \Cntem:e lengths
"a \ta11-.11cal an1fact ··
\ higher proponwn of black~ than
"'h1lt'\ hJd been ton..,1llcd ofvioknt
1111w l"\pt:n.tll} robbery There also
".1\ .11.11nccn1rat10n of black\ 1n states
that gave longer average sentences.
resulting m the 12-month difference.
Among offenders released from
pnson in 1983. there was no consis-
tent datTerenc~ between blacks and
whites in the amount of timC' served
for 20 categones of offenses.
T he study also found that"
-Nearly a fifth of those admitted
to pnson were parole v1olato~.
-About half of those admitted 10
pnson had been convicted of bur·
glary, robbery or larceny. Of these. 26
percent had been convicted of bur-
glary Founeen percent had been
convicted of robbery. and I l·pcrt'ent
had been convicted oflarceny
-About one-third of the inmates
released from prison an 1983
previously had served ume for a
felony. Those who previously served
time rec~1ved -sentences about 12
percent longer and actually served
about 11 peTCCnt lon$erm pnson than
those W1thout a previous pnson term
The 30 states participating in the
survey were Alabama California.
Colorado, Delaware. Georgia. fllj.
no ts, Kentucky, Maine, Maryland.
Massachusetts:
M1ch1~n. Minnesota, M1ss1ss1pp1.
M1ssoun. Mo ntana. Nebraska, New
Hampshire. North Carolina. North
Dakota. Ohio. 1
Oregon. Rhode Island, South C'aro-
lma, South Dakota. Tennessee.
Teus, Washington, West V1rg..in1a,
W1scons1n and Wyoming.
FREIGHT CAR DERAILS ...
From Al
A Santa Fe Ra1lwa" ~pokesman
said 14 Amtriik tratn\ travel the l os
Angeles-San Diego route da1h hut
onl) one or t\\-O freights U\C th1· ltne
each day
Sa nta Fe \\-Ori.. cn:w., from the
railroad com pan-. 's lo'> Angele\ of·
lice hoisted the derailed car back onto
the tracks. and the train rc~umcd ti\
Journey around 7 10 pm fl\ncr
said -
Shenifs deputies provided crowd
control, but no streets were blocked
b) the stalled tra m. he said.
Damage to the tracks was minor
However, crews will be making
repairs today.
Although thr tracks W111 be open.
oflic1aJs said trains wtll have to slow
down while passing through 1he
Saddleback Valley.
FREEWAY BOTTLENECKS STUDIED ••.
FTom AI
'ongc\\1w1 an pon1on' o l Irvine.
I l1\t1n .10d Orange that will be
1111pal trd h\ llln\tr\Jl 11on of lhc new
lrt•rwa\ l11rndor\. 3 \tud:. hy (rrucn
\-.\Ol 1.1lt'\ lCIO\ IUOl"\
l ht• wnnt•ctor lOUld be all above
ground or pant.ti!\ underground the
\t Uc1) c;a1d
\ cnnncuor Jt I a < olana Road
\>,ould a lso help meet thr future needs
"' C'a<;t and we\thound traffic 1t said
< onstruct1ng C'levated transit way\
along the Santa \na and ( osta Mesa
frct"ways and e'tcnd1ng the Orange
Freeway to the ~an 01ego and ( orona
del Mar freewa)'i would al<;o improve
traffic now. according 10 thr study
( hapman >\venue and Santiago
( reek freeway connector; wnultl
provide little rcltefwh1lr none ol thr
proposed anrnal UJ>V3des would
1 m pro,·e the tra~ef pic ture <;1gn1 Ii·
cantly. 1t said r uture upgrading of S•"< anenals
WC'rc studied They are Santiago
l'i'AIN OFFICE
)) fl~• 6A• >I ( .. ta 1,1'°" II
Canyon Road. 17th ~trcct/La Colina
Road. Chapman A ~enue Irvine
Boulevard. W alnut -\venue and
Moulton Parkwa-,.
Sharon Greene. manager of techn1
cal programs for the tran~portataon
comm1ss1on, warnt'd that funher
'>tudy 1s needed before any alternative
I\ rejected
The comm1rnon will spend the
next 30 to 60 day<; trying to "narrow
an the locus .. of future studies. then
bnng its recommendati ons to lht'
planning comm1ss1on. she said
Pornblc solutions to the 1raflit
bottleneck proJCCted by fu ture free
""a} construcuon have been poorl)
rrcraved by propeny owners '!"ho
would be affected by them. Greene
said.
In many ca'iC'\, impacts on the
tommun1ty and environment arc
high.
Construction of a Foothill
Boulevard freeway connector would
displace between 420 and 470 homes,
a school. a church and 12 busmesses.
Use of La Colina Road for a
freeway connect-Or would cost 590
homes. two churches and a school.
And extension of the Orange· Free-
way has "considerable displacement
potential." accord mg to the Gruen
study.
As d1srupuvc as proposed bot·
tleneck solutions would be. doing
notlung Wlll overload J.he Santa Ana
Freeway and artcnal streets that
parallel 1t. the repon said.
r he freeway 1s already over ca-
pacity by abo1:1t 65,000_vehicles a da,Y
and side street aJtematJvcs an: heavi-
ly used as well. Grceoe said.
The proposed East.em ·1 ranspor·
tat1on Corridor would link the Santa
Ana and Rivenide freeways. The
Footh11l Transportation Corridor
would connect !iOuth and central
Oranae County.
Dally Pilot
Deftvery
11 Quer.ntMd
, ..... ··-8··· ~'° ''"" ....... " 1•Jf (IUl'•~d 6'1 ~1· ~ & llC)IQ<O ,,,, 4)}' Justcall 642-6086 ""~' rr.oev « 10u <l<> ,..,. ..._ "°" .,."" Of s '°I> fl'I cal oe!Ot• 1 0 "'
..._ __
What do you hkeabout the Daily Ptlo t'> What
don't you hke'I CaJI the number above and your
rnessaic will be recorded, transcnbcd and de·
hvert<i lo the appropn1te editor
The ~me 24-hour 1nswenn1 serv1c.e may be
U$Cd to record letters to the editor on any topic
·C"ontnbuto M to our Letten column must include
their name and telqphonc number for venfica11o n
Tells u' what'1 on your mind
MO 'fOt6 CIOPY -oe ~eel
~~""'""" i;-•• '°"' 00 !'OI ·-... ,_ cooy 0y 1 • ,.. ~•• oetat•
'0 • "' end "°"' '""' ...
be -
Clrcvtetlon
. Te ... '°"" ......
()t l'IOf C-Ovt!y ., .. , ......
l llQMN ill9"" .......
Cloudy skies to clear tonight
A 20 peroeni ClhMce of ehowwulong tht Ofange eo.t thlt The F01'9CUt/ fOf
morn'"G • dltn4Nlh etlle anemoon to PetflY cloudy lklee Md
dNrl"O tonight, the NattoNI WMtM< 8eMc:e Mid.
Wedneeday wtll be meetly eunriy Md • lttU9,.WlllTMr wllh
loC&I guety wWKb to 25 mph betbw the c:.nyons.
Hlgt\e t()d9y wtll r9t1gt rrom the mtd to upper eo.. Lowa
tonight wtll be tn the tow and mtct 509.
t:tlgh• Wedneed•Y Wiii renge from IM Ul)p9( 80• at the
bMchee to the mid 70, Inland. AIOnQ lhe lnMr coutaJ wat.,., tight varltlble wtndt wtlt
beCOm9 w.et to northWMt 12 to 18 knot• this efternoon and
evening over• wee1•1y 1W911 of 1 to 2 feet.
WMt to nor1hW98t wtnd• wtll blow 15 to 25 ,knob through ttwt
outer ee>Mtal wetera thle ettemoon and evening oWt combined
.... ot4 toa teet.
U.S. Temps ~ u M • Q <*"';;> °' r··· .. MIMI!..., 7t 71 ~;;fl 'f'J~ ""'""' -( ··~'-~ t 1 IS .. Le ............ u 41 4.rtowfll•\ Al!Wl rv'"'' "'"'• (). .. Kh·•1 ~ ""'·''"' ,.,..,, ......,
AIOM>y 65 53 t2 .. ::::::-71 42 Mplll4t P..,i N•"' •wH w.,.,...,.. ., ·~ ....,,_ u ...
M &O .... ~ 71 47 ~ 12 --0:!
_,,_
76 11
Allalnll M 51 Hottoll.V .. n 53 AIWlllo City 11 &O Oil-City 7t IO -12 l5e ~ M 67 1-v.-.r ~ 19 ~· IO .. ONndo 7t .. y_..,..~ ... ..... 53 37 Pt•1:i....,.. 71 .. """"' .... ltwOUVfl ~ I>"' "' ... ognen. M '5 ,.._... M 70 =:::: 13 ... ...,_Gii 57 43 ::::".t'0r n .. 71 61 Tides --55 2t .. ,.. ..,._ .. II
ao.tCWI .. 5"' "'~ 72 ... ..._... ,. ..
llufl8IO .. 3e
=rClty
17 51 Ilg ... .. 31 TOO AT lut1ingftlll. VI 51 4 1 53 47 llWIOtl ,. 40 Flt14 l'llQtl 3 44am u c.._ 55 31 ,_,., 11 37 llylM IO .. Am low 10"57 Lfl'I ~3 a.-CW1.SC 78 se Alclwnofld " 50 c..-.. 74 51 ~· 1<53 p"' 44 ctwtol1e.HC .. 51 SI LOUI• Ill eo ~ .. .. 8-ICllOw I 1-04 p"' 3 4 ~ &4 37 SI Pwl .. fMICll 81 57 ,.,_ n M ...,_80AY CNctoo 83 .. Slit Le1i • City 56 60 ~-14 51 ,.,... ,,. •58Lm 51 ~ .. 47 SenAnlonlo 91 61 Lq._, 11 57 Ar"ll low 12·11 p"' -0 2 ~ 1111 4 1 Sen .Nln,P Fl 90 71 ~~ n eo 8-lelhlQll 714pm 48 ~bl&.S.C .. ... Seettle 57 31 10 52
~°" 82 41 s11r:r-90 51 MonrO'M 71 .. M ,_ loday al 6 41 Lm encl 991•
C-d.NH .. .. Slo\lx ... 71 41 ~ 74 .. :••·14pm
o.ne.-Ft Worffl 111 II s~ 41 27 ~ eo 56 tleM1oday•• ..... ,.. ltlCIMtl
DeylCWI .. 47 Sy.ac-83 39 Ml Wlleon 7t 47 IQMI et 10·31 •-"'· o.n-116 .. Topel<a 12 51 ...__ to ..
0. Moil.-12 58 TllCeOfl 87 11 Oeklend 87 u Surf Report o.trolt 116 311 TulM 19 ISO OntMIO 7t 66
EJP-83 48 WuNng1on Ill S3 Pellll Spnnoa .. 13 ,..,_. 13 ·15 Wldllt1 12 58 p_.,.. 70 M LOCAnotl elm DIA.
'woc> .. 47 w-.aa-a.rra (18 .. PMO~ 72 61 l.ul'lll ...,. 2-3 w Fle9et•" .. 31 ,._..,. 71 a3
Gt.nd~ 78 43 Aed 8lull eo 61 Sen•• Monica 2..J w
Gr.et, ... .. 31 Smog Report "9dwood City n ... ~ 24 w
~o,H C Ml 47 ~ 7J ao 2·3 w
Hllttord 71 .. SallNI 12 IM °"'1ooll '°' w.......,.. uw. cNnoe --~ )4 PotlollMll •tanderd -(pelt ().. 100 Sen.....,dlno 71 M
HonoMu 15 10 good, 100-200 unMellhflll IQ< ~ SanG_.... 12 M Eztended Houeton 74 81 people; 2<»-300 ~ '°' ... S....Olego 91 M
~Idle! IClillle u 51 ~--Fht l\oUt• 11 San F<Wdlco .. 65 Jec:a_.... 12 .. today'• Piii !or-._.., .. pt'IMOue San.IOM 71 M TMn .. .,. Nghl end morning tow .-. )I 27 ~·lltl.....,p91 s .... a.11era 81 ..
1(-Clty " eo SenlaCNt IO 53 doude ~ Iha -' T~ and
t::r tM M O..,.Cou1 ~ 8-AM.nt M $4 Ftldey wtt11 "* .... WMd MoM1)' .. 53 lnl9l>d Or-. Counl"f 42 llMI•"'-II M t:llOti6t Wwty end COOier Salway
l ube)odl " 51 ~.,,Loa~ ~ S!Od!ion 75 52 HleN In .... mkMOll end 70L I.owl In
t!le ~ 10 ml6-ao.
SENATOR LEVELS BIGOTRY CHARGE ••.
From Al
Festival 1s not ant1-sem1t1c."
The festival's executive board has
scheduled a special meeting Thu~
day evening to discuss the scheduling
problem.
But festival {>rtStdcnt Bodkin
warned that changing the dates ofth1s
year's event. Oct. 3-5. would be
da flicult.
He said contracts with a carnival
already ha,ve been saincd, and the
Irvine .Hilton 1s already reserved as
the site of the annual Harvest Moon
Ball Holding the festival earlier
would create carnival conflicts Wiih
the Los Angeles County Fair. and
scheduling 1t later would increase the
prospccl ofraan, which has caused the
festival to lose m oney an the past.
Bodkin said.
The lrvme Han est Festival. begun
an 1975, provide~ ente rtainment and
fund-raising o pponun1t1e!> for com·
munity groups. Last year's three-day
event drew almost 50.000 v1s1tors
The festival as managed by an
mdependent board, but Assistant
City Manager Paul Brady Jr. said the
city provides the location (Hentage
Park) and staff assistance to the event.
For the past seven years, the
festi~has been held dunng the first
weekend 1n October. This places it
nearthctimeoftheJewish Hi&h Holy
Days of Rosh Hashana and Yorn
K1ppur, which follow a lunar calen-
dar and change dates on the secular
solar calendar.
A conflict arose an 1984 when the
festival coincided with Yorn KJppur
When the 1986 festival was sched-
uled. the umin~ of the Jewtsh hol-
idays was considered ... but 1t JUSt
didn't click in," said festa val prcs1·
dent Bodltin. I....,
Sen. Carpenter as not Jewish, and
his dlSlnct docs not include Irvine. In
a telephone interview from Sacra-
mento. Carpenter said the matter was
brought to his attention by a fnend.
Steve Edelman of the Anta-Dcfa-
matlon League of Oranse County
··He gave me the h,story of the
schedulinf of the event, and I was
outraged,' Carpenter said."( wonder
how they would feel 1f a Jewish Cit y
Council were to schedule a funC11on
during Christmas?"
Irvine 1s said to have one of Orange
County's fastest growing Jewish com-
mun1t1es, although no specific figures
were available.
The city hai one synagogue. but
five other temples in adjacent cities
also serve Irvine residents.
One local Jewish leader, who asked
not to be identified. said the festaval
organizers might be guilty of in-
scns1tiv1ty in their scheduling but
said descnbang them as anti-scm1t1c
was "prematarc.~·
SHERIFF •..
From Al
cnmmals housed there.
Gates was not available for com-
ment.
Sterling_ also subpoenaed another
county official -Aud1tor-Controller
S.E. Lewis. Lewis has been asked to
provide all records pertaining to the
temporary facility at the honor farm.
Sterling said the records will prove
that taxpayers did foot a $5.1 mill ion
bill for the tents.
RACCOONS LIVE HIGH IN SAN JUAN ...
From Al
Oasbhght 1n the pool. they swam to
the shallow end and got out of the
pool and JUSt fil ed passed ham They
arc so cute," said Virginia Waugh
In all. the "cute" httlc animals have
cost the Waughs about S600 an
repairs
The raccoons move into the a111cs
through screened vents an order to
have a safe and warm place to ha ve
thear young, said Fnnk. Raccoons
have "kits" instead ofhtters and bear
anywhere from three to five babies at
a time.
When the cntters first came to
town. they pushed 1n the screens on
the att1cvents. After Waugh paid S300
to replace his screens, the raccoons
learned to tear the shingles nght ofl
the roof to make their way into the
insulated attics.
Animal control workers will only
take the animals once captured or
lolled. said Virgina Waugh. So home·
owners have built thearown box traps
and have captured two raccoons and
one smelly skunk.
Although fish is better bait than
lunch meat, the neighborhood cats
also enJOY the fish.
Some rciidents have complained
about the box traps because they fear
for their cats. "The>.' arc womed their
poor little k.ittch wtll get excited 1f it's
trapped," said Waugh.
Afl the captured animals have been
taken to nearby Casper Park. Despite
their relocation. the raccoons make
their way back to the warmth and
comfort of the San Juan Hills attics to
rati>C their young. taste cat food lef\
out for the neighborhood pets and cat
• -------
leftovers shared with the raccoons by
the residents.
"l thank what started 1t 1s the people
feeding them," said Waugh.
Fnnk said he has seen many people
feed the animals from their han<l but
he warns agamst the dangerous
practice. Althou&h the black-eyed
ma~mal was once sold in pet stores.
its viciousness and tendency to tum
on 1ts owner makes it a poor choice
for a family pct. Adult males are
especiaJly dangerous, ~d Frink.
Waugh said he and.his neighbors
hope to trap and relocate all the
animals. ·
Until then. the masked bandits will
continue . to make a tnp to the
commu~tty pool for a family. outing
-especially on those scorching hot
summer days.
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