HomeMy WebLinkAbout1986-04-15 - Orange Coast PilotORANGE CG\ST •
TUESDAY, APRIL 15, 1986
RS.id on Libya called succes~
White House says attack 'struck blow
against terro~ism;' summit in jeopardy_
planned May-14-16 meetina between
Secretary of State GeoTJC Shultz and
Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard
Shevardnadze, castfoa doubt on
plans for a second summit this year
between the leaders of the two
countries .
By MICHAEL PUTZEL ., ........... c.. ......
WASHINGTON -The White
House today declared U.S. air raids
again1t Libya a success that "struck a
blow against terrorism and sent a
message" to Libyln leader Moammar
Khadafy. But the attacks appeared to
have Jeopardized prospects fora U.S.-
Sov1et summit meeuna later rlus
year.
Libya, meanwhile, apparently re-
taliated for the raids by firing at a U.S.
Coast Guard installation on a tiny
Mediterranean island.
The Soviet Union, responding to
the bombinit raids. called off a
The White House called the Soviet
decision "a mistake." Shultz and
· Shevardnadze were to have dilculled
arranaemenu for Soviet 'leader
Mik.b.ail Gorbachcv's trip to the
United States to meet with President Reagan.
Attack
decision
made a
weekago t
President ruled it
was ff me for action
after Berlin b last
By W. DALE NELSON "••111Jlld,__.,..,
Addltlonal coverage on A4, I, 12
Presidential spokesman Larry
Speakes discloaed that U.S. officiafs
were told of the action in Moscow
before it wu announced.
"The Soviet decision 1howa where
they stand on the imponant iuue of
international terrorism. It aho llY1
somcthina about their commitment
to work constructively on i.uuea on
the U.S.-Soviet •nda. ~ludina
arm1 rcdocoons and f'Clional crises,"
Speakea aa1d.
The ni&ht1Jme U.S. bombinp, in
which a ll.S. Air Force P-l l l wu Jost.
"1ucceafully accom"1ilhed" their
object.ivea of damqh>a Khadafy's
ability to perpetrate terrorism and
lhowina him the United Statea would
•trike to punish or ~pt future
atacks apimt Americanl, be said.
Speakes said an w and tea ~ wu under way for the m~ plane
and it1 two-man crew.
In what Libya dacribed u a
retalia&ory ltrike of iu OWDt It lieut
two miuilcs wen: fired from &D
unjdeotified ahip or plane at 1 U.S.
Cout Guard station on the Italian
island of Lanipedusa in a.be Mediter·
ranean Sea, 1 C.O..t Guard apoket-mao said today.
The spokesman. Nicholas Sand-
(Pleue ... ATTAC&/A2)
Badham,
Lungren
laud U.S.
attack t>
BJ ROBERT BAR~
u4 TONY SAA VEDR.A or .. ....,,.... ...
Two ~ Coast co~en
lauded Monday's attack by U.S.
bomben on terronst posts in Libya,
while the son of a Hunt.inston Beach
man kjdnapped in the Middle East wu concerned that VJOlenoc would
bet.ct violence.
Double winner
Geor1e Strait won top
male vocall•t and album
of the year awarda at
Academy of Country
llaatc Award• cer-
emony at Knott'• Berry
Farm Monday. A 4
WASHINGTON -President Re-
agan gave the go-ahead some time in
the middle of lasl week for Monday
night's bombings in Libya. White Jrouse spokesman Larry Speakes said
today. LIBYA U.S.
flepa. Robert Bactb.tm and Dan
Lunarcn praiJed the carly-momina
air raid on mjlJtary hcadquanen and
barrxks i.n Libya today. However,
neither legislator predicted that ter-
rorist attacks would suddenly &O
away.
Coast
Bob Dylan and Tom Petty
will perform together at
the Pacific Amphitheatre
In Costa Mesa./ A3
Sports
Southern California Col-
lege's Tim Fortugno Is a
pitcher on the rlse./81
INDEX
Advice and Games A 10
Bulletln Board A3
Business A6-8
Classified 66-8
Comics A11
Death Notices 68
Entertainment A9
Oplglon A 12
Pollce Log A3
Public Notices 85, 8
Sports 61-5
Television A9
Weather A2
Speakes also said the process that
led to the decision was set in motion
by the president shortly after the April
4 attack on a West Berlin nightclub
that lulled an American soldier and a
Turkjsh woman.
He said the administration had
"pretty good indacauons" of who was
responsible for previous terronst
attacks but was able to come wp wtth
"irrefutable evidence" linking L1~
yan leader Moammar Khadafy to the
Berlin bombing.
"Once that bombing occurred a
week ago Saturday. we were able to
zero in on it and get some feeHn~ for
what we warttcd to do," he said. 'We
had a direct hnk. At the same time we
were seeing a rapidly cscalatina spate
of terrorist activities planned world-
wide against Americans.
"So the president felt it was ume to
take acuon. At that tame the president
set into motion what we would do. Is
the military option one he wishes to
exercise? Sometime mad-week last
week he indicated yes, he would like
to exercise the option."
"There was no need for the/resi-
dent to do further," Speakes sa1 • "He
~ve the execute order when he said
'use the military option'." He added.
rPleue Me DECISION/ A2)
• Sidi Bilal
• A1 Azziziyah Bks .
8 Tripoli Military Airport
8 AJ Jumahiriya Bks.
8 Benina Airbase ..... , --
Attacks
Libya
Republican Lunaren. who ~
retents Lona Beach and the western
part of Huntiqton Beach, said the
raid should prove cffectJve in
countering terrorism "in· the long
term."
"There will be far fewer deaths if
terrorists know they'll suffer the
con!Cquences:· he said. "It's a war.
And the war wasn't over in just a few
battles after the attack on Pearl
Harbor. I think that the direct
military action iJ a turnina point."
Newport Beach's BadMm, abo 1
(PleUe -LOC.&L/.d)
Security remains tight around Southland
By LAURA MERK °' ... ~ .... ....,
Increased security measures
already in force at Orange Coast
lllrpons, military bases and the lmmi-
grauon and Naturalization Services'
land border ports continued today
after the United States' bombing of
Libya Monday.
"We have increased security, but
have been doing so for several weeks
and will continue to do so until
further notice," said Staff Sgt. Vickj
Conkel, a spokesman for the Tustin
and El Toro Marine Corps air bases.
Conkel would not dabontc on the
types of security measures i.n place.
Capt. R. Fisher. a U.S. Marine
spokesman in Washington, D.C., said
all bases ••arc on alert status, but I just
can't give any details at all.•
John Wayne airport is not an
tnternaUonaJ a1rport. but It bu in-
creased secunty tn the past in the
wake of terrorist threats. Airport
officials were not available for com-
ment this morning.
Oiff R<>sers, deputy distnct direc-
tor of the TNS, said Monday's attack
did not prompt tighter security.
Immigration woTkcn "have been on
a higher state of awareness stncc last
year,·· Rogers said.
lnformallon from both 1otcr-
01t1ona1 and national intelliaence
sources is banded to primary inspec-
tors at all ports of entry on a rqular
basts. he said. Information may be
th1nas Hkc known terrorists moYJ~
toward the United Statea or "if 100
West German passports were It.Olen
in South Amenca. then we would be
on the lookout for West Getman
(Pleue Me SltCUIUTT I A2)
El Toro girl killed by truck;
boy, 5 , in critical condition
By ROBERT HYNDMAN
A 9-year-old El Toro girl died
Monday m&ht from IDJunes she
suffered when she was struck by a
pickup truck wh1 le crossa ng a street on
her bicycle
Melissa Prosck died at about 8:30
p.m. at M1ss1on Community Hospi-
tal
A passenger on her bicycle -5-
year-old Charles Davidson of El Toro
-was seriously IO)ured He was
listed an cn t1cal condition this mom-
ang at the M1ss1on V1eJO hospital's
1ntens1ve care unit
The California Highway Patrol
~1d Prosek was crossing Rockfteld
Boulevard at Land1sv1ew A venue an
El Toro when she was '!truck an the
crosswallc by a southbound pickup
truck. dnven by 24-year-old Vincent
Petenon of Mission Viejo. The
accident occurred at about 7:30 p.m.
Peterson. who was traveling at
about 45 mph, apparently failed to see
the girl because of the darkness,
inadequate street lighting and the lack
of reflectors on the bike. C'HP Officer
Jim Smith said.
Peterson was not cited by officers,
but the accident remains under C HP
Peace walker's
global trip winds
through county
There arc peace walks. peace
marches, hungcrstnkes for peace and
then there ,, Prem Kumar
He's a 29-ycar-old man from India
who, upon ftna,hang bis studies on the
relationship between disarmament
and world development. began a
world walk an 1982 to promote peace.
While stoppm11n Laauna Beach on
has trek to San Fnncasco, Kumar said
he will walk to has home in
Ahmadabad, India af\er pM•una
throuah Naga~ki, Japan on Aug. 9 -
the 4Tst anniversary of the United
<itatC1' use of an atomic bomb on that
c-1ty
Walkana dnws public 'upport. he
hchev". He cited the hablu.:al account\ of
how JC!uS walked through 1mall cit1c'
to share a '01ntual mcssaac He al.a
cited Mohandas Gandhi's Salt
March, which led to the indepen-
dence of India from British rule, and
Martin Luther K.ma Jr. 's walk from
Selma to Montaomery, Ala.. to
protest scarept1on.
"These three people arc fro m
different ~ru of the world and have
different 1dcab and philosophy. And
yet they had one thana an common -
to make people aware and challenae
authority u11na a common tool.'' he
said.
"In India there 1s a tndition.
Whenever there '' a need to promote
any idea or to develop publte opinion,
you walk to channel all sources of
communication, you touch com·
mumt1cs of all ~i7.c . even remote
villqcs," he qid
In has ruean;h, he ~d he dis-
1nvest1gallon. Smith said.
Following a ~parate incident. a
Bellflower man died Monday from
IOJUnes he suffered when he was
struck by a car early Saturday in
Huntington Beach.
According to pohce. Mano Mysak.
18. was runrung across Pacific Coast
Haahway at about 12:40 a.m. when he
was struck by an eastbound car The
dnver was not cited.
Mysak. who suffered several
broken bones and massive internal
tnJUnes. was taken to the trauma
center at Founuun Vall6 Regional
Hospital where he died.
Lauu
MERK
PEOPLE IN THE NEWS
covered "four m-.,or obstacles that
come an the way of peace. They art
reha.aous duharmony, the economic
pp between the nch and poor.
nataonaltsm and raClal and oolor
discrimination."
So Kumar started out on a one-man
m1ss1on to cncouraae othcn to share
h1s dream of a peaceful world.
And becaulC Gandhi onoe V111ted
Kumar's home town of Ahmadabed.
Kumar thouaht it S1J01ficant to t>csin
his wallt on Oct. 2, Gandhi's birthdiy
That was 3V> ycan aao.
incc he left b11 home he's vuat.ed
13 countries in Alia and Europe
Spcaklna It churches and 1ehools.
Kumar (who docsn•t uar a last name
because it connotates etas.a in India)
tnes to orpnize a pcaQC movement
(Pleue ._ PSACS/A2)
Pregame baby exchange
C&Ufonaia WeJe MCODd beeem•n Bobby
Grieb retv.rna 6-montla1ld Brett Pletff er of
~e to b.la modaer after a pffCame photo
aeeelon at tile Anaela' home opener. Grieb
contrlbated two blta, lnc ladlna a aame-
tyt.nc RBI doable in tbe ei.tatla, lD tbe
Anee19' 7-6 wtn O't'er the Seattle Martnen1
For more. aee Sporta. pace Bl.
Police audit cites force, cost
NB offi cia ls to s tu y recomme ndations
about aggressive s tyle a nd huge budget
By SU AN HOWLETT
Of .. 0.-, .........
Newpon Beach officials will 1tudy
scom of audit rccommcndauons
made by a consulhn& firm before
dctcnnin1na what ch1n,t1 should bt
made in the police d~nmcnt. the
city manqcr said Molfday.
Ctty Man.,er Robcn Wynn said at
an afternoon Cit'{ Council tc:U•on
that the C1tv wil look at the 139
~mmendauons 1n the next couple
of months to tee wb1ch one• can be
incorporated into the city's bud&ct
The audit. which cosl the city S60,000, wa completed Marth 19 by
the Natt0naJ l..cquc of O ucs Pohoc
Consuluna Scrvaoc. The audit tum
lalkcd with 3'tdent.s. observed pohoc
and tntcrv1ewcd city and pohct
officials.
Thom~n ( rockctt., onr of the
Wa'lh•r\ltOn. D ( -t.~ ron,ultal'lu.
wd the 700-paae audit wu pomt1ve
toward the department overall, but
noted some 1ntcmaJ wcakncun.
ancludtn• a larser than usual number
of cxcnsave fon::c compla10ts
Crockett told the C'aty Counal that
Newport Beach has an expcn11vc
polaoc department. one that COits
more than twioc as much to run as
man) CIUC1 With companblt popu~
laUon'\
The audit said the oost of \be
Newport Beach Pohce ()cpertment 11
S 171,063 per 1,000 residents, while
the national avef'llt for oompenbae-
(Pl--... POLIC&/ .d)
'
Al* Orenge eo.t DAILY PlLOTI Tu.day, April 15, 1988
Body found in HB lake identified
ly&oBEaTB~ .............
A man whoee body was found April
6 in a plastic be& in an abudoned
Hu.ntinalon Beach lake bas been
id entified .as Richard Leo
Buztamaote, 27, police
spokeswoman Jo Anne Berastrom
said today.
A fonner resident of \be Fresno area. Buztaman\e bad been in and out
of trouble with pol.ice sinoe J 973,
IQQOrdina to Bergstrom. Off'enlC5
included narcntics violations a~d
chaJSCS of disordeTly coaduct,
Beratrom said.
The FBI matched the man's fi.naer·
prints with prlnu on file, but a
computer in Wu~ D.C., came
up with teVen different allales and
birthda\e$.
Police, who tracked the man
lhrouah bis early pohoe reeords,
talked to bis mother and sister in the
Bay Arca and his father in Los
An&eles before establi.shina positive
identification.
Bergstrom said police have no
record of the man's whereabouts or
act1v1ues for the pa.st three yean. He
lived in the Fresno~• until 1983, she
said.
Polioe still don't know bow
8wtamante was killed. how Iona be
bad been dead, or the motive in the
app&reot homicide, Berptrom said.
His body, which was wei&bted with
a chain, was found in the 2th.acre lake
lbat once was a quarry. The la.kc is
located nonh of Ellis A venue between Ootbatd and Oolden West streets. It's
fenced, locked and not well known,
even to Huntington Beach residents,
officials have noted.
ATTACK ON LIBYA' A SUCCESS' .•.
From Al
ifer, said a telephone report from the
island indicated the missiles landed
in the water just off the island. causing
no damage or casualties.
Libyan state radio announced that
Libya had bombed a U.S. tele.
communications station oq the
island in retaliation for Monday
night's bombinj raid against tatJets
around the ma.ior Libyan port cities
of Tripoli and Benghazi
Speakes said the United States was
still assessing the situation and could
not say what the response might be.
He noted there were 31 Coast Guard
personnel at the long-range navi-
gation site and that they bad no
weapons other than personaJ small
anns.
Speakes also confinned that a truck
laden with rocket launchers had
exploded outside Yakota U.S. At.r
DECISION ...
FromA-J. ·
however, that Reagan "had the op.
t1on to call ofT the mission up to 6:59
last night."
The attack occurred at 4 p.m. PST
or 2 a.m. in Libya.
Throughout last week, Speakes
said, the president held brief mectmgs
with officials of the State Depart·
ment, Defense Department, nauonaJ
security agencies and the military.
''They kept showing him targets.
kept showing him ideas, he kept
malang various decisions affecting
this to go into plac.e." he said.
"When they came to him and said.
·Is Monday night all nght?' he said,
·fine. Monday night is okay'."
Khadaf y child killed in raid
TRIPOLI, Libya (AP)-The U.S. bombing raid on Libya killed the infant
daughter of Libyan leader Col. Moammar Khadafy, doctors at Tripoli
Chifdren's Hospital said Tuesday.
Doctors, who spoke at a brief news conference organized by government
officials, identified the child as Hanna who was less than a year old.
Two ofKhadafy's sons also were injured in the raid. the doctors said. He
bas eight children, includina Hanoa who was recently adopted.
Force Base in Japan at 3:10Lm. PST,
but said it was too early to say whether
the incident was the result of a
terrorist attack. He said then: were no
injuries.
American military and diplomatic
installations throughout the world
arc on full alert, and Speakes said
Americans have been constantly ad·
vised .. to be prudent and cautious
when they're traveling."
The spokesman refused to discuss
reports that the American planes b.it
the French embassy and other na-
tion~ diplomatic missions in Tripoli,
as well as several homes iq an affluent
residential neighborhood of the Li~
yan capital. He said U.S. officials did
not yet know the extent of damage
inflicted on intended military ~ts
and wouJd be analyzing after-actJon
reports throughout the day.
Reporters in Tripoli were taken on
a guided tour of one neighborhood
and saw damage to several houses
and the French embassy, wb.ich
Defense Secretary Caspar
Weinberger bad insisted could not
have been hit in the quick, intensive
raids that took place at 2 a.m. today,
Tripoli ti me (4 p.m. Monday PST).
The U.S. "goal was to strike targets
in a way that wouJd damage
Khadafy's ability to perpetrate ter·
ronst acts," Speakes said. "We want·
ed to show that such attacks were a
consequence of underta.kin& terrorist
actions., that terrorism cannot be
supPOrtod without incurring a heavy
pn ce. We have successfully ac.
complished both objectives."
"We arc confident that this
message was heard and understood."
Speakes told reporters today.
The spokesman declined to say
whether the military operation
against Libya was complete.
"J don't tf\ink it serves any purpose
for me to di,cuss the tactJcal oper·
ations of the United States govcnncnt
in this mission," be said. But when
asked if renewed antiaircraft fire
beard in Tripoli and a "blue flash"
reported over the harbor indicated
another U.S. strike, Speakes said it
did not and that be attributed that to
"nervous Libyans."
Speakes was as.Iced about reports
that a residential area hit durinJ the
attack was a stronghold of Palestmian
terrorist Abu Nida!, who was
suspected of mastennindi~ the air-
port attacks in Rome and Vienna last
December. He said, "I have seen
those reports, but I cannot confirm
what the situation is with NidaJ."
LOCAL CONGRESSMEN LAUD ATTACK •..
From Al
Republican. said. 1f anything, the
attack was overdue.
Badham also said he believes that
Libyan leader Moammar Khadafy
"blinked" by not immediately send-
ing out teams of terrorists to answer
the nighttime attack.
Bacfham said Khadafy may have
had "almost logical" thoughts by not
sending up his large fleet or warplanes
to challenge American forces.
"This shows he's rhetorical -not
suicidal," Badham said.
SECURITY ...
From Al
passports," he said.
"We are also a little more cautious
about people who fit certain profiles,"
said Rogers. who did not specify what
characteristics make up those
profiles.
But Rogers said while no changes in
secunty have been made. "it may
have just perked us up psychologi-
cally."
A spokesman from the U.S. Border
Patrol said officers have been on alert
for some time. "We are always on the
lookout for terrorists." said Gene
Smithburg, assistant chief patrol
agent.
Meanwhile, the son of a man held
hostage in Lebanon for nearly a year
fell a tinge of resentment when
President Reagan told the nation
Monday that U.S. forces would act in
self-defense whenever "our citizens
arc abused or attacked anywhere in
the world."
''I was almost yelling. 'Cmon Ron,
what are you talking about?" said 29-
year-old Eric Jacobsen, whose father,
David. is one of silt Americans held
captive by Moslem terrorists for as
long as two years. The men were
ludnapped ID Beirut, Lebanon, at
various times smce March 1984 by
members of the Islamic Jihad under-
ground v oup.
Relauvcs of the captives are frus-
trated with the unproductive and
seemingly languid efforts of the
Reagan Administration to frtt the
hostages.
"I'd like to sec equally aggressive,
but non-military action, made toward
my father and the others, becau5c
they too are victims of terrorism -
just like the people killed in the
(Berlin) nightclub bombing." said
Jacobsen, who lives in Huntington
Beach.
The U.S. attack on Libya was partly
ID response to the bombing of a
discotheque frequented by American
servicemen in West Berlin. One
Amencan was kdled in the blast,
which U.S. officials say was ordered
by K.hadafy.
Unlike many Amencans, Jacobsen
said it was premature to laud Mon-
day's air strike as a blow against
terrorism.
"It may be premature to celebrate,"
he said. "If violence begets
moreviolencc. the attack is some-
thing we cannot be happy about."
While one Iranian official warned
that a military strike against Libya
would be considered an attack against
the "Islamic World," Jacobsen was
doubtful that the Lebanese Moslems
holding b.is father would take ven-
geance on the hostages.
"In my father's situation, it wasn't
indiscriminate violence. They took
people whom they felt they could
eJtcbangc (for colleagues imprisoned
in Kuwait)," Jacobsen explained.
News magazines in recent days
<eported that Khadafy had offered to
buy Jacobsen's father and the other
American hostages from their
Lebanese captors, quoting figures of
SI 00 million and $50 million as the
purchase price.
"I would assume he was malting the
ofTer to get them and make a media
extravaganza to prove that be isn't the
mad dog of the Middle East,"
Jacobsen said.
POLICE FORCE, COSTS CRITICIZED ... From A 1 __ __,,
size ci ties 1s $74.094 per 1,000
residednts.
"Newport Beach 1s spendang a great
deaJ of money on its police depart-
ment," Crockett said. addang that city
officials should take the police de-
partment's cost into account when
deciding the budget.
Councilman 8111 Agee asked
Crockett for an explanation of the
audit team's findings concerning the
excessive force complaints against
the police department. He noted that
whether founded or not. Newport
Beach seems to attract claims alleg.mg
aggressive police tactics.
Crockett said Newport Beach
police have maintained an "ag-~ss1ve style" of enforcement, and
'the aggressive st7le often leads to
more complaints.·
"Newport Beach has trad1t1onally
had a very strict enforcement style,"
Crockett said. "Perhaps it would be a
good idea for the new chief. when he
comes in, to take a look at that
concept and sec if it still applies."
Councilman Don Strauss said the
excessive force complaints probably
MAIN OFFICE
330 Wn1 8&y 81 CO.la ~ C"
stem not from the department's
enforcement pohcy, but from "an
attitude or style problem on the part
of some officers."
Another recommendation aired at
the meeting dealt with the dis-
ciplinary policy within the Newport
Beach Police Department.
Crockett said matters which allege
serious misconduct against a police
officer should not only be in-
vestigated by an immediate super-
visor as currently done, but by
additional superiors in the depart-
ment. He added that the audit found
"a great deal of inconsistency" in the
way the disciplinary process has been
carried out from shift to shift.
One of the recommendations that
could prove costly to the city 1s a
police foot patrol of the Balboa Pier.
Newport Pier and Balboa Island.
Crockett said the enforcement team 1s
expensive because officers on foot
cannot answe( calls for service 1n
o ther areas.
"There are a lot of advantages and a
lot of djsadvantaaes," Crockeu said
Correction
A story in Monday's Daily Pilot
incorrectl~ reported that the U.S.
Supreme Court would consider hear·
ina a dispute between Shcnff ..COr·
oner Brad Gates and political oppo-
nent Linda Lea Calligan over
Calligan's right to make certain
allegations apinst him in her can·
didatc's statement.
Calligan's attorneys asked the U.S.
Distnct Coun to hear the matter
which was scheduled for I : 15 p.m.
today.
They also lodged a similar request
with the state Supreme Court.
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VOL 11, NO. 105
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used to record letters to the editor on any topic.
Contributon to our Letters column must include
their name and telephone number for venficatJon.
Tells us what's on your mind.
1 •
,. .... .,.... efld ~y "
~ dO 11()1 ·~ YOIJI copy ll'f 7 a m cal tle!Or• • o • '" eno YOll' cooy .. bt~IM!
Clrculatlon
T1l1~
Moel
()l' .. COunty .... _ ......
A atom\ that epMtcled the northern pert of the 1t1t• wtth rain eertv today wu expected to cont.,.,. eouttl, bringing lhOW9n.
wind and cooter ttmPtretur• to Southern c.ntomta. A 30 percent Chanot of Qgtit ehowttl wu rorecut from this
afternoon through Wedn.day morning, eocordtno to tha
National Weethtr Service.
Along the Orange Coeet !her• wlll be a cNnC9 of lhoWerl
tonight In the north penllStlng through Wedneed•Y morning.
Partly cloudy Wedneed~~ attemoon. Cooter wtth hlah• WedMe·
day In the eo.. Lowa t ht In the ~ 40e tQ mid 5oa. From Point Conception to the Mexklen bOrder -Inner
wat«S: LIQht wind• night and mommg hou,. beCOmlna '°'-Ith to
1CX.1thweat 10 to 18 knot• ttllt~ng wtth 1 to 2·foot wfnd wa\1'91
and weet to nort~ wind• Wedneeday afternoon. W•t ...tf 2
to ~ reet. l~ng ctoudtneea wtth a Chance of tnower•
aprMdlng from the rl0f1h ~•ting Into Wedn91day morning
Partly cloudy Wednesday arternoon.
U.S. Temps
.. Le .. 33 87 ..
113 36
78 72 74 ..
47 33
52 33 71 .0
IQ ... 17 .. se n ... .a
67 27
II 59
17 « .....
• 62 511 31
84 48 96 36
14 67
32 15 12 ,.
74 ..
I ::
55 46
71 53
16 .a 12 53 &e· 441
5a 42 113 41 43 ,.
.. 41 70 M
M 37 11 511
IQ 60
71 41
57 38
13 37
IS eo 57 3.2 .. &4
81 43
.. 49 57 34
&$ )t
Calif. Temps n u .....
TO 42 M M
.. 2t
4.2 Ot
. ...
IO M IQ eo 41 20 56 SI
11 M TO 441 78 41 n «
15 Ml
5a 21
12 :it
113 42 31 34
IQ 63
41 22
37 27 eo 33 51 ,..
M 1t 41 27
.. 71 a eo TO M n 45
~mogReport
81 " 42 28
II 30 70 51
70 441 78 41
PEACE ••.
From Al
His schedule is planned well in
advance, due tot.he many people who
offer him shelter and food and
contact friends and family in other
towns to do the same. ''Meeting one
person leads me to another person."
he said.
As he walks he carries a banner with
the flag of all the nations he's visited.
He says he doesn't mind the lonely
times, in fact.. he enjoys the solitude.
"Now I feel walking is like reading a
book you like to read or listenin$ to
music you like to listen to," he said.
He 1s anxious to return to his
family, too. His fattter is a busi-
nessman and his mother a housewife.
"But that cannot describe fully what
she is. She is very much involved io
the development and growth of her
children and involved in helping poor
people," he said.
His brother Tiven Marwah is a
physician who walked with Kumar
dunng the first seven weeks of his
march. "I can't imagine how I would
have done this without his support,"
he said.
Kumar plans to wnte several books
when he returns home.
His first book will be written for
and dedicated to the children of the
world. "I feel there 1s no other better
thing than world peace that we can
offer to the children. In the United
States I have spoken 1n more than 100
schools. I have found children to be
responsive, receptive and im-
agmery," he said.
Instead of answenng children's
questions, Kumar said he asks them
10 answer his. "I asked them why
there is war and one child answered.
'When people try to take away things
from others it starts the war.'
"Their understanding is so clear
about what is right and wrong."
DllllJ .... ,...."' °""---Prem Kumar reluea in Shirley Leitch'• LaCuna Beacb
home beneath peace meuace be wean while wa.IJd.n&.
Tonight's the night for taxes
Orange Coast post offices have made special arran~ements for
ta.xpaycrs who will be pushing to meet the midnight deadline for filing
their mcome taxes tonight.
Post offices that will have bans and postal workers available until
midnight are:
•ihe Laguna Beach main offi ce at 299 11 Niguel Road. Laguna
Niguel.
•The Playa station in Laguna Beach at 350 Forest Ave.
•The South Laguna branch at 31677 Virginia Way.
•The Laguna Hills office at 24001 Calle del la Magdelcna.
•In Santa Ana. the North Grand station at 2201 North Grand.
•The Santa Ana general mail facility at 310 I West Sunflower.
•The Newport Beach main offic:e at 1101 Camelback
•The Balboa station at 204 Main St.
•The Balboa Island station at 206 Marine Ave.
•The Riverside station at 191 Riverside Ave. in Newport Beach.
•
Storekeeper Todd Latham is
wearing our pure silk sport
coat. d1st1ngu1shed by sub-
tle. innovative coloring and
light weight for total comfort
WESTCLIFF PLAZA,
NEWPORT BEACH. CA
(714) 842-7081
t •
Candidates set
Newport foru~
The Newport Harbor Republican Women will
host local candidate• for state and local offices 1t 1 Thuf?day forum to bqjn at 7:30 p.m. It the Newpon
Mamon Hotel.
Candidates fOr the U.S. Senate, aecretary of
state, controller, attorney general and the 40th ~ot?aressional District, amona othen, have been
invited. Tick~ts for the candidates' ni&ht ~ S 12.
Reservations should be made by calling 673-43S4 or
64S-348S.
Art 11f•torlan• to •peak
~ his.torians Dr. Lynn Gamwell and Phil
Kovin1ck will speak Wednesday eveninJ at Saddlc-
back College on mountain landscapes m Southern
California, a two-part exhibition on display at the
college and the Laguna Art Museum at South Coast
Plaza.
The 7 p.m. !ectW'C in the McKinney Theater is
open to the public free of charge. A reception will be
held afterward in the college gallery.
Appearance emplJuUed
A lecture on bow your appearance can impact
your career will be presented Wednesday at
Coastline College's Costa Mesa Center Room 8 of
2990 Mesa Verde Drive East from 7 to 110p.m.
. Dr. Grego'"¥ Fisher, a plastic suraeon. will
conduct the scsSJon. The fee u SI 0, payable at the
door, and further information may be obtained from
Michael Montz at 752-7521 .
Buslness talk ln Irvlne
A panel of specialists will discuss e~rting,
1mportJ.Qgand markclin&-0pp9rtunityeS in--= na at-
Wedocsday's ~ting of the World Trade Center
Ass0ciation, scheduled for 7:30 p.m. at the' Irvine
Hilton Hotel and Towers.
The program is priced at $15 for WTCA
mcm bers and $18 for non-members. Call 549-815 I
for reservations and further information.
Arthritls luncheon slated
· The women's auxiliary of the Arthritis Fo110-
dation of Orange County will sponsor its annual
Stop Arthritis luncheon and fashion show Thursday
at noon at the Irvine Marrion Hotel.
TaJt-deductible donations will benefit the
Juvenile AnhritJs Oinic at Cbildrens Hospital of
Orange County. Call 642-5600 for details.
Homeowners convene
The Mesa dcl Mar Homeowncn Association
will hold its annual general meeting Thursday in the
multi-purpose room of Davis School, 1050 Arling-
ton Drive. Costa Mesa.
The group will elect new officers and directors
at the 7 p.m. session. Call Lance Thompson-
Hailstone at 546-3 I I 2 for details.
Klds' program on cable
"It's Elementary," the third in a four-part series
of cablev1s1on programs, will offer advice about
elementary school children Thursday from 7 to 8 on
Channel 3, Community Cablevision in Irvine.
Barbara Barnes, principal of Vista Verde
Elementary school in Irvine, will moderate a panel
discussion. The public is welcome to attend the
session, which will originate from the offices of thc-
lrvine Unified School District. 5050 Barranca.
Dance autborlty at UCI
William Como. editor of Dance Mapzine and a
leading authority on dance, will lecture Thursday at
8 p.m. m the Fine Arts C.onc.ert Hall at UC Irvine.
Lecture tickets arc $5 for general admission, $4
for students and senior citizens. Call 856-6616 for
further information.
CALENDAR
Tuesday, Aprtl 15
• 6 p.m .• La(ll.Da Bea~ City Coucil Meetbag,
City Council Chambers, 505 Forest Ave.
• 7 p.m .. Oceu View Sdlool District, District
Board Room. 16940 B St., Huntington Beach.
• 7 p.m .. Butiqtoa Buell Cit)' ScHe>l Dlstrlct
, District Headquarters, 20451 Cra1mer Lane.
• 7 p.m., Huntington Beach Planning Com-
mission, City Council chambers, 2000 Main St.
• 7:30 p.m .. lrvlae Uaifted Sclaool Dlttrlct
Board of Edacatioa., District Adminstration Center,
SOSO Barranca Parkway.
Dole urges women to take the helm
BJ PHIL SNEIDERMAN ....... ,... ....
Two decades ago, 1 male clusm1te at
Harvard Law Scbool criticized Elizabeth
Dole for OC1Cupyina a teat that he thoua)tt
should have been filled by a maa. Sbe
did.n•t bucl&t, however, and today bas
outdistanced many of her cla.wnatea.
On Monday, Dole, now U.S. Seaetary
of Transponation, urlfd thousands of
women aucndina a conference io
Anaheim to continue breakit>J down
barriers in wort areas that renwn domi-
nated by men.
Dole pointed to "America's quiet revol-
ution" m which .. a tidal wave of qual:ified
and talented women'' have entered the
work force in record numbers of the put
three decades.
.. A.ad with the revoluuoo ~pbcc in
ihlJ country .... / the transpQnlllOn ~
rewy said. manl:' m , I believe,
5llltlnl to SfUP w t we have alwt)'I
known: that ~oman abare with men the
need for pcnonal sucx:ien, even the quest tor power.
''And no toqer are we willina to satisfy
those necda through the achievements of
surroptea. wbetheT husbands. children or
merely tole models."
.DoJe was in Anaheim to participate in
the 1986 Conference on Women, sponsor-
ed by state Sen. WilliAmCampbcll, R-<;ity
of.Industry. About S,000 ~pie aUeneltd, rcquirina the traosportatJon secretary to
deliver ber speech twice in separate
ballrooms. In her cabinet post, Dole oversees a
aovemment branch with a $27 billion
Tom Petty (left) and Bob O,.lan wl11 perform tn Coeta lie...
annual buct,et and m<lft than 100.000 emplo~
Oun QI bet apeccb, Ibo claimed her own
.. little footnote in bittolY" as the fint
woman to bead a btaodt of the U.S. armed
fon:iea -the U.S. (Aelt Guard.
. Reprdina strides made by other .otk-'°' women, Dole Mid., '"The nu.mbcn of lbe put decades speak doQuently of Pfosreu. But who 1JD001 us can arpe that ~ .bav~ comptetety dimiMtcd dis-
cnmuu1uon or totalfy blJmed thlt m.
s-id.aous brand of ~ce -what l calJ
the tyranny of perfeetion'r'
She elaborated by quotiaa SOCli&I critic Matya Manna, wbo M'Ote. .. Nobody
objccu to a woman beina a aood writ.er or
sculptor or sene~st i( at the same ~eJ
she manqea to be a SoOd wife, a px>o mother, good-lookin&. IO()d-..tempered,
wdJ-dftaed. ~Md ~ .... llftfive, ..
Reprdiaa her °" ftdd. Dole .-. ..,.ra.DlpOr\llJOD ii a mefo4om' lllllllCI
ind~. You OGly baw 10 Joat al lhe
U'ldiliolW wort fon:e ill hiJllaW9Y coe-
ltrUCtioa. &b.ipbuildilllJ or tbe air udic
COlltroJ profcaiom to rc:aJiae ddl -aJ1.bouab we UC worlDQI IO iDcf 11 K dill
number of women in Ill 1rlmpOnati09
fields."
The cabinet member said tbc ~
of women in her own ~
depertment bad IJ'OWll oaJy &om J~S to
19 percent between 1967 and 1983 -die
. year she took over. Dole -.id tbe per.
ctnt.qe bu DOW pown to 22 percent -
that women now bold many of tbe &op
positions in the ~L
Bob Dylan, Tom Petty
to perform together at
Pacific Amphitheatre
BJ ROBERT HYNDMAN °' .. _...,.. ...
Bob Dylan and Tom Petty and the
Heartbrcakcn Will perform together at the
Pacific Amphitheatre in Costa Mesa on
June 16-the tour's only stopinthe Los
Angeles-Ora.n&e County area.
Announcement of the Dylan-Petty show
was perhaps the biggest news when the
Pacific Amphitheatre and Irvine Meadows
Amphitheatre last week unveiled their
lineups of nearly 30 acts scheduled for their
l 986 concert seasons.
More than 60 additional shows arc
expected to be 5Cheduled at the two venues
before the seasons conclude.
Accord.ins to plans, tickets for the
Dylan-Petty show wiU fO on sale April 2 l.
Depending on bow briskly tickets sell, a
second show on June l 7 may be added.
The ~fie Amphitheatre box office
opens at I 0 a.m. Gates to the amphitheater
boxing lot open at 7 a.m. with ticket-buyers
drawing numbers for their pl.aces in line.
Customers will be limited to six tickets
each, which sell for $20.35 each. Tickets
for lawn seating arc $15.
Dylan and Peny, who recently played a
series of concerts in Australia and Japan,
also will ~norm at the San Diego S{>'.<?rts
Anna. T1ckcu for that June 9 show will &O
on sale April 19.
At the Pacific Amphitheatre, tickets
currently arc on sale for the scuon-
opening show featuring Simple Minds and
the Call, April 22; Alabama and the Clwtie
Daniels Band, May 4; the Firm. May 23;
Rush, Ma)' 2S-26, and Kool &. the Gana.
June 20. ~
The announced lineup alto includes
Frank Sinatra, June 22; Bob Hope. July 6;
TcffrCy Osbome~y l t; th~
July 16; Dave Brubeck/Stan Getz/Dizzy
Gill~ic, Aua,. J; Steve Lawmice and
Eydie Gorme, Aug. 16; the Moody Blua..
SepL l ; Julio Iglesias, Sept. 27; Mr. Mister,
Oct. 3. and Sandi Patti. OcL 18.
Eurythmics and Culture O ub are set to
perform in August and Septembet, but
specific dates have yet to be confirmed.
The schedule of ticket sales will be
announced in coming weeks.
At Irvine Meadows, the lallOD started
early with the March 22 Pat Benatar/Dd
Lords concert. The Grateful Dead per-
formed two shows last weekend.
Other acts scheduled to appear include
f.cho & the Bunnymcnflbe Chwcb., April
19; the Violent Femmes{Pbranc. April 27;
Judas Priest. May 9; Heart, May 18; the
Alarm/LODI Ryders(T.S.0.L. May 31 ;
Tangerine Dream. June 6; Siouuie ct. the
Banshees, June l~ Gallagher's Rock ·n·
Roll Party with t'uhbone, the Red Hot
Chili Peppers and the Blastcn, Jne 28;
Julian Lennon, July 25; James Brown.
Aug. 1. and Chick Corea. Sept. 13.
Tickets for some of the shows already
are on sale. Other dates for sales will be
announced in coming weeks.
Smith International saddled Assessor
with losses of $265 million candidate gets leave By ~e AJsoclated PreH
Smith International Inc .. the oil field
services concern, reported losses ofS206.8
million Monday, or $9.10 per share. in the
fourth quarter and $265. l million. or
$1 J.66 per share. for the year.
The hu$C deficits reflect the impact of a
$205.4 million patent-infringement judg-
ment handed down against the Ncwpon
Beach-based company in February in
federal court.
The judgment forced the company to file
for Chapter I 1 bankruptcy rtOf$8.niz.ation
last month to gain protecuon from
creditors.
The company also disclosed that last
Friday it filed a notice of appeal of the
ruling to the U.S. Coun of Appeals in
Washinaton, ·D.C. The appeal had been
expected.
Smith said the judgment. plus legal fees
and other expenses rrom the company's
14-ycar legal battle with Houston-based
Hughes Tool Co. totaled $216.9 million.
Tbecase involved Smith's use of a seal ring
for rock drilling bits that Hughes dc--
vcloped in 1968.
In releasing its financial statement,
Smith, which has been hurt by a slump in
the oil industry. said revenues were down
by I 4.4 percent to S 172.4 million for the
three months ended Dec. 3 I and by 6.6
percent to $697.3 million for the full year. By LISA MAHONEY
Without the extraordinary writeoffs
because of the patent case, Smith posted an
opera tin'-loss for the year of $3.2 million.
Smith s chairman and chief executive
Jerry Neely said that the operating results
were disappointing, but that losses were
reduced by the company's previously
reported consolidations and layoffs.
In 1984, the company bad deficits of
$7S.9 million, or S3.34 per share, in the
final period and $68.5 million, or$3.0I per
share, for the entire year.
Of .. 11.-, ........
Oranie County Assessor Brad Jacobs
has relented and agreed to give one of his
deputies time off to campa.ign against him
in the assessor's race.
Deputy Assessor David Holbert may
have the two months leave be requested in
March, Jacobs said in a letter to the County
Board of Supervisors Friday.
Coming one working day before a
scheduled appeal of bis original denial,
Jacobs' letter provides a curious expla-
nation for his change of heart.
Atlas of seafloor off West Coast co1npiled
ThouJh he said Holbert's ex~ 1s
needed m the Assessor's Office in coming
months.Jacobs concludes that ~ntina his
deputy a leave is in "the best interests of
the taxpayers." information collected by the British re-
search ship Famella during a thrce--month
cruise off California, Oregon and Wash-
ington state in 1984.
quake faults and channels that look like
ocean-bottom river beds hundreds of
miles long. a USGS news release said.
According to the two paragraph letter. MENLO PARK (AP) -The first atlas
of the seafloor off the West Coast has been
published by the U.S. Geological Survey,
which says the maps wtll be used to help
locate possible undersea mineral and 011
deposits.
.................... _, The 152-page atlas was compiled using
The maps in the atlas show such features
as douns of previously unmapped sub-
marine volcanoes. giant landslides. canh-
The maps will be valuable in determin-
ing the presence of and potential for
economic resourc.es, including undersea
oil, gas and mineral deposiu.
Jacobs believes Holben would .. be forcicd
to campaign du.ring business hours.. and l
don't think that would be fair to Mr.
Holbert or to the taxpayers of Orange
County
Vietnamese refugee faces
trial on shooting charges
By STEVE MARBLE °' .. .,.., .........
A 30-year-old Vietnamese refugee
from Costa Mesa pleaded innocent
Monday to the shooting and wound-
ing the fonner director of housing for
the government of South Vietnam.
Tran Be Tu Van, a former school
teacher in Saigon, was ordered to
stand trial June 2 in Superior Coun
for attempted murder. He is being
held in heu of $50.000 bail.
Van is accused of sboouna Van
Khan Tran outside a Vietnamese
restJaurant m Westminster last
month. Tran, the former director of
FoantalD Valley
Two men robbed the Fast foto
shop at 16123 Brookhurst St. ofabout
S 120 Monday afternoon. The clerk
told police one man approach~ the
shop and dem1n~ed cash wh1!e !ht
other remained m a car. po1ntm1
what appeared to be ~ dou~le
barreled shottun or an Uzi machine
1un. The men Ocd in a 1971 dark
p-ccn MO convertible with .a larie
aold stripe on the OUKOJCr stde. • • • A resident of the 9500 block of
Acklay reported Monday tbat some-
one stoic a blue 1979 Cb.evrolet Luv
pickup truck from the driveway. The
loss was estimated at $3.000. ••• A cltrk at the 7-Elcven store at
housing for the government of South
Vietnam, was wounded in the
shoulder and abdomen.
Deputy District Attorney C'arl
Annbrust said Van confessed to the
shooting which he allegedl y said was
motivated by his hatred for Tran and
his politics.
Tran, who testified at Van's
preliminary hearing this month, said
he is a victim of rumors that have him
beina a communist agent and a
sympathizer of the present govern-
ment in Vietnam.
Van was described by his attorney
as an ardent nationalist whose family
lost its home and wealth when the
10545 Slater Avenue reported that
two customers entered the store
Sunday niJbt and took two I 2-pack!I
of Budweiser beer from the cooler.
One of tbe customers dropped a 12-
~ and when the clerk went to
obtam a mop, the customers fled wt th
the tec:0nd 12-pack without pay;na.
Each 12-pack was valued at SS. 71. • • • ~uapocu m a blue 1971 Toyota
station waaon pulled up behind the
Sofa Factory.t. 10870 Spencer, wluJc it
was closed :sunday. They allcaccily
stole 33 picccs of wood worth $100,
but were arrested by officcn whale
Oceint the scene
lnlae
About SSOO worth of jewelry was
government of South Vietnam col-
lapsed.
Defense attorney Alan May said he
believe~ Yao is innocent and may be
takioa the blame for someone else.
"Or he may be taking the blame
hccausc be feels the shooting is
1ustified." May said after his client's
preli minary hearing..
Van. employed as a newspaper
delivery truck driver prior to his
arrest, faces a maximum nmc--year
pnson sentence.
Tran was treated at the Fountain
Valley Regional Hospital trauma
center but has since been released.
reported stolen from a home on
Terrac1ma Mondav about 6 p.m. . ' . A. weight set was reported stolen
from an apartment patio on
Flagstone Monday about 5 p.m. • • • A new 1986 Chevrolet S-10 8la7er
was reported stolen from Auto Center
Dnve about S p.m. Monday • • • A Beta video cassette ~rder was
reported stolen from a classroom at
Self Hi&h ~hoot about 1:30 p.m
Monday. • • • A diamond rina, valued 1t about
S 1,000, Wis reported stolen from a
home on the 19000 block of Harvard
Avenue about 10 a.m. Monday. • • • A yellow Mercury Zephyr was
reported stolen from the 200 block of
Topeka Monday momin~
eo.talle..
A wallet contammg $500 was
reported stolen from a ripped purse
between 3 and 3:45 p. m. Saturday at a
South Coast Plaza shop. • • • A earners and jewelry, totaling
$1 ,251 1 were reported stolen from a
home an the 1600 block of Corsica
between 2:30 p.m. Wednesday and 5
p.m . Friday. Entry was possibly made
through an open window. ••• A compressor worth $2,500 was
taken from a rear shed of AJanar
Corp., 720 W. 17th t., between
Friday and Monday. • • • A tool box, worth $419, wa~
reported stolen from an open garage
in the 330 block of Tours about 2:30
p.m. Monday.
LaCun.a Beacb
The victim of a hit-and-run acci-
dent told police Monday that he did
not seek any prosecution because the
suspect was W'llbna to make restitu·
t1on. • • • A Glenneyre Street busmes~ rt'·
ported the theft Monday of a paint-
ing.. The val ued of the pamtm1 has yet
to be determined. • • • Firefi&hters were called out to a
South Coast H~way location early
Monday to insure that a trash fire.
which had been eJ.tinau1sbed but
continued lo smolder. "'IS put out
Newport Beech
Aboot SSOO dama&c was rcponed
after someone apparenUy shot at a car
Mth a pellet aun. The pellet reported-
ly m.ttered tht W'lndshicJd of a car on
West Coast Highway. • • • A purse was reported stolen from a
booth aboard the Pavilion Queen
The owner reponed a $110 loss..
Hantlnaton Beach
A faJl'lily member returned to his
residence m the l 6000 block of
Roosevelt to find his father's red 1984
Porsche pushed halfway into the
street and a $500 Blaupunkt stereo
missing. • • • A 10-spccd bicycle valued at $180
was stolen m the I 6000 block of
Gothard.
• • • A man was taken into custody for
allegedly irying to steal $100 1n
groceries from an Albertson's market
at 7101 Warner Ave. • • • A resident of the 7800 block of
Sycamore reported that someone
stoic bis blue l 977 Ford Granada
from a parlrin& place on the street.
The loss was estimated at $600. • • • In another incident in a Hunt·
ington Center parking lot. thieves
entered a locked 1981 Toyota
Crcuida and stole $300 in1ewcJs and
S20 m cash.
Attendant foils FV
heist, grabs suspect
By PRll. SNEIDERMAN
Of ... ~ .......
'\ Fountain Valley p s st.atJ on
attendent turned the tables on a
would-be robber Monday. vabblt\&
the gunman and holding him Mth the
help of a taxi dnvcr untd pohcc
am~ed
Jailed on 'U p1CJon of robbery was
David Moreno Noncp, 19, of Sant.a
AM.
Accordina to pohec reports. Nor-
•CSI walked up to the attendant's
booth at 2.14 a.m. Monday at the
Mobil stauon at 16230 Harbor Blvd
He persuaded tt1e attendant to open
tht booth by asking to Ke a telepbont
d1rtetory. On~ 1ns1dc. Noriep allqedly
placed a handaun m the attendant's
beck and demanded money, p0hcc
wd.
As the gunman began the Oct with
about $250. the anendanl. Robert
Allan Collins. 20. of Santa Ana.
followed and grabbe<i the robbcf'.
then wrestled him to the around.
police S&Jd.
The attendant called for help 10
rcstr&Jnina the robber and was u-
sisted by a taxJ dnver who was 6Jlins
up bis tank at the ume. potict wd.
The driver held Noriep wtulc
Colhns phoned polioe. oftictn aid.
OttcctJve Dann Bean said officen
recovc~ the money taken tn \he
holdup and setted a met.al f'Cl)ltca of
an automatic ptstol. Bean l&ld t.bc
attendant WU not awa~ the l\lft WU a
non-operating model when be de-
etdcd to grab the Oee1ng robber
•
• I
• '
'
Khadafy calls for reprisals against U.S.
es support from other
Arab nations
81UVIN006TELLOE t ,,,,,,_.,..
TRIPOLI, Libya -Cot Moam-
mar Khadafy's aovernment called on
Arab nations today to strike Ameri-
can wgeu worldwide after the niaht·
rime U.S. bombioa raid of military
targets near tbe port citici of Tripoli
and Benghazi.
Libya state radio called it a "oow-
arcily' attack, and said innoc::ent
people were killed and residential
areas in both cities bombed. Several
buildinas m downtown Tripoli were
blasted to rubble.
Government officials took foreign
reponers to the atnuent Bin Ashur-
7th of April -residential ne~
borhood. where five or six civilian
houses and the back of the French
Embassy were damaged.
In the soft dawn light, the streets
were littered with smashed can and
huge chunks of concrete; power lines
were down and water spurted from
broken water mains.
said no one was injured in the
mission. Some foreia:nen in the damaaed Bin Asb\.lt neipborhood
said a Libyan security headquarters
in the area might have beea a WJCt.
The body of an elderly man wu
removed on a stretcher from one of
the buildinas, and suides said many
pcopJe were taken to bospita11.
Dr. Fathi Benghazi of the Central
Hospital said 60 to I 00 people were
brought in with wounds, but that
many of the injuries were s~rticial.
A Libyan government official who
did not pennit uie of bis name said
civilians had been killed during the
raid. "Women and children were
killed in three blocks of apartment
buildioas " be said.
The official said victims were bcina
pulled from the robble, but be did not
know the number of casualties.
Khadafy's home and headquarters
reportedly were hit in the atUck, but a
Libyan government official said
Khadafy was not hurt.
One plane
missing
after U.S.
bombings
LAKENHEATH. Engl8:fld (AP} -
Six teen of the 18 Amencan F-111
fighter-bombers that bombed ~s
in Libya early today re~ume:<f a:afeJy to
a U S Air Force base in Bntaln.
T.he Pentagon said in Washington
that one plane landed !n Spain and
that one other was m1ssmg.
Reporters at Lakenheath, 85 miles
nonh of London. said they had seen
16 of the sleek khaki-and-sreen
camouflage-painted jets touched
down by 8:52 a.m. today (11 :52 p,m.
PST Monday).
In Washington, Pentagon spokes-
man Roben Sims later confumcd
that said 16 of the two-scat planes had
returned. A 17th plane landed in
Spain after reponedJy experiencing mechanic~! trouble. he said. Residents said many people fled in
panic. racmg about the streets in their
nightclothes screaming for help,
when the bombs fell around 2 a.m. (4
p.m. PST).
"He's OK, he's OK," Infonnation
Director Ibrahim Seger said in a brief
comment to the Associated Press in
the lobby of the Hotel Al Kabir. Libyan cltben• comb throa.th rubble of Tripoli netahborhood after bombing.
As for the 18th plane: "It is still
unaccounted for," Sims said. ''We
have nothtng funher to report oo it as
yet."
Hundreds of young men, many
dressed m ~n fatigue unifonns and
some carryrng weapons, shout~
-oown With America"" and "As-
Qssins. assassins. Criminal, crimi-
nal."
At a news conference organized by
the Libyan government this after-
noon, a man identified as a West
German technician trapped in
Khadafy's barracks by the raid said he
saw no one killed.
"The main attack was to an empty
admrnistratioo bu1ldJng. There were
no big bombs. There were rockets,"
said the man, identJfied as Erich
Braun.
struck" and appealed to Arabs m
neighboring countnes to "proceed to
strike at all American targets wher-
ever they may be and to cf\lS)l.all the
interests of the European arnes of
America.")
Earlier, Libyan radio also caJled on
the "valiant pilots" of the Syrian and
Algerian air forces to "hit the Ameri-
cans and their bases everywhere,''
There was no indication, however,
that Libya's Arab neighbors would
take up the challenge.
France refused U .s.
use of its air space
Ano~r Pentagon official who
spoke o condition he not be ident·
died con armed that U.S. forces were
enga$ed Jn a search-and-rescue
m1ss1on 1n,·01'(.!_ng the missing
bomber, but ~~d to disclose the
locauon of the' operation. Khadafy did not appear in public
toda}. did not immedtately make any
broadcast statements, and there was
no ind1cauon of his whereabouts. A
govern ment official said K.hadafy
~ur111ved the bombing raid.
Anu-aircraft fire could be heard in
I npoli at the time of the early
morn ing bombing raid. Machine-gun
volleys echoed through the streets.
indicating possible street fighting,
and at least two huge expfosions
Hll.ked the City.
Later, a bright blue flash exploded
""er the harbor, where Libyan naval
ships had been seen. There was oo
immediate explanation for the later
activity.
By 6: 15 a.m .. hfe appeared to be
rrturning to normal in the Libyan
capital. Cars drove down the streets
and people gathered at shops. The
international airport at Tripoli was
reported open.
(Libyan radio monitored an Lon-
don said the attack caused "extensive
destruction" of c1v1han targets in
Benghazi, the Nonh African coun-
try's second largest city wtth about
650,000 people. Homes, schools and
a center for disabled people were
destroyed, the broadcast said.)
Windows were blown out at the
French Embassy, but French officials
Government sources said two of
K.hadafy's sons were injured. The
sources provided no details on
Khadafy's sons.
(Libya's officials news 8.Jency
JANA, monitored in Rome, said the
attack continued this morning and
that U.S. fighter planes were bombing
residential and civilian areas in the
seaside capital of Tripoli. Algiers
radio reported the Libyan Infor-
mation Ministry announced two new
U.S. attacks. but said the raids were
repulsed by air defense.)
(Libyan radio monitored in Lon-
don reponed "at least 20" American
aircraft were shot down. The Pen-
tagon has maintained only one fighter
~as unaccounted for.)
(The JANA dispatch said "tens of
c1 viJians, most forcipters. were
lolled" and that the lraruan and Swiss
embassies had been damaged 10 the
bombing. Romania's news agen91 monitored in Czechoslovakia, said
Romama's Embassy was damaged
and four embassy personnel were
wounded.)
(Libya's official radio said in a
broadcast monitored in London that
"the hour of unity and revenge has
(Arab diplomats in Tripoli were
told Libya 1s demandinj their coun-
tries cut diplomatic ties with the
United States, withdraw funds from
American banks, and stop supplying
011, Libyan radio monitored 10 Lon-
don said.)
(Libya called for an emergency
meeting of the Arab Lca,gue Defense
Council, Arab diplomattc sources in
Tunisia said today. The league's
Secretary-General Chedli KJibi called
the attack an "error heavy with
consequences.")
(One Libyan radio report.
monitored 10 London, claimed Lib-
yan forces shot down three American
aircraft. and Libyan citizens kiJled
two of the pilots. The Italian news
agency ANSA said Tri~h radio
claimed that the pilots, bailing out by
parachutes, were attacked by a mob.)
About 800 Americans are believed
sull livmg m Libya despite Reagan's
order that U.S. citizens leave the
country by Feb. 1. Other foreigners
10clude 15.000 Italians, 20,000 South
Koreans and 1,300 Canadians.
PARIS (AP) -France confirmed
today that it had refused use of its air
space by American fighter planes
headed for a bombing raid on Libya.
and said the raid "renews the chain of
violence" trigered by terrorism.
A statement issued by the Fomgn
Ministry said that should Libya carry
out threats of violence against the
countries of southern Europe,
"France believes that the European
states ... should decide on an ap-
propriate riposte."
The statement said France
"deplores the intolerable escalation
of terrorism which has led to an
action of reprisals which in itself
renews the chain of violence."
A ministry spokesman, speaking at
a briefi~ said France had been
mformed m advance of the American
intention to strike at Libya, but he did
not divulge how much in advance
France received the mformat1on.
The statement said: "The Amen-
can intervention which took place
last night against Libya was decided
by the American government. In-
formed of the 10tentions of the
government of the United States.
France refused to allow its air space to
be used by Amencan planes. J t
(France) deplores the intolerable
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escalation ofterronsm which has led
to an action of repnsals which in itself
renews the cha10 of\.tolence."
The French Embassy was damaged
in the raid but no one was tnJured.
The spokesman. whose name 1s
withheld m accordance with French
practice, said France had no intention
of evacuating its citizens from Libya
but was Lryins to account for all those
known to be in the country.
.. As the minister of foreign affairs
let 1t be known, notably during the
meeting of pohucal cooperation
wh1ch took place Monda>, April 14.
at the Hague, France believes that the
European states. 1n the event the
Libyan government executes the
threats ll has made regard10g the
countnes of southern Europe. ex-
plicitly in regard 10 Italy and Spain,
should decide on an appropriate
nposte." the statement continued.
European foreign ministers meet-
ing Monday in the Hague decided on
a P.ackagc oflim1ted sanctions aga10st
Libya, including hm11 mg the number
of Libyan personnel and their move--
ment at its European d1plomat1c
missions. The United States says it
has proof Libya 1s behind some
terronst attacks
NATION
Spain's national news agency EFE
quoted a Defense Ministry spokes--
man as saying one F-111 made an
emergency landmg at dawn today at a
JOlnt Spanish-American naval base.
The spokesman was quoted as
saying the pilot safely landed the
warplane at the base in the southern
pon of Rota at 6·35 a.m. (8:35 p,m.
PST Monda)).
The spokesman said the F-111 was
to leave rhe Rota base late today after
being repaired, EFE said. Its desti·
nation was not gi ven.
A fe" minutes after the F-11 ls
began amv1ng at Lakenbeath. a fleet
of KC-10 tanker aircraft began land-
10g at the nearby Mildenhall base,
headquan ers of the U.S. 3rd Air
Force which 1s the overall U.S. Air
Force command fo r Britain.
Press Association, Britain's
domestic news aeency. said there was
grow10gspeculat1on that aJI 18 F-111 s
used 1n the Libyan attacks early today
came from Lakenheath.
At Lakenheath. U.S. airmen in full
combat gear with M-16 rifles slung on
their shoulders barred reporters from
entering the base.
At Mildenhall. military police also
barred rcponers.
Contra aid link to
veto-prone bill hit
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Re-
agan administration complamed
today 1t 1s be10g "given the shaft" m
the House ofRepresentati ves because
of a Democratic plan tying SI 00
million m aid for Nicaraguan rebels
to an unrelated spending bill headed
for a hkel) presidential veto
Presidential spo kesman Larry
Speakes said the parliamentary man-
euver engineered by opponents of the
administration's plan ''will severe!)
hamper our ab1hty to deal with
Contra aid in a straight up or down
vote.
"In shon , J think we're gomg to be
given the shaft as far as an opponun1-
ty for the Amencan people to have a
vote on ll," Speakes said.
He said that 1fthe Contra aid plan 1s
tied to the spendmg bill, "11 would
certainly be a candidate for ve to."
Asked if the Democratic strategy
had killed prospects fo r rebel aid
Speakes replied, "We would Just hav~
to wait and see 1f reason and fairness
would prevail 1n the House of
Representatives."
President Reagan denounced the
move Monday as "subterfuge and
backroom deals" and Republican
leaders 1n the Democratic<ontrolled
House said the) would try to separate
the two issues.
The House was scheduled today to
again take up Reagan's plan to
provide aid to the Contras fighting
Nicaragua's leftist Sandinista govern·
ment
At the Capitol Monday, police
arrested 57 protesters opposed to
Reagan's aid package. They were
booked for unlawful entry after
refusing to end a vigil in the Rotunda.
near a bust of slam civil rights leader
Man10 Luther Kmg Jr.
Last month, the House defeated the
aid package 222-210, but the Re-
pubhcan-controllcd Senate later P-ve
53-47 approval to a slightly modified
proposal and moved the fi&ht back to
th e House. A $27 million package of
non-lethal aid expired March 31#
The ma1or fight today was expected
to be on the rules under which the
Contra aid package will be considered
by the House. The aid pack.aae, along
w1 th several amendments that would
alter it, 1s not expected to face a vote
until Wednesday.
Strait, Alabama take top
honors in country niusic
By tbe A11oclatecl ~re11 I
qentleman cowboy Geor&e Stra11 prevented another sweep by perennial
favontes ~abama at the Academy of Country Music Awards takina the top
male vocalist ~nd album of the year trophies at the ceremonies ~t Knott's Berry
Fflfth. Entertau~er of the year and t~p vocal group honors went to Alabama for
a 1.. c~~secuu.ve year, however, giving the Fon Payne, Ala .• quartet a record .'.to H~t tro~hi~s ~~nee the ~nd'~ inception five yean ago. Ronnie Milsap's st·~ the Fiftie~. a.nostalgic max of country and doo-wo won so of the
ythear. MJ11sap, ~ho is ~hod, read Reba McEntirc's name in B~iue after ';>'peoina
eenve ope 1or top 1emale vocalist award. "Highwayman," performed by the
h~~i~!~~~'lfn:We'~:1 t~kW11lie Nelson, Johnny <Ash, Waylon
whose current song "Until 1 M i y .~!n&I~ of ~he year honors. Judy Rodman,
I.': e ou 1s cltmbina the country charts took the award 1or ~t new female vocahst, sayi~"I fctl son of 1,...tim 'te " Rand Travis won best new mal . ~.. . a DO!''.
of his hit song " 1982" for the audi;~~·~ r san11na an •~V1atcd vers1on
and dauaht'r team The Judds rcliona and Naomi Judd, the mother second consecutive year. · captu t e top vocal duet trophy for the
Key a.IJuttle debris recovered
CAPE CANAVERAL -A hu i fCha
foot-square hole bu med thro .... i. atfst'?.. eccl,. .. ?: is'!~n&er ~ wttth .a TWO; d b ' red-.... ....,, """ .....,.t\f u1e most 1mportan piece 01 e ns recove ~UIC It may Show why I jomt flilcd &nd CIUted the shuttle e~plos1on. The two-ton ICCtion contains the portion of the 'oint that ruptuftld
and spe~ flame IS seconds before the Jan. 28 tnaed'/J that killed ttYcn
utronauts. The Navy rtponed Monday that the sal h s w ·Rhone
ha.d1 rec2vhered the 10..by-20.foot chunk Sunday i:'lsO.rooot~ :_t« 40 m1 es 0111 ore. ....._ ... .,
,.
. C:W.noe Coat DAILY PILOT/Tueedey, APrtl 15, 1 .. 1r Al
Nations condemn, support raid
Russia, Europe say ·wrong approach;'
but Brttaln and Israel call it essential
By TERBENCE PETl'Y
'I ''Jf"9w....,
The Soviet Union, Chin.a and the
IOI-nation Nonali&ned Movement
today condemned the U.S. bombina raid on Libya, and several U.S. allies
said a political respon1e to allqed
Libyan-sponaored tem>rism would
have txen wiaer.
But Britain's foreian secretary, Sir Geoffi'cy Howe, said the raid was
"esxntial," and hi• IU{>port was
echoed by the prime m1nisten of
Israel and Canada.
••Are we to stand by and allow
terrorism directed by Libyan
authorities to continue absolutely
unchecked when they have been
appealed to by peaceful means
tbrouab the U.N. Security Council?''
Howe said
Objections by France and Spain
prompted both to deny permission
for the F-111 s to pass through their
airspace.
Egypt, one of America's best
friends in Arab world and a bitter foe
of Libya, expressed "alarm and strong
re1entment" today at the attack. A
aovemment statement said the attack
violated provisions of the U.N.
Charter forbidd.in& tbe u1e of fo~ to
settle international disputes.
Saudi Arabia. an Arab country alto
close to the United States, said the
attack ran "counter to all inter-
national norms of deallna with such
iasues." A aovemment apokaman,
mllina the statement over state
radio, affirmed Saudi su~ for the
Libyan people and said it viewed the
attack with "extreme regret and
denunciation."
Premier Bettino Crui of Italy
declared "the disaarecment of the
Italian government with the initiative
and responsibility assumed by the
United States." He told the Chamber
of Deputies, "Far from weakenina
terrorism, this military action risks
provoking explosive reactions of
fanaticism and criminal and suicide
acts."
He said the United States went
ahead ·•despite the opposition of the
ltaJjan government."
Weak Libyan response
surprises U.S. fighters
ABOARD THE USS AMERICA (AP)-Tbe commander of the
U.S. 6th Aeet says be was surprised Libyan planes weren't used to
counter the U.S. strike on Libya and airmen who partici~tcd in the
raids said Libya may have inflicted damage on its own citizens with
badly aimed anti-aircraft missiles.
U.S. pilots and bombardiers who helped conduct the strikes said
plenty of surface-to-air missiles were fired at them by the Llbyam but
that most seemed to go s~t up in the air and fall back down again.
They said they saw no Libyan planes and had anticipated more of
a Libyan response.
Safely back aboard the U.S. aircraft carrier USS America. the
airmen said much of the damaae caused by the strike likely came from
the Libyans themaelves and their poorty aimed missiles.
The airmen and the fleet commander, Adm. Frank Kelso, spoke to
a pool of reporters aboard the America. one of two U.S. aircraft carriers
that launched planes against Libya,
Kelso said be was surprised Col. Moammar K.hadafy didn't send
up planes to counteract the U.S. strike in Tripoli and Benahazi.
Libya's ability to fly nighttime missions is thought to be limited
and that is believed to be the reason the American jets struck at night.
Kelso voiced pride in the mission.
"We don't like to see Americans blown away in an 11rplanc, or an
Army sergeant blown away in a discotheque in Berlin." Kelso said.
referring to recent terrorism. "We'll certainly take pride in sending a
signal that our country is not going to Ii ve with indiscriminite killing of
our citizens."
The nine airmen who spoke with reporters also expressed pride.
One pilot compared Khadafy to tl}.e bully on the block who needs to be
taught a lesson. " Khadafy needs to get the picture real soon that the
world is sick of his action," said the pilot.
'Solid evidence'
prompted Reagan
to send warplanes
WASHINGTON (AP) -Presi-
dent Reagan says the United States
not only has "irrefutable" evidence
linkinJ Libya to the West Berlin disco
bombmg but solid intelligence of
Libyan plots to commit atrocities
such as the massacre of civilians
waiting for visas at a U.S. embassy.
Reagan, in a television address
Monday night outlining his reasons
for sending warplanes to strike taracts
in Libya, said the planned embassy
massacre was aborted "with the help
of French authorities."
"We have solid evidence about
other attacks K.badafy has planned ~nst American installa~ions and
diplomats and even Amen~ to';lr·
isu. Thanks to close cooperation with
our friends, some of these have been
prevented." Reagan said.
One of those attacks. he said. was
"a/tanned massacre using grenades
an small anns of civilians waiting in
line for visas at an American em-
bassy."
He d1d not identify the embassy.
Secretary of State George Shultz
said the United States had gathered
evidence to varying degrees "of
Libyan efforts to attack ... up to 30 of
our cm bassies."
White House spokesman Larry S~cs told reporters. "In Africa.
Libyans have been planning attacks
and conducting surveillance of U.S.
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facilities in t 0 countries.'' .
Reagan said of the Apnl S dis--
cothequc bombi~ in West Berlin
that claimed two lives and wounded
230 othcn: "Our evidence is direct. it
is precise, it is irrefutable."
Without divulging the sources of
his evidence. Reagan gave this ac-
count:
"On March 25. more than a week
before the attack. orders were sent
from Tripoli to the Libyan People's
Bureau in East Berlin to conduct a
terrorist attack against Americans to
cause maximum and indiscriminate
casualties. Libya's agents then
planted a bomb.
"On April 4th the People's Bureau
alerted Tripoli that the attack would
be carried out the following morning.
The next day they reported back to
Tripoli on the great success of their
mission."
Speakes told reporters, "members
of the Libyan People's Bureau there
in East Berlin with records of
previous terrorist activny were sttn
and identified in West Berlin by U.S.
and West Berlin security personnel
who were on alert."
Afterwards. Speakes said, "the
Libyan People's Bureau in f.ast Berlin
told Tripoh that the operation bad
been successful and that it could not
be traced to the Libyan People's
Bureau."
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Chancellor Helmut K.obl of West
Germany aaid Khadafy bad
"challeqed the intematiooal com-
munity" by apomorina tm'Ot auacb
and had to "conaider that t.boee
threatened will protect tbemtclvcs. ••
AJked if the United States wu
justified. Kob.1 said. ... bave an
undentandina for the srowin& eua.-
pcration of the American people.
"On the other band, we bave'
always said a violent solution will not
be sUooessful and is not very promia. i~veral aoveminenu expressed
concern about their cit.iuu who are
employed in Libya. Thailand said it
was orderina about 30,000 workm
out of the country.
On Monday. the foreilJi ministers
of the 12-nation Common Market
decided to impose diplomatic sane;
lions apin1t Libya rather than ad-
vocate inilitary force-.
Statemenu today by France, Nor-
way. Denmark and the Netherland&
said military action WU wroq.
"We deplore this coune of eventa,
especially u the Euro~ Twelve
have clearly urscd a political solution
and the ~vention of a military
escalation," said a statement releued
by the Dutch Foreign Ministry.
Ellemann-Jensen, Denmark's
foreip miiuJter Mid his country
must ''diuodate httlf' from the U.S.
attack. N~ Fortjp Minister
Svenn St.ray aid in a radio interview
that "problems of this kind cannot be
10lved by military meant."
In Moscow, a com.mentary by
political oews anal~ Vladimir
Gonclwov in the otficiaJ Soviet news
-.ency Tw said the United Stat.ea .. baa started 1peakina in iu we
tooaue -the tonaue of bombe. flames and death."
The attack wu alao condemned by
Kuwait, Syria, Nicancua and by
Turkish Cypriot leader Rauf
Denktasb.
Israeli Prime Minister Shimon
Peres told reporten in Nazareth that
the air raid wu an act of 1elf-defeme
becau1e of Lib~'s allq,ed involve-
ment in the April S terrorist bombina
of a discotbecJue in West Bettin,
where an Amen.can 10ldier wu killed:.
"Undoubtably Libya was behind
tbe bom~ ... and it iJn't surpriain&
that the Urutcd States takes steps of
self-defense," Perea said.
Canada also supported the raid.
"We accept President Reaon's state.
ment that Libya was involved in the
perpetration ofterroriJtattacb." said
Can.ad.ia.o Prime Minister Brian
Mulroney.
Embargo on oil to U.S. proposed
GENEVA (AP) -Libya's oil
minister said today be will ask an
OPEC conference to consider impos-ina an embargo on oil ahipmenu to
the United States in ~nse to the
American bombing of L1bya.
Fawzi Shabbuki wu asked by
reporten in a Geneva hotel if be
would ask bis OPEC partnen for an
embargo in retaliation for today's
U.S. air raids. He replied: "We did ask
it one time. We did ask it." Asked ifhe
would renew the call, be said, "Yes,
we will ask it .n.
"We did fight back and we will
defend our country. We will fi&ht
them not only for Libya but for all
blamiccountries," be said of the U.S.
attack. "They killed civilians. They
shot civilians."
Sbaksbuki sai4 Libyan oil installa-
tions and delivery systems were not
damqcd in tbe attack.
He did not specify if be was
advocatinJ an embarJo by aU tbe
Organization of Petroleum Exportina
Countries, which includes non-Arab
nations., or a strictly Arab move.
Most OPEC ministers stayed clear
of public view before today's opening
of the conference. Libya ships no oil
directly to tbe United States. OPEC as
a IJ'OUP. supplies barely I 0 percent of
U.S. oil consumption.
-· 2 Army ht. llob1D BeecMm aad motllel' Alice Bii DIM•
t;allred to reporten &boat ralAI ~ s.o= 1 •Word
w1ao clled lD tbe bomblaC of a llerlla .. Mr-·
Terrorists'victl1Ds'kln
spllt over attack on Llbya
By ~ Anedase.-Pren
The brotber of an American IOldler
killed in the bombinaofa West Bertin
club said Monday mat U.S. military
retaliation apinst Li~ was Iona
overdue, but the families of four
Americans killed in an explosion
abQard a TWA plane said they were
concerned that innooent people
m~tbehurl
'lt would be OK if be goes stralpt
to Khadafy, .. said Maraoth Ospina, of
Stratford, Conn., whose husband,
Alberto, was killed in the April 2
TWA explosion ... It's bard to say ... 10
ahead and do it ... a lot of innocent
people~ aoina to be hurt."
Warren XJua Jr., of Annapolis,
Md1 who lost his wife, dau.Jiiter and
motner-in-law in the bombma on the
Rome to Athens Oiaht. said be had
"aood feelinp and bad feelinp"
about the attack.
''It's about time America aot
tOjtther u a nati.:i;x Klua Mad. .. Once these people · &ba1 we are
toatthe:r u a nation, maybe tbey'U
ltOP me.ulna witb ua.., -
Maria Klus. 24, bet mother Oo-
metra Toula Siylian and her &-
month-old daqhter died wbaa &bey
were sucked out oftbe pLaoe aAet tboe
explosion.
But Robin BeecNm, brodaer of
Army Sgt. Kenne1h Ford. .md Prai--
dent Reapn "did the riabt ~ Tbe
president did what he 6ad to cfo ... I
think it's Iona overdue. I don't th.ink
they bombed just becau.e of my
brother."
Ford, 21. died in the ApiJ. S
explosion at the La Belle nilbU:.hab a
week before be wu tcbedulcd to
return to Detroit for the first time in
21h years.
More than 3SO people~ a tiny
chapel in Detroit for his fuaeraJ
Saturday.
•-Y ........ nlMlllCOOO
3mg
Now is lowest.
By US. Gov't. testing method.
SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING: Quitting Smoking
Now Greatly Reduces Serious Risks to Your Health.
NCJN THf LOWEST 01 ALL HAANOS
SOFT PACK 100$ Fil TER MENTHOL 3 mg 11r 0 J mg nacotint
~ Pl' c19M1ne by HC method
\
J I
COMPLETE NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS, Al
U.S. savings rate: Too low?
Is i t a mystery or a character flaw that
America ·s rate ts one-fifth of J apan's?
BJ JOHN CUNNIFF ,,,. ..... .....,...
NEW YORK -The savings rate
in the United States last year was j ust
ll bit more than one-fifth of that in
Japan. gjvmg rise agsun to lamen-
tations about the Arnerican charac-
ter
If Americans can't save, 1t 1sas~ed.
how can they fund government debt.
finance industry, expand the econ-
omy and create a greater material
well-beioa in the old lnldluon?
The questions suaaest mysterious
elements at work, one of the most
popular of these being that there
m1ibt be a basic flaw in the Arnencan
psyche. But 10 fact, there is little
mystery, and most likely no flaw
either.
You Judge:
-Earnings on U.S. savin~ are
taJ1ed. Interest on borrowing is tu-
s,;;~: ~~i: itE St r~:~ tl2'~. 118' ~rn:,:,•;r. ~kt ;i;;·:~ ~~;;, j
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deductible. That is, tn the Urutcd
States, where the saVlngs rate last
year was 4.6 pcr<:ent of d1sposable
income. the incentive is to borrow
rather than save.
In Japan, where the rate was 22.4
percent, most savings are completely
shielded from taxes.
-There is a bulge in the U.S.
population al age 2.S-44. These are
spending years -for furniture,
educat ion, housing and the like. The
years for saving come Later.
-The Social Security system m
the United States covers a greater
range than does Japan's system.
reducing the anxiety to save. And
corporate pensions also lower the
anxiety level.
The Japanese arc obliged to save
for their retirements. which usuaJJy
begin at age 55 . Japanese corporate
pensions are not nearly so generous.
Instead, workers receive bonuses -
one or two a year -which they put
away for old age.
-Amencans arc homeowners
Many have consider'.sble equity in
their houses. which they think of as
their financial security. Because they
own larger homes than do the
Japanese, their needs for furniture
and appltances are greater.
-Credit accounts in Japan are
like they used to be in the United
States -back in the 1930s: A liule
black book at the local store. In the
United States the credit system has
been revolutionized by plastic.
Five years ago, the average unpaid
balance per American cardholder
was $375. Today, it 1s $939 and is
projected to be close to $3.000 by
1990.
Because of the system. most
Japanese save for what they want
They arc likely to save and pay cash
for appliances and cars. There 1s no
such thing as nothing-down 1n bu}-
ing a house; a buyer must !lave a
substanllal down payment
While these d1s1inct1ons il-
luminate the subject, they don'1 fully
explain 11. The U.S. savings rate thal
cnt1cs so often complain about may
be actually lower than some of them
realize.
Included 1n 1hc U.S. rate are
contributions of employer~ 10 pen-
sion plans. "Break 1h1s out of the
(Pleue eee SAVIN08/A7)
WJUON
Kaama Marine
names managers
Rolud (B•lcl> WUtoe has been appointed manager of re9elt'Ch
and development and James E. Myen has been named product
service manager for I.um• Marl.H E•~r?I of Costa Mesa. ~e
firm manufactures hlgb-pcrformancc engines and accessoncs.
Wilson a Costa Mesa resident, has been with Kaa.ma since 1979. He
has wo~ked on the Indy circuit with Du Goeraey AU-A.mertcu
Racers and Fletcber R.act.q. Myers' back.ground in the field goes
back to his years as a student at Orange Coast C.llege, when h.c
worked for Kaama's predecessor company, the Jtada Aerouacraft
Corp. He is a Sunset Beach resident • • • Grat B. Cooper Jr. has been named an associate partner of Los
Angeles.-bascd McGruabn C.rl1oa Ir C.. bvestmeat B.Uden.
Cooper, who works o.ut of Orange County, will originate ~cw proj~s
in Southern California for the finn . The South Laguna resident bnnp
15 years of experience as a sales consult.ant specializing in
commercial properties to his new post. • • • Rlcbard C. Fyke has been honored as the 1986 Orange County
hfe insurance Agent of the Y car by the General Ageatt &ad Muqen
A11oclatioo. The award recogruzes an individuaJ for contnbut1ons to
the industry. community involvement. and achievement as a
business person. Fyke, president of the Blc Cuyoo Coutry Clllb, 1s
also president ofLlfe Broken b e. ••• Donald L. Blucbud has been appointed director of marketing
for Newport Beach-based Hoatebold But of CallfonaJ.a. A Mar Vista
res1den1. he brings more than 15 years of financial upcnence to his
new post. • , •
Donald B. Talcott, Birtcher president and chief operating officer,
has been named a panoer of the Laguna Niguel real estate
development, management and investm ent firm. The apf>?mtment
marks the first time in the company's history that an indiv1duaJ from
oumde the Birtcher family had been admitted to the family
partnership. The new partnership includes Talcott and general
partners Ronald E. and ArQur 8 . Blr1daer. Talcott will directly
oversee all development operations while contmuing as president
and chief operating officer. The Laguna N iguel resident has been wt th
Birtcher since 1980 • • • Louis F. Heilig has rcured as head of opcratJons for Font
Aerospace & CommanJcaltoDI C.rp. in Newport Beach for the past IS
years. H eilig had held the position ofass1staot to the president ofFord
A.erospace. He 1s a fonner vtcc president of the defense group and
spent 14 years as vice president and general manager of the
-· (Pleue eee PAllTPOtR/A7)
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NEW YORK (AP> -Th• followlno 11'1 shows lh• New Vonr. Stock Exchange stocks and warranls Iha! have oone up lhe most fnd down Ille most bHed on percent o chanoe reoardless of volume for MC>ndav. No ~urltles tradlno below S2 are Incl· Vded. Net and oercenlaoe chanoes are the difference t>elween the prevfO\,ls closlno Price and Mondav's 7 Pm Price UPS
J ~~~:f ~; La~I~ ,c~:
4 Danaher 1111'2 I 'It S Blocrafl s Zl Ill<
6 Emer1Rad 1i1h t'ili 7 vlGIOt>Mr of ~ 'I•
I NalGYPJVm s 6 ~~ 41~ 9 TexAmBnch 7 "" ...,
Pel. 8: I'~
UP '!·' Uo .9 UP .1 Up 7.1 UP 7.4 Up 7.3
Uo 7 I
NEW YORK (APJ -The foUowlno 11'1 shows the Over • the -Counter stocks and warranls that have oone up IM most and down the mos! based on i>ercenl of change for Mondav No securities lradfno below d or 1000 shares are Included NII and oercentaoe chanoes are tM difference between the previous clostno price and Mondav•s le\t or bld price UPS Name I.est Ch~ Pc;I 3~ ~/;blanShleld 6' I ~ ~g ~·t Phrmcll wl 311. 3• Uo .0
4 Pharmacnll 9 2 Up ., i Phrmctl un 20"' 411. Uo . OfaSwlch wl 311e >-' Uo 24. Ev.Care wl 2 lit Uo 23. I lnterlevk un ,,l'J 7· 16 Uo n
The Great American 6-Month CD
The greater your balance, the greater your rate.
Minimum balan~ $1,000; rate and yield above are for SS0,000 balance.
Five different rate.~ for five different balance levels. lllere are many
other tennl\ avaJlablc. from 32 days to 10 year~ All in.sured up to $100.<XX>
by an agency of the f cdcraJ government.
\\ Ith Iii! offk-t, \t'n 1111( (>ran a.:" ( oum ~:
.\m1hdm 11111!\. Rwlhoy Manet, R11lbc1ll P"nin,uh•. Capi..arano lk*'h·
tJ 1nrn, fountain \.ielk-\, llun1intt1on fka('h, ~na Reach. Laiun• Hiii,,
Laauna Nftcu~I . \lk,ion \ lt>jo, Monarch Ray. Newporr fW»eh, Oran~.
San mc"nle, '8n Juan ( M~trano and Woodbrlda~.
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Great American
Your advantage bank-:
Ovt'r llXI )~a" 111 ~kl) • Ai.-.cl' <>vL·r SX B11l1on
........
FSLl C
s-.-....11 111111a
'§ Open your account toda
CaJ J the roll-free Anandal Line now :
l-800-423-BANK.
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19 Jamesway 22~ 1'1• Uo . l Textslnll ¥i1 -Yt ~ MC!-tan WI ,,~ ~ Uo 14 R®Bel CV of ~ -""
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w'Tishlre 0 11 •~ .t 11, Uo .6 17 ReadnoBal 23/c -'Al
Ntwhallnv 191il + 1 Uo • ~ ~annOflGp 371/2 -1~ s VIChrlCo pf 21h + ..... UP 3 eneKO Inc 2~ -! DOW NS . arah Mfo 211/• -
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,g ~W~1~'?;F ~~i 1 1 ~ ~g ~·1 • Thora1ecL1>s 11 OMI Furn 2''• + ~ Up ~ AmFsrco H ~rerieuk"n 2 1-16 + 11·?~ 8g · 1 ~l~~~~
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Name °t!a":iNS Ctio Pel 2~~srnl wl
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•
OrMge Cout OAJLY PILOT/Tueeday, Apft 15. ftee A7
Sky taxis cater to hurried execs and fast deals
NEW YORK (AP) -Jonathan
RoeenthaJ says be bepn with a pilot Uoen1e, law dean:ie, telephone and
$7,000 from hi11&vanp and a credit
card c:alh4dvance.
Three yean later at ace 30, be rum
the nation's biucatjet.taxi company, owns S I. S millfoo wort.b of i LI 1toc~
drives a Poncbe and ponders hl1
fufure.
"1 thinJ.. about the next deal. l think
about wby I'm not further alona,"
RolenlbaJ said. "The problem ia, the ~vina board keeps chanaina distance uum the water."
ROlenthal ia president of Net.Air
International Corp., a Denvor-bued
company that operates 74 buainea
aircraft for charter to clients that !"nae from television news crews to
anvestment banken.
Roeenthal apoke in ao interview
Al'lLwepl •••
Jonatban Roeenthal, SO, 8ta.nda nezt to one of 7 4 baal.n .. plan~ bla company operate. for charter -tuta ln the aky.
FYllE BLANCHARD TALCOTT
PARTNER NAMED •••
FromA6
aeronutronic d1 v1s1on. The l.rvinc resident ts an expert in structural
design, stability, control and performance analysis of guided missiles
and aircraft. He holds patents in aircraft structures. rocket engine
design and automotive carburetion. • • • A11u C. Mayer Jr. has been appointed di.rector of aa:ount
services for Joaepll Potocki-Ir Auoda&el lac. of Newport Beach.
Mayer wu previously marketing manager for Beatrice/Hat Weuoe
Foods.
HEILIG MAYER UOYD
• • • Roa Lloyd has been named development manager for Leracy
Developmeat Co. of Newport Beach. The Irvine resident has
completed a two-year training program in partnenhip anaJysjs, fiscal
operatjna budgets, property management.. tenant improvements,
proJoct management, saJcs and acquisitions and financial analysis.
SAVINGS VARY •••
FromA6
savings rate, and you actually have
negative personal . voluntary sa.v-
ings," says economist James ~ns
tian of the U.S. League of Savtngs
Institutions.
Summary: There 1s hardJy any
mystery to the differences m savtngs
rates. There is probably no flaw in
the American character. But, yes.
there 1s a need for more voluntary
savings, if only to lessen dependence
on foreign sources.
To him this is "frightening in its
own right" If the United States
didn't have foreian savings la.st year.
he says, it would have had $58 billio~ .--------------1
left after financing the federal deficit
to run a $4 trillion economy.
As he sees it. there arc distinct
reasons why Americans don't save as
much as the Japanese. There is little
mystery to the differences between
Japanese and Americans in this
regard: each reacts to conditions and
needs.
Under the right conditions.
Americans can save -that has been
demonstrated. During World War II
the savings rate soared to 25 percent,
as P.COPle postponed buying. volun-
tanly or because goods weren't
available.
Investment
• 1n
High Yielding
Securities
for
Individuals
~II Os.AH lrJTTS,a UFlfOW• ll'C.
,,, (114) 644-2292
AMERICAN AIRPORT
TRANSPORTATION
& LIMOUSINE
S ERVICE, INC.
BUMI/ M lnlbut/ llmoullnea
. Stallonw090n1/Von1/RVs
Door lo Door Service
Prtvote Chorte11 and lours
1-800-524-1 300
AclYertiaing Jlrt
Service a
Brodt..ree/Cat ..... 0..lp
.I ""9-/Corpor.rle LO Peldoo ..
.I Typee.ttino I!_,,.,.... t.a.dl.tl ........... roof.
GBAPlllCI NEWPORT
(71') 720-9191
DO N__. c--0.. N....., t-ch CA HttO '
Dean Witter provides
the experience and
re&0urce1 that enable
individual.A to realize
their investment goals.
Selection of investment
alternatives should
involve prof el8ionals.
Ron Cbamberlln
or
Dudley Johnson
about himself and his company,
which on "'per made him a m1llion-
aire before hi• 30th birthday.
.. It doesn't feel lib much. I've aot
everythina 1 want. I've sot my little
Porsche and I like to date beautiful
women," be wd. "But I'd rather do a
deal than play tennis or lie on a beacb.
If I didn't do buaineu. I don"t know
what I'd do."
An attorney disillusioned with
practice of law, Rosenthal co-
founded NctAir three yean aao with a
bu1ine11 consultant, Ste~hen
St.raiabt, in the midst of &J.rline
derqulation. They aimed at a narrow
aepnent of people who cannot afford
to wait for scheduled ftiabts and need
not worry about expenses.
"We're in a businea environment
where deals get done in days. How do
airlines answer this question? They
don't." be said. "They're ioina after
the $99 ~nger. If you look at an
airport, 1t looks like a bus station did
lOyearsaao."
NctAirowns none ofit.s planes, but
leases them from corporation• in
excbanae for maintenance services
and a portion of the charter revenue.
Net.Air also bas no crews. but hires
them through a network of indepen-
dently owned aviation companies
scattered at airports throughout the
country. ·
Rosenthal said these companies arc
sjmilar to a franchise operation such
as a McDonald's fut-food ~taurant
or Hertz c.ar rental, with the same
standard of service and NetAir logo.
Netair's major physical assets are
its core of seven employees and a
computer that enables the company
to coordinate use of the planes and
crews. so that a flight can be ready for
takeoff within two hours of the time a
client calls on a 24-hour toll-free
number.
Rosenthal did not specify bow
many customers NctAir has or ident-
ify any, but said they arc mostly
senior executives. Air-freight carriers
sometimes use NctAir when their
own planes break down, Rosenthal
said. but bis most demanding clients
arc TV news crews dispatched to
cover an UJFDt story.
'"When they call they'~ on their
way out the door, ~into the ~one ·we·re m the car be eaid.
'When they want to ao. they want to
ao."
Ne-. Yort for up to eiPI ~ c:oaa abou_!_!J~1~. Roeeothal Mid. Tbe oomp1111D1C oomrnercia.I roundtrip
fate ~ from S l 98 apecial1 to
S 1 , I 18 for first clus.
With rates of S2 to S3 per mile, a
NetAir roundtrip Crom Denver to
NeWr it now the country's btgcst
air-ebanet company, operatina 0111 of
Mini-lot strategy on tap
Wecllleeday, Aprll 18
"How to Desip and Market the Mini-Lot
Subdivision" will be the focus of a ooo-day seminar at
the Newport Beach Marriott led by An..m Butenian,
president of Aram Bula1u A-LA. Is Aaeda&el of
Newport Beach, and Tbomu Payne, president of
Applied Retearell Services of Lquna Beach.
Topics will include dealing with lot shapes,
providinJ for the three major market aeamenu and
overcomtng problems like parking, 1treeUCapes and
outdoor livina space. For rqistration and infor-
mation, call (914) 238-8664. • • • Leonard Shane, president of MCT'CW)' Savinp,
will speak to the <>raqe Couty Society of lan1tmea1
Muacen at the Balboa Bay Oub in Newport Beach.
The 11 :30 a.m. to 1 :30 p.m. propam and lunch cosu
SI S. For reservations, call Jeff Rollert at 7j9-7 l 42. • • • Sheila Sonenshine, associate justice of the 4th
District Court of Appeal, will address the general
membership meeting of the ~e Coaty EtenW
A11octatJoa at the Saddleback.lruu.n Santa Ana.-
A graduate of the Loyola Univenit).' School of
Law, Sonenshine is listed in "Who s Who of
American Women." "Foremost Women of the 20th
Century," ''International Who's Who in Community
Service" and "Community Leaders and Noteworthy
Americans.··
Registration begins at 6:30 p.m. with dinner at 7.
For reservations. cart Joanne Kruger at 547-6871.
Thanday, April 17
Arata Isozaki. a leading architect in Japan, will
present a showing of rus current works when the
Orange County chapter of the America la1dtste of
ArekltecU meets in the Nellon R.eacarcb Cattc:r ll
UC Irvine at 7 p.m. llozaki'1 fim American dalip ii
t.he Los An,elea Muaeum of Contem~ An-
The public ii invited. Admiaioo 11 SIO for
members, S 1 S for non-members and S5 for atudcota.
For reservations, call SS7-7796. ••• A widen.ina black bo&e of broker liability, the
effects of propoted tax chanaea on reaJ caa~ and
current law on aubleuin& will be~ praented
durinaa "Tu UpdateandllrokerLiabilltyForwn" at
the Irvine Hilton Hotel
SponlOf'ed by the Southern C.allfomia chapter of
the Sodety el ..._trtal Realten. the panel
discussion will tqin at 4:30 p.m., followed by
cocktails and dinner at 6:30. .
Panel memben include F. Richard Shapiro
CPA, senior tu panna of K.eo.neth Leventhal i
Associates of Newport Beach; Randall-Babbulb.
senior associate with the law firm Rutan &: Tucbr of
Costa Mesa; and David Grant. senior litiption
partner in the Newport Beach law firm Allen.
Matlcins, Leck. Gamble&: Mallory.
S.J.R. memben may make rexrvatiom by
calling Joria Charles at (213) 387-3768. Noo-
mem6en should submit a check for $40 to Ma.
Charles, S.l.R., 601 S. Ardmore Ave., Los Anadel,
90005. • • • Huntington Beach plastic su?aeon Dr. Michad
Kamper will describe cosmetic JuraerY fOI' the
business person to the OmaJ B•'t u1 09 of
Fountain Valley.
The noon meet.inc at Mardinni'1 Reatawant on
Brookbu.nt in Fountl.Ul Valley will include a slide
presentation and a quest.ion and answer period-For
information. call Donna Griffin at 77S-72A6.
Feed a retirement kitty early, often
ment time. Ninety-five percent of all Ameri-
cans at retirement age arc dependent
on the government, charity or their
relatives for financial support.
Most of us can accomplish great
things when we put our minds lO it If
you have the discipline to do a linlc
planning and a little saving, you'll be
well ahead of the pack at retirement
time.
RALPH
Scorr
year to year 1s your measurement of
how well you're doing on your
retirement kitty. lf you don't do as
well as you had hoped in the first two
or three years. don't give up. Just as
dieters do, you have to keep at the
program to be suc.ccssful.
Next, you should draw up a
statement listing your sources of
income and your anticipated ex-
penses over the next year. Determine
from this how you can save 10 percent
to put into the saVlngs prosram.
Individual Rettremcnt Accounts are
an excelJent place to stan for the small
mvestor. The caminp on your con-
tnbutions arc tax-free until re~
If you're buying a houte, don't treat
the entire house payment u part of
your 10 percent saVJnp. The intaat
portion of your houte payment ii
very much like rent; you should
consider it a current expeme.
Mou importantly , don't
procrastinate. A dieter iJ Dot aoina to
lose weight th.inkina about the
pounds be wants to IOIC. You must
put a prosram in action and have the
discipline to stick with it.
Whatever our station in life. we can
all live with I 0 percent less current
consum8tion. If you will save or
invest I cents out of each dollar you
earn and folJow a few simple rules.
you'll have the retirement money you
need.
So where do you start? Right now.
and for each year from now on. make
a list of everyth10g you own and
evcrythin$ you owe. This allows you
to determine your net worth.
The change in this net worth from
Open ng • oertiftoatt eccount at fl8clftc Savings Bank
could be one of the QtMtMt playa you'll ever malca.
Slmpty open a 65-clay cenHtcate account with a minimum
deposit of $5,000. or a 6-month or k>ogef oertiflcete account
wtth a minimum deposit of $2,500 from a IOOrQI other than
an existing Pacfftc account. We'll not only gtw you compet-
itlw rate11 we'll give you two ttcMta to a •leeted Dodger,
Angela or Pldrn home game, oourtwsy of the 65 Ao'4ts
Sporta Club and a 35mm cameq wtth caNYfng caae Olmlt
2 he tlci.ta and 1 camera per houMhold).
For ewry Quallfted eccount. we'll allO ma .. a $25 dOnatlon
to the Cy.tic Abn>lis F'oundlflon to hetp ftnd I cure for CF
!rMr our--.& Rcllee Wortd Sertee .... P9 ... •" ~may
wfn an actlon-packld trip for two to the finlt two games of
tte Worid s.n.. Jutt ftll out.,, entry totm at your tocal btanci'I
.._ Seen It a certlfW .-UC
accem&ut wtdl offleel Im New,.n a.a.
by June 30, 1986. No purcha• neottla~
So catch our Grand &am oflltr. F« CUtNnt rates or more
intormatlon. can 1-.800-PACIFIC or •nd In the ooupon below. r---------------,
INatM I
I Add!Ma I
I I I City ._ Zip eoo. I
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TlllUY'I OLlllll PllOEI
Raid unsettles market
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market
finished mixed 1n moderate trading Tuesday after
a seesaw session marked bY. uncertainty over the
consequences of the U.S.-L1byan military conflict.
WHAT AMEX Om WHAT NYSE DID
NEW YORI(. IAP) APf'. lS
Advtnctd Otcllmtd ¥ncn11noe<1 otell~ New high• New lows
NEW YORK (AP) APf'. 15
Prev. Tod Prl...,
da ~~:r ., 1 ~ ~gfl\1= 's S New hfotli 2' NewloW1
AMEX LEADERS
Tu~1~':v ~?c~K 1n~"~1 di.='01 •,n:·'f6 m o I I active American Stoett E11ch1"9t lu~,. tredlng natlonallv a more than S Nn~ ffl'' Che. a I ubllil 1, I I '(i
8 om,P r 6 -~ ~r~~."r~~ A ,l-:n eC:no av o f ~ Llone ~ WanoLabB 1 .,.. ~ TotalPell 11 1 .,.. ... turnr8dC$I pf 7~ -'I•
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METALS QuorEs
NYSE LEADERS
Dow JoNE S AvERAGES
NEW YORK (AP) Final Oow-Jo"'J ~~l\' ir T!1sd_tew ill s. 'f':l 17 ~ . 11fl:" 1 • + ~::-J, m id 1 1:~~8:
Tr n • Indus i· l .~ ~J~~k 2 , 16 ', 1
NASDAQ SUMMARY
t})2,
-'l'J +I -''• -,,..
b.J tt.on do.wn sh1rL
o\Jl' f\nasLol hx1.tai odbn:i cloth eh111, 1TICICk fbr us by
~ o\ ~Or\ao~ &I~·~ t.dllom ""1th epltt
yo'M. ~ructal ix' ull,U"nOtll. nt,md ccmbt m wh1t4
bh.ct,tlC~.pnk,)¢llo.v
TV L1s1 1N cs
Ana ObrfCon pla19 a mob
flpre'• aweetheart wb.o kld-
napa a Jactce'a daqb.ter on
· .. The A Team'' tonfCJat at 8
on NBC, Channel 4 .
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Tue.day, Aprll 16, 1986 A9
-11:30-w=SllON
SATUll)AY flQKT
9flGHTUNE WU>, Wl.D WEST
vmAS
HAWAIFM-4
MOTOAWEfl(
PfW8E THE LON>
OOUAAOE TO IE AICH MOYIE ** "Hot Reeort" (1985) Tom P11t· elltlan, Debra Kelly
A tough 'Act' to follow in Laguna
When "I'm Getting My Act
Together and Taking It on the Road"
first surfaced locally a few years ago,
its strident feminism threw a body
block at its inherent entertainment
values, effectively canceling out its
eff ecti vencss.
The latest version of the Gretchen
Cryer-Nancy Ford musical, currently
on stage at the Laguna Moulton
Playhouse, is hardly"mellower" in its
impact. but, under John Fen.acca's
expert direction, it contains a splen-
did aura of balance. White not
everyone within earshot may be
comfortable under its relentless as-
sault on masculinity and social
stereotypes. most should find it a
worthwhile evening of theater.
Laguna audiences accustomed to
more traditional fare may wince as
much at the volume of the music
produced by the "Liberated Men's
Band" as at the discordant notes
st.rUck against time-honed social
values. But beyond the sound and
fury, the Mouhon's "Act" i~ a full-
bodied one, striking splendid dra·
Toi
TITUS
matJc sparks between the musical
numbers so capably directed by Mark
Turnbull.
It also is a glorious homecoming for
its star, Teri Ralston, a native
Lagunan who played the sweet in-
genue in "The Fantasticks" two
decades ago and went o n to Broadway
and road company stardom. Ralston
delivers a brilliantly delineated per-
formance as Heather, the rock star
who, on her 39th birthday, elects to
remodel her show to fit the per·
sonality she has become.
Ralston, wbo poscsses a dynamic
singing voice, undergoes a finely
orchestrated catharsis as she strives to
define her new, and admittedly
Tougher ratings due
for drug use in films
WASHINGTON (AP) -T he na-
tion·s filmmakers and theater owners
arc instituting tougher rating Stan·
dards for movies depicting drug use,
but allowi~ raters more Oeltibility
when a film tncludes sexually related
language.
A rating of R means a film is
restricted because of its adult nature
and people aged I 7 and younger must
be accompanied by a parent or
guardian. An X rating means no one
under 17 is allowed to attend a film .
The new standards, effective im-
mediately, were announced jointly by
the Mouon Picture Association of
America and the National Associa-
tion of Theater Owners.
Under the new rules, any film
depicti04 use of iUepl drugs will
automatically get a rating of at least
PG-13, and could receive an R or X
rating depending on the decision of
the rating.s board.
Previously, the use of illegal drup
in a film did not require an automauc
restriction.
The ratings board can grant an
exoeption, but only by unamimous
vote, in contrast to the rating.s board's
past majonty-rule pohcy.
The change in sexually-related
langua~e restrictions also adds a
provision allowing the board. by
unanimous vote. to give a film an
exception.
Sin~ 1984, the industry has auto-
matically given a rating of PG-13 or
stronger to films usinf. what film
industry officials term 'the harsher
sexually derived words." More than
one use of such words required an R
rating.
The rating of PG-13 indicates that
parents arc strongly cautioned to give
serious thought before allowi~ a
child of 13 or younger to attend a film.
It is considered more restrictive
than the PG ratina. mean.in~ parental
&uidance is suggested for children, or
G, which means a film is suitable for
all audiences.
ll"u ... '~.-
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1 :41 J:45 1:45
1:45 t. t ·4S
.. STTY ....... K
~1, J iOO 4:00 e oOO 100 10100
1 A~d•m_y Awercts OUT Of' Af"RllCA fP'QJ SHOWS A T 12:41 )1U
7 100. 10110
llDPtNe llAUTY C•)
1...0& 3'3.5
APllll POOl'I DAY
,,JO, 7,30, ·~
CEnTUAY ClnEOOmE 0 u• 7Ulr "•rm•n & hfll• Ant
T .. .._.YftTINt
IHOWI At 1 II Jill
1 :111:H • t :U
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Ill l llA,!lml!t !!ttr Sld tM!!!
OPPaaATINt s ~ut Beverly Hllf1
Cop (ft)
aAllllC> OP T ... HAlllD
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S:SI 1 110 t. 10,00
~ff=-" SHOWS AT 1•41 S:41 1141 7t41 .. 1141
1:00 4 100 a rOO 1100 .. 1 110
Tl« COLO• PU•fll..a nu I ,40 41ACI' & 1 40
'°uc•it:;....,vm
.-.u1 April 1'001•,
O•Y (A)
0911Yl 111 ft" l tJt •uayt/I II •~t1•1JUeh1 II fr•t Ue._ ••td
, .
uncenain, image. It's a difficult
assignment. demanding sudden shifts
in mood and tempo. and Ralston
handles it with consummate skill.
The necessary conflict arises from
Joe, her more traditional manager
(Michael Miller). wbo finds her new
material threatenjng his male values
as much as his 10 percent and reacts
negatively to both possibilities. Mill-
er presents an honest depiction,
refreshinJ!y devoid of the cliches
inherent in the role, as be struggles to
keep the "new" Heather from getting
out of hand.
Backup singers Carolyn Miller and
Laura Pryzgoda provide excellent
support. particularly in the trio's
"Strong Woman Number .. which
lampoons the feminist position. Jef-
fre)' Schlichter is engaging as a young
guitarist who'd like to make a move
on the older Heather ifhe could only
stop lc.idding her about it.
Jacqu ie Moffett's glittering
bandstand setti~ and Charles P.
Davis' intricate lighting patterns -
using a specially installed augmenting
light bank -provide superior techni-
cal support, while Ma.rtln Morginsky
adds some upbeat choreography.
"I'm Getting My Act Together and
Talc.ing It on the Road" may not be
everyone's cup of tea, but it's a strong
beverage, bnmm ing with impact
beyond its slanted script in the
Laguna production. Performances
continue through May 4, presented
Tuesdays through Saturdays at 8 p.m.
and Sundays at 2:30 p.m. at the
Moulton Playhouse, 606 Laguna
Canyon Road, La3una Beach. Call
494-0743 for ticket information.
CALLBOARD -The Huntinston
Beach Playhouse will bold auditJons
for the comedy "Play On" Sunday at
I :30 p.m. and Monday at 7:30 at the
theater, in the Seacliff Village shop-
ping center on Main Street at
Yorktown A venue, Huntington
Bcach .... director Howard Solomon
will be seeking I 0 actors and actresses
for Rick Abbott's scndup of com-
munity theater which opens June 6
for six weekends ...
Tryouts for the Rodgers and Ham-
merstein musical "South Pacific" will
be held Saturday from -t 0 a. m. to 3
p.m. at Sebastian's West Dinner
Playhouse. 140 Ave. Pico. San
Oemente .... 20 roles are> o pen and
there is pay .... call 498-9038 weekdays
before 6 p.m. for details ....
The Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse
will conduct reading.s for the c.omedy
"Alone Together" next Monday and
Tuesday at 7:30 p.m . at the theater,
66 I Hamilton St., Costa
Mesa .... director Pati Tambellini will
cast a couple in their mid-40s, th.rec
men from 20 to 30 and a young
woman 18 to 20 for the play, which
opens June 12 for four weekends ....
BAC&STAGE -c.aJ State Full·
erton will present Bertolt Brecht's
dramatic assault on the Hiller era,
"The Pnvate Life of the Master
Race, .. open~rig Friday for two week-
ends in the CSF Little Theater.. .. call
77 3-3 3 71 forticket information ....
The name of Millie Oifton, musi-
cal director for "A Chorus Line" at
Coastline College, was omitted from
the program and college officials wish
to render proper credit for her
contributions .... tbe two-weekend
production closed Saturday at the
college's Newport Beach Center ....
PO\ICI ACADIMY 31
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,. ....... ,. A.Jrt.J 11 .u.m (March 21 ·ApriJ 19): Long-standing transaction is finished,
whether or not you are a ware of it. Don't remain in pa.st -shake off lethargy,
take positive steps toward future 1oal. You are rid of burden not rightfully
your own.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Emphasis on style mdependcncc.
oriainality, trips. visits and special notices. You'll get to heart of matters, member of oppos1te sex is dnwn to you and you'll be very much concerned.
GEMINI (May 2 1-June 20): Dccisiob is made concerning_ djrcction -
family member proves instrumental.
First irnpressjons prove correct. You
could locate object that had been lost,
missing or stolen.
SYDNEY
0MARR
CANCER (June 21·July 22): Tim-
inJ. ~udgment intuition ~ true. Hi~hght confidence, take irutiative,
tnsJSt on quality as contruted to
quantity. You'll be on more solid
emotionaJ-financ1aJ iround.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): You'll have chance to rebuild. to remodel, to
correct rcoent errors. Someone '"behind socncs" lead,s private cheering
section for you. Be confident despite initial report which is discourqjng.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-ScpL 22): Focus on charisma. sensuality, powers of
persuasion. Scenario accents excitement of discovery. change, travel, variety,
ability to articulate feelinp. Romance plays major role. Gemini, Sagittarius
figure prominently.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Spotlight on achievement, reunion with
family member, serious discussions concerning lifestyle, budget, possible
P.urchase of an object or luxury item. You gain through diplomacy, you win if patient. understanding.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 2 1 ): Define terms, leave nothing to guesswork.
Look beyond the immediate, realize that member of opposite sex docs care
and soon will prove it. Streamline techniques, perfect procedures, get rid of
superfluous material.
SAGITrARIVS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Make this your power-play c!Jly.
Accept challenge, meet deadlines, express feelings to "special person."
Scenario h~bli&hts career. achie.vement.. IC.ward, money and love. Cancer.
Capricorn tgure prominently.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Relationship reaches "cntical" stage.
You have top hand, you actually arc an the driver's seal. Know it, be
confident, get rid of unnecessary burden and expense. Aries. Libra natives
will play paramount roles.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): You get "new deal." Health report 1s
favorable, you have reason to be o ptimistic. Young people express their
admiration. You make new start in new direction -you receive credit long
overdue. Leo plays role.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Good lunar aspect coincides with children,
spccuJation, travel, abihty to express ideas in entertamin~ profitable
manner. Intuition is on target. you'll be at right place at crucial moment.
Sense of dtrection restored.
IF APRD.1118 YOUR BIRTBDA Y you may not be religious in orthodox
sense. but you are spiritual. You also arc independent. an innovator, an
originaJ thinker. creative and courageous. You have manycritJcs because you
arouse envy. You also have many who admfre you, who will defend your
principles and who actually are valuable allies. Pisces, Virgo play important
roles in your life. If single. you could marry this year. There m ight also be an
addition to family. Yo u'll go into business, September will prove memorable
for you in 1986.
Bluebird of happiness
-it's really a fantasy
No bird 1s really blue None
produces blue pigment. What you see
when you see a blue bird 1s the hght
that bounces off the bird's true
plJlllent. ft absorbs all the rays except
blue.
Bunerllies were named not for the
color of their wings but for the color of
their excrement
Sugar plantation bos!>Ci in the F1J1
Islands brought in a lot of indentured
laborers from India. Today there are
more Indians on F1j1 than F1J1ans.
Your eyes see the scenery upside
down It's your brain that 01ps 11 over.
Q. What propon1on of the new
companies nationwide now are
staned up by women"
A. A third. Did you know 12,000
nev. compan1e<; crop up every week
no"'" That's never happened before
that phenomenall:r high count. I
mean
A.utomauon 1s <;uch no w thJt one
person can take care of I 00 000
chickens at at1me
() What do gardener<. mean h)'
"black fro~t'"1
.\ Fro7t~n mo1\ture from inside the
plant. That's the deadliest son Fro-;t
from outside moisture h:nd~ w 1n
sulatc
.\ t lcrk, it's ~1d. I'> one who
PEOPLE
L.M.
BOYD
processes information, and na-
tionwide now 70 percent of us who
wo rk for pay are clerks.
"Male rats, even those that have
not copulated before. have a natural
unlearned preference for active
females over anesthetized passives."
So reported the Eastern Psychological
Association at a meeting sometime
back tn Boston. So that's what those
people do. Feed mickeys to femaJe
rats. Tum maJes loose on them .
Watch them perform. Then tell alJ
about 11 1n Boston. Kinky
Whereabouts of this tombstone I
do not know, but the picture clearly
shows th1!. inscnpt1on. "Here I he
between two of the best wo men 1n the
wo rld: my wives. But I have re-
quested my relat1es tip me a little
toward Tithe."
~} the Scots " 'Tis cheaper to
borro"' money 1han to marry for 1t "
L.M. Boyd
columal11.
1yad/catt:d
Can't they profit
by our exarpple? !'iorl h-Sout h
dt>als
\ 11lnn1.1hlt•
NORTH
+864 3
V QJ 9
"9632
+85
If there's one thing parents agree
on, it's that if their kids took their
adv1oe, they'd have a better life.
We charge ahead of them like a
sno~low on an uncharted road,
pushma back the obstacles, alerting
them to icy patches and expertly
dtrccting them through detours. And
do thev listen? Do tliey profit from
our wisdom and expenence? Did
lmelda Marcos leave home WJthout
her Amencan Express card?
I said to one of my kids the other
day. "Why don't you take our advice
and hve your life the way we planned
1tT'
"Mom," he said, "remember when
I was a little kid and you told me to
Jump into your arms and you'd catch
me and I did and you didn't?"
"Oh c'mon," J said, "I thought you
were 2010g to wait until I counted
three.ft
"Okay," he continued, "what
about the time I slipped out of the
house o ne night and went fishtng
when you told me not to and when
you spanked me you said it was going
to hurt you worse than it hun me?"
"I was devastated," l said.
"At least you could sit d own."
"That's not fair," I said. "Tho5'are
isolated cases. Besides, your fat.her
and I arc• not asking you to do
anythillJ unrealistic. All we're sug-
gesting 1s that you save 10 percent of
your salary, get married, have a boy
and a girl, buy a house, make a few
investments and take nice va-
cat1ons. ''
"I'll do all of those things." he said.
"When?" I pressed.
"After I borrow from the credit
union to get a fan belt for my car."
''Your trouble is that you don't
E10
Bo11Ec1
have goals."
"I have goals," be said.
"Like what?"
"Like a fan belt for my car."
··Look at this," I said, pushing a
copy of a newspaper under his nose.
"Here's a kid who is only three years
older than you are and he went
public."
"With what?"
"With his own software company
that is worth $50 million in stock.
WEST EAS1'
+9 52 +<.P 101
,.,743 :8
.t 10 R K QR 4
•AJIOR +Q742
SOUTH
+AK
AK 106 6 2
A7
+K 93
Tht> bidding
South Wt>sl Nort h East
2 ~ Pass 4 Pus
Pass Pass
Opl'nlnR I Pad J ,1l'k 11f
And here's one who was 25 years old \.'.'i· lrnvt• oflt•fl nlluntaint'd that when he was named to the Forbes
400. lfyou had just studied business rublwr hnd)l.t• and <lupl11·at(• pa1r'i
in college, like we told you. Don't you un· rnorl' like t w 11 diffrn•nt l(amc!-
remember how we told you tech-than 1\\11 \'t•rs1011o.; nf t lw <;ame
nology was the wave of the future?" ~aml' C:onsid<'r th1o.; hund Should
"( remember the exact day," he you mak<' yo11r t•o ntrtH't at ruhht•r
said. ''I left an iron plugged 1n and bnd~t'°' At dupliral<''J
burnt it out." Thi• b1dd1ng wa" old-fao.;hwMd
"Y?ur father and I only want to.do htH a1Turat<' South-., npt'ninlc( two what 1s best for you. We're not asking . . . you to do what we want, but only • hf'fHt b1? was st ron1it and ~ort h ..,
what we know will make you happy." 1ump 111 gaow .,h11wf'c1 )(1111d trump.,
He thought a moment. "lsn't but dt>n11·d ;1 "1d<' ..,111t ;11 •' k1n1ct or
Queen Elizabeth your age Mom?" I '>tngleton
nodded. "When she was l6 she had If you gu dcm 11 \.\ 11 h I h1., hand at
her own c~untry. What were you rubber bridge. ~ 1111 mu..,t tw ..,quan
doiog at 26. • . . dcring t hou~and., of p111r1h t•ac·h
I ~hanged the .subJCCt q~cldy. To vear You can afford to low two
admit I was sort.tnJ. socks tn a uuhty '.1 b t · k d d" ct room in Centerville, Ohio, would c u ric s an a iamon , and you
take away m y edge. can a.~sure your contract hy <>tmpl~
winning the ace of ch amond'> an<1
then leading a club from hand at
CHARLES
Go REN
OMAR
SHARIFF
trick two. (Doh't hold up the ace,
becau e t he opponents might be
able to defeat you by s t11fting to a
trump at trick two ) ?\ow there is
no way the defender.., can stop you
from ruffing a C"lub in dummy. It m-
u in~ your IOSS€'!-to I WO diamonds
and a club
At duplkatr you must consider
what the rt>st of the• field will do
Most will b1• 1n four hrarts. tho11~h
here and t ht•rf' yo11 mi~ht find H
three nn trump rnntract, wh1<'h
will make ntnt> trkks on any lt>ad
<'X<'t>pt a club, and ten with a club
l1•ad
If Ea'il ha.-, the al'e nf <·lubs, you
<·an ~won· an overtr1c-k a1 four
hf'art" Evf'n 1f the ace 1s w11h
W1•-.1, you ran !-till makl' fo11r
h1•<1rto.; 1f trump ... art' 2-2 or tn th1•
1111l1kC'I~ P\ 1•111 thal I tw defendf'r
""ho win" 1111' -11•1·orHI duh -.taned
with a '>tn).th•ton trurnp So 11 1s
probably nl{ht lO win the a ce of di·
amondc, crn..,., to th<' table with a
trump and lt>a<1 a C'luh to your ktnl(
/\II WC''>l ha-. to do 1'\ win and n·turn
a trump to '-t't y1111r nintr;ll'I
She looks for love
in the wrong places
'::~:~:~' S@\\~}A-~£!r'6"
l<llto4 lty CU. Y I ,OUAN
9 1.0,rortoe le"•'-' of fhe
lovr K<O"lbl.d wo1d1 be
low to fo,,n fo1.1t ~mple wo,d.1
WOIO
IUll
DEAll ANN LANDERS: I am a
20-year-old woman wtth a problem
that could destroy my hfe. I've been
livmg with a 23-year-old man for two
years and I love him very much, but I
have an obsession to go to bed Wlth
other men. It seems that I JUSt can't be
satisfied Wlth one.
My guy and J have a great
relattonsh1p. He's a terrific lover but I
am always look mg for others. Some of
my lovers are married men, others are
involved with close fnends of mtne
l've slept with men I barely knew
This problem has been with me since
I was 16.
I once had an affair with a mamed
high school teacher. It became public
and caused him to lose his job. I felt
awful but it didn't sto p me from going
to bed with another teacher the
following year.
I thtnk my guy knows I am sleeping
around, but he says nothing because
he docsn 't want to lose me. Please tell
me what to do. (don't want to behave
like a tramp for the rest of m y life. -
NEVER SATISFIED.
DEAR NEVER: You don't soud
like a tramp to me. You aoud like a
aympbomanlac. A competent mental
bealtb profeulonaJ may ~ able to
belp yoa 1et over tlli1 lllneaa. Aak
yoar pbyalclu to recommend a
tberaplat, or call a a.nlveralty boapltal
ud aak for tbe cblef of psyclaJatry or
tbe depar1ment of paycbology. R~
cog:alliDg a problem Is a gJa.at step
toward aolvlng lt. Good lack.
••• DEAR ANN LANDERS: I've been
a nurse since 1968 Smee that time
I've seen a lot of misery.
ust night I reached the hm1t of my
endurance. Please. Ann. tell Amen-
cans to stop beating. burning and
neglecting their ch ildren. It tears my
heart o ut when I look into their sad
little faces. They don'1 c.:ry anymore
because there a re no 1ears left They
ANN
luDERS
never smile.
I'd give anything if I could take
each and every one of these battered
kids home with me, love them. and
protect them.
There 1s something radically wrong
with a society th.at allows people to
bear children and then hun them so
terribly. If it's becau~ we hvc in a
nation that believes in freedom, I'd be
happy to give up some of that
freedom 1f it meant never having to
see another abused child. Ann, we
have to do more for these pathetic
v1ct1ms. I hope God has a special
place for these skinny, broken. bat·
tered, scarred httle ones when their
bodies fin.ally &i\o'e up. -MARSHA
IN LITTLE ROCK, ARK.
I R lt GIFT I 1 I I Ii I
I T 0 V I M I ' Wire "Why don'I you play
I I I I. cards w•lfl VOIJ' covs.n?' Hus
_ _ . _ _ • t>and Would you play w11n
S1>meone wno chealed?" Wile
l,..._(_N_O_l_E_O __ I .No Hust>and Well ne won 1
I I I ~ 1~ I C) "'r ~·• •~e h I ~ q~o•od _ _ _ _ _ n., ' "'O "' ,~ •• ,., ""'9 ~'1• tO~ d•••'oo ,,._ 11ep "'o l boto..
';~rPA ... 8l[ A8'J>lf lll l (P~
'' (.£1 AN\Wl ~
I' I' I' r I' r I
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
DEAR MARSHA: Battered ud ACROH 56 Compatriot
57 Interchange
60 Opp. of WSW
81 Outwit
abased cllllclren bave a better chance
now tb.u at uy time lo oar ltlstory.
Teacllen, nelgbbora, relatives ud
emer1ency room peraouel bave
been alerted to be on tbe watcll for
abased cktldrea. More eltlldren are
beln1 reacaed tban ever before ud
abaslve pare.at• cu 1et profeaslooaJ
belp. We now reall1e tbey are sick
people wllo often bave tbemaelvea
been abased. To report a cbUd abaser
call the national botllne. Tbe namber
La 1-800-4%%-44$3 ( everywbere except
Canada) .
Parenti wbo need belp 1boold write
to Parenti Anonymous, 71%0 Frank-
lin Ave., Loa AD1elea, CA 90046.
Please enclose a aelf·addre11ed,
stamped envelope.
1 Hemp source
6 -of rOMS
11 Indisposed
14 Bring out
15 Prodigious
18 Born
17 Thrilled
19 Vehicle
20 Olspenee
21 Termites'
relatives
22 Vertex
24 Epistle
26 Breathers
27 ChatNu
30 Floor cover
32 Inquired
33 Music groups
34' Next to Juln
37 Wu untnie
38 Dally meals
39 Shut up
'40 Fellow
'41 Get rid of
'42 -de Leon
'43 Brokers
62 Aalan noble
83 Crowbar
64 Unfaahlon·
Ible
65 WOOd
DOWN
1 Feign
2 Trlftlng
3 Pudding type
4 Emphutad
5 Authorize
6 Straighten
7 US prMldent
8 Bueball"s
Speaker
9 Blue moon
tO Porters
t 1 Bond, e.g
t2 Rent
13 Pr•Eaater
29 Scrammed
30 Jigged hill•
31 French river
33 Wrongdoing
35 Noun ending
36 Right of
'46 Roguery
'47 '"A Bell tor
48 Made out OK
50 Rabbit's tall
51 Shelter
Arbor Day group Cites Eddie Albert 45 Fussy eater
46 USMA types
-48 One -sale
-49 Confuse
50 Footwear 52 .. _ -Doing
pef'lodl
t8 Valuate
23 Mourn
25 V8flef'able
26 Elicit•
27 Invite
puaage
38 Baked gOOds
39 Lyrleal
41 -out· died
42 Brooch
53 Rod
~To--
exactly
55 Nostradamua
58 Guido's high
note By tbe Asaoclated Press
OMAHA -Actor Eddie At· ~rt has been named the 1986
rec1p1ent of the J Sterling Morton
Award. the National Arbor Day
Foundation's highest honor
The award. named after the
Nebraska City resident credited
with proposing Arbor Day I 14
years ago, will be presented Apnl
26 during Arbor Day act1 vn1es
Albert "has been a passionate
spokesman on behaJf of tree
planting and top soil conserva-
tion," said John Rosenow e11-
ecutive director of the foun-
dation.
Celtic on court
BOSTON -Robert MaJcolm
GnMm, who j:>layed a two-year
stint with the Boston Celtics tn
the 1960s. hu become 1 6-foot-1
rookie on the Massachusetts Su-
perior Coun.
Graham, 40, who has been a
distnct COUrlJUdae, was sworn 1n
as an USOCl.lte JUSlJce of the
Supcnor C.ourt by Oov ~el s. OM.UH.
Gnham wu a member of the
world c h1mp1on National
Buketb&LI AJ9oalbOD Boston
ltddle Albeit
Celucs from 1967 to 1969 before
lllnes~ fo~d him 10 retire He
was director of player personnel
until 1971 .
Kinky juatlce?
IU.nky P'rteclm•n
KERRVILLE. Texas
tardom may have helped a.tat
Eastwood ,e1 elected mayor ofhis
C'.ahfomia community, but JUd..
ar4 "IUUJ" FrWmu 11)'1 beiQI
1 cclcbnty probably won't do
much for his bid for JUSllce of Jlle
peace.
"This 1s not Cannel-By-The-
Sca. This 1s real life here. This is
Texas," said Friedman. founder
of the offbeat, country-western
bal:)d Kinley Friedman and the
Texas Jew Boys.
Friedman is running as a Re-
publican tn the May 3 primary.
Whoever WtnS JCls the job, since
no Democrat has filed for the race
in the central Texas city of 20.000
people.
Madam to TV
NEW YORK -Sydaey Biddle
Banow1, labeled the "Mayflower
Madam .. after her 1984 arrest on
chaf'IC' of promotin1 P.f!>Sti·
tution, says she's tettina sail for a
carttr tn television.
"I don't want to be known 11
the Mayflower Madam the mt o f
my hfC," she wu quottd 11
11yina. "l do want a new 1maae. I
want to show that I can handle a
position like thta."
Barrows said she wtll audition
for the pe.n of co-host on a
rvndiaited comedy prOlflm,
;"Comedy Toniaht.. •• produced by
WNYW
All Right'"
eo
28 ConllMnt
44 Congeal
45 Vent~ 59 Orlfic.t
3
I
;.. ........................ lli ........................................... lliillll ......................... -. ... __________________ ~~---~~~-~~~~~·~~-
THE
FAMILY
c~cus
-
by Bii Keane
"Why didn't they give a girl's name
to little Bo Pete?"
BIG GEORGE by Vlrgll Partch (VIP)
'{-·~-
"My wife thought It would lend a llttl• cl•H to the Joint."
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson DENNIS THE MENACE
"Is this Ladles' Day Out?"
PEANUTS
GARFIELD
TUMBLEWEEDS
DRABBLE
DAO, 1r '-IOU'!<£ L(X)(JNG
fOR ™E. C~'5t U>~lf>,
1 Ai£ T~E.M i\UJ
ROSE IS ROSE
0
by Hank Ketcham
• •
• I CMT FINO lHE JW.Y. ~ l>OES PEANuT
6UTTER AA' HORSERADISH eAA6 YA?.
by Charles M. Schulz ---------WMAT ~AVE WE DONE
TO FORT Zl~OE~NEVF?!
by Jim Davis
I CAN'T PECIPE.JU~T
GIVE ME A P1£C£ OF PIE
APPLE, P£.ACH, PUMPtO
6UJE8£RRc.,1, C.HERF\Y. OA &ANAHA CREAM?
by Tom K. Ryan
~f.ACH FOi'. 'Ye~~ "<A L.IL.L..'f'·U~lw, L.OW~
~v.o56~fit! ---.., __ _
by Kevin Fagan
1"f. MOME.t-l1 ~E.'!> NO
l.ONGER DECOCTl01.£,
~ L.f.T ME I \(NOW\
by Pat Brady
Orange Coat OAJL Y PILOT /Tueeday, ApfU 15, 1Ne All
BLOOll COUNTY by Berte• Breathed
U.S. ACRltS by Jim Davis
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE by Lynn Johnston
FARLEY, Sii //
FARLEY, fil ..
JUDGE PARKER
FUNKY WllfKERBEAN
HOW A80U1' ~15 ~FIC.
U5ED CAA , SIR ~
DOONESBURY
ARE £X)(J Kt()()t~ 1 ~ 1'~ 15
CAR I~ FJl1H<.> !
by Jeff MacNally
by Harold Le Ooux
by Tom Batluk
by Gary Trudeau
\
I •
Al• * Oninge CoMt DAILY PILOT/ Tu.dey, As>rll 15, 1988
It'sagooddayto
reflect on waste
in government
As a nation routinely savaged by bureaucrats who
would pay $600 for toilet seats, waste millions in cost
overruns to defense contractors and spend millions ~more on scientific studies of the most arcane aspects of
human and subhuman life, we celebrate our heritage and
our destiny today with a sacrifice. We pay our taxes.
Tax Day is the perfect time to reflect on wasteful and
abusive government spending practices and to re-
consider the recommendations of the President's
Private Sector Survey on Cost Control. Under the
direction of its chairman, businessman J. Peter Grace,
the commission that undertook the survey identified
potential savings in fede ral spending of $424.4 billio':\
over a three-year period. More than half of that -57.1
percent -would result from correcting what the
commission calls "system fai lures and personnel
mismanagement." In other words, the federal govern-
ment is an inefficient engine guzzlin~ tax dollars at an
obscene and -to the taxpayer -painful rate.
As we drop our federal 1040s (with all appropnate
schedules attached). we can take some small comfort in
the Grace Commission's conclusion that the federal
government should not look to us as a cure for its
growing deficit.
"The tax load on the average American family 1s
already at counterproductive levels .... (M)edian family
income taxes have increased from $9 in 1948 to $2,218
in 1983. or by 246 times. This is runaway taxation at its
worst."
According to the commission:
• One-third of all income taxes is consumed by
waste and inefficiency;
• Another third of all taxes escape collection as the
"underg.round..economy" blossoms in direct proportion
to tax increases and places even more pressure on law
abiding taxpayers, promoting still more underground
economy - a vicious cycle that must be broken;
• With two-thirds of aJI personal income taxes
wasted or not collected. 100 percent of what is collected
is absorbed solely by interest on the federal debt and by
federal contributions to transfer pa yments. . .. (A)ll
individual 10come tax revenues are gone before one
nickel is spent on the services which taxpayers expect
from their government.
On the average, each of us will work four months to
earn our share of the federal burden this year. May 1 is
.. Tax Freedom Day." Put another way, the first one hour
and 44 minutes of each work day belon~s to Uncle Sam.
The good news ID this 1s that dunng the Reagan
Administration, .. Tax Freedom Da y " has remained
relatively constant. It fell on May 1 in I 980, advanced as
far as May 4 in 198 1 and fell back to April 28 in 1984.
Last yea r. it wa s May I .
Certainly, it is every American's duty to support his
government. Democracy could not survive otherwise.
But we arc betng pressed far beyond the call of duty when
we are dunned to su pport the kind of foolishness Grace
and his commissioners discovered. For example:
• The Civil Service and Military Retirement
Systems provi de to participants three times and six
times. rcs pecu vely, the benefits of the best pnvate sector
plans. The government's civilian and military em-
ployee~ reurc at an earlier age, typically 54 and 40,
respecll vel1. as compared to 63 or 64 ID the pnvate
sector. In addition. the pensions of federal retirees are
full y indexed for in flation -a ranty in the pnvate
sector.
• Compet111 ve bidding 1s prohibited on the
movement of m1l1taf) personnel household goods to and
from Alaska and Hawaii. despite a Department of
Defense stud y showing competitive bids would reduce
costs by 26 percent.
• Congressional interference in military decisions
to close bases 1s estimated to cost $367 million.
• Jn th e Northwest, the Federal Power Marketing
Administration was selling subsidized power at one-
third of market rates. The difference is the equivalent of
the taxes paid by 6 76 ,000 American families.
The list is virt uall y endless. Each month, Sen .
William Proxmire twtts the government by presenting
his "Golden Fleece·· award to the agency that has found
the most ludi crous way to waste our money. Although it
makes good read10s. 1t 1s difficult to see that it has
dissuaded non-w10nrng agencies from competing for the
prize in the future
The Reagan .t\dm1Dstrauon has been the most
agressive pursue r otgovcrnment waste m modem times,
yet most of the: recommendations of the Grace
Commission rema10 little more than suggestions. The
cost savings make a persuasi ve argument for change. But
not as compelling as the realization that the nation that
made the world wonder at its ability to manage its
industries cannot even manage its government.
Correcting that problem is a challenge that should
inspire all American ~ to act ions -that and that tax
check you just put in the mail.
Oplntone expr"eed In this space are those of the Dally Piiot Other view•
~ uucl on thl1 page are those of their authors and artlats Reader
eotnl'l*'tl• lnv1tecl The Delly Piiot. Po Box 1560, Costa Mesa, 92626 Phone
642~.
QAANGE COAST
DlilyPilai
IC-W1ttmer
,,. Z>ttl ,,,,,.,.
T°"" Telt
"··~~£0010<
O...ll...,
City EdftOf ,_c.._.
1.1e ... £dolor
Cr ... IMff
'loon• EdtiClf
Put>!,,,_
~Cflurcfwftaft C'.ontr~
"°*-1L~
PtoducltOn l.tM1"04I'
T_,,I( ....
O!Cullll>On Ml MOM ....... .__.,
f"IH'k-110Q Oweetor
~~(II
''The frequent raJesofcounlerfeJtconsumergoodsmakeltclearthat
when counterfeJtJng becomes easy. It can become commonplace.''
ATTACK ONT ERRORISM
[!] F · 1 1 1 bombers fly to Libya
from US bases 1n England
(!) A 6 carrier based bombers
and A· 7 allack planes strike
Libyan largets
0 S1d1 Bilal 6 Al Azz1z1yah Barracks
€) T 11poh Military Airport
0 Al Jumah111ya Barracks 0 Ben1na Air Base L y A
What has Libyan bombing
unleashed for the future?
By TIM AHERN ................ ,...
WASHINGTON -Even as
Amencan bombers were streaking
away from Libya, dump trucks were
stationed around the U.S. Capitol -
a fronthne of the precautions that
Amencan secunty forces must take to
blunt the possibthty of a new round of
retaliatory terrorism.
President Reagan . mindfol of the
dangers unleashed by bis strike into
Libya, warned Moammar Khadafy to
end the cycles of terrorism.
"Today, we have done what we had
to do. If necessary, we shall do it
apin," Reagan said during a na-
uonally broadcast speech Monday
night.
"rhc trucks have been around th e
Capitol since November 1984 to
block any attempt to deliver a bomb
by car or truck. similar to the
devastating 1983 attacks on two U S
fac1hties in Beirut -the Amencan
embassy and the Manne barracks.
If K.hadaf) chooses to retaliate, his
targets are numerous. American tour-
ists and business people are among
the world's leading travelers and can ~ found almost an)'where, from the
busiest n lles a1rpons to the smf llest
and most remole outposts.
While Reagan's action won im-
mediate su ppon in Congress. some
legislator; womcd about whal come"
next.
Future acts against the Un1tcd
States will also require mihtarv
retal1at1on, said Sena1c MaJonty
Leader Bob Dole. R-~n .. Once you
start down this road. there 1sn'1 an)
tum1ng back ...
Senate Mmonty Leader Roben
Bytd. D·W.Ya .. noted that Reagan
promised to repeat the U.S. attacks 1f
necessary.
"Are we gom~ 10 do th1s again and
again and again .·· Byrd said ... I 1hink
the president gets himself into a box
by saying he's going to do it again and
again. And what 1f there is a clear
track (of terrorist act1v1ty) going w
Syna or Iran? Whal do we do then'1"
Even Reagan raised the prospect of
future stnkes. "When our c1t1Lens are
abused or attacked. anywhere in the
world. on the direct orders ofa hostile
regi me, we will respond so long as I'm
in this Oval Office ..
There will also be conseq uences for
Amencan foreign policy One thing
that 1s clearis that U.S. standing 1n the
Arab world is cenam to be harmed.
J\n 1mmed1ate consequence will be
more damage 10 the already stalled
attempl to forge a peace be1wcen
Israel and tis Arab neighbors.
While Khadafy has been pnvately
lnt1c11cd in the past by his Arab
neighbors. those nations have also
rallied around him and have -with
the notable excep11on of Egypt -
ignored Washington's appeals to J01n
1n the anti-Khadaf} effon. Arab
leaders can now be expected to rall y
behind K.hadafy, no matter what they
thin k ofh1m pnvately
In Europe. >America·s alhes have
consistently refused administration
entreaties to join forces against Libya.
Most of those NA TO allies have
stronger economic ties 10 Libya than
does the U n11ed States .
Reagan. an his speech Monday.
detailed a long history of frustration
in trymg to enhst Amenca's allies in
the fight against the mnn lhe pres1~
dent last week called the "mad dog of
the Middle East."
"We tned quiet diplomacy, public
condemnation. economic sancuons
and demonstrations of m1htary
force ... he said. "None succeeded."
As Reagan took offi ce on Jan. 20,
1981 . he greeted the 52 American
hostages freed by Iran and promised
.. swift. sure" retnbut1on to tcrronsts
who stnke against the United State.,
or llS c1t1zens
But until last fall. the public
Amencan response 10 terronsm wa~
largely rhetonc. Then, in an action
that was w1del}' praised at home and
abroad. U.S. Navy planes forced
down an Egyptian airliner C8!1J:tng to
freedom the terronsts who h1Jacked
the Italian cruise ship Achille Lauro
and murdered a cnppled 69-ycar-old
Amencan.
Two days after Chnstmas. terronst
bombs exploded 10 the Rome and
Vienna a1rpons and the 12-year-old
daughter of an Amencan JOUmahst
was among the dead. Reagan again
sought -and failed to get -allied
suppon for economic sanctions
against Libya.
Tim Aberu rovers a11t1oaal 1ecur-
lry issue• for Tbe Auoc/11ted Pru1.
Reports rev,eal Khadaf y' s
long history of terrorism
Recently declassified cables show his
eagerness to finance terror anywhere
WASHINGTON -llntll vet)
recently, the Reagan adm1n1strattc>n
offered no ha;d cv1dencc 10 hal·k up 11~ charges that L1hyan dictator
Muammar Khadafy 1o; responsible for
much of tHe random tcrrnmm thal
has made Americans ncr\ ou\ about
traveling abroad
Now the While Hnu-s<.' and thl· ~tJtc
Oepanment are g1' 1ng the: puhhc
chapter and vcrc;c on 1-.hadal) ·._
involve ment.
Lest anyone get 1hc idea that 1hc
latest outrages laid at Khadary·, door
are his onl y offense\ -and ma y he a
Justifiable respon-;e 10 his (iulf of
S1dra hum1hat1on -we can nov.
disclose some of the past evidence
against Khadafy found in State De-
partment files. The cables from lJ S
embassies to Foggy Bottom wt•rc
recently declassified
The cables. reviewed by our a\
sociate lucette l..agnado, male clear
Khadafy's wilhngness -nay. eager-
ness -to finance terronsm and
subversion virtually anywhere in the
world. from assassination of Libyan
dissidents to coup~ against vulnerable
governments. He has also provided
generously from Libya's oil wealth to
g.ive !raining and refuge to vanou'i
terronst groups.
Here arc some examples of
Khadafy's m1sch1ef-maktng:
•N11ena lnApnl 1983. theAmen-
c.an ambassador 1n Lagos sent Wash·
ington a deuulcd report on an alleged
plot to overthrow the N1gcnan gov-
emmen1 The plot was .. personally
approved'' by Khadafy and
bankrolled by him to the tunt of S40
m1llton
A Niaenan on tnal for plottmg the
overthrow "had testtficd of several
clandesune tnps to Libya ... last year.
and said he and seven other plotters
had received cub parments of over a
m1lhon dollan m Tnpoh, Accra end
Lagos," the cable stated. The am-
bassador added •hat the 'iupposcd
plot may have been a scam .. 1n which
several Nigerians were able to con
large sums ou t of the Libyan'i."
The authenticity of the P.lot wa!>
largely irrelevent. In fact, 1f 11 had
indeed been nothing more than a
confidence game it demonstrated that
Khadafy was so enthusiastic about
a1d1ng the overthrow of the Nigenan
government that he hadn't made
"even a cursory check of the supposed
plotters' credentials or chances of
c;uccess.
\on men or coup plotters, the
N1genan group "met w11h Khadafy at
a m1lttary farm on the outsk1rts of
Tnpoh," the ambassador reported.
The Libya n leader "approved and
encouraged their scheme, telhng the
N1genans that he had two other
groups in N1gcna. but they were
mefTcct1ve,'' The nc.Jtl day, the v1s-
1tors met with members of lht Libyan
revolutionary council and were Jivcn
money
•Egypt. In November 1984. Egyp-
tian intelligence held K.hadafy up to
worldwide ndicule by announcmg-
falscl y -that a Libyan oppos111on
leader had been assassinated in Cairo
K.hadafy 1mmed1ately claimed credit,
whertupon the EJypttans produced
the suppostd victim at a press
conference, ahve and well. The Lib-
yan hit squad auigned to the task had
been captured by the Eaypt1ans and
persuaded to confess
Amon& other th1nas. a' the Cairo
cmhas.'Y repo~ to Foggy Ronom,
the aani that couldn'1 shoot straight
had confcSKd th.at K..hadafy also had
plans "to assassinate vanous heads of
state, includma (West (~nnan}
Chancellor Helmut Kohl. Saudi
Arabia's Km1 Fahd, the United Arab
Emir1tes Sheikh Zayed Bin Sultan
and Pakistan President Zia ul·Haq."
JACK
ANDERSON
and JOSEPH SPEAR
•Tunisia When Khadaf y com-
plained about a supposed plot by
Palestinians based in Tunis to as-
sassinate Libyans worlung abroad.
the U.S. ambassador in Tun1Sta
reponed: The Libyan charge might be
"a response in Jund to the Tunisian
public statement implying Libyan
responsibility for the sabota~e of the
Algenan-Tun1s1an ptpehnc:
MINI-EDITORIAL: We're not ex-
actly enamored of our blow-dned
nvals on the telev1Ston news shows,
but we're deeply disturbed about a
White House plan to bypass the
networks and feed unedited speeches,
briefings, Rose Garden ceremonies
and other White House media events
directly to local TY stations. The
idea which is the brainchild of the
resident White House press ki cker.
communications chief Patrick Bu-
chanan, seems to us one more 'ltcp
down the slippery road to Oocb-
belslike forcc·fccd1ng of propaganda
to the public.
DEEP BACKGROUND: Eh Rose·
nbaum 1s the World Jewish Conaress
bloodhound who has been d<>uedly
sniffing out the N&zJ bacqrouod of
former U N. Secretary GeneraJ Kun
WaJdhe1m. Rosenbaum was amused
rc<:ently when he came atto a
photograph Waldheim is ustna 1n hJS
c.imp:uan for president of Austna. h
shows a sm1hna Waldheim W1th lhe
famous Manhattan skyline 1n lhe
background. And there -naht thert,
see? -Rosenbeum spotted ht~ own
opanment bu1ldtna.
TBOllA8&LIM
colnmolat
WALTER
BURROUGHS
Treat
kids like
the kids
they are
Dunng the las1 couple of weeks,
every time I pick up a newspaper and
read about the misbehavior of "stu-
dents" in Palm Springs, my thou~ts
tum gratefully to the long-past situ-
ation here in Newport Beach.
You other old-timers must re-
member when young people used to
conver~e on this area during "Bal
Weck.'
They used to swarm u'I here by the
thousands and would grab all t.he
a va1lable sl~J>tn$ and living quarters
they could find an Balboa, Newport
Beach and Corona del Mar.
I wish to say that the behavior of
these kids was pretty reprehensible.
Then, all of a sudden, 1t stopped.
Why'! Landlords would not rent
ei1cept to adults. who were required to
put up a deposit that was forfeited if
damage was done to the properties.
Moreover, a curfew was set early
enough to induce the kids to go t-0 bed.
Now, don't pick that up .
Yes, I know there were some
mismatched sex affairs, but nothing
compared to what has been going on
in Palm Spnngs this year.
I didn't live herc at that time. I
lived 10 Los Angeles, JUSt outside
Beverl y Hills. I had a nightly radio
program on KMPC which at that time
was located on Wilshire Boulevard in
Beverly Hills. Clete Roberts, whose
hfe story I ha ve already told you.
broadcast the news. A story ca.me
over the wire about .. Bal Weck."
Clete came to see me just before
broadcast time. which I think was 8
p. m As usual he had a suggestion
which made good sense.
"Walt," he said. "these high school
kids Just love to get their names on the
air. What do you saf we Just pass 'Bal
Week ' on our news. •
You should understand that, al
that tamt'. the sman broadcasters
didn't think news was desirable for
.. pnme lime·· anyway. so we didn't
fear compet111on.
··okay, Clete:· I said. ··Let's pass it
up ...
Wc d1d
So. the m1sbeha v1or of"Bal Weck"
became strictly a local story. There
were some pretty bad results locally.
For example. a clerk who worked for
us. in trying to outrun some boys who
were shoutmg at her. ..Come on,
lovely. we want to show you some-
thing." fell and broke her hip. Her
father sued the city.
Some of our more responsible
ci112ens agreed it was time to call a
halt.
Then Sam Meyer, who pubhshcd
the Newpon Beach wcekJy news-
paper. steeped in and persuaded the
c1tycounc1l to enact some laws and be
also persuaded landlords they were
better off without .. Bal Week" busi-
ness.
lfl were a resident of Palm Springs,
which thank heaven I am not, 1
believe I would learn from Newpon
Beach and from some of t.he other
areas of this country that IS-and 16-
ycar-old kids are not adults; they're
still children and they need to be
d1sc1phned. I don't mean beaten or
incarcerated. I just mean required to
behave in order to retain the many
privileges that kids have these days.
Walter Burroughs L1 Ute PUot'1
fouodlng publl1her.
TODAY IN HISTORY
By tile A11oclated Pre11
Today is Tuesday, April IS , the
I 05th day of 1986. There arc 260 days
lcf\ in the year. Income tax reports arc
due todar. Todays highlight m history:
In the early morning hours of April
15, t 912, the Titanic, a British luxury
liner on its maiden vo_yagc, sank in
the Nonh Atlantic off Newfound-
land. less than three hours after
striking an iceberg. Some l,500 of the
more than 2,200 people aboard died
in the disaster.
Five years ago: President R~
pardoned two former FBI officials
convicted of authorizing illepJ
break-ins. Washington Post reporter
JAnct Cooke rctianed after admjttina
she'd fabric~tcd a Pulitzer Prize-
winning feature story. And a coal
mine explosion in Redstone, Colo.,
cla1med IS lives.
One year aao: The government of
South Africa said it would repeal laws
proh1bitina sex and marriage between
wh1tet and non·whites.
Today's birthdays: Actor Michael
An~l'I 1s 64. Chkqo Mayor Harold
Washington 1s 64. Country aiqr:r
Roy Oark 1s S3. Act.ros Elizabeth
MonlJOll\C.ry 1$ S3. Actress Qaudia
Cardinale 1147. Aock ainaer-pUwil
Dave Edmunds as 42.
Thouaht for today: "Man is not
'um of what he has. but the totality
what he docs not have, of what
mi&ht have." -Jean-PauJ
( t 90S-1980).
'
TUESOAY. APRtL 16. 1986 •
Jeers turn to cheers
for Angels' Miller
He gets booed for play ln field ,
then gets game-winning hit
By JOSEPH DUDEVOIR
Dlllr .... C.11 J • I
The Angels opened Anaheim Stadium for business
Monday afternoon with a show that dam near brouabt
down the house.
An0peninaDayctowdof37,489r~iuapproval
when the Angels scored their 7-6 win over the Seattle
Mariners in a game that had more lead changes than a
Grand Prix race.
Darrell Miller turned jeen to cheers with one swin&
ofhis borrowed bat when he sin&led home Brian Downin&
in the bottom of the ninth for the game-winner.
"Before I went up to the plate {Maoqer) Gene
Mauch told me to relax and drive a baJl to center, .. said
Miller, who was using ex-Angel Mike Brown's bat. "He
was tl')'ing lo take the pressure off me."
What bad r,taced a rock of sorts on Miller's back wu
his "adventure • in left field back in the sixth inning.The
Mariners scored three times to take a S-2 lead after three .
straight line drives tied up Miller. The tint., off the bet of
Ivan Calderon, appeared to be catchable but Miller let it
drop. The next two, by Gorman Thomas and Steve
Yeager, were very difficult chances that Miller failed to
botd on to.
That's when the boos started. And when Miller flied
out in the seventh, it got a bit louder.
"I thought maybe they were .calling for 'Rupe' (Ru~rt Jones)," said Miller with a smile ... Actually, I
don t take what happened in the field up to the plate with
me. I just went up and tried to bit something lD the air.
Thafs why I used Mike's bat. I hit better fly balls with it."
Donnie Moore ( 1-0) picked up bis tint win of the
year after pitching a scoreless ninth for the Angels, who
are now 4-3 and tied for fint in the American League West
with three others.
ToJJl6llt'•6ame
~ttle (Youns 1-0) at Aqell (Sutton ()-1).
Tune: 1:3S p.m.
TV: oooe.
Radio: K.MPC (710).
Wednesday's pme: Seattle 11 Anaie1I, 7:3S p.m.
Danny Tartabull tried for a double play by taaina Jona
and going to fim to get Pettis.
But Jones came only halfway to accondand Tartabull was only able to get Pettis when Jones wu ufe at eecond
on the throw to firlL
.. You have to get the lead man on that play, .. said
Mauch. .. We were fortunate they tried for the double play
that way. It was a mistake on their You.DI m1n•1 put."
And the Angels made Seattle pay when Jones came
home on Bobby Grich'• double.
The An&els picted up three bits, a home run and two
RBI from Aendrick and two hits apiece from Grieb.
Downing and Miller, who drove in a pair of rum.
On Miller's defensive antics, Mauch aid, .. It's hlld
to see the ball at ~t time of day. The kid bad a bard time
seeing it come out of the lhUu. rm \.cry happy for him
that be got that hit in the ninth."
When asked what be bad told Miller, Ma~ said. .. ,
just said to hit a line drive to left so we could set this~
thing over."
There were ei&bt lead cbanges and a combi.Dcd lA bits
by the two AL West foes after Miller lined Pe1e Ladd••
fastball to left. Downin& bad reached third~ Ladd bit
him to lead off the inning and Hendrick's around ball
went throu&b the legs of shortstop Spike Owen.
It was I>owning who bad tied the ecore at S..S in the
seventh when be tripled and continued bome when relay
man Tartabull bobbled the throw from oeoter. He slid just
under Yeager's tag at the plate.
Phil Bradle, of Seattle woal4 like amplre
Don Denlrtncer to belleYe Rick Barie.on
Dlllr ........ "' o..tll---.
coaldn •t hold on to the ball OD a taa at
MCODd bue. but the proof la lD the willte.
Getting back to Jones, it was be who scored the sixth
and tying run when he made a smart baserunning move
(or lack of it) in the eiJhth. After be walked to open the
inning, Gary Pettis hit a ground ball to second where
..That play seemed to set the fans into the pme. ..
said Downing. ··we~ the fans to believe in ua this year
and I think they did tocJay."
On the play he said. "I didn't know the throw bad
~ ... AJIG&L8/DJ
One-legged hoiller!
Injured Bochy hits
game-winning HR
against Dodgers
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Pete Gray
was the only one-armed baseball
player in the major leagues, but if you
ask Padres man.ager Steve Boros, San
Diego's Bruce Bochy has a biger
claim to fame: be played minus a leg.
And he hit a pme-winning home run
at that.
Boros was speaking figuratively
when he raved about Bochy's one-
lCJfed, 11th innin& homer Monday
night, but only an eyewitness would
have known.
DodJlers'
Cad1llac
riding in
fast lane
Stubbs h elping fill
Guerrero a bsen ce
with sizzling ba t
LOS ANGELES (AP) -When
Pedro Guerrero went down for three
m onths with a knee injury and put
young FrankJin Stubbs ID the lineup,
the Los Angeles Dodgers feared they
had lost thett punch.
"I told FrankJin that every time he
goes up there he has to think that he's
better 'than the pitcher," Guerrero
said. "I've told him he can't worry
about anylhin~ else."
For now, it would seem, the Dod&ers have nothing 10 worry
about.
In the Dodgers' first seven games,
the 2S-year-old left fielder bas hit
three home runs, driven in a National
Leque-leadinJ nine run~ a!ld
preserved .a ~r of one-run Vleto~cs
with late-mnmg throws that nailed
two runnen at the plate.
. Like most frce-swinaing sluuc""
the left-handed Stubbs tends to strike
out often -nine times in his 18 at-
bats this season. He's batting .278.
"The pitcher is going to win most of
the time," he said. "That's the way the
pme is. But hopefully you'll get your
share."
He aot more than bis share-:-all ~f
bis home runs and runs batted m -m
a weekend series apinst the San
Francisco. His two-run homer Sun-
day was the difference as the Dod&ers edaed the Gianu 3-2. Stubbs also hit
home runs Friday and Saturday in
pmcs won by San FrancilCO.
"He's going to be a folk hero,"
Sunday"s winnina pitcher, Orel
Henbiscr, said of Stubbs. "He's The
Refriauator ofbuebal~" a reference
to 'Rilliam Pe"l 01 the NFL's
Olicqo Bears. 'lf Pedro hadn't
aotten hurt., Franklin wouldn't be
playina... . .
Stubbs bad an extensive tnal Wlth
the Ood&crs at first bue in 1984,
banjna .1~4 wtlh eia}lt home runs and
17 RBI in 87 pmes. But be ~d a
strof\cl t 98 5 wttb Albuquerq~ an the
Pactfic ( oast Lcaaue, bllllnl 32
(Pl .... .-STUB88{82)
I
"He hit that home run with one leg.
ll was a remark.able thmg.," said Boros
after San Diego's 4-3 win over Los
Angeles. "I've seen some amazing
tbina.s, but this might have topped
them all."
Bochr twisted his left knee in
Sunday s game and it had swollen up
considerably by Monday.
"I couldn't bend my knee this
(Monday) morning.," Bocby said. ''I
told them I could swing the bat, but I
couJdn 't run."
But the pinch-hit homer proved to
be a most effective pam reliever.
"When something like this hap-
pens and the crowd is going wild, I
hardly felt it," said Bochy.
Boros said the knee would be
examined today and some fluid might
Tonight'• game
Dodgen(Honeycutt 0-1 )at San
Di~o (Show 0-1 ).
Time: 7:05 p.m.
TV: Channel I I.
Radio: KABC (790).
Wednesday'spme: Dodgers at
San Diego, 7:05 p.m.
be drained.
Monday•s victory was the ei&hth
consecutive one-run finish for 6olh
the Padres and Dodaers, a National
League record. With the excitement
bas come added pressure.
"WMe-not getting hits with men on
(Pleue eee OIU-LBOOED/82)
1 ......... ,....., ..... __...
Ttm Fortaano la m••r:tnc ap for eome loet ti.me with a ll•e
fut ball for Soathern California Collete'• V&DfllUda.
Dod«er center fielder Ce.ar Cedeno can•t reac1a the ball lalt 1rJ Padrm' Tta P'lallaery.
Rewards of trail blazing
Vanguard pitch er
h as found a home,
and maybe fu tu re
By SHARON FRUTOS or._o..,,.....,.
Tim Fortugno has never followed a
charted course. choosing instead to
look down each path and blaze a trall
ofhisown.
Consider:
•He left home when he was 16
years old.
•At 18, with no itinerary and a life
savings of $500 in his pocket. he left
Massachusetts for California.
•After a couple uneventful months
in Bakersfield. Fortugno attended a
Christian retreat camp in Arrowhead
where be hooked up with a friend of
an ex-girlfriend and moved in Wllh
the near-stranger about two weeks
later.
•He lit in Costa Mesa. took a Job ip
a restaurant and at 20, dcetded be still
had time to do whatever he was going
to do the rest of his hfe.
And while his ventures were purely
whimsical, they delivered him to a
place he hopes to remain for quite
some time -the baseball field.
Fortugno, now a worldly 23-year-
old husband and father of a four-year
old son, has toned down his travels,
taking road tnps only when has
Southern Cahfomia College baseball
team dOC$.
With the Vanauards. Fortu~o 1s
6-2 with a 1.86 ERA. and hoping to
improve enough through this season
to be drafted by a major league club.
After yean of ln4eclalon. Tlm P'ortapo bu cap OD rtcbt.
His trek to the pitcher's mound
each day is a trip in itself when one
considers what It took to get him there
-and why he 1s still ID college ball
after having been drafted twice.
That 1.86 ERA 1s throuah 6 7
innings in which he has allowed 31
hits and 53 walks, as opposed to I 06
snlceouts.
Fortugno. a 6-0, 200-pounder,
hadn't even considered pla~ng
baseball when he left Uxbridge High
School in central Massachusetts.
"I pitched there my junior and
senior years." Fortuano said .. That's
all l pla}ed I didn't play summer or
fall ball. I only played tn 36 games ...
36 pmes. I always had a strong arm,
but I'd only strike o ut 14 guys ill year.
Where I was. there was no notonety. I
had no (college, major. leque)
baseball offers. When htah school
years came to an end, I wun 't
thinking college ball. I was average. I
wasn't sure what I was gomg to do ..
So Fortu~o packed up.
''They (fnends of his family) uked
me to go to C.ahfom1a. I wd I'd go
because I had nothmg el9C to do;·
Fortugno said.
So tn 1980. Fortugno made the
(Pleue 11ee l"OR11JGRO/m)
Ryun still doing what he loves best running
NEW YORK (AP) -Between 1966 and
1975, Jim Ryun was the world's best middle-
distance runner. He set world records for the
half-mile, l ,SOO meters and the mite. He was
the first high school runner to break four
minutes for the mile. He was a three-time
Olympianhwinnina a silver medal.
And e was one of the most rev~
athletes in the world.
But there was tremendous pressure on
him, the pressure to win, the pressure to set
world records.
Fear eventually btcame hlS bigesl oppo-
nent, and bttter duappomtments became
interwoven throu_ab bis career. His iu-0rd1 were broken, b11 times were emuc. and in the
1972 OlymP1CS, be fell durina the qualifyina
tri•ls oft~ J.SOO and finished hlst
Finally, an 1976, Ryun, a bom-ap1n
Chnstian, retired, say1na, "God spoke to me,
saymg. 'You fouaht a aood fill?~ you ran a aood
race, but now you're finishe<l.'
Now. Ryun is back runnina. But the
pre ures are gone. He doesn't have to run fast
or Kt records. He doesn•t even have to wm.
He's runnma for fun.
'Tm enjoyina it now, probably more than I
ever have, or as much as when I first started
runni~" the 38-year-old Ryun said Monday.
"I m doina a lot of road f'ICina. but it's low
key There's not u much prcsautt.
"Prnsurc wu my bigest fear. Sometimes,
it was acnenttid by the media. Somenmes, by
the competition. Sometimes.. it was internal.
0 h was hard to explain. It almo.i bocamo
self-dcttn>etive. Every runner hu to learn to
adJUSt to at. I guess the success I had as a young
boy helped build up that pressure "
Ryun said his book. "In Qut'St of G lory."
has aiven him "the chance to explalD why I was
totally motivated." •
Now. Ryun 1s running pnmanly on the
roads. and his next race will be the 10-mile
Trevira Twosome April 26
He 1scompeuna in the ra~ "bccauw oflhe
uniqueness of havmg a partner and runn1n11n
Central Parle"
"The first ume I was 1n Central Pane was in
1964, and I fell in lovt' W'lth 1t," he said. "But
I've never raced in the parlt
"This 1s m y 23rd season of racma.. That's
Iona time. But I have aood kne • &ood ankles. a
good back Thank God. I have no 101unn"
Ryun said that while his world records
received much attenuon and wcrc very pt-
1 f) 1 na. there were other htabh&hU of hts car.icr
that didn't gel much attention but were just as
satisfying.
~incident be recalled was his fint raoe.
as a h1&h school sophomore.
"I asked a sen10f bow to run the ..-ce."
Ryun noted. "He wd to JUSt U)' and stay wtth
the leaders for three laps, then lt1ck the last lap.
That's what I did and finished ICCOnd, just one
second behind the Winner The next ~ I
beat th( state champion."
In add1t1on to runruna now, Ryun tra"ell a
lot. &JVln& 1nsp1Ana talks to younpten.
.. tfs moS1 rtwardina. .. he said.
Thcrt a.re no prcssum 1n doina that. either.
.,
I. I
4
•
81 * ()qnge Ooet1 OAJL Y PILOT I Tue.day, Aprtl 15. 1883
Ra·ngers' 'Inky'
gets a good look
at Toronto's Steib
FromAP...,.lek. • ARLINGTON, TeUJ -Pete ln-
cav11ha of the Teu.s Ranaert knew th1op
were 101na to be different when hf saw
Dave Sueb's brcaklna pitches on openu~ ni&Jlt.
"Ain't oobody in collCJe'can pitch like tlult," said
the raw rook.Jc an awe of tbr Toronto Blue Jays' a~
riah \-bander.
The Ranacrs' heralded riaht fielder came d1rectJy
to the maJor leques out of colleae where he set an all-
t1mr NCAA record at Oklahoma State with 48 homers
and 143 RBI.
lncav1gha displayed tremendous power an spnna
training. Once, he knocked a hole in the fence with a line
dnve His seven homers were a Rangers' record for
Pompano Beach
The Rangers' fans couldn't wait forrus debut. They
put up "Inc Spot" sians all over Arhnaton Stadium
awa111ng their hero's fint major league blast.
On openmg ni&ht. lncavi.&lia. bbstercd a one-
bounce doub1e off the leftfield wall but had trouble
h1tt1ngh1tt1ng the curve. There were no shots to the "Inc
pots" allhough he bu a memorable foul ball that
traveled O\Cr 3"75 feet
However. his 12 homers in banrng practice had the
fans buumg.
"We're going to have to expand our budget," sard
Teus General Manager Tom Gnevc. "Let's sec. 81
home games and balls at S2.50 each and a dozen each
game that's o'er $2.000. He's fun to watch isn't he.?'"
Howe' er, lncav1gJia had a much tougher t1mr in
the Rangers' first homestand a&ainst maJor league
pitching.
After IO straight groundouts and some stnkeouts,
lnla' 1gha linall)' got his first major league homer on
Fnda) oi~t. He llmed a fastball from Balumore
rrlit•,er Tippy Maninez and the ball earned over the
ce nter field fence at the 400 foot mark.
"It was a tremendous ftthng," said lncav1gha.
"ho..c homer came on his 17th at-bat.
It came as some comfon 10 the Rangers'
broadcasting team who1okingJ) pointed out that it took
Babe Ruth 18 at-bats to get his first homer
T cam offic1als. ""ho took a bag chance on bnnging
Inca' 1gJ1a darC<'tl y to the ma1or leagues. breathed easier
"It got the monkey o ff his back." said Rangers
Manager Bobby Valentine "He was starting to press a
lmle Now he can relax "
lnca ... 1gJ1a completed t~e home stand on ~unday
with another double but his ba111ngaveragc after a week
of big league pitching was 3-for-24 and .125
"It's going to take tame for him to find his groove."
said Gnrvc "We behcve he will And nobod) hits a ball
harder than Pete does. He absolutely crushes ll ··
Quote of the day
Bugay Engelberg, general manager of the
Un11ed States Football League's O rlando Ren-
egades, on the wealth of New York real estate
developer Stephen Ross. new maJonty owner of
the Balllmore Stars: "The other halfofNew York
that Donald Trump doesn't own. Ross owns.
When they play Monopoly; they play with real
buildings."
Bees fine, suspend Norris
SANJOSE-MikeNorns,thcformer •
OakJand A's pitcher, drew a fine and one-
week i;uspens1on from the San Jose: Bees for
m1ss1ng a weekend game
His first 'ltan for the Class A Cahfom1a League
team now 1s sc heduled for next Saturday II he complies
w11h team rules, said Harry Sieve. the Bee~· president
and manager Noms. who wa<, to have pitched on
Sunday. was scratched from the stan after fa1 l1ng to
show up Saturday night
"I c;llll believe Mike 1ss1ncere 1n wanting to make a
comeback," Steve said after ~unday's game "Hut this
laLeu thing reall y d1sappoinb me "
Baaeball today
1909 -Leon Ames of the New Yon OWlta
pttch<d a no-tuner ror 9 1-l fn11'-OJ> openioa
day, but lost)..() to Brook!~ io ll1nninp.
1910 -~i<knt William Howard Taft
inuiated the cuatom of the Chid Executive
throwina out the fint ball at a Wuhln4ton
opener. Walter Johnson held the A's to ont' hat in
a 3-0 tnumph.
I~ S -Rube Marquard of the New York
Giants no-bat the Brooklyn C>odJcn 2-0.
1947 -Jackie Robinson played his fim
major leque pme for the Dod&l'n. He went ()..
for-), but scored tht' dccidina run in a S-3 victory
over the Boston Braves. He was the first black to
appear in the m"ors since 1884.
1957 -President E1St"nhower opened the
1956 suson by tossing out the first ball 1n
Washmgton. The ball was the 10 millionth
Spauldina to bc used in m"or league flay.
1958 -Major teaaue batebal came to
California as the ll'allsplanted Giants and
Dodaers pla)'ed their first pme on the Pacific
Coast. At Suls Stadium in San Francisco, the
Giants' Rubcn Gomez blanked Los Angeles 8-0.
1968 -Houston and the New York Mets
played 24 inninas in a night game in the
Astrodome before the Astros won 1-0. The pme
lasted more than s1~ hours.
1976 -New York opened refurbished
Yank~ Stadium with an 11-4 victory over
Mmncsota.
Maya draw• governor's praise
SACRAMENTO -Gov. Geo'Je • [)(ukmcJian declared Monday to be Withe
Mays Day in California in light-heaned
ceremony m Dcukmejian's Capitol office
welcoming Mays back to the San Francisco Giants as a ~pec1al assistant to the team president.
After DeukmeJuin presented a proclamation to
Ma)s h1ghhght1ng his .. outstanding, fastasllc career" 1n
22 seasons with the Giants in New York and San
Francisco. a reporter asked the Republican govt'morif
he had ever S«n Mays play.
"I didn't have enough money to go to games in
rho~ days, .. DeukmcJian replied, prompt in~ Mays.
"ho played from 1952 throu&h 1973, to ask in mock
horror, "How dld do you think I am?"
Clowning ~or television and newspaper photo"3-
phers. Mays bncfly sat at DcukmeJ1an's desk, sayi ng.
"This 1s great. How long dad 1t take to get here ··
The proclamat1on. which Mays accepted "on
bchalf of the ball club," cates Mays' career 660 home
runs, 3,283 hats, 1,903 runs batted in and 6,854 putouts
and his off-the-field volunteer work with under:
pnv1leged children.
Clippers eying Baylor as GM
LOS ANGELES -The Los Anaelcs m Clippers have scheduled a news conference
for today and are expected to ceplace
general mana,er Carl Scheer wuh former
Laker star Elgm Baylor.
01ppers spokesman Scott Carmichael dedmed on
Monday to talk about the contents of the news
conference. which was scheduled for I p.m. at the
Spons Arena.
But there have been recent reports that increasing
tension between Scheer, Clippers owner Donald T.
Sterling and team President Alan Rothenberg could
cost Scheer his JOb.
Scheer has said he will resign without the full
suppon of Rothcnbcrg.
Television. radio
TELEVISION
7 p.m. -BASEBALL. Dodgers at ~an
Diego, Channel 11
RADIO
7 p.m -BASEBALL Dodgers at San
Diego. KABC (790).
7 30 p.m -BASEBALL. Seattle at Angels.
KMPC(710).
Cook, Vlachos,
Ogburn All-CIF
VOLLEYBALL
Chargers
ramble
in three
The Sunset League 1s represented
by three pla)cr!> on the all -Cl F 4-A
glfls basketball team
Jackie Cook of Fountam Valley
and Ocean View's T noa Vlachos
earned first team honors. while
Denise Ogburn of Ed1!>on was tahbcd
fur the second team
( ook and Vlacho\ are each 6-0
\en1or'> ( ook averaged 12 6 JX>1nt\
pc( game while Vlachos compiled a
19 6 average. Vlachos was a '>(.'rnnd
team !>elecllon last )Car
Ogburn, a 5-4 senior. finished the
\.ea son at 14. 9.
The co-players of the )Car arc Muir
li1gh 4i1stcrs Pauline and < 1rann1nc
Jordan
P1aVef", Schoof * First T .. m
Pauline Jordan, M uir
Ht. Yr. Avo.
6 3 Sr 110
Geannine Joroan, Muir 6·2 Sr
Trhe Jacluon, LynwOOd S·I So
Teresa Palmisano, Buena 6· 1 Jr
Mandy Hannah, Comoton S· 11 Jr
Julie K 1nQ, Gahr S· I Sr
Andra Kabwua, Hwlhrnt S· 11 Jr.
Rosland M oore, lnQlewood S·9 Sr.
Leslie Caroenler, Buena 6·0 Sr.
Jeckle Coot!, Fntn. Ve .. v 6·0 Sr.
TrlM vtac.hos, OcMn View 6-0 Sr.
Shurrell Jol'ln,on. LynwOOd S·I Sr
S.Cond THm
lS 1
18 7
116
t7S
11 7
17 9
202
t3 9
lU
lU
lS •
Sonia Brack.en, Comoron 6·0 Sr 16 O
Jan Pearson, MllHkan 6·3 Sr . 13 J
Tasha Bradley, Muir 6·3 Jr. 12 0
SMda Greene, Mrnlngsde S· 11 So 16 II
Mollv Wamoler, Gahr 6· t Jr. 20 O
Tia ThomH, Morningside S-S Jr 19 II
Klhln Dl11on. Sanla Monte.a 6·1 Sr. 229
09"IM OtlbUm, Eclson S-4 Sr. t4.f
Debbie Rvan, Don Lugo S·9 Sr 17 •
Marv Klemm, Buena S 6 So. I 7
Debra Rabin, Roval S-9 Sr. 20.1
Kelll l<nox, Inglewood S·9 Sr 11 0
Nina Revovr, Culver C1tv S 10 Jr 19 I
Co·Plavers of Year Pauline end
Geannlne Jordan (Mulrl
Sunset League volleyball leader
Ellison made 11 \even 10 a row 10
league play Monday night with a
I 5-12, 15-6. 18-16 victory at La
Quinla in a match which left their
coach. Dan Glenn. thinking on the
po<i1t1vc side with C IF 4-A playoffs
action looming
"The last time we played La Quinta
we won in three and I wasn't very
happy at all." said the ~cond-ycar
Edison coach
"This time the scores were closer,
but I'm a lot happier. We're beginning
to pla y as a team. We just have to be
ready so we don't get snaked up on 10
the playoffs."
STUBBS SWINGING HIGH •..
The Chargers. 7-0 an lea1ue and
10.1 overall with No. 3 ('IF 4-A
crendcnt1als. an addition to No. 2
'iUllu~ (to Dana Hills) in Orange
County, were paced by senior middle
blocker Dan Hanan. senior outside
hatter Richard Smith. senior outside
hitter Steve T 11us and senior setter
Eddie Rapp
From Bl
homer'i and driving 1n 93 runs
And when he h11 341 m '>Pring
trainina this yea r he became the
obvious cho1c.c to take over when
Guerrero suffered a tom patella
tendon 10 his left knee
'Tm sorry 11 took an mJury, but
that's how 1t happens sometimes,"
Stubbs said ''I'm relaxed now. I've
matured. I'm more confident. I know
what's going on. I know I'll ha vr :i
chance to play again cvl·n 1f I go ().
for-4. ··
Manaacr Tommy Lasorda ha~
taken to calhna Stub~ "Cadillac"
since it's a baseball axiom that home·
run hitters drive Cadillacs They al'IO
strike out a lot. but Lasordu said that
doesn't bother him
''I'm not womed as long as he
kcc~ h11l1na them out at th1t pace,"
Lasorda sa.ad.
On Sunday StubM was O-for-2,
both stnkcouts, when he came up
apinst $(oil Garrchs in the St'venth
anninJ.
"The auy tod•y went back to the
pitch he had been s,ctt•nf meo ut with,
but J stayed back, waakd and wa•
mo~ petient. .. Stubbs said. "J had the
fcchna he'd throw it apin, and it Just
hung 1here." And ht' put it over the
J9S-foot mark JD center field.
.. I've faced him 10 thr mtnor'i, so I
know him," Garrelts said "What I
tncd to do with him was get ahead of
him and go to the split-linger fastball
It worked for the most pan. But he
kept swingrng and \winging and he
finally got one "
A week after surgery , (Jucrrero 1s
~till on crutcht's, but he has stayed
111Volvcd by iJVing advice to Stubbs.
"He JUSt has to lay off the high
p11ch." Guerrero said "Make them
bring 11 down and that'\ when he'll
h11 He hit over 30 homers in
Albuquerque. so he has the r,owcr
I'm 'urc he's going tu hit here.·
''Pete has me thinking that it's JUSt
an ego trip out there," Stubba said.
Hanan had I 5 lulls and 4 stufT
blocks. Sm 1th was in on 15 kills, Titus
had a dozen kills and Rapp. the son of
Santa Ana College football asmtant
Benny Rapp, was credited with )9
assists.
Senior seller Jon Lee and Junior
outside hiller Make Whitcomb stood
out La Quinta's Aztecs.
.. Tonight was a big win for us,"
continued G lenn It was the first of s111
matches 1n two weeks before the
playoff1 , with Huntin1ton Beach on
Wednesday and fountain Valley on
Friday/
Dodgers send Reuss to bullpen
SAN DIEGO (A P) -Veteran
p11chcr J crry Reuu of the Los A nae le•
Dodacrs has been ~nt to the bullpen,
and he wall be replaced in the st.a11in1
rotation by 22-ycar-old Denn11 Pow-
ell the Dods,cn said Monday.
Reuss. a 16·year..old lefthander.
was rocked for 11x hits and five runs,
twoofthemeamed, 1n 3 1-J 1nn1npin
h1'1 onlv start of the oew icat0n 1n a
pme the Dodgc,., lost to the San
Francisco Giants 9·8 last Fnday.
He had a 14-I 0 recol'd with an
eamed run averqe of 2.92 for Los
Anaelcs lut year H11 combined
earned run a vera~ the out sill years
WIJ 2.87.
Reuss hid a n:cumnce or elbow
problems and a sore tntt dunn1
spnn• tta1nin11h11 ynr
Seattle centerfleJder IYaD Calderon (left).
eecond bueman Danny Tartaball combine
ANGELS WIN, 7-6 ...
From Bl
been dropped b) the cutoff man. I let thl' coaches do the
looking for me I Just kc.'t"p runn1na unul thl'y tell me to
stop."
While 1t may have Sttmed Tarubull had his st\are of
m1sfonune in Lhe field. he did all riJ,ht at lhe plate,
ham menng a home run approx1matley 4.)() feet The two-
run blast gave the Mannen a 2-1 lead an the third inning.
Almost lost in all the exploits 1n the field at the plate
was the pitching. Angel staner Jam Slaton got through the
first two innings untouched before bemg roughed up in
1he third. He was replaced by Ken Forsch. who went H'1
inning.s gJvmg up one run bcfore turning the mound over
to Moore for lhe ninth.
The Angels gave an update on John Candclana's
status. Team doctor Lewis Yokum has concurred that the
Angels' lefthander has sustained a crack in his elbow.
Specifically. it's the are<t of the calcificat1on or spurring in
the posterior aspect of the left elbow
There ""as no tendon damage evident, however. The
hoc of treatment and disabled hst status is cllpectcd to be
revealed today.
It doesn't look good, though. And the way the Angels
arc g1 v1ng up runs (Sill per game) they don't need any arm
problems.
"If we keep gomg hke we are:· said Mauch. "I thank
we'll be all nght Winning fo ur out of se' en ~hould be
enough this year "
And wouldn "l you kn ow 1t') Thal figure~ out tO 92.5
wi ns. Last year Kansas City won the West with 91 ·wins.
* ANGEL NOTES: Tiie ,..,_., are llOW 12 U In home oe>efle" 11 10 at
Anaheim Stadium Tllev 1u,1 mlu.O tl'lelr rec0td fOt e>o.nl"9 o.v
allend•n<•. too T1141 rtc0<d 1, Jl,076 .. 1 In 1911 C:O•rv f>etft1 •H
ewucs.o n1, GOid Gtove Award lrom lhwllno1 T1141 l'red H-
Awerd went to flr 'I be...-Tien We/ly ,,..,_ IOt b91119 the ou1,1andlnv
rOOl<lt In 1prln9 trelnl119 ~ fllljt!Nt u.1111 file nallonel entN:m
Rldt .,,.._ ntendecl hi' n1111119 1tr"' 10 ''11 oarne~ The Anoe!•
now Pian 12 home run,, • fl9ure 11141y dldn'I reKl't unlll Ille IStPI o•rne IH I
veer 1tuon '91'le1 wltll Ille Marlner1 11 llOw tied at 2 2 At>Oel
•••rter Jim 5191'911 •H • fonner S.alll• Plto1 In 19'9 He lletn't •on •
oeme In Anallelm ,inc. Mn It. lflS Oklr ~ '' '"•on 11141 1l'lell
wltn • Pulled groin muKle Sool'l9f" 0< L•ltr Oec>t -II didn't l'laooen
untll tht ''''" 1nnt119, DYi '"' flrtt 110111 Of Ille Ange1,· home Knedute brolle out In Iha center field 'lal\CI' Tht ""~" were 3·4 efler 1tvtn oerne1
'"' veer
DllJ .......... " ...... -.....
for a near-mt. of ~eta• Brian Downl.al'•
bloop-double 1D the fourth lnntna Monday.
Bobby Grich puta the tac on Seattle'• Ste•e
Yeacer before completina a double play.
FORTUGNOOFSCCON A RED-HOT PACE. • • From Bl
move with modest means, a baseball
gJovc and a trophy tucked under his
p1tch1ng arm.
a head-on 1h1n~. even though at one
point we wcren t talkmg."
When he finally landed in Costa
Mesa and began working. Fortugno
met several people familiar with
baseball programs in the Orange
Coast area.
In 1982 Fonugno joined a co-
worker at a baseball game featunng
eventual state champion Orange
Coast College.
Sou them Cahfom1a College Coach
Bill Rc)nolds has had no disciplinary
problems with Fonugno
"He's a real responsible auy. He's a ~
(Boston) ( clt1cf fan ... so he gets a
little excited Rut hc'1 no problem at
"I saw Jack Reinholtz pitch,"
Fortugno said. "He was their best
pitcher. When I saw him pitch. I said
'I could pitch like that.' l$3id 'I could
go out there and throw harder ....
But OCC Coach Mike Mayne
wasn't 1mprcsSt'd enough to bnng
him onto the Pirates' team. He
suggested Fonugno work out and
play organized ball again before
venturing into the community college
program.
So Fonugno built up his admitted-
ly scrawny body (5-1 1. 165), and
played in summer Metro League.
He was approached by then-first
year SCC Coach Rich Emert. who
lured Fonugno with the prospect of
starting for a college team.
"They were rebuilding their pro-
gram. I was rebuilding my career,"
Fonugno said.
He regained velocity on his pitche s.
and felt 1t was tame lo take himself to
market.
"I was 20 ycan old at that time," he
said, "I was a freshman in colleae and
went 5-4 that year. That summer I
thought abou1 aoing to a JC so I could
get drafted and sian.
"I was throwina hard, well, and
people were tellina me I was a
prospect. I thouaht a JC was the way
to jO."
He enrolled at Golden West where
he was 2-0 with S no-decisions and
Tim Forta.ano
one lru~tra~1~g inJury. latcr diagnosed
as tendm1t1s m has shoulder
While Oakland drafted ham that
year. Fortugno declined 1t~ offer, and
went on to tum down Clevela nd and
at least two ma1or colleges (Or:\I
Robcns and Oklahoma)
"I decided to go ahead. to bypa~\
the pro offers and go bac·k to ~hoot "
Fortugno said. '
But he would not return to Goldrn
West, where friction c111stcd between
Fortugno and Ru~tlcr' Coach Fred
Hoover.
.. , was frustrated becau~ of mx
arm problem . . I don'1 know 1(
Hoover really believed I had 11.
because he was pushin$ me. I don't
blame ham, I don't think he knew
(how painful injury WI\) It WU nC'V('f
aJI.
"lfhc p11che~. I hke ham fine He's a
good gu}. he keeps h1~ no'C clean:·
Re} nold'> \31d
Fonugno rchab1htated his arm an
an unconvcn11onal method -via
acupun<.tun\t before. even, Jim
McMahon
"I tool a nsk 1n moving out here. I
took a nsk 1n gelling married, I t•kc a
lot of nsk \," fonugno Uld. "f 10 OUt
on an edge and I have never fallen all
the way down "
Fortugno didn't con$1der
acupunuurc a nsk because conven·
t1onal rchab1 htat1on didn't work.
"After looking at my sophomore
year (01 ( iolden West). I looked at the
whole s11uat1on. I had a wife (Kelly)
and a 'Ion (Jason) and they played a
part in my dccmon (lo continue with ba~ball)
"I was already es1abh1hed here. I
was offered a contract with the
I\ tl:intn Brn ves, but I thou,Jht I had to
go out and pitch on a consistent basis.
la<it year at S< ( I wu reboundana
from the arm HlJury I didn't under-~tand what was happening."
And now, midway through the ~ason. Fortugno 1~ throwma at a
fcvrrish pitch
h hC' rnn .. drnng nny m9rt wild trnvrl,.,
"l'vr got lwo cho1les Roston
because r·m from Boston and Pit
lsbu rgh bee-au~ l>rnni~ Rogers (a
former SC c· Coach) 1~ the~. But the
bo1tom line .,. 1f the Dudaers or
Angcl\ draOed mr, I'd 10"
Sax's heel to be ONE-LEGGED HOME RUN
examined t oday rromei • • •
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Los Anaetcs
$CCond·bateman Steve Su win be e~llmincd by a team doctor today to
determine. the tlltent of an injury to
his ri&ht heel durin' Monday niaht's
pme qamst San Dicao.
Sax hurt h1mtelf dunna • wild
double plJly in the 9th 1nn1n1 Su
opened the inn1n1 with a double. He
was followed by Mike Soo1~ia, who
nppcd a sinale to n&)lt that was cauafit
by the Padru' Tony Gwynn
Sall: agravated an 1rvured n&ht
h«I as he ran home He wa1 C..ged
out. as was Sc10te1a, who wa1 cauaht
1n a rundown between firat and
base ~use ~f the prenure. fhe reached ~·ond when len f~lder Ken
tension 11 bu1ld1na [very play. every Landreau~ dropped hai hner for a pile~ 1s very important It', hkt two-base error
ptay•.na in a ,pos,t-sea~n or a World l~s Anaetu had taken the lead on ~;.1es P!"e· said Boros. Manano Dunc.n's lcadoff home run
They!! make an old man out of a 1n the lop of 10th ofTwinnma pitcher
manaacr. Dodser mana&er Tommy ( ra11 Lcffens. 1-0
Lasorda said of the close fin11~C1. "rt The Dodsen took a 1-0 lead apanst
makes you ft't'I old 1n a hurry. Mark Thurmond in the third innina. "They·~ kind of exe1t1ns. ,,that' a Steve Su sinaJed. went to second on 1 one I~ th!n, about them, aa1d wolk to Make 'Sc-i~ia, moved to third
Bochy. Bu.t l d 1keto1ttalauahcr It onul'crifktand l(OrtdonD\lncan's
would be nice 10 take the prcnure off 11ound out
the bullpen "':.e've 101 some tired The Padres snapped Welch's stnna
anns out lherc. of 1 l con1«ut1ve l(()rrln~ inna
1«ond base.
Su aqravated the
dunna..spnna tra1n1n1
Dodaer atan:er Bob Welch, who w1U1 a run in the fif\h on T~
11ruck out a carctr·h•vi 12 batten, Flannery'• double, a urnnoe bunt
had camedJ• l·~ lead into the 10th, and Ma"'tJI Wynne'• aacrinoe n)' 10 but the Padres lied the pme on the unttt Orld
same heel first m~or lcaauc hit by rookie John The Padre1 had ur.d ihopmr In the
Kruk. He drove tn Tony Gwynn with bounm nf'tht' mth on~ vr Oarvc •1 a two-out pinch •male Gwynn had 1tC ond home run t1f the ~~r. y
• ' •
Otenge COMI OA.ILY PtLOT/Tueedey, Aprl 16, 1NI. •
Looking back at Tars circa 1949 Harbor'•
:!~ Cantrell
RB'dTars'
'49outflt
toB-1 mark
About Don C&ntrcll:
Ke wu the first spons editor of
the Costa Meta Globe-Herald
and served from I 95s-60 in that
capacity under publisher Walter
BurrouJhs.
After the publication became
the Globe Herald and Pilot and
became a daily, he served u city
editor for two yean.
Later he was to serve in vaned
editorial capacities with lbe Santa
Ana Resister, followed by toun u ma~ editor of the Cua Oran Arizona) Dispatch, city
editor o the Lu CNCICI (New
Mexico) Daily Sun-News, u cor-
respondent with the Auociated
Press in Arizona. and the wt
editor of the Tombstone (Ari·
zona) Epitaph, which died in
1975.
He was also the quanerback for
Newport Harbor Hip's 1949
football team.
The 1949 team scored 323
points over the course of nine
f'CJUlar season aames. an averq.c
of3S.9 points a pme.
The Sailors lost JUlt once,
43-27, to Fullerton, but that was
enou&h to keep them out of the
CIF playoffs because these were
the days when only champions
were chosen for the eliminations.
ad
BJ DON CANTl\ELL
Preface: AltboUlh 111A11Y an •utumn•I moon ht1 whisked tbrou,b the htaven1 "1Jce tbh conw r.d«l
•w•y ftom the Oranle County 1potU wrltiaa Jeenc,
rhe intemt ~m1io1 "°Ill with tbc 6'.lt or lf'W}y mend1biP1.
Two aucb friend·
1hi1» include two for-
mer Newpon HMfJor
HJ,h vlllity football co•cho~ Al Irwin (1948-5:>) and Mike
Olddia11 (J 982-85).
They, 1/on1 with
Wendell Pickens (1941-42 and 1946-47),
Uu.re ono thi111 in com-
mon.
They tll coached TM JTid tel/DI that rank
among the top four in all-time ICOrlfll for 1 1lfll}e
season. Oiddinp co.cbed two ofthosc.
And that'•~ focal point ofrbis commenwy,
but it should be sireuied that there would never be 1
desire to •lilbt the lofty marb of ey tum.
However, it w ieemed fitti111 it rhis point to
s~t one st1ti1tical adjustment to lMJance rhe
picture.
This would be the creation of two e11tqories,
one for all-time ICOrifll for one suson and •norher for all-time JCOri"I for 1 tqU)v suson (no playoffs)
since there'•• sharp conr.rut between rbe two.
lt'ulso pertinent to note that the 1942 and 1949
teams did not have a two-platoon system. This was still an er1 of •1ronmen," players who went the
d1Stance, particularly when the scores were close.
However, Irwin ( 1949) did have 1 habit of making
frequent defcmive 11d1ustment6.
With that diaetted, here's bow it was in 1949:
Early day teams bad no protective face~. no
scouts or scouting system, no films of their aanies, no
films of rival teams to study, no wei&ht training
programs, and coachina help wu limited.
Irwin had only one assistant coach. In fact.
Wendell Plokeu
NewPort didn't in1tall liabt1 for home pmes unatl
19-'8. And, for almost three decades or so, Davidson
Field feal!U'ed nothina more than permanent
wooden bleacbm (circa 1930) on the west 1ide.
In the late ·~ the 1ebool added portable
bleacben on the cut side durina the football season.
The Harbor area's population was tliaht compared
to the likes of Santa Ana, Fullerton and Anaheim.
Newport was the only hi&b school and the
enrollment berclr exceeded 600 students in 1946 but
bas approached ,000 by 1949.
With the exception of some Dutch Meyer
CTCU) spread formation experimentations dunna
WWU years under Coach Leslie Miller, the Sailors
bad lived and died with the old power formations
untjl 1948 when Irwin returned to his alma mater
and introduced the buic T-formation.
The '48 outlook wu woeful on paper. Irwin
-<:ould only count on four se><alled veterans and 1
flock of upcomina Bee teamen. Few knew anything
about the T-formation. But the Tan opened the
season, just mining what would have been a
stunnana upset of the defending CIF champions. St.
Anthony's.
The Sailors led 12-7 in the finat minutes, but a
deflected punt near the Tar 10-yard line helped pve
lhe Saints asubaequent 14-12 vtctory. Irwin finished
with a 5-4 record under difficult conditions.
Little did avid Sailor arid fan• know that '49
would be a Iona-awaited surprise packqe. There was
nothing impressive on paper. Irwin bad six
retumjng starters, the riaht side of the lane had
s;rad~tcd, five pa.yen wett witcatcd IDd the
IW1l.OI team only averqcd 161 pound• per ma~o..
whjcb meant tbe team would be outwca,bed 10.20
PoundJ per man durina the teaJOo.
The nottalai<: look ot yesteryear'• Sl.ilor football
wu cha~ Tbe old muatard-yeUow J!ner• wuh blue numl M'R aone. Tbe new unJfotml ~
arey jcneya, blue numben, blue pents and blue he I meta.
A.od for some oblervm, 1t nwked the end of aJl era. which featured the tut of the Goat·HiU Boys:
Woodhoute...t 1Anplt1 T~mpeU:r, Smalley &ad
Canchola.. vooe were Df'Ullina familk:!'! na.ma th.at included the MWli1 brothcn. tbe o boys.
the Shetlin1, the Netbs. the lrwin1 and the Trippe.
But 1 mobile U.S.A.,~ the impact of
Wwtl, found the 1949 team with a ruged
Oklahoman at fWlback named Bob Berry, Who
remaiiu amona the top all-ume Tar ruaben, and
teammates who bailed from all comen of the
country: Artanw, Tcxaa, llhnoi1, Pcnnaylvanja
and Connecticut.
It became a team lbat could execute li&btna.na·
fut pl1y1 Wltb preci1ionand thrived on t6e flcet-
footcd runruna of hurdJer-fuJlb.ck Berry, "sprinter
Bobby Watu and as:·unior ace named Mel Smalley,
who led the Sunset in 1COrina.
Basically, the ae pme wa1 only uulizcd to
keep opponents off-balanced. However. passina
accounted for eight toudldown1 and the peroentaat
of completions wash~. at 6'4.2 percent.
The defense, whl<:b blanked four Op,J>Onentt,
featured the Tan' own version of the "Refriaerator"
in JU&fd Gino Boero (240), but he was flanked by
ficn:c, swift tacklers which included John Kinoton.
Keith Burch, Morrie Lan.adaJe, Bob BlaildclJ, Jim
Hitchman, Bill Wittman and Berry.
But the Sailon of '49 bad another maJor
strength-a rare, intangible commodity called team
spirit oo the bench. Few will ever ~member their
names:
Frankel, Merrell, Rankin, En&le. Upchke.
Andrews, KindeU, Stahr and Aarvold. But an your
heart, you can never foraet lhem for they shared both
the tean and triumphs of one put autumn that faded
into the yellowed files Iona qo.
But in the end, they established the all-time
record for team scorina in a fCJUW season.
It had to be one of AJ Irwin's finest houn.
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Singer can't help Toronto
Newport resident
throws-oUTITrst ball
as Orioles beat Jay~
From AP dl1p1k~e1
TORONTO -After Newport
Beach resident 8111 Singer threw out
the first ball. the Baltimore Onoles
spoiled Toronto's home opener with
a 2-1 victory over the Blue Jays
Monday.
Singer, who pitched for both the
Dodgers and Angels, was the starting
patcher in Toronto's first home open-
er and first game an the franchise's
history on April 7, 1977.
Alan Wi~ns and Rick Dempsey
hit run-sconng doubles and Mike
Boddicker pitched a four-hitter for
the Orioles.
Boddacker. trying to bounce back
from a disappointing 12-17 record in
1985. struck out six and walked two
before 43,S87 fans at Exhibition
Stadium.
Af\er tying the game J.J on con-
'lecutive two-out doubles by
Ocmpsey and W1gg1ns an the third.
the Onolcs scored the winning run in
the fifth against Doyle Aleunder.
1-1. as John Shelby and Juan Bonilla
san&led to nght and Dempsey hit his
RB1 double into the lef\~enter field
ga~hc Blue Jays had opened the
scoring an the first inning when Tony
Fernandez stroked a one-out single to
nght, stoic second, continued to third
when Dempsey's throw glanced off
his leg and into left field, roared
through base coach John McLaren's
stop sign and shd under Dempsey's
ta\he pre-game ceremonies were
h1ghhghted by the presentation of the
Amencan ~ague East Div1S1on
champ1onsh1p Oag to rookie manager
Jamy Walhams by ALPrcsadcnt
Bobby Brown
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RedSD%2
BOSTON -W1lhe Wilson tng·
gercd a six-run eiJhth inning with his
third consecutive sinale 11 the Kansas
Caty Royals erupted for a victory over
Boston, spoihna the Rtd So•'s 86th
Amencan Leaaue home opener.
The Royal,, held to sill hits and 'two
runs for seven 1nnanp, Jumped on
starter Dennis "Oil Can' Boyd, 0-1 .
and reliever Bob Stanley 1n tu.mint 1
close pme into 1 rout wtlh the
lcaaue ~ bi1&C1t mnm1 of the youna ~son They .ent 12 bltttn to the
plate as Fenway Park's nth birthday
bash resounded with boos from many
in a packed crowd of 3-'. 76'4.
Left·hander Oiarhc Le1brandt, a
17-pme winner lait year, earned the
v1C1ory tJ\ his firal dec11.ion of the
season. He allowed two runs a~d rour
h1U. 1ncludtf'\I Marty BatTett s fint
homer. in seven 1nninp. Dan Quin·
senberry mopped up.
Wilson started tht Royall' e~th
1i1r1th a ,milt to ('t'nter and took tllard
I
Podres suffers heart attack
GLENS FALLS, N.Y. (AP) -Fonner major league patcher
Johnny Pod.res will be hospitalized for at least another 10 days after
sufTenna a sliJht heart attack last week.
Podres, SS, was listed in stable condition Monday at Glens Falls
Hospital
Pod.res, whose pitchmg heroics in the l 9S5 World Senes
htghliJhted a 15-year major league career, ts a roving instructor for
the Los Angeles Dodger fann teams.
The left-hander was the first most valuable player in World
Senes history an l 9S5 and became a hero to every baseball fan in
Brooklyn when the Dod&cn ended decades offrustration by bcaung
the Yankees to win the World Series.
It was the first time a team had won the World Series after losing
the first two games, and it was Brooklyn's only World Senes Vlctory
before the franchise moved to Los Angeles after the 1957 season.
The Dod$Crs lost the first two games at Yankee Stadium, then
the won the third 8-3 at Ebbets Field. Podrcs went the distance on his
23rd birthday and scattered seven bits.
Jn the climactic seventh game, at Yankee Stadium, Podrcs shut
out New York on eight hits.
Pod.res' career spanned IS years with the Dodgers an Brooklyn
and Los Angeles, the Detroit Tigers and San Dicao Padres. Hts
ufctime record was I 48-116. He retired io J 969 at aae 36.
on Georae Brett's single to riJht·
center. Hal McRae hit a slow roller to
the left of the mound and Wilson
easily beat shortstop Ed Romero's
throw home, putting lhe Royals
ahead 3-2.
McRae reached first on a fielder's
choice and gave way to pinch-runn~r
Dwight Taylor. Frank White doubled
ofTlfiird baseman Wade Bogs' aJove.
sconna Brett and chasing Boyd. Steve
Balboni and Darryl Motley followed
with RBI single' off Stanley.
After Jim Sundberg struck out,
Jorge Orta reached on an error by
Romero, Balboni scoring, and Rudy
Law singled home the final run before
Steve Crawford replaced Stanley and
put down the rally.
The Red Soll got a first innina run
when Wade Boas singled, Bill Buck-
ner walked and-Don Baylor lined a
sangle to left-center. Kan~ City tied
at an the second on sl{lglcs by White,
Balboni and Sundberg. then went
ahead in the third as Law bounced a
ground-rule double mto the Boston
bullpen and ICOrcd on Wilson's first
sang.le. Barrett hit his first homer of
the year off an upri&ht atop the wall in
left-center in the fif'\h inruoa.
* KANSAS Cl'TY
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with a solo homer offT1m Leary. 1-1,
who lasted 41/1 inninp.
Teus also got a solo homer from
Steve Buechele in the eighth and a
three-run blow from Larry Parrish to
cap a five-run ninth.
Buechele 1s a product of Servile
Hi&h School in Anaheim.
Correa, 1-1, the youngest player in
the major leaaues, aave up three htts.
struck out five and walked seven. He
started the eighth with a shutout, but
lost it when Paul Molitor walked,
went to third on a wild pitch and
scored on a double by Billy Jo
Robidoux.
Mitch Williams pitched the ninth
for Texas. T~ Ranaers made at 3-0 an the
third IJfler loadina the bases off Leary
on a "'1alk to McDowell and singles by
Scott fletcher and Pete O'Brien. Pete
fncavi&lia drov~ in a run wilh a
sacnfice fly and Gary Ward's
vc:>under !Cared apother.
"It's kind of hard sitti~around for a couple of hours, but it ·riced," said
Correa. "1 was rushing y tempo a
little early in the pme, so I had to
slow myself down. I feel confident. I
had it in my mind that J was a big
leaguer."
HXAS
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,Itta. m s,.-•t1C•"llfle
IP K ••• aa to
Dan Petry, 1-1 , was the winner, and
Richard Dotson, 0-2, took the loss.
Willie Hernandez earned his second
pve.
Parrish homered an the second
inning and Walker tied it in the
bottom of the second with his fint
homer.
Evans, the major league leader Jast
season with 40, hit his third home run
in the fourth innina after Spilman
singled. But Walker hit b.i1 !eCOnd
homer in the bottom of the fourth.
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T-3'21 A-10,734
A'• 7,
Twin•6
MINNEAPOLIS atney
Lansford's two-run sangJe capped a
three-run rally by Oakland 10 the
seventh inning to lift the A's past the
Minnesota Twins 7-6.
Oakland, which trailed 6-' after
five innings. spoiled a two-homer
night by Tom Brunansk-y. The Twin~
collected etght hits. seven for eittra
bases.
"You are not goang to be an too
many games when r,ou five up that
many home runs. · A s Manaacr
Jackie Moore said ... But the bottom
line is we won and we'll take it. People
have been talk.ins about pmes shp-
pina away from us Toni&ht we camr
back and 1ot one. "Enou&h runs as never enoua)l. Or
cnouah runs is never too much."
"We didn't die when they hit four
home runs." Lansford u1d. "It
doesn't matter how we won, JUlt that
we won ...
OAKLAlltO
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kYd .nctled to 4 l)ellen In IN 1111 umoiro ••ome, ltMd, ,.,..,, ,.«d, Second.
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T-i•6' A-.)4.76'
R•IJ6en, 10,
Bre'W.enl
MILWAUKEE -Nlneteen-year·
old rookie Ed C-0rrea pitched eiaht
strof'\I inninp and Teus h.ad four
home runs 1n a 15-hit auauJt on four
p1tchcn as the Ra.f'\ltrs •PoUcd Mil·
waukce's home opener with a 10-1
victory over the 8rewtT&.
Damll Porter's homer with the
hues empty 1n thuec:ond anninapve
the R.nsers a 1-0 lead, and they
sc.ored tw1ct In the third befo~
Odd1be McDowell led off tht fifth
........
Lff'V L. I I 4 I l 1 • 4 I l
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l -2'07 A-'2 ·'"
Tlsten 10, Wilte~B
CHICAOO -DlmU Evani hat a
1wo-run bomcT and sinaJed to tnacr
a 11x-run sixth inoina, lcadina the
Detroit T11Cf1 to a 1().8 v1ctory over
the Ch1cqo White Sox.
Lance Pamsh and HIJT)' Sptlman
also homered for the T~ while
Oret Walker hit a pan oftolo homen
for the White Sol
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SecoNI, hnWll Tllltd .,..,,,... ..
T-> le A ,. 2<IO
--ea Cardlnal• oatflelder Andy Van s:t;: catche9 a 07 ball Mt
by the lleta' Gary Carter acalnat t fteld fence Monday.
St. Louis takes
advantage of gift
From AP dl1patelaee
NEW YORK -New York Mets'
third baseman Howard Johnson let
fato Landrum's sround ball bounct
through ham for an error that allowed
two runs to ~ore 1n the 13th mnani
and gave the St Lclu15 Cardinals a 6-2
victory Monday
Johnson's error with the bases
loaded and none out broke open the
Se between the two National
uc East teams that battled to the
fina weekend of last season before
the Cardinals won the d1vis1on
* STLOUl1 "IW YORK
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• 0 0 0 , 1 0 0
, 0 0 0
• 0 0 0
l 0 0 0
1 0 0 0
0 0 0 0
I 0 0 0
0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0
00 0 0
0 0 0 0 1' , 4 ,
M\..ull -., tit -·-· .._ Ytrlr •1 -•l -1-1 G-Wtllftlflt 1ta1 -,._ E-<..-1er H Johrtl«I OP-SJ Loult J
LOa-'J Louh 10, New VOf"k I 79-0S·Mtlll 1
J Clerk la-<:Olemell le~ ''" Yen 5t¥'• m 11ectil'NWI 111. DYlt•tr• m ~
Herr Sf T tuf9I Mc0..
Sft..MM
Horlofl
0.vlev
Womlll ,.,..,W I 0
.... Ytrlr
• H •••MIO
1 1 I 1 • I I J 0 I I I
U3 1 O 0 7
7 0 0 I I
OoocMft • 7 7 ' ' McOOwtl 1 0 0 0 2
Otot<o J 0 0 2 J
NletMM L OJ 0 J 1 I 0
....eft\'I I 11 11 1
Nltmenn 9'tcNcl 10 7 bell«• Ill ~ l)tfl
w~ ...,,~
U"*'n ~ Wftl ""' I WMllem' \.tt'Oftd Mc 5heorrr T lltr Cl 1"\1111
T 11 t. 0 711
P1ratea 3 ,
Plillllet1 J
PHILADELPHIA -R J. Re-
ynolds doubled an the winnana run in
the I 0th 1nnina and J~ Onulak
singled 1n an another as the Pit·
tsburgh Pirates beat the Philadelphia
Phalhes }. I Monday niJht for their
third 'ltra1Jht victory
With one out an the I 01h. pinch
hitter Steve Kemp walked. Rafael
Bcllt&rd ran for Kem" and scored on
Reynolds' double to na)\t-<:ienter field
off Steve Bedrosian. I · I Reynolds
then scored on Onulalc's sinaJe to
center
* ,fTTHu.ilG" l"fftLA0•"'4~
••.wn " Onulell ct hv 111 .,..,,, lb
M9'own l"I t,._ c ,
MlllflVt lb
KPltllfen "'-""""" Wlnt10
aleleckl D
Clmtlt\ p
~·· 1(-0fl a.in.rd .. , .....
.. ,..... ., ....
5 I 7 I ltec!UI " S 0 t 0 ~ 1 1 I MTMl!td 401 '
• 0 I I Hel'ft 10 , 0 0 0 4000 kllmdtJll 400 0
4 0 2 0 GW11$ot1,; • 0 l 0
4 010 O<tulton t >Ott
• 0 0 0 AtwY0111 4 I 0 0
)001 Jelltll •010
1 0 0 0 KGrou • J 1 I 0
0 0 00 1.....-npn 0000
' 0 0 0 MedOo• ... 0 0 0 0 10 00 hdrottl• 0001
00 01
0 0 . 0
0 I 0 0
JJllt) T ....
tew'f""' .....
» 1 t I
........__ •1 - -,_ > ,., •••• * -'" -.... , ltn rMdled flrtt en ea!CNr'• lwNi "* WQ ~ WIMlnt Ital -ltlt..,,..... (I )
1-o.ulton ~tlaAlurtll 1, ""iftU I IA J L~ttteureh ' """~··""" • ~ lttdu\. Oeullell \ ,.,__ ()), ......
I II SF NI T..,._ ......
Cll<!*'i. ~W l l
WINIS,I ,., .....
.. "••••tO
' ,
1
I
1 1 I 2 S
1 • • 0 ,
I I I I I • • • • •
II.Gron t 6 I I I 6 ~I. 11 1 t t 1 I 0 ~" ,....,. Tel•. ' I Cr~ lee oncl C. ~. T...,, .,.. ..........
T HI A ''*
\
M * Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/ Tue.day, ApfU 16, 1986
Nicklaus in the December of his career?
Hardly ... but he admits 1es not
~s easy as tt was 10-15 years a o
81g Four events, the tournamenb around wbJcb be buLlt
hi s golfing lifei. the tournameois around which he
constructeC:t the nncst tt00Td in the history of the pme.
"But," he coot10ucd, flashing a long-absent, confi·
dent, satisfied smile, "I can Still play a little bit at times ...
By BOB GREEN ,., ....... And, he said1 that's his plan now in what he called
"the Occcmber P.' my career."
AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP) -"Dead. huh? Washed up,
hub?"
He'll play a bttJc.
Not as much as he once did, not even as much as he
has in 1he past few seasons when he rcs tncted his schedule
to about a dozen events. Jack NickJaus kept those questions in mind.
And, on lhe rolhng, flowered hills of the Augusta
National Golf \lub course, site of the Masters tour-
nament, be wrote his answer into the hi5tory of this
ancient game·
"I won't play much the rest of the year -mostly
around the mlijors. And I won't play as much next spring
as I did this year," NickJaus said.
Not yet.
Not Jack Nicklaus.
Then he qujckJ y added: ''I'll play as much as I thtnlc
I need 10. 10 get ready for the ma1ors ...
'Tm not the player I was IO or 15 years ago," the 46-
year-old N1cldaus wd after a bnlliant 30 over the back
nine Sunday lifted him to another victory in one ofgolrs
But he'll contin ue to play.
"No, I won't retire. Maybe I should. Maybe I should
go oul on a wtn hke this. Maybe I should just say goodbye.
Mavbe that would be the smart thing to do.
~ • • . ~
MAJOR LEAGUE STANDING$
Ainenc.n L .. eue
...,,...,
Kanla\ CH~
S.a t1i.
Teu•
Mlnn9'ola
Oeklano
CPllcevo
NtW York:
Belllmore
Derr oil
Crevela nc
l!IMton
Mllwauktt
Toron10
WIST DIVISK>N
W L
4 3
4 3
4 3
• 3
J 4
3 •
I 6
Eutl>M'*t ' ' • 3
• J
l 3
' 4 3 •
3 4
MondeV'1 Scores
Alll'b 1 Seallle 6
Ko"''u Cuv I Bo\lon 1
8a111more 1 Toronto I
Trao\ 10 Milweukff I
Delro,1 10 (PllCeoo I
Oa~1on0 7 M lnneso1a o
On1v oatnel lClle<luieO
TadaV's Gemea
~C1. .m
.$71
.571
$71
.479
•?9 143
GB
1 ....
I 'I)
2
2'~
2''>
1 'l
Seelllf •Young 1·01 11 An9els lSu11on 0 11 n
New Vorll (Nlallro 0-01 al Clevt1en0
!Candlolll 0-0), n
Oekle no (HHs 1 01 al Mlnr>eM>lo
(Lalham 0 OI, n
Oelroll al Cnlcaoo. PO•IPOnecl snow
Onlv 9ames schedule<!
WldnesdllV's Gamea
Seollle (Wiicox 0-11 al A.,.,
(Rornenlck 1·01. n
Ken.es Cllv IS.t>erhagen 0-0) al 8o$1on (Nipper l·Ol
Oakland (Anduler 0· 11 al MloneM>le
tBIYleVtll l·O)
Balllmore (Dl•on l·Ol el Toronto (Kev 0·0)
Tuas IWlll 0 01 ., Mllwauf\H INlevM
0·0). n
New Yorio. CTtw"-\burv 1-01 01 Cleveland ( Nlellro O II n
DelrOll !Morris I Ii ., CPllCllOO IBan
nlllfr 0 I) n
ThundlV's ~
M•nl1fl01a et An9els n
Kensas Clly al Bosron
Beltrmore a1 TorOl'llO
fou a1 Mllwauktt
Ntw York el C1tve1anc ,,
O<llv Ool\'IH M:lle<lule<I
National LNVU•
WEST DIVISION w L
San Ote90 s 3
San Frenc 1eo 4 2 Hou•lon
Allan la
Clnclnnali
'*'-'
SI Louil
Phllburgh
Pl'tlladell>llla
Mon I real
New York
Chicago
3 3
2 3
2 l l s
EAST DIVISION
S I ] 2
3 3 2 J 7 J
I 4
MencleV'• Scores
~C1
62S
6'7
500
400
400
l75
83J
600
500
400
400
200
GB
I')
1 ')
2
1''1
7 2 ,,
2''2 31,..,
Sen 0141110 •. Oed9en l t I I lnnfnosl
SI Louil 6, New Yor!J. 2 I 13 1nn1ngt)
PlllsburgPI J. Pl'tlledlllPllla I I 10 lnnln9sl
Onlv 9amel schedutea
TedeV's Gamea
~ (Honevcu11 0-ll al Sen Dleoo
I Snow 0-II n
Chicago ( E ckarsiev O· II e r Monlrtal
(Tlbl>s I 0)
Houslon !Knepper 1·01 a l San FranclKO
(Blue 0-ll
Pittsburg!' I KIPPer 0-01 al Plllla<lell>llia
tHUd1on 1-01 n
Clnclnnell <GulllCkson 0-0 a1 Allant11
ISmllPI 0-0), n
Only oame• lCPl.OuleO
Wed1Wi61V"s Gelne'\
o.cleers IPoweH I>-I er San D1eoo
Oreveck v I 01 "
SI Louis 10wnoev I 01 al New Yor!J.
IDer11119 0 Ot
Hov\lon °"'"••es 0 0 a • Sall Franc·sco !Mason 0-0
Plllsburgll McWd tams O 11 et Phllade1
pP11e rcarnon O 11 n
Clnclnna11 1Den,.v 11·0 a1 •11an1e
1Malller 1 I• ,.
Onlv oames lCl'edu1.o
~ndeV's Gemea
Clllcago a l Monlr111
SI Louis 111 New Yorio.
Sao Oleoo er San Francisco
Onl" oames scPleduled
MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
Am.t1Qn LNIN9
BAT flNG ( 10 el bets I Allanson, C reveland, 500. Gibson Detrol1, •16, Hen· drlcll, AllllSls, .4'2, Youn1, Mllwaukff, 4S8,
Owefl, SHllle 4SO
RUNS-De Evens Detroll 17. Dawn·
ii,., An9el•, 10 Ow Evanl. Boslon 7 G
TPIOmes See II~. 7 LA Parrish r Uel 1
McDowell Toes, 1
RBl-Terlebull Sea1111 10 Ben. for
OMIO 9 ~. A,,...s, t 1 ar, 11.0 WllPI
7
HITS-Bell Toron10 II Bog9s BO\IOn
I I De Evens ~I roll 11 Terlebull
Set1111• 11 Youn1 Mllwauto.ff I I
DOUBLES-Bell Toron10. 4 8uc1t.ner
Bolton • Hrt>ett Minnesota • OBrlen.
Tuu 4 12 •rt 11eo wllll 3
TRIPL ES.-TOll8M>n Cl'l1ceoo 1 10 art
11.0 wllPI I
HOME RUN$-Bre11 Kanus Cllv J
BrunanlkV Mlnnewte J De Evans De
lrolt l ~. A.-s. l G ThOmes.
S.a llle 3. lteJechan, Aft91h, > TarlabuH
S.e llle 3
STOLEN BASEs-<en9elo11 CPllcevo
6. I) ere tied wltPI 2
PITCHING (1 dKi\lon\ -?9 art lled
wllPI I O rtcoros
STRll(EOUTS-BOddlek.... Balllmore
14, Hur\I Bosron 14 , Corrt1 Tues 13
Morris 0.1ro1t. 12. Smllhson Mlnne101e
12
SAVEs-Rl~lll Ntw York.. ),
C•mecPIO, Creve1en0 1 H.,.nende1, Oelroll t J Howell Oaklend. 2. R Devis. Ml11ne
sole. 1
N1non.t LNIMI
BATTING 110 el ball)-f'arur Clncln
nell, 519. Rev, Plm!>YrgPI, '76, Jo Rusaell
PPllledele>nle 4'7. Knt9ht. New York.. 4SS.
0 Srl'lllPI, SI Louis. '4•
IWNS.-COleman, SI LO<Jll 7, L_,erd,
Sen Frencltco. 7, Oor•n, HOU1ton, 6,
Orsulak Plllsburoh '· S era lled wlll'I S
R 81-lt ev Piii tbuf gPI. 9. $""""-~ t Carter N-Vork., 7 Heyei.
PtllladelOflle 6 Leonard S.n Frel'ICl\CO '
HITs-Gladden San Frenclsco 10.
Melttvno!O\ S.n D'-. 10, ltev. Pll
lsllurOll 10 Su. °"""' lt. GWVM Sen
Dleoo '· Perker ClnclMall t ltldus
Ptll\adelPfll•. • OOVBLE~ lteraer Clnetnnall 4. 7 ere
tied wfltl l
TIUPLEs-t Me llecl wllh I
HOMf ltUNS.-Leonard, Sen Franctsco
i . ~ ~ l •• are lled ""'"' 1 STOLEN BASE~ ~ S
COieman SI lovl• 4, OOf'lll, Hout!On ••
Httr. St l.Oul1 4; GleOOen Sen lfranchco. l. M. Tl!omoton. Pl'tlledellll'tla. l, Ven Slvtl•
SI 1.oul•. l
PITCHIN<# (I O.Clt!Om) 1) ere lled
""'"' 1000 $T'llKEOUTS-W*"-~ l1
Goo«Mn, New York 12, H....UW-,
C>Meen. 11, Krullow. Sen Frenclt.eo, II,
V~ DMeen, 11
SAVES-0 SmltPI, Hou11on, 2 ll are
11.0 wllh I
AMERICAN LEAGUE
A,.s 7, Mlirtnen '
SEATTLE CAL.lflOttNIA
ebrllbl elHllbl
Tnat>ll 2b S I I 2 Grich 2b S 0 2 I
8radlev If 4 I 2 0 Jov,,.r lb 4 0 I 0
Caldern cf S I 2 0 D.Cna 3t> 4 I 0 0
GTPlms dh 3 I 1 I Ownng dh 3 J 2 0
ADevls lb J O O O H•ndrck rf • 1 l 2
Cowen5 rf l I l l Mitter If 4 0 2 2
OH.c:tsn rt 0 0 0 o Burlesn u 3 I I 0
PrelleY Jb J 0 I 0 Boo,,. c J 0 I 0
Ytager c J O l 2 RJones Ii O I O O
Owen u • I i O Pellls Cf 4 0 I 1
T...U ll 6 I I 6 T .. ell 34 1 ll 6
No ours when wlnnlog run scored
~.., lmlMt
SNtwe 001 003 010-6
c.tlfeml.a I 00 I O'l II 1-7
Game Wlnn1119 RBI -Miiier Ill
E-<>wen 2. ~rtabu" DP'-S.lllle 1
California 2 LOB-SHllle S. Cellfornle II 2B-Ce~on Downing, Burleson. Grkh
38-00wnlng HA-Tartebul• (JI Hendrick
(2) SB-8radlev 121 S-Jovner
SF-Miiier. Cowenl Yeeger
t~ H A ER BB SO
Saetwe Lat1gllon
Swlll
G~1ermen
Leckl L 1-1
CalHot-tlie
s 2-3 9
I l·l 2
1-l I
1-3 I
• I
I
0
l
I
I
0
' l
0
0
Stalon S 1-3 I l
l"orscPI 12·3 J l
D Moore W.1·0 1 0 0 0 0 I
L•<ld Pllclled to 3 belltn In 11'9 "" HBP-Oowning ov L•dd
Umolres-Ho~. Coble. First
McC1e11an0. $«ond Denklnoer, Tnird Aeil-
1v
T-HM A-37,"9
Htndrlcll
Wllfo119
Jackson
Downlno
Narron
Jov~r
Burleson
800114!
ScPIOflet<I
Pell ls
Grich
Miiier
OeConces
JOnt\
Ttta11
A'"* •veraees
BATTING
AB A H HR
13 4 6 2
9 I 4 0
13 6 s 3
23 10 • ]
3 1 I 0
JI l 10 1 n 1 1 o
2? l 6 I
4 I I 0
25 l 6 0
21 4 s 2
13 I 3 0
31 • 7 0
14 S I 0
144 .. 70 11
PITCHING
IP H ea
lllBI ~C1.
l 462
2 ...... 6 JU 9 34e
0 333 6 323
3 m
2 27J
0 2SO
3 240
J 231
2 231 s n6
2 071
.. • 211
Corbell 2 0 I 1 SO W-L•lllA
2 0-0 000 s 1-0 J,31 McCnklll a O 6 S
Slalon 12 '> 13 •
Moo<e ~ l O
Romanlell I~ 169 76
Wiii II~ 12 S
Brvden ~ S S
F Dr\CPI 61i:i S 4
Sullon • O a o
Candelerla 2 O 6 I
Tetab 61~ 6.5 :M
Saves For sch 1
7 1·0 HS • 1·0 ,,,
136 1·0 4 so
9 l>-1 s 40
4 0 0 63S s 0-1 711
7 0·1 900
0 o-o "00
47 •·l uo
NATIONAL LEAGUE
PadrH 4, Dodeen J
LOS ANGELE$ SAN DIEGO
allrllbl ebrllbl Out1cenu
BRUl~llll
Slubbl If
Landrw 11
Madlcll Jb
MersPlel rf
Cedeno cf Brock lb
Sax 2b
Andes" 2b
Scloscla c
WelCPI o
S I 2 2 Wvnne cf 4 0 0 I
3 I I 0 Gwynn rf S I I 0
2 O o o McRylds If 4 o 2 o o O O 0 Gervev lb S I I I
S 0 O O Kennedv c 4 o I O s o 1 o Nellles lb 2 o o o
S O l 0 Rooer11 pr o O 0 O
S o I O Ronler 3b O 0 O O
4 I 3 0 Krul< PPI I 0 I I
I 0 0 0 Martinz lb 0 0 0 0
3 o I o Tmolln u J 0 0 O
J 0 0 0 Fle nnrv 2b 4 I I O
Tllrmnd p I 0 0 O
McClleop IO O O
lorg Ph I 0 0 0
Lefftrfl P 0 0 0 0
Bochv PPI 1 I I I
•I l II 2 Tet1111 l6 4 I 4
Score bv """""' Los Anoeles 001 001 000 10-l
Sell Ole9e 000 0" 000 " -• No out\ w~n winning run KO•ed
Game w .nmng RBI -Bocllv 111
E-Ne•lles Cedeno La ndrtaua OP'-
~" Oleoo I LOB-Los Angele, 8 San
D•f!W I I 2B-l'en~v McRevnotds Flan
nerv Sax HR-Garvtv <2 Dunca n f 11
80CPIV II) SB-B Aunell I II, Duncan I SI
S-Weleh Thurmond Ttmoie1on
SF-Wvnnf
IP H A ER 8B SO LOl A,,....I
WelCPI
VandB~rg L ,0 1
SenDle9o
n1urmon<1
McC11ers
Letferll W, I O
9 1 l
I ) I
3
I
1
I
s
I
6,36171
213 1000
2 ? I I 0
12
0
venoeBero
111PI ollcl\e(l 10 1 better on tnP
Umolres-Home. Mon11gue Flril
Broclllander Second, Wevtr fnird Ren
nerr
T-J 13 A-2S.432
COMMUNITY COLLEGE
South Coast Conf9nnc•
Oranoe C.ou t
RancPIO Sanllaoo
Cvortn
W L Gli
13 0
9 4 •
Golden Wt\! • s s
c ... r110,
Fullt<'lon S.dOlet>K~
• 6 s . 1 , 6 •
6 1 7
Ml Sen An1onoo
Com Pion
s 9 • l
4 • 9
0 IJ 13 TodeV's Gemes (~)
Complon er OrenQt Coes1
GOiden Wttt el Fuiierlon
AenchO Sanllago •I CVPl'HI
Ml Sen Antonio et Cerrllo1
ThurMlllY'1 Gemes (2:)0)
Onn11e Coest •' Ml San A111on10 Sacklleback el GOiden Well
Fu11er1on at Rencno S.nlleoo
CvPfeu el Comoron
S.tvrdeV's O.mea 1-) C~rllos ti Orenve Coa11
Aencho S.nllego •1 S.cklleC>KI< Complon al Fulleflon
Ml Safi Anlonlo •' Cypress
HIGH SCHOOL ST AN DINGS Sunset Lqaue
w I. T Ocun Vltw ~ ' I Marine • 3 0 Founlaln Ve llev ) ) I Hunllngton 8ee<:PI l 4 0 Wf\lmlosler , • 0 Edison 1 ) 0 TedeV'1 Gemei
oa
t l , , . .,
2..,
)I.',
E dlWtl VS Hunll119lon 8eacll al Miit ~uere Perk t7l
Wes1m111119f et Fountal11 Vertn (J ISi
Octal'I View el Merine () ISi "'*"'' 0...... ~unt11191on a..el'I al Ocffn View ()IS)
Founteln Vettwv VI EdllOtl •I Mii• Souart Peril ( 7)
Setunllt'I'• 0-.
Marloe VI Wtttlmlntler el Mite S<iuer1 Perk (7)
w LT oe E11enc1e • 2 0 Unlversnv 4 ' 0 S.~k 4 , 0 Coront de4 Mer ) ) 0 I Wooelbl'ldoe l ) 0 I Cotte ~ ' • 0 2 L..elMll eaacn 1 4 0 1 .... ..-00<'1 H~ 1 4 0 ,
Oakland'• Joee Canaeco
leapt to no avail agalnat
one of two Tom
Brunane.ky home run• for
Minnesota Monday.
WadneSdeV'l Gemes
Corono del Mar ol Sad<11eoock (3· ISl
Newoor1 Ha rbor v\ Colla Maso al
Orange Co1ul Col1eve (3 IS)
Woodbrldoe v\ E s1anc1e el TeWlnkle P&ril l7l
Laguno BeecPI a l Univorsllv t3. IS)
FrldeV's Gamts
Saddleback al Unlversily f 3 IS)
Corona del Mar et Laguna Buell (J•JSl
Estancia "' Cosio ~s11 el TeWlnkle Park 171
Newoorr HarbOr at WOOdOrld9e (71
Sourtr Co.st LHOl.I•
W LT GB frv,ne S 0 0
M1uron V Pio 4 0 0 >
CaP•srrano Valle• l 3 O 1''>
Dana H Ii\ 1 2 O 2 7
Laguna HhlS 2 3 0 3
Er Toro 1 • O • San C•emenlt O S 0 S
WednesdaV's Gamea ll)
lrvlne at M·U ron V1eoo
Laouna Hiii\ a1 Dana Hills
Sa r C1emen1e &• E• Toro
FrideY'• G•me• (J) Laouno H llt al lrv•ne
Coo1"rano Vallev a> Et Toro
San Clemenle al M1u1on Vleto
NHL PLAYOFFS
Division Mmlflnals
(S.st·ll·Ftvel
~ATlllCK DIVISION
HY R•"99n n f'Mlldllcltl1e
4Prll 9-Ntw York Ran11trs 6, Phlle<lel·
Ollla 2
Aorll 10--PPllledelPllle 2 N•* Yorio.
Ranger\ I
April 11-New York Reno.fl S PhlleOel·
olll& 1
4Prll IJ-f>nlladelPPlla 1, New Yo<"I<
Range" I <Series llec:I, 2-2) ~ To<'>gPlr-New Yorll Ren11ers al Ph -
<lflOPl1a
NY lslenden n We~
4P• 1 9-Wesl'tlng1on 3, New Vork
hl&n<lers 0
AP<ll 10--wes11ll'Qlon S, New York
l\ler>dfr\ 2
April l?--Waslll"91on 3. New York
IS11n<1•" I (WashlOGton wins Mrl~H. l 01
ADAMS DIVISK>N
Hel1ford 1r1. Quellec
April 9-Herlford 3, Qvebec 2 (Of I
Aorll 10--Herllord •. Quebec 1
Aprll 12-Herllord 9, Quebec l (Heriford
wins serte\ 3 01
ManlrMI Vl. '"""" -'Drll '>-MonlrN I l. Boston I
•orll ll>-Monlreel 3, Boston 1
ADrll 1?-MonlrHI 4 8011on l (MonlrH I
win' ,., lfl 3·01
NOlllRl'S DIVISION
Tor....., n CNca ..
•Prll t-Toronlo s. Cl'tbOO
All"ll IO--Toron10 6, CPlkellO 4
Ae><ll l?-Toron10 7. CPllcH O, ITorOlllO
win' Mri•l l Ot
St Lwl1 n. IW!ulS ....
April t-51 loYIS 1 Mlrw.tele
A 11"11 10-Mlnne\ole •. St 1..0Ull 2
AC><M 12-s1 Louis 4, Mlnnnote l
AC><ll l)-Mlnnew11 7. Sf LOYh • ,~ .... l>.O , ,,
fnnJQPlt-SI Louis et M1nneso11
SMVTH • DtVIMC>tf "'~ Y1.. •*'*"-" Aorn f-!dmonlon 7, V~er l
Aprn 11>-£dmonlon s. Vl/tC:tNVf' I
APrll 11--fdlnol'lton S. V~V9t
l[Clmonlon wins win, 3-01
eee.r.n.w....
Aprll f-<:-'Oerv S, W!Mloet I
AP<ll IG-<etg•rv 6. WIMIHO 4
AP<A 11-<•toerv •. Wlnntoee l (Caloary
win' Wies. l -01
··But I'm oot that sll\IJ't," said Nickllus, who now
ba.s won a record 1jx Muten. a record~tyi~ four U.S.
Opens, a record·tying five PGAs and three British Opens.
That's 18 m~or profcssionaJ titles coverina a 2S-year
professional career. No one else is even close.
about retinna.
He rejected 1t. . I'-.. L -"l'vc played too welJ too long to quit I .. c that. uc:
said. "I'd played too well too Iona to make a short penod
like that the last time 1 played golf. . .
The latest Nickllus tnumpb may have been the most
satisfytna.
It came at a time wben he was down, when he: was
playing poorly, when his pride bad been bun and his ego
stung by published reports that said be was .. dead, washed
up, through. had no chance whatsoever."
..l still enjoy aolf. I still eDJOY the compelltJoo. I
ervoyed the competition at Pebble Beach (w~eTC Tom
Wauon beat him in the U.S. Open). I en.JC?~ the
competHion at Riviera (where Hal Sunon beat him tn the
POA). . . th la . "And I enjoyed this more than anything in e st six
There weTC constant questions about whether he
would retire.
years (the last time be won a major). "tb~'s nothing wrona with my golf game. If I put
And there were reasons for the questions.
He had won only twice since 1980. He had not woo at
all since 1984. And, this season, he had played very
poorly. In seven starts. he missed the cut three umes. He
withdrew from another toumameDL He didn't finish
higher than 39th.
my mind to it, I can still play." .
At least this one time, the most accomplished aolfer
in history played with the flair and fervor ooJy be seems
capable of achievma.
And, by inference, he hinted that be. too, bad thought
And be iso 't through
Not yet.
Not Jack Nicklaus.
Nidia.us, strWe bV atrWe
Slroke bV slroke with Jack Nldtleu1 In
the flnal round of the Masters Golf Tour-
namenl Sundey on Ille 6,905-yerd per-72
AUllusl Nellonal GOif Club Cours.:
Hott No I, 400 vards, Per 4: Driver 10
falrwev, I Iron lo grMn, 2 PUiis trom 10 ffff, Per 4
Hole No. 2, SSS yerd, per S. Driver,
mined lalrwev rlgni, 3 Iron shorl of grffll,
Pitching Wedge IO grffll, I PUii trom • feel,
birdie •.
Hole No l , 3'0 nrd, 1141r 4' I lrOl'I 10
lelrwev, t Iron to grff(t, 2 PUll1 from 18
fffl, par•
HOie No 4, :ZOS yer<1, per 3 2-lron 10
lJ'ftfl. 3 PUits from «> i..t, boOle 4.
HOie No S, 4JS yerd, per 4 Ori.,..-10
felrweY. •·Iron 10 grffl'I, 2 PUlll from n
'"'· per 4 Hole No '· llO·verd, per l S-lron lo green, 2 PUiis from 4 i..1, per 3
HOie No 7, 360-verd, per 4 Driver to
lelrwn, 9·1ron lusl off c>rffll. plleflll'CI
wedge to llfff(t, te1Hn per 4
Hole No I , SlS-verd, per S OrlYer to
lelrwev, l ·wood stlor1 ot l>l'ffl'I. ollchlng
wedge to 9rffl'!, 2 PUits trom 10 lee1, per S.
Hott No 9, 43S verd per • Driver 10
felrwey, ollehll'CI Wedlle 10 Qrfffl, I PUii
from 10 IHI, birdie l
Per oul 36.
Nlcklaus OYI 35
Hott No 10-.. S·vard, per • Driver 10 rlgl'tl of lalrwey lnlo gelferV, 4-lron 10
green, t Pull from 25 '"'· birdie l . HOie No 11 4SS·verd, Par 4· Driver lo
lelrwev, I -Iron to orHn, I PUii trom 20
IHI. btrdlt 3.
Hole No. 12: ISS-verd, per 3: 7-lron over
orHn In beck fringe, wtdlle to grHn, ?
Pulls from ' feel, l>Ollle •. Hole No 13 '6S-verd, per S l·wooo to
falrwey, 3-lron lo grffft, 2 PUtt1 from 30
IHI, birdie 4
Hole No. 14. 40S·yerd, i>er • 3·wood lo
telrwey. 6-lron 10 becll trlnge Of grffll.
PllCl'tlno wedge IO grMO, I PUii from I loot,
Pe r 4
Hole No IS SOO·verd, per S· Orlver 10
felrwev, •·Iron lo grMn, I PUii from 12 1M1, eagle 3
HOie No 16 110-yer<I, per l S-lron 10
grff(t, I PUii trom l fffl, birdie 1
HOie No 17 400-verd, per 4 Driver to lalrwev, pllcPlll'Q wed!MI to grffft, t PUii
from 10 IHI, birdie 3
Hole No II 405-yer<I, par 4 l·wood 10
fairway S-lron 10 orMn, 2 PUiis from 40
IHI par 4
Mlistws dlamptom
1934-Horton Sml111
I 93s--<;e,,. Sare zen
1936-Horton SmllPI
1937-Bvron N"son
1~enrv Plcerd
1939-RalPl't GuldePll
19'0-Jlmmv Oemeret
1941-CrelQ Wood
19'1-8vron N"son
1943-No TOYrnamen1
194.4-No TO<Jrnamen1
IUS-No Tournamen1
1946-Hermen Kels.r
1947-Jlmmv · o.maret
194&-<laude Hermon
19•9-S.m s,,.ed
1950-JlmmY Demere1
19S I-Ben H09en
19s2--s.m s,,.ed
19U-S.n H011et1
19S4-Sam Snead
19S5-Cerv Mlckllecoff
1956-Jeck Burke, Jr
1957-0oug Ford
19S.-Arnold P aimer
19S9-Art Wall !~Arnold Pelmer
1961--Gerv Ptaver
19'2-Arr>Old Pelmer
196.3-Jeclc Nic.leus
19...--Arnold Pelmet
196S-Jeck Nlcltleus
1966-Jecit Nlckelul
1961--Gev Brewer
1961-600 Goelbv
l969-Geor111 Archet
197~fHy Cese>er
1911-Cherlei COO<lv
1972--Jacll Nlckleus
1973-Tommy Aaron
lt74-Gery Player
197S-Jecit Nlcklau•
197~ev Flovd
1917-Tom WelM>n
197t-Gery Player
1979-Fuuv Zoeller
1990-S.ve 8ellesterot
1991-Tom Welson
19t2-<:ral9 Stadler
1913-Seve BalleslerOI
1994-Ben Cren1l'tew
19'S-8ernllud Langer
1"6-Jeck Nlckleus
TENNIS
Mlft(s teurMment
lat ..ec., f'r-.)
.. lntlll-..f,.......
Guv Forget (Frenc:.) def l.eW10n Dun·
c.n (US ); Terlk &ennaolles (Franc.) def.
Pe1er LundOren (Sweden), 6·2, •·l; PIUI
McNe"'" (Auitrellal def Jell'nl Vz-(Peru>. 6-3, 6-3
Wemen's '9Um9ment
(et AIMlll ltMftd. ,..)
fllrM llllCMll Sllltlet
Pem Ce.ele (U.S.) def. Kate ~'
CU.SI. 7-S, 1-6, •-l, Debbie ~ (U.S.)
d9I SYlvle H1nlke (Wttl G«meov). 7·6.
•·O Other wlnMta Terrv "'-'· AIVcla
Moulton, Hu Na. Suaan Sloene.
C ..... men
UC lrvWt I. SM JeM St9toe I ,......
Man Son9 Hing (UCI) losl lo Allen, •-2, 4·6, 4•6, Ve lei (UCI) d9I Mun11'ty, ,.,, 1•S.
Derr (UCI) def Telle, •-2. O-•. 6·4; l(eplan
(UCll def H-. 6-2, 7·S, 8erl\em (UCll
ci.f ~"· 6·,, 6-J, Downs (UCI) def. LYH'll, 7-S, 6·2
0....
[)Own• Vel .. IUCll def Ttlle·L.yoy,
6-3. 6 7, •-3. lartlam-Kaolen (IJCI) def
Carbone·MurDfty, 6-l, ... S. Derr·c.d!Mn
(UCll def Allln·Htofttr, ... 4, 1-•
N•A
("111110 • )
WHT•lllN CON,•lll•NC• ~adfk DM"-t w L ~d. ...
z·L.aliWt 61 ?O 156
)(-Portlend 40 42 .. Tl
~ 32 50 .3'0 30 ~Ix 32 so J90 30
Seallle 31 Sl .371 JI
Golden Stale 30 S2 -"' n MidWnf~
v-Houston Sl 11 622
x-Denver ., lS .573 • x-Dattai .. JI .$17 7 x-Uleh 0 ., .sn ' 1t-Sacremen10 37 •S .451 •• x-Sen Anlonlo lS 47 Q1 16
EASTE•N CONf'ElllENCI
A"-nlk DMIMft z-&o11on 67 IS 117
x-Pl'tlledelC>hte S4 ,. Ut 13 a-Welhll'Qlon )t 4J .,. ,.
it·N-Jerwv )9 '3 476 2t
New York 23 St * ..
Centr• DMalan v-MllweukM S7 25 69S a-Allel'lla so :n. 610 7
a-Detroit 4' 36 561 " ll ·Cl'tk:ago 30 S2 .3'6 ,7
Cleveland 19 53 .J~ 2t ll'ldlana ,, S6 .317 JI x-dlncMcl C>lavotf l>eftPI
v-cllndled division lltle end olavoff tienl't
z-cllncPled conference lltle
NBA ll&lvoffl
(Flnt rwnd, bes1 II~)
WESTERN CON .. lllllENCE
LOI Anellft n. Saft AlltMla
T11urldev-San Anlonlo el Lekers, 7:30 pm
Se1urcsev-Sen Anlonlo al l ek•rs. 12:30
P.m
Wednesd•v, Aprll 23-Lal<en al San An tonlo, S.30 pm
Friday, Apr» 25-lekers el San AnlOl'llo,
S P.m • If neceu.arv
Sunday, APrll 27-San Anlonlo e t
Lal< en. 12:30 Pm., If neceuarv
S.~n.Heu1 ... TPlurldey~rernento a l HOY1ton
Salurdav-Sacrernento el Houlton
TUftday, APl'll 12-tioullon •' Sacra-men10
TllUrldev, APl'll 2-+1ovs1on al Sacre -
rnento, If nec:euarv
Se1ur<1ay, APrll 26-Secremenlo •I
Hovsron If necaua ry
f'w1laftd n. o.m.r Fr1dav-Porllend et Denver
Sundey-f'orllend el Denver
TUHC!av, APrll 22--0enver e t Portland
Thur'ldey, APrll 2-c>env..-al Porllend,
11 -aarv
SalurdaY, Aorll 26-f'orlland al Denver,
If r>ecH.erv
Ufllll n. Daaas
FrlCSev-UlePI et Della•
Sul\OaV--Ulell el Detta.
WedneSO.y, April n--OeHes el Ulah
Frl<Slly, APfll 25-0ellu al Ulah, It
nece1.ery
Sunday, Aprll 27-Ulah a1 Den-.. If n<teessary
EASTElllN CON,.ERENCE
Ollca .. n. ....
Tllurldev-<:hlcago et Bo.ion
Sundev-<:Pllcego et Bo.ion
Tunday, April 22-eo11on el Chicago
Frldey, Aprll 2S-8o11on el Chic.ago, It necenery
Sundav, APrll 27-Chlc.ago el 8o1lon, If necessarv
~n.A ......
Thundav-Defrolt e1 Allanle
SaturdeV-0.troll at Atlante
Tuesdav. Aprll 2?-Atlanle el Delroll
Friday, Aprll 2S-Allanle e1 O.troll, H
'-MN
Sunday, April V-0.troll 11 Allanle ti necessary
.._ J«W'f Y1.. Mlwelllr ..
Frldltv-ffew W'-v al MllWeuk"
Sundav-New Jer..v at MilweukM
Tuesday, April n-Mllwaul<M el New Jersav
Frldey, Aprll 25-Mllweull." e l New
Jersey• H -s.rv
Sunday. APrll 27-+4ew Jersav et Mll-
w•uk", if IMCelsafV
We.,..._n.~ .......
Frldev-Welhlnolon et Pl'tlladelol'tla
Sul'ldeV-Westilnoton el Pl'tlladelotlle
Tundev. APrlt 22-Pl!ll•d•IPhl• •• Welhlnglon
Tl'tilndev, Aprll 24 or Frlde y, APf'll 2S-Pl'tlladel~I• el Weshlno1on, if neces1-ery
Sundey, APl'H 27-Wealllnglon er Ptolle-
delPl'tle, If -s.ry
HIGH SCHOOL VOLLEYBALL
S4lftMt L .. tue
~
WL Edlion 1 0
Founleln Vallev 6 1
La Quinta S l
Oc.een View • • Merine l 4
Hunllnolon 8ffd'I 2 ' Wntmlnster O t
M9MIV'' sew.
0-..
WL
10 I
' 2
' 3 ' . s 6 , to
0 12
Edison def Le Qulnte, lS-12. lS-6, 11-16. w.-..v-. MetcMs (7)
Huntlnoton &Mdl e l EdlMll'I
Marl11e a1 OcMn View
L• Qulnle et WesfmlMler
'"*V'' ~ (1) f:dlr.on et Founteln Velley
Hunllnoton 8ffefl el I.Al Qulnl•
Wntmlntttlf' 11 Merine
I
Ken Bardaley
SCC's Bardsley
NAIA academlc
All-American
Former Costa Mesa High
standout Ken Bardsley, a senior
at Southern California College,
has been selected to the NAIA
Academic All-America basketball
team, Vanguards Coach Bill Re-
ynolds announced today.
Bardsley, a 6-4 senior, was one
of just 15 players selected to the
team from more than 500 NAIA
colleges and universities in the:
U.S.
A Business Management
major, Bardsley bas a 3.67 grade
point average:. He plans to attend
graduate school in the fall.
Bardsley was the Vanguards'
leading scorer this past season
with an 18.8average, leadingSCC
to a 19-l 0 record. He earned alJ.
leaguc: and all-District III honors .
District Ill encompasses Cali-
fornia and Nevada.
After graduating from Costa
Mesa, Bardsley attended UC
lrvmc: briefly on a basketball
scholarship before: eventually
transf emng to SoCaJ College.
Garagiola
sues Musial
ST. LOUIS (AP) -Sportscaster
Joe Garagiola is swng bis former St
Louis Cardinals teammate Stan Mu-
sial concerning a jointly-owned bowl-
ing alley in south St. Louis.
Garagiola owns a one· third interest m the bowling alley, Red Bird Lanes.
and two holding companies. They
claim Richard Musial, Stan Musial's
son. and John Garagoani. another
defendant. received payments of
$750 a month between January 1982
and November 1985 without their knowledge.
The boards of directors of Red BLrd
Bowling Lanes and Red Bird Con.
cessions last year voted to hire a
company called SM&B Management
Co. to manage the bowling alley and
the concessions for a return of 5
percent of gross sales.
8-1 tennis win
for Anteaters
SAN JOSE -UC Irvine's :nen'<.
tennis team swept to its fourth Paci fic
Coast Athletic Association victory 1n
five starts Monday w;tb an 8-1
decision over San Jose State on the
second leg of a three-game journey.
The Anteaters, who dropped
Fresno State: Sunday, 6-3, continue
today with a non-eonferencc match at Stanford.
Coach Greg Patton'<; Anteaters
improved their overaJI record to 16-9
with ~he ~ictory, keyed by strong early
play 10 vmually every match. Th~ onl_y loser was Bruce Man Song
Hmg m singles. Man Son Hing, in a
mild slump, dropped a 6-2, 4-6, 4-6 match.
Folley to fight
at Irvine Marriott
Roben Folley, the son of one-time
heavyweight contender Zora" Folley
will ma.kc bis California rin& debut at
the Marriott Hotel in Irvine Monday
April 28. '
The 22·ycar-old Foley (I 0-2) wdl
meet Olen Kennedy of Covina in the: I ().round main event.
Folley, a native of Pbocoiit, hopes
to follow the career of his father, who
boxed for I S yean as a pro, dcfeatina
Eddie Machen;.. Henry Cooper, Pete
Rademacher, vcorse Cbuvalo, Bob
Foster and Oscar Bon.avcna.
In 1967 Folley was unsuccessful in chal~cnai Muhammad Ali for the hea · t title.
The e\ er Folley died in July of
197.2 u a result of a swimmina pooJ aocident
' ,
•
A.ma,_,. ""'"'W do• OlymDic bodQScbampion Paul Ooniaies and
Catt0t Palamino will be &he fcallmMi cdebriUet
anendln1 \be Wc:.uninater BoUn& O ub'•
ama1tur bor.lot abow on SUAday at. ~ir JYID.
14042 Locust, lo Weatmi.nattt, ~at I
p.m.
Alben O.vila a.od Danny Lopez will a.Ito be
on hand and \he public ls invited to attend for a $3 donation.
•
\ \
--~ .......... _~~ ~ --. ~ --
Orenge ~ DAILY PILOT !Tu.day, Aptl 151 1Me •
NOTICI INvmMQ MA' ID _,.
lllC-2St
--
0
'
'
\
'
..
•·t·
.
I.
..
: :1
I' l :1
I
J
,
I
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I
I
I
..
•
Orwige Cout DAILY PILOT/ Tu.day, Apr11 16, 1988
CALL 642-5678 IF CALLING FROM NORTH ORANGE
IF CALLING FROM SOUTH ORANGE
540-1220 -··-
I LOST MY OWllER BUT
FOU• HIM AFTER I
PLACED All AD IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS.
A Not1onol Celebration of Hom.a
ror People. Business and lndultry.
11'!!~!!!!!!!!!~~~~~~~~~~ IMJ lltate ft1 lalt ta •111 1024 C11t1 ••11 2114 Lieu..... 1141 C.... ••• •r JIU C..11 •eu JIM lnprt 1tae• 2Ht lntah •• lhu
"--al IM• -Ul1D •Eutelde 18r, 18&. 1 M lll 11111 3BA/2BX. &tgfit i ™Y. 1 MILE TO BEACH-2/br, UUU l&f ILR 2724
CHECK YOUI' AD
nwF ... aTDAY ,,.. Oai1\(j:r1io1 ti<T..M lai oftl<...,
l Y I nd a(C\ifk 'I Ho••~. OC .. ••10"9Mv ...-rot'\ dO oc:<-ur Pfe.ew
11•f9"I •"9ft "104JI M I• ftM DilC1l el\d CPlleiU ~OVf eel 0.•t\t ......
vf•"' .. l r.::r~. ;;:~~':-,...,~
• : :: t~ an• ~'O' ,, ~ •01t1..-1t~ i fllJM IOI' ~"("Pl! ' the• Olf t'ftOOfK ... ,.. tQ w l 'CltP' fOf 'M CO•I ~ 1"'9 •DeCe
:..-: •: .: 1(t1o1elly o<-CvP..0 Dw the tf't'Of
1 .. 00 ~Y Crt<I• ,,,.. ~iv a. •~""eo for ,,,.
).&· -uo 4N ht\I tl'Uflf•~"' ..
aMl.lnAft ,_MU ........ Ai'• •~'" "°' 0110 •1th1n lO oao •• 1eov•'~ *'' be"'~' •o CNt "°' •f'ft·ft O •o t ef't<t f\af te'\
(C)l"l'IOV'•-d • '' ,, t~ ~lid De..A"'C.• O.' ..,.. \f'IO• A (Ol..Ct-ol\
tOtl\ e C , .. _ • f't\I>" eO•• et a....•-----· 'OI'"'"' 'ff\
[
[
Gntral 1002 Geaeral ---------------1002
o// Stice
"/ tle
g""" l!i/e
Ground floor. full security, pool
and spa. 2 master suites separated
by living , kitchen and dining room.
Large sundeck, extra storage.
Cool ocean breezes, peak view
Near beach. Hoag Hospital -Im-
maculate Villa Balboa Condo. Only
$169,500
.. '{,(11(1)1(,f dt>./r //(14.
. f~o/z<~t k~1.> 6'1.'J-8 'l.?'l
3407 E. Cont Hwy .. COfona del Mar
Sell Y 01t Prepettr!
_. • -.i r919 Adult. No pet• '550 Treuuf• llNlnd Mbl9 time w/tplc, eundecil, laundry, frig, micro, Walk to STUDIO· 725 Sq Ft. Avail A1g C&nyon F p<of ~+ 11T 1'm WfW ~ &::;1~ ~ Cr9dlt ., req. 631-2242 2& 2Ba. 3 pvt bChee. 2 ear,,..,, r~ nr bd'I I hop•, I 8 9 5 /mo. lmmedlatefy. M9"1WI N/1mkr . dHlr•d. 3 r
Vert .~hole• "Beystd• root.'drtwwey, paint, 09U-,._, Fii* pooi, MC gate. 1 yr tee 11275 mo 87 99 875-5735 only. 759-tt14!7 Oya or 2poo1'hB&:.,.~P'f~Xcu~
Cow End Unit TwntlfM Inge ltOYe and bathe * _.. S 1495 mo 499-2704 $950/MO. + S950 MC d9p. LOFT APTS • Frplc. prvt &42--0202 1 opm ·,h~H 720-1057
at water• •do• Sf3S,OOO Call Rob1~3Bdrm,2Bath,2 earg11t-I le L lltt 1BR 1ba. Sande11tle petloe t>Mmedcelllng• Newpor1He1Qht1Lrg2BR 1_:_NC...,,......"'.""::c---;::-;::-:~
"e.yfront" W/full vtew. Tench 631 -128& age, pool, all bltlnl. yerd, nrrrt IC• condo. Up11a1ra. All 2Br +Lott 28&. 1Br. .i.O 1BA frple garage, enCI E CM-Reepon F/n-emkr,
An elegant & dletlnctlve pet• ok S1200. FM •tAYI ~* amenities. 2 car covd Beenelof Apta. tw~ patio No p.i, saoO/mo. 2bd, 1ba, $275+ NC, & 'h
Adult home "53.400. • • 4 §fil: fia TILDEn 111-IHO Studio + Ml kttdlen. utMe :Z:'~~~~o;eoe Avail 9IYI II MW 673-2825 or 553-0450 utll, 5"8--~811 att 8'>m· ~~El --~-•SHARP WM1elde 29r lnc1$400. Fee $615/mo E/alde 2BR UDO ISLE Fumi.hed 18r, Fem2b< 11\banrbet1S350 19a Duplex. Tiie lloore, mDD'T IJl-IHO C • U2f lBA petlo pool lndry elee gar, utll1 Incl mo ·~II. 5/1. 720-7827 11f -• 11f TWll ... ~· erpt1, drps, w/d hkup, Hll tu -room. cioM to e11.' $625/mo yrty. 1 P..on. wtc 969-1292 hm Beth
Chotce 60' Cerone del Mar 2Br 29a Condo. 1at Tru91 garege. 1800 +MC. Must *Un.ti* S100"' 149 E. Bay No pet•. 873-0637 Fem 3br hM nMt OCC
lot avallabl• •• one Deed approx 9% Axed. •tend cr9dlt "'· No pete. Beach HouM 3Br 398· 60' MOVE IN COST TSL MGMT &42-1603 II 1111111 w/Poot/Jec,' eedr pett
parcelet"'85,000ortwo Own« wtll pay buyer 770-6629· tobeh.8-9 moe5-t8-7415 Loe Cottege Type. 2BR 385 1/3 utll. 752--0773.
30'lobat$250,000MCfl etoelng ~•·STEAL at UY-* lBA.pYtpatlo.w/dhkup, FIREPLACE-POOL-PATIO NEARHOAG~OSPITAL 957-el60KerynorBev Se11et w111 pey dern041tlotl $123,500. &40-e120 or -...ae~anu * H•w 81 No petl 1&75/mo. X-Lg 1Br $585 & 2Br 1875. 2-atory, 2bd, 1 ~be ~•of exiltlna home 11 875-4912 Blu ~au .n Large 1BR, 18A • new T~L ·MGMT 842•1603 Eutalde 557-28-41 dining rm, laun hkup, Fem quiet b.clc bey cond.
lot•.,. eokt lncflvtduAllly decor, mini bllnda. Stepe 1750/mo 8-42-8&29 It emk pool/Jee/ten S350 · •U WMll TIWl .. U to bMCh 1825. FM 1 ~ FUE IEn IUIPI OLUll 8 new 21bd condo tn .,... tee.' 1nc1. uttt. &45-5123 : .
39r 1V•b• w/edd on fem. ... ... '"Int nuam llMHO S525/mo 1BR 1BA. all ~~p~R d~~ w/~~~ ~=d geted comm, pool, Fem to ehr 3BR 2~1>41
rm. fr doors, bay win· Frple, vault9d celllnge, dbl aer 298 hM 2 eer gar. bullt Ina, lndry rm, nr rl o frplc In eml 00mplex etc 644-1385, Ive INQ. veulled eetllng1. frple, dow, pney tire, Jee. g111, pool, spa. No pe11. • 11 ~7 .. 1 t>Moh & lhope. • • "-Belt>oa Penln
Move In eond Call 9111, 2Bdrm, 2'hBa $915 Xlnt view, .. "mo. 735-741 W 181h St. w/pool & BBQ. 1825. SUNNY NEW 2/80 g11t ..,.., 75-9518 -
759 -9100
------
Aot 756-1323, 631--0884 2Bdrm. 2'hBa+Oen U25 760-8708 TSL MGMT &42-1603 381 Hamllton. 848-9794 CONDO In guard geted, '.:'S3_50_1_mo--:-._9-;:-:::--:.--:-:-~
l 866 W 181h St. 4 bike to water huge 3bl' •UNIQUE COMPLEX* comm Po o I , It c F non-amkr 22-25 10 ehr FIR llT RILIATlll Imai &45-2739 ~183 hH evall 5/1 S1150 1Bdrm Apt w/batcony, 1BDRM w/'h dbl gat $585 ~1385, Ive mtg. 3br duplx on Balboa Pen. orb~?u~,Pl'~-T~~ Leutifui Parkelde '8r 3bd 2b Meea Verde 53M191AgtfM pool. N~~~~1~95tmo. 2BR1Bew/frp1Cl.g111895 ••PllTMUT Ocean view, yrly, 1350.. o 1ga on Y 2',...B• fem rm home · a. QUIET petlo pool, apa Beley eve/tw&-7414 PR 0 DUCE R. C a I I c~ lot on quiet dt>i Home w/lg 1111 & fem rm, 4BR 3BA WATERFRONT NO PETS ' 64g..2447 Lrg 3BR 2'h8A w/v'tew, 2 _ ___.:_' ---,---:=-----
PATRICK TENORE cul-de-He s1ee 000. covered petlo, lg fenced 2700 at Docit 12200. ~tfiield ear gar. pool, tennl1, Fumrmavlnow. ~per-
631-1266 3841 Salem 8~ yd . g a rd n r I n et • Aek for Chucit or Liz WWC9 WI lffll 1111111 elOM to bd'I. I 1400/mo. eon Full prlvs. 20 to pool ii~~. S 120 0 I mo , Pet 848-7171or848-57'3 Wanl 8 Mlectlof'I of grMt TSL MGMT 8-42-1603 S275-t-S75 dep 8-42-s.435 I ••• l..,.rt IMc• I 5"5-3650. eve ...... 11111/.. FllllLY IPAITIEm tMng? We ean otter any-lfWPllT H1llT1 Mele lhr 3Br COM 2 atry 0je $ * l&fFlllT * 3 BR T /Hme Ar9plc..:. ga1-Mtn & city lltM vu, Ph ... l S~~~:~~ :t; thing trom a tmelt apt to 2Bdrm 1 Ba, g11tege. Pool, Condo. $.-10 -t 'I• utile .. 'I•
-By owner 4 BR 3',...ba. r~ age Comm. pool a 1000 Harbor Vu Hme. Comm children. Near park. Heat • 4 bdrm house. If look-leundry. Water & ges ml to beh. Prof pref d. 1.,1 YlleJ htatt Ifft modeled In '&4. LOe dock. mo yrly Wa1erlront pool/ten. Agt &40-5e64 paid. No pet• Ing In CM. NB, or HB paid. 1725/mo. 950-8213 Rob 996-99601760-8017
Apprx 40 ee premium Prom Bay .,... Fee Homes Inc. 631-1400 3Bdrm 2Bath 1785 think 01 ua nrat for that NB 1 blk from land 1 Fem
wtneyard land. Tr.... Mu11 '•beolutely Me thl~ 1111 llHI 11112·1•1 2Bdrm 2Bath 1730 T~~fdeal 1~~·1603 IPAllllS IPT lhr 3Br 2Ba hM. Pool,
view, ~. water. Ex· mon1h 1795,000. Dy No mlaprinl Ptex lncU den 2Bdrm 1'!.Bath 1710 1 mlle to beaetl. &42-2357 pvt prltng, ell amen• $.-10
ceptlonell S295,000 848-2451, flY 875-2320 Nev.rb··•-befbu~ea=b:'11.~ 2br d1hw1hr garage 398 w. Wl'-on 831-5583 Daaa Ptiat VILLA BALBOA· Luxury 111, lut, dep 548-2375 term• Cell Stuar1. .._. 539-e181 Agt COit
707/993-5288 or *UllllSllllE* 53M191Agtcoet 2Bdrm 1Ba "Cottege" -u11nn1m condo, 2 m••t•r NB-2bd. 2b• Apt, IVlll
707·257-1019egt Buy Ane RE from our CHOICE RENTALS &YllUILI.. Readytogo1Prlv11eyard Upetalrs 2Br, 1Ba, ene1 bedroom•. A/C. All May 1, 1500-t-utll,
elegant Limo 773-5471 Nothing fancy 2br hM yerd Lrg 3BR 3BA Twnhae. ,2 $625/mo NO PETS gar. No pet a S700/mo. amenltlee. 81814•7-2589 1tr~n-atrgt ok, pref 30-'
SCRllLETS
UI
HOROSCOPES
UEllW LOCATEI
llTIE
FUI
ADVICE
Ill ES
PlliE
Harbor Ridge Eetate. 4Br. tor kldt S600 $100 depo ear ger w/ext~ro~~ >'I 990-2970 33421 Cheltem Wey. #C. Htk 1111 •1tH _&4 __ 1_94-=----,=-:---
3Ba, fem rm, highly up-otherl a1 ~~o I=~· p, 1 BR, prv pe11o. $.-85. Pool. Open Wknda .. 2' ~ rt 2111 N-port CrH1 3Bdr"'4
gr 1 de d . I o rm• r *llM1H* ' 114 33rd gaa&weterpald.nopeta. 240-1891 or vv1 20 2',...Ba. Tennie. pool. ape
model,Oeeen view & etty OV« 2,000 aq n stytllh TSL MGMT 842•1603 Reta required. 14 7 Lg 2Br 2B• upetalra. lnTllT II Oerage $425/mo. U1111
tight. By owner S750,000. 413br 2«>• frplc deck Aower. &45-8191 Ocean view. Cl• to tirbr. 1 & 2 BR near So. Cout Included. &42·7380
lllm •ir-EI $850 not far to oe.an BAYRIOOE 2Br, 2Ba. view, 2BO 1BA 2271 Pomona 0111age. Adult1 pref'd. Plaza, encl. gar., petlo, N-SMKR MALE PRV ~ I -..... 539-e180 Belt Rlty tee like new. pools, apa, dbl patio ~erport qulei S800/mo. 861--0185 lndry room & lots of trance N San 'c1emente A real doll hooM. Perl.ct garege, w/d 1250/mo • .. :. cioMt apeee · • lor young couple L111ge 2 EASTSIDE C.M CUSTOM 54-0-7552/D 788-5160/E neighborhood, .-.25/mo. l•at leack 505 W Sunnower $340/mo, S 150 depoalf, ,,h dWoOd lloore BEAUTY· Appnc 1800 aq No Peta 548-5&05 . • . 'h U111. 498-1733 bdrm w/ ., . ti 38R 2iAba fully loeded Beeutltul overltted Coodo , 28R 2ba, ept1/drepe1, TSL MGMT &42-1603 --~----,,----,-
frple, 2 car gar end load• kit....._ 1 · It le 3Br 398 pool New crpte 2Br 111\Ba, d/w, w/d hkup, patio garege. dleh-MYI II MW Outgoing, aenou1 fem lhr of cherm Just reduced to """"'• am rm w rp · · S F · patio. 3004 Allmore 2Br ' ,f I d 8Mch houM w/eouple. $214,500. dining rm, 2'~ ear gar Wiii all bltlna Only 900· .. 1•,...ea, l/p, d/w, petlo. w1:;5t1~, ~~5t" ry. S7 10 mo. 2BR 1'h8A, gar., Pool. tennl1, l'rplc. 1350.
Traditional
Realty
6:1 1-7370
eo ns Id e r P • t • · TIUIEn 171-lllO ger. 634 Hemllton. S650 / 0• W/D hkup, easy freeway Llnda/MlehMI 6-48--4912
$1500/mo 494-4873 BIG CANYON MCLAIN Ea. No pet1 5"3-5"78 3 ~room, 2 84th with eeoeu, nr So Cst Pila. p f I 30' f f f -.-99111•• 2, b llrepl1C41 patio newly 2601 Aur0<• ro n • pre em "' Wl'SllR _, -condo. 2BR den, l'I a 2BR 2be. peUo ap1. with crptd 1975. ~I etter TSL MGMT 842-1603 14)&C. 2BR 2be CdM apt. 2Br. 1Be Co1tege w/gar on gOll crse. 2 ear ger laundry rm New paint. 6pm (714~ w/laundry, blk 10 t>Mch.
lnci grdnr $850/mo. Anne $2 195. call 759--0079 cpt1. drapec. No petl. Iliac. ltatall Call ASAP 875-9189
MeCuland63l·12e& Cenelfront 18ryrtyS900 $660/mo &45-7321 IUWlllYILUIE FEM to ahr BAYRIOOE
LIWHT PlllOH Ill~, , 631-1400 Pool. Several Avalleble WIY llTf b an empty'd. oulet room all amenities $475/mo. I I ·ii~~\·? Wettrfrtlt .... , & 2 BR Apts S570-S700 IHaa Z7M TWNHME, pool+ prvgar,
~~8~.1 i;~,n~::;tr;;~,•Cf DELUXE epee 2bd 2be Call Cell• &48-65" 1 Live where you have In Meea Verde home. Lori 75~ 165.
YILUIULllA Langone875-8120Agt Eutllde large 2Bd. 1B•. lullyfurn,w/eltamenltlea. •Speetaeulerapte Oerege, $400/mo F to lhr 2B/2ba w/~ lllWPUH ··-Cl 107 yard, gareoe & lndry fa-pOOl/Jee etc, ocn vu. mealiB.AU ., & 2Br. 1 & 2Ba eultee 548-3255 Anytime! Pool, tennl1, ape/wgt rm.,
Spaelooa 3 BR townhome, ... .. .. ,, cllltlea $795_ 2364 Norse $1350/mo. EXECS ... why 11'Speciou1 townh<>Ueea New Condo, mat M, pool walk to bd'I 1395/mo
exquisitely deeoreted *IOIAll VIEW* Cell Sheryl 673-31 17 stey In hotel when f0< '-' IPAITIEITI * Flrepleoee lndry, utll Incl, prv, 5 min 722-18281840-8880 Gina
wtth family room lllld lor-3Br 2Ba, FR. New Hamp-1•••1 tPEllll you cen heve thll Beautiful lerge aptl In •Private baleonle• or to beh, tum, ~ ..... 260 N-emkr ahr 3 BR Condo.
mel dining room ChOloe ahlre home. Cu1tom bullt, .._ &42--0880· 631 ..... 897 quiet neighborhood. Garden petl09 Room for rent In Newport pool, jec, CM. 1375/mo +
tocatlon close lo pool end vaulted eelllnga Jee tub Nu Condos. 2 ml to beh. Harbor Ridge Ooean Vlewt Pool. Spa. No pell WIY MTt Beech houM. 5 min from 11'\ utll 722-78-42
ape Could not duplleate sundeek. 2 ea; garage: 3Br 2',...Ba, dbl Fgar 1450 4br, 3b•. lam. rm. turn. 1Bdrm S&40 occ. Full houte Pf1yj.-Stir 4br home on Balboa
11 $235.000 Cloaetobeaeh 831 -1400 sq ft. Pet Ok ned yrd guarded gate, pool, ten-151 E. 2111 St. 5"8-2408 •3 Lighted termi. court• legel. Celt tw2-e537
111
__ .. •~•"'/mo Incl ...
11
_ Dys 499-0491 Wknds Frpte, ape $1 150 ln111nt nla, $.4000 mo 760-8782 * 2 Swimming pool• .,.., ......, .,, (114) 673-4400 --·--lnl Call 642-9666 •2BR DUPLEX New •Streems & pond1 ltllla/)letth fUi Bayview, l/p, ale Prof
lo 1111/PETI II carpet & drapec, gatege, •Sorry no pet• -non·tmkr d99ired, evall l11trl Prtf 1 S Lg• 3Br 2B• 2 atory 3BR luxu Bluffs condo private & quiet, walk to * Furn1ih1nge avail UlllA IOU mid a.pril. Jim 873-5379
Aid BEAR lo cabin Moon-S f~gg· J,~[:· J:~~~~i view. $1491720-1950 ahopa. $650/mo 559-5001 Ou lor Hea~~ & Coolllng •Tll I• Tl'MI
ridge, 3-11ory, 3 br, 2 675-4912 LIDO ISLAND· 3BR 2ea •FREECABLETV.Lg 1Br Wk~ rentall. Low rat• .................. :;~~i 5'!'~-~9~1 SlOSK IEU YIHE newer, apeCtou1, 11ry: ~i~'6~~d~1~P._!:·,:i_~ WHY NOT CALL 11 5 & Up/Wkly. COIOr For tl'MI Competlbte
----lovely courtyard, evall · HM 111 TV. meld MMoe, free Roommat•. Open M M-F, 3Br. 2Be, dbl ger $1100 5/1. S2000 p/mo. C•ll $650/mo 2Br 1Ba. Reta coffee, hMted pool & 10-4 Set & Sun. 291-5777 -------•I LE. £xck1~1 1100 mo Incl gardener. Anne Sheron 975-5792. req'd. No pets. North IUWlll YIWIE step• to OOMn. Kttoh'1 WANT oOTI WW •xeh•w MeCUland 831 -1266 E 3B 2b II Costa Meta. 3009 Jeffrey avell. 985 N. Coast Hwy, •111• 42 -··-• ~i~~\· LIDO ISL . R a. eva Orlv A 1 559-8221 16555 Huntington l/lllege Leguna BMch, 494-5294 ' y ITl"IE ~;,;;,;;;;.;..;p;.;,.;.;~...p.;.;;.p preelou1 oertlled gema 2 •• ,: 5/2, no pet•. 11800/mo, •· 0 Lane, from San Diego --------na
for 1 for your equity and t ' 499-3400 own/bllr Small Studio Apt. Eut-Freew~, north on BMch IUWI 11111. Stor.,.. 5.--Available usu~ payments. ·J~ ~: ..... Wkly t-•· _., -..-..-call 71 2030 -----• LIDO ISLE HOUSE elde. Retrlg, hot .,..le, to Me adden. 1"1t on ren -now av-. De Anu Bayside l/lllege .w YI •• YllU LEASE-3BD. 39A, 1blk 10 Welk-In eloMt. e1C. "'°° Mefedden. $129.50 wtc & up. 2274 300 E. ca.et Hwy N.9.
.EllOEI
"'
UllE ctubhM/bd'I, s1eooi mo. mo.., MC. &45-5990 I . •---L Nwpt Blvd, CM 848-7445 873-1331 Mon.-Fr1 'e-.CP,, "' l1at1la 2Br 1BI, family room lnci ...,.. _.. DUPLEX-2Br lba eaeti weter S850/mo. Anne for more Info ,phone UllA IU IP11 SU 1111 LlllE I So-of·PCH S264,900 2102 McCaaland 831-128& 714-970.2559. 1Br. frig, renge, Indy, P<>91, *' ...-... * 3026W. Paelftc:Cout Hwy C..atrclal Cell Cl111ifle4 ,
642-5678
for information
& surprisingly
low cost.
521 Carnation. By owner Gtatral I ~ ~~ \.? Ooean front 3er 2Ba un-carport. No pelt S55o Refrlg~d~ & 1tove Newport BMch Refrlg TV LL lalt/ltat I _673-o241 or 673• l5" ~ COM -lg 2 a1ry 4BR 2BX • irr furn. I 1800/mo. 1 yr 1... g31 w. 19th St 5"8-0492 lnci. NO PETS 546-48SS s 125+ wk agl, no depoelt. -
Cffta •"• 1024 ~f~~1mi•rALs'b''oN~ -'~-~:;. • 11t.1ut +MC 882-12tw lllff &nW/YllW 2~ &d~100~: Yau tin lntalt laaiaeu Prt,etJ/lale
BY OWNER 3BR 2be ·2BR 2BA. lower unit. 1 Not tar 10 NB 2br 2be well ON THE WATERI 4bdrm, Vaulted eelllnga, prvt Incl No Pett 54Ma55 llU 2117 Condo Patio, 2 ear gar hae off l>Ch $850 yrly. 2be, view from f/Very beleony. redecorated
$105.000 966·1923 •&-UIUln kepl decor + pool e flat room! Furnlahed or un-$895. 2151 Pectfle Ave VERSAILLES CONDO SUMMER RENTAL: tum lflltAl.llfll
• -$585 muat see 539~191 lurnlahed. 13200 month! 9 3 1 . 8 1 o 7 pm 0 r 1Bdrm, 3rd Ar .... '725 Coeta Meta 18r condo NW?t Beh nr HOllQ HOIC)l-
rrade your old stulf for PlllPl.AUlllEIT Agenllee 875-5511 or evu 85s-oee5.Nopet• 57µ912v111aRentM llpe4,mnl09•vt8/21 tel.13281f.Whypeyrent ~:':s,R~o:~e:.t~~~8 a 11•1111·1111 PLUSH CONDOS wlfalla 494-2342. E LUXURY In 8 Pine For-•WT'lllff* to 9/1, 75 -5501 Iv meg own your own office.
atr .. ma. Gar w/opnr Seel 4br, 2ba, Fam.Rm, eet. L,.,.. 1b< *580/mo, 18r. Nr S~"'-ter. Hiila ti hrt Tomal Lee, agt &42-1903 .-.=:-:--~~==================:::"l Charming WHtmlneter w/d hkup, new d9COf Alll view comm. pool & ten-I 2br..-S700/ d/ ""':.:... n•.a • ant/ .... 3b< ff•b• f/p, g111dnr Incl now 2br 2ba 1895/mo, nl1, S 1995. 760-8782 ... ge mo, w. 1895 No pet• 1...,.. -
1900/mo. 891*'4209 1br 1895 1at mo t S500 frig, gu/wtr pd, 2 petloe, NEWPORT MARINA APTS $ont i;om; on Libo; n• STBllE IT
DCB
UY l'LACING AN AD
I THE DAILY PILOT'S
<:LA 'iSIFIED PAGE
PRIVATE PARTY RAl f. (No Can1·fllln11on)
4 lme. 5 11mf' minimum
•.60 per ~ne-Eumple. 4 hne'I, 5 dev~•12uo
• I 11 ,. m11., IW' 1n..f11drtl en •d
fi1 I 9
• lb1r ,J,. ... not •ppl• 10 ("""'™''",.I orc-ounl• \utomull•f' ""4Hrljl: ot Rrol f,.talr
• \JI) (~I I.A 1 IONS OR ( llA R~L':i ''"" t~ •ti hoa run f u0111uw ,.
, .. pr.n••*"" for tho-hill 1rnoun1
·FOR ~ORE OETAll S
(.:\I.I. 642-5678 DlllyPUat
Pleulng prloe txJf1041ow aee. 5"9-2447 Studio Apt, 5 doora to :~·s.~J.:1'· yHr •Bay View -28r 2Ba + laland. Arlt and lut. 2 PFliVATE oFf!'ICE§
S400'a pey. rent & utll1 SHARP emodeled 3BR beech, frple, utllltlee In-' . Den. 1800 Sq. Ft. Aval! 5/14. Female J)f9f. Cennery VIiiage Are-.
eppla provided pvt ~den ~ and lge yard eluded. = + NC. •EASTSIDE 29r 1'hBa, Wehr/dryr hkupe, micro, 873-5878 eft 8:30 pm harbor vtew, S250fS350
feneed539-e181 Agtfee Northtlde $1200 Inc depotl1. frple,Qerege.S750. 1886 frplc, encl getege. Prvt ... motomo .. 87~t0
.. IL...-lala.. I V«Ulltelg. IU , 1bdrm. Irvine Ave, '8 720-9422 bd'I. boet effp evfS2105 !!!JI!!.... ... BAYFRONT BLDG
&-. bllt, to bcltl. era.pool. E...id9 19r, carport. Quiet. •ALS01t EXECUTIVE sum:s Xw-ling Winter retMI •at. IMc 14 1P4, gym. se9 &40-4388 No pet• $42S + tut & 18r Oarege Apt. Micro. 11 35• & UP 842~ For month of May & Junel R Com encl gar 1920 Sor1y nc · ·
3br 1'~b •• IA pet•~. g111. LHH /Rent. ldHI new ... ca...... 1171 dep. AleO m In --t• 780-0819 Btwn °8-5 CdM dtx Sult ... AIC, " "' ""' 2BR 2ba condo. refrlg, plex, pvt bth & entr S200 ..... · w/d, lrpl. Cell Agt Scottie WHher/dryer, micro, PANORAMIC OoeanVlew-+ tut, dep. 84e-3420E -n-joy--t,,_--L-ux_ury __ of_t_he emplepkg, utile& jenftOf
875-4000 or 873-7702 min rrom beh or rrwy ~ 3bd. 2ba, IP•. E/SIDE 38r 29• dupl9x t>MutlfUI eurroundtnge of 2865 EC.t Hwy875-ee00
SOUTH BAY FRONT S900/mo, 864-5232 petlo, low yd main, call y d d/w W/O .. U1f11 Ql1 •• 12 ___... ,..... DESK SPACE 1150/mo
3BR 2beth 12000 yrty. and Lucille 4t&-0500 et ' garege, ' -Garden Ofc Lg petlo,~ • thly Pr.ter quaHty hM 3bdrm 2 hkup. Wtt'Y ntoe. pt1vat•. In • epeoiol• 18drm or Sne., '8 SliO vu. Gd ....... , ...... 842_Kl\1 othef WM!lly 0 mon ba1h blQ fned y111d dbl •tH qui.t. $975. 631·3&4& 2Bdrm Condo wltrptc, 2 _... ... -
rentel1 even 873-8700 garege kid• pet• S800'• laatl Aaa • C4I' gerege w/opm. S.. Oft I MOndt leun. LO Office 1n FMNon !eland
... 539-8191 Agt fee L(lt:;I&, pool, tenn,, P9t lllTllT II curtly guarded get••· • Month-to -month Prof. eutt•. llbraty, conf p ia l 1107 1.....1-t-4 o.k ,,.., So.ca.et Pl&U 1735 mo 2BR, 1'~BA. W/d hku~. M+0500 rm, Zerox. free Ptlftllng,
•• •• 1 " .. 1 etec1rtc ontyl '5215 E/llde towntiouae, gar., LAROE SBR 2BA DUPLEX also eve1leble S1000/mo Jv6r 780-25M
·-ll IAll* m 28( 1~ee ~ &40-8580 or 835-7001 tndry room, ntoe 1oce11ori wttti eundeck, ....,_ 10 • fumishtdl all •T .. ._ Lg bechelof Unit. Perteet tr• Condo. GrMt .,..., 2629 Ortlf'ge AW beeleh, ,..ny.t1200/mo. .......
find tor th•. perfect carpof1, no pete. 1 yr IM ........... TSL MGMT 842·1803 646-211515 unfurn11h1d c:::!~:W,~
Bachelof 0n1y '500. F• 1725/mo 720-7443 _ • F1tn1H centers, 5et aq ~VIEW sum•
TllDln lll-UU LO 1BR wlpetlo. ale. pool, ~ Cetta •eu MM Cetta •eu 2124 tennis. twimming w11f ReoeccHete
Excellent quellty 3bl' 2ba !:91 :::~.~·to:* b1aM 3111 Modela open d11ty. 9-6 Ni-1111
yrty gourlMI kl~ 1~ Mert 552~2.457·2121 s&mhmBXYl2bd WOODLAND YILLAGI Sorry.no~· OCEANl/1EW8Maerw. ~3M•1e 11 ~t t tee AANCHO SAN JOAQUIN teeo f7&-tl5t3 eve. Newport Beech Ne ""1.. Mwpcwt Cent.w
CON00-280, 28A. den. APAllTMllll'I ...,.1 •A n 1 8
1t10
200Mwpcwt c.n92t• DI'
on,:,courM. ,evelt4-t2. laJLll Ptalaa•ll ....., rv1n vt u • 00.644-44 Wip;:iWj;mm,..-.. .... lpiii•I • Comt & tntOY our prdln 1tyil epts Quiet. comfortllllt N•lftl l•t 16th) ==-=-=~----2BR 11%&. oc;;;n -Mw. •1 • 830-7708· 1117 close to lrMWayi & So tout Plaz• wlMlt Olll'f 11111111m to the Of'FICE for Nnt IP9'0lf.1
P•tlo, gar.wide It. Adlte Unfum Doll H• 2Br 2Be. *-ll • ._. bllth Car-••lllltllt ~ P(TS Plf.ASl M5-1* !!! aq. ft. ~ Ind 9' 1950/mo 7.,.......1 y IM ••1111"• -..... Newport Beach So -•. Coe1a ......_ ~ P' 's11c1 ... ~ptc<8'1o~.J..~ Studkl + full kltah, utll ...... • •Al • LAB II IY •I... 1700 19th StrHt rnonttl. ~. ocsae..~3eobl8UQ HOUM ,...,,tJll Off PCH fr9'C •11
• ~ tnct. Aefr!G, atCNe. Ytty or OrilCi to.' rwnt -
t>tttn• e>0Mlt>i. option ~ ~ 15c McMno SSHimo. i::.. •a-• 111 Oovtrl __
under l700 539-1111 ------11• -' • •••• w~sm 180 aq. ft. H9rbof Inf Aoent• . 3bf, new ,.._.., ......,. -~ Wer.Coet•MM.-. w/frpt.oceer1~.•1 .-.. -* ~ · month.~.~ ti ...... 714/404·204' ·-..... 2., ni,:o ms&'!·::· (Sun>~ 1111214-a* ~~~':~~!TEI cs "::: =-1~,: ~ ,ru 1MO ''A•• H~I find ttMt IQlllC>o S3IO per montt\. F• ~,,., ..,._ Gfoea ..... All/It( ~. Pfl ~9'-34t4 ~t and~ ftley ,,_, 1'ILllllT 11...... 11&11 '"" to.' • IMW311
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aw""'8 W..'tOHC lrl .... lllM ~ lcbw.8elwV°°""'••• fhp"'. Olol•p"one, ..,+ .....+ DI •Mill·NDLM~ llM "" 1111.. .._ *·
Nll.fOCflca.".lllO/fftO. ~1111::=._"1. let.~ wl-.p.tu-10S3 W" .. ""· .. lr1ilrl. *9•••4.. -..... .:::=-It ~.:r1 f • Up•O' ~ ~~
01•)111..... ...:.. ...::.Nr::: -::n~=r:s to OAIHIUOKlcOf16N ~ ........ 0~= LD 111~-:.-:.... ... ~~I. penonwtw>neecl9X.TM o.thodofttto offtoe. Ho ~=-••••_,Ml or 1*t w a M41M MoC1k "1iil1161wiiibi'WM IMAla~ ':&~""~· deCOI•-,_ .-__. MOHIY 11M127. Or1ho 11XP neo.411 0100 ~1Mm\CA9)oo0 • tiM NllP Nllded tor ......_ ,._.. :.w • -pr;-_09* a cllPt?I.· Ollr M 1 ,_. .. ... • ~,!:.1:=....--.' 1A8Yii'T'TinNUDto Cllillll-AM NIT·lm ..n...,....-aMllfM :;.~~:,' tasL1nia..cw -=---~= m . ••a•• All ementftta lnok.tdl"G hrMlrne 1n our....,,, - _ ..,. W IA1.a AIMTANT to fUtm • • ... N111111 1rr ,..1 0, ... M 0 Zerox. Approx. IOO eq ff. lwll tlofM. Alf9 teq'd. • "'°"' fDr OM of .... • .. 11 ff M\1118 ...... Mlpm UprWM ·"'--· ...,. • ft I --........ ..... ~ *-· Mow Mk.. MO NH ••• ,." Very IM.tW dtOulllllOn Of. ........... In "" '°' Ctw'tltlllft lohoot. ..., .. ,, • Cofdepot, ruM f00d 111 ; •11 ... • 11100 ... •n
(714) 72CM>141 'Ul L TIMI MON-FRI, Horton & CQnw Pfw. floe~ J*'•ttme • ~!,;d:,r. .:::-eni= A#kl 1-~. PIT PHO'fO lA8 1""" = ""IC>~"fa,... 'iJC;;C;LP"llilll!Pl.l·=··~I;;;;;;;;;-;;;-;:=-;;; •-tortwe.40Q0f/I OAYCAAEtof1yrokl,ln m.O. .,.. reloeaUng ~!! '-¥Y pt'°"9 -wttfl -w ~Y!l1.1114112 .............. ,.,. __ .._....__ -:. -·--~· NUQBJT'M---.._ • my E.. Side Co.ta M-. tnelr ...., <>Mot to "" ............. t*'9ntoeou. -· ......... _ -~ --r • ... . ...... w..-. ............ Oii ..._ 20 ce11no. MOo home 14?·7aat w.-... of of.._. tomenl ~-"""' WWtt '° ,,_. ~. ~ ~ U. .,_ Ca1Hra la6eepenon, "! j '---':c, W •· Hew . .,..... a Ur• llOdtl.CoeetHWy,eo,.. • . port 9-ot\.,.,. ~ bewt,,...,.....Md Olll Julen Ill., .... TO'*'-Gnlelaollle. .,.., ~ ... JI • -... ,.. •t0 .... Ce1•1--ona .,_. Mer. Oottone.. NEW to .,.. end need Gfowtno ,.... phatmMy haw a p111eent ..... tof en .,C. J:IOem ..,._ M00-"60 tul • .,..24aj.
Dey/81 ......... .2*21 . bebyllt1• for tofM ... c:Nlnlu ... dn9Aocounc· ~ .,., • ..-. 8olM IAU!llGfllEETlR mo .... 1418, Mt ... 7.-01--.,-,., ........ iiiCKd-~-PACKIA ___ LES 111~1• ft9/21~7Me78 ~~ otd boy. lngP~. ~ o"'°9 "'°"' lllo. Hour1y+OOll'fft 'IT tiAI, •11111r M:ll ~ iiiOOtoeo. (il#lt _..
ctmMtlll fl11t1tl ~'who~:."'" 1 Fr1,t:OO ... AM~-oo~ coee.-.Ai.tow...\ AFTER e'om• ·,..~· ntt1ne, ooi-C':."'iw....,,. .... ~--.i!,....,...n ... ~t.1 money. Cell atter 1 • .-. to mW!.;' .... eooounttno ltattklOMl9f'lllS100per 84a-1*· •tor J-v. $CllX)L .......,.,... ~ ~1121. • ,..... ~ii,,~;J!*J!:i.!; ~°'~.~~~"Zr =·~: =~2~:':'oa a ... ,,.... ..... ,,. XIS ':..t~1~ •• c:: •c:;.6:,......,..,.., Imo. 932 ... 190 ~2527. the generll eube6ctlaty PM.~ tor Deen In~ leedl Pwt or ,. ....., • 1r1 lltitl ledgert. pr..,.tton of &5CkfXl WWW u t1rM. ..,.. be 21 or .__ tt200. 4loW111 a.-a.n.11T11. the~ ...... , .. ..., •1•11111 ,,..._ r1M1 OYet. Al!ll. '°' ,.,.,.. ...,.f'ftCMMmlid'omidlr FREE &TAHDINO CARING "'°"*' rm: C*tt ttow ~It, 111.Y PUT tMl1 .,.., tpm.....,,. tllC, ,... oond. .. ...,...
Ltg 8tlow Room & omo. 1ne 111ttna tot btlOht ...,_ ..... Ind oenerel tu ,.. aunova llnlll'V atw... 2 M. Punt •uao
l ComerofWeetolff&lfWte ~ E'bluft women. Aeq pone, budgeting and now.~at. .... ~~ llUnl.1 m1u.mn2 I lllt7to,l4040TT
S1gnep.ceevlonW..edlf'I 2:30pm dNM to 8 Toro 1Mn8glng en offtce Maff Coeta ...... CAt2e2e -• -.... ..,.._. Now '*tno tot M end ~ _, "" Nat.
Ml-t111 ~ m c;'"'~t~01 r= n '1i of eight. Equlil Opply. Empqer HOST /H08'1'U8 PRIZES 'art..tlmf po11e1c.-. Ml.Ill S:-..!: •14 "*°' dn. ,., Mo. + Tax
hJiiUl/Valit nu 720-81« M~ have --wtth ~ 1RfS ~~= ~.:~--~ IDlAW,...,...
!7!ft5I Drl! ay °"""' HOUSEKEEPER. Nftport ':::70~ "'.':::..,."*:: T ....... /Tr... HOUSEMAN Hwy, i....,,. lwh. Ida wloill trtn\. ...._ ~ '=. ~=
2Br 1ba, eep. ydl/gw. Bch. 20 hrl P9f .... 8elery commen1ure1e 1111 Mme 1'f':' ~ ltleulls ... . lllCM12J d9re 1 tiwee ~ t1t ....
1192.500.(213)430--5211 ~~Ing .only llppfy w/~ •• beneflte XOfo UECAXNiC ... , ... 111u1•111 I Kint llH waterbff TNI ,..,..,, .. Of
WUillll HU__ ll/AP.flnaLU PORSCHE·Ell~r1enc.d ~'GKfMAIO •="· 'rn~~IT:i ,...,~d.-t21.A14 6 '1f tiitup iia: rd. --.arw/ lllLMlll on1y need llPPIY. dWI ..-EnglWI If>'°" .. tot eortre ..... of Orenoe C'~·-. '°"" -obo. Jedl OAC en
1000 ft carpetect ofc 4C>0 LIVE-IN. M1ture women. Minimum, 2 ~ ex per· ehop, Od benilf; Ancl9I IWtno INft eperdnQ lftOMY, 0t •• eel~ (21S)MS-"iOM'-7• 113-t311 lift 9Pm ler# tllMt
8"/IC>I "' 405 & HwbOr 81 It 10 wk. Sen Clemente. lence. Muet type 46 wpm Roed & Radr'G oalt '*-DOCK WOAKEA to go SI*-Ille Meglo hctlOMI aota Camef • 1111
'Btlr. 840-4152 · 4N-572e or 917-7822 end 10 key bV. touch. 0t .Amokl. 71'-957..-00. Mon-f'tt Mountain, Knoftl 8erTY '211. a pc dlfl. 'room alt
1 _ Data entry ~tee I Farm. °' win Prtme encl T~ .,,..,._ 1120 541.,... t'NMl 98
RENT:1125 eq ft. W/trudc MH .. (trt.P•> Ind accounting dWal·~~,.. 8NACK8HOPATT£N Awerdt,C•h•nowtW'• • fU~.
door. '550M'to, 1355 4 cnlldNn, egee 1·8. ~. helpful. Selary com· 10 opehlnga, .. ph-. Sun & Mon only haw M11Wa1 CIC*ilngl In Int,.....,...., Sold wood klna .._...., P9r Mo.+ Tu
Logan II. Coete ~ nee. Baytt\of .. neigh-men1urata with u -S7·S10hr. DOE. foreppt C.M., H.B. or F.V. -.... --bed, ~hdlltd & I to~~ Cell 175-5111 bomood. N.B. 842·8~2 pet'lence + beneftte. 13&-5700. SAVE ~ INCOME AUOtTOR 142-4338 r...-1-drewere undarneat". eeip Coat 125.000
WEST COSTA MESA WEEKDAYS 2_..._ FH. 10135·A Wetl· ACCOUNTS RECBVABLE -& .. ..-.. __._ needed ~~ ....... ~·~ C.., Ald.12.700 -vt""• cw Cell (213) 273-0850 for mm.ter. ~ ~!Cid only -·---_.,,.. _.., _, --,...,, ............. __. t .4 .... w 11th St. 7-151< eq tt. Ind ,..._eneee req"lfed, Ketth ~ Mnd,....,,... to 30 OS**1al. .. l)h-. to conduct a Mnettno t100, patio «Nlrltll* .._ 1 .... 1
SOC/ft.840-700 NB home, 759'-10M. 11478o.RoberUon8MI, lllllTYLllT WORKING CHEF from M-113 hr. D.O.E'. = fot the ~ bllO, 2 90ld wood.,., Tote':,~Of
lutat "'"", ... ~tit . =· LoaAngelel,CA90035 G,...,~ln M~llXP for eppt .. IH·5700, ltl~ll,. "d Mooe.S1ll0.117-t1to OACCE.L. .......... -• _ FIT RECEPTIONIST exdulNe M9wport 8Mct1 SALES CLEAK 10135-A w .. tmln1ter. 00. .. WamL Fl• Serl# 1811137 13M1 HeftlCW M .-G.O. ~ •• REC LEADERITEAC FOf Fut G owl Co Salon. &46-2111 81¥9 ~/Fee PIMMnt w6oa a -·-r•-1--. 1••2111 ,._ lll?ID'l AON "°8• cretta, gemee, Oppty tor ~ r-.) RV/MECHANIC Aaxlt>te 1rttw fir 11M. rnuat, ~a ,.. .. 1.119 Ill... ..-
COSTA MESA loc. W/ok» =~:~'::';~ P9f90n who can uclll. rofwk>nel wded fot Fogg:,=°E PIT 1-3 dy9/Wk. Femlllar ~.r.. "1o:W ~ W=•o.:: c:n~ t ..... "'"'""' SUBAAU '71 4X4 WON. I 11Ptl. Rent. cen be llPPI "4-422l HB An...,~. type 45 Wll•teb9go Duh ltllp In w/OC Pf-' 40+ rwttr... 19f16or1. CCJ110e...... ... All OOl1d, eunraof, 9lftltM relHd. T remendou1 ' • · wpm I ... 11t •he<• Northern Callf. CGK Good w/ftguNa Mlle,·..._., .... 222 & mooulah..., Hows ~~!!.,.. f ~~ 0 P cw. Good *--11•.
potent1a1. Btlr. l4f.2111 tu... nHd•d. Donne R. Camper a... ,.. tor MoncSay-rrtdey 5'.*>Dm ---· tA8 CAM tto. Ci i sq-1291 :hliam::::=:.:i:.:.ff=:·=~I Southco11t RecrHtlon 72C)..91IO. PeteCota,G.M. ~llf... ~GIRL FRIDAY to t :OOpm, leturdey mav'-1.. afl ounmetel 1ray. Low ~r;;;:;;;::;;;:;;:::;:::
N I Center hu lmmed open-.. ,.., 707·544-7114 ~U21. rw Johnln :"~ 9:00em to 1:00pm. 8tatt iiXOf lMD9 m TV ::: .:: ..:..--: ~~AW
tA T ' ---Ill_. Inge fOf tMCherl w/e:AfJ FOf buly otnc.. comput• Liii 1111 Ml'9t type llO we>m. 10-•I '4.00/hour plue conaoia w/2f>" TV om tnoo l4t t311. _ t --,. wonting w/5-12 'I' okla. e dellf'ed SM-513e QAAl'S key IBM Pf'-' no lhort ~ Pr1vN deelc & naadlWOftl Nomertteon -------fiM UORN for Perferred Clw 2 dnv.'1 xp. · AVON.., ' • • phOM, cuuel attlr•. wood cai1 H0-5144 .... ,_
TO. S 10Klup, no credltv lie. From 14.50-Sl/Hr. .. fWf HAS SALES OPENINGS 118'11111/.... ::"'~~ !:'. Home wotti .. wetcome. wt.rtdiw. I I I llll
OeNeon"->c.173-7311 Cell Sheryl Hewtllneon PIT Hour9 1·5 Deity •NOW• Day & n6ght ltltftl open. Olaln,&-.Spm. For lnteNtaw cal Ma. 1t-.:.:i .... .-..... ... •----~-&48-4334 Of 846-9708 MS-5958 ,._ for uu.n · 466-1531 Aflf*I betw u mon thN Mereno Mon.·Frl. at ... TllLI _::·~ ~v--,__ -----" , .. deu1 ... WllT Yll'll Frldlly et Coco'•. 900 Ful charVI boc*keeper I 4 2 • 4 3 a 8 b • t " Excllenl cor1d ....... 4X7 .,._ ·-... _ -• --------•~-~. 'J/ Siii PAYROLL ....,. Bf11tol No, N.B 762-2801 w/dou.,.. entry el(S* hm·3pm. Or after .,.,.._, S225, 72?-Ml2. (lm8'!,'*1 "27•11)dllli{ .. !!llY.;.._. ........_.. 2121 "91Ua1•tr•tf" needed tor* hoep. ~ 5:30pm .. M.2"'5811. .... -.. ..._, TIP ...... ......... ,. '2f5.t"=;i:t~ CLEll At~:::·1!:..o.rn: p,:'::'11 ..... =.!5~o tz;;· = :~~:= <>AA.COAST ForP 1$1 ..
Penoneni.d "-umel I Th• Oreng• Count TMJ~Rogerlnc.en .. Coete MeM. W1ttl our Weltrw Hoet.el ~I 4-oc 18$00 TBIWI --l)OllllhedbrWfrontl.Sb _.,Aaneult ... c1d• ...
lettere. Same day wvtoe Regleter 2em-11.,,{ lebll• •d rHllurant MW ~' IClle. 552-0233 Tom or ~ ~158te 840 ,,_.,,, p/11me ~ b ~·~la:!":;: :~= 2514tWbor Coete,._. JIW
1vall. RESUME WORKS wkdys& ~end. $5/hr ;. chain, hea.,, ~for rou c.n wn men then 711-1911 Mary • Mld6o ... oo. ~ ~ l'n-9103 •• 1121 TopMaicadaa..,,_P81d
111-19" geullOwenca.Qppty.for ::,'~!:e:T4 ~ 1200 In commmton~ ~ToOpenSoonl ... I hoeplWle&oolao-No • CALLPET'E"orMY
Leal I,.... His ldv1noement Xlnt lbftn. eon dept. PayrOllexpend =.:r~ It'• Need penotwtal for .. Exp'd~Somalltelend-d!Nct .... bulmu9tbe fltt It Yte IHI fw ... -···'* en11. Need~ car. 1()..key helpful, but w111 PoMI* 10 wn more Dapta. ~ 1n penon IC&Plna. Salary negot. et>te to p1aae a ~e rm -1Hesoa;;:maona1ca ... l•ll
FOlll> ADS
ARE FREI
Cal:
ln1, good drtvlng record. train .,, lndlvldual who lhen S1000/Wllt.., Houn 811 8. El Camino AMI. In Muet hew dep. trudc. w/....a> cuetom.-.,_, r-. UI I hlcup, em/fm --. '"118 751-4155bef0f• 11em. tiu. llmltedexpend•ct. ttexl*f!i.'''8ctKlol Alpha ht• Shopplno ..,.1.-331eewmeee. SI rwty+ lncentM .......... 1mMll/h9t wNl.*'4300.l50-1•, __ a_1-a_or_7l4_.,_-ma __
LIU llllJI llr• to lwn. 8elety com-:~... Stu-;;;~:oc,1sen Ctamente. HouM clHnerel Mu1t ~ .0:::. = ~ SHEPHERD/LAB MIX he 11111: ,....... MM ll&f TIYITI
Tired of R.E. 8ecome 1 mentul'ate w/ exp, ~ denl9 & 8enlot a... . haw own trena. HB FV for ~. 714/eecM>727 PUC>'*911.4 wb old. LJ<e MEYEM TOWO
Loen a-R E. Uc ran'd In P9f90n lanMpm, « encouraged lo eppfy. For ..:==:. 9•.a er• etert SI/hr M/~k itldS. From Mela Verde ~ ......_ •&1 -IBMSet~pfOfy~.I~ Mndt91Umeto: an 1.ntervlew Cell .._.. ~ --M3-M71. .... TERMINEXINT'L ~1067 ,_,.1.--.Mll*~ _,..
t\eld + Trelntng. LA PAZ. THE J~L'Y,~EA INC. (714)540-0301 illll&IM INT""_,,:n n. •UTe,.... TM nedon'e llact.r In peat Alli:: r:..-•--:4~1~ tie, •1200. --·
MORTGAGE Chuck 17.._.__ •• Ave ·-· ~" ........... ,_PE control, "-~ .,._ ........ •e••• <714mo.eoe7 1rv1ne. e1.. 92114 nu.nm"' ___ TECH: Pmm. '° f/t1ma. OC*llno '°' 8er'ltce Ae1>-a ...._.., IMt ....., ..,.... 11• "2-1111 714-250-0331. PAIT·Tm--·-EJcper. PNf, Wegae. ~.Exphelpful. OL"m. Gant1 ______ ... ________ 1_,.._....._.
-------•18-klflilexp9f.ElctOWOf· PIT SECRETARY Opportunlt ... avellebi. ./..,... ~elCS*· Fem but .. treln. mutt have cond. drafttnt ,...., • .,1......... 'f1•/IC1 .... -
ftoer, Jr. Elcrow Offtcer Archttectw81Rrmlnlrvtne w/'TheloaAngemTlmea ... Pll.LD pref. · Calf drMrl lie, good dellca,chllra,mllc.J9fl LOAOEDwn'H!XTIWl
Found-M/lg blk 6og w/wtlt end Elcrow Secty. Salary ..-. • PIT a.er ... -. drQJ!atlon Dept In our .. -drMno recotd. W. ofter Clalr'9--...._.144 '750 131 ... 3711 ~ chest, Senti Arte Rl\'9f .q>en ba.d on~-H8 ·-7 • DoOt o-Ooot • lrnmeeffe .. oper11rt f _,_ compMtttvelllary, llberW _,,..,,_.
bed.Bl'ookhurst&Hemllo-., ... 1mmec11ete()9enlng. p~~. ~ ..... -tPf09f*'I',...~ lop~. eoun:'eo.: Full-time dtl:i. New-l11oe11tlw peen,. 't rt=· = • JUSTOffTH£80AT I
ton,.A{>l 12. 548-2148 Gretchen ~1255 btwn =:--~ · ........... teed hourly ..g. +com--pen1ea. LongJlh«1 term PQf11et.ta .... company beMftta. eel --c·2-·ae AabtlM eon.. ... f.OU o.&nlll F 8:30-5·00 Moo-Fri ._.._ n, ''"""'' mlel6on Houri 4pln Mii~ manta. Muet be US ct\INn. Cell 714-646-0213,orllPClfYln M wNt& Belt ofter
ed Nblk / '~1~•9 ' ~k em . .,,:::.! ipm. · Trelnlng ~~ {A(;Ta,;p0RAR'f SVC. b t w n 3 • 4 : 3 0 Pm ~ t -5pm, 1431 r:" ,:--:::'::; 75e--1170orMl-4116
Street• ::Tutt. Thur• •M.lol/Dntal SIH Ible. '61~7900 provtded. Potential to 4500 Cempue 1124 C714)14CM411 ~~· ._,. '75~1 3009 ALFA Aornao '14 GTVt. ••• • 'f6t+ day,844-6314. earn $300 +I*..-. Nftpof't 852-8424. ~-Anttw'e, tan....,_,.., TURIO OIESE.L lllTAl.llm llm111f/-For an Interview call FIT IOIM HJ*lenc. ft,l ... ,llllii9ill roof, ale, OCMr. Plrlll BM/blUe Nlfr .capt., L~ :d:a.y:;.=~ R~T~~N:~n/'~,:; ~ofc. PIT:=~ (714)857-2000 Ext 2411 A~::~onat~~·~ ~~~ ~il~~ 111...,...1 ··:ti, Ii .. ~~~.~~1 er~i ':. :10oncs.~ ~~
Lllk•. on 4/8. An• Toby · expar pref. Nd Mii· Mntlal~751-3191 ... -1.-... Sl-$8/hr pit, call Si.ve RCA 25 In L:utl#Ui 850-0121.,.. tpm, or buy (8002Se)
S50 rewwd. 980-0240. atarter dedicated to ex-_. ...-•-2:3o-5pm, 145-5780. MODELS MOVl.E XTRA8 Eng gent ..U pollt • Walnut (perf oond) eor.-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ·11.-. c I SECRET ARY FIT Home Fumlehlngl, F(T ' * Actora. Menl end kldl apt mgr No oomplax too .,.. TV nMdl woftl l50 .,.... LOST~:C.tbtk/grey~rpe2 ~~t 11 now Accurate typtng for W.P .. PIT. Hrty +Comm. Prt/f 111111/•H•ll (2·17) Comm, 'TV, Print blg:the~theb.t'*1 ~ . LARGE SEl.ECTION ~ OfRIMllli 1-.1 °"8rf ~· Cd Cyn ·~ wlll train. lClt dlctaphone Retell eJCp, Mr. Tom Work Seta. ~t Hrbt Adi, 1..aoo-55S-ALM.* Jemee Aoae 642-2111 lu •-•-NEW & USED BMW'SI -M Ill ~nr9, m ut M«I .. 14. Cl1nlflecf1gotthaanew« lklltl, epeilllflil llftd good 144 8eeO Nettle ere., Anlmel Hoep. 125 Mw If!..... t,m---840-80n '9#ard to your flfewood naec11. w/numben, 431-8460. Futllon let, N.B. Or. CM ~ btwn 9-3 lad 01 Stereo, ree to-ree VOLUME SALES 100! ~·9'JI NI
Claulfled't got great sound• for you. C....... 1114 SERVK;E & LEASING . ~ · •
·-.. 3ei~~~ve. VOlVO ·a Turbo a.den.
MOTOR ROUTE
Mlec. material•. tool1, (No. CtlerTy exit~) Sunroof. IOeded. boll
equipment. 1upply1. (ll•\AM.....&9Aa c;ond. AM/FM CHI. 828·3 Termlnel Wey, ,.__,.. taeoo. all 173-7~ C.M. Sun.·Thurl. &-5. Trac»4nl Wek:iome
¥m!!ah!llttt Cnant/Cnmtt lad~ La ..... ,... Patatia1 Available In Irvine area. tmlprttdta OPEN sEV£H DAYS v:::v..nsa::o,.:,:
bflveways. pa1I09 .• pa;, HANDYNlov -M.int a I LlnAn PAINTER NEEDS wOG1 $300 to $600. No collect-pelnt. Good cor1d 1n1out
$2.40 per day etc. No Job ~~ !"*'· Aepelr svc. Home. Apt' Lend9Caplng. s;;n;c .... 1nt1Ext. oe111nge, rllfln cab. Ing. 3-4 hours a day. Mon. IMJ&.._al till S3mioC>o. 846-7111
RMI. Mickey, :>.JO-V553 Commen::lal 7eo-7194 Sod. ~. 20 ~In (21) ~exp.,~ i' PtOW IOXT. Stcnga vw BUG '84. Rune or-\. Cltuiat lll'rift **HANDYMAN•• .,... Tony 145-5124 o.w Pe1n11ng 1 thru Friday afternoon. Sat. ~,.,....., 1315. c.11 .. wcrting oond .. ,.. Thel'1 ALL you pey fOf
3 ttnee. 30 day minimum
In the
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
m'§ cWNINd Large Of llNlll. i doh"'' FULL SERV. GARDENING I' 962 4701 & Sun. morning. Call (714)75Q..0389 o.r-.,.. s1MPLY TKE BEBT ~,&4• tsoo. ca11
SERvice: a ttwooughly Pat 531•5579 «,.... meg. No Jot> 2 b6a « 2 1me1 IC • 642-4333, ask for Kirk. f« Tom N...-S::O~oi~~~ig
ciMn houM. 540--0857 YOU BUY• I INSTALL F,_ eat. 84-3072 8' SEAFLIGHT Sellboste 1S40 JAMBOREE RO VW SC1ROCC0'78. Great
EA Lt. Bee;, Lt. PlumblnQ. Complet9 ~ gen'I TEACHERS PAINT ORANGE COAST cornpteta '"5/ee; 2 P.-· NEWPORT BEACH con d • m u It • • • CLEAN-SPARKLE CL N G.,. Opnre_ WL 543-MIM melnt tr'M ~· fr• CONT .. '"CTOR ...... .-..... eon moulded peddle Act•-• to F..-...... lllland 12100/080 780-3'03 or Thorough reaponelbte • • ""' ,. ._ ..., Plllt .....,., .... ,_..., --· 7"'""--~1 ..... ~ certng rJ.. 481-1810 ' PROF RESID'L SERVICES 111. Mauro, "2• 3 Free eet1me1 ... &41-4!18 boeU.....,-. -• '*'· Open ~ Dllye ~ Weetc __._.. """ .... _
. Call Walt for 'f04l/f home,_.___ •-•T ~ p M7-3956/947-TT74. &40-6444 ;;;;---;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.
HouMCIMnlng 14 ~exp. _ _...need$. 842-7990 ..,_, ..,,... "*'m~*' •= "~ SOUTH COUNTY CALL TODAYll '·" ... ·--· .. ~.--"'"'' 330 W Bay St KAYAK: 0oaan ._...Vlk· -.. ·-1•1PU1 retleble, r.... • 'own II ·MIKE 850-3 . f NG INTERIORS • • Ing 11 ft. A!Jdder, blgl. OE_...LIV-ERY10EP5•DTO.JiENT VOLKSWAGEN
tr•n•. Pine M s-teee Dall• .U.. HANG1NG1snt1PP1NG Costa Mesa, CA OO'Mtpaddle. cer ~ """"'
KAY'S CLEANING sERv. ttHAUUNd . UOVINd ......., v1sA-MC 11:J.1&12 l550 1141913-8491 McLAREN'S BMW a
lllF•Llll
Your Servtoe Olrec1ory Rapt .... ,,.,,....
U2-412111t. IOt
Reetd. spec:ta11St. 1n1'd, Geraga' Y.,d ~ imocr-wa111. bt!ClkWo&. ANDYs wALLCOVERINO L , ... IMb tll t rs uzu
Bonded, lie. e&&-5703 Jon 192 c:onct9te. ~· lnetllll811on & AemoYll •-••••...,.•••••••••••••• H'LYllll M-FtlH 8,S-Stlll8
altlften Comm'I OeY. Corp. Gree»-15 ~ exper. Int. P91ntlng. ~13 • DELIVERY DRIVER -: ·, ..._ ........ ..._ -~. e~~!t. heul-weld. G«l contrector ~Petlol & onv... -·-_ llTI" • ,_... .,_... ·---~-714-elO 8300 8.1. WILSON & SONS ,_., ret ... 146-4631 G .... blOClk ~t a --·um • 1e extra Taak.173-3934 2 13-191~701 Rm. Add. Remodel Kite. • tentry DEPENDABLE QUALITY iPiioi-.mii(ii;iii .... iiiiWiiiiii4i..._ eath. T11e. 1357467 ins. •CONST. CLEAN·UP• Drywall. Pu 14 -3238 wor1cmaneh1p. M2..ea13 • Dally Piiot motor route • .,.. _nm /llN ~eyed or remove. Ory· 30 yre exp. e46-l740 g::'~te~~ ~~ cu.tom Br1dc-8tone W• gale""'. hq tog91her : av all able In Huntington • '11 4kw. lllp. flnanc'g wall Ref>alre. 947.7901 Blodc-Coftct....Stuooo Hengletrlp. Ad\tloe to the e e 'rt lv+brd. ANXIOUS
hEBLowN oR PAINTED C..atnttl• HeullnQ. Mewing. a.en-Ref'•. Free eat. 549-9492 OIU'I· 83o...01so • Harbor area. 1-2 hours • ry SMK. ~7417
Aleo Int/Ext Painting I hJW!aL upe~ ~ L=:~-· SPECIALIST BLOQJ( p)nM., . : per afternoon. • .... llll
Oc"281687 831-9295 RTC ~ &;WIJi . FENCES. Cement, bftck. -• c 24' Sklp)adl 1971. 430 tire Art~ Spect= In Comm'I lutntdea Call 24 hr-. 545-0729 H .... f 111-1• • all 642-4333; Monday -twtn eng wltl1r. Mini oond
....... Ind I. F,... .. t. xnnounang M Of?F on STUCCO MASONRY-TILE •AIJ*.wftl*g&~ • Friday 10-5 P.M. Ask for Dodtevllll. •19•500: ARCA. RENDERINGS. 5-48-8923 1313924 Cuetom DOG Obedience No Jot> to"'*'· All typee. DfWNS CLEAR From i15 • Art &42-11M/D 831-6458/E
HOMES. COMMERCIAL ···-••••n•m• .. .,our home. ProNctJno F,....,. Uo. 831·234S FeucMa. Dlllpoeel ....... : • SID IMb tilt Cell Kevin, 211·2277 ~ t..-...i-evllll. Protec:tlon ~ •~1 ~ p•A ..-..-a. An ~ of remodetlna. o:;~ ... 841-7116 ~ -..,..,, • '" --0 c t HOBIE 11. w/lreller. ~. ttcl4&7891. 840-f591 .... 1.,.. R .. J'1COMPLETE Hom9&: F8"J9 088 '"91080. White hull.
x;;:r;p;t;& ROLLS CONSTRUCTION EATING DISORDERS. CLEAN&EXPERT 8uelnW Maintenanoe. e Delly Piiot blue tr.,,,.,.~ buy1 ~ • Rooftna I Contr1c;Ung fOI qu1llty Anor9ldL 8lumla. ()wr ... Owr25 experteia PtumblnO epedlllt. F,_ • ~ W .. 0~-• Deepel8te.131-7&s4 W~ig• 131...i198 llom• Impr ovement•. •ting.~ eppt. Uc. T-11r.::1iO.tMS eettli...._ S...29M • ...,., • J nY9 1111 .... ...11-Tlll ~~~~~~;1 8-46851M as2-0421 Uc•M
11554 Mo-6454
• t; , .. i • Coeta Meea, CA ...
M;;w;ig Xn I COQO. ~ ... ••ILi 0u::~~~ fJt11ftwoet l'NOit ••e •••••••• •••••••••~• °'91Qr'1 8erv B<oc:tlur-.. Entry ( F™ ooo;; • nean \.0 RATES. 552-0410 ERTY MGMT .. 3" a., T)l*•t~. oRAPHica By Norman The 0oormen K.e. fitiiEMVICt ITAnM-.L• AMERILAH0"1"*1
N&WPOA .720-t181 Oak&Flr.157-DOOA T~~T:i=.:.-l~ll--• WIJIYIL.lflM\
l)plnQ:Word Proowtno. 919-8213 « ~ Of*'ll9 Co. C>nalnll ~. aot m~.i 1NN'lf
fypeiiettlnQ. RUSH J08S tudenl • n. fnand OUR SPE C IALITY ,............ nm ~~~1-1427 ..... Mii/iHliilii
GRAPHICS NEWPORT. Qualttywoftl,heeet. NEWW--.........--• 72o-t191 1 4255l3 Ml-7401 TOPCJed/~. a.en-.... .._,.., .... _.. W'~ ..... ,«111 up, new 1ewna. 751-3478 ..._ ••• Top Ouelty. L.ow Pnoe. -LUii RESID/COMM'L/INO 21 Trea/Trtm/Cleanup oompC ... _.._ FrM .... UC. es1~2S46
,._1,.__10 91-.-Vf9. Do my own wont. Uc. ~. ~ ~ llllllllill9IL191i CAU NOw. 8'i.:4fe'' 1278041. AJ MM 121 ::-. cfiUdc""'t'J.'nn By ttr./or pleoe. e48 -~ -;mtlm B;"'
NO. mad\. c1ee1gn ELECTRICIAN Oetdel•ig. 'ul 1en4oe ·~ lntlet ~ 91r9a ~MIC , .... Aocurate . Atlable Uc 1233108. Small= Mow ~ ......... 8oocMfe,Mopede Mower'I
Owr 20 Y"8 up. 54&-0805 Jobe I repen. 54M WOftl. ;;::;:;;811 Iv IMO-e:Tv:c" iOf tor&;; Expert. &*'90Nll. ;.._
• ~ NEW/REPAIR au.My. No OU'S F1HN LAND8CAPI the~ (71=2008 P/upe.'Or.' Owe ~1117 <ii-._,llliiii_.._,_..,....-!11!"'"9 )OM to email, rM904...,.., Plant~
re Q'. Que11ty Free•I . 16c'd.131·2346 lewn HofUauft .._ M = .. ... ,.,_, .... ........,_ .... • 1.1 T'tPel ;;\1 · _.__.,, ....... 7 --Wfrs;;:LP:CIOi 8t~ Medloll ft malnt. rw. ._ -llr ~ Afllol..._ "*"' a 1911 bedl
.. ..._ ttoma Uo'ctllna/ Fl ,.;;;t. Afti Old. Ci8 LAWH iilM6i ~~ 11Uo)'f'9ofhliPoY k*'-'. C.. 7224713 ._.,Ibo co.. .... ,.... wood ~ ... ~·.. Mow .it .. i-..... montt\. --.. • 2t06U .• 1 a • tii*1 CeritenttY ~ fl'M .it. Ono. *'4111 S17.50 lOla.. ...... 722 T'tlanll-Yout tes-41t4 WM Ill • I
..... ~·~ ISH1KAWA LAHDiCAPi AAA. PAJNTINQ tntl&t LIT THI tu1•1-Iii Door9 etc.. 84l""llO Sod. ~. M*I. LOWUT polllllbel..=. ~..,._~
,, IUIU> 6A A!PAIR .mi:, ou;:. ,:-~ = 8prtntl1ef'I.-. UCM 147 10 • e.Moa. Lid. o.1 (714) ... 1110
ala. dOof'e. wtndOM. :..0UNS or :ff-OIM DUSTY'S~ DAN eAlYP PAifTNO Pwt1 _..,. faM'*€
,.._, _,.., 1emodtll. Malnt. a.v. M.ttlmo'I Uic 142M2'6 w. alllo ~ ---Ucl1M . ...,,,., M• 5941 . 1 ._,"-alt. t41-1MO Cel ~ IM-2017 ~ ._ no.t101
,__,., ,_ ---OLAIGOW PAllfTINO iPf1nCI &ri1i lpedlll Oolftm1.~~ Dumptune.C.MJN.& ~T~ lnatall. lnt/bt SO ~ ...,.,., ....,_WlndowW ..... llt-mt~"*'n~ ..... JlmWhytil.t42·120I T,_ Trtm Ind "*"'IOll9I. ,..,.. ld-6214 11W1al
~..Merettonl •G , . LIWn Mein & w H OWNEA N 'f04ll ._,...,ig ,,.._ ~HCC Pllnt. °'Y'ftl. ~ 8'Wtr*ter INtall, . lnt/llrt. AooU1L C..., -0-..,. the reeoets
llJftalllP Jetry Ml-oel7 4JtO Oery 645-627') PTl Ff9a ~ UcUta517 131-t}M .,. eq.a.11
penln1• Now Available
CAR ROUTES
E•rn E•tr• C••h
For Dellt1•ry Of Thie P•,,.r
HUNTINGTON BEACH
FOUNT A'N VALLEY
INDEPE.!-iDENT
Deliver 1 day a week. N
collecting. no soliciting.
Must have dependable car.
truck or station wagon and
insurance
CALL 842-1444
A~ for JoAnne Craney
·-·""·* MAAOU8 CHANNEL
S150/MO, M0-1146. BMW '80 3231 .... v ..__.. ...._.. bo 1 cycltnder. eoK mi. recs .-._..,, .......,. Ill. S..l*g. ~ tnt, Centre
Power boe1I only. Weet f'Mle. PtM 914-0754 of Atchea. NB Stt5/mo. '
Avl 5/1, 142-2423 -'II Ull
••• , ..... ,... beige. mint cor1d, .. IC'lrM.
-...... 114,500. 857·1348 DeAnD~~ 300 IE.,..___.~ N DATSUN 210 Heticl'I~ . ._. • • . '71 Gd cor1d
173--1331 Mon. Mpm 12700. pfl 11S..1':r-'·
LootllnO tof a Mooting In JAGUAR .,. •""•-R•""' .... M9wport a.di for • 41' -.....,,,. ..........
Yedlt Ateo Med On-Anltw'eohe ~ 9IC1, QN¥
lhof'9 Moof'lnO tl3-I04 7 tltW Int. ent1. hdft WlfW, IP ... gaNOld. Ol1glMll ~ 8aad\ moortno. ownr. lClt oon, S400 ml.
42 '°°' near UdO .... £PA/DOT oerta. oontect t11,500. n-.5562 St""' 175-M81 ON™ BOAT M<><>f'.
ING 11p to 18 It HO/MONTHLY Neer
P9Vtbl 87Ml28
SHORE MOO RI N G
WANTED On lalbo1
lelend Cell Collect
I 11-ll02.o2.20.
SUPI AVAIL 2UO.SS'40'
3333 W COAST HWY.Ml
&42~ e.-5 Mon-#n
IN U.S.A.
AM> 11~ HARMR
TO II( Jt 1
• SAU!I
• MRVICE
• 'ARTS
• L&AAlfQ
I AltC£Sl &'M"TOllY °" IHI wtST"l:OOI
OOY lllJ(l. ' C(l.CJI C4 ll"9AY
. ·. . .
~2000
l
--
;
..
' I
-
• °'MOt Coeat DAILY PILOT/ T~ay. ApttJ 16, 1988
..... Ir out't .. ~ llJTJC( "8JC 9l>la NI.£ flJTIC( l"8..!C flmC(
' iUfflJij t1 itt• MOftOll TO eNnOltl "IO tlo•tcwmeo MOnC8 TO I Mm
ml ort ,__ YI 9'1Q. i..o. AU. COWTMCTOM for eld» ~ OI ~ flt AU. COll1"MOTOM 190'TQ CW fl1md1*. 111'911 S*tS CAILM'°91_. .....-,_.. '° ._.,.. CALUee'°"W DIATMW PUBLIC NOTICE
Olr, '100, 145-el'41 ~ ~: Co..c .,. oontnot. ludt , .... .,.. loNol CMwtot: Oout "'OM>W*D y~
Community 0°"99 Olmtat • .__ ~ ColliOe '*-tlc:lt Ne CW NftiiON PROPOllD ITATe•NT OF COMMUNITY DIVELOPMENT
OBJICTIVEI AND PRC>aCTID USE OP FUNDS .. ~' ) ... . -
BUICK
DEALER
IN
ORANGE COUNTY
lid~ llOO o'dOC* Cr..._ ct111Wtu*' °' 8td ~ t.'00 o'clodl TO .aor•r•n• p.m. <1' ttle 1tt1 ct., of Mey, ,.,...W • ._...... p.m. Of ttle Ith dllY of Mey, leTATI MO.,.__.. tMe IOt ..... .,.. .....,,.,. 1tM To .......... ...,,..,
,.._ of lld ~ Of>. lft h o4'lllo9 of ~ ,.. ,... of 9kl "'-Pt Of· oredtt0tt llnd tlnfent "°' °' ~ Ohdot, elm ... "ennlng, CoHt b of~~. cndnon., arid~~ ~ Kain, CoilllC c:om.. Comrnunfty Oc,..g. DlilCrict. hny Kain, Coil9il c:om.. "'-' be Odl9 .... 111• II d lnlrityColegeDlltftot, 1310 T'1111tr I. ,370 AdltN A .... munltytolleOe'*'rtot. t370 In the wll llnd/ot ..._ ol:
:::::· Coece Mw, CA ~ :::o..c:::. of ~ Co9te Mw. CA M~.=::o .,!.AMr!!n Med
Project ld•11t1floet1on P9' diem ~ • beeed Project ldentlfloauon by lt9A YAMIN In the au.
Name: Of.nge Co.et ~ upon • wortclrlo o.y of eigfl1 Heme: Ofange COMt ~ !*IOf Court of Ofange
tege . lld •t31t: A9pllOe (I) hour-.. The r• for ho'-"'99 • lid #1110: PCB Coumy~!'-111SA llectT~ 9\«em, ld9Y Md ~wattl lhall TrtNfonnet ~t YAMIN be~ M Pet· ~ ~. 8ieil 0.-be Ill lwt time end~ Proi.ct. Stete O.fer~ -* , • ...,1tattw to .O. ,.,.,., Melntenano. Pre>-half Melntenanoe ~. fin. tnliWt• tM .... °'IN. grwn PriOrtty #~ 11 lfMlll be !Mndatory upon orlty lf•2t oedent ~Plane.,.. on ni.: Of. the CONTRACT~ to wt1orn P'-oe Pltnl ... on Ne: Of· Th• · pe11tlon requHt• nae of Ph\'llClal FeGllltlM the contrllC1 le .....o.d, and floe of PflY9ICal FeollltlM *'1tlOtlty to 9dmlnletw the Planning. fral* ,eolllty, upon eny e.it>contractor Plenntno. trehr Facltfty • ..tmte under' the lndepan-
"8", CoM1 eommuntty ~ under llUOh CONTRACTOR. "9". CoMt Community C4* dent AdmlNetretton of &-
ieg. Dletrtct. 1370 Marne. to pey noc leN than the Mid tege Oiltrlc1, 1370 Adami, tat• Act
ICott• M•H T ... phone: ~re ... to .. woni.,.. Cotta M ... Telephone A '-'Ing on the petition (71') 432-6707 employed by them In the•· (714) 432·S707 wlll be held on A.PAIL 30
NOTICE 18 HEREBY .cut.Ion of the oontrect. NOTIC( IS HEREBY ttee et 9.30 A M"'"ln Dept: OIVEN th•t th• •bov•· No bidder may wttlldfew ()IVEN that tne •bove-No 3 8t 700 CMo ~
named Sc:noo1 011trlc:t of Of· fllff'f bid for • pettod of uty named SG'hool Dlttrlot of Of· Drive W•t. 8anta Ana, CA enge CoYnty. Cellfotnl•. ect· (llO) deyt •ft• the date Mt enge COunty, c.ttomla. eat· 92702
Ing by end ttvough Ill C)oy. i0t the ~ Of bide Ing by and tflt°"Of\ ltt Gov· IF YOU 08JECT to the
Wf\lncl Boerd. herWlatt•,.. A ~ boncl end • emlng lloerd, herelneftW,... grwitlng of the petftlOn, rou tined to .. "OISTRICT'. ..... per1orl'Mlioe bond '**' be leNed to .. "DISTRICT"...... ehould etther ~ .. tM
reo.tw up to, but not ..,., ~ ptiOr to execution reoeiv. up 10. bu1 not lat• '-lng end .c... 'f04M ~ than the ~ted time. of the oontract end llhall be than the ~•ted time. jectlonll or Ille wnttel'I obJeo.
-i.cs bide tor the ewerc1 of 1n tile form • tor1h In the -i.cs bid• tor the -d of tlOn• with the court beb'9
• contrect for the above pro-oontrec1 documanlt a oontreot for 11141 •l>ove pr~ the '"'911"01 YOJ.K 9P9911'· jeOt Puralant to Section 4690 Ject. 11'°9 mey be In pet90l'I or by
8ld9 lflall be t.oeMd In of the ~t Code of 8lde lhall be receNed In ytJAJr •no<~ the p1aoe Identified ebo'te. IM Stete of ClltfotnlL IN the place ldenlln.cl ebove. IF YOU ARE A CREOfT°"
end tf\ell be opened end oontreot wlll oonteln end lflall be opened end Of • contingent Gr.oltor °'
publldy reed aloud et the provllion9 pennlttlng the publicly reed elOud 11 the tn. decMaed. rou muet Ille ebove1ta1edt1me anc1 ~· eu cceuful bidder to abov9etetec:t t11M end place your c1e1m with the court or
Ther9 wtll be • I t0.00 ~ 1Ub8tltut1 ~-tor ltlr'J There wlH be • S 10 00 di-PfeMnl It to the pereonal P<*f required tor aeofl Mt of moneyt wltl\Mld by the OIS· poelt required tor MCll M1 of repreeentetlve eooolnted by bid docuf'Mnta to guarent• TRICT to •n•ure P•r· bid documen1' to guarantee the court within lciur montht
their return In OOod con-lormenoe under the oon-their return In good coo-from the dete of flnlt • dltlon within ten <laye an• trllC1 dl11on within ten deyt 1ner Miene. of ten.,. u provtded
the bid OC*ling c:t.te. °"-'"'"' ...,ct, Ir: the bid opening dete In Section 700 of the
Followtng ta the City o1 Fountain Valley'• propoMd auitement of Community 0ev9k>Pment ob)ectlw. and
projected UM of the i2th Yeat Grant f\.lndt tn the amount of $259,000 from tM U.S. Department of Houllng
and Urban Oevek>pment, and program Income from lntereet and rental IMMl In the amount of $14,400.
The primary objective of Fountain Valley'• Community Oe\19topment Program Is to produ~ • viable.
urban community which lnctudM decent houtlng and a aultable llvtng envlronm.nt, as wetl II the
de"*opment of economic oppot1unlty prtncfpally for perton• of low and moderate Income. To ecnteve thll
objective, tM follO'#lng pro)ect• are propoMd In keeping with the U.S. Department of Houalng and Urban
Development national objeetlves. The propoeed u .. of fund• waa developed eo 11 to give maximum feaalble
priority to aotlvltlee which ben•flt low and moderate lncom• famllles or aid In the prevention or ellmlnatlon
of blight.
1. HOUllNO ASSISTANCE -.1eo
Provide low-Interest loans or rebatM to quallfytng low and moderate Income hom~wnere for
rehabUltatlon of thelr alngi&-famlly residences In the City of Fountain Valley.
Provide Grants to qualifying low and moderate moblle homeowners to correci code deficiencies. The two
moblle home parka are Rancho La Siesta, 1819.4 Bulhard Street, and Fountain Valley Estates, 9320 Talbert
Avenue.
Continue the Code Enforoement Program to Identity dwellings In need of rehabllltatlon. which could
benefit from the low coat loan, rebate, or grant programs.
Contract with Orange County Housing Authority to provide Section 8 rental assistance to residents of
Fountain Valley.
2. FAJR HOUSING SERVICE
Contract with Fair Housing of Orange County to provide fair houtlng services for residents of Fountain
Valley through Information, referral, and educatlonar programs, ensuring equal housing opportunities for all
segments of the community, regardless of raoe, Income, age. religion, national origin, or marltal status.
3. PUBLIC SERVICE OAAHT8 $31,150 Each bid ""* conform Oewld A. arow11etl, E..:n bid mutt conform Problte Code of c.llfomle enc:t be reeoonelW to the cti.nctlar end be ~ 10 '"' The time for 1111no claim• .tit contr..;t doc:umani.. Welk Thru Thuredey. contrec1 d~t•. not eKplre pnor to four 979 2500 1 Each bidder tt\911 be • April 24, 19&8 • 2PM &oh bldd• thall be 1 mon1111 from the d•t• of the · lie• n •• d cont rector ~Put>llthed Ofenge COUt 1 lcen ••d cont r 1c Io r nurlng notice above.
Set aside funds for the purpose of Improving services for low and moderate Income residents of Fountain
Valley. Agencies ellglble to receive these funds are those concerned with employment. crime prevention.
chlld care, health, drug abuse, education, welfare. or recreation needs. ------purlM.lant to IM Bu.,,_ 0 Piiot Aprll 15. 22. 195e purtUllll to IM Buel,_ YOU MAY EXAMINE lhf
BYlctl 73 c.n1ury, 72,000 end Prot..iont Code and T -138 end Profetalont Code and Ille kept by lhe court If you
ml, clMn, QOOc1 oond, be l'°9rlMd 'Jn the fo1tow1no P\ll.JC fl)TlC[ be lloenMd In the 1011aw1no are a per.ari lnt1teet~ In '975, 873-8252 clUelfk:atlone c:laaelftc:atlona. the ....... )'OU may ~ 4. ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ASSISTANCE $100.000
NABERS
CADILLAC
LARGEST SELECTION
of late model. low mlleege Cadlllecs In Orange
County! See ua todeyl
&40-9100
2CIOO Herbor Blvd.
COSTA MESA
C. I I-Elevator inet.llatlon MOTICI C.10-Eleetr1cal (general) upon 11141 executor or edmln-
Each bidder lltllill 1Ubmft, Of' AVA.LAM.ITY Treneporter of hcuirOOu• letrator or upon the •t· on the form lumiehed With OI ANNUAL MTURN WM11 m1terlela mY9I hllvl torney for the ••ecutor or
ttie cont,.,, document9, • Pureuent 10 Section EPAEonmental Protec-lldmlnlstnrtor, and me with ll•t of the propoeed euboon-s t04(d) of the Internal RIY· tlon I number; Stet• the court wtlll proof of ..,. lrectort on thlt project u enue Code notice 11 hereby Haur OUM Wute heullng v1C41, • written requeet 1111-
requlred by the Subt9tttng g1wn that ifie ennu411 return permit, end Ill neQ9lllfY Ing that you deelre epeclal end Subcontracting Fair Jor the calendar )'Ml' 1915 of Fed«al. State ano local per. notice of the flllng of 111 ln-
Prect!Qee Act Goltemment the HIGH BLOOD PRESS· mlt1 plue nece ... ry In· Yentory and epprlliMment ot
Code Secllon 4100 et eeq. URE RESEARCH FOUN· euranc. eovoerage •t•t• _.,or of the petl-Eacn blddet must IUbmlt OAT ION • prtvetl foun· Each blOd• 11\811 IUbmlt, lion• or aocoont• mentioned
Conduct a study to determine the needs of community businesses and methods to Increase the number
of jobs available In the community.
Community Development Block Grant activities In the City of Fountain Valley In 1986/87 are not expecied
to cause any dlaplacement of pereona. In the event of any displacement. the City would be governed by
Reaolutlon #73S., which sets forth the regulations governing relocation assistance end real property
acquisition. The objective of the resolution la to assure the fair and equltable treatment of persons displaced
by programs and projects of the City and to establish pollclea and procedures governing the duties of the
City· with eecn bid • oer1lfled or detlon j, •V911ebie et the on the form furnlal'led with !{I Section 1200 and 1200.5 of
C&lhler'• check pay•ble to found.it1on'• pr1nclpal ~ the contrect documen11, a the Callfornla Prob•t• Code
the DISTRICT or I bid boncl tor lnlC)9C11on during reguler ll1t of the Pfopoeed eubcon-Aar-fl Aer-. Ille..
In the lorm Mt lor1h In the ~ houn from 9 • m lrector. Otl this project u Attome1• for ,.. ... .._,, CAD Seville '84 Elegant• con1r11C1 dOcumenll In en 10 5 pm by Vrf clUzen wtlo required by the Sublet!Jng 21'IO twbot 8twd.. lte. 3IDI, 2 ton.. lo ml, eKcel oond, amount nol .... then 10% of requ.t It wtthln 180 dayt end Subcontracting Felr Coeta ...... CA ...
c:IMn. lthr. loeded lo ml the mulmum amount of bid •ft• 11141 date or thl• put>ll-Prectic.t Act Government Put>llehed Ofenge Cou1
The above projects are publlshed so as to afford affected citizens an opportunity to examine the
statement's contents and to allow for comments. All of the Grant and Program funds are to be used for
activities beneflttlng low and moderate Income persons.
121,000or TOP 644-2151 ... ou-•-th•I the bid· cation -Code Section .. too .. eeq Dally Pllol Aprll 14, 15, 2 '· d•r wlll enter Into th• The foundation'• prlnclpal Each bldd41r must eubmlt 1988
WEHYAUUIU USED CARS & TRUCKS
COME IN OR CALL FOR
FIH&nUJUL o.uuo amlLET 18211 BEACH BLVD
HUNTINGTON BEACH
l.tl-10tl1141-1111
WEW&ITYlll
OUAI ISO O&ll See Veno dot Santoe
THlODORE
ROBINS
FOID
2060 HH8011 Bl VD
tO!ITA MIU 641 ·0010
FORD '77 L TO-II GOO<l
eond Muet sell. 4 dr
"fhlie. 350 V-8, S750 or
beet offer 673-1150
FORD '79 wtllla Pinto Run
About. new l>rlta. 4 epd £•tick). Kint trenepor·
tatlon ear $1250 OBO
Eves 549-4474
FORD 'B5 Tempo, $5895
ex $500 & finance for 3 I
mot Wkdys 851 -1400
Eve/Wknds 720--0826
MERCURY LYNX '84
Wagon GLT·Take over
pymla. $211 /mo no
down 5 spd, air cu11
whl• tnt wndw. lllt. r1rk,
low ml OESPERATElllll
675-84 1 ..
Monte Carlo 75 Run• I Gree11 $1500 obo Call
Jack 963-6319 alter 6 pm
PINTO 1979 wttlte run
about. new brakes •
tPMd (ttlekJ. exce11en1
tran1por111 t1on cer
$1250/0BO 549 4474
ev011lng1
PLYMOUTH '63 Reuant
orlO ownr Air etc )(Int
c;ond. 731< Frwy m•. Mull
~I $3 100 642·5204
N••tl 1port•
«4ulpmcnt 1
I~\
Pfopoeed contrect If the olflce It located at 1901 Por1 with each bid 1 oertln.cl or MT-062
aeme II awwded to IUCll eermouth Pl Newport ceahkW'• check peyable to---------bidder In 11141 event of fallufe 8Mctl CA 92ee() I.he DISTRICT or • bid bond to enter Into Mid con1rect, The 'pr1nc1pe1 m.neger ot In lhe form Mt forth In the _ __.flt&.;...;;;.;;;..;;.;.;IC;.....;.;11>..;;.TI..;,.;,.;;,CE..;;.__
IUdl ..:urtty wtll 'be forlell the foundetlon It Mlc:hlll A contract documenll In 111
The DISTRICT r...,.,... Weber M O emount not .... th111 10% of NOTICE OI
DEATH CJ#.
llt<>Rlrr MK:HML
ll.OAN, e'9o know11
M "OHJrr M. ILOAN,
,,... right to reject any or all MITAN a TUC1CIR, 401 the maxlmvm amount of bid
Okla or to wlllw any Ir-CIYto Ceflt., °""· w .. u a guerant• th•t the bid· regularitlee or lnformelltlee leftta A-. CA a7'Q2 der wlll entlf Into the
In any bide or In the bidding BILLI RICCI Sec'y-Tr ... propotld contrect If the
The DISTRICT hu ob-of the Found'•tlon 19828 Mme I• 1Warded 10 IUCh talned from the Director of Burtelgh Yorba uncsa. CA bidder In the event of fellvr• the ~· of lnduetrial e2fSse ' I 'o enter Into Uld contrec:t,
aleo~n• 80l ll.OAN
AND M PETTTION
TO ADl9UTI" EaT An MO. lOOOOC Aelttlone the generel Put>llthed Orenge Cout IUCh l«:Uf'lty wlH be lor1elt Pf9Yalllng rete ol per diem o.lly Piiot Al)f11 15 198& The DIS1RICT r...,.,... weoee In the loc:allty In wNdl ' T. 1.e t1141 rlgnt 10 rejeci any or all To all helra, beneflelariee, bid• or 10 waive any Ir-creditor• and contingent
regul111t1M or 1ntormallt1M cred11ort, an(1 pereon• wtlo ---• In any bid• or In 11141 bidding mey be otherwlM lnter•ted OBITUARIES
GIFFORD at I P M . Ollvewood
LEWIS GUYc.tGIF· Cemetery. R1vermde,
FORD. 65, a fesident CA Memorial ser·
of Hunungton Beach, Vlcefi, Sunday. April
puaed away April 11, 20, at 4 P.M . et United
1986 Mr Gifford was M ethodist €hurch of
& reUred Lt C.otn-Cost.a Mesa Evan's
mander in the U S. Brown Mortuary, 0,.
Navy and a goll pro-rectors 679-1114
fessional for 12 years. MC CANTS
Beloved husband of FRANCES LOUISA
the late Dorothy C. M C CANTS. long
G ifford Devoted ume C.OSta Mesa resi -
Cather of Donald G dent passed away
Gifford and K elly A . Apni 11 1986 Mem
Gifford both of Hunt-ber of St. Andrews
mgt.oi:i Beach Al.so Presbytenan Church,
surv 1v 1ng are 3 Newpo rt Beac h
grandr htldre n . 3 Beloved mother of
brothers, Joeeph W Richard Evan Mc
Gifford, Granola, Cants of SeaJ &>ach
Kansas, Robert E. a n d D o r o t h y
G1ffor:d, Whlluer and Wahlstedt of New
F'ranas D Gafford of port Beach grand
Huntington Beach, mother o f Julte
stSter, Mary G Raul-Wah~t.edt of New
bolt, Orange, CA port Beach. Diana
Holy Rosary will be Walhlstech of Calta
rt><.ited on Wednes· M esa and Patrice
day. Apnl 16, al 8:15 Eberl! of M enlo Park
p M at St Mary's By CA S1Sters. Margare~
\he Sea Catholic Qwnn of Glendale
( hurch Mass o f and Anne Matteson
< "hnsuan Bunal will of Lake Elsmore VIS·
hf· ~lebrated at 1~ 1tat.Jon Tuesday. Apnl
A M Thursday, April 15, noon unlll 9 PM
I 7 ;it ttw church. ln-at Pierc.'f' BriJS Bell
I.A nnt>nt wul be made Broadway Mortuary
a,t Riverside NauonaJ Graveside Sf'r VU'f'S,
Cs>met.Pry al I PM Wednesday, April 16.
Thursday Pt€'rce 11 AM at Inglewood
8 r o s Sm ' th Park O>metery. In· Mr1~~ry. Directo111 glewood. CA Pwmo
536· ,539 Bros 8'>11 Broadway
GRUBB Mortuary. Dtrec-tnrs
642-9150 Alt.Prta Clt>ment
Grubb Mrs. Grubb FREELY
was a resident of ETHEL R (Dusty)
Newport Beach. since FREELY. 80, a resi-
1957 She haa t:>ttn dent of C<JSta MNia
The OISTRICl hU Ob-In the wlll end/or eat•t• of: talned from the 04rllC1or ol ROBERT MICHAEL SLOAN,
the Department of lndl.lltrlal allO known u ROBERT M.
Rel et lone Ille generel SLOAN. ellO known u BOB prevelllng r11e ot per diem SLOAN wegee In the locallty tn wtlletl A petition hu tie.'I lllld thla work 11 to be performed by MONIKA GAIL SLOAN In for eacti cren Of fYPI ot the Superior Court of Of.
worker needed 10 e.ecute ange County requeetlng Illa! the contract Suctt rel• ere MONIKA GAIL SLOAl-I be u followl eppoinled u ~el rep-
Creft, CIH•lf1cetl0ft, or ,_,tettve 10 admlnlater the
Ttpe • Wege"-'-"t••• ol the deeedent WIQI rat• ere avalleble The petition requHll In the office ol Phytl<:al Ft-euthorlty 10 edmlni11er the
cllltlH Plt"nlng, Cout •late under the lndee>en· Community College Dletrlct. dent Administration ol &-
Trlllef B, 1370 Adem• Ave. ••IN AC1 Coate Mete. CA 92828 A r-r1ng on the petition The loregolng ICtledul4t of wlll be held on APRIL 30,
per diem wagee It blMd 195e et 9 30 AM In Dept
upon a working day of eight No 3 et 700 Clvl<: Center (SI hourt The rete tor hOf. Oflve We~t. Sante Ane, CA
ld1y and overtime work lhell 92702
be al 14111t time end orie-IF YOU OBJECT 10 the half grentlng of the petition, you
11 thell be mandetory upon thould ell her appeer at the the CONTRACTOR 10 whom hearing Ind 11111 your Ot>·
the contrect 11 ewerded, and jecilOn• or n1e wrltlen obi«:·
upon 1ny 1ubcontr1ctor tlonl with the court before under tueti CONTRACTOR. 11141 hearing Your IPPMf· to pay not less than the Mid •nee mey be In per.on or by
apecllled rllM to all worker• your attorney employed by them In lhe ... IF YOU ARE A CREDITOR
ecutlon of the contract or a contingent creditor Of Ncf.ibldder mey wtthdrew the dteeued you mull Ille
eny bid for • penoo ot llKty ytJAJr Claim With t1141 court or
(&0) d•Y• ener the d•t• M1 pr_,, It 10 the perlOflel for lhe opening of bide repf'--.tlllve eppo4ntecf by A peymerit bond and 1 the court within lour month• per1orm1nce bond lhall be from the data or llrat 1 ..
required Pflor to eKecutlon euance of lerters a.I provided
of lhe contrect end llhaJI be In Section 700 of the In the form .., fortll In the Prot>•I• Code of Cllllornle conlract documenll TM lime for n11ng Cialm1 wlff
Purwuant to Section ,.590 no1 expire p.-1or to lour of the Government Code of month• from the d••• ot the
the State ot C1lllornle. the heating "Otloe above contracl wlll conllin YOU MAY EXAMINE the provl•lona permitting the Ille kllfll by tlwl court II you
eucceuful bidder 10 ata • P9'10fl lnter .. tlld In
eub1tltute MCUrltlel for any the eet11e you mey -~ wlthheld by the DIS. upon the •KICUIO< or Mlmln-
T R•C l 10 en1ure per· lllretor or upon 11141 at· tormanoe under the cori-lorney for the executor or tract edmlnl1tr11or. and nie with
Qon rnlng aoerd, •r: the court with proof of ..,.
O • w Id A. Ir o • n e 11, \flee, • wrltlen requeet ltat-Ch~ Ing lh•t you d•lr• "*"" Wilk Thru Thurad•y. notice ot 1"8 n11ng of an ln-
APfli 2 ... t9811 9AM v.ntory and IPPflleement of Pul>ll•Md Orange eout Mt•t• UM1• or of the p«t-
Oeity PllOt Aof'll t6 . 22 19&8 tlon• or eooount• mentioned ·T. 13 7 In Section 1200 end 1200 5 of ---------1 thf Calllomle Problte COO. Pl8.IC NOTIC£ "-....... AttC1m9J,
Ma2 V1a Oporto ..... ..,
FICTITIOUI 9U ... H 9-ctl, CA~
INFORMATION AND ASSESSMENT OF THE CITY'S HCDBG PERFORMANCE
1985 GRANT
The objeollves of the 1985 Program were met In the following manner
Objective·
Objective
Objective
Objective:
Objective:
Objective:
to Improve housing opportunities for low and moderate Income residents
The City acquired the land for low-cost senior housing at the southwest corner of
Warner and Magnolia ate cost of $1.285,000. Construction of the rental units Is
pending approval of a non-profit developer's application for 202 funds
Section 8 rental assistance was provided for 34 residents through the Orange
County Housing Authority
to ensure equal housing opportunities
The City contracted with the Fair Housing Council of Orange Covnty at a cost of
$6,500, to provide Investigation &Miatance for redress of alleged vlolatlons of
Federal and State fair housing laws; 379 complaints from residents of Fountain
Valley were handled.
to Improve services for low and moderate Income residents
The City contracted with the following seven agencies.
Center for Creative Alternatives
(drug counseling)
Karol's Kids,
(after-school programs)
Community Service Program
(restitution end diversion counseling)
West Orange County Hotline
(suicide prevention)
Visiting Nurses Association
(home health care)
Huntington Beach Community Cllnlc
(health care)
Elwyn Institute
(Independent llving project)
$4,500
3.000
5,000
2,000
3,500
5,000
9,200
$5,000 of Contingency funds was allocated to Harbor Adult Day-Care Center for
rehabllltatlon of their kitchen facllltles.
to enhance opportunities for low and moderate Income youth In the area
An agreement Is being negotiated with the Hun11ngton Valley Boys and Girts
Club. To assist In the conatructlon of a new center to be located at 1&400
Brookhurst Street, $70,000 was allocated
1984 OR.ANT
to assist low and moderate Income residents with the rehabllltetlon of their
residence
Thus far, one tow-Interest loan and one rebate for housing rehabllltatlon have
been completed, totaling $2,500 and four more are In procesa. Five grants to
moblle homeowners for rehabllltetlon or their coaches are In process.
1982 GRANT
to provide for rehabllltatlon of moblle homes
The rehab of eight mobile homes, for • total of $50,000, was completed In late
1986 under a contract with the County of Orange ·err> vf'ry active in Com·
muruty affrun She
Turn to today~ cl&u1f14td was a mem~r of I.he
Entered i nto rf'~t
April 12 , I 981!
Surv1vrd by !IC'>ll,
W illiam B Frl'1•ly.
NAMI ITATl.-wf Publlthed 0<•"09 COM! The fOllowlng pereone ere Delly PllOI APfll t-4. 15, 21, doing bu11nMt 11 A A.. AM 19M
84w'vtoe Home Cwe, 111 Ea-MT -055
cepede Court. Newport ---------
ASSESSMENT
ror 1ne hest buy' A s1uslance League.
1 6.42-5e78 • Orange County
GIVE
'IBE
TIME
OF
YOUR
l,IFE.
lk .1 voh11Ht't 'r
+
Philluumoruc, a con-
t.nbutor to the Hoag
H011pttal Endowment
Fund Widow of
W Allen G rubb
Survived by her
dnughter, M ary-Jane
l~ell and grand-
daughter Joy LM-11
Pnvate family .er·
Vices wert> held ln
lieu of flawel'I, dona-
tJoM mA y llf" 11e11 t to a
charity of your
chotce Panfl(' View
M on uary Di rt'ctors
644-2700
TOERJNG
W1ebrand TOt"rtng, ~·
60. ~ away April
12, \g86 1n Sun City.
CA Ht' workl'd for
(..1a Val for 30 yHn
tn Newport ~ach
area Ht' la 1urvived
by his wlf,., Jant~.
two ION, M.rkua and
Jk'Obua TOC'rina and
th.rft ~hildttn.
two brothen, John
C and Ptet T~nn1 R,ecl ro88 GravNldto ~rvicet, J Wednmday , April 18
(daughter in luw,
Sharon C' Freely) of
New p ort Bee('h.
daughwr Mama L
McCulloch of Q.«t.a
M esa , grandsons.
Roger D Freel y ,
e-cti e2ee:1 P\B.IC NOTICE Karen BlthOO Henn.Id. __ ...;..;;;.;;;.;..;;....;.;.;;..;..;.;;.;;... __ 1•
Mme .. •bow '1Cl'TT10U• .......
Thit buelMel 11 con· NA• eTATlmlfT
ducted by en 1nc1Mdua1 The foMowtno pet"10n1 er• l<Alren Blthop Hlftfleld doing ~ M
Thtt 1t1tement wu flied Hil·MAR ELECTRONICS. with the County Clerk of Of 1702A Newport Clrole, •noe County ~ februar; Sant• Ana. CA 92706
All of the projects llsted above provided services for low and moderate Income residents of Fountain
Valley and aulsted In the prevention of slums or bllght In keeping with the U S. Department of Houalng 1nd
Urban Development national objectives.
Persona wishing to comment on the Proposed Statement of Community Development Objeetlvee and
Projected Ute of Funds, may contact the Plannlng Department at City Hall. 10200 Slater Avenue, or call
directly at 965-4425. Comment• wlll be aooepted through Aprll 25. 1986. 24, 1988 8'1en Keith MarrAdl, 1S1 Coste M esa, and ,_,_ E 1e1t181 •26 Coe••Meea grand d aught.-r . Publlal'led Ofange eoeet CA 92e2i · • Publlahed Orange Coast Dally Piiot Aprll 16, 1988 T-145
M e g h a n F Oelly P1IOt MatCll 26. A~ t. Frederlek lOQ.1!11 Hiigert.
M cCulloch Co1~a e. 1~. 1988 t2H 18th 81 . Coet• ~. rtB.lC M)TIC( PtaJC NOTICE PtalC M)TIC( PtaJC ll>TICE "8JC NOTIC[
Meaa Mrs ' Frttly T·IOI C~:.!82~•1nu1 11 oon MOTICaTO anoeCountr.CellfonM..ct· c:lltlOnlrla telned from me OINotor of iliidliii'itilfOiiwartta
Lived on BaJboe l.sland "8.IC fl)TIC( ducted by co-pennert Al.&. CONnlACTOM Ing by end lfwau9'1 ltl Oov-Eacfl bidder It*' IUbmlt. tM DIParimant of lnduet,.... = ':f. ~ ... Crom 1943 to 1970 Dr1an Mer~ CAU•CHOlll let ernlnOBowd,herelneft•,. on the form tumllMd 1llfttl Aelat(ont the generel No '*Ider ·
nd _,., .... ~ It.....,. Thi• 1teternent wH flled School 011trtct· CoH1 wrecho•"OIS"TRICT",wtll the convect dOCM'Mnte. • ~ m. of per dl9lft bkl for '""'1 -:4'..!!
• ~tumo:u t.t> u11.., ACTITIOUI ..-.. ""'h the CcMity Clettl of Of· Community COiiage oi.trlot reoe1w up to, but noc laW t1t1t Of the piopoeed alllOOn-MOM 1n tt1a IDOalty 1n _., ~ • Pll10CI --.
An'8 from San DI~> ..,.. ITAT'lmlfT anoe Couflty on Metefl 2t, lld OHdlln•· 10 00 """the 1110''9 .. ..., tlrN. traatort °" .. ~ .• thll WOf'll 11 to be peiiolnted tor~:= ..
an llJBl Telophue Thtfollowtnopenone-ttM o'c:to<*em Ofthelttlct.yof ••McUl6dttor!MllWW'dof ~by ttla ~for Md\ oreft or type ot A_ bond Md• Socs doing tlU9INM • JACK R ,_ Mey, 19M • oonnot '°' tM MIOw9 ptC)o end hboofttrecttnt FM WOf'ller ,,... to ...,.. _..,.....,,_ .. __ " .,..
oty.Ou-octon Oo4llltJ'INflllAHCIAl .. ._ -0...,..C-,,_ ..... -.0!·""· _..,·--· ... -·---=-::..--:-:1 VICES, 129 W Wllaotl. !kilte Oe11Y PllOt April t, t. IS, 22, floe of Purcn.lng OireotOf, llde 9'lall be ,,.... In Code~ 4100 .. ~ M follOwe: of the~~ INI
200. p O &ox 10427, Ccet• 1986 hny Kelln. Co.et Com-the piece Identified above, hcfl btddlt ""* "'°""" Cr .... Ct1u•11U... fH In.._'°""' .. llr1fl In
Meea, CA 02t27 T • 117 munify Colclgie Dtllrtct 1a70 end ...... be °'**' Md liltttl Md! tlld a oettMed Of ,.,... • W ........ ~-~ VllW, .. -Jeck A 0.9ruyn In· Mama. eo.t.e ....a. CA ~ reed _,.. .. ttle OMfller'• <'** ~ to ·weoe ,..... .. .,...._ ~ ~ '::o,. ~ ---eur~ a.nitoee, Inc 1211 rtaJC MJl1C( t2l2t MIOw9 et..s ttrne tnd olloe. ttie °'8T"9CT °' • tltd bond In tM offtoe °' ,,.,._. , .. c.m.i..y • ~ w Wiiton. Sutte 200. Coeta Pro1eo1 tdenttlloeUon .,...... .. be• 110.00 ct. In._ lofM Mt~ In ._ Gilli.. fJ!annlftt. Cout :. ~~ ~ • Cl ...... 1 MeM. CA '1177 • Celfoml9 MOTICC CW Name Of-. COMC Cd-Polft ,.quired fOf eedl .C of oortnot ~ In M ~ QClllfe Oltllrtol. , t I I 3500PedftcV19WOrlw corporiltlon eeo•...,..Olll•lm i:!"' Sid 11aot; ,_.. ~dooUlftent9toguanntlM emountnot,..tNn1~of Trallrl, 1S10Ac1191N~ 0011•'•0 •1 oontata
He -'11 --........ Thll bulll1MI I• ~ Notloct • '*9b'/ OMtl lM1 /,_,_. HV 8ytMtn u.lr '9lUr'1 In good oon-1M IMlilrftufft ~ of ll'lt Coata Mw, CA tN2I prlWWone I*""'"" .. wpo:. _. duo1.0 b')" • COf'PO(etlOn tM Ul'IOll•ooed .... "°' .,. • ea. IMdQ., a ... 0.: dlUon wtthln ..., ( 10) deyt •• ~ !Ml -bid-Tite betc*• ...... ot •uooeu ful ltlddet ••
144-i700 Jeotl A 0.8ruyn In· 19af1011•b61 for any Oel)ta or '9rfed MelnttMnee ,.ro-llttf IM b4d opening c1ea cter wttl ...., lftto tM .,.. dt99I ....-II Meed :=-..::... ~ .:' c2
eutl/ICe s.rw-. lnO , Jat* 1 ~ oontrected by~ llfll'I, Pnortty 1).71 lac:fl tlld ""* OOtlbm PRIP Ill d _.,.,.. W ._ wpcwu..,...,. -Of_,,. f,.ICT 10 ..,..,,. Hf•
KM. a. LAW-A Oeln¥'I. ~t one otn. tlWI myel#. on or ..... ,,.,.. ... on ... Of. end be ........ to lftit MIN le ...... '° --(I) "°'"' Tite ,.... -... b,,... _....., .. -
llT. °"" Thie et~t ... fled .,. ""'~ -ot PflYllOll ,....... oontr• ~ tllddl' In ......... ....,,. ..,.., Md.,.,.....""' ... a.cwt-,,.___ wtth me~ a.tr Of Of· OeMd "* a1111 ciey a1 ~. tr... '~· &di b6ddlr lflell be • to ..-"'° .-. ...._ be at ..... tlllM ..i _. tnot. .. _, '-·-1 .,. ~ °" Mwcti 21 ...--. ,... "I " eo.t;ComMunltyCd-tlonud oe11trutor .-...-llY•be..,... ,.. ••• -a ...,., .,. C.••Ol'l' 1tee • ........ LeMllt. PA._ teoa' '*-~ 1110 AdafM, ,_,,..,.,.. 10 tf'I .,._. Tite Dtl'fflllCT ,....... 1t0ltlalbe1M1dlllf'Y~ Da,ld A. •r••••tl, •"2t a.tr•.. ,_ m.'"-9..... Co1ta ~ T~: end l'tof lg• OOlll end ttletlglltto,.._.trty_.11 e.OONTMOTCMUo"'*" Ct 11 I Cotta..... 11'\1..,,.. Of-. eoeat1 ~ 0ranoe COllf.t 111•14U.f101 .. ....., 1n .. ~ bldl • '° .-. 919r ... 11a_..,. .. .....,..., w•"""" "'*'·,,..
S.0.-MSol DellYl'lotAprll. f&.t2,tt.
1
o.ity ,_ A0tt t-4, 1&. 21, NOTICl II Hl!,.HY 7t lft09Uot-.: ,....._ 0t ............. llPOfl .,,, .....,.tractor "•'::,;..,IAM~ ~
1MI 1... OMN tl'l•t tM above-0.20-w.-Alr ~ ... .., bldl "'.,...,. ....... .,,.. --DONTMOTOf\ Delly,..,. AIWl 11. t
T • 121 VT o0e0 ~ ~ Dll&ttct Of Or· Ventla11no MCI Air.CO... Tha 0.TNOT tlM ~ 10 pey l'I04 flle IWI .. Mid • ' •
'
ORANGE CO\Sf •
TUESDAY, APRIL I S, 1986
25~
Air Force jet remains unaccountecf for;
Reagan: We will do it again if necessary
by sctvaccmen in West Berlin
"When our citizens are abused or
attacked anywhere in the world, we
will respond in self defense," Reagan
sa.id. In an unmistakeable wamina to
Khadafy. he said: "We have done
what we had to do If necessary. we
will do it apin."
F or more coverage, 1ee A5
dents.
WASHINGTON (AP) -U.S.
warplanes attacked "the head-
quarters and terronst facilities" of
Libya's Moamma.r Khadafy, Presi-
dent Reagan said M onday niaht.
ln1t1al reports were that the middlc-
of-the-ni&ht aar strike succeeded, he
said, adding: "If necessary, we will-do
1t again."
Defense Secretary Caspar
Weinberger said an Air Force F-111
was unaccounted for, but he did not
Coast
Bob Dylan and Tom Petty
wlll perform together at
the Paclflc Amphitheatre
In Costa Mesa./ A3
California
Night Stalker victim testi-
fies Ramierz the person
who killed husband,
raped her./ A4
Nation
Officials speculate about
motive for car-bomb
murder of mob leader.
/A4
Reagan lashes out at
House Democrats for
!Inking Contra aid to
domestic funding bill.I A4
Wor ld
Stalin's daughter, who
defected to the United
States and then returned
to the Soviet Union. now
plans to leave again for
the West./ AS
Sports
Southern Call1ornla Col-
lege's Tim Fortugno Is a
pitcher on the rlse./8 1
Nicklaus, at age 46, Is still
golf's golden boy./84
Entertainment
The Laguna Moulton
Playhouse has Its ··Act''
together In a strong musi-
cal show./A9
INDEX
Advice and Games
Bulletln Board
Business
Clasalfled
Comics
Death Notices
Entertainment
Opinion
Police Log
Public Notices
Sports
Televlslon
Weather
A10
A3
A6-8
86-8
A 11
88
A9
A12
A3
85, 8
81-5
A9
A2
know if 11 bad been downed. Libyan
radio said three U.S. planes had beeo
hat and the crew of one jet had been
killed, aft.er ther, were downed, "by
Libyan citizens. •
Reagan, in a nationally broadcast
addres.s to cxt>lain the military itnke,
said the United States had direct,
precise and irrefutable evidence that
Khadafy had ordered recent anti-
American attacks, il)cludma the
bombing of a discotheque frequented
At the Capitol in Washington,
sccunty was tightened just minutes
after the au strikes had ended.
Reagan's spokesman, Larry Speak-
es, said the purpose of the raids was to
"pre-empt and discourage" Libyan
terrorism, and he said the Untted
States had evidence that Khadafy had
ordered more anti-American inci-
He said the raids bcpn at 2 Lm.
Tuesday, TripolJ time, 4 p.m . PST,
and were over within minutes. Cor-
respondents in Tripoli were reportina
sporadic explosions and aunflrc more
than three hours later -well after
Wcinberacr said U.S. planes had
returned to base.
Weinberger ~ the Air Force
bombers were dispatched from three
U.S. bases in Enaland with the
permission of the 'British aovem-
(Pleue Me WAllPLA!U8/~)
Candidate asks
court to blbck
voter mailing
• Sheriff hopeful seekS
to retain statements
in election pamphlet
By LISA MAHONEY
Ol .. 0.-,,... .....
A U.S. Distnct Court JUdat will
hear ariumcnts today on whether Orange County voters' pamphlets
contammg the edited statement of
shenffs candidate Landa Lea
Calligan should be held until the
constitutionality of censoring the
document is resolved.
Pregame baby exchange
Callfomia ~el• MCODd buema.n Bobby
Grich returna 8-month·old Brett Pfeiffer of
<>ranee to h1a mother after a precame photo
Nealon at the Anael•' home opener. Grich
contributed two hlte. tnclwnn. a 1ame·
tytnc RBI doable la the e~th. la the Anaela' 7-6 win o•er the Seattle llartnen .
For more, .ee Sporta, .,.,e Bl.
Frustrated by a 4th DUtnct Court
of Appeal dcosion Friday that pre-
vents publication of her full state·
ment tn the voters' pamphlet while
delayina a hearing on whether such
prior restraint violates bcr free speech
nghts. Calligan's anomcys Monday
petitioned both federal justices and
the state Supreme Court to resolve
the matter.
A U.S. Distnct Court Jud&e bas
agreed to hear an injunction hearina
Man found dead in bag
had long police record
By RO BERT BARKER °' ... D9ltr,.......,
A man whose body was found in a
Huntington Beach pond had an
extensive arrest record throughout
California, police said Monday.
The man's body. sealed in a green
plastic bag with a chain around his
neck, was found April 6 in the
abandoned quarry by fishermen
The FBI found a match for t~
man·s fingerpnnts but a computer
came up with seven different names,
or aliases. and seven d11Tcrcnt
b1rthdate'I that the v1ct1m had used.
Lt. Jam Walker said Monday that
officers apparently have narrowed
the list of names and believe they now
have the correct 1denttficat1on. They
plan to check the man's records with
the Cahfom1a Youth Authority.
Walker said. before making a pubhc
(Pleue Me BODY I A2)
Deadline for tax
filing at midziight
By LAURA MERlt
Of ... 0.-,,... .....
It's that time again. Americans arc rushing to file their income tax
papers before Uncle Sam can shake a finger at them or. worse. slap
them with a fine.
Doomsday hits Tuesday at the stroke of midnight. Anyone failing
to drop by the mailbox by the that ume will be late in the eyes of the
Internal Revenue Service.
But there's hope and some help
(Pleue Me T il/ A2)
that could halt producuon of matt
than one million voters' pampbleu
which are now bein& readied for
distribution.
The pampb)ets contain an a~
version of Callipn's c:and.idate'1
statement wbicb takes pot lhOb at her
opponent -incumbent Sberift'.COr-
oner Brad Gates.
Gates filed a complaint in 0raQF
County Supenor Court to block
portions of the statement from publi-
cation. On April 3, Oraqe C.ounty
Superior Court Judie Judith lt.yan
ordered two parqraphs of Callipn'•
statement cut from the pamplllet.
The court ruled the parqrapbs wen:
false and-mislcadina.
CallJpn then peUuoned the 4th
District Court of Appeal which stayed
the lower court's order and tel a June
18 hcanna to resolve the free q>ceCb
lSSUC.
Compwnina that. by then, the
primary would be over and the
~of Callipn's statement done,
Gates attorneys went to the state
Supreme Court for rcllef. The Su-
(Pleue ... VOT&ll/A2)
Youworkfor
UncJ eSam
until May 1
By Ge Asaoctakd Presa
WASHINGTON -Here 11 bow
"Tu Freedom Day .. has varied over
the years
That 1s the date. calculated by the
Tax Foundauon. on which a pcnon
would have earned enough to pay all
his or her state. fedcraJ and local taxes
for the year if evcrythina earned to (Pl-..e Me T AX/ A2)
Elizabeth Dole urges women to break barriers
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN
Of ... o.ity .........
Two decades ago, a maJe classmatt'
at Harvard Law School crit1c1zcd
Elizabeth Dole for occupying a scat
that should have been filled by a man
who undoubtedly wouJd put the
education to better use. She didn't
budge, however, and today has out·
distanced many of her classmates.
On Monday. Dole, now U.S. Sec-
retary of Transportation, urged
thousands of women attending a
conference 1n Anaht'1m to continue
breaking down bamcrs 1n work areas
that remain dominated by men.
Dole pointed to "Amenca''i quiet
revolution" in which "a tidal wave of
qualified and talented women" have
entered the work force in record
numbers of the past three decades.
"And w1th the revolullon taking
place in this country ... ," the transpor-
tation secretary said, "managers arc, I
believe. staniog to grasp what we
have always known: that woman
share w11h men the need for personal
success. even the quest for power.
"And no longer arc we wilhng to
satisfy those needs through the
achievements of surrogates. whether
husbands, children or merely rok
models."
Dole was in Anaheim to part1c1pate
tn the 1986 Conference on Women.
sponsored by state Sen. Wilham
Campbell, R~ity of Industry About
5.000 people attended. requ1nng the
transportation secretary to deliver
her speech twice 10 separate
ballrooms.
In her cabinet post. Dole oversttS a
government branch with a $27 b1lhon
annualbudgetandmorcthan 100.000
employees.
Dunng her speech. she claimed her
own "little footnote in history" as the
first woman to head a branch of the
LI .S. armed forces -the U.S. Coan
Guard
Reprd1ng stndes made by other
working women. Dole said. "The
numbers of the past decades speak
eloqucnlly of progress. But who
among us can argue I.hat we have
completely eliminated cbscrim1na-
t1on or totally banned that insidious
brand of prejudice -what I call the
tyranny of perfection"''
She elaborated by quotma soetal
cnt1c Marya Mannes, who wrote.
"Nobody obJc<:ts to a wo man be1na a
good wnicr-or 5eulptor or genetiCJst if.
at the same time. 'ihe manages to be a (Pleue eee DOLE/ A2)
Peace walker on
global trip stOP.S
in La'guna Beach
Police audi~ may
prompt changes
Newport city offtctals
to review report over
next several months
con'lultants. ~1d the 700-paae aud11
wu po'l1t1ve 1oward the department
overall. but noLC'd some internal
weaknesses. among them a larger
than usual number of c,1.ccss1vc fOf'Ct'
complaints Left home In India In
1982. says walking
draws public support
There arc peace walks. peace
marches. hunaer stnkes for peace and
then there as Prem Kumar.
I k 's a 2Q-ycar-old man from India
who, upon finish ma hts studies on the
relattonshap between disarmament
and world development. bepn a
world walk 1n 1982 to promote peace.
While stoppma in Laguna Stach on
his trek to San Francaco, Kumar said
he will walk to hts home in
Ahmadabad. tndia after pass1na
throuah NapsaJu. Japan on Aua 9-
\he 44th anniversary of the Umted
State$' use of n atomic homb on that
city.
Walk1n1 dra~ pubhc •upport, he
bchCVC"
He cited the b1bhc I accounts of
how Jesus walked through small cities
Uuu
MERK
p ({) p I I I N ' H f N f ~ s
to share 1 spiritual mcssaac. He also
cited Mohandas Gandhi's Salt
March. which led to the 1ndcpen-
dcncc of India from British rule, and
Martin Luther Kini JT.'~ walk ft'om
Selma to Montaomcry1 Ala , that
opened the Southern vouna booth• to
blacks.
'1'bcte three people are from
different ~ru of the world and have
daffettnt 1dcal11t1d philosophy. And
(Pl ...... PEAC&/A2)
...........................
PnD Kwr rel ... ID 81alrl9J Lelto1a•1 ~Beach
home. Tia• lla'D lae wain wlt.Ue wa'"DI haDC9 on the wall.
By SUSAN HOWLETT
Of ... D91tp .........
Newport Beach official~ will stud)
!!Cores of audit recommendations
made by a priva~c consulttna firm
before dctermin1na what ch•nJes
should be madt wtth1n the polt~
department, the city manager u1d
Monday.
City Manqer Robert Wynn uad 11
an af\cmoon C'ity Council ~ion
that the city waif look at the I 39
recommendations an the next couple
of months to we which onet can ht
1nco1 poratcd into the aty°s budact
Tht audit. which co't the cit)'
$60,000, was completed March 19 hy
the National lcque of Cities Pollet
\onsllltmaScrv1cc ba9Cd 1n We•h1na·
ton. 0 C-The audit tc~m talked with
t'C$1dcnt , o~rved poltee and 1ntCT·
Y1t'wed city and pohcc officials
l hompson < rockcn. one of the
Crockett told the < 1ty C o unc1l that
Newpon Reach has an expen11vc
police department one that costs
more than 1w1« as much to run at
many Cahfom11 CttlC1 wtth com-
parable population•.
The audit C'ltlmates the cost of~
Newport Beach Pohcc Depanment 11
SI B.06' per 1.000 rcs1dcnti. wtuk
the nauonal average for comperablc
CltlC IS $74,094
"Ntwport Beach 1s spend1naa pat
deal of money on their pohcr dcpert·
ment." Crockett u1d
He added that c1ty official• should
take lht pohcc dac:>aruncnl'a cost ol ~rv1ce into a<'COUnt when dcadll\I
the bud&rt
Councilman 8111 A& alb:d
C rockett for an CllplAMllon of Cii
audit tt.am's findinp conc:ernina lM
f'X('M 1ve fortt complaints aptat
the poh~ department He noUJtl \bat
(Pl-... ... POL.::S/A21
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Al Onlnge COlll1 DAILY PILOT/ Tu.day, Apt'il 1&, 1988
WARPLANES POUND LIBYAN CAPITAL •••.
homAl
mmt. HoWCVClj}!\er ~re ronlled to
Oy an ntra l,auu milet round·tnP
bccaUIC France hid muled pet·
mlsaion fOr the born bcn to fty over its
territory en route to the Mediter·
ranean, he &a1d.
Peotaa0n IOW'CC'S wd military
officiaJJ bid decided 1evera1 days 110
that any mil1wy 1trike would be
conducted at nl_,,t, because in·
telhpnce information indicaiet Lit>-t'.~~ pilots have linle trainina in ni&ht
tlilbts. The U.S. planes have 10phisti·
cated avionics and naviplion aear
for operation at niaht and In bad
weather.
Knowledaeable officials said
K.hadafy's headquarters was one
t&tJCt ohbc raid, aJthouah 11 waa not
on the Pentaaon 's official lilt of
taraets. Reapn h1m1elf detcribcd the
attac9 as "concentrated and careful-
ly taraeled to minim1.1.C cuu.allJes
amona Libyan people, wath wbom we
have no quarrcl."
A broadcast by Libya radio,
monuored by the British Broad-
castinJ Corp .• wd " . the savqe
Amencan 1ovaden carried out a
treacherous and barbaric air strike ...
apinst the residence of the brother
leader of the revolutaon (K.hadafy). A
number of members of the family of
the brother leader were in1ured as a
result of this raid."
In Tnpoli, Kha.dafy's information
d11ec1or. Ibrahim Seger, said Tuesday
1ha1 Khadafy had survived the raid.
.. He's OK, he's OK." Seger told
The Associated Press.
Weinberger said the anacks were
mounted against five targets near
T npoli and Benghazi usinJ 18 F-111
bomber\ from lJ.S. bases an England
and I 5 A-6 and A-7 attack Jets off
Navy earners Amenca and Coral Sea.
Speakes, tile deput)'. White House
press St'cretary. descnbed the targets
as Libya's "terronst infrastructure -
the command and control systems.
1ntelllgence, communications.
logistics and training fac1h11es"
Secretary of State George Shultz,
app('anng with Weinberger 1n lhe
White House bneftng room JUSI after
Reagan's Oval Office statement, ~1d
the So" 1e1 Union was told of the
operation as 11 was taking place and
waussured 1t was "1n oo waydu'Mtcd
at the Soviet Union."
Asked what would happen tf Libya
wu to retaliate for the air Mkes.
Shultz said. "What it cleat &oo.iabt ti
m.t the United Stain will take
miljtary action under certain circum-
stances."
"He counted on America to be ~ssive," Reapn &aid of Khadafy.
'He counted wrona."
Several dozen anti-nuclear war
actjvistt and foes ofReqan'• Central
American policies turned out Mon-
day ni&ht to chant 1lopn1 ouuide the
Whitt lfou1e decryina the U.S. attack
on Libya.
"We do not wan& to ace Rambo in Tri~li\'~}!'e aroup lh<?uted 1n uni-son ID yette Palk Ul a demon·
Sl.rltlOD hastily ana.naed by tbe
Committee for a SANE Nuclear
Policy.
Weinbef'ser and Pentqon oftia.als
said the Air Force and Navy jeu bad
anacked tbetc ~ inside Libya;
-Tbe Al Azziziyah barracb in
Tripoli, detcribcd u "°the main
b~uarters of La'byan pltnnina and
direction of its terrorist anacb over-
seas."
-Tbe Sidi Bil&J . port Cacility. d~bed u "a tratoJna bue for Libyan commandos. ..
-Tbe mill~ tide of the Tripoli
auport. After this area wu attacked,
·Weinberaer said all the liabts at the
facility went out. Tbe Pentqon &aid
that section of the airport ia UJed "to
transport military and subvenive
material around the world."
-The Al J umahiriya berncks in
Benghazi. This wu described u "an
ahe~,att command post to the AJ
Azzlllyah barracbs."
-And the Denina military airfield.
The Pentagon said this tarset wu bit
for "mihtary suppression purposes"
to ensure no efforu wcrc made by the
Libyans to attack Amencan planes.
According to the Pentagon, the fint
three sites 1n the above list a.re located
around Tnpol1. The latter two arc
located on the other s1de of the Gulf of
S1dra near Benghazi.
Weinberger indicated the Air For.cc
F-11 l"s had been usianed to hat the
targets around Tnpoti, while the
Navy attack Jell concentrated on
BeQ&hazl.
The prcs1denl wd .. evidence it
now conclu11ve" that recent terronst
incuknu bad occurred on "ordcn
1ent from Tripoli." He sa1d ID·
teUiaence had blocked one "planned
mAssacte" 1nvolv10a the ute of
venades and amaU anns to attack
Americans waitina in line for visas m
Franc.e.
S(>Cakes would not discuss cas-
u.alues or damqc. He said "we took
every precaution" to eo1ure that no
civilian• would be i.ajured or killed.
Kbadafy's headquaners near
Tnpoli wu amona the targets of the
Amencan stnkc, which occurred at 2 a.m. Tuesday, Tnpoli time.
Speakes bneftna was telecast hve
on network news shows at 4:20 p.m.,
PST, just 20 minutes after the air
stnkcs bepn. Speakes began· "US
m1htary forces have uecuted a senes
of carefully planned air strikes apinst
terronst-relAted taraets in Libya.
These air stnkcs have been com·
pleted and our a1rcraf\ are return mg ·•
There are thouaht to be more than
800 Amencans an Libya, despite
Rtaaan's order last year that D.S.
cittzens get out of the countrv.
Withm five minutes after Speakes
finished briefing reporters at the
White House, several dump trucks
were brought onto the grounds of the
U.S. Capitol, bloclungall thc auto and
truck entrances in a move to enhance
protection apinst any terrorist at· tack. .
Speakea tho said m.t admirus-tratioo officials bad succeeded in
tyina Khadafy "very directly" to the
attack Jut week at the West Berlin
ditco, in which an American soldier
and a Turkish woman were killed.
Alked how the tarsets were chosen,
Speaket said, "Because they strike at
the very heart of Kbadafy's abiU1y 10
conduct terrorist activities." .. we•re cenainly prepared to do at
apin," i( Kbadafy continues to
auppon t.erronst acuv111cs agamst
American targets, Speakes said.
Tbe au stnkes were the second U.S.
military action in less than three
weeks.
VOTER PAMPHET DISPUTE IN COURT •••
Fro m A l
premc Court replaced the Supenor
Court order and returned the case to
tht' Court of Appeal for a hcanng on
Its merits.
On Friday. as the prcslles were
beginning to roll with the tnmmed·
down version of her statement, the
appealc; court turned down a pet1t1on
from Calligan asking the June heanng
be moved forward.
( alh$lln. who has spent most of her
SH,875 in campaign donations on lhe
candidate's statement, says her cam-
paign will be devastated 1f she cannot
get her message 10 voters
She maintains 1hat Ryan was
ne1ther "reasonable nor fair' 1n ruling
port1onc; of the statement false and
misleading. '"If anythmg's false and
misleading. it's Judy Ryan's de-
cision ..
Calligan u1d 'ihe was encouraged
by the U S. District Court's w1lhng-
nec;s to consider an injunction. She
said movmg the case to federal court
w1 II assure a fair heanng. "The federal
court 1s not going to be swayed."
Rcacti~ to the latest Calligan
pcti11on, Gates' attorney Darryl Wold
said, "It continues to amaze me the
lengths Ms. Calligan has gone to act
her faJsc and misleading statements
pnnted. If she doesn't have anythma
better to say 10 the voter$, she m1&ht
as well get out of the race."
Allegations edited from Calhgan's
onginal statement include accusa-
tions that Gates was convicted of a
federal cnme, illegally owned a bar
and covered up the drunken dnvmg
arrest of a deputy
Wold said an 1nJunct1on at this
point "1s very unlikely cons1dcnng
the extensive review of this case
before three d1lfercn1 levels of 1he
state court "
1f an m1unc11on 1s granted, 11 will be
an 1nd1cat1on that the U S. District
Court has scnous questions about the
state's right to control the content of
candidate's statements, he added.
Under a 3-ycar-old state Elections
Code statute, anyone may challenge
the contents of the statements, which
arc wnnen by candidates for public
office and sent along with sample
ballots to all the county's registered
voters.
· The statute has never been tested in
court.
If state court dec1s1on 1n the Gates-
Calhgan d1i.pute are reversed, 11 will
mean more costly delays for the
county Registrar
Registrar Al Olson said numerous
pages m the voters' pamphlets would
have to be rcpnntcd 1f Calhgan's
statement were changed "Jt 1sn'tJUSt
a simple case of repnntmg a can-
d1da1e s statement now;· Olson said.
TAX FILING DEADLINE MIDNIGHT ...
From Al
I or las1-m1nutc filers. there 1s
as'i1s1ance available 1f troubles arise
For ques11ons about the form!> or
filtn~. the I RS has a 1011-free number
to dial, 800-424-1040 And for thoo,c
who discover the forms th ey have are
not the forms 1hcy need. hbranes.
po\I office\, federal buildings and
some banks have add111onal papers
ava1lahle. an IRS spokesman said.
A number of I J S post offices
around the count} wall be open until
m1dn1eh1 And several offices will be
emptying drop ~He\ until the dcad-
l111c
into the wee hours ot Wednesday
morning because of the volume of
last·m1nute returns.
And Balcer ant1c1pates the crowds
10 roll in just as they have every year
.. Practically (all the post.al workers)
will work . Last week wu busy,"
becau5e property taxes were due on
Apnl 10 "And 11 looks ltke we'll be
very bus) today," she said
At several offices around 1he coun-
ty, postal workers will be stand
outside w11h bins so people can dnve
by and drop offthe1r returns But look
ou t
"There arc rows and row~ of cars,"
Baker said. Police officer'> will be on
hand to help direct traffi c
Bob Pineda, manager ol mail
proccsi.ing in Coc;ta Mesa. said all
drop boxes 1n front of the 1590
Adams Ave. office will he cleared
before m1dn1ght and everything will
be po,tmarkcd for the I 51h
Al the Huntington Beach office.
6771 Warner Ave., postal workers
will be manning huge brn'I outside
un11I midnight. Po\tmac;ter Jim
O'Hare said
A hst o( other pmt offices that will
ha ve bans and postal workers avail-
able unlll m1dn1ght arc
•The Laguna Beach main office at
29911 Niguel Road, Laguna Niguel.
•The Playa stalmn 1n Laguna
Beach at 350 Forest Ave
Chance of .howers along Coast
P:Edoudy ._ todey ltw...-1 a 30 percent cMnoe of
lhower9 tontght In the Orenge eo.t. tn. Nettone1 WMther 8ervloe .
Hight wttl range from N et the ~ to 74 Intend.
Ovwnlght low9 wtl1 be In the 508.
Mo.tty Ck>udy ll<lee win carry• 30 percent chanoe of ratn
during the morning houra on Wednetdey. beoQmtng par11y
cloudy In the atttrnoon.
High• Wednetday Wlt1 ,.,. from ea to 78.
l.laht wind• over the'"'* ootetai wet .. wt1I become ~h to eoulhwtet I to 18 knota With 1· to 2-toot wtnd wev. 1t1i.
•"wnoon and tvtnlng.
Moetty ct~ tklee Wiii bring• cnanoe of ahower• by tonight o~ • w.eterty awetl 012 to 4 feet.
U .S. Tempe
--teMce HOM VS 0eot ~ C..-o
TOOAT e 07 •m
ftOMIDAY 12:20Lm
938 •m
70 42 .. ..
71 .. .. "
01
4 2 00
POLICE STUDY UNDER REVIEW ••.
From Al
whether founded or not, Newport
Beach seems to attract aeveraJ claims
allcgjna auressive police tactics.
Crockett said Newpon Beach
police have maintained throt1about
history an "agressive style" of ~n·
forcemcnt, and "the agretsive style
often leads to more complaint•." ...
"NtwPort Beach bu tradjtionallr,
had a very stnct enforcement st)'Je, •
Crocke11 said, "Perhaps it would be a
good idea for the new chief when he
comes in to take a look at that concept
and sec 1f 1t still applies."
Cou ncilman Don Strauss said the
exccu1ve force complaints probably
stem not from the department's
enforcement policy. but from "an
attitude or style p,roblem on the pan
of some officen. •
Another recommendation aired at
the meetina dealt with the dis-
ciplinary policy within the Newport
Beach Pollce Department.
Croeken &aid matten which allege
1eriou1 mboonduct qainst a police
officer should not only be in·
vestipted by an immediate super·
visor u currently done. but by
additional superiors in the depart·
ment. He added that the audit found
"a great dcaJ of inconsistency" in tbt
way the di1eiptinary process bu been
carried out from shift to shift.
One of the recommendation• that
couJd prove costly to the city is a
police loot patrol ot the Balboa Pier.
Newport Pier and Balboa Island.
Crockett said the enforcement team 1s
ellpensi ve because officers on foot
cannot answer calls for service in
other areas.
"There arc a lot of advantaaesand a
lot of disadvantages/ Crocket1 said
about the proposed root patrol.
Acting Police Chief Arb Campbell
attended the afternoon session to
hsten to the audit's recommen·
dations. The new permanent New·
port Beach pohce chief is expected to
be named today, and Campbell
topped the hst of finalists as the
h1ghest-o;conng applicant on the city
tests.
PEACE WALKER ON GLOBAL TRIP ••.
From A l
yet &hey had one thing 1n common -
to make people aware and challenge
authcmty u•ilng a com mon tool," he
said.
"In India there 1s a tradition.
Whenever there 1s a need 10 promote
any idea or 10 develop public opinion,
yo u walk to channel all sources of
<.:<>mmun1ca1ion, you 1ouch com-
mun111c\ of all s11es. even remote
v1llagc'i," he said.
In his research, he said he d1~
rnvc-rcd four roadblock<; to a world
void of weapons.
'"I drew the conclusion there arc
lour maJor obstacles that come an lhe
wa y of pc.ace. They arc· rchgious
d1'Jharmony, the economic gap be-
tween 1hc rich and poor, nauonalism
and racial and color d1scnminat1on,''
he said
So Kumar started out on a one-man
m1ss1on to encourage others to share
his dream of a peaceful world.
And because Gandhi once v1s1ted
Kumar's home town of Ahmadabad.
Kumar thouaht 1t 11gmficant to bcjln
has walk on Oct. 2. Gandhi's birthday.
tnes to organize a peace movemenl
His scbeduJe is planned well 1n
advance, due to the many people who
offer him shelter and food and
contact friends and family in other
towns to do the same. "Meeting one
person leads me to another person,"
he said.
As be walks he cames a banner with
the Oag of all 1he nations he's visited.
He says he doesn't mind the lonely
times, in fact, he enjoys the solitude.
"Now I feel walk.ing is like reading a
book you like to read or listenins to
music you like to listen to," he said .
He is anxious to return to his
family, too. His father 1s a bus1·
ncssman and his mother a housewife.
"But that cannot dC1Cnbe fully what
she is. She is very much involved in
the development and arowth of her
children and involved 1n helping poor
people," he said.
His brother Tiven Marwah is a
physician who wa.lked with Kumar
durina the first seven weeks of his
march. "I can't imqine howl would
have done this without his support,"
he said.
thing than world peace that we can
offer 10 the children. In the United
States I have spoken in more than I 00
schools. I have found children to be
responsive, receptive and im-
ag.anery," he said.
Instead of answenng children's
questions. Kumar said he asks them
to answer has. "I asked them why
there is war and one child answered.
'When people try to take away thinp
from others it starts the war.'
"Their understanding 1s so clear
about what is right and wrong," said
Kumar said of tfie children.
BODY ••.
From Al
disclosure.
Police spokeswoman Jo Anne
Bergstrom said the man apparently
had been an trouble with the law most
of his life. His string of arrests runs
from Southern CaJifomia to North-
ern Cahfomia. The arrests included
drug ~iolations, Berastrom said.
'"f veryth1ng we gel before m1d-
n1gh1. they will t anccl Apnl 15 .. said
(iwen Baker 1nforma11on clerk al the
~anta i\na main office Po\tal
workcrc; will ~ canceling the mail l\nd remember. at midnight every-
one patk~ up and turns rn. ~he said •The South Laguna bramh at
31677 V1rgin1a Wa y.
•The Laguna Hills office at 24001
Calle del la Magdelcna.
That was 31/J years ago .
Sance he left has home he's v1S1tcd I 13 co untnes 1n Asia and Europe.
Speaking at churches and schools,
Kumar (who doesn't use a last name
because ll connotatcs class in India)
Kumar plant to wnte several books
when he returns home.
His first book will be wrillen for
and dedicated to the children of the
world. "1 feel there ii no other beuer
Pohce, who view the man's death
as ~ homicide, say they have no
mot,1 ve for the en me, no weapons and
don t _know how long the body had
been an water, Berastrom said. And
they do not know the ca use of death
Berptrom said. ' TAX FREEDOM DA Y ••. From A l •In Santa Ana. the North (,rand
~talion at 2201 North Grand. that date were set aside for taxes fh1\
a\\ume<i all business 1aJ1cc; are paid by
1nd1v1dual'I
I >atc~ rrom I YKO on ha vc hcen
rt•v1sed becau<,t of l<llt'r ec:onnm1<.
data
1930
1940
1950
rebruary I l
\.1arch H
Apnl 3
1960
197()
1975
J 9k0
1981
19X2 1wn
19X4
198S
1986
April I I
April 28
Apnl 2R
Ma y I
Ma y 4
Max .1
April 30
Apnl 2M
May I
May I
•The Santa Ana general mail
facility at 310 I West Sunflower.
•The Newport Beach main oflk~
at I IOI Camclbaclt.
•The Balboa station al 204 Marn
St
•The Balboa Island '1lat1on at 206
Manne Ave.
•The R1vers1dc station at 191
R1ven1de Ave. an Newport Beach.
DOLE SPEAKS IN ORANGE COUNTY ••• From Al
good w1fr a good mother good
looking goud tempcred wcll -
drc\c;ed, well-groomed and unag-
grc't~1ve"
Regarding her own field, Dole \aid.
"fran\porta11on 1s a male-dom 1na1cd
1ndu\try You only have to l<>ok at thC'
trad1t1onal work force in highwa y
construction. sh1pbu1ldmg or the air
traffic control professions to reah1e
this -althoulth we are working to
MAIN OFFICE
IJO ~"' e., S• r "'• ~ • "'• ~ ... ",., ·~ C<it•• u.u • .,,.,,
increase the number of women in all
1ranspona11on fitlds "
I he cabinet memher said the
percentage of women in her own
transportation departmenl had
grown only from 18.S to 19 percenl
between 196 7 and 1983 -the ye.r
she took over. Dole said the per·
centaac has now arown to 22 percent
and that women now hold many of
the &op posi11ons 1n 1he department.
"Amcnca 1s wak1ng up to the fact
that the very interpersonal slulls of
consensus bu1ldina. med1a1ina. mod·
erat1on and dealina effectively wtth
people an acneral -skills that studies
and surveys have historically mden·
tified at predominant in women -
are the bu1ldana blocks of a post·
andu1tnal society such as ours,'' Dole
said.
Deity Piiot
o.ftyery
I• Gu•entNd
c.i .... •eo•,,. IA1 ~71 ~ & eo•D'• A•1 o~• Justcall 642-6086
I.'_, , ,..,., " tOli do
_,,..,.'/O<l!~Dy
'"",.'O"' lffl <>•not Co••· •• t ...... 11 ..t'I'-• •·. '• ,..,. '~°" .. !lit.A''''.i()int ~nr ei, ,...., • ., ,,. •1.,...,, ..
~,, ........ "''' C)e '9CJ'OOi.l<.0 ·"~'· ~. C»" ... ~ .. ,,._
VOL 71. NO. 108
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Clrculetlon
Telephone•
Storekeeper Todd Latham is
wearing our pure s~k sport
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NEWPORT BEACH. CA
(11416Q..70l1
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