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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1986-04-28 - Orange Coast Pilotl'OMCA8T80NAI * * .. _______ .. MONDAY, APRIL 28, 1986 Charges vs. priest shock parish Alleged fondling of altar boys reported to stunned Huntington congregation By PAUL ARCBIPLEY Of .. DlllJ ......... Many parishioners eltpressed con- fusion Sunday at Sl Bonaventure Church following Monsianor Adjuatlng well ltz-UCI player Bob Thornton hu •CVaated to life In the NBA. Paee Bl.- Coast Local schools adopt an educational program aimed at preventing teen- age delinquency./ A3 California A Soviet woman told a spy trial jury today of being beaten by Soviet agents./A2 Nation Michael Duffy's remarks about the felony molestation charges filed Fri- day against Father Andrew Christian Andersen. Although rumors have been Artist brings whales to life Naturallst leadsBaja tours, makin name as sculptor, painter Exotic, tropical birds squawk as visitors walk up the rocky driveway. A group of green, blue and gold macaws retreat behind lush trees. The road to Peter Otl's house could be in the tropics, but it isn't. The Laguna Beach anist and natu- ralist just likes to bnng his work home. Inside Ott's two-room home, pythons and boa constrictors occupy an aquarium. Deep-blue paintings of whales tic propped against the wa1ls. Half-finished sculptures of the ocean giants clutter the room. Ott is known both as a naturalist and a trapper but the apparent contradiction doesn't bother him. circuJauna and stories have appeared in newspapers, several people said after the 9 a.m. Mass in Huntiilgton Beach that they didn't know what the paator wu talking about. Duffy told the conareption be bad remained silent about the circulating rumors. But when the media broke the news that Andersen mi&ht be charged with fondling several altar boys, he decided to talk. "We arc all tn this together," Duffy said. "Many of us arc suffering deeply." He said parish resources were available to suppon those who were suffering most. "We need your suppon. too," he sa1d. Those at the SpringdaJe Street church who knew about tbe ~ aaainst the associate priest, ca1fcd "Father Chris," said they were sur- prised and saddened. But they backed Duffy's call for unity. "We suppon what he's doina." one woman said. But many h.adn't heard the rumors or seen the stories about the district attorney's office filina 24 felony ............... .., ............. counts of child molestation aplnJt the 34-year-old Andenen. They c:x- preued shock and di1bclief. One man said he badl>'t beard about the clw)les. But his children had. "He touched people-altar boya," his son uid. "Why would be do thatr Im (Pleue ... CllAllOU/A2) Crowds attend Coastal lifeguards count more beach users, few rescues By ROBERT HYNDMAN °' .. ...., ........ Summer may still be two months away, but that didn't !low viaitors wbo flock.ed to local beaches over the weekend to enJOY sunny aklcs and mild surf. Lifeguards aJong the Oranae O>ut said acv.eral hundred thousand vilo- itors helped create a summer-like atmosphere, but cool water temperatures &enerally kept the crowd on the sand and out of the surf. Only a handful of rescues were rcponed to 59-<iearcc waters, where steady surf pe.a.k.ed at about 3 feet on Sunday. Secretary of State George Shultz advocates covert action to combat Libyan terrorlsm./810 At one time, Ott collected exotic animals from Baja California and brought them back to the United States for sale. But Ott says he no longer is involved in that trade, preferring instead his.of\en-used title of''naturalist." "I am involved in environmental issues," he said. Laeun• natarallat Peter Ott pa ta the flnlahln& touche9 on one of Illa martne mammaJa, "It was busier than 1n past week- ends when we had wind or overcast sk.ies," said Huntinston Beach Marine Safety upt. Bill Richardson. "It is starting to look like summer already." Alona Huntinaton Beach's city beaches, 20,000 v1s1ton arrived Sat- urday. On Sunday, with sliabtly wanner temperatures, 25,000 were counted, Richard.Ion said. Llfquards made 13 rcteues Sunday in the 2- to-3-foot surf. World Marcos tells President Reagan he wants the United States to help him return to power In the Phl{lpplnes./ Al Sporta The Orange Coast Col- lege crew has a strong showing at the Newport Regatta. /81 Bualnesa Using credit wisely can Improve your flnanclal situation while enhancing your llfestyle./85 INDEX Advice and Games · Bulletin Board Business Classified Comics Death Notices Entertainment Opinion Police Log Public Notices Sports Television Weather A8 A3 85-6 B7-9 A9 B9 A7 A10 A3 B9-10 B1-4 A7 A2 Estancia decorated by senior trashers By TONY SAAVEDRA °' .. .,.., ........ Judgina from the s1ans cluttenna the small lawn io front of Estancia Hiah School this morning. every real estate qent in town was tryina to tell the Costa Mesa campua. Actualll• the school is not for aale. And it s a aood thin&. too. Not many buyers would ventu~ put the yellow and white toilet 1>9peNlrcam- 1na from the trees in front of the Placentia Avenue facility. On the aide of one buHding. a yellow fut·f ood banner enoourqcd students to "Try our, new nachos." Cradled in the trces were atrcet buricadet and 1 forlorn aurfboard. Amid the mess wu 1 oolillcal aian for 40tb ConareuionaJ l>iatrict can- didate ~1th1n Rosenbcra, who prob- ably won't muster 100 many votes from the auldent body. (Pl ......... T AJllCIA/ A2) I On now spends at least three months a year tn BaJa Cahfomia leading wilderness tours or enjoying what be calls the most desolate and rugged terrain left in Nonh America. He recently returned from a month in Baja whe~ he and a friend headed a I 2-pcrson kayak tour through Magdclena Bay, a well·known g.ather- ing around of the gray whale. Ott was also billed as the feature artist for the Dana Point Whale Festival. Ott finds Baja beautiful and rare. "It is one the few places where the tropics meet the dcscn," he sajd, addJng that those who caJI Baja a desert are wrong. "They have tropical fish and birds. A lot of species that the field guides say do not live in the area are there," he said. ''It is so unique. There arc some places 1n Baja that no human has ever set foot." But Ott worries that wilt all change once an ineltpcnsjve means of de- salinatina and pumping seawater to remote locations is djscovcred. "Then Baja is doomed." he said. "The population of Baja virtually grew at a snail's pace unttl they paved a road (stretching the length of the penmsula) in 1973. Now they have tripled the population." Ott says he uses his tours to inspire people to work to conserve the environment, but takes care not to preach to his clients, who have paid anywhere from $600toS1,200 for the wilderness tnps. "We tell the people that the world is losmg its environment and that they must ban,d together," be said. "We do stress that we arc losing our environ- ment and that that animal's habitat is betng lost because of the encroach- ment of man and ovcrpopulatton." Ott focuses most of his an on whales "because that's what's (popu- lar) now." But birds of prey. he confesses. arc his real love. · When Ott first decided to use whales as subjects, he found there were few factual and scicntically accurate depictions of the animals. "As early as the '70s the pictures of the whales were always too large and bloated,·· he said. Even the scientific examples of the enormous animals were rounded Partners.hip-in-Education benefits all Irvine schools By G. JEANETTE A VENT DlllJ,.. C..I J I fa I When President Reag.an en- couraged business to help the public sector aJmost three years ago, he probably wasn't thinking about ice sculpture. But that 1s one of the forms 1t took in the Irvine Unified School District when the chef at the Irvine Marriott Hotel carved a block of ice for an ice cream social at Vista Verde Elemen- tary School last year. The partnership program. now tn its third year an lrvmc. assists the d1stnct tn a vancty of ways, according to Barbara Barnes, program director. When the district started its Part- ncrship-l n-Educat1on Program in 1983. there were two partners linked with two schools, Barnes said. Now all the schools are matched with panners in a program that involves more than I 00 busmesscs. "We look for links that would be beneficial to both the busi ncss and the school. If they donate equipment. there 1s the opportunity for tax benefits," but for the most part. businesses sec the pannershtp pro- gram as good community involve- ment. said Barnes. Businesses can choose the level of involvement they desire, she said. In some cases. it's a one-time contribu- tion. In others. 1rs once or twtce a year contnbutton. or 1l may be on a regular basis. said Barnes. (Pleue eee SCHOOLS/ A2) .............. ..,.,.... ........ Gym claM memben clean ap Utter from lteta.ncla B1Cb School'• 'truh nl&hL' .. • IAuu MERK PEoPtr 1N THE Nrv.s instead of sleek and torpedo-like. He claimed most artists stilf do not create the animals to scale despite a wealth of available pictures. For Ott, it takes as least as long to design a painting as it does to pamt 1t (Pleue .ee ARTIST I A2) At the state bcac~es ad)01nllll Huntington Beach. lifCJlW'dl kept watch on about 40,000 visitors each day. To the south. 45,000 V1.siton spread their towels on the sands of Ncwpon Beach on Saturday, Marine Ocpartrncnt Lt Ron Johnson said. On Sunday, with air temperatures warma.na to about 69 degrees, about 80,000 bcachgoers hit the san~ from West Newpon to Corona del Mar. In Laguna Beach. lifecuard Mike (Pleue eee CROWD8/ A2) Candidate drops out of Irvine council race By PHIL SNEIDERMAN Ol .. DlllJ ......... Betsy Scheer. one of 11 candidates competing for two Irvine C'ity Council seats has dropped out of the race. but her name wtll stlll appear on the June 3 ballot, an election official said today. Irvine City Oerk Nan~ Lacey said she was notified by phone that Scheer is no longer a candidate. But Lacey said she 1s stLll awaiting wnttcn confirmation of Scheer's decision. Nevenheless, Lacey satd that by lawn 1s too late to delete Schccr·s name from local ballots. "Once the nom1nat1on penod closes. you·rc on the ballot," she ~d -Scheer is a pension account manager at Lon~ Beach offices of The (Pleue 1ee CANDIDA T&/A2) • Sewer assessment, annexation put on community ballot Old Top of the World needs sewers to solve problems, ctty says By USA MAHONEY Olllle.,..,,.. ..... I nstallauon of sewers in Old Top of the World could begJn this summer 1f residents vote to create an asxssmcnt d1stnct to pay for them. The 6 I-home, unmcorporattd communtty near lqun1 Beach has for yean endured ICWll'C and wash water stream1n1 down Its stttets because ofinadeQuate septic systctm. The problem can be ehmmatcd 1( residents vote June 18 to finance enainecnna and construction of 1 KWCr line e~tens1on from the Laaunft &.~h city hm1t1 into their ne1&)\ botti'ood. Assistant C'1ty M1tnaatr Rob Clark said ~Y can also knock 20 percent off the c'lt1matr-d $686,364 cost if they choose to be annexed by the ci ty. he "11d . .\n annexation vote l'i scheduled June 17 Fon y-fi vc heaJth v1olat1o ns have been document~ by the Oranac County Health <..•re A&c:ncy at Old Top of the World since 1983. In all, he.alth 1nspccton have responded to ~4 complaints of foul odon and ~S\)lllS Chronic septic system (a1lum PQK potential health and safety hazards to residents there. wd Re11 Ehlin&, director of pubhc health A health aacncy rcpon released last week said some systems have to be pumped every I S days to prevent ovtrl\ow. TM state con Mien 11ept1c system to be f9'hn& 1f It muS1 be pumped more thin twice a year Because of limited land to build new septic systems and poor soil at-,,orpuon at Old Top oft he World. a (Pl_.. ... COIOl1JJQTT I A2) •, SoY-iet w:Ooian tells Miller trial jury of beating by KGB \ LOS ANOELES (AP} -A Soviet womaa "'° mnNd bcr cocUeaaioo to 11MM 1old juron in Richard W. MIUef'a esplonqe trial today that ahe WU beaten bloody br, Sovtet qenll wbo branded her 'an American W~ .. ~I ~n~~ MOICOw. Svetlana O&o · ov, testiMna for a fourth clay in the trial o( her former FBI lover, said she didn't tell Soviet qents about Miller durinf her trip to the Soviet Union in June 984 even thouah their affajr had bctun the month tierore. · She said she spoke only of John Hunt. the aaent who she sit.id bad been her previous lover. Ogorodnikov pve a sometimes puzzlina account of her mcctinas with a KGB agent named Anatoly in a Moscow hotel. "I cannot remember exactly what happened," she said hesitantly, "but they took m.~ to the militia. and they beat me up. . Asked for further explanation by US. District Judge David Kenyon. Mrs. Ogorodn1kov said: "They put me on some kind of bed. One policeman was sitting on me and holdtng my hands, and the other one grabbed m y hair, and they were h1t11ng my head on the wall. I was all 2students taught at home going to Harvard BOONVILLE, Calif. (AP)-Ifs a school even Huck Finn could love, one without tests. report cards or homework assignments. But then, the students at remote Mountatn School in Mendocino County are a teacher's dream. Two graduates of David and Micki Col- fax's home-based school for their four ~ns have won scholarships to Harvard University. Over the weekend, Drew Colfax, 18, decided to accept an offer from Harvard and turned down those from Yale, Princeton, Amherst and Haverford. he said Sunday. A spokeswoman for Princeton, where fewer than one in siJt apphcants was accepted this year. called him "one of o ur most extraordinary applicants.'' "We've never seen a kid like this." said Princeton's Laura Clark. "He 1s home-educated and has demon- stra(cd an amazing academic excel- lence in an unonhodox learning environment." Harvard spokeswoman Margery Heffron said Sunday, "I don't think it's unique. but it's unusual." Drew win JOin his older brother. Grant, at Harvard. Grant, 21, 1s an honors pre-med student. Reed, 16, 1s "mathematically precocious," ac· cordtng to their father. a former university professor in soaology And Ganh. 10. has a deep interest 1n ceramics and painting. Thetr mother said Sunday, "I think they're very bright and very motivated, but I don't think they're particularly g.if\ed. They JUSt have a lot of interests, and they pursue them vigorously .. in blood. . .. They told me I was an Amenc:an whore,· she said, buntina into tears "l was feelina very bad." Later, she said lhe man named Anatoly came to tee her at b.er hotel room and ordered her to leave the country immediately. "That was very airanae." she said. "He uked me to step out lo the corridor and told me to get out immediately ...... She said she expressed concern for her son, Matvei, who was in Kiev visiting relatives, but eventually they were reunited and left for the United States. The boy, now 14, 1s reportedly living back in lhe SoVlet Union at present. The judae quesuoned Qiorod· nikov in depth about how she ltncw that those questioning her were with lhe KGB. She never made this clear, otlaer than to say that their behavior 1jpoed ber off. fter testimony became contradic- tory when she first claimed she had received no instruction from the Soviets during her trip, then later contended sbe was told to com· municate wtlh Anatoly in code through letters wntten to her mother. The government. in its case against Miller. claims that the smaJI, blond woman recruited him for Soviet espionage, tellina him she was a m"1or in the KGB and he would be paid well for classified documents.. New bike for Pilot carrier Dally Pilot carrler John Moore wu given a new bicycle by Century 21 worken (left) Bal Bouley and Steve Riddle after b!a old bike wu atolen. The real atate Mleamen purc haaed the bleycle after readJ.n.C a Dally Pilot .. letter to the editor•• from Moore'• mother. who bemoaned the theft. Moore ba d purchued b!a old bike with aavings from hi• newspaper route. hi.a mother Mid. Francis Rhodes d ead at 75 Memonal services have been held for Francis W. "Frank" Rhodes of Newpon Beach, who died recently after a lengthy illness. He was 75. Mr. Rhodes, who was born 1n England, served in the Royal An1llery during World War 11 and was dis- charged as a major in 1946. He reured in 1978 after 15 years with Avco Financial Services as the head of the company's Govcrnmen1 Relations Depanment He 1s survived by his wife, Eileen Molly Rhodes. and a son, Francis Jeremy Rhodes of Santa Ana. Services were held at Pacific View Memonal Park 1n Corona dcl Mar Memonal donations have beC'n re- quested to the Santa Ana un11 of the Salvation Army CHARGES SUPRISE PARISHIONERS ... From Al daughter asked ··[don't know. honey," her father replied. The pnest allegedly fondled a number ofaltar boys between the ages of 12 and 14 between February 1985 clnd last March fhc molcsta11ons allegedly oc lUrred 1n Andersen's car. tn an office un the church grounds, and at a prt"ate Huntington Beach home 1ha1 1s owned hy the church. accordtng 10 authonlle'>. i\nder'>Cn'\ whereabouls are un- known to Huntington 11cach police, hur he 1<; e ~pected to surrender to chem this week Pohc.e said they launched the in vest1gation March 31 when the mother ofa 13-year-old boy told them her son had been molested at the church rectory by Andersen Their investigation led chem to several other alle~ed v1ct1m s and some evidence, police said The pansh serves about 12,000 members 1n the Orange Coast While many at the crowded 9 a.m. Mass apparently hadn't heard the repons, 1t was evident che story was very much on.the minds of the c hurch's leaders t-ather Chnstophcr Smith. who said Mass, told pansh1oners. "All of us 1n church today know what pain feels like. "So of\en a ktnd of pain tnvadcs our li ves that is so different. so new, l>O confusing we can hardly see our way through 11. "Thi'> parish community needs to hear ... that we believe in a God who will wipe C'very tear away But before tears can be wiped away. they must be shed '"Now 1s 1he lime more than ever for us 10 love one another," Smith said. ESTANCIA HIGH CAMPUS TRASHED •.. Fr om A2 Senior trash night had come agatn I{> Estancia Hi gh "There must have been a big run on toilet paper at the grocery stores last night." ~aid police Sgt. Tim Holbrook ··And aboul 200 people are going to find their "for sale' signs gone today" The nocturnal pranksters arc most· ly students who will be graduating at the end of the semester It 1s a high ~hoot 1rad1t1on that also plagues most other campuses But this year. Estancia Assistant CROWDS ... P'romAl Dwinell said about 40,000 v1s1tor'I iunned themselves on the bcachC's from Emerald Bay to V1ctona Beach. Nearly that many spent the af\ernoon under the sun on Saturdty, he said. "The crowds are definitely p1ckrng up." Dwinell said "There's more and more people each weekend." T cmperatures are e•pected to cool sh&htly aftd today•s warm weather Forecasters said Tuelday would be mostly cl~ with some fo, and low clouds alont. the coast. Hi&Ju of~ to 72 were predicted at tbe beaches with iliahtly wanner tem_peratum inland. Lows tonight will beJn the mid·S-Os. Pnncipal Alfred Ma u said the stu· dents showed much more restraint in limitrng the hi¥)! school hiJinx to the "senior lawn" in front of the campus Nothing was broken and nobody attempted to break into the !tehool buildings, Matz said "I thought they were very respon· s1blc Th ts 1s nowhere near last year," he said. rcfemng to "Trash N1$ht '85" when students shattered windows, vandalized th·e mam building and stoic aolf carts from the neighbonng golf cour~ 1nce 1hen, school officials have installed an electronic survc11lance system and spread the word that burglary or malicious vandalism would not be tolerated. Matz said. He addC'd that parents dropptng their children off at the school this morning laughed when they saw the toilet paper landscaping. The odds and ends, tncluding a large yellow dC'tour sign, were re- moved by a gym class. Matz said, adding the realty signs would be returned. CANDIDATE QUITS .•. From Al Equuable. l.Accy said Scheer told her The Equitable was closing its Lona Bead> offices and movma its operations to New York Accordmg to Lacey, Scheer explained that she must decide whether to move to New York or to seek another JOb. . Scheer said the JOb developments prompted her dec1!1on to cease campaigning for an Irvine Council seat, accordina to the crty clerk. Scheer could not be reached.for comment today. Her last campalJll finance statement. for the penod end1n1 March 17, included only a S48S expenditure for a statement of qualifications to appear an the ballot pamphlet. The candidate's dcpanurc still leaves 10 people running for the scats now occupied by Councilman Larry Aafln, who 1s seelong re· election, and Councilwoman Barbara Wiener. wbo H not. The other candidates arc Oarenoe P. Becwar, Gary Steven ~nnett. F.d Doman. Jean Hoban. Thomas M. Jones, Anthony Korba. 'Hal Maloney. Mary AilCC'n Matheis and Scott Wellman Ocean breezes t o cool coastline w•enino of• hlQtt ~ dOfM ~ Utah end Nevada Mi1y today w• expected to allow ooollng ... brMDI to waft t1eroee ooeetel 8outhem Cellfomle. ~ molat mettne air wtll brlno fog and low cloud• ..nor. tonlgltt Md Mtty TuMdey, t>ut daytltM .... wtn be moetty Cfeat, eooordlng to tM Netlonel W•ther s.Mc9. •cirr~"-.-.JU Along the Orenge eo..1 It wltt be mostly clMr Tu.day bUt 101M fog and low cloud• along the cout tonight and Ntly Tue.day morning. Cooler Tueedey. High• at the bMCMI rueecsey ee to 72. L.OW9 tonlQht 5-4 to sa. Hight In the vatteye TUMdey 71 to 83. Lowe tonlgfit 50 to H From Point Conception to tN ~lean 8ofdet -'"'* wettte: Light vlrleble wind• night and morning hour• becOmlng ...t to eouthw.et 10 to 1e knot• dunno an.rnoon hour• TUMdey. Wind wevee 1 to 2 r..t. Southweet IM!l 1 to 2 '"' M= clMr Tueedey bUt eome tog and low cloud• tonight and T ey morning. l------___::..:.......!!!L~~-------1 l!JJJ!J!n,..~. ~.A, f llONTI U.S. Temps ~...,, 18 ~ .. 80 10 M '11./111 ~ ~ltf ~ w.,m_ Cold _. S11<>w••• Re.n Flvlt• .. Siww OecluO•O.-. S1e110n.,v ~ -.-W•""" ~t HOO US 0.0-' C~<• ~'"-' 72 M .. Lo~ .. e2 AnloWly,N y 7i 47 NewC>rtMM II .. ... 37 New VOttl Cfly 72 M ~QUe 71 31 ~.Va T7 5" Anc:notllQa 62 32 Ol<ltlhOfN City ,, ~ Alllnla 8G 57 Omen• .. 32 Calif. Temps Extended Atlantle: City 86 Au9tln ~ ..,...,_. " lllrmlnQNm .. ... 57 loelon 57 luffelo 18 c...,., 57 ~.SC ., ~.WVa .. CllMoCW.HC .. 0.,..-51 ~ 11 .. a....lend 83 Colull'lbue.Olllo .. ~IWortll 71 Dllylon 811 o.n-., O.M'*-74 o.troll 83 °"""" 53 EPMO 79 'elrtlenlt• 4e '"'00 42 ,,...,. 63 Ot-S~ 13 Otwt, ... M ........ M Honolulu 85 "-!Oft 78 ~ IM -**-.MIM 83 Jecll_.,... ~ ~ 54 ~City 72 LMVeget 79 Uttla Roca 75 LOUllWlile .. MefnclNe '" " Orlalldo 91 eo eo~ 71 4t 50 "'-"• 141 ... 57~ IM " N .M-87 43 4 7 Pcwtt.nd,0.. 81 41 IMI Pt o\llclel I09 M 52 "::tc IM 55 81 City 50 3-4 56 ~ 13 4t 81 AldwnonCI .. 54 96 8'~ 83 51 17 a.it La• Ctty se 49 eo a.n Mlonlo 83 ee eo *-" .. 54 ,. sa~ 80 50 47 Spolc-st as 5t s.,r-18 47 4 I Tempe-St P\AbQ 16 H 43 Toptlka 13 43 IMI T.-on ~ 54 43 TulM 75 ~ 411 WMl*lgton.O C 81 53 32 WlcMe .. 3t 37 W•-&en. 75 48 31 65 : Smog Report ~ Pollul.,,I lltanclerd Index (pel~ 0-100 65 good; 100.200 uMMilllful '°' llNH"'9 83 =· 200-300 uMMl!llM lor ... eo 500 l'IGlltdOua '"' ~ 11 35 today'• pet lorecasl. ~ .. ~ 41 d.-;'. •ttalNcl pel IMI 113-195 S3 ~CoM1 .. 80 Orenge eoun1y 183-92 8 , M91roe>Ollt.,, Loi A11Q91ea , ... ,38 Tldea 8-ldiow TOOAY l .18pm l1 l\ISIOAY Flrl1 lltgll 12:62e.m 8.4 FINI !Ow l:He.m 01 8--1Ngll 431pll'\ 34 8-IC!low 7 57plft JO ~ ... , 1odey "' 7 $.t p m • "- Tl!Mde)' et a Cle• m encl_..~ llJ 7.Upm / Moon ... , tod«y 11 II 24 e.m.. n.. f UMCSay et 12 57 e.m encl--~ 81 IOHam Surf Report era 9"AN 1·2 .... 1·2 .. 1·2 .. 1·2 .. 2 .. 1·2 ,... 1·2 .. Deaver asks special probe over conflict allegations WASHINGTON (AP)-Lobby1sl Michael K. Deaver asked Attorney General Edwm Meese Ill today to appoint a special prosecutor to in- vestt&ate allegations that he v1olated confhct-of-inlerest laws after leaving the White House as President Re- agan's deputy chief of staff. Meese told a news conference he will remove himself from any Justice Depanment review of the Deaver matter in view of his long association w11h Deaver. Deaver. in a statement released by his office. said, ··1 believe elementary due process and fairness to me and my family require appointment of an independent counsel. ··while I am grateful for the prcs1denfs continuing suppon. the climate has become such that this 1s the only way to resolve the issue fairly." he said. Congress set up the special pros- ecutor's procedure "as the means by which persons in my position can have such allegatons weighed and resolved by experienced, impanial and thorough examination," Deaver said. Meese was conducting a news conference at the same time Dcaver's statement was read to news agencies. He did not mention Dcavcr's request for lhC' appointment of a special prosecutor. Said Meese: '"Because of my lo ng association with Mr. Deaver that goes back almost 20 years to California I have determined to recuse myself m any proceedings in this matter." Meese said any action taken at the Justice Depanment regarding Deaver would be reviewed by Deputy Al· tomey General D Lowell Jensen. who would make a final determina- tion .• , Meese refused to provide any details of what the Justice Ocpan- ment plans to do regarding the Deaver matter. s.a)'tn$ "invest1ga· tions or possible inqumes within the depanmcnt is somethmg on which we don't comment." Dcaver's office also released a letter from his attorney, Hcrben J. Miller Jr., to Meese, seeking appointment of an independent counsel. Fnday David Manin. head of the Office of Government Elh1cs, rec- ommended to Meese that a special prosecutor look into Deavers bus1· ness dealings. There have been allegauons that Deaver violated the law by lobbying on issues which he handled while in the White House. Federal conflict-of-interest law proh1b1ts former top officials from lobbying for IWO years on issues that were directly under their purview dunn$ their final year in office. Add1t1onally. the officials cannot lobby colleagues with whom they worked m the same office for one year. Deaver. 48. was Reagan's deputy chief of staff. HC' left the White House a year ago to open up a lobbymg firm that 1mmedtately attracted a range of foreign and domestic clients, includ- ing the governments of Canada, Saudi Arabia and Mexico. Among the corporations that hired Deaver are Rockwell InternauonaJ Corp., Philip Morris and CBS. The success of [)caver's finn. Michael K. Deaver &. Associates. prompted tnqu1ries into the business. SCHOOLS LINKED WITH BUSINESSES .•. From Al California First Bank 1s in panner- -;hip with Turtle Rock Elementary School and the district's ~obaJ stud- ies program. Because California First 1sowned by the Bank ofTokyo, "they provide a lot of Japanese matenals," c;he said. In somC' cases, a school may have scveraJ partners. Los NaranJOS Elementary 1s matched with an entire shopping center, said Barnes. People at a sponing goods store can lecture on sporting equipment. while a dentist can give tours of his offic.c. Having speakers who can discuss specific areas 1s one of the benefits of the partnership program, she said. "Irvine is an ideal spot for the panncrsh1p prOlf&m, .. said Barnes. There is a lot of retail and high-tech involvement." Toshiba donated computers to the Lakeside Middle School and the Fluor Corp. sponsored a breakfast for Woodbn~e High School's student council in 1ts executive dining room, she said. On occasion, the partners donate money, as was the case when students needed sponsors to attend a constitu- tional nghts convention. Contribu- tions from three businesses enabled I 0 students to attend, said Barnes. COMMUNITY TO VOTE ON ASSESSMENT ••. From A l sewer system 1s the only answer. the repon said. Clark said the city 1s willinJ to pay about $11 7,000 of the sewer mstalla- t1on cost if residents are willing to join the city. The ctty already provides police and hrc services to the isolated hill top community because county emergency vehicles cannot respond fast enough, he said. If Old Top of the World 1s annexed, the city would get about $25,000 in propcny caxes, Clark said. For the first 41/J years, all of that income would go to pay for the Ctty•s share or the sewer line, he said. Because of the Proposition 13 property tax limitation, annexation would not increase property taxes m Old Top of the World. Clark said ARTIST PRESERVES ENVIRONMENT ..• From Al because he must first draO a blueprint of the picture. As a result of his dedication to accurately recreate the animaJ, he was commissioned by Scientific Ameri- can to create a breachina humpback whale for the cover of the March 198 5 ISSUC. Ut:spttc nis 1actc. 01 tormau training in an, he insists art is like music - anyone artistically &ifted bas an innate atnlity. Ott's father, Petef"P.lul Ott, is also a successful sculptor./ 1 t d1ft.cuh to keep any long enough for display But his tnps south of the border surpa15 his love for the arts and he continues to offer the wi lderness tours. Just seeing his clients have lhe thnll of sceina such an enormous animal as the lf'IY wha,le up close makes the tnp1 wonhwh1le, Ott says. Al 45. Ott is on tus way to making a similar name for himself. His pamt· inas sell for up to S 1.000 and he finds MAIN Offtcl )30 w"' ee, 81 Cott• M<t .. C.\ Ma• aod<tu 9o• 15e() Cott•""-CA 9c015 c:-1.o .0. 6'2•6179, ~ ' tOtlonai 962 •321 G<»r-Ql't •Ml ::i..,. C<>eto ~ '·"'-"r No -tlO'oet _,,fl.,,... .0-te>< ...... 11 .. 0.1 ao.. ...... "*'" ........ m•~ OI' reptOOU<.ec:I WllflO.I• lbfl:-41 oar ,_, o! t~Y"IQM - S.COl'd • ·~• """'"9" O•., •• C:.U.t• ....... • 'I>'""• !UPS '" 8001 S..~• '''°" o, U".., t~ J!> ,._,.,., 0-t ,,.. .... $1 00 l'ft(',r''Yf Justcall 642-6086 What do you hke about the Daily Pilot? What don't you like? Call the number above and your messqc will be recorded, transcnbcd and de- hvcrcd to the appropriate editor The seme 2._bour answcrina scrv1ce may be used to record letters to the editor on any topic Contributora to our IAtten column must include their name and telephone number for venficat1on Tell$ us what's on your mind Dally Pilot Detlvery la OuerentMd ... ~ '''°"~ " JOU le "'Ol ,,. .. ,_ -o, ' )() 0 " u Ot•·)t• 1 " ... •"<I '°"' «:i>1 -be ·-<IO s ...... ,., -~" Sll"Oll, If \'°" 00 <•QI •k-r<'V' '°'"' 11> 1 • ... ,." ee•oro '0 • ,., •f\.(I )'ti'" (o0y •• IMO-··~ ClrculeUon Telepttonee Of-ange CoM1 DAJLY PILOT/~,~ l8. 1• * A8 Hart to address Newport seniors Peace candidate breaks stereo u--Nwil~n Beach City Councilwoman Evelyn nan ~( speak •bolll the "deep POclceta lasue, .. Proposu10~ ~I onth~June ballot, at Friday'1aenera1 anc~be~p ~I.la or the Friends of Ouii at the "OasCo 11 Seluor Ciuzens' Center, 800 MIJ'IUCrlte Ave .. rona del Mar. ~ wUJ t.allt at 10 a.m. At tJ a.m. four Amenc:an Field Service Students at Corona del Mar Kiah ~hool wil~ show slides and ditcuss their cou~tnca.. They include Jngundc Ritz of Brazil ShC!lf Attta of Eaypt, Ela Najura of Panama and Judith ,Alder of Switzerland. Call 644-3245 for funber information. KJd•' deprealoa •tadJed A free class for parents on coping wath ~pmsion In children and adolescents will be offered Thunday at Northwood Community Park 4S31 Bryan Ave., Irvine. ' Therapist Merritt Schreiber will conduct the pr~. which will be held from 7:30 to 9 p.m. Call the Irvine Family Services Department at 559--0464 for add1t1onal information. Ex-FBI agent to speak Steve Sears. see Ing seat in CongreSS," • o ers a ternattve · in 40 h District race BJ PAUL ARClllPLEY "' .. ..__,... ..... The stc1t0typical imaae of a Peace and Freedom candidate -Iona hair. bell- bonom jeant, tic-dyed shirt and Berkcnstocks -is quickly dispelled upon meeting '°1h conaressional district CIO• didatc Steve Sean. Scan wears a tic, dress sJAcks and winatips. Kc sports shon hair and works for an accountina ftrm al ooc of the Oranic Coast's most prestiJious add.rcsles. Ml think m y candidacy will address tbc views not beinJ covered." Sears' potitJons mclude opposauon to I.he we of mahtary force in Libya. Ccntra.I America and elsewh~rc. Instead, he favors diplomacy. cultural excban1t1 and econ- omic ajd, "We should be scndina medical sup. plies;. food and teachers to Nicaraaua. not the \..ontras " he said ... By doinJ that we could have ~rienda and alliances 101tcad of people rallyina to kill U.S. citizens. 'ByworklD6wltlJ tlJePeacea Freedom Party, It ooald become a viable partyoa the moderate left.' In fact. his views aren't really radical, either. At best, they're just lcl\ of the mainstream. And that, Sears said. is part of the reason he decided to enter a race for Congress he knew he'd never win. ··rm afraJd to travel. Reagan's pohcies bav'c affected our freedom." Scars su~ts the United States open up to the Soviet Union like it has to China. He would Oppote conven1on of'El Toro Man~ Corps All SUttion 10 commcma.t use, however, a.ra~ It woWd create noise, pollution • .tlaffic and ufety prob- lems for tbe residen He favon ttroqer etroru 10 9f'C)mOCe mass transit systems, opposes oftibore oil dnllin1 and would ~otk to aid lhe eounty•• poor aod bomelesa. .. Here in Onnse Coun" we have so much amuence you'd think we could provide shelter and adequa1e bousina for the needy," be uid. A six-year member or the Peace and Freedom Party, Sean wd the party cncom_puses a WJde-ranJins mcmbenhip from Zen Buddhists to envuonmentalisu to former Democrats who fell the Demo- cratic Pany no lonaer oft'cred mocb of an alternative to the Republicans. "If I were trying to &et into r?litict throu&h the Democratic Pany, they d have me out disiributing fl yers," he said. "I like to influence politics rather than them inOucncina me. "By work.ina with the Peace and Free- dom Party, 11 could become a viable party on the moderate left." At 301 Sea.rs is making bas first venture into pohtics. ~ Fonner FBI agent Leslie F. WaJT'Cn will address the Hu~t.ington Beach Host Llons Oub Thursday at Francois Restaurant, 18151 Beach Blvd., Hunt- ington Beach. Warren wall discuss the history of the bureau at the '!'cctin~ which is scheduled for 6:45 p.m. A.dnussaon 1s $9.50 per person, which includes dinner. "I'm providina an aJtcrnativc because nowadays the Democrats aren't rcallr, much different from the Rcpubhcans. • Sears said. "You don't have to have long hair and be a hippie to take issue with the views being expressed in Orange County." "Reagan bas been callinJ them an evil empire. China is a commwust country, but we seem to accept it." be said. Scars would diminish the military locally as well. claiming Orange County's groWJng population 1s incompatable wnh military bases. "1 have analytical skills, I undcntand the use of money, 1 have youth and the cncrJY to make th1np happen " he said. "We need new blood in C~npeu. I'd love to have run for president. but you have to be 35." .. I'm runnin& u an independent can- didate and the party isn't tellina me what my views arc," be said. Pointing out that Republican candidate Nathan Rosenberg admits bis views generally coincide with those of incum- bent Robert Badham1 Scars said, "What kind of a campaign as that? We need a political dialogue. Without it no c hange occurs. A homeowner and resident of Irvine for ci&ht ycan, Scan said of the local bases, '"We have belicoptcn and military jets flyina over. A jct recently ~nubed in Laguna Hills. rm sure WC have nuclear bombs pointed at us. But even has candidacy tn the 40th will be hard-pressed. He aucssed bis total expenditurei in the race will be a few hundred dollars. "As a candidate you re~t your constituency. I'd work within that struc- ture." Book sale ln Newport The 27th annual used book sale sponsored by the Newport Beach Friends of the Library will be held Thursday, Friday and Saturday at the Newport Center Branch Library commuinaty room 856 San The Peace and Freedom Pany bas promised SSO per candidate at most. but 1t also has given Scan the fftedom to speak has mind. A IJ"lduate of San Dieap State, with a maslef's deaiec from Cal State Fullerton, Scars is anendina law school at Pacific Univcnity in Lona Be.ch. He is a CPA with the firm Laventhol cl Horwath in Costa Mesa's Center Tower. Clemente Drive, Ncwpon Beach. · Hours of the sale arc 10 a.m. to 4 p.m: and all sorts of books wiU be available. A prc-saJe for members only will be held Wedncday from 7 to 8 p.m. Call 645-3485 for more information. Gay, lesblan allies to meet The Ora~e County chapter of Parents and Friends ofl..csbaansand Gays will meet Thursday at the First U nited Methodist Church, 16 1 S. Orange St. in Orange. Orientation for newcomers will start at 7 p.m followed by the regular meeting at 7:30 and rap 'Toups unul 9:45 C~ll 998-5844 for additional information. Dependency seminar set National lecturer Terry Kellogg will present a talk on co-dependency Friday from 12:30 to 3: 30 p.m. at the Newport Hills O ubhousc, 1900 Port Carlow, Newport Beach. The workshop will touch on shame and victimization within the family system, family roles and scripts and solutions. The fee is $15, and further information may be obtained by calling 964-2267. Pornography talk slated "The Scllini of Sex: Wo men. Porn0JT3phy and the Law" is the tttlc of an address to be given by Dr. Wendy Lozano Friday at the Orange Coast Unitanan Universahst Church, 1259 Victoria St .. Costa Mesa. The p~m. scheduled for 7:30 p.m., is pan of the First Fnday Forum conducted each month to discuss worls problems. A $3 donation at the door is requested. and further information may be obtained by calling Betty Guthne at 856--0117. CALENDAR Monday, Aprll 28 • 6:30 p m., Co1ta Men Plaaa.la1 Commlulon . Cat)' Council Chambers, 77 Fair Dnve. "It's inevitable that those bases wall eventually have to relocate." 'Operation A ware' stops kid problems before they start By SUSAN HOWLETI' otlMO.-,,......,. When faced with the problems of a teen· age alcoholic or a young man behind bars, though is of prevention arrive unfortunate- ly late. But a group of educators and local Rotary Club members say Operation Aware may steer elementary school stu- dents in the right direction. The program discussed at a recent Newport Sunrise Rotary Oub luncheon as aimed at directing fourth, fifth and saxth- grade lives. "We're in the people business, and if we can save one, or two or three kids, then I sus~ it's wonh it," said Newport-Mesa Umfied School District Superintendent John W. Nicoll. Operation Aware is currently beina conducted in 389 schools in 240 cities in the United States and Canada. It has educated more than 25,000 students in areas of peer pressure, making friends and self-image. Nicoll said the battle against ncpttvc influences in today's complex world isn't easy, making such a program necessary. "Weare hvingin a new era. For too long, schools existed in vacuums," Nicoll said. "But now we arc a totality." Operation Aware is not billed as a drug abuse-prevention proV3m nor a scare- tactac program. accord.i ng to officials of the Minnesota-based non-profit organizauon. "It is, instead, an awareness and preven- tion program that teaches students what they can expect from their peen and how they can handle inevitable negative peer influence and prc"urc," according to Rotary O ub officials. The fourth-grade program. entitled, "Fncndsh1p," meets once a week for 15 sessions. It covers skills such as com- municating. accepting. feeling, trusting caring and makmg choices. For fifth.graders. the program focuses on "Be Yourself." It cover' class skipping. stealing. authority, derogatory remarks and other issues of adolescent life. The sixth-vadc program centers on peer pressure. It as designed to help the older elementary school students understand peer pressure and assist them in making the right choices. Newport Beach Police C hief Arb ~mpbell said the school program 1s encouraged by local law enforcement agencies that want to deter youngsters from a lffe ofcnme before at's too late. ··1 aJways got that frustrating fcehng that once they got past 14, you've lost them," Cam-pbell said. "I certainly support this program." He added that it's better to have youngsters visit the police station on a tour with Operation Aware through the front door. than to sec them later amvingat the John W. Nicoll '\ . ' back dOOr of thcjail. Costa Mesa Capt Tom Lazar said be secs the program "impacting the sociaJ- izataon of our children.'' Although the program is not mandated m Newport-Mesa schools. Nicoll told vanous Ncwpon-Mcsa principals to look mto adopting it at their schools. He said at as often up to the teachers 10 make a difference in a child's choices and per- ceptions concerning life ahead. "Unfortuately, television is the ~test and worst baby sitter of our tame,' Nicoll said. "I think our vaJues arc getting a little goofed up." • Blue Angels flying into ElTorofor annual show The U.S. Navy Flight Dem- onstration Team -better known as the Blue Angels - will bi&hli&bt the 36th annual Navy ltellef Air Show to be held May 3 and 4 at the Marine Corps Air Station in El Toro. The sho~.t billed as Southern Catilornia's largest free event, also will feature a demonstration of the capabilities of the infantry. artillery and aviation Marines workin& together. Guests will see how leathernecks use helicopters to land close to their objective and bow artillery and cfosc air support assist their attack. Gates open each day at 9 a.m. with the air show taking off at noon and coding at 3 p.m. both days. To reach the air field, take the Sand Canyon exit off the Sa.n Diego freeway. tum east and follow the signs to the parking areas. • 7· 30 p.m .. Lapu Beacb Art• Commll1loa, Caty Council Chambers, 505 Forest Ave. • 7:30 p.m., Lapna Beacb Downtown Speclflc Plan Committee, City Council Chambers. 505 Forest Ave. Librarian from Illinois to head Newport system • 7:30 p.m., lrvlDETru1portatJoa CommJ11lon . Caty Council Chambers. 17200 Jamboree Blvd. By SUSAN HOWLETT Of IN o.-, Nat tww replacing city libranan Judy Oarlcc, who resigned Jan. I. development officer for a hbrary system in Wheeling. Ill .. Wynn said. She bolds a master of library science dcgrtt &om Rosary College in llhno1s and a bachelor's degree from Wcstmar College in Iowa. with the staff there." KJcnatz has sax children. including four she basadopted to create what she calls "an 1ntcmational famtly." She has two adopted children from Korea, one from Vietnam, and one from Germany. Most of her children arc adults now. but her teen- age son will be moving with her Tuesday, April 29 • 6:30 p.m .. lrvlae Unified Scbool Dl1trtet Board of Edaca&lon Workllaop, Administration Center. 5050 Barranca Pky. LaDonna T Kienitz. who has directed a library in llhnoas for nine years has been named Newport Beach city libranan. Caty Manager Robert Wynn announced. "The city's management looks forward to the opportunity of workmg with Ms. Kienitz toward achieving the goals for the Library Board." Wynn said. Kienitz, director of the Lincolnwood Public Library in Lincolnwood. Ill .. wall begrn her JOb in Newport June 16 She as Kienitz, a member of the Amcncan Library Association. was hcad librarian for the Woodlands Academy in llhno1s an 1973. In I 977, she becamc the pro1ect 'Tm very excited about the ar>p0int- ment and very excited about moving to Newport Beach," Kienitz said. "They have a wonderful lib~ system in Newport Beach and I'm looking forw;ard to work.Ing Wynn said KJcn1tz's u lar\I wall bt' S48.083 a year. Driver killed while trying to pass car on Ortega road electnc typewnter. • • • Using a slam Jim tool. someone broke into a newspaper employee's pickllp truck parked over the week- end on Trenton West The loss included S 160 worth of quarters • • • • Taking out a window pane to enter. someone burglamed the Sampson Construction offices over the week- end at 18005 Sky Park. fhe loss included a Minolta copying machine worth S 1.500. A Dana Point man wa.s killed Sunday on Ortega Hiahway when he tned to speed past a car driven by a f nend and noticed too late that another car was commg in the opposite direction. authontaes rc- poned. James Robert Gray, 23. was CJCCted from his Ford Maverick after it crashed throuah a fence and pluftjed into a arassy ravine, California H1~­ way Patrol spokesman Ken Daily ~Beach A heater was bcheved to be the cause of a fire Sunday an the laundry room at a South Coast HWiway address. The blaze was ext1nau1shcd. however. ~fore firefi&htct"5 amved. • • • A buralar h11 a North Coast Haahway address, the victim told pofi~ Sunday Ari estimated $200 in cash was t.alccn • • • Police arrested two motonstJ on suspicion of dnv1n1 under the in- fluence of alcohol. Alexander Spencer Jr., 18. of Camp Pendleton .• was stopped at 3:2S a.m. Sunday on Nyes Street and South Coast lii.&hway Orqory C.arl K rausc. 21. of £1 Toro was arrested at 2:3S a.m Saturday alona the 2200 block of Laauna C".anyon Roed Huntinfton Beach Burglars used bolt cutten to enter a said. Gray wu pronounced dead at the scene of the accident, which occurred at 3:30 p.m . about eight miles cast of the San Dicao Fruway outside San Juan Qapistrano. Daily sajd Gray was traveling about 60 mph when he attempted to pass a vehicle driven by a friend., Guy Sumrall, 26. of Dana Point. "He apparently misjudacd the on- coming traffic and tried to get back ... said Daily. "Has friend slowed to let him back over but Gray must havt' ovcr-<:orrected ... G ray Jerked has vehicle back into the single. eastbound lane but lost control when the car ran onto the dart shoulder. according to Daily. Daily said both men apparently had spent the day at Aliso Beat h and had been dnn!Ong beer. But he said there is no evidence that G ray was intoxicated. • • • Someone broke into a Volkswagen Rabbit parked over the weekend on the JOO block of Cornell. The loss included stereo equipment worth about $450. CoetaMeea rcs1dcncc in the 8000 block of of NaJu. A typcwnter. a pencil sharpener and a coffee maker. all worth S445, were reported stolen from the adm1n- 1strat1ve offiet of the Rea Centcr. 661 Hamilton St.. betwttn 6:30 p m Friday and 6:0S a.m. Saturday. Whatbum and stoic appliances. furniture and jewelry. ••• Thieves forced open a locked door in a residence in the 300 block of Sth Street and stole• $300 surfboard and a S I 00 stereo. • • • Buralan entered a locked pra&e an the 800 block of Nichols and took a SSO bicycle that later was found dcttroyed in tht nci&hborhood. • • • Thieves used a pry tool to force o pen a locked bathroom Wlndow and stole $4,000 in salver ingots. a S300 clock and S 1 SO an 1cwclry. • • • A man was apprehended wh1k allegedly tryina to s1eal a SI . 49 p11r of sh~• at Pie N Save. 2 1082 'Beach Blvd. ••• A $1 ,000 paddle boat was reported 'ltolcn from a dock an the 16000 block • • • ~uspe-c1s who were ajvcn a nde by a dnvcr on Beach Boulevard, stoic his blue Velcro wallet containinaS4cash, busmc" cards and adcntiflcatio n papers. • • • A man wasatcd forallctedly t.r)'lna to steal sunatassn and shorts at tbe J.C'. Penney store. 7777 Ed.Jngu Ave • • • Thieves used a (>TY tool to force open a locked door 1n the 9000 block o f Yorktown and stoic a cash box contaanina SI t 3 and a stereo • • • Power tools valued at $400 were • • • ·A sports baa and contents. wonh $201 . was ~poned stolen &om a car at 2489 Fairway Onvc. ~tween 7 p.m. Fnday and noon Saturday • • • Two cars were bUrit&nzed at an apanment complex at 1300 Adams Ave., between 2 a.m. and 8 a.m. Sunday Side windows ~re shatttrtd an both cars Two ncrcos. one wonh $500 and another wonh SI .000 ~re ~tolen. stolen from an Praat an the 2000 block of Delaware Poantaln Valley w-.1 A man who rc11de'I a t the Tu$tin u nDe M1mne \orps Air Station reported Someone smashed the glau an a Sunday that w mcone stoic has red front door to bura.tanze the Thako(d black Kawasaki Ninja mmor offices over the Wttkend at 1212 c clc. wha~h he had parked 1n an McGaw The los\ includC'd an tRM partmt'nt carport on t~ 10'\00 hlll('k ' .. of La Hacienda A ven uc. The loss was estimated at $4,600. • • • Someone broke a slid1na glass window to burglanze a home over the weekend on the I 0900 block of Capcnsc. The loss. estimated at $1,578, included a vtdco recorder. mink coat. tape recorder and candle holders. • • • Someone entered a backyard on the 10300 block of Falcon. used duct taP.C to muffle the noise down while breaking a wmdow. then burglanzed the house. The loss. estimated at $3.936. included audio-video equip- ment and vidcotal)C"s. • • • A brown I 982 Dodge v.an was burglanzed late Fnday or early Satur- da} on the 16600 block of G lass Mount.am. The intruder took five cassette music tapes, vaJuC'd at $25. from the &Jove companmcnt. Newport Beach A purse was taken from a ~r parked in the 400 block of Prospc'Ct The owner reported a S24S Ion • • • A home was bu rlanzcd on V aa Lado Soud on Lado Island. Police say the thief madr off with $600 from an upstairs bathroom. • • • About S 1.294 an computer equip- ment was rcponed missing from an offi~ 1n Newpon c~nlCT. • • • .\ marhn \pike a nd other fi h_1ng items were taken from a boat moored an Newpon fiarbor Thc owner rtported a S4 I 5 loss. • • • A video cassette rccordt'r valued al S 1.000 was reported stolen from a home an the 2000 bloc._ of Ctrde • • • A burglar took towels. blankets am.I a cable tilev1sion dtt00er from ~ home on 43rd trcct Three in leaky boat saved Three people were rescued by the l out Guard Saturday after a leak n their sailboat alm0&t forud them to abandon the vestcl bct-wttn Santa Catalina Island and Newport Beach. The 41 -foot sailboat bcpn lcakma from the propeller shaft. promptm.a the people aboard to radio Coast G uard offioals in Lona Beach. ac- eon:hna to Petty omor-r James C"haunate. Names of the ,.1lon wcrt not avallablc. "They were womed that thty wcrt aoana to ,_ink nd they radi~ that they were ma.king prcpant1on, to abandon ship:· (h1unate said Officaab diverted the cutter Point °'"'de to the troubled boat. \h1unate wd Point Divide was on patrol dunng the Ncwpon 8each-to- Enscnada sailboat race and rt- ,pondcd to the l'&ll. ht said Also called to help ""ert a Coast Guard Jet out of San Diego and a hchcoptcr from the Coast G u&rd station an Lo Anat~ A darnaee control team from Point D1v1de boerded the wlboal. p\lmped out water four feet dttp and rtp1.1ttd t~ leak in the packina around the propeller, C'haunatc said The cuttef' C1COncd the 1adboet into Newport Harbor ( ~~ Or.noeeo..t DAILY PILOT/ Mond11, April 28, 1988 ~· • Ford has maintained prices across the board on the best-built American cars: And now offers reduced Annual Rate financing on the best-built American cars , and trucks: FORD RANGER: &.go/o A.P.R. BRONCO D: 7.go/o A.P.R. F-150, F·250 PICKUPS: 7.go/o A.P.R. . THUNDERBIRD: 7.go/o A.P.R. TEMPO: 7.go/o A.P.R. MUSTANG: 7.go/o A.P.R. FORD ESCORT: 7.go/o A.P.R. FORD ESCORT EXP: 7.go/o A.P.R. ECONOLINE VAN: 9.go/o A.P.R. (Econoltne cutaways excluded ) CLUB WAGON: 9.go/o A.P.R. BRONCO: 9.go/o A.P.R. F·350 PICKUPS: 9.go/o A.P.R. ·A 1985 survey established rhat FOfd makes the bf>st bullt Amencan cars and trucic.s This 1s based on an average of problems repo<ted by owner<o 1n .:i six month Pf'rtod Qn 1981 19&4 models designed and built 1n the US FORD RANGER PICKUPS ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE FINANCING Your participating Ford Deal.er can arrange through Ford Credit 6.9% annual percentage rate financing on all new '85-'86 Ford Rangers for qualified buyers. SPECIAL FACTORY CASH INCENTIVES TO DEALERS COULD SAVE YOU HUNDREDS ON FORD LTD and CROWN VICTORIA A Special Factory Cash Incentive program to dealers. which may be passed on by a participating dealer, could save you up to an additional $400 on Ford LTD and Crown Victoria. ORDER OR TAKE DELIVERY FROM A PARTICIPATING FORD DEALER BY JULY 5 To take advantage of any A.PR~ or cash incen- tive. you must take delivery from dealer stock or order by July 5, 1986. Earlier order cut-off may affect some models. Limit one per qualified retail cus- tomer. See your dealer for qualification details, price and terms. Dealer contribution may affect customer savings. . Through Fofd Credit lof quahhed buyers ' ' ' . . . . . " . . . . • . . • • • 4 • • • • • • • , ' , • • t c • • • • . . . \ \ . \ .. . . OnW From FORD: 3-YEAR/UNUMITED Mil FAGE PO\NERTRAIN WARRANTY A COMBINATION UNMATCHED BY ANY AMERICAN MANUFACTURER Unlike Ford's new powertrain warranty, most warranties don't cover you for an unlimited number of miles. And unlike the few that do, Ford covers you for a full 3 years. It's a combination unmatched by any other American manufacturer. Ford's new war- ranty covers major powertr.ain components on 1986 ' Ford cars. It's limited and certain deductibles apply. Ask to see this warranty at your Ford dealer. FORD ESCORT- WORLD'S BES 1- SEWNG CAR FOUR YEARS RUNNING Ford Escort has been the world's best-selling car four years 1n a row7 The following list of features designed and built into Escort may have helped to make it so :• Front-wheel drive • 4-wheel indepen- dent suspension • Front and rear bumpers twice as strong as the law requires • Largest standard engine in its class. In all. a fun-to-drive, versatile car with design improvements that have evolved over the years. 'Based on 82· 85 calendar year -worldwide sales and export data Ford's Prefened Equipment Packages could save you even more ... Ford's Preferred Equipment Packages are groups of optional items that have proved popu- lar with consumers . You'll see the discount for the package right on the sticker price of the vehicle. A Preferred Equipment Package makes the buying process easy and can save you money on the total price of your car or truck . ' Motor Trend Car of the Year: FORD TAURUS At Ford, we're proud because Taurus is some- thing more than a neN Ford product. Taurus represents the product of a neN Ford philosophy. A unique front-wheel drive sedan, where design and engineering come together. Taurus combines desirable European sedan road tiandling characteristics with traditional American sedan room and comfort. These are some of the reasons why Taurus was voted Motor Trend's 1986 Car of the Year. Taurus Wagon, available with seating up to eight. incorporates many FORD RANGER SUPERCAB- 4x4 of the YEAR The truck-sawy editors of 4-Wheel and Off- Road magazine drove six 4x4s through what they called their toughest test ever. Ford's winning . Ranger SuperCab was " ... A virtually unstoppable force in the outback'.' Proving once again that tough guys finish first! FORD ESCORT EXP SPORT COUPE Ford's new 2-seat coupe featuring: A 1.9-liter engine that provides high-spirited performance, crisp front-wheel drive handling, ample cargo capac- ity and a new design that catches the eye and helps cut the wind. Luxury coupe S&,235* from $7, 186 or sport coupe model pictured, $8 ,235. "Manufacturer's suggested retail pnce excludlng tltle. taxes. hcense and desll· nation charges • 0rang9 Coat DAILY PILOT /Monday. Aprll 21, 1 ... features like spfit fold rear seats, and even a cargo tie down net in some series, all wrapped in one cA the freshest wagon designs to come along. FORD-America's Best-Selling* FulMlze Pickup Ford pickups are best-sellers. One reason . bigger payloads, up to 5730 lb. worth. Another, the power you need ... with every engine from Ford's standard 4.9L six up to 5.8L V-8 leading its nearest competitor's in load-moving torque ! Add Ford Quality and you've got a truck built Ford tough . 'Based on 1986 MYTD Mtgr reported retail de41venes Save up to $655** with special F-150 Pickup option packages Order an F-150 4x2 with manual transmission and save $655 on special option package 500A. or order F-150 4x4 with package 510A and save $435~· Package includes: M4 or M40D transmission • Payload package # 2 • Bright low-mount swing away mirrors • Headliner and insulation package • Tachometer • and more . ··Savings based on the manufacturers suggested reta11 P"Ce ot the package as compared to tradlhonal suggested pnong c:A ttie opt!OOS purchased separately Have you driven a Ford ... lately? .. I 1 ll r . ' .. Swedes detect radiation leak from. Soviet Union Reagan calls Marcqs, backs Aquino By~ Auoclated P~• STOCKHOLM -Sliaht increases in radJauon levels detected near a nuclear power plant in eastern Sweden apparently were caused by a radiation leak in the Soviet Union, a Swedish official said today. Bo Holmqu1st, a senior offictal in the regional government 1n Uppsala. north of Stockholm, which _supervises Sweden's Forsmark nuclear power plant, said increased radiauon was discovered around the plant this morning. "au·1 the source of the leak 1s some~ere to the cast of us and to the cast of Finland. if you know what I mean," he told the Assoc1ated Press to a telephone interview after the Swedish news agency TI reported increased radJauo n was detected outs.ide t.hr Forsmark plant. Abu Nldal clalms cred.lt for tilling ln Israel BEIRUT (AP) -Abu Nidal's terrorist group clatmes today 1t k.iJJed a Bntish tourist in Jerusalem in retaliation for Britain's role in the U.S. air attack on Libya. A typewntten communique debvered to the west Beirut office of a Western news agency said Paul Appleby, 28, of Bnstol, England. was slam Sunday by Abu N1dal's Fatah Revolutionary Council. There was no immediate way to venfy the claim. The communique Said the shooting in Jerusalem was done in •·retaliation for the complic11y of the Thatcher government in the U S. imperialist aggression on Libya ... Clt1na 's economy ln hlgh gear HONOLULU (AP)-The United States 1s strcss1n4 its support for the fledgling Ph11ipp10es govtmment of President Corazon Aquino followrng President Reagan's courtesy call to Ferdinand Marcos 10 whtch the deposed leader reportedly pleaded for help in gett1na his old Job back. Reagan and his wife, Nancy, mean- while, took a walk on the beach and stopped for a rare chat with some strangers before leaving Hawati today for a 14-hour f11sJtt across the Pacific to the Indonesian resort island of Bali. White House efforts to gloss over human rights problems in lndoncsia were set back by the Suharto govern- ment's detennined refusal to permit two Australian journalists accompa- nying Reagan to cover the U.S. president's visit. President Suharto has banned the Australian news media from his country followmg publlcauon of an article in a Sidney newspaper comparing Suharto's fam- ily to that of Marcos. And U.S. efforts to exempt members of the traveling White Hou!IC press corps we~ only partly successful. When Reagan, in lionolulu for a rest stop on his way to the Far East, telephoned the e~iled Marcos to pus &Jona personal 1ood wisbes; Maroos ind.icated be would like Reqan's support for a return to power, a senior U.S. official said. The souroe, speaking on condition he not be identified, told the As- sociated Press that R~ "said nothlDg to encourage him.• The convenation, described as ao emotional talk, P._articularly for Marcos and h.is wife, Imelda, wbo spoke with Mrs. Reagan when the men bad finished, occurred shortly after Reagan arrived Saturday. Presidential spokesman Larry Speakes, at a briefinJ for reportcn Sunday, refused to discuss the con- tent o f the Reagan-Marcos conversa- tion. But he stressed, "We support President Aquino's government and encourage its policies of economic, poht1caJ and military reform .... We support political stability in the Marcos phones Flliplno followers MANlLA tAP) -Ferdinand E. Marcos procwmed bim~lf the ~tful ruler of the ~~nes and uqed 12,000 d.iebard foUowen to ?fily peacefully in the streets t the Jovemmeol of Corazon Aquino. . His wife, elda, referred to benclf u "your first lady" a.nd told the~~ gathered in Manila's Riul Park that she and bet husband "will do evcrythtna to return to their homeland &om eJtile in Hawaii. Marcos spoke for 20 minutes to the Sunday nilly by a pre-8:fr&O&ed telephone call to a former aide, Lito Gorospe, who hoo~ed up the rccc1 ver to a loudspeaker. Some people sobbed as they heard the voice of the man wbo had been their ruler for 20 years. "I am your leaitimate president," Marcos told the crowd. "Because .I a~ not there wt th you, it is incumbent upon you to embrace our struggle. wh.ich as nothina but a strugle for freedom, j~tice and dignity.·· Philippines, and our policy has been and remains, in the final analysis, it is up to the Philippine ~pie them- selves to detennme thetr future, and they have voiced their will in this r~~es sajd Reagan called Marcos "because he's an old friend and aJly." The president, staying at a private beacbfront residence a short distance from where Marcos bas bee~ livins in exile aince February, had no mtentton of meetina face-to-face with the ousted leader. Speakes said. After Reagan's plan to calJ Marcos was d isclosed, the White House announced a new S 150 milhon aid program for the Ph1hpptncs, and Reagan telephoned Aquino and in- vited her to visit the United States. WASHINGTON -Economic growth 10 Chrna. in marked contrast to conditions in other communist nations, has exceeded the expectations of its leaders, the lntcrnat1o nal Monetary Fund said Sunday fn its semi-annual "World Economic Outlook." the.IMF reported that Chinese production gre"' by 12 percent in 1985, more than fou r times the world average of 2.9 percent China's growth 1s expected to slow this year. howe"er. as the communist government holds down mcomes and imparts. the study said. Greece rejects san~tlons on Llbya ATHENS -Greece once agam has stepped out of line with its Western alhes, refusrng to impose diplomat1c sanctions against Ubya for sponsonng terronsm on grounds that no proof exists. Premier Andre~ Papandr.eou claim~ that rcpnsaJs against terrorism such as the U.S. air stri.ke on Libya could escalate into warfare. "We've entered a new and highly dangerous phase where terrorism is bein~ transformed into a weapon of conflict between states," the 67-year-old premier t0ld Parliament last week. He said Greece could not appl~ sanctions against Libyan diplomats because ··not one shred of proof oft he guilt of specific countnes in terronst act1vllles" has been given to the I:! Common Market members. Japanese leader says terrorism on economic summit agenda Libya linked to bombing attempt at officers' club ANKARA, Turkey (AP) -Two Libyans arrested in an alleged con- spiracy to bomb a U.S. officers' club were helped by Libyan Embassy personnel wbo provided t.he hand grenades, the prosecutor said today. Two blacks slaln by S . African officers JOHANNESBURG -Police said two black men were killed today in a vollry of gunfire from a unll ofwh1te policemen on duty in the black township of Alexandra. Police headquarters in Pretona said officers opened fire and threw a hand grenade at a house after shots were fired at them from thr dwell in~. Two blacks 10 the house were k.iJJed, police said, and two officers and a man 1n the house were wounded Ale~andra residents disputed the pohce account. I TO K YO (AP) -Pnme Minister Yasuhiro Nakasone urged greater 1ntcmat1onal cooperation to fight terronsm today. and said that ter- ronsm will be an important issue at the seven-nation economic summit meeting in Tokyo. NaJcasonc, 10 a meeting with foreign reporters. also defended his government's refusal to take a speci· fic stand on the ApriJ 15 U.S. air stnkes against Libya. "Japan would like to see all terronst acts disappear from the face of the globe. but that's not possible without international cooperation ... he said. Terronsm and measures to combat 1t, "will certarnly be taken up as important issues of the summit." I ffllf~ c~. --• ·~RfTJts Now is lowest. Unlike European countries which have taken clcar-<:ut stands either for or against the raid, Japan has said only that it is studying the situation and hopes the violence does not escalate. President Reagan has said he will seek "forceful and collective action" agarnst terrorism during the May 4-6 meeting. But he is expected to meet some resistance from European na- tions which have criticized the U.S. raids on Libya. wders from France, Britain, West Germany, Canada and Italy aJso will attend the 12th annuaJ summit. The summit 1s a fo rum to discuss econ- omic issues, but political problems discussed informally among the sum· C-llJ IW'nlOl.lla roeACClO 00 3mg { By US. Gov 't. testing method. SU RGEON GENERAL'S WARNING : Ouittmg Smoking Now Greatly Reduces Ser ious Risks to Your Health. ' • ! .. .. JtW. HH IOW[ i Qf ALL HHM 0\ ' .,. ' .... ' ~. (1( I SOFT PACK 1QQ, r1t 1fR Mf NTHOl 1 mg. '1a1 ' 0 3 mo n1cotinP av ppr c1q11P.t1P by FTC method , mit participants always att.ract wtde attention. Asked about Japan's stance on·the Libyan attack. Nakasone said his country "is consistently hold.ing to its Policy of condemning international terrorism." He said, "we have listened to the American views that the actions were exercises of self-defense and that the United States has firm evidence" linking the bombing of a Berlm nightclub to Ubya. Nakasone said the government asked Japanese industry not to take advantaJe of the withdrawaJ of U.S. compames from Libya, and since the April attack has told industry not to start any new projects there. The arrested Libyans. identified as Ali Eccfli Ramadan and Rccep Mubtar Rohoma Tarhuni, both 30, were captured April 18 near the U.S. officen club in the residential district ofGaziosmanpasa. They were carrying a bag contatn- 1ng six a;renades, State Secunty Court Prosecutor Ullcu Coskun said today. The two men were fonnally ar- rested Sunday on charges of fonning a conspiracy to k.ill a grour of people. Coslcun said the two wil be tried in about two weeks. Border control group organized in county by immigration chief LOS ANGELES (AP) -Regional Immigration Commissioner Harold Ezell helped create the Orange Coun- ty-based Americans for Border Con- trol -a group which includes many ofh1s fnends and church associates. The U.S. Immigration and Natu- ralization Service commissioner said he tried for more than a year to form Americans for Border Control, which has about 40 dues-paying members and is based in Orange. Such involvement docs not violate any INS policy, and Ezell said he will not serve as an officer or board member of the group. "l don't think there is any prob- lem," said Ezell. who addressed the organization at its $20.a-platc k.ickoff luncheon last month in Costa Mesa. "From early on in my appoint- ment, I felt the same kmd of grass- roots impact that the women got with MADD (Mothers Against Drunk Driving) was nC'Cded to bnng the problem of illegal imm~t1on to the attention of the nation.' "I will continue to speak out on the need for the silent majority to get involved," he said. "HaJ has certainly provided the inspiration for this," said board member Stephen Fleishman, a Bever- ly Hills attorney. "His vocah.zation of the problem has produced an aware- ness: he's piqued an interest in it nationwide." Other board membe~ said Ezell asked them to serve as directors after giving th~m a nighttime tour of the U .S.-Mcx1co border. Air Force under fire after explosion at Vandenberg By the Associated Press LOMPOC -The explosion of a Titan rocket at Vandenberg Air Force Base sparked a fallout of criticism for the Air Force, with local officials claiming they waited up to three hours for confirmation that the blast was not dangerous to the public. "The first 20 to 30 minutes caused the most ha voe,·· Lompoc Fire Department Battalion Chief Charlie Johnson saad. "The public could see the smoke. and we didn't have good, hard inft>rmation to tell them." "There was nc.ver an affirmative statement that 'There is no danger, don't worry about it '" said Sgt. DaJe Schade, commander of the local Santa Barbara County shcrifrs station. "( would have expected definitive information from the Air Force when I requested it.'' Handlcapped clilldren write to Bouvia LOS ANGELES -"Dear Elizabeth, I hope you hve your life. There's so much to live for," a boy in a handicapped childrcn'sclass wrote to quadriplegic Elizabeth Bouvia, who is fighting to reject medical treatment. "l had pam last week, but now I feel better. I hope you feel better," concluded the letter of Miguel Haro, who is suffering from a serious heart condition. Bouvia. 28, suffers from progressive arthritis and cerebral palsy. She recently won a court order to remove a nose-to-throat tube being used to foroc-fced her. The appella~ court decision said she had the right to reject all offered treatment, including food and water, even if it resulted in death. Teacher Ruth Buell at Perez Special Education Center in Boyle Heights told her class lllSt week about Bouvia s case as a current events lesson. Sallboat, freighter colllde ln SF Bay SAN fRANCISCO -A 36-foot sai~boat collided with a freighter in the San Francisco Bay Sunday on the operung day of the yachting season. No injuries were reported. Before the collision, the 66()..foot Norweaian buJk carrier, Hoegh Mallard, had sounded five bias~ on its whistle as it passed under the Golden Gate Bndge. Steve Len tz. an cyeWltness, told KGO radio station The sailboat lost its mast, but its crew of about eiaht or nine people escaped uuury, said Coast Guard chief petty officer Egbert Vallecillo. Baby wltb new heart Improving LOMA LINDA -A 15-month-old boy is improving after a weekend ~can transplant at Loma Unda University Medical Center. but another dyina ~nfan~ desperately needs a new heart. a hospital spokesman said. A baby idcnufled o nly as Babr James receivC;<f a h~ in an .o~ration performed Saturday afteryioon by Dr. Leonard Bailey, chief o.f ped11tnc cardiac su~ry spokesman Dick Schaefer satd late Sunday. The 1nfa.nt remained in cntical CC?ndition Sunday ~ilht. "Baby Jame1 is doina just fine. He's proaessina nicely," Schader said Rald ancoven 188 Ulegal alien• SAN DIEGO -Border Patrol taents reported findin& 138 illqal aliens crammed ir110 a house south of downtown and aw&.1t1n.a transportation to wOf1c in Northern Cahforn1a. The raid came Saturday, after the owner of the boute made a surprise v1s1t and found the house jammed with people, said 8ofde:r Patrol aient Ed Pyeatt. Police were notified and Border Patrol aaents were called to remove the aliens, all of whom weft ffom Mcx.ico. •• 1 was astounded last year when we (found) 60 and 70 people in a house. This was amanna. .. Pyeatt said. The aJiens alJ apttd to voluntarily rclurn to Mexico and procc .. 1~11na was completed Salwday afternoon. The Melucans IUid paid S27S to S300 a p1cct 10 be smug)ed aero lhc border. Pyean said. f . I Ot1lf'IOe eo.t DAILY PtLO~/Mondey, Apttl 21, 1111 A1. Judge won'treo~ 'E.T.' morielawsait Savor asked wbat tbej"-'* mta.ot. "I'm rcferriJIJ to YoQ1' arpunau. .. II.id KtUer. Life with the Sycamorea LOS ANOEL~AP) -1'be law abbori U:teleas acts, ' the judae lOld an attorney ttyina to reopen a federal coun suit claimina produClCr Steven . Spielbera atole tbe story for the movie "E.T .• the Extra-TerTeSlrial" Ht told Server: '"You•ve tnocked on a lot of a~doon ud DO ooe hu ll1'eed with you_.Tbe 9tb Circuit &aid you were dead wro-. .. Rutb Cameron, Barnie 8cbleaaln1er. llaareen BJ•lte aad Tim llal.thtll Fm eft) comprt.e t.be DDJ ore family In t.be llfmaa-Bart comedJ .. Yoa Ca.a •t Take It Wlt.b Y oa,' • ~ s::-zatect by t.be new &adcDe c;k v.u97 com- mantty Theater PrtdaJ8 and a.ta.nta,.. at·8 p.m. throqb llaJ 17. Call 788-0981 tor dci:et information. VCR won't kill movie theaters NASHVILLE (AP) -Movie theaters will survive the video casset- te recorder craz.e just as they survived the advent of radio and television because people will aJways want to go out, a nationahpokesman for theater owners says. "We've been called dead many times," said Richard Fox, president of the National Association of Theater Owners. "We were called dead when radio came out, when TV came out, when pay TV came out and nowVCRs. "The fact is, people still want to go out," said Fox, who spoke to southeastern theater owners in a three-day conference. Theater owners expect a short-tenn slump similar to that expcnenced when radio and then television came on the scene. But Fox said business should return to normal once the novelty ofVCRs wears off. MoVle theaters offer a reprieve from noisy children and nnging telephones along with wider screens and padded seats, something in- home entertainment cannot always provide, Fox said. To ensure that VCRs do not take away business permanently. theater owners are refurbishing old movie house$ and building plusher, larger ones, Fox said. They arc also fighting to keep production companies from releasing movies for use in VCRs less than six months after their original release. he said. "As long as that window as main- tained, people will come to the movies." said Fox, who owns Fox Theater Management Corp., a chain of theaters based in Reading. Pa. Although some individual com- panies make deals to release movies earlier for use in VCRs, most of the major companies allow for the six· month "window." Blockbusters like "Ghostbusters" and "Back to the Future" take even longer to get into -t:30- ll NBC NEWS Cl) Cl) 0 NEWS • TOO Q.08E FOR COWORT •JE.OPNVf • MACNBl / l.Btf9 NEWSHOUR ID NEW UTEAACY: AN INTIO>UCTIOH TO~ QllBGON ID DOUG Cl.AM -7:00-8 C88 NEWS II 9 Bn'ERTANIENT TONOHT eSOAP •N/JCNEWSQ 0 LOVE CONWCT10N (f)MSEBAU. • ntREE'8 OOtl/PNf( • a WHEB. Of FORnJNE ID IUSIESS AEPOAT Cl) PM MAGAZINE GD PMl8E THE LOAD !~SHADOWS * ** "9 To 5" (1980) J1ne Fonda. Daly Plrton. (!) IC>EP9l>BIT NEWS WASHNGTOON -7:30- • 2 ON THE TOWN II PNCE IS RIGHT • WHAT'S HAPflfHNQtl e LOCAL HEAOES I II •1.000.000 CHA.Net Of A LHT'llltE • w·A·s·H e NEW\.YWEDOAME • WILD NllE1fa. ID neE INT1SH ISLES Cl) S.D. AT LAROE 9 PEOP\.FS COURT a JEtJPNJD'( CD ESP£aAU. Y FOR YOU: KEHNY AOOER8 N«J THE RAST EOOlOt4 ~=ROCK ~~TO<* t *Yi "The G<lde Allen Murder ca." ( 1939) GnlCll AAln, Warren Wlllllm. -t.oo- • Cl) 8CAAECAOW AHO MRS. l(ltQ II 8 YOU NJNIH'I eMOVIE H•• "Harper" (1968) Paul Hew- 1111n, Julie Ha-rill • 0 HAADCABTI.£ AHO MOCOfNCK G •100.000 PYAAMIO eNEWS eMOYE U~ "Hellinger's Llw" (1980) Telly SMllM, Rod Tl)1or e Pl.ANET FOR 1lE TN(JNG ID AMERICAN P\AYHOUSE ID PRAISE 1lE LOAD IDMOVIE U "Thi Long Wiit" (195-4) Am~ ~~~Cobutn. u •,; "Clollt And Degglr'' 119841 Herwy Thomas, Dabney Coleman. ®MOVIE .. "Hot Dog ... The Movie" (19841 Oevld Nlughton. Patrick HolllW (!) 8AAHEY MIU£R MOVIE * * * "GreyllOkt' The Legend OI Twun. L«d OI The Apes" 11984) ~Richardton, Chrlatopher Lam- ~ -t:OO- • Cl) KATE& AWE ll QIMOYE *** "All &wty Frott" (1986) Aldan Oulnn. Gena~ • 9 TECAS 150: A CB.EIRATION SP£aAl. GNEWS e ""8. AMENCA PNJEAKT e Pl.ANET FOR TitE TAKING ~=THELOAD **"Porty's" (1981) o.ri Monlhln, M"1t Herrler Cl) ST AA TIE< (%)MOVIE * * * ·~ "Coll Minef's Daughtet" ( 1980) Sissy Specell, Tommy Lee Jones -t:30- • Cl) NEWHART • El.EPtWfT <WEI -10:00- • Cl) CAGNEY & LACEY ~ eeNEWS r GMEAVOAFAN Cl) A WOMAN CAU.B> GOlDA e MEICAN P\AYHOUSE • SUPEMOCCER • IEHll> TitE 8Cf:Nf.S 9 8Pf81#AY All/Elf/CA (C)MOYIE * ••,; "St1rm1n" (1984) Jeff~ ... Karen Alen. CID MOYIE -~ ID KBfT NID DAU AXTEU Cll IHl>EPBl>BIT NfWS -11:00-••••0a NEWS 1=-e1WNYtaLS1 e IU8INE88 AEPOAT Cl)TMDAY • CttRl8TIAH Lff8TYLES MAGAZINE eFOOITM MOVIE • "~Amri:en Gina" ( 19831 c.. • et.ke, J.cqueline Lotlinl. (!)MOVIE U "Off Siclel" (198o) Tony RM- dlll. Eugene Roche (%)MOVIE * * i,; ''Thi Biiied OI Gregorio Cor· tc" ( 1983) Edwlrd Jemea Olmae. Tom Bower. -11:30- • Cl) AEMl«JTOH STEELE 18 TONIOKT SAT\JIDAY NGHT 8 9flOHTUNE D Wl.D, Wl.D WEST •VEGAS eHAWAIFM~ • 8P£C1lUil HAWAII • BJAOPfAH JOURNAL • PRAISE TitE LOAD -11:36-* * "The H1b Haw Eyes II" (1985) CID MOVIE Mic:hlel Benyn\ln. Kem Bllir. *"" "Out Of Control" ( 19851 Marlin Cl) COUEDY RAK Hewitt, Betsy Rullel. -10:1&--ta:G0-bert -8:30-CID AElJQIOUS ~ e EY£ OH HOU.YWOOO MOYIE Cl) COMEDY RAK •II ~~ * "Frldey The 13ttl -A New Begin-• COMEDY TONIOKT ning'' (1985) Jolwl Shee>lrd, Mellnlt 9 ENTERTANIENTTONIGKT •PMMM~llL----------.:__:. __ ;_ __________ -=::...:__.....:_ __ __:_ __ :........:. __ --1 Early Bird Dinners '7 .SO Featuring Pr ime Rib or Fresh Fish Complete dinner with c hoice of Soup or Salad and Dessert •to 6 PM 7 Days a W~ek 801 E. Balboa 673-7126 ••••••• • •••••• • • homes. ..---------------.... • "People are bashing their brains out in this business puttmg more into 1t. They're the ones putttng lots of money into it They can't all be "'"' fol,. OflOln, It'• lter IW.. ! BARGAIN MATINEES MONDAY THRU SA TUROAY ! • 1 ST 2 PERFORMANCES f X( f PT HOLIDAY<. & "' ARRfO I . I H AIURE s • LAKEWOOD Cenll!I f»11u1u 1 tSltlhulN a. C:.Hhw'~ CM.ULU HOHIOH MUl,tfl''S LAW (I) 11'• 2,40 41 .... H MJ lltOJ LA MIRADA GATEWAY UU1tt111llff'"'f '" Yoll!y y,_p OCkaY mao 111411!' 1•th .......... 011\ CMAALll IMIONION MUlll'HY'S LAW ,., IMI JiU .,. 6oJO ... 10.• .. ,, ti dummies," he said. Business was down io 1984, but Fox said a "bang" in business during January and f:ebruary this year followed an anerolSC of 8 pcrccn tto I 0 percent in 1985. The historical animosity between film producers and theater owners is a contmuing concern for the industry. In a nutshell, the rift is "a kind of one· upmanship," Fox said. "The film producers say, 'You can't live without us,' and the theater 8~,l.~>.JU Jt"l~UA ownen say, 'You can't live without ,.4 1F ""' us,'" he said. ~---------1•lfilq~D/• ~~--·-o===-...... -r:z;r:tr,'.,:.,J. 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""" ,.... .. , lo HABRA .•••• l[lllJ .!11~ , I •• • • t HIWAY39 CMAMn al!ONtOH MUltftMY'I LAW 111 IUNAWAY RAIN 111 ~ lllVfTO Wiii GUYS 111 YOUNOllOOD Tt4I MONIY ll'fT (N I • OUNO NOt ,....,>! Attorney Ralph Server, rep- racntina Lssa Lite~ tried to arsue a point Monday which be Aid was a ~ int.epreaauon of cop~t law. but U.S. Distict Judie William Keller interrupted. .. Even if I'm wroDc;' said the attorney. ••my cl.int has a fiabt co her day in court completely." Ma. Lit.ehfidd fi~ a S 7'° million lawsu1t in 1982 claim.tDI her play, .. Lokey from MaJdemar•• wu plqianzed by Spielber& and turned into"E.T . "Mr. Server, have you ever beard of the old legal nwti:m, ·the law abhors useless acts?'" Keller asked. "TllP TO ""11fll" 5IO, lt.t0 (PC) "CODS •ST IE CWY" l 'tt (PC) mnsraax "MUTSUf Ill(" (rc.13) 6·JO, I le. 10.U UCUISM~lll "SALYUOI" (I) 71S US 4 l'lAGll DOLBY S IUl 0 "CtlfCHS" (K·ll) 7'l0, 9 IS edward• SOUTH COAST PLAZA 548-2';'11 lllt810l AT IUNH OWEll "WISE CITS" (I) Ut "Tiil IOIU 'fl" 6ll. IO.ot (PC) "LUCAS" (K·ll) IDO "'llm II NI" • r.i. 9 ~ (PC.ll) "TU COLOI '1Jlru" HS (~Ill "OUT Of AHICA" (PG) , .. edward• BRISTOL 5'0-7444 a•1tTO\ &T UA:A•i .,up IANTA ANA ''IAIUll SISTtlS" .... (PS.IJ) ''IUl"lf'S IOllUCE" '00. 10 00 (PC-Ill "OOft & HT Ill. llUS" 6 IS 10.10 (I) "CUIC H " (K·ll) I IS IOM Clim "UCllD" l"I 7 IS '1S "NUCl ACUEIY 3" I") ... "IACI TO TllE FltTUIE" 5.lO 10 15 " •• QISfomJ50ll "TIOUIL£ Ill 11111" (I) 6 II, SIS 10 IS edward• CINEMA CENTER 979-4141 ,.AlllOll t l VO a ADAMI MflA YUIOf CENT(ll COIU ll(I A CMMUS llOISOll "IUIM'S lJW" (I) 100 900 "LUCAS" 1"·13) 6JO. 1020 "PIETH I• Pl•K" I JO !l'C Ill ''* tllUISl "UCEH" !'Cl I JO '10 OU WAUAC£ Sl<l'I "CllTIUS" (PC:·ll) 60~. UO IOOO 11( ...., rfT" (H) I• IO<>S "WtSI CUYS'' (I) uo UT m>GE'S ... llUJOll WAYS Tl M " (I) 1 'lO IC.HUSl $1(111' '°"' "Tiii •n 'tr' (K) , ••• 11• "Tll Cllll ntN" HS (PC Ill "OtlT Of lfltCA" l'CI IOI "llS( cm'' (I) l :ll .. , ..... (K-ll, Ut, lllS "Tl1' Tl IMITlf• .. S!ll, ltl~ (PC) "Tiil COUI ""'1" 1)0 (PC.IJ) tHMl.£$ llOIGOll "IUIPlfS lJW" (I) , .. "' mmco "I IUJJlll IATS Tl ... (I) '"·'· """1'f ..... 1 u (PC-ll) "Uta TO TIE FllTllll" ~JS .... (PC) IOM ,_S SlllUYU. "TIE lllO PIT" (K) 6·15. 1:15. II U CIWIU Sll'Lll "llW" (K·ll) 6 JO I JI lt1t "llTH" (K·ll) llS "'°UCl AWEIY l" 6 JD. 10 00 (PC) "Ull•U & SISTHS" HO (PC-Ill "lllmlY'S IOIAICl" 6 00 It~ !PC Ill DU WAUAa SIClll "CllTTHS'' l"·ll) 7 IS 91S CIWIU S llOISOll "lllUllfS lJW" (I) 1 °' 900 "DOW• & OUT llV. llU.S" 5 JO. 10 lO (PG Ill "CHC H " (K·ll) •• 4 tUCI DCUT SDO l'Cll CIUS( .. llCDr (K) , ...... 4 TUCa DOllf SlUfO ~CM( "WITtr (PC·ll) 7 ll •• "mTTl" "' ... ..... (PC-IJ) "lftPIY'SltlHCE" HS. I 0 00 IPC IJ l fC. IWllS »lll£Tl0Mt "TIE lllO 'tr' (PC) 6ll a• IUt SISST •M:Cll "W10UTS Alf llll(" (I) 61!1, an.1H1 HIS HISTomJSOll "Tlfflll .. _ .. ,., Ill l ...... l lS "CMN"(pt.U) . >• 11• "IUIMISISTUS" t•!lt!ltlS(PS IJ) '11UTS• Ill[" (I) .......... lttl '1ftSI CITS" (I, ll~ "CllC II" (H-13) 1'5. ltM .,. .. '9lf"' llal(N-ll) . ._..., • cuzr· ....... • 1UCI llUf StmO nltc.R "lHDr (H) ....... 1 .... '4tlT If lfllCA" (N) HS "-.nfSttM1cr HI.~ (PS.IJ) "\ICU" (PC.U) •• "nt.IC( KllUlt J" •11. ltll l") C IUCI DOLIT SDO "CtlmJS" (K-13) 1 U t-IS fff mcl'S "I 11UJ11 IUS TO II(" (I) ,. 1 1~ lt:ll • llACll DOLIT srmo CMMlD 9CJISOlt "Mm"SLW'(I) , ...... "tOft & HT 10. llW" 5 •• It.JO (I ) "IAll Of TIE IAll" I ll (a edwarda SAOOLEBACK S81·S880 f l T )•ll "0 AT •or .. ' If l r fl t0"'0 CIMI SllD "LUCAS" (K·ll) •IS l lS 10~ "DOft & Oil IO. MW" , .. 1010 (1) "POLICE ACAtEI' l" I JO (PG) OAlllY 0.¥110 "llSl CITS" (I ) "' ... 1000 DU IUUAa STOii "CllTTEIS" ("·ll) 700 HS 10~ CMMUS 90fCSOll "llMIY'S lJW" (I ) 6 lt,1zt,10 IS m llllGCS "1 llUJOll WAYS Tl ti" (I) 11~ ,.. edwarda MISSION VIEJO MALL If l h .' .'(' SO 'W' Tfil.AOW .. WAllf' ! llACI OllJ'f S1Ul0 "wtS( CITS" (I) It• UI 4ll 6ll a·• IOU "CUIC H" CK·ll) l50 .... "LYW" (ll'C·lll IW, ... I~ _.,IUDI ....... , .. sisnas" (N.U) S4S HI, .. ~)'.April It A.JUE! (March 21-April 19): Lines of communication open -much to your advant.aae. You'll receive wnttcn not1ce which could r~late to promotio'!t_ p;u:ti~pation 1n special project. Spotlight on creativity, varjety, romaooe. venuru plays role. :t"AU~US (A,pril 2~May 20): Spotlight on travel, change, special relauon.ship. You '11 reach more people, long-range prospects come into clear focus. Emphasis on language, pubhsh1ng. recognition of spintual values. GE~ ~May 21-June 20). You could be dealing with "tlurd party" in connection with land. residence, real eslAtc. M!Uor change occurs on home- front -money is involved. and you get excellent deal if d1plomat1c. lJbra figures prominently. SYDNEY 0MARR CANCER (June 21-July 22): De- cision is reached concerning contract, cooperative efforts, possible partner- srup. Stress individuality, define terms, strc1mline techniques. Many answers arc found by looking beh1nd scenes. Pisces plays role. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): This could be "crunch" ume. Means chips are down, ~~ ~ face up and c~atJen~e is put forth. Emph.a.s1s on respons1b1lity. diSctpllnc:. deadlines, 1ntens1fied love relationship. Financial coup distinct poss1bihty ~GO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): You'll stnke chord of universal appcaJ - empha.s1s on wider audience. special appeal, vanety. charisma, physical attraction. Burden 1s removed, all stops are out, you can emerge a "big winner." Aries plays role. ~RA (SepL 23-0ct. 22): You'll have ability to see through pretense. Spothgh~ on independence, individuality, pioneering spirit. You'll be on more sohd financial-emotional ground. New start in new direction is favored. Leo plays role:. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov 21 ): Ideas are transformed into workable: concepts. lntullion nngs true. teacbcrretums, reunion with family member is also highlighted. Special success indicated in dcahng with public. SAGrf'TARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21 ): D1vers1fy, display humor, reach lxyond previous expectations. Elements of timing, luck nde with you - you'll d.JSplay un~quc talent an ''p1clcing winners." Gemini and another Sagittanan figure in dynamic scenano. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): You'll be in dnver's scat. Lunar. nume~~ cy~les highlight strength, courage. detenn1nat1on, added reco~111on. Circumstances tum m your favor. you'll be at right place at special moment. A9UARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): You'll locate lost article by doing some dctc:ctJve work. You could gain access to pnvtleged infonnation. Focus on secrets, psyc~ic 1mpre~s1ons. prophetic dream. Member of opposite sex expresses feelings in unique manner. PISCES (Feb 19-March 20): What beg.in!> as "mild 01rt.at1on" could be transformed into "someth1n~ real " Emphasis on gif\s. v1SJts. music. Oowers. romaoce~o~ers of persua$1on arc heightened. you'll get your wish. Taurus figures prommentl)'. IF APRIL %9 IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you are 1ntu1t1ve, first impressions usually are correct. you are a natural teacher and character anal)'Sl. You often are better at helping others than when 1t comes to promoting your own interests. You are sentimental. romantic, have knack for dealing with ~omen. Cancer, Capncom. Aquanus people play import.ant roles in your life: x~u'll travel more thJS year, popularit} increases aJong With soc1aJ act1V1t1es. May will prove to be your most memorable month of 1986. Married marksmen better by decree England's Queen V1r tona re- portedly knew next 10 nothing about extraordinary sexual preferences. But in 1860. she decreed that men who chose to remain unmarried wouldn't be welcome in Her Ma1esty's R10e Corps. Because. c;he said. nonnal ma med hfc improve\ a man's marks- manship. Q. Where'd our words "hocus pocu~" come from'' A. Norse legend. Depicted therein was a sorcerer named "Ochus Bochus" "'lo. sir. there are no blue go ldfish Some J U!ll look blue because o f refraction and reOec t1o n Oran$c. )ello w and blad are the onl} pig- ments 1n gold fish ~o rc.>crea11onal actn 11; including sports. cau'\C'i more bonl' fractures than acrobit dancing Q Didn't you cla im a prt bull dog 1c, more dangerous than a handgun'' <\ "'lo. J didn't But \OU ma\ have c,omcth1ng there The gun won·1 101ure unlcc,c, 11'\ touched <) 'W hat\ Jn ·asu:nding rrn1m'"' I\. Thai\ what the Fnglt'>h called an elevator hef<1n' the\ ~tarted calling 11 a "It It <) I\ 1t wnce1~a hlt that \u1c1da l terrnn'>t\ can actualh hn ng a maJor natio n to 11s knet.''i., \ .\II f know 1<; Japan dunng L.M. Bo Yo World War II lost 2 6..!4 kamikaze pilots -and the war Hong Kong's race horses. between races. wear rubber slipper\. Have to. The\ li'e 1n three-storv stables and walk 10 the track through the city's streets You know where they're e'emsed'' On the c;table roofs . The (1) p'i1C~ had a saying that not all Communist bureaucrats and Capi- talist 1ycoo M keep in mind. Namely: ""lever steal two chickens in the same \ tllage lo blind dog biles a deaf man. The 'Jlllm sues How would you rule on lh1'i one )'OUr honor., Has the b1tee got a case., It happened In 1928. The 1udge held in f:n or of~ he dog. ~ov1e1 cnm1nolog1sts report the roost common denominator among Ru\sia's female lawbreakers is "drunken husband'i " l .M. Boyd Is • $fDdic•ted colamnl$I. Let Lady Liberty keep her distance As this is being wntten, a search is on for a woman who is a Statue of Liberty tookahlce. This may or may not cause women to hyperventilate with excitement who are walk.in~ around out there with a JS-foot waist, a four-foot nose, and an arm 12 feet in diameter holding a torch. waning to be dis- covered. Even if you could find a woman to admit she was a hundred years old and had cosmetic surgery over 90 r.;rcent of her body. the question is 'Why?" Why does the Statue of Libeny have to become mortal? The answer, of course. is so she can do for commercialism what Clara Peller did for "Where's the Beef?" The: Statue of Liberty wtll be human- 12ed and turned ioto a pitchwoman. Ever since the adven1smg industry discovered names sell products. celebrities have been hucksters. When they had exhausted movie stars, opera singers, business tycoons, spons figures, rock and roll artists and authors, they went for the symbols. And the myths came tumbl- ing down. We learned that George Washing- ton crossed the Delaware with a cheese snack in his coat pocket, Uncle Sam ate onlr. kosher hot dogs. Mona Lisa was smiling because she had Just experienced the perfect pizza, and l(j~g. T~t's eyes rolled around 1n anuc1pat1on of a candy bar. I once saw Abraham Lincoln at a car wash in Ohio and Ben FrankJin passing out coupons for a dozen free doughnuts in New York.. After that, their places in history paled a bit. I don't want the Statue of Liberty to become hfe-s1zed. If she 1s given a vo1ct', I cinn't want IC\ know if she has ERMA Bo11Ec1 a New Jersey accent, a twang from Texas or a drawl from Wyomin~ I don't want to k.now what feminine products she prefers, if she wears a bra for a full-figured woman, or 1f she ever leaves Bcdloe's Island Without her Amencan Express card. I don't want to see her doing a sketch on "Saturday Night Live," balong an apple pie on "Hour Magazine," or telling me she won the Reader's Digest Sweepstakes Maybe there should be a law protecting o ur symbols from exploi- tation ... these larger-than-life hunks of concrete with carved eyes and h ps of stone who cannot defend them- selves. It would guarantee that the woman holding the scales of JUSllct' on our courthouses would never be shown wearing Fo'iter-Grant sunglasses and thal lhe Mt. Rushmore quartet would never ap- pear at a bar and request a hte beer. Let her be. Let the Statue of Liberty stand there from her· he~t of 141 feet. Let her keep the dignity she has earned through years of welcoming the world to our shores. Let her contmue to make us weep w11h gratitude for all she stands for. Once she has passed out cosmetic samples at Bloomingdale's ... 11 wo n't be the same. Admit stranger in and invite trouble DEAR ANN LANDERS: I was very pleased with your advice to say "Sorry, no" toany adult stranger who nn~s the bell and ask.s to use the facilities. If your readers think you were being hardhearted. let me assure them that such is not the case. I speak from experience. Two years ago a pleasant-loolung man, neatly dressed and somewhat elderly, showed up at my front door He asked 1fhecould use my bathroom -s~ud his car had broken down and his companion was waJlung to the comer drug store to phone for help. He looked hannless and seemed polite. so I said yes. I became concerned when he remained 1n the bathroom for what seemed like an unreasonable period of time. It occurred to me that he might have become ill or. worse yet, died an there. All sorts of bizarre notions raced through my head. If something was wrong, how would I explain this stranger's presence in m y home? Suddenly the bathroom door opened and there he stood naked as the day he was born. I nearly fainted. He walked toward me. shoes in o ne hand and suit, shorts, shirt and socks in the other, muttenng over and over "J hate tight clothes. They make me nervous." I knew at once the man was mentally deranged. I m~o .. r:emarn calm and asked it h~wollm11ke a cup of coffee. He said. "That would be nice:· I went to the kitchen. called the operator, gave her my address and asked her to send the police at once. W1than minutes the police were 1n m y kitchen, helpine my "visitor'' get dressed. He was indeed a mental patient and had been reported miss- ing. How lucky I was that the old man wasn't violent. He could have killed me. Never again will I let a stranger in my home for any reason whatever. Pleast pnnt this letter for the benefit of others who may be as naive as r was -THANKFUL IN N.Y. ANN lMDEIS DEAR THANKFUL: Here's your letter a.ad my congratulations for budllag the situation la the best po11lble ma.DDer. To you goes my C.C.C. (Cool, Calm, and Collected) Award of tbe Month. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: Con- gratulations for opening another can of worms. Since when have you become a diamond appraiser? [ refer to your statment that a one-third carat diamond 1s worth about $450. Our family has been an the jewelry business for SO years. M y husband 1sa certified gemologist. l am the third generation in the business. Since your article appeared we have received many phone calls from customers who have purc hased diamonds from us. They say "Ann Landers claims one-third of a ~rat 1s worth only $450. We paid a lot more." Please, Ann, be aware that all diamonds have different charac- tens1tcs. qualities and grades - T. INW. VA. DEAR T.: Rlglat you are. It depends not only on welpt, bat shape, cat and clarity. Tile jeweler wltla whom I consulted a11amed I w11 talking aboat a.a average one-tbJrd carat stone. To make matters wone, aome papers aroud tlae coutry prtnted I Ya carat by mistake so I've beard from lots of jewelers Uaese put several day1. I lllllllt from aow on 111 leave Ute diamond bas1De11 to tile e~rts. Actor to fly glider over Mount Everest By tile Auoclated Press NEW YORK -.\ctor Cliff Robert1oa say'> he'<; getung ready to fly a gl1derovcr Mount Everest Robertson said he and Pnncc Alvaro de ~rbon are planning a two-man tnp 1n a glider over M ount Everest. De Bourbon " cl cousin of King Juan ( arlo\ of Spa an. "We're both p1lo t'i," \81d Rob- ertson. "The lung of Spa an spoke to the king of Nepal about 1t, and we 1ot the OK. .. I've been to Milan to check o~ 1he \afety aspects and the structural 1ntcgn- ry. and if he can get corporate &t'onsonbip from an en vtronmcntally consc1011~ tom- pany, we'll ao.'' It'• Child Week SACRAMENTO -Spurred by Emmy-wmruna tclev1s1on nan Daa7 DeVl .. and bu Perhaa, &he C.hfomil 1..eai~ l11ure bu proclaimed this Weck Cliff Rol>eTUoa "C.•hfom1A Wed: of the Young· Child" The couple received rcsot- u11on1 from t.hr state Senate and I ' DunyDeVlto Asxmblr u honor1.ry eo<bair- mm of c:are (or ~Children. 1 p-oup 1eek1na suppon for more child care prosra.mJ from both business and government. DeVito, who won an Emmy Award for !Us role as djspatcher Louie DePalma in "Tw," de- scribed t~e stress he and Perlman went through arranajng child care whHe they were both in weekly television shows. They a~ the ~nt.s of two youna childno:n. 'It's not just poor people, not just minontr people, not just single people,· he said. "Today there are lots of women in the work force We need for them to go to work and have a free mind, not have to 10 to the phone every I 5 minutes" Teen benefit MONTGOMERY. Ala. Commod ores bassist RH Lapru4 p!Ans to channel profhs from a new record to needy children and tecn-qen m Ala- bama, uym1 he hopes to reduce the number of .. manu(~n:d criminals.'' • . I ANSWER TO WEEKLY BRJDGE QUIZ Q.1-Bot h vulnt•rnblt', as 8o11th you hold· •KQ1062 \ KJ61l 0 Q964 Your rt~ht hantl opponent OJ>t'llS thE' bldrt111g with ont• dub What a<'· I 1<m do you l <•kt"' . A.-You ha\.t• an t'Xt't'llent offen- '-IVe hand,~ h11 h t'Ould play well m any oft lw 11nb1d s uits Despite the rat·t that your ~padf• Sllit IS SO mud1 stronger than th~ 01 ht•rs, we prefer a rakt•out doubl<' to an overcall of ont-"r>adC' Q.2-St>lthl'r vulnNable. as South ) OU hold +KIO 4 . AK9M "AQ9 ..i76 Part 1wr open~ tht• bidding with f1v.-1 l11b!. What at·twn do you 1akv" A.-Part 1wr':-. pn•C'mpt s hows a long. stron~ dub Miit and the abih· ty to takt• t'l~ht tricks with his suit a'> trurnJJ'>. Your hand certainly hlis ple nty of play for four tricks, so wt.• would t·o111 m11 tht• hand to shun J lo\\'!'\ l'r 111 prevent a lead r ltrou)o!h 1111r lo.in~ of ... pades , which tould n •-.ult 111 tht· loss of two 1 n• k' ri~ltt 1111 1111• hat . we cnuld 1·1!·11 111 pl.i~ 111 -.1 \ nu trump rather 1 ll;tll 'I\ I lllh'- Q.:J-H11tli \tllrwrnhlt•. ;L" Soulh ~ 1111 t111ld +A.J7 K4 .JI02 +AQtf54 Ttlt' h1dd1 11~ ha-. prni:ec•ded South Wt-st North East y :1 • Pa<JH Pass \\'11.11 .11 111111 clu \ 1111 rakt''' A .-Y1111 11111ld hardly a~k for a h1•11ttr ')Jiii! for tlll' opponents to pla~ tlll' hancl Jlowt'vt'r. if you douhlt• l·:a:-.1 rn1l(h1 dC'C'ldl· that hi:-. '"It· clrn• ... ha\ c• a bt:llt'r contract .1f11•1 all arid 1ak'• :-nmC' acti<>n At 1111-. \ 11lr11·1 alnlil y . you will li(t't 100 p111nh I 111 •• , 1·n t Tll'k vou defeat 1111' 111111 rac I l'a·.,.,. J nd bt.• .;at1~f1Ni '' 11 Ii l"'"1hl" ,1 -.m all profit Q.4-'\1 11 tll't '11lrwr:.1hli·, a!. South Y•HI t111ld +AR A7652 AQI063 •5 The· t11cld1n~ ha:-. pron•ed~d: South Wi>s t North East I Pa<1R I + Pass 2 Pa<1R 2 • Pass ') \\ hal al'l 1011 cl11 ~ 1111 t akt•'' A.-l'arr nt>1 1, 110{ ><how an~ mud1 '-tr..,11.1{1!1. 11111 ... 1111·1· tw did not tak1• CHARLES GOREN OMAR SHARIF 'iome ..,on of preference he s hould have a fair six-card suit Your hand 1~ JU'H worth one more move, and th<' rt-1·ommended action is a rai'Je to thrt.>e s pades-nothing else 1s likely to :-.tir tum Q.6-A" South. hold +73 South 1 ("' ? /AQ983 West Pass vulnerable. you OAQI O •K93 North East 1• -2 0 Whal 3l'llon do you take·1 A.-You might or m1~ht not havt• the values to make three no trump llciwcver. you can almost certainly defeat l wo diamonds, since you rate to take at least five tricks in your uwn hand. Double Should partner have the values for your <1id€1 to make three ne trump, you t'an look forward to a handsonw pvnalt} 1 n any event. should they mak1.• their t·ontract you won't hdVt' doubled them into game Q .6-Bot h vulnf'rable, as ~outh you hold +AQJ .7 0 A83 •KJ10662 Tlw b1dchng has proceeded South West North East I • Pass I "; Pds 2 • Pass 2 :' Pass Wbat action do you take'' A.-Part ner has just bought him M'lf a rnntract You have more than you havt-promised to this point. but the· hand has all the earmark~ of a m1i.;fit and you have no sun• :-1111rl'e of tracks Therefore. don't .,, 1•n t h1nk <tbout two no trump fla,, For information about C harles Gort'n's new newsletter fo r bridge players, write Gort'n Brldgt> Lt>tce-r, P.O. Box 4426, Or- lando, Fla. 32802-4426. TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 1 Iowa city 5 Lopsided 9 Protection 14 Make wine 15 Ukewlse 16 L of AWOL 17 Put in chlpa 18 Shon drive 19 Renown 20 Ibsen heroine 21 Eye 23 Sicknesses 24 Earthquakes 26 Ambush 28 ~orge on 29 Irenic 33 Wading bird 36 Adagio 37 Age 38 Truncates 39 Adobe 40 Disturb 41 Unit 42 Harridan 43 Awareness 44 Cottons 46 Down-under animal 4 7 Analogous to 48 Whiskey 52 -Andrews .. 55 -Allan Poe 57 Lounge 58 Redolence 60 Additionally 61 Adequate of old 62 Presenter 63 Devastate 64 -soocl 65 Promised 66 Desires 67 Weaver's reed DOWN 1 --garde 2 Trivial 3 -nous 4 LlnMS 5 Classify 6 Some Finns 7 Fall to mention 8 Regret 9 Pub product 10 Prescription 11 Pall - 12 Race track 13 Soaks 22 Wlutclsm 25 Wood 27 Honor card PREVIOUS PUZZLE IOl YEO 29 Discomfort& 30 Wild plant 3 t Scotch mists 32 Modern 33 Walk heavily 34 Slnoer - tfnniJIJ 35 A~ble 36 Humped animal 39 Auto part 40 Bold 42 Windy City A CT OF SHAVE SORES 43 Old French coin 45 Allure 46 Oullheada 48 Oepresalon 49 Pedestrian SO Oxygen form 51 Informative 52 Parents 53 Kick up - - 54 Taboo Joke 56 Paste 59 Sub111t ( by Bii Keane "That bird did a pretty good job building a nest with no hands, just his mouth." MARMADUKE PEANUTS ME>r LUC'1'. [ HEAR '<OU VE BEEN ELECTED ·auEEN OF THE MAY '' GARFIELD DRABBLE ROSE 18 ROSE I by Brad Anderson ) BIG GEORGE DEKIQS THE MENACE by Hank Ketcham by Charles M. Schulz l l - by Jim Davis LET'5 MAKE T~AT A MfPIUM 816~ by Tom K. Ryan MASSACRE:. S~ Of'EWS 'TbV'AY,Al\IP HE ~101HPa'/ OOT1HE FIRST PALEFACE. by Kevin Fagan ux.u..mris llM~i '"f.~ ~" ltll ,, ~StZ . by Pat Brady > et.,. Cout DAILY Pt LOT /Mondlly. Aot121, 1911 M BLOOll COURTY U .S. ACRES FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE ~.r;. MOM···\ Wf¥(, tr50151 Mt~ITS ~ 1Pl'DWDl1f: O{)Sf m ~ISINe lPe~K MAl\..,~ I ~~\CK. I SAW rf. fCONo A CHECK~ •) 4.50. JUDGE PARKER F ou.ow1NG Ht9 INITIAL CONFERENCE WITI-4 HEATHER WARNER, A NEW CLIENT. ATlORNEY SAM ORIVER IS IM~ SYTHE FOUNDER OF HER RAPIDLY EXPANDING COSMETICS FIRM MRS, WARNER WILL eE IN A WEEK FROM T'OOAY AT THE SAME TIME! FUNKY WIKKERBEAN "' • by Jim Davi• by Lynn Johnston by Jeff MacNally by Harold Le Ooux BEFORE l FORGET, LET ME Gfve 'IOU MY F'RIVATE PMONE NUM&eRS AT HOME ANO AT THE OFAO:, ft.l#t. DRIVER! by Tom Batiuk lAEil. ' HE IS A urn..c. DOONESBURY GINNY/ \ \ C.OrTM~ •.• Ma'i\7 I:»!~ ~· ~ j 'f·Zf ! L.__ __ __;,,~------- (( lf( .. 04AN6£:5? I by Gary Trudeau CA'Mge Coat DAILY PILOT/ MOf'day, A9fll 28, 1988 • Massage parlors can be regulated if council dares It should be clear by now that the Huntington Beach City Council is uncomfortable with the idea of massage parlors and unable to confront them as an issue. Last week, the City Council watered down a 5-year- old ordinance it had never really supported. It dumped standards that prohibited massage parlors within 200 feet of residences, within 500 feet of schools and within 1,000 feet of each other. The action angered Police Chief Earle Robitaille, who minced no words about his opinion of massage parlors ... What ruffles me is that they accept aJI that baloney that (massage parlor operators) are the equivalent of Olympic trainers. It's like comparing a druggist and a dope dealer." Robitaille's attitude has been boned over years of police work. Experience has taught him what civilians only suspect: Many so-called massage parlors are fronts for prostitution. Since everyone acknowledges that prostitution is illegal in Huntin~ton Beach, Robitaille is frustrated that the City Council is not helping him close massage parlors. The council did impose the location guidelines on new massage parlors, barred current massage parlor operators from selling their businesses and limited the number of massage parlors allowed in the city to I 0 - which just happens to be the number of existing massage parlors. Certainly, that stops the potential proliferation of massage parlors that may be fronts for prostitution, but it also seems to ban legj timate massage business in Huntington Beach. AH of this wheel-spinning 1s curious when the solution seems simple: Regulate the massage business and bust the whore houses. There are accepted applications for massage and accredited institutions where people can learn the techniques. Through normal regulatory channels, the city can assure that the operators and technicians meet existing standards. They can also regulate the hours a massage parlor may be open. As Earle Robitaille might observe, anybody who says he's going for a massage at midnight 1s probably looking for something else. In any city, the police officers on the street soon learn who the prostitutes are and where they work. lf the council is interested in evidence upon which to revoke a business license unknowingly issued to a bordello, the police can provide it. City Council's concerns about forcmg people out of business are honorable, but they shouldn't be the shield that protects pimps and prostitutes from the law. Opinions expressed m thts space are those of lhe Dally Pilot Other views expressed on this page are those of ttlelr authors and artists Readef comment Is Invited Tile Dally Pilot. PO Box 1560. Costa Mesa, 92626 Pnone a.2-6086 Research unnecessary to prove boxing danger To the Ed11or: The US. Amateur Boxing Feder- ation 1s investingS I million to learn 1f amateur boxing leads to chro nic brain dysfunction whilst too many boxen. Muhammed Ah a famed, former world-ranking. Olympic and pro- fessional heavyweight champion. for one, are walking ev1denct' of the damage inflicted b\ boJung upon an athlete's brarn. According to research published b> the Bn11sh Medical Journal. "the peak force generated" by the h1gh est- ratcd heavyweight boxer 1n Britain, frank Bruno, punching a measunng instrument with the same force he uses to hit boxing opponents. "wa' equivalent of a 0.63-ton blow or thc same as a 13-pound paddt'd wooden mallet swung at 20 mph or a half· ton o f bncks. ·· Cahfom1a Medica l Assoc1atwn re pons "a recent stud> of pro fessional boxers showed that 87 percent had eVldence of brain damage. A '>ubse- quent study of both amateur and professionals revealed neurological abnormaliltC<; in both Sf'Oup<> of fighters." T he rla1m of the l SABF that ··currently. no data ex1'lts linking amateur boxmg to lhrnn1c brain dysfunction" sounds all too familiar with the boast oft he tobacco industry made 1n 1964 with a SI 0 m11l1on gram to the American Medical Association to determine 1f smoking kills Three ~eeks of "research" and the .\MA declared "c1gare11es should be labeled a health hazard c1t1ng also the nct'd to con\1der the economic health of merchant~. growers. processor... local, state and federal rec1p1ents of 1hc mult1mllhon dollar revenue') that would be Jeopard11ed by an) proh1b1- 11o n of tobacco -;moking" Given the enormous despicable profits made by the slca1e -;1aging the c1v1hzed grinding of fine athletes to hamburger, w11l 1t takc lJ ~ Olympic. federal and state health authont1cs the 22 years the AM •\ dcla)'ed biting the bullet before boung I'> lrTevocahly banned a~ a ~nct1oncd. dcadl), dangero u!> throwback t<> the glad1a· tonal butchery of anc1CJ}t Rome? AR U< rs HOPPING Crack down on drunken pilots To the Editor T see now where drun~cn boat dnvers arc gomg to be in trouble with the law, but when are we going to do something about drunken. ··stoned" morons cluttenng up the sky? The mg.ht the last o ne cra\hcd we could ~as1l y have had him 10 our yards m\tcad of the ocean This 1s\l;ic third crash wt have all felt we were JWit lucky 11 wa41n't U\ as they all flew much too low Is there no way thcoi;c people can be m onitored" ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat p"°""'*' ..... y 1111y ~ .... -., uo w 0.y SI VAii ..._. AOOr-~ ~·"'!lo• l!leO Cnl•• "'- \.. If Newport can be oi;ucd for not maintaining the ocean proper!)'. I fear 11 could have some trouble with our -;urv1vors 1f one of these .. happy p1lot<1" lands o n us I think 11 bchooveHomcone to take 'itcps to che<"k anyone who wants to take a .. fun. JOY ndC'" cspcc1ally at night. For their \afcty but al\o for all of us along the coast. I think 11·., time ~mething 1\ done and ~oon F~Zlf\I M•IOt T-Talt !Aane111ng fllitf)f OOftFeNey C•IV fd11()( TOMCtentn Neftf()l()t C'*llMff 8'>0t1t Editor MR U l> KIN<iSBU RY Newport Beach fl-llfJ C~MI r oo11oll•w flobw1 L c.,..trtllt Pr<>O\ICflOl1 Man1t(lllf• Tenylt--. C" cvt.ttlOI\ Men.toe< ............. ..., M•1l<11t.ng Oltec:tO' :::,~:,,, "Theotherday. lsawanadfora waterproofradlotr,:}::.'::f::.t;wall of your shower. Can waterproof TVs and reclJners . ~(IEK\~T Y ~~D ~IS T~l"l\.lNC9 PUPPET SHdt/ FOR ~\SARtAAM!~T, Pl~i. &~R~OOD lWYo~ ~~~Ti~ER l If you like showers, you '11 love B.rrayof new gadgets If you buy them all. though, stall won't have room foryou There arr a fe~ things I enjoy more than a good hot shower, but vel) few In fact I enJOY a good shower so much I'll wager it's been a good 10 years since I've had a bath. I v1v1dly rememher a senes of baths in about I Q76, occasioned not by a need to get clean. but because 1 had suffered a scm1-senous accident, and was re· quired to soak my sorely bruised body daily A fncnd had purchased a 250cc din bike, and watching him go around and around a field looked hke great fun. so I tncd tt I could tell you all about how I fearless!}' and unc;elfishly laid that din bike down to avoid squashing a mere child who was going around and around the same field. but the simple facts of the matter were that I ended up on the ground 1n a very battered cond1t1on The lud rode on. blissfully unaware of how close he had come to being permanently tattooed with tread marks. I haven't ndden a din bike since And, as soon as I was out ofbed and reasonably ambulatory, I went back to showers There are. of course. moming- shower people and night-'ihowcr people. I'm of the former persuasion. There's nothing quite like staggering o ut of bed and into the bathroom, turning on the water. and standing in there while the cascading water beats hfc back into you. After about five minutes. I begin to breathe again. and about three minutes later. my heart starts to beat. If 11 weren't for showers. I'd probably wander around 1n a coma· tose state all day, humping into lamp BILL HARVEY post'> and knocking down little old ladies. Wtth my luck. I'd probably walk right into a karate expen and end up back in the bath tub for a few weeks. Recentl y, I've noticed an alarming trend with regard to showers It seems that manufacturers are coming out with more and more pdgcts designed for the shower The hrst gadget I noticed was a httlc plastic shelf that hangs from the ~ooseneck to which the shower head 1s attached. That looked hke a prctt) good idea to me. and there are no shelve'> 1n o ur shower, so I bough1 one. Prior to my purchase, we kept our sham~ and hair cond1t1oner on a she lf in the bathroom, and took them into the shower with us. Wh1k 1n use, we -;tored them on the floor of the shower: Now, we had a shelf and could ke.ep them nght in the showe r. The drawback. I soon learned, was 1hat 1f we bumped the shelf or either of the bottles, they had a distance of about five feet in which to build up considerable ve locity before smashing into o ur naked toes I contacted OSHA and the agency suggested I patot a red danger area o n the floor as well as rope off the impact area The next gadget I found was a shower head with a little boule attached to 11. I bought one You wt:re supposed to put your fa vonte liquid soap in the little bottle. and by pushing a button, flood yourself with soap 91.lds. The button stuck, and the entire shower stall filled with sud!.. I was in there at the lime and, believe me. there's nothing pleasant about being nearly bubbled to death. The next thing was a hose with a hand·held shower head at the cod of 11. There 1s a bracket that goes on the waU. and the whole shebang hangs in the bracket for use as a regular shower. The thing has a very nasty habit of a1m1ng itself directly at the door, so that unless you're extremely careful when you open the door and tum on the shower. you 're likely to be doused with very cold water. The other bad thing about It is that someone bent on revenge has enough hose to take the thing completely out of the shower stall and nearly drown an unsuspecting v1ct1m . I used to occasionally sneak up when Ann was in the shower and empty a glass of cold water over the top of the stall, causing the most 'Wtllsfymg squeals you can imagjoe. Since we got the hose, I've done that exactly once. She squealed, but whjJe she was to the process of squealing, she ~napped off the hot water and came busting out of there like a commando. With deadly accuracy and a total disregard for the coo vcn- uons of modem water warfare, she doused me from head to toe. She is no longer unarmed while she·s m the shower. The age of shower gadgetry 1s upon us, and it has me scared. The other day, I saw an ad for a waterproof radio that sticks to the wall of your shower. Can waterproof TVs and recliners be far behind? I. shower addict and gadget freak that I am, will be compelled to buy them. Finally, there will be no room in there for me. I'll be forced to drag the hose-and- showcr head outside of the stall, and talce my shower in the middle of the bathroom. And I find 11 really difficult to d o my best thinking while filling the house with water. -17111:11:rac.n1i1;,J;tt!·'tf ·llU'·'----------------- White House quietly tilting toward relations with Iran Fears Soviet at tern pt to occupy Iran in post-ayatollah period of confusion W '\SH I NG T ON I ran 's Ayato llah Khome1n1 . not L1bya'oi; Moammar K.hadafy. directs the world's most deadly terrorist network. Yet incredibly, the Reagan admm1stra11on has begun a hush- hush, barely perceptible tilt toward Iran. Take the 4uc~tion of hostages, for example. The implacable Khome1n1 , not Khadafy , controls the fate of American hostages Washington has been quietly conc1hatory in the behmd-the-sc.cnes negotiatio ns w1th Iran over the American hostages held by pro-Iranian terronsts. This dramallc, subterranean shift tn policy toward I ran goes beyond the fate of the hostages into the realm of global geopolitics. President Reagan has been convinced bx his adv1scl'll (thouah there art still some dis- senters) tha1•an effort must be made to establish relation~ with Ayatollah Khomeini Their concern 1s 1hat, without an Amcncan presence at all tn Tehran, the Soviets may be em p~d to occupy northern Iran dunng any post-Kho. mc1n1 period of confusion or chaos. When we asked about the warmina· up with Iran, one hi~·le,el State Department official tacitly confirmed the development by snappint testily: "We deal with the Soviet Union. We deal with Syna So why not Iran?" A clue to the •urpnsina chanac 1n d1rectaon toward Iran can be detected by readana between the hncs of President Reagan's hard-h oe denun- \ c1auons o f Khadaty. Reagan appears to hold Khadafy pnmarily respon- sible for the murders of Amencans at the Rome and Vienna airports last December, as well as for subsequent terrorist attacks. However. the terron st Abu N1dal 1s known to have masterminded the airport attacks and may have enJI- neercd the later ones. Yet in 1983, when Iraq expelled him because 1t wanted better relations w11h the United States, N1dal went to Kho- mcm1 for help -and got 11. Our sources estimate that the ayatollah has bctn giving N1dal about $25 m1lhon a year for his murderous ventures. In addition. we've seen a classified U.S. intelligence report to the effect that the Rome and Vienna coordi- nated assaults were ar,provcd by the foreign ministers of ran, Syria and Libya at a meettna 1n Tnpoli on Dec. 23 The three aovemments' m- telltaence chiefs oversaw the twin operation. which was earned out hy N1dal. Fmally. Ntdal was SPotted 1n ust Berlin about the time o f the dis- cotheque bombmaearhcr this m o nth. Jn~lliacncc source say he may have had a hand in the atrocity-probably on loan to KhadafY from his protector and bankrollcr. Khomeini. Yet Reagan has sina.Jcd out Libya u the source of all ann·Amencan terronst ev il. even when the evidence sug.eslJ that lnan and Syna arc at kut equ-.Jly cu1lty In add1t1on to the SCOPohllC'.tl ' JACK ANDERSON and DALE VAN ATTA reason for rebuilding bridges to Iran, a senior White House official men- tioned a similarly hardheaded in- ducement: money. It costs the United Sates a bundle to defend apinst the chaos that Iran sponsors. "We have o ne (sensitive) report that indicates we arc spending $10. $12 billion more than we would have to if relations with I ran were normal,·· he said. As to what hopes of success the administration has for iuoverturcs to Iran, the White House souroc said that Iranians to general, and even majp1trtam Shiites for that matteT, are WOt as viscerally anti·Amcrian as they may seem. They have been stim:d up by Khomeini to djstract them from other troubles, such as the appalltng slaughter of the ~r with Iraq. CONSTITUilON CAPER: You remember the $150 million monu· mcnt to the Coratltution we told you was be1na pushed by the staff of the Constitution's biccnknnial com· mission? Well, we may not have to worry about it much lonaer. A bill, already cleared by a House subcom· miuec, would ban further construo- tton on the Mall beyond five stroo-tu~ already approved. The Coo· stitutJon build1na as not one of the exempt J•d A..h,.... ud lMJe Va Atta an 1ya4.katt!4 t'Ol•m•hU. BILL llAllVSY col•••IM DAN WALTERS Image defeats issues in politics · SACRAMENTO -Actors Danny De Vito and Rhea Perlman visited the Capitol last Thursday and briefly spoke to both houses of the l..qis- lature on behalf of better child care. Unto itself, there was nothioa wrong with that ap!)Ca!1lllCC nor the cause they were cspousmg. But in larger sense, it symbolizes a malaise that is afflicting the Lesis- lature: the dominance of politics and image over substance. As a S0C1cty, California ts growina steadily larger and more divcne. Its economy is undergoing d~seated and fundamental changes. It 1s divid- ing itself mto distinct sodocconomic, regional and ethnic classes. That underlying evolution produces enormous pressures on education, transportation, housing supply and other public servi~, at.a t1mc when government spending ts constrained by Proposition 13 and other anti-tax. aoti-aovcmmcnt movements. The impacts of social and econ- omic changes arc being felt tbrouab- out California. But dunng a period in which the sta~·s problems have become more complex and lonaer- ranJe, the Legislature bas imploded o n it.self, becoming less interested in the real world and ever more prcoc- 't'upied with trivial political games and its own tntemal dynamics. While city coul\cil members, coun- ty supervLSOrs, school trustees, civic. business and labor leaders and othcn struule with the effects of change, the Legfslature seems content to enter- tain itself with the .. celebnty of the week... as one insider tagged the current infatuation with visitors from the sports and entenajnment worlds, and occupy its time with factional and partisan power struggles. This is an election year, which to some tn the Capitol 1s explanation itself for the inerua that has de- veloped. Certainly Gov. George Dcu- lcmcjtan didn't set any hi&b standard for action m his Jan. 9 State of the State address. in which he mostly patted himself oo r.bc back for past accomplishments and answered his Democratic en tics. But neither have the Democratic leaders of the Legjslature produced much in the way orsubstantave Policy dcc1S1ons this year. They have been long on holding news conferences to tell us what they intended to do. but short on doing anything. Meanwhile, schools grow more crowded and highways more con- gested and pitted., the state continues to suffer a loss ofbasic industrial jobs, farmers face crushing debt burdens and profitless ~rices and hundreds of thousands of immigrants pack into the central cities of the state. The ~stature is continually ex- pand.in& its staff and creatina new committees to deal with one issue or another, but m the end, it has become largely irrelcvcnt. What kind of a state California 1s bcc-0ming bears little or no relationship to what state l~s­ lators arc doin-m the Capitol, which bas evolved mto a theater of the absurd. It wasn't always so, nor need it be that way. Earlier legislatures, composed of parttime citizens, were willina to make serious policy decisions on matters of Iona-range importance. such as cruting a world~lass ~ way network. consumer and cn- vuonmental protections. an un- parallcd hi&her education S)'1tem and an ambitious wa~r transfer system. There was no immediate politic.al payback for those decisions.. The currcnt crop of legislaton is so preoccupied with power struglet raising money for campaians and other non-substantive matters that they literally leave no time for dealioa with the things that count to the rat of us. There is a disturbing tendency of the California Leais.laturc to cmula~ Congress. which demonstrated yean qo that it could not make any decision -even I wrona decision - on any matter of substance. Proof of the gridlock that the It.ate l..cajslaturc has achieved on ~or policy matten is to be found in the flurry of far-rcachina initiatives placed on the ballot by thote fha• traced with lqislative inaction. Two of this year's major lDt.UUft:I, dealina with pcnonal injury liability and camp&ian finance reform. 11' direct ruuJu of lq:islative foot - drqai 1.qi'!fa1on pcTenni!l~f complaan about initiatives not ~-°' thJ'OUlb the "lepslative proocas •to have tbetr draftina polished. But they Ibo refute to resolve iuucs that bana around ror years until their advocaaa pow weary -property tax ~ and Proposition I 3 beina the dulic example of what resulu from Jesi*t-ive footdna;i na. Du "Iha. Is • .,... .. to#am.&111. • .> Pirates 'skin' field Orange Coast crew Impressive during Newport Regatta BJ JOSEPH DVDEVOIR ........ Cc::: ' f p The host Oraqe Cout Collele PiralC'I •'skinned" the field Su.nda~ at the Newport Invitational Rowtaa Rcpna with a atrona showina tbat couldn't have come at a bener lime with the Western Sprints just two weeks away. Nine teams, includina UC Irvine which finished fourth in the ov;;;D competition with 13 pointa, ba~ !n Newport Harbor under sunny slcia m the 21st annual event. Even thouab it was UCLA which won the Pafrner Cup, outpointina OCC, 26-25, the Pirates' ciaht-man crews dominated the two races that they WCf'C ho~. ~ in ~ prooeu, Cout heavily to 1u wardrobe ensemble. .,..,,._.,._...., DMW---. After the Pirates' junior vanity and freshmen eights rowed home as winnen, the time-honored tndi1ioo of-the losing teams aivina the viaon UC trnne nn!ty el&ht oanmen (top) celebrate win 8111lday. They include (from left): Tom Taraenon, Jeff Emdee, Ala Babbud and Mike ltt.ert. (Pleue ... ca&1'/m) Thornton completes iiiitiation Ex-UC Irvine standout- adjusts to life in the NBA By JOSEPH DUDEVOIR Don't look for Bob Thornton among any of UC Irvine's all-time basketball leaders 1n porn ts, rebounds, assists, games played or any other category for that matter. Where you can find Thornton. however, 1s on the roster of the New York K.nicks. After spending 1985 in Spam playing in a European pro league, the fonner Mjssion Viejo Hiah standout came back: to the U.S. to join the NIJA wars and made the K.nicks' squad, managing not only stkk for the entire 1985-86 season. but making a big contribullon in the process. And be did it the same way he played the game at UCl from 1981-84 -hard-nosed and all out. often collcctmg more fl oor bums than points. "It feels Rood to have a year under my belt now," said the 6-1 0. 2~pounder. "I know I can play wtth these guys now, even though they arc terrific players. r have to admit, it was a drastic change when I first came into the NBA." • About the only thing he didn't have to adjust to much was the coaching. "(New York Coach) Hubie Brown and (UCI Coach) Bill Mulligan arc very much alike," says Thornton. "They'll both get on you. but both wtll back you up when you need them. All they ask for 1s effort." , Brown is notorious when it comes to getting the last drop of sweat out of a player, especially a role player like Thornton. "There's a b1g difference between the NBA and European ball1" says Thornton. "Over in Europe it's almost hke college. The NBA is much more physical; plus, they play international rules over there. It makes a difference." Thornton. a fourth-round choice of the Knicks, wa.s advised by New York penonnel to play in Europe to get some seasonina before t.esttng the NBA waters. And it seems to have paid off fof him. He had career highs of 17 points and 14 rebounds agamst Cleveland. He also ran mto an old friend and UCI teammate in Ben McDonald, who J.oined the Cavs late in the year. 'It was great to 5ee Ben again." he says. "We're sull good friends." But with the high st.aJces of NBA play on the line, friendly faces are hard to come by. "I couldn't believe some of the moves these (NBA) guys had when I fint played against them," said Thornton. "These guys arc tough. But I just try to play all-out against them and not give in to them. "When you have to play against guys like Moses Malone, Charles Barkley and Akecm OlaJUWOn and all the other srcat players, you JUSt try to hold them around thetr scoring averages." Thornton and the Knick:.sdid a pretty &oodjob this past year in that department, leading the league 10 fewest pomts allowed. And that was without, for the most part, rookie center Patrick Ewina. ''When we get Pat back and Bernard King can come back hke he was, we should be tough next year," Thornton said. Bob Thornton Another Laker blowout Mavericks blasted in playoff series opener, 130-116 INGLEWOOD (AP) -The de- fcndina NBA champion Los Anleles Laken are showina no sips of letting up in the defense of their crown. Behind 28 pomts from Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, the Laken continued their playoff roll Sunday with a I 30-116 victory over the Dellas Mavericks in the openina pme of their Western Division 1emifinals. "We did euct.ly what we wanted to do," La.k.en Coach Par Riley said. on1r7'! -arrive in It's the Reggie and Ruppert Show! Tbe Lakers, who oul1tld the San Antonio Spurs with ~similar one- sidcd victories, never 1et DaJJas tet mto the contest. "We came out today as we did against San Antonio -b~," said Lak:ers guard Earvin "Mqic" John- son, who ran the Laken' offense, contributing 16 points and 14 assists. "We're playing With the same at- utude." Ensenada Ftrst-to-fintSfl honors claimed by Wind Warrior By ALMON LOCK.ABEY ~ ........... ,.., ENSENADA -Another slow Newport to Enscnada race. How slow is slow? Consider the fact that as of 5 p.m. PDT Sunday. only 70ofthe 504 boats which stant'd the race Saturday at noon PST had crossed the finish hne off the Enscnada breakwater 125 miles from the start. And with little or no wtnd 10 Todos Santos Bay. it appeared that less than half of the starting fleet would have finished before this morning. The only crew that could claim a 'fast race was Stephen Jon Shidler's 48-foot catamaran Wind Warrior out of San Francisco which crossed the finish line shortly after midni&ht Saturday with an elapsed time oil 2 hours and 56 minutes, and hour and a half short of an elapsed time record. Shidler said he chose a course about nine miles outside the Coronados Islands south of San Dieao and held moderate winds until about midnight Saturday when "'the bottom fell out." On board ~ind Warrior as crew were Randy Smyth, Huntington Beach, one of the world's top multi- bulJ raocn; and Lewie and John Wake, Newport Beach. Second to finish was the 39-foot catamaran Minette, skippered by Mike Leneman of South Bay Yacht Racina Oub, S bours and I 0 minutes behind Wind Wamor. Fint monohull to finish was Dick Penninaton's Petenon-66 Cheetah. Lona Beach Yacht Oub, about an hour behind Minette. Cheetah was the fint of the bi& so-called uJtra-li&ht displacement sleds to finish and was nearly two houn ahead of Doua Baker's 68-foot ~.also ofLBYC. Fifth to finish was RoJCr MacQreaor's 65-foot Anthem, Lido Ille Yacht Oub, with an elapsed time of 19 houn and 30 minutes. Othcn of the tol) 10 to finish were: 6. ~mt, Pat Farrah. LBYC; 7. Chri1hne.1. Fred Preiss, Pacific Marinen T acht Oub: ll. Swift.sure Ill, Nick Frazee, San Diqo Yacht Oub; 9. K.athmandu, John Landon, SDYC; and 10. Pandemonium, Robert Moore, Balboa Yacht Oub Jonesbreaksouto_f _ slump; Jackson stays hot in 8-7 triumph_ MlNNEAPOLIS (AP) -Ruppert Jones has been struggling this season while Reggie Jackson has been streak- ing. But the two put 11 all together Sunday, leading the Angels to an 8-7 victory over the Minnesota TW1ns. "I've seen what Ruppert can do. if you cao JUSt stay wtth him," Angels Manager Gene Mauch said of Jones, who was batti n$ . 16 7 before homc- nng, singling tWlce and scoring three runs Sunday. "It's painful for me to wait for him to act 11 going, but it's even more painful for him." Meanwhile, Jackson, who 1s bat- tmg .467, doubled, singled twice ana drove in two runs. The two RBI hiked his career total to 1,6 14 - 17th on baseball's all-time List. "Reggie's a good ballplayer," Twins Man~cr Ray Miller said. "You don't hit 535 home runs and play for 20 years without beinaaood." Miller bemoaned the fact that his relief corps crumbled, o..probtmn that has plagued the Twins all season. "Other than relief pitching, I'm very proud of the way we've played," he said. "I'm getting tired of saying that." Jones was getting tirccf ofhis slump and was hesitant to sax that it's over. Toalgl:Jt'• 1ame None scheduled. TUESDAY'S GAME ADsel1 (McCaskill 2-1 ) at Tor· onto (Steib 0-3). Time: 4:35 p.m . TV: None. Radio: KMPC ( 710). run from Bob Boone, pounded out 14 hits against four Minnesota pitchers. With the score tied 5-5, Jones led off the fourth with a checked-swing infield hit off Roy Smith, 0-2. One out later, Jones stoic second and scored on Jackso..n's single up the middle. After Smith struck out Brian Downing, he yielded a double to Rob Wilfong that moved Jackson to third. Rick Burleson 's soft, broken-bat Liner then tipped off the glove of leaping second baseman Steve Lombardozz1 and rolled into center field, scoring both runGers to make 1t 8-5. Rookie reliever T.R. Bryden, 2-0, gave up two fifth.inning runs on RBI aroundouts by Kent Hrbek and To~ Brunanslcy, but held on to pick up his second major-league victory in two days. Donme Moore got the final five outs for his fourth save. The Angels took a 2-0 lead in the fint off Minnesota starter Mike Smithson on Jones' single, Wally Joyner's bunt single, Jackson's RBI double and Jerry Narron's sacrifice fly. The second pme of the bcst-of- seven series will be played at the Forum Wednesday night. "I respect Dallas as a good of- fensive team and I expect them to be much bettcT J>!CP&red on Wedncs- da ," Rtley said. tbe Lak:ers, who scored at will in the game's opening 61/J minutes, opened a 22-6 advantage and never looked back. "I thmk they hit their first six or seven shots." Dallas Coach Dick Motta said. "We made a couple of runs. but they were feeble." Danas, playing less than 48 hours after eliminauna the Utah Jan, could hit just two of its fmt 10 shots. "l don't think the fatipc factor can be used as an acuse," Dallas forward Sam Perkins said. ··we just have to be prepared. no matter how much time we had. "We wanted to start out just like they did, we just didn't shoot well." After the Mavericks briefly inter- rupted the Lakers' bunt with 10 straight points, Los An&clcs re-estat>- hshed command and took a 30-1 7 lead by quarter's end. Dallas pulled within 39-:W with 17 points m the fint four minutes of the sccond quarter, but the rest of the half was all Lakers. "I just react and bit, be said. "I got into a pretty good aroove (Sunday). but] don't think I've totally round my aroovc yet" The Angels. who also got a flome They stretched their advantage to 5-0 in the second. Boone's lcadotl homer was followed one out later by Gary Pettis' double, which chased (Pl-..e eee ANOBl.8/82) lllnneeota'• Kirby Packett. who went 4 for 4, fall• backward after a cloee pitch by the An&el•' T .R . Bry'1en. Los Angeles, with James Worthy scorina eiaht pomts, ran off a 20-6 spurt to lead 59-40 wtth 2·42 left. ~ Lakers led 66-48 at mterm1ssion and were still in front 95-80 after three quarters. Byron Scott scored 24 pomts and Worthy added 23 for Los Angeles. Reuss returns to Dodger rotation, beats Brav~s, 7-4 LOS ANGELES (AP) -Jeny Reuss admitted he was in a better frame of mmd than he was two weeks aao after scatterina nine hit, in seven tnninpSunday to help the Los Anacles ~defeat the Atlanta Braves, 7-4. 'Absolutely," Reuu said afterwrnnina his first decision of the scuon. "It's not that I was losina any velocity. I still had enouah left but I was losina location and aettina sloppy." The veteran left-hander was demoted to the bullpen two Sundays q o to straiahten himself out after allowina five run8 and 11x hits 1n 3YJ inninp qainst San FrwnetlCO. He made two rehef appearances last week m San Franci5CO that put him back m the startma rotation. · "I don't thmk I was doina a.i:yth1n1 wrona." Reuss said "It was JUSt a matter of ttme ~fore everytluna would have been OK. "It was a combination of some days off and throwina a lot over a period of time. I think I threw five da)'1 in a row and two of those days l aot mto the pme." \ The timing of Reuss' seco nd start of the aeuon was perfect, because Dennis Powell is out of acllon with an mflamed left shoulder. "Once he convmccd me that he was throwtna the ball better, I made the deem on," L&aorda said of Reuss. who recorded h11 20th catciCr victory over the Braves m 28 dccmons. "l didn't know about Dcnms' arm until yesterday." Bill Rupell and Dave Anderson d rove m two runs apiece as the Dod&en rapped a season- hi&h 13 hits apinst Atlanta starter ane Smith Tolll61:Jt'• 1ame Ptttsburgh (Kapper ().. J) a1 Dod1en (Valenzuela 2-1 ). Time: 7:35. TV None Radio· KAB ( 790). Tuesday's game. Pittsburah at Dodaers. 7:3S p.m. and rwo relteven. Smith, 1-2. who shut out Los Anaeles twice on a combined si~ hits m his last two starts ap1nst the Oodaen. was raked for five runs on e1aht h1u 1n thrtt mnina." Los A.naclcs took 1 t-0 lead m the firs1 on an R Bl sm$le by Enos Cabell. Steve Su, who had thrtJe hus. srn&led ho me another run m the second A throW1n.g error by Su at second beSiC allowed Atlanta to uc the score in the thud, but Russell delivered a two-run sm&le m the bottom half of the third Anderson followed Ruucll's hn With a s1n&Jc, and Ruuell scored when shortstop Rafael Ramu-ez's throw pulled first baseman Bob Homer away from the baa. Tom Niedcnfucr replaced Reuss to start t.he etahth. and Ramuu hit the reliever's fim pitch for his tce0nd homer of the teaion N1edenfuer went on to att his second laYe. Jhe Dodacn scored twice m the eiahth on a leadoff home run by Ken l.&nd.rcau~ lus sa:ond. off Duane Ward and an RBI 11Qlle ~ Andcnon \ .. f 'l • * ~ CO.t OAJLY PILOT/ ~ay. April 28, 1888 S PORT ~ B REA~ --- Joyner was ready to ball qut after roof sprung leak 81.zera advance to meet Bucke . Rookie Terry Catle4p scored 27 m points and veteran pomt 1ua.rd Maarice C.eeb added 24 l)Oanu and 11 usiau u Phl.1.adelpbia routed w.ahinaton 134-109, From AP 4.1.,.&cMI MINNEAPOLIS -Anaels rook.le • Wally JoynCT had seen enou&h of the Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodomc and was willina to call it a niaht when the stadfom's roof spruna a leak durina a heavy thundcrstonn. Joyner's Antiels had lost 7-4 to the 'Minnesota Twins Friday nifbt and were trailina S-1 in the bottom of the eiahlh mnang Saturday niaht when heavy austs of wind caused an inner seam on the Metrodome roof to rip. Some rain came down on the v Playing field and the speakers and li~ts over the field began to sway wtldly. Sunday to win their first-round NBA playo1f 1encs. 3-2. Philadelphia, runner-up in lhe Atlantic Division, ion to Milwaukee on Tuesday 10 open a best-of·teven tcrics with the Bucks, the Central Division champions. The 76en bu alt their lead to 61-38 witb S: I 0 remamina in tbe second period and the Bulleta could get no closer than 12 the rest of the way ... Jn the opener of an Eastern Conference semtflnaJ seriei, &evta McBale and Larry Bini SJ»:rked a 14-l)Oint run to help Boston pull away In the th1~ quarter and beat Atlanta, l 03-91 . The Celtics set a sin&Jc-seaJOn league reoord of 34 consecutive home victories_. -includina the playoffs. They broke the Minneapolis uken' mark that had stood since 1949-SO. Boston. which won all su of its rcgular-1e&son pmea apinst the Hawks, can extend the record Tu~r night in the second game of the best-of-seven ~ond·round scncs. ''I wanted to get out of here,·· Jo).'ner said. "l didn't want the ceilina to faU on us. I've never seen anythina like it I thought the ump1res were aoing to call the game and that was pcrfe<:tly all right with me." After a nine-minute delay, JoJ'Der however, Metrodome workers were able to stabihze pre1surc inside the stadium and play resumed. The Twins increased their lead to 6-1 before three tw~run home runs 1n the ninth inmng -the last a game- winnin$ shot by JQyner -rallied the Angels to a dramatic victocy "I didn't want to go back out there," Joyner said. ''It looked like a lot of people could have gotten hurt and I didn't want to be one of them" Quote of the day Bob Brenly, San Francisco catcher, on the G iants' impressive early start: "You don't win the National League West by winning five games in a row in April." . Yankees won't trade Whitson NEW YORK -Calling himself • "higher on Ed Whitson" than the rest of the baseball world, owner George Steinbren- ner says the New York Yankees have no 1mmed1ate plans to trade their m1llion-dollar pitcher Apparently nixing spcculauon of an immiment trade for the discontent Whitson, Steinbrenner also said Sunday that the whole controversy surrounding the pitcher had been blown out of proponion. "[ haven't heard anything about a trade," Stetnbrenner said. "I don't know who we would trade him to. J think he's a pretty good pitcher. I told Tom (Reich, Whnson's agent) 1f he wanted to go outand find a trade, OK, we would talk.about 11. but we haven't been approached by anybody" Whitson. a JO.year-old nght-hander, signed a tive- year. $4.4 m1lhon free-agent contract with the Yankees in December. 1984. He got ofTto a 1-6 start last season. and he 1mmed1ately became the target of boo!>, hate mail and death threats, prompting him to ask. for a trade. Whnson was scheduled to make his first start Saturday at Yankee Stadium since Apnl 9, but he came down wnh an upset stomach and diarrhea. On Sunday. Whitson worked the ninth inning in rehef. giving up one hit and no runs an a 9-7 loss to the Cleveland Indians Those left 1n the crowd of 46.607 chanted ''Eddie' Eddie' Eddie'" and gave him a standing ovation as he left the mound Surprising Rangers advance Piure Laroacbe, who spent most of ~ the season in the minors, scored two goals ' on setups from Mike Ridley, and John Vanblttbroack sparkled an goal as the underdog New York Rangers beat Washington, 2-1, Sunday night to move into the Stanley Cup semifinal round. The Rangers' victory in the sixth game of the Patnck Division sencs sent them into the Wales Conference final starting Thursday night against the Adams Division winner . The Adams sencs 1s deadlocked at 3-3 as Hartford skated to a 1--0 victory over Montreal Mike Uat, back an goal after missing two games because ofan mjurv, stopped 32 shots and Kevln Dlaeen scored his sixth goal of the playoffs to lead the Whalers and force a dCC1d1ng seventh game an Montreal Tuesday night Strange beats Peete in playoff Cu1tJ Straqe sank a 20..foot bmlie l!I pun on the third hole of a sudden-death playoff Sunday to defeat Calvta Peete and win the Houston -Open aolf tournament. After Strange made his fun. Peete, wbo had led or shared the lead through al four rounds, stepped up and missed a 20..footer that would have forced a (ourtb extra hole. Strange pocketed the $90,000 first prize, while Peete, losing the first playoff of bis career, earned $54,000 for second place ... At St. Petersbur:g, Fla., Pat Bradley, COIT\Pletely a nearly flawless 65, birdied the 18th hole from 25 feet to win by one stroke over Janet Colet and move within $3,079 of becoming the tint $2 million winner on the LPGA Tour. The victory was the 18th of Bradley's career and boosted her lifetime earnings to SI, 996, 921. She has won a tour-leadinf $202,724 in 1986 with nine toP.-10 finishes in I tournaments. including a victory in the Dinah Shore three weeks ago At the Legends of Golf in Austin, Texas, Don January and Gue Littler combined for a final-round 64 for a two-stroke victory. The winners' four-round total of 25-under-par 255 was two shots better than the previous tournament record, set in 1982 by the team of January and Sam Snead. Garza tops Irvine boxing card Former WBC. super bantamweight m champion Jaime Garza. sporting a 43-J record (including 40 knockouts) will meet Mario Gomez tonight. an the 10..round · main event at the Irvine Mamou Hotel. Gomez, who is Mexico's No I bantamweight, 1s now based in San Antonio and holds a 19-5 record. Unbeaten Genaro Hernandez (8-0) of Los An$cles will take on Jorge Valdez of Mexico City m an e1ght- round super featherweight semi-main event bout. Other matchups include: Ricky Romero of Torrance vs. Genaro Espitia from North Hollywood in a 118-pound six-rounder, Long Beach's Dave Yonko vs. Jim Asha rd of Portland in a four-round heavyweight contest; Lee Sentinella of Westminster against Milton Bush of Huntington Beach an a four-round 162-pound bout; Ronnie Gu11crrez of Santa Ana vs. Greg Ortega of Pomona an a four-rounder at 130 pounds: and Nacho Guerrero of North Hollywood against Los Angeles' Geraldo Lopez. Lewis captures 100, long jump WALN T -Carl Lewi<. coming m back from a hamstnng injury that slowed him last season. won the 100..meter dash and extended his long Jump victor) stnng to 46 meets on Sunday to highlight the Mt. SAC Relays Lewis. winner of four goTd medals at the 1984 Olympics, seemed 1n less than top form m both events. w1nn1ng with what were, for him. mediocre marks. He won the I 00 in I 0.1 4 seconds and took the long jump wnh a w1nd -a1ded leap of 27-4. The long jump tnumph kept antact a wan string that dates to 1981. Evelyn Ashford, another 1984 Olympic champion who wa<; sidelined last year, also continued on the comeback trail. She won the women's I 00 at Ml. San Antomo College wnh a time of 11 .1 l Television. radio TELEVISION No events scheduled RADIO 7 30 p.m -BASEBALL· Pittsburgh at Dodgers. KABC (790). ~'TAKE IT ID THE MAX!" ( If'> ~r bcxfy and )Q.J really w.ant to ma~ thP mrr.1 ('JI •I Tr1at mean!'. IOS1ng M'!!Qht and qel11ng in J•aPP. taking ,.our b<X1y an the Wifo( to tnriess• II means com1T11n.ng ,.our~l 10 soerwj1119 11><.<, th" ~11 '"JV' rr11ee 11n1~ a ...ee+< .r, an ei<e•CJSP prrigram ttlal can pwm1se results Anet r'91'lt roN we ve made mernl:)l>(c;ti1p e)((;ltrr !Qlv 1tlorrJ.:1tM> di lhe spa that has rt 011 - lciud•ng 1ndillldually <;upe!VISf!CI 'M>rk.wt pr!JtJr..m'.s n1Jtnt•ON1I quodance me latest n Na1111l11<, inrl AXE!fCISP eouopmROI and much motP ·UFt-CVCU • HMITIUJt • AEAOe!CS • STEAM • SMJHA ·~ • NUTilfTIOfC SA.A • MORE, MUCH MORE TWO-YEAR MEMBERSHIP* NOW, ONLY ... s 91 PER MONTH! FOR 24 MONTHS WITH JUST '25. DOWN •NON-RENEWABLE-FIRST VISIT INCENTIVE .................... __ ti __ _ JIG( LaLlm1 • r:lcw/k , ................. S.- ooeQ mMIM"1a AMA-~ e.oeeo ~-cmtD "'9C:a8.,... ~t ~"',... flOU4W. &311 sen.. UOW•t-•t«t74 831t ~ ,,,.,. UWMW¥W- .. lllD 1 '92't Herber 9l\ld 478' P9dftc C.oac Hwy ... ~ wan GAWN """"'"*-..,.....t1 ~ 2.-e E Or'eligett'IOIJ» AWi wa1m•TM-•WMWWICOfta --t7 W-HOMOo l'S72 Ylll9y v.. &..... 55& 18'tl St,.... I i Kent pitches UCI to 6-1 win Bo Kent pitched his third tomplete pme o(thc season -a three-biner- to help UC Irvine collect a 6-1 PCAA bueblll victory over tbe Univenity of Pacific Sunday at AnteaterFieJd. It wa1 the final home .-me or the acason for UC Irvine, wb.1ch finishes tbecampaian with 1evrn strai&ht road contesu. Kent's route-aoina effort was the third straiabt in the weekend senes for the Anteaters, who won two of the th.rec pmes. The only aetback was a 1-01011 to the TiJers on Saturday. 'CREW ••• From Bl their 1h1ru followed "We didn't look like we were dia&inadown too hard," said OCC JV co&Cb l>at Gleason. "But when you were as far out an front as we were. it's hard to max 1t out." Olcasoo's JV shell strapped a holes.hot on the field and zipped to an easy time of 6:03.34 over the 2,000- meter course to the second-place Brujns' 6: 16.00. The Pirates coUected the Robert 8. Moore Cup in the process. ··1 think this will encourage our guys," said Gleason. ''We're soing to go to the Sprints looking for the u~t over Washington. Our guys feel they can do it." The freshmen rowers had a tougher time of it, but according to iheir coach, Lee Miller. they turned in one ofthe1r strongest performances of the season. "It was a very nice win for us." said Miller. "That was our best race of the year. It was probably the first time we put 1t all together." Once again 1t was a duel between OCC and UCLA, with this one nip- and-tuck all the way. As the boats came past the 1,500.. meter mark, the Pirates held a three seat advantage over the Bruins. "But the the guys jUSt exploded," said Miller. "That was our best final 500 (meters) oft he year. We ended up with a good wan -and some shirts." The Pirates stretched the advan- ta~e to over a length at the finish, winning by a 6:07.75·t~6:1 l.75 margin. "This win couldn't have come at a better time," Miller added. "We have been on kmd of a ,down, 11 seems nothing had gone nght for us lately." THm icores· I UCLA. 26, 2 Ont!Oe Coal!, 2S, J Sen oi.oo Stele, 21, 4 UC lr11IM, ll, S Long 8Hc:h Slelt, II Novi<• eionu 1 Ont!Oe Coa11. 6'09 60, 2 Sen Ot.oo St•lt, 6 II ll, 3 UCLA, 6·19 66, 4 Long BHcn Sltlt, 6 31 ss. s LOYola, 6'.31 39 Novice four'· I San Ot.oo Stele, 7'00.IO, 2. UCLA. 7 21 ~. 3 Ce l Merltlme AceO.nw, 7.24.S9, ' UC Irvine, 12S 01, S Orenoe Coett, NO 47 Lf9htwetoht t19nu 1 San Dleoo S1e1t. 6 13 1'. 2 UCLA, 6 II OS, 3 UC &enlley, 6 20.42, 4 Cit MArtllme AceOtmy, 613 It, S Lono e..ctl Slllt, 6 29 94, 6 UC e.rltttev. 6'.20 '2 F r"M\t n •191'1h I Oranoe Coel t, 6:011S, 2 UCLA. 'II 7S. 3 LOYoia·MerYmounl, 6:27.29, ' UC lrvif!e, 613 21. S LOtlO !Madi Slalt , 6·.0..21 Verallv fou" I Or•noe Cotll, 6 53.06, 2 San Olaoo Slate 6 SJ 61. J UCLA, 6'413, ' Unlvenllv of Sen FranclKO. 6 6S 14, S UC Irvine, 67SSI JunlOI' "'"''" elonh I Or1nc>e Coe''· 6 03 3'. 2 UCLA, 6 16 00, l Lon9 BHCh Slale, 6 16 34, 4 UC Irvine, 62014 VertllV tf9ht1 I UC lrvlne. 6'01 "· 2 Long 8HCh Slele 6 02 II. l UCLA 6 10 SJ, f Sen Oleoo srete. 6 13 37 ANGELS • • • From Bl "°Smithson 1n favor of Pete Filson. Jones cracked Filson 's first pitch over the right-field wall. The Twins rallied in their half of the second on Mark Salas' three-run homer and Kirby Puckett's tw~run shot off Angels starter Ron Romanick, who was relieved by Bryden after the innmg. Puckett, who also singled three times, leads the majors with seven homers af'\er having hit just four 1n his first two major-league seasons. (lilPierce Brothers Bell Broadway Mortuary 110 8roedw1y Cona ........ 642-915 RUFFELL'S UPHOLSTERY INC. "'*'Yu Oellr Covwi Morel · m2 HMIO111.w .. com MrSA-~S-1156 SHOCKED! . .. .. '. . ~ AMERICAN AIRPORT TRANSPORTATION & LIMOUSINE SERVICE.. INC. 8uM1/ Mtnlbua/ llmoulln•• Stotlonwogon1/Von1/RV1 Door lo Door S.Nlc• Private Ctlort•ra and Toura I ·800·524 · 1300 AclYertblng Aa1 lerrio•• ~ ._h..n.Jc.t~. O..i.,. • i... .. 1C~et• ID ,_..._ •• "~ .. It .... c .. "'...,.~~ ... ,... GllAPlllCI lttWPOllT (1 14) 720·9191 tM "~ c-m 0. ,.__, a-.:t. CA ttM0 It also marked tbc 10th complete pme by UCJ (6-9 in confereo~. 17-12-2 overall) this eeuoo, The Anteattrl bad only four wt year. In the 1erica. UO pitchers com- bined to yield four n.101 (one earned), struck out 23 aod walked just m. 'J'.h.e Anteaten' staff entered the series wnb a 6.11 earned run averqe. Kel\t (7-S) waa in command throuJhout, rctirlna 14 of 1 S bitters and strikina out four atraiaht hit ten at one Point. He walked three and struck out seven overall. Pacific (S-10, 20-22) ecored an unearned run in the aecond inniQa.. but UCI answcrtd in the th1nS wilh tbe tyina marker on an RBl-ainale by Mike Byrne. The Anteaten took tbe lead for aood in the lixth, acorin& ~~es. Oene Roumimpcr led offwnh a~ and Ooua Kline walked. An infteld out by Frank Spates broup home the fl.ni run, Mike Supt's double made it 3-1 and Chris Ollleao delivered the final run of the ionioa with a bue bjt. Ocean View baseball team nearing title But Sea View still wide open entering this week's play Ocean View High's Seahawks are within an .eyelash of their second straight Sunset League baseball championship as a pack of con- tenders continue to take their shots this week. But in the Sea View Leque, there are four teams w1th1n one game of each other. University and Estaneta share the lead at 7-3 with Saddleback (6-3-1) and Laguna Beach (6-4) very much in the hunt. In volleyball, meanwhile, the open- mg round of the CIF 4-A playoffs 1s scheduled for Thursday, followed by the quarterfinals on Saturday. Pair- ings will be released Tuesday. lo swimming, the league finals arc scheduled for Sunset and Sea View League athletes. The Sunset finals are scheduled at Golden West College with the girls' prelims going on Wednesday, fol· lowed by the boys on Thursday, capped by a co-ed finals at the same site Saturday morning. The Sea View finals are slated for Heritage Park in Irvine with the boys going Wednesday, the girls on Thurs.. day and the co-ed finals on fnday, each beginning at 2 p.m. In tennis, the Sunset League's first two rounds are scheduled for Tues- day afternoon at Edison, followed by the quarterftna15 and semifinals on Wednesday and finals on Thursday at the Fountain Valley Racquet Club. Track and field..l meanwhile, winds down with the nnal week of dual meets before next week's finals. The big one is at Marina Wedesday afternoon when Edison v151ts. Bue ball Tueadey COLLEGE -Polnl LllfN t i Sou''*" Cat Coltalle, 2.30 COMMUNITY COLLEGE -Golden Wttl at CerrltO\, 2:l0; Sadelleback a l ~•nc>e Cott i, 2.lO HIGH SCHOOL -OcM n View e l Edlton el Mlle S<wtr• Pt r11. 1, Marine •I Fo...nlaln Vlllev. l IS; Wtllmlntltr el Huntlnoton Btaetl, l :lS. Woodbt'IOOt "' Colle Mete at Tewlnklt Perl!., 1. Wednet.day COLLEGE -UC lrvlM •I ~dine. 2:30 HIGH SCHOOL -Ellancle al ~POl'I Htrbor, l ,IS, S.dditbKk ti Laouna 8ffctl, 3 IS, Unlvanttv •I CorOC\a dtl Mar. 3 IS, lrvlne al Cal>lllrano Velttv. l Thundliy COMMUNITY COLLEGE -Or100t Coal! al GOiden W1tt1, 2:30 Fr1dlly COLLEGE -UC trvlnt II San JOM Slal•, 1 HIGH SCHOOL -Fountain V•W.V al Wttl· mintier, l.IS, Marina ti <>c.an vi.w. 3 IS, CorOC\a dtl Mer al Woodelf'~. l IS, Unlv•nlly al COiie MtM, l'lS, La~ 8ffctl a l E ttancla , l'lS, Ntwoorl Harbor t i ~C11. l 15, lrvlM al Dana Hiiis, J s.tunav Cot.LEGE -UC Irvine al Sen Jote Stilt, I, 8lola 11 Sou''*" Cal COl!tot (dOubltheadtf'I. noon COMMUNITY COLLEGE -Aanc:llO S.n· llaoo 11 Or1nc>e Coat!, noon. Golden Wttl 11 Cvweu. noon. HIGH SCHOOL -Hunllnoton e.ac,, •I Edllon, "°°" $4'nlllly COLLEGE -UC trvlM al Sen JC>M Slalt, I VoUeyball Tllffd9y HIGH SCHOOL -CIF wild c•rd o•rne•. T8A. Thundlly HIGH SCHOOL -CIF llrlt round, TBA P:f1d9y COMMUNITY COLL.EGE -Southern Cal 1teoi-11 ., Pierce, TBA S.tunl9y HIGH SCHOOL -CIF outrltnlnlll•, T8A Track and neld T..-v COMMUNITY COL.LEGE -SoYttl Coall Conference Pftllm• t i CtrrllO\, 1 w.-..v HIGH SCHOOL. -Mllalon Vlelo •I lrvlM (ol11•l. ); Hut1llnoton e..cri 11 Founlaln v..-v. ); Edlwn at Mart11a, ); Wftlmlntttt et OCNn View, ); MerlN at Edlton (oit'la), ); Fount.in v.-w 11 Hunllnolon IHdl, i; OCNn View •t WMlmfnlltr, ). ~y HIGH SCHOOL -NtWl)Ofl Hel'tlor al CorOC\a dtl Mar, J, Cotl1 Mew 11 E•l•ncla, l , l...atuN hid\ at Se~ 2:45; Woodbr~ a l UnlvartllY, 3 Pf1d9Y COMMUNITY COLLEGE -SO..ltl CO.ti Con!wat1ct f111a1t al Ctrrllot, 2 Saturday COLLEGE -N.-8altnct lnvlla1i-1 a l UC Irv IN HIGH SCHOOL -ArioeiU1 LA.-IH'lllml, ,_,TBA Strl..mm '"'1 Wedlnndly HIGH SCHOOL BOYS -SM vi.w LMOUt pre11m, 11 Htf'flavt P8rk, lrvlnt. 2 Tllur'lday COMMUNITY COLLEGE -Slete ,,,_,, T•A HIGH SCHOOL BOYS -SunYI LM°"" Of't llm' a l GolOtn Wn1 COlltOe, 2 HIGH SCHOOL GIRLS -SM View LMOUt Of'ellmt '' Htrllavt Park. Irvine. 2 flr1dlly COMMUNITY COLLEGE -Sl1ft !Mtl, TBA HIGH SCHOOL -S.• View L•aoue fln.11 •• Herltaoe Perk. Irvine, 2 S.twday COMMUNITY COLLEGE -Sr11e meet TBA HIGH SCHOOL -Sunsel LHOUt llnalt I I Gol<ltn Wttl COlltOf, 9 • m, T"91day COLLEGE tmenl -C-4 Poly ($LOI at UC 1rvlne, 1:30 HIGH SCHOOL -SUnMI L"9Ut rnrs1 ano MCond rounch) 11 Edlton, 1, Corone dtl MM •' Etlancla, J, NtwPO<l H•r'llOI' " UnlYtrlllY, 3. S.Odltt>edl If Woodbt'ioo., 3; C0\11 Mftl al LAouna !lffc:h. l Wednndly COL.LEGE -UC lrvlllt 11 UCLA. 1 HIGH SCHOOL -SunMt LHgve -r lwflnat• ..,,,lflnal1 al Founlttn V111ty Rae-• Club, 1 TIMlndlV COMMUNITY COLLEGE -Soulh Coe\I Conterenu tournamen1 If Rancho S.nllaoo CollM. HIGH SCHOOL -Sunwt 1..N9ut llnall al Foun11ln V•lltv llte<llJtl Clut>. I. P:f'ldlay COLLEGE (mtnl -UC lr-.lne 11 PCAA 1ournamtfll <kn Jowl COLLEGE (women) -PCM lovrnatNnl er UC lrvlne. COMMUNITY COLLEGE -SOuth Coal! Conftr'tnet 1ourn1men1 '' Rancho S.nfl•oo Co"'9a . HIGH SCHOOL -CorOC\a del M8r al WOOdbrfdoe, 3, Unlvaralty If Coa11 Mna, l, L.tl>Ullt e..ch •I E11ancl1, ); NtWPOl't H•rt>of 11 S.ddllOack, l , In.IN al Otna HUit, 3 S.turdlly COLLEGE (men) -UC lrvlnt 11 PCAA tourn."*lf (Sen JC>MI. COL.LEGE (women> -PCAA 1ournamen1 el UC Irvine COMMUNITY COLLEGE -Soutn Coeal Confwtnte 1ournamen1 al lltandlo S.nlltao ColltOt $4'ndlly COLLEGE l"*I) -UC lrvlnt 11 PCAA 1ovrnaman1 (San Jowl COLLEGE lwomtnl -PCAA lournamen1 t i UC lrvlnt Softball TedllY COMMUNITY COLLEGE -San Oleoo Mew al GOiden Wtit, ) TWl4ay HIGH SCHOOl. -Edllon ., Ocean vi..,, 3. HunllnolCNI 8MCtl el WMlmln11er, l , FCN1l1ln V111tv •• MArlna. l. w .... v COMMUNITY COLLEGE -Oranc>e Coal! t i GOldtrl Wttl, 1:l0. HIGH SCHOOL -UnlYtrlllY •I CorOC\a o.l Mir, 3; Ettanc;te •I Ntwl)O(f Htr~. ); WooodtlfldOt ., Coal• Mft8, l; LI0\1118 a..ctl •I S.ddltt>edt. 3; lrVIM ., C•l>l••••no V•llrf, ) P:rldlay COMMUNITY COLLEGE -G010tn WMt 11 SaddltOeQ, 3; Cvweu •I Oranoe Coetl, » HIGH SCHOOL -Corone dtl Mar 11 Woodbr~, l; l..89Ullt 8"c:tl at Ealltld8, 3. NewllOl't H1'11or al 580dllbldl, 3; Unlvwaltv 11 Cotti Mna, 3; trvlM •I ~ Hilt, l ; Edlaon ,, Hut1lltltlon 8eedl, l, 0CNn View •I Marina, l , Wtttmlftttar al Fountalt1 Vlllr(, 3 Cre• Sefwclly COLLEGE -Oranoe Coel l COlltoe, UC San Dteoo, UCL.A 11 hllona Cr-., LO\ Anoelet. 10 a.tn.; UC tr..lne, Lone !IMCfl Sl•tt al Ntwl)O(I a..cn. I a m Cobb-Tyson team takes Endurance ~ RIVERSIDE (AP) -The team of Price Cobb and Rob Dyson survived to capture the crash·filled Grand Prill of Endurance Camel GT sports car race at Riverside International Raceway Sunday. It was the fint v1ctory in the sencs for Dyson, 39. of Pleuant Valley, New York and the tcCOnd for Cobb 31, of DtJlu. Their Portehe 962 completed 178 laps and averaacd 9S.948 miles per hour over the 6 hours, I minute. 4S.423 tceonds of nicina. Second, a little more than a lap back, was the 8.F. Ooodrich-tl)Onaor- cd Porsche 962 of Darin Bruafield and West German driver Joc:beo Mus. Finish1na th a rd was the team of Bob Wollek of France. Paola Barilla of Italy, and Bruce Leven in a third 962. Pole.-sitter John Paul Jr , who tct a t ' qualifvina speed rcc0rd, was forced to the sidelines early because of mechan- ical problems. The ~ond-futest qualifier Geoff Brabham, drivina the Nissan OTP-ZX Turbo, hit the tum nine wall due to steerina problem~ early on. By lap 13, 11 was P«ul's tcamm.tc, Bob Lobenbera. wbo'bad the &cad in another Buick Hawk:. but Holben •took the lead on lap J2 and held 1t throuah the first hour. A m~or crash in turn one aovolved the Jquar XJR-7 of Chap Robinson. the Ford Mustana Probe of Lyn St James, and the COrvctte OTP of Doc Bundy All three driven walked away ftom one of the most horrific cruhcs an Rivenide f ntemat1onal Receway has· tory I FoR JHl Rf cnRD ~ • • "' MAJOlt LIAOUI IT....,...S ....... LAllllle WllT DM11011 W L ""-H It 7 An II t .J1f I ' ' .at , • ' C71 J • 11 A21 • 7 12 Ml s 6 II .lSJ s IAIT DMMOte 12 ' ... , ' • .m , ..... ' • .S2t , ..... ' • 529 2\lt ', ... , • 10 M4 • Miw91A• 7 ' All • .... .,SC.. .._1,MIMeeote 7 °'"611nd t, Hew Vorti 7 Toronto I, hltlmore o lotton at l(anM1 City, POcl., rain o.trolt •· Clllcatlo 1 r .... ,.Mllw...._2 OMllnd 1, S..ttta 0 TMllY't 8efMa No9afnat~ ,......,.,..,,_ ~ al TorOlltO, n Mlnnatola et Hew VCW1L, " 1(-City at Detroit," S..ttta ., lotton, " a.it""°" at Clllcaeo, n Cllwland al Tau1, n Oeklend at Mllwauk•, n New York Nia de ID Illa SI. l.Ouh ~ ~ Cl'llcaeo ......... Uetue WIST OfVISIOM W L ll s 11 7 10 • 1 10 7 13 s 10 IAIT DIVlllOtt 11 l 7 • 1 • • 1 7 ' ' ' ,...,..sc- DMilllrl 7, Allan la 4 PltttOurlll 13, Ptilledelptlle 5 Clllceoo l2, MontrHI 10 New voni s. St. Louis 3 Howton 6, Cincinnati 0 Safi Olaoo '· Seti FrancllCO • T•V-1 ..,,_ Pct. 01 m .611 2 .ll6 , .•12 Sl'°J .350 7 .3l3 ...... .7" .467 ...... M 1 4\IJ .M2 • ..., .... s 400 S1h Plllt0ur9h (l(locaer 0-1) ., DMilllrl Ill allmuela 2-1). n St. L..ouls (Ownbey 1-1) et s.n FrllftcllCO (Gerreltt M ) Clllceoo (Sandonon 1-11 01 Sen Olaoo ( Hawtllftt 1-2). " ,......,..~ Pill'°'6911 al DMilllrt, n New Vof'k 11 Atlanta, !WI Howton at ~. n Montr ... at Clftdnnall. n Clllcaeo ot Seti Oleeo, " St. Louil at Sen Frandlc:o, n AM•RtCAN L•AGU• ........ ~7 CALM'O.NtA llWINllOTA c.-... ........ arlllll •r11111 5 I 1 0 Puckett cf 4 2 • 2 S l 3 2 HelCN cll'I 4 1 1 0 l 1 1 0 Hrtlek lb 4 0 0 1 5 1 32 lrnmky rl 4 111 000 0 lcMtf llOO 0 00 1 Geefll)b •O OO • o o o Salac > l 1 3 4 l I 0 l.mtll'ctl 2t> J I 2 0 S022 ~Pll 0 0 0 0 5 I 1 1 Sanchetpr 0 000 •0 2 0 Gaonau 3 00 0 ... "'"' 1 000 • 114 I T..... aJ 7 t 7 Sair'f 1111¥ ...... tat ---· ____ , • " ..... to 2 5 S 5 1 1 S 4 t t I • I•) 0 0 I 0 I IM 0 0 I I 2 I l•J S • 4 I 1 0 2 1 1 0 0 , l·l ' , J 0 , 4 I•) 1 0 0 I 1 Flllon pltefled 10 J Detten In Ille Znd. HIP-Jovnar by ,!hon. UlnP!ru llome, c_..., FINI, P.Wmo; S«:ond. v-.1 Third, K•IMI'. T-2:4S. A-15.12'. ~.,,.... ... IATTMO Al • N .. ., 12 21 s 26 • 11 • I016t7 5 ... 5 14 0 '71510 s 71 t 11 > O I 11 0 70 ' 1' 0 Jl s 7 ) M 5 12 2 (7 1' 10 2 26 2 s 0 26 4 5 2 7 I 1 0 '4S 117 17' Jl "'CHING ... "ct. lJ M 7 7 .al 12 .m ' .l04 II .2" 13 .2W s .%)4 • .m s .m • .m ' .213 2 .1'2 , 1'2 1 .143 1f2 .J76 lfl H H 10 W·Ll"A C«Wll t •h S S 6 0-0 U3 Font« • l 2 J 1-0 US Witt 2? 2.S I tt 2· 1 U7 McCat.kll 2S'I) It 11 20 2'-1 2.M Moor• 10 s 3 11 1-0 "° 519ton 2S 2.S ' 14 2-1 ,_,, lrvden l~ 13 10 11 2-0 •.30 Romank:k 2• 23 10 15 2·1 4 .. Forldl t 11 4 f 0-1 1.00 Sutton 11'.'.I 71 7 12 0-2 10J1 Candelarla 2 • l O 0-0 11.00 T..... 1~ 1'2 '7 12J 12·7 U4 Sevet: ~· •, Forldl 1 NATIONAL L•AGU• o.dllr'I 7 I .,.,,.. 4 ATLANTA LOS ANOILU Samolerf ltarnlnu MNifpfiy cf HorMr lb ...,_If McMrtryp SI'""'"' lll °'*1(ft)b ATnomtu WardP "'°'""° Pl'I lanadlct c Cnmt>tt Pl'I HUObrd2b Umltbp Wlhlltn rt T ..... •rlllll abrlllll • l 2 0 Sex 2b S O ) l 4 2 32 Ouncenu 4 11 O l 0 0 0 Cebell lb l 0 1 I • 0 2 0 lrock lb l 0 0 0 200 0 Manllalrt • 110 00 1 0 Cadenocf 3 110 2 0 0 1 L.endrll cf I I 1 1 , 0 1 0 Trevino c • 1 1 0 l 0 0 0 llt14MI If l 1 l 2 0 0 00 Andtsnlb 31 2 2 I 0 l 0 lteut1 p J 0 1 0 J 0 1 0 Nladnf\lr p 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 4 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 l 0 0 0 M 411 J T ..... ,. 7 lJ 1 sar..w..__ ..... 112 •1 llt-4 L.a.,_.. 111 • nx-1 Gome Wltlnlne It II -I . It 14MI ( I). E-$a1t. OP-Lot Anotltt 2. LO&-Atlenta S, Lot AllMIH 6. 21-HUbllard, Travino. Hll-ttamlret (2), UndrMU• (2) Sl-Ouncan 2 Ct>. e . RU&Mlt <•>. S-2 Slnlln, I . Rut .... N~ ....... L Smltn L, 1-2 MeM4irtrv Ward La ......... ll-•W,1-0 NladttlflN S. 2 lelk-Werd IP H ltl•laSO J 2 3 • s s l 3 l 0 0 0 2 • 2 2 0 , 9 3 2 I 2 2 1 1 0 0 Umolr..-Horna, Tela, Flrtt, Crewtord, s.cond, C. Wllllamt; Tlllr<I, Wtn<lellledt T-2:21. A-46,221 100's. 17 mg. "tar".1.3 mg. nicotine: Light 100's. 11 mg. "tar''. 0.9 mg. nicotine. Kmgs. 17 mg. "tar''. 1.2 mg. nicotine: Menthol Kings. 18 mg. "tar". 1.2 mg. nicotine: Light Kings. 10 mg. "tar", 0 .8 mg. nicotine av. per cigarette by FTC method Basad on manul1Cru1or's !UOQOSlld rete~ pore Puces oarionat W1th P<1ff('llJlllllQ retailers ) ~ flCAA UCllrlW6,~1 ~ .,. -...-1 J 3 UC tr'tN •1 m .._. 10 J ....._, a--m. "*"" <•> aM Ortb; Kent and Kh. w-«ent, 7·~ L~. •H . ,._Tttuftl (,.), a.Ille (UCI), klNI' (UCI). Cmtl• ICOllll flilalk·lt UCLA 14 Ari-lJ (UCLA ._. ,..c· 10 wllll lS-t r-.t wtlfl II• ...,_ to NY. UCLA II JHO owrtl. MJOM k , ..... M-1'), • USC )O, llllWd 1 (US( II t2·U, U·D. llaMot"d Ii 1'" IO, 2'-tt). Arl\ON Slate 7, C9lltorflla 6 COflttLt:MINITY COLUO• ...,. c-tt c••• •• W L H Ota.-Coatl 17 1 .endlO SanliHO I> • • 0--. W.1 11 • 6\lt Fulwton II t 6lit c~... IO 1 7 («Tllo. ' 10 t \lt Ml. SM Antonio 1 12 IOYll Seddlabecll ' 1) 11 \It Cometton O It 17...., ,......,., 0-. (J:JI) ~S.tlCldci.&11.e.-.1c:11c:11 ti Oranoe Coe11 GOiden Wt11 et c:arrhoa Fullerton ti CvtWau ltandlo SafttiHO al Mt. San Antonio ~· 0.... (21Je) OranM CoMI al GoNln Wnl CYIWft• t i s.d lllilt I'* CefTltot ., ltandlo SafttiHO Ml. Sen Antonio al Compton ~·---<-> ltancho &Mtlaeo el 0rMea C-t Golden W•I al (ypreu ~ at 'utltr!O!I Compton at CKrlto1 HIGH SCHOOL ,..... u..ue W LT Ga OcMn View Hunllntlon IMdl Marina Wt1lmln11« Fountain va...-, EdllOll t 2 I ' s 0 2\lt s ' 0 3Yt s ' o av. 4 6 I • • 7 0 '"" TueMll't'• 0.-0cNn Vltw t i Hunt'"91on l..c:ll (l:lSI w .. 1mlntt• al MMINI (3:15) Edlton "'" Fountalft Vallrt t t Miit SQuere Pertl (7 P.11\.) ,.,_.., 0.-(k1S) Merine •• OcMll View ,_ Fountain v....., •I Westminster SatuNIY'I 8enl9 (-) Hunllnolon IMd1 •I EdllOll See View u..ue W LT GI Unlvtrlllv 7 3 O E1tancle 7 3 0 s.ddlllOack 6 3 1 \IJ L.--IMctl 6 • 0 I ,.._., H9'tlor S S 0 2 c-del Mar 3 6 1 3\l:i WOOdbrldoe J 7 0 4 Cottt MtM 2 I o S TueMll't'1 0-(7) WOOdbrldoe v.. Cotta Mele a l TtWlnkle P•rk W.._.'t'I 0-(JtlS> Unlvw1ltv al '°'-del MAr E1tancle •I NtwPOrt HW'bor SadClllMci al ~ IMctl "'*Y'• ..,,_ (JtU) cor-del MM at WOOdbrldoe Uni~ at C4ttla Mfte ~ IMctl at E1tande Newoon Herbor at SeddlaDeck s..tll C•lt LAe9Ue W LT 01 lrvl~ a I O Minion Vltio 6 I 0 l Cepl11r-Vellev 6 3 O 2 LffUM Hllh J • I • 0 -Hllh 2 • 1 411: El Toro 3 • o s Sen Clamtnlt 0 t 0 I W~1CO.-UI Irvine at Ce9!1trano Vtllr/ El Toro et o-HIM• Ml111ott Vltlo al Le-Hiit """""'' 0-(J) lrvlnt t i Dena HIM1 Ceol1trano llalltY at Minion Vlllo ~ Hlltl at s.n ClerMnte ............... IUllOAY"t altULn (Ill .. .,..,,, -.......... , ftlllT llAC .. OM m1L ~ <McClWrefl) .... ,. 2M Miii_,.... (,..._.) SM UO Air Force ...., (C•tenolll uo nm.; l:JI Ill MCOMO 11ACa. 6 ""1onft. lfeo lluca IMcCMron) Ut 1'0 UO Native .... ty (9ildl) 711/0 .... Fr~ l~Ytl JM Time: 1:1i llS. ti D•Y D0Ue&.m IN ) Hid t\MO, II •XM:T A <J-1> Mid t.31.20. ~ RACa. 1141 ,,..., E..,_ IC.'-l lUO 7M 00 l.Wl!Mwe~ (Hftuwal UO SAO .Jolty Joell (DtW-•tave) l..40 ~ 1:52. U IX.ACTA (M ) 1191411241.00. ~"" llAC8. ' ""'°""' ComparMl!lfy (Ml:Ct'll) UO J.00 2.20 Clllck Or T-(fl1naiy) S.00 UO Fallllon OvnMIY (S'-"aker) 2.20 Tlmt: l:IO J/S. IS IX.ACTA (2-4) Pelcl 116.50. flwnt RACa. 6 furtanf&, Gotdv'• COll'Wldlr ( VlrW) 6.20 4.20 1JO Don•1 Oelllfty (~W) UO ~ Le ltlcaln (Mceerron> J.20 Time: 1:11. IS IX.ACTA (7-10) N ici 115'.!G. llXTM uca. • turlOtln. Ital D9ll (MceemMI) 2UO 7.60 SAO O.Vll'1 Ice (Mau) >.40 UO NorlMrn VMlr (VetalUUllal 00 Time: 1:10 2/5. u •XACTA <M> Mid m u o MWNTM UCL 1141 IT\llal on turf leton ,.._ CMc.C.arron> 17..60 uo UO Gen'lon (~) l .00 UO Wiil SOr1nl (DelehoulMye) UO Time: 1• )/5. IS Ix.ACTA (1·4) Nkl 1137,00. Sf f'tCec SIX C>-1-2·7 or 4·7·1> H id U 1,513.IO 10 llw winning tickets Cthc llOr ... ). t2 Pica Sia conlOlttlon Hid 1176.40 IO 16' wlnnlne lldlet• (five l'IOf'MI). llOHTH RAC•. One mlle. Skvwalter (Plncay) uo 4..60 2.AO SetlOna (Mceerronl uo tAP Al ~ (llaltnNtfe) 2.10 Time: 1 ::14 415. IS IXACTA (5'-7) Ptkl1110UO. NINTH ·~c•. I 1/1' mllel on tur1. Gouraml (Vtllntutla) 11.40 6.40 UO E,,_dorl (Toro) S..60 4.00 Tuotne WOOd IMcCarron) UO Time: 1:4. IS IXACTA (1-3) paid SllLOO. All~ 2t,2AO. GtMd""-.......... (at.,,.,....., Tiit io. nnls11tn Sunday In IN ~ Prix of El'C!Uranca Cemtl GT -'I QI' race el It~ lnl4r'rwtlonal •-•Y (lndudlftt drtvert' '*""· QI' "'"· leM comCllltad, pUt'M !Ind w!Mer'• • .,,., ... t"9d In mlltl "" hOur): I. It~ Ovton, Price Cobb. Ponc"9 "2. 111, SM,SOO. tS.'41 mph, 2. Darin lraMfleld, JocNn MaSI, WHI Gwmany, Ponche "2, 1", SlS,400. l. lrucl L.even, loCI Wol6tk, Fr..-, Paola a.rtlla, Italy, Por1dlt "2, 17', 110,000. .. loCI Akin, J-w .. ,,.,.. ~Idle "2, 170, 17 .soo S. Ja<* leldwln, Jim Ma.., CIWVfoltt C.rnaro. 161, SlO,SOO. '· J im Adami, John Holchkll, Ponche Mardi, ue, 14,250 . 7. SColl Pruett, 81'\Q Jenn«, Ford Muttane. 16', S7,700. .. Jin! Oownlne. John ~. Maida Areo. 1'3. '7.SOO. TIMMIS Maf"9 Certe °'*' (atMMl9C8fta.~) ..... ,.. Joeklm Hntrom (Swedall) -YaMlck Noell IFrancal. 6-l, 6-2 (HYt!rom wlM ISl.500, Noell Wint Of.MO). ~ .......... ,.. (at La Mllllll> Mml'• • '*"""' <>-Malln (lell Canvonl def. Dan 8otlannon COraneel, 6-7, 7·S, 7-S Mm!'• 41 Dtwllltll Gordon Davis (SM!a Monka) WI loCI Dueller (Nawpot't leedl). 7-6, ..... Mm1'•1S ~ .. Cone! (~I dlf. L-d Owortlln (Gtendaia) ..... retired. ......... DMlllll lar'tlera ~ 11..e Joie) dM SallV ,,,,_.. HUU (trvlnal, H , H , 6-l. Ollll ......... COMMUNfTY COU.al WOMmN 0...."111111 lredl!OUN·Ponca IF~ton) def aro.-11err11 car-eo..o ... ,. 6-2. ~ >· ..... , WWW Atlanta at lotlOfl flt! ....... , Mllw9ull.eit Wll*tlfOAY"I eAliM ...,.c1•-0e1et•t ~ Llhrl 1-. Mnerda n• DALLAS (1'6, -A"*'9 .. lJ H W. "9rillnt ._17 H I, ~ ._. f.11 17, llldltnall S-1• 1-1 11, ...,...., Mt H 11. VlnCllllt 6-14 6-7 ll, ~ l•J H I. Sdw'9nwf 4-f '"' '· £111 S-7 w ... WIMlnetoft M H 2, lleo 2-l H 4 T.,.: 0 ·'7 26-J3 116. UKUI (Ult) -• .,,,.. l •"f H J. WorltlV 10-15 J-4 2J, ~,,..._. 11·11 4•S 21, JoMtan 6-10 H 1', 5cofl •W H 2', CooMr .... M 12, ~ 1-W H 1', ~l-2H2,0.......HHI. McGee M H 2, Kl.IKMll H 2-f t T-..a; U-15 2 ... M IJO. s-.. .. °"""" Delea f1 Jl • it-11• Lekan lO M 1t &-t• Tllr~t ~lls l , GooMr 2, HtrHf'. Fouled out-NoM. ••~ ~ Oellat I 1 (Doneldloft 10), LMler'I 4S (LUCM ti. AMltt-o.IM f7 (Hal'Mr ,), LeMr1 J2 (~ 14). Tofal ~ 22, L...aQn 2'. A-17,515. -~· 11~1 I IAllllALL. ._._L-.- MINHESOTA TWINS-,,..._, Frw* Pastore, oltc:IW. Set o-111 lwtl, ~. lo Tota60 of IN In"' MtlcwW Ltelua. ........ L.-.. ST. LOUIS CA•D4NAU nt1Qe1 Jeff Lehtl, pll(Mr, on IN lS-CS.Y........,"' ratrollctlve IO Tllundey, A#I 2A. lltc8lled ~ a.r-. ~.from L..ouhvtle crf tM Amer1can AMOdetton. SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING : ~making By Pregnant Women May Result rn Fetal Injury, Premature Birth , And Low Birth Weight . ' I .. I I I , I ~ ... Mets completesweep. New York extends wtn stre to nine With 5-3 triumph hem AP 411.,.&c*n ST. LOUlS-The New York Meu keep winnina. John Tudor and the St. Louis Cardinals arc the latest to be swept away. Kevin Mitchell and Tim Teufel htt home ruru and the Mets extended their winning streak to nine games S.Uday by t>eauna the Cardinals, 5-3. The tnumph completed a fou.r- game sweep in St. Louis and pinned the loss on Tudor, who lost for only the second time in his ldt 25 rqular- season decisions. Bob qieda. 3-0, scattered nine bjts for the victory and scot St. Louis to its seventh straight loss. The Mets swept the Cardinals in a four-game scnes for the first time sinoc 1979. TeufeJ connected for a two-run shot 1n the fifth inning that gave the Mets a 5-2 lead. ··1 just got caught up thmlung futball and at the last second threw a changeup instead," Tudor said. "People make mistakes, but there's a time when mentaJ mistake$ can't be tolerated. (Catcher) Mike Heath wanted a changeup, and I knew he wantcdachangeupand twas thinlung fastball." Tudor, 3-1. was trying to win his 15th straight regular-season decision. which would have ued a team rttord The defeat was Tudor's first in the regular season since last July 20 against Los Angeles, and his first at Busch Stadium since April 22. 1985. against the Mets. Teufel's first home run of the season put the Mets in charge. "It felt good, because before that 11 was a 3-2 game. They'd just scored a run," Teufel said. "That changed the momentum, and after that they had to play catchup. John pitched a good game. Everything until then was down. but I hit a pitch that was up ·· Mitchell led off the fourth WJth his first major-league home run. sparking a three-run rally that put the Mets ahead. Haw Yo.ti< Mllchell SI S.ntene u TeuNI 1t> Hrnndr 11> Ce.rt ... c Strwwv ri FIKl ... lf I( nlefll 3t> Dvtutr• d Oieda D T.-. .Orllbl • 7 'l I 1 0 0 0 3 i I 2 ' 1 1 0 4 1 0 0 4 0 1 1 4 0 2 I 4 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 • 0 0 0 * ST.LOUIS Cotemenlt OSmllhU H«r 1t> JCllrk lb McGMcf Lencvm rf Pndllll 31> HMlh c Tudoro Whtteon WOrTlll O Hurdle on lS S 7 t T...n SC-b\I ........ 11> r II bl • I 2 0 4 0 I 0 4 0 I l 4 I I I 4 I 7 l • 0 0 0 4 0 1 0 • 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 i 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 » ] ' ] New Yt'11 000 no 000-S St. UWlt 100 100 010-l Geme Winning RBI -Strewl>efrv (21 E-Teufel, 0 Smith DP-H-York I L~ Yoril S. SI Louil 6 2&-H«r. Strewtierrv HR-Mltctle4! (I), Teufel (II. McGft m. J Clark (l l 59-<~n (61, Pendleton 1 141 ,,. "•••••so .... v.- Olede W,l-0 9 t ) l 0 ? StUuti TudorL.l·l 7 5 S 3 0 l WON'lll 2 2 0 0 I 0 H8P-TIUNI by Worrell Urr14>1rn-Home. A_,...t, FlrJI Brocktenoer. Second, Montague; Tlltrd. waver T-7 IS, A-39,1'3. Padres6, Gla.nts4 SAN DIEGO -Ton}' Gwynn hit two homers and drove in three runs. leadmgSan Diego past San Francisco. Gwynn, who went 3 for 4, singled 1 n the first inning as San Diego took a 1-0 lead. G~n hit a two-ruo homer m the third mning and added a solo shot. his third of the season, in the seventh for a 6--0 lead. "Hopefully it will contmue. not the home runs, but hinina the ball bud," said Gwynn. who went into the p.mc biruna .282 and raised bjs t.tt.ina averqe to .307 by the end. "I'm petfcCtly content to be a Punch 'n Judy hitter. I don't want to be a home RlD hitter. I think wl\lt I do best is ictlina on bese and scori na runs." A look at Gwynn'a rcoord the la.st two years proves he's riahL ln 1984 and 1985 Gwyno led the Padres in hits, and iast year he led the team in runs scored WJth 90. Padres Manager Steve Boros thinks Gwr.nn 's future may hold a few prnes similar to Sunday's. "That's somethmg you're not going to look for, but as he acts older, and a mature hitter, I think you'll sec more of that." * SAN 'llANC:ISQO IAAt ot•GO Gleaoefl Cf WCle" II> Cllrown JI> L-rdlf CDevh rf LaCouo 8ren/Vc RT"°"' 2t> Dl'leWI Oii Urlbeu Ynol>IO Oii Kf'Ukow o Mefvln Oii Lelll.vo Mldndo rf T ..... Mrlllll 3 ' 0 0 3 1 1 0 • 0 0 0 ) 0 2 0 4 0 0 I 0000 )0 0 0 , 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 ) I I 0 I 0 0 0 1000 I 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 I 1 2 Kruk If WYMllcf Gwynn rl Mettvld cf K~c T"°""'" •• ... lllft3t> lo<v 11> Ge,.,.., 11> Flannrv 2b Ofe\tdlr o Stoelderd o Gouege p n • S l T.-.. ic-bV ""*"" .. >rllbl 4, 1 0 0 0 0 0 • , l J • 0 0 0 • 0 0 I • 1 1 0 3 I 1 0 4 0 1 I 0 0 0 0 ) 0 1 I ' 0 0 0 0000 0000 »••• San fll"Mdto<• 000 -040-4 Saft '*99 102 101 IOll-6 Geme WIMlno Riii -Kennedy (2), E~. "T'hotn9son .... '""· LO&-S.n Fren· clsco 5, Sen Dle9o 4 28-f<rutl HR-(;wvnn 2 (3), Maldonedo m ~ Htt1uteaso S...fl~ Krukow L,3· l Le$1tev LeCou San'*-9 s t I s • 4 2 0 0 3 I J 2 0 2 0 0 1 Dr•vedtv W,2 I 1 1·3 S 4 l l 4 SIOdderd 0 0 0 0 I 0 Got .. ge S,3 I 2·l 0 0 0 0 I StOCSO.rO ollched to I t>eller In tlle 1111. UmolrH-Home, Kll>lef, Ffrll, D•Muth, Second. Me,.h, Third, DevlOson T-2.IS. A-2S,799 Astros 6, Reds 0 HOUSTON Bob Knepper pitched a four-hitter and became Lhe National League's first four-game winner. leading Houston past Cincin- nati. Knepper, 4-0. struck out four and walked two. The Astros have won 10 of their last 12 games. John Denny, 1-2, toolc the loss. He pitched four innings a.nd gave up six hits and five runs, three of which were unearned. CincmnatJ made four errors in losing tts third straight game and for the seventh lime in its last eight games. The Astros toolc a 2-0 lead in the first mning with the help of <wo Cincinnati errors. Bill Doran led off with a sin~ took third when shonstop tillwell misplayed Craig Reynolds' grounder. CINCIHHATI EDevl' cf Pow.,o Slllw"u Parker rl Ew~v lo T Jonel H Beff lo BDlar c Oest« 2t> Def'lllVD Cncocn on Price o p.,.ez lb T..-S * '41rlllll • 0 1 0 0000 4 0 0 0 4 0 I 0 ) 0 0 0 '0, 0 l 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 ) 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 l 0 0 0 HOUSTON Oof'en 21> CRenlCIJU Crur If Hetctlet'" GDevls 11> Ben d W•Hlng)O Puhl rf W•tker ct MlltrOCk C KnePPef o JO 0 4 0 Tet.h k•• bV ""** ••trlllll S 1 7 I • 2 1 I J I 0 I 0000 ) 0 2 0 • 0 1 0 l I 1 I J 1 I 0 0 0 0 0 l o 11 o ' 0 0 0 CWlnN!tl 000 000 000-0 Heu"9n 211 100 Olx-4 G•me Winning ltllt -Cruz CU E-Sllttwelf. Oest., Perker B Diez, Doren OP-<lnclnnett 1 Houston I LO&-<lnclnnell s. Hou,ton 1 2B-W•Nlng HR-< R•vnolds ell S8-0oren (I) SF-W•ltlng IP' II A Ellt 88 SO Ondnnetl O.nnv L.1·2 Price Powtf' Heu1'9n Kn-rW,•·O 9 UmotrH-Home, Davi•, Second, Stello, Third, Grevv T-706 A-17.ll S 6 s 2 7 0 0 0 0 1 3 1 1 I 1 I 4 0 0 2 • First Har vet' CalM 12, Bqo11JO CHICAGO -Jody Oavu drove 1n five runs with two bomen, iocJudi"4 a arand ala.en. and Steve Cbriatmu pinch-hit, two-run double in the eighth innina Uf\cd Chica&o to a wild victorr. over Montreal. Tra1li1119-7, Davis rut a·solo home run with one out in the eiahtb innina off Jeff Reardon, 2-2. C6ris Speier, who earlier bit a two-run homer, sm&Jcd and Jerry Mumpbrcy fol- lowed with a pinch-sinaJe Christmas then hit bis two-run double, Shawon Dunston followed with an RBI double and Leon Durham added a run-sco"°' sinalc. The Expos scored in the runth on a passed ball on Davis. * MONT1'aAL CHICAGO RalnH" Wabtlef cf Dewaon rl 8roolt• •• Wellacfl lb GelaNt 11> Lew 21> Fltt-IOC Mc:Gttvn" Scntidr p JThOMI Oii R .. roon o Riley 11 T.-1 eltrlllll 4 2 I I s 3 , 0 3 1 1 0 5 2 'l ' ' 0 0 l 4 1 , l ' 1 3, • 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 o.r11terd Chrstm Ofl Holfmnpr lkller p BoMeylf Oumtonn Sndbr'v 211 Mor.tnd rf Out'lvTI lb Cev lb TrillO 30 JDevl\ c $09lw IS L-lf Trout o Ruthven o MUIWVcf 171012 t T ..... laf'llb¥ ......... elttll• • 0 2 0 I 0 1 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 • 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 S 1 I 0 3000 A 1 1 I 2 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 ' J l 5 3 1 2 2 0 1 0 0 'l 1 I 0 1 0 0 0 1 I I 0 ,. 11 14 12 MMtrMI •• -•1-10 CHc.aee -412 05•-12 Geme WIMlno lt81 -CllrlllmM (1). DP-MonlrMl 1, Chlceoo 2.1.0&-Monlrffl. Chlceoo 5. 2&-tAw 2, S.td18or11, Trout. Bo"8v, llr(l()l(J, Dunston, 0.W10fl Hlt-4leinH C?I. J Devis 2 (2), Lew (1). SC-W (1), 8foolla C•l Mentr'MI McG1ff19en k tialztOef RMroon L,2·2 ltllev CHc.aee ... Htt••••SO • 4 ) . l ·3 • M 2 s 5 2 2 • 4 I I , s I I 0 0 I 0 Trout \ 5 2·3 1 4 • 3 4 R utllven J 2 3 3 3 1 O Fontenot w, 1·0 1 1·3 O O O o O Belter S,2 l 1 1 0 0 1 McGefflgen Ditched lo 2 oellers In the Slh Hllp......c.y l>v McGeff!Mn. P8-J Devis Umofrtt-+fflme, Enoel. Flrll, Quick, S.Cond, RUll99. Trilro, Pallone. T-3-01 A-lO,l'lS. Pirates 13, Pldllles6 PITTSBURGH -Bill Almon doubled twice and homered and drove in four runs. highlighting a 15- hit attack that powered Pittsburgh past Philadelphia. The Pirates. in brcakjng a five. game losing streak, struck f~>r seven runs in the second inomg against Steve Carlton. 1-3. The outburst included two hits. one a two-run double by Almon. and three of the Phillies' five errors m the game * .. Hl'-ADaL .. HIA P'ITTS8utt C. H GGronl1 Jemes It MTllmo cf HevH 11> Sdlmdl ll> Lefeovr r1 GWllsonn Deullon c A11uevo2b JeOZ U Cerllon 11 HUdson Of' Slew•rl o L809 Oh Andenn o T"1ltl •I>, 11111 2 0 I 0 2 0 0 0 4 0 2 I • 0 0 I '0 0 0 2 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 s 0 0 0 l 2 I 0 l I 0 0 3 I 7 2 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 RRVkh cf Morrlan 30 Almon 31> Rav 2t> MBrownrl MDleztf Or\ulek cf TPena c &reem 11> s.ltlerd n BleMdllo P•lleon o Wetko 1S S 1 4 TMlW• kenbv~ ebr 11111 6 0 I 2 0 I 0 0 s 1 3 • s 0 0 1 4 ? , 0 4 I I 0 I I I I 4 1 3 I 3 2 I I S I I I 2 l 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 I 2 I 41 ll IS 12 P"Nladallltlie 010 10'1 000-s ~ 070 100 osx-u G•me WlnnlllO RBI -None E-Havu. A11uavo 2, Schmidt, BrMm, Rev LO&-Phlleoetonle io. Plllll>urllh 11 2&-Atmon 2. T Pene 2, M. TllOmOM>n, Well< 2. M Brown l&-A11uevo HR-Almon (3) S&-Atmon c ll llrMm (11 S--Bleleel<I SF-Almon, H8Yfl P'Mlod ..... >la Certton L.1·3 Stewert Andtf'..n ~ IP H It alt e• SO • J 4 l 0 0 I 1 S S 0 I llleteci<I W, 1·0 S S 4 S 3 Petterson 2·3 O O O 1 WatkS,l 31·3 1 0 0 0 1 Bielecki ollcri.d to 2 bellerl In Ille 61h HBP-A11uevo l>v Blelec.kl 8elt.-Bleleckl 1 T-245 A-17,21' Professional golf scores Houlton ()per, lef Tllil W.....,.., T•11ea) 274 ~ Curtis Slrel!Oe. 190,000 12·61·1>1 t.6 Calvin Pftte. \5'.000 4S·70·70-69 Tom Wahon, ~.ooo m D•vld EawerdJ. 110.6'7 Bruce Lletzlle. '20,667 Jav HHl, S20,667 -P.vne St-ert l 16 11S 0oug T•w .. 1, s ''· 11s ., Charles Bolllng. s 17 SOO Len11le Clements, s 12 ,soo llrl•n CIHr, S 17,SOO Bttt Gtenon. '12.soo CretO'Sl•dler. 112.500 Nick Prl~. $9,SOO Chlo &«II. 11 lSO PlllllP Perkin. ll,7SO wevne Greov. ll,2SO Nick FetOO. ll,2SO as Donnie Hammond 16.060 Mlkt Sullivan, 16,060 Mike Oo<\eld, M,060 Ml-• HIA>erl, M.060 Sttve Pete, M,060 Fr en• Conner, M.0'4 Merl\ Hevn, M,OiO Gii M« .. n, M,050 Mow•r<I T wlll'f, M,OiO DeYtd llro11. M.OiO Merl\ llroolla, M.0'4 Miiie .. eld. S),2'° D1¥1d ~In, $3,250 Wllllf WOOd. ll.250 COl'ev Pevln, s2,304 Lennv Wedi< Int, t1 ,304 I red 'axon, s?.JCW Steve EllllntlOll, 12,304 kOOv Cletneiell, s?JOA 1'ntonlo CercUt, n .JCW - "' Oave It llfl'W'MM, s U 'OO L-ro T"""-". Sl 100 ., .. , u-. t l,700 )Kii Nlcllle\K, Sl.700 JoM ~. 11,700 JONI Adetm, tl,700 1'1 Rod Curt, Sl.757 .>GM Me<.Otn"". I I 1S1 c.rv Hd:lert, S 1,251 OeN~--.t1H7 69·61·1>1 71 73·71·66-69 61-n -11-111 61 70·67 ,. 4'·73 It 67 11·70 71 61 73., n-10 n -69·72·69 1•·11·61 10 17·71 70·69 611 10 11 n n 11 7J " n 73.10-'' 6S·12 10 11 .. 60 70 11 n n 10 10 1S 43·74·1) 1) 11 11 10 67 n 12·1• 10-11 ·n n n 11 10 n n ·6' n n 10 13-11 n 10·11 n n n 10 n 12 11-11 n n 11nn11 7'0-1S· 11 11 n-n"" ff-76-11 n tt-n-72·7• 10-n-n -14 10-74-70-7~ n-10-n·14 71.,,.....,. 11 .,, • .,.,.n 11·70-7J-7S n ·7'-1l·n 14....,..19 n•n ·7>n ... .,, . .,,.,. n·n·n-n 11-1.-1•·11 11-10-11-1• .. , .. .,,.,. ,,.,.1s-n , ...... 7 .. ,, ,,_.....,S-7• JC Sneed, '1.1S1 Don Poolev. l 1.1 S1 R lck Daloo~. s I, I 4S Tom Kit•, S 1, 14S David Lundatrom s 1.10 Geor~ Burnt. Sl.10 Ronnie Bleck,' I, 10S Rooert LOllr, S1, 10S Tom Slecl<,,.,.nn. SI IOS Bred 8rvent I I, 10S LovGretiam, sl,070 Bi.lne McCellltter. s 1,0?0 Blllv Plerot, S 1.010 Pet Br1<11ev, '30.000 1sne1 COlel, s 11.SOO Jane Cr ell« '13,SOO Bttw King, '1 f1S Cethv Krelz«I. 17,'7S Jen SteofM!laon. s7,f7S llelsv llerre11 '1 t7S Leu<t<I HOWi, 14.100 Amv 8en1, "'·700 LMI Garb<teJ, M,100 Mindv Moon. Sl,I07 11> ,,, - •1 Jl'J 2IJ Jo.t.11ne Carllt'. s.),507 .. 0.0 llllCtierd, SJ, 107 Marthe NeuM, SJ, 107 K•lh'f WllllWOl'lll, s.), 107 as Wllvn ~111. 11.6S7 J-t Andenon. S1,4S7 Kelll11 ••• .,. U, l)S Ot!llN Stf'90ie, S1, IJS S.U. lllOOlemM, 12, llS o ... E .... lnt. IL llS ClndV Hll, U, l)S 8efll Otnlel, ., • ~~ Sllellev Hamlin, u. 1a5 lAUl'le lt11*•. l2.1)4 ANllOll "Mt'I, tt, 1)4 .. Mlltl !dlfe, si,707 SteriMllle F erwto. s U07 COllMtl we111 .... 11.101 -~ Mroffl(s, , ,_. ..... Solornoft. "·* OeW'll Coe. t l,G • _. Wlll!Oll, t 1 A ..-. lfecv. st.a • ..,. JoMl, ",Cl 19-66-73·73 12·11-1•·7• 11-n -11-11 73·71-71·n n ·n ·n ·70 11-n ·7'-73 1s-'9-n ·n •t-1'·14·1• 13-12-n-1s n·13·13·1S 71·72·72·7? 1•·10-11-n 61·7S·n ·74 69·67·71·65 61·6'·'7-•9 ...... 73 ... ll-11-11·•1 '1·n -n -'9 70-70-70-70 14·10-'5·11 n -10-11-41 10-69·71·71 10-64·1'·11 10-7•-ff·•f 69·72·71·71 ,, 7) 10 .. tt·n -11-n 70-61·7H5 n n-4f-11 11..,.n-n n '11 , •• ., 1•·11·11·10 n -11-n -10 71·70·7S-79 , •• ., • .,,.71 '4·12-4'-n ,,.,...,, . .,, ... 7J-7'-7J ......,., .. ,. 7)-7) n-4t 11-1 .. Jlt-11 n-11-11-n ..... " .... 11•16-11-~ .,,., .. 71-71 • 10-11t-n n-n-n -n n ·10·n ·n Penny Pulz, Sl,403 Kim Shipmen, s l,403 Cerolyn Hiii, '1.057 Merv DWV9f. I I ,OS7 J•ne G41ddes, 11,057 ~ Autlln, I 1,057 Anne-Marie PeMI, s 1,057 Allee Mitter, I l.OS7 Cethv Mon•. ll07 Llllde Hunt, ll07 1kvertv Kleu, ll07 L~ Mur.olle, 11()7 Shlrln Furtono. SI06 M. J. Smith, "°' Clndv Rerlcll, 1'21 Clndv Meckev, $611 L•Ann CH~!11411 HHIMr Ferr. M21 2'1 in Connie Chllllml, 1471 ~le~Y."'71 S..V Lltlle, M11 OenfN Hennlde, t.171 0..-LAIMI•, tA7 I ~e4W•rd,M71 ,,, Nencv WTllt• tr-. U.. ~rln Smv•n. UM •9·1'·n ·n 69·7•·70-7S n -1•-n -10 71·74·74-10 7•·6t-7S-7 I 71-71·7•·71 1•-u ·n -11 74·61·n ·7S 11·11·7'-69 ro-7t-n·10 69· 73· 71· 70 n -1s-n-11 n·n ·n·n 49·73·7'·71 n ·1'·1l·70 79·61·72·12 73·7•·71·73 71·72·15·73 1•-61·n ·11 11-n 12-n 7S-70-7S-n 7Hl·7)-73 10-1s-1•-n J0.61·n ·n 14·1•·11·14 69·7•·74·76 •S-•1·"5 ... .......... s-62 "5~ .. , • .., ., .... .... 70-64-... .., ........ s-.. ........... 43-'6-'7 47 ., n ...... ·~-.. ·61·67 6'·"3·70 .. "" .. .. ., . ., ..... s 41·70--67 '7 6'·47 .... ·6' ....... 7 ... ....... 5·69 ...... 70-.. ........ .... ,.,.. ... "5·6S-1'· .. AMERICAN LEAGUE A# .... ,. ... Inftl.n• 9, Ya.a.tee/I 7 NEW YORK-Bren Buller drove in two runs with a double capPi111 Oeveland's (OUN'UD eiahtb ln~~· U tht Indians rallied to belt Nc;;yon Butler's double oft' reliever Dave Righetti. 2· l, came on a ).2 count with two outs after Butler bad fouled off seven consecutive pitches. Pat Tabler started the comebtck wi1h a 1wo-out sinaJe. Carmen Castillo followed with a pinch ainaJe and Joe Ca.ner drove in his fourth run of the game with another •inale. scndiAA Castillo to third. Castillo scored on a broken bit infield sin&le by Chris Dando, brina- ing up Butler, who had homered on the sixth mning. The winner was reliever Scott Bailes. 3-1. and Rieb Yeu pitched the final two innings for his first save. Seattle flnt bueman Alvin Dam t.4• Oakland'• Dollllie Bill on pickoff play darlnC fourth lnniDc of Sanday'• game. Dave Winfield robbed Oevcland ofthree runs with a pai.rofscnution.al catches in right field. in the second and eidtth innings. With runners at first and ICCOnd and two outs in the second, Winfield made a stidjnf catch of Joe Carter's looping fly bal to shallow riabt. ln the eighth, he leaped over the wall near the comer to rob Brook Jacoby of a home run. CLaVaL.AHD Seattle no match for~'s Langford h I . h . Y 8utter cf * H•WYa.llK ell r 11111 s l 2 J s 0 0 0 s 0 0 0 s 0 0 0 S I J 0 4 2 I 0 1 I 0 0 1 I I 0 0 0 0 0 • , l • 4 I 1 I RHncbncf Griffey If Mlngfy 11> HHMVC Wlnfleld rl EeNlrdtl Polrulo lb Rnd!Ofl 2b ~ .. •r11111 • 1 0 l so 0 0 3 I I 2 S 1 I I s 2 J l 5 0 I I s l , 0 , 1 0 0 ) 0 1 I He one-hits Mariners ave to re yon IQ l at Slluauon. OU t. B•rnir021> aslc for trouble by P.~tting meo on base • ~~~ ;~ in seven-inntngsttnt as Oakland wf ns. 1-0 From AP dJ1patcbea OAKLAND -The Oakland A 's Rick Langford, whose pitching career seemed dead 13 months ago, tore up the obituaries Sunday with a winning, one-hit performance for seven in- nings. Jay Howell fimshed ofT the two-hit, 1-0 victory over the punchlcss Seattle Manners, wh o have a team batting average of 137 over their last 11 games. "I thmk I've come all the way back. I sure hope l erased some doubt$ w11h this game," Langford said after his best showing in four years. "I was here to see Rick Langford at his best years ago, and that was him at his best again in this game." said Dwayne Murphy, the A's veteran center fielder. Langford had a 19-1 2 record m 1980. his best season. Three years later, he developed arm trouble. and his comeback attempts were often discouraging. SEATTLE BreOlev If Celdern r1 AOellll lb Bonnett II> Pnetot Oh PrHlev 31> Trlel>H 21> DHtdlnd YffQe< c Cowens on KHrney c Owenu T9Nb * ear II Ill 4 0 0 0 • 0 l 0 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 l 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 'l 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 1000 0000 l 0 I 0 OAKLAND Pet ... ,lt Muronv Cf Cenieco rf DuBekr dh Len•lrd 31> Boehle 11> DHIM 2t> Grltfln n Tettleton c 21 0 'l 0 Tetlll1 Sun by ""*"" .Orlll>I 3 0 1 0 l 0 I 0 3 0 1 0 ) 0 0 0 4 I ? 0 4 0 I 0 l 0 I I J 0 0 0 l 0 0 0 1' 1 e I SMflle 000 000 000-0 Oe-lancl 010 000 OOX-I Geme WlnnlllO RBI -D Hiii t1I DP-S.•lllt 2, Oel<lend 1 LOB-S.ellte 3, Oekl•nd I ,,. H It EA 8 8 SO S..fh Morgen L, 1·2 0ekl¥d Lell9fordW,1·2 I l 0 0 2 1 J How941 S.4 2 I 0 0 0 S Umofrn-Home, Hlrscht>eelo., First 8•rne11. Second. Bremlll•n, TlllrO, Rot T-210 A-14,2'21 BlueJays8, Orioles 0 BAL Tl MORE -George Bell. Cecil Fielder and Rance Mulliniks hit home runs, powering Jim Clancy and Toronto past BaJtimore. Bell and Jesse Barfield, who each had three hits, led a 13-hu assault on four BaJtimore pitchers. Ken Dixon. 2-1, started for the Orioles and allowed five runs 10 2¥1 inrungs, raising his earned run average from 0.84, second best m the American League. to 2.63. Clancy, 2-1. struck out four. walked one and allowed nine hits in record- ing his first shutout and first complete game of the season. "I used onJy two pitches, fastball and slider. but I was hitting the comers and stayinJ ahead, of the batters," Clancy wd. "The key 10 p1tchmg aga10st a good hitting team hke 8alt1morc 1s keeping ahead of their batters and keeping them ofT base. Once you get beh10d. they arc looluntt for a fastball and that'5 what I IASl<•TaALL Qty ...... '*1 ~ ADULT L•AGUH ,....... c DMtMfl WMD TN Teem SYC" ., .. .,, Weter lovs PHI Merwtck lllC*lfSC... Tiit T"'°" 67, ~I Merwi<" M TwMllY • Dl¥hllll .. vwood 8oml>en Peet Merwlc.k Llllle Dlooer• Couw ~Ilk Mutual .. emlMn Youth •ecmt SC.. /Mnfl<* 49, ""'*" Y°'1tfl H tomoer• ... '9clftc Mufuel ,. w 1 • t &19Y cc Dfl'1llll VINl'\111 lieren ~loWln 0 0 .. c TNCl'le ltou Toott ·~sc­ Touclle RIKI •s. a D .. c u Vel'tnlll 11, TOOi• .. tll rer1 SI, ~Int 40 ....... cc:c OMtllen ft!W4 SlrlnO fHINllllen War Devil$ ClloYln Grower'\ cs~ co .. l•rJ L.Mttw hit\ •ecmt lar'ft °""~ 66. c ......... 17 CN¥1et ~ 1. .. , ...... 10 Tllltd Sfflnt Sl Growen •1 3 0 , 1 2 1 1 , 1 , 0 ' ) I > l 1 I I 2 1 ) I 2 • 0 1 7 > , , , 7 1 0 ' • 0 J I , , 1 1 1 l 0 • against Baltimore. Jeco0v ~ TC>ttONTO * Tabler 11> \ MHeMlf " IAI. TlMOltE cc .. 1111 r1 ~ct Fernnctz n Mullnk• ltl Uot.Nw 11> el>rll• S 0 I I SMAW rf el>' II Ill Nl•Oll" 4 O O O Carter rf .. 0 2 0 S 0 1 0 J8on1M lt> S I 1 I RIPlten u 4 1 O O ~rev 11> 4 232 Lynnd 4 0 0 0 lk'*> c 4 0 I 0 TfltWa n f12 I T..- SCM'elw ........ J171t 7 a.it" LMdlH S.rfi.ld (f Fleloer Oh HHrrOll C Gercle 21> T.e.ls 0 0 0 0 MllYonolf • 2 lo Sl!Mndh ' I I , Sl.t.roc 4 1 2 2 Guti.rz 2t> 4 0 I 0 Dwyer on >t IU I Tellllb s-eiw ........ 4 0 'l 0 l 0 I 0 '0, 0 '0 0 0 3 0 I 0 1 0 0 0 15 0 '0 T.,,..... a2 110 000-e ........,.,.. 000 .. 000-0 Gema WlnnlllO Riii -8eM m DP-Toronto I. 8-ltlmor• 1 LO&-TorOlllO s. Belllmon f 2&-HeerrOll, Gutierrez, J Bonllle HR-llel CO, Fleldef ('l), MullW..a Cl) S8-t>Olhew 141 " ...... so T.,_.. Ctencv W,'l·l • ' 0 0 • ..,,.,._.. Dixon L.2 I D Martinez Haven• ~ 2 2·3 • 2·3 4 l 7·3 s 2 0 ) ) I l 1 I 0 0 2 ' 0 1 0 O 0 I P8-Steftf'O Umplrea-Home. McCov. s.cond. Welk•. Third, Pl'llMlol T-2:31. A-1'.921 Flrit. VOll1111110. T'6ers 4, wilteSoi l DETROIT -A two-run triple m the sixth mnmg by Detroit's Lou Whitaker broke up a tight pitching duel between Jack Moms and Chi- cago ·s Joel Davis as the Tigers beat the White Sox toaven a sweep in their three-game series. Morris. 3-2. allowed six hits, walk- ing one and striking out six as he turned m his first complete game of 1he season. Davis. 1-1. had a one-hitter before the Tigers broke through tn the sixth. Davis lasted 61/1 innings. giving up four hits. walk.1ng three and striking out a career-high seven batters. The White Sox took a 1-0 lead 1n the second on Ron Kmlc's fifth home run, a shot into the lower left field scats for his third homer in two days and the 10th yielded by Morris this season -the most by any maJOr league pitcher. "I know 1f Jack Moms goes out there 35 times, he's gomg to throw 16 or more hke this." said Tigers Manager Sparky Anderson. "That was Moms at his best out there It's a good thing. too." CHICAGO Cal!Oelt Cf Liiiie.lb ll•lnH r1 Killie on Flak If llllonlM 11> Guillen u Crut 1t> Cre'9 Of\ Hui.ti 31> MHIMc Helratn oll Slllnnet c T ..... •llr 11111 4 0 l 0 '0 0 0 4 0 I 0 4 1 I 1 4 0 I 0 l 0 I 0 • 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 l 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 I 0 100 0 0 0 0 0 * O•T1'0fT Colllnsd Lemond C*->I> Wllltellr 21> LNPerVI c DeEvns II> Leff Oii HerndOn If $11ttldn l'1 Tremmt u »I 6 I Teteh lanb¥~ eC>rllbl 4 I 2 0 0 0 0 0 l I 0 0 4 1 I 2 • 0 0 I 2 0 0 0 ) 0 0 0 J 0 0 0 2 I 0 0 l 0 l I ••• 4 CHQee OlO -M -1 o.tY9" -_, IOX-4 G•me Wlnnln, Riii -WNtefler (2) LO&-<lllc-.o 6, Detroit ) ,._,,ltk, Tremmel( l&-wllllalt.,. Htt-Klttle (S) 5&-<olllna m . CNca9e J Devh L,1•1 Ne!aon ~ • H Jltallt H SO ',., ' 4 • l , IM 0 0 0 0 1 Morris W.3·2 t 4 1 I I 6 Umpires-Home. Koac, Flrat, ltt.O; Second, FMO; Thlrd, Gercl• T-'l:ll. A-20,fSl T1M'1dly .. DMMefl !ICED DrnHtY l 1 Breve 8unnv l I Miiie.. 1 1 C••lclv'I Fooh , 2 LAW Wnt I 3 l'l'eftCNH lr~ 1 ) lltKMsa...t tunnr "· Tr-n 53 MllleM 61, OVneatv "1 Ceulctv'a FOOis 74, \Ater Weal 63 UTTL• L•AGU• 8AS•8ALL Ne•'"'1 NetleMI te:eNt AA DMI*' Oodllera 16. AnMll IS CuO• 17, Plretn 4 Tiiiers 17, AlleM J CUl>I 21, AllOM 11 Plfetn 11, Orlolft 17 ~ It, C.dllwll\ 17 Oodoef• 17. Y8"k"' J A.AA~ Pltllft 12, CUO. II Oooller• 11, .,,... " Yentl-ll, CU!lt II Antel• "· TIMf'• ,, Plretft I?, Orloln t Dooven 16. Cerdlnell 14 Antell 10, Orlotn ' Oooller• 15, Ytnlc"' I ........... OMUml Plrt ln I, Cullt • Anotlt t. OodNt• ? Y8111t-II, Culls 0 A,,_ It, Tleetl I Ooollert II, C.4lflelt 0 Ytl* ... ).~ 1 GOU ...c....c....,a.. ""CLWCN~ ai. 9 ..... Low ., I lenla S•~. m.: > LI• Dr.-• ,. ~ •tll,._, NewYer1t •1 ---7 Game Wlnnlno Riii -8utllr (ll. E-Jecoov. L08-Clevelend •·New Yori! 13 211-Melll"lllv. Jecot>v. Buller. HR-+4HN't' 0 1. Carter m. Bu11er m S&-Wlnflelel (21. R. HendefSOll 115) S-Meachem. 11' H .. l.U SO ~ P Nie-ro l(ern llellet W,J· 1 Y•ll S.I IWWYwlr 6 I·.) f 0 0 2-J 0 1 I 7 • 0 0 0 0 0 0 7 ) 1 0 I 1 t I T-hl>ury 6 l 2 2 1 l Fll!W' 0 1 l J t 0 ~lrlev I I 0 0 0 I ltltllettl L,1· I I S 4 4 0 0 Whit.on I I 0 0 0 0 Flsller Ditched 10 4 better In ,,... 7th, llern ollcMd to 1 better In Ille 71?1 WP-Shlf"tev Umotr .. -Home. Men-In; First, Heftorv S.COll<I. Coualna. Third. Ttctllde T-3 20 A-46.607. Rangers6, Brewers 2 ARLINGTON. Texas -Bobb)' Witt struck out 11 batters, a Rangen" record for roolues, and Don Slaugh1 hit a two-run homer, carrying Teu!I to the Win over Milwaukee. Witt, 2-0, waJlced SIX and scat&ered three hits m seven innings. Reliever Greg Hams came on in the apth inning to finish. "I really don't know what to ex.pcct from mysclflhis year." Will.~ la.st year at Double A Tulsa, wd. "But 1f I can just relax, I feel like I can get mto more of a groove. I'm feeling a Link more relaxed each time." Witt had more trouble with a blister on his right hand th.an he did with Milwaukee. which had had beaten the Rangers sevel\ straight times 10 Arlinaton St.adjum and scored 21 runs in two previous games there this weekend. "The blister was JUSt sometbmg else to think about out there," Wm said. 'Tm starting to feel like I belong. rm st.an.mg to have some fun ... MILWAUl(E• Molitor JO Rlletn c-c111 Yount cf ROOld• lb Gen111r~ HMNdr rl FefdetH CMoort c * TIEXAS 80rlllll , 1 0 1 4 0 0 0 2 0 0 I • 0 l 0 , 0 0 0 4 I 2 0 ) 0 1 0 4 0 0 0 l 0 0 0 Mc0we4 ct ~rreh 2b O&rten II> Pedont 11> Wllkn110 lncVOlie ri owr111r11 rf Wetdll LAPnhdll 5'eu911t c BY«Hell> Flltellrn ", ', , .. Seet-.W...._ Mrllbl 3 I 1 I l 0 0 0 1 0 1 , • 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 J 1 2 0 1 0 0 0 4 1 , 0 ) 0 0 I 2 I I l 'l I 0 0 l 1 0 0 " .. ' Mlwaw.. tit ttt __ , T•H .. let ___ , Oam. Winning RBI -~ (J). E-Ni.v•ll. DP-Mltw~ l Lo.-MltweukM 1. Texn > ~lfter, O'trlen, Yount Hlt-SleuoM (5) ~__, (I ). MolllOf (2) $~ P1rrtt11, C:... • " ..... '° ...... Ni....n L,0-1 COCMOwet T8lttt • ,., 6 • , , 1 11-J , 0 0 0 • I . WI" W.J-0 > 2 I • " Merri• 2 1 Wl"-8 Wiii Pit---t 2. Umolr.. Home. ~. Second.COll!e;Tlllrd,Me09lend T-2:21 A-11M1 0 0 0 Finl. ltet!tt lo-net-1. Vldll Irvine, 1'7 ...,... ...... Low llfOlS-1 Cr~ Gf'ev, 271 Low,.._, MW..,... l(oatw, t1t ........... low WIK-I KAJY ,._, 1n. Low net-I .J.n McA4etn, 214 ,,... ...... I.ow lll'OH-1 Vlr9lnla F0111R .JOS. t..o-net-1 J.c:llle Mc:Clov. m. ............ Low WOs-1. "9n11¥ l\Mdl~, m_ ) Low,..._, Dl•ne Ostood, m. Law -..0 Cl4lllf Au.di._ MON'THL Y TOUllMAMmN'T (lffl ........ CC) A ...... I Lou Clem, 77·1.._., ) ltMd WNtMmore 13·1>-79, ) (lie), Ktt1 ~. 10-71. o-r.t FOWier. 11-10-71 . ...... 1 •Ill Mot/A, &J-1~. 2. C...,_. Cr0w .... 16-10, l (tie) Freftll llte>W, Sl-16-71 .,.d Lo .... "'"""· n -11-11. KM Smllll, •·17-11 c ...... I Oevkl ~lid. •7·1 ....... ; 1 (tlel Teet ~. «M1-n IM Jim Kllev, b-)1 11 Mii ,.,_..,, to-1t-n;., w """'· n-.,_n 0 ...... I lllel hit Ytune, ,._'1-it, Don LewW, ... ,,._..MOW~ .,.._, ..,_,._.,, ' 1"91 Me• SMrltltf. _,_,,,_,. 8lld I.A .... ,,_,,_,., 6 111 111..oi1. n -n--11 I ...... I Cllenn "9rCll ,._,._..; > Ar1 ...,.._., tS-71-.., J II I ~OOol llevtiur11, lt1·1'-11 llld J\Altll GOCll9 lOO ,.._ 71 .. '.Use cr€dit to your advant age Americans ~ve become savvy Utet manaaen m recent yean, mov- jna quic;kJy to talce advantaae ot attractive opportunities to cam better returns. Al manage~ of credh. how- ever, many people arc still in the Dark ~·r ex.ample, smart consumers wouldn't think of leavina their bard- eamed savings in a low-yieldina paubook account when a far better return-with little or no extra risk - is available from money market deposit accounts, money market mutual funds and CDs. But many people still pay rates of 18 percent or more on credit card t.lances and other sbon-term debt, even though less expensive alterna- 1ives arc available. Many people don't realize that when you don't pay your entire credit card balance one month you are charged interest not only on that unpaid balance, but on each amount you charge the nut month as well. And many make the mlsta.ke of thinking that, because interest charges are w-deductible, they don't cost you an)'1hin&-Even in the SO percent bracket, half the cost comes out of your own pocket. Other common mistalccs that add to credit costs are borrowin& piecemeal. borrowina more than needed or for lonaer than nece~. If you fit thiJ description, you re not manqina your credit; your credit ls managing you. Using credit judiciously can im- prove your financial situation while cnbancina your lifestyle. Borrowini for home improvements -which may increase the value of your home -1s one ex.ample. Another is using credit for advanoed education - which may produce hi&bcr future income. You can also use credit to take advantage of investment op- portunities. ff the return on the investment is areatcr than the cost of credit, then you're buildina net worth. Properly managing what you owe also cuts your total credit cost. Having many loans at different I MARY RUDIE interest rates, for example, may add up to a hiah interest rate on a considerable amount. Y ct you may be able to get the same amount from one or two sources at a lower total cost and with putcr flexibility. Plan the most efficient means of meeting your expected major credit needs now, so you won't be at the mercy of the marketplace if the need for credit arises. Generally, the most efficient way to borrow is against assets you already own. An insurance policy that builds cash value can be a very inexpensive source of credit because you can &encrally borrow against the J>Obcy'a cash value at rates from S to 13 percent. Of course, the policy's cub value may lfOW llower while the loan ii outstandina, and if you die, thc proceeds paid to your beneficiaries will be reduced by the amount you owe. One of the least expensive cred.it choices is to open a marlin account at your brokcrqe firm. M&J'lin ac. counts offer you a line of credit bued on the market value of your securi· tics, which serve u collateral for the loan. Some institutions also offer special loan accounts for substantial onc-tJmc financing needs that allow you to borrow apinst assets that aren't traditionally ma.rajnable, such as CDs. These types of loans let you raise cash without 1elling your securities or CDs. lnterestcharaesarcfavorable- they're linked to tile rate institutions pay banks for money-and you have flexibility in repaying the debt. How- ever, there arc risks if the collateral declines in value, so these loans arc not for everyone. Many brokerage firms, banks and thnf\s offer homeowners a revolving line of credit based on the equity in their home. This can provide a substantial source of funds, which you can draw upon at interest peged to the prime business lending rate. Some companies allow employees to borrow from their pension or salary reduction plans. Credit management means using the right forms of credit in the most cost-effective way to help achieve your financial goals faster. Take control of your credit decisions -so you can get credit on your terms, not the lender's. Muy J. RHie la Yic!e pres141at 6 maaacer, Couemer laformaUo• Servlcet, Men111 Lyack. Pierce, Fa- aer 6 SmlG lDc. OTC UPS & DOWNS -. ~-- . ' MllT tHl NlW ooctOR IN toWNI Hi, I 'm Dr. Karl S-wope, D.C. PROFESSIONAL QUALIFICATIONS Did you know that becominq certified a1 a chiropractor require• a minimum of siz yea.rs of hiqhly specialised colleqe trajn{iiQ? Today's Doctor of Chiropractic must complete 4,485 hours of clusroom instruction and pus a riqid chiropractic board ezam.i.nation before ea.m.inq a licente. In most states, continuinq educational 1eminar1 must be completed for annual license renef41. In addition, I have completed couraes in work lite injuries and nutrition. In 1985 I wa1 honored to be named Vice Preaident of the Clinic Intem1 Action Asaociation. To further my continuinq education, I haYe received 1pecial traininq since collec;ie in Physiotherapy from Dr. Richard Ackerman and Orthopecia from Dr. Rory Pierce. I have aho visited a number of chiropractic clinics to study their method. and procedures in San- Dieoo, Hacienda Heiqhta, El Toro and Co.ta Meu, California. Additionally, I devote three days every month attendllio 1J. nationwide 1emina.r in San franciaco or Lo. Anqele1, to ·iiftay current on the latest chiropr~ctic adTances. This is the kind of traininq and professiona.liam I offer you. U you have heaitated visitinc;i a chiropractor, per- haps you didn't know that chiropracton qo t? such qr~t lenqths to continue their education and p~ovide Y?U with the latest techniques and the most qualified •rnce. So, you see, what you don't know, c an't help you. Call me today and let me help you. Did you know that the symptoms most commonly treated by chiropractors are: Back Pain HeadachH Neck Pain Arthritia -. Stilfn... Buraitil Numbn... Hip Pain Painful Jointa Shoulder Pain Arm/t..g Pain Cold Hand.a/Feet To introduce you to the he&linq world of chiropractJc, pleaM accept my 1pecial offer: FREE SPINAL EXAMINATION FREE THIS MONTH ONLY FREE Thi1 e~amiDation normally costs $35 00 or more. It will include an ortboJ*i.ic test, a neuroloqic&l test, a blood pre1ure test, • spinal aliqnment ch.ck, an esamin&tiou for restricted or ezceu motion in the 1plne, a mu.cl• strenqthne11 test. and a prhate consultation to di90Ua the re1ult1. (714) 432-1135 Dr. Karl Swope Swope Chiropractic Office 2850 Met& Verde Dr. E., Suite S Co.ta M._, CA 92626 Hourt 10-1 and 3-7 Mon-Fri for Accident• or Penoual Injury • ' .. ; .... ~ Cout DAILY PILOTJ Monday, Aptll 28, 1D88 , D 0.., ... \.ele• LHf C .... ~ • . . NYSE COMPOS ITE TRANSACTIO NS , 111111'1 tH~Ulll PllOll Stock trading mixed NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market 1umed in a mixed perfonnanc-e Monday in wh.at 1raders descnbed as dull trading. Some late buymg in the blue chip sector boosted the Dow Jones avcra~e of 30 industrials. ln1cma11onaJ Business Machines gamed I~ to 161 1/1 Gene Jay Seagle. vice president and director of technical research at Gruntal Financial Inc .. wd the market scc:med weary, with many investors generally content to collect profits made on selected ~tocks. In vestors had some uneasiness ahead of the Treasury's announcement Wednesday of its Quanerly borrowing plans. The auctions•that will be held next week are expected to totaJ a record amounl of notes and bonds, a reminder of the bloated federal budget deficit. Bond dealers have been concerned that interest rates could head higher 1f demand at the aucuons 1s slack. WHAT AMEX DID WHAT NYSE DID NEW VORK (AP) Ao<. 21 Adv4nced OKllned ¥~1=, Newlllglls New lows Tod~ 44 6 AMEX LEADERS GoLo QuorEs NEW YORK (AP) Ar><. 21 NYSE LEADERS , Dow JoNES AvERAGES METALS QuoTES NASDAQ SUMMARY t.hl,, bJtton dowtn shirt. ourf\na&ell·cd.Lal odbrdcloth eh1rt~ b usbt OOdon d' Ni\VQrlczam SI~ nmdl«i te1laTIJd Wlth epl1t ~ ~ructa"I 2't-u\t.unot.a. fit.end CDmbt tn wtut4i bh.At,acru ,pmk.yrilloa.v ' r ' .... __________________________________________________ ~,------~~~~~~~-~- t CALL 642-5878 IF CALLING PROM NORTH OflANGm IF CAWNQ PROM IOUTH ORANG! .,,.. c,, • -' , "'!).,~* • . ~ '~ • l ~ ·' . / • , , -·~-,,.-;""ta ,;, ~.-Jj6 'I'"'" ..... ,...... .· .... J "' ~ , ' ' ............ -:....,...._ ~ f,JI. ,. -'>';..• ...... .=:..... /59-9100 WM~F\ ' f ... I "'' • WM~R ',, ... l .. • .. ltt ....... y .. Stll y .. ''"'"" Cal ClenifW, 64t-S671 for Inf ormatlon & Sl.frprlslngly tow cost. Autumn~· toft to looll but hat. to rate•? eon- -••to,..,, In dWlfted =· lndry, ie25 moi Vk:toN. 541-M23 .. .,, an w IYllW Vault.CS c•llln91, prvt balcon/. redecorated 1895. 151 Padftc AW 831 -8 107 pm or 885 OM5. No pet9 CHARMtNG 2 8d oott.oa. t ywd/=. 119 Aoww nr ttll/Npt t725 +utlt, llVI 5/1 875-3875 CIHn E'tlde atudlo. 1425/mo Incl utll. Nloe ~ !WghbOmd,avt 5/1 ordt"" ~14 E.-. 21k ..oce;· Huge '** ywd. pet9 olil t725/mo. 72()..9422 EISIDE 38r 28e ~ Yard, gereoe, d/W, 10 l*up, ~,.., ptMl9. qutee. • 5. 131""3&4e E'SIOE lg 29r 1~ '4)par. Balcony, gara/c:. MM/mo, 120 E II Stn, Ptl 875-«MO et.ary, fuly F\JAN. 28A wtth Pf'v. pdo, duptex. ..... .:;re~·,,..,,.,, ,.,... . 2323 Wcatfleld , ... , ......... ~::s.:-' IWve .. wtth 1 or 2 c:Nlchn. Near partc. HMt a=:m~ '77: l&drm 28ett\ 3MW.Wllof\ 131..aaa mTUT• I SAVE up to $2000* • .. 12 ............ Sne•pteSl!iO ............ • Month·to·monttl also available • fum1shedl unfurnished • fitness centers, tennis. swimming Models open d11ly 9 6 Sorry, no pets Newport 811ch No 880 IMne Avenue (It 16ttll 1415-ncM Newport 811ch So 1700 !&th Str9et let Oovarl IG·S1Q ~ & tfl!OJ .. , P• ~ _, ()ulet. tomtertlllle •" to., .... ~ & So C..St ""-a wr.-Mt lltftWtts to Cataca .. .._ NO rns rtWl ......... u •• ., ..... a•• ' ..... . I 111•• 'Tta.'7 M.11 m&T A met WATW-.. Mt•a•• II "' M.W• IT Ht Hit Ma.t Ltell/!1!!!11 rni +.,. utll. -M10. .... _ watlflad. prof t.rn. u.a .. deen/raap/mGn. 1 9f\ .... '350/mo, 113 utl. SIOO Wki'la......... Low ,.... dip, nr bClf\. M0-8311 s 1 a Up.1Wtt1y. Color Aoomete ~ S325+ \6 TV, ma6d ..W., ne utll, Coeta M9M. .. oon... ...._, pool a Ketty b9tWMn l-5pm, atepe to oc.n. Kltdl'• 280-0270. availl. Ma N. eo.t Hwy, Aoommat9 ln'llMd.. Non Laguna 8-:lh. 494-6294 uuwmm ..nkr, P9t Mg.. pool, doee to "--U. C.M. Wk'Je ,..,,.... now awl. 1275/mo+cMp. 7298 s1 .ao wee a up. 2274 AOOMMATE(a) WAHTED Nwpt BMS, CM &48--7445 LG 38A. 2 bett1 ._ dllf'I SUISllLIHE wlfw. lndty. pool, ~ 302e W. Pedftc eo.t ~ ~rm. Only l2M mo. ~ Beedl. R9fw1g 241-1423 tMlf. noon. a • ege, no d9poett. 8hr 2lk 28a Coeta _,.... lnt1h t1 hue Apt. S350/mo + " utll. c.. Jflt 722-M05 Home. nit 751-1342 Wen F to Iii# 2 rNtT bdmJGlih SHA 3IOO 80 FT OU1ET. In PIMcl9ak apt.C.M. luxury twn, =tto VU, 2 2&-40. AWlll 5/1. MOO/mo. frplc. from 11t, i.t . Contact Mary 751· 71$5 u111. a •· te6-8479 28A -'· nr ~ 8eedl The State. Gin 2().; to lhr Br. S 185/mo. +utllltlM ... _ ............. (714)720-9803 for DabbV For "" Competlble 2 Matr bd, twnn...t>C:: Aoommete. Op9rl M M-F, 1°'"' s.t a Sun. 211-&111 )9c, bet\ doae, CM lntalaWu ... nit quiet ptof. ,...,.., $400. 0.754-lllO, E-131-4335 I Mother's Day Greetings how Mom how mut h you ca r(:' with <1n affectionate greeting. Our Mother's Day greeting~ page will run unday, May 11th. A 5 line greeting is just $2.50. Adciit 1onal line~ .50¢ each . D1~play ads are avai lahle Cal~ for add1t1onal inf ormation, 64 2-5678. Your GreC'tin~ . ·.._ _____ _ °'Pl""' l O I'd• ... pt I 11111 Rc•turn to Daily Piloi 330 W . Bay St ., Costcl Mee;~, A 92626 l>cctdltne . Thur~da), Mtly 8th. Ad~ mu~t be prepaid. ) •I Ollwioe eo.t DAILY P1l0T/ Monday, Aprtt 21, 1Ne .II I ... , ....... &.111191 ... "" ..... , .... ~~~~ .... r~iiiiiiiii-:-~ !!!!!!!...--.! ... !!! .....i ... a.u..... .. c11.... ..., w•_.. .... ... L=w.LOMe MA1MO n-..r • www.G;i;a;f.'.W~~vw. .... ..,. 11111.. ...._ .., • ......... ~.:::: ...... --• ..:....-;:.':.:ti ~...... .... lttdl• 1'~u.ir:.,:M· ~.,,_~~...: :.:=~.: ==-.,.--.-~=-. d -CM. .. I Ill RI I H 'I· lllrt ~ ._..,.,.... • ''IP' lllll ... 0t ---on AM/FM.-..,..,., In _:...,:_;.;... __ .,. ... ...,..,,.,-,...._-c;•;tm. 11/Hlr .• o: .,,....,....~ •.. -"'--'I .., ...... -.-..... ..... _ __. ..... ..._,_ HAiiiilllitJll wtedl tor IN • ...,.,... wood.n w f.:d-oi:-- -WI ..... --=an;;;n•a•t == =:':.::: ":::;-,:...~KWMQ. ilfiFAIMll lllllLI .. ,,,, ~,=~ lllltm tiWNaOftlTOUIH't .,...,..,..,.,.....,. • lnl'D"...._.._1111 ~~ .. ~~ i.a N7 .. 1JS ... UU....... ._.mu 1, l•llBI CALL ==~d ~.: br:===,......~::----r".'~ • ..... mor• Into cell Me. ~· Prat • .:::.: COHiOli' ootor TV & wtll II llrWlilmiJ ,. _, ~ ...,. "*'· .__ ________ 1-.1*'-"41· Mon·''' :=no •1 141"!~!! ''NO: :J tbl ... l660: ltMHf ~t....., ihd. U. llllUWI... c.11-...a.Jpm M :I0.(1t4)MN141 1:aopm':":fi-ie71. ==·=~=-LL••n LA~.~~:' 114-21M U..#1 .. 111•1 1111 11'8 • WONIHCOHTUT ,_" -,II' ,.. . --IAIL lOfT lookfnO '°' •· ....,. """* ... Uftii 15().5311 •IA • fB • Kind lftatur• pareon '**IOld Mncl wcnw, 1 '8 love .-11111. (~M7-41M .... 11.111 WortrOnThlt~ needld '° .. , ~ full time. ULLMAN .!.. '•!bed"°· llmPt lull!lalll 1111 a phon• aeoretertH U/MlllW :-M::=.1511 IAll.l.116-tl10. l15,1Clt.tbft2f,en-eootl~~-~~=~~~~I (111}411-1411 ===--= £'!~~ -l'a&8 tfl'..:.n:.:i:..ie=: -~:'et~· .... '\:"';..~'~·.::: " ............ iii KiilQQTiO 11 ttefflo. We twM nloe ow-Dfttd Mk eft 1ptn. .,,.,,....... = '°' Ne. ~Mon 1M1 Flt. Ttme.. 14)148-3141 1275: dtn Mt •lo#lf'9 M.(111)171-IMI tOfNl'9I ~ muet 141-ec>t1 -~c: ""* epeall .,,,_ iiAiliiTAi.iil CW!vw t475:JC1nt&4S-410I INll lntral fill ~ yo11 ~ iram., be w t.,..,_.-.., and pan1ea. llh. '""* "°°"" bolr'd ProdUotl ~ liOY'• or otn'• Olk 1 pc \ I a .oo + '°' "'"Y· ""'=: ~ S:: T•bkll/Tt1.. 1 ~eve. ::ts~,..·,~ bpertl!IOld hllPful, 1:30 Bdrm. tum. b:* oonct. Xlt oonct. s~NTIJrnatt& 11 -------c:• oMo9 ' .-. ''"' 4800~ 1114 .....__ ~•-amto4:00PM.M&-224'4 tel6;1'~PlentlN, Japen,i.ndtJtA·15U8A,, •• -I •1 .,. llPIWOX. Mon-N9wpof1 ~4. --melQ"" .,_ • ·--720-1704 N.kfl 8elrd a Tetloc* lfttWI ._..., CMJilCan Jiii ,r1,l:OOAMto1:00PM • ...,_., l..alll-l~ AJ::ff..._, kJH01iiD.Sw'1TopUM prtC*fY,141-1151. • etMUng-.,Ylll100per -1 lrft'D Now Hiring LUNCH J:30ar!H:'°Pml4.15/Hr ftnn,Pdl1200muetllll IOSTONWHAl.EA I 8'MPLYTHlllUT ~1 Ill.ft NllDID .... Aflf*I In penon. ..fllS.I ftr ltl\ AOUT! P!.Of'LE PIT, M-+ ben 210 MoCormldl now. 2 mo otd. 8el fOr 18 Ft w/S5 HP Johneon S....· ._... • L...ing l'w1-UWM 1n OUt N9wpof1 Mon-nu.. t:00 to 4:00 ~ ...,. Menne SCUN\I ·Fl40-tl0dll'/t1'4747 eo.te M.. tee-tato teoo. Mlketctyet7M700 traler. lCtt oond, aaoo.t EUAOPU.N OEUV!AY .... horM. ,__ req'd. PM. NIA fOr a.n. bullrlW .... ~ rw. MECHANIC l T DUTY 9'1""9tnd 1M-0316 ~. aft 5 pm. I 1640 JAMIOREI AO. llO llH ~. Mlr*nun 0U:.,C ~ W/Mlll club. meln· KJMQ SIZE BED Comcll. NEWPORT RACH ... & 1•11 l1•ntill Mii llAlllllLYIPIOIAITLIT =--~~ •-MW !!~Ml Hllboett. TWnwtt.ung llOCo!sEt:,IO~:~A 2 :0~~!~.IAd='ili:Tw="" 2'1or1141S74* Xibi! '1U~ln. ;::J,i oeii.nt Mnettt•. P•Y rtDll •• · &ut. E41ter 1114' r,10 &4().()Sh wy °'**by one, ~I llXEY TOflTl twNr In wtll otw. AM + S30W.ltly8t. OOfNMI_ ....... •· tMl1 Model Mek«JournertnM Part-TltH · 2 ~ padd .... fie»-lA 11 wty aft, n...nlcr, eo.teMw.CAnt2e =~enpenon unurv '°Senior. Onty ~ LOVE 8!ATI Matchl:f tkln, IC)n!Ytkltte. 00'*'9, llPIU11RIMU 1 Ill.II Am+aoo1mo.Ma..m1. Equai()ppty.~ 2431w.C::...~::.-.unLPRIZES• ~;,.!'1;-=:.= El:~Mattt~ =·~~~. ~ 's"'t4r::rob"!~ DELMc~:ENoo;sA=I smma 111a• f!CTI _ _ Pwecilkln IMCNnlnO a Study for the <>nnoe en-2211.,., 1pm 114-733-1211, aft 11pm. LM DWIR Lllllll .._PIT ~*'O PAYROLL ....O,..,,~ ~ •• ~ COlltPubtllhlngCo. Neef1)'newrwtn911dMet-PnnLltl fill, M-'tlllt.M•I 1eea1..,_~ help. ExP '42..-& CLERI 1111 ,..._,.CM 1lfS mZJ:'.°':1no from le Wlllc hntl"4 trw a Trundte mettrw 11' --11.111111 l2t 8. !.uolld at. I 11•/Ml .... .......... ~ blueptlntl •P•teooe ,. PteeMn1 phOne Yo6oe • undernMth. 1100 tor ~ Fulerton, CA "•lal1tr1 1111 ~~Inc • .,, .... SU. 1111 ''""r:t:"' qund ~ heYe your mutt, no upertenoe r... bottl. 173-&431 Bey uunch. 191 ~ 714-480 '300 , ':r: 1113 eor-. -----t .... , .:..._.. t--.....1 A~ ... ...-. 1d9ei for ~ ,.._ .....a...bd Mii.i\ ,.,_,,,,, C8'1114/432•1..... 213-tff .. 701 -"'odl~:3' tabll• •d r•1t1uran own ,_.., --1 ..--hi II h I ,__ ...,... --..,.., -LMI &11111 c:tlaln, tlU.,, ~ • r --. oc ~ .... m•k•r•. g I C 00 =•lbr... wall unit 1MO AICHAAD80N. I tllt whlitil.I It Tncl -cif-A.E. hoofN • wuntry --= • &;;.; ,..,,_ « hlltcwy ..mon. cdlge It~ ;ooftbltetl460·dln Aybf'tdg9, twn ctt..-, full, dltlOnl 8M to L.oen Rep. A.E. Uc. req'd. clertl. to WOl1t a 4 P«· ll~f!l'I M "you.. tor-:'! ..._. to: Ad No. 11 CIO a moonlloht .. t ~~ tet 1350; bet 11oo11 t751 cainvu 35'. AEADY TO I ~ .. JV?7JKL 144-42C>1. P IBM8et~foryoulnthe eond9pt.P11yrohxpand _.. ~"'°':. ~ Deity Ptlot, P.O. Box :-:on:.~~~•Y81~:,>r.; oett bdrm $400; oountry G0.113,000.~218 U!¥£$ .. W~ TOYOTA •14 &IOi'GT "-'d + Training. LA PAZ to.«ey hlllpfUI, but wt11 Mount.I*\. Knot19 1111ny 1aeo. eo.ta M-. 9M2t 9.oo.m to 1~. aittt oett din Mt 1675; eotaJ •79 BERTRAM 21., ;, 1 ... -• ••• eonv. Nd, My lo9dll. 5 MO~RTGAGE, Chuck treln an lndMdual who E.xpllrtelioed ,_ • ..,..,., ,arm. or M\ PrtW and llllJ.I 1• •t et 14.00/hour plul '°"9'650. Xlnt. f543..4706 bridge, lpOt'tfllher. F 1 -... 'Pd. 13,000 mt,...,., rm ~ntMOe7 ltM llmlted =•ct. Account Eucutlve Awdl, Celt .. nowt we All Hl, :;; nee bonuMe. Pnvete deelc & On mattr w/box 9')91, frm, outfit, ebeoluUlfy brlet . COnd l17K ObO 141 4043 * l'IMD* ~w/up.; 5:.~ ":'o= twM.....,op11111rT.1n ~14)187 .. 57 • phone, o .. ual •ttlr•. 81mmona. 20 yr guar '41,50011rm,6'4-1711 ., VOLV0'18 244Dl xlt To orgenble door·tc>-door In penon ~. or +oornmlllllonand C.M .• H.B. or .V. • HOfM W011tert ~ 1150. Oelc, ledy'a, ISO. FIBEAFORM '81 at', 280 AJwaY1 e tr~ oond. low mt, orta fl/#rV, tlctlet talH for new ..net,_,,.,. to: a.ict,....,,.to: '42~ ~ewtom...W911t9d F0t lnter¥t9w cell M•. loweMt ISO. 87'5-ea52 Volvo 225 hp exoel ~-of , & n-1mkr, 18000/•bo, W ·1 Pro y..-...... """EA INC A t u n•"•r Coupl• und« OOWt Pb:1a Con-Mareno Mon.-Frl. et ---"--HIS ........,. ·lo.._ .... ..;. ... -·-· -•A _, *"""' w/ ~ U:: l50K •;+~Mr. TH~~'t~ Ave · :,..;•'°' •beUIM 80 eumer to ..,.._. ct. 8 4 2. 4 3 3 s b wt n •tllftlMa ... I ....... wit''*""i17 000 c•r.tuUy prepared ;;;:.ib.ee, 484-279'. arw. 213-597-1013. ltvlne, CA. 92714 lrMp.... Unft a.den Apt. CM. !Mry, ...w. and prod-hm-3pm. Or •ft., ; ;while WEDDING 'r.;831 or7aa..9259 · preowned BMW'a tn • . .... ir.== IWLll/Dntal Ills 714-2 5().-033 1· ':.t~:.2'~· :=."ta~:r:~:: :'.°':~= 5 :30pmat 942 -&e 1 •· :.,,ess~1~·or~ NasuPeve11w1pun:NM.1:C:..,,.. dtf St=>-=.,= 6M'JCXi818tXHf PITBOOKKEEP£A-8EC C::~~~ , ...... -... nln•H :::_ot::._~loceted ~ TB..EMARKETIHO °"9r.Celteso-eate ~C= s:::n>YI fW•~ ....:: ~ ~*'4~7ICM*I ~~::::'t~ o.r~~ N~ TIM CENTEA 11511 Bo1N Chica, HB. WlllfY1ll IUlll EXQUISITE! NEW Al· Crulw. at ft 4 In • twn ~ 'f0/11-..W. ~ our frtendty omc. 641-1381,Sandra NophoMc:ela.,.._.. aooGE..COASTHIGHWAY To become • mywt9ry LIGATOR guuln• ?.z7 I ,""'*· fVllYI ~ SOUTH COUNTY '-"· 30-35 ~. RDA Ouallty lndlvldual with ~DEL MAR CUltOnW and receM • En«~ ~ needed lellU. .nea. ~wtth • xn eond. VOLKSWAGEN Pr•f•r•d. 1151-1783. ablllty and atnbfUOn to lmmeClete oS**'CI fOr a INK! STORE monthty rebet• plMM to Wftfy iww 1tett1 for gotd handle. · Ew 21M 1 GREAT BEHEFTTSll letrn boat lnM.irance High 8Clhool gred. no rrf MECHAMC NEEDED IN Oii toll he°" th9 Delly Plot. NO SELL· JOHN WAYNE TfHN18 Wll~ 951-2360. I (l14) UM111 & ~. oooeaeutloua. pertence '* '11 'I· IAVINE. CALL DAVE Mondey, Aprll Hth. ING Exoeltlnt ~ CLUB reguler tran•· •-11 INtl 7114 Ma ISUZU .. Al..,... dee*ldabl•. Avalleb.. ••ti) ltMI poeftkln, ,. 781-0034 1~21"3874· to etat1. Hou,..: M·F fereble m•mberalllp NU JOtW.1-4, ...... lrlwMdlllt9 poeltion. eu.y lmmedletely typln" qWl.,...lia: good drMno Domtno' ptiza Inc:. 5:30pm-tpm end Sat. MOO. Cell 472...e290 ISUNbEJUIXRlUX iO 1 a.ORO e=vi Ortl'lo Practlc.. Mu•t ~· eomact Jor"; 1'9COrd,herdWOftt•.Mlll CA8HIER/AECEPTION tam-1pm. CeMlal Attn. STEEL SHELVING ·~ O'M'9t Secrtftoe-1 I haw~ Front & Heleofl 873-7911 eenn.ry appw81ioe. P"-br1na toq11111enoed fUll or pert NURSERY ..._ nMdl e# oonctltloned offtc». For C.blnMI. ltl WOttc tbll & Well equipped. Votvo10AT8UN ,96 300ZX I Bed! office. Good .ury Vllleo-vldntty · OMV pnntout Ill time Of time hetp needed tor energetic P«IOn 10 grow ln19Me'# cell M•. Mateno ............... ,11 of<l ~ d~. Auto pftot, bllQe ~ ...... '250l mo. a benllftta 714/364-2154 . eppllcatlon, eppty It: Faahlon ••land r•t•ll w/estab Co. min 1 yr... •t 142-4333 btwn ---5 pump. & fur11ng ..... I d1119 213-e34-3125 IDIUl.tnlOI GdR~/=~~. Frwwey 8tor•. 2108 atoreEOEl44-6010Terl ... ::'Woo.up. FIT. hm-3pm. Aft• 5:30pm lltc,842-191 ohergwl24K81"3-2525 ,.,.931.nsa aft5pm """"-HatbCW &Nd, CM. --·-=~~ 1200~. oell 842~M78. frM te ft• iift ..... /Ski IMll Mk for BtwS.' ' ~=~~~~ ~·:.;m,:,:2""993 ... -1.1.uua uNt0Lo:tt'.::Uco ... .,;: :H.TnMr~.;y • wANTI:0t Ener;et1c1..,, sRORtRo/lXa Dix 101& llllA'lllhllW ,_,___.=· j=; ~OO RECEPTIONIST! Part Exp•rleno•d 81lu-NECTION INC. net. ,.. only. T~Fr1. 146-74-41 motivated people I PUPPIES. AMI cute, free. ElEE!t 192 20ft JU l lk• new run• ::. • "wn _ _ pereonel Exploding a.-liable per90n to deltWr UIYll llllllY PIMMnl wettclng oon-a wtt. old LOW9 kid• ........ or · · ~ 11 A P Tim• typing, pl'lonM, Offtoel W• need J:' tic* ... H.w di1Y9rl'• Mc: dltlonl, no ex~ M-. v.d. 54g..1057 · B«kle't Jet w/tr&lw 75 11495. J 87~1 1 "::.!:.~~~~,con· ~f-:';6~2~ M-8Al80Al8LAND EALTY &cet.Stnldy75M600 N~::i::~~~'C: ~F/~. ~:"nJ: Pett I hl•lll 1641 ;;:.~~~:.~~71~f M,:O! ;!~L~~ NB Beech ofc, 780-19114. HllmllllTI 111·•!.M .... 1UlDI ~ Flt. wk d8)'1. In-Gl'Mt opportunity for cot-c 0 ck ER pa P-X kc 1u,./Dtcb/lter11• 'm. o'u.. • u 95 0 . 1nllll&Lllf/TP/T 1n ~ttcna 1n 'f04M ....., by ~· °""'' ieoe 11Uden1 "' ~ Cttemp blOOd. a.gent 7022 854-2218.1se-1211. Ci.nc.I NOW HIRING Fun NeutlQtl Gift & .,.._ F l 8eturda'J. T~Fr1. 646-1. wrvH. Afcply Hon•'/· allWr/apr'loot coet, long MBZ •71 2 50e M910lldel 2 lmmedleteopentnglnec;.-FIT&PIT Oott11ng Store. Loo«lng Cernec.14/541..0111 u.IYllllllUY belled. 3 00 E. ~ W'l,1175.837 ... 113. •1111·21"'* door,loeded,noauntOOf. r::"'g~~~ f« .,, ~ P«'°" DESK CLERKS Hwy, Corona d9I Mar GOLDEN RETRIEVER MARCUS CHANNEL 97K ml. gel oond. 13750. agency. tor d•l•ll•d llPOllT1 ~~ :3443 Vie All lhtf\9, Ill 1m11 OOll8t't PllTlmlfflll treliadlat BlttL..abmbted/M.~EEto 1150/M0.~14&_ ' Secrtftm,483-1112 m!Md P«IOn lo audit OllTl •a& Udo Npt ec:·u~ front reeort hotel, Mk fOr Ullll 111111 good home, big but BEST SUP In Balbo•jMaz '73 SE. Thie 4 5 " and prooeaa time reoorcs. 111· lltl · · &t1, 873-7030. &uey ~ 8Mctl 1-pw-A11.Uucn IOl l gentle, 2 )Tl. dell aw or eowa tor pow. boet to powerful tt blUe by Otto =~~~~':; RECP/OFFICE ASST. Ill.II MY• llMU eon , CJ8l·Frlday 1)jy IPPLlllCES wkend1, ee&-7442 32 ft. StO P« ft. wltacll., Newport• Beech OWMf touc:tl ..... and aptltud9 FIT Fountain Valley A fft good IMl'I and Exp Counter <M11 needed = ~ ~ Plun fUI Avelt 611. ~2<t9 NSOO. 831~111 '°' ftguf98 and ablltty to Ananclal Plenntna omc.. women nMd.cl, Mrn fOr Ptent In Coete MllM. ~ eltlll and LE8 9574t 33 IOSI S L I P 8 A V A L MBZ •93 300SD oMkMr malntlln accur•t• ,._ evall tmmedrate ly. ::.:+ ~~3-Mc;: Wiii treln. A«*t mom-·~no.cl on word DISHWASHER lJMd 2Xbf &;;n 25,30,36'40'80' I phone, 32,000 ml. corda. 8-rtltul Newpor1 '800/mo, 964-2108, OC' 87:'9280 ' Inge Otnt'/ 122~m "°'9 pr~. POM1b1e fUll Portabte Of Permanwlt ~ :'tt1on 11~ 3333 W. COAST HWY.NB Wlllte/pelomlno. 1un BHcll envlroment, tOC'AnnEgan. EASYA88EMBLYWORKI time In Mure. Com-SMr9top-of41n9pd bMt otterl 751-3508. 842-4&44MMon-Fr1 roof.&.cill•lt.r.otep9. frtendly ttrnoepfloel•. end 110/llllllml ULU/UllWlll t714.00 pw 100. Ouw. penHtlon b•Hd on M30 Mete. oft9' 75M195 M9ug. phone ~2.e1 lac Trui,.rtat ta All other opttonl. Mint 1111c1N•1t berleml. 89nd / k Full or Part-time Counter PllY"*!t. No S... 0. ptCNWI abllltlee. Phone FREEZER 21 CUBIC ' eond.128,500.720-9041. rw.ime: Mt1. Br«:tl•. Pelnlll!l9nt pt, n«n '· S.... In Ael9ll Hardw9na 11111 Hnd 1tamped · Sam Hooper,. Money Ma FOOT. Whtie upright, 3 S!!fflaLGtM1 IMS CIO Coc*ran Cttw. Uv-9XP«*IClld. (knowtedQe Store. ExP pr'efd. a.. envelope: ELAN-903. cf*'-lnt9rMtlonal 714 )'Ml'9 old, S20o -OBO ~ fXALE Cua~rs Ult ~ ~;no= 8~= ~.~::.= ~ St.w, Wrlgfyt Harctw.. 3418 Enterprtee Ad, Ft. 4111~. 846-1415 CUM rack IOlld wood WEEKENDER eXUPER port Bwtl, CA. eaeaa. WOl1I wttllOut ~. 1ae AocMet«, CM. PWoe. fl 33412· UllPT/IWIYOllllll REFER/22 cu n. "' wt111 4x8.' 2 .,,e.. lampe. and 9 tt. new upnoeawy, toti.t, _:__,,.._---,,---..,.,.,-I Cell 499-4187, ~ UL11 Plllll fAllTI FANTASTIC OPTYI ~ SUNDAYS at our R.E. o4-toe matcer 134(). 17 w ft much m<>fW '800/obo, oven . I c •box , CLERICAL pcMlltlon wtttl 1-&pm, Mon-Set. Commtlllon ontyt Mu.t gN11tve ~ w/eolld b In Newport c.ntw. top fl'Mzer 111~. c.n. 844-5882 Jack1/bounce away1, =~~:·~~~~ lfyou're tooklngtora job, heve ~·Cell *"':-'NI~~ Call Mon-Fri 9·5. llver546-1112L.arry Get anangte on th41cemera ·~~Jobo.~l·~ft~~ .... l.'141HI• Admlnl DIAM MIJ..1182 claMlflld hu ,_.for you. I during · l'lrl l13-6630. mgt. ydt'fey 844-eoeo EOE n you're looklng tor 1 car, equipment you've alwaye uk t0< Don 842-9511. Chemp/pal., lmm~I• ctualflld hu newt for yoo wanted Read cluelfled cond wvtoe di ••••n-...•• tt••••••• •••• MttttCJtln/ btl "ot tec:t. re::,,: •i ScMttra IOll (t84Wl~ a.a.. or Buy. .. ..llMUELm 111,ltl : Motor Scoot« t tOOmt .J• IUllU e 1750. 55&-GOCNI tor Met1( •1111 DELIVERY DRIVER Ari> TRYING HUDEJI TO BE .e l • 8ALE8 •SERVICE •PARTS • LEA81NQ Dally Pilot motor route available In Huntington Harbor area. 1-2 hours per afternoon. Call 642-4333; Monciay - Friday 10-5 P.M. Ask for Art. • Brand MW '85 Hond• 1 100 Quell 81., N.B. e Z50R Mini llfk•. ~. 833-8300 : rlden Sacrifice "475. r.;:=:;:=====;;JJlj~il!ii!J! •' 842-6409 JI : 4 .... Drift/ J ..... el tllO ·1-.. -... -.. --1111 ............ : It COfMe with bucket CALL TOOAYll &SI FOR LOIS Your a.rm. Dln1C1ory Repr...,,tatlve 142-4321 tit. 301 i-ii~~nmi~ • Orange Coa•t Dally Piiot 330 W. Bay Drive C09ta MeN, CA • ..., •. ttnted g1 .... radlal • tlr• and your-. for Im- • medl•te dellWry. e (Stkl 28tn{Serl 5271) . .. ... : ORANGE COAST CHICK IVERSON PORSCHf AUDI l HFVNOLFT lllt h•tl Quality C:.al .. & S.rvlu CHICK IVERSON JIMCLICK AUDI/RENAULT JEEP S,' n IRVINE AUTO CENTER •• 2524 H'::c:r"=! w... ••••••••••• ••••••••• • Mt·I021 U S F C"oa11 H""ll Nowporl S.ach 714-951-3144 800-428-7 485 MOTOR ROUTE Available in Irvine area. $300 to $600. No collect~ Ing. 3-4 hours a day. Mon. thru Friday afternoon. Sat. & Sun. morning. Call 642-4333, ask for Kirk. ORANGE COAST 81lly Piiat 330 W. Bay St. Costa Mesa, CA Openins• Now Available CAR ROUTES E•rn Extra Ca•h For De/Ivery Of Thi• Paper HUNTINGTON BEACH FOUNTAIN VALLEY INDEPENDENT CALL 842 -1444 Ask for JoAnne Craney Vaaa 673·0900 BUICK '80 Sllyln, ve . .... .._ ___ ...., ..... 11~~~~~~~ Auto, P8/P9, P'W!On. Cr ., UTll-YU I! cntrl, ern/fm .... ... '85 fectory,7 pw. All op-trane. $11H, 141 IM3 lion•. 4000rnl. 840-9n3. • SMB * BITTER • CAD ·n !Jdor'lo eo.w.rt. * PEUGEOT * -.. ,,_... t u ..... Allti••n, •MASTEAATI * ;';~~~ Claulea NH * A~A AOMEO * oond. ,... top 7-o.M7f ENSEN INTERCEPTOA 111 '14. lmmeo oonct. 52K ml. Muat .... INOO/ObO, ;~-D, Metehlnd,..~ ... • t ' In ci..m.d -•• bringing ~~ .... In town to -for AWi 544-12 t2 * 762.-00 * room. ADVERTISI IN THI DAILY PILOT'S CLASSIPllD PAGIS PRIVATE PARTY RATE (No Cancellation) 4 lin., 5 time minimum · ,$.60 ,,., line-Example1 4 lines , 5 days$1200 ' • ~ ... not Clflfll'/ IO Co~ O« ......... AlltOmofl,., loGllrlf ~ aaal htaile •NO CAMCl!lLATIONS 0. CHAltOf~ _. !h. ed hel""' Cwo-i. ,. ..... fOf .. Ml ~ • FOR MOR! OflAILS / CALL ~2·5678 t - ' , I I 1· .. T .... •• .... • .. I MUC '9DTIC( Ml.IC M)JIC( '9i0 .. -· UK ... PW1JC lllJTIC( 1'1111: llllTIC£ PWIJC JIOllC[ PW1JC llJllC( PWIJC IDllC£ MJC !!plP ~-...... •• ,_.... &A*9 a ~ DA • .............. 'h••,,! ~ °'-C.. ~ t VIO !~N AKA MA,_Y~~-.. ·= ~a.;;O:· ~~ ~~.!!_ ~010t =....,_.....!._~If ... -Vllillll ~ ••J"unld.m1GM.,,: PlotNN'tlf,._1, ,."'"" ,,.... ... _ ... -•onw.--..-.-----,..., ..._. ... • -·••• 10, .. _1 .. , •• • 11. t. 11M .J~~~'! .. ·~ A ....... • -.i.., ....., .... 11¥ lie Ofllll "' "-~ ~ 111 Gov-....., A..,., ~1. · '" a...._, ..., tr; r4 ••= r ,., .. _,,, .... •• ·r-· -11¥ .... M, ..... h ._. ...... W ~ .... .,.,. _ _,,......,..,. ,_,,,... V119y,..,. .. ,_ .........,.,. .......... .._...... .. ~lft l1le ...... 11e.10011rmpp-..-7 llM7I ••lfttnCIHdO) "'"T l .... Oewt .. Or-.. w . 11tt 1-ltNet, .......... ~.... LIMrly Wood• Inter-..................... thAt a I -,,...OAN TM»T COM.. 00..ftty ret'*""e diet Roofft IOO, ._.,..,...CA ,..... -. eo. • lllOt...., ....... lflo., ~ _.. ~ Diie. ,., tw fie i1*1 ...,..,.. NABS IWUC llOllCl ·~ -• OM=•• =:. "'.-::..: ... =-~-= = i:i ::.. "':...""1: =~':::""·•·~°'fl •. ":.:; .=-... -:.,-:.. ":.": :.:-... ::.:."' •,,-..: . -• ·-CAlll.LAC a:=. :-:.::-. -=. .. • • ·-"":".:::-'~.'.:.•:: ""~::"' -...i =:----.. -... /·~ 0:.: " .... ::.:::,,,'ti/,:. .. .:"-.,:1?'i:ot.: =.=t ~ :": ... --... -.. (CITA011e1To~': .... ffls ......... -;: ""'*' ''4uoet• ............. '" ... ~~~.,. ... ,.... '"dwoetdbr:•OOJJIOfdon ., .... , •lftUttM ...... ==-'"·-=L ~..:...-... ... ~ .. ~,,...•rvn ~.~~ "i?~ -..... ~ 10 ... , .. , ... lie ................ ._ ... ~ ~ LINttY Wooct• lfttOr• ~In h b1c1. Md ..... to Ollil*MAY ~ ....... C••w. .0... -.-·--.._ _.,,_. .. _._ --undlr 11o lnds9lft.. •=•*',.--a. Madt IN! lfllll lie~ Ind netlonal, lno., "•Y • flOrtft -lllltt '" ... ·-'"'•'II--...-_ - .,..._ .. ..._-W, LT::::-::-":.~ -... , __ _.,,_, 0, --·----" ... 1 .. -... ltu -"''"'~ •a11 .. , .. 'iiit,-tij.,;_,,;y --'"''!:!_It -~ ... lltlodieyt AllOC&ATU, IHO. ... "=•..._• - 1 ..... AIC. form ITD lf1...,. die Ille! al>OYOoottatect tlrno and TNa .....,.It wa tied aroundttor,......., .. ....,...,a~• .._-.: .... ttd 1~0.1100 ~~. ~~Tl~A.&....!'...._.IOiON ....... .,_ A._,... on the~ PfO:llOnt Mopt••• .. .-.. lwttflthe~Clertlf//#Or-lild. =If a... -... 0....-A a• 1 ° • .._ ""' .. , ""'""'" ............... ,.. ........ onMAYf4,t ......... uNlltlthellld• "'*-.. ••tu.Go• ... County on .. tt, .... ...,............" .... -.,.. • .. ... .io""'*llWI. MC ICIHZJI. liol -., • ... .. ••t:.aoA.M.lnDlpt.No.1• 11 , ...... ~the IT'D POIM,......toraetft•of 11M Ml,.._Md, ts WWWf/1# ........ ~.. .. .. 0..ClafelflQr. COITAMUA MO KIHZll _~ NfM ,_ ,._ 1000MoOeneerOrMw.t, ltt. blddoounwtta~ ,.,.,. II ~ Aftf .,... l"I lllildid ar._ 0..-.... c._, in .... It, 'It ~.D0a1to10 ;:: .::--.,_ ... l.._Anll.CAtl10:I. lld Jl"IUIHI """'lie h91rrtlumlni'O)~ ~ °'7. COMI .... lllldlnlle~DJ I' I ra .... Afrlt'f."•U. -~ ..... lllt ..:~=.:.: ...... -~=-=.,:.:,.~~~=,~.:,::.err:: ::'ts'=*-~ --,~.~Apt '._,I, :.•.::.:..-r.:-. ~ l,t 1tll MOit "U f ... 0... CIMI 090. Celt~~ dsmelldando) KllTH DU ""_, -, ...,.., ...,_ WW • h ~ hm '*"' Ind laofl lltd mu. oontorm MO'rt tloar'I Wfto w .... M ~ "4t ,_. & -I. l42•NSI MOUOHIL ~ ..... "-._ '*""8 llfld ..._ ,.,, • ll*tttdoew wi1 not lie Md lie ,..._wtw to 0.1 111•••11 on fllfllWl£ f//# .. .. .. ""' ~ ti. '9. ttll , ....... ~ ... -::.!__ --. ...__. 11te11on1•11ewrtnanooteo-OOl IUI ........... oontr11CCdoot¥Ml1la. I ... .,. llftftH' oorpoi...., Md ...... ~ -·~ M-019 llf ¥J, 111111 DAYa ... -"R I a ,._. .. ---,. llofw Wltft 0. ocut Mfof'O =---· of ~ The laofl *der ... IUtlmlt, ,._ ""'lllK rncq 111n -Oflldr .... -alDCAMI TMIOKI II _.... • ,_ to•• • 1 k. '•.., .... 1.,. ....,.._ Your .....,, ~ hM h rtgflt to on .,. form fUrNaNd wfttt eien. It lie'*' 11 ~ •...,.. aeM ~llNO"OALL'O" ............ 'el$11Rea ....... -~ rflpM anoameyllelnparworby 111'11 ~'". -oontreot doeumonC.. a YOU AM • ""~' ...... Ot • ..,........ IWlfihuUI• .... INI~ ...,~,,. ............. j~'"°'"""· t»ct °'to,.._ 111'11or11 •of•PfCIPOMd.woon.,1=::•:::0.::.,.wun .._ 1'la """"Md .. ~21....! .. ... ~ A'*-rw.._ ..... ~~ ....... • lf'YOUAMACMDn'0..*9. treotonon-.E;j -...._..ofll91'*11 ..... ·-~--..._..._, .... SiNtMt ,_. ":J': ......, ._,.. ...._ • 0t 1 0011•1f11tt cndltof of No t»ct .. M oon1llf1 ed ,........ by 0. _,. Ula.aN YOU TMI ..,.. Md Jo11W1 _..,.,.., If ~ ~ ' lllYllLIT ...... fUSI•• -.............. (1lllM ... the -• I llf. you'""" ...... " .. .,.... .. a ... Ind lubOontraotmo , AOTIO• TO PROHCT tll• bidder •• • HIO ~-Of ••'11a1111ACHllVD .................... ._,........_). 1 ~..,. ... theoourtO# dlrdtlwn!Unllfladby .. ,,.._Act~. Coda 'IOURMOllMif,fTllAY ,,,.._.INp or.,.,_ IOUTHINt ~ 1fUHT1HGTOHMACH = ........ ._,._ ~..:.c.:: ';'r-::,:...-:_11e :"' 2-,-::-::,_·~: 1eo~c:.:.,.,__..,_1:u."'°~~':'i: ::.":...=.::': ~=':,~._ n.::::::=-.. MJ-tllJ1141-aU1 I,_ .. "" .. -=-----1=....: ..... i::...:: _,,_.. - -... -., •U .. TION O• TNI ... _ .. ,,.,. __ '!.!: eo. -I TANICAI, -· ... llT -'H$1 llU • .... ,_..., ••IMAI OWMIOe from 1f10 cMto Of 11rst • J't NJ I lltw llldOlr'I nwy OMtllar'• otlldl peya111a to MATURI 0' TH I of the lllclctlr With a ...... Ano., • c ... ,.. oorpor.. 10t01 ... ~ ... r ,... .... ... -. _, ,._ ,.,. ~rHHtar Haj..._ ........ prowldecl ...... Md Ob1.ttArt ... tt1oOllTNCTor1t»ct1>onc1 "'OCUO.. AOAMleT Mliorl folowrr'I ~ d0n.100W.. .... = 111 ,.._, YmieJ, c., -II.Ill ... Mil ....., ......, _. ,.. ~:_ • .... • ..... 1 ,n ho11on 700 of trt. 'POOtftOatlone, and" btd In o. '°""' Mt fcw1tl In tlll ',ou. ~ .. ~~ "OeA (lhe. ~ MrNt''; ~··~ c.. 11 • - R BINS "'" ----~ ""..,............. .......... "'otieto COiiie of~ '°""911¥Mlncl•orme11na oomr.ot ~ In .,, ACT .. -.. ·-·-ptowtdad ~ "° ... . ... -COit-UMtly WtH1 .....,. ---=-- -h I I'::':'".: T." = ::'::;.::'':::, "':"'.:: :.'": ':. ~ ~ ==... "'::.':'.: _,..;. UU = = ":"' .. ":.'::: ~'l~:' (:'.::":; , .... ..:::;•.-::. ,..... ............. "" t 4 • fll$1 ... ,montN from the,... of .. done .... ab0"'9 tddNse. •• ~ thet -*-·~ -1, 1~ ... :.:.: ............ the o,._ .. ~ -==~-"::' ~:o.,....,,. Ymll,, c.11. :" .. ·::== =i:-:r.-,::-.:~:=-=.. ... ~ ..,.._ (1t4i::...:::. =.;·~ ==~ICON~NCI HO·=---~-.:-............. D.t.::,-lo - FORD J111,r1 HARftuR e1vo (0.IAMl\A t;4J •101fJ ........................ : ... •••olu .... bytheoourt. If you A""""*" bond ..... ..,. .. "'9tcfiCrto Mltl vrcu. INC ... ~ • ,..,,. of the J't ....... 1111 I "f~:-... ~ ~~..,... ~ 018 _.!!.~,.,.a per.on .. ,... 11d.., ct.rd '°''" eo1 it. the blddtr.rnttie...,..of,_,,.. ~T~~~~T= ._ ... ,. r,....., end ,,...,_, ~": '-'.·. 411.Pr ·..,• ......, ....... ...---•the ....... you IN) WW "'*"'f//#flft)'.--it11flle to.,.., Into Mid oontraoc, ,.__,. ~. ,.,. a. 1 c• - D. ,. N ,. '• .. I ;:;;;;;;=;:;;;;~;:;:;; • .... aN ..._ (laeM Ill -. "'*' tlll-.outor or.._ oontraot pttoa ~ .ooom.;. Mltl ~ wlll be for,· IMOUted b'/ Tltnottly '· The Qty Cowd of o. Daly Not Acwtl • w.y I , lie Courlty an II Or- ' , , ._ ..... ~ .. _... • ,,....... • rserator, or "'*' the at-~ ewry OOft1t80C ~ f91ted. I MoOulre, • •:.. "*'· City of C-. ..... ,__. 12, 11, ttll Cculty °" A'9I 11 • .,..._ • ... le -. :..,~.,"• ...... SI= 1 1D'"9'J tor the ....-0t enttCPenCftn lnw The DWrNCT reMnW ~~ ~ t111rtgfltto,.._ltl'Jor11 t.M1I _ .,....... .... ........ .. .... , .. i 1...,...,M«, end ... ...,.. ... ooo. ttie rtatn to '9fect""'"' .. 1 · ~ ~ ~ .., ...., .._ • ,._ ....., • ......_ ....... llo OCM1 wttti PtOOf of..,. The......,. *der w111 blOI or to Waf\oe 111'11 ~ • 1 INnd, o..ct: Apf1I n. 1... "'8.JC Mme( ~ ~ eo. .. •DIM OWAllOI J •?re• •Moe '90 •• 1wto.. • wrttten NqUeeC et8t-lie ~ to .,.., Into e ~In 111'11 b101 °' In ~":: Ndy Ann ~ ar.,.. CC*lt Not _.. 111. -1. =,. ,. ... ,., .... :_t.;, • • • ................ ,me ttiet ~...,...,.... oontraDtw1ll •-··" "' 11elllddlnQ. ~· end-:: ~P1oCAcwt21. 1... umJ a.11.1• ~ ...._ • ,... 1!"9,.,... 1 nottoe of the tlllflQ of an~ lie torm of • ''8tarldatd ""-1ftott'9pr0¥ltlone M070 N:lhiOUI• llllM -·· · · ' · •......... ....._ ..,_ -.~ ltw .-tory end ~llWlt of Aor-.t1811f, bm STD I '' of llotlon 1771 of Ute Labor i · 8 ~· 9*ltl Mm STAW • • u.. _.. • ................. ,... ... ..._. ..._-..or of the,_... wfilds 1"911 lie blndlna "'*' Code of ttle Sf* of c.- 1 • to "' on.. P\8JC Jl)TIC( The~'*"°"' .. ~~=~=~~~~ I t f *' "' le ............ ..._ ........ "°"'or aooount1 lnll'IUolled the a... of Celtomlia Ofltt fornA-. the D&tTNcrhllot>-kuth :nter.t, II .. ..._ ~ -•bTANO'n..mlfm,oo, "" r 4 • m1u k ln1181tsau ........... ,..,leotklrtl200nl200.6of uponllllPP'OWll1>y1'1a....._ talnadfromtheDlreotorof lnoommon,~"*°'9.n llO'nC8 I ~& t eo tuto, xlt oond MK ...................... -•wt lllll ''• ,_. INCelltomie,..,otiet.Code. Tiie oonnot le not blndlna tlll~ of lnduetrMil recorded I DeclembOt 11• wm111Q _,. PLYWQOO COMPANY, _,, .. now tlrH,. bat, ... f"' 0011 ..... , ..... a .......... ,... . .,... c. ......... on...,.., party uNlltl ana A•l•tlon• tll• general 1ee1 • lnMnlmentflUmber •rrntllO. nt 110101 ..... A,..., ..... I RUSS ....... ,-..... .,... ::·..-:·~ ..::..:::: 1:7'::'"-:.=::;·::::::-r .. ::-~ ::;.:r: ;::::.: ==:.."..: ="!..-.:: ~ ~~~:Z: .rmc•,.':, ·.~':.~:: ~ -...... -~~.': a~.h'. ... II ...,. ....._ • .:..). ...._ ICA Ill SI •• agendee, lnolu:dlno the 0. ~· for llOlldoy OOtdet of Oranoe Courity ~Ol)OMll _.be,..,_., by I llbel'ty Wood• Inter-~ away Fridliy • • PlaJC llJJlC( "°:' -• -'" ~.,, -:~ ~'n° 22°.":'. ::."' ..:....-o.. =.,, _ ;::.::,. "':, ':; •-" -wiU: ""'~ ~ c;... "";.~ :"'....::'-A...":!'i::; I A,..u 20. 1ioo at ~ r 091I fll$1 uute • ...... ,_. tlll The~~ lldd': of 11eee All nolltllfilmpt 1'-. ~ be periotmed tor eectfl ortft ~gi.~: ~f== loll 1200, C-......: C.: 111, ~ V*'t. c..r. 1 1 o ca I h oa pl la l . ",f19C11hOUeWll ,_.., .. -., .......... --........ ...... ..-~.): .... 'I MTOee not.oftl.0000'rnot9are Oftype~WOttl•~ FOA CAIH OR CA8HfE.A'8 forNa t2tn-1200, on °'10210I Survived i...v h~ ~•Mm ITAl'WlmWT ....... ......, .. .._. .... .......,.,_ --...,... eut>taot to._ oontrwitor -.cute .... oontract. ,,_ ""'., ,~..... btfor9 o. "°"' 11:00 a..m. TMI .,...,,... .. 00!'-.. T ~ J etrH ..... ft H Plf1or Coutt °' c.llfomla. 11_.,. W\Tll'r-noudlaor·niottoft Md~ l'9tee .. on Ille• ttle Dl8-CH....,.,. --91 Ume °' on Fttday, M9'J t , , .... " ducted by. a oorpot.acw 1 band, Robert Rlm ux ,.,,!!'!:::;::,::--.,.. ,.,,.,.,.., _,_.., =":::.:.T"t.: ,,_,,. ~:~ '"'"°' "•"'"mulo """'--"""° :=.:;:,':";r..",.::-..... -,_" ""-·"-• Ln@wN -::-ClaA fJOHTANA PAl'fT· ~'==...,_ .......... rom1at33o1 • Maneaotr Pllt**lt lo OCMtmment ~ P=, IMna. enttanceofttlelowofllceof thoblddtrtodelllwNabtd """ ..... ,, .. !led Ronald Rum ~"Sao -· • -"""'*' -,:: .;::'::0:: ""_; -,.. --g::.,.~0,::.,-:= ..,,::.•:.,,.._,".:':.,::: c-n... 7t7 Udo:.=~..: :;,"':!~"":::,:'r,· 0 1•1•: brotbm, ''"""'"'•· "'" --·--__ .,,_, A...., ':I"::""' 't eom, -2 -a ., __ .,,..,_ ·--_.., .. __ ttll -~ • Fronk MIU..• of .,._...., '"""'· • ..,, b 1 "' '""••-'"'' ......... °' _..,,_ .., ... _.,.,,· . ,..,.,. ... _ ·-'::°.,.,.. _.....," ""° -G,..t T..-.-and ~~ountatn V*t. Cellf. ._ a .. • •s f • ,_. ~: ;:1.,."'::,·'l:i ~ ,~~ • rn aooorctanoe wtth ttie _!ICONTlfiell tt:~ory~ ";.,.., ..-, = a.m., or • eoon thei..,.., ""'*'*' OtMOe Co. LeaUe ~ ol lllv· ~ a AMocl t" llMara•www.•,... • Propoeect ct.el . proWilotw of a.oaon 1no v.. """'""to-...... ll'lthe • .,,.,..... on ,,_'°""'Not Acwt II."'-a, _ Lula I ., c!11tornl1, 1:430 WSMle • tllltlfll • e mero de telefono del &action ~ opmanc!f ofthel.aborCode,theO. theoontrec:tlUWdlld,end ~ c:: Meyt, 1M8.tn1'1aco;.;;Gi 12,lt,ttll ~; __,,_, nur.1 Street. Suite_......._ • .,_....., ~~~··01Prefaf:IM:c'~ Plt1ment 11111 ..,,..,_,upon eny .ubcontrector ~-~Clt)'Hel,n''*I M-474 M . a.dnjaJ ot Rtwer-Cellf =... .....,._ ... -._,_,.._,.., Que no ..__,. ..--tflOI the glf*W ,,..._.Ill INlr euctl COH'TAACTOA, Ofto4, eo.a ...... C.. aide and PbyW. Tate 02, fount• Vt/JWt, · ,,_ tlence abogado, H): for~~-, __ C. r ... of W9gal ~In to pey not leat than ttle Mid ~ 1 ':at~ tornA., for tho""'*'*'° oh of n •• __..._ .,_ rkm c.. .... nm we RD EL c HA p I N ' . --.... oouncy In wtlkltl the... ltP«llfted,..... to .. won... on oat 7 QAHO MOWIHO UHtt ni .. ~-. ._, "' .._" ,_ ,,,, ___ °'lEVOOETT. Ga•"d M .~.--....... _____ ,,._ ..... ,.. -~o:;,,. --...... wtllbebeld~. by. • llmlted perii.. IN court i.: (EJ nombf9 y ~~ ~~ ...;=:,• ~ FeetlWtl of Ml 1atalll1hed Md pub!Wled ecut:on of Ifie oontraot, ~ ~ ~780 !; ~lb• ~ be i»-SCllAllLOS April 29, 198S at 12 ~.(ij-..no L 8etoore, ,,..._ dlNodon d9 la oot'9 -~ Ye. ' ...,, ' of Bleottl"..... of by the ~ of ~ No bidder !NY wlthdr'9w Alocird. of ,..____ telrled at the <>Mae of the -noon &t The Ray~ MUNICIPAL COUOT .,.,CA ..... , -_,, --· ...... =""'""""°'-· ------•nr.. U M.moriol 0..pol. ~~~~j' • ~:;;,~": :!a'~•U•n Numb•" ;l:,':".,.""c:!, ":. ~ t,, .,": :1'..::.. ": -~~:;':': l::, =-= .. ":: HOllSIOPES s!,, a-,,., 163:1 Harbor Judicial Dletrlot, ·~__..,. ,.___., Publllhed Orenoe COMt ~. 'e!Mew 0. b6d•. .._... P9ruiVt>••tenent tumedto1'1a~ofthe ..... North El Camino 4801 Jwnborw Blvd .• 8un. rv...__, ~ ..._ Dally Plot ~-27 21 MoPtTUllel 0... A P9)'ment .,....., Ind a Lot City a.ti, ""'*t Mid 11"1 Reel. In wUl 101 ~ Beeott CA DallyP1otApr111, •.21,21. 1..e Apfl • • • Me1Npac11on.-11et1e1ct perfofni.a bond .. be oommon'='° 1of llrnk."' a IAlliled ~ LllAm tennent t2Mo ' 1* 1 a.a12 T~. Apfl 2ttrt, 10:00 l1lqUlred P"°r 10 ueoutm In 1boc* 3, = ldentlfted on the OWllde wtth follow at the El Toro The neme, add,..., end 1 M-c>63 A.M. FalMlw Deve101MMn-of ttie oonttect and "*' be of Mtac iti..,.. o. lld 1tem Number and u. II TIE Cemetery, El Toro, ::-..::...,-:-:; ",.:::;:; llllllC llJJlC( PUllUC ll011C( "'.:::-~ °""' °' :..:... ~ " .,. -°' -O.· °'::,~ :."' - -fll CA, Ray . Family ~n wtthoUt .,. ettomey le; (B Plant ()pefltlcll• IH. Purwt to 9ectlon 4680 ~ ~ aadl end """'1 Item .. -Mortuary' Direc1.cn . .. _______ nombf9 18 dlNodon'y •nu-K IC7ll o..... Publlelled Orenoe COMt of ,,,. GcMmment Coda ot • "* fof1tl 1n o. ~ ... I llYIGE "8JC NOTICE mero de ••l•fono d•I '!2!'C9TM !!! NOT1Ca TO o.ly PloC Apttl21, 21. 1Me the Stet. of Celltomle. the ~ Wiit. , : Any end 11 •aptio11Uo the O'CONNOR abaoedO del demlndente, 0 VWA ..... cown.AC'fORa MOM contreot wlll conlel n lnOluel¥e IOoated thww lipldflQaUorwl'l'IUM bealeer· gaMES A WYN O'CX>NNOR U.t dll demendante que no PLOMNal II. 08 1* (SI ... ) prcMelone l*mlttlng ttle s· ~ ~ In tl'te *· Md ,..,,.. '°I .. born A 9 1927 0 2PK:iihOUe Wll llenoe ~ •): LAW , WLDmmUTM AU 8-.cs pr'OpOMlt wtll be 1uccH1f11I bidder to ·A eneint to .., fOfttl In'/ lt9m 1n t111 PllE UCUll • • Mm ITATllmltt'T Of'f"ICU 6' c' R "BUO'' PL.OMMCI ... KIMmDY ,..,.., at the °"'°' °' P\ll.IC NOTIC( IUbetltute MCUttti. tor ln'I tor-::::. IPKlflo1tton1 •h•ll b• Ka.nua. P-.t ••• , The folowtng petlOM .,.. MARSH, 1n22 -~ llvd.. AU P'l.olmlCa Plent Opei.uor. -,..,.. MOnCa TO "IOM'J9 wtttNkS by.,,. C>l8-en1C¥W11' == oroundt tor ~ of the I April 28. 1988 ln J'ull- dolng ~ ee: Ste One, Tuetln, CA t29IO. ~ Dl'v'l1op1M11ta1c.tter.2501 COlfT'RACTotita TRICT lo •n•ure per common.,.. of IOt fltd. er\an. Survived by T.W.O. ENT~PRl8E8. (714)544-1836 -Hwbof llvd., Coeta Meea. CAU.81CIPOR_,. torme11ce Under the OOf!o-EecftllldlNll•UotUlthe H band n '-hard S4a8 VllCa Sierra.~ DATE:(~) JUNE 21, AICA~WY CAuntll2:00P.M.on••· 8ohooloi.tnct·IMneUN-tr~. 4· Nt ~ fulnemeeand....,.. .. of d ua • ~ : c..r.eom 1Ma IMlrf...,._ 1Me,•whldlttmetf""J.-lfed • o.s.,,...., ~Ir A. ~ Wlti unA tor a11 pereone end pe111e1 au1hter. Korry Delber1 c. &ton. M3e J. ,...,...., a.ti. ~ MDOPNllllOit blopefted..::',~ Bid DHdllne: tO:OO •t;::,tL.,~enoe OoMt Md occupancy of 1:-.::i "'':9~1f c Joho; '°"',James and :-:OSlerra. eypr.., Cellf. LA=-~~ TO AD•HTD ~--taoll. end o'Olooll A.M. of lhe 5th dl'J ~Plot Apn121. 21. 1Me iOtold common.,_ .ute the::,... °To. of; Mark 0 Connor; Glber1 c. AnoMta. 24" o.ity Plot April f. 14 21 llTATI llO. A.-~ '*' ury 10,. of May. 1Me MOM dllflned"' ttte dedem:on lloers wno c... l1oft "'/ mother Ade If• C... "·· Huntington Pert!, 211 1Ne • • • To .. ...._ -~· place (4) h\P.h voltage ~~°' ~ ,.._.: 5050 = ~~ llQl.-rtem on bet'9lt of O. L Stoltenberr, erancf-~11802t!8..nw 11 oon· . M-047 ::J::::. :: ,;::. ~ ==:n: ~In :: Project ld1ntlflcet1on PllllC NOTICE Mil, Ptl09 1193 of ~tti!" one~"":: IOI\, Juon Jobo and ducted by. OOi*tnert me)' bl othlrMM In~ oordanoe ...,. .;. end Hen-= County P~ K Ml'M offlolll raoorde of eeld coun-1191 If the * le by a Ptlrt· / Ir• n d d 1 u I h t er. Delbert c Eat Pl8JC NOTICE In Ute _.. and/or •et• ot: ~ .. tNrtitore. UrWwetty ... ~ ACTmOUe w11 ty Md lfWMn on ttte con-I ...Np °' • ~ ~ Tamara Joho. Man- • .. -, .. 0 •• H c • .. . • ... ... -:.:::r:--~ .... .. .. ··-IT .. _ dornlnlurn pier! flor-=itt unit ... _. ...... end •I A ort.aI ... "-M Thie lt*rMn1 -,_, IC .. DMa WllDEAMVTH AKA FLOR-lo 1 ;;:r; pr ap-!MM Unified lofM)(lj 0. n;;-____...,.,.. • Tiie '1rMt liddtw Ind :;;::.;-;.':';... part. le.·-~ OD· wtth ~~ ~..!' ~-(CrfACtOee MMCW.) ENCE M. KENNEDY AKA ~ .. "Imel .. trlct, 1050 ltarrenc• ......... =::.~eom. other OOfMlon dMlgnetjon, ,,.,. endr.: ~ If / ' day, 11 A.M. Padtic enoe ., on ,...,.... " ' NOTICE TO DEFENDANT· Fl.OAEHCE WILDEAMtJTH, ___._ SecUon PMnotly, !Mne. CA 82714 ~"' /If In'/. of ttle ,_. ~ Vi~ Chapel Pmfic ,... ' ....... ""0 .. ""HCE KE"'NEOY ---wttll NOTrCE IS HEAE8Y put• Bl.in... St°" 27'80 dHcrlb•d abou ,, lh• bid ., 1• • •01• s v M [)( """ n.. ""' " Ulte lit eaq., Tlltl 2. Cel-01,,.,N .. h b H~ llvd.. Coete Meea ,__. t .._. 21..,. ........... I propn.torlNp or anott.-lew or1Uary, -9300 a t Ill...-t•-llOI AKA FLORENCE MARY fomle Admlnl9tretNe Code. u ; lnlt I e • ove-Cellf. 82929 pu.,...... ,.., o .-. vc ..,_, enttty tfllt doe. ~ rec\Ors. ,!attl Dtantlc na H -n u; Kennelh Mltehell 227 SO Slnlell, Unit # 105, Coate , BUICK PlllJC NOTIC[ Nl.IC NOJJCE PlllJC NOTIC[ Temco. Rlwrtlde: C111t. ~ =*' T"*-::-'W:. := ~ 4 92508 dlolctelme ""' llebllny tor 111'11 of the bidder wtth • cMlll>-s CONIOLIDATED AJPORT OF CONDfTION Richard HH, 371 N. lncorrectneee of ttie '1rMt 1nat10n folowfng ~ "THE •ANK OF OAANOE COUNTY" OF FOUNTAIN VAL.LEY 8eredlo 81.. Orenge, c.llf. ed<:reee end other comntOl'I "DeA (1tte ftc:ttttoue ~ ConlOlldated Report of Condition of "THE BANK OF ORANGE COUNTY " ~ builneee I• con-~· " en>J, ltlOWn l~nem. "°'::'·be"° ueec1 I 2 of Fountain Valley, Orange County. end Domestic None Subsld latles at Iha ducted by. • general pert. a..d .... wtll be made but ~ ,,_. 19 1 cunwit close of buslneu on March 31, 1988. nerW!lp wttttout ~t or W.,. ji'9gletrdon MUI the Oninge \J EVERY NEW 1985-1986 BUICK ltato benk No..1275 Ken Mltdtell 1 =...,,_.orlmpled,. County~ tn a.. of AllETB In Thou .. nde with lhe County Clel'ti of Or· 1enc;um enoee, to p.y the nernee of the Preeldent, Dollar Amo.1nta Thie .. atement -flied gw • tttle, pa 111110,;, or ICOl'J)Or911ont. lnclUde ttte F Cash and due from banka.... ....... . . . ........... ...•.. ...... 7978 :C County on Merctl 29. l'9ITllllrtlng prtnQper 1Um °' Secntary, r,...,,., end -... ,. w ,, , ( IN STOCK OVER FACTORY INVOICE ·-------• 5.9% TO 9.9% annual percentagt rat! <1va1lable . ~ ~ . ER OOWO©W • • 2925 Harbor Blvd. Investment securltlea (Market value 1 ,... '~ ~~ ~= M~etty Council of the -0-)..... .... .. .. .. ........ .. .............. .. .. ..... . . . ..... • ... • · ..... · ·O· Publlehed Orenge Coee1 '111er9on u pr~ In Mid 1 Ctty of Coate ~ ,....,.,,.. I Non-lnvntment MCurltlea. ... .... . .. • . . • ... . .•. . --0· Deity Pllol April 7, f4, 21. 28, I not•. 'ecrvenc.. If eny, lttte nottt 10 f'9teCt ln'I or .. Trad Ing account securltlel.......... . . ..... .•... . . . . . --0· 1"6 under ttie terme of.., Deed bldl. Federal funda SOid and aecurltles ._..(MS I°' TNlt • ...., c:Nrgee and I ~: Aprll 22, 1Ne purchaled under agreements ~'Of the Trutt• end Publllhed Orange Coeel E 5 6 l 8 to resell In domestic offices....... . . . . .. .. ... .... . . ...... 4300 Ml.IC NOTICE lof IN'"*' c:Naled by Mid Delly Plot April 21. 1':, 71 Loan1, Total (excluding uneer~ Income) 22713 Deed Of Trvtt, tor the Leaa: Reeorve for posalble I{ Jll1T1 emount reuon~ •11- 1 ________ _ 1oanlo11ea................................ .... • 309 ~~•=' ~~·~~ MUCNOTICC D Loan•. net............. . ..... . . 22404 Tiie to1ow11,g pereone.,.. Deed of Trwt herwlotor. ... Bank proml .... F.F & E. etc doing bu1lneu 11 eouted end dellv9r-.cl lo the ......,.. COUSl'T (Including S-0~ capital lease).... . . . ..... .............. ......... . 1382 8AVOAIE'8, 3t7te eo.t 1 ui1di111lgned • wrtt1en 0.0.. ,. a... c.... DfM. Roal eateto owned other than HIQl!w9y. South L.aeuna, CA l"'at:on of DeflUlt and De-..... Ma, CA.,. bank premises ... ........ ... .. . ............ -· 1429 ta&2 mend tor a.. and. wntten HUNTINGTON IV-THE· lnveatment• In unconsolidated Jerr~ Ne11er. Wllllem Nol:ce of DefliUft en E11otton 81!A Moellf HOME PAN<. aubtldlarleaandaaaoclated companies.. • ... -0-=-~.v~~~·,n•· 1 :u.:'·..:e~~,=-z.-e1penner.. DO-IT-YOURSELF IDEAS Cuatomer'a llablllty to this ft111 butlnMI It con-1ut and E1ectton to 811 to '4. A READER SERVICE OF THIS NEWSPAPER bank on aooeptancea outatandlng . . ............. . -0· ducted by. co-pw1rter'I be r9Corded In Ille county DICKINSON PAClflC Other aueta (lncludlng --0-lntanglblea)...... . ..................................... 550 Jerry Nel .. r, Wllllem ,.._.the,... ~ II CABLE SYSTEMS. 1 c., TOTAL ASSETS................ .. . . .... ..... .. ..... ..... ... ... .............. 38043 Bown IOceted. lornle corporeuon, dbe LIABIUTIE8 .,.,. Thie l11twnen1 WM lllld I DATED: APf'tl 7. 1Me CA ILE 8 y STEMS ; TOTAL OE POSITS IN MUI the County 0... of Or· 1 A M I It I C A M It I • FITZOEAALO CON8TAUC- OOMESTIC OFFICES...... . . ..... . .......... .......... .. 344,302 I= County on April l8, ~= r~! TION COMPANYj • ~ Totel demand depoalta..... ... ........... .......... ... US. 147 ,_. ..w; Ill. C....-. = 1 CoJ:CH•t °';~ ':.... Tottl time 9nd aavlnga deposlla . . . . ............ ... .... ... 18, 155 I Put>Mlhed Orange eo.i 1'9M. 717 u.. Pwtr DrM, ~DOE ~NETH L ~g~~~~E~~~g:s'.~ ................................................................. --0· ~.';':,Aprll 2t. 28, Mey l~r==' CA -:::,z::~~E~t~= TOTAL DEPOSITS IN DOMESTIC ANO MOe4 S.ict .... ~c;-ITAUCTION COMPANY: FOREIGN OFFICES..... . . ........ ......... 34,302 =ev'l'~ SERVU.S. DOI m. FITZOEAALO CON- Fedetal funda purchued and eecurltlea eold under P\8.IC NOTICE INC .. 717 Lido Pn onv.'. ~~u=:.,,1coMPANY. agr•"*'" to repurchue In domntlc offices... .............. ...... .. --0-Newpott lelefl. CA ,_..., ·c... No. ~1.u Other llablllti.. for t>orrow9d money, Including LIGAl ll011Ca (714) 87~84441 •-a. noto balance. or U.S. Trouury........ ... . . . ....... ... ... . . ... . . ........ .(). NOTICE IS HEREBY PuOIWted °'7. Co.It eaoncm Y• .... .... Mort:,1=~~-~l.~.~~~-I~ .. ~........ .......... ... ·0-~~~I = P1lot ~ 1 . 2~ -:-:-.~-=IA-= AcoepttnOM oxecutod by Of fOf eocount .1 ,,,. PoAoe [)epertment of.,,. ..._ ....., ...._ ,.. ,,... of thl1 bank and outetandlng. . .. ... . . •. ..... ... ...... .. ·O· etty °' co.te MeN tor 1 :::.:. _....!'::Z:,....., ~6;·~~1t~~~tt~:ries·(•~c·,~~i1~·-~~~di~•1ec;·~··• ....................... · 233 ~~_,...of n!Mly l "8.J..;!TICE If~~.:~~= end dobenturn)... .................................. .. ... . . .. .. ... . .... .. 34,535 ~ :o'f:.• 1 e. Or· •Yrflle _,. ,,....,, Yo'I ~ dO eo Subordinated notM and dob«lturoa.. .... ................ . . ... . . .. • • .. . . -0-:=.nn ~ 1~ °::· • ,,... MO. 111 C': eo tl\111 your wrtt· lffAfllHOLOIRI IQUfTY ~~ .. ~ NOTICE II HIAHY !led~· If lnY. "Wf be Profetrod •tock -.. 12 'Pd QIVl!N lhll ... ,.d AVleOI Ulled he~ de- No. lh•r• ..... -0· •mount -0· bike, 11 .oo blll, proc>OMll wlll be NoOeNect by INodldo. El tnbunel pulde Out•t•ndlng.......... " 1~ boye bllle, lhe City of eo.ta ..... to deddli-oontre Ud .... - Common 1tock Mutr9Y bOW 1tpd CNMr, wtt The City C<Md, Po dlanc1o 1 ,,__ ~ Ud ,... No lhtr• NOt1cr IS FU .. THIA 9oll 1200, eo.c. ....... c.a.. ~ defltrO de "' di. euth0f1ud 2,000 QfVtN INt If no°"'* ep-~ llaf..1200, on or LN I• lnlorlfteoton que No lharoa .,..,_ and prow. hie own. Nfol'9 the hour t 1:00 Lm. ..,. outttandlng 1,682 Amount 3.381 erahlp ~ "'-P'Ol*1Y wllNn on Fftdl'/, Mt!1 •~ 1111. 11 lf 'IO'I .wi '° _. ltte ld- 200 ...., ,, I dl'/I folowtng lM 11'1111 be ... ·~ "' *-of "' anomey lrl INI Surplut .... ·· .. · · .... • ........ ·.. ... .. · · · · · · ....... ·.... 1, II' blUttct1 of INI Noaoe, t111 bidder to delllw Na btd lfi«AO do TOtAL CONTRIBUTED CAPITAL.. ............................. ,....... ... .. 4581 iM tttte tMNtC> 1N11 wet In to Ille City C!ertt'1 OMoe by ~~~.,_your_:. Aetauw.d taming•.. ................ . . . • ......... • .... ... • • • • ( 1073) ttie flrtcter, I there~:=, or tlll llf°'*" __,,.., tllM. ~ If lnY mey be Aoaetw for oontJngenctea 91\d In IN City of eo.. In l6de Mi be ~ CIPlfted °" .. : · other capttal rseorvee............... . . .. .... ............................ ... . . . -0. :::"lie°: !-_~ and reed *'Id et '1:00 11 UilNd .._ ....._ e1 TOT AL !HAREHOlDERS EQUITY .................. , ........... ,..... ..... . . .... .. . 3508 Hon et time .:t;:: a.rn., °' 11 eoon --= ooneeto d9 ..., abooedo en TOTAL LIABILITIES ANO ....,:,.., • ~"':, :. ~ .... _,,,.., ~ r-to 11 l ll E RED BARN II yov "•lll'l~ r ii~ ii I \It ~QI OllJP\ I"•~ D Of"fl •\ nw ~11tul1u11 1111o1\ c1011·11 01"'"<111 .Hlll•l1011 to be111u 1 \Ii ; ,, '~I'll It •11.1~~'" II''"' pt,-y•,ou" for young \It 1 1A rt1rnr• ~ ;in11 '") ~r·rtl ()• .1 pool~•<lP .tbAn.tt 11 111~ •• ,, 1 ~~ 6 , 8 • 8 Du• t••t s 1e L dn be 111ertd lo you ·~Pih An~ A!'lilll'u• woo11wo1~p1 can tollow uu• ,1.,p ri~ ~•n• ,,,, u 1 o' .1no pt •os A co<nplete mar.• " ~ ·~! ~ •! r1111tn~ \C~t-1111!" ·~ 11< lu<!Pd ~I <l I • II ocor ""'"' °"' p 0 en. )J&l YI ~ ~ .\ 9•0Q ------ •481 Rt• 8.110 $4 00 1 ll 11.11,11• l 11 il()p S2 95 p,, 1111 114 00 U• Ojr1 l~I SHAREHOLDERS EQUITY . 38:043 DATU>: Apr1 ta, 11M Mey 1• ~ H ... 71 Fltfr lnmedlet-te., d9 •te TM undertlgMd, Edwtrd H. ~. P....ident & C E 0 . end P•trldt U. ~ Cf111P °' =~• ~ c., menera, 111 re1pu•1te A Aah, A. V P & AAINtt CMNtr of the abo.,..nemed btnk, Meh decfart1, for '°'-JC8 ton-. tor the fUm11NnG of ~ II My llgUnl. puaoe ~•mr hlmMttaJont.,,dnotfortheother:l ~\19~11nowt.dotoftMmetten ~ °'9"09 COM! UNlfO"MI 1'0 .. O"UA ~·~~~A OOf'ltalned In th .. ~ tnd I bet~ thtl Met\ ttatemtnt ln Mid .-.por1 II ~Not Aprt te.. 11M f'O\.JCI ANO l"IM Pl,._ • 1 ._ bean fllsd AOO•tS\ tru,. !Kt\ of the u~-~Md. for hlmNlf aJont and not for the Other, Otrtlflee M07I '°"'NfL of tM :;':.;=;.....-you 11 uncs. penetty of S*Jut'Y that the foregoing &a tn.o end eotrtct PWllC NOtlC£ Addition.I •• Yo'I .,.. to ...,.., .,... ...,. C11v ~on.., 23, 1He at Fount.in v.-.y, CallkwNe :::O:.lb..: 0:.~ C:::tllUlt 'IO'I ...._ ~ • si.n•-------1111 _____ _ COSTA MESA 979-2500 .. .-.---~---L = ~ ~ . L-.,.,..;.r.i:,._ :=:-.:..°""!'/,:. n t: 1=.. ";C :::::::-.: ""' '"""'" ,..,,,,' "'""''" Pubtllhed OrMge ~Dally Plk>1~ .. 2•. ,_ _ M~ =.r~~.,. ....... l6de ...., be ,... r . ,...,. '° ~=...=-=-=============~~ ) > .. · .. • \ Top court rejects homeless, upholds public sleeping ban Shultz stresses need for secret action By die A1toelated Presa W ASHlNGTON -The Supreme Court hu rejected a constitutional challenge to a Sant.a Barbara. c.aJaf., ordinance uu1t bans sleeping m pubhc places. The court, without comment, refused to hear arauments io behalf of29 homeless people that the ordmance violat~ theu freedom to travel and equalprotectJon n&hts. The 1979 ordinance, passed after local ,merchants complained about panhandlers approach.mg pcdcstnans outside their stores, bans sleeping on public streets or in public parkin,g lots. It also bans sleeping in public parka and on public beaches from 10 p.m. to 6 a.m. Challenger pUot'• funeral planned WASHINGTON -The ptlot of space sbuule Challenger, Navy Cmdr WASHINGTON (AP)-Effective effons apinst terronsm require secrecy aooording to Secretary of State 5corac Shultz, who says the United States must ma.kc better use of coven a~tion, ~1litary ~taliatJon or oconom1c sanctlons tn us anti-ter- rorist fi&ht. "There arc all sons of thinas that f suppose that could be done. and the whole notion of covert action is to have it something that is not de- Michael J. Smith, will be buned Saturday tn Arlington National Cemetery wt th w 7 2 full mtl1t.ary honors. The bodies of Smith, 41 . and the SIX crew members who oman died with him when the shuttle exploded 73 seconds into its flight on Jan. 28, ' ' will be flown Tuesday to Dover Aar Forc.c: Base in Delaware lo be prepared for ,,._.,..., th burial. Lt. Col. John Myers of the Military District of Washin,gton, said the Il OW ffi Q er spacecraft's comma oder, Francis R. Scobee, will be buried at Arlin,gton on May t 9. Scobee was a ca vilian who had served in the Air Force before joining NASA. of the year Funerals for the others have not been announced. Tot thrown through window; dad held PORTLAND. Ore. (AP) -A 72- year·old mother of 12 from Stevensville, Mont., was named Na- tional Mother of the Year at the annual meet mg of American Mothers Inc. NEW YORK -A 23-year-old man was being held today on attempted murder charges after he threw his infant daughter through a closed. fourth· floor window, pohce said. The 18-month-old baby was caught by a passerby, and was in good condition at Woodhull Hospital, said Officer John Venetucci, a police spokesman. T he incident occurred Sunday night after Fred Purcell argued with has estranged wife, Vcnctucc1 said. Purcell, of Brooklyn, picked up the child and threw her through the closed wmdow, the officer said. "You know, I've said a mother really doesn't need any adulation - our children arc our gifts," Martha Ann Burke said after she was chosen Sunday from among 50 contestants and presented with a bouquet of roses and a diamond ring. Major erapdon feared ln Alaska ANCHORAGE, Alaska -Augustine Volcano has started building a lava dome and that has reduced the hkelthood of an immment. major eruption, geologists say. Geologists mon1tonng the volcano late last weeks.aid a flurry of small earthquakes convinced them a major eruption was ammm'ent. Now. they say they arc not sure. Mrs. Burke and her husband, William, !lave been married 47 years. In addition to their 12 children, they have 20 ~ndchildrcn and one great· grandchild. Clalms pour ln on Shleld damage RICHMOND, Va. -The le tters and postcards claiming damages from u~ of the Dalkon Shield arrive from all over the United States and 8 1 nauons. creating a nightmare of paperwork but a stamp collector's delight. After Wednesday's deadlme has passed for fihng claims against the seller of the mtrautenne birth control device. officials estimate the last will mclude more than 300.000 names. The A.H. Robins Co .. which d1stnbuted the Dalkon Shield an the early 1970s, began an antematao nal advertising campaign an January to notify women who used the device that they had until Apnl 30 to file a damage claim tn U.S. Bankruptcy Court here. She worked as a nurse and teacher before she mamed and now writes a weekly column m her hometown newspaper. "It's a lot more fun being a mother," she said. Jane E. Oliver, 31 , a Lou1sv11le. Colo.. mother of two, was named Young Mother of the Year. 0 CHICK IVERSON Chevrolet • Porache • Audi '41 E. C11st llwy., lew,ert leaoll 173-0tOO Highest Quality Sales & Service 0 THEODORE ROBINS FORD U.S.A. 's # 1 Thunderbird Retail Dealer Modern Sales, Service, Parts. Body. Paint & Ttre Depts Compeltt1ve Rates On lease & Daily Rentals 20IO lar~er llYlll., C11t1 11111 142-0010., 140-1211 o SADDLEBACK Sales Leasing & Service Parts 4' 0 CREVIER BMW ~ \,J/J/I SALES • SERVICE • LEASING \,J///I' "'Where Professional Attitude Prevails" S.,.cl•llzlng In Europeen O..lvery. Excellent S.lectlon of New and c•r•fully prepered U..ct BMW'• always in stock 835-3171 208 W. 1at St., Santa Ana Corner of Broadway & 1st St Closed Sundays GSTERLING SALES -SERVICE -UASINC -, •• rs Ov"'rseas Delivery Spec1allsts OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK BMW -•ROLLS ROYCE 1540 Jamboree Rd. 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W Sal•• -Service -Lea.ino ~ Ml-0110 abroad." scnbcd 1n detail, but 1t 1s certainty intended to be disruptive," Shulu said Sunday on the CBS-TV proaram. "Face the Nation." Shulu, mterv1ewcd in Hawan while accompanytng President Re- agan on the Journey that will include a seven-nation economic summit tn Tokyo, said he felt the United States was t.akin,a adequate security precau- tions apinst future teJTorist actiQns "to prot«t ourselves at home and But he acknowlcd&ed that, "When you fCt the heads of st.ate of the seven key mdustnal dcmocrades gathered together, ifs a very juicy target for terrorists." lhioss that need to be done accrctly, and we have to haveaareatcrcapecity in our country to rccos.o.iu the importance of be1na able to do thiop without havina them publiciz.cd ahe•d oft1mc." He would not say spcc1fically whether the Rcapn administration was cona1dering undercover oper- ations apinst the government of Libyan leader Col. Moammar Khadafy, but he said there arc "many Last November, the Wulunston Post discloted a covert CIA pl.an to destabilitt the Libyan aovcrnment. wbich included providing secret sup-port to Ubyan dissidents in the hope at would lead to an uprisina. l#l.4 ,...... 3 ad agencies joln to form 'superpower' NEW YORK (AP) -A merger of three of the nation's largest advertiJ... in,g agencies will create the world's largest ad group -a potential "Jlobal creative superpower," its chairman says. 8800 International, Doyle Dane Bernbach Group and Needham Harper Worldwide announced Sun- day they had reached agreement to merge and form a new public holdiq company. · Allen Roscnshinc, president and chief executive officer ofBBOO, said in a statement that the merger was tbe first ever among three advcnisiag agencies. 8800, named for Batten. Sanon, Durstinc & Osborne, is the s1xth largest advenising agency in the nation when ranked by gross income. Doyle Dane Bernbach is 12th and Needham Harper as 16th. Mother of Year Martha Ann Burke (right) la congra~ted by J>redeceuor Loulae &amino. • They have a combined workforce of more than I 0,000 employees, and their combined gross income tn 1985 was$736 million. 'M_!.SSION VIEJO ·eVOLVO HIGH VOLUME DISCOUNT DEALER LXZ[ SALES, LEASING PARTS & SERVICE 28802 Marguerite Parkway • Mission Viejo, CA 92692 (714) 582-2880 (714) 364-1210 • .. che PROFESSIONAL APPROACH 7 1 4-979-2500 2925 Harbor Boulevard • Costa Mesa, CA • 0 HOUSE OF IMPORTS • UNIVIRllTY OLDlllOBILE HONDA 2880 Harbor Blvd. Coate Meaa 540-0713 3 Blocks So. of 405 Fwy. 0 808 LONGPR• Orange County 1 Oldeit & Ulrgut Pontiac DHlenhlp •t le11e'1 81\-d & tn• C..rd•n Grove F,.......y f7t4 892-MSt 17t4J 616-ZIOO We per1or"' 111 Pontla< wamtnty work. regard•u of wh•~ you or191na11y purchased )"OU' c.1r . .,.._MONDAY WDltHll UWTtL .... ~·· .. 0 CONNELL CHEVROLET 2121 ll1r~tr llYlll., C11t1 11111 Over 23 Years Serving Orange County Sales • Service • Leasing 546-1200 Specill Pim Ult 546·94H MONDAY-FRIDAY 8:30 AM -9:00 PM SATURDAY 8:30 AM -8:00 PM SUNDAY 10:00 AM -5:00 PM fJ) TED JO~ FORD/ISUZU \'our full 11ervice Ford & lauzu dHler • Sales • Ser vice • Leasing tA.~) to flND ... 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MONDAY, APRIL 28, 1986 Reagan to Marcos: No comment I Marcos indicates to Reagan in phone convers-atton he seeks return to power By TOM RAUM • l'ah .,,,_ Wltlet HONOLULU -Deposed Presi- dent Ferdinand Marcos indicated in a NEWSLINE Adjusting well ltz-UCI player Bob Thornton bu adjuted to life ln the NBA. Pace 81. Coast Local schools adopt an educational program aimed at preventing teen- age delinquency./ A3 telephone conversation wtth Presi- dent Reagan that he would hke to return to power in th~Ph1lipp1nes, but Reagan "said nothing to en- courage him," a senior U.S. official Artist brings whafes to life Naturalist leads Baja --+-tours. making name as sculpt or. pal n ter faotic tropical birds squawk as visitors walk up the rocky driveway. A group of green, blue and gold macaws retreat behind the lush trees. The road to Pct" Oil's house could be in the tropics. but 1t isn't. The Laguna Beach artist and naturalist jUSt hkes to bnng his work home. Inside his two-room home. pythons and boa con~tnctors occupy an aquarium. Deep-blue paintings of whales lie propped against the walls. Half-finished sculptures of the ocean giants clutter the room. Ott 1s known both as a naturaltst and a trapper. but the apparent contrad1ct1on doesn't bother him. At one time. he collected exotic animals from Baja Cahforn1a and brought them back to the United States for sale. but Ott says he no longer 1s 1n v0Jvcd in that trade. pTefenng instead h1\ often-used title of··naturahst." said Sunday. The official. s~.ktng on condauon he not be 1denufied, descnbcd wllat he called an cmouonal conversation between the two on Saturday after Reagan amved an Hawaii, where Marcos has been 10 ellllc since he was ousted by Corazon Aqumo in Febru- ary .. Presidential spokesman Larry Speakes said that Marcos ··as aware of U.S. policy," which 1s support for the current government. Speakes said that Rcapn made the local call to Marcos because .. because he's an old friend and ally." The president, staying here at a pnvate bcachfront residence a short distance from where Marcos has been living in ellile, has no intentio n of mecuna face-to-face With the. ousted leader. Speakes told reporters However. be bas tovatcd Mrs. Aqumo to v111t the Unated States. That vasll wtll probebly take place n~t fall, aides have saad. The sowu said Reapn .. was sympathetic" and listened quietly as Marcos spoke. But the president told the 20-year ruler of the Ph.ilippines o.r ....................... .. I am involved 1n environmental issues ... he said. Lacuna nata.rallat Peter Ott put.a the flnlahln& toucha on one of h1a marlne m•mmela. All's quite All la quite ln Byannla, Mua., followtn1 the weddtn• of Marta Shriver to actor Arnold Scbwarzeneggar. A6. Nation Secretary of State George Shultz advocates covert action to combat Libyan terrorism./ A& World An American woman In Beirut says she plans to stay despite the upswing In terrorlsm./810 The Afghan rebels forgot a basic principle of guer- rilla warfare and took a beating as a conse- quence./810 Sports The Orange Coast Col - lege crew has a strong showing at the Newport Aegatta. /81 The Lakers get off to a fast start In the second round of the NBA playoffs by thumping Dallas, 130-116./81 The Angels edge Minne- sota, 8-7, behind hitting of Ruppert Jones and Reggie Jackson./81 Ott now spends at least three months a year m Baja California leadrng wilderness tours or enjoying what he calls the most desolate and rugged terrain left in North Amenca. He recently returned from a month 1n Baja where he and a fnend headed a 12-person ka yak tour through · Magdelena Bay, a well-known gather- ing ground of the gray whale. He was also billed as the feature artist for the Dana Point Whale Festival. Ott finds Baja beautiful and unique. "II 1sone the few places where the tropics meet the desert ... he said. adding that those who <.-all Baja a desert are wrong. ··They have tropical fish and birds A. lot of species that the field guides say do not lave in the area arc there ... he said. "'lt is so unique. · "'There arc some places m BaJa that no human has ever set foot." he said. But he worries that will all change once an 1nexpcns1vc means of de- salinating and pumping seawater to remote locations is discovered. "Then Baja 1s doomed." he saad. "The population of Baja virtually grew at a snail's pacc<tJntil they paved a road (stretching the length of the peninsula) in 1973. Now they have tripled the population," he said. He ~s ~uses his tours Lo inspire people' to work to conserve the environment. but takes care not to preach to his chents. who have paid anywhere from $600toS1 .200 for the wtldcmcss tnps. .. We tell the people that the world 1s Sewer assessment, I annexation put on· community ballot Old Top of the World needs sewers to solve problems. city says By LISA MAHONEY Ot-0..,, ......... sewer hne extension trom the Laguna Beach c11y hm1ts mto their Aeigh- borhood. Assistant C'u y Manager Rob Clark said. They can also knock 20 percent off the esumated $686.364 cost if they choose to annex to the city. he said. A separate anncxatton vote 1s scheduled June 17 lnstallat1on of sewers in Old Top of Forty-five health v1olat1ons have the World could begin this summer 1f bttn documented by the Orange residents vote to create an assessment County Health Care Agency at Old distnct to pay for them Top of the World since 1983. In all. The 61-home unincorporated com-health tnspcctors have responded to munlly near Laguna Beach has for 54 complatnts of foul odors and years endured sewage and wash water sewage spills. streaming down its streets Ix-cause of Chronic septic system failures pose inadequate septic <>ystem'i. potential health and safety hazards to The problem can be ehmtnatcd 1f residents there. said Rex Ehhng. residents vote June 18 to finance ' director of pubhc health. cngmecnng and construction of a (Pleaae eee COIOIUIOTT I A2) losing its environment lsnd th.at they must ban together," he said. "We do stress that we are losing our environ- ment and that that animal's hab1uu 1s being lostDc<:ause of the encroach- ment of man and overpopulataon ... Ott c urrently focuses mo,t ofh1s art on whales ··because that's what's (popular) now." Bards of prey. he confesses, are his real love. When he first decided to use whales as subJec:s. Ott found th'tre were few factual and sc1ent1cally accurate de- pictions of the animals. "As early as the 70s the pictures of the whales were always too large and bloated." he said. Even the sc1ent1fic examples of the enormous animals were rounded instead of sleek and torpedo-hke He l.Auu MEii PEOPLE IN THE NEWS claimed most artists still do not create the animals to scale despite a wealth of available pictures For Ott. 1t takes as least as long to design a painting as 1t docs to paint at (Pleue eee ARTIST I A2) Price of gasoline bottoms out, may rise this summer LOS ANGELES (AP) -Tht' stead}' dechne of retail gasoline pnces smce December 1<> bottoming out. and a moderate n'I<: 1s h kcl) to occur over the summer months. ml industry analyst Dan l undbcrg said Sunday. There was no interruption m the retail dcchnt this past "eek. but Lundberg's biweekly survey of 15.000 gasohnc stations showed the overall price ofgasohne wa'> 89 96 ctnts a gallon. a small drop ofO 11 cent since Apnl 11 At the same ume. whole~lc pnccs to dealer> increased h) I 38 cents a gallon. Average pump pnce'I for each grade were 76 82 cents a gallon for leaded rqular. 82 72 cent'\ a gallon for unleaded rqular. and 97 87 cents a gallon for premium unleaded Pnces include all talles and arr from self-serve pumps The retail eince plunge began last December when the overall pncr wa\S 1.21 45 a gallon Since then the pnce has lost 31 5 cents "The fall of pnces. I think. has bottomed out and we're nov. cntcnnga swoon which will very shortly begin ton~ ... .said Lundberg. Import fees and an increase 1n federal excise ta\C'i art hkcly off~u to cont1nutd low pnces. he ~1d (Pleue eec GASOLll'f&/ A3) that "the PtuhpPme ~ ha~ made thnr deci11on and ultunaiety It as thelt dccwon" &o mak.e, the o&w recounted. A source 10 Manila, who called Marcos on Saturday. quoted Ma.n::o. u sayin1 the &alk with ~ wu "fricndlX· consenial, productave and fruitful. ' The two men diec:uMed (Pleue eee ll&Ml.All/A2) ~ 7 Charges against priest a surprise ManyMass oersdld not know of alleged molestations of boys ByPAULAACHIPLEY \ °' ... ,,.., ""' ..... 1 Many pansh1onen expreacd con- fusion Sunday at SL Bonaventure Church following Moosianor Michael Duffy's remarks about the felony molcstauon charges that WttC filed on Fnday apinst Father AD- drew Cbnstsao Andenen. Although rumors have been circulauna and stories have appeared in newspapers, several peopk said after the 9 a.m. Mus in Huntin&ton Beach they dJdn 't know what the pastor was talking abouL Duffy told the concregation be bad rcmamed silent about the circulauna rumors. But when the media broke the news that Andenen might ~ charJcd with fondling several altar bo~ be de- etded to talk about 1t. "We are all in this togictber, .. Duffy wd. ..Many of us arc sufferina deeply." He said the pansh resources were available to support those who were suffcrina most "We need your su~ pon., too," he wd. Those at the Springdale Street church who knew about ~ cbaraes apinst the as~te pnest. ca1fcd "Father Chns.'' said they wett sur- pnscd and saddened. But they t.ckcd Duffy's call for unity. "We support what he's domg. .. wd one woman. But many hadn"t heard the rumon or seen the stones about the district attorney's office filing 24 felony counts of child molestation ap.tnst Lht' 34-ycar-old Andersen. They ex- pressed shock and d1sbelie( One man u1d he hadn't heard (Pleue eee CBAJlG.lt8/ A2) Blue Angels flying into townMay3 The l ~ Navy Flight Demon- stration T cam -better known as the Blue Angels -will h1ghll&ht the 36tb annual Na"> Rehef Air Show to be held Ma) 3 and 4 at the Manne Corps o\1r Station 1n El Toro. The show. billed as Southern Cal1forn1a·s largest free event. also will feature a ~mgnstrat1on of the capab1ht1es olthc infantry. artillery and av1auon Marines working together C iutsts will 'itt how Leathcmeclts u~ hehcoptcr\ to land dost to their obJCCll\.e and how artillery and close air support assists their attack. Other performances and displays will be:' offered Gare' open each day at Q a.m. with the air \how taking off at noon and ending at 'p m. both days. Tho'\C' intcre'ited tn attendma 'ih1rnld ta~c the Sand C'.anyon exit off th<' ~n t>1ego freeway. tum east and folio" the "ltgns to the parking areas Business Using credit wisely can Improve your financial altuatlon whlle enhancing your llfestyle./85 Hacker cuts into pay TV to air protest Irvine schools reach out to business INDEX Advice and Games Bulletin Board Bualneu Claaslfled Com lea Death Notices Entertainment Opinion Ponce Log Public Notices Spons Tetevialon WMt~r A8 A3 85-6 87-9 A9 89 A7 A10 A3 89-10 81 .... A7 A2 NEW YORK (AP) -A video hacker calling h1m~lf"Captatn M1d- n1ght'" startled c~ble telcv1s1on view- ers from Maine to tht' Plains early Sunday when he interrupted a movie on Home Box Office with a pnnted mcssal'e protesting HBO'~ scnmhl- 1ng of its satelhte-t<rearth TV signals "h 's a criminal. wtllful 1nterfcrtnce of a aovernmcnt-hccnsed satt'lhtc broadcast." fumed David Pntchard. an HBO vice ~s1dent. who '3id the cable system ti d ~1v~ ,.botJV threats an rtte months "It's kand of hkt 1erronsm of the anwaves," said Grq Mahany. who wa' watch1n1 in Middletown. Ohio. ·---------( (P1eue ... BACUR/A2) • All of the district's schools now linked with.businesses in 3-year-old progrAm By G. JEANE'M'E A VENT o.llWN9tC.i&llJI ...... When President Reagan en- couraged bu"ncs! to help the pubhc sector 1n a proclamation almost thrtt yea" ago, he probably never thouaht 1t would takt the form of an iet ~ulptun.- But that 1s one of the forms 1t took 1n the Irvine Unified School Distnct whtn the ch~ at the Irvine Mamou Hotel carv~ a block of ice for an 1et crtam 50C1al at Vista Verde Elcmfn- t.ry hool last )e.ar fht pannenh1p pmsram. now 1n 11\ third )Car m }-ear 1n In int, 1\ auut1ngd1~tnrt !><:hool,.ind pravam 1n a vanct}' of way'>. lltord1na to Barbara Barnes.. progn\m d11"l'Ctor When the dastnn started its Part- ne"h1p.ln-Educat1on Program m 191'3. 1hcrc wtrt two partner. linked wuh two 5cllools. Barne'i said Now all lhc tehools are matchr-d with panntf\ 1n a proaram that involve\ more than 100 busine~s "We look for hnk' 1h11 would ht: bc'ncflc1al to both the bus1ne\\ and tht' tehool If they donate equ1pm<'nt lherct 1s tht opponun1ty for tax benefits." hut for the-mo\t part bus1ncs~s sec the partner\h1p pro- gram as good commumt) mvolve- mcnt, said Barnes 8ustnt'S5C'S can chooK t he level of '""olvcment tht'y desire \hc '81d In some ca~. it's a one-ume lOntnbu 11on. In olben.. it's onct or t~1ce a year contnbut1on. or at mav ht' on a regular basrs. ~1d Barnes Althou&h many busine'>~ an· paired wtth schools. some suppon a specific program Cahforn1a First Bank 1s tn partner ship with Turtle Rock l:Jemental') School &nd the d1stm·t', &Jobal stud- ies proaram. ~u~ < ahforn11 F1Mt 1rnwned by tht' Bank of Tokyo. "the>. provide a lot of Japane" ma1enal · \he u1d ln \Omt' l'a'<''I, on(' ~hnol ma) have ~vtral pann('r~ l m Naranjo<. Flemcnit!Y 1~ m trhrd with an entu'f' ,hopping ,t·nter. \lud Barnes Peoplt' at a '>porting goods store can lecture on 'lpor1ing equipment. while a dl·nt1'1 l :ln g1,e toun ofh1s office ltaving spcakcn who can d1Ku .,t,cofic areas l'I one of the benefiu of th<' pannenh1p proaram. ~he s&Jd 'In inc " an 1ckal spot for the pnrtnrf\h1p prosnm:· said Barnes Thcrt' 1'1 a lots of retail and hi.gh-tech 1nvolvrment ·· T o\h1ba donated computers to tht' Lakeside Middle School and the Auor (. nrp <JpoMOl'Cd a break.fut for 'Noodtm~e H1ah School's student council tn Its ":ccut1ve d1n1n1 room On occasion. the pamen <Sona\C mone\. 111 was~ ca!IC when studet.\ts nttdcd 'ponson to aa.tnd 1 COMitu- t 1onal nahts convmu , <Antnbu- t1on' Imm thrH buri ft\abkd 1en '>ludent\ to attend.; .. ~· NB library director named By SUSAN HOWLE'M' Otho.Ir ......... poin:m, 111 .t11d H 01\ l'\l tlnl 1h11u1 nlll\lnl( to :\C'"-l~HI i-k'Ohh ~1\lllt/ Temperatures to.cool slightJy uOonna f K1en111. who ha\ Krved for t he past nine year\ a' director ot an llhno1\ library, ha' betn named Newpon Beach l it) hbranan. ( 1ty Manager Robert Wynn has announced forwud to lh l: opror1u111t\ 111 wor(.. 1011> w11h M\ K1 cn111 tow.tut .1d1tC'\• 1111i the goal\ lur thl· l 1br..11} Bu.utl," ~)nn \aid '>aid l hnha\l''1"-Ulllk1lullih1.an • Sunny skies but cooler temperatures wtll teunch lhe workw .. k In the Orange Coa11. lhe National WNtnet S.V1ce said Kienitz, who has served ~1nce 1978 as 'he library director fl>r the Lin- colnwood Pubhc Library 1n L in- colnwood, Ill .. will begsn her JOb in NewportJunt' 16 She 1..rcplac1ngnt} hbranan Judy C larkc. who n.'\1gnl'd Jan I "I hr Cit\·, managcment look\ ~1en11J an .llll"t' nwmtx·r ut thl· .\mencan l 1br;,i ry ·\\\Ol1at1on wa' head htmm.ln lor the 'WooJl.inlh i\cadtrm in llh no1~ 1n IY7\ In 1477 )he became the proJcCl dcvd111nnen1 officer for a library ~y~1cm 111 Whcl'I· mg, Ill., W )nn \<ltd. Shl· holtl\ a master ofhbrary ~t1l.·nee degn·l' Imm Rosary Collegt• in llhn<m . .ind ,1 ba<:helor of an' Jegn:l.· from ~ l'\l111Jr < ollc11.c 'Tm \Cf\-t''l 1t1:d ahoul thl' .it' \\\lt'm in ·~l''"P'lrt Bt•.il h, Jnd I 111 lool sng lor.,..;ud tl> '"11rl..1ng \qth thl' ~t .. n 1hnr .. "'ll'llll/ h,I\ l°"O l lllldH'll of ht'I l•\\-11 JlllJ h.l\ .1d11ptt•d \\-hJt \hl l.111' 'dn 111tt·r nat111nal 1:111111\ " "ihl· lrn' t\\u adopted d-..IJrcn lron1 "urea. om· from V11:1nam. Jnd onc from (icrman\ M"'' ul her children lHl' adult' nov.. hul ht•r ln•n-age ,on will 114.' mm 1ng v.11h h<'1 111 thl.' < >rangt" ( U:l\l '"l' ... 11d \l.) 1111 ,,rnl KH'lllt/' \JI.ti\ "'111 tx· \4X OX l .1 )l'.H Home-taught boy wonder finds Harvard acceptable RC >< > "J \. I Ll l C a 111 (<\P J -.\ n llHtar-old who hualt hi\ ov.n ll'k- '>(O(X' hut ne\cr attl•ndt:d a lorm.al \<.hool !Mild \unda> ht• ha~ aln·rtcd a Hanard l 'n1 vn'>1ly \lholar\h1p. n· JCll1ng offer~ Imm Yale Pnnt·1.·ton and Amht·r\I Drew ( l)ffa,. dcudcd to iu111 h1!. 21 war-old brother < 1ran1 •• 11 thl' l\o\ league '>C hool Da .... 1d and M1 t k1 t ollax unhapp~ • with the qualll\ nl puhlit t•dutJl11111 ha\t· educated th\.'1r tour 'on-. .11 their remote mountaintop ramh about I ~IJ mile~ nonh o t San Fram.1\w "I and m~ wife <lcudc<l }l'Jr\ ago we weren't about to ha\c our 1'Hh \It through a min<l-numh1ns n penent·c," said < olla,, a furm•·r 'iocrolog) profr·., ... or 'We hu\ lhl' book\ and prnnt them 1n thl' nghl dtrett1un." c 11,1nt < olt,n " J prt·ml·J1t.il \ludent .11 lt.11 \ ,1rJ Reed 16 J\ "mathl·mattlalh prccociou'>.. and l!l-}C.H-llld ( 1anh ha~ a deep 1ntl.'rec,t 1n tt·r;,m11t' and P•11nt1n~ th1.·ir IJthl.'r \c.lld. ~· .. Dre.,.. \\a' ww ol our mo't L'XtraorJ1naf) Jpplil .ml\ · ,;i1d I ;aura C lark o l Princeton v.hC"rc 11nl\ onc 1n "' applic<int<. "''" Jtll.'plnl th1• • '"H "lie" truh a 1h1nh•r · CHARGES SUPRISE PARISHIONERS ... From Al ah<iut thl' t'h.trl!lol'\ Hui h" thiltlrl'n had "He tout hl'll J)l.'11pk -,1lt.sr ho-., ' h1\ \On '>Cud ··V.h\ v.ould ht• Jo th..it 1" h" daughtcr J\l..t·d I don I """"' hont \" her l.ith\'I rt•pltl·<l I hl.' prit''>I allegl·dl> londkd J numtx·r ol altar ho~., hctwl.'l'n tht: J&l'' ol 12 Jnd 1-l tx·tv..l't'l1 hhruar. l'll<"I ::ind la\I ~Jrlh I he m11lc\lall11n-. Jlkgt•JI\ 111. turrt'd in \nJcr\t'n 'li.11 1n ,in 11lltu 1111 thl' ( hun h groundc, and at a flll\Jtc Huntmgwn Bcat'h home that '' 11\\ned h-.. the churl h. Jt-Uird1ng 111 autnonttl'' .\ndcr..cn ·, .,.. ht'll'<1ho111-. .trl' un· 1.nown to Hunlinj!lon tki.ll h 1111l1u• but he I'> npcllcd 111 \Ur1cn1k1 lo them 1h1<, wed Police \aid thl'\ l.11tnl hnl thl' .1n\est1gat1un \.forth 'I v.hl·n 1hc mother of a I '\-)C"ar old ho\ told thnn her ~on had heen molt<ted al thl· thurch rector. h\ .\n<ln.,l·n Their 1nH·\11ia11or1 lnJ th• m 111 several other J lkgcd 'll 11111' .m<l so ml· l'\ 1dC'nlt' polll l' '>J 1d Thl' 11an-.h \crH''> Jhnut I~ Jl(J(I member' 1n thl· < >rangt· C t>.t\l '.\ t11ll man~ at thl· lrowdcd ll am Ma"' apparenth hadn't hc;.ird tht• n·11on\ 11 was n tlknt tlw \ton wa\ H'J'\ n1ul h 1111 tht' mind\ ot thc lhurch\ lcader., I Jtht•r ( hn'>tuphcr "-"m11h who ,,11\J l\ltav •. 1t1ld pan<1h1oners, · .\II ot u' in thu~lh toda} I.now whJt pain ln·I' hkt' \o ottco JI.ind ot pain rn'.idl'' our ll\c\ that "\O d1flercnt '" ne.,... \o t·onlu'>tnl! "l' can han..lh \('l 11ur w,I\ through 11 · "I hi\ r>ar1<.h 111mmun1I\ nn·d, It• h1·.ir th<1t "'l' ht:ht'H' in a ( in<l wh11 ..... i11 v.1p1.· cH·r. tc;.ir .1 .... a\ Hut hd1m· ll'.tr\tan h1.· "'11)1.'d a"'"' '1hn mu\t ht· \hl'll · "l11v. I\ lhl· t111w '""fl' than t \1·1 l11r lh lo 111\1 11111· .111111hn \11111li \,lld REAGAN TO MARCOS: NO COMMENT ... From Al \.laru1' \1tu'.i111111 "rl.'all\Ill alh .. hut 'v1.irtll'> d1J Ollt l'IJhoratL :.itlorJ1ng \II lht• \OUfll' \~lll1 \p11lo.l llr1 llllldlltrH 111 ;inon\ n11t\ K(,1~.in 1.1k111~ ,, ,111 .... roult' 111 I 111'\11 1111 111'\l .,..n·I..' w\l·n na1111n n111111m1t \11n111111 ,pt·nt \und.i\ rnt1nl!( hl.·lrirt· hl·.idtllfl l11r HJlt In thmc'>la to ml'l'I "tlli v.11h k<1dl'r\ 11I 1hc \l\·11..i1111n \\\11t 1J1111n 111 '111ulhl'.l\t \\1.in °"at111n'> f \\I''' 111duJ1ng ,1 rt·prt'\l'ntJlJ\C 111 l'hf11p pint•\ ltl' l'rn1dt•n1 \ah c1d11r I <JUrl'I It w1U ht· hi' fir,t rTll't:ltng with an\ repn·.,l·n1c111\t' 111 th1 rH·~ Phil1pp11w ti'" crnrnt:nl Reagan 1nJl\all:d \tr11ng \up11111111 the \qu1nog.01,.l·rnrt11.·nt \a\lng ~l hl'lll \C that \\l,in na1111n\ art· th1 111,1\ll'r\ 111thnr 11\\11 I.ill'· I hl" prl'C.1dcnt u>mml·ntnl in "'rll 1111 1l'\p<H1\l'\ ll·lra\nl \und.i\ 111 q11l'\t111n' \uhm111nl h\ rl'p11rtl'" 1111 '"uthl'J\I \\ltfll nl'V.\fl.IJ)l'f' I 11 .1 qu1·,1111rt 1>11 v.h1 tin r tlll I lltll'd \\,tll'\ I\ 1.11n\11h ring \11\111~ 1p :.i mi11t.1r. h,1,t• 1n Brunlt hn..iu<,1• Id llllll'fl,11111 11\Cf II\ h,J\< \ Ill lh1• Phil1p1rw' ~l.1~•,1n rt·,p11ntkd in 1h1 "l'll.J l 1 \l Hc,111,1n ,,wt 1h.1t "''1111 1h1 \q111n•1 t"l\\.'rnm~nl h.id \<1V.t'<l l11 IH111111 ,111 .iJlrl'l'n,<'rrl 111 .11111 ... 1 \ h<t\I'\ 111 1t1l l'l 1hrp1m·., .11 k·"' 1hr111111h I 1•11 11 1 •1111 p<l\\lhli' It• Pll'<ll I lhl' .11111111!1 ... 1t1l· f't11linp1111· ~11,rrnm1·111 1'""' ,,, .. ,.,, llll'fl.' 1r•· <1tlw1 1~ii•\lhh lo• .tt1111" t '' rur l.1lllll11., rn 1hr l1hd1pp1111·\ 1111! lhl'\t l1ll .111<111\ v.1111!.I ht• ITllH h 111"1 · 11\tl •• 111tl llltll h "'"' l'lltc 11\1 tli.111 11111 111·,t.tll 1111111\ .11 \uh1~ H.1. ,1nd c l.1r~ \11 B,1\(' kl'.1y.in \.11<1 I >11 tlw \1Jh1n I 1111t·rr11r"m l<l'.t~.111 c,,11d h1 <lid 11.,1 1li1n~ lhl' h11mh1n!o' r.llll 11n I 1h .. 1 "'"uld d.rn1a~c f \ ll f,1111111' V. l\h ,tli1t'\ 111 \11utht·a\I \\1,1 'Iii' f li,1\<' IJ1'\ I'> lh1 \r.ih v.11rld ~ l ht'lil \ 1• I hl' fl,fl 11/n<, < 11 \ \( \ '• \ti.Ill' 'HH ll'fllJ)lft.lfll l' 1111 lt'flllll\411 r1·11.1rdk\\ 111 tlw q11o1111·1 1111111 "'" h 11 '•Ill~.. hl \,11d I In ,11)•1th1·1 t\\1w \p•'olkl'\ \,11tl th.ti lht• g11\1 rn1111·n1 ••I lnd11nl'"·' h.1cl dl'l llkd 11111 111 Kl.1nl \ "·"' 111 tv.11 \11\tr .111.rn hrr 1,ctll .1\I Tl'()( 1rt1'f\ ~ h11 olfl' par! 111 th• pre" 1•n11111r.Jl/.1' .ll l 1101p.i11 \Ill~' I he prt'\llh' n I 1111 111' l l da' I .11 I ,1\1 1r1p I ndonn1.111 l'fl'\Hk111 \uh.irt11 h.t, hJnnnl \1t\l1,tl1.tn 11111rnJll\I\ !111111 h1C. tllUJllr• 111,1dl\pull'11\l'r lllltl,tl '111fll'\ .th• 1111 ht\ fl')(lnll' thi:ll JQJ)l'oll l'd 1n a \1dnt·. 1h'"-'P•1J)l·r I ht rt•porh·r, llm '\1uhllt-l<lll .111d R1l hard Pall re' man. ho th l'm pl11\ c'> ol thc \u'>lrahan Hroadrn\llng ( orp \did the\ haJ deudcd to Iraq· lhl' pre\'\ eniouragl' 1n Honolulu i.lnd go 11n to Toho °"ht·rt· tht'\ "'Ill rl·1111n tht· prc\11kn1i.1I gr11ur 1 .. ~ Ill'' t \\t'l'~ ,., "ll<•lllll \IJIHlllll I Ii..: Pll'\ldl Ill ......... g111ng ln till' lml(lnt'\J,tn "I.ind .t II.iii 1n \I• 1111,1\ \f>' ,I~\'\ \,1111 \.\ htt\' 111111\\ Ill!' I '..1!•111" "-llh lht l11d 1111 \1,11 I''\ Ill nll'll( h.td htl'fl l1111tl1'\\ llll lhl' l\\Ul' \ \k1•d 1.' lwl hn }frJga n v. 1Juld hr 1 llf up thl' 'uh1n t 111 alkgt·d human rig/ti\ \1t1l.1llt>rl Ill lht• \t'\\11111 \'tlh \II h .JI 111 \pt ,Ji..,·' , ... t.I \\ (' II h •• \ l. I 11 ,,111 11111 I lllll lln~ f<l·.1~.11 \I>\ Ill .1 ll \llllf d.1 •ti \11nd.1\ v11111).' .,,1.·r h11:lin.-ti•111~' 1•11 11" •I.._ •m""t' nwl·1111~' .111.t .... n 1111• •II lhl h{.td1 A tth Ill\ "ti ,,Ill\ .... ,\\,th .. \.ltd Marcos tells followers he is legitimate ruler \1 '"'" \ l'hil1pr1n1·, 1 \1'1 r ILJ\tnl l'r ntdt'nl I 1·1d1n.111d \1Jfl ()\ 111lt.1 .11!11111 I~ , )I I( I l11llt1"l'I \ \und..i~ 1h,11 hi." "'·" thr lq•1t1111.1I• prn1d1·111 111 lht: l1l1il1pp101·-. ,11111 ur~n.l 1111·111 111 l..1Tp d1·11111n .. 11.111m· 1lf!.Jtn\I lhl t''•\\ I llrll\'111 111 ( 111,11111 \4u1n11 H111 Ill' ,,ud till'. ,1i1111ld ~ l l p 111• 11 prtrll'\l\ !"' ,1ldlll .111d 1\l1id \I• 11 'II 1 I .1m ht.11th\ I .sm r .11h 1•1 twt.1 \IJrt "' 'fk"1lo.1nv h\ t• kph11r11· lr1111 hi\ I t.nL111.1n t \Iii' 111ld .1 1Ii•1·nr.i 1"°"" 111,11 fl,l hl lld 1111 .1 I di ti \l,inil.1 \ I< I/ ti 1';11 ~ l(l\Wtll 11111 ld,1 l< kt11'1( l11lil'l\1'll ·" \lllJf ltr..t f.1d\ .111d \111111111 ii ltl..t• \Ill .\a\ 1n lt'.H\ a\ \ht' It old 1111 l ll1"d \hl' .mt! lil'r hu,h:.ind "'Ill tl11 l'\•'I\ 111111).' I•• ll'llJlll Ill th1•11 h11111L•(,111d \I lh~ r.tll. \1.11 11\ \fll•h 1111 111 m111ull•\ 1n .1 pr1 .irr.111vn1 t .dl 111 ,1 l11rn1< r .11dc• I 1111 I 11or11\fl<' "h•• li•>f1i...ul up 1h1 ,,.,<'I\\ r 111 ,1 lt1ud'f'k"~' r \11rr11 P• 11pl• ... .t.twd .1\ \1art 11\ 111111 hrnrrrn d 11ut .11 1h1 Ill I l•d h\ lr11 mrr Y"' 1rnr111•1111111111.1h ,lfld \11n11• 11111\ H' \l,tl\ l111.i1t\I\ 1,tll1nl l•11 111. 1ti11d ,11.1wh1 \111111,1\ 111 th111.tnd \l.1r,11,· 11·tu1n I"' lh1 p.t\I IWCI WI'('~' \1.irt ,,, \1tpp<1rlt'l\ hi.1\1· :tl\ti \l,l)H ti 1 1yil\ •lie the 1.i.,.. n 1n Iron I nl lht I \ I 111h.1\\\ atl 11\111)! th1· I n1tnJ \t..iln 111~1d11.1p p1njo1\I.tr•11\ lr11m h" l11rnw1 p.1111 t• \1,11t '" urgnJ \t1pJ)ortl'I\ I•• Ii" .1hl'.11l "llh .t rl.innul ralh nn \1." I "'h1l h tw ,,1111 v.,1\ nut onh 1 d.n I• 11 "'"ri..n.., h111 ,i1,11 thl· ,inn•' t•r,.11' 111 r ' 111.11 n.1g1· 111 \1r., \1 Mt"' 111 I 1 '-l I >11nn11 \I.tr·"' ''' \tJf\ 1n p11\.l.t'I 1h11-.1'>.in1h 111 I ilrp11111 ""'h'" lllJ11'l'J \la IJ.1 \ 1.1d1 \t:..H ''1111 1,tll1t !<• )'f11tr\I l<I\.\ "-·l~l'\ \1 tit II~ h.111 "" \1t1 ~l'' .tnd .1llq!1·d 1111111.11. n1•1l tl1l ll'\ .!)'.1111\I v.11f~t'l'i. \ Ill pf '\l<lll\ \fl<'l'l.ht<, \1.lf t"'• .11 " .•. I 1111 \q111n•1 ~.,,,,·r1111H 111 •ti illl-11.tlh l"rtll\• .11111v 111 ... pt·r· ... ,11,tl tH••pt•J! I 'Ill !!ll l•l'fl. "' ..... rt1 II I .n•.tl• 11• I 1 .. 11q1 1111 .111 I "'111 t ' 11 I \ l'rl)oW·lll l h111 I IA. ill II"' ('\I'll \\II h thlll I r< It thtlr ,1h1t\t \ .111d tlJ II ltll~\ •'f\ I h1 !1,'•\l'I r 1111•111 h.1\ \,11d \1.11111\ hi\ l.11111f\ 111d ,1\\111 I.th'<, ,1111,1\\r d lnrlll )) !>1111011 111 ~Iii lull11 111 Ii\ pluncll'llll)I puhlu l•1llrl\ 1'111111111 l..111'h;11 ~ \ .111d lhl' Iii t• C rll\1'1111111'111 11tlil I.ii\ \t'l/L'lf pl11f>1.•rt\ 11<' h.1 il-tl lx·h1nd .11111 ·'"'tr\ 1ng 111 1r..i1 ~ d11v.11 hi\ h11ld1n11' rn r•tht·r , 1111111111•\ \1.1!111\ h,1'> if1•nit'll I )i,11)11'\ hl 1111 1.111wd h" pr111><•rt' ilkp.ilh \1,tr111\ \Ille\ ..... 1\ dl11\\l1ld r11t1 11111011111,1111' f11 dll't'f\ \\hlll \lllHI• I 1ilt0 llllllll Ill\ IUllflllljo( llldll 111 Ill• 1.i1n11d I l'I• · p1c'>1l.kn11al l'll'• 111111\ .11rnt't.l .11 lhl' ralh vlan 11-. h,1, 111gnl I rltprno\ 111 ll"lll~lll/l' f 1ill'l1l11111 ,t\ ",1t1111y pr• \!dent" 1n hi\ .1h\1·11c1· I .1111 \<>111 ll ~·111111.111· p11 \11kr11 \1,llt •I\ !told tin· l 111v.d fl, C \1.11l11\ I h.I\ hn 11 )!"Ill' 1111 "' 11111~· ,.ud J 111.111 1 n t lw ,111d tl' IH l' \\tplll>' lt',11\ 1111111 hi\ ('\t:' I h'1111111\ll,1tor' ,,irr1nl .1 mo•~ l•1lh11 "11h.1 m.11o:.a111H p1ltu11· I <\11 \qu111•1 p.a<,ll'd 11n •lltt \llfr 11 1r11nl .i \l~n 1c.1d11111 ·c , 1•1ilh\ r ''" < nr. "\.11\ \4•J11111 ~ 1111 ~ n.1111c lhl' tr11v.d v.,1~1«1 \ lr11 \llhll\ \ll!fl' w1tt till If hny.1 T\,1ll1I d1.1111nl 111 I :.11t.1l1111 ( h.11~· l I .Hi'<. GASOLINE PRICES BOTTOMING OUT ... From Al rhc am1111111 11t drl\1n~ "'II 111 crease thl\ \umnwr pan1tul:trh ht· caust" ol lrar' ah11u1 \ill ;11111n1n11 O'l'r'ica' hut n111tkr;t1111n \\Ill he 1h1 rule "lhl' lntrl'.l\l' 111 fl.'1\1111111· 11111 \Ump11on I\ n111 g111n~ ''' 1,111\l' prit•'' w 1onm up ·ht• \(lid "l!(gl'\lfll!I 1h,11 a~c.ump11on' ah11111 "in1ml'r dr1\ 1ng arr "'run~ "I 1rc.1 ol all. It" uni\ .1 m1n11rit\ 111 1111' r11pul.111un that al 11rnlh '''" 1.1k1· to the road 1n \Ul h numht.·r\ ,1, 111 1111-.Ct lh<' j(H'dl IC'n1!1111. \ •rl 1111· rm·tropohtan popula111111\ 1101 111 ht· <1hlr 111 .ttl•1rd 10 l(O o ut 1111 tlw ro.111 ltkt• 1h.1t • r hnr h3\ t1l\<1 tx-rn. bl!( dct ltm· 1n numhc.•r<. of lull \Crvtc.c -.1at1om m r:'ln1n11 msint<.'nancc mrnor rcr.ur" .and l"\ t•n rr\lrcx>m'i arc unavsulahk lor trd"rlrr' I undtx-rs u1d Ne..,. 1 ar • 1~ nl·r' Jrl' al"M1 dcpend rna more: on ".1r1.int11·\ for rrp:111'\. ro\tra 11n~ I •intlllll!l ,, ... 111\\,I\1111p11\\ll1k )II prt'dll I a prlll' 1111 .HI\ ~1\111 p111111 111 tlw \unu1H·r hl•t .JU<,e 111 t "lllPk' 111'\\ t li.llll(l'' 111tlw1ndu-.1n I hi 1 1m h111t llll' l'nJ 111 lhl• Jhtf ll\ 111 lh1 I ltl ,111cl l'l·t1nkum I \f>t •rt1n11 < 11unlrH'\lar11'1 111 \l'l p11°1·~ .111d 1111 l.1 I lh.11 lhl' '.1hH'\ 111 pr11d11• "111.1111· 1111111rn1 ,tfl' ,, I l\lfll! 1ntlm 11 • • ;! .. 1••. . ,, I I tllk <111\11111111111t1r 1p11ll'.1n ·"'·" .d1lll 1111' IH " ( II I>' I I • \I Francis Rhodes dead at 75 Mrm11r1al \t'f\ ru"' h.h l' hn 11 lwlil lor I l<!Oll\ W "fr.int..: i<hodn ol "'l'~fl(lfl &"ll h who l!lt'd rt'll'nl(\ alter <1 ll'ngth) illnl'\\ lie wJ' \ \.1r f<hudt '· wh11 WJ\ hnrn 1n f ngl.in1! 'iC'n C'd 1 n t ht• Jto-..al \rt ii kn dunng \'.orld WM II and ..,.,., th'> Lhargl'll "' ,, m.11111 "' I '14fl Jfr ll't1rnl 1n 1(1"'1'< af1r1 I\ H'M\ w11h '"" f 1na1111.1f.\t<r\ tlt.'' ,I\ th< hr;ul 11 lhr t1rrn·, C "" l'r11111•·111 k l•l.1t111n' I >I'· partml·nt tit• " \111\'l\ t d In hi\ v.11t' J 1lr<.'n \11111\ Hh11dq .111d .1 '"n ~raml\ frrt·nn f<h,,.,lt•\ 111 \,1n1.1 \nJ \t•r, 1tt'' v.rn· h1·ld .lt P;1t tlll V1rv. Mc-mor1,1l l'.uk 111 C 11rnn.1 dt'I \.1,1r Ml'n11111,1I don.1111111-. hJ\l' hct•n rC'· quC\IC:<I 111 thl' \,1n1.1 \n.i un1111t th<' \.th.1111111 \1111\ Highs al the beaches wlll range from 70 to 75, w11h h1gh1 near 80 inland Late night and morning log end low clouds tonight and Tuesday wlll accompany overntghl lows In the low to mid 50s Tuesday Wiii be cooler. wtlh highs 68 to 7'4 Light varlable winds will become southwest to weal 8 to 16 knots this afternoon and evening lhroogh the Inner coastal waters A southwest swell wlll range from 1 to 2 feet Mostly clear skies today will become lncreaslngly cloudy and loggy 111111 tonight Further out, weat to northwest winds will blow 10 to 20 knots over ~ to 10 toot combined seas through tonight U.S. Temps l °'-'••V1l .. 88 !>& M...,1)1\ .. 82 eo M111n11a..c11 18 67 t-1•\lf'' ,....., """ VQF\ 1i p m 5und•Y "''°lancJ~OoeMoll 8• S6 M•twtMJa .. llO 511 ,, ..... ., .... A.. '9''• -.... HI L• Al(lat y NY 16 SS ... ..,, ..... M S.l -°''-"• 9 I ~II Al rruQueot f ,.,,.,. 84 30 An l~llkl 84 46 -voo1C1ty 1"L st Arw"Clid\I,_ 48 3S -ot• 11• 77 51 NOfth Plett• 4S J.l Calif. Temps bfOC)i!l()f 81 ·~ f ar.t:'41 Vat lt'f I\• n ,~,·~·. Ill .. ~ At •'•le ~-1 61 AHant~ C ly 70 ·~ O<•endo 91 ~ HoOltt 10wt tn•OUQI\ '> p "' 'luncl•t Apj)le I/...... 90 Extended A"'l\tf 13 /1 PllN-1)1\te 76 !>() ts• lr.mtw. 91 •& "-• 96 57 8·r•t1rngt1t" 89 •• P1111~ e• ~7 8••mAl(lo. 41 )7 Po<1i. 0<• "' !>() &oow S1 4J Prov~ '>II Sl &<.110< sr 4W R~h 8• s. S..tle•o 11 60 Reold C.11y '>() )J 8t.< 1o1'Q IOI\ I/I H 51 "9r>o 1) J7 ea-67 30 AlclvnonlJ ae 51 c~a<llMt°" S C 13 87 811.oui• llJ 61 C1ta1 ... 1or.,WVe u 57 Sell Lall• en, S8 Jl Cl>aflOlla N C u 60 ,.,, Anlt.11100 fJJ 1 t c,,....,. ... St 30 SM Juen PR M /I CtnClnnet• 116 &3 SI a .. M11r1e 18 s• c .... ei.na 8) 51 &Miiie ~· •6 (.olumbl• S C. 94 6& $twwepor1 90 6:1 Colul"but Ohio 68 SS SIOu1 F•ll• SI u ConeOfd NH n Sl $pollen<> S8 )fl Oellu Ft WOf'lll 78 fl~ 'iyrec:uM 78 •6 Cll(IOn 86 S7 I 1mp1 SI P1••DQ 8S s& Oenve< &1 ]~ ,.,~ ... 10 Sii 0.. M OINtt n 63 rvc..,., 115 !>() 0.HOll "' .... rutaa ,~ !15 EIPHO , .. ., w .. 111og1r;r. O C. 81 '>J Feorb•n•• . ., " W1<.n•1a 117 ~ f1119n H 17 Wllk .. -8arre Ill •• fl•g•l•tl 83 ~ Or1l'>O Ra11•GI 63 S8 G•NI f •ll• S6 37 Smog Report O<MntDO•o N C ~II se HlllllUtll 11 ~l ..... tw. '>-8 ll PQltut•nl tlencl••ll tr~• IP .. I 0 100 HOf'IOlulu ~· 72 QOf><I 100 :100 U-tllful (()( ........ ,.. ti°"''O' 78 68 peoc>"9 100 lQO t,_1tMu' ''" •'I r10 11t•ePo1' A• SS lOO !IOO r.azaro0u1 l he ttigur• 1• f,)I tt'oofl .laic:;,l)n .V "" cH ~J P'~•~t <31-; I Ol leY9il .J• ~~'.>'"• t ... H '>fl """'.' (, ,, 10 1)11 o,.,~coatt ' la& L .. V"O"' HI se '"'""° O•""Q'O C.OU.tly 111 Lllh• R.:..1 , .. 61 ~lfoPQl•let\ l °' •no-oe• 138 .. e ..... ,,1e1e1 8> 'IO 8a•l10W ,. 4/ Beeumotll 8'> SJ ""..oetet...e "11"' ••"" M'WtUOQ frJQ 8'0~ t.~ ;,i<l •h'1 1vw. ClouO• Utt.•• 4lli II t •16'1"9 8'ell09 '" :'II lrr.tn In. tntd et\d -'PC># ,. ~ ~M°W'"l!ll "~ 81yll>e llf· JI (.Ot.11 10 lht 10'\ •I• w•tr ·*' 1t I •h(J Cu<-<-11-r •• 51 Ya.11-\rl l fJlllllf'1' n tt•4H1'1(J4"' 4, .n«J' It Eu1 .. 1 fl 411 ''Ml'O flj ... LllllCnl .. Ill 17 l()nO 8eec:h 6C> ~·1 Tides LOI ~ 81 Ill Meryt"'lle II() '7 "'on•ovte 00 ~1 TOOAY MOl\l-10 116 !>4 Flf,t IOW I 37 • m (Jft Mon< .. ey fl~ 46 r1,.~h ; >JI> m '~ "'' WUton &9 •9 S.c ,,, ... (j 18 p '" 11 N..01• 8J ')8 N9wp<>"f Stttt.t• 11 ~3 TUflOAY O•klencl , ' so F1111 fugt I) ~I J "' ~' Ont.,10 93 50 f lr'lt k'Jw "~·'" U I P elm SP<lr•Q• Ill 82 s""°"° '''II' ' 18 '-" I 4 P ... o.n. 86 ~· '111C.ond•.,.,. ., ~ p" II PHO Aob .. t 8l 38 R•-110. ~6 51 Red Blull 11\ n '•\.!"' "M' ,,~ • .,.,ti or ... , •• d .... ,, Rec!WOOCI Cny ,. •fl ~l!n •' 1 J• p m S~•-10 81 46 oon M1• Hl'0•1 a• & 28 • m Selln111 12 40 Sen Betneto•n• 86 ~2 Surf Report Sen Oe1>1 ... 87 ~' Sen OleQCI 81 ~ \•n F1ft<.1tco 1} ~· LOCATION till Ollll Sen JOM 16 46 '11nte Ane ~ ~ lum•~'' w Sen•• 8111b1111 11(1 411 C\•nta M 0t..r1 r Y< Sat1t1 Cru1 ,~ ·~ ,.._,_t } 3 .w s ... 1 ........ ao 4(. SW' ().eoo f.nunr; w $ante Monou u 60 ().,tl(K)k fr)t f *MJAy lltll• ti A'"k4"" Mild Santa Ana winds warm sunbathers, marathon run li) tht As<>ot'iatl'd Prell>" \ 111tld \.1111.1 \11.1 1qnd l•1nd1t1on 1ll\111t1pitr111 d "' 1 .. ·1111wr.1turt''> 1n the m1J )\Ii\ lllll\lrHl'll lhllU\jnd\ 111 1111,.JJt \11utht·rn < ,tlilorr11;a hcachn ...,unda\ ''h1k uthcr\ hra'llt:d tht• heal in mar.llh<ln t h<irlt\ t.""'t."nt'> In l..agun,1 lkat"h runnt'f\ ratrd thn>u)o!h thl' l.t'<t\ldt· u1mmun1t} \un d.l\ 111 r,11\<.· fund\ lor area puhlit '' hn"I' In tht· 11t\ of <>ran(H' ahout ' 10 lk.'11pli "-l'le.,.. hululnl t11 J).art11.1 p.1 It' 1 n the < >r;rngL' l I u ngl.'f 'W ,1 I lo. 10 ral\t' fund' tor tht• hungr)' .arid 1111pt1\l'fl\ht:J 1n thl· I nitt·d \ta1t·, .ind .ind c1\ l'f\l'J'> .,, . ., l1h· a l!l.!Jlld \Ul11mrr WlTkl'IHI It' J ~1111d lri1wd \a1\.I t1111nl\ hlqWcHd I I I om I IJrgl'll .11 till I lt:rmll\,1 Heath \lill111n \llorr than I 511fJ(J(J 1x-opk lannl'd \urkd and t1p-tm·d atrll'I\ lht hot \.and' ol ht-al hn lrnrn Pla\<1 dl'I K n lo< almllo on thl' lir\l d.i' 111 d.i' lt~ht \Ci\ 1ni' 11mc. lfarp.l'll \:ml I Ill' 1 r11v.d \lrt'I• hl'' all .do11y tli• twat h ) OU l<lflllOI drt\l' .1 1t·1111·1v. t'lll) I 1ru1 lo. 1111 11 It\ 11'.111 111 .. · I ~ l\h I .... ,1\1) I ""or k 1 ll~ • h1· \,lid lk.11 h 11 lllpn rlllft'\ ho\l·rc .Hound 'fJ dl').'11·1' \\llllt .11 tlw I • \n~l'le,C 1\11 1 ell\! lhl' h'JOf'k'J,1ll1t t• Hl\l '" X7 Jq?.ll'l'\ h\ p 111 I uv .111d 1111.1. d11ulh Wl'rr 1 \(">l't ll'd t11 dn l'I• •P :.ilon~ tlrt· l 11,1\t \.111nd .1\ n1)o!hl .111d l11t\d,1\ M•1ng1n~ 1,,.,..,, tllllf'k0 l,JIUll'' 111 111<' I (I\ \11jo!I k' hJ\ln ARTIST FINDS SUBJECTS IN BAJA ... F rom Al I"• 111\1 ht· 11111\I 111\t dr.111 :.i MIUl·print 111 lh1 p11 11111 \\ ,1 ll'\<111 111 hi\ dl'<lltJllOn In .u 1111!)11'1\ 11·1 rr,11111g th1 .in1rnJI lw "-•I\ l 111111111\\llllll'd h\ \{ ll'llllill \ n11·r 11.111 It• lll'.tlt' .1 hrt'<Khin~ hurnph.11 ~'Ah.tit· 11111111'111\t•r ol lhl· \(.1r1 h I 'IX 1 1,\lll' I lt'\Plll' 111' l.1l k 111 f11rmal lr.1111111fo! 1n art he 1n'11\t\ art " ltkt· ntU\ll .111\oOL· Jrt1st11 .. alh glffrd h." .m inn.ate .1bil1t\ n11·s lather Pl·tl·rpaul < >tt "al'>O .l \llltC<i'>lul \lulptur \t -l5 Ot11\onhl\wa}tnmak1nga \1mdar name tor h1m'1cll H1\ paint 1ng\ '>t.'11 lor ur In $1 .00() and hl' find' 11 dillicult to keep an~ long enough for But h" trq>' d1m11 \111tth \ut pa'' hi\ loH· 1111 th1· ,111\ .rnd ht 11111t111u1·\ lo •1lkr till' °"ildt'llll''' l<Htl\ J11\t '>l'l'IO~ hi\ di\'11\\ 11,H\ llJI' tlptll rl '>l'l'lfl1< '>lll h .1n \11111111 .. 11' .1111111.11 ·" thl.' gra\ wlwll up 'ln\t' mJl..t' 1!11 trip\ worthv..hik ht .,;1\ ... HACKER AIRS PROTEST ON PAY TV ... From Al '~ '11. n 1 lil 1111 "••gt· 1 n t1·rru pll'<I • I hl· I .ii 111 .11 d I ht· \1111w m.1'1 · I lit 1111'"'·lltl' printed 1n wh1tr klti" ''" ,1 •1l11r har ll'\l pallnn l>al "-»11•111111 n .. 1d 'C 10tide"en1n~ II ht t 1111111 < .1pt.1111 \1 11l111~·h1 \I:! •1'1 I 'Ill 11111' •,., '•I\ l\h11\.\\lllll \fo\ IC f II.inn• I lk".lll' I I hl T uk1.tl ! 11111m11n1t.1l11111\ lllllllll\'11111 \ 111111 t''>llg,Jll· lhl· 1m I h nt ,,1111 \p11k1 \111,111 'W 1l11.1m P '"'II v.h11 r1 IU\t'd to \J\ how 111lh11ri1t< \ 1111~•111 tr.ll I.. d11°" n lhl I oil ~( I 111 l'll'\\'nl ., .1pt.11n Mid· 111rtt1 1111111 .. 111i..111~· .1g.11n \1.1h,111\ \,1111 lh.il .11 f11\l lh1 J)I! lUrt' lliprwtl h.11 ~ 111d l11rth ht·tw1•t·11 lhl 1111'"·'11'' .11111 111• 11111\lt' ma~ 11111 11 \l'l'lll l1k1 1111< I w.t\ tr} Ill)( Ill get II\ \llo(11.1I h.H k I 1 l110!..nl l1ke .i light Im 1 nn I rt I of 1 hl' 111 H rol.1.,1\ 1· ht· am " 1111 1111·"·11-:t Jppt«tn·d Jt 12 l() I Ill I ol\ll'I n IHl)I' and rtma1nl·d nn till' .111 .1h11u1 liH' m1nutl''> It wa' 1,t·1·11 in tlw l'.l\t1·rn twrHhinl<. of th1· 11.1111111 .,.. huh ,1l 11111nl\ l11r mun· th.1r h.111 111 1111( I' 1-l 11 11111111111 \Uh\l nh 111~' 111111\1 hnld\ ., l'11lt h,utl ,,11tl th1 hat kl'r Jr>· parn11I, \lollh lhl' U\t'nf.1,.itt.:llitt dl\h .111d i.i ll<•\H'rlul lrJO\rlllltCI dll'ltl\1 (\ repl.tted II UO ' \lll,llJI w 11h Im own I or '>omt· rt'J\On -J')<l'>\lhl} tx· laU\l' < ap1.11n \.11dn1ght'\ \1gnJI ...... , hettn-umcd or more powatul - HRO , <,atcll1ll' rl'lCl\l'd the h.itkcr"\ '>1gnal IO\ICJJ nt H RO'\ and ht'amt•ll 1Ldo" n to H RO''>c<irth rcla\ '>ta1111m \unda\ ·, inlrU'>lfln wa\ 1mmltlt· Jtd\ nottlcd at llH<>' u1mmun1la· t111n'> tenter in Hauppaugl· j'o. Y hut 11 wa\ not dear wht•thn thl· hat l l·r l'IHkd hi\ o wn mt'\\agl' ur "J' lnrlnl o il h' II BO l'nt< hard .,;rnJ H HO would haH n11 r11rnmcn1 on that "We ha"c 1m pkmcntcd \ome tt•chn1<:<1I rcmcd1n and Wl"fl' pur\uing othl.'r\ .. he \,11d ·· fh1<, rcprt•\cnl\ a dear d.tnp.l·r 111 ner) '>atellttc u\t.'r ·· Pntt hard '><i1d Jl 1111n hkc ~unday morning·, haJ hccn threatened 1n kttcr\ to H BO and 111 mag:111ne<. rtad is1')1drsh owner\ "We'd bct·n threatened lrn tht· IJ \I lour or fi1,.c month\ wath \ometh1ng like th1i. If we didn't rt'lOO\lckr our plan tn -.uamhlc.'' hna1d "1 hr} .ud 1hc\ 'd du \nmt."thmg I he\-didn't \J\ whal" I ht· II BC l 1.1hk "~nal "" 1,1111hl1 ii 111 pn•q·nt rt'll'pl11111 1n h111111·, "-111·d 1111 tahh: ll'k\ 1w1n hut 11111 np11p1,. d v.1th an llB<>ton\\'llt' I 11111 ,·,1111 r lhl\ \CM \Jlt'lllll d1\h 11\\lll"I\ '"t'I .1bk to IOltftlPI tht un\t1.1111hl1 I '11111.tl 11 fl(> hounu' oil \,11dh11·' 111 th\' l'arth \ta1111n' that rt IJ\ thl· '1v1i.1l \I<! l,thk In Janui.lr\ hownt•r llBI > 1 .... ·g;111 '1 rJmhling .111 1t\ '>Jll'lhll'·l11 earth \ll{nJI<. HBO \old dl\h o.,.. nl'r' wh11 h,1\J ht·en watl hrng lnr trrr thn \ .. ould h,1\l' 10 hu~ a dc\Cramhlcr ,;,, ~ \''" .rnJ pa) \I_ 'J) d month \ nothrr lrad1 ng pa" .;1hk -.u"' 11, \huw11mc annountcd ptan' 1111 .1 \IOlllar '>}'-ICOl Prill hard '>aid ahout 1, 1.111<1 d1 .. 1i ow nt·r.. put Jow n the u1'h '' 11 till' deui1kr and '>tgncd up tor HBC> or 11' \l\ll'r ~l'r\llt', < 1ntma' But thl' propo\,ll h,1, hern unpopula1 '' 11h 01 ht•r\ . r hl'\ \J~ thing' hkl· I he (411 l.l.J\e\ arc ln·c 'and ··1 hq (lllHJ) "" u\lng gO\crnment u1l'lh1c' th.11 11111 la \t.'" ra' tor ... Pntl hard \illd l'ntt. hard \did tlBO\ 11rogra111' .111 11\ propcrh and 11 lca\n \Pill t lri1111 prl\ att'I~ owned "31Cllllc\ COMMUNITY TO VOTE ON ASSESSMENT ... From Al \ h1·Jlth ,1gt•nt.' u:11ort rl'lt.•a\cd thl\ "-t \ ~ \illd \llOH' \\-\ll'm\ htt'vt.' lCI ht• pumpnl <'\t'f\ I~ tlt1\\ to prc,ent 11-..crtl11w-. J hc \tall' tOll\tdcr\ J <,l'pt11 \\\ll'rt1 l11 ht lJthng ii 11 mu\I tx· pumpnJ nwrt th•tn 1w1cl' ,1 \C<lf fktauw ol l1m11cd land to hutl<l nl'W \t'Plll "\l4'nt<, and poor \01I Jh,11rp111111 .11 <lid 1 op of the Wnrld a \ew1•1 "\ll'lll '' lhl· onh an\wl'r lhl' MAIN OFFICE I l IJUt t '~ha Clark \atd 1hr city 1s w1l11nf!. 10 pa-.. ahout i 11 7.0()() o f the c,cwcr 1 n-.talla- uon CO'it ti rc<.1denu art willing to annex thC'1r nc1ghhorhood r he nty alrcsJy provide\ polite and fire r,cr1.>1('e" to the l\ola1rd 11111 top l"Ommun1ty hernu\l' w unt) cmc·rgcm) ve hicle-. tanno1 rc'>porHJ la'it enough ht· 'lard It Old I opot thC' ~orld 1qnnnnl tlH' lit} woulll get ahout \:!~ (J(I() 111 prnpcn} tai.:c''· ( larli. '>aid. I ur 1lw lir'll ~11i }t."Jr'> all o t that 1ncrn111· would ~11 to pa) for thl' nl' \ \h.irt· 111 the <,Cwt· r Ii nc hC' \,\ 1<1 Bcc:au'l' 111 tht• Pmp<1\ll111n 1 \ proJ)Crty ta' llm11auon ann1.·1\at11111 to the rtl) would not 1ncreaw pr<1p en ) tJ \C'\ in Old Top of the World Dally Piiot Dell very re CuarantMd Just call 642-6086 ., .. ~ . . " What do ~ou ltkc about the Oa1l } Pilot'>~ hat don '1 you ltkc'1 ( all the numtler aboH and \uur me5~ie ~ 111 he recorded lran\C'nlx'd and de hvercd to the ppropnatc cdllor ' ,.,. ... ,..., The ~me 24 hour an<iwcnna \Cf"\. tee ma' he.· u~d lo rernrd kncr\ 10 the cdt1or on an~ 1op11 ( o ntnbutor\ lo our Lener\ column mu\I int ludr their name and telephone numhcr for venlit:a1111n Tell\ u\ .,..hal''I on )Our mind Clrcutetlon TelephonH " I ·~ .... ..,~