Loading...
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.
Home
My WebLink
About
1986-05-20 - Orange Coast Pilot
~ - -- - TOlllOMOW: ' FMR I ' fOMCMTI Oii Al . - TUESDAY, MAY 20, 1986 Spiderman ·stalks Lido Isle Welcome home Pamlllee welcome home crewmen of the aircraft carrier Coral Sea, wboee tour ln the Mediter- ranean wu eztended by a month for an alr.atrlke acatnat Libya. A4 Coast Orange County's largest bualneaaes are being urged to adopt voluntary smoking guidelines - before the county does It for tt1~.1 A3 INDEX t\dvlce and Games Bulletin Board Business Classlfled Comics Death Notices Entertainment Opinion Police Log Public Notices Sports Television Weather B6 A3 A7-9 B8-10 B7 810 BS A10 A3 84, 10 81-4 BS A2 Jewelry thief climbs walls. disappears; Newport police are baffled by.footprints The thiefwa1 named "Sp1derman" after his footprints were found lead- ina up the sides of houses then disappeared into thin air. Accordina to police reports, Spidennan appa~ntly enters m<>5t of the homes throu&h a tce0nd~tory balcony, then steals cash or jewelry befo~ makin1 an escape. By SUSAN HOWLETI' Of .. Dlllr,......., Newport Beach police arc warning Lido Isle residents to lock their doors and windows until "Spidennan" has BB lifts ban on home builders By ROBERT BARKER Of ... Dlllr,.. ..... Huntington Beach City Council members voted unanimously Mon- day night to end a 45-<lay moratorium on residential construction around Main Street after hearing protests from home builders. 4 The builders said they weren't notified before city officials imposed the ban April 7. They said construc- tion delays were cost.log them money and threatened to reduce property values in the neighborhood. Earl Mazzari, a retired Los Angeles Fire Department captain who de- scribed himself as a small builder, said the moratorium was ill-timed, coming when rates on construction loans had finally fallen to favorable levels. "It was totally unfair," Mazzari said. Councilman Jack Kelly, who led the City Council charge to reject efforts to extend the moratonum another I 0 months, was especially critical of the building ban. "It's become ridiculous to buy (Pleue 11ee BOU..DING/A2) been captured. Spiderman has stolen about $200,000 in jewelry and cash in more than 14 Lido Isle home buralaries sinoc January, polioc said. Hot wheels Newport Beach poboc spokesman Geoqe Beyer peen lnalde a 1957 Japar at the annual Concoan d' Bl91ance dlaplay of cl•Mtc aatomobllee at th~ ?Cewporter Reeort OD 8anday. In the bKk&rotmd la a 1954 Rolla Royce. Trent Harris, wbo declmcd to elaborate on details of \be inves~ tion, said most of the buralaries have occurred on Via Lido Soud duri.n1 \be evenina houn. Accordina to poli~ oft"teen. foot- prints up the sides of walls have been discovered at the scene of the burglar· ies. One officer said the prints lead up the side of the homes, "'the,n just van1Jb ... lik.e Spidenna.n wu theft ... One buralary reported in tbe lOO block of \Tia Udo Soud tut week netted a $30,000 loa in jewelry. Another bur&larY last week in I.be 500 block of V ta 1.i<IO Soud reNlted in lft S8.000 loss, p01ice repon.s u.id. Other Lido l&le raideftu have ~rted s2s.ooo. ss.ooo, u . 100, and , ........ .rsw&IA/d) Clean air group criticizes three county officials By LISA MAHONEY Of ... Dlllr ........ Nine of the 14 public offictals entrusted wi\b protcctin1 and im- provina air quality in the Sou\b Coast Air Basin have flunked their clean air quotients, accordina to \be Coalition for O ean Air. Three Orange County politician• are among those given failina grades by the non-profit citizcl'll' orpni.za- tion. They arc county superviaon Bruce Nestande and Harriett Wieder and Anaheim Mayor Don Roth. All are on the board of the South Coast Air Quality Management Dis- trict, which is charged will> meeting federal air quality standards for stationary pollution sources in Or--.nae;tos ~les, Rivmide and San Bernardino counties. "A few ycan aio district officials were citinc the year 2000 for poten- tially attaining federal clean air standards for our area. More recently, they are usina the year 2020. At the rate the board is aomg. an additional 20 yean may not be enouch," said coalition Executive Director Kelly Hayes-Raitt. "It's time the board at least lived up to the Air Quality Management Plan they passed in 1978. We are tired of holdina our breath and waitina fottbe SCAQMD to start doina its job," she complained. Two Orange County board mem. ben called \be coalition's analysis unbalarwed. Wieder wd that the district boeJd cannot be u single-minded as the coalition when it comes to clean air. Wieder, who also is on the Nte Air Resources Board which rqulat.cs vehicle emisstons, said the district board must take the economic imeect of its ~ons into coru.iderauon. Some bUsineues like small peint and furniture manufacturen and oil re- fineries could be put out of buiness by strict ~ation, she said. .IottL om, wb rcRrelellts Nestande on the board, said be~ with the coalition's pOlitioq about two-thirds of the time. But be said its i~ of controlina air POUution ii to put companies out o( business and people out of work. ' 0The district is trying to toe a very fine line between the maximum amount of air pollution reduction without burtina the economy," Elcbom said. (Pl--eee CLaAlf/A.2) Dance instructor cleared of charge of sex with girl, 14 Newpert Shor.es property leases approved by judge By STEVE MARBLE Of ... Dlllr .......... A nationally known dance teacher was found innocent Monday of seducing and having sex with a 14- year-old ballerina during private lessons at a Huntington Beach dance academy. "This is a wonderful moment," Anthony Sellars Jr. said afler the SuperiQr Court jury in Westminster cleared him of four felony counts of oral copulation with a minor. Jurors returned their verdict shortlv before noon Monday after one day of deliberations. "There wasn't any concrete evidence," said M.L. Madsen. one of the jurors. Huntington Beach police, how- ever, said their case was hindered from the beginning because several other female students at the academy were not allowed to testify. "It's tough to lose one like this," LL Jim Walker said. "But it's especially tough when the case has been hun because of our inability to utilize the statements of other female wit- nesses." Anthony Sellan Jr. Police declined the say what the other girls would have said on the (Plea.e eee TEACHER/ A.2) Dornan denies criticizing Badham in news interview By PAUL ARCHIPLEY Of ... Dlllr .......... Rep. Robert Doman threw his "unqualified" support behind Rep. RobertBadham Monday while emphatically de in& he ever accused the Newport congressman of having a "country cl ttitude." Both congressmen we at a hastily called press conference at Doman'& campaign headquarters where the 38th district representative denied a series of quotes attributed to him in a news article about Badham in Sun- day's Los Angeles Times. The story by urban affairs writer Jeffrey Perlman quoted Dornan as saying that Badham bad a "country club attitude" and \bat he "carries the air of rich, Republican clubism, of ridina in limos and jet-setting around the world. He's not in the trenches politkally, in the House. He's a limousine conservative and my God, we sure have enouith of those in the Republican Party already." Doman said the quote was full of words he wouldn't use and that the descriptions didn't fit Badham. Doman said he has uses the· description "country club Re- publican" when talking about party moderates who are "uneasy on social issues" and "not strong on defense." "That's certainly not Bob Badham," Doman said. "It's a speci- fic type of Republican who used to (Pleueeee DORNAN/A2) By ROBERT HYNDMAN Of .. Dlllr,.. .... An Orange County Superior Court judge approved gUJdelines Monday to settle a lengthy dispute over bow lease payments should be calculated on homeowners' land in the Newport Shores community of west Newport Beach. Judge Judith Ryan's ruling sup- ports the decision reached in Febru- ary when three arbitrators agreed on payments higher than what the resi- dents sought, but lower than the assessment by their landlord, Signal Landmark. Properties of I rvtne. The ruling 1s expected to be the final action in the dispute between Rep. Robert Dornan Newport Shores residents and SiJnal Landmark, acoording to Ninfa O'Brien. who represented rcsider t.s in the rent dispute. "When the court finally confirms the award, it cannot be appealed," O'Brien said. "I don't thinlc they (Signal Landmark officials) arc even considerina it anymore." Siana! Landmark officials were unavailable for comment. Monthly payments will multiply more than six times under the terms of the new lease agreements. But that is far less than the twentyfold increase initially sought by Signal Landmark. Payments ofS20 to $23 per month will Jump to S 135 to $153 per month, O'Brien said. The rent disru1e was pushed into court in Apri 1985 after a leae arrangement for Newport Shores homebuyers left rates unchanged for 25 years. When that agreement expired in December 1984, residents of the West Newpon community disagreed with Signal Landmark over how new payments, which arc based on the value of the land beneath their homes, should be calculated. On April 3, 1985. Judge Ryan said arbitrauon should be used to settle the dispute. And in late Ausust, the thr~ arbitrators -including one (Pleue eee LEAS&/ A2) 30 flee minor fire at HB Pacifica Towers By ROBERT BARKER Of .. Dlllr ......... About 30 people were evacuated this momina when smoke partially filled the second and third foors oflhe I I-story Pacifica Towers building near Five Points 1n Huntmgton Beach. Fire alarms sounded throughout the two-year-old building at 18800 Delaware St. at about 9 a.m. Many of the occupants had already fled th(' building before firefighters arrived with snorkels and other high-nse firefighting equipment. An employee had put out the electncal fire with a dry chemical from a fire extinguisher before fire- fighters amved. There were no rc- pons of injuries or damages. Battalion Chief Edward Vasile said investigators blamed a short tn a lamp's electric cord for the fire. The fire djdn't bum hot enou~ to tum on the building's fire spnnklers The buildtnJ. 1s connected by a comdor to Pac1fica Community Hos- pital. The hosptial's adm1ni1trauve. staff 1s housed on the second floor Bitterness mars congressional contest Su SAN HOWLETT Combatants from both parties lose their tempers In TV debate Tempers flared Monday morning following the tap1na of a tclev1son prOIJ'Bm that 11red the diversified views of five 40th Congressional District candJdates. The tapina 11 KOCE 'ltud1os on the Golden We t Collqe campus in Huntinston Beach sparked heated exchanaes between Republican can· did.ates Nathan Rosenberg and Rep. Robert. E. 8adham1 and between Oemocrauc oontenoers Art Hoff· mann and Bruce Sumner. Peace & freedom Party candidate Steve Sean is also runninJ. It was the fir1t time all five of the 40th District challcn1crs shared the same st.11c. and 1f the candidates didn't pull any poli1ical punches, their t:amoa11Ul workers nearly ex- changed the real thing. The race is a bitter one on both Republican and Democratic sides, filled with mudalinains. accusations of campalan spyina and mob connco- t1ons and eharacs ofuncthical tactica. The GOP battle is between Badham. a five-term incumbent, and the 33-ycar-old Roscnbcrs. Badham contcnda Rosenbcra 11 an incitperienccd newcomer whoac can- didacy was prompted by padualel of est (a scM-improvement aroup) want- in& to pin political power. Rosenbera has openl)( attacked the S4-ycat-old congressman on several fronts. 1nclud10J hit campaian spend- ing. House vottna ~rd and "que1- t1onable" endorsement• from promi- (P1eue ... T&MPSRa/A.2) aep. Bob 19adMm Foes trade 'spy' charges In the 401h Distnct conaress1onal race, it seems one &ood spy de~rve~ another. The verbal lugfest between the camPll&"S of Rep. Rohen Bad.ham and Republican chaJlcqer Nathan Rosenbera reached new he1ahts Fn- day n1aht when Badham helpers djSQovered a Rosenbera campa11n worker in the Badham campailD bcadquaners. But the ··Roscnpte" inadent turn- ed into "Badhama.atc"' Monday when Rosenbera atcuscd Badham of py tacucs. Roscnbera cla1ms the Radham campa1an sent a do uble l ent to hi hcadquaners to pose as a volunt~r In the Fnday n1ah1 1nc1denl. ELECTION '86 Badham campaign workers wett outraaed when they found Rosenbera volunteer Joseph Tl'JO "walk.tna around with noth1n1 to do .. in the convnsman ·, headquarters. Trio had S\tned a volunteer 1dcnu- fica11on f onn at the Bad.ham hced- quaners u i.na the name Bnan Men- dou, ICClOrdina to Badham at.de WdJiam httibet. After he wu confronted by sutp1Clous camPUIJl work.en, he told lhe-m h11 name was J~ M1chact Trso. Trao's voluntce-l)ob for the R~ nbcft camp&.1an tndudcd P"Uttit\a up campaign 11ans throuahout the ~ Dutnct. ROKnbera wd Trto .. wu (Pt __ _.IPY/A.3) j ' ,, Ap * ~ CoMt DAILY PILOT/ Tu.day, M.y 20, 1Ne Gaamaa N&e. Flnaalr pl1UJe HELSlNKJ, Ficttaad ~Ae;edAn armed man today com a Fi r:uwr pauenaer plane before lakroff in the northern city of Oulu alld held five crew membtn hos-., rwt10 repons said. The unidentified man, believed to be 1 Finn, rcleuccl the 95 puseqen ball an bout aftei the takeover, S&Jd Fu1nilh Radio. The hijacker\ who carried a pistol, ' did not immediately make deman<b, lhe broldcast said. Police at the Oulu aitponwd they were in t14lpcontact with the crew. LEASE DISPUTE SETTLED BY COURT ••• homAl representauvc from each of the two perties -ruled in favor of the raidents repniina what method should be u.led to determine rents. ln subsequent months., the arbi- trators araued further over bow those property values shouJd be calculated. Anomey Ronald Beck. representing the llUi ~1dt-n1~ in 1h,. ,.;~putr , JEWELS Prom Al S4,400 in Jewelry missing.. The bur-sJar has taken at least $3,000 worth of Jewelry and cash in each theft, Jiarris said. A spokeswoman for the Lido Island Yacht Association said today the islan~·s p~vate security guard is ~orki~g with Newport Beach police 1nvest1gators to capture the burglar. Hams said the burglar has been described as "a male subject." No other details were released by the police department pending the in- vestigation. pointed to comparable neia.hborioa IJU$ and sajd Newpon Sbores land was worth about $2.93 a square foot.. Siana! l.&.ndmarlc representauves selected other areas they sajd were comparable and anived at an assessed valuation of $24. 9 I per square foot. Faced with the wide d1spanty, arbitrators selected a midway point -SI I .2S per square foot-on wbkh the new lease payments should be based. That was the figure approved by Jud&e Ryan on Monday and will be used retroactively for lease payments dating back to De<:ember 1984. BUILDING BAN ENDS ••. Prom Al property tn Huntington Beach when by some whim or will-o'-thc-wisp. t~ey can change zoning. I think this is ndaculous." The city initially imposed the 4S· day moratorium along Main Street and its environs, generalJy between I J th Street and Palm A venue, after homeowners complained about den- sity, partc.ing and rental units. The moratorium prohibited new con- struction of more than one dwelling unit per lepJ building site, whether it was zoned for single-family or mul- tiple-family units. There arc I 54 houSJna units on 76 buildina sitet within the area. Thirty- -two of the sites have sin&le-family homes and 44 have multipfe units. Mazzari, and bis partner John Jacobsen, purchased two lots at 317 Crest for about SI 58,000, a price they say was predicated on buiJding two duplexes there. They wouldn't have paid that much, they said, if it carried a zoning for one house on each lot. Councilman Don MacAllister, who proposed the moratorium, was out of town and missed the meeting. TEACHER CLEARED OF SEX CHARGE .•. From Al witness st.and. only that the statute of limitations precluded their testi- mony. The trial revolved around the testimony ofa ballet student who said that Sellars seduced her during pn- vate dance lessons in 1984 and persuaded her to perform sex acts. The prl, now 17, said she bad a "crush' on Sellars at the time and only agreed to talk about the incident after police approached her. A Huntington Beach police officer said he monitored a conversation between the girt and Sellars in which the dance teacher allegedly made incnminat1ng statements and ac- knowledged the sex acts. But Detective Don Howell said he failed to press the "record" button on a tape recorder he had connected to the telephone during the conversa- tion. Several Jurors said the absence of a tape recording weighed strongly in Sellars' favor. The dance instructor denied any involvement with his student, who he described as a talented but lazy dancer. He conceded that the girl telephoned him. but said she only talked about her boyfnend. The trial, which lasted throe weeks, attracted dozens of spectators. Some said they supported Sellars and believed in his innocence while others said the teacherabused his position of authority and deserved to go to prison. "There is no doubt in my mind whatsoever that he is guilty," Deputy District Attorney Michael KoskJ said. During the trial, Koski descnbed the dance teacher as a seducer who was on a "power trip." Sellars. who owns the Phyllis Cyr Dance Academy an Huntington Beach. declined to discuss the specific Ch8Jlcs or what effect the Lnal has had on his business. "I'm sure I can put things back together," he said, standing in the coun hallway with his family. "l have what I need-my wifeand my baby." Sellars dismissed the parents and former students who have turned against him by talkmg about th ose who have stood by him. "I didn't know bow much love there was until now," he said. Al Ramsey, a 73-year-old attorney coaxed from retirement to defend Sellars. wd he believed io bis client's innocence. "This was somebody worth saving. not a drug dealer or a robber," Ramsey said. "This was a case invotvmg decent people." Ed George, a second defense at- torney whose children took dance lessons from Sellars, predicted there will be changes at the dance academy for the protection of teachers and students alike. "There will be some radical changes made," George said. "No private lessons without an adult present, the blinds (covering the studio window) are coming down and we're even considering putting cam- eras in the room." The studio room where the alleged sex acts took place has one window that 'was covered with a blind. But several witnesses said parents, stu- dents and even Sellar's wife frequent- ly walked through the studio unan- nounced. Ramsey lold Jurors that Sellars would have been "crazy to take that kind of a risk -1t would have been fatal." SPY CHARGES TRADED BETWEEN FOES ••• From Al angry over the systematic removal of the Rosenberg campaign signs. and that the Rosenberg sings were re- placed by Badham signs." Trgo reponedly went to Badham's headquarters to fi_nd out what was going on. Trgo was fired by Rosenberg cam- paign officials following the mcident, Rosenberg said. He claimed Trgo acted independently of the Rosenberg campaign by going to Badham 's headquaners under an ahas. But while he was at Badham's headquarters, Trgo saw Huntington Beach rcsidenl Many Burbank and recognized him as also worlc.ing for the Rosenberg campaign. Burbank reportedly boasted to Trgo that he bad taken down a bunch of the Rosenberg campaign signs Trgo had put up. Rosenberg said Burbank had vol- unteered to do administrative work at the Rosenberg campaign head- quarters. and that Rurbank had rcponed for duty Tuesday, Wednes- day and Friday morning oflast week. Burbank has been accused by Rosenberg of actually worlung for Badham all along. Schreiber said Burbank is a vol un-tee~ for the Badham campaign, but claimed he changed to Badham 's campaign "after he became dis- 1llus1oned with the underhanded tactics at the Rosenberg head- quaners." Schreiber said Burbank told him the Rosenberg headquarters "is so full of est people that there's practically a seminar there every night." "He didn't just decide Friday that he didn't want to work for us.'' Rosenberg said. "Not after he told us he's been ukmg down our signs for the past two weeks.·· Rosenberg campaign manager Harry Rosenberg called Burbank al home Saturday. seeking an expla- nation ··He (Burbank) said, ·yeah, I've been t.atc.ing down your signs,' " Rosenberg said Rosenberg filed a rcpon with the Newport Beach and Huntington Beach polic:c depanments, "but they said there's nothing they can do." When Burbank admincd to taking down Rosenberg's campaign signs. Schreiber said he was reprimanded by Badham carn'paign chairman David Vaporean. who said "that's not the way we do things." Another incident occurred Sunday afternoon dunng a Badham cam- paign reception. Schreiber said Rosenberg volun- teer Robin Springer taped Badham'!! comments during the ~thering. Harry Rosenberg said Springer was not sent to the event. but told him she was gomg to attend. "It's a public forum ... she's a United States citizen, and she had every nght to go." Rosenberg said. TEMPERS FLARE IN CAMPAIGN DEBATE .•. From Al nent Republicans. CharJCS of spying from both sides of the increasingly bitter GOP race have also come into play. Badham has bee n accused of placing a volun- teer in the Rosenberg camp. and Rosenberg has been charged with th e same tactics by Badham campaign officials. Followmg the taping. Badham asked for an apology from Rosenberg over one of the "campaign spymg" incidents. Badham received the apology. but said he didn't believe Rosenberg'~ explanation that the campaign worker had acted on his own and with the knowledge of the Rosenberg campaign. Badham also said a r~mark made durioa the 30-mmute program by Rosenberg rcp.rdang Badham's wife's alleaed uscofcampa1g,n funds to buy a mink coat was "inexcusable" and "a ~i~~~E Daily Pilat MAIN OFFICE llO "'ff' S.1 jt C.~t• ~-" Me• t oel<H t Pll)• \IJO C~ lo ......... t A l'f\'f> 11e." The two candidates stepped aside when Rosenberg campaign chairman Harry Rosenberg and Badham cam- paign consult.ant David Vaporean stood chin-to-chin 1n a finger-point- ing shouting match that stopped j ust shon offisucuffs. The altercation &as sparked by what Badham a1cles 1ermed "underhanded" campaign tactics by Rosenberg and the com- ment he made about Badham's wife's wardrobe The Democratic pnmary race be - tw~n Orange County Democratic Pany chairman Bruce Sumner. Lyn- don LaRouche follower An Hoffman and Peace & Freedom Party can- didate Steve Sears 1s also a colorful battle of scpar.lte views. Sumner 1s a write-in candidate on the Democratic ucket. Dunng the KOCE tap1nj. Hoff- mann accused Sumner of having connections with organized cnmc and drug trafficking. He claimed Sumner supponer James Roosevelt. son of former President FrankJin Delano Roosevelt, was also involved in sordid dealings. Sumner, who used the air ti me to repeatedly tell voters to write in his name on the June 3 ballot, said Hoffmann's involvement with LaRouche followers 1s "wild, weird. bizarre. but it's also dangerous.'' Sumner said unless the people of the 40th D1stnct wnte in his name they will have a "Lyndon LaRouch~ d1sc1pl~" running in the general election-. Scars made his campaign stand on freezing nuclear weaponry. He said the United States should negotiate more treaties, "or we arc going to end up in some kind of nuclear war." The KOCE show 1s scheduled to air on public telcv1s1on's channel SO at 6:30 p.m. May 29. Delly Piiot Delivery I• QuerantMd C_._.,,~ fl.'1 ~71 -& ..,..Of,. M1 •)1• Justcall 642-6086 Mnnd4r t •>Ql1 " yo.. d<' N)I ..... t"'" Pl-by l>lOom u~c.o.:~1 1 11 ,. •"Cl ff'l'I CO()y w• Do! ~.o C<.or~· •99J ,,,., ~ _ ........ _"'9 ~· ' ""' .-. •·~~ .--"' ••.nrt .,,.,'°". ~•n• '°' ., .. ,., ... -· ,,.. ...... , r.. ·-O<JOJ(~ ... ...,.,, 't«• l>f>' ,. -Of t'»f'"" I - ~'O"d (0\ p/•'4'fll O•~ t' '• l.4.~a I '0'"'1• UPS ... 900 S...t•Of'O" ti• ..... l~1~ -0'•.,,.,. rtv ""•" ,.., oc IN\(ifl'". YO&.. 71, NO. 140 What do yo11 Mee about the Daily Pilot? What don't you like'> Call tht number above and your menqe will be recorded. tranKnbed and de- livered 10 the appropnate editor Tht same 24-hour answenna serv1et may be used to record letters to the editor on any topic Contnbutors to our Letters column must include their name and telephone number for venficauon Tell' us what's on your mind !\atUtOly .no ~, " '°" (lo) "°' tf'( .... '°"' (00., Oy 7 a ff\ • Dll'<><t 10 • "' -fi!\,O (CIC>f ... °"_.., ClfcWltlon , ... ~ ~ 0r ..... eo.~·, M-Ml-Cm ·~·~ ..... Ocean winds bring cooler c;tir Cooltt WMthef I• In ttor• kw rnoet of SoutMtn C.ilfomta 11 • tow-preeeure sytttm due to move ecroa the region llUOt!t mot1t OCMn alt Inland. The loW Pf'.UUr• trough. •xP901ed to Cf'OU the 1tate torught and Wedneeday, wUI ~morning low cloud• and fog from ttMI t>MchM to the cout reno-. according to the National WNth« ~let. Sunthlne w11 expected to reuMt"t lttelf In the e~«noona. bYt ~high cloudlneu wlll persl9t throughOYt ttMI region. U.S. Temps OIUlinonle City 1• 5' o-M .. • • OAandO '° 10 .. Le ~ .. .. Alt)eny,NY tl 55 ~ l04 70 ::i::~ ., $6 ~ .... 70 .. 13 50 71 1141 ~aoe 67 41 Portllllld,Ote 11 152 AUente 71 67 PrcMdencle '2 67 AIWlllO City .. 541 :::relfy 1t IS AuMlf'I 80 541 72 43 hlllmOf• 6$ .. "9rlo 80 47 Sl"t<lw•rl ....... 1111*'1 .11 &2 Aldwnond IS IS '-.,..WM,,.,~ HOM U $ 0.00 OI ~c.t It loull .. .. ... 17 6S eo.on '° eo Sell LM• City 12 82 aufllllO .. 41 Ian MIOftlo 82 53 Calif. Tempe lanlaMa ,. eo c...,., 71 41 a.em. 71 47 t.l\eCM 76 u ~on.SC 71 71 ~ 78 5e 8MIA ..... 17 eo ~on,WVe 7t 6S Spoil-n 57 ~ 24 "°"" erodlnO al. a.111 ............ I I .. ~.N C 7f 14 a;.-82 M tt eo Tei-Vs/ltfft 71 14 T~IPMllQ .. .. £"'11U U SO T-7t .. 71 43 ~ ~ll 6S 41 T~ .. .. ,,_ 11 eo v--. ~ 71 ., T-101 16 Ill .e ~ 112 .., ~ .. S2 TulM 78 IO ~::--.. 12 ~.Ciiio 11 41 WMflln01on,O C. .. ., eo 62 OlllM-AWMb 71 M WlcHla 72 62 ,_Ao«ile9 112 ~Tide. = 12 .. ............ ., .., "9d tlld! M 74 47 "9dwOOd City 72 M O..Molli. 70 .. Smog Report :::-i0 12 54 TOOAY °"'°" 54 46 .., 62 S-..SIOw l:Otpm. ot OUMt! 53 2t IMIC*DO 1a tO ~Ngll 7:Sa p,lft 5.7 El P9to .. 55 Polluttinl tlMderd Inda (pel): ~ 100 ..,, l'rencleoo ., 52 ,lllr'IMlnka 67 37 .. .. .... IOAY OOod. 100-200 unhNllfllUI tor WllllM ..,,.. ..,_. P:lfVO 17 45 PM'*' ~ uMeellflM lot tit: 8tocaton M M ArM IOW 2:11 &.m 01 =-,...,. 71 " IOO.aoo '*-IOull Fnt ...... le HW1, IOW IOt 24 hour'I ~ M 5 p.m. =::r;: 1:23 Lift. 4 I 62 u toeley'I pel ,.,,_,~le pr9'llloue ~ Vll/lclf 14 4t IOw 2:2t p,m ot CM.-,... n .. .,. •• 9"11ned pel ..._ 100 .. a-'111 .. 1'05 p"' u .....,. II 47 -...non. .. 54 Honolulll M 74 S... llMdl to M9CArlhut 8MI ..... ll0-68 Ilg a-n 81 Sun .... I~ 111 7:6:,,.:,·"'·· ...... HouMon 76 61 .,...,,., ~ Vtll9y ............. 75-13 ...,_ ,, 46 w~at ·41a.m -..-i lndlMapolla 5e .. Laguna llMd\. . . -50 llytM '°' .. at7:Up.m, JecMoft.M• n &3 Catallnot .. 57 Moon ...... l.od9y at 4;J I P "', Mb ~ .. 13 Surf Report Lono llMd\ 11 51 --~atl:lla.m 9fldrtMl..-i ~ .., 42 M~ 16 16 115.Upm ~Clfy et 47 Monro.la 17 1141 ~v-o-100 73 LOCATIOM tmlNAN ~ tO 50 LinlllAOC* 71 53 1·2 poor Mt Wlllon 71 ., ~ fl 41 Huntington 8-1 1-3 poor NMCllae 105 ::Extended ~ 71 47 "'-""'IY. "-P«1 40GI 8tteM, Ni9wpor1 1-3 poor Hewpor1 9-dl 70 Miami._,., " n 22nd ....... Newport ~ = ~..,,,,.. .. 64 ... , ... 50 4t tot 72 ,. Thinday llWOU8fl ......., .... ~tPu 114 SI 911110aWadg9 ~ca.!:: 1·2 poor PMadafte .. 55 rnoatly = --.,.,_ ... l.009I NalfMl9 16 50 ts 1·2 poor ::=-c11no 16 f': llOft wll>de on ~ ....~ 111 ee w..,~ . ., 15 57 ~-'~· ._,_, hlClflt .... Yon.City .. 83 a.n Gatlflel ts 67 to7 . .._5410 .V~hlClflt75to NorfOll,Va. ., .. a... clncllon: w-SenJoea 75 .., 11 • .._ 41 eo eo. ~ CLEAN AIR GROUP RAPS OFFICIALS. .• From Al In rating board members, the coalition considered nine key clean air measures including refinery con- trols, ride sht.rinJ incentives and regulations on toxic emissions from landfills. Each member of the district board was rated on the percent.age of his or her votes in support of clean air goals. Votes by the majority of me"lbers strengthened or upheld air quality goals less than 41 perc:cnt of the time, according to the coalition's analysis of district board minutes from 1984 to the present. The coalition considers scores below 50 percent to be nunking. William Sm1land, Gov. George DcukmeJian's a~pointe~. earned lhe worst score. Sm1land did not cast a sineie key vote for clean air during the pcnod studied. the organization said. Roth. chairman of the district board, also ratted to make the grade with a 30 percent clean air score. Targeted as very pro-business, a coalition member said it's rare for Roth to vote for "anything that smacks of control. .. Wieder and Nest.ande each scored 40 percent on the coalition's clean air ratm_g. Wieder attributed her tow grade to her refusal to go along with a coalition-desired ridesharing pro- gram. "I don't believe the only way to solve a problem is to pass another law," Wieder said. The supervisor said she voted in favor of strict refinery controls and regulations for to~ic waste landfills. Eichorn echoed Wieder's com- ments. He said he voted against astc.ing businesses to provide ride- sbaring incentives because be did not believe such programs were within the district's JUnsd1ction. Eichorn said Ncstande favors strict controls on oil refineries and has been "at the forefro nt of toxic controls" io Orange County. Roth could not be reached for comment. The worst overatJ county scores were earned by San Bernardino representatives, who rated a 30 pct• cent positive voting score. Ironically, San Bernardino is considered to bo the most polluted county in the basin. Other failing scoren include two Los An_gelcs County representatives, Supervuor Pete Scbabarum and dis- trict board vice chairman Tom Heinsheimer. The Coalition for Oean Air is 1 statewide organization dedicated to the eradica1ion of air pollution. . It docs not endorse, suppon. nor oppose political candidates. DORNAN DENIES CRITICIZING BADHAM ••• From Al dominate the Nallonat Republican Committee until Ronald Re.agan. "rve never heard anybody hint that Bob Badham is a moderate," he said. "Another line in there -'He's not in the trenches politically, in the House.' I wouldn't say it. None of 1t could I recognize as coming out of my mouth," Doman said. Doman said Perlman told him the quotes came from an interview last fal l. He suggested the reponer made a mistake going through his notes. attributing to him things that some- one else said. "I have to assume it's an honest m1staJce," Doman said. Perlman referred quc~t1ons to C'ity Editor John Arthur, who said the Ti mes stands behind the quotes. "These congressmen profiles have been under way for more than six months." Anhur said. "We've gone through Perlman·s notes. Everything in the story is substantiated." Arthur said Perlman obtained the Doman quotes dunng a telephone interview last fall. "It's an old interview. Doman may have for- gotten about it.'' he said. ~Doman called to complain and we commenced a search and we're satisfied with the results. We know we have it nghL "fn reviewing the notes, there's no doubt that's what he said," Anhur said. "I thought the Sunday story was very fair. It was well done, welt researched and very fair to Bad ham." The Newport Beach congressman disagreed. . "When I read the article I said to my wife. 'That's not Bob Doman.' We'vebeen through the trenches· together. We've worked hand in hand. "These lcinds of things arc beyond the pale of rcspccub1llty," Badham said. "I don't think I've been treated straightforward by Jeff. He's tried to get me to say bad thinp about Bob Doman." Badham said he heard Perlman bad been taken off of partisan politics stories becau~ of a bias against Republicans in past articles. Orange County Republican Party Chairman Tom Fuentes echoed that belief. "We understood he was no tonger doing panisan pieces because of a lack of objectivity," Fuentes said. adding be thought the Badham profile wasn't objective, either. Anhur, who Joined the Times in February, said he never beard of any suchassignment change for Perlman because of biased rcponing. "That's bull-. I've never heard that before," he said. Summer Silks • In addition to our classic tan raw silk sport coat. this season we are offering it in a most unique shade of grey. As versatile as its counterpart and as timeless in style as tradition itself Gentlemen's Clothing Inspired by Tradition 46 Fuhion Island Newp<?rt Beach (714) 640-8310 ·) t UCI •YIDPQ&ium eeton ecology A two4aY tyml)Olium oo eovironmental DIYCboloCY will be held Thunday and Friday in the UD.ivenity ~ter Heritaae Room at UC Irvine. The ~ wit~ brine totether oerticipents from unweniues, ~vate industry ao4 public aeenciet. A l)'mpolium benciuet ThW'lday will feature a keynote~ by LL Gov. Leo McCarthy at 7 p.m. lo the Un1vet11tyOub. Admillion i.SSS for one day or S l 00 for both days and tickets to the banquet are S30. Call 856-6849 for details. Goodwill ale bJ Ilea .. .:n b~will's Costa Mesa store, at 620 E. 19th SL, ww ott us 30th anniversary aa.le Tbunday throuah Sunday. Doon will be open from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. weekdays, 9 to 6 Saturday and 10 to S Sunday. Call the store at 646-2479 for more information. Water program Ln Valley Oordoo Eller, information officer ofthe Oranae Co.unty Water District. will &ive a video presen· talion on behalf of the Southern California Water Committee at the Founlain Valley Mayor's Break· fut Tbunday at 8 a.m. at the Fountain Valley Reaional Hospital, 17100 Euclid Ave. Call 965-4403 to ltSVP. HealtlJ, etlllc. eqlored Ethical questions about health care will be explored by Ellen Severoni, project director of California Health Decisions. at Wednesday's 8 p.m. meetina of the National Orpniution for Women at the EJ Toro Library. Discussion topics will include il!CP,l aliens' riabt to medical treatment, death with d~ty versus prolonging life, and funding priorities in medicine. For information, call G wen Griffin at S86-2737. Car pool foe. to meet Driven For Highway Safety will meet at 8 p.m. Thursday at the Revere House, 900 W. First SL in Tustin. A citizen organization opposed to car pool lanes on the Costa Mesa Freeway, the aroupwants to know bow commuters feel about o pcnfaa the lanes to all traffic for a six-month trial period. Further information is available fro m Joe Catron at 7S2-7S3l. . Art program ln Irvine Art of the early 20th century, includina modern masters Picasso and Matisse, will be discussed _by Dr. Lynn Matteson, an art professor at UCS, Wednesday at 7 p.m. in a slide-lecture at the Irvine Fine Arts Center. Admission is $7 or $6 for students, teniors and arts center members. Call SS2-J078 for more information. Artlultl• dl11ea .. lon .et "'An Introduction to Arthritis" is the topic for the Alsociated Booe and Joint Orthopedic Medical Group's tint su~rt aroup meeting 1hunday from 7 to 8:30 p.m. lD the conf~nce room at Humana Ho.pita! Westminster. Call 898-2SS4 for additional information. AIDS forum ln Lagana Lquna Outreach is sponsorina a community forum on AIDS from 8-10 p.m. Wednesday at St. Mary's Olurob, 428 Park Ave., in Laguna Beach. Thomu Prenderpst.i.. director of epidemioloCY for Oranae County, and K.lndalJ Wick. president of the Oranle county chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union. will be among the speaken. For further information, call Lquoa Outreach at 497-4237. Tueeday. May 20 • 7 p.m. Oeeaa View ScHol Dta1ricl, 16940 8 SL, Huntinatoo Beach. • 7:30 p.m. Buua,to. Bead Plaallla1 Cem.mJaJee, 1 p.m., City Council Ownben, 2000 Main SL • 7:30p.m.,LapaaBeadParklq, Trafflcud Ctralad• Committee, City Hall Conference Room, SOS Forest Ave. • 7:30 J>.m., ~ Buell Selamlc Sale- ty /Dilu&er PrepiareUet1 Committee, Police Oe- putment Library, SOS Forest Ave. • 7:30 p.m .. Irvtae Commulty Services C.•••11-. City Council Cbamben. 17200 Jam- boree Blvd. o;.,._ C... DAL V PllOT /Tu9ed1r, -II; .. * M Firms urged to adopt smoking BJ Ul4 MARON&\' Of ........... The On-:. County Chamber o( Com· merce ia Ilk.ins the county'• 7.~ ~t busineuea to adopt voluntary amokina auidelina before local aovemmenu im· pose mandatory rules. "Private entefprite needs to join totelher to rqulate itself on this iaue," chamber president Lucien Trub.ilt said In 1 letter cirtulated to more than 7,000 busineas executives last week. The letter invitet rums to tend • representative to a 1une S wOtbbop on introducina amokina controls in pnvate buaineas and warns bulinea ownen io Laauna art ule un.iftCOf'POrated .,.. dliat .. if' M doe't - the county will:' The mom na-&oa. WOf'bl9op ii the ~or comooniat al a dlalnber drive 10 avoid county~ of mom .. in tbe wotkplace. • Ora.nae COUDI)' auperviton were preperecl to extnd amoki111 coetroh Crom public buiktinp to private buliDeM Last June but ~ IO delay muda\ed smokina Polada IO liw the chamber a chance to nlly a voluwy tfl'Ort. Chamber officials arp1e that a blanket count~ Policy would poee a hardsbip to IOme firms and that eacb buliaell lbould be allowed to adopc its own llftokiq Nies. GrouPI like Catifomiant for Noa· Tbe JAaC1aDa Art llueam '• Son of a white Eleplaalat Sale oa hDday ra1Mcl $18,000 for contlaaed rtmoYatlcma at tile m11Ma1D . Plecee from tbe ........ de-acceeMCI collection were eold mad aactloned ID both .Uent mad Un aactlona. Aboat '50 people abcnrecl for die MCOD4 aJaDaal eYeDt and nearly all of die WCll'b were eold. Wor~ ID OrOaolao Marz •••k• areclockwlM froli top to bottom: llwam Dlrector BW Ottoa, Marla lltrd, ftom•• Tierney, .Jmae lla.Da- aer mad Amie cute. Graduation slated at five local colleges BJ PHIL SNEIDERMAN Of ................ Five area community colleges will conduct graduation ceremonies for more than 2,900 students over the next two weeks. The fi rst pduatina class of Irvine Valley College will receive diplomu at 6 p.m. Wednesday in the courtyard of the campus. SSOO Irvine Center Drive in Irvine. Before it was given independent status last year, Irvine Vall~ was Saddle- back Colleae Nonh, a satelhte of Saddle-- back Colleac in Mjssion Viejo. More than 90 Irvine Valley students, aae 19 to 66, will receive dqrees. Thomas Nielsen. president of the Irvine Co., Oranae County Iaraest landowner, will be Sculpture pieces offered to visitors for a limited time during the summer months, those who attend the Wednesday afternoon gallery talks and subsequent art tour sponsored by the Laguna An Mu- seum at South Coast Plaza will receive a tlaptooe remnant leftover from the build- inJ of the Nogouchi Sculpture Garden. "California Scenario." T he commemorative pieces, dated 1982, were recently made available to museum to be distributed to those interested in the oogoina development of the Orange County Arts community. "Art Sandwiched lo" is a noon-hour series of informal gallery talks g.iven by museum docents and 1uest speakers each Wednesday. Admission 1s free and those anendina arc encouraged to bring their lunch. 1uest speaker. Thursday commencement ceremonies wiU be held for about 7SO students receivina devees from Saddleback Col-'*· The event will take place at 6:30 p'.m. in the f)'moasium on campus, 28000 Marsuente Parkway. The featured speaker wiU be Dr. Joshua L. Smith. chancellor the California Com- munity Colleacs system. He also is chairman of the board of directon of the American AJsociation of Community and Junior CoUeaes. On May 28, Oranae Cbast Couqe•s 38th araduatina cla.u, oumbcrina almost 1,200. will receive diplomas. Ceremonies be&in at 7:30 p.m. in LeBard Stadium at the Costa Mesa campus.. 2701 Fairview ROid. The commencement address will be delivered by former OCC student Judy Bums, a veteran television scriptwriter who most recently was co-producer of the series "MacGyver." Coast Community Colleae Distnct chancellor David Brownell will pretent OCCs annual Outsundina Citizen Award. Also on May 28, commencement oer- emonies will be held for 37S Coastline Colleae students. Coastline has no per- manent campus but offen classes at numerou1 community locations.. The araduatio n exercises will beai n at 7:30 p.m. at Coastline's Newport Beach Center. 310 1 Pacific View Drive, Corona del Mar. Coastline President Wilham Vep will be the featured speaker. A 1e1Nttm1ative of state Sen. John Seymow, R-Anabeim, wiU present 1 motution mcopizina Coastline on itt l().year auivenary. On May 29, more tban ~ dietrees will be awarded It the 20th conunenc:emeGt ceremonies at Golden West Coaeec. Tbe event bqins at 6 p.m. in tbe cenual quad at the Huntinaton Beach campus. I S744 Golden West Sl The featured speaker will be t.bealef llU instructor Stewan Rotm. Chancellor Browocll will prcxnt Gokkn West's Outstand.tna Citizen oftbe Year Award. Dunna the ceremonies. 20 DW"let &om ma.inland Ch1n1 will receive CC1blicata o( acb1evemen1 for completiq a o~year study program 11 Golden WesL School offered new farm pets By ROBERT BARltER Of .. ....,,.. .... Officials at Golden View School. where more than two dozen animals were massacred recently, have received many offers from community members who want to donate rabbits and chickens to the school's animal farm . '"One man read about it and went to the pct store and bought a rabbit that he brought to us," Principal Mike Merz said. "We've received lots of calls from people wanting to make donations. It's made a positive out of a negattve ... Vandals climbed over a fence and tortured and killed about 30 rabbits and chickens at the school's animal fann May 8. Three siJtth-graders. wbo check the grounds in the early morning, were able to conceal much of the carnage from the younger ch1ldre-n. Bu t body pans were scattered about Merz called the scene ••gruesome ... Huntington Beach Lt. James Walker satd 1t appears that older you tbs who were seen drinking beer at the school late at night were responsible for the slayings. Satanism isn't a suspected motive, he said Merz sa1d the school is cons1denng the donors' offers and 1s consulting with officials at the Santa Ana Zoo about how to ma.kc the animal shelter more secure. l Newport cop refuses ACLU offer of lawsuit settlement estimated at S2SO. • ! • A resident o(thc IU200 block of Warner A venue reponed Fnday th1t thieves u1Cd 1 slim Jim tool to break into her brown 1986 Honda Civic. parked 1n her carpon Car sttteO cqu1pmcn1 worth S380 wu taken • • • arrested at 9 40 p m Sunday 1n Heisler Park. .! •• Pohcc arrcs1ed tmest Lynn Franct, 21 , of TcnncSStt on suspacaon of felony drunken dnv1n1 foUov.-1ng an accident early Sunday an whach 1 pcdcstnen wu 10Juted. France wes 11T'CSted 1t 1.10 1.m on Mount.11n Road ind South Coas1 Hlahwa} In a seperatc incident. pohoc arrested Thomas Alben Howard, 45, of Lake Forest on tusp1c1on of dnving under the influence of alcohol Howard was stopped a1 12 30 1.m. unday. police prom1~ not to prcss charaes for fili ng a false Pohce repon. • • • ._bout SI SO wonh of prden1na cqu1J>- men1 was stolen from the city yard at 890 <\rhngton Dnvc • • • ._ woman reponed that tomeone. possibh her son, stoic 1 bank ca.rd from her pu"' and removed $940 from hct 1:hcck1ng and s.av1np account. BJ STEVE MARIL£ Of ............. A Newpon Beach police SCTIClnt who said he was humiliated when he was accused ofsOYina and kicked out of an American Civi l Liberties Union conference in 1980 baa turned down a 1ettlement offer from the ACLU. s,t. Rich Lona uid the offer to fund an annual Sl,000 essay contest In the Ncwpon-Mesa Unified School Distrie1 would be little more than a '"platform" to further the caute oflhe ACLU. AQCOrdina to the offer. students would be uked to write essays on pol.ice-community relations and the Bill of Riabts. Lona. who sued the ACLU for l"1IM Two T·topl were stolen ftom 1 1974 C«Ytm SU~y puked at 1 con· domJnlum projtCl on the 100 block or Promenade. .. _, A one-speed blue Mumy cruittr wu •toln ftom I 9d\OOI on SilkJea(. • t .• A 26-lncb 1irl'1 M~my c:ruiecr was stolen &om \be yard of a homt oo the 4$00 blodt of Cheviot Drive. • • • 9\ll)tarl broke Into a 1979 Orand Pru parbd 1n I.ht ~ of I coodom1n1um oroject on Topcta Saturday n\&ht and itofe Ole T ·lOSJI. • • • S2SO,OOO in damaaes, said he would prefer the civil libeniea aroup donate money to the Boy Scouts of America. to a teen·aae co,upsclina orpnization in Newport Beach or to an annual picnic for students sponsored by the Police Department. ··eut I sure don't want to be responsible for belpina tet up a lcpcy for the ACLU," Lona aid. The lawsuit is to be •Nianed to a court for trial Wcdnetday in Oranac County Superior Court. Six years llQ, Lort1 attended an ACLU conference in Newport Beac:h but was reponodly asked to leave the mcetina after be was recosniud as a police officer. The ACLU accused Lona of spyina on the orden or then- The abCCl)lkan coven 1n 1 1981 Poribc puked lo the oetttina lot ora ho~I on the 17900 block ot Jamboree ~ stokn. t .• •. A airb Schwutn ~was 11olen from Montcccllo Fridey nlaht.. A 1983 Toyota OT Tiftback wu stolen rt0m Mont A venue Fnday niabt. ••• A I 9-1nch 12 .. peect "l...em1n1 Cm- tunan" bicytlt wu noJcn from Lcmon- IBD Fnday nia.hl Foantal.o van., Vanda.It stnKk the front wu\dow of lht Radio hack JtOK 1 70~ Wamtr Avt. Police Chief Charles Gross. The officer was spotted takina notes and made others in the room feel uncomfortable. the ACLU said at the time. But Lona said he made no attempt to disauisc his presence. He said he paid an admia ion fee. paid for lunch, wore a name tq and talked with several people who knew him as a police officer. He said the ACLU's reaction seemed one of0 paranoia." Althouah the settlement offer did not include an apolOI}', it states that the Newport Beach Police Depart- ment does not e~ in "surrep. titiousJy monltorina' aroups con· ductina lepl. non-violent meetinas. fi ve t.1mei an an appartnt breaJMn at· tempt, "Oft tmplo~ reported Monday mom1na. No enll)' wu made. bul the dam• Yt'll estim1ted at SSOO • • • A re 1dtnt of the 16100 block of Mt Cn 11 reported Monday lh11 bW)la.ra entered her unlocked ~n 1979 Volvo station ~n and atolu brown Vlnyl caae conta1n1.na 1bout 10 caStclte ta~ Thf tapes. detcnbcd u rtl\IJOUI. violin mu ic and mouv1uonal. ~ valued 1t S60 • • • A wandow was amuhcd over t~ wukcnd at J J .'• Houtc of Subl. I IOS3 M.,,noh1 St ~ vand&I a~ntly did not tntcr the bu11ne The '°" waa ' AcoUcpstu<knt wbohvcson the 17700 block ofBay reported Monday \hat thieves toed to buralariu her yellow 1970 Volbwqcn. Ro tntry into the car wu m1de. but the frusttlted buralar did about $200 damaae lo the vth1clt's sun roof Handncton Bea.ch Tbicvts 1l0~1 computer and elcctromc equipment valued at $9,000 and books wonh $200 from Room 109 1n the tcchnolotY buildina 11 Cioldtn West Collqc. • • • Buralan t n\Ct'ed hakey'\ Puu. 19100 Beach ltlvd., throuah a roof vtnl ind stoic $100 in q_IW'tcn !'tom video pme ma- chines and 1110 bilked themselves 1 p11n Newport ... ch Tiret v1lued 1t SSSO were taken oil 11 rar parted in the l 900 block of Cialatu l cmce. • • • A $400 Cit Stereo wu taken from a car parked on East Ottan ~venue The bu,.W apparently tntcted throuah lht car•a sun roof. . . ' AnolMrS.OOc:ar ...a10 wu Jtolcn from 1vch1clt1n tht 2700 block ofScav1ew ••• A Ack mirror wu taken otf' 1 car puked in the 700 block of West Balboa Bouleva rd. The ownct reponed S 100 dlmqe. LapDaBeach An CltltnAted S a.soo 1n MM Mt stolen from I Olcnneyre rttt bui1 tht V1ctJm t'*5 poboe Monday . ' . Pohce.amsttd Ro~n Lee Thomas, 42, of Lquna BeKh on 1uw1aon of le'lrd conduct and rnu11na 1nn1 Thnma• M' , . . A CB radio valued at SI SO wa.s stolen Monda' a C irC'le Wav re 1dcnt told Police CoetaMeu An cmplo}'tt of NauaJCi Restaurant. 2956 Bnstol St who reported Monday she wu robbed and knocked unconJCtOu\ with a bot cofftt pot admitted to pol1et she concocted tht cn11rc 1nC1den1 ~ 2S· "car-old woman allqedlv confessed 1ftcr ••• .. bout S600 worth of Mary KAy ca. mchcs wa5 5tolcn from the Oninac County Fairgrounds where a woman was aettina up a booth for a •wao meet . ' . A buf'l)ar broke inlo 1 houtc on the 3100 block of'Yukon b) rcmovina1 shd1naaJua Window A. tclcn\lon, \tcreo and Jewelry wa' rcponed m1\sina. The losa w11 t•t1m1ted at about S2 400 . . . A \ 1nd1I shol oul lhe windo• of 1 claumom 111 WC\tchn ~hool. 2025 Gar- den Lant. with a 88 aun Man bound, robbed of $1 ,800 in Irvine hotel An Orqon man wa'I bound and robbed ofS 1,800 an cash and belont• 1np Monday momma at the Irvine Mamon hotel. Grqory Edward Miller. B . told police he an,wered a knock on his hotel room door al about 7 a m. And three Latino men forced their way into the room The men were re- portedly armed with a nfle and knives, said at Leo Jone1 of the tmne Pohtt Department. Jon" would not u y 1f pohcc iuspect the robbers "'1trt look1n1 for dru "h loolt ~uhar No1 100 many robbtties hkc this occur. so )'OU look at 1t with suspioon .... Jones d fhc men rtportodl)' nppcd &ht~ \heels and bound Miller's handi and P8l('d him a the)' beaan loolrina ~w monty The thrtt made away wnb $600 In ca h, a $600 aold ••lcb. ~vcral ettd1t card and a JS.mm camera W1 \h kn Aid Jona. M1lk'r, a \and per, was bit on - bade of~ h~ but f'f~ oeJ a ~mall cut 10 t~ tar. said Jona Ht was found by holcl KCWit affi '81d t Dtck Bowman > Crews of sshlfs, Cora Sea welcomed NORFOLK, Va. (AP)-Crewmen of the aircraft earner Coral Sea, wh0to tour i" the Mediterranean was extended by a month for an air strike apiD$t Libya. w~ beck home with their famihcs today after a heroes· welcome led by the Secretary of the Navy. In South Carolina, three Charleston·bued Navy ships that aCQOmpenicd the Coral Sea durina its million also returned to a balloon- bedecked homecoming Monday. When the Coral Sea docked at the Norfolk Naval Station afteT 7'12 months at sea. the thousands who crowded the pier ch~red with the sailon as a Na~ band struck up "Anchors Aweigh ' a.nd bouquets of colored balloons were released. Navy Secretary John F. Lehman Jr. Oew to the ship as it steamed toward port Monday to commend the CTCw for its part in the bombing raid against Libya. "Everyone knows what you've done to make this ~t success for the American people, ' Lehman said. "We're very proud of you," said Gov. Gerald L. Baliles. "You struck a blow against mindless and destruc- tive terrorism." SeJJor from tbe aircraft carrier Coral Sea an. llq fJ'Om b.la wUe after tbe ablp retuned to lforfolk, VL llODdaJ after etcJat montha at .-and tile bomblaC ra.18 OD Libya. Coral Sea fliers joined pilots from the earner America and British·bued Air Force F-1 I ls in the attack. Capt. Robert H. Fersuson, com- mander of the Coral Sea. said he announced over the ship's loudspeakers when the war planes took off that night and when they returned safely about three hours later. "You could feel the excitement through the ship. You could hear them cheering." Ferguson said of the 4,600-man crew. "There was a great deal of pride." Two Coral Sea escon sbips. the cruiser Biddle and the fleet oder Mononaahela. also returned to Nor- folk on Monday. A Coral Sea crewman from Holly, Mich., said morale flagged after CTCW memben learned in early April that they would not return home as scheduled April 21 . But he added that morale rose when the crew learned it would participate in the raid. "It made us feel really proud of what we were doing, It was a just cause," he said. Federal officials have asked that ucept for commanders, crew mem- ben not be identified by name . CIA chief says NBC spy leak broke law WASHINGTON (AP) - CIA Director William J. Casey is trying to righten the tap apinst leaks of U.S. intelligence secrets by seeking criminal charies apinst NBC-TV for reponmg that U.S. submarines eavesdrop in Soviet harbors. 1 Casey said Monday that the NBC report, if true. violated a 1950 law against the willful disclosure of U.S. abmty to make and break codes. and that he bad rcferrcd the matter to the Justice Department · John Russell, a spokesman for the Justice Depart- ment, said he had no comment on the maner. Network spokeswoman Sharon Metcalf said "NBC has referred Casey's allegation to legal counsel to review." Casey's.action appeared to be part ofa wider Reagan administration effort to pluf leaks in government. The administration has recen t y dismissed a Pentagon executive suspected of disclosing ct0,ven arms transfcn to insuracnts in Afghanistan, and fired a State Department spccchwriter who leaked a classified cable from the U.S. ambassador to Argentma critical of comments made by House Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill, on a visit there. NBC. on its "Today" show Monday morning. said accused spy Ronald W. Pelton mar have given the Soviets mformauon about one of the Nauonal Security Agency's most sensitive secrets -a pTOjcct code named "Ivy Bells." The network said that under the program, U.S. submarines eavesdrop mside Soviet harbors. NBC did not repeat the original story in its Monday evening news broadcast. but did repon Casey's action. Pelton went on trial Monday on chaf$eS of selling the Kremlin secrets he obtained through his JOb at the NSA, which is thought to be Washington's largest but most clandestine intelliJence organization. collecting and decoding communications for the Pentagon. Shuttle panel says it has copies of lost documents W ASHJNOTON (AP) -NASA officials and presidential investiptors said today that no documents necessary for the investiption of the Cballenaer accident att unavailable, even tho"'lh tome were destroyed at the Marshall Space Flifht Center in Alabama. ''CoP.ict wcrc m files" eltewherc, Deputy Adminj .. trator William Graham told a conarcssionaJ panel. "We arc continuina to look at it, but 1 believe the commission has found its work was not impeded." Meanwhile, Mark Wcinbefa, spokesman for the presidential commission which is investiptina the Jan. 28 spece shuttle explosion, •jd in ~ote to a reporter's questions today. "Becawe we beheve copies of the documents were kept, the commiu.ion is of the opinion it has received the documents neceuary to do its job.'' Graham '1 comments came at the beainnina or a day· Iona hcarina inio the speoe ~cy by a House appropriationuubcommlttee. Officials have said some of the destroyed documents dealt with the booster rockeu which are thouabt to have cauled the llCCident. He said the space qency's own investipton also arc I= into the destruction of the papers to see if internal p uret were followed in their disposal. Immediately after the explosfon, NASA beadqu&IW'S ordered all documents relatina to the shuttle, eveo handwritten notes, prescrved for the accident investiption. Rep. Edward Boland, 0-Mus., the subcommutee chairman, told NASA officials bis information wu that copies of the documents involved bad been circulated amona more lhan 30 officials at the facility in Huauvllle. Ala., and t0me were disposed of routinely. ':'ASA Administrator James Fletcher confirmed Botand 1 ac> count, and added. "It probably happens at other centen, IS well." Boland also said at the hearina that specie ase~ officials had provided a rouah profile of future fundina that call• for spendina to rise from $8.6 billion in the 1981 fiscal year to more than $9.S billion in 1990. NASA f undina for the current fitcal year is petlcd at ro"'lhlY S7 .3 billion, altho"'lh Cooaress is almost certain to vote more as 1 result of the Cballenicr accident. The fiJum for future yean usume construct.ion of a fourth orbiter to replace the ChalJcnaer -even thouab President Rcapn has not yet formally requested one-:-u well u construction of 1 permanent manned spaoe Statton and construction of a space plane. It allO includes SSOO million for rcdesian and rcpeir of the solid fuel booster rocket blamed for the Challcnaer accident. The comments by Graham. FletcMr and Weinbera essentially end the presidential commission's probe into the alleged destructton of documents. Food stamp system mired Radioactivity over U.S. 1nay be three times higher BOSTON (AP) -A Harvard- based physician task force, which caused a furor in January by ident- ifyina I SO "hunger counties" across the nation, said Monday the Reagan administntion is to blame for ma.k- in& food stamps bard to get .. The prosram is ~rmeatcd by a climate off car cstabhshed by officials at the federal level," according to a study by the Physician Task Force on Hunacr in Amenca, planned foT release today. Professor J. Larry Brown of the Harvard School o( Public Health, who chain the task force, said the food stamp program is fading to meet President R~t>'s goal ofbelping the "truly needy' because of red tape imposed by Washington since 1981. Although nearly 20 million Ameri- cans were assisted by the program last year, another 10 million to 15 million low-income people who were eligible got no benefits. By tM A1aoelate4 Pre11 WASHINGTON -The Environmental Protectjon Agency conceded that the air many Americans ha ve been breathing since the Chernobyl nuclear accident may have had three times the radiation the agency reported. But even at the hiabcr readings, the radiation is still not hazardous to human health, EPA said Mondar . The diSCl'Cpancy occurred because most EPA equipment was only measunn.aairbome particles of radioactive iodine-131. Not beina trapped and measured wcrc gaseous compounds containina the substance which almost certainly were present, the agency said. EPA radiobiol<>&ist Neal Nelson said readings at the EPA's Montgomery, Ala., lab detected radioactive iodine compounds at concentrations t .5 to 3.5 times grcateT than the tiny particles of iodine.. 131 iuclf detected on fiber filters. Reagan .Jgn• la• ea•lng gun control W ASHfNGTON -Presjdent Reagan sianed legislation casing restric- tions on gun ownCTS and dealers. givmg the gun lobby many of the changes in federal laws it bas sought for 18 years. Tbe pTCSident signed the measure Monday in an Oval Office ceremony closed to the media. Among other things, the bill, sponsored by Sen. James McClure, R-ldaho, and Rep. Huold Volkmer, D-Mo., allows gun dealers to sell rifles and shotguns to buyers anywhere in the country. Vltam1n•, mineral• top food worries e nt1mber one managed savings and loan in the nation WASHINGTON -Improved nutrition has moved to the front of Americans' food concerns. replacina the worry about sugar and cbemicals th.al dominated in the last few ycan, a survey for the supermarket industry shows. Vitamins and minerals were listed as a prime worry by 22 percent of people contacted, the Food Marketing Institute reported Monday in Trends, its annual pubHcation for food manufacturers. Worry about too much sugar was the biggest concern last year, while the hazards of chemical addit1vcs dominated shoppers' thoughts in t 983 and t 984, the lnstitute'noled. Contadora peace treaty •apport urged WASHINGTON -More than 100 lawmakers today urged President Reagan to take a "step for peace" and suppon a proposed Contadora peace treaty that could end the conflict with Nicaragua. Rep. Lee Hamilton 0-lnd. chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, told a news conference that "enormous J.>rogrcs5 bas been made in ncaotiating a Contadora grccment" that would be s1Jllcd on June 6 by the fi ve Central American countries of Nicaragua, Guatemala, Honduras. El Salvdaor and Costa Rica. But he and the other 101 signers ofa letter to Reagan said U.S. support is vital to make the agreement a success. Economy po•ts •trong 3. 7% gaiJJ W ASHINOT9N -The economy grew at a surprisingl y strong annual rate of3.7 pe~t 1n the first three months of the year. a fi ve-fold increase over the previous ~uarter, the iovernment reported today. The Commerce Department said the gross natlonal product, the broadest measure of economic health, turned in its best performance since a similar 3. 7 percent increase in the first three months of 198.S. The news on inflation was even better. A price index t1ed to the GNP rose at an annual rate of 2.5 percent from January through Man:h, its best performance in almost two decades. • is located inNe ortB and Sta sa. P()rl )PS nrngazitH', t lw int ern at ion ally n\spectPd b11si n<~ss publi catio n, rawd Colulllhia Sa\·ings numhr r <HlP of all sav ings and loa ns in it s Ya rdsticks of ma nagPmPnt pPrfornw t1('P. \\'hi<·h is not surpri sing. Col11mb ia has long b(1Pn kno\\11 for solid and efficient rnanagrrnPnt. F"r <·xam plP. C'ol 11 m bia's aclministrativr ('Ost s arr far below th e other majo r saving~ and loan s .. \nd our loan and invrstmcnt st rat(\~ics are amo ng th e most "ll ('('PSSflll in tltP illdtl~ll'\'. The· r<'~lllt is prolit . Pr:ollt that C'an hP passrct al<ing to you in thr form of high rates on saving~ .. \nd lo\\ rat l '\ on loan s. Hr ing profil ahl" kc·t ·p~ Col um hia strong, ton. 0\'Pr t hrP P. ti rnrs as strong as the govr rnmPnt rPq11 in·s .. \nd . of ('o urs<\ yo ur savi ngs arr frrlrrally in s11rrd to $100,000. So visi I Col um hia Sari ngs' >:<'Wport Beach or Costa MPsa branch today, or call our Con\ ''ll it •nc ·(• Banking numhPr: 1-800-6~2 RA~K . And find out ivhat the number OJH' marrngPd sm ings and loan in the nat ion C'a n do for you. SAVINGS ANO LOAN ASSOCIATION Ont or Arnerira ''i larJ(f''it ~avtngs and loan asso~latlons. ORANGE COl'NT\' 'fEWPOIT BEACH \1·~ f"•rl 1 •·ttt•·r l•r .1n1I ..,,inlA f(1,,;1 c ;1 11 ifill l(;ll COSTA MESA llflrh<•r ftm1H 1nl mil\\''"'" 17111 t.lh ;111 OTHER LOCATIO\ BEVEILY DOHENY »O!ll lir\,.rh Houl••,an1 c .!1 lJ !i.1 •1mo BEVEW HILU \\ lhhm· 110:11,.,ar•l .tnd R11bt>"'""· ( .!11 )h:li Ii l<t'I BEVEILY RILLS Wll,h1rr Houl,,,aril and C .i1mdl'n (!I.I) )(:lll tlf101 Bl~NnOOD 111140 San\ 1r1>nt .. Houll'\i41d ( ~11) 'i''fi ii'IJ I EAST 1.os ANGELES 2·1111 E"''' "' "''"'''' ( !l'I) .!f\ll t1r.t1 I.A MllADA lm1H"l'1al Hw-. and '~n1111 ... r1rullr'. ( 21:11 1~ 11 .lifl7 PALM DESERT 111•1'1"'*" 111.init i i 1ft1111 14111ill ' Gt rt11111-LlNDEA ANAHEIM lllfl' HriM1khuN nt'Jr Ball anrl RmokhuN ( iU) iiti 7101 I.AXE fO& 'T u.i.. .. f'11N'•I l>r1\1• and R1H knt>ld (ii I) ;;o oo+I~ PAl.M SPIJ~G. Jll Ea'I f'lllm < ""'"" llnw (11111) :U:.! .!2011 SANTA MOSICA ·m~ I W1l,hlrf' Roult•\.tnt < 2t:I l ~:?II !fill~ TA.12ANA umu \i>nlUl"I Rhd . Wt,~nrR~I\ Rlvd (MIH)'l.$M~Ml TffllD 6 PAJUAX 1.t5 ~uth f11rfu A\rnu" ( Zf.I) lfl7 ~Piii WHITf1£1 1~1.!I Ea.\I \\ h1ltltr &ult\ard (211 l A~~ .!i~I Wll.SfflllE FAIRFAX SQl)(I Wll•hlN' Rl\d \tutual Sl>nl'ftt t.1f" Hhl, (:!1 IJ IU7 mo El ROLL IOW "for the right •tart In life" HAWTHORNE CHRISTIAN SCHOOL ALL DAY KINDERGARTEN Kindergarten thru 8th FAU SEMESTER STARTS SEPT. Ith • Door to Door T ranaportatlon Where Posalble • Reasonable Tuition • Arithmetic, Reading, SpeUlng, with Phonic Emphasized • Before & After School Care for Students of Working Parents (6:30 am-6:30 pm) A PRIVATI 8CHOOl OF OISTINC'TIOH FOUNDED IN 1t42 IN ,..,.,II.UY 11111 •llDlllT (l 1t) 111-Tll 1 · Brock silences Teamster meet LAS VEGAS. Nev. (AP) -Labor Secretary William Brock drew cheers when he said he was addressing the :Tcamst~ convention even though tts president faces racketecrina charges, but delegates listened in stony silence as he asked if it isn't "just plain time to clean house." The 2,000 delegates pve their embattled president. Jackie Presser, a thunderous standing ovation on Monday when be accused in· vestiptors in Brock's department. a Senate subcommittee and .. oen.ain elements of the media" of wqing a five-year vendetta against him. Presser. 59, called the labor racketeerina and embettlement in· dictment handed up Friday •nil him and two other union offiClals a desparate attempt "to embarrass the working men and women of our great international union." His election Wednesday to another five.ycartenn is considered foregone. Funds short vs. most common VD WASHINGTON (AP) -Only 10 cents of every dollar the aovemment spends to control the spread of venereal dilCISC is targeted on the most common fonn, despite aerious health risks the diSCQC poecs to infected women and their children public health expcn.s say. ' Witnesses told 1 Hou1e 1ubcom- m1ttcc Monday that the federal ~ntcn for Ditca5e Control is spend- ina about $4.4 mmion this year lo control chlamydia. which occurs five omcs more often than aonorrbea and I 0 times more than IYoh.ilis. That is less than a d6llar for each of the 4.6 million catet of cb.lamyd1a estimated to occur eecb year, the witnessusaid. and only 10 percent of COC's $44 million put Pf'Olt'&m for venerca.J dile.Ue control Dr. James 0 . Muon. COC's dircc> tor, toad the House Encrv and Commen:e health 1ub(omm1ttee the apncy recoani.2es the problem and·~ movina co deal with 11 I Solomon Islands mopping up after Violent typl.aooa Dom nican Republic election in shambles SANTO OOMrNGO, Dominican Republic (AP) -The ~member Central Election1 Board lw coUapeed under aiticiam from the aovemina party•• president.ia.1 candidate, who claimed victory despite an ofticial tally indicatina he was in 1CCOnd place. Vote tallyiq from last wtiek's elections still bad not resumed Mon- day niaht aft.er beina suspended without explanation Sunday mom- ina. When the count was halted, opposition leader Joaquin Ba1aauer was ahead by 3S 000 votes with 92 percent of the poilina stations report- m~wo board members resiped after Jacobo Mliluta, the SI-year-old can- didate of the aovemina Democratic Revolutional}' _Party, aocuaed them of favorina ~. of the Social Christian Reform Party. ~luta said his tallies showed him lcadiDJ 78-ycar-old Ba1quer by 3,000 votes in results from nearly the same number of votiq diatricta. He de- manded a recount of the nearly two million ballots that bad been tallied. An elections officer said Monday momina that the vote count bad resumed. But report.en who went to the board's office found it bad nol When the count was suspended Sunday1 Balquer bad 799,968 votes, or .O.U4 peroent, to ~luta's 7~,S09 votes, or 38.26 percent, accordina to the elections board. Juan Botchi 76, of the leftist Dominican Liberation Party, had 3Sl,749 votes, or 17.61 pcrcenL The rest of the votes went to candidates of three minor putjes. Kiev panic blamed on radio news MOSCOW (AP)-A Soviet ocws- P9pcr ~ today that worried Kiev residents streamed to railway stations after the Chernobyl accident. but blamed their fean on °enemy radio voices" it said were spread.ins rumors about the disaster. Diplomata at the Swedish, British, Canadian, Italian, Danish, Finnish and Japanese embauies said their ambuaadon declined a Soviet in- vitation to visit Kiev and an area near the Ukrainian capital where evacuees from the Oiemobyl area are livif>I. Other Western leptions, including the U.S. Embusy, were still consider-ina the offer, but were expected to tum it down, diplomats said. Most of the diplomats said the offer was rejected bec:au1e their aovem- meou wanted to send experts~ not amt.saadon, to the area and wanted the experts to visit the plant iuclf, not just J(jev which is 80 miles south of Chernobyl. For the sixth day, there was no update on the Chernobyl casualty toll which American Dr. Robert Gale, who helped treat the wont radiation cues, bu said was 13 dead. with 24 in pave condition. Students protest. S. African raid• JOHANNESBURG (AP) -Hun- dreds of students at JobannesbUJ'l'S main univenity stayed out of class today to protest South Africa'• mili- tary raids on three nciabborina coun- tries.. and 13 people were arte1ted. lo Zimbabwe, the foreian minitten of six countries borderina South Africa met to diacuu the attacb on the capitals of Zimbabwe, Botswana and and Zambia in which at least three people were killed and l S were . 'wed. .,n London, memben of a Com- monwealth deleption aeekina to mediate between South Africa and the African National Conpaa. the main ~ lfO'lP ~b~ white minonty rWe, Mid their initiative .ouJd continue despite the auaicb. China, Taiwan OK defectoracreement HONG KONO (AP) -Aviation ofllciala ftom Olina and Taiwan aid today a Taiwueeejwnbojetliner and nwo aewmen Oown to Clli.na by a pilot wbo ddecttJd will arrive in Hoaa KOCll before Saturday. Ttie ..,.ment bet'l1111 ... .., .... ee-n Taiwan'• Qiu AJrtiDa and ChiDl'I lt.110-ND airliDe, tbe Civil AviatiOG Ad.mini .. 1t1doD of Olina, 1temmed fi'om the RM direct coot8ct between t.be rival Qineae ~mentl in 37 yean. Zha.n& Rw bad of Olina'1 de)ClltioD &t ~ ~tiofta. told a oewa ooaMace after a founh day of talb that.~ date bu yC1 to be fhed but that tho ainnft would be ln Hont Hon.a before Saturday. Tired of being nickeled and di med to death by your checking accoun t?'Then open an Advantage Checking account at Great American . It\ a no- nonsense account with time and money -.av mg advantages that really ad<l up. No monthly fees. No transaction charges. With Ad vantage Ched. ing. all you ha\ic to Jo is keep a low $3(X) minimum balance. And you·11 get unlimited check writing. Unli mited depol>it~. And all kinds of additional services. At no charge. Com~ your checking account with Advantage Checking. Advantage Your Features Checking Bank Minimum ba1anct SJOO Number of checks you can unlimited write no~ Maximum number of deposits unlimited no charge ATMacctSS unlimited no charge• Automatic payments to IRA yes-no charge Automatic paymenl on loans ycs~no charge Automatic depolilfl yes-no charge / Ttamftr funds yes·no~ Balance inquiry by tdq>hont yes· no chargt rz Added Pas.scant convenience. When you open your account. you 'II receive a Checking Pa."-.card. That plugs you into Great American\ exten. ive network of2+Hour Telle~. So you can make dc~il~. Withdraw ca;,h. Or ju,t check your balance. Anytime . At over 100 California k)Cation~. Your P.~ard i~ al~ good for in~tant cash at over 2.5CX) STAR SYSTEM '" ATMs throughout the We~t. More than 10.CXXl CIRRUS 11 ATM' acros~ lhc U.S. and Canada . Another plus. Transfer money by phone. Advantage Checking\ low minimum balance let~ you 11'tllke money by keeping more of your fund.., in a Great American ~tving-.. or money- market account. And as you rk..~'C.I it . you can inm ... ter money from \avmg-. 10 c~'Ckmg -and had, again -by phone. JuM hy pu~hmg ate"' hunon-.. And ,till. no charge. Open your ate0unt today. Stop hy the Great Amencan offiL'C 111 your neighborhood. You can open an Advantage Checking accounr m JU ta few minute..,. And when you do, enter lhe Great Amcrican/PSA E....cape to Expo Sweepstakes. It's fTre ! Great American Your advantage bank: bUshed 188S •A ts over S 11 BiDion Enter now! The Great American/PSA ''Escape-to-Expo'' Sweepstakes Win one of five fret tours for two to Expo '86 in Vancouver, 8 .C. E:.ach winner and a guc't will fl) /re<' tn BclhnghJm, W:i_.,.hmglon. with Jll lhe l'Omfon of PSA\ 3 +-l ~ting nn one ot thc world \ OC"-C'>l.Jtl Oech. vou·11 be met JI the airpon b) the E PO fapre"' and dnven ocm~~ the horckr into Bnt•'h Columbia oon. you 're in Vancouver at a Jelu\c hnll·I where lodging l\frt't' for two nigh". A/71'< mini-tour of the Cll}. 1wo /rt«' mull1-duy EX PO Pa ... -.c ... un<l your free retum l11~h1 with PSA 1'1t1nJ out the S'Aeep ... 1ai..e ... pntl' poicl..uge E:.nter JI an) Great mertlJn nlficc. '-"here you ·11 tin<l complete S'Al'Cf)'tai..e, rule .... n,, pun:hu-.c '' l'k.'lC"·'f"\ lFEfA. Catch Our Smile FSTJC STAlOllAN<lf C'Ol n l\AIR<JAI I ND lOI Mati ...... W fl7' 1211·RAllMlAPl'l"ll" flllll 8-ltv'll!l•J 11•117\llo(APl\tll .. '<lfll~H '-'lOllO.Wll MllJ <l'ltl n:im·ltl ro..,,-.c1to"llU'.AC"H 91\lA<t.'1""" --~ '-Wl•l '\(11 'wARf.M H t1llOl:n""'' ·"°' ''41•MO .. It( 1111"\ ,..._1111<1\Pl•tt ' llOl •,..l V.l'ORTllr.M II \( •"1"WM4'Pla/A M4 11111\•M WPUtlffll~ H lll)(l\.lll \(,r \]Ol 'w•rnn81•J "'' .. ~·V·" I f-Mf-'llT1 "'''"' [IC •m>noRnl <191·1191• ""' rtr Ml /\<if AVI ... ,n ... rte() 411114\fft..U ""'" 4~ fl\ 1'1-t!l;LA"'lf>OltA .r ( nt N'n' ... ""m l\Hln l 'I \\~l\.n ..... ,.. ( "'''"'ltd.~ fl!\I ll . WS 1 c nllttl"Rl"I INll W>Jt •t I fOMO ~'Mii H lo>l'llltJ •111 7'211•Hll ,..T,l"l\.M 11 V l«ll'' \lwr \H lllfl' 4'ill•I l\Col ""Im I\ ~'Ill f'a'l("1olr\•lnl<,. , , • ll"'IA!lil(ill l 'ClllH11w.11\al~P\ .. , '"'lllkl•'"'"()"l\.llJn :,,1:1 ...... 11.1 :'111 f1\.U.•llfl\ .. (1rTI'ITil\o .. IHl1'1 2"'"'°"'U•ll"ll't' Wllll<llll Af'll ANC"Al't'IT"ltAM) 12n:c.m11111t ii"""""" Nil 11>1<1•·~1)1.IOBlll()(,I 1\2'1fl•n-•I'\•\ \W "Iii'' .... .._ ... _ ... .._ ....... . ' - M * er._. ca. DAILY PILOT/~. May 20, 1Me You help us keep our priorities strai t. Walk into any Imperial Savings branch these days and you 'I I see us wearing bunons with a message that really makes sen~e:. C.Vou're #1." Not "We 're # J " or sorne (>Cher way of telling you what a hig deal we think we are. But an honest, simple statement that leti;; you know we have our priorities in <>rder: "You're #1." Quite a ~vlitch , isn 't it? A big financial institution that realize~ it\ in husine~s to serve \'OU. You ·11 fed it in the way we greet you. TI1e way we listen. And, ye~. e\·en in the hunon~ you 'II see u~ \vearing. See for yourself. Our asset~ are in the billion:-,. But the most valuahle one i~ \'ou. Making your invesbne nts work harder is a top priority, too. Sometimes. the pr<x)f of our priorities is in our product"'. Take Ceniticaces of Deposit for example. Our tiered Tomorrow Savings~m en~ are designed specifically to he responsive to your individual need"i. TI1ey 're not just a serie:-, of one-size-ht"i-all account"i, but "aving~ opponunities which :1nswer your financial prio rities. ln1perial Savings CDs pay solid, safe, con1petitive rac es-naturally. But they share the special advantage of allowing you to ch<x>~e fron1 sho rt or long tern1~. rnake sn1all or large deposits. And t:njc >y either liquidity o r long-tern1 gn )\\'th. To learn n1ore about the ciered Cl ) right for you, call us toll-free, at: 1-800-0-IEK-NOW (1-800-243-5669) Better yet. sto p at the Imperial Savings branch nearest you-we'd alway~ prefer to ~ee you in person! H ~Sa· Association ~ Where TomorrouJ Begi·ns Today. SW HuntJngton ldch I 9021 Beach Blvd. Newport Beach .H66 v~ Udo ~ewpon Bellch, CA 9266.~·WO., C'l4) 673-.i I ~0 ewpor1 Center Mission Vlefo H482 Alicia Pirl<wly Hundngtoo Beach, CA 92648-2305 (7 14) 847·3386 550 Newport <:enter Drive Newpon Beach, CA 9l660-701 I (7 14) 644-1461 Mi~Jon VieJo, CA 92691 -2699 (714) 951-8757 ( 'oublonl11I pnulrv fur ~art\ ., ithdr,..,..I ~r NJC. @ ffi!r1 ...... ~ ' Girl saved; 2 dead, 3 missing from boat LONG BEACH (AP) -At dawn today Coast Guard helicopters joi ncd the expanding search for three people missina from a 28-foot pleasure boat apparently capsized by a freak wave overnight Sunday. A 9-ycar-girl who spent at least 12 hours clinging to the wreckage in cold Pacific waters was listed in aood condition today, but rescuers found the bodies of her mother and another woman. Her father and two others are missing. U.S. Coast Guard Petty Officer James Chiunate said two helicopters joined the search, which has been expanded to I SO square miles off Pt. Ferman near the San Pedro Harbor. Rescuers believe tbe 28-foot power boat DC-II was flipped by an UOCX· pectcd swell. said Lt. Dennis Fahr of the Coast Guard rescue center here. The exact time of the accident has not yet been determined, but the surviv- mg girl was found about 5:30 p.m. Monday. Desiree Rodriguez, 9, of Riverside was in stable condition at San Pedro Peninsula Hospital, rccoverint ~m hypothermia and exhaustion, w~ a nursina supervisor who wouldn't11ve her name. . "It's amazing that &he's alive," Fahr said of the girl, adding that the water tcmJ?Craturc was SS degrcn. "She was m the water at least 12 hours." A Coast Guard cutter and a patrol boat crisscrossed the seas off San Pedro searchinJ for Oe$iree's father, Thomas Rodriiucz, 30! .her sister, Tricia, 5, and family rriend Allen Wheeler, 34: Fahr sa1d. Helicoe~!' helped scarcn Monday while dayli&bt lasted. Paul Strasser, skipper of the com- mercial sportfisbing boat First Strina. said he spotted the O'(ertumed boat about IS miles southwest of San Pedro while be was returning from Santa Catalina Island. Rescuers ~vercd the bodies of Desiree's mother Petra, 29, and Wheeler's wife, Corinne, 33, Fahr said. Both families are from River· side, SO miJcs cast of Los An&elcs. Private beach open after court inaction VENTURA (AP) -Many Cali- fornia beaches now labeled private may be opened to the public because the U.S. Supreme Court bas refused to enter a dispute overa sea wall in an ex.elusive Ventura community. The court declined Monday to bear an appeal by residents of the Wb.alers' Village Oub, who were ordered by the Calilornia Coastal Commission to provide public aocess to their beach in exchange for retroactive arproval of a sea wall. The rock wal was built without a permit in 1980 after storm surf eroded the beach, causing some houses to sink. • "All that's left is for them to come take the beach," said Whalers' Village president Don Paul. "And we'll have to police and maintajn it." Attorneys for both sjdes predicted the ruling would talcc the wind out of the sails of residents in other com- munities fighting similar Coastal Commission ruling.s. "We're very disappointed," said Charles E. Greenberg, Whalers' Vil- lase Oub attorney. "fm sure this will affect many of the homeowners up and down the coast -both those now in court and those who might face this 1n the future." James Jordan Patterson, the depu- ty state attorney general who rep- resented the Coastal Commission, said: "A lot of pco~le arc going to realize, 'Why fightr · Tbe celebrity-filled Malibu Co- lony, Surfside Colony, Capistrano Beach and Blue Lagoon in Orange County also have sued the com- mission in the past over similar issues. California law bolds that beaches up to the mean high water mark arc public. The commission's order was to provide access to that public strip of beach. Feds seize $29 rnillion in drug money crackdown By die Associated Press LOS ANGELES-The U.S. Customs Service has setzed $29.4 million in casb believed to be the profits of cocaine sales in the bigaest crackdown on drug- oriented currency smuggling ever, federal authorities said Monday. The smugglingcraclcdown began in October in Miami. Since February, when it was expanded nationwide, customs officials working out of Los Angeles International A.irpon alone have confiscated about S 10 million in cash. "It corroborates the fact that Los Angeles is the major distribution and consumption center fo r cocaine ... west oft he Mississippi," said Alan 0 . Walls, customs agent in charge in Los Angeles. Seventeen arrests were made by Los Angeles-based customs authorities, Walls said. Playboy sue• pornography commlssloa LOS AJ'lf GEL~ -Playboy magaz10e founder Hugh Hefner says the popular mens p~bhcatio~ ha~ been the v1ct1m of "sexuaJ McCarthyism," and Playboy Enterpnses Inc. 1s sutng U.S. Attorney General &iwin Meese and bis CofI!m1ssio~ on P~mography. ·•we·~ talkfog about the suppression of images an.d ideas Wl~ which some S!'flall portion of t~e population disagrees," Hefner wd Monday 1n a telephone mterv1ew from his Holmby Hills mansion. "If we start doing that in our society we're talk.ing about something very, very scary." Playboy accuses the defendants of acta ng to censor and suppress distribution of Playboy through a blacklist. Moriarty starts prison term ln Lompoc LOMPOC -former fireworks kmg W. Patrick Moriarty reported to Lorn~ federal pnson to ~rve a seven-year sentence for using political corruption to wtn legislation favorable to his busi~~s. Moriarty, 54, surrcn~ered about noon Monday at the. coastal facility, said Lompoc co~t1onal officer J~ff yan Brusselen. Monarty was the eighth man to go to pnson. and one .of 11 1~d1cted as a result o~ the nearly thn»-year investigation centenng on his dealings. He used prostitutes, money and other favors to corrupt politjcal fiaures and bankers who could be helpful to his fireworks firm and othe~ businesses. Moriarty, a father of six. founded the Anaheim-based Pyrotronics Corp., the largest fireworks manufacturer in the United States He declared bankruptcy last December, citing debts of more than S 11. s million .. Ex-cop drop11 lawsult agam•t Stanton . .ST ANTqN -. Former .police officer Anth~ny Sperl will drop bis $25 million lawsuit apinst the city, filed after he accidentally killed a S-ycar~ld boy while on duty in 1983. his attorney said. Sperl instead will seek vocational rehabilitation under workers' compensation procedures said his atto~ &iward I. Masry. Friday Sperl said that he would not dianiiss bis pendi.na S2S million civil complaint apiost the city unless officials qreed to pay S20. ()()() for ttis law school education and allowed him to carry a aun. But Mury ~d that after meetina, with his client they concluded that the best way to obtain money for education was throuah state worken• compensation. ' • i • ---==-===-------- -~ --~·~ OrM09COMI DAILV Pll.OTIT~. MIWIO. ,_ A7 COMPLETE NYSE COllPOllTE TRANaACTIONI. Al Banks, S&Ls battle over interstate proposal Rf Va} bills that WOU}d legalize national bi!I. ABl492, throu&h the Lqisluure S89U, in tum,~ been .1.tlldc in ThoNewYorllboAU-.-IO Jan. I, 19'7,ud ...,._.: ! th!? year.. • Calderon'• aubcomnuttee smoe l:ut Jet a piece or Calilomia'• lucrative interstate bankii would be~ or regional banking stuck In stalemate We will hav~.· bt.11 before the end July. No bearina bu been scheduled and e1pudlna eeonomy. But dlle belinoisw Jan. a: 990. of the summer, wd Calderon, 0-for it. either. California b&ob were not at Reciprocal means that bMtl fto.D SACRAMENTO (A P) -While leaiJlatora and lobbyisu debate the lepl fine poi nu ofin1erstate banldna, a eomputer-qe revolution is rendet- ina the columned, isolated locaJ bank as obsolete u a banker's spau. Rival bills to lcialiu either na. tiona.I or rqion.al interstate b&nk.in.a are before lawmakers. but are stuck in a Slalemate between a new c:oalition of New York and California banks on one side and 51vings and loans on the other. The banks, which want nationwide interstate bankini. says customers would rap a wider cho1oe of services and rates. But savings and loans, which want only rqional interstate bankina. say MUT UAL FUNDS ' tbe New York ban.ks would sjpboo off California dee· u 10 finance their iotemation.al oans. WbiJe this talemate continues in the California Lqjslature, national interstate b&nkioa is becomina a de facto reality tbtouah computer-qe links, fut food-like hnebis1na, OC&I'• banks in stores and other space-age tedlnol<>sical advances. Aslemblym.an Charles Calderon is carryina the bill that will contain the qreement reached in January be- tween New York and California banks to allow nationwide interstate ban.kin& by 1990. Calderon, chairman of the Assembly Finance and In- surance subcommittee on interstate banking. is confident be can get his Montebello. New York banks have been intetated in tbuatumed New Yort m1e1 tbat a1lowout-ol.a1C bub Id But his. bill has been sitti~ since pusbina bills 19 lepliz.e. n.ati~o~ mark.et. Instead, ~ fa-.iored re-auer t.beir 11a&e1 could ecq\We od last July m the Senate Bankin& and uuerstate benkina m Cahfoma1 s1.nc:e Ji.on.al i.olerllate banti.na amoaa t.be open bub in CaliforDia. Natty~ Comm~Committee. TheC?Ommi~ tbe late 1970s. Several, indudlna Westetn stalCI where they oouJd doun 11a1e1 aatioowide aUow ~ t~ cha1~. Sen. Rose Vw~h. 0-qticorp ~ ~ M~ttan, have dominate. bm ot l.Dta'IWe .,... t.bow; Dinu.ba. 1s coauthor of~ !'val bill bu~ lobbyiJU LO Saeramcnto. But But io January the two stale'• include A.ri.Q)U aod ~ ' and 11 less than ent.husiasbc abou1 unul this year, they were always ban.km& poupt announced they bad Jn the c:ompromite Californ1- Ca1deroo's. blocked by tbe Califom.ia Bank.en reached an ~t: Reciprocal b&Dkl te'l • llltt.,ar be.d 11an e>Q "I won't take a position until I Mlociation, wbicb rep:reseott the intenia.te b&nk:ina would be allowed lbe Wesiero resioe- understand it and how it affecu the 11ate'14SO banks. in the nine Western states beci.Mina ~ w INJ&U'IATS/Aa~ people of California," she said of 1 Calderon's bill. She said it won't be beard by her comm.iuee untll June at the earliest. The rival bill, SB988 by Sen. Alan Robbins, D-Tanana, and Vuicb, would allow interstate banki.na among California, Oreton, Washina-ton, Nevada, Idaho, tJtah, Arizona., Alaska and Hawaii. Lotteries make a winner of Mesa's ESI Industries 87JJMRATB~ ...,,...Cenr u s Costa Mesa-based E.SJ. Industries Corp. is casbtna in on the lottery. The firm develops, manufactures and markcu computeri.ud lottery equipment. electron.i( video pmes and coupon-dispensina machines on a wortd- wide basis and recently sianed a five-year, S30 million (Canadian) contract with one of the Sentinel Group companies of Vancouver, British Columbia. Roben L. Burr, E.S.I. chainnan and president. said, "Sentinel with its subcontractors has acrud to assume all manufactunnJ and martetina cosu and intends to employ Canadian componenu and labor. E.S.I. will be unique in its ability to supply Canadian- made producu for the lottery and coupon~spensina industry. "Provincial governments are currently issuina requests for purchases of lotterr. cqujpmeot, and the low production costs made possible by manufactWina in Canada, positions E.S.I. for a major share of that business." E.S. I. lnduatriel opera led the first video lottery in the U oiled States and is currently opentina in Australia, Mexico and Guam. The company &110 captured a SSO million contract to provide its proprietary lnformabC on-Uoe coupoo~1pen1ina terminals as the exclusive world· wide supplier to Consumer Communications c.orp. of , Troy, N.Y. last December. Consumer Communications Neiwort.. the mar-ketina di vi lion of CCC, toot deUvery of 4, 900 units in January. The lnformatic computer terminal, de-• veloped by E.S.l, URS swo.of'-tbe-ert video di.st &echnoloey and a dispemina mechanism that enab&c customers aa:aa '° discount ooupoos and cbeck-cashina privilep b in.en.ins a ~ card. The card is coded with demOll"IPbic information that enables stores and manufac:turen to mote efficiently taraet their adven!sina. Companr officials bave aid that the coupon dispen1er di vasion bu idmtifiat supennarUt chains lhrouabout the Un.iu:d s.aaa that meet cri1a'ia for placement of the units and ~pecu to imla.ll u many a 9 ,000 duriaia the DC1t Ive yeen. _ -(111111¥1:1 tln~J:tt------------------ NEW YOttK (AP) -The foltowlng 11,t lhc>WI the NeW York Stock Exdwnge atoeka end w•rranta that have OOM up the most •nd. dOwn the !TIOlt blMd on percen~c.Mnoe reoerdtess of volume tor v. No ~ t tredlne ti.tow 12 er• I~--~. Net P«"ClfltaGe c:Ntnoes ere the d tnQI bet the Pr'IV $ dosing pr ce end ~ondev•s ~ p,m Pr l c•.urs Last c~ Pct 'ii i \? 8: i:~ I~+ l Up ~· 'h UP , \Al ~ Up I .\t t II') UP • ''" l ~ M: · .. _.....,., .............. ..-f'f'n••·• ..... ''"""'"-~'.._ ........... ,#11 ................ 1 •.....i Looking for a CD that will really peak your intcrest?'Then take advantage of At $50.000 Minimum , I Year Earn: ................................. -......... _,....~ ........... t ......... ~t-· -·~--..... _.., ._,.y At """"'•1• ... , ..... ~ ... ·~·-·""'"'',...., n.,,..,...._,.., .. ,_.... ... I ............... . At $1.000 Minimum, t Y~.ar Earn: ln vc tor Series Accounts at Great American. The mtc · are tiered. So you can choose from different ra~ at five different ~it level!-.. lnitial depositS can be ru low as $1,(XX). Larger deposits and loqger tt.-~ mean higherrai . In¥ tor Aocounts also give you many ocller Greal American banking advantages. like oourteow service. The ~crength of aver $ t I biUion in . And FSLIC security for your fund~. So if you want a CD with more than just high rates. open an Inv tor Ac um today. a.oo ~, 7.40 " 7.69 ' 7:14 With Uh1tlkn ..n1"1 Or1lnp Councy: l\lllltam If II\ <'•rt"'""'' lkah Hunttn~ll'I lkai.h t....,1111.1 "•fucl ~ ~,,, Rcaa h '-.in C lnnrnrt '' nild.i 1'1'.1• Oran~ \..nluo1n< "'f'l..-nnc• ,, C'lcffrnlr V.,'lll(fl"1llrr 9.lfhoa hl~n.I 11 Tnm l.AtuM lkach M'''""' V.r111 8•1 ,. l'tnon•ul• h'tUOti\HI \.al If'\. l .,UN Hill' Mc..'"61\;h BA'! \t •• ~ .. l,jlljl9. ''¥tftlt\ t~ ........ ~ ....... ,,,,., --~ ....... --~,..... ,... .... , .......... .,.._. ... ...,....u,......... .... .......,._,,...~ ........ ,. • ....-.. ..... . Great American \bur advmtage ~ F~ ••A! 0-Sll-., llO·--'""',,,."'""""''"'-"'""""--•·• ~ "'""'' '-"""""''"°',_._r .. "".,.. l\o ~ ........................ "-·f ... _ ,.,_,. "" ..... ~ ................... _, -~ ,._,_, ____ ,_"" ..... ... -~----- EST JC -·----·- ' ' . . / M OnlnOI Colet DAILY PILOT/ Tueadey, Mey 20, 1988 INTERSTATE BANKING ARGUED ••• WnmA7 .. lntemate bankina is pretty much Bankers Association. She notes that the a.ilina Fidelity Savinp and Lo&n Jndced, any ansutution that wants a reality,'' says Kathleen WedekinJ. New Yort aiant Citicorp already has in Oak.land in 1982 and chanaina itto to expand beyond 1t1 homo state epokawoman for the Califomta ats foot in the state, havina purchased Citicorp Savinas. boundaries can easjly fi nd some I.aw, -===================================:::::;~ loophole or electronic aadactry that .. will allow it to do so. ARTHRITIS ...• Don't let it stop you. Learn how you can llve a fuller, more comfortable and Independent llfe. THE 1986 ARTHRITIS INFORMATION SERIES When: Time: First Meeting, Thursday, May 22, 1986 7:00 -8:30 P .M. Where: HUMANA WESTMINSTER HOSPITAL 200 Hospital Circle, Westminster, CA ( BaMment Conference Room) T he Arthritis Information Serles Offers: • Special Presentations By Board Certified Orthopaedic Surgeons • Information on New-& Proven Arthritis Treatments • Question & Answer Discussions • Free Information & Refreshments Co-Sponsored by: --------_,. Auoclated Bone & Joint Orthopaedic Surgical & Medical Group ---------mana Hospital Vlesbtw.ter JOHN C. WARBURTON, M.D. A08ERT 0 . HERSCH, M.D. AOeERT W. HAMMATT, M.D JAa< ,ASCHALL, JR., M.D. STEYEH A. ORA80ff, M.D. Call for Reservations & Information (714) 898-2554 ~ Free 35 m ~amera Some bal\b were expandina into other slates until Conaress passed lhc McFadden Act in 1927 and amended it in l 933, durina the Depression. It prohibits national banks from estab- lisbint bn.ncbca outside of their home states. Bani holdina com- panies, which arc firms that own ~-~'J 101 around this until Congn:ss puKU the Bank Holdiq Company Act of l 9S6, which prohlbits holdina companies from acquiring banks in other state unless those states authorize it. California has never passed a law authorizina out-of-state banks to buy or open banks here. But the Bank Holdina Company Act had a grandfather clause, allow- ina holdi04 companies that already had banks an more than one state to keep them. . RIFI NOW Y 04lt Home h Y041t lest lnwltment 9V2'A 15-YEAI FIXED OWNEROCC Al'tl. 9.95 I FIXED 9~a'A OWNER OCC Al'tl. 10.19 714-956-0SOI VANGUAID MOllTOAGI COl,OUT10N IVll IY APPOINTMINT CMllC1 lll'C>ll & MOITOAOf U OUI No matter what you're doing. your hometown newspaper The Daily Pilat fits in. .. Opening a certificate account at Pacific Sevlngs Bank could be one of the greatest plays you'll ever make by June 30. 1986. No purchaee nece ... ~ So catch our Grand Slam offer. For current rates or more intormalion, can 1-800·~1FIC or Mnd In the coupon below Simply open a 65-day certificate account with a minimum deposit of $5,000. or a 6·month or longer certificate account with a minimum dePOSlt of $2.500 from a source other than an existing Pacific account We'll not only give you compel· 1t1ve rates, we'll give you two tickets lo a aelected Dodger. Angels or Padres home game. courtesy ot the 65 Roses SPortS Club and a 35mm camera with carrying case (limit 2 free tickets and 1 camera per househOld) For every qualified account. we'll also make a $25 donation to the Cystic Fibrosis Foun~tlon lo help find a cure for CF Emir our "65 AoM9 WOftd 8eMe 9wffpetab9:' You may win an action-packed trip for lwo lo the frrst two games of the Wot1d Series Ju at rill out an entry form at your local branch r-------~-------, l *"'----"--~~~~~~~~~~~ IMM"---------------I I City -----------Zloeoo. ____ _ I -Of!Otle I I ....... IO c.a ____ _ ~IO~~~~-=-~~~~_!l'_J Job honors and promotions told Rould J. 811tJlD has been promoted to vice _Prcs•dent and team leader of Wtll• Far10 Bok'• real .e 1ate andustncs aroup. or Orange Count . He will be headquutered 1n Newport Beach. 8utlin has been witb Wells Fargo sin~ 1984. when he Joined the bank u a loan officer in Oranae County. He was formerly a Knior financial analyst ror n. lrvlH Co. ••• Gerald Mc'N•tl, Irvine resident, hb been named manaacrofthe new Clrca.lt City store m Van Nuvs . \ . Gary G. K.ooclle 1s one of the top 10 performers for 198S for BlaMp Hawk, a West Coa!lt commercial real estate brokerage. Knoche a senior agent from the Newport Beach office, was first an total saies an the Orange County office an~ seventh out of ~he company's 120 agents. The Newport Bea.ch res1dent has been a seruor sales associate for the Newport oflic.c fort wo years and has more than 11 years' expcnence an commercial and res1dcntull real estate. • • • • Brtu J. Edward• has joined the public relations and, markeung agency ofFlaller B111loea1 CommunlcaUoDI lac. as a pubhc relations account uccutivc for the Costa Mesa company. Edwards IS former senior editor of Hardcopy Masuhae, based an Placentia. • • • Newport Beach rcs1den1 Oebble Granl ha'i been promoted to western regional sales manager for Oryvlt Sy1tem, Inc. The Rhode Island-based company has an office in Newport Beach. It ma nufactures exterior wall insulauon and finish systems. Grana has been with Dryvat since 1983 and formerly owned and .operated ~er own interior design firm. She serves on the Commercial lndustnal Co uncil of the Orange County chapter of the Bolldera ud111try of America. • • • William ff. Adair, commercial an vestment marketina specialist with Grubb & Ellt1' Newport Beach office. has been awarded the certified commercial-investment member designation from the Commerclal-bve.tmeat Real E1&ate CoucU of Realton NalJoul Manetill& 1Ja1tlt11te. Completion of live courses 1s one of lhe requirements for the dcs1gnatton. Adair as a member of the Newport Harbor/Coal& Mesa Board of Realtors and the Callfonlia A11ocl1Uoa of ReaJtora. • • • Tllomu S. Maddock, president and chief executive officer of Boyle Engineering Corp. of Newport Beach. has received the Morecll Medal from the Society of American Military Englaeere. Tb~ n:iedaJ is offered annually to a Navy engineer -rc~ular, reserve or C1V1han. Maddock holds the rank of Rear Admiral. CIVIi Engineer Corps., U.S. Naval Reserve. Until his retirement from the military last year, he commanded the 17,000-man Reserve Naval Construction Force. ••• Sllaele Dou1la11-Bauon has been named manager of anfor· mat1on systems at Applied Tecllnology Services, a Laguna Niguel computer system consulting company Bannon had been CFO for Monarch Bank and will also serve Applied Technology as financial adviser to the board. • • • Huntington Beach resident Barbara B. Kamm has Joined National Bank of Lon& Beach as vice president and manager of its new Orange County office. The new loan production office at Hutton Centre tn Santa Ana 1s amended to develop loans and international trade financing with companies in Orange Coun1y. Kamm was formerl y president of Oloptka Medical Product•, an Jrvme·based manufacturer and d1c;tributor ofophthalmological products. She has also served as senior vice president of Mame National Bw of lrvl.De. Bukin-Robblna clerk Sergio Lopez aenea a p one the ch&Jn 'a International Creama lce cream cone lo Loe Angelee. Liqueur ice creams at Baskin-Robbins By FELIX GUTIERREZ .......... ..._ ..... GLENDALE -8ask1n-Robbms. maker of such k1d~nt1cmg ice creams as .. Goody Goody Gum Drops" and "Herc Come de Fudge," has dec~dcd to try an adult approach. Two liqueur Oavo~. "Almond Amaretto" and "Graod Mam1er," were amons those unveiled last week as part of the chain's new Inter· national Creams line. A third ... Bran- died Cherries Flam be.'' Wlll be added an July. In the past 40 years. Baskin- Robbins has developed more than 550 flavon. 31 of them offered at any siveo moment 1n it's 3,200 stores worldwide. The ice cream maker Qionecrcd such flavors as "Lunar Cheesecake,.. "Chocolate Comet." and .. Sweet Com," which as available in Japan only and taste hke com on thecob. A ketchup flavor didn't catch on . The new lane also includes non· alcohohc Chocolate Raspberry Truf. fle and Cappuccino Chip. Customers needn't show adentJfi. cation to buy the alcohohc desserts because the amount of liqueur as so small. The Grand M1m1er, wtth French brandy, is I. 7 percent alcohol. Almond Amaretto has .98 percent alcohol content and Brandied Cher· ries Flambc is too low to measure. "You're talkina about people be· tween 2S to 4S yean of &IC· They panacularly like th as product." said Baslon-Robbins Prc11dent Ron Marley, add1~ that lhe new flavors are desiancd • for the sopb1u1cated, adult palate." • "A aeneral comment of people in lhat aae aroup is that <hey rc.tlly liked the &tore when they were teen.qers. but~· they arcw up 1t didn't have the appea~" he said. Baslon-Robbans, once the place to a.o for premium tee ctUm, now compete$ wtth pntty frotcn desicru offered by such makers as Haagen Dazs, which has rum in ats Rum Ra1S1n ice cream. "This made 11 essential 10 offer a product not obtainable anywhere else," Marley said. "We've decided to jump over all of th em and produce something that is very outstandma and very expensive." At a dollar a scoop, about a quarter more than non-alcoholic Oavors the new na vors aren't for ace c.Um pcnny-panchers. It cost Bask.in-Rob- bms about $500,000 to develot> its lntemationaJ Creams, Marley said. Baslon·Robbins, a subsidiary of Allied· Lyons of London. had sales of $490 million m I 98S, up from $470 millton in J 984. Marley said the chain's share of the SI S.S billion ice cream market has remained at about three percent for the past six years. "We haven't lost ground, but we ha ven't pined c1thcr," Marley SI.id. BasJun·Robbms operators don't plan to JUSt wait (or tbe customen to drop into their outlets. In addition to a company-record SS million advertis1na campai&n. local outlets will offer free spoon-ntcd samples of the new Oavors. "Our approach will be to station people at the doors of the retail stores and ask p_eople to pleax. try it. .. Marley 111d. Recent taste tests revealed 95 peroent oft he people who tried one of the ultra-nch flavors said they liked at and would try 1t apan, Marley said. Marley doesn't think the liqueur· laced navors Wlll offend the chain's current mi~ of customers. The flavon sot h!lh marks from older customcn. but problbly won't atlru:t childttn, Marley said. "The mort we looked at at wt thouJ)\t w1lh only three or four 1tem1 with alcohol 1t would not be obJ«· tionable," Marloy said. ••They're not rc.tlly cb1ldrtn'' flavor They really wouldn't ~ popular wah children " • ' ' ______ ,_ , Orange Oout OAILY PILOT ITUMCSey. Mar 20, , .... M IBM leads stocks surge NEW YO RK (AP) -Prices on Wall Street strengthened Tuesday. led by a solid performance ~Y IBM and some investor spcculatio1' that interest rates may be headed downward ..:ain. Anal ysts said the marlcct had been afrajd that the giant computer company's stock would d ip below the "magic" level of 143 -the lowest point it has reached this year. But the fact that it did not happen helped prevent the onset of new bearishness 1n a market alr_'Udy edgy over the recent slump of prices, they said. In addition. the release of revised go-vemment statistics showina that the nauon's ONP rose 3. 7 pc~nt in the ftnt quarter -mstead of the prev io\Uly announced 3.2 ~nt -also en- couraged the market. they said. The gain w~s not sec~ as a positive 11sn ror the CCOnOm)'.. Smee It WU mau\ly due tO an IDCteast Of inventones, especially unsofd cars. AnaJysts said the high level of fi1'1l-quaner inventories would dampen growth in the second quarter -leading to renewed speculation that a new round ofinterest rate cul.5 may be in the offing. WHA T AME x Drn NEW YORK (AP) MAY 20 AM£X L£~0£R S ~ NYSE Lr~orRs 1 GoLo Quor£s I METALS Quo1Es NEW YOAI< (API -SCIO! ~ ~II pnoee T~ .,..._ • M 60 -'• I* QOUnd, NY C-• 1C>01 "'°"'" clOeeCI Mon C.,.., • ""'°" _..'-• PGUnO. V S ci.11N1Uono c.,... • 82.46 _..,.per pound NY ColM• 1C>01 month ~Mon IAlllll 19-20 Olllta a PCIU"° za,,.. )5 °""' • pound, .,..._ 1'111 • t3 '920(~-WMll ~· ll'!Qe I* l«t I .... • S4 170 I* -Manely ' H•mlMI ..,_ • So4 t5"4 per troy ouno., NV C-..• 1C>01 mon111 OIOMOMon ...._, $270 00-1215 00 I* 78 Ill h--York ......._ ... 16 OO-S-411 00 domMllC m«dletll ''"" -.N Y Dow JoNE S AvERAGES NASDAQ SUMMARY Toloou tlfl.S ftomt . .htl Robtrt 1~1L :.t. !>L9f1 • t ..:t 10 m co1 ma. vo: tizv t!'-1 . world~ fov;.s' hrmc.u:.awn t.\'15 olwe>y~ t..hz p:.r•a ... t.. 9~1'.., ond el~e · h,· la~-~:. ~ ,qc t..L("Jn rc~t tcz.och it'I fll 'llh • ~llmd , "'1"! f:'t~ 70 \MIS,.!,llOOO~\ ... 1001~ bhd ,21:\i2tlt-~7~ P'tldJof\t'I 5.?~sovl.h lo\\Qow ,8l81 9") met\ ll lnJ fn 10to9 •. M l.urdtsy lOt.oiJ l eur1doy t"ICIOTI t.o ~ • Firefighters: Duty is to fight, not t o strike Sometim es, when considering the public sector, it's good to ask the question: Who is the employer and who is the employee? Although the answer might seem obvious -the guy who writes the checks is the employer, the guy who cashes them is the employee -real life is not always so simple. It has become complicated by the formation of public employees' unions. Unions were useful organizations once, stanrung up for the rights a nd welfare of people who too often were victimized by bosses who couldn't tell a man from a machine. Abraham Lincoln may have issued the Emancipation Proclamation, but a lot of people think Samuel Gompers freed the slaves. In the public sector, however, conditions always have been better than many private businesses offer. Salaries have been adequate. If they have not kept pace with the pay scales in some professions, the job stability and health, vacatjon and retirement benefits have been very good. Workmgconditions are not always ideal. Police and firefighters accept danger as part of the job -perhaps the most attractive part, a t least initially. Trash collectors accept cenam risks and ruscomforts as do postal employees. Certainly, life m the employ of government is not ideal. But, it is socially essential. Public employees should recognize from the first day on the job that they owe more than a fair day's work for a fair day's wage - they owe their employers a commitment to service. Performed correctly, public service is an honor. The very notion of a public employees' union -or, worse, a public employees' strike -tarnishes the ideal we hope our government workers cherish. For without them , our system must fail. Orange County's firefighters have recently threaten- ed to strike"'()ver the co unty's insistence that it has the right to hire part-time firefighters rather than pay overtime. There is no argument that the county's plan is more economical than paying overtime to the full-time firefighters. There 1s also no argument that the firefighters should be paid as much as the county can reasonabl y afTo rd to pay them for the dangerous. essential work they perform. It is unfortunate that eight months of negotiations have not produced an agreement. but they have not. Our sympathies are with the brave men and women who routinely risk their lives to protect their community - right up to the point where they hold us hostage. T rue public servants could not envision standing by while the homes and businesses of their friends a nd neighbors burned to the ground. A strike by firemen - or any other public employee -simply is uncons- cionable. Any firefighter who thinks a strike isa solutio n to his labor dispute should walk out and keep walking. He should be in another profession -one that doesn't demand such dedication to duty. Opinions expressed in this space are those of the Dally Piiot Other views expreSS4)(! on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment is Invited The Daily Piiot. PO Box 1560, Costa Mesa 92626 Phone 642-6086 • . •'The natJon 's trial lawyers are raJslng bushels of money to block legal reformsandsavethelrPliesPeakfees." = .~' .......... ,1111 ..... •-"" ....... --,~ . !it - -· -- -·-z__ . . ~ ¥ ~· 'f. " ~ . &3 .. ~Jt ) ._., ~ ~ ... ... c:..-< --. --_-~ ----~ ,. ~ ----.-...___ ..... "WELL .•. AT LEAST THIS YEAR W£ DON'T HAVE TO Bl>ME THE WEATHER .... " Federal report cas.tsdoubt on animal rights activists Activists may themselves have caused some injuries attributed to scientists A new federal repon casts doubt on some of the key clatms of animal nghts activists just as the st.ate Assembly gets ready to take up a landmark ··humane" bill which scientists say could jeopardize much of the medical research done in California. The report's key finding: Some of the injuries to laboratory animals portrayed in videotapes and photos used by animal libbers to show "abusive" handling by scientists have probably been caused by the animal rights activists themselves. Tapes and photos of.animaJs taken from a lab at UC Riverside during a midnight raid by masked members of the AnimaJ Liberation Front on Apnl 21. 1985, have played a maJOr role in heanng.s before legjslat1ve committees considering new rules for treatment oflab animals. The single animal featured most prominently among the 46 7 stolen m that break-an was a baby monkey whose eyes appeared to have been severely Injured when sewn shut fora "sight depnvation" experiment. The expenment aimed to de- termine whether new sonar devices would ajd infants who are born blind. "The bandages seen on the videotape were not the originals," said uni versity spokesman Jack Chappell. "That was only one of the discrepancies found in the animal activists' claims." Added the federal repon, "Oaims that the eye pads were filthy and the animal had sores on the back of his neck and body are not substan- tiated." The NIH repon also questions "inconsistencies between still photo- graphs and between still photographs and video photographs," and it expresses doubt over a claim by the 80,()()()..membcr People for the Ethi- cal Treatment of Animals that aU the k.idnappcd animals arc now living happily in new homes. "That's impossible," says Cha~ pell. "1f only because the lif~spans of some of the animals arc Jong since over. We also believe a colony of deer mice that was taken can't be very happy. There were talccn without their specially-designed water bottles and without those. they become extremely cannibalistic. They prol>- ably died horrible dea ths." The NIH repon dismissed all charges of animal abuse by ex - perimenters at the Riverside campus and fo und animal care there "a~ propriate." The report couldn't have come at a better moment for California re- searchers. now trying to fend off a proposed state law that would allow humane officers with just 24 hours training to inspect any research facility using animaJs. l HOllS ELIAS stage repeat visi ts to any lab every three weeks. That proposal, sponsored by state Senate president David Roberti, a Hollywood Democrat, passed the Senate on a 2 1-11 vote and awaits Assembly action. It is opposed by a coaJitfon including the American Cancer So- ciety, the American Diabetes As- soetation, Stanford University, the state vetefi?ary association and the California lnslltute of Technology. "What happened here demon· strates what can happen under that proposal, when vinuaJJ y an_ybody can come in and interfere 1n the Jabs," said Chappell. Rpberti calJs that a "gross exag- geration" and says he's willing to compromise and tone down the proposal. But scientists say they won't willingly accept any law allowing "virtually untrained zealots" into their Jabs at will. "The NIH report here shows what can happen when scientists are pounced upon randomly while doing meticulous research," sajd Chappell. "h's atrocious for the research and the animals, too." Not to mention the humans who ultimately get the benefits of the experiments for which animals are used. S EARCHLIGHT WALTEI Bu11ouc1s Joan Irvine's push for UCI A story that appeared a week ago Sunday in another Orange Countl newspaper is not complete. I d~n t know how to set the record straight but to tell you all the facts. The first and most import.ant fact yo u should recognize 1s that Joan Irvine (now Joan Irvine Smjth) is solely responsible for bnngjng the University of California to its prctent location on the lrvme Ranch. Oh, there were some others of us who hauled on the line, but Joan alone of all the directors of the Irvine Co. realized the tremendous value to the lrvme Co. and to Orange County of mcctmg President Qarlt Kerr's requirement that the university have .. enough·· land so the overcrowding that took place at the UCLA, at Berkeley, and at every other campus could be avoided. Joan aJso knew that the presence of a complete faculty would pay off for the Irvine Co. because of the type of residents it wouJd anract. No pomt in dwelling on that. Fact of the matter is that wbat Joan envisioned has come about. There was a man who had a title, I think it was general manager of the Irvine Co., who Joan felt was a liability. Consequently she consulted her stepfather, Judge Oarke of the Los Angeles County Superior CoW1. He recommended she consult a lawyer named Howard Friedman. Howard was, and is, a member of Loeb and Loeb, a firm of attorneys who. for the most part, represented motion picture producers. Joan consulted him with the result that the manager resigned and Joan found herself, at this early age. the most vocal member of the Board of Directors of the lrvine Co. One day I got a call from Howard Friedman. He said, "Walt, you're trying to get a university for your part of Orange County. How wouJd you like to have a branch of the Univer· siry, of California?" 'Great," I responded. "How do I do thatr' He said, "Joan Irvine wants it too. Herc's her phone number. Give her.a call." But that new report by the Office for Protection from Research Risks of the National Institutes of Health said heavy bandages kept over the monkey's eyes were apparently re- moved after the raid and replaced wt th thinner ones unable to prevent the animal from scratching the sutures holding its eyehds shut The eye injuries an the tape. NIH said. were probably caused by the animal's post-raid scratching. The humane officers could be named by any group incorporated in California for prevention of cruelty to animals and each officer could I did c.all her. Her answer was "Yes, I want to talk to you. But I can't do it to morrow. I'm JOing to Las Yef1S to get mamed again. But I'll come right back and we can have lunch on Friday." Thomas Ellaa la a Suta MoaJca· We did. And she said, "How can LETTERS --------- baaed cohamalat OD 1tate l11ee1. you prove that the pt'Ople of Orange County would like to have a branch of the University ofCalifomta here?" "Easy,'' I answered. "We'll Just ask them." U S n t Q i&l'.j 1 t -11u1:11:r3r.n1 ~!imiJk1i;f.ii#i ·i • • .ros .1..1.J ce exce s a deliv ering pornography Legal reform plans spark I explamcd that wc could have a son of mass meeting. To tht> Ed1t11r The Postal \(:rv1n· had a ..et of rules as lo what wa' indecent and porno. graphic. etc. hut tht• \uprcmc C oun found it to be unconc;t1tut1onal. and threw 11 out It would \<.•cm that 1n\lead of attempting to draw up a nl'w set of rules that would he arccpt.1hk, the By the A11ocl1ted PrtSs Postal Service ha'i become the willing purveyor of pornography. It 1s prol>- ably the la rgest purveyor of porno- graphy in the world. It JUSt might be that they have found something that they are good at. JIM BOLDING (o~ta Mesa Toda} 1' T Ul''-dJ\ !\11,1, 211 1he I 41lth d,I\ of 191<6 There arc 225 days left in the \ear TOctay·., h1ghhgh1 1n h1\l1>1) On Ma> 20. 1919 regular transatlantic air ~nice began as a Pan .\mencan A1Na"" planc 1hr 't .rnkce (lipper took ofTfrom Port Washington. "I Y . bound for f-uropc On th1r, date In I 506 ( hmtophcr C olumhu~ died in poverty 1n Cipain. In 1830. the firr,t railroad timetable was published. an the newspaper Baltimore Amcn~an In 1861 Nonh C arohnn \.oted to ~cede from the Union. And the capital of the Confcdcraq· wa\ moved from Mon11omery. Ala . 10 Richmond. Va In 1862. President Abraham Lincoln signed the Homestead Act. openi ng m1lhons ofacre'l of Western land to re'lettlement. ln 1902. the United Suues ended its occupation o( Cuba. In J 927. Charles Lindbergh took ofT for Pans from Roo~velt Field on Long Island. N Y . aooard the Spirit of t Louis In 1932. Amelia Earhart took off from Newfou ndland for Ireland 10 become the first woman to ny '°lo across the Atlantic. Ten )'ears ago In an uneJtpcCtt>d ~tback for the Defense Ucpartment. the U Senate voted to put off until the following February a dCC1~1nn on whether to produce the B-1 bombtr ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat I ,,. Z>nl E4ote>t T-r.n "A•"llQ'"O Edttor Doft ,.,.., C•ty fc>otor T_C._.. N<J>¥t Ee!<f or Cf ... ~ 3C)Ol'll Editor "111 FPl4#) CMwClt.1•: ContrOllef ......... c.-... PtoductoOl'I M~ fenf~ C..tvt1tion MANIOef HeweNliMIJ9Nry MathllnQ Olfector c:.~~""~Of "How soon?" she demanded. "Oh," T answered, "I don't know. It would probably take a month." count era tta ck bv lawyers h•~lf.~iir~it~~t}lii~'. J El Pres1dente of Amigos YieJOS, and he authorized me to use the club publish an imponant story or take ''membership list. That was 99 of the some other action based on the 200 who turned out. Limits on lawsuits would-hit lawyer s in the pock etbook WASHINGTON -The nation's tnal lawyers arc raising bushels of money to block legaJ reforms and save their Pikes Peak fees. Here arc the details: Proliferating lawsuits have caused such havoc across America that voters arc demanding reforms. Milhons of organizations, ran,ang from the American Medical Associa· 11on to the Boy Scouts of Amenca, ha ve Joined forces to stop the lawsuits that have disrupted their activi ties. This has forced many state lcgj5· latures. dominated though they are by lawyers, to review the civil justice system. Any restrictions that might hamper lawsuits, of course, would nit the tnal lawyers nght in their bank accounts. So the American Trial Lawyers Association has mounted a counterattack to \IVC the system that enriches them. Jn California. for example, a drive is ~inin' momentum to revise the civil JUStlcc ay\tem. This has taken the form of a voter in1tiat1ve called Propo 1tion SI , which the Califom1.a Tnal Lawyers Association is rushing to head off Its president, Peter J Hinton, has sent an u11ent d1spa1ch to an mcm· bcn entJtled "A Repon from the front " Without m1nana word • he notttles them that "tnal rawyen wtll be called upon to malte maJOr oontnbut1ons to defeat this m- 1uat1 ve •• What const1tutC$ a "mljor con· tnbu11on" for a tna.l lawye~ Hinton make that clear. "OvcT 1 dozen firms and 1ndiv1duals 1n O•hfomia have JACK AllDEISOll and JOSEPH SPEAR already comm itted more than $100,000 to the fight against Pro~ osnaon SI," he states. "Some have contnbuted as much as $300,000." Hinton clatms that the reformers are trymg to reverse "centuries oflaw which state that the first consider- ation an the ton system is to make th e mnoccnt mJurcd pany whole." He is disputed by James Coyne, president of the American Ton Reform Association, which is leading the battle to change the system. Coyne contends that U.S. courts. "with limited exceptions," held for 200 years that "a person suina could rcoover only if he proved that the defendant was at fa ult .. that one only obtained redress for cases of true negligence, not for the personal risks of everyday life." AH this chanaeci. ac.cordana to Coyne, an the 1960s. "The ton system we have today," he told us, "1s vastJy different. Our generation ha.s over- turned 200 ycan oflcpJ trad1t1on." The result has been an explosion of lawsuits. Tht\ has nuscd the risk for those who make decisions: many no lon,er will serve on corporate boards, ~hoot boards. town councils, athletic lca&uC$ or other business-cmc-vol- untcer aroups. Those who arc s111l W1ll1n1 to take the risk have been forced to change the way they ma.kc dcc1s1ons. They don't dare decide whether to market a new product. approve an innovation. , merits. The first question they must We invited the entire board of the now ask is. "What's the chance I'll get Irvine Co. to a luncheon but no one sued?" except Joan and her mother. Athalie .As Coyne i;iut 1t, "Jn this stifling O arke, showed up. · ch mate of an?t1et y over unknown risk, It made no difference. We passed our CC<!n.om1c growth, perhaps e.ven out ~rds inviting people to join an ..OW: span.t of adventure and pion-orgamzation called Friends of the eenng, wdl be rcduocd." Uni versity of Califomta m Oranae UNDER THE DOME: Everyone County. knows Congress bas a tendency to The attendants at the meeting each throw money at problems; now hi&h· took I 0 cards, with the result that we spirited Senate aides are literally had about 50,000 Orange Countians throwing money -mostly pennies S•'1\ a request for the univcrsjty to -at a huge iron mobtle sculpture estabhsh a campus in Orange County . suspended high over a marble Prior to this l bad consulted my courtyard in the Hart Senate Office aood friend O ark Kerr. president of Buildtng. The Alexander Calder the statewide university. who had mobile bas a flat enough up~r asked me to consult an architect surface to catch many of the coms named Ball Pereira. Bill Pereira wu winged its way, as weU a skiUfully half of the firm of Pereira & Luck· propelled paper airplanes. Workcn man, which had done a ai&a.ntie job of with long-handled brooms sweep the findina out what made a grat debris ofT periodically. Like coins university. tossed in Capitol Hill fountains. the Bill showed me the result of his mone)' is donated to Children's studies, He recommended the univer- Hosp1taJ here. "Some people don't sity on Irvine land, provided we could arow up," commented a custodial act enouah land committed to avoid official. the bad thmgs that had happened elsewhere. ~INl·EDITQRlAL: The rcs1~en1 The proposed si te was high on a geniuses on Capat<?I H11J have devtsed hill, wtuch later was bouaht for a a btUrre cos.t~mng schef!le: ,CbatF cemetery. news orpnuat1on!l. pubhc antertst Joan was upset as. of cou.rsc ~ 1 IJ'O~ps and the pubhc at t.,..e for and Brick Power ' copies of the paperwork that ~n· What she and I and Bnct did aftn aress produces 1n such ovcrwheln:una that 11 too Iona a story to cover in one quantJty. The ~tuff would .be pn~ issue ofSearchliabt. So. that will haV'C accordina to me and weilJ't. ~Ill to bold until anolbcr issue. <;:onv.ess1 we wonder • .et ,UP lend•lll I promiec I'll nan the fim 1nstall-lt~ncs ror~who.cao t afford tht ment of' the wholt atoey next -eek. hi&b~tofbotau'?Wallthere":bcst· Bua before doina '°I have i.o tell scOer hsts and d11QOunt s&ora. How ~what the story l ~fcmd to 11 tht will the proud and. prohfic pots ·nnirt1 of this Searcbh&bt bad to Withstand the qo·bnu11na •ndtsnJty do with my decision 10 lay out tht of'bema rcmatn~ whole 11ory. =u·u f'orpve me. J•d ....,_. Ml hMpt $J118r Jf.J~c B I• ,._ Pf#f'• •n ,,Wletlle4 cekreffll. ,.,,_,,,.. ,..UU.r. • ,_ .-:,):- t ... Can't find the handle llhmaota rtibt-ftelder Tom Bnmauky can•t ~ onto the ball u be hlta the IJOtlDd darlat tlrat lnn•na action Rozelle under~oes l 3 ._1/2-hour grilling # USFL attorney goes at NFL commissioner in antitrust suit trial NEW YORK (AP) -NFL Com- missioner Pete llozelle wound up more than l 31h hours of grillin& by USFt attorney Harvey Myerson Monday by emphatically restating that he had no knowledge of the three "smoking guns" that Myerson claims will make the USFL's antitrust case. As be did durina Rozelle's two previous days on the witpess stand. Myerson spent Monday on a series of topics, attempting to weaken Rozelle's credibility and shake his contention that the NFL in no way contributed to the USFL's problems, including its failure to get a television contract for its switch from spring to fall. At one point, Myerson went as far back as 1959, just before the Aft began play in competition with the NF'L, to inquire into Rozelle's signing -as general manager of the Los Angeles Rams -of 1959 Heisman Trophy winner Billy Cannon. NFL Management Council, to inflate USFI. costs by golng after that league's playen. Rozelle bad said in his tcstunooy last week that be disregarded the Moyer memo and knew nothing of the other two until they came up in pre-trial depositions. "Has anything you have beard since refreshed your memory as to any of those itemsr' Myerson asked as Razelle's testimony wound up. "Absolutely not," replied Rozelle, who bad been called by Myerson as part of the USFI.'s atttempt 10 prove its case lhroU&h the statements of NFL officials. The commissioner will return to the witness stand T uesday for cross-examination by the NFI.'s lawyers., Frank Rothman and Roben Fiske. Myerson's questioning of RozeUe ranaed from the si&Jtlng of Cannon to the oommiasioner•s knowledge of attempts by Oak.land and New York to secure new franchises to replace NFI. teams that left town -in Oakland's case, 400 miles south to Los Angeles; in New York's to the New Jersey Meadowlands, seven miles away from midtown Man- hattan. -- with the Boeton Red 8oz llonday ~t. Tbe tame wun•t decided antll the Dlntb lnn•na. Por tM atoJy. aee 83. But at the end, Myerson zeroed in on the thrcc documents he says will prove the USFL's $1 .32 billion anti- trust suit -a Harvard Business School study Myerson caJls "How to Conquer the USFL;" a 1973 memo from league counsel Jay Moyer matntaining an open network might mvitc a new league; and a plan by Jack Donlan, executive director of the Myerson used the signing of Can- non to attack Rozelle's credibility - the commissioner had criticized the USFI. for signing Herschel Walker when the 1983 Heisman Trophy winner still had a year of college eligibility left. Noting that it hap- pened 27 years ago, Rozelle conceded that be had signed Cannon while he (Pleue Me ROZELLE/JM) A• good aa a home run Boeton •a 11ark 8alllYaD, hit by a pitch. reacta to umpire Dan Morrlaon •a a1fna1 to take flnt with tbe buea loaded. gl'rint the Red 8oz an 8-7 win o•er lllnnaota Monday. Karl Gaytan Gaytan selected E Oc Vi h his new assignment. X-ean ew COaC Gaytan was the head coach at tO head program Needles for four years before coming ------""---'=-----' .to Ocean View and led that school to a at Edison (Fresno) record of 36-14, including three trips BJ ROGER CARLSON °' .. ...., ........ Karl Gaytan, who underwent back- to-back 2-8 records as head football coach at Ocean View High School, bas been named the new bead football coach at Edison Hiab in Fresno. The 32-year-old Gaytan left today for Fresno where be wiU be for the next 18 days before returning for the last week. of Ocean View's school year. "Jt will be lcind of fun to coach some aood athletes," said Gaytan of to the CLF semifinals and an offense which combined for over 5,000 yards running and passing on tbrcc oc- casions. "h's a situation very much like Long Beach Poly... said Gaytan. "You're pretty open to what you can do." A "com{>uter magnet" school in Fresno, Edtson has an enrollment of less than 1,000, but is open to stu<ients throughout the Fresno area. The Tifers operate out of the North Yosemite League. Fresno Edison managed only one victory in 1985, according to Gaytan. '.Drug testing necessary' Angels try again tonight SAN DrEGO (AP) -Drug testing is an oppressive but necessary tool in the short-term to combat baseball's substance abuse problem, Com- m1ss1oner Peter Uebcrroth said Mon- day. ''Let me tell you. I thtnk it's an invasion of pnvacy." Ueberroth said of testing players, coaches and club employees for drua problems. At the same lime, he said. testina provides an effective detemnt to drua abuse among playen and will buy ~or leaaue baseball lbe time needed to develop drua awareness and prevention Pf'C)IJ'ams. dependency in sports. The prop-am was sponsored The San Dieao Union and by Operation Cork. a drua-awareness and treat- ment program run by San Dieao Padres owner Joan Kroc. "It's ah eff'ective1 temporary measure where there s reason or cause to believe there's a problem. Bateball demonstrated that there was a reason and a caute (to believe) there was a problem, .. Uebem>th said. Lut year. the sport was rocked by a drua trial in Pituburah. Several current and former pfa~rs v.'ttt called IJ witnestel 'O tcstJfy aaa1nst dealers a.nd ended up detail1na their use of narcotics. BAL Tl MORE (AP)-Tbe Angels' pme at Baltimore scheduled for Monday night was postponed by rain -the second day in a row the Anaels were rained out. Sunday's pmc at Detroit was also rained out. The Orioles announced the pme would be made up Thursday. ona- inaUy a.n o ff~y for both teams, staruaaat l:OS pm EDT. The An,cls' Ruppert Jones hit a talo home run 1n the accond mnlnl off Ken Dixon. who had yielded 10 homcn in his 16 previous 1nninas at Memori&I Stadium. * llllJ Piii . TUESDAY. MAY20. 1918 It'sAkeem • • in Houston But in Los Angeles. ttmaybeamenfor Lakers • title hopes HOUSTON (AP)-Akeem. Houston Rockeu Juard Robert Reid says the surname Oltjuwon is unneceuary in identifyina what iJ becominaoneofthemostawesome forces in lhe National Ba.sketbaU Association. "A.kcem needs only one name Ulcc Ulysses or Hercules," Reid said. "Everybody knows Akeem. "J see twn u a young MOSC$ (Malone) who doesn't know the meaning of quit or lose. J see him u a future legend like (Kareem Abdul) Jabbar is DOW." 1 Olajuwon, a seemingly unstop- pable blur under the basket, is establishing a piece of bis leaend in the Rockets' NBA Western Con- ference playoff series ap..inst Abdul- Jabbar and bis Los An&eles Lakers teammates. Olajuwon is the peatcst reason the Laken are traihna the upstart Rockets 3-1 in their best-of-7 playoff and face elimination unless they win when the series resumes in Los Angeles Wednesday night. Olajuwon bas led the Rockets on a three-game winning streak~ the Lakers in the series. bringmg them within one game offacing the Boston Celtics for the NBA title. .. .,..... COllPD•llCll P9IAU , ......... , ~ ....... tc.w ~,.,,.......,.. Hou9tOft 112, a..Mrt -How9tofl117,~ Hoult0n ltS, ~ f5 • •• rlnt 8 I• I ttl w.dn11'9Y -...,.... .. UMA. l:30 p,m, Frldev -LAMrl et HOulteft, ~ p.m.(lf !WV) lli«tdav-Houlton at a..Mrt, "°°" (If necan...,l The Rockets thumped lhe Laken 1 OS-95 Sunday for a 3-1 lead in the series. O~uwon scored 3S pointl. On Friday, O~uwon ICOm:S .ta point.I u the Rockets won 117-109. After each pme, the Laken and Rockets have lavilhcd prai1e on Olajuwon. He bas the La.ken wonder-Ulf. where be'U tum up next. 'It's very difficult tor any defeme to cover him bccaUIC he's so quick," Los An,eles forward M.aurioe Lucas said. "We have to be aware where be is at all times." But even knowina where Olajuwon is and what he's going to do ipi't always enouab. .. When be FU the ball down low, ' there is no man in basketball that can stop him," Laken guard M.aP: John- son said. ( A class on how to learn the art of real suffering By BARRY F AUL&NER some guest lecturers to talk about running form, swimming and bikiq technique, as well u nutrition and injury prevention." ~NltCcc: 4 , 1 The trialhloner's mentality bas never been considered conventional and the students ln the Oranae Coast College triathlon class this sprin,a are doing nothing t~ dispel such beliefs. After compleung the class final-a mini-triathlon oonsis~ of a 4()(). yard swim, a three-mile bike ride and a mile run last Tuesday at CCC -the competitors would be forgiven for savoring their panola bars and auzzJ. ina a few cups of watet" in anguished contentment, but most were surpris- "We have beainncn, iot.ennediat.e., all the way up to expert-level aahletes in the class (ra.naing in IF from 19-SO)," said Georae WrilbL .. And everybody iJ weak in somethina (one of the tlwe apons)," he added. .. It's been iJlformative and fun," said Dave Panel, 31 of Cosca Mesa, , who is the most experieooed lriadlJete in the class and finished fin& in the event with a time of 19:29. inf, unfulfilled. ·~as it everythin' you expected?" asked the courses co-instructor Barbara Wright (her husband George also teaches the course) of the 16 men and three women who bad just completed the event. some of whom having no previous triathlon ex- perience. Parsel, who prepped at Es1ancia High and wu a two-year staner in football for Oraqe Coas1 in 1976-77. took to running after sufferina a broken leg in bis last football season and just "aot booked." He currently competes in both track and cross country at CCC and bas competed in triathlons since 1982, inclu~ a triathlon in Nice, France involvinc a two-mile ocean swim, a 75-mile bike leg and a 20-mile run (about three-quarters the distance of the ultimate triathlon, the Iron Man in Hawaii). "Too sbon," was one reply heard from a crowd of students, seemingly ready to dive back into the pool for a repeat performance. "We arc very pleased with their performances today," said Barbara Wright.. who along with her husband bast.aught the class for two semesters now. "It's basically a lecture and lab class," she said, adding. "We bring in Delores Curry. 48, and Marie Mainville, 45, both Huntincton Beach residents, took to triathloning as a natural extension of their running (Pleue eee TIUA TBLOllf /IM) Overturf proves to be touab. foe -even for boys By JOSEPH DUDEVOIR In the future she would hke to join the Ladies Professional Golf Association. But while she is still at Ocean View Hi&h, beating the boys 1s fun enouab for Vivian Overturf. "A lot of guys get upset when I beat them," she says. "But that's their problem if they can't accept losiDI to a sirl.·· Though only a sophomore, Overturf 1s the No 4 golfer on the ~wks' varsity a«>lf squad. And don't think that because of this that Ocean View is probably one of the weak sisten of the Sunset Lca&ue. The Scahawlcs finished in a first-place tic with Huntington Beach, as both stroked their way to 8-2 marks. Ocean View golf coach Ben ElJerman saysOvenurfas "Just another one of the guys on the team. "But I saw some guys on other teams ~ faced throwing clubs after she beat them. She's for real and canies her wciabt on this team." The team consisu of: Pablo Duarte, Steve W~t, Mike Holmes, Overturf, Ken Schisler and Travis auth. The top five soorc for each team and Ellerman says Ovetturfplaysat her best when the oompetltion is ltlffist. "She had one of her best rounds -hen ~ really needed it.," says Ellerman. "At Huntinatoo Seacbtr she shot a 39 (at the prep ~ 1olfen f.> only rune boles). That was her biaett day this teat0n. • And she has more bi& days ahead. For the tee0nd con1etvtive ~J Ovcrtun will be hcadina to the state toW"My for airts in June. The tournament will be bdd at Burbank, the compcttton n«d1na a handicap of 11 or acss toquahfy. Overturf c.anies an eiaht hanchcap "rm sun aiettina bettcT," she 11ys "I have a laloa 'Mlh I pro every 'Wttk •• he says her f.&vontc lady aolfer ts Hollis tac:y, a 13- ycar vc1eran of the LPOA Lour But before jotnU\I the prof. ion&I ranb, ~ttturf plans on attcndina_cotl bopcf'uJJy on a p>lflcbolanb\p "Drug testina shouldn't be used until you obviously have a problem, and then you use it to have a detctTCnt and to act a handJe on how aeverc your prohlem as." Uebcrroth wd 10 an addrcs to 15 sport.t wntc:ra attendin .i ronfttcncc on chemical Currently, only m~or lcque pla¥- era Wlth dru&-testina clau1e1 in their contracts ana 21 ptaycn s10&)cd out bv tbc comm1woncr'1 office last (Pl-.. .. oauo T&aTJNO/IM) Time was called for 27 m1nulc after Eddie Mumy intlcd to open Bah1more•s halfofthc IC'COnd and C'•I R1pken was at bat Dlllllr ..... ---'--.... and bopefullr to U . Fonn~Ocean Vtewaotf11at Ki m · iawi \be Oceu View llJcJa '• Vl fta.n Onrtarf. (PleMia -OC&AR VIS1f {M) ' • Orange Cou1 OAJLY PILOT/ Tue.day, May 20, 1oee Capistrano Bay Yacht Oub's Ocean theSouthlandcoaat. Boats runmna to Balboa and Dana Wharf, tshina Racina Series, a race from Dana Point local fishlna~undure comin~k coastal kelp beds and rocky points arc to Newport Beach and return. to thedoclc wnh nice catches of ettjoyinaaood fishinaas weU, with the Sewnd was Risky Busi ncss, bonito, bottom fish and some yellow-bulk of the catch beina made up of Hansen and White, Dana Point tail and keeper size barracuda. bus and mackerel. There should be Yacht Club, and Thundcrbox, sailed Fishina has been consistent for the yellowtail under floatina kelp patties by Dick Amtower, was third. "Freelance" skit>J>Cred by Donny an the channel for private boa ten Gold Rush, co-skippered by Don Brockman ruonana out of Davey's beadina out to sea. These breezina and Ann ~leer, Capo BYC, was th~c Balboa(673-1434). With yellowsareeagcrcatenonbothlive Class B winner; runner-up was Day-im ov ba.itconditionsforNew-baitorjiascastnearthefloatinakelp. brealc., Bob Gates. Capo BYC; third po rbor-bascd sponfishers, There are also Spanish mackerel deep was High Hopes. Ray Noonan, anaJcrs are being rewarded wt th under the pattiesand th~ are hittina DPYC. consistent catches. The" Freelance" Lucky Joes when metered. Hi Id i ng John son's W h 1 s pc r. as one ofNewport's newest and fastest With improved water conditions, DPYC. was the winner in the Non-spon boats and makes it to Catalina currently sea temperature is about 62 Spinnaker Class. Island in less than two hours, depart-dearees, look for continued good \ fishioa for the locaJ fleet throuah the entire summer. As fishina improves advance reservations for daily trips and charten should be made an advan~the landina prior to arrivin the doclc. The · &lso some shark fishina on tap. The new c.haner boat "California Dawn ... a ~footer runn.if\ltbark fishioa only tri~out of Davey's, is comir11 back with some larae blue and mako sharks. The rnako shark is excellent eatina. while the blue is a bit tough. ThercareaJso thrcst\erand other sharks in local waters for increased anaJioa sport. Fishina in San Diego waters off the J11 NIEMIEC Coronado Islands bu been very 1ood foryellowtail. Fish in thel(}.2S pound class have been common fort.hose tossina iron or filhina live bait. The "Prowler" out ofFisbennan'a Lind- ina (619-222--0391) bu been fisbiag the bot spots daily and retuminaat sundown with aood catches of ycUow-tail. Look for very aood yellowtail fisbina at the Coronados through mid-June, when hopefully, the albacore will be bitina. Ledbetter win1 Finn Clan ~ti• Brian Ledbetter of San Di~ Yacht Oub was the winner of ti Finn Class national championship a three-day rcpna held at Alami11 Bay Yacbt Club. Lont Beach. The Finn 11 the Olympic sinaJ handed boat. Ledbetter bad 10.2 penalty pc:>in under the Olympic acorin& system 12.S for Russ Silvestri, St. Franc YC, Sao Francisco. Other top .scorers we~ Louje .Nad St. FYC, third. 44.0 po1nu: Ricbai 8yTon, Belmont Shores Sailina A sociation, fourth, 46.0, and Robe Oder, Alamitos Bay YC, fi~ 48.8. The top five qualify for U.::s. Yael Racing Uruon funding for the 19E Olympic Games at Seoul. · Everybody ... every person. every family. every group ... is different. and we all have different health coverage needs. That's why Blue Shield. California's health coverage leader. offers a variety of choices. Blue Shield of (4lifornia has contracts with more. doctors and hospitals than any plan in the country. A choice of deductibles from $250 to If you have to pay for your own coverage, you know how low these month~ rates* are for the Blue Shield Preferred Plan in You 're special. You want to decide who your doctor is going to be: you want to decide how much you're going to pay for coverage. and how much you'll pay when you need care. Blue Shield offers these choices. $2 .000. a choice of plans for individuals of all ages. families and groups of all sizes. The Blue Shield choices mean you can select a plan tailored to meet your needs. Discover for yourself how Blue Shield is right for you . Blue Shield. The Choice Is Yours. r--------------------------------------~ Q t:MP·lll I write: or all: I Blue Shield Blue shield of ~UfOm~ . San Pl'lneilc.O (41S) 44S·S292 I ~California Box 7168 Lot ~In (1JJ) 642·54SS I -• "'".. .... . .... · "'iU San Frandlco. CA 94120 I I Please send me Information on the new Blue Shield Prelem!d Pim 1 0 For Individuals and f a_milies I O Por Group Coft~ge for my Employtts. #Employees __ _ I . ' : NAME ~-~~~------------~---------~--- : ADDRESS ----------~-CITY........., __ _ ___ ZIP __ f PHONE _____ .........., __ AGE~ua ________ _ I o rm over 6S ~a not elJajblf foir me Blue sbiild Piifenld Plan. Plnlt lend me. wtthout I obbaatfon. Information on .. ue lhiekl't Medkate SuPOllment Plw. ltrthdite , __ _ I CJ Please Hnd me a Oire<iory fl PhJlkim Mmiben-uid .Paelenad HOIJ>'tall for my ~~;1 L--------------------------------------J I Orange County. If you 're buying for a company, call your agent or return the coupon below to see how much a Preferred Plan can save you. S250 Deductible Under 30 30-44 4S.5' 55-64 -Si"91e Party SS7.2S $11.&0 S111.oo S1t6.15 ,_ --2 Person Family $103.45 $144.60 $218.30 $295.75 ---~ - - -J Of Mor9 PemAy S141 .IO S1M.70 lm.45 S)Q.~ --~ SSOO Deductlble .,,.__ $Ingle Party S42.65 M0.10 ..,. -• St2.40 S124.2S -i.- 2 Person Family $76.90 $112.10 $162.40 S220.00 -..------J Of More '-"'Y 1105.50 S144.ts S1ts.J5 S254.t5 ... S1000 Deductible ---5'""9 Party ~ NO.JS SU.JO $73.IO S102.t5 --2 Person Family ~55.75 $81. 70 $126.05 $175.30 ---J Of More Femily - sn.10 $106.05 $150.IO $201 .50 S1500 Deductible .-UJ.ts Q4.40 166.15 S11 .1s 5'ngle Party --.~ --2 Person Family $45.90 $65.00 $112.85 $154.10 .... -3 Of More Pemlfy SM.15 Slt.45 sus.oo s1n.n $2000 Deductible -$27.M 5'"fle Party S11.45 MO.JS tl4M ----2 Person Family $39.50 S56.00 $102.00 $142.10 --.--~ -r- ) Of More ,.,..ly SM.SO -$74.20 S121 .50 -S16J.15 •These monthly dues are billed quarterly. Blue Shield of California CALIFORNIA PHYSICIANS' SE RVICE. \ - 1 ~ -- - - -- - ' - - It .8 St. Louie Cubs? It will happen if playoffs earned f'nm AP ..... taee NEW YOR.K.-The a.a,o Cuba • will Dlay ~Y potlle&lon sames at Buacb Stadium ~St. Louis rather than at Wtjaley Field, their home pelt that baa no Uabta, the National Leasuc announcied Monday. .. l'.Ve llid f0r four yean it•1 ~ina to ba~n. I recop1ze the lead time to let li&htl it up,' Cubs president and.~ maueer DaDu Green said. __ o_ree ... n Mia it would IUe ••a amaU miracle" to set liabts imtalled It Wrisley in time for this 1eUOn'1 playotr1. Jn a new. releue, the leque office said the proposal for the Cuba to move poaUeuon pmes wu adopted unanimously by the clubs in the National Leaaue. Baseball is under a current televia.ion contract that Tequires niabt teleca1t1 durina postaeasoo P~)'-City and state laws prohibit rupt buet.ll It Wri&Jey Field, the only m~or leque ballpark a,_ without li&hta. "There would have to be plans made that's why they took the action now," Often laid. ' National lajue President Otub Feeney called it "~ unfonunate 11tuation, but pven the lack ofli&hts at W~ Field the best alternative is to have the Cubs play in the ~t NL .Eu1em Division city," St. Louts as approximately 300 miles from Cbicaao. . i:tie Cl.\bs recentl.Y _entered into an agreement in prm~ple with the CiVlc Center Corporation in St. Lows, the owner of Busch Stadium, for use of the facility if the Cubs win their division. "It was not our decision." Green said. "We've worked very bard to make people understand and it hasn't worked out yet." "The Cubs bad requested Civic Center Corp. to make Busch Stadium available, and we were pleased to oblile. subject only to the Cubs obtaining the approval of the football Cardinals, which bas been received. No retebeduling of football games would be required," Marie Sauer, president of Civic Center Corp., said Monday. Quote of the day "The fans have been remark.ably restrained. If this bad happened in New York, they'd be ~ the stadium down." -CincinnatJ Reds General Manaaer Blll Berae.et. on the patience of the Cincinnati fans despite the team's poor 1tan this sea.son. Ewinl n•mecl Rookie of Year NEW YORK -Patrick Ewing's m roolcie seuon was almost u humbling as it was suooessful. The New York Kniclcs cent.er was named the NBA Rookie of the Year Monday although be miued 32 sames because of injuries to his right knee, left ankle and left elbow. Those problems, plus a multitude of injuries to bis teammates, resulted in a 23-S9 seuon for the K.nicks. wont in the league. Graf, 16, upeeta Martina Albeck flrecl by Balla CHJCAOO -The Cbicato Bulls on Monday fired Colch Stan Albeck and huna a "Coecb Wanted" lip on tbe door for the third time in u ::Jeyean. and the ninth time ia tbe last . Bulll chain.nan Jerry lleinldorf announced tbo firina in a statement, which also hinted the club already wu DCllOtiauna with his tUQCCSIOr. A source close to the ~~ wbo declined to be identified. said tbe BUiia will ~ former Pb.iladelpbia 76ers star Doua Collini a1 Albeck'1 repJaoemeot later thl1 week. Albect's firina came despite a lato«aaon au,.e, sparked by the return of 1upentat Michael Jor· du, that enabled the Built to catch the Cleveland Cavaliers for the Eutem C.Onference'1 final playoff spot. Jordan milted 64 pmea·after fracturina a booe in hit left f ooL "We feel that we are releuina ~ a competent NBA coecb who has sbown clus and character through a difficult season," Reinldorf sa.id in the natcment. ''We wish Stan the best in bis future endcavon and will pf course honor the remainina year of bis contract. UCLA ho.ta bueball tourney Four teams ranked among the coun-• t.ry's top 16 in oolleac baseball will be in acti~n this week in t~e t 986 .NCAA West Reaionals at UCLA s Jackie Robinson Stadium. The doubl~limination tournament begins Thurs-· day at l l a.m. when eiahth-ranked Loyola Marymount. 4S-12, faces n.inth-ranked UC Santa Barbara. 44-1 7.ln the· second game, scheduled to beain at 3:30, IOtb- ranked UCLA, 39--21, meets 16tli-rankod Hawaii, 41-22. Oames also will be played at 1 l a.od 3:30 Friday and Saturday. If a seventh game is needed, it will be played at I Sunday. The winner of the tournament will qualify for the ColJqc World Series at Omaha, Neb. In other action, Peppcrdinc faces Pan Amencan and San Diego State meets Ariz-0na in the Central Regional Thursday in Austin, Tex. And in the Midwest Regional at Stillwater, OkJa.. Stanford takes on Appalachian State Thursday. Stanford and Anzona tied for second behind UCLA rn the Pacifier I 0 Southern Division, Pepperdine was second in the WCAC and San Diego State won the WAC. Cal track athlete ahot to death OAKLAND -A member of the . ·m University of California track team was shot to death by a &unman who opened fire from a fast-moving car, according to police. Kerry Threets, 21 , "might not have been the intended targ.c:t" of Saturday night's shooting. accord- ing to homietde Lt. Richard Brierly. The shooting was "the classic drug-trpc," be said, but added Threets "could have j ust been m the wrong place." Threets was shot lket with a friend. "It wa.s~·ust one bullet, but it was a very good shot," said police Jerry Harris. "It was from some luod of handgun an it hit him in the back." -.. ' -- hit batter with 2 outs. bases loaded In ninth PntaAPM1f1t•11 BOSTON -Jim Rice walked with two outs in the ninth inAi~ fom_na home the tyiQI run, a.Dd Mart Sullivan wu then bit ~tcb with the buel &oeded M y lliabt. rallyina the Botton Jled b to a 8-7 victory over the MinDe10ta Twi.0.1. TWlna reliever Ron Devia, l-4, entered the pme with a 7-6 lead in tbe bottom or the ninth IDd retired the fint two bencn be Caced. But ~ Barren walUd on a 3-l pitdl IDd third on a double by W9de ~ Bill Buckner "' walked mteo· tionally to loed tbe bun and Rice then fouled oft' five pitches with two strikel on him before walldna on a 3-2 delivery, forci.Qa home Barrett. OIV11 threw a strike put Sullivan but then bit him, forcin& home Boas with the winnina run. Joe Sambito~ 1-0, pitched the ninth innina for Botton and recorded hil fint ~r-leque victory since J 981 . Conaecutive bome runs by Kent Hrbek and Tom Bnananalcy bad keyed a five-run fifth inn.in& that pve Mmneaota a 7-4 lead. Hrbek bad an RBI double in the fint i.nn.ina alona with his two-tOD homer. But the lled Sox aoomt in the bottom of the fifth on an RBI sin&le by Bill Buckner and pulled wit.bin 1-6 in the ciahth apinlt ~licver Frank Putore on lifllleS by Rice and Rich Gedman and an RSJ aroundout by Don Baylor. The Twins pounded Boston starter Mike Brown for nine bits in less than five ioninp. Mickey Hatcher capped the Twint' bia fifth with a tw<>-run double oft' reliever Tim Lollar. The Red Sox rapped starter John Butcher for nine hits and four runs in five inninp, but were frustrated by four Minnesota doubJe plays. Minnesota jumped to a2-0 lead in the fint on doubles by Roy Smalley and Hrbek and an RBI single by Marie Salas. * MMN8IOTA ~ettcf Snlell't dl't HrMk lb an-llyl1 S...c co..ttl• Ll'Mlorcfl 211 tullc;Mr If GHMH ... , ..... 5 0 I 0 S2 2 0 52 2 l S I 2 I > 1 , ' • 1 I 0 • 0 0 0 • 0 I 2 4020 ,., .. , 2t> loealb luduv 11> ltlc:eM o.dr'Mllc ltomwopr SUllHllC .. Ylordh Sltllhos rf OulnoM• LVOMd Jf 11J 7 T .... .... .,., ..... .., ..... • 1 I 0 > I I 0 • 1 2 2 • I , I • 0 I 0 0000 0 0 0 1 3 I 1 1 • 1 1 0 3 1 1 1 • 1 2, SJ 112. ,.. .... --__ , ...... ,. "' 111-• Two outs wtllfl wlMllle NII tcOred. ' Geme WlMllw ltll -~ m. 01"-MlMetot• '-Loe-MlllllelOI• 6, Botton 1. 21-Sfnellloy 2, Hrt*I, PucUtt, ~tcNr. Sl9MouM, LYGM, "°"'-Hit-Hrtlek (5), an-ns.kY (I), luc:knw Ill. ~ (3). • " ..... so I OtlftOI eo.t DAILY PtLOT/fU91d111, -.... * • lloJ'al8' ~t fte&der Rwly Law {7) a.ad Tau tldrd bu1 •• ..... ........ ""9t1e eacla otb&r to tile ........ ....,.... tlalrd bue -.ell lllU Penaro at. to~ It .. ll•MT· ladf.an• 8, BJaeJa794 TORONTO -Joe Cartei-drove in three runt with two siqlcs and Mel HaU went ._for-4 and~ three runs, lcadina Cleveland to a 6-4 victory over the Toronto Bh•e Jays, ~PPIDI the Indiana' five-pme los.- 1na streak. Veteran knucklcMller Phil Niekro, io!f 1cat1ered 10 bits, struck out four wa1bd three before bein& re- lieved aft.er sivinl up a lcadoff double to Tony Fernandez an the ninth. Scott Bailes aot the lut three outs for third save. The Blue Jays pvc Staner Dave Stieb, 0-6, a 2--0 lead on Georse Bell's tw~run double in the fint toning, but the Indians rallied to keep Stieb winless after nine starts this year. Chris Sando, who had two RBI, walked in a run in the tceond after Hall's leadoft' triple, Pat Tablet's iofidd sin&le and Brook Jacoby's walk loaded the bases. ARLINGTON -Gecqe Brett bad two hits and knocked in two rum and Mart Gubic:za WOil his teCOed suai&ht pme, ladil>J tbe IC.uMa City ltoyala to a 6-4 V1CtOry over tbe Texas R.a.,n .in a fiaht·intm'Upted pme .. Gu~ 2--4, who started * season with four OODICIC'Utive ~ struclc out ei&bt over Ii.a inninp He also walked thn:e and Md three wild pitches before Steve FarT pitcbed me final three innln&s to pick up his third save. Bobby Witt, 2-3, took the ka A fi&ht erupted bttweco lludy Law and Texas third bueman Seeve Buechele in the ciabtb that emptied both benches. Buechele shoved Law after the Royals risbt fielder al.id inlO third and Law J"CIPOOded with a swiQa at Buechele. Both bencheldeared but the two were quickly teDUated. Bren sinaled home Wlltie Wi.tsoa from ICCOnd to pve the R.oYala a l..0 lead in the finL W itt hit Willoa with bis first pitdl of the pme before Kansas City outfiekkr stole hil eiablh bue of the season. BERLIN -Steffi Graf. a l 6-ycar-old E;3 West Oerman upset tos>eeeded Martina Navratilova 6-2, 6-3 to win the West German women's tournament Monday, Televiaion, rad.lo TELEVISION No events scheduled. RADIO , ..... lut<:Mr Pastor'• ltO.v" L.1-4 s • s 3 2 I The Indians, who bad lost nine out of 10 pmes aft.er tiinain& 10 straight, took a _..2 lead with three runs in the third. Hall bad a run~scorina double and Carter a tw<Hun llJll)c, keyina s • o the rally. ~ ~ ~ Hall ICOred his third run of the Kansas City added three nm.a in lk fourth. Frank While Jed off'tbe . • her fourth suai&ht to'= victory in a row. "Graf, the Ro. 2 oomplet.ely dominated the 4:30 p.m. -BASEBAU: Angels at BaJti- more, KMPC (710). 1-l I , ...... lrown 41 -3 t 4 • 1 2 match with puniahina forehands and accurate passing shots that zipped put the American nearly every time she tried to oome to the net on the clay court. 7:30 p.m. -BASEBAU: Montreal at Dodgen., KABC (790). Lollw 2 31102 Crewford 1 J--l I I 0 0 2 s.mo!IOW,1-0 I 0 0 0 0 0 HI~ (11'1 ll. O.vlll. Umolltt llome, Mornloll, Ant, MdC-; 5-ld, Clw11; Third, Shuloc::k. T-3:10. A-11,G. Celtics sit back, wait for opposition Boston· s drive for NBA crown has to wait for Houston. LA BOSTON (AP) -It took the Boston Celtics JUSt six days to destroy Milwaukee. On the seventh day, they rested. The powerful team favored to become kings of the basketball world. took Monday off after k.nockina the Bucks out of tbe NBA playoffs in four straiabt pmes with a 11 t-98 victory Sunday that ended the Eutern Conference finals. The Celtics won't return to practice until Wednesday mo.min& and may not know the identity of their opponent in the championship fin.ah until Sunday. Leadina 3-t, Houston can pin the Western Confcreoce berth by beatin& the defendina cham- pion Laken in Los An,eles Wednesday nighL If necessary, games will be played in Houston Friday night and Los Angeles Monda).'- "A seven-game series will 4ive us the best opponent," Boston forward Kevin McHale said. "That's a long enouah series to determine which is the better team. If tlte Lakers arc the better team. they'll be able to come back." The fint two games of the final round, both in Boston, will be May 26 and 29 if the Lakers- Rockets series ends by Friday, or May 29 and June I if it ends Sunday. Boston Coach K.C. Jones and guard Danny Ainge said they had no preference for an opponent Houston, with Akeem Olajuwon and Ralph Sampson, is better equipped to handle Boston's offense, which revolves around the inside abiUties of McHale, Larry Bird, Robert Pansh and Bill Walton. Los Anacles would provide a rematch of the past two title rounds, won Jwt&ston in 1984 and the Lakcrs last year. Boston was 2-0 apinst both teams in the regular ICaSOn, although Olajuwon did not play in one of the Rockets' pmcs and Sampson missed the sei:Ond half of the other with an inJury. At home, the Celtics have won 38 consecutive games and arc •7-J for the season. Their only loss was 121-103 to Ponland on Dec. 6, nearly S'h montbsaao. Still, the Rockets arc "scary," Ainge said. "They have all these young guys, all these athletes with great bodies and they don't know any better, so they're not scared," be said. "1 lcnow the fans would rather have us play the Lakers, but I don't care. "You get that championship ring and it doesn't say on the side who xou beat. It just says you're the world champions.' pme in the fifth when be &illJled, moved to 1CCOnd on Jacoby's sinaJe and came home oo Bando's sin&Je. The Blue Jays bad made it 4-3 in the fourth on an RBJ single by Dama.so Garcia and S-4 in the eighth on Cliff Johnson's fifth homer. * CUV.L.AMD TOllONTO Nixon cf lerlllJ'dft FrMCOH TI!mtndrl ~H luttwcf T...,111 Cw1wl1 ~>ti lefldoc: ~c T...a ., ..... s 0 1 0 G9rc:l9 2t> 4 0 0 0 MoMCI¥ cf s I 1 0 Mulnk• lb 4 I 1 0 Grubw Pll 4 J 4 1 UPINw lb 0 I 00 W N • 0 1 0 lerlleld 11 s 0 2 l .JOfmll dtl J020 WNttc 3012 FWMd'IU 0 0 0 0 J7 61J 6 T .... ._.....,.,..... .. , ..... s 0 I I s 0, 0 l I 0 0 I 0 0 0 • I 0 0 4 0, 2 • I I 0 l I 2 I '0 I 0 4 0 2 0 J7 4114 ~ '" ... ··-· T...... -1• t11-4 Gwne W1M111e •11 -c.rttr m. E-M. H9I. OP-Toromo I L~ 12, TorOlllO t ,._...., M.. H .. , Ftt'MllCML »-M. H ... Hlt-.JoMIOll (S) SI MDI'°"' !121. luttw <ti. s-e.ni.1wd • H ••• USO ~ PNlekro W,l·l • 10 4 • 3 • ldMS.l I 1 0 0 0 I T ...... Sti.L..N 1 10 s s • Ac:Mr 2 l I I 2 PHIMlro Plldled to 1 1>1111., In Ille tm HIP....TMller (bv Stelb) Umcllre.-+tom., G..-c:I•, Finl, Kote, Sec:oftcl, lteed; l'l*d, Ford. T-1:4'. A-21.202. 'th · It, w· tDDml W1 h11 10urth bome run. rtt then walked tbme of the next four benen to loed the bues and Wilson fono..ed with a rwo.ru.o linlle. Pete lncavialia aoored the ~ first run in the fourth on Texas' first hi1 with ruseiahth homer. * KAMIASCITY Wlltoll c:t Umlllllf U-rf uwrf Brett )ti Wtllle 2b Ori• dll_ MctlMdft 8elllonl 21> Sundl>r• c AS.19.rr u T .... ., ..... l 1 1 , l 1 1 0 00 00 S 0 I 1 • 0 2, 5 I 1 I 2 1 0 0 2 0 1 0 s 0 1 0 • 1 0 0 l 1 I 0 McOwllc:f Wwdll oerlell 11> ll\CVtllle 11 LA'""" dtl Por'IWc: Herrllfla luec:HeJb WlllrwlU GW"llM llfl l6 6' 6 T .... ._....,.,..... .., ..... • 0 0. 4 I I I 3 I. 0 '2 3 2 ' 0 1 1 JOIO JO •• • 0. 0 l 0 •• I 0 0 0 • 4. 4 ~·atv --..... T--Mil,.._. G.me WIMlnl ltll -l"9tt CS>. L09-f<-Cllv n. Te-. s. 2&-lncnltlla Hit-Wiii .. W , IM:a~ (8), W•rd (2) S6-WIMn Ct), La.. PwTWI (I), • " ..... to ~·Qty Gul>lcn w .2-• • • J 3 J • F•rr S.l l 2 1 1 0 4 TH.H I Win L.,2·3 • • 4 ' • , It Wrl9fll 12·3 • 2 1 1 0 "'91'11W 11-l 1 0 • 0 1 HI~ (by I Wlft). ~ J. ~. Md:ov. Finl, SColt, 5ec'- Olld, W .. •; Third, '""llllpa T->:07 A-2UOO CUSTOM QUALITY SHUTTERS I Hawaiian Traditionals Let the sun shine lnl Capture the extra hours of daylight with moveable custom shutters . . . In sizes & colors to flt your lifestyle. AT FACTORY DIRECT PRICES! Call (714) 548-6841 548-1717 Designed • Finished • Installed • Established 1953 1977 Placentia Costa Mesa I Come in and see our new Reyn Spooner Corner for men & ladies. Westcliff Plaza 17th & Irvine~ venue Newport Beach 645-0792 ' \ . -... L.aMUll sJAMCl•S 8o6ton New Von .. ltlmote Mllweull" Clevelend Detroit TorOl'llO .............. WUT~ W L"" M 20 17 ..541 lt lt .500 I~ ll II SCIO 1~ 11 1• •n 2~ IS 20 .nt • ,. 24 ,,.. '"" 1• 24 ,.. ·~ •AST DtvtSIOM t • 1) .... 2:) 1• '22 1 20 IS .571 3 It 1' ,SC) ' 1• 11 .m ,.., 16 11 .471 ·~ 17 21 .447 7~ MIMaY'• SCiwet .,..,... 11 a.ttl,,,_., OPCI .. reh1 Clevetelld 6. Torot1to ' laottOl'I I. Mtl\NtOll 7 K•nH• Cllv '· Tt11aa • Onlv 9"rnff acn.ctuled TMllY't ~ A.-a (McCaaklH 2·ll et B•lllmore (loddklklf" 4·01, n Oeitlend (Vouno 1·0) e l N.... Vork IGulclf'V •·2). n S..llte (Mclof'e 2·•1 e t Detroit (T«,..- 4·11. n. MlnnetOI• (Viola •·3) •t BoJton (Clement 6•0), n Toronto <Cttulll 0--0) at Cnlcego (Oa1111 1-1), n KenMs Cllv IL-rd •·31 el Tuas (Melotl 3-0l, n Cleveland (Schrom 3·1) at MltweukM (Ntevfl 3-11, n W1•1 8Y'a ~ A...is at Balllmore. n 0.kland el New V(l(ll, n S..111• et Detroit, n Mlnnnole at BoatOl'I, n TorOl'llO •• Chicago, n Kansas City at Texas, n Clellelend al Mltwaul<M, n Hou'1on ,._,..,... LMtiUe WHT DtVlSIOH W L f"<t. <#a ,, 14 600 San Fr1ncl1co Atlenta 22 IS .595 11 " soo 3'h San Dleoo ~ Clnclnnell II II SOO 31"1 II 20 474 ..... II 22 333 9 EAST DIVISION 23 9 719 21 13 .611 3 . . .. . . . . " ..... IUtleOAY'S IT..,.. ~UP (Orlwr, llOINto-. Qr ,.,,,..,, dluala .... Md _,..... • .,.,... .... tk:altoft ...-111 m1M ... "'°"' (llH·~le). ... , I. lllldl Meen, tellenlleld, No.A, MllctrCotW«ttl, 216.8. t. OeMY Sullivan, Louliv ... Kv .. No. t, IN«:rl-CO.wwttl, 215a2.. l. M6cflael ~ Netartftl, ~L. No, ... ~worth. 214..122 •-1 ... lotlbY .eflel. Dulblln, Otllo, No. ), Mlldl-CO.wwttl. 213.150. ~ Al u-. AlbuQl.lwciut, No. 11, P9nllle-~. tlutS. 6. Ktvlll Coelll. llledondo IMcll, No. 1, Merc:h-Cot*Ol'ltl, 211.'22. ... J 7. Tom S..V•. PwedlM VellteV, Arla., No. 33, Men:tl-Cotworltl, 211.171. .. 111-.no ~"°· Co6onlO&e. No s. Merdt<oiwontl, 211.576. t. Al ~ Jf.. AlbuQuerciu., No. 30 Lole·Coswor1t1. 211.S». .... 10. Ed Plmm, Dubltl, Olllo, No. "· Mar'dt•Cot~, 2\G..174.. 11 ErNnOn Fltl~. Breall, No 40, Merdl·Coswor"'· tl0.237. 12. Jotwlv lllutfl«ford, Fort Worth, No.. ti, Merctt-Coewortfl, 21o.no. ... s 13. IHtendv Lanier, Oevle, Fie., No. 12, Merdl·Cosworth, 20t."4. 14.. Pandlo C.rter, Brownsburo, tno.. No. lS, Loll-Cosworth, 20UU IS. lll·Rober1o Mor-. Brun. No. t , LOll·Coswortll, 20U6'. ·-· 16. R·~ Vlllneuve, c.neoe, No II. Mardl-Coswortll, 209.3'7. 17. DIMV Oneel$, Sanft Ane, No. 2.S. Merch·Buldl, 20t.1SI, II. Josale Gene, M111lco. No. SS, Mercn-Cosworfll, lOl-nt. •-1 19. Tonv hltenlleuMn, lndlalloaoolla, No I•. Marctl-Cosworttl, 20Ul3. 20. Arie Luv.ndYk, Hollend, No. 61, Lole·Cosworltl, 207.111. 21. Oennla FlrHI-, ~. No. 3', LOlll·Cosworth, 207.A71. .... 2:2. G.otf Brebtlem, Au1trall1, No. I, Lole-Coawortfl, 207.0l2. 23. AJ. Fovt, Houitoll, No 14, Marefl· Cosworth, 21l.212. 24.. Raul BotMI, llreill, No. n, Lola· Cosworth, 211.202. ._, u .... , .... Martlna l'faYratllo•a bmiee ber face. after ~ apeet by Stem Graf lD Berlin toarnament flnala. w ..... .......... , ...... , s..... ...... Steffi Grat (WWI Gemwnvl dlf. Mertine Nevratllov• (U.S.), 6-2, 6-3 (Gret wlm Ut,000, Newetllova wlM t\3,000). """KM9I Cll' INDfV10UAL TOUaNAMllNT ( .. ~ llmdl T_. CM) ....... 1 .. (l''*Y'S 1 IM'\. ,...., s..... Jeff Ter•neo (Mini Costa> "' Tonv Bulon Undlol DUIPII "AC·• au •••uws C• Ute> U 1 ..... ""' .. ,... °"' ~ heeh: .... , 1-\. Mltl..e 111-. ~. 10.71; t. ,....,. o.-. Gel, n.l211.11na1 Mllrtrl, w~ st., 11.11. Meet 1-1. Jev Thoraon. Stlllford, 1u1i 2. si.ve Lucis. WetNnttoti SI .. ll,75: >. Mtltt OoN-., '°""*'" c.t. 11M. Heel )-1. Cll1M OernMtle, W..,._IOll St .. 10.n, 2. Jim ~. UCLA, \I.IS. L.ont ~. SNrtev. , ........ t.111-. tH, ). G#TIMtte, D • 10, '-OeeMr, tMO; S. CoMollv. tt_.14; 6. TllorlOft, 22-S\4; 7. 0.ft Colllna. OrNOn St . 21·4; I. Lucas, 20-10~. (Gonules fouled lflrM lumM eM wlttwlr-). snot py~l. lllemot, •-1-\4; 2. Gam- bttte. "•l .... ; 3.. ConnollY. 44-lV.; '- T'*10ft. )9-10; S. SIWllY, Jt-7V.; 6. o.en-. •s; 1. c~. 11-.-; a. Lucn. )6-.3, Hletl !Ume>-1. lllemos, 7·1, 2. (lie) LUCU alld Connolv. ,_ 10¥, • Shlrlev. ,.,...,, S. Gembllte, •·7; 6. TllorsOn, H ; 7. Coltlns, '°111•; I. 0.0-, H . 400-metw ,_,.: Helt 1--1. Deener. 4'.64; 2. ConnollV. 49.tt, 1 Codins, SUt; 4 Lucei, U ll. Heat 7-1 Shlnlv, 4UO; 2 Gembettt, .,.Jl; ' Thorson. 4t.53, S ...,_, 50.16.. Fl.,._._! K:Ol'91-lll-. 4,349; Gam· 111tte. •.110; Shlrtev, •.m , Connoll'I'. •.013; Thc>non, 3,IOS; Deener. 3,711: Luces, 3.531; CoNlna, 2,"9; Gona.ie. wlllldl'-. N•w York MontrMI Ptilladlle>l'lla Plllaburoll Chlceoo " It .,. 9 ..... 25. Scott Brevton, Coldwel«, Mich., No. Oeve Bier (MlfelHl•l 'f1,. Eric P9ui (Sent• Berl:Nlral SteYe OllY9r (Celebuaal "'-Eric Kode (Coronel 13 " '" 911) 11. Merdl·Bu!G, 10l.079. 14 20 '12 10 SI Louis 13 20 .39• 10'n 26. llt·F'tlN K~. lndlenepolfs . No. 42, 191S Merdl-Cosworth, 207.M . Ed P9revrlno (Wt1larnl n . OoUO EIMn· men (FOPIM) Mll*Y's Scer'9\ No IMln'll\ Klleduled Tldl't's Genwt 27. Clllp Genenl, PlttsOur'Vtl, P.., No. 59, Merdl·Cosworth, 207 .SfO. ._,. Steve Wier• (Celel>ea.U) VL J~ Ger· de (LA 5eme) Mon,,..,, (Smllll 3·2) •• o.-n (Veten1uela S·21 n a. Jim Crawford, Sco111nc1. No. 31. Merdl·Bulck, 10Lt11. 9111 '1Nl9I': (Santi &wlllr•) vs. Gerv Pelrane (Minion Vlelo) Merk HenMn (Mlralest1I vs. Dan Turbow (FOOlhlH) BOXING (et,.1' .... ) MIDOLEWEIGHtl. -MlcllMt Nunn (Sherman O.lla) KO'll' FellPI Vace !Mex· tco), third round. ll'.4&/M Is now IS-0. Veca Chic.go 15'.llctltte 1·61 11 Atlente (Palmer 2·2), n COLLIEGIE NCAA•"4fl WU'T R•GtOMAU CTilwMIY et UCL.A) .......... 2'. llUc:h vooi.r. lndleneoolla, No. 6, Merdl·Cosworth, 208.0lt. AleK llelctltl (Los Attosl va ~ .,.... (C-... Mtl) Clnclnnell (Gulllclr.M>n 2·l l 11 St Loul\ (Conrov 2·21. n 30. JoMnv Penom, BrowMburo, llld., No. ts, Mardl-Coswortll, 207..,• ~ Sdwnldtc:Mn·Heu (Senl• Bartleral "' a1--wum tlJMnd> Is •13·3). ' ·1 ... Pllllbut'Oll ll(lpper 0-3) •' H~ton (Rven >-SI. n lhwll 31. Gerv IMttenl\euMfl, Monrovia, Ind .. '"'-lledelPlll• !K Gross 3·3) at San Oleoo (Show 2·2), n II e.m.-l.ovole Mervmounl ('5-12) ~ UC Senta Bart>we (44· 17) No. u. Mardl<oiwwttl, 209.756. l2. ~ Snider, Baltersfleld, No. 8', Merdl•COlwortfl, 20f,025. Gleu·Hencock (Foothill) o D•nenfllulr·SMotlort (Sen Merino) AIMtt·D. --. t•-> "'· Rob«t$· Maidlrenkaa (hvertv Hlllsl N-York (Oleaa S· ll 11 San FranclKO ( LaCoss 4·0). n 3:30 p.m.--(JCLA (19·211 vs. Hew1ll (41·21 ) 33. K·MM'lo ~Ill, Nuere111, P. .. No. 2, LOle<osworltl, 212.JOO. w ..... v-.~ MonlrH I at Oedllln. n New Yorll •• San FranclKO Chtc.eoo •• Allenta n Clnclnnetl ., SI LOUii n P11t\buron et Houston. n Plllladlll>hla e t San Diego n Ja~son "''''°" JOVM!' 8urlnon Downing Wiifong SCl'IOfle!d Grich Hendrick JoMs 0.Clnc:n Pettis Boone Miiier Tet.b Aneel • .,., .... IAT'TING Al It H Hit 931130 7 " 3 s 0 ISl lO 49 1S '7 1227' 171 26 39 s 91 13 ,. 2 .. 10 2• 4 SS 6 IS 2 67 • 17 s " 2• 22 2 139 IS Ji S 11• 12 ,. 2 10S 17 23 2 ll 4 s 0 lliU 1'4 341 51 l"t'TCHING ltBI ~ct. 11 m 3 .313 37 317 9 310 22 lO? 13 2t6 II 279 • 2n 11 25' ,, 247 21 237 II 214 • .21' 1 132 113 .:Mt • " •B so W·LERA Corbell 23•1') lS 6 11 O•O 2 10 Wiii S"'1 5' 19 41 3· 3 2.71 SlalOl'I 49'\') S2 I• 21 4·7 3 tt McCHklll .. .. 11 40 2-3 4. II Romank:I< u '2 11 22 3-1 4.70 Moor• IS 11 1 11 1·2 4.79 Forster 14'"> 16 5 10 J· I S.03 llrvdln 22'"> 23 IS 11 2· I 6.04 Sulton 37\'J 46 I 21 2-3 6 '4 ForKh 12'"> 19 6 9 0-1 10.21 C•nclelerte 2 ' I 0 0-0 11 00 T.-. J»tl) UO 111 210 »·11 U l Sevn : Moore 6, Cor~ll •. Forach I MAJOR L•AGUE LEADERS AIMl1clNI ~ .... ,,.. .. , ScMdllle 11 • m. and 3:30 o.m. gemM. SetwdllY'• ~ 11 e m elld 3:30 PJT\. oen'lft. SUMIY'a~ I P.m . oame (N MCMMIN). (TM WlllMI' of tM toumement wlM ouellfv tor the Colle99 World Serie• a t Oma,,., Netlresb.) C•NT1lAL 1t•GtONAU ('TlMwMIY et A"'*< TH.) ""'.__. Nooo P1pp •dine (35"-lt-2) v~ Pan A,..lcen (41·171 3 pm.-S.n Diego State <•2·21·1> "' Arl1ona (4I·121 7:30 o.m -SOuthern IHlnols (39·20-2) v' f ellas (49·12). MIDWEST 1t•GtONALS t~ et s.weter, Otl:la.l l'lm .... Olllahoma Slete U0-13> n . Richmond (24·2') . Stenioro (3S-21) "'-A-lact\ten St (.0-11) Arlr.enaaa (42· ISl v,. Oreoon St. (37· 131 C-.. Teo 20 .... Id-' I FlorkSe Stata 2 Loulalane State 3 Mlemt (FIOrlcSe) 4.. Oklat!Ome Stele s. Texaa 6 Mk:lll!Mln 7. SOUth Florida I. Lovole·Mervmount 9 UC Senta Barbera 10 UCL.A 11 OllllllOme 12. Te111s UM 13. Sen DleoO Stat• I•. Stenford IS. Arl1one 16 Hewell ·~ 53-11 50-11 C:HS 50-13 49·12 47·10 S0· 14 •S·l1 44·17 39-21 43-lt '4·21 AV«eee tor 33 cauellf1en -lllecord 210.39 mph tever.oe In 1915 -20l.lll). c·Andrettl CIU9llfled flflll but cer demeo· ecS In ~t cru.11 In !M'ectlc:e end bKkuP klbllltutecl tor reoe. NHL f'LAYOfl" SIMl9Y o...--. ,..., .. ._, ~n.Mm*wf CalOarY S, MonlrMI 2 MonlrMI 3, C.loerv 2 (OI) (5-lft tied, 1-1) TOl'llof\t-Calolrv at Montreet Thut'tde~•loerv et MontrHI Salurde...-Montrul et C.IOarY Monde~l9WV et MontrMI (If MCHMrv) WednndeY, MeV ~!real e t C.loerv <N necnsarv> """ lcMlll .... Cll' TaAM l'INAU Po-Shen (MlrelMlel Vl. Llneflan· Tredenlllck (P9ioa V«dn) seton-llutlln ( lt¥ef1V Hiib) vs Miltln ·I. ........ (U..--..0) KoOolct-Lin t UPlendl vs. B. P9us • ~· (Sent• a.rtleral Imel-Hunt (South Torrence) v\ Sem· mon-Glede !El OorlOol Alclle·Dentson (c.t>lstr1no \lelllY) "'- Fll1petrldt·LanoteV (Mlralesttl. Note: FrldllV'a ~ltlon al'° lndudea ~; Semlflnell end ftnals Wiii be Pleved Seturdev. beOIM!no 11 10 a.m NBA ltLAYOflftS c. ....... .... , ...... _, WHTWltN CONl'•lll•NCI: LMWln......_ Lakin I It, Houstoll l07 Howton 112, L•ken 102 HOUSIOl'I 117, Liken I°' Houston IOS, Let.en tS (Houston IMd$ w in , 3-ll Wednesday -HOUiton et Liken. l:JO Pm. Friday -Llklf"S at Houlton, TBA (It neceuerv> MGN!ev -Houston at Llllen. noon (It -rvl IASTaltN CONl'•W•NU MefldaV'I traMac:tlelll 9 AHaALL .......... u... ATLANTA 8RAVE$-f'teced C~udlll WaahlnotOl'I, outflelder, on the lS-dev dis· el>led Nal c:.lled uo G«eld Pwrv. ftral l:IH•man-oulfleldW. from Richmond ot the lnl«nellonel LM9UI. l'OO'TaAU ....._.F ..... LM91M GREEN llAY PACKERs--41 .... Md Rich w1nvo. ltne«>edler. INDIANAPOLIS COL TS-Treded Jim Mlh, ladde, to IM Denver Broncos lor • dr lft cllolC9. NEW ORLEANS SAINTs-<ut Tvr- Antllonv, runnlnll lllck NEW YOlllK .JETS-Trad9d Menln Powel, lacltle, to the Tarnoa Bev Buc- ce,_a tor • 1"7 llof\th-round drift Pldl. ST. LOUIS CA.ROINAL$-$1enecS Victor llurnell end MldlMI Wiiis, defensive end\, Si.ve L4She end Trov Slonec:ek, llOM IKlllll, Oennv Miiier, Pl9ce-klck«, Merit MlchNll, Oerren Wlti.ctle end Stacy Price, Rllllbe<:kers, Oevld Wlbon. Wede Loekatt, Tllomll Brown end Tim O'Bvrne, wide rece!V«s, Broderick Seroenl, runnlno lllek, Rldlerd Sii«, t!oht end, Eric Mex· IOft, .-.-ive tedlle, Jemes Newton, di· lenilVI bedt, Ind K9Vk'I Miiier\, wide rec:elver·dlfln\lve l>edl--rterl:Nlck SAN DIEGO CHARGEll$-$1enecS Darvt DlckeV, QUlrterl>KA, John Kntotit, Nnebeclr.lf", PNI Perlter, aatetv, Hep Pellf"son, noM i.dlil, end Joe Smllll, wide rectlver 10 1r...-eoen1 c:ontrects. HOCKIY .............. LAlltllll ( Tilrwlll ,.,..,. GMwl) BATTING (71 at 1>et1)-Yount, MU· weulr.M, .371; BooP. ~ton • .363, Puctlltt, Mlnnnote, 3'0, PtlllllPS, 0.lllend. .3C2; Melllnotv. New Vork . .340 11 Alebemll II ArkanMa " MelM 20. ~Cline 42·21·1 3S-21 41-11 41·21 '1· 11 '2·1S ll·21 35"-19•2 (at I.A Olmllre cc, s.119 ..,..,.. ) I. W91lleke, 316; 2. E-enre, 39S; 3 LO\ Altos, m .... Lone Beedl wn.on. 391; s.. ttlel Aoour•. Dem.left, .00; 7. Cetlf'lllo, 404.. ..... "' ....... &otton 121, Mllw•ull" M &otton 121, MllwltUl!ee 111 Boston Ill, MllweullM 107 &Olton 111, MllweukM 91 llloJton wlm .., .... 4..0) IA• tlmn POT). MINNESOTA NOtllTH STAlltS-Treded Tom McCerttiv, left wino, lo Ille 8ostOl'I llrulna tor e .-id·end lhlrd·round Mlle· tlon In tile entrv nft. ~•o• NOttTHEASTER~emed Ken Foeel men's 111\lllttlell coed\. ROZELLE • • • From Bl still had one game. the Sugar Bowl, left 10 his college career. The questioning about the fra nchise moves elicited the most emotional response in Rozelle's three days of testimony. Most of his answers dunng that time were gj vcn 1n even, sometimes subdued tones. But when Myerson suggested to him that he had promised a franchise to New York m return for that city's keeping the tJSFL New Jersey Gen- erals out of town, Rozelle was visibly angered. "If anyone said that. they are lym~ because I never said that to anyone, · be said, Jabbing h1'i finger 1n Myerson's d1rcct1on Myerson rephcd, "So 1f the gov- ernor of the sLatc of Ne w York or Mr. (Vincent) Tese of tilt Municipal Development Author11y were to tes- tify that they were promised an expansion franchise . ·~ He was then interrupted by Rothman, who objected 10 Myerson 's su~cstmg what other witnesses m1 t say. Rothman's obJcct1on was up eld by U.S. Dlstnct Judge Peter Leisure, who admonished Myerson about sUltements he said were preJu· dicial Andretti finds himself in a pickle He's in a spot (No. 33) which has never produced a winner INDIANAPOLIS (AP) -Mario Andretti's wrecked race car can't be repaired in time for Sunday's Indianapolis 500. and the frustrated former champion will stan his backup car from dead last in the 33-car lineup, a position that never has produced a winner. Andretti bad practiced in his primary Lola- Cosworth race car at nearly 21 5 mph and qualified it at 212.300, which would have &iveo him a second-row start. But he crashed the car in practice last week and the dama&es were too severe for the car to be fixed. Andretti was in Milwaukee to test another car for the next race on the lndy-<:ar series when the announcement of the substitution was made Monday. Team spokesman Michael Knight said Andrctu was "certainly disappointed. However. under the circumstances, there is no other alternative." U.S. Auto Oub rules stipulate that when a car or driver is substituted, the replacement must start at the rear of the field. It will be the third time in 21 swu at Indy that Andretti bas had to bqio at the beck. Both {>rtvious times. however, it was because another dnver aual.ifiod in his place while he competed in Formula One races in Europe. The last time a substitute car was moved to the back because of a crash in ~ce was in 1980, when Tom Sncva wrecked his already qualified car and had to drive another one in the race. Sneva eventually worked his way from 33rd to ftrst place in that raoe before finishing second. Andrctti, who won the raoc in 1969, also finished second after starting 32nd in 1981 and second after starting fourth last year. The farthest back a winner bas ever started from is 28th, by Ray Harroun in the first 500 in 1911 and by Louis Meyer in 1936. "Now it's just a matter of waiting to sec what happens at the start of the raoe. You can't plan strategy for it," said Knight "You just have to take your best shot and try and move up." Andrctti, 46, who has crashed a record five times during the running of the race, suffered a cut to bis left foot and bruises to both knees during last week's crash against the third-tum wall in practice. "His physical condition is improving every day. Tbe sweflina in his lmeea bas subsided and his soreness is improvioa." K.ni&ht said. "He told me he anticipates no problem whatsoever for Sunday's race." Kni&ht said that Andretti's crew oriainally aslCSICd the cSamaae to the car as teVere and not liketr, repeirable. 'But the decision was made that bccautc of OCEAN VIEW'S OVERTURF Prom B l Trojans at the present on a aolf ICholanhip. Overturf bas been swinaina away since she was et&hl yean ord. but lhe didn't take golf seriously until the was 14. "One day my dad came home and said there was a tournament that I lhould enter," she says. .. It wu a junior sirls tournament. "After that I became very mte:rest.cd and swted playina aJmO&t everyday." 0'1enurf says there a.re IOme other sir's out there playine-ex>mpc:titivcly wtth the boyw.. appromnatdy 20 throuabout Soutbem California. "Problbly the best aitt I face in this area tJ Amy FnahWirth (Cypress ; Hiah)." she Al!· ... We have a little rivalry, but we re fiiends. too." Overturf'• best 18-bole round IS I 74. She plays vtty well on longer CX>Ul"lel. acoordina to ElJennan. 0 She's a calm., Itron& hit1er, somo- wbere in the 230. 24().yard rup, •• be says. "She is a Vf:l'Y ddennincd compctit.Ot ud doesn't t.ct down." For her su.nunet ICbedule, Overturf plans on Dla)'ina more jwuor tour- naments. lief idol, Staq, was Junior Girls national champ for for thru •lfliaht yean (1969--71 ). Tbat'a IOCDdhina 10 shoot for. But even if the &boo.kt fall abort of that, abe can lti.O 1boo1 down the boys for two m<>ft yeara. the difference in starting positions from fifth to 33rd, they would make an attempt to sec if the car could be repaired." he said. The backup car, also a Lola-Coswortb, was driven by Andrctti in practice at above 210 mph. "This is not something I'm lookinJ forward to, but there is no alternative," Andrcttl said in a prepaR<l statement released by Kn.iabt "For- tunately, I bad some practice time in the beckup car before the accident, and we were able to work on a·ntcc setup during practice last weekend." The first four qualifiers, headed by two-time winner Rick Mean at a record 216.828 mpb four- lap ave~, were unchanged by Monday's move. Last years winner, Danny Sulllvao, will stan 1COOnd with Andrctti's 23-year.ald son. Michael, in the third Sl)Ot on the outside of the front row. Bobby Rabal will start fourth, on the inside of the second row. Three-time winner Al Unser and veteran Kevin Copn moved up to fifth and sixth, completing lhe new ICOOod row. Sneva. Roberto Guerrero and Al Unser Jr. make up the revised lhird row. Aildrctti will start on the outside of the 11th row. aext to final_qualifiersGary Bettenhausen and Georae Snider. The three veterans sLUtina on the lut ~w have a combined 54 years of Indy SOO eitpenenoe. Redskins' Dean gets physical He's charged wtth assaulting cop after fight with fiance FAIRFAX, VL (AP) -Wahins· ton Recbkin1 defensive beck Vernon Dean WU arrested after be .... Wied b.i1 fianoc in the lobby of a poUcc station and then <ouabt with police offioers trvina to ex>ntrol hiro. police said Monday. "It took three officcn ~iaa with him to subdue him." fumi County police spokesman Wamm Cannichael taid Dean was charaed with usaultina a P9lice officer and d.rivina with • suspended lioense a.od relealed OD $500 personal bond aft.er the Friday ni&ht mclec in a suburban Vifsioii polioc station, Carmichael said Dean suffered a chipped tooth in the melee, but refused medical UUt· ment. Carmichael said. The fight took plaoe after an officer who separated the arsuina couple drove Dean's girlfriend to a polioe station a.od the four-year National Football League veteran followed in his car, according to Carmichael. Dean, 27. was the Redskins' first draft pick in the 1932, taken in the second round out of San Diego State. As a comerback. he was named to the All-Rookie fint team by the Pro Football Writers Association and second to Oeveland's Chi~nks in balloting for Associated NFL Defcnsjve Player of the Year as a rookie. Since then, be has staned sporadi· cally and played as the Redskins' 6.f\b back on defense, intercepting five passes last year. Carmichael said the first repon of Dean's argument with the 24-year· old southeast Wasbioaton woman. whose identity was not released, came when a citizen reponed a woman screaming on Route 7. a commercial strip of Fairfu. The officer was told the woman wu Dean's fi.ance but that she refused to ride in the player's car, according to Carmichael, so the officer drove her to the police station in nearby Mclean to call a friend. DRUG ••• From Bl February arc subject to drug testing. Negotiations are now under way between management rcprcsenta· tives and the Major League P1ayen Association on a Ucbcrroth proposal for a non-punitive and confidential program aimed at detecting abuse of cocaine, marijuana. heTOin and morphine. Minor lcquc players and major lcquc personnel not covered by the players' union now arc subject to drug testing. Uebcrrotb said be was confident there soon would be a brcakt.hrouah in the negoLatioos with the playcn· union. He said the two sides arc cJote to an agreement but arc still bqgling over legal issues. "I've said that the baseball battle is virtually over with illegal drugs," Ucberroth said. "I say t.6at because everybody cares that it's over. Every- body is working hard to get it over. "There will be debate on the m~~ods to get to the g~, but the uruoo the owner, the media and the players most of all want this~ behind us and arc attaclcina tt." Uebcrroth also predicted baseball would be free of drug-scandals this year. TRIATHLON ham Bl involvement, wbkh consisted o( racing in l Ok events several times a year. "These two arc an example of a success story for the class," said Barbara Wright. mentionina Main- ville's recent win at the mini-triathlon in Irwindale (in the 4~9 • aroup> I and Curry's 1tlver medal finish in the same cvenL Mainville also finished 1 third (~9 age aroup) in the recent Lo~ &each Triathlon. "Id like to k.eep doing some mini· triathlons just because of their ben- efits to aood health and for the exercise," said Cuny. .. It was a aood class ... somethina new," said Ken Victorino of Foun- tain Valley just aft.er completina his I fintevertrtathlon ... But I could never become a runner, .. he added.. It was not all tbateasy, however for one unidentified competitor ~bo voiced this desoentina opinion while ru.nnina the track ponion: "This 11 not a happy race." 1(-lllCnnoue• 111• ...._l'HCT I rT I ) ---.. __ •r•--- 52.00 IN TERM ISS ION Sondheim show stellar songfest Stephen Sondheim, so the legend goes, aot bis first bad review at the age of I S from his neighbor -Oscar Hammerstein IL He hasn'tgottcm too many since. In fact, as NeiJ Simon bas been the king of Broadway comedy over the last quarter century, so Sondheim has been the reigning monarch on the musical side of the street. StartinJ in the late Fifties with "West Side Story," "Gypsy" and "A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum" and continuing throuf.! the current Pulitzer Prize winner, 'Sun- days in the Park With George," the prolific composer-lyricist bas become an American institution. Which is ~n enouab for the rettos~e revue "Side by Side by Sondheim," now sending audiences humming out oftbe Newpon Theater Arts Center. By selecting re~nta ti ve pieces of his work, including some numbers jettisoned during tryouts, the show is a testament to Sondheim's breadth, depth and im- agination. A company of two men and three women, all blessed with pleasant voices and a keen sense of show- manship, functions smoothly and slcilJfully under the tutelage of Beth Hansen, who handles both the stage and musical direction. Completing the attractive picture is the piano wizardry of Terence Alaric -who accompanies the first haJfof the show from memory. The performers -Josc1>h Jones, Kristine Sudderth, Liz Jones, Cindy Takeda and Michael Wren -aU are newcomen to the Newpon stage and each brings his or her own Oourisb of individuality to the ensemble. Liz Jones is a beautiful belter in the Judy Garland mold, Suddenh displays a more operatic tone, Joseph Jones takes the more dramatic stylings, Wren revels in the physical comedy and Takeda brin&S a cute, pixieisb quality to her multi-faceted per- formance. The opener -"Comedy Tonight" from "Forum" -is well chosen, one of the brightest curtain raisers in the musical theater. And immediately, RUFFELL rs lPHOLSTERY INC . M**** 'E.T.' meets' WarGames:" -Joe Gtt.11. NEWSOAY ·--... _ ~-· ·-··--, .... ,,........ Wit•• • *1•9lt.t ""-w- .... , ... .,ft ...... """ .... ... -.... -,,...._.._,~ ... --·--·---..... -. ::-, .. UOMI ...... ·~· = ,... :::.,•m,C1'"- -... --· , ..... o.... "' .• -·-·C>--.. go .. , _..,.. -· ~~~-· • _,_ __ ,,.. __ c-... n Toi TITUS British 'Mission· wins at Cannes CANNES, France (AP) -"The Mission" by Britain's Roland Joffe bas won the Golden Palm award for best film of the 39th Cannes Film Festival The prize was presented by Sydney Pollack., president of the 10-member jury. American Manin Scorccse won the P.rize for best director for his film, After Hours." Soviet exile Andre Tarkovslcy won the jury's special G rand Prix (or his film "Sacrifice," which was filmed in Sweden. "'SWEET LIBERTY' IS A SWEEIHEART OF A MOVIE." ' -O~nt Shain, ntE TODAY SHOW MIA UA•'ft •«121 .... ,. ,,,~ UA..,_ . ...., ltUCNAl'A- CotTA .... A ..... , .... c.... ~,~, .. tL TOI'() ,_.flltrt ,., tlOI l'ldfle I ...,_ ~ Orlft.M • 1-401t OWPl.AYING ---- ""'"1MOTOM 11/eCH .....,.. WLIO OMNCM , .... a..o.. l .... v,.1-....._Dr-• .. ,..,,. ...., .... ,,. I.A MAIM 9llWOllT MACt4 WUTlll'IMTl:tl AW.rllN!>ll,._ ,....,.__.~ l..,..C:.-._ •1ca ..._.,,_ •1.aa ~~ ~ ''"= UI l'W , ... ,,~i::n===~""'""I , SHOCKED! Wren's peppy "Buddy's Blues" and the Joseph Jones-Takeda duet "Bar- celona." "Side by Side by Sondheim" con- tinues throuah June 14 (Michael Grenie will replace Wren for the last weekend}, playina Fridays and Satur- days at 8 p.m. at the Theater Ans Center, 2SOI Oiff Drive, Newpon Bcacb. If you're a musicaJ theater lover, don •t hesitate -calJ 631--0288 for ticket information. 1"_ tr UlllTT llSllMCI -~ & Est. 1957 1~b 131-7740 s 441 otd .... ~ 91\od. .... ~....._c .. ~~· SHOWS T 1:41. 1:45 7 Academy Award'• OUT Of' Al'•ecA .. ) SHOWS AT 1:11 & t :)O ~s~r.J 1:10 l :eO & tO: tO SHCMrT' C.curT t':I SHOWS AT 1:10 :2 l :JO 7 :40 & tO:OI ..... """~ 3:10 7:41 elue Cl 1i (" 2:00 1:11 • t : I .. KTTY ....... K r:aa•• 1: & t :OO ·~.., ...... It l :lO /f'ollce Academy 111 (PG) at l :lO TOf'eUM ... \ ettOWS AT 12:1' :40 l :Ol 7:JO & t :IS M»»DNIC••r.J SHOWS AT 1:40 : I 1 :45 7 :10 .. 10:00 T .. ~"fr ... ) 1:11J:ll1:11 7:11 & t :IS 1011 r u• ~Jfl~[)fl[)( GAME VIMf OUll H.--..- U I UlOlll """1"11 DOUY l1ll90 TOM CllUlll TOP OUN <NII .... a. ...... 1 .. . .... wtnt ......... .,, 11:41 .... l:U ILUI CITY (II llUedl lMS MSOlun .. .,. ,,...,l ,,. ........ NITTI' IN fllNI( pie.U) Mledlll• camta pie.u1 ,,,.. ...... Wiii OUYl111 ..... u '"" lAKEWO ( f'nff'• Sou th !Zllll:M 1111/hollJ II 014 AM• OITT1NO IVIN 111 .... _.. .... , ...... 11 ... MO 1111MT, MO --!NI , .......... DANOHOUIL Y CLOll tll> ...... 1.u ANAHEIM !lU)tJ! !Milne I ft. fe t.-n XA.IOiO IN""' !ICMrf•" GITTING IVIN ..i NAT •ott DUTM .., '. ~' lllOllT. 2.•-··-.... a. Mf 1111 DUil T CLOll 11t 1. ,_WITH, •• .,.., .. 2. MGMT "' ,_. a. JOY Of llX • ORANGE ~· -~ 9Qllm.-~ °"""" WMONMI .. ITWIWll - IMotlT CtlCUfT 1N1 tlON uou ..... DOUT~ TOM QUiit TOP OUN t"11 .... a. ........... . MAH .... AT CLOll llAHOl (I) 1trU aM JtU 71M 1•u 'lllTTY IN "NK "°UI '" ........ LUCAl.,..111 Ml ... , .... OUNO HOt '"'111 , ........... ..ol.ICI ACADIMY ~t IACK IN TRAINING INl a.u 7llJ '" .. llUI CITY Cit 111• .. •1• Wiii OUYl lll Ma ........ ...... N'fel JO JO NNCft. YOUI Llfl II CALL ... .. M001• .... 1111t MMMM swan L18111TY ,.. TWKI IN A L""1MI Ill 9"0IT WMllOa 1111t TtOLL,.ta loH AB~A , .. t:1.1J ·.~-, llWI ... ,. "'°"' '*"" .... lllON IMU ,._,., STADIUm a Ill 1171/llf!r!M ,,,.. S!d!!!M s _...,.WAllalOM 0V,..._tC..+4tt roM (ll'0•1 J) ..mrT LWRTY ..,_, Plut Co-Hit Tw Ice In A L ifetime (,_) c•rnw..IM-•at AIH Sltowlnl a1ue City C" IO~ DAllC:Sa Cit) UI Co-Hit Janed Cd" I") ..-aOVT• _,,..LY~\ Tit• Color~,. .. ( ·1 ) ........ " ~., ........... to U'll uture (~G) NJ!M MM SWiil LlllllTY '"" 1'1141tt ..... lt IO•• Sl'MAn VACATION (I) , .. a.a ...... 1111$ JO JO DANCll, You• un II CALLING fll ...... ,. WITNlll 111 """" , ... .... WI™ .... ,...u, "" ..... .. NO lllTUAl, NO suatllNDU '"" llU 71U lltU VIOi.ili Altl ILUI ,...,., 4111- TMI COlott PUtlf'll1,..u1 ........... LA.IT ••son DOWN AND OUT IN llVllLl Ht\Lt flt " •• 1UCI ...... swo ••'91R "TWM''(N) •••••. 111! ..•• ,. ···swnT L*ltl" (PC) ntt.• .... , .... UctUSM~lfl "IESHT llUITS" (I) ue HS US .... ,. u.u. "SW((T UlllTY" (PC) 6 IS. e•>e, IHI ....... "SEPMAU VACATIMS" ns. t-is (•> edwardt SOUTH COAST PL Al A 546-2711 ' ••1 s,. .Jl a r !i ...... , 1 Wt,. , ••• "Tl( Cll• '9U" ~AS (N.U) .. "' ., llmCA" (PC) 1• ••••w 7t .. 6 TUCI OClJT SIUlO IOll Clll5I .. ,., CW (PC) 'OI I.IS. 10 .. ......... "mm•Nll" &:•(PC U) "V*ETS All llll" US. 10 IS CPS.ll R.•llll •• "WT IHllT" (i) I JO "llUl Ctll" (I) 65e.1~ IZ,,MJBIW "Fill WITI Fill'' t• CPS.Ul "IUCuttSlY CLOSE" US.I .. ~) U.•IWlllRI "HOST lut101" (I) 110. u s 1'2t v•oo1m I edwards CINEMA C ENTER 979-•1•1 1 HA•a l)• •l WO A AO AMI\ Mf '& vftt0( If MTf • COSTA llf 'a UMJIU l nl "UST IESOH" lltl ... "fW( ltHlY 'IT" (") i~ H S RMJWllMI "SE,WU VACATIOIS" (I) 115 n o 12.00UHI IU "LUCAS" l"·ll) 639 1010 "'llm Ill "H" • JO <K·lJ) R.MJWl l W a!CMMO NYI» "JO JO DUCH, YOUI lift IS CAl.UIC" (I ) 7 00 t-00 "USllUT£ llCMMIS" I JO tK I)) "IOR I OUT llY. lllUS" 6 » It JI (I) pMJIQ l llt • 11aca DOllY srm o $lAll"""' U CLOS( IHC{' (I I 1 IS tlt .. ~ CltllSTOPIO 9UCll "AT CLISE IMC(" (I ) 1 1~ t,. ••••PllCI MAii Al~ "SltlT UIUTY" (PC) ,. 1 1~ ion .._.. ... ms .. ... "'"" (1t-U) ... ,, IMT1fa" •• (PC) Ml" (I) us. u s. 1020 ....... • rua OOlll snxo MM AUi& "SIUT UIUTl" (PC) "'. u. It u edwardt WOODBRIDGE '.>')1 -()6')') a a•wa .. , a t ·~ • ,, .-f"" '""'' .. ·---...... ,., s:-. tt1. II.II ····-.... '"SWiil LmTr f PCJ ns •• ··---• lUCI llUf Sffl(.O Alf ..... "mlf *""" (N) C!ll. t!ll.. l•.Jt edward s v1L L AGf: C IN f: MA 5 AG ' •)'>f, • ..... " . .,. . .. - , .... t -.... ' • , a.. .. I 1 1 . II -... n£r (I) 1 l! ". •• '¥.", -11r (I) • , ••. ,.. 'u:!!e lt>JS mw M1DmC OM .'!!!!!!_ I "SlllT Cllalf' (K) .. SlPMllt Ht ...... lt:tt VACA?m .. (I) U ifi M ,_--~__,.~1•~1~"'~==--- "l.IW" (PC·ll) •I-Pm • l5 • tlUCI OOlll UEl£O "PUm • NII" fell~ a .v.;ut-, -""=""""=""'·..,,·1~~,,,, ........ .,,.,,,,,1 .. ,..!~ .. '=,=-=- "T• ltHl PIT" (K ) RM mg w mm '41, IUS "Jt JI lllCll'" (I) "CHC IO" (K·ll) UI. lt:zt 1 ll "f• WITI Fm" a••&w.mr ••lfS.m .,..,.,QI "JO Jt NICO. '"' Ufl IS CAWIC'' (I) 1l0, t:JO a••a • • "WT llSllT" (I) I 4S "IOWI & OIT ID. llW" I 4S It 2t II) P•IWJ •!Pl "Sl'AHTl VACATIMS" (t ) '30 I JO It JO "TW Tt MllTIFll" (N) 'IS,10 15 "Cits MST I( cuzr· I IS fPCl R.Mllf\W.Jml SlMI Prllt C1«1$10Pt0 aAUfll "AT CLOS( IMICl" (I) ~JO HS 10 00 R.•Td• ..- "I USS" (I) H0.10~ "llAZll" (I) ... •t •BNCl •UT Sltl'DY "SIOIT CllCllT' (K) '" IOI 10-00 U.HIKlliD "CUK IO" <"·13) u s "USOllTt llCtt•HS" UO 10 JS IPC-IJl p .W!J(laid ''Fii( WIJll Fiil" I lO (PC UI ·•UIC(ltUSU ClOSl" (I) rn un R.M IJll llll "T• TO IHITIJll" I IS (PCI "CMS IWST 9£ CIAZY" 6 a 10 IS (PCI ....... 4 TIACll OClllf Stc.tO M.MMOA "SWlU lllHTI" 1"1 1 IS, uo 4 ftACI SlOlO 'ell ClllUll( "TW , .... (K) t •US 6H &•\US lt.MfMl lnl • 11 SDO MM 'tlll "AT CLIS( WC(" (I) u •i 2 » '11 '~ tu ....,,.'°' ............ ,... llrt IS CAllMC'" m •• rn u~ J.8 91' "llCOI" (PC) u s WCIITTOS" IPS-11) , ...... edward s N ESTB~OOer ', 30 4'C' ........... 'w, """' ...... }"". . ••; '.. .. . . ,,., _ "UIW" (PC-UJ us "CllTT£1S" C"'-llJ 629 IUO "WT tlSOlr' (IJ . u "tMCfltlSU Ct.IS(" (t) l;JS. I .. edwards SAOOL EBA Cllt 581 ">880 f, ' •• ·~ A ' A 11 I t fl .• . I ~ . "SENlln VACATIMS" (I) US US IUS p•lWl l • "WT llSllT' (I ) 115 "fl( IH£l f'fr' (PC) WEI"' R.•iMI "CHST IAUIOI" (I) 11\ t lS p•JWllW "C(TllttC EYH" (t) 6 JO, l JO, l .. IS U4Illl l W "Tl( Clltl ""11'' to 1"'-ll> "HT Of MllCA" (PC) , .. ltMJW I W "ClfTTllS" (PC-13) 6 I~ t5e "Ucnt" {K l •• a Tl~ OOUT SfOllU "S•T ctlCllr' (N) U IS. ! IS. 4'1• uo ••. ltJO ...... ,., • TIACll DOl" STiile> tell Clllll "TW M .. (PC) llS Jll,l• llS tt1' .,...,"'"" UI .......... 1111 .. .... " ' • r ··'T.,'fa· ... , 11 (March 21-Apnl 19): Money-legal questions can be settled to your ldvania,c. You'U &&in more knowl~e about the financia1 status of otbcn. you oould learn about inheri~nce and secret Investment plan. TAURUS (April 20.May 20); EmJ>hasis on lepJ fiahts. pcnniss1ons. You'll locate needed document, you'll aiso find that some terms must be nruned1 clarified. Much oocun behind scenes. you'll need to look, inquire and to put 1ortb certain conditions. GEMIN1(May 21-June 20): Focus on pressure, deadlines, responsibi!Jty, intensified love relationship. Practical ------------afrt.tn cannot be ignored -one who does care will be at your side and a valuable ally. Pisces fiaures promi- nently. SYDNEY 01111 CANCER (June 21-July 22): Good lunar aspect coincides with charm, physical attraction, speculation.t in· tensified romance. Young people ngure prominently, swift changes occur and ••••••••••••• you must keep options open. • LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Activities center around close relatives. including brothers. sisters. Focus on distance, long-range prospects. residence, investments. You'll make new start in new d1rcct1on and gain added indepcn,SSence as result. VIRGO tAuJ.. 23-Scpt. 22): Family reunion is featured, sense of purpose and direction will be restored. Intuition is on target, you'll learn through process of teaching. One who was distant wtll now bc<;omc close. Aquarian plays role. UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Elements of timing. luck ride with you. What is needed will be obtained -you could also locate article that had been lost, missing or stolen. Short trip could be part of scenario. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): This can be your powcr-~lay day. Spotlight on resourcefulness, initiative, mventiveness, courage, willingness to pioneer a project. You'll be asked to revise, remodel and possibly to rebuild on more solid base. . SAGl'M'ARIUS (Nov. 22-Dcc. 21): Excitement of discovery is featured. Focus also on flirtation. romance, creativity, secret mcetine which lends space. Pertinent infonnation is discovered behind scenes. Gem mi, Virgo play roles. CAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan. 19): One close to you helps you make wash come true. Major domestic adjustment could be featured. You'll succccd m matters of spcculataon, popularity increases and you could win contest. Libra figures prominently. AQUARIUS (Jan 20.Fcb. 18): Orders "from the top" are subJect to change, possible deccpuon. Be aware, alert. keep optJons open. Someone 1s "desperately" trying to revcaJ something. Know it, be receptive and pounce on opportunity. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Emphasis on communicataon. higher education, abahty to overcome distance, language barriers. You'll have more responsibility and chance for greater financiaJ reward. Love relationship does grow stronger. IFMA Y Zl IS YOUR BIRTHDAY current cycle indicatcsorponunity for mamage -there might also be an addition to family. You'I emerge from morass of details, red tape and dealings with .. ordjnary" people. You are dynamic. versatile, have unosual sense of bumorand arc very much aware of body image. Gemma. Sag1ttanus play important roles in your life. You make new start before May as finished, you get to heart of matters and you learn where you stand with "special person." December wiU be memorable for you in 1986. Turtleneck the best garb for NY subways Q. If you get o n a New York Cit}' subway wcanng a gold necklace. what are the odds you'll get off sllll wcanng it? A. Your query makes the point, aJI ngh1. Nobody knows the odds ... But the gold necklace is indeed the No. I target of subway grab-and-run thieves. The conquistadors wanted gold. When they also found platinum in the South American nvcrs they searched, they threw at back, figuring 1n time at would npen into gold. Q. Is tt true that bard called the roadrunner attacks hubcaps? Q. Indeed. It attacks its reflection. Swans do that. too Attendants at parking lots with swans nearby say those bards ruin the finash on count- less cars b) hammenng awa~ at their own hkene-;se'i Q Whal''> an airplane·., "foot· pnnt'"> A The ground that gets the most noise directly below 11 when it's an flaplt. Different planes. different 1001- pnnts. The earl y Boeing 707 was said to have a footpnnt of about 52 ~uare males. The crocodiles arc getting bigger around Lake Mweru Wantipa, Tan- zania. according to the correspon- dents. Reason 1s they're eating on the average a villager a day L.M. Bo YD During the Civil War, the South had their songs, the North ~ad theirs. But that elderly ditty ''Home, Sweet Home" gained distinction as the only song popular on both sides. Spnng as the worst time of year to start a daet. Or so contends an authonty on nutntion. Takes more food to sustaJn the human body an the sprinj. Therefore. your body is likely to object maghuly to your diet plans at that part1cufar time. The Royal Canadian Mounted Police do 10 Canada what's done here by the FBI. the Secret Service, the Border Patrol. the Highway Patrol, the local police -and even an pan 1hc CIA. Oldsmobile sponsored the 1969 Miss Amenca contest. Judith Ford won. Her dad worked for Chrysler. Something else the ancient people of Peru had first was popcorn L.M . Boyd 11 • 1y11dlca1~d colomnl11. Shoppers, start your credit cards At last, women who are "born to shop" have a p0ster child ... a stunnmg brunette, formerly of Mani- la, who can say ''Charge" in IS lanauages. Is she a victim of credit card commercials? Js she a woman who bates to do hand-washables? Or is she a woman who will eventually become a folJc heroine and appear in a musical called "Imelda" and sing "Don't Cry For Mc, VaJentino." I say. do not Judge Imelda Marcos until you have walked in her 27.000 pairs of shoes. Who among us'has not suffered credit card bums over 70 percent of our bodies on a given day? Who does not have a closet full of dresses in three sizes? Who has not spent three weeks an a caty without ever leaving the hotel gift shop? The disease that has had no name until now as calJed .. Impulse Buymg Syndrome" (JBS) complete with a support group called Debtors Anonymous that says Imelda Marcos is 001 alone. According to the School of Con- sumer and Family Affairs at Purdue University in Indiana, about one-half of all consumer purchases are made on impulse. If you're a woman who can't window shop without buying the window, take heed to their suggcs- uons. Keep a shopping list with you at aJI umes and buy nothing that 1s not on the hst. Don't P.Ut off buying important items until the last minute and shop when you arc not rushed. Don't carry a lot of cash and keep your money in hard-to-reach places. And before you buy something, stop and think how many hours you will have to work to pay for the item. Somehow1 these seem rather sim- pbstJc so&uuons for a shopper like Imelda who spent $4.S million in two months ($10,430on bed sheets in o ne day). ihe IB Syndrome c-0uld warrant some drastic measures hke tyang the shopper to a chair in a room the moment she hits a city. Or taking away her palace and giving her a smaller closet for storage of her purchases. Or maybe making her wear the same yellow dress for a year 10 keep her humble. Compulsion shopping is not a new malady. If you doubt it, just sit at the airpon sometime and watch return- ing vacationers roam through cus- toms lugging painted faces on coconut heads, coffee tables sup- ported by celephant feet. and som- breros in 'ISlack velvet and silver the size of a satellite dish. Sporadic shopping attack.s arc brought about by boredom. the excitement of owning something new, a packer-upper to get you out ofa funk, and a real behavior disorder that compels you to buy things you don't need and will never use. Havang wd all of that, I have to admit that since the exile of Imelda and her black belt in shopping. I have this recurring fantasy ... to be her Avon lady! Other wo-man in a no-win sitUation· DEAR ANN LANDERS: You arc probably sick and tired of hearing about the Other Woman but I am desperate for some advice. I started to sec a married man when J was 18. After a year and a haJf his wife found out about us and threaten- ed to kall herself if he left. So. "Lou" decided he had to stay with her. I was pregnant at the time. Has Wife gave me money for an abortion. Lou took me to the clinic and drove me home. He said he still loved me and asked me to be more careful. He promised to work things out eventually. Sax months later I was pregnant a$3in. Once more Lou's wife gave him money to pay for the abonion. I decided I wanted the baby and told him I wasn't going through with his wife's plan. He was very angry. The baby is almost a year old now and Lou hasn't called me in three months. He pays child support but I am miserable without him. I'm a good-loolong woman and other men have shown an interest in me but I can't get Lou off my mind. Nobody else looks good. Should f give up on this guy? If so, how do I go about gcnang him out of my system? -HEARTACHE l N OHIO. DEAR OHIO: Get with It. Loa ua a real talent for attracting masodli1t1. (Hla wUe Is also a la.la.) You only cbuce for a decent We is to write blm off and consider yoaraeH lacky be dumped yoa because you woa.Jd never have damped bJm. Get some coa.nsellng. Yoa need to talk to a profe11lonal aboat you low self-esteem ud why yoa allowed Loa to use yoa for three years. lt'a time you got smart, Battercap. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: When was the last tame you rode a New York City train o r bus? I'll net it's been quite a while (if ever). Judging from your suggestion that the young and "ablc-booied" surrender their scats to the elderly •• lMIEIS I have encountered some little old ladies who could be linebackers for the Chicago Bears. Just yesterday one shoved me with such force when she thought l was going to take the seat she spied that I very nearly fell to my knees. Last week I saw another little old lady drag a teenager out of his seat by the scruff of his neck when he beat her to an empty seat on the subway. Age docs not automatically cnutlc people to respect. They have to cam 1t. -OVER 70 AND OBJ ECTJVE. DEAR 0 AND 0.: Moat elderly folks don't alton atrufer• aroa.ad oa pabUc truapor&ation. opt for glvillg tbem a break wbeeever poa11ble. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: Please print one more letter about machines that dispense newspapers. I'm in the business. The biggest problem we have with our 120 machines is vandalism -like toothpicks and matches shoved 1n the coin slots. Sometimes people haul off machines and knock them to pieces with an axe JUSt to get a few quarters. We arc a morning paper and collect from our machines late each after- noon so there won't be much money an them overnight. Twenty-five years ago we had "honor racks." Customers could put a nickel in the slot and take as many papers as they wanted. We didn't lose nearly as much money then as we lose now. This certainly says something about how times have changed, doesn't it, Annie? -J.T .. DAILY HOME IN TALLADEGA, ALA. DEAR J .T.: Yoa'd better believe It, Mister. Anchors hold summit-on sweaters NEW YORK -TV news anchors Du Rather, Peter Jen- Dill11 and Tom Brokaw met to discuss on-the~spot reporting - and sweaters. During a forum for the Inter- national Radio and Tclev1S1on Society. NBC's Brokaw sup- ported the pracl1<% of h.avang anchors broadca'St from world hot spots. but said the networks can sometimes look like they're just following each other He quoted ABC'sJcnninasas sanng. "We've aot to stop following each other around the world like d<>ss 1n beat." And Rather. the CBS anchor. said. "'I'd like 10 sec us go when we believe we can ma.Jee a difference in the story" but not JUSt to say, "Gee whiz, Mom. look at me. We can aive you this cbtchne. ·• Jenn1nas brou.aht up the SW'tlters. for wb.Jcll Rather has become famou._ .. , jUJt want to uy one lluna," he .. ct. .. I tpent almost all my Ufe ~na sleeve- ' .Joe Pl9copo less sweaters and now I sat an a freezing. cold New York studio and am not allowed to wear one " Jeney bounce NEW NJ -Passa.i~ Ted Nqent bom Joe PlteOPO'• tclevmon spec1aJ spoofina and cclelmuna New J~y was a boon to at· tempu to woo Holl)wood producers and potentaal tounsts to the state. In the show, the former "Satur- day Night Live" funny man lampooned the state's image as the pollution capital and mim- icked native sons Bnee 8'rta1· ateea and Fran Slaatn. Among those who apl)elred with Piscopo in skits were comedian EddJe M•,.,.Y and Gov. ftoma1 ff. Keu. 81.ullnl in Iowa CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa Rock musician Te4 N•sat may have broken the law when he and a nearly-naked young woman 11mulatcd a 9CJI a<:t durina a oonc:en, accoroina to tbe police chief. who says no chataea are hkely . Chief Gary Hillman said th.at the incident is over and no cJwaes are pendini, Hinzman said a review of the concert 10 the Cedar Rapids Gazette indicated Nuacnt took a woman from the audience, pulled off her clothes and simulated a SCJ1 act • WORl,O CHAMPIONS OUSTED Neither vulnerable South deals NORTH WEST • 765 'V 986S 0 AJ 2 •J63 •A98-4 '7 A k 10 7 OQ96 •A 10 EA T +J 32 ~42 v KI0743 •875 OUTH • K Q 10 V'QJ 6 <> 8 5 +KQ942 The bidding South West North I NT Pass 2 <. 3 NT Pass OpenanJ( lead •) Even the strong<'st team:. can no longt-r take their oppos1twn for granted. In the recent Vandt-rbalt Team Champ1onsh1p, playt•d in Portland, Ore., fave of tht• top I ti teams were elimanat<'d fairly C'arly an the competition And tht• lt'am seeded ninth not only mad<' at into the finals. but wen• ll'adanf( aftt•r three quarters beforr sucl'Umhan~ to th<' third seed A team includmg tht> two top A men<: an~ on tht' World Bradj(t• Fc<frrataon rankan!{s. Bobby Wolff and Uob Hamman of Dalla.-.. and four otht'r players wath many na t1onal llllf's to their c rcdu, frll to the 25th seed m thC' second round. u 'ading by I 0 lnternauonal Match Points with only 16 boards to play . their unheralded opptmcnts wt'nt on to wan by 36 !MPs. The opening lead on th1s board an·ounlt>d for 11 V U E MA I I, I t CHARLES GOREN of those OMAR SHUIF The auction shown is that 111 Hamman-Wolff. In their method-;. thr Ot>('ninf( bid of one no trump Rhowcd 13· I 7 points, the rt>sponst• of two diamonds wa'i forcinl( St tty man and the rebid of thr1>e no trump showC'd 13-14 points and 1·i · t ht>r 3-3-2-5 or 3-3-:J-4 di Rt ributaon Since North had shown length in th<' majors and South had denied mon• than three diamonds. West krww that it was almost rl'rtatn 1 l11H has partner held four or mort' diamond~ Therefore. hf' led th(' at·c.· of tla<tmonds and continuf'd wath the Jack. and the defondc·r-. took lht• fir-.t five trarks. (Shghtly bl'ttt·r would have been an Ot>('nlng Jc•ad of tht> Jli<'k of diamonds, re· 1:1111ang th<' at·<' as an entry in ca.<;<> 11 wa-. nt•Nit•d ) The> a11('taon in the othl'r room was M•mt•what less revealing. West 1'110-;c.• to lead the nine of hearts, and dcclar<'r took all 13 track wht•n every suit broke favorably wou UMI R H E D 0 1 1 r r The coach gave lhe lollowrng accO\Jnl of lhe team s most recent loS9 The whole game hinged Cl"I a Single call th~ call I made ro H I V N A S 1---lhe game 1---,,.--..,.,-... ,-.,.,1__,,.,.., --C) \..Ot'l'PI"'" •he cltv<lile QuOled . . . . . . by I II nQ n lhp "''"'"II WO<d• -~--~---yov d•••loo f1om "l'P No J ti.to- 8 PPINI NUMBftfD ,[ r rf PS IN SOUAPfS C) IJNSCllAMBlE l!TIU S fOP ANSW[R TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 1 Pushcart 5 Sour 9 Claw t4 California city 15 Fixed route 16 Caprice 17 Well versed 1n 18 Plankton unit t9 Clear-witted 20 Deserve 22 Falls off 24 White meat. 26 Auto races 27 Hair braid 29 Displeasure 30 Foot 33 Invasions 37 Uncommon- 38 Heaths 39 Insect 40 French river 41 Pontiff 42 Resolute 44 Firmament 45 Scruffy dog 46 Disorder 4 7 Parochlel 49 Oellght 53 Metric unit 57 Vibrato 58 Express a thOught 59 - -the ground floor 61 Eden native 62 Oven control 63 Attar 64 Head Fr 65 Big amount 66 Time to eat 67 German river DOWN 1 Falhom 2 Cowboy 3 Esteem '4 Small 5 --carte 6 Placid 7 "--We Trust" 8 Spitting Image 9 Toll 10 Dance.s 1 t Issue 12 Nothing, on the court 13 Here's son 2t Lenin's predecessors 23 Grein spikes 25 Poetic contraction 28 Release 30 Trouble 31 English composer 32 Wiid plant 33 Brats 34 Corner 35 Oupllcale 36 Door sign 37 Say again 40 Salmon 42 Chief· It 43 Washington Irving hefo 45 Arrtvers 47 lnnet-coate<I 48 Slow· music 50 Abette<I 51 Party tlckei 52 Mr Alee 53 Dowries 54 Hefolc poem 55 Peak. It 56 Turning. pref 60 Negative f ' \ by Bii Keane "I think I flunked the transformer test. I couldn't make robots out of a dinosaur or a grasshopper." BIG OBORGlt by Vlrgll Partch (VIP) I s--~o "You went eomethlng. Whit 11 It •• chicken •nd dumpllng1? Pot ro11t •nd pot1to p1nc1ke1?" MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson DE1'1'1S THE MENACE "Dogs your size don't jump Into folding chairs!" PEANUTS ) II I ( I ll I J \ J $-.1.0 C> ·--....... .,.__ ... GARFIELD TUMBLEWEEDS <Nl'CLJ~PA~ LAUN I --~--"2"'"~ WIMIUf ,. ~ L/ ~EM~, 8l)T l'M MOT l()tt4~~. ~RIW, MOM. i"AT '!> M'4~T~T ! , ,., - b Hank Ketch.am by Charles M. Schulz WELL. SORT OF MAYSE PRETTV FAA BACK SE~IND YOU ... by Jim Davis by Tom K. Ryan by Kevin Fagan l ' Or1nge Coat DAILY PILOTIT~. M9y20,.. WI BLOOll COURTY OW.*"W' A WfNm IUlllll. lllJlll _ MP lf'L#1tJ~ -Wta THE 11/!fl'P ffM- "611.-, U.S. ACRJtS FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE MMl"\-eD{! ~ AN' CORN 0'41He. coe- MV FAV~rle ! JUDGE PARKER FUNKY WINKERBEAN FROM BAND cAMP Ai~RRt5f~ ... iO A BA111..£ Of r~E 8AND5 l-IELD I~ A ~ ... ' i~~ ~=~ I ~=-i;;:-::t_rfjj_H!n_l:iri~~ .. DOONESBURY ~~ f INHERe :/ 10 BEING &1t1ED IN A 8UZ."'Z.AAD ON 1ME WPI.; 10 'THE 5TM€ BAND c.omE5T. by Jim Davie by Jeff MacNalty by Harold Le Ooux by Tom Batiuk 10 ~6+tr'S FOr 1..0CK DIN~! by Gary Trudeau l • \ • Orange co.at DAILY PILOT I Tu.dmy, Mmy 20, 1938 CALL 642-5678 IF CALLING FROM NORTH ORANGE IF CALLING FROM SOUTH ORANG! 540-1220 411-81GO I LOST MY OWllER BUT FO.•AFTERI PLACED All AD IN THE CLASSIFIDS. ~~Nfl!DINDEX641·N78 ......... Jc.ta... llMll!!J!!! ..... 1111 C.ta... llM,lnpr!•M• ltlt ltatah te lhrt halwt nM , ... lul/11!!11 11• P'ltOllllNOfmtOMNCllCO. M0-1211 '•Sale 1111 •SHARP w....,. ar. N e wport H•lo hu 11a1DC1 2 8dtm 1 beth. HVHM&tnvnec.MoMeo UM Onertu!titl .aaa..-nldlll Mll•TW 1ea DpCx. T1'e tn, QtPtt. Townho\.IM 41drm 2 Mal cer gerege, r...-ty l 2br, den, oomm. pool, Houee, COM. 2 1*1 to * FllEE * bollent ~to 9"0W ,., l' ' . -. ~"' ·~ , ~ Aiftv ~t ,_ M~ ••"*' ... , .. ._ .. -.. ._ .... M "°' llmf'-0 IO 1.-Ce C--comoul• et l'o\'Oflf .... _ .. .. -..a __ el t~l- CO\,, al'O .,_W , .. W\tOlt .,. ~IW'tt ... , w• to .,..... • Ebbttde ~. wld htcup, ger MOO ::'·ci.~~Ji400 + pelnted I oerpeted. wetr/gtdN, Ind edloltt "'" bMdl. Prof rnele. $475 I wfncw Hun on teecb Moblle Home Perl!. + aec. Muet etand Cfedtt • M60. 144273 I amkr, ~. avtlll 05-23. '!'<?! tat/let + S250 dep. aa.. ..... Precllce. lgh p ay 8tngee wide + auntOOml "'. No '*9 nCMat SPECT ACUlAR CONDO !..aide 28' 1 la trpk I 1400, 8 te..3M-8710. _,..., 07~2 L • • r n from M I KE w/t>er*tta. &42.ao35 =~c~e~ ~~ .. llllHll.... 18drm 1be + trpc, elt beam<*l,p . 2 .;..,n.: MIP•T llll'f M/F prof, 25+ Qlw\/reep HUDSON, I top f',oduo-DENTAL TECH E.llp'd CI .s1 12t1 -T-1~ dbl ca-StOO No btUne, pool., rec: room. No pm MI0-8700 + 1ug 38R 2'-'IA w/.,..,. 2 n-lmkr to ''" lge NICE lnG wteren of 1 )'M'9, B wuer/Flnl1her '°' ., • • ..._ OwntfAgt 179-1739 Mu9t ...i °"'Y MM.'-lat, MC 1225 860-1781 cw 991 pool ten"4. CM 2BR. fUll PY' ba. leUn-how to P'<* the right Au1llty oriented lab . • ,. Se':'!.T/~":m~p::: :..:.-: E~=:.c,.~~;llT~~~·11m:~ ~fY;5~'i:utf:,9S.7t::° ~~·£:,5 ==}= -:.---lt(IO/mo. yf1y. ~ -frpic jeQml endd cer end gw. No 1*1 ONE HOUSE TO 8AHO M/F Aoommal• to ~. pt"oftt. TNI wortlthop II a kif bu9y 08/0YN ofllm. TAKEOVERASSUMAIL! t EAST810E; 2 Bdrm, 2 ba Cf9' S10M kldl Mt-8191 1750/mo. 546-8950 280, 28A, f\My tum, lltll C.M .. poof. evell June 1. m\.llt kif .. who.,. rqw Aef•t11CW & uper.,. LOAN. Low down. N11w towMc>me. Frptc, 2 eel A9' ... GARDEN aetttna: Spertd-1 pd, ~. eVllll now, t S2t0. '~ \.ltll. dOM to In Of t,,_t wWI to entr the quired. &46-6815 dbt wide, N.8. Boet 111p gw.1795/moyf1y. Weter-VERSAILLES CONDO Ing, ~ t"'. ~., mo only, S850. 831-15et. bMdl. 548-N18 netting wortd of MLM.1------.,.~=- evell. 811·2004 front Ho mu Inc. 2BR 2ba w/frptc In~ 8Mrnt, welk-lne. Com VERSAILLE STUDIO NB OCEAN FRONT PHii Performance. ~ .... 1 ~ 831-1400 . loe. Mini bey..,..,., tteo. ept. MO a/1. End petlo & CON[)().()arege w:ut· 3bd 2ba, Mede M/F S500 714/476-3Mt I~ Newpor1 IMCh. •· ll'Rll ... laJt .... JUST LIKE NEW. 48d 2be No pets. A9' 844-7211 ger. ~· fnwyl, bet\. No tty, poof, .. ~ room. a Si50. evelt 06-02, call .......... penencefr'bn~~ .. ~.To laaune m Gt IOt. '= new ~ no pet• -5/mo. M 1-3071 a&ff/mo 864-.aotO l(rllttn. 173-03et. . .. .,, lmmed. ---~· =bet\, ~5· ' IMmllr. 11 ioo mo. ...~ .... 1'1'111• GOOO E'SIOE LOCATION: • • .... n ··-o,,.rtultJ IHI _ ..... Ill .. I own. .,.._ 2~11. 28A tbeth, petlo, genioe, SUOCESSFUL REST -a•fl a_. (114)812-5720185,000. BRANO NEW 38' 2'ABa. 2£ 2L condO. e;po;; 1710 pet/mo. No pets. •Deify~-Uf)det• LOOIClng tonllent prtnr, re--~ _. I t450 Sq. Fl. 2 ml to bet\. ln5 Pool, jeCunt. Nr 850-33tt, 5-46-1708 •Mofe leeda. fMter MN. turn of lnve1tment Meded~ == Obi ger ape fncd r South Coaet Pleu mrlllf. •All Otlentl ecr•iecl +lnt..et guar. Reapond ~PT diem ~ 11150,... o6c M2-3t4 5"5-713t or 731-5 188 1735 mo. 28R, ,.,.BA, 11t."' , •• L.eMtn to ed 1335 C/O The Deify ex:,. pt'~ not ,9q. >Ont ,_ ......... .....,. .......... __ CONDO! 3bd, 2be, frplc. LUXURY CONDO-Welk to E/llde townhoule, ger., *H 12 ..... ....... (114)141·1111 Piiot, P.O. Box tsec>. Nlery & beMftta Ind . .. eral llU petlo, pool, gw. lndry ,.. S.C. Plue. Frptc, etegent lndry room, nloe locatlon. la"'' h llOO Roomme.. eel Coet Coeta Meae. CA. 82821· mllege. Cell for Info. c:Mtty. Nw CM court)Wd. fNnCfl dOOf'I, ale. home 2429 Orenee Aw. want • • ihMf fe fMi BH Home tMlth Aeeoutce l&TILllWDIM Avll/1,11050. 780-112t MCUrtty, w/d, ello Incl TSLMGMT M2·1803 II I •t1 .. lu111, ~.~ ~=; -_.,.., c.nter,851-3803. NOT A LIST AGENCY prv cfub w/tennll COUf'tl, ~· · Y • ... ...-1 am:: rm HERE'S JUST A FEW EASTSIDE 2bd, 2be, large = Jecuul, Hun•. ~ ·Month-to-month M5-275e TO. l tOK/up, no crecltt"' Cltrl1al/v111n n... Bech pect w/appla .... 1395 yerd, quiet, Pf'fV•t•. No lfllllyd«:Oratecl •ww::.a.1 ~ also available SECLUDED, troplcel, OenleonAuoc:.873-7311 --~.~ll!ii!l~lllPll~~~,~/T~- E·etde 4 rm kid c*. S400'1 peta. S850. 875-5151. ctub houae, & mud'l more. t>eame, frplc, tennle, Mlt\.ll'e NM 81 l Nr OCM11 211& ........ $525 Eeetllde hM "'''ii". c:rptd 2 bd $915, Ind moet utll, Piaf APllT9011 ·Furnished/ PoQll. )ec:Z. S400. Friend ....... v1c1ori. a..t*:a~ Ott Nw1>t 2br 2b&..S800'• decor 5 rm a yd llldalpet Saint Albani. dey, SpertcllnQ dw\ i.ge epte unfurnished of 8111w.5-45-1104 ___ . ----..,..- •ut-t1M* 1750 call a.et Atty tee 838-().i()5, eve. 731-1521 lot ~ with t or 2 • Fitness centers. The Lett I fn.. ltlS ..-W1111 .. Nr OCC + 3br 2b&. .. 1725 MeM Wood&. 38' sea, ..... Lapaa l lU ~No· Nw pent. Heet iennis, swimming IH••• IHll .... I Ll~ht typing, flllng. Xtru + 3/2br ger .. $800'1 den ,.,.,, rm new kitchen -_.... , '*'· phonea, data entry. Wiii 3br +guest ept I* 1875 OntY l1350i mo P9ta oil. ...._., 28dtm 114Bath 1720 Models open daily, 9-6 For the ~t~~ fnllU\ ADS train. N/..,..r ~.rd. Cllll Rnt/own3b<H2orwlt250 Dftw by 3291' Tl#IOdl. 28' tumWled. Patio, SM::==.:, 1740 Soriv.no pets Roommate.* t-* uunll Mlot*'985t-05t7 53M180 Beet Atty ... thencllli540-7355Agt .• poof/pv1bdl/eec:urtty~ . 831"5533 lntall Wu ... nli ID[ FREE ....,... ...... ..,, Guerenteed x111•1ctlon ~ owner. St200. M2-t •FRE!CABLE TV LG 18' Newport Beach No NY BUSIAlU UXA ~ ·-·--•-•--.JI llM ... 38' 2'Mle 2 Q( S31.S250 l 28' 28e GerdM Apta 880 Irvine Avenue FIT umHIY ...... ...... 1tory Townhome. All Pool ' rec room ss2S.: Oealt99 to ..... ~ c I WP/dlc1~911pprwf& .......... emenltlH. $1250/mo. &,u!!ntt M55.nOWl8thSt lat16lhl furnlaNdNB.,..c:ondo a: ml9Cof'fteedUtl•,lnbU9y Lo 38'. Stepe to bet\. Ger. Vllte Rent• 175-4812 64S-T104 :om~ lr;!' ... ~·. Ml·llll frtendty office, 83l-&4IO • .. ---------------.1 ,__. Peta S 1300 Fee •PENTRIOOE COVE• lalMa •MESA VERDE O'lux Newport Beach So .,..,, ..._ """'· · 28'2BaCondol896.0\19f •-•--~ --28dnl'I• lBa, new decor 1700 16thS1ree1 m1n 2bd.ioe.lrwfel•10M m.FWf •--• la••t f •-J C..ta.... IUf SUllU lll-llll ...._ .... dlhwatlr kx*ecl gw. cell John 714-432.S111. Costa MeM offtee. Cell --.. • .. -• fell• a ltrMml . New STEPS TO BEACH M75 No' -84().2485 lat Dover I .. 1JST91. COZY COTTAGE 2bd, decor. W/d l*ue>, 2 cer 3BR BA llv dining --'42-51tl RETIRED FEMALE Found 'ii Huntlnton 8Md\ Ulllen MS-5958 ..... ,C... USTlm I 11 1•2 2ba. den, new carpet, ger w/OfXW. 111 mo + ' 1 ' rm. lie POOL-PRIVATE PATIO ~ W/em dog. Mede atwecl Friday 18ttl. Male black UUL a.TAIT " Nice three Bed_, two wry dMn. Avail Imm. S500 NC. 5'45-3115 Stie~ r,~92~ ,._ d/w, frptc:, gerege. hou1lng, Cotta M .. e lab milted w/wtlt pewt, ll--al lOll Bath With oM r::;n~ 11300. 875-2578. Reduced to rent $525 2br ' ><-LG 18r *645. 28' M75 erM ~eel M2·2206 213-aea-7221 F:.. ~~:o.~ ..... noore. brtctc llrepleceend L1'N quietly fncd Yf'd kid• ...... • ........ EASTSIDE 557•2M 1 1111111 fer .... FOUND large Mt of car pref but not req, Miiiry *-SIU"'* latge yatd. Won't lut at Ptalatala 1117 53Mt81 Agt ,_ 2117 SNrp !woe 2 Bedroom. Aprtnments ntt key on 2500 block South comm wtug, =2·-· Onty 12400 Down . 8'-'% 1155,000. Cell Curt TOWNHOUSE. Nice loe •ITIPITIUll* Upetlllrs. Abtolutety Im-R&BM.YldQedPiooe111H Coett ~ Legun1 Mr Jon.. 7 . Int. Sharp 3Br. 2Ba. ale Hert>ett1 II 831-1281 1Br 1Ba houee. 2 btlcl to 2BR 2.,..,. blllnl 2 mecul•t•. DllhwHh•r. -Ill............ BMch. 4 7. Condo 1 blk to SC bch. Yrty 1750 Incl ell ' cw Lg tBf 1Ba. xtre dMn. All er'doMd kx*etMe OW· .. IC latall Storage only. -£alttde FOUND: SMALL CREME Plaz~0 w/pool, 1pa ·& 1·~.:;~;p. 1o1tll1,83S-6-«5,21044th ~ge, emelll petlo. bltlna.HurrySS75tF.e :r,· Perk-lflce groundl. • C.M.846-S13710-7pm COLORED FEMALE NOWHIRINOll carport. Only S82,to0. 2 __:J........ St. Av1 lmmecl. ..,,..},,r;:e7~s::-nse 1ILDllT lll-llll S 75 Avelleble J1o1ne .... fttl CORONA DEL MARI TERRIER .. Newport l&TI Emf OIJ8 Br -S72.000. 251t W. • *...._* Nwpt Perlin 38' 2ea, gw t2th/14"'-Nor:-· Cell 1 Single car Qar9. Avell-BMch. 758--0175 Sunnower Call Sue S..-IHt. luMu l MI 2bdrm, 2.,_, The Point Int. a..c• 1141 lndry, trptc:. Yrty s1soo'. &48-t2 8 Fem. nHr So CoHt ebl• nowl HO mo. Ptnlillls Hit To..-, 1n ucmno ....,. ward 131·1216 or .,..., ,._ decor frplc NEW COxORY HOME VIie Rent• 17S-4912 MESA PINES 2950 Herta Plua/405 fwy, wuh/dry. «1-0104 °' 487-44e3. paper Buslnw Otftoe 831-5&94 * * • WlTD * * garege on1y s1300 F• • Newr occupied 2200 aq ..==-. ~-• •• .: •" 2BA 1ea wlger 1750 kllcr.en.tt•. pool, jee:z. "'~---1-• Awlbtlona tllken now kif wtth lnPUt end e1i1ttee1 I •~j~~ \.Cl 4BR 48a.lfam rm. Pen; TILllllT Ill-.... tt, 3bd, 2'A t>A. we1tc to ~ ... -.. .. TOP AREA. Qutet, No P.t.1 $325 mo. 556-1737 ~ Miu Cott• Mele 1HI. d\.ltlM ~ on ~·-· '-~ O<amlc VU, upgreo.., 3t bch, ..... 1'MM option. •cUtt narrn. 1L'. o-· ••546-3117•• FURN BO/BA-N Til9tl. LL Salt/Int Age 17-22. Never bMrl IBM sY. 34. OrMt ... !~ . 1-boat dOcit. ON SHORE Reeerw thta lull 3br yrty 11400. eeo-.3521 :rs & trpc Sl50/mo. TOWNHOUSE TYPE Lg l300. n-emllr/coold1\9. -merrted. Call 860-1480 eflta and growtt't ~ RL TY 2131592-0IOe hm 2be tpr1c: ... d-* ~----L Jc~' 8 S-..812 VIII• RenteAI 2Br 1'AB&. Lndry NUlP9 Aepty ed 1334 c/o Deity laalata/Oltiet .... la:I:=•• 11•1. Appty et: UllllU ~ ........ IHI w /vl•w $1300 It ..... ce1..... BM Fncd petlo a getege: Piiot. PO Box 1580, nit --~a..-1 ....... ___ _ ...... - -53M181 Ag1 ,_ 2 IX. $885 No pet• 5-46-54!05 Coete Mw. CA. 82e29 !; ..... Four 2 bdrm condoa In OWNER on No. 10 t• eenu ... ... i lB eo.... .,... frptc:, open IN§tXNt IN Fum Room IOtc.t\ & lndry 1~ 1~~ Ml cww Cut 3111 ,... M'P9f 1oea11on. s1epe 10 ~u~':'9's~~· ':' *--11n• ~c:'!ng2•7d1~oereoe. as~":. 1:, tB,! ~ w~~~"':!!-prMI. vng.en'91Y'drnele. Sq .1111 scuff BXavsitt@R NEEDED: 330 .a.yat. community tennle & grecsei. 495-9064 ..,.., • _, * • · _.. bMctl a ~l'Y • 1:' ; W• c:en on. .. -~ Welk to the Merine. Nwpt 8c:f\ 5"1-5032 AQt FllM time/ 5 wtldy9. In my eoataMeea,CA9292t bW:tl9I ShOrt well( to Lg 118' 1Ba, 1 eel:.':: LG 1BD HOME 735-741 W 11th St th: from I am.-ept"'ro $350/mo. 483-5-474 Ew GEOAOEOUS BAYFAONT Weatmlnllter home. Car (714)M2~1 Uck> vi~,:: & r ... l!!J!!! ...,, lMt el bit~ ~ra· Fee Pool, lentMtl<: OCNrl llt9w. TSL MGMT . M2-1eoo a 4 bdrm houM If look· 1rv1M m/f non-emkr prvt. EXECUTIVE OFFICE. 8 mutt. 895-1397 taur9nta. 1 • w:h. •Ull•ftlW-mo or mo. S1275mo.dy9--752--0501 , 1ng In CM NB. 0< HB bath' kit pool. ~ &1100/M0.146-n85 DAY CARE etetf efter ~~~ ~tNNILLE 4 Bdnn ; beth + den, TBJlllT lll-llll ~711-7830• Gf9g()fy. 1 ... 1111/M, thfnk ot u .. flrlt' 10< tnet $400 ~ 1/3 Utt. AveM OR 759-3074. echool. Mon-Fri. 3-5. ~rs I~~ ln- 759-9100 F~ doors & lkyttt• 380, 1BA UnfUr. "°'* Oen w 3 Lg bdrma, 28&. 215pm78 ~Cell after cttOk:ie of ldeel llVtng. 8/1. 494-0e11 aft Spm. BRIGHT NEWPORT OFC Salery negotleble. Con-Mance axp P,., lilk tot elaborate petlo/declle'. Lg yd, dbl garg, yf1y ...... "Sherp". ,._ w/w Cf'l)t 2 TSL MGMT M2-1903 lettlt/•-"-•-ftll 643 aq ft w/thower Nw tec1 Stew S41M>5&2. Pet 813-5&41. • $279,000. 780-0353 $1050/mo Incl grdnr. $1350 IM. 7141494-2049 211111 1~ lut ............. PCH Poat Office & LIVE•IN CARE . .HARBOR View ~ 8d eveU O&-Ot, 173-933e. Wtlnde or 1181284-5285 G•• a.. ,....._ 2 _,,,,, • LJm&... MarlMrt Mlte.146-2947 2 ch II d,. n II t e REAL ESTATE . .. rm -•· "' ,...,..,, ••-, 2BR 2b• cpt1/drapea ' lff'AR llllHI iii-------~ 2·~Ba, 1pa, ,.. lend. .. ... E. UI lnprt ...,, 2111 Se75 No pete 154-2n7 petlo gara • dl•h~ _. • .. Kl 111111 h1llp/cooklng, Marllyn, NS -------... •• _.,. ____ ..... _ quick po•••••lon Exec Home~ .. 48' -.--11n·-2BR 1b• se10 Large wuher, coYn . lndry. Wiiiy rent• Low ret• Ample pkg utll• peld 483-1124, aft 6:30pm. LargeC/21 °'"°'· Orenee $315,000. 780-8215 + pool. "Sit Down" ocn -· -* patio very c.Mn NMr S725/mo 846-$451 S1S5 & Up/Wldy. Color 2155EcatHwye7s-eeoO "Ilea I Country aru. Ea· vu. e.gant1 S3000tmo. Good ., .. , lrg Studio, all SOuth Cout Pim 1 ' TV, meld MMoe, freer perlenced only. Cell COLDWC!U. BANl(eRa Ullll ona Dr•m4'1<: 28' Ste+endeetl bltln•.1..utlll Incl. Otherl chlld no pet• MS-7321 SUWlll YILUIE ootr.. helltecl poof l CHARMING NB WATER-••HOUSEKEEPER For -75t-8180 Q( wrtt• P.O By owner. 3bd, 3~1~lt 1800 a/f twnhme $1500 avell .-75. F• ' 1 & 28' luxury Apt• In 14 etepe to OCMn. IOtc.t\'1 FRONT 500 aq ft on PCH Eldef'ly Couple. Cook, Box 4355, Cotta MeM, den/recrm,boatll~ ........ lle. YD.DllT lll-1111 2BR 2be wlpoof •• newly Plant. Poole, tennla, avell. 915 N. Coeet Hwy, 114-111.... drtw. ~ Sh0<•. NB CA829~ -.... ,.,.,. .,......,,, we~on~t.~ '°' 141-1111 AIYTml pelntecl ~mo CCI! d, no waterlallt. pond1I a .. ror Laguna Beech, 494-5294 ., ... 845-7784 UllPlll•IT ILll MllU Ill... broc:nure$470,000 CUTE 2bd home 1be, 48' tl~! ':~ard. ~14&-3e18 MOO coolct'\ & helltlng r,!· IHI W llTIL F~~ = AIDE F/Llv•-ln, a11l1t PIT, peraona.ble, rNllUr9 IMl,111 650-2709 garg, frpk:. petlo, s. 8'de Wiii condelder pet? 38R 2be E'alde TwnhM, ~~~h :;. ~ch "7o Wkly f9ntall now avell. Sec:retertel s.rvio..· ~ ..}fy W:~.Ch~~;, per1onColor Property Stunning MW condo 3 ••AY•lllT-• of PCH. •v•ll oe-oa. 11000 H\.lrTYf F• McFadden, WHI on ll~.50 wt( a up. 2274 ComerofWeatdlff&lrvtne Rm+l300/mo,M5-2357. Mgmt .' with ~·Y BR. 2'A BA. formal din-Chanc9 to get :::=:'buy $975, ~·· ~ ell TILllllT 111-1111 C'3o~ ;.:a~ ~on~.:..!55Ln55 Hunt-=. Blvd· -· CML846-IM7445E I ~~!u111TE1 LIVE-IN COMPANION For ~ 8:.r.o~ Ing, FR, wet bar. dectt & on thi. meontncent llt9w b • t w • • n I . 5 Pm' • aa__ _ M0-2429 eva/wtlndl ""'' ~"'...,.... . .u. -Elderly Ledy. Mutt drive. Set. Mpm. Good pticne petloe lntuleted win-condo Priced at S55K 5~ _, -*"'---2n. 2aa .. , SC 111-1111 3021W.Peclfteeoe9t~ O.C. AIRPORT AREA EI Toro a r •a. rnannera muet.&U-1903 dowl, oek ceblnett & de I 1 s.e' CUT 2BR 2'A8a on golf c:ree. 2 ..._, ... '" mofe South of PCH un r apprae.e . · E 2bd home lbe, cargerS1895 759-0079 Plaza, S.A . Carport, f::::: ...,, Newpor18Mch.Re"1g Atrtum of'ftee. 22M50 ICl 7141380-8435 ·-1m•pfT • Bldg Pool, bO•t t llp garg, trpc, petlo, S. llde . patio pool Chlld oll ~ l 125+wtlagt.nodee><*t. ft. Janltortel, utMhtel, Iota IWV'l1•-• 44-HIO avail 2br, 2ba, $385K ol PCH, evell oe--03, BLUFF CONDO: 3BR 2 ba. $]O()N0 PETs 722.ao 11 •llZY """* of pertdng. 152·93ee Pnhuleaal Type 45 wpm, med. -------_ Ho1111 ~~7&RM1tor. ~9:~~~· ~PC: =~~~~';~•1 o'0v1 wS.::~i 1wa11110 bd\, .. ut111 Ind VautlH lntah Small omc. ap-. fOf M•l•lllll~ SIM =~prer°":9~ UllCO 5~ 7141720-8728 eva/wllnd •1&11191• . .:::-~Hurry! IS5l~5·.~ lfU rent. e...t t71h St. Full not req·d. Tuea.. & Thur'I. Large 4B<lrm. 38• ... IUOl FMIOLlllUS 2&, 2ea ~. Jae. ,..__., -rnfront stUdiO ;;;a wvtce. S350 & Up. ~ HIDIDll 8-5. M hr. caa McJn-.Fft ecutlv• home Good I FANTASTIC BVYS. DUPLEX 3bd. 2ba. trpc, CLEAN 3bd, 2b&, Harbor d/W, gerage $750. Fee •PDl•IU* now thru June. 10ttt. for 8111 Ms..33ee R«lreel, but wenta to be 8-5. SUMn &4a-tOIO C.M. Bectl Bey locetlon Wood Priced '"' below appnaal lkytlottt• & batconlee. Hllend1I l.M S 1200 mo. TD.mllT llMMI Balboa p~ Bon-I acttve egeln WttoleNle 1-------- decklng leads to 1 IC>• DOVER R.E 759-5080 Avail 711 . l1200mo. g.,d/weterpd NOPETSI 18drm. 18a. ~. nle 873-89231940-0111 au•t fH,Htf Produce~. lfyou ....... IT eurrounded by lulh land· DUPLEX 756--0127-0 780-8t46-E &46-2389 °' 643-1381. •MESA VERDED1wc28f, etlte lvtngl 1825. F.. fttl caltecl before, p1eeee cell FIT ~ typing Wll eceplng New kitchen AP-3bd 2ba, + 2 trple, Ori PCH ~ 5 rm CONDO VILLA BALBOA 2Ba. new decor, d/W, TILllllT 111-1111 I I 1.. • ... egein. 557.1351 tretn on WOfd Proo9.or pilences & much mOfel sun<Seck 1 blk 10 bd\ abode convenient llltch 1bd, 1ba, PoOI, •P•. locked garage, lndry .......... ...... ... tat l I ti •llt ..... ·::n::t=tal Sltl '5/Hr. 646-7111 ' Only $229,000 yrly, s 1050 turn, s 1oo0 H50 llld1/1lnglH Ole petlo. Welk to beech. s7g5 No pet• 840-2495 ~ • nM ~ ...... -untum, 6-45-3756 53M181 Agt ,_ $1100 734-2982. •NICE 28DRM 2BA• •1 mllll .... Fem 2t30 to;;;; 36d Ju-1 lilted. 3bd. 2be up. coOMI@ ' H/PT, lllllTUf/-Traditional E/BLUFF 3Br 3Ba .... " C.St • 21•.. DUPLEX Lndryfec,dlw.Fncdpetlo. ReMg,dlehwtllher&etow 2b•houtelnCdM.,.j 1bd, tbe down. frptcl, bulyMeclLab,llnowtOC R.E.Ote.PIT.H<M'99-1. _.. 1 111 .,. 3bd 2b 2 f 1 No pet1 M60 N/tmk,.. Ind. NO PETS 545-4455 •nd tidy, non·tmkr. bit-Ina 1 4 car parf(lng. ., ... Gd drtvlng record, Good lYPinG. apellng • Realty ~v:!ct(~:;d ~9.~· 2BR 26ulp::Cloue conao. IU~~· 1 ~k tor~: 780-1418"' M2-7521 S385+dep+1/3 lrtll. Ptl met\KepeflOl'I. &40-0140 aenUeU Alf751-31t1 H:l J. 7:liU jOwnr 720-t696. 827-5018 ~~o ac;n~ ~~~· ~ yrty, 11050 tum, $1000 1650 South Coat Plue 1~~-:.!':.;: call 780-5025, C.thy --I IOUI FlllT 1795/mo. 832-5282 . unfurn, Ms-3755 ., .. 18drm, air, lenc:iecl pool. Gd vu. Nr bch Me&. 380, 2BA CDM-'A ml to C.....--11-.-"I 1024 806 w OoMn Front, HARBOR RIDGE 28'. f0<· pool, cerpor1, No pet1. iS7M912 VIiia Rent.a. beectl, xtr ... S500 +~ * WTW * mal DR. lrplc, epa1aeuna, 54e.a781 *•&and ,,_ 2er 2aa. u tll, c •II Co II•• n --==: WOODSIDE VILLAGE l800aqttolluxui,MW 2BA t'A8e TWnhM Lg guerd gete, poolltenni.. 800-H50, 2bd, 1ba. Chotoe erM. Gerege. 7st-.3003fl52•2400· l!!~!!lf!!!.!~!!!!!~ 3Br with new carpet & rernod,.w.~· W~ICI • patio, gee frpl. Welk to 11995/obo A9' 875-0M7 _.........renovated, on Petlo 1900 Norf:'' Aval! 06-01 Room & fUll 1-...1-~ paint, xlnt loc: & con<I w ,v,.. ... -..m. ' Npt Hrbr High Sc:N M75 ~ ............. , · ' _...... S81.500 758-54 10 conlld«equlty trede Alkf0<Jlme31-7370 Hlt•er•2brfnodgerden weat 17th nw Whittler. 780-1713or857-1 I priv,'340+utll, 11t,1Mt, 0 rtaidtt lllt 1250K or Maul Pf'OJ>, _ _ apot w/gerege • ftet S700 548-3129 kif more deta. ... Tm Wlftl* ~. reaponefbte. em-1_.;:,..l.:;l!I~==,;..;::.;:~ When the 1•11 le•ves Sl8r1 turning 11 s lime 10 turn to clu1Hied fOf ii.IP wtth pre· w!nte< m.inten•nce 714-673--0~7. byownr 4BR, 1'Abe, 1g rem rm, muett• 53M191 746 mo. E/llde 2br 1'-'be Studio ~ 10 btlc, perking. ployed, 850.al50. John. DT _....,•a• - Milllons 01peopleloo«10 lrplc, W9t ber/lg lch din Agt l'M towntlouM, trptc:, petlo, An new drpa/~. All CdM, F/M Pfof. IMmll. Good ~ • ~ cleulfied everyday .1rs etM, eppl, nr SC Plua. LIDO ISLE Yrty ..... gerege, lndry room, off \.ltlle Incl Yrty S625 F.e 2bd. 2ba. pool, fr1>1C. 6 ., ..,... • ~ uMdnewt n-pet11075, 557-4.Ne. Channing l BR 2t>e. ev91j ltr.t, quiet location. TBJlliT 111-M $475 mot Jim 4784119 onty.,..&--,4 NOW, no peta. $1800 mo 2917 Orenge btWn tem-2pm M.-F. llftll81l1 489-3400 own/btcr Tll ~. Ml· 11N EnlOY the Luxury of tN CdM. L.atge bdrm a beth Net'I oo ..-. ldeM. In. LIDO ISLE GREAT LOC bMuttfUI aurroundlnga of In 3br home. wld, frplc. wntlofle, new productt. 3&. sea"-· .. emene, ILWFAPTW/ftlW •lllYllWT petto, 1ot1 of perking. 114/5l2-1M4,_beeed grdnr Incl. VILLA Vaulted celllnge, prvt In • apacloU1 tldrm $4!0/mo. 759-3330 BALBOA-Htoeet on Ntoe balcony, redecoreted Condo w~. 2 cer Couple Of lndtV kif ~The Stet. of CIMomle.. Ln, 28', ell emene, penor 119!. 2151 Peclfte Ave gerage w/opener. a.cur. bdrm/b&. aer ' apedol,. ~ment of Parke I ~ vu. II.Ix rurn S 1800 I 3 1 -1 1 o 7 p m o r tty guerded get-. Wtd condo nr u c 1. poof kttc Aecl'Mtlon. It aotlolt~ mo, unfur l1850/yf1y. 855-0MS. No P9t1 hiiupe. M4--050t gerage S4i5 ·w.1&.e · ~kif the ~don of ,._, MITAL CLEAN & SHARP 2 BR. NEWPORT HEIGHTS F 20-28 lhr. 3bd, 2'M>a !t E=:i Co¥e0 I A:= ". _. -cp1I & ~. O/W, get· 18drm 11e. ., •. Pool. Twnhee HB .... to bc:f\I Perk. Bid• .. to be 111-4111 tr llM111 :rs:.as;7pets 164()/rno. leundry. Wetw I 0-r· l2tO +i350 MC. A~ &11. opened et 2:00 P.M. on 1700' 1725 eao.121 720-1124 JMI. Mt-Oeet. June 11, 1tte, t41t"" 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 llllJPillt 330 W. Bay St. Costa Mesa, CA penin11 Now Available NEWPORT HTS redec ..,_ 1• 11A 28A 2be w/trptc, W/O Lota of ....-.. a"751-hkup a oereoe No s>eta. ........ , -....... evell June 1. t 1000, No peta lto-2170 O/E/W pd. 75t-1114 ·H A8TSIOE 280RM* On Cenal 28r tie. MW F to 1tw 3br C.M. hOme. ~~:o"'~2• crpt, dtpe, dlw, ~ 0-·1 • 175/mo. ... .....,anoe The Contract' .. fQ( • 5-c AR R 0 u TE s ege. No ~• ..... Y,_1., • for Fem. teecher In y.., P9rlod Pfoepecttw $800/fft0~7 whlctlr. N/lmkr MS-2367 8lddef'I mt). purct.e 1 FOR YOUR BUDGET: ADVERTISE IN THE DAILY PILOT'S CLASSIFIED PAGES PRIVATE PARTY RATE (No Cancellation) 4 line, .5 time minimum ~ .60 per line-Example: 4 lines, 5 doyss l 200 • Pr.c• 111u11 b. intlvd.d 111 od • Rotw do.t 1'0f ~to COf!llN'fe!OI occounn A~. &oatifl9 Of Real b lOM • NO CANCfllA TIONS Ofl CHANOfS -. it.. od hot ""' Cu~ It rnpofltlblt for it.. Ml °""°""' • FOR MORE DETAILS CA LL 642·'618 llilJPilat Gwege. Huge yerd. 1787W~IC 7t0tmo. 720-t422 WOODLAllD YILLAGI AltAllTMlllTI c • • • • • • • d d 1 d 4 + • • • § d OOJ1f of the Pfe>epeetue kif S10 et elf'/ of the fol. lowing Offlole of the Stet• Dec>•rtment of Perk• end AecnNltlon. The Pf~ mey be 1nepec1ec1 et no Cflatge .. the ..,,.,. looetlone. All ~.., 8ldder9 .. lnvfMd to ettend e ~ aft• ,,..lldden, CM-let u • ...., y. ~ ... ,~ = A.M. Cllll (714,..._ 1_ S .. I Y.. ,,..._...I kif fur"-infonrtdoo. ..,,..... , JI OMoe of foonomlo end Recet Affelrl. 1411 "' ·--............. ~.. lttwt. Room 1147-21. .,.. .,...... .. , (111)44MOIO. 64l-S671 o;:r, i:C:~ Hunttngton CA for information 1W:... ..,.._Loe Mo Earn Extra C••h For D•ll~ery Of Thi• Pa,,.r HUNT.NGTON BEACH FOUNTAIN VALLEY INDEPENDENT Deliver 1 day a week. N collecting, no soliciting. Must have dependable car, truck or station wagon and insurance. CALL 842-1444 & su rprisingly eao?at2.'01\~I IOW COSt. .,,..~..,~~ Ast< for JoAnne Craney ~~:==-=======:-z=========~!!!!!!!.L~·2~1:oe~1(~t•ft)n,;:;'~~1~4l'~''~l~~~~~~~!!!!!l!!I!!~~~~~~~ I l 'I ...... -.---~ ~ ...... mT a..t,tt.l'r••-u. ....... CUM llM 111•!....o.. .. , ••• "'." 'tr-:.,,,._.-: -'~°'o/n ~ ••••1111 • touaTOM worfq ..... ~ ... IVNUJI 11HJt, IVOty/ ........ , ..,.,: .-. ..,..... ... Ot• Jlf ............ ....._-::im. _, T1t~IJ,_.. WOtts. ew. ·~_,..:-::. =~lft""'·t=tw I * ww'OOl8'-,,_. eo 1111 .. _. ,.,...,.,., 'llmMWI ...... MW•y to • lllSI ..... _. flod wwrw t J 11t Mo ft· Pr I, · S7 1 11t:1 .. Hlll _. ..... fOW4l=-11) l---::~=:=':=::"-~-~~1 a. Oftttl~linS*IClnla. .. =5 I ~-+ !!!-.!9 ..... ::'_~--_-e.e **Wllllte WIOOINO :::=:r: ---.,_ ~ ........ -. .._, 2~·,... M1tOr-.. en11 -7 --no.,. --· -_... _..., DM91, -a. ..._ iWOllO.......,,... ... ~ • ._. M .. e ..... Co *"""' ...,.._,._IA..... 14114CM bw\wom ltl001 ......... *'r ....... I .... tor ....... Md Yl~•.:..!OOD ..... W1.Jln0tPntw.OOM-c.rw••···· ----·-Ofler c.-.-... ..,.: ..,_. ~-·-· •ul11tort1Mc1-. ._,9U9IAl&H08T-..___... ._,.. . ,._ ..-. ..... 1tllla..tk N.8 IRVINE AUTO OOMrnwilcatton MllMe HIU. Ctllll't flloe-peny -x ..... OOM-'IT "°'....-..0 ~ .. ~ lllln .. ~ MMIQUI ifllilf-~w. -' _,...; . =''i..:t'1= ~~:-::: ::=.=j= ':.::r::.""'11.~!:. ='AVP ~= ~·~:::...: ~=;::. w•CiDll IOO f.-.o 71..::s~~;144 tlMtllftCI ottlco1 lfld IVI COCiti'AtL I . *4 I 1• ,._,..Aw. CM. '200 Obo. In-ma. ---·-m.11 'lie, "'7 ::*'• 800-~2• ·7"'•~ compolltlve ulary DAY.-...... IDI n •• -LL..__ A """"9 .,_. ctwte'' · • low mt, ....._ -1K. ,. u-llllfVg Te 7Q.0100 • rvvvWAITMal -1Jft••• ..... ,_, poraon w/cornputer, 4mWltll llilboe ....... ~peolt:lllll, ... 4401,Moft.M ''l•iii;:;;:;r!!!!!!!! MWny ":::.:.~ ~ c:..:. ~-~ .. ':.. ~ Midi .tt print• & key punof\ TINNll MlMll .. IHIP 111-no-noa Ot Wke:lii iiiiil '• 11 wan ,1.., Hoti L • ~ .~· knowlNgo tlellpfUI • ..,. 1110. 11cM11111. 114-t1M141 ...,~ .. ·.~'' -· . -r.cNnotfNllofltoe, ~8-dt~ ano, ~·II + _..,,,11·1-. c..--,;i. "°''*· ~ ilACH TIN-acr,. OOCllk. p.., w •.llllw/~IM....._ 10 employw. Ot9et WI· bpd, ""-....... Allftkt"' 11on•1-1• Wiii(::tii)CAMv::Oll'f NII CUJI,.,.,,... t'Nm-Tlbemldo fMll1 fd/, -............ •1 •. OOGIJO©~ m..:a1WOl'k '"" time -.r/lllftll peraon.t 2llO ao: COeM LLOYD'I NUMefrf botoh~ ::;•t.,ebte ta001mo. OW. rtli-nM llrp·="·~·i1~444ii7i, t1=M~1111111 00 _..--:t--iiMm---.--MICua Mo•loen ...... Hwy, Laoune lelatl. Ml-1411 IUO. hh!Mftd 116-1117 t•illl/t1... ~~t;,;Mo~.:-: PIT ~... Women21-30.Goodlootl-··--· CHOiCib IMI Noll/Denny 2ttf..1Ttt1.' ..._ ...... lftotlo4etedl*· -· ... • m ... ,_,.... ~· 900d l'laure. ~ ...... -• Upto~tt.endlldo"'up 1 bMiViMi ' eon to rnmco -....-. In .,...._,.. _, • ... 'llV'I,"" u.. 80llttl COM1 .,_ -• .... to 24 ft. In "" ·trtendft c;:.11~:.,': :f, Now~l?f!~help. oc a~·.Je•ndon At.:Z.=~MMI. :' .. eo.~ec::'d •=-:.:=-~· a:":Zf:t:-:~ ft POASClif #' ~ Yeotlt9, 1131 dey Ind 9"9 INftt °'*'• Ooneral l11-70IO oolot prtnte. WW.. .. ALL llUCY\JM.9 MU8T G04 Mlboet. Ml ..._ llolt AUOI '*"'"'-CM. QltlpeoClfil&OlltlteR, .. -.... ........ rocolwo a comgt4:!~ ~ ~ ~ uoefoulp .... 1114dey <.HfVROln IOAT lnlptctot-Muet bo ==="""°'":' 8 people t::'tn SA~ produce. 12 r:.=·~."°"' ~~··,;;;.;;;: ornMMI--. H191' .. t~Jll\I t1mltu w/Hllbo111. 700 w. COMt ~8. Otdor dopt, no HP midnight to .... momtnQ. LAM(• ~ One In Clilll wrlCI&. Aght .._,,.., WANTIO: tip tot 40' S.I•• 6 S.•v•u MacGtegor Yec:Ms. 1131 nee ll"lf, mu.I bo 11 compeny ber*"9 wtth Corona Die Mar c.. tlatdwere, ~.,ad Kotch, ..._pott/Dena P1ecent1a, Cceta MaM. Now a~t111g appll· Yf*. and bo able to .eett growth. '•rnlly~. man t75-4Me . furniture, alt•retlona Point pttl'd. t'7t-e114 ltlllCl#I •THI cat1on1 fOf CUtllera, ~.••c1111t Income. pi•red. 587-1361 room, end MUCH, MUCH Dta.161...., hlWMdl "'" Bu I c K IMlll ~~~ ::,"fu::=.::.:: 'MlftlB ....... =:=quallyand WAHTB>: To 8'lt loet 4~!~~~!!:~ "l,.o~~~7~ Mcf~ Pteoo at the Mr.~112-5143. ~-~:-Cto "'" ... a-u.... till •a••-•1'a"'°'1bo'amo,o,rl1no °"d 67•-e•M 101».AW~ 0 Nowport Plu blwn ---...·"' .._..__ _,. in • • 7 DEALER 176-4994 --· ,_.,.., °' Cati for • or lnOf'e lerl\-tom ~. lndudlr\ll ... L ,._.a_ = --Gfoo¥9.8AVEAo!HCv' 10.m-2pm Dally .~~ on tofttn~ • lllY .:OEHi Mf 1.... (t1l>I02~Coloct ~=ii!iii;;;;iiiiiii.:J,• Liii 1111 commlol6on. Mlf. for 11ne Info. ,,., 14 1234 Lii Ml-1111 a.. ' eun. am .-11•11&www * ... ___., • PIT BOOKKEEPER 75'-014t t7M013 or(213 1 11' CUbiC fl """811etor It. COIU Mw. Cati C 8 1f .. ~ .. * 111.D * Wookondaceno~1 ·~ --...,,IL 8TAE88 Clf'N90 1 1150. 13• Cubic ft. Up-fkw, 1-IOO-M7-100I ~. * IM8 * 91TT9* OYNAMIC .... pr0gram. ~MICee33 1,DllnaPt. -·--•-Mii, exper'd .,,.,.,.. right Frootor 1 100. fntte f• MB ......... ~~ IBSli Tetemarkotlng. Unltd -Baxtar l Cloero Sall 17S-tl68 -_., ,.., -· xtra, pOt4nt1eten-M21M11111 PIT..,.. -~• IMlt e mo me1c.,.,142•1231 JoM ·-MOW'9 . DobenW\/Xkc INrp,prvparty.111,600, 8Mrl.11~ 1111 ----In .. ptw ' ' -... ,.. pur9 !Wed M, II IMtl, 64l-0211 ' I ' ~'"J::"1~ of Mecbt lnautwo bit!-lllH./MI... ~cuft,ldtooftd, "ulll" CMltandlnca, cllRolmed. L.,.. ;·· * 1'1a-GIOO * llYllTlllll Ill.II etter'3pm.ThoAttz.llO lf.: ~~·ph~ Pem1aoont FIT Moft.~. brencU1200,111-102I. F,_togcfhm.11s..aalt -te n ---,~,_,...,,,......,,_,_ __ NNpol1 Center Or, NB. toc0hnlquo1. Call Mra ~ lnJ::;;~!:'· 'AIOOIDAIRE AiFNGEA-STANDARD POODLH ll• WI 1.1111 •--..... Harper 253-7324. 210· E 11-tc .... ATOR w/loo ,,..,, vwy AKC ALSO COLLIE. IU.... fi 111D .... ........... • '" • .... good condition, 1175. FREE TO GOOO HOME. I Exporlo!IOod ~ NowHlrlngfor .. pooltona. ........ STOCK ROOM HELPER 54WOte 85M140/~2141. 111111 I ... . Account hocutivo ~:C' Needed. Wllltraln. Mu9t Wiii train, opportunity AEFAIOERTOMiUIUP OBIN fUlltut ~Tl''°"'mtON .... ..... needed' for fMt orowtno . Hwy, NB. have own ttw. 541-0757 growing compeny, flt. Apart .. AefrigerltOf'I a ·-EF. I ... , I 13111..,_8'¥d, G.Q. publ 1htno company. ltwal HM INSUAANCE 640-ll80 Ga6orol 1oe e. let Awe. ... ~ 11111 BEACH ILVO. IM-2118 =:==-~ IJJ Com'I llf'90 CSR FIT or BelboaP9n.Apt9. ·~ wil&m, l14/Ml .... · · ,. PfT. llllary +comm.<*! otemencelllng a--o.1~-Mll NIWI c:Nllt, 2 dt,,,,. ftlo .. _ W ... .......... Thia •"kond p/tlmo 1Wbera844-0390. ...._. cMll'IM.2tX21H,4dr ... _ ... U .. Pdl th .. = =~ Mllng. JANITORAUCOUPLE llllllllMI ....... ":1~ .. 12;::1-:inxtnt. VofOUNO ax .. A W!Jil:ra; 0 I• · . · E~ work, lmmod ~ .. afll •LI By order of Landlord. · ~ -7 to"' P. • Box fMO Pl~ hero In 1 days. 11 _. ... _.14111 • Legal ... of Abandoned f1t1 I le&;ell .... cer, truok or YWI tor COetaMw.CA92129 Rhonda 112-6&43 ~ Ener~ peop6e needed PrGperty ~ -211t. CASHI 750-4644. IN ORANGE COUNTY We Otter: •New Car Sala •Used Car Sales •Service •LelSlnt •Excetlent Finaric1na ·.~'' -· . - 979-2500 Attn: Tim Guwman UftlJW 1 Pl L1UL ~Ill to conduct a MattcelllftO 1o:ao.m'. At 1is1 ~ F=.. ~c ~ 4 netJ llhtJ~ Nophonocell~ oxpertenco. non trne*er, ~ICedforAfW'noon Study fot tho °'9n90 8tN9l, Sutto U , CM. good homOI 733-1187 fot ~ Law Firm l Evening hours. Clrmen eoa.t PutltllHng Co. 0¥W l40.000 '1odt of Newpof't ~ 9"!!'!!!!!'!!''!!!'!'"'!'!"!!'~ •• • ULD •. and Altllno. FIT 78CMaee l Mwfteld 875-4200 • ..... ........ = : -= FREE TO~ HOME .. ·-·-TIP ... Piii TrlYOl Ind. -s>· rqd. non AnrD ~ ~no.:S:-W:-,: coofweoce tall4oo, S4 Male Kltton 7 wk•. "..::"9'tlnted-:.. ~ for PM-ad amkr (714) 7eG-3171 r t U\ --qund. for hofM. new dining & d!Mtt .. • ...,,,_ a lebby, gry .,,... end tor tm-- Ill 1/W SCtK)()L To repair rnacHnery Midi m1kor1, high 1e1h9ol ~~C.: w/btu..-. 722-1"2. "'*"-~· ...,Lin ... •W&l llLlll 11.000 °"' ml. • 1100 541-7421 llft 4CMft, '7' Eldorado. -cpo, Nd ltf'I lntr, nu brk1/t1ro1, gd cond l20001• Ofr ..... 1.1 515-Paint Statue ot lJD- efty on glas$ AmerlCal\ nags a.nd e.qe symbol too Pattern af\d com- plete instruclJOna tor three 19" 1r: I 2") piClures Gift lhop, J.W Airport. ~~~~ ... • aen1cww, ~· collego ~ not• fOf 3 complot• LHA8Aold APSO ..... ~ (8tU 21~' 5271> To,>Metoedll ....... Plld Muat bo ftelc l evlll JOBS .,......,..,...._., "'"''" ' .--.. k"°'8na. ~ale. & • tnUlt ~. .-CALL~ MY wttndl/owe. Bottle Tim Janitorial MrVlcO ma-Mondoy-ttdly 5:30pm mor.t Muat tio' IOfdl Good clelpoetUon. Buff OAAHGECOAST OI ttlr Fr1 862_,1H dllnoo, Alr·Unel. To do to 9:00pm, Saturday Term.: oeetl MIC or cotor, ,1u9t apeyed. AJI Jelp/Aenlutt -· ··-•ll'ITrtll Send S3.2S plus 75c Pottage. l"laf\dhng, tor each panem am t'IDN mlnoroleetrtoat&plumt>-9:00em to 1:00pm, 8'-1 VII&.~ H.Mon ~ at1ot1. 1150 n•got. 2624Hllrbor eo.taMw .... l•H Aet:..rr.... LM ~=•~t:,=& ~~~r~u: 11onoor 931.3915 7S3-1252ev/Mndl. 1• ma 211 «114 •7-~ Nowport BHch Drug MOf(Y notChort. Mult apoak ~hon•. caaual attire. UCl400. llllMal lmtnwta fnlb lltl •ADY TIYITl StM•, oxp prot, pi t, PRIZES ~ !.;9: !.::: F:i-1n=:: =r':: hnltut Ml4"'l •a fovo+X l Wfi/dr, llLll 1'"30 "''I*.-. for tMlntenanco. Send your Mick Mon Fri at lllT.. -8ELMEft ALT0 9""""°" em/tm-. * lltklnd W:.Of:J'.._M~.~-~... TRPS ::;-: .. H~T;:: ::;.;:~~3~r b~:.~ LU ti1-11n :!!81:~·.='°~ =·.=.~ an•a ULD •1·n111 de9rl Way. 1rv1no. CA s:30pm1tM2-ae11. 4.,... tMng room 1et. cttUon.2•1-a11 ~ 1111•1 FIT&PITcounter..._ln ';A~ 92715 Novor u11d. Brown fllw l .lillU Cl~ IMS 1;:~=r-..-· mall ==-1tor1. ......,.,, M~~~!:u!': To6emllrtlettng ~1~:;-2~ •t tRIUGPRTMS.m:ctl.J&I( vw 'IO Jena. vwy crw. WAIGHT HARDWARE. "you.,. IOolllrig for utra wt1o woukS enjoy fwl,,1111 llefb AJI Fr. Prov. Form din Ulf .. W body rough a.ft~ auto. ale, erwt. IS400. 121 ~. C.M. epencStng money, or tit• deellngdlrecltywttf'lr.c.il eutto. OftG t3600 aec. '700/080, 280-1014 meny tpar'O Pl'1I 12000 Dt9 211/251...._. heo lUYll. &1111 to go pi-.. lttle Mag6c ator•I In tho Waat-NO SELUNGI 2 a.tie 11350: cof tbl let 1550; wttdy or 64().5434 AAM ID-7141 lft lpm. 714/711).1343 l<de Mountain, Knott9 8-JY min.t• and eo.ta Maoa = o!,c;..~':' occ clln S150: aofa iov.-IU ... 11111 Lill ....... tfM vw '11 AAB81T, 4 doof, '= :*'...!':~ ~= ~~~ C: !':!t;: .,... ~to 10 In per Houra 5.aopn;.9.e>opm· wt M60. Jdnt. IWM705 _ blUO, 4 epd, ale, vwy lndgcruloel.Selatycom-have..,.., opeillnga In .-. 9157· Sot. 9:oo9m-1:00Pm. Foi ANTIQUE wtin. bdtm let. •• ctoen, 12900. 0 .8 .0 . "**"''' w/folowtng l C .M .. H.B. or F.V. P&ITlm lntoMaiw ell Mr. Mk* et Dbl bed, 2 nlte atande. I C.... W ... llU · Mlletl0-4111 ..... =.-=-~_!1 =' .::.: c. ';C.. lf'f um """ ...... MMs, _ .......... . LAUIA WHEB.11 c A A F T s expettOllCO. Call a.tty 842-4333 Pert Time ~II wort! 8 4 2 • 4 3 3 8 b w t n drawer c:n.t & mlf'rOr 11111' DTlft MUST SELL THll W&KI mftLB ft.I• Jerdlnee73--3310NBd\ CASHIER M1ture, p.... lnPrQf111'aoatlrvlno 9:00am-3:00pm. After l 15.IWC).1'7t SNPl.YTHEBEST 'II vw A8bblt ecnv... -·· SELL timo ...-~ ~ omce. No aellng. 5:30pm 842-Nrl. ,... lofllbd t350. °'*' * * Ill.I * * a....~ -~ trtpll wtlt. a 1a.0001ob0 n w--:.~7=" IMO. Cl-L-/•--..·uua.. ntent Slore LH. Siiiery FlexlbleHrt.Stilery Telemartcettng =/br.., wall unit MUST SELU In ~ EUAOPEANDnJVE 952-41S5or75-1170. ... _.. w Cell IS~ 1 + bonua. Cell • oof tbl let '450: din Homo. Loo Clnnober Jew-1540 JAM~ AO . ... negot. .,,, 1· 752-2351,AlorHowwd. MtS350;berttooll S75. aled hcnel 8'hlgfl; IW NEWPORT BEACH )'OUCMlocateparutOt )'OIK throush cl<1ss.ified .,.,._.,.. .. .,._....,....,. CASHIER WANTED! Ful ,,. ... ....,._ ... ,...,, _......_ ,. ___ .._. ecre.i·. Pr. t• Adjecant to F..nlon llland l~llll=tlque~=tiut~o~1n=c1~1:;u~lfled~~?~!.;;~===!;:===~=L_-_::_ ___ _ BARTENDER FEMALE l . --llm• ..,.. """" -· -·-, "9',._,,_ "--1 o.ya ...__.. = =:R:::,E::.,.fl~= =d~_r'Yi4~ 'iiiiiiiiu W~tr~"°':;~ =::1so~lli...~ =~=~~ --·~-' houM, ono bf1t fr0m main W•t Mat1nl Prod, NB. Lloyd Peet Control neectt For more Info Cl I PATIO TABLE high Cklllonoe YMee; Pf liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii bNc:tl. Btoedwey Bar l a.tto thebuioABC'a-routotech.wetratn,muot 142·5811 After 8:30 pm (CUSTOMIZED AEEL) of Kol ftlfl bowte; Igo LAAGI 8ELICTION ~ Grllle 251 Broadwty, attlcl,b~t.andcloaet -ha~gooddrMngr«i0rd. only,_. for Mary. 0000 CONDITION, ~Coltectlon lndudee NEW l USED IMW'SI · L-oun-Boect\ 497-3012 lhen get tomecutl. Cati ~7· .. !!Y1rior AM MAKE OFFER. 648-1170. Tuek. flQur.a and Lem .... _ ., .......,2 not1kto1 and more. VOLUME SALES Oriontlll rug1, Ceblneta SERVtCE l LEA81NG from CNna and Europo. An ext111t1W Bronn Cof.. 3870 N. Cheny A~. LONG BEACH lectlon. Ctyat1I pee.. of (No. Cherry exlt-405) ::.,,~~ ~.: (l14lUMlN from around tho wend. Tr .... Witcome ..,..iiiiiiiiiiiAi-----1 ~ ......,.,, ,..,._, OPEN SEVEN DAYS ooor.Moldlngo.-8-)' RESIO/COMM'UINO 28 _....,.....,iiiioioii ..... ___ EXTERIOR EXPERTS ~ pOf'OOlli, dlehel, -------• Wlndowe-Compteto PetlOI yre. Do my own weftl. UC. LAND8CAptNQ by Jamee Otfflcult/Ext. Our SoedaltY otc. Cwwd ~ood $2 40 per day ACSdltlona. ~· #278041. Al M&-1128 #417131. Free eettmetea UC#211617 831-929& ~and much moN aNUll llllfUI DELIVERY DEPARTMENT McLAREN'S BMW That'; ALL ....... ...., for •4n44e PIUI NEW/AEPAIA. Oualtty. No LMW ....... M9-1H5 I GLASGOW PAINTING MAY 22.23.24.28, ..,,, to 3 llnel.. 30 d•-~ Plue Small Aemoc1e1 and job1 to tme!!· reeeonablo. ~ e Tree Trimming lnVEllt. 30 yre U$*.. 8 pm. 321 M.AAIOOLO. SERlnvt~ICE W.m-i,~--=··lk:d.e.1 1 - 2345 ~::=· ~::e:;:;DSWORKI lut.c:.~M7in1 ~~·:.~':~ HOME AEPAl~AVICE llueuy lnVEllt, cellngO. refln cab. Fulter1on. CA Alt Phailel. . ,. • WILU mrw;c: 6IGWotti 12e)yreexp .. WOl'k~. ~ ...... ,,... 114-el08300 DIRECTORY model. Addltlona. Ouer'd cu.tom O&Mo l Mirror concnto Como patlOI.· o."'8 Pllntlng ~7 Sc:Ndfer 250-0570 daye, __ 2_13-89 __ ,_~_1_0_1 __ Wortt. By UC. Contractor. WQftl, wella. llldlng doora 15 Fri~. ~ . Painting lnt/Ellt PIC*'lnQ 11411 04tO eveningl CA.LL TOOAYll Free alt. (714) 554-2183 etc.A-1 QIUI. 541-1507 BRICKWORK: Smalt~ ~. and Aepatra. 25 f ru tlM Ill .. I ... Door-.Aaplllr-Alteratlonl .... ,... u-..... Cootl MeM, tw'1 exp .. 979-5294 .... Cabinota-P.,...._Lodt~c ~ -,...,._,......, TNG Your 35 yrtpP.JerrylW2-054S7 carpentry e MMOnry • lrvlne. IW'L875-3175 TOP QUALITY PAIN I p .... Jill SeMco DltoctOtY Plumbing • Drywoll • STUCCO MASONRY-TILE Int/Ext rwfa. ho Mt. ,..,, ..... ,. ..... ._ __ ..,_ Aepr..,itMl'll ~ iii. & Moro. JB Mt-9990 No Job to llNlll. AH typoe. 411-1111 ut-1• 1A8 +AONBEAllMB MJ-412111f, IOI ep:re;;;trmio;; FENCES-GATESTreetrtm Free•t. Lie. e.11--2W Wo Try to Boat any Prtoe ~~ 28 ft Aoc>* Wortt l ClwWnQ. Dump NM. C.M.IN.8. .,_.__ * THOMPSON * ..... , ... 10 .. ..__ .......,_ ,_ MS lnltallltlona. 836-47~ .,.._Jim Whyto 842-7208 _...11111 * PAINTING * .., " " .,_.,, '"""'' ..,.. •------• • t>oerd1, (21 tlrl), cabin •OEN. HOME REPAIRS. •A-1 ..... * FREE ESTIMATES '* ae...,. 5, fUll vecwm Paint Drywall Carpentry CLEAN l EXPERT Aolldanllal l Commerclat hoed ~ wttf'I mtcto etc. Gary 84&.&277 PTL Owr 25 tw'I a.portance lnt/Ellt/and Lt Matnt. ator~olt•P•· 1hlp to ••HANDYMAN•• uc.T-1t8,421 t30-1363 Aefa/Guer.M2-01115 ~ redk>, hot ~ Lar or ama11 I do It alll .. ABC MOV1NG.. ........ ayltem, fuly loededl -.. h-.._.,....------'-----....--=-=~=::::-Par 531.as11 ·or 1we mao. Ouk* ' CtnM T 13I048 FXJffRIM IN'i'iMIOAS ~n:=•:J::.o•12~= YOU BUY • I INSTALL LO RATES. 582"°"10 HANOINOISTRJPptNG '~Eweo. Lt. Eloc:. Lt. Ptumblna. IT11'91. L• VISA·MC 173-1512 28' ~ '13 Sleepe. Oar. Opnra. WL ~94 .. _ ... ,. .. Wl!llpaper lnltlllletlon a . lo tlrl, ~. RoF radio: -tietlmA8'°-~ Homo tmproo. Orange Co OriQlnel ROlnO\IO. AJI typea. comm I L«an 1mmec. ~ tip •·1 mentl~ • .ec, cuetom Student MM.. Tnaured & reeld't. Joe 648--5180 rft. '3uoo. 97t-e614 SEAV~1ttv~7 ftnWlcarpontty,fuly UC.T124-438.841-t427 Wog91111hdtlang~ Oy9581-M42Ev/Wtt.ndl • aooumo deal\ equip woodlhop 11$-9093 NEWWaretlOueaStcwago Hang/lltr1p. AcMco to tho 41' Del T,....,. Lo "" c:Nrt & tnterpNtetlon. EClEANEM: I .. 11.U.. 11111-1111 C#R'/. ~130 auto/pilot, 1tablll10t1. -------- I 10.00, 8'yen 4S2-1745. ::o.::~19:: -mmlJNd .QOOiNd ~ f l•W, :'f'6-3:M.1:;~ c111 ~~~~t=cw. !Pit Hol-"oMlng. ~ & :• & Yard ~92 tw./or ptece. ••• 3116 14llraf111-1• Ctwta barrel bodl. ·se. '""· low mt. seooo. ~x;;; NIP*I I uphotltery. wtnctow9, etc. .,-AJplU!Mlng&Mllltng\' 1ttt 111 ono.over,3000 131~12a ~ ~ l Klr'btl Matnt. 131·8272 H~ M0W'9. a.an-ng1 DRAINS CLEA.A From 115 Ml r...or to MW 0onct'. Da.oreen late '81, turbo. 5 W • 131 1" Hol. _.._.'9 14 t" tlkP· upa.c1. Barry ~;2~ FllUOIW. Dtapooet, Heetor. 127.600. 911 Warri19tcw1 apd, orig SK ml. 1500 !~J!t!=---1,....,..,,...,,,_let,own ' M1.ot07UC. 722..aoel NHYC oS**'9 day Win-MmO bo1115,500. W• G'aG &aar; r trw.PlnaM&-eeeeDelo ~"'*"'·~ ner1tetr1w. lhowontytt1t743-9371. T• ~ W9miih tow rm. promp4 ...... , -·· I FEAAAAI 30IOTS 1171 compound, .U. 167-i48t c...tnetlel ~. Court. 759-1911 ~ 30 ~ ":: :_ C.... 1tee 31 ft on 50 ft AodfTan Oottt .._.., ......... rrilll I roof Mt guer. 122.7537 moortng. M2.en1. Webora. Tuned Ex,,_.. ...... 1 .. 133.a.. 11w1•1. U:::Cilio lit I co;o . ...,. .. ,.. '-«Mtt Aea1dentt11 es.. l••" .. /MiillU --,~Fmiiiiiir--.... 11•1"-I ... Deelgrl .,., ~ All~ of remodlloo. Home tonhe llderty ,.._ ··-• -Typeu tttng.. GAAPHIC8 llcl4'7811. M0-1511 aerdonlncl. Comoetftlwe Kathy 640-4101 Rod, mlntooftd. 1MH ml NEWPORT. 7»t1t1 ST. CLAIR CONSTRUCT. Pr1cel. Cfiuak 142-2113 Xdd',..611;11 Fl.nlOdii 1331<. 111-792-2233 ord Praciwno, Comm'I, Aellcn Ptet\t to K.C.TAElSIJMCE .. •.a.iiiiiiiiii .. "9 .... ...,."""""....,11111111m .... ,i:~·~O:J;: ......... • flW8H JOBI oompt.to.,....., '*'4131 Top. TM\. AeitlOWll. Ouel.. ---...,.. UDO 14 COMPLETE Low ml ldnt cond .. S1IOO. ICIALITY · Aemodlt A1patrt PatlOI, Serv. UCllnl. hi alt. \ * * * * 430 SMta Ana Av., NB ...... IOI QAAPHICI NIWPORT. dry-well & tanent ~ teMm °' l3I MH lnt./lJlt Nllld'I, comm't. EXPiNf CiMXUiC TiiftCi * * HONDA PAELUOE 720-9191 mentt. fillndyt 841 t.XP'D GAN>I~ 10 Y'I 'fyra Unton eicp UH4ta0 Dllltlrw.ttw. Af'fotdab9 SANT AHA 30/10 IMtU, •13 AIC. IUto, IOeded. TYPING, word P<O c 11 Ing, N.I ., CdM W. 0UeMy F,... .... LOW MTUI Kltc:Nno.. bcatN. 722 .. 113 toeded. ful-reoe t ..... ~to. ~ ... ~A~H'""--'"-....-..r.om-~~~ U Yl1K .. NIU fi•9l~iiiliil-~,?!'_~~ trael7500MO-1 ""m --.. .,...--~;-;::-.__7 ,. .. .,. .... aa '°' lnfO • .,.._. Oii °' . __,. . M 8 Z 'I 1 3 0 0 i D • ..... IMne. 112-4144 ~ • ~--out. ---"3-1m Of ta-4249 LET THI 8UNIHINI 1H I .-oond Otto ii ;;;; llO wtl gu.-/sp MT.a640 C&I LAWN 1E1MCE SuNNno window delf*'O .,,tf'I ~· 'O°. 0 • D -~· -MOW•EDOlTWICEMO. FIHI PAtNTING ~ Nch-Ltd Cell{114)~IJllO flll ~11~J1.1~: IT'" ... in ~ laO-UI 541-6112 ard a.nor. '' l"' ot Mppw -s;;;;;;~iiiiijimjiiif;iftitii'" "-'a•• e AIT)t>a OOONGALOREll . ~Uc. li06U. Col111M1eili/A Uilel1 .... atcw.OMme llo!W .-0 ~ FUUIEAV. LAHOi&PI TtleNl·YOUI tea-4114 1.-oryl30 • 2..-.MO M DO IT A.LU Ltc'd/tfta/ C.. 90b ....... 1/fNfll No Jo0 l..:Jo or I 8mal. A.A.A. JI ant/llrt Celt ~ ..... 114 ,_nbo eon.."' 1114 lntty 1 FfWdl Docn hi let 72 lft lpm LOWUT ~ ..-. i:..., &;;e;;;;rm · ty "°"'*'Thi 000nnan 1'1111 lo•• a.w..1111..ma =::-r~ Ook&,.,.U7.oc>OR Topped/~ a..., ............... IK up, nMr IMIM 1U.s471 hellt!Wll8'*rit-7137 a.. uPo•T,_ r LVlfll' ...,.,..~ Uo #42M24 Mlk! ~ Cell AnytW'M IM-2017 ' • FIND--•hrough classified =:.!o~~:' ~ ptto9a tNrt .,. °"' °' .. FU SUCCESSFUL CITIZEN How much wilt your son or daughter know obovt busineil when applying for their fim full-time job? f>tenfy, if he or 5he hen ewr been o newspaper carrier. Through route 1xperienco h. or the is olreody o lbp oh.ad of thoir classmate•. While they all moster ideas, !tie boy or girl w~ o newspaper route is able to pvt them to practical VM. &Ystneu? Corrion leom the bask leom !tie basic principles from !tie fint doy of lto,,;ng to cMll"'9r newspopen. Thoy buy at wholesale, Mii at retotl, moke collections, kHp their own books, and cMol with peopi. f~• to face. Corriers quickty find out ltlot "profit'' ond "lou" ore more ltlon t•xtbook terms. The benefits of managing o MWipOper route ore on equation for o fvtv,. su<ceuful citizen. A groat numbor of todoy's prominent men and women storted th.Ir public co,...rs os newspaper corners. And thoy all ¥Oudl ltlot o no~ rout. gives o boy or girl o hood stol1 on the fvtv,.. Boys 011d girts 10 yt'>Ors ond older who may be 1nteresied '" rOU1e work should r o111oc1 lhe Doily Pilot c1rculot1on ~pe>rtmftnt at 642 4333 Diiiy ~t~ION DEPT 330 W£ST aA y ST p .0 . eox 1.560 COSTA MESA, CALIF. 92626 , _________________ , I I Yes, my ton/dough.., would ltb I information on o Ooity Pilot rovt.. J I HIS/HEit NAME '-------1 I ~~~~~~---1 I ________ ZIP __ , I PHONE--------~•GE_I I • PARENT~ I SIG NATUR...._ ________ I L-------~----~-~~J __ .. 8 10 ~ CoMt DAILY PILOl/ Tu.day, May 20. 198e MOTIC9 TO PUalC OI' TRANIMITT AL TO HUO OI' ntm lllVENTff ft.M CO'TTJNITY O.WLOPmNT al.OCK QAANT ~ CfTY OI' HUNTINGTON .UCff 2000 1i1A1N 8TMIT HUNTINGTON 8UCH. CAUfOftNIA aMI TO ALL INTERESTED AGENCIES, GROUPS, AND PERSONS: On M.y '°· 19H, the City of Huntington 8Mct\ wtM tranlmft It• EleYenth y .. , Community ~I Block Granl ~ to U.S. Oepertment of Houalng and Urban o.v.4opment undet l1tle I of the Houtlng and Community ~t Act of 1974 (P&.·93-383). I TAT'llmNT OP COlllllUMTY Dl[VUOPMIJfT O...CTIVll FY 84/95 & 85/M PROGRAM BUDGET OBJECTIVES 1. A9¥tt.alutlon of downtown commercHJ dletrlot; 2. Ptovltlon of community aervtc:e related facfllttea: ' 3. Upgrade and ~ deollnlng neighborhoods; •. Pr...w the exletlng hOualng elock: 6. Expand the hOualng oppottunltlea available to low and moderate lno<>fM hOuMh<>ldt: e. EJ(pand the economic oppot1unlti.t avallabM to low and modetat• lnQ~ houMtlold• Ind minority group• ,,, .. end.·~ end AlllHWI Of ~ ~ LOC818ftd NadoMI ()bfect'"9 OMvt.w (ludfeted 1... ...... .......... • ... 140): ~of theee fund• were expended to provide eecurtty NMoe8 lor the KoledO Lane DemonttratlOn Projee1 during oonattuetlon or flfth unite and during the demofftlon or the carports. Additional tund1 were uMd to pay a contractor fOt lhe orftlte lmpro..-.mente An expenditure wu made for a land uM analyl4• and cirout.tlOn study. $479,593 of theae funds.,. unemoumt>ered; $75.317 Is eocumti.ed or expended This 9C'llvltly IYpportl objecttv. Number 3. 5, and 8, by provtdlng public lnrtutruc:ture lmprov«nentt. entlanoament of open IP909 Md parking, and '9habltl1atlon or tenant occupied mulll-famlly ~1lal ttructuree. Since the majority of these tenant• are low/moderate Income houNholds. this actMty ltlO rneetl the bro.d natlonet objectlw of maximum teulbfe priority for benefit to auoti houMhofda. Houelng fWwti-....~hd11tec11IM • •~ ..,...ed 1• · "71.000): TheM fund• wer• ~ throuoh a retlatMUtatlon Toen poof to Improve owner occupied slngt&-lamlly and lnveator owned multi-family reeldentlal unit• wlthln the City. $5-47,909 of 1heae funds are unencumbered; $9,500 la expended. Thll activity add,...... obfecllve Number 3, 5, Md 8, by provtdlng direct aultlanoe In 1he Improvement of houllng condition•. Since 1he majority of the own.r or 1enant beneficiaries are low/modera1a Income houMtlolds. lhl1 activity alao ~· the broad national objecttv. Of maximum r.aslbfe priority for benefit lo IUCh houMttolda. i..tocatloft Aaeleleno. (•.ut11tec1 1 .. • '2IO,OOO): Relocatlon tunda have been and wlll be uMd to asal•t dlaplaced residential and bullneaa tenanta with moving expen .... rental sut>.ldlet; and down payment aMlatanoe. Approximately S 1 million In re!OC4tlon fund• will be avetlable ror downtown redevelopmen1 for relocation of existing tenants. Tl'leM funds are committed through a Dlspos111on and Developmen1 Agreement COmblned wl1fl funds from 1983 -$597,231 of these lunds are committed but uneicpended. Thia activity addreues ob)9C'ltv. Number 1, 3, and 7. Commodore Clrcle (hdgeted 1 .. • S111,J57; hdgeted 1115 • *250,0000: T'hese funds are targeted for a compreheollve rehablllta11on or development ltrategy for thl1 blighted nelghb<>rhOod. $43-4,260 of these funds are unencumbered; $12,097 of theee funds 11e committed to expended. Sine. this activity will benefit low/moderate Income houaeholds, 11 meet• the broad netlonal objee11ve of maximum teaalble priority for benefit lo auch hooaehold• and the prevention or ellmlnatlon of aluma and bllghl. Waehtngton ~ Pubic lmprowetMnta (lludgMed 1 .. • ll0,0000: These fund• have been replaoed through other grant• for atreet Improvements. AvaJlabte fund• wlll be approprla1ed lo another actlvlt1. $80,000 remetns unexpended and unencumbered. Local Option (..._..ed 1 .. • S1•,000; ia..dgeted 1115 • f117,G11): $249.8 t 7 of theae lund1 are unencumbered, and $5,244 hU been tPent. TheM fund• wlll be transferred to the relocation acllVlty to supplem.nl the funds committed through• Dlaposltlon and Development Agreemen1.Slnce Local Option funds are used In support of prevlouely budgeted actlvltlee, they tupport any of the obfecllves. MobMe Home lmptOftfMfl .. (~ 1115 . *250,000): Theae funds were used for the lnltlet publlo Improvements al the old mushroom farm sl1e located at Ellis and Goldenweat Only $485 has not been committed from these fund• -$14, 186 ls committed but unexpended. Thi• actlvtty addreaes obfectlve Number 6 alnoe the llte will eventually house low and mOderate lnoome mobile home tenants as an Interim housing toca110n Pubic ~ (ltudgeted 1 .. • S100,000; lludgeted 1• • 1157.000): These funds were used to suppor1 the activities by human service agencies 198.4· Legal Aid · $30,000; H.B. Community Cllnlc • $20,000: Feedback Foundation · $10,000; AMPARO -$10,000; H.B. Boys & Girts Club • S 10.000: wes1 0 . C Hotline -SJ.500: Harbor Area Day Care Center -112,000; Interval House -$4,500. 1985: AMPARO -S 10.000: Boys & Glrta Club -S 10,000: Cent« tor Creative Allernatlvea • S 14,665; Dayle Mcln1osh Center • $8,394, Feedbactt Foundation -$12.673; Glrls & Boyt Club -$9.100; Harbor Area Adult Day Care Center -$17,500: Human Op11ons • $2,335, Hun11ng1on Beach Community Cllnlc • $26,600: Interval House • $11,000; O.C. Conaolldated T ransportatlon ~ Agency -S 14,233; 0 . C. Fair Housing Council • St .000: Palmer Drug Abuse • $10,000; West Orange County Hotllne • $4,500; Women's Tranaltlonal Living Cenler • $5.000. 1157,000 This activity supports objeCUve Number 2 by providing llnancial support to agencies which meet the soclal servloe needs of low/moderate Income households. Slnoe the majority of the beneficiaries of this activity are low/moderate Income households. II alao mee1a the bfoad national obfec11ve of maximum feasible priority for benefit to such households. $90, 134 remain encumbere<I bu1 unexpended. Fair Houalng Council of Orllft99 CountJ (Budgeted 1 .. • 125,000; Budgeted 1115 • $25,000): TMee tund1 •we expendM to tuppcwt the~ prowtded by the F.ar Houatng Council of Ofenge CountJ to emrmatlvefy tur1her fair hou.lng end ptowkM ~ for NCOnelllatlon of &.ndtotd/tenllftt dlepu .... turthertng tetr end prOYkllng direct ..... lance to low/moc:t.rate Income tenent1. TlMNfote thta protect M.IO Thi• ec:tlwltJ~~'" Numb.r 2 by ptowtdlng ftMnctal ...,.,we 10 thia ~ to...,., In lfllrmatlY.ty tMeta the bfoed nat ttYe of maJ1lmum....,.. prb1ty tor MMftt to 1uch ~ 110.411 rem"na encumb.red. Admlntetr1tlon Budgeted 1114 • 1113,.912; Budgeted 1115 • S105M1): These funds are eicpended to meet personal and operating coeta In the general administration of the program. S~.000 are u~xpended as of February 28. 1986. "'°"ECT 0£8CRIPTION FOR TWELFTH YE~ coeo PROGRAM ANO 8TATEMEHT OF Ptt<>.IECT£D Ute OF FUND& 1 Admlntalrttlon: This activity pays the personal end operating coats Incurred by the city In t*"t admlnlttratlon of the Block Grant Program. Addl11onal Cotta associated with the city's Rental Aeflabllltatlon Program and Projeet Self-Suf1lciency will also be charged to this activity. S 139,459. 2 N919hborhood En~t Protect•; a Oak\'leW. Theee fund• will be used to conatruct needed public 1mprovemeri11 1n both the nonhem and southern sec1ions ot thl• nelgtlbo<hOod as Identified by a draft oomprehenslve plannlng and circulation study prepared ':Jy a consulllng firm $200,000 b. Oper1tlon LOGOS. These funds will be used lor the personal and operating costs associated with this youth employment program In the Oakview nelghbortlood. $40,000 3 Citywide A .... IMC« a Ren1bllllallon. Funds con1t1tute the contribution to 1he city's ongoing rehablllla11on loan pool Said funds are used to provide the below market ra1e lnteresl home Improvement loans and def8fre<l loana 10 low-Income. owner.occupied, slngle- famlly homes and to Investor-owned mulU-tarnlly structures $400.000 . b. ProJect Self-Surtlclency Funds wlll be uMd 10 support the personal and operational costs for this HUD Oemonslratlon Program. As well as the "Adopl ·A-Famlly" campaign which pledges up to $500 per ramlly II matched by private funding This program wlll assist 25 slngle unemployed parents In making the tran11tlon from welfare dependence to economic self· surticlency $50,000. c Public Service. These funds wlll be disbursed u aubgranla to human servloe agencies providing services to low· and ·moderate Income households within Huntington Beach. Specific agencies 10 receive a share of 1hese funds will be the subject of review and recommendation by 1he city's Human Resources Board These recommendations will be subsequently forwarded to the City Council for Its conalderatlon. S 153,000. 4 Or1ne-County Fett Houalng CouncN: One of lhe major objectives of the Community Development Block Grant program and one of lhe requirements for 1he city's participation Is to take steps to aMlrmallvely further fair housing. The city accomplishes thla objee11ve by annually con1ractlng wt1h the Orange Coonty Fair Housing Council to provide landlord/tenant relations to low-and ·modera1e Income tenan1s within 1he city. SJ 1,000 5 l oc.I Option: Each year as part of 1he CDBG Program, a share of funds la reserved In a local opllon account which wlll provide addttlonal tlnanclal r890Urces for any curren11y of previously budgeted activities Which may Incur cost overrun• during the source of the program year or to meet needs not ldenllfled a1 the time or the adopllon of the budget. ST A TEMENT OF PRQJECTED USE OF FUNDI 1 Adm1nistra11on Personal Services and Operating Cos1s Office Equ1pmen1 Fair Housing 2 Neighborhood Enhancement Programs Oakview Operation LOGOS 3 C1tyw1de Ass1s1ance Rehablll1at1on Pro1ect Sell·Sulllc1ency 4 Public Service 5 Local Optton FY86/87(12th Year) s 131.759 $7,700 $31,000 $170,459 Tote!: $200,000 $.40,000 S400,00 SS0.000 $450,000 $153.000 $93.541 11,101.000 NOTIC8 TO AM. CA ta706 .,....., II ~ to Clll 12702 MOK!Df CMDfTON OP The FIG1tttoue ....,_. kW'n6e UnlfiDr'ln CoffwNIGllll W YOU 08JICT to tN "-~r>eA~ =-~ =-ln~o~-: ~s:n~c:.....of :=-..::-~= CAH MQMGAOI COM· U.C.C.) Dec. 4, INt f..l71&21 tM "'Hft wltfl wflom '*'tfW Md .... 'f04ll .. PAHY. l!>WA,.0 W Mollee .. hereby tJNer1 to ~ loOlft, 715 <>ell· dellnl ""'I be llld le: AC. ~ 0t .. wrlfttfUl4'filO• SOL OM OH , "ENH A credltore of 111e within WOOd,OrM09oCAtffet TIOHHCAOW,INC.,toa0H. none...,_,_~ IMib'9 ~~:Mi nwned trenlllworle) INI 1 TNt tM1nem ... oori. TUSTIN A~ SUfTI • ttie 11e11'1n9. 'ftU ..,..,_ • b1i11C trw,_ Iii llbout to be duGteO by 1t1 lndMdull. 8AHTA ANA. CAUfOANIA .noe !MY beln pett0n or by ~~ ~t~;N~-= m.oe on Wtonll Pf°'*'Y Thie ·~ .. 1'ed t270S Md ttll IMI M1 for ~ •«Ot'M1· .. ..... · nerelnatt• 6-cttMd wttfl tile County Ctn of~ Mt'Q ~by llf1 ONdltOI' IF YOU ARI A CA!.DITOA ~ :::::. lnoftN~ TM n.,,_ and bullneM 11ng9Coun1yon wav 1. 1 ... en.I be June 4, ttM wtlloh or • contingent erdOt of "' --- edd,..... of the ln1911\ded Put>lleMd Or1nge C<*' .. tfle buMl'letl d#rf .,.,.. ttie ci.c11vad. yOU"""" ... County; tr-lwore .,. ~and o.11y Plot M9Y 20, 27, June tM contun1meUon dlte ~ dlllm "41fl IM oourt 0t Nld OMd of ~ dlto 81r1 V1ndeput, 332 3, 1(1, 1M8 epeo!tlechbcwe. preMnl " 10 the perlOMt ICtl~:::r,::61~ 9131. Marguertt• AW , COfoNI D.i T208 Oeted: It.pl~. ttee repreMlltl tlW llPPoW\l9d by In .... C'°" _. ,.. __ • ....:...... Mar, CA tH2S. ""' V1'1t...... ~, .... tM oovn within four montN .... '" "' ---- The IOcetlon In Calllomte .fti>ir ...., from tM cSeM of llt9t • pew mes> ~ ln looll ot the cNet ••~tllle office "8.IC Mh~ ......... ~ ._., euenoeof1etter1 u ~ 258. P.-a lfld •of Mi.. °' prlnolpel bualneet omoe .--To IC ...... Tfll ••• -In Section 700 Of th• oelleMoul ..... In CM of· of the lntend.c:f tt111111wor I•: .. .=:.,~_._. Pu~ Or.,. eo.t Prot>et• Code of Cellfomta. b of tM COunty ~ u.rne. ~""" '""""'"'" D.ily PllOt MIY 20, t... The time fOf 1111ng clllme w111 of Mid County. All other butlne11 ne~ CAL.UNO f!Ott -· T202 not •ltPit• prlOf 10 le>vr YOU ARE IN OUAUl T end lddr ..... uMd by the Sonool Dtwtrtct: lt"ftne Uni· monlhl trom ttie dlte of lhe UNDER A DEED W T'AU8T Intended tran1r.rot within llecl Pt8.JC NOTIC( heettnG notice M>o¥9 OATEO 3/29/16, UNl.ISS thr• ~ lut .....,, IUt B'd O..Ollne: 2 o·olodl y()tf MA'( EXAMINE tM YOU TAKE ACTION TO peet eo ttr .. lo\Own to the p.m. of the 10th day of June. ACTTTJOUe ....... Ille kept by the oourt " yOU PROTECT YOUR PAO'· none Piece of Bid Aeoelpt. !SOSO The 1oMow1ng pcw.on1 •• A PU8LIC SALL IF YOU Intended trtneterM ere ttaa ...-11A~ ,.,.. a l)Clt'IOll lntdWd In EATY, IT MAY 91 SOU> AT ~ neme(i) and tiu.m.a e.rrenca, Irvine, CA. t27 t 4 doing bu111*9..: wtwat? tn-the -:::x.::or ":y .= NEED AN EXPLANATION llddr... of the lntlncMd Pro1ec1 ldentlflCltlon wet"*lle 1. t d .• M3 Con-=OI' 0t upon IM It· OF THE NATURE OF TH8 lr11MlerM(•I -: John Seon N•me NORTHWOOD IV gteM, Colt• M911 t2e27 t 'tor the uecutor or PAOCEEOINO AGAINST Llwte>n. ~n• Lindy Lew-ELEMENTARY SCHOOL David Allen Vici!--. 113 .:=..1rator tnd Ille wtth YOU. YOU SHOUl.O ~ eon, 1832~ Newport BtYd.. Piao. PteM .,. on Ille' CongreH. Oo•t• M•H 1the ooun wttti proof of ... TACT A LAWYER. Co.II M--. CA 92827 o.nlellan/A.Nodet-. ~ 92e2't v1o9 wrttt ~ etat· 1oe2 Senta CNz Cltole. Thal the property pert!-Cempu1 Or • Suite 210, Tlltl tiutln .. 1 le eon-~ en dellte epeciel Coe1• ~ CA t2e27 nent "-•to 11 deec:nbed In Newport B .. eh. C• duct.ct by·.,, lndMdUel ~Ice of~ ftlng of.,._ fn. ··cu 1 etr991 eddf .. 0t qeneral .. Coton• o.i M1r 9 2 8 e O -P II on• { 7 1 4 ) OeYld Vlelkan wnt Ind lllMn'leftt of common o..ionetlon of s.wlnCI Ind Vacuum.center, 852-t575 Thll •t11emen1 .,.. fll90 ..iirt~...c:':' of IN '*._ propeirty • ltW)Wll eb0¥e, no and I• IOC•t9d .,. 332 NOTICE IS HEREBY wltll the County ()ertl of Or· uone or ICCOUl\ta INllUoned warranty .. gMln .. to "• Marguente Aw., Coton• del OIVEN th•• the above. ange County on Mey t , ttM In s.etlon l200 tnd '200.S or oomplltenMe or COtTee\· Mer, CA 92825 ~ ~ ~~.'!' ,_ ttieCellfomle ProbeteCoOe n .. a)." Tfle b•n•flclery The Bullnen name uMd ..,,.,. .,.,.,.,iy, "''-· Publlefled Orainge CoMt ......,* a .........; under Mk! Deed ofTN91, try oy llld 1ranet.ror1 et Mid llCtlnQ by llld tllfough It• OIUy P1lot Mey 20, 27, June A..._,. .., ,........ reaon of 1 bt.edl or def*" loeetlon II. Coton• o.i Mir Oovwnlng 8oard. "!Clln-3, lb, 1988 .. v .. •-. .. In the ~llonl ~ s.wlng Ind Vecuum Center. after ~9d to u DIS-T204 -. ~ ..._, CA tfl.,.by. her•tofore ••· Tlllt eald bulk ltllllfer II TRICT . wlH r«*Ve up lo, .... ecuted Md ~ to the Intended to bit eon1um-but not leter then the•~ 1111m11C NOTll'C Publlehed Of Cout underlilgtled • written 0.0. mated •I Ille office of ,._ at1tec1 time, Mlled bide for r~ •~ Delly Pilot M 7. 20 2e letatlon of Def9Ult ltld 0.-pon VICUum Center. Colt• Ille tward of ' contract fOf ltMIOttl 19811 •Y • • • mind tor Sele. llld Mmen M .... CIHfornl• on °' •lter t~bo::o~ .... ved In (Crt A~ .IUOICIM.) MT t3S notloe of~ llld of IMc> Mey 29, 1958. . the :.,. ld4lnllfled bo\4 NOTICE TO DEFENDANT: tlon to CIU.. the under· Tiii• bulk trensfet 11 not P • · (A v 1 1 0 · 1 A 0 u .. d 0 ) elgned to Mii Mid ptOS*"Y llUbjtlClt to Celltornla Uni-an:.:1)1.: ~. ~ GERALDINE CORSE ANO rta.JC fl)TIC[ to M llefy MIO ~tlont. ~= 8~~rnercl1J Code Sec-:ove-e~at•d ttm: end DOES I lo 10, lnclutlW NOnc:tl Of' IN'TaNT ~'=:.=not~ ptae. YOU ARE BEING SUED TOAM.Y'°"AN --The n1me and eddreu of ni«. will be • $ 100 ()() BY PLAINTIFF: (A Ud .... ,. ·---rr TO bfMCh and of e6ecllon 10 be Ill• per1on with wllom · demindindo) OURSEY -~ A reoorcMd Jenuer; 27, ttaa clllme mey be llleel 11 Merna dee>Ollt required IOt NCtl let SCHNEIDER & CO ' COAITAL DtlVI~ u tn1tr. Ho. e&-035t81 of L1waon. 1832'.\ Newport of bid docul'Ml'lte to guer~ · LIMD flllNlllT Ol1ldel Rec«dl In the offtoe Blvd . Colt• Meu, CA ~~~!.~~~~ ~~::'erc:c:; 0 ::: = :::..... ..... ~ ~le.lit~~~ of the Recofder of Of1nge 92627 Ind the lut d1y for bid .....-..... "-' le Mf'f9d 9ft ,_ .... • ey • · """'' County; n11ng clllm1by1ny eredllOf ~~ !t 1 typewt1tteft , .. .,,_ et BolM Corporation Ned • &lld .... wtllbernede,but llh•ll be 5128188, wttleh i. m eon orm tMI cowt. Requwt fOt In Amendment wlthOUt ~t or WW• the t>ulinwa 01y before the arid be reeponllw to Ille A ...._ ,._.... Ml .. to Coaetel Development renty expreu or lmPled r9- eonaummallon d1te apecl-contract ~ .• is... not ,,,...:: ,,_. ,._ ~ Pwmlt No. 6-83-702 wltfl the ger~ tllle pc 111111on'. or fled above EM:tl bldd« .. ._ l&.lbmlt, __. . ..,. South Cout Otltric;t or tfle enc:umbttnea1. to pey tile Oiled: Aprll 28, 1988 on the form lurnllhed with ~ "1••-..,,.. If M Cellfornla Cout11 Com-rem11n1ng Pf'lnQpll """ of John lcott Lewton, !.~ ri::trlC1 ~..'!:....' ..,..""'::~lo ...,:::; mlellon to conduct to-the note(•) MCUf9d by Mid .....,.. Landy Uw90fl In-,.., o the Pf......-11.1 ......... ~ dltlonll ~technleel In· deed of Truet wltfl Int.,_ ~Tr•-..-• 1r1C10fS on tttll profeet u ~ ~Ind llelld exem-u 1n ealO note prOYIOed ecs-Publllheel Of Cout required oy the Subtettlng • '°" • _. • row lnet.lonl on portlonl of Bo1M v If .., under' the Dilly Pilot May ~986 end Subeontr1etlng Fair '"'aw 9ft .._, '°" .., Chica. loce19d betwMn ~ MIO 1;..';; of trwt T210 Pr1C1loel Act GoverMlent ...... c-. ... ,.. WWrwtl Avenue and Odden 1-. end • •---------~~4100et.=,,. :;-9'_,~.,::w .. 1 ano Pecmc CoH t or th.~=-Ind~ l'tllllC N011C£ wllll Mell bid ~lfled 0: fwhr .... .,._. the ~:. ~Inge County, tNlt• er .. i.ci by N10 Deed • OCMWt .__,or ........ ,. llUt'POM Of of Truat f'ICTITlOUI IMllMll cuh"!, 1 check payable to • theee ttudlel It to updet• Said Nie wMI be tl9IO Of'r Nlim ITATDmNT Ille 01->TRICT or I bid bond Tiw9 .. ....., ..... ,._Ind ~llW IOdftlonel lnfor· . The tollowlng P9'90t\I .,. In tM l0tm eet forth In the ..,_,..._ V• ...., __. metton r ding the Wedneedey, Mey 1e, ttaa. dOing bullnea •. INTER· eontrlC1 doe\lmentl In Ill to cell .. .....,_, ..... II.:~ u ~ •I t:30 p.m. In tM lobby to MARJ< 427 C.t~• New· •mount not .... ttl&n 5~ of .. .,. If ,... de .... "'""' ~ County of Or ~ the building loc:a1ed I I eot port ee.c.,, CA 92ee3 ,,,. mulmum amount of bid M•tt•~::::• Lend UH Pltn /~l l ~:!~~-· Or.nge, Jofln B Outey u •bove 1 •• • guw1111 .. tl\lt the bid· ....,_, • Coutel Progtltl'I Thlt bu•ln•~• 11 con· der wlll enter Into th•• ..... IN oMoe (lleeM lfl A pyblic 11eering will be ~~~in:, ~~he:.: ducted by. an lndMdull prC>pOICIO eontreat If tile ~ ~). le fleld by the Celltornl• ~ total amount of tM un: John 8. Duley Mme II twlrcs.d to IUCtl -----Cl99 • _. Coutel Comml911on to con- Thie alllM*lt wu llled blddet. In rtie 9Wlll ol flllu,. ::C-: .... ......_ I"-lider the Requeet tor 111 ~Ion~:' J:: .::! wltfl the County C*1t ol Of· to enlet Into Ilk! contract, wted ..._ 1111 .... Amendment Notte. wlft be ~:'deed ~ tn.iat Ind •noe County on April 24, aucll MCUttty will be lor·jde IO Dt41 CM.IM>ANOI prOYtdeO u to the ••ICt Mtlml ed c:oet 1988 fe4ted p•r• pr•••ftler •n• 11me llld cMtlOe of the tlMr-1 '· expenee1. '107410 Each bid<* lhlll be I ,....._.. -*a • -Ing TNt NOflce I end edVll'IQ99 II S2t,459.87 Publlthed orange Cou1 11cen1•d contractor,.,_• eet1.n.. ~t 10 Sectio! 1~ It II PoMlble tt\et It tlle ~:~ Piiot M1y 6, 13, 20, 27, ::~au:,~;~ c!:'': • .::: .: ':'==of Ille Calttornie Coutel :; ~ ':.'':.... ~:.: T 184 be lleenMCI In the following I"' al 1a1 h n; " ,. .,, _ .. c=:::; ~ Cout ~tedneel ~ ---------CIUll!k:41tlon· Oenerm 8u110-~I~...... If IV9leble, the upected P\lll.JC NOTICE Ing Contreetor-B. 10Ylftpllr c en IH rer-= Piiot M-V · 21· 22• apening btd m-v be ob- "2All NOTICR Of OlllOUITIOM Of' ,ARTNO .... Publk: no11c» II hereby given 1Nit Al Sfllnllle end Ch.,... H1t1wey. heretofore doing bu"-under Ille fie. tltloua """ n-ano 1ty1o of Cllue Roofing Compeny, al 204 North BrO.OWey, Sult• K. City of Sa.ntl Ana. County of Orange, Sllle of C.N- loml1, dlO on the 111 day of May, 1988. dlUOlve Ille NICI Plflrwtlehlp end termln•t• their rel1tlon1 u plflner. therein F\1111\er notlc9 11 ll«eby given 11111 tile underligned will nol be rnponelble. from 1111• day on, lor 1ny obll· gallon Incurred by 11'1• otM<1 In Illa, M<, their own nltn9(1) °'In the n•me ol 11\e firm DA TEO AT Ar11114Mm, C•M· lornl• 11111 M1y 9. 1988 Al Shankle au.-KLlY, 11 00'1 1 , o.-HNHlltO, 6 LYMAN, Att~e Publlthed Of~ Cout D•lly Pllo1 Mey 20 1988 T209 MlllC NOTICE Ttle DISTRICT r...,.,,..,""allchch• te1et e1 T1e9 t.eilMdeilMO by Cllllng the loltow-1119 right to rejac:t any 0t 11 eprapl1d• .. _........ Ing telept\orle numbers on Old• or to ..iv. any Ir·.-II a.n. ......_ .. "8.IC NOTIC£ thedeybeforetN..,..(714) regv1ar11i.. In 111y bid•°' In -. 385-4137 OI (2t3) e27-4M5 Ille blddlnn .. ~ M ,,_..Ill --1 ,.. -•Mt-• Oe19d: Aptll 29, ttee Pu~tlotheprovtllons l,..._.. ......... ,.... _,,"' .,... '"'" rs" TO ... I~ C~ ofs.ctlon 1773oftllelebor ,.,., .. ...,, .. ,_.... =°,:.~ PORATION, •• 1el d coo. ol the Stst• or Cell-.......................... T 0 c Iv IL e 0 DI r..-.... ., T. D. IDW:I loml•, theOISTIUCT llNOt>-,r otrH OHH do •• ll~I(•) COV,AMY, •t•ftl, 8J lllineO from tlle Dnc:1or Of PllJl1d1d • _... _. Hottcelaherebygl'lentllet CMdJ ldlllll...,, ,..... the Department ot lnduettlel doMI,., ,_.•le...._ AlrCel Inc , 1 Dllawer• eor· ._. --...,Y, to1 ._. Rel1t1on1 tll• gener11 I...._ ..,_ ,.. ..... porellon wllh lddrw et Lewie I t.. Of.,..., CA pr9V&lllng r•t• of per diem ........ ,_... .. ...., 3838 8ltdl Street, Newport ... (7141 ~ wao•• and tM generel .,.., • ......, • • ...-. Beech, Cllllorn11 92880 T c ,... prevelllng rete tor hOlldty lnfflidle.....-.llM.,.. ("Treneferor .. ) Intends to PubHllhed OrllnQ9 Cout end ovenlme wont In the I<>-· -• tM 1t C rt , ...... tran.f9r to and leaMbeetl ?:'e'l Piiot M1y 8, 13. 20, T185 Clllty In wtllctl thl• work II to "9Mlt • "" ..,,,.... • ,.._ from Chryeler Flnenc111 be l*fonned tor MCtl crett .,..-. de •• 111 dt I • I Corp., wllll 111 prlnclp11 Of type of work• ne9ded to -oectN .. .,.. ..... Place of bualn-. 11 901 ---------••acute the contrec:t. Ti-~.. dlrMt.n. .._ Wlllhlre Orlve, Troy. Mich-P\8JC NOTICE ,., .. are on nie II the DIS-). lo 48084 M ldl ---------TRICT olb loeated al 5050 I c-.... CIS1• f~~i Company~ tru: 00: • 4MM 8errane., lrvtne, Ca. 92714. The name end .Od,.. of pany organized uno.r the NOTICa TO Coplea mey be obtained onjttle court II: (El nombfe Y laws of tM CommonWMtth CMDffOftl Of request. A copy of theee dlreoelon de le corte •): of ~nY91Venla, not In lte MllJt TlllAHll'l'1 rates lhell be poat9d at Ille MUNICIPAL COURT OF lndlvlclu9' eapectty, but 1Q6o. (a-.. •101~107 Job site. CLOASLIF~NEIAE,SCLOUNTY OF ty u Owner 'rrutt• uno.r 1 U.C.C.) ltlheltbemend1toryupon A~ L • 01Anget99 Truet Agreement wllll Notic. le hereby gtYoen 10 ,,,. CONTRACTOR to whofn Judldel Dlltttci, t tO ~ Ch-'-financial ,..~ creditor• of th• wllnln Ille eontrecl • -•ded. end Grand Avenu.. LOI Angelee. wtth'tta prlnclpel ~ "c)f named lranefw0t1•> ttlat I upon 1ny 1t1beontr1ctor CA 90012. ~ •I 35 Nortll Sixth bultl trensler lea about to be under IUCh CONTRACTOR, The Mll'MI, eddr .... ltld SlrHI. RHcflng., Ptn· m90e on pcwlOMI property to pay not 1eu tllen the Mid telephone nut'l'lber of pleln-ny1lv1nl• 19801 (herein herlinMI• deecribed '99Cllled rat• to Ill wont.,. tiff'• 1ttomey, or plalntln e•ll•d tll• "Tren1terM· The netnM end ~ employoO by them In the U · wtthOUt en •ttomey, le: (El Oec>tor") certain per90ne/ ~ of the Intended eeutton of the eontrlC1. nomt>re, I• dlreodon Y el nu-pr09W1Y to C tton & Corn-1rentferore are: NELSON No bidder mey wllhdr-mero de telelono del peny, Ltd , with It• pr1ndpal MILES. 204 E. 17th Str99t, any bid tor • period of forty. •bog9do del demandlnt., o piece of t>ullnea 11 5-1 Coet• ._.., Cellfomla. llw (45) d'll 1tter the date del demendente CIU9 no Klt•Aoylm8 2-Chome M~ The IOclltlon 1n Cdfomle K 2Pl7 Ml for the opening°' bldl. tJenoe •bog9do. •): II• M 110-Ku. TQkyO 107. Jep9n, of Ille el'llef executive ofllOI '1CTITIOU8 9UIMll A payment bond end I Frledmtlll or Hllnlen. Fried-Ot Bank.,. Trvtl Company. or prlnclpel ~ offtoe NAME ITATUllNT performance bond will be man l Cohen, 9570 WIWllre • New York benklng corpOt· Of the Intended t'*'8teror ... The following per90nt -required prior lo execution Bouleverd, 84.llte 3ea, Bewr· e11on. not In lt1 ln0Mcluel ea-ume u 1boY9. doing bull,_.•• ButlneM ol the eontrec:t 111e1 lhlll bely Hiiia, CA 902t2. peclty, but eo1e1y " lflden.. All other ~ nemee SY9terns Coneulttnte, 555 In the form let forth In the DATE: (Fecha) AUG 7 IU'9 1'rutt .. with tie prlncj-end eddr ..... ueed by thct Perkoenter Dnve, Sutt• 120, contract documen11. ttM pal ofllcle et 4 Albany $treet. Intended tranetwor wttN11 Senta Ane. Calflornle 92706 Purtuent to Section 4590 IDWAN> M. KNTDllMI. New Yortl, New Yori! IOOtS lllr .. year• lat )'Mfe tut VJH, Inc. 1 Calffornl1eor· of the Government Code of CleR, bJ ot.w W..-, (Mreln celled "Securod pat ao 111•known 10 the lpor1tlon, 555 P1111cen1er Ille Stile ol c.llfomle. the DeoutY Party") The properly 10 be Intended trln•tw.. •re: Otlve, Suite 120, S1n11 Ane, eontr1c1 wlll eonteln Pubffahed Of"'G9 Cout tren1lerred end In wtllcfl • None Celllornle 92705 provl•lon• petmltllng the Delly Piiot May 8, 13, 20, 27 • MC:Uflty lnter•t 11 to be Tiie n&meCt) Ind t>uelnMe I Tlll1 bu1lneH 11 con· eucceutul bidder to t988 gr1t1led 11 gener1lly o.. eddr... of the Intended lducted by • corporlllon Mibttltute 19Wfttlel for any T178 ecrlbed u follows· treneleree(e) ere: OONALO VJH, Inc , By· Vlciel J Hiii, me>ne'fl withheld by the 015-Four (4) Avco Lycoming R. LOHSE. 11 Springelde 1 HE GRANTEE CERTIFIES THAT Prealdenl TRICT to eneure per-1111m1.,. NOT.,.c englnM Model ALF 502R-5, P1rk, Afhevllle. NC 28403. T1111 ttalement wu flled lormence u~ the con· '~ "4 m1nulecturer'1 Hrl11 That the propeirty pertl- CEATIFICATtONI (a) It possesses legal authority to maske a grant submission and to execute a community development and housing ;wltll 1119 covniy Cl«k 01 Or· treat. IC... numbetl ALF 05288. ALF nent llereto 11 de9crlbed In program' ange County on M-V 9, 1980 OD•• ... 9oard. •r ~ ACTn'IOUe ..,_.. 05288, ALF 05277 llld ALF 119'*•1 ... All ft•tu,.., (b) Its governing bOdi has duly adop1ed or passed as an of11clal act a rMOlutlon, motion or almllar action authorizing the lt*7'llD 11=ri C...., Nlim ITA,,...,.., 05285, ~~.or 8UCh :::•nt. frenchlH , person Identified as the olflclal represen1atlve of the grantee to submit the final a1atement and all underatandlnga and Published Ora• Cout Publ lhed Of11nge Cout · The followlng pereona are • n Cl In•• 1 • m • y b • •t•te, lnwntOty, assurances contalne<l th9f'eln. and directing and authorizing the person Identified aa the offlclal repreMntatlve of 1he gran1ee D•lty Piiot M1y 20, 27. June = PllOt M-v 13. 20. 27. dolftG bullMM .. : RWI OE· eubtlltul9d IMrefOt. eton llUe lllCI lltoek In trlde 10 act 1n connection with the submlsalon of the llnal s1atement and to pro"1de ~h addltlonal Information as may be 3. 10, 1980 Tl"" VELOPMENT. t870 C«C>t1 Two (2) Brttlall Aet~ Ind la IOCeled 11: 204 !. '7th required, T207 .., Clfc:le, Coete M.... CA t48 s.r. 200A Model 48L Str .. t, Coele M9u, Ciiio (C) Prior to submission ol its flnal statement to HUD. the grantee has •---------92829 l lreralt, menuf1eturer'1 lomla "8.JC NOTICE 1111-.,. M)·Tll'C Didi ero.n. 1110 ~ Mt1ll nur11betl 2051 llld The 8ullnee. neme uMd ( 1) met the Citizen participation requirements ol SS 570.301 (aX2) and has provided citizens with· '~ •-C ..... ,._ M " 2053 _......., _,. _.,, ..., •&UI ........... _..,. (A) "-f f CDBG f I fl ...,._,, ---11 Ire... ..,.,.,.,, eea, " 'r....,... ...... , . .,.., -v-• "' ...., tn11W1W0t• 11 _.. t ..... estlma1e o the 1mount o funds proposed to be used or ectlvl11es the1 wt I bene t ,._son• or low an n"'''""" ----1 TO ............. Avco 1.rcom1ni ..... , ..... , ................. PION•"' .. T"" ... ,,..., NAm ITA,...,., ....,,_ "''"""u ··w ,.,.. ...,.,.., ...... , ,.; cc.n ""c moderate Income. and ,_. T --...... CMDITOftl Of' RW Brown Co .. ll'IC. (Cell-MOdel A F 502 ·S ~ OUT STORE # 172. (Bl Its plan lor minimizing dlspltcement of persons aa 1 reaul1 ol activities aaslated with CDBG funda and to aaala1 peraons he'-~""" l)Clteotlt 1re llUUt ~ lornte ccwporetlon). tMOt Manuf•eturer'• Serl•I That Aid l>llltl trentter le actually displaced as a result of 8UCh activities; doing bualnele ... 8t1arl cs.c.. etot-e101 Tustin VIII• Wty. TU1tln Numbers ALF 0513t. ALF lnt9nded 10 be COfleum- (2) prepared tts final statement of community deV910pme/11 objectl..,.. 1nd rvo'-ted uae of funds In llQCord•~ wOh SS Tllompeon EnterprlHI, u.C.C.) CA tHIO 05227, ALF 05221. ALF met9d et the omo. of ... ,_ 4702·2 Vie Le P.iotna. Or· Notice II~~ 10 Thia bualnee. le eon· 05229. ALF 0525t, Al.F ALAMITOS ESCROW, 570.301(&><3) and made the final sta1ement evall1ble to the public:, ainge, CA 92Mt ctedltore of th• within ducted try 1 oerwei P9'1· 05252. Alf 06254 eno ALF , 1478 South Stre9l, c.. (d) the grant will b9 eondue1ed and administered In eompllanee with 8tlen TllOt'nC*)tl. NIM u named trenet.rort \tllt 1 nenHp 0525$, or "'°" .Wetlft or r1t01, Clllltornle 9070t on or ( t) Title VI of the CIVIi Right• Act of 1964 (Pub l 88-352, 42 USC. sa2000d et aeg.). and above bultt tr.,,..., 11 ebcMll to be R.W. Brown Co . lnCI., Tim englnH u m•y be 1ner June 30, t9N (2) Tlll9 VIII :>f the CIVIi Rlgt11a Act of 1968 (Pub. l 90-284, 42 U.S C SS 3601 et aeq .). Thi• bualneu It eon· made on per110n11 property lrown, Pt .. ldent: Dick eubetttuted therefor Thia bulll ,,..,,..., It eut>- (e) It wlll af11rmatlvely further fair houalng: OUC'led by an I~ ,...,~ dee«lbed. Brown Thie ttaneactlon i. to be toct to C.iltomle Uniform (r) It has developed Ila tlnal ata1ement of profected UM of fund• ao N 10 glw maximum f..alble priority 10 activities Which 811"' ~ The l'llltnM tnd bu"'*' Thie etet9'Mllt WM llleO conaumm41ted on 0t lfter Commerctel Code s.ctkln 1>enetl11ow and mod.,.ate Income famm .. or akt In 1he prevention or ellmlnatlon of alum• or bllght: (1he llnel statem.nt of Tllll '~6!:' ":>: llCldr .. of the Intended wtth the County Clertl of Or· Mey 30, ttaa i t the otno.. 81C>e. ,_....__. ffund 1 1nc1---1v11....._wti._ .. , ..... t -1"--d-"'n.cstomeet , .. ~ It wlthtlle ty of ·1raneterore 1re: JIM "'09CountyonM~8.1Meof8reed,At>bott &Morgen, Thenemelndaoor ... of pro,......vu UM 0 S m1y a IO u ..... ...,.., ,.. ...,, ,,. gran ee ....., ',._ are .._ o ,_ oommun y ange County on M-V I . ttaa MALAKOUTI, 179 17th ,_,.,.. 153 EMt ~ Streat, N.w the pereon with whom development need• having a particular urgency beeauM eicl1tlng conditions poee a 1«1001 and Immediate 1ht'9at to the Pu""'·.._. "'-7.~ Street. Suite o. Coell MMI. Publllhed ~ CONt Yori!. New Yori! 10022. TM clelme mi~ ti. ni.o 11 heal1h or welf1re of the community, and other financial reaouroea are not avallat>rit): except that the ...,.,egate UM of CDBG .,.,.. .... "' .,._, c "'"""27 ......,.. .... _, M 1 20 21 =II pr-. ... to ...... Al• It 1 7'" ~--.. "'•I"' ....... t M-1 • 20, 27. A ..... u . .,_, ,......, •Y • • _...., •• ... m oe acrow. 14 .. fund• reoetved under Secilon 1oe of the Act and, If appllcable under .,_.ion t08 or the Act. during lhe 121h. 13th, and 14th ..,.. " ,....., -• TM tocatlon 1n Calltomlll June 3. 1tee ed 1n Or1lnCl9 County Soutti Str99t, c.rtttoe. c..i... year1, e g , 1984 & 1995). atl&ll principally bene1tt per1ons of low ind moo.ra1a 1neome In• manMr that enwre1 that not i..e JuM 3• 1988 of tN chief eic9Ql11W W>f11oe I T 189 Dated· Mty 18, t.,. fc>rNe 90701; Attn· Aelptl than 51 p«cen1 of euctl fund• are uMd f()( actlvltlet that benell1 IUCh peraone during IUeh p«lod; ________ r_198_ or prtnc;tpa1 ~ office aA.MKIM TlllUIT COM-'ourun. &crow No. IMe (g) It h .. developed a community development plan, for 1he p«lod tpeelrled In par~raph (fl abova. thtt lden11flet rtll.IC N011C£ of th. Intended tren1teror II. I P\aJC M>TIU ::..~:.:.:::' ,,.,.,, Itri Ind the IMt dey tor ::I community developmer'lt and houtlng ~· and epecln.t bo1h ahort and long-term commu ty development obJect"1M that -nee ao ~-= Prado, AlleMlm,, IC --Publlehed Or11nge Coeet =~ by2;:'Y,~ II have bMt'I developed In accordtnce with the primary objeetlve and r9e1ulrement1 of the Act; ...., °' -..._..._ p M .... ....... ...... ..... •-·.1 h II 181 t I Which h been ved b HUD t t SS 570 306 NOM-M~ AM other buelneM NmMI NOncl Of' ,_.,, llot -V ilV, 1•..,. ,,,. wvtlneee d-V ~CM (h) It 11 fo1...,...,,ng a current ou ng a • ano. Pan u appro Y purtuan o . ; Notlc.llher'abyQ1"9nth•I end llCIOr ..... \IMO by 111e MATH OP T20t oontuml'll911on date ~ (I) If w111 not •ttemp1 to recove an~ c.pltal co•t• of public lmprovemen1s .._ted In wtloi. Of In part wt1h fund• pr0\'1ded the undenlgo~ wtil not be trwteror wllhln tl\e PM' CAM. M. _,.Cl{UI fled eboV9 undef Section toe of the Ac1 or with amount• r..ulllng from • guarantM under Section 108 of the Act by ....... ng any rMpontlblo tor any debt• or 11\Ne yMta 11•: None. Me CM' Nii'"* W NQTlC[ Olted~ Apr11 4, tHI amount analnll pr~lea owned and occupied by persons of low~ moderate~. Including any r .. Ch~ or llebllltlM eontr............ The netnM end~ TO •a11•11-· DOMALO "-LOtMI. • -f ··-"' bl1~1 '-• (1)fund ............... .-... .... ~~---ion _,_,,,1ny-_......~ .. ~ ,.....,. tfi=..._ ... 1 llTATS .. NO.···,.·•,__... ..............,,awL• a ......... -t m·"'-u t coodltlon o obtain!"" ac<: ... to.......,, pu "" m"'~t•. un-· • ,_...., u • ...,.... ..,_, .......... ~ , ... _ -on 0t _,_, ..,, u.. -... ---· --" --·~· ..,,. ... ... .,.,.v.,_ ,_, .. ,,_,. ete· !AOOO"H KIR"' .. l'T ' • ...,, _ _. Pvblltflacl ~ "-• 1oe of Act tr• uMd to pay the proportion of euch tee or ......,.,.,, lhat ,.Cat• to lhe capital eott• of IUCh pubffe •fter tlllt d.ie · .. ...., To e11.....,.., beMftc:lal'IM. T'MMlD"l IA.LI --~ ..,.._. impro~t• thet are flnano. from rewnue tourc.t 01her th.,, undet Tiiie t of lhe Act: of (2) for purpoaee or .....afno any O.ted !Ne 18tfl d-r of I nd SUNA KIAl!MIT, t aredltor9 llld oon1tn0en1 a.e.-. o.tty Plot M-V 20, ttM amount 90eln11 pros-rt1• owned and occupi.d by~ or modetate lllc:Ome, the grant• C*11flea 1o fhe ~retery that M9, 1tee Cltaclel. •rvtne. Ceuforn•••credttcn. Ind pcwlOfll MIO -.et/llOltSI T 11 l~kl tottlo'9nt tundl received under Section 1oe or the Act to comply with the r9qUl'*°'*'tl of tubparegr~ ( 1): Md Gl1'0 lllu1ll Onlr. .... 92:'4 lm-v be otMl .._ ln--.0 T.&. .... «*'W -"·'--f .......... wtth ....... •-'le& .. '-•-0tMr ,,....., *I. ... It.. ~o 11P'~t In CM .. Wtd/Ot ....... ol. WliT COM C UI t1 wfM comply wtth the other pr.., .. ,...,.,, o the ,....., .,.., Ot·-...,..... .,.. ........ c..u ....., CA _, ·--.._._, "' ~ CA~I. H NOE.a<UI TOWNt! rac..aw COR- PublWl«I OrMQe eo.t .,.., -. Stool! In Trlde. Fb· 1 A .,._ltlon f\111 bell\ ll9d POMTlOH .. duty 1p. AJkle 11. Wefttw«tt\, City Clef'tl, City of Hulttfftltoo 9Mc:t\, 2000 llelft ltNet, Huntlnfton 9-d\, CA aMI ~ PllQt Mty 2CJ". it. 27, turH E~ulpment ind by 9lANICE HOIC«E" 1n ~ Trultee ~ tt1e1 -------....---------------Pu_bfl_lhed __ 0r_-noe ...... _eou __ 1 _o.uy....,_Ptto __ t _M_ay.._20_._t_oee __ T_-2_,_,_~ 111M T203 g::=: ~ ~°'.! =..'=': ~ ~ ;;;w,1~ =t~I WE'RE HURTING. '"'m,ilt,t·•q,mh. ''''''P''""' 1111,,..,,,,,,,.ttr•li'·''llr re he I .incl 01hn h11m.11111.1r1J11 pru)lr.1111, i..,, p 111111111111114 \flt!\\ I l Jll I o11111rrJ l1t t 1ttll(' Uf' •ho •I I l'I, ·'"' h1 Ip American Red Cross •mi.,. W\TIH' IOCilled 11t t7t t7tfl Street, HJllNICI NOi be IP-AUCTION TO TH HIO..u"T r-.n. nu•~ Suite G. Coetl ......_ CA. pointed • ,.,..,_ ,..._ 1100f" FO" CAIHI IC ---::: ~~~_I!? ,....,...,.... &o .. M.._, Ille ANOIO" T'HE CAIHllM ..., ·--..... -....,.oftN ~t. 0" Cl!r.T1'1ED CHECKll 11ATllmNT OP locetlon 11 Sl!AllOl 1 TM ~ltloft raqU91t• 1NCWG IH CMl. COOi A&ANDO"R IDT Of Cl.!AHIM 1UtftOrtty to .... ..._ the K~ 2t24fl ~et U9a Of '90Trnout Seid tMA ,,..,... Iii In• llUC. uno. N ~ N ..,._ of ... In ...._,, T11!*$N~'°"' :-= ':,:. ~ = ~ of &-:";:.' :_ "'::' ::= , h1.,.. a IN '* ot I ESCAOW. INC., toO Not1tl A ....ino on N ,.mton oonwy.a lo Incl no. held tl'I• ,.letllllOUI 8u1ln•H 1 Tuatlfl Aftllue, ~ G, .. be t.rd Oft .AMI 11. by II ""°" ..., Deed OI "''"'' FIV IEASOHI Senti AM, Celtf0rn4&, Or-, ... et t 30 AM In DllM' Tt\IM Ill N Pt°'*"Y Nrelno J :ATfREA8. 1021 Unit A.let!OI eo.,,,,ty on Of "'• Mo 3 .. 700 CMc. Centlt .,_., deacl'ltleel: at Edlnoer Alie , l lll'IC. June S. 1tte Tiiis Wit Drl¥e w.t. tent• ~ H!Ull'OR TOHI ::A..L.::::==::::::::==:::::_ \ , 1 25~ T UESDAY, MAY 20, 1986 Teacher cleared .of sex charge Jury fi n ds no solid evidence gtrl molested; poltce claim statute of lt mitations h urt case By STEVE MARBLE Of ... .,.., ......... A nationally known dance teacher was found innocent Monday of seducing and having sex with a 14- ycar-old ballerina during private lessons at a Huntington Beach dance academy. Coaat Orange County's largest bualnessea are being urged to adopt voluntary smoking guidelines - before the county does It fot them./ A3 California Cathollc leaders In Tl- tuana find fault with Protestant missions./ A5 Nation I CIA chief Wllllam Casey accuses NBC of broad- casting classified Infor- mation In violation of the law./A4 World South Africa sends jets, commandos Into three black-ruled nations to strike alleged guerrilla targets./ Al Sports Akeem Olajuwon stands In the way of Lakers./8 1 Karl Gaytan la the new football coach for Edison High, In Fresno./81 Ocean View Hlgh's VM an Overturf la giving the boys fits In golf ./81 INDEX .. This is a wonderful moment," Anthony Sellars Jr. sajd after the Superior Coun jury in Westminster cleared him of four felony counts of oral copulatjon with a minor. Jurors returned their verdict shortly before noon Monday after one day of deliberations. Golden Bear's end has arrived By ROBERT BARKER Of ... ewlr .......... Demolition crews staned Monday to tear down the Golden Bear nightclub in Huntington Beach, w6ere rising rock music stars per- formed and old-time HolJywood stars dined. Work crews also erected a wooden barricade around the Wayne's Auto- motive building and were preparing to tear it down. too. The two buildings that have stood side-by-side for nearly 60 years near the comer of Maio Street and Pacific Coast Highway arc being razed to make room for a nine-story hotel and other redevelopment projects. Constructed of unreinforoed ma- sonry, the old buildings arc con- sidered vulnerable to earthquakes and faced the threat of demoli1100 on that count, too. Workers from the In-Tele Wrec)cjng Inc. started work Sunday but were ordered to stop by police because of a city ordinance prohibiting heavy construction on Sundays, police said. Residents and Golden Bear lovers had launc:laN pe&iiioll driv• aoci made countless appearances before the City Council in a fruitless etfon to save the building. The Golden Bear was opened in (Pleue eee OOL DEN/A2) "There wasn't any concrete evidence,'' said M.L. Madsen. one of the jurors. Hunti!'gton . Beach police, how- ever, said the1r case was buidercd froth the beginning because several other female students at the academy were not allowed to testify. "It's tough to lose one li\ce this," Lt. Jim Wallcer said. "But it's especially touj.b when the case has been hurt because of our inability to utilize the statements of o ther femaJe wit- ne scs." Police declined the say what the other girls would have said if called to the witness stand, only that the statute of limitations precluded their testjmony. The triil revolved around the testimony ofa ballerina who said that Sellars seduced h1ST during private dance lessons in I 984 and i'ersuadcd her to perform sex acts. The ~I, now 1 7. said she had a "crush' on SelJars at the time and ................ ......._ ...... Seetiona of a barrlca4e lle .,aln.n tbe OoldeD Beu nip tel ab .. workmen aet ready to tear tbe 8tnlctare down. only aareed to talk about the incident af\er police approached her. A Huntinaton Beach police ofticc1" Slld he monitored a convenatioo between the airl and Sellara in which the dance tcac.ber allqedly made incriminatina stakments and ac-- knowlcd&ed the sell act&. But Detective Don Howell uid he failed to press the •• record .. button oo a tape recorder he bad conncc1ed to the telephone durina the convena· tioo. Sevenljwon said tbe llbecoce ofa tal>t recordint weitbed ltl'OallY ID Sdlan. favor. The dance iutnacior deaied uy involvement with bis .-.a. wbo be detcribed u a talented but lazy dancer. He conceded tM1 die ptl k lepbo.ed tnm. bu• said sbe only talked about ber boyfriead. Tht trial, which &Ueed tbfte weeks. attrlcied dozellt of spec:taton. Some said they supponed Se11an ud , ........ n.&em/A2) Newport Shores rent for leased land set by judge Landowner gets less than asked: residents to pay more than now By ROBERT HYNDMAN Of ............. , An Orancc County Superior Court judge approved guidelines Monday LO settle a ien,tby dispute OVet' bow lease payments should be caJculated on homeowners' land in the Newport Shores community of west Newpon Beach. Judac Judith Ryan's rulin& su~ pons the dccis.ion reached in F'ebru- ary when three atbitraLOn ear-eed on payments hiaber tb.u what tbe resi- dents souatrt. but lower than tbe useament by their landlord. Sipal Land.mark Properties of Irvine. Tbe ruli~ is expected 10 be tbe final action m the dispuie between N rt Sbora residents and ~ ~~~ro accontina LO Nlnfa <Ya~~ resntentod rctidcnuin the rent dit1)Utc. .. When the coun finally COftfinns the &want. it cannot be appailed," O'Brien said. "I don't think they (Sipal t .1ndnwk ofticial1) are evwn oonlidaina it anymore ... Landmark officials were un. ~ ... J.ltAR/A2) Wave swamps boat; 2 dead. 3 missing LONG BEACH (AP) - A ~year old airl who survived and tbe bodies of her mother and another woman k:iUed in a boat swamped by a wave were pulled from the sea Monday by rescucwork:era, but tbreeotberpeople remained missina. the Cout Guard said. The little Jirl. Desiree Rodriquez, Advice and Games Bulletin Board Business Classified B6 A3 A7-9 88-10 B7 B10 B5 A10 A3 B4, 10 B1-4 B5 A2 Lion sighted, but searchers come up.eznpty Comics Death Notices Entertainment Opinion Pollce Log Publlc Notices Sports Television Weather By STEVE MARBLE Ot ... O.., ......... An animal tracking team was called to Mission Viejo early Monday after several citizens reponed seeing a mountain lion lur)cjng in a flood control channel and later in the backyard of a private residence. But animal control officers were unable to locate the cat or even its footprints. a county official said. The hunt later was abondoned. The mountain hon s1ghting was one of two Wlthin 24 hours and marks what seems to be a vowin' pattern of mountain lions sightings in residen- tial areas. A mountain lion was reponed Suoday in the hilly area near Park and Wendt Terrace overloo)cj ng Laguna Beach. Today's sighting was made near the intersection of Jeronimo Road and Marguerite Parkway in Mission Dornan denies ever saying Badham not in the trenches By PAUL ARCHIPLEY °' ... .,..,,.......,, Rep. Rohen Doman threw his "unqualified" suppon behind Rep. RobertBadham Monday while emphatically denying he ever accused the Newpon Beach congressman of having a "country-club attitude." Both conaressmen were at a hastily called press conference at Ooman's campalgn headquaners where the 38th d istrict representative refuted a senes of quotes attributed to him in a news article about Badham in Sun- day's Los Angeles Times. The story by urban affairs writer Jeffrey Perlman quoted Doman as saying that Badham bad a "country- club attitude" and that be "carries the air of rich, Republican clubism, of riding in limos and jet-setting around the world. He's not in the trenches politically, in the House. He's a limousine conservative and my God, we sure have enough of those an the Republican Pany already." Doman said the quote was full of words he wouldn't use and that the descriptions didn't fit Badham. He said he has used the descripuon "country club Republican" when talking about party moderates who arc "uneasy on social issues" and "not strong on defense." "That's certainly not Bob (Pl eue eee DOllNA.Jlf/ A2) Viejo. The cat rcportedJy was seen a shon time later in the backyard of a residence on the 26000 block of Ouranzo. Mountain lion or cougar si&hungs have increased smcc March 23 when Laura SmalJ, 5, of EJ Toro was mauled at Ronald W. Caspers Wil- derness Park outside Sao Juan Capistrano. A mountain lion -thought to be the same one that attacked the girl - Rep. Robert Doman was shot and klUcd the foUowina day. Ron Hein, a state fish a nd Game supervisor, said there may be sevCf'll explanations for the increased moun- tain lion si&htin&S- Tbe mountain lion population in Oranie County may be on the 10crease Lbouata there aren't any documented counts to prove it, Hein said. "But one thing we do know is that the area mountain lions live in is acttinf. smaller because of devel~ ment, ' Hein said. Hein also sugcsted that because of the attention focused on the March 23 attack. people arc mistakina other animals for mountain lions. "I have to believe its a compos1te of all these Lbiop," Hein said. Tb~ mountain lion attack at the rural county park marked the fint documented attack in California on a human in more than 75 years. County officials get low marks on smog By USA MAHONEY °' ... .,.., ......... Nine of the 14 public officials entrusted W1Lh protecting and im-provi~ air quality in the South Coast Air Basin have flunked their clean air quotients, according to the Coalition for Clean Air. Three Orange County politicians arc among those given failina grades by the non-profit ciuzens' orpniza- tion. They arc county supervisors Bruce Ncstande and Hamett Wieder and Anaheim Mayor Don Roth. All arc on the board of the South Coast Air Quality M~ment Dis- trict which is charted Wtlh meeting federal au quality standards for stationary pollution sources in Or- anac. Los Anaeles, Riverside and San Bernardino counties. "A few yea.rs qo district offiaals WCTC citing the year 2000 for poten· llaJly attainina federal clean air standards for our area. MOR recently. (Pl--... SllOO/ A2) Congressional primaries bitterly contested Suwa HOWLETT Tempers flair during_ debate between rivals ln both party con tests Tempers flared Monday momma following a telev1s1on uaping that aired the d1vers1fled views of fi ve 40th CongressionaJ District can· didatcs. The taping at KOCE studios on the Golden West College campus m Hunllngton Beach sparked heated c"Kcbanaes bctwten Republican can- djdatcs Nathan Rosenbcra and Rep. Robert. E. Badham, and between Democratic contenders An Hoff- mann and Bruoe Sumner. Peace &: flttdom Pany CJndidatc Steve Scan is alto ruTin1n1- lt was the first time all five or the 40th District challcnaers shared the same siaac. and if the candidate didn't pull any pohttcal punche their campaign workers nearly ex- changed the real thing. The race is a bitter one from both Republican and Democratic sides. filled with mudslingiq. accusations of campaign spying and mob connec- tions and charaes of unethical tactics. The GOP battJe is .between Badham, a five-term tncumbcnt. and the 33-year-old RoscnbctJ. Badham contends Rose.nbera is a anexpcncnced newcomer whose c.an- d1dacy was prompted by graduates of est (a self-improvement poup) want·. U\I to ptn political power. Rosenbcra has openly attacked the 54-ycar-old conaressman on several fronts, 1ncludi~ bis campaian spend· 1na. House vot1na record and "ques- tionable" endoncmcnts from prom1· nent Repubhc:ans. The latest chapter occurred when Badham volunteers aiuaht a volun- teer for the Rosenbers c:amp:uan , ........ T&llPSRl/A.2) Nathan Roeenbef1 t .. Rep. Bob Badllam \ The vctbal sluafcst that has been 1oina on between the campeians of Rep. Rohen Badham and Nathan Roscnbcra reached new beiahts Fri- day nt&ht when Bldbam helpers discovered a member of the ememy's campamona them. A volunteer for the Rotenbers campeian was cauaht "spying" 1n Badham's Newpon "leach campaign headq uarten. Joseph Trso first SllOcd a volunteer 1dcnt1flcation form in the Bldlwn headquarters u.s1aa the name Bnan Mendou, acc:otdina to Bldbam aJde Wilham Schreiber. Af\er he was confronted by susp1c1ous c.ampacn workers, he told them his name wa Joe Michael Trso ELEC TION '86 Trso's volunteer Job for ROKnbeq included the posuna of campacn sian• throuattout the 40\b Di1tnct. Rotmbai sa1d TTIO "'was &QlrY a& the syitcmatac removal of 1k Roee- nbctJ campaian aan_s and t.bat they were replaced by Badh.lm lips." He reportedly went co Bedham'i beadquan.en to find out what was 101naon. Tf10 -.s fired by Roetnbef& cam- paip officul1 followiaa t.bc inadeat. Roembai said. He aumed TflO ac1ed ~tlyoftbe RORnt.q campe..an by aoina to Wham·1 btldqua.nen under an al But the ''Re>Knpie"" intjdmt tu.m- ( ......... CBAJtaa/ .UI : ~ -- Or-. eo.t DAILY PILOT/ Tu.day, Mey 20, 1888 LEASE DISPUTE SETTLED BY COURT ..• ..._Al available for comment Monday aner· DOOD. Monthly payments wtlJ muJuply lllOft than u times under the terms of the new lease aa,reements. But that u far less than the twentyfold 1 ncrease UlitialJy tou,ht by •anal Landmark officials. Payments of$20 to $23 per month will jump to S 135 to$ I 53 per month, O'Brien said. Tbe rent di1r u1c was pushed into court in Apri I 98S after a lease uranaement for Ncwpon Shores bomcbuyers ten rents unchanged for 2S years. When that agreement expired tn December 1984, residents of the West WAVE ... From Al the hosratal for observation. said hospita spokeswoman Laurie Lundberg. Fi hcrman Jeff Means. who wn- nessed the rescue effon . c;.a1d the little Jirl had been an the water stnce Monday morning. "She said a freighter came hr, earlier. but 11 JUSt went by her. · Means said The women found 1n the water were idenufied as Desiree's mother, Petra Rodnque2, 27, and C'onnne Wheeler, 28. a Coast Guard spokeswoman said. Still missing late Monday night were the women's husbands. 'fhomas Rodnquc7 and Allen Wh eeler, and a 5-year-old daughter of the Rodnquez's. Tnc1a. All were from the city ofR1vers1de "Coast Guard emergency medical technicians quesuoned the girl," the spokeswoman said. "She told them the boat was hit by a following swell. a wave that comes up beh1n'2 the boat. The girl who was pulled from the sea about I 5 miles southwest of San Pedro. told re'iCuers that the accident involving the "CX-fl'' occurred late ~unday night or early Monday. Newpon community d1saarced with SiJnaJ Landmark over now new payments, wb1cb arc based on the value of the: land beneath their home&, should be calculated On Apnl 3. 198S, Judjc Ryan s.a1d arb1trat1on should be used to settle the djsputc And 1n late August. the three arbitrators -includjna one representative from each of the two parties -ruled an favor of the residents rqardan& what method should be used to determine rents. In subsequent month • the arbi- trators argued funher over how those property values ~hould be calculat~ Attorney Ronald ~ck. reprt:~nt1ng the 186 residents 1n the dispute. potnttcl to comparable nc1&hbonna areas and 1d Newport bores land was wonh about S2. 93 a square foot Signal landmark representatives selected other areas they said were comparable and amvcd at an a ~sed valu.at1on of $24 91 per square foot Faced with the wade d1spanty, arbitrators 5Clected a midway point -St l.2S pcr5<1uare foot-on wb1ch the new lease payments should be based. That was the fiaurc approved by Judae Ryan on Monday and will be used retroacuvcly for lease payments dating back to December 1984 GOLDEN BEAR ••. From Al July 1929 by Harry Bak.re as one ot the few good restaurants between Hollywood and T1Juana. where movie stars traveled on the weekends to see horse races. It was finished three )'Ca~ aAer Pacific Coast Highway was con- structed and soon gamed fame. Former actor Lionel Barrymore was reported to be a regular vis1 tor. So was Tyrone Power. Bakre also featured a M>da founuun that proved to be a big drawing card, accordmg to Barbara Milkovich. a spokeswoman for the Huntington Beach Historical Society The Golden Bear w<&s con ven cd 1n10 a nightclub tn I% I. long afierthe death of Bakre. Rock stars Jani<J Joplin. Bob Dylan and J1m1 Hendnx ~rformed on its stage on their way 10 stardom Wa)ne·s Automouve was con- structed an 1925 by J H. Macklin and housed a Hudson and Essex auto- mobile dealership. It also did a 'booming busmess because of the opening of Pacific Coast Hipiway. Mike Adams of the city's Re- development Agency said builder Dick Schwaru had to dchvcr plans how to save the facade of the Golden Bear before demolition could start. Adams said the paper work was delivered Monday. The facade a~ parcntly will be incorporated into the new structures. ln-Tck President Dan Dulack said Monday the demolition will take about two weeks to complete. It will be done by hand. not a wreck.ing ball. he said. Acid spills into flood control cha nnel ~bout 200 gallons of munatac acid spilled earl) today mto a flood control channel that fcl'Cii. the environmen- tally scns1t1ve Up~r Newport Bay, but health and water quality officials said the -;pill W!>Cd no threat to wildlife. The acid apparently leaked fro m a large container at Science l\ppli- cat1on Inc tn Irvine DORNAN DENIES REMARKS ON BADHAM .•• 'From Al Badham," Dornan said "It'\ a 'ipcc1- fic ty~ ot Rcpublu.:an who used to domtnate the National Republican Commlltee unti l Ronald Reagan ''I've nt."ver heard anybod) htnt that Hob Hadham 1.-. a moderate." he \aid "Another lint' 1n thert··-'lie\ not an the 1renchc1. politically, 1n the House.' I wouldn't \a} 1t. None of1t could I rerngn11e a<.. coming out of my mouth " Doman \aid. Dornan \did Perlman told him the quote'> came from an 1n1erv1ew last fall He \ugge">ted the reponcr made a rr1stakr going through his note<.. a1tnbu11ng 10 him things that <.ome- one el\C said "I have to assume it's an honc~t mistake." he said. Perlman referred questions 10 city editor John Anhur. who said the Times stands behind the quotes "These Congressmen profiles have been under way for more than six months." Arthur said. "We've gone through Perlman·, note<.. Fverythtng 1n the story 1s substantiated.'' Arthur ~1d Perlman obtained the Doman quotes during a telephone tntcrvicw last fall. "It'<; an old 1nterv1ew. Dornan ma) ha\c for- gotten about 11," he <;a1d "Doman called to complatn and we commenced a search and we're satisfied with the result'> We know we have 1t nght .. In reviewing the note\. there'!> no doubt that'<; what hc \aid .. Arthur s~ud. "I though! the Sunda) 'ltory wa-; very fair It wa' well done. well researched and very fair to Badham " The 40th d1stnct ( on~re\sman disagreed Monda\/. "When I read the article I <.aid to my wife. 'That's not Bob Doman ' We'vebeen through th e 1rcnche\ together We'H· worked hand 1n hand .. These k1ods of thmis are beyond the pale of respectability," Badham said. .. I don't think I've been treated straight forward by Jeff. He's tncd to get me t~ say bad thmg.s about Bob Doman. Badham said he heard Perlman had been taken off of partisan politics stones because of a bias against Republicans an past articles. Orange County Republican Party Chairman Tom Fuentes echoed that belief "We understood he was no longer doing pan1san pieces becau~ of a lack ofob1ec11v1t)," Fuentes said He tell the Badham profile wasn't ob1cc- ti ve. either l\rthur. who Joined the Times in F-cbruary. said he never heard of any suchass1gnment change for Perlman because of biased reporung. "That\ bull--I've ne ver heard that before ... he~1d. TEMPERS FLAIR IN PRIMARY DEBATES ... From Al .. .,py1ng" 1n Radham''> Newpurt Beach campaign headquaner'i Ro,enberg ..aid dunng the KO< l: taping that the '>PY Joseph Trgo as "an 1mpetuou'> youth" who made a mistake b) gcnng to the Badham headquanel'\ Ht: -;tres..ed the inci- dent wa\ not 1n looperat1on with the Rosenberg campaign and that rrgo was a<,ked to wnte a lener of apolog) to Badham followi ng his d1sm1ssal from the Ro<.enhcrg campaign 'ltafT Following the taping. Badham a-;ked for an apology from Ro~nbcrg. Ro~nhcrg \aid he wa<; \Ort)' for I rgo·., bcha,1<1r .ind \hook Badham'-; hand Badham Jlll'plcd the apology. but told Roscnhl·rghed1dn't bchc:ve Trgo acted independently of Rosenberg'\ campaign. tlJdham also ~1d a re- mark made during the JO-minute program by Ro~nbcrg regarding h" wife's alleged u..e of campaign fund\ to buy a mink coal wa<; ··incxl u\ahk" and ··a he .. The two candidates '>lepped a\1dt: whe-n Rosenberg campaign chairman Harry Rosenberg and Badham cam· pa1gn consultant Da vid Vaporcan stood ch1n-t0<hin tn a fingcr-po1nt- 1ng shouttng matt h that 'itoppcd JU\t shon of fisticuffs in an altercation apparent() over thc comments can- didates made dunng the taping The Democratic pnmary raet· bc- 1 .... een Orange ( ount) l)emotrat1c Party chairman Bruce \umner I yn- don LaRouchc follower An Hoffman and Peace & f-reedom PJn.,. tan- d1date Steve ~ars 1s al<.o a colorful battle of '>Cparatc "ll'W\ \umnc:r I\" wnte-1n candidate on th<· Democrat al 11cket Ounng the KOC l taping, Hof1· mann accu<scd 5umncr c1f ha ving co nnections with organ11cd crime and drug trafficking. Jte claimed ~umner supporter James Roosevelt, ~on of former President Franklin Delano Roosevelt, was also involved an sordid dcahng'i ~umner. who u'ied the air time to repeated(~ tell voter. to wnte in hi'> name on the J unl" 3 ballot. <.aid Hoffmann·, involvement wi th l.aRouche followers 1s "wild. weird b11arre. but 11's also dangerou'> " Sumner said unle~ the people nl the 40th D1stnct wntc tn his name. the)' wall have a "Lyndon LaRouchc d1'iC1ple" running an the general electwn ~ars made h1\ campaign !.tand on freezing nudear weaponry. He "31cl the United States <;hould ncgotiatr more treaties. "or we arc going to end up tn some ktnd of nuclear war." The KOCE 'ihow as scheduled to air on public tclc v1s1on's channel SO at 6:30 p.m. Ma y 29. CHARGES OF CAMPAIGN SPIES TRADED .•. From Al ed into "8adhamgate" Monday when. Ro~nberg au.:used Bad ham of spy tactic<. Rosenberg cla1m'i the Badham campaign ~nl a double-agent lo has headquarter<s to pose a\ a volunteer Rosenberg ..aid that while Trgo wa'I at Badham's headquaner'i he \llW Huntington Beach re<11dent Marty Burbank and recogn11ed him as al<10 working lor the Rosenberg campaign Burbank reportedly boasted to Trgo that he had taken down a bunch of the Ro\Cnbcrg campaign 'ilgn'i that frgo had put up Rosenberg ..aid Burbank volun- teered to do adm1nistrauve work at the Roscnhcrg campaign head- quarters. and that Burbank had reported for duty Tuscday, Wednes· day and ~nday morning of last week MAIN OFFICE ~. ,,...,. "•' ' . .......... ,. Ma.,.....,.,,.• ,. ",.,._.,'4 A f"J' But Burbank has been auuscd by Rosenberg of actually working for Badham all al ong "He didn't JU'>l decide f-nday 1hn1 he didn't want to work for U\ \' Rosenberg said. "Not after he told u\ he's been taking down our <.1gn'i lor the past two week!> .. Burbank's duties did not include the posting of Rosenberg's campa1g.n signs, but the informauon on where the)' are located 1s available at the Corona del Mar headquarten where he worked. Rosenberg ..aid Rosenberg campaign manager Harry RoM:nberg called Burbank at home \aturday ~ekrng an expla- nation. "He said. 'yeah. I've been takmg down your \1gns .... ~oscnberg 'la1d Rosenberg filed a report w1th the Newport Beach and Huntington Beach police departments, "but they said there's nothing they can do.'' Schreiber said Burbank 1s a volun- teer for the Badham campaign, but claimed he changed to Badham's campaign "af\er he became d1s- 11lus1oned with the underhanded tactics at the Rosenberg head- quarter~" Schreiber said Burbank 1old him the Ro\Cnberg headquarters .. ., so full of est people that there's practically a M:m1nar there every nt&hl .. When Burbank admitted to Ulking down Rosenberg's campaign $1gns, Schreiber said he was reprimanded by Badham campaign chairman C.>av1d Vaporean, who \aid "that's not the way we do thing~." Burbank wu not available for comment Monday Delly Piiot o.flvery 11 OuatentMd ••• ..,_ &•1 \~7· --"O'J'P'• ~., 41'' Justcall 642-6086 ... ~.~ ..,., It -r ,. ""'-' t ..... '°"' Of' £11 ~ lO 11" u 1.,;IJto ' I " VOL. 71, NO. 140 ' What do yo u hkc about the Dady Pllot., What don'1 you hlcc., (all the number 1bove and your mcssaae will be recorded. transcnbed and de· li vered to the appropnate eduor The same 24-hour answenna service may be used to record letten to the editor o n any topic Contnbuton to our Lctten column mu'1 include their name and telephone number fbr vcnficat1on Tell\ u\ what'~ on your mind '"° '°"' ti:-c, ... r,.. .... .., •.,tQ.11 ~l' I '°" oc ,..,, OJ(-'°"" C(Jlll !ly , • ... t ~ t•' • •O '"' •...s '°" t~, .. r..-.-;i ClrculeUon , ••• ,:w.n.. "'"* Oo•• '°" ...... MJ..QJJ I I P~rtial clearing in afternoon ExteineNe nlQht and morning low doud1 and log a10r'1Q t"41 Orenge Cout wlll contlnut tl\rOUQh Wedneeday with pertlal ~ring In t"41 1hemoon1 nMt t"41 bMcNI, tM National W .. lMr~Nld Fotwatt1t1lar 8 pm l:OT. Tue . May Temperatur• wlll be000'9r with htghl from 1"41mid801 nMr 1"41 bMc:Me to the UPS* 80t and low. 701 Inland. Local mountal"' wlll be fair with gull}' .outhw.t wind• blowlno 15 to 30 mph thl1 afternoon through W9dneed1y. H1Qh1 tod1y In the 70t, Ind OV4W'nlght Iowa from the upper 30t In 1"41 hlgMr valley9 to t"41 low 50a ~· South"9t wind• 10 to 18 knott wlll blow through the tnMf' coutal wet.,. over a .outtaWMt 1w.11 ot 1 to 3 feet. Sklel wllt be cloudy and foggy. with p1rtl1t olearlno thl1 afternoon and evening. U.S. Temps ~ 10w9 lllf0119" 6 D '" Mon0ay .. ~ Albany N y 81 " Mldlancl 00-... •• ~Que II 48 M ........ so 46 ""'9flllo 13 41 Ml*-81 l'aul .. ., 90 AtttltotllQa ~ 34 N-..W. ta ... Al!eMa 73 83 ..... ~ II .. Allal\llC (;lly 13 ., -Yotll Cit)-.. 71 Calif. Tempe Allflll' eo 55 lalllmot• es 17 llllng9 7t 60 =-n .. 70 4e ... .. S2 eo.1on to e1 IMllf\Qton v1 82 53 ~ ,. le CN.tlMton.& C ,. 71 OllW10lla.N C 78 e1 ~ 71 45 aiic.oo SS 47 ClnOnn•ll se ~ Columbla.S C e:.> 87 Columl>Yt.O!\lo 87 ., Concotel,N H t3 eo o.HM-F1 wonn 71 52 Ceylon eo 56 o.n-74 49 O..MolMt 70 44 Oelroll 62 •• EI PMO 86 •• Fairbenh 56 36 Fetgo 17 44 Fl.gtla." 71 32 Ot .. IFelle 77 60 Gf-*>OIO,N C 75 83 H.,,torel to 81 HeMtla 81 4. HOflOlul<i .. 71 "°"91on ,~ se INll~ 58 !IQ Jecll_. ....... n 82 Ju<-. m 41 1tan ... 01y " 45 L.M VeQU 100 63 un1a Aoca 11 se l_ .. et SS Memj)Ne 71 81 ... _._. 81 76 ~v. 13 .. Oii..,_.. City 74 60 ~ .. .. OtlMCIO to • ~ .. ., "'-'la ICM 71 ""o::::rc 70 63 p ·°"' ,. 52 ,.,~ 12 M AllPld City 72 .. Reno IO 44 AlchmonO 1$ ~ St 1.0U1e .. ao Seit Lalla Coty e2 •• SenMtonlO 52 82 San Juall,P R " 74 ..." .. 71 62 ~ 71 M 17 ,. SPoll-71 •• 9)'1'-12 82 T ampa-81 PlreOQ 86 72 Tocieke .. 46 ,_ 101 71 lulM 13 60 Wlllhll>Qton 0 C 86 70 WlcNte 12 46 Wllll-Bana 17 63 ~· Eztended F• ll•ur-y llwOUG'I .. turelay .. ,,. _,., 9'IMy -.... ....,_ L«* gue1y nonn wltl09 Ot1 Thut.oey r~ .. ,.,. 1ano-a.a-. ~ M lo 74 L°""9 5-4 lo M V...,. .... 76 10 IA 1..owe 4t to eo S-•Monlea SIOCl<IOll TelloeVlllie'y Ton..-v_.naV~ Tides ., 541 M M 71 )4 7t S6 ,. '3 TOOAY 130em f 28aM I Ollp m 7)3p m 0 8 4 I oa 6 1 WU*RIOAY 2 ,~.,.,, 8 23 e m 143pm I OSp m .() 3 4 I 10 •1 8"" "-loday al S S8 • m Md tau aQMal 7 51pm Moon.-.loeleyel4 31 pm endMlt aUMam SMOG ACTIVISTS RATE OFFICIALS .•• From Al they arc usmg the year 2020. At thr rate the board 1s going. an additional 20 yeal"!I may not be enough," said eoal111on Executive Director Kell y Hayes-Raitt. "It's time the board at least hved up 10 the Air Quality Man.agement Plan they passed in 1978. We arc tired of holding our breath and wailing for the SCAQM D to start doing its Job," she complained Two Qrange ( ounty board mem- bers called the coaht1on·s analysis unbaJanccd. Supcrviwr Hamett Wieder !.aid that the d1stnct board cannot be as s1ngle-m1nded as the coal111on when 11 comes to clean air Wieder, who 1s also on the state Air Resources Board which regulates vehicle em1ss1on!t, said the d1s1nct board mu'lt take the economic impact of 1t"> actions into consideration. ~omc hu'itnes'iCs lake <;mall pa1n1 and furniture manufat·ture~ and oil re- linene\ could be put out of busmess h) stnct regulation. -.he ~ad Tom Eichorn. who rc prc'iCnl!> Ncstandc on the board, said he agrees with the coalition's position about two-thirds of the lime. But he said its idea of controhng air pollution as to put companies out of busmess and people out of work. '"The district 1s trying to toe a very fine lane between the mu1mum amount of air pollution reduclJon without hurting the economy." Eichorn said. In ratmg board members, the coaltuon considered nine key clean air measures tncluding refinery con- trols ndcshanng mcenuves and regu- lations on toxic em1ss1ons from landfills Each member of the d1stnct board was rated on the ~rccntage of h 1s or her votes 1n support of clean air goals. Votes by the ma1onty of members strengthened or upheld air quality goals less than 41 ~rcent of the time, accordtng to the coaht1on's analysis of d1stnct board minute5 from 1984 to the present The coah11on considers ~core!> below SO percent to be flunktng. W11lrnm Smlland, (iovcrnor George DcukmeJ1an's appointee, earned the worst score: Smiland did not cast a smgle key vote for clean cur dunng the pcnod studied, the or· ganiutt1on !.aad. Roth, cha1nnan of the district board, a lso failed to make the grade with a 30 percent clean air score. Targeted as very pro-business, a coalition member said it's rare for Roth to vote for "anything that smacks of control." Wieder and Ncstande each scored 40 percent on the coaJiuon's clean air ratinJ. Wieder attnbutcd her low grade to her refusal to go along with a coahuon~es1red ndeshanng pro- gram. "I don't believe the only way to solve a problem is to pass another law," Wieder said. The su~rv1sor said she voted in favor of strict refinery cootrols and re-gulat1on~ for toxic waste landfills. Eichorn echoed W1eder's com- ments. He said be voted ajatn&I asking businesses to provide ridchar- 1ng incentives because he did not believe such programs were within the d1stnct's JUnsdiction. TEACHER CLEARED OF SEX CHARGE ••. From Al believed tn his tnnocenlc while others \31d the teacher abu..ed his pos1t1on ol authonty and deserved to go to pn\on "Thcrl I'> no doubt 1n m> mtnd ..... hat'it'K'\Cr that hc 1s guilt)" Deputy D1\lmt \ttorney Michael Ko'>k1e \aid During the tnal Ko!>kl dc'>cnbcd the danu· teat her a., a -.cdu<.er who wa\ on a "power trip " \ellaf\, who own\ the l'hyll 1-. < yr Dance ..\tademy 1n Huntington Beach. de<. lined to d1'itu'' the i;pcc1tit char&e\ or what effect the tnal has had on h1<, bus1nes<> "I'm sure I ran put things balk toKcthcr," he said. i;tand1ng 1n the court hallway wi th h1i; famil y "I have what I need -m) w11c and my haby " Sellars d1sm1sscd the parent'i and lormer students who have turned against him by talking about 1ho<1e who have !>lood by his 'ilde "I didn't know how much lovi: there was unul now," he said >\I Ramsey. a 73-year-old attorney coaxed from retirement to defend Scllar<i, said he believed in his d1ent'-. innocence. "Th1'i was somebody worth ~v1ng, ~ot a drug dealer or a robber." Ramsey said "This was a case 1nvolv1ng decent people " Ed George. a !>Ccond defense at- torney whose children took dance lesson .. from Sellars. predicted there will be changes at the dance academy for the protection of tcache,... and 'tudents ah kc. "There: will be some radical changes made," George 5.a.1d "No pnvate lcsson'S without an adult present. the blinds (covenng the stud 10 w1 ndo .... ) arc coming down and we're even cons1denng putttng cam- eras 1n the room.'' The studio room where the alleged sex acts took place has one windo9.' that was covered with a bhnd. But several witnesses said parents. stu· dents and even Sellar'' wife frequent ly walked through the 'itud10 unao nouncc:d. Ramsey told Jurors that Sella!'\ would have been "cra1y to take that kind of a nsk -11 would have been fatal .. Summer Silks In addition to our classic ran raw silk sport coat, this season we are offering it in a most unique shade of grey. As versatile as its counterpart and as timeless in sty le as tradition itself Gentlemen's Clothing Inspired by Tradition 46 Fuhfon Island Newport Beach (714) 640·8310