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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1988-04-26 - Orange Coast Pilot* TUESDAY, APRIL 26, 1988 25 CENTS Heart donor's death investigated CM police begin homicide probe, but are unsure whether foul play was involved to a medical aid calJ in Costa Mesa at 6:26 a.m . last Tuesday. A man was lying on a sidewalk in front of the Circle K store at 1913 Pomona Ave. marked the county's second heart transplantl Althouah unidentified at the time, Ramirez was declared brain-dead boun before the transplant Undtt state law. unidentified orpn do!lors can be used if police conduct an "extensive" 24-hour dTort to learn the d o nor's name. Hoag spokeswoman Pam Bolen sa1d . the police, the hospital and the in search of Ramun after tbe Coroner'sOffice. Policcfinttrprinted operation and was told he WM not the unconscious man and checked the there. pnnts throuah the state identification Hoaa Vice President Larry s)stem without success. Amswonh said Monday the brochet- BJ JONATHAN VOLUE ... .., ....... •• 1-.e 1eemfogJy violent death of a 19-)lalf-old Costa Mesa man whose ....,.. was used in a transplant operation is bein& investipted by pol.ice as a homicide, though authorities arc unsure whether foul A volunteer cleans one of the about 100 birds rescued from the 21,000- gallon oil spill In the wildlife haven Suisun Bay marshland./ AA Sports Keith Kaub leads Cal State Fullerton past UCt In college baseball./81 Index Advice and Games Bulletin Board Business Cl.fled Conilcs Death not!Qes Entertainment Opinion Poflce Log Public notices weath. A8 A3 85-7 88-10 A9 810 84 A7 A3 86, 10 A2 play was involved. Eleno Ulloa Ramirez was found unconscious in front of a Pomona Avenue convenience market early last weer and declared brain-Oead hours later at Hoaa Memorial Hospj- tal in Newport Beach. Police and paramedics responded Liiguna cany,,n buyout sought By JON.ATHAN VOLllE OflleDlllr ....... • A group that hopes to block development of Laguna Canyon an- nounced plans Monday to buy the I 0,000-acrc area and preserve it as an urban wilderness ~k. possibly with help from a SI 0 million private grant. Richard Harris, chairman of the Laguna Canyon Conservancy, said be bu met with a group that could provide the grant, but has yet to bear whether the group will fund the effort. He re{~ to disclose the name of the group. The conservancy's plan was an- nounced two days before the Orange County Board of Supervisors was scheduled to vote on a development agreement with The Irvine Co. for the Laguna Laurel project. a 2, I~ development that would include more than 3,000 homes at the. northern reaches of the canyon. The agreement would guarantee the company the right to build the project in exchange for various con· cessions. despite. a slow-growth measure that has qualified for the county ballot. Officials administered oxygen and took Ramirez to Hoaa, where he was later declared brain dead. His death is being investipted as ··suspicious." because the injury apparently was caused by a blow to the head. Ramirez' heart was transplanted Wednesday into the chpt of a 58- year-old Fountain Valley doctor. Dr. Nonon Humphreys. The o~ration Costa Mesa Police Lt. Rick John- son said the attempt to learn Ramirn's identHication before lhe suriery was ··.a ttam efTon·· involving The lieutenant also wd officen in-law amved at the hospital arty se.an;hed local missins-persons re-Friday. more than. 24 hours after. the ports without success. transplant operation. He wu told AJthouJh Hoaa a~tly was that .Ramiru' body was not at dlle within the law rqulallnt transplants hospual. having since been movei:t to from unidentified donors. the trans-• the county !"0~. . , · plant raised ethical questions. which Authonlles said Ramntt 1 M.an were fueled by reports that the saved the life of Humpltreyi. WbO donor's brother-in-law went to Hoag (Pleue ~ DBATB/U) Traffic cutback proposal unveiled Plan would reward employers for cuts inrush-hour crush By BOB VAN EHEN or .. ..., ...... A detatled plan that rcwanls walkers. bikers and other noo-poDut- mgcommuters v•as un,·eiled Monday by the Orange County Transpor- tation Commiss1on. Under the.commission's proposal. empk>}crs would cam poinis if their employees worked at home, bicycled or walked to work, commuted dunna non-peak traffic hours. worked com- pressed work weeks. or rode to work m car or van pools. lf the~ lS appro'-cd by the South Coast Air Quality Management Di• trict. 11 could serve as an alternative to the d1smcfs 11)0tt restrictive proposal. which rtcop.izes onJy car and van pooling as options fm redyqn& tnl.ffic and auiomobile em1ss1ons.. Conservancy members say the project including the prol)()Sed widening of Laguna Canyon ftoad. would spell doom for .. the last remaining hint of a canyon from Malibu to the Mexican border.·· ArtUt IOcbael La-abowa bla ••before .. The development would be adja-·-1 o.-.-......... Lee,.... the canyon for preeerTat:lma u an arbaD puk. On the table ID tbe bae"1oand t. stack of pedtloD8 from Rpporten .eekln& to atop dnelopmeat ID tlae canyon. EmplO)'Cr"S ~ho earned enouati points under tbe commission's proposed propam ~ouJd be exempt from a distnct rqulation that re- quires empJo~ers to develop car- pooltne in~nt1ve prosrams for their \llt'Orkers cent to the San Joaquin Hills Trans-and ••atter• rendltloDa of ~ Canyon portation Corridor. a proposed toll OD llonday U memben m tbe Lap.na (Pleue eee CAlfY01'/ A2) Canyon CouerftDcJ' an Yelled plane to buy Last year the dtstnct adopted a measure kno-.rn as Regulation IS. aimed at inausana the avcrqe number of occupants in Southern California commuter vdudes from the current 1.3 to I .S. Burk cleared of wrongdoing in dual jobs The measure pve employers with 100 or more employees one year to come up with plans to enc:owqe their emplo)CCS lO_JOID van or car pools. Otstnct offietals decided that the objective should be for half the employees at all major firms t.o be in car pools of nvo or more. penom. ahbouah no time hmit was set for attainment of the objCClive. BJ ROBERT BAJUtER otlleDl!lr ....... -Criminal chaflC$ won't be filed apinst former Huntinaton Beach city employee Walter E. Burt. Deputy District Attorney Martin Eoquist said today. Newpqrt may declare partofcity litter free Enquist said an invcstipuon failed to show that Burk, who also held a second fulltimc job at US. District Court in Los Anteles since last Oct. 19. was paid simultaneously for both jobs. complete and didn't Justify the filina of criminal charges. Increased ac- countability on-em.,Wyca..s,hould be examined. he said. She said. however. that the alleged two-job situat1on was .. unfortunate and an embarrassment but not major'' and that 1t constituted a potential ''iolauon of city personnel rules at most. JOb and that she apparently ,,..as misled by Burk for reasons of his ahscnccs. Enquist said that documentation concemin& Burk's hours was in- Huntinaton Beach City Attorney Gail Hutton said that ··she never once thought"' that criminal charges would be filed. Hutton said she didn•t give per- mission for Burk, 47. to hold a second Hutton. whose manacemcnt St}le had come under question. Slld that Burk dido•t receive pay from the city while workins as a deputy adminis-- (Pl-..e eee aumt/ A2J Transportatton CommiSSlon of- ficials. however. arc hopin& to .ell • (Pl..-.. TJt.AnlC/ A2) New language more than Idirl chatter BJ BOB VAN EnEN OllleDlllr ....... it. If somebody tells you ··z.e loy g1," you can bet he believes He's sayiDJ "I love you .. in a very ~se lingo known by the very =name of Interdisciplinary International Reference or ldir1 for shon. ldirt is for althouch, like the Palestinians. it has no homeland. And its fluent speakers, for the moment. number pretjtidy oncy • ·11 • •-.a: Jobn ench hOpes to cha.nae that. He W1 bcsin ~• tcminanon ldirl thiscvninaat the Bowen Museum inSlnta Ana. ' A retired journalist who spent most of his lik in the Far East. Y ench. 70, said he bepn·developing ldir1 «>years aao as a means of removing the ambiauity and imprecision from Spoken and wnttcn la.nguqe. In taking on what bccamea lifelonaproject, YcnchJ01ned the ranks of visionaries like Ludwi.& Zasenhof. who. an 1887 ckvelopN an artificial lanauaac he calJed Lingvo lntemacia. mott common)) known as Esperanto. And Yeoch's branch1ld. ldtrl,jomcd a Ii.st that includes. not only Esperanto, but numerous other made-up laf\l\&llCS. such as Volapuk and Glossa. . . . • ..In English. our SY!!lbo1s arc very m1sle.adina. so 1t s no wonder peopk have difficuhy and arc sometimes unable 10 communicate.·• wd Yeoch ... We have 26 lctters.. but there arc re.lly •43 sounds. Ifs hke an offitt ~ there are 43 people but ~h' 26 desks ... Often words which have croups of letters in common do noc have an)1hi.ns to do with o~ another .ronccpeually. ~nd the way a word 1s writttft 10 EQIJ1sh somttuncs has very httk to do ~;th the way ifs pronounced. Yench said be thinks thest inconsistencies are 11 the bottom of man) so-called learning d1sab1hties. .. A lot of times v.e think kids are slow lcamcrs when 1t may really be the la'n1uaie that is the problem:• be said. ··1 tbtnk. for cum pk. that dysleJttC luds arc simply contuxd by the iDCODSlSltOC) of our languqc. Maybe ~ are simply straiabtforN&rd people "-ho expect ideas to be bnked up tn a rational -way." Yencb·s rational wa)' ofhnllna up ideas came to him. be • said. thrOuah euntinat1on of scientific w.au.s. In chemical nomenclature. for eumplc, H20 denotes a mokcile with t~-o hydrosen atoms and one ox~ A8d loOkina at thC way it's written. )OU can tell somcduna a"°"9t the way the molecule i~ shaped In Sttkina asimilar structutt fo.r ldit1. Y t«h tqan wnh '" ..... a.L/d) 'Skinsman~er'sson 'irtevelant' pick:!::'~ ........ ~-·' \ • Date set for 'Night Stalker' trial LOSANOELES(AP)-Tbc Nitbt SUlker trial ot Ridwd Jtamue:r will ~.-n J=~ 1juds said today after brirta by ·a.mirez~s II~ th.at lhc dcknte will be tady to prOt'ef!d in tbe lon1«1ayed ~. .. rve coatmed with my client and we're lady '° btain trial June 30." said Daniel Hernandez. "Thaf s a finn <Sate~ asked Su- ptrior Cou.n Ju .. Michael Tynan. .. A fl rm date, ' aid Htt'l\&Dde7.. who added that he expects to com· plete all reseatth ncocssary for pretrial mouons to be resolved before tlKn. "Thar's very encourqina. Mr. Hernan&z., •• said the;.,.. who lw flefd ttpeated requesu fOr ddlya in the muhipk m1udc'r cur. He aW.ed Ramirn if he was wllhna to waive his ri&ht to 1 trill before the 30th and Ramirez respooded in a busty voi~: .. y"-•• T~nao said a pmdina motion cballenaina the composiuon of Juries in Los A"'cles County will be heard on May l I. He noted that jury ttlection in the complicaled trial could take six to eisht months and advised auome~s they need not worry about havtng witnesses ttady before then. Ramirez 1s charged in Los Anactes BURK CLEARED ••• Prom Al trator 10 federal court. She claimed Burk seemed to pcr- fonn work at his second job in Los AnJtln while be was receivina va- cation time. compensatory ttme for past overtime, or took lime off without pay from his city job. Hutton SA.id that Burtt, who worked in her depanment as an analyst for three )"can, said he had to JO to South Dakota to be wtth his seriously ill mother. Burk at one t1mc aJleacd.ly called from thc airport. when he was scheduled to come back to wort. sayina that hts mother took a tum for the worse and needed to stay longer, Hutton said. Another time. he called when he wa.s scheduled to depan. claiming that bad storms caused a delay. Those statments were .. not off the wall and seemed to be reasonable ... she said. Hutton said, tho~. that there seemed to be sufficient evidence when Bur'k resianed on Mareb 29 that he mtsied her as to reasons why he needed to be away from his city JOb. City Administrator Paul Cook said today that officials will hold a mcetinJ with Burk to determine what personnel rule's may ha\'e been broken. He said 1t will be determined at that time whether Burt should have any of his pay docked from a final pay check. Lt. Ed McErlain said there ap- peared to some days that Burk was paid at both job sites. But a lack of rcrords and witnesses made allcga- t1ons dHficuJt to prove, he said. Count)' witb 13 CCMifttl of murder and JO other fdonies alleMdly com mi tied durinc a .llPfeC o( nilf'it-tirM in- trusion1 and lldistic attac:k.s in 191<t and 198~. Tbe attacker, who came to be kno..-n 11 the Njpt S&alket. :.= enlmd homes ~ doors and left ~~ms, a n'mbol associated wuh ···devil worahip. scrawled at some of the crime tc:Cnes and on some of the vKtims. Ramirez. who once yelled "Hail Sat.an!" as he was led from 1 courtroom, has been linked to four San Francitc0 murders but has been charged with only one. He was also charged with attempted murder in that attack.. He has also been charpd with auempted murder and rape in an attack on a couple in Missaon Viejo. Ramirtt was captured in Los Angeles on Al.II-31, 198S. He was apprehended by aftJIY residents who recognized him from a photo released by police. Baby aballdoaed A 4-month-old baby was found abandoned in Huntinaton Beach, police said today. The baby, who hll'S not been identified. was found in the 7000 block of Everest Circle near Golden West College. Officers took the infant to the Orangewood Children's Centet in Oranic. but officials there had no details about the child.The ~nter cares for neglected or abused chil- dren. CANYON BUY OUT SOUGHT BY GROUP ••• Prom Al road that would cut through the rural canyon. Hams met with offic11ls from The Irvine Co. six weeks ago to discuss the buy-out. "They basically told us to call back when we had a check.·· Harris said. .. And now I think ~·ve got it." Harris said the group would split the $10 milhon grant down the middle if it is approved -half the money would go toward purchase of the land and half would ao toward fund-ra1s1ng efforts to secure the full- purchaie pri~. Hams said he ha~ no estimate how much the 10,()()().acre canyon, which indud~ Orange County's only natu- ral lakes. 1s worth. But Irvine Co. officials scoffed al the proposal ··The Irvine Co. csumate of the canyon value would be in the hun- dreds of millions of dollars," said Larry Thomas. vi~ president of corporate communications. "In the late 1970s, the st.ate of California purchased Cr)st.al Cove State Park on Pacific Coast Highway for roughly $38 million. and that would have been for just about 2.300 acres. "'While I beheve they arc both well meaning and scnous, it IS difficult to take seriously their proposal. It's simply not realistic.·· Thomas contends the Laguna t Laurel project and development agreement would benefit the Orange Coast. "The (pro,JCCt) provides transpor- tation. pubhc service facilities and open space fund1na benefits that significantly exceed current project rcquu-ements; quantifiable net public benefits total more than S 17 milhon beyond those currently required by the county." Thomas said. Thomas said La&una Laurel will leave mort than 1,600 acres of open space and more than 1,300 acres dedicated to hillsides, canyons and three natural lakes. IDIRL: TALKING ms LANGUAGE ••• Prom Al an already existing uniform system of symbols. the International Phonetic Alphabet Then he arranged the symbols in tables, hke the Penodic Table of the Elements. In the tables. symbols arc arranged according 10 concepts. so that. by knowing the symbol and where it appears in the tables. a reader or listener will always know what It means and how 1t 1s supposed to be pronounced. Yench earned a master's dqrec in lingu1st1cs from Cal State Fullerton about I 0 years ago. Alan Kaye. chairman of Fullerton's lincuisucs department. said he was aware of Ycnch's work but did not know much about ld1rl. Kaye did say. however. that all artificial languages share at least one similanty. they arc attempts to sim- plify and to eliminate amb1gutty and DEATH ... From Al suffered from a deacnerat1vc heart disease 1hat was slowing eatina away lbcorpn 1mprcc1s1on from language. "In Esperanto. for example, all nouns end in 'o' and all adjectives end in ·a: so you can tell by lookin1 at a word what part of speech it is,' Kay said. "And there are only three verb tenses: past, present and future." Unlike ldirl. Esperanto already has a body ofliteraturc and a large group of speakers "I thfok ifs safe to say that many of the great works oflitcraturc have been translated into Esperanto and the number of speakers is anywhere from I ma Ilion to l 5 million, depending on whom you believe. Oranae Countx has quite a few active Espcrantists. • said Kaye. Esperanto is based entirely on European lanauagcs.. Kaye said, as arc a number other artificial lanugaaes, such as Volapuk. which was de- veloped in 1880 from En&lish and German roots; Occidental. which appeared in 1922 and is based on a composite of Romance languages; and Glossa. which is a recent inve-n- tton based largely on Latin and G~k. But Yench said Esperanto and other artificial languagcs lack some important concepts that limit their uscf ulncss. "Esperanto isn't as versa\Jle as 1t could be.-he said. than simply a manner of speaking. They acquire with their language an entire S)'Stcm of knowledge, Yench said. "Thinp such as virtues and the laws of nature arc embedded in the languaae, •• he said. That kind oflinkage between whole ideas and symbols 1s not unknown in the world. Y cnch noted. Many Orien- tal languages arc ide<>sraphic. so that symbols represent not sounds but concepts .. Some other non-European languages. such as Arabic and Hebrew, arc similar to ldirt in that they contain a greater degree of conformity between concepts and symbols than docs EnaJish. he said. "For example, there art certain combinations of letters which. in any semitic language, convey the same conceptual meanina." he said. "So you can tell by rccognizina those letter combinauons that words arc related. That's often not the case in EnaJish ... Yench said he believes ldirrs precision will be useful in the de- velopment of sucn future consumer mainstays as voicc-activiated ap- pliances. On the less technical side, ld1rl is J>(rf ectly capable of conveying poetry and sona. he said. Even slani is perfectly poSSJble, he said. ''Anythina that can be said, I want to be said in ldir1," Yencb said. Yench was bom in Russia in 1918. ueWednesday U.S. Temps MlemlllMcfl IS " Calif. Tempe Enended ........ .. 41 .. ~,,..,. • .. S4 ..... 24 ...,,..._ ... Lift A ._ ti .,_... n.n:: = Le ....... .. 40 ,,..., ......... = ~ n 40 .......... 16" *:::t._,. L_. 411eM NtwO.-. u ., E1 .. ta u .. ~ 47 '7 ...,.. ... .,. Altlnll 72 ... ,.._YOIWCll) u .. FrMnO 14 " Alllntlc: City .. .. Okltllome City •1 .. lOIMgelel 74 u 11111""°'9 .. II OmaM 70 42 0.IMd .. 14 . 16r"*'Ql'lam • 5' Ol1er"9o .. .. .. .,~ ~ :: Surf Report ... 54 ,.........,... .. ,. ftedlMI ao..on • 42 ..,_.,. .. .. ~ n .. L.OCAnoet .. ....-.. luftllO 5' 37~gl'I to 33 ~City 10 .. ~INdl H ~ ~ se 39 ll'ortlllnd,M"'"9 54 'S2 ~10 14 .. ... ~. """'°" 1-2 .. 35 f'cwtleftd,Ore a • =-~ • .. ... ..,_,.......,, l·f "* ColumbUl.ONo 13 1·2 ,. 51 StM*-52 17 .. 51 ~I---~ o.itu-Ft WOOh 75 ...... .._. 1-2 .. Dey1on " 3t Syr~ 54 S2 Sen f r.,clllco 11 It 1-2 ,_ .. 2t T~tPlflbe ts 14 .... ~ n 52 ~ ..... 1-3 .. o.n-lella.i-M O..MOIMI 74 4t Topet.a .. 43 s.n LW ()blapo 71 .. w .......... ., eo 41 TllC9on 17 S2 SIOC:lllon 71 " ..... llQetloft W•I Oltrol1 OUluth . 4t 21 Tulle ... 41 High, low tor 24 ~~ M Sp rn. 42 W~onOC '5 E!Puo 11 .. lantow u 4t &le 52 S7 Wlcftlt1 '5 47 ... 110111 11 • Tides '""**' 541 3$ ...... a H FllQst•" eo 27 8llhop 14 IO Ot1lnd Rlelld• 13 21 Smog Report ~ .. N TOOAY Honollllu 16 70 C.tallne 81 .. ._... ... 11>1 P"' 04 lanceNr IO 50 ----· 7 42p111 44 Hou9ton 82 12 7S 51 ~-"" ~ 11 SI ...,._ .....,d .... lPllt 0-50 lonte.ctl ,_,.. ... 137~ I 4 Jed(~ ...... a 12 ~·tOO ~ tOMtt -LA Air1'0'1 es 12 ~:r ... 722a.m 4 I Jadl_,,,.. 11 • . ioo.291._.,~.-Sant• Cn.11 .. 42 13Spm °' .MtNU 50 43 Md ................. Flrwl ........ Sant• Maril 11 42 a.c-o• 7 57p_m 47 ........ Ol!r• llt181Nct ,,.. l«:ioflll .. Kanuaerty 67 .. ~---San1•Monlc:a ., 5S 91#1 ...... 7 31 p "'· n..w.so..-.v i...vaga IO 51 .... 9Mdl IO MecAt1tu INd so.st TatlNVlllley IO 40 fl t-07 Liii Md ..U IOllfl .. 1 3.2 p fl\, um.Rodi .. 47 .,...... S8'1Pr•tct v-., S7..e2 Torrance 71 50 Wooflt'8elM 2 Up 111 , -W"*- ~ 82 • ~ ..... ~,. .. W.--od 11 Q -• 1'1'1 a.111 Md -IOllll .. ' .. ....,_.. .. .. Loe ......... 42.71 'f_..Vly .. . Pllll TRAFFIC CUTBACK PLAN UNVEILED ... From Al proposal to the district that allows local aovcmments to adopt their own. more broadly based traffic reduction ordinances that would exempt them from the requirements of Regulation IS. '"The difference between the two approaches is that the district is tryina to address air quality whereas we're trying to solve traffic programs, .. said Tom Fortune. a spokesman for the Transportation Commission. "But we think our program also improves air quality." Under the commission's proposed traffic reduction system. employen would cam one point for each employee who either works at home or bicycles, walks or takes public transporation to work. Each two-person car pool would earn the employer one point and an additional ~int would be ca.med for each additional person in the car pool. up to five. Van pools also would rack up a point for each person other than the driver, up to 11 points for a l 2-person load. If an employee lives wtthin five miles of work. thecmployeractshalfa point. Two-tenths of a pomt arc earned 1f an employee works a fou.r- day week. Commission staff members have calculated that a reduction in auto- mobile-related air pollution equal to the district's standard of l.S averae riders per vehicle could be attained by accumula1in1 34 points under their system. Thus, fer ~xamplc, an employer with I 00 workers could earn 34 points if employees used these seven traffic rcducins methods: • If ft ve people bicycled or walked to work for at least six out of every I 0 days. • Six employees took the bus for at least six out of 10 days. • Ten pair of employees rode an two-person car pools. • Four additional cars carried three-person car pools. • Twenty-five employees worked stagcred hours so as to avoid peak traffic hours. • Eighty employccs worted com- pressed work weeks. •And six employees worked at home. '"Both the district's plan and oun arc based on an employer's aood faith effort to encourage employees to set to work some other way than by driving alone." said Adrienne Brooks. a commission staff member. Commissioners stopped short of 1pprovin1 the Trip Reduction Incen- tive Plan. One member. Com- missioner Dana Recd. said he had received the proposed ordinance late and had not had time to read it. "There's nothina that leads me to believe I would oppose 1t." Recd said. "I just need to read 1t before I vote for it." Commissioners did, however. vote to send copies of the proposed ordinance to the Air Quahty Manaac- ment District and several c1t1cs. includina Costa Mesa, which have expressed an interest in the model ordinance. A distnct spokesman said late Monday that he had not seen the commission·s pro~sal yet. but that the district was w11lin~ in principle, to accept local traffic reduction efforts. ··The district will acxept local efforts provided they are at least ~s strinaent as our rqulation," said John Dunlap. community relations officer for the district. "In concept .1t so1:1~s lood, but we need to stt 11 in wntmi. Transportation commissioners will vote May 9 on whether to adopt the proposal. NEWPORT TO HOST NFL DRAFT PICK ••• From Al play in the Super Bowl. More importantly to local folks, Beat hard has been aivcn the chance to join an the 13th annual lrrckvant Weck celebration bcginnina June 19 in Newport Beach, whCl"e" the last draftee 1s wined, dined. feted, and ftnally presented with the coveted Lowsman Trophy. The 5-foot-9-mch Bcathard will be t.acklina a tall order when he tries to make the Rams' team. Used mostly as a blockina back dunna his one season at Southern Oreaon State, he played under head coach Chuck Mills. 1 friend of Bcathard's father and a former bead coach at Waite Fornt and Utah State. Assistant coach Jeff Weiss SA.id the 190-pound Bcathard also saw duty as a ball carrier and rettivcr. He pined 680 yard~ on 112 carries and ca"l&ht 23 passes for 230 yards. Weiss said. The youna man is also 1 lot like his father. the coach saiJ "He's a free spirit. A lot of Bobby is ~rtraycd in Jeff," Weiss said. 'Noth1na rully shake1 him ... Wci5S described Beathard as I "quiet leader" wbo "leads by exam- ple." Althouah realistic about his chances.. Bcathard is makina the most of it, Weiss said. ''He's workina out and putt1na on some ~ig.ht. He's also tryinf to concentrate on his studies." he said. For their part, the Rams wcren 't sayina their selection of Bcathard was in any way a favor to his father. Althouah they picked UCLA run· nina back Gaston Green in the fint round, and already have workhorse Charles White, Rams spoke1penon Terry Nealy said Bcathard has 1 shot at matins the team just like all their other picks. "You never know," Nealy said. Just ask Norman JefTcnon. Humphreys on Monday was sitting up in his bed and eating sohd food, said Bolen. She added that Humphreys was in "fair to good" condition in Hoag's intensive care unit ldirl. on the other hand 1s useful, not only for day-to-day conversation but for scientific discou~ and even the automated diaJoaue of com- puters. Y ench said. With the onset of the revolution, be and his family ned to Shaftlhai, ________ ..;.;:. _____ ......... --"--------'------------------ China. "He's eating well. he's sittina up and has color 1s good, .. Bolen said. "The doctors arc very pleased.•• Meanwhile. at UCI Medical Center. 26-ycar-old Huntinaton Beach mus1can Scott Headdina also made gains followina bis April 8 suriery. Headdina rccti\'ed the heart of a U.S Marine who died in 1 btawl with Cal State Fullerton foo1baU pla)'crs oulS1de a bu not far from the campus. -I Noc:haracs were filed in connection with the death. UCI Medical Center spokes-om.an Elaine Beno said today that Hcaddina has been rcmo\'cd from me intensive care unit and was tcheclukd to bqin 20-mioute exettite rwtiM on a stationary bicycle. SM •id a biopsy was scheduled later this~ and the results from that tat WoUJd help doctors ddmnine wbnl ttdddina miaht be ~ltattd. Because ld1rl organizes not only semantic concepts but also scientific pnnciplcs. its speakers acquire more • He came to the United States in 1963. and to Ora~ County in 1970. He li\'es 1n Anaheim. CITY'S lOOth BIRTHDAY ••• From Al HtStory ofNewpon Beach. In Otccmber o( I 888, brothcn James and John Mcfadden com- pleted the Mcfadden Wharf. which would later become 1 ma1or a.rao dceot on the Oranae Coast. One month later, 1~ 689·\0n Eureka -tilt flnt 5hip to dock at the pier-unloaded its c.a~. Commerce in Jlikwpon Btach bad bepln. The boc>k's most cvmnt ed1u1>n, printed in 1911 . marks the city's foundina in 1906. BLit beclute mot1 copies arc told out. Hi'10rical Society mcmbeii are ecarms ap b anOdlrr pnnt1n1 and \Nill martc the city'& found1n1 at the 1888 completion of the pier. The cost to produce the ~ hard- cover book is estimated at $67.SOO, which will be footed by the city. Historical Society offtcials ntinuite a S.l2.000 profit f'rOm Illes of the book. The new edition will contain • ~x1mately 150 111111' o( _. lat. 1ncludina an updlte oa Newpon 8ea.cb th~ me 1910a. About 5,000 anitial Copies will be primed. The book will be rdeated U'CMl8d Chrisunas. .. Oii d1•11 fl 11;2 I II ' A.sorted Dreaa Shina From the classic pin-point oxford button down, tailored in seven different colors, to E{lilish spread stripinp and contrast collars you can meet your dress shin needs at P.0.S.H. I , • I 0 e 0 0 [ cJ st a ., I Golden West Will host hi@ school seniors ~hurSday arlne pilot's condition upgraded Senion Crom 20 area bith tehools have beeo invited &o auend the \bird annual Hilla School Senior Day at Ooldift West Co1Jetr in ff untinaton Beach ThW'lday from I &o 4 p.m. Activities planned for the campus visit. which is by invitation only, will miter in the maid qu9d area. where academic and career dit'plays will be tet up. A live band and free barbecue lunch win be part or the pqra~. ., 1.;;,. ...;.it..-; • V1s1tors wi I tour t""' art ....... ,. automotive technolOJY. computer teienc:e ~. crimi- nal justace, fitneu labs. o~ admin1Strat.fon, s>erformina ans, science muteum and the theater. Call 895-8211 for additional information. J ob lair a t collele A .. supermarket" or job opportunities wilJ be presented at Golden West Collqie's annual sprina JOb fair Wednesday from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. in the colleae center. More than l S orpnizations will be represented and the public is invited. Call the colleae's job placement office at 895-8711 fOr additional infor- mation. lfealtlJ 11eUlon 11' NB Nick Oelsado, an authority on health ~nd fitness. will conduct a frtt health seminar Wedries- day at 7:30 p.m. at the Ultimate Medical Care office. 3961 MacArthur Blvd., Suite IOI . Newport Beach. Space is limited and reservations arc necessary. Cati 476-2334 for details. • Career ezpo a t OCC An expos1t1on explorin& 18 of Southern California career growth fields wilt be conducted for local adults Wednesday from 4 to 8 p.m. in the cafeteria at Onanae Coast College in Costa Mesa. Booths will be staffed by OCC faculty members and representatives from industry. Call 432-5614 for details. ., •AULMCml'LSY ------A MarlM PftDl wn taken off the cn&ical Iii& Monday, one day aft.er his FA-II Hornet jet crubed durint an annual au lhiow ia El Toro. Cot Jerry c..dic:t, 4S, of Evansville, Ind., was reponed in JmOUS but a.able condition at Mission Remional Medical Center in Million Vitjo Where he under- went SUl'Ff'Y. Dead Beads are gone, and police relieved By JON.,\TBAN VOLD.£ °' ............. When the Grateful Dead performs. the band cams its money. When the infamous ''Dead Heads." who follow the band from town to town, pack up and leave, police officers often cam their pay. from a nude swimming pany at an Irvine hotel to drug arrests unseen since the 1960s. the flood of Dead Heads rolled throu&h the town like the tide when the band played last weekend at the Irvine Meadows Amphitheatre, then washed away, but left some debns in their wake. His aarcraft cruhcd whde Cadict -.. aucmpci-. '° coms*te a looO rnanruver d&anftt the annual show at El Toro Marisae Corp1 Air Slauon. Offtcials uid the air Shows would continut dctoi~ lbe eocidmt. Al~ the caute of the crash has not bttn ofrtcially drtirmiDed tiy a military boardofinquary, wilnnttssaidthe Hornet appeattd to stall at the bonom of' the loop maneuver bef0tt iu tail struck the sround. ..It was an ilOlated Jnci<knt... said Marine COl'PI ~ 5sL D*wU ..._..n1 ... Thealr~ will continue u aa open event for the eo11tmwaity in f'ut~ years," Cadick's plane crubed in a rteld about 1,000 yards from spectators watchina the 31th annual N~ ltdicf'Air-Show. None of the •pectaton •as injured. · Quick work by a Marine rctCUC ieam may have saved lhe pilot from almost ~ruin duth. another spokcspenon said. Two.._.. Inlets were at dlle _. of lbt cr..a. with1a l S 1IOOC*ll of lk .,.._., biui• t11t ..oct. GUaaen-:SIL kadly Cabot uid. Tbe ·li'ucb aft IJlowiel J 60 S«Onds to ttt to a crub si&c Uftder Marine Co~ standards. she said. ··0ur crasb, fire and rncue penoond did ao outstandinc job." she Mid.. .. , dertnitely would say their efforts and tArir quick retpODtC alkviated what could have bttn a real ~y." ................ '--...... Ya.ton show ln HB A slide show entitled .. The Yukon Expedition" will be presented Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the Sport Chalet, 16242 Beach Blvd .. Huntington Beach. Admission is free. In addition to tons of trash in the amphitheater parking lot -where many camped for several days -the group's hippie-like followins also left behind lots of drugs, cash and police paJ>C!""'ork. Final fi1urcs weren't talbed today. but more than a dozen people were arrested at the amphitheater during the per- formances. on accusations ranging from assault on a police officer to misdemeanor drug-~ion charges. said Irvine Pohce Lt. Make White. Aftermath of the Grateful Dead concert at Irriae lleadcnn after 20.000 Dead BeadaDMne OG. Dan Carey of the Boojum Wilderness Institute will conduct the program. Call the chalet at 848-0988 for more information. Stop-smoldng program A smokin& cessation propam will be offered. staning this week. at the Fountain Valley Regional Hospital. "They kept us hopping." White said. About I p.m. Monday, the manager of the Embassy Suites Hotel reported "SO lo 80" nude swimmers in bis pool. A few of the Dead Heads had checked into the hotel. but refused to leave at checkout time. Mo~ than a dozen officers descended on the hotel -and pool -and made several arrests. Some in the pool were alleaedly under the influence of narcotics, while $18,000 was seized in the hotel room. Those rqjstered in the room told pohcc they earned the cash selllna T ~arts, but could not provide business records. so authorities confiscated the cash. Ten people were arrested at the hotel. on chaf'IC'S of possession of marijuana, il .. mushrooms and LSD, White sa1d. l.SD 1s a hallucinogen popular durin& the 1960s and still used by the Dead Heads. authonties saad. Shortly before the hotel sw1mmin& party, five people from Oucago v.-crc arn-sted near the M2m Street hotel. They had more than $200,000 v.onh of LSD. the ~utenant satd. A Newport Beach lf'affic acadcnt an.- volv1n& a vanload of Dad Heads also knocked elcctncity out 10 the 6000 block of Coast Highway. Deborah Flex. 38. of Berkeley was rcturmog from lhe concat Monda) and told authonues sbe became distracted and veered from tl)e road when an argument started an the rear of van. The van chpped a power pole. Some of the occupants of lhe van ~ treated at local hospitals for minor in1uncs. Acll.. however, was arrested at the hospital on suspioon of being undef" the influence of a narcouc, pohcc said. .. We're cxplonnc now what we're goini to do about theR suys in the future, .. White said. -obviously. they're a pain.- White said that the Irvine City Council mi&bt discuss the issue at toni&ht's mcctini. Free introductory~ mcetinp will be held Thurs- day and Fnday at 7:30 p.m. at the hospital. on the corner of Euclid Street and Warner Avenue in Fountain Valley. Call 966-8174 weekdays between 8:30 a.m. and S p.m. for further information. Streu semlnan slated A senes offive seminars on stress in the lives of firefiahtcrs will be offered. bcainning Thursday at 7 p.m .. at Fusionary TechnolQ&ies. 1300 Bristol St .• Newpon Beach. Growth opponents pall initiative analysis Glona McMillan, wellness facilitator for the company, will conduct the program. Reservations may be made by callina 4 76-2646. An Invitation Attention orgonil:Ofion ~and secretorift: w. want to help mob your upcoming ......... '""'9191, setninon and fundroilen sucCMSful. Send bfW art- novncementl including time, place, cost (If any) and o phone rwntbef fM oddftioool information to1 ~ Boord, Doily Pilot, P.O. Boa 1'60, Cotto Mn.a, 92626. Repom of your dub or or9Gf'ization's odiYiMs - such en community MNiot pn>iects or etedioft of officen -should be directed to the community MWI editor at the some oddreu. Non-returnable block and wftite phofo9raplls OJe w9'cCMM. By JENNIFER WEBER °' .. ~ ....... Costa Mesa's top adman1strator is standing behind the objectivity of an analysis of a slow"l1'0wth iniuauve even though several councilmembers claim the report is biased. "I think that what we have Slld 1s that there arc sections of the initiative that are bad. Period. There are also some things that we think arc very cooc:t." Ctty Manager Allan Roeder said. But Sandra Genis, a sJow-crowth ac- tivist, thinks thectty'soffacial review of the initiative is very bid. feehnas that the document may be blased. Counetlman Peter Buffa. who consistently supponsdtvelopment in the Clty, saad that the 140-page report talces aides. ··1 don't think 1t meets the test of belD& absolutely objecuve throupout." he said. Genas accused the document of taking "gratuitous slams at citizens' sroups" and raising ··arrelcvant" issues like over- crowding 1n schools.. -vou look at that and you're thinkin~ 'Well. is this person totally out to lunch?' Roeder. who expected Mnh criticism on the report. is takina the attacks with aplomb. .. , have to say. there's somethin& for ever)Ont to d1shke in this document. .. Roeder said. The report. which reviews the iniuatl\"e line b)' hne. 1s a sencs of quesuons and ~pon IS that the caty inittauvc. which is almost adenucal to the countyWMk slow &J'Owth 1nitaat1ve, lS "1tncric-and not tailored for C<ma Mesa. "This inauative allows neither the flexibility for that uniqueness. nor sltUC'- tures 1ts intctst uouDd the medwusms currently an place," the report said. The analysis was not entirely criucal. bov.<evcr. and pniscd some of the in- 1tiat1\·e's traffic improvement~ Overall. the staff report tS lona on critiasm and sb011 on particulars of what is hkcly to happen 1f the initiative panes. Only three f11ures arc given for what the city would have to spend to comply with the measure: • $79.4 million to complele the ett}'s ~ system so 1t could handk flood waters from a l~)ear storm. Tbc report to keep thtm ruruuna. Even so. lhe rq>c>n said that fi.ttfi&htcn would not meet lbe initiative's standards for ~n& to the southern and caucm pcripbcrin and t.bc aty·s nortbcastcm corner. · But thost fi~ raHie another qUCIUoo about lhe ioiua.tivc. oamcl)·, bow the cat)' would pay for tbc cba-.es. t.bc repon said.. The saa.fT stttmj away from anal)'Sis of the ccooomic:s of the iDJlJaU\:e. bcca~ •ord.ina of the measure is not specific enoUp for t.be staff lO predict Y. hat other impacts ou the city miaht be. -When it comes l'> some of the aras of implementation. it just son of &lossno\-cr that. -he said. The aty manqcr actnowledacd al tbe coUDCll mc:ctfoa that tbc report was likel) to surcontro\"CfS}' ao a com!l'un1ty alread) polarized by dcvdoP..D!en& ISSUCS. "I am very disappointed in 1l. both an the quality of the document and the obvious bias," she said. "I thought at was un- professional. There was a whiny tone throU&houL I felt that basically they snivefed a lot. they whined a lot and they made statements that were untrue." So far, the inch-thick document has had limited <futribution -only to council members and t.be press -because of fean that 1t may be biased and therefore 1llepl for the city to release. It will not be widely available unless City Attorney Thomas Wood deems it objective enoo&)i TOr release, but Genis obtained a copy of the repon from Councilman Dave Wheeler. another of the initiative's becken. "Illave to:;r,; tlJere'•.ametblnglor everyone to dlalflre lJJ document" That is .by, he said. be recommended to the council that the {>Ublic be ghen a chance to comment on tL If Wood decides the repoi:t is objc;cthe enough for wide- spread ~lease. citizens probabl) wtll have Silt toeaaht v.uks lOcommmt on it and the staff v.-10 wuc a final vcn.ion. Tuesday, Aprll 26 • 4p.m.S..tllLapuBeardofRevlew,31S92 West St. -Costa Mesa City Manager Al an ROedcr comment.s posed b> the city slafr. questioned oow the autlion of the in- itiative came up wnh those standards.. which Roeder said "arc frankly not 'ustiftcd. -Wednesday, Aprll 27 • 9:30 a.m. ~ C...ty ....,.. el s.,er- .U.n, board hearina room. Hall of Adininistrat1on. 10 Civic Center Plaza, Santa Ana. Wbeder attacked the report af\cr read- ina the fint pqc at last wetk's CityCouncil meeting. "It's a political document and it's to biased as to deny a JQJity." sul Wheeler, who is a principal beckcr of the initiative. Most of the rcpon pokes holes in the measure. sharply chalknging ats worcbng. callinJ its assumptions anto question, and accusana it of duplica.una exist1na laws. Roeder said the staff was duty bound. thouah. to call the language into question. .. Those arc the kands of semanttcs that end up beina liugated in bad law." he wd. J • S3&S.33S to hire 10 new ~ice offKttS and equip them. Officaals said thq woukt have to hire the extra help to meet the aniuatave·s standard of rcsponda.na to ~ within five minutes SS ptt- cent of the time and beinc at non- emetFncies within IS minuic:s. They Ytent on to question what constitute5 a .. non- Council mcmben have andtcatcd the)" .. ;n wait for tnt linal tt1>0M before dccid1aa v.'helhcr to put t.bc 1n1tiative oa the balloL Roeder wd it •'IS likely that tbt measure v.'OUld be put before lhe voten in November. Ne\cnhdcss.. supportenoflhe measure have accused the council of dr'llllina its heels and ha\e s·~ the report is nothina more than a •-ay to postpone puttiq the initiative on the 1'iovcmbtt baUoL • 7 p.m. La .... a... P'•••• CUulUnlea, council chambers, SOS Forest Ave. • 7:30 p.m. r .. ta111 Valley ....... C..- all1Jee, city council chambets,~10200 Slater Ave. ··1 felt this document was not worth the papaer it was printed on," Genis said. addina that she resents her Wt money aoina toward its production. Wheeler and Genis are not alone in their Another major flaw, he said. is that it .. doesn't draw a bnght hne." as not clear eno~ to be a good law. .. It s muddled and vque in terms of its intent." be said. One of the major complaints in tht ~~;lllioa t.o build and equip three new fire stations and $3.22 m.ilhon a year ··1 think that some peopk are readina m<n into it than is realJ) there.-Roeder said. .. This v.-as not done as a dda)•lll tact.IC or anythina of that natu~ ... Coast man, son deny part in multi-million fraud plot By 801 VAN EnEN t.c:t as t.U-free sifts. °' ... ...,........ forester was c:o11¥icted in 1914 of A Huntinaton Beach man and bis criminal conttmpl IDd died in son p&u.ded not JUilty. Monday to ~~aftodaer ~ -~ cbarwes that they bilked 1nveston out and otber deal-= .. .._. Md of millions of dol~ in a ~ hud penitjpuns flD °"' lnal M lllif ICherfle ~t also involved sax other partic:ipu11 wae IOld ...... .....,. count) rcst<knts. • declare thftn aon-~ Charles 0 . Spurrie£ and his'°"· TMt PIOIJU' .. •= *'" Dennis C Spurrier, wttc uraiped oa velopied lw • .,. D. · ffl charleS that they sold illep) t.U Artt..-. \fa..•c•· sto•11ha1t shelter prosrams developed_ by &wo U.S. At1cnlf T.-Ii UL U.. convicted East Coast tu hud is DOW ia..,.. b ""•Ts' a Iii swmd.len. Kh•e ...... .._ In one of the 1dtimQ. invented b)' Tiie elller S.arilr, 61. • a ~w Yon mideft\ Frm L l9 ""' la.._ • • FOralcr. 1nvctt0r'I wese IOld a.er ftneliheil~_.•• -a>uld cbanMI lheir income iato Olaaa .. -..... oftWtott tnlSb, Md u.en m:elw k o..il It aa• " _.. '9 tenaenced to 17 years i.n prison and up to $30,000 in fines. Alto anaiped in connection with the aJqed Wt fraud IChemcs wa'C Richard E. Dunn of Coaa Maa and Wayne G. Hill of Fountain Viney. Otha defendants iladudt Hyrum J. Amuncbns and bn wife. Eva L Amunchm. .both ()(Saa• Ana, LeoD G. Hill of'Mission Viejo. ud TbolDM ll. Smith of Qranee. ne defeaduts were 1ndic~! Weral .,and jury iD Loa A Ailril ll. Al ol lbc clehdarall pa.dtd "°' _,. Iii Molitay .. 1 .,. ............. ...... todlcclm1t*U D tktC....•S..AM. Tmhas '-•llrJ-JliallillML . before midnight and -went to sl~. It turned out that the nocturnal visitor. a Los Alamitos man. na-pped whik waiting for b.as g1rlfrienc1 • • • Someone stoat a briac pune con· tajnina SSS at Ocean "Prai lmtant Printing. 17308 Beach Blvd. 1llc victim wd a )ounaman wbococntto the business scllina candy may be a suspccL ••• five biqck$ were stolen hen rKk.s at Villise View School, Sl6 I Sisson Dri,e. • awa) on t.hc 12-speed Sunda\ and DC\ er returned.. The tb.ief kft a Califorrua dri'·cr·s hcensc behind. but that bcJoaeed to a man •ho said be lost 11. ~ r'Old bike was valued at $2.800. • • • A~ C9llcd police Frida) to ~she'd teta a man break into a car • ...U the &aet tealS out and put lbe1n in his own tNcl. When lbc O•'fttt cbeCbd bis car. p1rla:d on Stcrti11& C'omt ICMltb of Gloxinaa \atue. he laid his stereo. speak.en. tires -.I wllleC1s were aho m1SS1n&. 1ibt km._ put at Sl.000. c ....... .. i"••• iD Uie 100 bled of .._ Vima Awew rc1JC)l1ed a pao:Au • 4:S3 Liil. Moecta>·· ••• A~ llur M:11Mlri~ Dickup --·1:::==s:2~ ~ rA 1 ....... ffl Pila"&. The truck. v.-as described IS a 1916 model • •• Someont stoic a Sl.200 computer pnnttt Wcdncsda} or Tbund_ay ftom a.n insurance~ in the llOObkd of Airwa) A\CDUC. ' • • • T•-o men toOt ~from Sea Schwinn at 2 p.m. Monday ud rode a•a) on them. Tk bikes Yt'ft'C WOfdt $1.~49.90. ••• A~badtbe=• Monda'/. af\enooft °"a car m the 2)00 bloct ol ...,_. Yard and Siok the S600 seerco. l 'i-year-old cyclist k illed I ' I I . ! I ! t i l I i I I i I Charging batteries suspected cause of 1>last on submarine I• NORf'OLK. Va. (AP)-Tbe blast ,, that crippled the USS Bonefish may have been cawted by a blttery explosion, and three missina mem- bers of the submarine's crew may .have died tf')ina to save the hvcs of their comnidcs. the Navy's top officer 1said today. 11 The Booefisb remained tethered to a rescue ship as offtcials waited for . toxic ~ to clear before swtina salvqe efTorts after the Sunday explosions and fire that injured 22 crewman. Atlantic fleet headquarters con- firmed today that the first explosion occurred whjlc the sub was at per- iscope depth. However, the spokes- man refused to comment on specu- lauon that the. ship was recbaflina batteries at the time. In Washington, Adm. Carlisle A.H. were on watch in the ship's control room and were last seen there," saad Trost. who is chief of naval oper- ations and a submarinct' himself. "So it may well be that thcy-cimply ensured that everyone aot clear and they themselves didn't make it." Relatives of the missi111 sailors. meanwhile. maintained vi&Jls. "We still have a little ray of hope," said Joyce Undlrcn. mother of Petty Officer 3rd Class Marshall T. Lindgren of Pisa.ah Forest. N.C. "When he enrollccf in the Navy I gave him to the Lord and I have to have trust in him now ... 1bc 30-lcar-<>ld submarine, one of the Navy .s ~t ~iesel~!ectric s~bs, was part1C1patina an trainana exercises Sunday in the Atlantic about 160 miles off the coast of Florida. Oil spiil taking toll on wetlands' wildlife ' MARTINEZ(AP)-TheShell Otl Co:s wont spdl tn 73 years left dozens of birds coated with made oil and fl&htina for their lives in the wildlifC, bncn of the Suisun Bay manhland. Bf Monday, about 100 oiled birds -tncludina csrcts. ·avoccts, cin- namon tt.als, mallard ducks. arches. herons and the endanaered cla~ rail bird -had been rcteued alive and taken to centers in Berkclc)' and Walnut Creek for cleaning. said Brian Hunter, of the state Department of Fish and Game. It's nestina time in the marshes. crcatina another wildlife hazard that may never be counted amona the victims. officials said. The birds were trapped after 21,000 pJlons of thick. unrefined crude aushed Saturday from Martinez' Shell Refinery holdina tank. 30 miles northeast of San Francisco. The oil coats the birds' feathers, leavin& the animals unable to keep warm or move around. Also threatened arc the endangered ~It m al"'lh harvMt mnu~ 111nd IVf'il"1'1 marsh creatures.. includ•nt tortoi~ muskrats and otters. Volunteers tn the cleanup reponed • dozen de8d muskrats, several oat-coated turtles and a dead heron. State officials said Monday they( planned to .. sacnfice" a section ° Suisun Bay marshland cast of Inter· state 680 to the bottom of »C&lled .. Shell Marsh" in order '\o save hundreds more acres of wetlands. .. We're tryin& to keep new areas from bccomana oiled," said Hunter. "We're willing to try ~nd capture as much oil as we can an 20 acres of marsh." The spill spread a slack of currc.nt- sloshed oil that by Monday momma stretched 10 males from Port Costa cast to Ryer Island. Ovcrfliahts by Coast G~ard. spotter planes.. six vessels with 011 skimmers and 16 vacuum tank-trudcs raced to ca{>ture oil to save the wetland animal~. Coast Guard spokesman Kc~ Massey estimated it could take until next week to clean up the spill. Trost said a battery ex~ was a It kcly ca~. and said the tbrcc mJSSml mm mi&ht have died while sa\ 1ng the laves of their comrades. .. All three of those individuals ... At least one blast occurred in the battery compartment and fire broke out in the forward battery compart- ment, said LL Cmdr. Aaron Lona, spokesman for the Atlanuc Fleet headquarters m Norfolk. A 1'a.,-laellcopter ltftll ..Uon from the deck of of tlae V88 Bonen.b after aa -denrater upl•lo• dl8abled die dleeet- powered Rbma.rbae. The frtcate USS Carr la tn the backgrcnmcl. EconoIDy grows, inflation rate slows JudP:e rules for cities Lawyers find in off shcire drilling suit By ne Aaeetate4 Preu WASHINGTON -The U.S. economy, shruggina off the effects of the October stock market collapse. grew al a respect.able 2.3 percent annuaJ rate in the first tbrcc months of 1988, the government said today. The Commerce Department. issuina its first look at overall economic performance this year. said the increase in the JfOSS national product was propelled by a strona increase m consumer spcndina and the biggest surac in business investment m more than four years. &:onomists said the balanced growth was good news for Republicans in an election year and should bury lingering fears that the 508- poml drop in the stock market on Oct. J 9 would topple the country into a recession. In further&ood news, the growth was accompanied by a slowdown in the rate of inflation, with a pncc measure tied to the GNP risinJ at an annual rateof2.4pcn:cnt. down from a 2. 7 percent mcrcase in the fourth quarter. Robertson must pay salt costs WASHINGTON -Republican presidential con- tender Pat Robertson bas been ordered to pay $28,000 of coun cosu 1DCWTcd by a former congressman he had sued for questioning his war record. lawyers said Monday. The clerk of U.S. Distnct Court here rejected Sl4,84S of the $42,MS sought by ex-Rep. Paul N. McCloskcy Jr .. R- Calif., folloWJng the dismissal last month of Robertson's $3S million libel action. McCloskcy was sued in 1986 after be claimed that Robertson had used the political influence VS•513 50" M~CTION ITEMO COLOR TELEVISION wmt REMOTE CAalNET: Gemllne o9k veneer WOOd • Contemporary stytlng • Hinged, hideaway bl-fold d00!'$. PICTURE.: Rear projector • 50" wahabte bted(-matrix, antl-ren.ctlve acreen • 190 fooUamberts of brightness • 120 degr• viewing •"$lie • lnterCooled Couping • Linear blue phosphor • Magnetic-focus CRT's ·Three 6 element, f1.0 ooeted glaas lenses • Automatic Picture Latitude Circuitry (APLC) • Comb filter • 2 Mt• of video Inputs • Video Output. TUMNO: 139-channel. cable compatJbfe• • 104ley random-acceM. t,.quency syn- thesizer • Programmable Channel-Memory acan tuning • Quk::k-Vtew tuning • On- 9CrMn Information dtsptey with tlme-<>f-day and channel setection • Channel-Lock • Program-timer • Ott timer. AUDIO: Stereo/SAP broadcast reoep- 11on • •• Stereo/SAP broadcast lndlcatOfS. Separate bass and treble tone controls • 4- speaker. sealed-encl09Ure sound of his late father, Sen. A. Willis Robertson. D-Va.. to avoid combat duty dunng the Korean War. Robertson dropped the lawsuit last month rather than going to trial on March 8, when he ran in Republican primaries on Super Tuesday. U.S. District Judge Joyce Hens Green dismissed the lawsui( on the condjtion that Robertson pa) McCloskcy's court costs because the former congressman is the prcvaalina party. I rnn Con t·rn LOS ANGELES (AP) - A federal county of San Francisco (which .I. a -.6. a judge, ruling local ordinances did not operates as one government entity). • J.,. violate federal controls. has thrown and the cities of Monterey. Mom> J•udde tQLJdll out 10 of 13 oil industry claims Ba~. Oceanside. San Oiqo. San Luis 'EJ' -EJ• against California citaes and counties Obispo and Santa Cruz. New jet tracks drug trafnckers WASHINGTON -A newly modified Coast Guard jet which has radar and infrared systems will enable pilots to lock onto and track suspected drug traffickers' planes through clouds or darkness. The first of a fleet of nine N1Jhthawks. as they're nicknamed, was dedicated at a ceremony Monday in a hangar at National Airport. "It's a particularly bad day for those who would smua&Je drugs mlo this country," Adm. Paul A. Yost, commandant of the Coast Guard. said at the dedication ... Now that I've got these aircraft, I say to thcdrua smuglers two things: If you're in the business. rd look for other employment. and you can run but )OU can't hide," Yost said. The planes. which will initially be based in Miami and Mobile, Ala .. arc modified versions of the Coast Guard's medium- range surveillance jct. the HU-2SA Guardian. built by Falcon Jct Corp. of Little Rock, Ark. They have been equipped with a sensor system that combines the long- rangc radar used in the F-16 fiJhtcr jet with a forward- looklna infrared. or FUR. sensor. Ck-3513" WASHINGTON (AP) -Lawyers for Ohvcr L. North and his lran- Conlra co-defendants arc on a col- lision course with the j'udge. as they argue for dismissal o the case on J.f:Ounds that evidence was gathered allcgally. A prc-tnal hearing Monday began on a sour note for the defense team. when U.S. District Judac Gerhard A. Gesell ruled lawyers for North and two other defcndant.s violated his ground rules for the hearing. and would be barred from prcscntina any witnesses. From that pomt the proceeding rolled downhill for the defense law- yers. as Gesell rebuffed their request to question the top prosecutors - and grand jury witnesses -about their exposure to testimony ajvcn to .Congress under a grant of immunity. "I have a great sense of unfairness for my client." complained North lawyer Brendan V. Sullivan Jr .. Ir COLOR MONITOlllMCIJVD WITH MllOTI Genuine oek ¥eMW wood • Contemporery styling with pedeltet beM • ~ .. gr8'ed ~ • Ful ...,_ ptcture tube • Automatic PtCtUre l.etlludil ewcuttry (APlC) • cc>mt> Mer· v~ modulMlon • 2 video lnputa • video output • .. • .,.,. (TTL.I or 11 c:Otor) • 131-<h. cet>1e oom- pe'8ble• ,~ F8 bring. a.M- Ml·Memc>t 1 • Quldr """ • °" .... mode ~ • ~ Loott • ProgrM\- ...... • 8'1r9o11AP broedclMI NCIP'" tton• •• AUdlo ... ~ ........ .... Md.,...., ....... ~ .... . Vlf'tllble 1-.0 °"'P"'9 • 4tSi ..... -.lftd • EJC*"9111111 .. 1• ........... -Dlrii•-- (HJ(WJIO;ln.) 37 IJ11, 313/t • n 31•. - attemptina to control offshore drill-Western Oil contended in the suit ing. that the local ordinances would In a decision made public Monday. ..create a wall from the Mexican U.S. District Judge Consuelo 8. border to the Oregon state hne Marshall ruled that in 10 cases the blocking development of otl in the local ordinances dad not challenge outer continental shelf." Dcvelop- fedcral supremacy as the oil industry ment would be hindered by severe had claimed. rcstnct1onson onshore support faciti- th;:ic J:d~.:~! sarn ~t s.:~ P<>Dfeg'b~c. tics such as pipelines and processing Oceanside and San Diego County might violate the commerce clause of the Constitution. The Western Oil and Gas Associa- tion and National Ocean lndustncs Association filed suit last Auaust against the counties of San Diego, Sonoma. San Mateo, Monterey. San Luis Obispo, Santa Cruz, the city and plants. according to the suit. "Upon cx.amanauon of th~ com- plaint. there is no allcpuon of 1mpossjbility to the continuance of offshore drilling. only additional expense and inconvenience. There- fore, the ordinances arc not true obstacles to the accomplishment of the federal purpose." Marshall wrote. Court ruling leads to calls for amnesty filing extension By ne AslOclated Press SACRAMENTO - A rule that made illegal aliens mehgjblc for amnesty if the)' left the United States briefly without permission has been declared invahd. raisina new calls for an extension of the May 4 amnesty deadline. The rulinf Monday by Lawrence K. K.arlton, chief judce fot California's Eastern Distnct, ordered the lmmiaration and Naturalization Service to throw out its pohcy of requiring the undocumented immigrants applying for amnesty to obtain permission before teavin& the country for departures described as "brief, casual and innocent" K.arlton said a case·by-casc review 1s needed for illegals who have been declared incliaiblc because of the INS rule. In Los Angeles, INS District Director Ernest Gustafson said that despite the ruling an extension of the amnesty applicatfon period is not justified. Lawyer wins $21M over Argentlne torture SAN FRANCISCO - A lawyer awarded S21 milhon for four years of confinement and torture in Argcnune prisons durina the military regime says he'll donate half the money to other victims of human abuses there U.S. District Jud&c Samuel Conti on Monday ordered former Aracntinc Gen. Carlos Suarez Mason. who supervised the prisons. to pay the money, described by plaintiff lawyers as a record for human ri&bts abuse cases settled an the United States. On Wednesday, another federal judce is scheduled to decide whether Suarez Mason shQuld be extradited to Argentina on charges of 43 murders and 24 kidnappinp . Sonny Bono slnglngpralse• of new son ~Al:-M SPR~NGS-Sonny Bon<?, wborose.tofames10Jing"l'veGot You Babe with ex-wife Cher, welcomed his first son in the world Monday night less than two weeks after beingcl~ed mayor of this desert resort. The bah)'. born at 8: IS p.m. at Desert Hospital, was named Cbcsarc Etan, said Bono's spokeswoman Manlyn Baker, who said Cbcsarc was ltahan for Caesar and Etan meant "spirit." The infant's mother, Mary Bono. and baby were fine. Fana s•amp Garner "1th get-well cards LOS ANGELES -Actor Jamcs Garner has taken his first sohd food and witnessed an avalanche of sympathy cards and flowers after undcraoina quintuple bypus heart suracry. a hospital spokesman said. Gamer's ~pularity with bis fans, and now with the Cedars-Sinai staff, is unparalleled. said hospital spokesman Ron Wisc. Remember Momon May 8th For Your Convenience CONTINENTAL EYEWEAR is Now an · "Optlque Moblle" ... Oflll9Clln~~betort! M....,Optlcten s.nderl.8ueen wilt visit your home or officel RlRIOllllC)IM4fDCAU, or Orange Coat DAILY P1LOT/T~. A,pfil 28, 1 .. *Al ' Korean election marred by cries of voting fraud Court hits U.S. moveonPLO THE HAGUE. Netherlands (AP) -The World Court ruled apinst the United States' attempt to shut down the Palestine Liberation Orpn1u- U.S. back~ down on plans to flex its muscles in gulf tion's mission an New York today WASHINGTON (AP) -New The rulina imphculy condemned declarations th.it the United States the U.S. move to clost the PLO docsn 't want a "serious shoouna war .. mission to the United Nations by wath Iran come amid Sl&ftS that the member of \he Reunifica\ion Demo-supportina the U.N. position that the Reagan admanlS\rallon is backing Saadl A rabl • to bred rela tlo~ witJJ lraJJ SEOUL(AP)-Riot poU~ bettled protesters who wqed violent rallies apinst alk-Jcd vote fraud today as SOuth Koreans picked a new parlia- ment in an election the aovemina party was expected to win. Opposition supporters accused the aovemment of mampulatina vote countina after a state-run televi1ion station reported Monday th.at a aovemina party candidate won elec- tion with 39 _percent of the vote. The MBC network said a local affiliate on Cheju Island accidentally broadcast an election rehearsal. The network saad at fired the station manaaer and four other officials. cratic Pany. dispute must be submitted to ande-away from ear1ier proposals to broad-Ko~n ncW1papers also ~id I~~ pendent arbitration en the U.S role in the Persian Gulf. WASHINGTON (AP)-Saudi Arabi.a was expected to annountt today it as brcakina d1plomat1c rclat1ons w11h Iran in response to Iranian attacks on sh1pp1n1 in the Pcrs1an Gulf. . . According to an informed sour«. who ~uesled anonymity. the SaUdi counctl of man1sters took the decision at a mttllD.J Monday. ni&.ht. . . oppos1t1on campaianers were in cnta· The ruhn• was 1he court's second The new susicstions by top adm1n- cal condition afkr bein1 stabbed by dec1s1on against the United States in astrauon officials come after a wcek- unknown assailants in Hwasoon. two years. Iona re"'c"' of Persian Gulf policy another southern cit). In 1986. the U N 's JUd1c1al arm trigered b) the Apnl 18 clash The Saudis. like most of the Arab countnes. IS supponm& Iraq tn its war ~•th Iran. In Seoul, poli~ fired tear gas lo condemned a\ a vaolauon of antcr-between the Navy and Iran. an which disperse 300 Yonsei Unaversaty stu-national la"' the Reapn adminas-sax Iranian U\aps were damaged or tellin1 reporters that -everybod) dents who threw rocks and firebombs tnuaon·s support for the rebels fight-sunk acknowledges that we need to move to protest alleged election man1t>u-ang Nicaragua":; Sandanasta govern-Last week. U.S. officials had saad back to some more limned set of lation in favor of the govemmg mcnt. 1he polac~ was under review. spccafi-rule<; .. Dcmocra1ic Justice Pany of Prcsi-The World C oun. officiall) known call~ the rules of engaecment which For the past I 0 months, NaV} ships dent Roh Tac Woo. as the lntemauonal (oun of Justice. J>(rm1ttcd the Na"> only to protect have bttn esconang the 11 rcflagged Earlier, police broke up a similar has no enforcement powers and itself and 11 reflagged Kuwa1t1 Kuwana tankers through the &ulf. protest by 50 .Yonsci students. No depends on voluntarf adhcrence. tankers. which as one oft he venues fortht'long anjUrics were reported. The PLO office dispute emanates But Monda). admanastrauon of-lran-lraq "'ar Kuwait 1s an all~ of Hundreds of students dashed from .\mencan anta-tcrronst lcgis.-fic;als suggro;ted that there may be no Iraq Administration officials bad Se· gcstcd last week th.it the rules m1 t ht-chan&ed to let the Navy aid ot er merchant ships should those vessels come under attack But the gaffe fueled protcsu on the island. where an estjmated l ,000 people fo~ght with . police. Ne~ reports saad authontaes were an- vcstapting whether the broadcast broke clcctton laws. through streets an Seoul's downtown lataon signed an to law by President change an that policy Sccretar) of The United States has pre' 1ousl~ MyongdonJ shoppinJ area. shouting Reagan last December. The legas-State Geof'Je Shultz stressed that no attacked lranaan forces and fac1htaes slogans agaanst .. election riggfog .. and lat1on a ams at closing the PL O's 14-final dec1s1on had bttn made. but an retaliation for lranaan mane-la) ing ----------- chantmg "Down with dictatorship." )Car-old o~ncr m1ss1on to the said "~e "'Ill not grt taed up 1n an) act1\.1tacs. Last wttk's clash was m "Right now the rules of cnpge- ment arr esscnt1ally the same as thC} were last week. reflcctana the cme~­ enc> nature of the s1tuat1on. • Fitzwater saad Monday. "But the question as where do we move back to... I can't discuss specifics .. The statc-controtled KBS telc- vmon network, meanwhile. reported after the polls closed that five 1ovem- ing party members and three opposi- tion candidates were leading their races. Police pursued them. sometimes United Na11ons 1n "'cw York. serious shooting war "'"h the Ira-rc\.engc for an Apnl 14 1nc1den1 m hurling tear a.as &renadcs. CllZcns The la~ classifies the PLO as a naans" which a Nav) fngate hat a mane the ~ RGiHTll'G FOQO.Rlff ~ Aff!91can Heart .'111 acta1o11 rescued a student beinadragged away "terrorist organ1zat1on" and bars II Prcs1dent1al spokesman Marlin Coated States claimed was laid b' by riot police. from operatangon l c; temtory Fauwatcr reOected the ~ hne Iran Yonhap.thcKorcannewsagcncy. i-::========================================================================================================; s1d police arrested more 120 students around Kwan11u in southwestern An opposition campaigner died after drenching himself in gasoline and igniting at durin1 an argument wath government supporters an the southern caty of Wockwan, Korean press reports said The man was 1dcnt1fied as Lee Kwang Ho. 21. a South Korea. In the southern city of Chonju. about 500 oppos111on supporters battled not police. In Mockpo, another southem city, hundreds of protesters occupied downtown streets. Israeli troops thwart Arab raid; five killed JERUSALEM (AP) -lsraeh troops ambushed a band of Arabs at the Lebanese border today as the guemllas launched a raad into Israel. the military said. Three Arabs and two Israeli soldiers were killed. Two other soldiers were wounded. the army said. One was in scnous condition wath a gunshot wound to the chest. hospital authorities said The Israeli armr said the clash occurred 200 yards inside Israel after troops on an earl)'. mornang patrol encountered guemllas trying to in- filtrate from Lebanon. However. a Lebanese police spokesman saad the pre-dawn clash occurred in Lebanese territory near the southern village of Kfar Shouba when Israeli troops opened fire at a seven-man guerrilla group. The army said soldiers chased the guerrillas throu&h rocky terTain and scrub brush and foua,ht a brief battle in which the Juemllas threw hand grenades and fired a rocket. The Lebanese police spokesman said the .. ficrceclash" raged for about three hours. The Israelis "fired flares al the rate of 20 every five minutes as their helicopter gunships chased the guer- rillas an the region." he said. The guemllas were "apparcntl} ambushed before launching a cross- border raid into northern Israel." the Two U.S. reporters ' credentials pulled JERUSALEM (AP) -Israel tem- poranl) withdrew the press creden- tials of two foreign correspondents today because they reported details of the assassanatton of a PLO leader \l,llhout subm1t11ng the repons to m1htar) censors. the reporters said Glenn Frankel of the Washington Post and Martin Fletcher of NBC News were required to hand o .. er the1rcredcnt1als toda) to the Govern- ment Press Office. Fletcher. quoting I sraelt sources. reported in1t1al word of lsrach m- vohc!mcnt an the Apnl 16 k1lhng of Khahl Wazar. better known as Abu Jihad Frankel later reported details on the operation He also quoted lsrad1 sources. Israeli law requires JOurnahsts to submit reports relating to sccunt) matters to mahtar) censors. spokesman saad. He spoke on con- d1t1on of anonymity an keeping Wlth standing regulations. Israeli radio saad the soldiers fought the gucmllas at a distance of two yards but dad not give the exact sate of the clash. Doing Your Own Building? R an My 30 years of construction ex- perience can help you success- fu lly complete your job. Call! (714) 250-0310 For a brochure-THE CALRAN CO. 18002 Skypark Circle, Irvine. c;llllo.n AdLel"'s handcraf tecL sterlln3 sllver bud vase.. 3838 E. Coast Hwy., Suite A Coro~d~l~r 673-7495 ROfer's has the perfect gift for your Mother 5an Joaquin Hiiis Rd. at MacArthur I ~ ........... Pll.ke-M0-5800 A1&T Phone Centers Present "The Sale Your Mom Asked For" Now save on selected AT&T Products and get Mom a Free $5 AT&T Long Distance Gift Certificate, too. Choose from AT&T Corded Phones. Cordless Phones. Answering Machines. and even AT&T Typewriters. 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All the right answers. All in one place. ATs.T Anehelm Anaheim Plaza 500 N. Euclid lwe. (714) 999.0012 I C...M- 3033 S. Bristol St (717) &41-0041 PHONE CENTER Bush should lock ap GOP aomlJJatloa totJay ---· ........ o1,.-., ~-CM'>-Nilllnd,,......._.i! a. ..... t't '111 nnrh ....._, a.,.. IUlll· a~ to led up the Jt n Mmi.-ioa. Jeue Jackson counted on tarae turnouts in the slate's two biiint cities to ajve him a shot at an upset victory over Dukakis ia tbe non-bindina popularity vote \hat was pan of a Iona. complex primary ballot. ' But Democratic front-runner Dukakis was vinually auured of cap&uriRI a solid ~ority of the 178 convent~on deleptes at stake in the primary and add to his powil\I letKI ID the two-man ntt for the nomination. ·:The turnout is liaht this momina. ••said All~~ny ~ounty Electt0n1 Director James Scanlon. But he added. 1 think the weather will help a lot. It's aoina to be a beauuful day." In northwestern Pennsylvania, Erie County Elections Supervisor Mary Ann Edler said polhna places reported aood Mt1111ca11t2111 nd• .. ".c.YC;;•.,= ii:fS!.al:'i.4:~ With l,Oll drlrplll in u.e 11 ... AllOdatcd .~ 1aUy, Bush was only SI sbon of'the 1,139 needed for a ~onty at the Republican NatioMI Coavnlioa in AUIUI!-. PHmylvaaia electa 71 Republican delcpta. sjvina the vice prnident a strona chance to ,et his m~onty when the results come in toniaht . . · · Dukakis has put toeetber a strina of primary v1ctones 1n Wisconsin, Connecticut and New York to k~ock out 1;11 oppolition but Jackson and build the impreu1on that his nomination is inevitable. . . Dukakis wu more than halfway toward a delepte m~onty • boldina.t,075.1' national convenuon votes. Jackson ~s ~},.6.J while 602. 7 Sare uncommitted. A t.aUy of 2.081 or more 1s n~ to win the nomination at the July convention in Atlanta. t ' EDllORIAI . Marines should quit whimpering over pollution fee You have to give the people who run the South Coast Au Quality Management DlstnCl credit for not being intimidated by some of the J>Olluters they arc supP<>SCd to police. District officials arc responsible for monitoring and reducing air pollutaon in Oransc. Los Angeles, Riverside and pans of San Bernardino counties. Until 1988 the district was in many ways a toothless tiger, but that chan$ed when the Environmental Protection Agency said exemptions from the federal Clean Air Act would soon be an excepuon rather than the rule. State officials responded by giving the distnct broad new powers to get the Job done. Since then, distnct officials have Jumped into issues where they had feared to tread 1n the past. and they aren't being timid about 1t. They have squared off against none other than the U.S. Marine Corps and the Air Force. Military installations, like pnvate industry. are fined for exceeding poltuuon levels. But the bosses at some m1lital") installations m the district's jurisdiction, inlcudmg the Manne bases at El Toro and Tustin, are refusing to pay the fees. They contend the fees are a tax. State and local governments cannot tax federal installations. The m1htary's logic doesn't wash with d1stnct officials. They contend that a polluter 1s a polluter. and everyone should do has or her share to help clean up Southern Cahforma 's air. Marine bases at El Toro and Tustin, which pump about 40 tons of pollutants a year into the atmosphere. are not the "'orst offenders. El Toro owes SJ,750 and a $750 late fee. Tustin owes $23.750 and a $4,750 late fee. D1stnct officials sa) March Air Force Base, near Ri verside. has been dunned for $41.490 and an $8.298 late fee. Most of the pollution created on the bases comes from aircraft, generators and other equipment -nuts and bolts- type stuff that the m1htary does each day. Obviously. the d1stnct 1s a little ~amstrung on how to make the m1l1tary pay. so the) 'vcenhsted the help of Sen. Pete Wilson. R-C'ahf, and threatened to ask that the bases' operating permits be revoked. That action. as unlikely as 11 seems. could open the door for coun action to force the m1htar) to cease operations until the issue is settled Some officials contend the controversy 1s JUSt a snit between d1stnct officials and some military brass. We think distnct officials have made a good pomt. If the polluuon fees are an illegal tax on federal installations. why has the Long Beach Naval Shipyard. Veterans Administration hospitals and the Norwalk Defense Fuel Supply Depot paid without a fight? The Manne bases at El Toro and Tustin. March Air Force Base and the other military installations in Southern Callrorn1a play an important role in national defense and the regi onal economy. Since these installations arc controlled b> the federal government. isn't 1t logical and fair that they be sub~ect to the same requirements imposed on area residents. businesses and industry by the federal Clean Air Act? The Mannes' and Air Force's big brass should quit whimpering. admit that they arc a pan of the problem and help district officials achieve a solution to the area's air pollution problem. Jf the Marines need a little msP.1ration. they can open up their copy of John Bartlett's "Fam1har Quotations." Right above "Semper fidelis" (ever faithful). the U.S. Manne Corps mono. there'sanothersaying that applies to the air pollution fees. It reads. ··Pro bono pubhco" (for the public good.) Smog If you think the air you breathe 1s bad now. it's probably going to get worse. According to a state Air Resources Board staff repon. continued growth in the San Joaquin Valley threatens to diny our air even further unless government imposes stiff controls in the next few years .... We arc alrcad> the second-smoggiest air basin in the United States. Our air 1sd1rty enough to damage crops and cut yields as much as 20 percent. There are many days -far too many-when the scenic beauty of the mountains is obscured by brownish-grey gunk. Automobiles and industry arc the chicf offenders. but Genevieve Shiroma. a member of the air board staff, says co- generauon plans also pose a significant threat to the future quality of valley air. These arc plants that typically produce steam and electricity. Individually. they emit little poUuuon. but collectively and cumulatively, they add to the tons of pollutants eitpendcd into the valley's air each day. There was only one co-generation plant operating in the San Joaquin Valley an 1980. Today there are 49, and another 65 have been approved by local air pollution control districts. · ... such plants elsewhere in the nation have been linked to acid raan. which causes widespread cnviroamental damqe. . These plants arc being built lhanks to the Public Utilities Rqulatory Policy Act of 1978. which was paDed by Conarcss to encouraJC ust of aJtematjve-encfl)' sources. T he act•s intcnuons may bt &ood. but it doesn't take into accou nt the impa l of uch plants on places with critical air quality problems ... A prohibition on the dcvclopmnent o( &D)' mo~ such plant should be adopted by all counties in lhe valley. and if that fai ls. the state .should step in. In the meantime, federal lawmakers and repllators ~ to amend the law on alte('native eftC'l'J)' sources to address concern raised b)' the~·~ ~ts. t ..... ...... .... .. , .. VIMIM n__.Dlltll Orange Cout OAJLY PILOT/Tueeday, Apttl 28, 1981 * A 7 '- "Bo/and raised the sugge tlon during an executive meet I rag. His Idea wa toofferS20.000toagency~rsonn~Iwhounma kco-workers gullty of .slipping tortes to the press. " It's not too late to stop Coast Guard budget cuts O K so 1t wasn't the ~menca·s Cup ESPN d1dn 't co,er 11 However Fnda} ·s stan of the local classic. t!'le Newpon-to-Ensenada race. amazed and lhnlled pan1c1pants and spec- tators and pro,ed that order could emerge out of all that confusion More 1han 500 boats jOCkt~ed for pos111on The rachlsmen knew what thc:'.r were doing -grtting 10 Ensenada 1n the best corTCCted ume It was not a h1gh-trch race. The !>alls v.cre not designed b) computers The racers were at thr mert:) of 1hr wind. and the bcst·kCi)t secret was whal would be the '4i1nning na' t· gat1onal strateg}" Was this thr }ear for the inside passage" The camaradcne of the race 1s the essence of 1he Ensenada race. This )tar howrvrr an 1mponant ltnk in the race was missing. The Coast Guard' rssel. the Point D1 v1dr remained 11ed up at tts benh 1n Nev.pon Harbor We ma) ha"e tu get used to Stt1ng the Point 01\ 1dc s1111ng at the dock a good pan of1hr 11me As ~uu read this. ( oniress will Ot' laboring u"er ~SI 0' m1ll1on shonfall m the l uast Guard's budget This represent., the bonom hne after dealing"' 1th the ong1nal S:!05 mt I hon deficit Tn lut the operauons funher two station'>. both 1n nonhrm C ah- fom1a. "'111 be recommended tor closure Jnd ship and aircraft oper· auom 1.ut 55 percenl Smee th1.· C oasl Guard 1s under the Dcpanm1.·nt of Transponatton. 11 must compete v.1th mass trans11 for funding It 1s a fact of hfc that mass transit supponers oul,ote C-oa~t Guard '>upponcrs "This i.s a ua"e t" ·· satd .o\dm Paul ) ost. Coast Guard comman· dant I caught the admiral between hearings foran update on the struggle. Ckarl\ frustrated. Yost wondc~ 1f the count") realizes v.hal the impact of cuna1hng Coast Guard act1v1ty will be on the v.ar against drug smugglmg. Consider ""hat we're drahng w11h in trrms of the natton 's drug habits Eighteen tons of manjuana rr~ resents one da) 's habit Se'en tons of cocaine represents onr week's habit The street 'alue 1s esttmated at S 140 btlhon. Thr cost to soc1et) an loss of producll\. ll) medical trcatmrnt law rnforcement and cnminal justice comes to an esumated S I 00 b11l1on The Coast Guard has four or fivr cui1ers and planes making 15 to 16 01gh1s a v.cel to patrol our coast In 1987 the~ ~11e-d 5.500 pounds of manJuana ~50 pounds cocaine. and 60 pounds heroin ofT the Orange Coast The great fear 1i. the patrolling deterrent could be lost If the proposed cuts are made 'rsscls and aircraft can respond onl~ to hard mtclltgence of smuggling. \\. ha1 kind of a message do } ou 1h1nk this"" 111 send to smugglers'> M) despair 1s that C'ahfom1ans don't understand the magnitude of the potrnt1al lo'>s It v.as on m' "'atch when tht lasl (oas1 Guard ·budget slashing oc- curred I lnl'" .\dm .\lfrtd Manning. th1.· area commandant from our as\oc1at1on "'ttl\: the En'lt"nada race He tipped me: ofT earl~ in the game. to \I.hat a threat "'as in storT for h1) operation Like Paul Re~en: I soundtd tht alarm .\lmnst 50 peoplr drscrnd"'d upon \\ash1ngton -1esuf~1ng at heanngs -bunonhohng leg1slato~ We "'ere successful Ifs 100 late to stage a bm1k.azr allacl on V..a<>hington this ttmr If this 1s 1mponant 10 \OU. plta\e \l.nte 10 Sen Franlo. Lautenbcrg chairman Transpona11on and R"'la1ed ~gen­ c1es.. Room '\o ~ D 118 Cap11ol Washing1on 0 ( ~n~ JO In the Houst". conlad Congre<><>man "ii· ham Lehman l hairman Transpor· tat1on and Rl'latl'd ~genc1rs Room No 2~ 18. ( aptt(ll \\ ashington DC 20515 ~JI thr admiral\ I tallo.l!'d to Jssured me that non1.· of these cuts .,.,ould afTCC1 resc:u1.• m1ss1ons I lmov. I'll sleep bettrr al night kno" ing 1ha1 Kno'A1ng the Coasl Gaurd \\3\ as JACKIE HEATHER close a .. a radio call ha5 alwav<> been a comfon 10 bw.te~ · When \\<:. am,ed in "iewpon Beach thr fim thing ""t did was tale thr Pov.er Squadron Cou~ We didn't ha'c a boat but ""c could dream t'Ouldn't "e"The nch. o ld man 5tlttng ne\l to me." ho had a ~pl.Im for his boat II.cpl 1.;0p)1ng ofT m~ paper dunng e\ams I coul4n'1 Jtt through to him that I "as wpposed to ansv.er thr e'en-numbered quesuons and he v.as suppo-.cd to ansv..er the odd "You·re odd. 'ou·re odd!" I kept h1s'>ing. He told me later he thought I "as rdi:mog to his ~\UJI p~ftrtn~. Our first hoatm{I mo~C' 1A.asto Join a sailing cluti To me that ts th~ ~e<"t "'3~ to go One: da~ a month wr had the boat and all thr other hrachches hl'long.·d 10 the club Our four sons "er~ just the nght age and v.e had a "'1lhng en:..-. When 1A.e could afford our o"'n ~at. in panne~h1p the big debate ..-.11~"' hC'thent "'vu Id be power or '><111, Lorc:n 'ottd for sail. but the bo~s v.'Cre beginning 10 lra'r for colkge I "'as not a good crt"' I didn't mind bnnging thl' IOod and dnnks, but I hated ~'"' bossed around pulling sheet\ I'm crnain v.c had mam un· e' cn1ful cross1n1P to Cat.alma. but 1"11 rte"~ forgel the Hmt" OOlh engines conli.cd oul and the swells Sttmed 2~ feet high E' C'f\ one e \\ rpt mt mo' ed 1010 a rep.ur ~1at1on . I \I.as thr radioman I stood t" at the read' lucl1h the l'ngin~ l1d.ed tnjUSI be 0forC' I ~rit thr l31l ··maHta~ ma~da~ ·· J•cttt ButMr u • t.rm~r ,I\·~·· port B~•e<ll m•)or. Banker wants to pay bounty for names of news leakers WASHINGTON -A senior of- ficial at the Federal Home Loan Bank Board has a proposal that would uckle George O~cll - a $20.000 boun1' on the head of an) bank· board staffer who leaks infonnauon to the ~s The have-gun-w1ll·trl\.CI approach is the brainchild of James E. Boland Jr . 1he bank board's No 2 man -..ho Sitne as chief deput) 10 qcnc} Cha1nnan M Dann) Wall. Boland r:used t~ 'UllC$110n dur- '"' an e~ccu11\'e mttuna where onl) about ~vcn top bank-b<>Ard official .,..ett prcsitnt. His idea v.-u 10 offer $20.000 to •ncy i;xrsonncl .,..ho unma co-~orkcrs 1u1h) ohhPP1na 11oria to the press. SeHr1l bank-board offie11h ~led Boland's pr0posal w1th hor- ror. One u id the idea ~ould hurt cmplo)tt morale and be rounter· pi'odUCU\C. Ncwiofthr bount) ldra •"Is leaked 10 us. Boland dtthnd:t to ~tum our pttonc call\. . In an 1n1en1cw w.1th ou.r as.tCX1AIC Mic'hltl 81nstem. Chairman Wall •id ttaC pl.ta was "'DOA" «cx.d on lf'n\'al fk w. oukt not elaborate on has owa rethnp about tht reward Idea. -. IGUn.'n 11> 1t.a1 wan .,,., bC!m *!PIY disturbed Ow:T ltab. Sinte utUm•na the chairmanthip ... ~ • .., ... llied '° ""fitftft. NMt tht :~tavc.. about 01c bell= *"" . .....,. .... '"' .... npl9tn.. ........ has .,_ t ant 10 mp0m1M 10 dn1t1Mtt the "'II' " wbm lbt fcdtnl vt"fl and Loen lnwrantt Corp.. hkh UlW •bt dtposi ... \ lacing los~·., c'pcctC"d to r'cttd S.SO billion Sin« 1he thnft tnduslr) was <k- rqulated in I 118~ -.a' 1nis and loans ha'e become Ille tedrrall) insured casinos Loan\ for "1ld land specu- lation. ml' \tock mukct deals and e"cn .\rab1an ho~ spdm banks ha"c often bet'n substituted for the trad1t1onal ma inst.a> of thnft in"itu· uons -home monpgcs The result 1s that the FSLIC is flat brokr and ~111 ha\t to hmp from ont bailout to the ne\t until the me\.alablt occur:5 -a ma 1\C ta'pa)U bailout. ~'hile 01~n ha'e bttn tcreamina fi~. Wall h;a~ raJltd to smell the smolt . La 1..\uau$t. Con&f'C'SS pas.-d a bill addin& SIO bilhon 10 I.he depositor in urantt fund. throu.ah the ~le of bonch. .\t tht tame. Wall rclcucd a ~t.atemcnt sa 1na C natn ~ ai'cn him • hal he nttdtd to do the1ob. tic m~t ha\e hccn 'tooki t hroup r~on!d iWsiC5. Tiie fact is. Wall alrud) had JttD a tcettt rcpon that hoM'd the ban bol.rd n«dcd nt.ar1) $16 bilhon 10 bttl OUI onl the I lm ho~> dc>c>tnCd thnf\s. \nd Oft(' out or ''m. fhe of the' nauon·s 3.200 thnf\ ' nasoh'tnt. Our auoaase 81nsit1n 1Md a (Op) of t M mmc ICCftt fq)Oft. TMt •'I OM of the lea thit drch-e Boland to I I boU.nt OG laktn. Tht bao board is undcntanda C8ltf' to dimn••IC the nc:ptn-c mona tht that rd rtlu• nats arc ti) to SWttP undtt the . ' t , tn>ubkd ~•n&J and '°'n 1n Tna\ •ould co~\ C\tf) man. woman and child 1n th11 \talc S424 ta.ch and "uuld v. 1pt out the ai tma ca.sh resenC'.\ oftbe FSUC' twitt O\CT. On lhc a'CJ111.C· tech of the-. t Texas 1hnfti. w.wld cast the FSLIC $1 ;3 m1Uion 10 bail out. ac:cord1aa to the ittrct rcpon tlNl·EOITORlAL -What n1tt fmnds Ron and ancy haH·. "croup of Cahfomia nsn pstt!hcd 1n S2.S m11l1on and ht t~ first couple a ~t1rcmmt ~ '" 8d ar. H~ no11 11n , nactty. Tbt' Rcapns 11111 Pl) ttnl, but the) aren't sa~u11 bo much. The Offict of GO''ttl'lrnet" Eth1ena tbt ana,.cnK'ht pr'obabl 1s~l.~~n1fn 'I •=:uttll • JU bd"'ftn frimch. ts art an v.'f'd to ~ Pfatftt from fnend' -a fttdtte. a bottle of co~ a mansaon. le$idrs.. \.M 1hOutt mt\ &om lllM>n)moul ~Ron and Nancycn*'tpwdl ftOWH'l lMI IMy are ..,,,., nm 1f 1¥') doft' ~ Wham WU. fntnds hkc thal. wtto needs ~ mttttil lfOUPI? •r ,_. ....,_ ,.,, Dllr v. 1111 ltft'· IJ!l.CIM lll ' • Ii 5iterall•fl. • LETTlk S ------~--=~c..-...~· ' Stun gun suit To the Editor. Sorf)', Mr. Subruck. )OU just doa"t ha\t the facts. I s~t youseucopy of the drposjtions of the Huotincton Bnch stun gun suit and rad tht'm. They s.a) that a j ury 1nal would not have awarded milho ns Auuminf you are not an attom~. ma) respect full~ make )OU aware of some facts ndcr the d1sclosurr laws. both \td~ must ba"e all of documents. C\ 1dcme. dcpos1tons. interroa- atom~~ "11ness.es' si.atemcnts, inier· '1ew\ and photOJraphs 1fan)'. I had lhe pri\"1legc 10 stt all of the photographs. \pea~ with claimants and n:ad most of the docum ent!> pcn.un1n& 10 this ca~ Oh !>u~. some people thought 1hc polu:c acted wtthm their jUrisd1ct1on and !l<>mt' people t' ~n thought the pohce did not &O far rnough in thls m.tttt."r Howe' tr the~ people wert not av.art' 1hat t~ stun gun's manufac- turer has been found liable in several pre' 1ous casn. 1ha1 1he largest police dcpanment IO thtS COUntl') hu WCn !>tun guns awa~ from pa1rolmcn. that at last t"o lorensacuperu were ready to tes11f) tha1 permanent dam• had occurred and finall). that Just a week pnor 10 the scttJc.mcnt 1n Huntmgton &ach a similar case 1n Huntington Parl. which ~rnt 10 thr JU') • .ended in fa,or of tht' claimants h ~llcd in the a"'ard of somt' scnous money to cltamanl5 a nd sent two pohce officen to the state pen11en1taf) for SJX ycan. Thi!> 1s not an isolated mc1dent m Hunun,1on Beach. Had this maucr gone to tnal )OU ma) h.avt heard 1c:st1mon~ about othrr infrxuons b) U>e police. which 10 be)'ond the scope of detention and a~st Therr a.re good and bad pcopk m the poltct dcpanments of most maJOr c1t1es Lucio.ti~. ours~sttm 1s good enough to spot the bad ones ~rh in their carttr and <.lul lht) go Without going into detail. S:!00.000 v.as a"arded in an Irvine ~ulcmen1 where the pohct were found to be nl.hl. but the pla1nt1fT COiiected ~S r SI\. thesr are not isolated cases. · Police power docs not mean uncon- trolled powrr. &.""Cause v.:c arc a land of laws. v.r pre"ent lhmgs hke what began happen1n11n Munich 1n Apnl 19)3 and ended 1n Berlin some nine )t'a.rs later \\ e can nc~·CT allow th ts to ta~e place here lfwce"crdo.}ou'll be the first to Cf) about pohtt poWtt GENE SELIG Irvine Jesse Jackson To the Eduor \\ h) 1sJC'S5t' Jat lson being strong)) cons1dc:-~ as .. pres1den11al ca~­ d1datt'" I lgftt v.uh the an1cle ~nncn b\ \\. tlham F Buckle). which points out tlle major Oa"'s of Jesse Jadtson as a true pres1cnt1al candidate He has absolutd) no t'Apcnmce 1n hold1111 a major poht1cal office. yet he feels htmS('lf Justified 10 Sttk a pohucal offi~ 1n 1.'htch he wall lead our crca1 nation and all of us c1t1z.ens He undoubted!) obuuns a great dea.J of suppon be-cause of his race. )Cl ht himself has madt' ann-Semmc com- mi:n ts and appa.renlh feels himself 1ust:fied 10 look dow-n upon the Jrw1sh communll). His crcatcst asset 1s that he 1s a masterful orator and presents himself quite wrll. He as indeed a master of wonh.. but has 11 come to the point 1n our ~t na11on v.here somC'Ont running for the O\ al office Ii JUdlt'd ~ tht manner 1n which he speaks. rather than h1~ e'penrntt and past achc1\lt-- ment'"" If thr aunbutc that~ no• seek 1n a prrs1dt"nt 1s for him to be a pal ~pca .. er. m~ '0lt 100 10 none other than \\'illtam F Buckle). \14.RSHALL SOLOMON (dM H1ifl School sophomore ~Beach TooAv IN H 1s10R~ --._....__,....,...~_ Beatings leave deep scars DEAR ANN LANDERS. This lc.uer is fo,r every parcP.t. Before you hit your lud. ask yourself: Why am I dom& this? •• lMlos some oflhe catcaorics: Tall or short. Fat or skinny . Amencan or fore11n. Rich or poor Colleae graduatet or high school dropouts. I am a 40-_ycar-old man who has vivid memones ofbeina slapped. hit with a razor stnip and beaten with a belt I was told that I was no good. I didn't understand what that meant. -. •••••••••••• How could I? I was only 6. ~1 ve or waJlflowa. Sw1 ngers or waltzers. Boozers or drys. Smokers or non-smokers. Good dressers or sloppy. I never married and since I've never bad children of my own one could make the point that I don't know what it's like to have two or th~ 'Sereamina kids an the house. I acknowledge that this is true. Maybe I'm lucky that I d1dn"t marry and have a family because I'm not a well-adjusted person. I flunked classes in high school. have been fired from jobs and was court-martialcd an the sen-ice. 1 was told that I was a loser. I believed it and fuJfilled the prophecy. h 's too late for me but n's not too late for millions of othcn to bqin to treat their children with respect. Parents should rcmem~r that they are training their children for life and for parenthood. The war they arc treated is the way they wal treat their children. The cycle 1s unending J.A. IN KY. DEAR J.A..: YH do yoanelf u lajatk:e. 11te le1&pt ud uder· •~I reflected la yo11r letter ...,at &Mt '" mtpt make a very .... ,...t. 1'laukl for a le«er &Mt deffnita to be take• terloetly by e•ery rru• wlM wallops •ta or kt dll . Too oftea slid belaavlor II u aatomatk respoaae to Uter and frutratiOD. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: Women arc forever ask1ni, "Where arc the desirable men'>" Men ask the same question about women. Both sexes tend to categdrize within the first few mmutcs of meeting somebody new. They engage in a winnowing-out process. to eliminate the "undesirables." Un- fair'> May~ Reahsuc., Yes. Herc are When I get throuah StZina them up. J go back to playin& poker. - F.A.Z .. ARIZONA . DEAR F .AL! Bo~ malet u4 females lose oat wllu lMJ nJe .. t prospects based on trrdevocles aacla a1 fat or 1kluy, riclil or poor. SklJuly women 1ometlma 1et faL Rlcll men cu lose ~etr moteY· Smokers can q•lt aod drys cu -rt drtakiq. . ~ •• patJace, loyalty, late- 1nty, 1enero1lty u4 th altWty to commulcate are tbe ~ &Mt cont tn a relatlon1blp. B•t yo. cu't detennlne U tllese are preaeat by lookla1 at a women betwen poker b.Dds. I'd say yn've 1tacked Ge deck a1aiut younell, mister. Fresh start md1cated, love plays important role. Wedaesday, April %7 ARIES (March 21-Apnl 19): Check details. be posjtjve concerning recommendations. references. sources. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): Reunion featured. recalcitrant fam1lr mem~r acquiesces to request. Focus on home, manta status. property value. ability to wm through powers of persuasion. Cancer. Aquarius play roles. Kttp options o~n SYDNEY concerning possible relocation. Surprise meeting could ul· Oll•RR t1mately lead to ro-..,. mance. Scorpio 1n-••••••••••••• volved. TAURUS (Apnl 20-May 20): Do some investiptlDJ. discern motives. get ideas on paper. communicate with relative an transit. Member of opposlte sex 1s interested 1n more than mere f11rtat1on. Virgo is in picture. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Focus on sccunty. home. serious money djscuss1on with family member. You get what you need 1f diplomatic. Don't force issues. You'll rca1ve g1ft, 1t 1s a .. peace offering. .. Libra featured. CANCER (June 21-July 22): Gain ovCT'lll view. leave details for another da). Terms W111 ~ defined. your pos1t1on gams strength with llme. Play waiting game. gather information. Pisces. Virgo figure prominently. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Spotlight on power. authority. prestige. money. mtens1fied love relauonsh1p. You'll be asked to meet challenge that involves deadline 4-nicle previously lost wall~ recovered. Capncom pla)'s role. VIRGO(Aug. 23-Sept. 22): You'll reach more people. circumstances favor your efforts and money could come as result of lepl decision. Focus also on romance. crea11v1t}. pubhsh1ng. travel. Anes. Libra m picture. LIBRA(Scpl. 23-0ct. 22): You~ine'nlightenment 1n area previously censored or proh1b1ted. Skeletons could rattle. but ultimately )'ou"ll ~strengthened by knowledge SAGITrARIUS (Nov. 22-Dcc. 21): You'll~ more aware of appearance. wardrobe. we1&ht, body image. In vitation to social affair could include travel. Pro- fessional supenor becomes aware of your contributions. Gemini featured. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Emphasis on revision. remodeling. redecorating. ab1hty to break from tradition. Wish will be fulfilled in unorthodox manner. O~n lines of communication. Money. previously withheld, will ~released. AQUARIUS(Jan. 20-Feb. 18). You'll discern motives relating to mem~r of opposite sex. News 1s favorable 1f )OU don"t permit false pride to intervene. Modicum of modest) will actually promote cause Sagittanan in picture. P~ (Feb. 19·March 20): Look ~yond the 1mmed1ate. perceive potential. Contractual obligauon will be fulfilled following initial delay. Settlement reached. you'll be more secure as result. Taurus figures prominently. IF APRIL %7 IS YOUR BIRTHDAY current cycle places spotlight on popularity. pohucal or chantable act1vny. social affairs. greater awareness of appearance. bod> image. Anes, Libra peo{>le play important roles an your life. You are sensitive, dynamic. romantic. sentimental. must take care in handhn& of sharp obJects. 1ncludrng kitchen knives. You could have unusual mark on forehead or face. Dunng May. you'll~ asked to accept challenge that includes specific deadline. Go to it. Why not talk to each other? Sir, you say you're stall looking for that one bnght idea to make )Our fortune? Nothing to 1t. Dream up somethm$ for people to do during TV commercials. Sevent~ percent of the grownups watch TV m the evening But only o ne m every eight of those does nothing else. How would you describe the shape of your face? Seven face shapes arc generall) recognized: oval. round. square. pear. oblong. diamond and heart. Long-distance running in compet1-~on u~d to ~ called "pcd- tnanism... First such runner of nown -m the 1860s -was an "merican Indian named Dccrfoot. It he who fixed the long-held v1ct1on that I nd1ans could outrun tes anywhere anytime Sorry. can't vouch for the claim Jhat parsley, rub~d into the armpits. f1lakes an effective deodorant. You'll have to try it yourself. Q. Which professional sport has the most female fans'> A. Hockey. That's per capita. Almost half the hockey spectaton are A. Five times higher. That's one .. informed estimate. L.M. Bo YD '.> ,c;1 When your granddad was a lad. a stnng of28 C'hn stmas tree lights cost the equivalent of a week's wases. female. Sometime ba~ a JcmaJc chent wrote "I love hockey I fantasize that rm the puck and all those men arc fighting over me." "Gave me the luxuncs of life," said Frank Lloyd Wright. "and I'll willing- 1) do wuhout the necessities." Am advised the world's larsest hotel -the Hilton with Its casino - spends S 11 .000 a da) on elrctricuy. Q. Who tn\entcd buttons? A. The Chmese. names unknown. About 2000 8.C. First buttons were carved seashells Dccorat1ons. not fasteners. Q.1 know the rateofdrugaddict1on among ph)s1c1ans 1s h1~er than that of the general population -but by how much'l The sun zaps out m ore energy an one second than mankind has used so far. Q. What's an ··ecofemimst"? A. Somebody who believes women ha\ ea special connection with nature and a special mission lo protect the environment. To ge1 some notion of how fast an impulse tra-.els along one of )our ncr'c fi~rs~ lf)OU had such a fi~r as long as a football f\eld. said impulse ~ould get from one end to the other in less than a S«'ond .\ristotlc defined women as ··mutilated males" without souls. \\ h) he '° long was regarded as a bnght fellow I do not know Women didn't think Ille was all that swift. Onl~ 4 J percent of the feature films made in this count') in 1986 were shot 1n California. PROMISES • to stop drinking too much or quit using drugs DO NOT WORK OUT-TREATMEHt the new generation of truting alcohol/drug abuse, DOES WORK • ... Successfully Proven Prognim : .. Improves YOur L~ ••• No Time Off from Your Job ..• Affordable with No Extra CostS Make a PROMISE you can keep. call U1 for HELP U)day. Frtt Co9fidential Aucssmcnt FoUntaln'Viley/Orw1ge County (714) 966-1179 1-IOC).341-3535 C11•~•1110 ... ,.,... ......... ,n1J•t ' BR IDGE East-West vulnerable. West deals. WF3T NORTH • J \) 10' '3 0 J 10 6 • A IC Q J 10 EAST • 7 5' \J A 5 l • K Q 10 I 6 J \) Q J. 0 K 9' 3 0 • 1 ~ '' 5 . '' SOUTH +A 91 \J K 9 7 0 A Q 5 2 •• 3 l The bidding: Wm No~ F.ut r-t• 1+ ,._ l• Paa p-P• p .. So•~ 2 • 3 NT Openin1 lead: Four of • The one truJy international tour· nament is the Epaon event, played on the same day, and approximately u the same time, throupout the world. The 1988 event will be held worldwide on June 3. The competi- tion ii the brainchild or the current preadent. of the European Bridac Fedcralion, Joee Damiani of France. A sometime partner of one of your author1, Damiani displayed the preciaion of a computer on this band from tbc French Team Cbampiomhip. Both teams reached • three no trump on amllat auctions. Note South'• cue-bid to let a pme force-it proadled DOthina about control of the ipade suit. At both tables West led a ipade, and declar- er held up the ace on the fint two RU Ff ELL'S UPHOLSTEIY· llC. .......... 0-. .... HU -P .. CISTI 11.U-SU.UM f•t8AL•__..wl -1.o..e-. .. ---., ........ .., .•.... • 8:30 9:00 9:30 Complete televlalon Hating• In Sunder'• TV Piiot. CHARLES GOREN rounds. At both tables East itufted to the queen of hearts at trick three, and both declarers covered with the Icing. One West arabbed the ace, and returned the suit. Had East held the nine of hearts instead of the eiaht, he wouJd have def cated the con· tract. As it was, declarer now bad nine tricks-five clubs, two hearts and one each in spades and diamonds. At the other table, Damiani heed- ed the advice so often heralded in this ·column: "Before committina yoursd.f to a line, take time to count the tricks." He saw that, even if declarer made a heart trick, be had only ciaht tricks-five clubs, two aces and the heart. So be allowed declarer to win the trick. South had no counter. Declarer save it his best shot by continu.ina with a heart. Damiani allowed that to run to Eut's jack, and the inevitable diamond return set up a trick in that suit before declarer had established his ninth t,rick in heart.a. ~-~~~~~~~~~~ 68 Mixture 89 Letter 10 Inward 71 Kind of grus DOWN 1 Skin 2 Equellty 3 Cenedlan "stat•" 4 USSR name 5 Eon unlta 8 NotdenM 7 Gun lheeth a Wing: Pf9f. 9 Exct.matlon 10 Orientlll IOCietY , 1 Flower pwt 12 SMrp r1Clge 13 Birda' ,,..,. 19 Mec.w 21 Peddle 23 Engenc:lel 24 FNndl city 21 Adhel••t• 27..,.algn ;c!=loob 33 Dt.ltch ~ S5 Patrtotic gp. 3e Uoct d• tged 37~---­SI Oulceli ' 40 Aaplllt 1 2 3 4 8 9 10 Hood'• friend 57 ...... ctty 58 DlmlnlaMa 81 -Yu.-t'q 82 Frequently 14~' abtlr. I& lit• 12 13 I j ' ( A " H ( 'I D ~ . "' • byBH Keene ·0o11y made me a mud pie but I'm still hungry." by Brad Anderson "Relax, he Just wants to be sure we have your attention!" , PltAl'fUTS UI TBS BLEACHltllS by Steve Moore "If It makes you feel any better, we found the pit bull's owner and got your ball back." DltlUOS THE llE1'ACE • by Hank Ketcham ~ l j l I by Charles M. Schulz MERE'S ntE WORLD WAR I FlVIN6 ACE IN MIS SOfWITH CAMEL ZOOMIN6 ™R006M TME AIR Ml6M OVER FRANCE ... EVER'<TMIN6 TAU6UT TO MIM GARJl'JELD AON1 GOSSIE WILL TAKE. CARE. OF '10LJ WHILE I'M IN THE. ~rfAL HA\'INu Ml.I TO~IL'!> REMOVEP TUllBLltWEltDS IN TRAININ6 SVDDENL V t COMES &ACK .. ., ___ ..,...... ... ........ - wamaoes by Tom K. Ryan • • 0 0. BLOOM comm GAMDt ANi> PATCllltS FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE . SHOE JUDGE PARKJtR ,.. WHEN I CALLEO MYSELF A MATRO N , I OIDN"T SAY I WAS AN OLD ONE DAVID / THERE ARE YOUNG ONES ANO MIDDLE-AGED O NES AS WELL' FmfKY WmDRBBAlf 1MANK <,QJ rQR COMING "rnlS E.VE.NIN6 ... OrMge Coat OAllY PfLOT/Tueedtly, Apft 29. 1-.M .. - by Berke Bteathed- t #'A WJ1UYl* ,.,lllNIW' l/lllltr ! TNI eut' . \ by Lynn Johnston by Jeff MacNelly by Harold Le Doux . by Tom Batluk DOOIUSBURY by Garry Trudeau Mt/ff .. )QI (;4Ut-N!ClM£, 'IQJ_ f~r~' • I I . ..... ..,... .............. ~~ 411*'l .._ .... ._,.._., •• no ,....._,...... _____ ......,_ .. • , • . 1 FR .... • l .J J GE 3-Head Digital VCR with Picture-in-Picture Special Effects_~ G. E N E R A l fBJ E LE CT ~ I C • 3 video heads provide clearer special effects such as slow motion. freeze and frame advance •picture in picture capability lets you watch a tape playback and a broadcast TV program simultaneously •tunes in up to 142 UHF. VHF & cable.channels • on-screen programming by remote with large easy-to-understand display makes programming easy • 8-event/21 day programming with daily and weekly repeat takes the hassle out of unattended recording Here Are Just A Few Values You'll Find! .................... ................ o,_1*MH ..... •• e FM ...,_,mono mode 1111ctof •~FM wulll._ •l•Ctof •2,500 Circuit City Low Price Gu•,.ntM ... If, within 30 day1 of your purchaae from Circuit CUy, you find tne same item at any local 1tore, including ours. we'll refund tM difference -plu1 10ll of the difference. Thia offer exclUiies tM Circuit City Outlet Center . .. htll •a:l-..1"ru DllUVUYA¥,....~• Wbdil&lilay,AjMtl 27, 1911 1DAY9A ..... t ., . .,....... 19'' llEmTE 1U IM OW lel• Coun..aor. For Det8ll1 • I • I I I ( s I \ t b • • It • E 2 0 Former Golden Weet Co~e alager Keith Kaub bit a pelr of 110lo boine nma to lead ..., .... ,........, ....... cal State Pullertoa put UCJ, 4-1. ID a Padftc Cout Atliletlc AellOciatlon 1ame. Oiler~ topple Marina, 3-2 Huntincton Beach Hi&h center fielder Bnan Mena scored the tyang run in the second inning and chopped an infield sin&)c to dnve in Brad Walker for an insurance run in the seventh Monday as the Oilers held on for a 3-2 victory over Manna in Sunset League baseball action on the Vikings' field. Chad Phillips, 4-1. picked up the win, allowing four hits in SV> inninas while reliever Tim Wimbish earned his second.save of the season for Huntington Beach. Phillips walked five and struck out four. The Oilers upped their leaauc mark to 4.S and overall record to l J..6. Mena, 3 for 4. sinJled and then later scored on Joe Kijcwski's RBI sin&le tn the second inning before Chris Bowen sin&kd home Jason Bcttmicr to sjve the Oilers a 2-1 lead. The rally for Huntington Beach came with two outs. PhiUips and Wimbish kept at that way until Mena's RBI in the seventh made at 3-1. Mena hit a slow dnbbler to third base and beat out the throw. Marina (2-6-1) took a l-0 lead an the first and added another an the bottom of the seventh to make it close. Wimbish. who walked two and struck out one. entered the game with runners on first and second and no outs. He walked the first batter he faced to load the bases before an annana-cnding double-play. In the An1Clus Lea_guc: Mattt Del 'J, PIH X %: Bill Brockschmadullowed two earned runs on four hits while stnkang out sax over five annings·and Brian Frankel hurled two perfect innings of rclicf as the Monarchs(7-2. I S-2) maintained a tac for first place v.ith the v.m o'er Pius (0-9). Jason Gall (3 for 4. one RBI). Jim Austin(:! for 3. one RBI) and larT) Sutton (two-run double 1n the St'"enth) ke)cd Mater Dca's offense 'HJESOAY. APM. 28, 1988 Fow.,.. ....,.,. mlllle louth .. , ..., lt11lcelllel ••••·-. Auaale duo nlpe U.I. In Deeett 8c111t11ble golf thoWdown. n Fullerton's Kaub beltspair, UCI, 4-1 • Anteaters· Douty ends gritty outing with swing at ump BJ ST AN GRANCll ...,,...ew, s ,, 1 Two schools moving m opposite directions met Monday nt&ht at CaJ- State Fullcnon as the Tuans, ranked sixth . in the nation by Baseball Amenca.handcd the Anteaten their founh consecutive loss.. 4-1 . The Titans ( 12-3 an the PCAA and 34-11 overall) were led by desisnated hitter Keith Kaub. who blasted two 400-foot home runs. Kaub a senior who attended Golden West Junior College. has 14 horn~ runs for the season. Kaub was not the onJy local boy to bun the Anteaters as Fullenon catch- er Brcnt Mayne. who attended Or- an~ Coast College. had three hits. which kept his h11ting streak ahve at 27 games. For UCI (5-10 in PCAA and 26-24-1 ). it was the conclusion of a frustratinc weekend. Al the bcaJnnang of the ~r. the Anteaters were packed to finish second m the PCAA. but after being swept by the Titans. the Anteaten arc m fifth place. That frustration began to show Monda). Pncher Dean Douty pitch- ed a gritty game. despite 11van1 up 14 hns. six v.alks, hittina two batsmen. and havma two errors made behind him. He allowed only four runs. three of which were earned. UCI Coach Mike Gcrakos ~id. "Dean threw a good game. he showed a lot of character .. Dout)' helped his cause by 1nducmg the Titans to hll into three double plays. but put a cloud over his performance m the eighth inning. After surrendcnng has second home run of the evenina to Kaub. Dout) hit Mayne after JUSt massing ham with the previous pnch. The umpire walked to the mound to protcc-t Douty as half of the Titan baseball team · was slowly ap- proaching him Dout)' and the Titans were ex- changing v..ords when the umpire decided he had heard cnou&h and ejected Dout). who then threw a punch at the umptre which just missed. Douty had to be rntramed by three of his teammates and the near fi&ht ne"er matenahzed as the Titans Sttmcd pacified wllh the CJCCtlOn of Dout)'. The Anteaten only run of the cvenina came in the third innina.. With one out. John ScebufF sin&led and then Doua Khne bit a sink.inalinc dnve to ncht that rolled to the wall after the right fielden' divine anempt failed. allowing Sccbursier to tc0rc. UCl left ca&ht men on hue as compared to the Titans IS. Both schools missed many opponunities to blow the game wide open. One bright spot for the Anteaters has been sentor second baseman Jeff Oberdank. The lcad--off hiller went two for four. &iv1ng him 87 bits on the )·car and his twenty-seventh multiple hit game of the season. Obcrdanlt needs Just one more hit to tic the UCI record for hns in a season set by Mille Hirano back in 1979. With cacht pmn left an the season. it is a sure bet that Obetdank wall shatter that mark. Gcrakos praised Obcn:lanlt saying. "He plays hard all the time and good thincs happen to th05C who try hard. He has an excellent idea of what he wants to do. and then he socs out there and does tt ... Obcrdank said he would aladly trade the record for some victories saying. "It feels aood being able to break the record. but I would like to be wmrung some more p.mcs. I decided that this was my senior )'eat and I v.-as goina to try as hard as I can for C\.Cry inn ma. J feel that as the way the flmc should be played ... W ath eight games left m the season. G~rakos 1s bop1n1 that the Antcatcn will build up some momentum for next )eat by finishing strong. "We arc go1n1 to take at one pmc at a tame. There arc e1&ht games left and I thank the season wtll end posativc- ly. tt sa1d Gcraltos.. UCI pla)s at home torucbt at. 1 against San Otego State Univcrsit) and Wednesday apinst Southern California Collqc. In other colJeae action: SeCal C.U~t 4, BWa 2: Jeff Motske singled an Kevan Kasper from second base with one out in the I I th 1nnin1 and Josh Johnson (6-4) pitch- ed thrtt mnanas to cam the win 1n rchefasthe Vansuards( 17-23)camcd the Otstrict Ill Win. sec was led by Mike Frei (2 for 4. t~o RBI) and Kevin Kasper (2 for 6. tv.'O runs) at the plate. Frei singled 1n Motskc and Kendall K.aspcT in the fifth inning to &ive the Vancuards a 3-1 lead. Larry Jacinto S1naled an Kevin Kasper in the farst for SCC"s other run. B1ola's Bnan Keller V.'ellt 2 for 6 with an RBI to lead Biota. whiCh scottd once 10 the first to even the pme and tW1CC an the seventh to send i 1t into extra 1nnanas. In the rventh. Mark Speck and Jtm Blakely siQ&kd. and l..arr) Amt reached on a fielder's cho1cc, sendina Speck to tha:rd. Speck scored on an error and KcUer sinalcd to dn"e an Flint. sec swter Jim Mansfieid ..-mt six-plus inninp and allowed three earned runs. • 1 0\\ the communal} col~ level: .. : Golcko West won by forfeit wbCD• Pasadena failed to show up for theii1 scheduled make-up pmc with mt• R~lcrs at Golden West. Ram.s_ 'picks off er great speed Seahawks' Dirling· keeps rising higher.1 UCLA.sGreen. Alexander only part of fleet group From fte A110cl.ate4 Preti It will be ye4rs, of coui:sc. beforc anyone is sure which team came away with the best packa1e of players in the NFL draft. But Rams Coach John Robinson is sure of one thing -his tc.am got some speed. "There's no question we got some fast guys." Robinson said Wllh a smile after the draft was completed Monday ... We'll take our four fastest 1u,rs and race anybody m the draft. Entcnng the draft with five of the top 47 picks. the Rams went for d~namic speed at runnana back and wtdc receiver. They made UCLA's Gaston Green, who ran the 100 in 10.SS seconds 1n hiah school. the first back taken. Then they made Aaron Cox, timed in 4.39 seconds in one ~yard dash durillf pre-draft workouts. the fifth wide f'Ceeivcr taken in the tint round. In the second round. the Rams took swift defensive back Anthony Ntwman of Orcson with the fint of thtt s_>iclts. Then they went for pure lpeftl in UCLA's Wallie Anderson. considered the teeond-tastest ~ c:eiver in the draft by the Rams. Jn the laacr rounds. the Rams ldded two bumtrs at nannint '*:k. ney took Missouri•a _Robert Delpino. 1 convened fteeiVtt with a 4.34-second docking an the 40. m the fifth round and Nebraska's Ke1thJones(a 4.3-second 40) in th~ sax th. "We feel we've helped ourselves a great deal. especially in the paSStnf pme:· Robinson said. "Cox tS TCady to play. Anderson sjves us an immediate deep threat and Green will be a threat to catch - the ooll coming out of the backfield .. Green represented the csscnt( of the Rams' ph1losoph) m this draft. Wllh all the top backs still avail- able. the Rams chose the best breaka~a' thrcat O\Cr more durabte t)'J>" hkt" Cnua He~-ward and John Stephens. ··Gaston as a threat to score from Raiders surprise critics by bolstering defense EL SEGUNDO (A.P) -Cntics of the Los Aoaclts Raiders may have felt the team's bi11C51 holes were on offense. but Judi•nJ from the NA.. draft. that was a mistaken impression. After takma Hcisman Trophy winner Tim Brown. a wide receiver and return specialist. on the first round. the Raiden wound up talc\nasix straiaht defensive players -1 three defensive backs, two linemen and one projected as a linebacker. On Sunday. the Raiders chose. chose Brown with the sixth overall sclectio.n. then toiok Tennesstt corncrbi(k Terry McDaniel and traded up to act Illinois defensive end Scott Davis. all dwee CJlpected to stan ~xt 9Cat0n. On rounds four lhrou&h .even. the Raiden c:onlin...cd to bolster their defense. choosi• i]Ska \ICkle Ted Rother, UC cor- Ml'beck Dtnnis Price, Ii Iler Erwin Grabilna of C'lilt estern Rcscrw and OtlMoma defensive back Dcmck Crudup. Rother is a 6-foot-7. 268- pounder who and led the Big Ei~t 1n quarterback sacks with 10 last - )car. despite playina m the shadow of Neil Smith. the second pick in the draft Pncc was an oftcn-injuttd but rang} comcrback at UCLA who. hke McDaniel, 1s a mao..on-man coverage specialist. Crudup, the seventh-round pick from Okla- homa. falls into the same catcaory. Crudup made an intercstina journey to the Raiders. In 1983. was a freshman reserve ctuar- terb:ick at the University of Aonda. where Shanahan was the quarterbacks coach. After Shanahan left. Crudup moved to Oklahoma. playin1 one season at "-Ide rccci,cr before eventually mov1na to romcit>ack. Grabisna and the other low. round choicu art gcnnatly de· vefopmental °'8)-en, i!'diVidual •ho were late bk>omen 1n colks. anywhere.'' Robinson said. "We'rc aware of the questions about has durabilit). but ht won't be a 3(). carry Jl:IY.'" Bcs1dcs adding some explosive- ness to their offense. Robinson thought the Rams upgraded then sccondal) ~1lh Ne.v..man and poss-. 1bl} UCLA's. James Washington (fifth round) With their other picks Sunday. the Rams took Purdue linebacker Fttd Stnckland m the second round and Illinois defctWve end Mike Piel in the third round. In the final seven rounds Mon- day, the Rams took Jones and Jeff Knapton. a defensive hneman from W)omina. in the sixth round; v..1de rcce1"er Darryl Franklin of Washington an the etghlh round: defensive end Pat Foster of Mon- tana in the ninth round: 31 S-pound tackle R.C Mulhn of Southwest Louisiana in the 10th round; and running back·v.1de l"CCC'l"er Jeff Bcathard of Southern Orcaon State in the 12th round. Amoog the h1chhchts of the final da> 's picks. •Bcathard. son of Washinaton General Manaicr Bobby Bcathard. v.as the final pla)er taken in the draft after the Rams and Redslins v.orked out a last-minute trade. •Franklin. who turned in slow 40 times at the scoutina combines. claimed he was sack and d1d much better for the Rams. He caqbt 43 passes for 712 )lrds as a senior. •Mullin was the only ofknsh·e lineman taken by the Rams with th.cir 12 picks. "I fttl \-Cry sood about the drat\." Robinson said. McPhetson triggers run of QBs I M t • Kalli k personal best and county low of f 4.31 ar na S C ID the 11()..mcter h.i&h ~urdles as the goes County best V1k•n&S defeated Huntanaton ~· 10-66 in the Sunset Leapc. KAlliclt · 14.3in l lOlows -~:,':'~~==}:::.~~ -v.on the Ions Jump (22-0) and tn Senior Ray Dtrhng of Ocean V1ev..· jump (44-1). Kevin Ml&\lla added a High sct a school pole vault record for strona l 4-611 tn the pole vault. the fourth ronsecuuve umc Monday ,Mite Easa and JerTJ GBluph Of'. in a Sunset l.Qsuc track and field ~cstmmstcr each threw o~ SO feel mttt •inst vis1tm1 Edison m the shot put. bu.t the Lions wae Otrtang. ..,ho oricinall} broke the .. hipped b) Fountain Valk). 107-29 school mark with a 13-6 vault tv.o ~ngen. who ~' an Anclla lnv1~ -.eeks ago. vaulted I .S-0. topping his uonal meet ~rd last Satu~y WI most recent effort of 14-6 set at the a throw of S--! I, toned at S2· Oransc Count> Champ1onsltlJ>l.. Monda) Gallcspae earned second e Edison. wb1ch v.on the meet 97-37. 50--10. ~ : 1s nov. 4--0 in duel leaauc meets. J• Wea•~ look tint sn the 3 K.alcaph Carter -on three events }&rd 1nter:sncdia1c hunt~ 220 Qi) for the Ch~rs. includina mar\s of 880 -his first lUM 1n t~ m~ S9-I an the shot put aod 161-1O1n the distance e"enl '""7"' to help UN.~! discus to a 73-S8 Sa View ~ wua ower• Other winners for ~ v.~ fatanc1a anclu<kd Victor GutiC'rttz. _.ho Oris o.t·~ti Of C~ spnntcd the 100 in 10.08. and Dan made his marll: ~n the: hcific C Kutsch. who ran the l.200 in J 0:33 4 Lcaa~e meet ap1nsl 1.....,,.. Hilla llw running the 12()..) ard hp bunles i8 In other bo)'S action: I b 7 and the 330 inltl uli<dildts ia Marc lbllk' of Marina turned in• (Pleue ._ B1011 •B1>a1J•lll Uni's Patton hurls first career no-hitter, fans 1 ., Mills' father fed up with Kentucky, NCAA controversy ....... fte .bwd&M4 pm. LEXINGTON. Ky. -Claud Mills m UY$ he 1s so tared of the controvmy about bhis '°u n:s ~llmfKent to play basketball at . t e n1versuyo entuckyhedoesn'ttatt anymott af Chns ioct to UK. • "I don't even want Chris to so to Kentucky. I really don't." Claud Mill said an interview in Los Anaeles this weekend with the LeXinaton Herald-1...eackr. 'I rally don't know if he's comina 10 Kentucky or not. I rallrdon't know. It's up to lhcNCM." The NCAA and the uni~rsity are 1nvesuptins alkp1ions that Sl.000 in cash was found when an Emery ovcmi,lht mail envd~ addressed to Claud Mills popped open at a Los An,eles sorting center. The sender was listed u Kentucky assistan1 coach Dwane Casey. Cuty says he did not send any money. and the MiUses they never received any -or upected any "I didn't ask Kentucky for no money. I have money. (Head) COid\ (6ddie) Sutton will tell you n&ht now. He never tent me no money.and I neveraskedror no money," Mills said. · Mills said his son "could have gone anywhere an lbecountryf0rSSO.OOOorSlOO,OOO. What the hell you talkin& about -S 1.000. That's slavery. "Chris Mills ain't no Sl.000 man. He's one of the top players in the nation. "He didn't come there for no money. UNLV - Las Veps -has sot more money than Kentucky. LA bas money. If we want money. we would go to one of thosc~plaocs. We went there because of Coach Sutton ... Chris Mills s11ned a ~tional letter-of-intent last November to play at Kentucky. A recruit normally cannot back out of that commitment without losan& a year of eliJibility to play, but when a pla)er 1s involved an a rccrwting infraction, different rules can apply. Chuck Smn. an NCAA assistant d1r~tor of cnfon:ement. has sa.id that 1f a prospect received an inducement from a college. he would be ineligible to play if he still decided to attend school there. Quote of the day S&eff"lllnlt, of the Elias Spons Bureau. on the fact that New York Mets slu~r Darryl Strawberry entered the 1988 season with a batt1n& avet11e 50 points higher with men on base than he had blttin1 with tJie bases empty: ··That's a big difference. It's kind oflike the difference between Steve Garvey or Brian Bosworth dating your dalllhter ... SOcken enter Chapter 11 The San Diqo Socken, overwhelmed • b}' about St mallion in dtbta, filed a Chat>ttr 11 bankruptcy ptt1uon Monday 1CCkmg protection from creditors while undc'*oin& financial tt0tpni111ion, team officials said. The team. which is in the mid 1 of the opeo&na round of the M._,or Indoor Socce1' Laa~ playof&. ptans to continue operations throu&h at least the end of this season, said Ron Fowler, chairman of Socken Management Inc He said the future of the Sockm, MISL indoor champions in five of the past s1x ynn. depends on an infusion of new capital .•. Los Anicles Lakcrs· President lllU SMnnaa. who has spent the past 3-4Jears in ~rofess1onal basketball as a player. coach an front office eilccutive, announ~ his rcurement Monda). Sharman. 61. has spent the las1 17 years with the defending NBA champion Lakers -he was their coach from 1972-76, their acneral manaaer from 1976-12. and their president for nearly sax years .•. Job McEllroe, the form« top-ranked pro currently on the comeback trail, defeated No. J.-ranked Stdu ~kf'll 6-3. 6-4 in the finals of the Michelin ChaUenac round robin series at Inglewood. In an earlier doubles match, to~ranked &ta Flad and Robert Septodefeated Jtb Uoyd and Q.rllt• vu ftalbtlrs 6-2. 6-2 ... Armed with new ecnaltics agltnSt SUbsla~·UStng athletes and unethical laboratories. lhe International Olympic Committee 1s honins its attack on dopin& in spons to make sure this summer's Games are as drua-free as possible. Tof officials of the ~nel say the Seoul 01~ mp1cs wil operate under the t1gh1est anti-dru& rules ever ... The Meche broke slowly from the post and lagged an ci&hth at the baJfway marker but closed strongly on t6e far turn to w1n the S 111 ,SSO San Jacinto Handicap turf race by a lcnsth at Santa Anita. The Medic's wan, underarts McCarna. was accomphshed on the final day of the park·s 91-day winter-spring meeting. Downing goes on 15-day DL Designated hitter Brtu O.wD1a1 of • the California An&els has been placed on the 15-day disabled hst retroactive to last Wcdncsda) because of a continuing muscle strain of the left nb cage area. the team said Monday. Infielder JanJor Noboa will replace Downing on the Angels' roster and will Join the team in Detroit an lime for the opener of a three-game series Tuesday night against 1he Tigers. Downing. 37. hasn't played since last Tuesda) an Oakland Sance that lime. be has been examined by team doctors Jales Raalull and Lewis Yocam, the An&els said. Downing 1s hnttng .111 with one home run and four runs-batted-an. Noboa. 23. was acquired from the Cle veland Indians by the Angels' Edmonton farm club on March 29 in exchange for outfielder Ted Milner. In 13 games with Edmonton this spring. Noboa hit .277 .... Texas relief pitcher Mltcll Wiiliams was suspended for two games by the Amencan l.ea&ue for his pan an triggering a brawl between the Rangers and the Boston Red Sox earlier this month. Shannon to guide South Coast area players Keefe. Guild. Rice. Probst join forces vs. North in Orange C9unty game Woodbridge H11h's Adam Keefe. Manna H1gti·s Steve Guild, Ocean View's Cra1.1 Rice and Corona del Mar's Geoff Probst arc four of a 15· man squad selected for South Coach BlJI Sh.annon of Woodbridge High for the 23rd edition of the Orange County All-Star basketball pme. The classic. sponsored by the Costa Mesa Kiwanis, 1s scheduled for June 2S al the Bren Events Center on 1he UCI campus. and will follow an all- star game of Orange County girls a1 7'35. A two-year CIF 2-A Play_er of lhe Year. the Stanford-bound Keefe fin- ished his prep career at Woodbndge with 2.212 points. which ranks him 11th on the state·s all-ume SC'Onng llSt. Keefe averaaed 26.3 points and 14.4 rebounds as a Junior The Nonh squad, under Kennedy Hi&)l's John Mayberry. features Maanolia H1gh·s Mike Goff. UCl- bound Bnan McCloskey of Sunny Hills. UCl-bound Brett Pagett of Los Alamitos. UCLA-bound Dre Lamoureux of Los Alamitos. and San Diego Stale-bound Kevan Rembcrc of Mater Dci.P-- GofTlcd Orange County in sconng wtth a 28.2 average. and averaged 16. 7 rebounds a pme. · McCloskey averaged 18.4 poants and 12.3 rebounds a game and Rembert. who helped Mater Dea to fourconsccuuve Cf F championships. as well as lhe state championship while a junior. averaged 15.5 points and 9.0 rebounds a game. * Hltltl lchMt <MANGE COUNTY AU·STM GAMa let ..._. ,,,_.. Cellew, UCll SOUTI4 SQUAD ,....,.,,, Sdlelll K~ lemelt, Le Quint• Gv1e11 0o11111. SeOdtftea Steve Gullcl. Merine lrei JoMMlll. El T0<0 &obt>v Jova, S.nre A.ne Adam Keefe. WOOdllrlOM Cherin Lodlero c_,,,_ v...., r-. Mt. t •·O t-t 6•S I H • •-1 f ,., c ·-· . ,_, Scoohe Lvnwooo, S.nte Al\il Leo Pet"ker Jr , Tuitln Geoff Prc>b$r. Coron• oet """' Crelo Rice. Ocffl\ View Joe :sm.n. lob•~·"°' Erle Souker El T«o Chf•• Towtf'. Wttlmol!Sler Co.di I ll WNIOll WOOdllr~ NOltTH SQUAD ,...,.,sci.. Gree ledlord. Cvpreu Chf•• Bowen, WMlefl\ Mike Goff, Metn<>ll• Kevin Greddv, Buena Perk Gerv Hunter, Buena Park MlchMi Keith. Kennectv l n en Kerinev. s.rv1te Ore Lamoureux. Lo• Alem1lo• Wendel L~OM. Kennedv Geoff Me<Artfluf, Or•nee Lutneren Ertk ~'""· W?littier ""'"Ian Brian Mc<IMl!ev, Sunnv H1I' lrtll Pe .. 11. LM A.IM'n1IO' Kevl" Remb«'I. Meler Del Eric Slllntr.lt. S.venM Coecll. JOlln Mevwrv. Kenneclv . ·-· I 6·6 • S-11 I 6·1 .. , ,_, I 6-S I 6·S Count1e• to vie on court Orange County's best prep basket- ball players from the 1987-88 season wall face Santa Barbara County•s ~t in the second annual all-star clash between the two counties. June 26at 1 p.m. at the San Marcos High in Santa Barbara. Oranae County, which won last year·s game. I 06-90. will be 1 1 by Jack Jlllcklau chlP' to the ~ on tbe foa.rtb bole at tbe Oeeert Scnmble. Auuies win Desert Scramble SCOTTSDALE. Anz. -Orea Nor-l!I man sank an J 8-foot birdie pun on the first hole of sudden death to give him~lf and panner Ian Woosnam a one-stroke victory over Jack Nicklaus and Lee Trevino in Monday's SJ00.000 Dcscn Scramble, an expcnmental pay-for- view golf tournament. The victory was wonh SI 00,000 apiece for Norman and Woosnam and they also split a $50,000 bonus for wanning the final hole. Nicklaus and Trevino each received $25,000 in the best-ball, stroke-play tournament in which the final nine holes were televised live on cable for a cost of SI:?. 95 per household. The ··1ntemallonal team .. of Norman, from Auslralia. and Woosnam. from Wales, trailed by four shots after 13 holes. But they made eight birdies over the final 11 holes to shoot a 6-under-par 30 on the back nine and (orge a tic at 64 over the par-72, 7.045-yard Cochise course -a new layout developed by Nicklaus. The .. U.S." team of Trevino and Nicklaus had fired a 4-undcr 32 on the front nine to take a two-shot lead at the tum with four birdies and five pa~ Olien win, 8-4, aweepC.llUJ The f.dmontoo Oilen built a four-.oal ~ lead &RIO &he leCOnd period aftd thea '~ld ' otr visittna Ca)pry--.th the help of Ga.. u•1,... .. dinchina Pl f'or a M vktorY, . Monday nilbt to aweq» ~r Stan~Cup Prayofr~. Willa tbcar Jo.anh atraillll \'iaol")' over their proY&~ial rivah. tbcOilenbecamethe ftm Leam in the playoff's lO reacb &M conferace fiAals. They'll ~Y for the Cam~I Confcmw:e title -.ainat the .;nner oft~ Noma Division ltrict betwetn Dttroit and St. 1.ou11. Ma ..... .....,,Cral&IA••11 .. Wa,.. GNtlkJ and£ .. TlkbMa had powered the dtfcndint Stanley Cup champions to the 4-0 lad .... OenN Oallut ICOrcd two~· and 1oaltenckr Olea....._ stoPl)ed 27 shott as v1si tina Detroit defeated St. Louis, 3-1 to move within one game of winnint their sencs. ft resumes Wednnday in Detroit Petr Oma ICO~ on a break.away for Dc1ro1t's second pl in the first period. T•J M~&epeJ flapped in the rebound of a ~ R•ter shot at 19:40 of the tCCOnd penod to pull St. Louis within one, 2-1. Boston •a Hurat hurl• afz-hltter MILWAUKEE-Bruce Kurst patch-Iii ed a six-hitter and stNCk out eijht Monday night as Bouon beat the Milwaukee BreWttS 5-1 . the Red Sox' sixth straiJht victory. Hurst, 3-0, did not walk a batter and allowed the only run in the ninth innina. The Red Sox chased Milwaukee mrter Bill Weiman. 1-l . with one out in the seventh when Ellis Burks' RBl-sinale drove in Brady Aodenon. who bad doubled. and a.ave them a).() lead. Television, radio TELEVISION 4:30 _p.m. -PRO BASEBALL: Anaels at Detroit. Channel 5. 4:30 p.m. -PRO BOCIEY: NHL div1s1on final round Game 5. ESPN. 4:30 p.m. -PRO BASEBALL: New York Mets at Atlanta, WOR. TBS. 7 p.m. -PRO BASEBALL: Chicago Cubs at DodgeB, WGN (blacked out an some areas). 7:30 p.m . -COLLEGE BASEBALL: UCLA at Pcpperdine (delayed), Prime Ticket. RADIO 4:30 p.m. -PllO BASEBALL: Angels l/t Detroit. KMPC (710). 1 p.m. -PRO BASEBALL: Chicago Cubs at Dod&cn. KABC (790). ' p.m. -PRO BASEBALL: St. Louis at Padres. KFMB (760). WEDNbDAV'S TELEVISION 2:35 p.m. -PRO BASEBALL: New York Mets at Atlanta. TBS. MacLeaa picks UCLA over Georgia Tech SIMI VALLEY (AP) -Prep All- America forward Don Maclean. who averaged 31.5 points and 12.3 re- bounds for Sima Valley Hia.h 1h1s pest season. announced Monday he will play basketball for UCLA next year. what Coach Paul Hoover calls the "triple threat." Woodbndge·s Adam Keefe. a 6-9 player headed for Stanford. Santa Ana's Bobby Joyce (6-7) and Westminster's Chris Tower (6-10) make up the tno. how tired they'll be because of the Norch-South game. I think a lot of the gu}s last year laked it (the Santa Barbara Classic) a lot better than the North-South pme.·· Maclean averaged 21. 7 points as a sophomore at Simi Valley and 25.2 as a Junior. He finished his career with 2.343 points.. the fifth-most 1n CIF Southern Section history. He also rankse1ghtbon thecarccrrcboundan& list with 1.120. Tacket prices range from $2 10 $3. Included an the fcsuvities will be a slam-dunk contest and a three-point shooting contest. accord1n1 to Hoo- ver. who's based out of Marina High and 1s coaching the county all-star team for the second stra1Jht year. There will also be a 11rlspme prior to the boys. Most of the P.!aycn involved for Orange County will have played the prior ni&ht in the Oranae County All-Star games. .. (The pla)ers) seem pretty excited about 1t: Hoover~1d. "I don't know Santa Barbara 1s led by 6-6 Paul Johnson. headed for UC Santa Barbara. and possibly Simi Valley's Don Macl..ean. who signed with UCLA on Monday. Also on 1he Oranie Count)' boys roster arc Manna's Steve Guild and David Yamate. Mater Dci's Char Ruppel, Kevin Remben and Mike Hopkin~. Bolsa Grandc's Joe Small. Santa Ana's Scootie Lynwood, Hunt- inJtOn ~ch's Rich HuJhes. West- minster's Eric Kutas and La Quinta's Arri Buford. Maclean said he made the d~1s1on based on the fact that Jim Harrick was now the Bruins' coach and he wanted to be a pan of the resurgence of UCLA basketball. ·He chose UCLA over Georgia Tech. ··1 have an extreme apprecaauon of UCLA as an institution and the academic opponunit1es that it provides any student," Maclean said. ··1 see myself as being a mltjor contributor immediately to the basketball program. The opportunity to play is there. and that was b11 factor in my decision. Wills stops Rawls Jn eighth round HIGH SCHOOL TRACK AND FIELD ROUNDUP ••• Fnm TM An9clated Press Mark Wills stopped A very Rawls an the ei&hth round of a scheduled I().. round heavyweight bout Monday ni&ht after Rawls told the referee he ci>uld not continue Walls. of Van Nu}s. was declared the winner at 3 07 of the eighth. Under California rules. a fighter can only be sa"ed b> the bell an the finaJ round. From Bl 42.06. but Laauna Hills won the mttt. 78--62. On the 11rls' side: Am &lutqer of Manna won four events in leading the V1kinp past Huntington Beach. 80-<l7. Stle won the 110-yard low hurdles in 15.1 and the 330-yard lows in 49-0. Kissinger also took the 100-yard dash in 12.3 and the 220 an 26. I. Skill Toc~u of Fountain Valley won the I 00. 200 and 400 meters. teammate Melody Flinn won the Ion' jump and tnple jump and He1d1 ;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;, Corcoran ran a personal best ,100 low hurdles tame to lead the Barona past Westminster. 68·60 in the Sunset l.a&ue. SPREAD THE NEWS Work In the ever expanding New9paper Promotion field! If you are Mff-motlvated and ffk• working with teenagers , thta may be the oppottuntty ;YOU'Ye bMrl waiting for. Nedle bner of Edison threw a ~ record 114.31/J to ttfin the ditcUs as lhe Charsers defeated OC'tan View. 70-57 ma Sunset l.eaJUe meet. N«lta Jeeaer of Estanc1a ran an 11 74 in the 100-metcr duh and won the 220 in 27.24 u the Eagles ran pasi University, 100-27 in the xa View mccL Ouisllt Howard wcnt S-2 10 win thch1ahJumpand Beth Hararove turned in a strong 116-6¥1 in the Oitcus throw. D• 1•1 Otl-••· a fn:shman spnntcr for Costa Mesa, ran the JOO mt1el'S in 13.4 and the 200 in 28.S for a pair of tint-place finishes and &allrJ 11a1eJ won tk 400. tiut Lasuna Hells won the Paalic Coast Leas~ meet. 17.JO. ;,. * 400 r•v-1 F-••ln v ... v. 52.7 uoo rt1av-I. Fountait1 v....,, 4:l6t HJ-I. Foa lFVl. S--1, 2. R..,_. IW), S·6, "° llllrd LJ-1. T..clW IFVI. lt-l. t. H'*-"d IFVI. lt•lt, l. lllU (FV), 17·!. 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IM: I. _._ ICMI, ~•t. -.':.J.~ .... ~ ..::-k:r.*..f-"9· .:'t Or AS _, ~"..::"&•· ~"r'.-._ fJ-LC-. llH -.... -~•&-.... ~.!4lt\ ~~\C CUI.,._.,.._, JM 0 ! ' Major Lelutne staadlngs -A.~~-. . war DIVISION w L Pd. GB Llt SUak lletne Aw17 Oakland 12 7 .632 -6-4 Won 2 s-4 7-3 Kansas Cit)' 9 8 .S29 2 S-S Won 3 6-3 3-s Chi~o 9 9 .soo 2YJ 6-4 Lost 2 .... 6 S· 3 Seattle 9 10 .474 ) s-s Won l 3-6 6-.. Texas 7 10 .412 4 S-S Won I 3-6 ..... 4 Aqell 7 l l .389 41h 3.7 Lost 3 ..... s 3. 6 Minnesota s l I 313 SVJ 2·8 Won I 3-6 2-s EAST DIVISION Cleveland 14 4 778 8-2 Lost 7. 2 7. 2 New York 13 s .722 I 6-4 Won 6-2 7. 3 Boston 12 s .706 1 ·.~ 8-2 Won 6 6-4 6-I Detroit 9 7 .S63 4 6-4 Lost I ..... 3 s. 4 Toronto 9 8 .S29 41h S-S Lost I ..... 4 S-4 Milwaukee 7 9 .438 6 5.5 Lost 2 S-3 2-6 Baltimore 0 18 .000 14 0-10 Lost 18 ().. 8 0.10 Boston s. Milwaukee I Monday'• Score Onl)' game scheduled Teday'1Gama Aa1el1(W1n l·l)atDetron(Rob1nson 1 -2).4:35~ Kansas C aty (leibrandt 1-3) at New Yor'k (Leiter ). 4·30 p.m Seattle (Moore 2-1) at Cleveland ~Cand10Ui 3-0). 4 JS p. m. Oakland (Davis l·I) at Toronto ( t1eb 1-2), 4:3S p.m Baltimore (Morgan 0.3) at M innesota (Viola 1-1). S:OS p.m Boston (Boyd 2-0) at Chicago (Perez 1-0). S:30 p.m M11waukce(Bosio3-1)1tTeus(Gu1man 2~1). 5·35 p.m. We4aesclay't Games An1el1 at Detroit. 4:JS p.m. Kansas Cd at New York. 4:30 p.m . Seattle at lcveland. 4:3S p.m. Oakland at Toronto. 4:35 p.m. Baltimore at Minnesota. S:OS p.m Boston at Chicago. S.30 p.m . Milwaukee at Texas, 5:3S p.m. National League WEST DIVISION w L Pct. GB Lii Streak Home Away Doc11ers II 4 733 7.3 Won 3 4-~ Houston 10 7 .588 2 4-6 Lost 3 6-3 Cincinnati 10 8 .556 2'h 5-5 Lost I 5-4 San Francisco 9 9 500 J'h 5-5 Lost 3 4-5 San Diego 1 9 438 411, 6-4 Won 3 6-J Atlanta 3 13 188 g•,: 3-7 Won I I-Q EAST DIVISION Pittsburgh 13 4 .765 8-2 Won 3 8- New York 11 6 .647 2 7-3 Lost I 6-2 Montreal 8 8 .500 4''1 6-3 Won I 5-4 Ch1ca~o 7 10 .412 6 2-8 Lost J 2-4 Ph1la elph1a 6 10 375 6•1, J-6 Lost I 4-3 Si Louis 5 12 294 8 3-7 Won I 4-5 Monday'• Score No games scheduled Today's Games C hicago (Maddux 3-1) at Doc11en (Leary 2-0). 7·05 p.m Ctnctnnau (Robinson 0.2) at Montreal (Youmans 0.1 ). 4. 15 p m New York (Gooden 4-0) at Atlanta (Glavrnc ().3). 4;40 pm PhLladclph11 (Rawley 0.3) at Houston (Scott 3-0). S:35 p.m. St. Louis (Tudor 0-0) al San Diego (Show 0.3). 7:05 p.m Pittsburgh (Smiley 0.2) at San Francisco (Reuschel 3-0). 7.35 p.m Wedlletday'1 Games C hicago at Doc11~n. 7:05 p.m. New York at Atlanta. 2:4Q p.m. Cmctnnat1 at Montreal. 4:0S p.m Ph1ladelph1a at Houston. 5:35 p.m St. Louts at San Diego, 7:05 p.m . Pinsbuf'lh at San Francisco. 7:35 p.m . 7-2 4-'* 5-4 5-4 I-6 2-4 5-3 5-4 3-4 5-6 2-7 I-7 ~ GOU>9N STATE ATI4L•TIC CC*l'IHUKE SeCal , ..... 4. .... l f I AME•teAN LEAGUE Red S.11 S, &rewwl 1 M>STON MtLWAUK•E Burtu cf 8arrell 1b 8oool lb ltl« dh G~lf OwEvn 11> c..--c SOwenu BAndlll rl T"'11b arlllll Mrlllll 4 0 I I Mot1l0< 3tl 4 C 0 0 4 0 7 7 YCM!t cf 4 0 1 0 •OOO 8<9"$r1 4 1 70 SOOO Oe«lf •O OO 7 0 0 0 ~OCI< ID 4 0 1 I 41 00 /Nverdh 4000 7110 Schroe«c >OOO 4 I I 0 S,.t\lm u l 0 0 0 1112 Gantrw20 3010 JI S 7 S T.-. JJ 1 ' I Scare .. .....,... ...... •1 tit 112-5 Mllw•ull• --•l-1 GatM W1nn•1>11 Rll -BAnclerlOft I I) E-9rocll Moltlor OP-MheUll• I LOB-8o"Ofl t Mltwaut<• S 7e-<erone BAndeoon, Broci. S&-GrHnwell fl) SF-9Anders0fl Berrett , .. " ••••• so 08rlen TH R H«ldlOll NV Wlnfleld NV ltev c .. Glel Tor ~uel'llNY Seilter KC Ulllford0.11 McGrlffTor Carter Ci. ' ' • 1·3 6 7·l 0 1 • 7-l I l·l 0 ) • 0 , 0 l 0 0 0 0 0 • 0 0 ) 0 • 0 0 0 0 1 soc.t Colle9e 100 020 000 01---4 10 7 llole 100 000 100 Ill>-l t I Man1fleld, BrOOll• 171 ~IOft 191 end Sataaar, Keller, Carter ISi. Jull .. 191 and Sooevtt W-JoMton •·4 L-Juhlle 28-Ke K•\oer ISCCl Cor'IWTWftttY C.-... SOUTH COAST CONl'EltENCa c.OIOeft V.tn I t. PI MCleN 0 I forte; ti Hilt\ Khod SUNS•T L•AGUE H~ ... °' l. MmttM 2 Hun11n91on Beach 020 000 1-l t 0 M¥11\1 100 000 ,_, s 1 PtllQ•o\ w'""'"' t" •no Flores, ,..._, and Lind.a,. w-P9\•lllot 4· I L_,..._ 21-~ IHBl, V1~tlon IHBI ANGILUS L•AGUE Ma• Del 7, Plu1 X J Mal41" 0.. IOI 100 l-7 17 I P11n X 010 010 0-? 4 0 Brock.cr.m.01 Franke; "' and lctl11, Leon and Ham1 w-ereclllCfVNclt l~ L-Leon 28-Sunon IMO> S4lftMI LMeue w L T Ga W•llmln"er 6 l 0 Oc•aft v .. w s l I , Founta•n Vallev s 4 0 1 Eclt~ 4 s 0 2 HuftlllllJlOll hKI> 4 ~ 0 , Marine , ' I )ll MIMIY'l SC.. Huntln9ton 8MCl'I l, Metme J TMrt'• 0- Marlfta at FOUMt •n v llltv WHll'niflll• al Oc:a8ll View Hun1.,..1on 8"ctl al Edlsoft "'*Y'•,.... F-1••" Vt1'8'1 81 0C-V-Matl111 at EdtM>I' ~.o.- w111mlnst.,-et HIMlllneton leecf'I. 1 o m ... cHk c .. ,, ~ w L T Ga ~ Holl 1 2 • Ort"IM 1 J 0 Tratluco H·ll\ 4 s 0 ) Woodtlrldlle ) ' 0 4 C01t1 Mela ) ' 0 4 Laeune 8tadl ) ' 0 • TNaY'I..,,. WoodtwldOe "' Colt• MeM ., oa ... , Flt'O 1 L..ao""9 ~ at l..etUN Hiia Tratluc'O Hih at 0r.,.. ft.-'('• ...... Traouco Hiii •• ~ IMcfl LffUNI Hiit 11 COSll Mft8 WOOdllrlOot 1 I Or 11198 A• oamn et a is U011e1a '*" See "'9W ~ W LT Seel~ • 1 • GI T1111111 7 2 I I Ellancl1 6 ) 0 1 Unh,enl'V ) 6 0 5 COl'Otll o.t MM 2 7 I ' HewooN HorW I t t 1 ...... "._ lstll'Cle •• c~ -,,,_ IJM,enlty .......... ~ $1dtnK'k et Tuatlll ,,...... ..... Ctf'tfle•MM et Ea~ ...,._....,.., .. ~ TU\1111 11 SlfttllClc l lenctv L Vie J Chio 8ectl )Ml!r1l~ 4.. left Cr ...... s '--vw.,.1n, 6 HtHM\ 1 ,...,~ l.St..,. ... I. f G•Mot"Mn IO Or" Nornw.n 11 David F rot I 12 Paul Al•l\Mr tJ Fred C °"°"" 14 Mi-. lteld 15 ~ Ceic.v8(C"•• 16 Ptvll8 Slew.-1 11 lot> Tw..., 11 Ken GrHn 1' Tom Kite M CralO Stadler n s1 .... Jon11 n Ed Flori 2l Scon Hoch 2• Tom WelMltl 7S J.,tf Sluman 26 01vid Eowerd\ 17 Larrv N•llon 211 JoM Mahett•v 79 Donnie H1mmono )0 J•m Cer11r )I Mac O'Grea1 » Curt Bvrum ll Rev l'iovo )A Don POOlh lS Oen F0<\m1" l6 Fullon Atlem l7 G-S.uer~ ll 8-fnllard L•"~' lt 9,1 SINMr .0 TC Che" 41 ""°'• .. Ma-•2 Marl• 0 Mee• a &J Oan Pont 44 Da•t l!lar• 4S Tom Purlrer 4' Merk W1eo. 47 Bruce L tll~t 4 Rooert Wrt"" ., c .... ,' !>Ira._ SO R·cl\aro Zot.ol S 1 Jodie MuOO S2 Oouo Tewe; SJ JoMCook S. Wav,.,. Lev• SS BOC> LoN S6 Ca•v•" PMt• S7 Lerrv M. re SI 8 UOd'I Gar dne< S9 Ke II\ Cltarwa•41" 60 Garv KOCl'I '1 Dave E iCMC1>«11r 41 David ()vt1n 63 JoNI Hu\IOfl 04 Klftnv Perrv 6S Pet.,. JacoO\e., 66 BolM>v WtO-•n\ 67 Jav 00<! 8'8U lht ) D1v1\ Love Ill 69 Tom Bvrum 70 M>kl Hull>e!'I 71 Ken Brown n Mark Ln n Lt rr,. Rinlr.er 74 TOll'\fTlv N1i.a1oma 7S Hel Sullon 1• Gr99L~ 71 NICll Proct 71 Rocco Med•ate 79 Ll'OftlrO TllOmOWll 90 Scott llero4an~ II RuuCoc11r1n 11 D•c~ Me\I 13 Scott S•moM>n 14 LO<tnR-t\ IS Noell Fei<lo .. Jc Snt.a 17 WavM Gr.av • BolM>v C141moeit " Brea F11>e1 90 Rooer MallM 91 Wli''« Wooa 97 ROlln•t 8141<• t3 0 A Wt•l)(1"9 94 Fra~,conner ts Br.an ltnnvMll' 9' L..,,,,. C-nt\ '1 Fwrv Zoeo .. r 9t BoO Eeuwooa " Devt Rummell' 100 Sttvt E 111•"9100! IOI Tom S•~~m111n 101 Brea Fuor )03 S...t Ba 'H•ero\ 10. MQ<'1\ Hete \k• '-• GOLF '"lillfl WlhMI PACll'IC COAST LEAGUE -.. ...,..,, ....... , IJfS.SJI ms.1• Im.All 1294."5 im.61' 1.772,llJ ms.m m.l.ttO t.J50.JQ 120.Nt mU'2 aou .. 1191.llJ SIM .... SIU,"6 •17>.tff '17U32 SIS.UM 1151.17• SI0 .571 llJUll S124,J6J 1124.221 '111,'11 •111.2,1 110',JOO ,,.,,,,, tt07,110 1103.17• 1102,590 1102,516 ,,.,552 stlAOS Jtl,317 •t0.7M SM,5't 114. IS't 112.n• lill,3'1 11un "° 11f7 m .n1 '"·"s s1s.m l7S.>Al 575 117 sn.111 170 ... "'.,. 567 114 "'·°" 56S.1"1 .... >03 "3 11• 562 713 •5' '55 '57 ISO 55'.JM 55' 14' 5JS.Sll SSS.Oil $5.t ... SS4 74.l ss.t U1 SS4.l70 SS..370 sSJ ns SSl .CW SSJ 3'7 SS2,77' ISi 97• ISi ltS SS0.173 MUll Ml.OS. M7 •U M4.4JO "4.113 M3.7SS MJ.3'• M1,0M Ml.73J Mini M l.Ill M l.IW Ml,056 "40,533 Slt,126 13t.61t lll.Sll '37 ... 2 '37.200 136,.»4 OS.JS.I s.M,tlS llot."4 '33.flO '33.511 \J1 M3 Sll '50 UI 4'7' 511 "' U9111\1 hl<ft -· Cesta Mew ~ IAll\I C,... GC, ' '*"l 1 J c. ~' L8 n 1 ... , Frenc.. L l!l l and M G "' L8 )t 4 All)ett IL8 •2 S Mot>,. ICM u SEA VIEW LEAGUE hlllncla l60, T1111t11 443 I Ce•vr" E S. 1 Mall• tEI S6. ) Jovner IE• S1 ~ Hnt"910<" IE, '2. S M .. .,,, tE1 '3 .. x.,,. ( ........... , HEAllYNEIGHTs-Maf'll w I (Van Nunl TKO o A•41"v R1w~ (Compton) in 1118 till!llh ol lC~ultd 10 r~ IWltll II 9·1· 1 •llft 1'9fll kllOCkOVf\ ltt#I\ ., 11· )·I wlln 111111 knocllOUl\l JUNIOR LIGHTWEIGHTS-G•,.aro Her,.a'>Ol'r CLO\ ""9eifll TKO·o J....,. VIN ILO\ 4"08 .. \1 Ill ll'le "'""' Of ~ 10 rOU"Q\ I H~ ... "°81 •I 14 0 W·ll'I \hi k llCKllOUI\ ll"'e ' 6 ·4 Wiii\ h"'t IU'IOdloulll NHL Sta!Wf Cuo IUYefll OIVWC* P•UU ,...... ... SC.. Dt"O I ) SI LOU'• ' (~Oii ............ )·II EdmO"ton • C61Nrt 4 IE..,_IOll •Ill• ~· ... 0 T ......... lO-~w Jtrw• at Wulllnoton. 4_,is o.rn ISll'IH !ofd 1·1 BoslOfl 11 MOntret4, 4.lS • m (ac.IOft laeCb ...... , l 11 w.....-.,-,~ SI Liiv'\ ., o.troil lOS om TllurNlrf"• 6- WHll "''°" II New Jenev, • tS o.m l MO<'trff at leston. OS om (If '*9WYI ,.,....... GefNI 0.1ro.1 11 St LOUll , US P l't\. (It ..........,, ~--~ ~., ot WI~ t..n ._ (W ,_..,..., 9°'1(111 •• ~':.:.:(II~) St Loul~ 11 Oe"9ot, US p rn. (I NeaW"fl 111,L...., NOTa.:""" -~ ,...-..,_, ~ .....,. .. ._... .......... *1lft. ..... , ... -""*'•• ... UU le, ..,,ft (I, II MlrC:UI conoa. io. Sout,_11 c.111orn .. It 111 A•• H~. It. Otlio St111 !J, ijt) Ow1h °""'"· da, ..... lde·LA• VtN> ts 1111 Ge.-we ~ wt. NlveOe·L.ft V .... (I 1311 Hou•lon Heoor«, oe. Jac;),IOll Slot• 11. 140> MldlMI iw .. nes, wr, "Of11ltrll At110l\e (7. \661 ~ P ll<-n II>, AlllMlma (I I,.) Jomft Prunu1. 111. U(LA If. 1221 s1 ... C1avto<1, Ol ....., !>ta .. 110 7501 ~ Mlllln9 wr ~ Ill, 17t> Cert• W-.., da. 11 ... , ..... Tedi m , *> ..,......., Tllurtnan T~, ''>. OIUaflOITll Sia.. 12 ••n 8tfnero F0<a .,, Cetttral F10rt0t () 661 l.t4lt Gl6Soll tt. Pitt IS 1211 Kio Ro.ch. Pk. Wn1..-n Carol"'• 1S llSI Dan Mur•.v II> EHi SlrOUO\OurO 1, ISOI Tom &orck• OI, Mernc>fl•\ !>te t• 17 1n1 Bo WrtOftl, 111 Ala· !Mme 11 1'4 Jonn Haov Clb Te1a• 11 10t1 Hf! Wr'llf'lr l\I (l'"tre M11\0U'I !>te •e II , 7111 c1rtt011 e. ... ~· Nort11 C¥Olofte 1• ns> Mor'l111 Mavf\e• ao FIOr-St111 · 10 2'21 Pett Curktf'OIU "' Penn Stal• 111 2"1 JoM OriKott OI Ne• Hem""'''' I l7 )Of) Tom Erlanct\Of'I. Ill WH""•Olon • 12 31" ChU..Bun 9rao Mu''" ro S•1nforo 11, 2lJ wanoea Dav•\ wr. LSu 771 O•"'• ~. 11 Oltlal'loml 12 Sit Reor. Jarv•\ oe T~ tl 111 J m TllOtnlon •t Fun.-rlon S•e•t 14 lOSI Tro., ~ o Qo.la"Oml IS 1131 L- ShnMlrl Oii Toi\ Teer 6 1611 c-Rtfll'I 01 OlllahOml '1 199 D••·a Te••· 011 COloreoo II. 108> Hervo ~ffa. ro Howa<d tt . 2111 R094 ~ wr LSU 9 24SI Joel Por1tr 01 BevlOr 10 21) S•e.t 1'0<1;1\ I> "Mt>raV.e 111 )01 C.•"11 C •'-o A••t0'\11 Sra•e 111 m ~-11 ---\ Ric~er D·•Ofl Jli Qto. .. ,.,..,.,. I ,SJ E_,., '10.ev· Wooa•. ro N~eoe ·Lu llevH 17 311 Kevon Wtllt.t• ·o N'•••141no 13 S7) David Grenl nl Wnt V••ll•n·• 14, 141 H~'> Wt\t41r 01 low• IS 1141 Peu ;1110<1 09 Tun 16 1•11 R~ro R.,...r O UnlO<I NY 11 161 CUt1•\ ~.... •• C.••"'()1•"9 !>•••• • • ltS I 8r11\dv Wt\•\ clO No•rt Oemt If 7161 Ello\ O•••"""' 00 E 1\1 Ca•OI •• 110 2Sll P..,. Hicllert I* Murra. S•a •e II 1tO Cer Ptrk, W' lle"C)trl) I 2 J071 0.Veloftd .,.._ C•rttoro ,,.., •on II Fior·oa (I n I Mt<:l\ae' Dean Ptrrv 01 Cie"n\Oft '2 SOI Ila., Wa It<\ II> ln<l••n• ) 71 """IO"• Bil•IOC\ Ob Woni!on·s.lam S•e•t I• 100 l l\ant Gt~ Oii Ent Tr<1"ft\ff !>•alt 11 1•1 J J B••otfl ..,, Oreoon 8 2161 Dennw C®-"CI di> En•e<r Ktntuck1 ' 2441 8r I~ We~·l>ll'O'I 01> .... breue 10 7nl Hendley H1#•1n\ .. , Nl' brnk• 111 300> Stt•e Slav<letl oo Oukt 111 )211 Dl&a1 Cewtiev\ M<llll!I ir.;,r wr M.em• 1'141 41 11) t(.., N0<ron. II UCLA 2 41 Mark Mul\Of\ 09 Oltlanome l 61 t Oavod w de<! o• Bt>\•Ot' Coftl'9l' • •• Seo•• !>ecu4\ QO V·ro.n•• 16 ISi Ow~ Hoo•t" o• 0rt90" S•att 1 111 Ma~k H•911\ •0 Ktl'tUC• v t 10SI 8r •" Bldf0<d wr (.;illt0<n•e 9 m1 81u .. Owtn\ di> Pttt t 10 2'31 C"OO Ht<W'•llG\ 01 llo.•r Fore.• ti I 190 a.... Hummt' tO UCLA 12 )17 '*"'*~ T~ G•lllO'' "' !>vrtcu\I 1 74 Ger•., Pfo<r-v o• So..t•,,.,n U"*"'Pf'' •v 2 •S , t111.., Gu-«v oo LSU l 7'J Corr., E•• n dD C..,tTai FIO<.O. ( 5 13' Pa• Ke1fv te !>vrecuw 11 17•• Garrv Fr1n' c Mi\\oHJl•O< Sla te 17 1'11 Mel F1rr r1> UCLA C9 2 .. 1 Cnenn•"9 Wlll•Om\ rD, Arlzon• Stalt 110 2 .. 1 R1cl\4lrd C1•,.1n rl) WHl>•nglon Slett 111 31)41 Jollnnv Carier "' Gr1t'TIOl•"9 !.•••• 117, 1"1 O......UIM ~ 8..0.\ 00 M oam Fla I I )I CIV·\ ~an. II> Ol\oO Slate 2 791 Pal Ctl"t•. ••. FlortOa S!att 2 »1 Rav llOUl'Cllr• •r. ,,...... Sltlt ll Sii W•11<1m W"''" di> Ot>•O S111e 14 ISi E•< Anool\111 og LSU IS lllJ C.n Po1ntltt" rtJ Hemoto" " 142> J~ Ja~ wr Slel'lorO 11 1'9 Ge•v ~•04 Ot M,.,nft01e II ltll IC p Corr1"fl0<' CID Ttu\ A&.M If m 1 Tooo Irv·" o• M•u•u PC>• 19 n. Peco Cra-11 ''" UCLA 10 754 O•""• Moc.C°"1 <Ill Cine•""•' 1 21 Gr-.a.v.-1dlan S•er'·l>ll !>,,.roe wr Sou111 C1ro11ne 1 Sl\lwn PtllefM)ll di. Ar·tOlll !>tete l1 )41 l(ftll\ WOOd\IOt •D TOH A&.M (), '1 ROl4 •n Putz~r 01 °'"°" «• u ChY<t. Ctc1 OtJ Aro1one 14 "' Oe•re lleea ltl OI< lflO<na IS 1161 Joie•t Holl oa Auo..rr• • ,.,., Gerv Ric11e•a db p 1• 1 1n Pe•r;c,• COltlf>\ rD Qt.la~ I 100 "'e• w, • 1nM>11 •t Je~ Mad.son" m 1 e .. o Kf'Yfl Ob w .con'"' (10 2S61 Sco11 Bo>tOt' wr A.,l)urr1 17 )17 Heus-~ Lorenro Wl\11t r o M·Cll-~ Slat• I I n i Ou•"''" Jone' Otl p,11 2 4 • G•"ll Mon190m erv o .V.•cl\•11•~ !>•al• l 11 Cr1 \ 0 '11n\an dtl 1>.;rOut IS 17S Cr• s llf"l'ul\t 11 C"'C" Slalt 5 1301 ll:urt C••"' O Aubur" 1• 157 Trace• E11011 .,., Por11ano !>••I• t7 1171 D••• ll•Hf't c M.n~•• °""''" II 114> DavoG S0<101n o TeaH Cllr•\ltltt t 1411 Marco )Oflnson wr Hawe 10 77 p Je1r.ro Fr an~~n "' Frttno S1e1t 111 7'91 John aran11e.. II Georoia 117 l251 lrdaN-1 Ctfh C>vrl Cllat'dlfr ~ WaV-Otot' fl 761 M<f\MOI 8a dtl Sout~ U"•,..r\olv 4 10'2 JOl\n B•vior db !>ou•~'I '>\•urn PC> S 11' Jeff Hef•O<I !ti .V.·\\ U-00• t 7tl 0 Br..., A~ton D ~rv•ano 110 110 Do<>n·• Dee o. Tul\a C 11 2'71 llo.elr()" o.ennev wr W1\COn\•ll Sle .. .,,\ Pgjnl 11 lOt 'f',,.. llHlll>Q 01o Slrf'KUW I 11 111 Klll\H ClfY Cllleft Nl't 5"' "' :>t N.o<u•e 1, 21 11..tY·" Potter, di> A, o • l S9 J R "'"'°"ow •• _,.,._,_, l4 .. • .;a"'"' w-. ro M n JoM Stile (6 IJ' T•o• S•eama., Ill Wallltlurn 17 170) All'rWOO Rol>I''\ It M•em• F'I II. 1t71 A111udd.n Al>Ou• Ile ool wr Marvlon<I 19 7141 1<-.. Geml>'t •o COlllll4! 10 2Sll Din~,. McMonu.\ Ob ~ &o< <11 S••tt 11 711 l Le\ A....-S Rt~ TJm 8•0#" •r loj01'1 o ..... (I ' Tt''V MCOtn~ dtl T-''" t !><ott DI• \ Ot r "°" 11 1S 1 .., li!o•,..• o· "'"°'•"'• it '<>• 0-•S ~·Ct 110 UCL A cS 1)1 E•••n Gral>t~ II> C••• vv~\•ern ttnarve 1• 1'3 Derrietl CruOut> 01> Otl>al>Oml 17 171 ~ Ate•e..O.• •r Ptfln Slate II l"l ll-Wa<t re AuO"'" It 7171 S<Oit Tal>Or o (alofom•a If Z1' N-• ~ ..... OI Yllttl T .. H Statt 110 7SS DewoC Yllltler • CarrOll w J 111 713 G•"ll ._.,,.,. .. oo K1r1tuc.h I 17 3111 LetA,,...,RWM Gilton G•ff" •o UCLA (1 141 A.aron Coa wr Ar1r-S•e•t 11 201 A"ll\Ollv Newman db 0rt90" 2. lS vvllLt A~wn, wr UCLA (2 4'. l'•ec! ~"(~Incl II) PufOU. 12, 0 . M.kt p.. d' ,,, ...,., l 11 ctallef• o..M rt> M''"°"' S 1111 Jtrne\ 1NaWfll9•111' di> UCLA IS ll'I ti.t '!! -111, NtOrs\lla 16 1•71 )~ I( naP'<><' di Wvom "II 16 1651 O.rrvi ,,,.,,....... ... We\"•"ll'O" ••• 2011 .... FO\I~ OI, Mo<\111\41 • 7>11 ll C Mul>ft ot Soul!" wftl...,. Lou•\•"• 10 251 Jeff 6Mlt'\otd ,., Sout"4'tn o-.-2 l331 M<al'ftl~ Er< !(.,,...,~ .. OI OfloO Stole (1, WV'\ William\ OD ror.oe ,7, O l F.,... .. E~ i., M¥'¥\t"CI I) n1 ~ JoN>i011 el, 0.le· ,.,... 1 • " ttoo,,..,. ThotftH •· "~ Y~ IS 1761 MOl•ln 9ral10n. rt> ~. Fla C. 1531 Gt0t" c-. 111. OfllO $&tte" 1561 K-•n hi, Oii l'iorlda 17 1111, Herr'\' Gal· llt'fflll oo T.-."81~ II 2121 Loult C"-, 01 fua• A~M II ?201 Jilft Cr•u •· No,_,,, If'~ Kll!C'-.. LSU I 12 ~I MINc ..... va• ..... oe, Mlctvtla"I Sta• 16, \~) Ml9.4t ,..,_, a . M" JoM 5•••• (7. 11SJ Denio w.lltaw. lw, M•H~ \/ollfv Sft fll (7. t .. l """""' Liiv, •· ~.. Tecil "· m1 anc Hki..,. .... .o . ..,.,.,. Ut. 191. s~ Wllln, ... ~-St ... 110. HSI (,f' .. Hwrl&. wf, Trov S'•'• 111. JM) David l'Wtl tit lrW'i1'1'1 Veullf 112, l Ill .. "'°9ft Me(armlctl, di. '-'"' CMClllM (11, m l .... y~ .... Oat;t ~. ot, Sout'*" C..lllllirnio 11. II ffl'IY Williein• 00. let"'--Coek"*' 17. ,,, I! rlll McM!llon. dD, MitMurl IJ. "l Ja,,,. Hn•• Oii. Whlltft9!0ft !i•••• t>. 741 Miu WilTlvcOlnN. •· I'"'""' siote tS. nfl ....._ l'r1M "'· ,.,,~ "· 14'1 Gerv ....... 111, Enteni Micllite11 (1, 1n1 K.lilff! '"'*-1, ia, .....,..u.. 11 •» .. ..,. r-. .. -. .. , Cllft•• "· no1 Jot111 aoo11r. a , T••n c:.w ... 118111 410. tS7l >onn G"'-tn, II, 80.IOll C ..... (II 2'11 Albert Gou di, JIQ."811 ,, ••• 112. )14) "It ....... Kelll\ Jae"'°" le, 0..lellOnla 11. lJI Efl< A""' •• ,..,.,.,.. Slett t2. JOI Mall PatCJ\1111 ot M;aml Fta IJ 6SI Erk E....,...1, a . Te&OJ Tac" IS 122) Don M<"'*Mll 411> SJ'f'a<UM I' l .. J Roo S•erftlCI, cit. Mall"lt 16 1 .. J TOdO WMt w~ Fuo.r1on Stale 11, 1761 Dl,.ld Sm II\ ro Wntttn Ken1ua... II lWl Joe Scr..n•e< di, lowe 110 2'11 IH I JenlllM. db. Horii\ C••Ol!lll S•att 111 M l Slovt K1utuw' CM Br'9f\lm YOU1'9 12 )If) ..._.~ I(.,, .._...,.v b Ct • 10rni1 (I, 121 T OllV Jefl~.,. •II Te .. , c"'"''.,. 12 lll Tom T ..... Cll>·O Ol\oO Sle •t I) 61> ~ 9'om, Oii 11.rg1n•• u.._ • •s1 Cl'fll c;..,,., to II•"· oert> II CS. 1101 T Ollv JOfoan, rb IC-• S1a1e IS 1371 Joo Pllill•I>\ 00 Olllaftaml 16, 1411 Er1'11 Jonfl wr lno .. .,. t1 , 11'1 Til'ft ,.,_, Ill M.c"'N" S•ett It 206> S<ott Dll °" ~Pf\•\ S•a•t 9 23l) Anctv ~ wr M·•"" ot Oflio I 10 2'01 K•"-M<Cow Cit. Frttn0 !>tele II 1'11 Cllf1\ Carroor dtl LSU ll7 lll> ~s ......... •••on Jo,..~ CM Eu1tn1 ICentuc:J<v 11 111 Oerrnonlfl DlwWl'I, °' Ktflfudo'f t2. t'41 Cnuco. L•'lH c Notrt Dame tl , 101 Otr•" Joroan Ill N0<•11eflt...,. IS 171) )err.. Re111 n! Ke<i'lltk• IS 1211 Wvr.,. Wlllam&, rt> M•"" Fe ' ISS> ,,._.,c l9"0 -· T-17 111 Me•• "l<"<>'l "'• Micf\olle"I Stolt It 7091 M••• H '"•"' It T-It 7111 Gor-Loe• 111~ .... ro HOlv Crou ~. 1l6) John Jec•'6n 01 E l\lttn Kt"tUCO.v CIO, 7511 Booo.,. Oew~ oo '"'"'"' 111 m i Jatnti e-1e 111 c .. m'6n 1 •1 )77 s-o-aw,._, ···-· ,.,.,,.... ..,, T..,nft-I IS ;,;, ,..,. E •' • .,, 10"'• 3, 60 Joe c-oe l>tt• Mt-••<o !>••I• I• fll Srec,. S.ar-" ot ""°""" I• 9) 0••4 ll<naros Ol UCLA • ,., C~· c I' 111•0. 111 Notrt o-16 IS71 Jc>e• Ho•••a OI T9tlnltt'" (t 2Jt) Eo Mir... ' p,,. 111 2tSI "-~ H•nlo.11 n1. 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Fia to 2••> R.c• AA<1..to0 o• Won f'OIO" I II 2141 DweVf\t He·OO"' db !oou•" C•·-S•att 111 1"1 Oa•t Onlloc"tn o• S." 0-Stait ! 12 ntl T-a.'llocca Ai P1ul Gr.-r Of W·K-I. •> ~ Ta•e. •!> c.-11.. 1 SJ> R-1 Goff dt, 1wburrt 4 tl) JOflfl Brun.n, OI T---1•, .. , Montt Rot>Oo~ o M~ " 1lJ11 Wllltom Howero 11> T~ IS 113) Sflown ~ 01 Norr. AIOOlma f6 I~ K•"v Goode rt> ._ .. _ 17 161) ""'"°"• ~ rt> East Ca•llM• ti 1•91 ll-Oaw", OI, ~ Ca•obf\a tt ns1 Fre..,.. P'lllow -T""""'" Ste•t 11 1791 V.ctor JO'lft IO y., ...... Tocl\ llt )10! ............... Cn P L_..I .... °" M•nncne>ll 12 SS1 Mille Ol Ol>lnt rb P.,...i *"'° ll .. , .J.,... ~· \ ro M<no.• 4 10f• C&"' Moml di> S..,.. ~t.>n S•a•t S 121 SI.., H"'""""tft Oii Nor'"'H' 1..0..•\•l"I U 15') ....,., ~0\, dO Sa" D lllO !>••·• (7 1'3 ~ McG·b, '11, Wellt Forttt I 711) 81a1t• '"'°'""'°" 111 Mew CO!lt91 tt 74' .._,,. 8rOWI'. OI °"'° State (IQ ?nl Cu•• t(OC" Ot C-000 II lOSl wev~ ltou D S.1' Oieeo Sta•e 12 )IS) ~ > . J()rell"I c,. 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(Sltv-J T1mo 701 4 U IX.t.CTA (l·•I oalCI Ul SO U OAILY Ta~I ll-•·ll Plld Uf'l.60 NINTH ••ca 11. m 'ft °" tun Oa~ IT oro 12 «I •-20 Po'"' 0 Anoos (Stov ... ,I 4.2t AllQ"t" ~ .. vel r.,... 1~.1 U EXACTA IH I PllCI lUOOO U IXACTA M>X 16·11 Mid t71 IO '1 P'IC.c SIX rt .. ·~4·)-61 Paid 19.4.SUO ~ 27 w.nn.ne rtct.et• (l'a f'IOf'lft), oeid 1.2'• 00 • 651 W•Mtnt 110.0li tfl ... --.n) P\dl !llM ooafl SS37 lSS SI l'tC.K .._. l)·t·l-l·t ·l · .. l .. 1 '"9 .. "464 1137 Of IO -Wlllftlf'IJ llCAOI (Oollbl ,_,,..>1' 09 d ... .0 IO t2'l WIM1flll llOl81l ( ....... llOr\ftt o.ld 5612010 l.'21 winn"'9 tte;llets (Ila llor\fll Picti n&M -UOl, .. 7 AtltflOOllCt JI 15' M..•-~ ....... .,, 0..Me....... II OAWY"l L0atU (...._, I.al -~ l>Oal\ 11' .... llln 1 Clef'l"ec:ude ... llllllllO. " roe~ t \II 174 COi.CO l>eU 10 Mfld MU 100 !"'\Kti.--' C2 -\ller1ls I molw llWW1l 1 r..,., It OC'-'""" 1S ~. 14' tM.le -di l _,. r~ ... WPORT LANOtMG -1 -~ 14 atlOl9f\. \0 oorct-21 QhC:a ..... Cl '9flt .... • madi•.., t roo htll I? \CUIOWI. 11 ~ • Ml_.1•1¥11"'4 1 ""81U ctl I •AS«•A.t.L ~ l.eaillll9 AM£1t1CA.. LEAGUE-~ MlliCfl Willoetn\ Te...as II ........ Idler, Mr PWe N""ft tor "-"'9 e Oro_. --l'- lt41fl'OO"\ -,.,. Bo\ton tted So• -W ""' ,,_.,,.. 8AL TINIO•E ORlot..ES-tte<.olleCI ••~ Sc,,.,reor. "''Cl'lor C•a.. w_.......,,, "'""' 08_...,, anct l<Ot' HUO'ln ~. ll"Wf\ "-'-'"' ftlA ,,... ..,._,..,... L-.u. s..t Jll'll Tr..., ou!i-..., O.•.-...,..n. ot'Or .. 10 lto<...,le< CA.LI F Oft NI A ANGE LS--1'\Kod I r••" Down ne --·ed 11.1..,. on Ille IS.,..y d• .. Ooecl ~ii •t''-Clt.,. 10 llo.~I 70 c.ll9d UP JU"oO< Noeiot ·nf..-r ~om Edmonton ot 1"8 Pac• c Cou • L- SE • TTLE MARINEltr<tll90 \lll De"° .._. ou<f-!!'om Ce..,... °' l"8 Jl'aclllc Cot\' Ltff~ S,...! Bric• ~171 rnt ~ IO Ce !il'Y ........ i........ ~ T LOUIS CARDINALS--Act1,,,atec Jotlrl T-ll"Cl>I< !ram ltw l~·da• d• .. -i\I Oot-Seo" •·~ o-•ct.t •o LOU<nilie OI .... lftl .. ,,.,<0<'\41. ._.._ 5-91 Atla!llK '-.._ G ttE ENSBOltt\-A"!!O<J"<eG 111e1 1111 -~ -_...._. lW ..... ~ "··-~ &ASK~LL ............... nec:ldla LOS ANGELES LAKEltS--Al!fl0UftC90 tl\e ,,. .... _.,. .. 911 "*"*' .......,, ........... ,.u... CHICAGO EltPttE~......, """'"•" '-0 ........ ltoci.• .... ~ dtrreCter - hC• •• -·'""" Incl D••• ~.,,., dlrtCIOt .. •oe•PI ~oft l'OOTaALL .............. L...- Dlt•i.e-.... ....a No.a Oeulllerfy IU•lllll't oa.at•oa1 coactl LSU-.._.., !NII ~....... ~ )...0'0 ' lee•mv t"8 "'°"' MASSACHUSETTs.-+i ...... Jlihll e,....,. INl\•••O. ~ Ml!.SISSl~A_,,... !flt f'ftlltM!loot et 11.8" GIOtofl tract. ~f\, .-Ctl... ~ la NEW ENGLAND ~ATIUOT~ ·~·[)on 9•.K''"llOft ~-... ,....,.. .... DOC-I" '"~'181'1 C-"' • IM ~ SOCCEI SAl\r DIEGO $0Cll.Cltt-~ ..._. -· .... , 1r..o JOr ClllMW 11 ~ TUl..S U ~ "'E NNI~ ASSOCIA~ ltldt• •'a G.e••f!I co "-114 Roedl M lftl "'-".,... mt" ' 'r11'1>' '""'· ~ ~ ...... lt·Ulldllr t r ... "II u 5. "'-' ..,.. Teem COLLIN Y.[Y.-IS STATE~ ... ... , ....... , ~in... ~ .......... ft !>•··~·• C.rov ol l"tw ,..,.,...._ t11° .., ... , f'Ot>ll•h lor ~ W"' ... ._.., P£ PPE ltDllfE_.,..,,. lt-.n ..._.,. •!IC o .... ,.,...... • ...,.,.,. "'*'·· '"' ..... coec"ft It J)f) Ari\ Jl<1<'4ft. "'· Te-.. TIOI 110 I JMl Tom IC~ r't> "°" Creo Cit, 1'>1 ltOllCSll NICOi~." Ar.._ Ml .. (1, ltl, ·~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~:I trao Edw8"0. • SOl.ltl ~ tt, ,.1 Al HGN. 411. Ha•• <J. 70 T.-. tl • oe. Antoftl S••*' 16 *> ~ ,~ • Mltftll, I'll IS. lHI Den"IC.tl Wblltl • Oii•• ...,. " , .. , ., ...... "-.. .............. OmeM O. lal '* C•lll • ~ """ II ,,., .... McGow •• ,:..,.. ... ~. DJ) 1t1e11 .__. di, W~ Clit, »ll ~ Faow. • so..~ ~ 1 u ''" .... hlllM ........ ..,, ~ ~. ~,..-n '-~ Cl, '11 vw ... tf~. .,,.,,,,., S... It, 0 1 T9!t ....._, Ill, ..._,. o.M fl .. "'"' 0... . ~ ~ •• fl), ~ wr. UU I• t1I TNf¥ GW'dt ... ~ uui.i-,. •t '""' ..... • ~ ,. ''" s... ...,.__ Ttd! 1'-15.tl ~ u.Nr. -· ...._ ''· ,.,, ..... GelW .. c..-..,.... Oklil tt. ,., • ...., UUoMt c. ~ 111 "'' Allll. ,. l...... ,, ,,., De.e ............ c.....12 • ............. Crail ~ ni.. ''· lf.n wr, ~ F1ll {I, SfJ T"""' ....... ft1, ~ u. tll '" ... c.n .... ~ •.*1.~ ... ..... ~ cs .. m1 .-,..,.,. -.. ..... fS. t)I) .. SlrN .. ,_,.... • Ml """ FltW Ill ~ ... (1, OteM ~. .. ~ . 1111 CWlla IUlft. -.s-o... ". ... ........ Iii!! Dittt S-lit •• 114 ~ ~ •.. ._..,..~1'9 1• Vil -· ....... 01 ., ....... •• Geer• tll r (U. THE BOUSE DEBATE CONTINUES ••. ,, What Sets HOUSE qf IMPORTS Apart from r.N Rest? -,. C>NngtColet DMlY PILOT/ Tueeday, Aprtl 28, 1088 Wtdne5day Evenings from 5 pm m WINE T AST/NG featuring fine wines from selected vineyards with an assortment of complimentary hors d'oeuvres m FASHION SHOW featuring the latest In designer f ash Ions from Jean Dahl Boutiques m ENTERTAINMENT by Sonja Stevens Piano Bar /Vocals • FolloweJ h\ Chuck Bacra;.:/1.i at 8:30 p.m. 'Boss'justanemployee now By ELLEN CAMPBELL formanccs; but it dtdn•t !.ve t~ Attna. Dlllr,..C~...,.... o"erwhclmin& ene'l)' and uncon· Theysay8ruceha5matured,(allen l saw a very nit"C concert Saturday trollablc emouonal hlat! of a typical. 1n love, aoncn happy, that he's ni&ht It wa~n·1 a Bruce Springsteen ~onderful Bruce conCt'rt. moved on to a new phase in h11 ·concert but 1t wus very good. Unfortunate!). those whett what performmaand personal life. That 11·1 There were Jood vtbcl, wann most of the audience expected al a natural step, h1sonly altemaiive. He romantic feelings, tho ughtful Saturda> night's "Tunnel of Love" can'tkecprchash1n1thestandardshis storytellin and polished per-concert a t the Los Anacles Spons fans love to hear -especially r-.,-~-~-.---.-4-STU!Dm9 ___ TQ __________________________ anauished sonas when there's no ..... --· ... -• •1111> cou••-anguish. SMcy and Melissa arc ... a-.ut Julianne, honey, spcaldna for all .... .-uv Bruce's fans -the people that really to discover a new four-letter word for love him -have an affair, act fat, sex ln the '80s:.. contract a di~se. get a bad perm. Best of alJ. dump him. He n~s 'Help! I h. be somet inJ to upset about. You're ~~ ruin1nah1s carttr. ~ Saturday's concert confused a "f""' legion of the devoted. Confronted by .. unrecotnized songs distorted by a bottom-heavy sound system. fans JOI up to buy beer. saunter to the ladies' room and generally mill about A l lNIVF.RSAl Release e ~ I '"'""' ( ._ ..,uJo" .... -----NOW PLAYING----- ...,.... • M,.L.lllTOll •LA-·~ .....0 IMTA MA WWW IM ... ~--"' MIC,_..1 _,....,,._ (-0-Mlf .... .._ ,.....~ ,,._. · •-m tttt *•u• ...,... ...,..It! WA • .W.. u.ca.MA MLLI OAMGa • ITMTOll .WiWIM 1111---""""""" -· AMCOr-.11111 -~C....,_,_ ...... -tt =--1>1-lll.-e7 ..... ....... AM *U.MAMA u •IMTA.UU. 11&-W-4tl!J "*'_._. •1-0UJ 1o111e-.... •n... ·-· -,..,,...~...,..."'9~1 A90VI: THC LAW Cit) I 00 ) 10 S 20 7 30 . ' so •nu•N TO SHOWY ••LOXI 8LUD •tvo 11 f"G> 1 Jo .,.._n, n u a 10 ) 4 0 S SO I 00 I 0 I S S 0 0 1 20 & t 40 METL.E JU ICI: ('PG) 12 40 l 4 0 4 so 7 00 ' 10 &ADV t• W""1[ ..._.,, .-eu1 T"e Gate (~·Ill A80V11 TIC &.AW Cll) Ptua T"• s ... e11th Slf11 (lit) Then Bruce would launch mto a standard and the arena was o n its fttl. relieved and grateful. clapping and gyrating to the familiar rhythms. Then they were back m their scats. listening to Bruce deliver a choreo- graphed fi ve minutes of reflccuve philosophi"Zang wnh sax man Clarence Clemons grinning and nod· dmg at his side. In contrast to other concerts. Bruce knew his Imes Saturday night. I guest the point is that he had lines. At previous concerts 1t seemed hke a) Bruce has something to say b) Bruce thinks of how he will say 11 c) Bruce comes out with some garbled hem- m inJ and hawing message that is obv1ouslv heartfelt and meaningful ~ .. Bruce SpJinCateen Bruce now has it all planned out - e'en to the several butt thrusts he treated tus females fans to. Does this mean Bruce now knows he's a sex symbol and he's making it part of his act., I resented it when he'd spm around, reach his arm behind his head and. i n a sort of Betty Grable cheesecake pose. wiggle his behind at the ens1ly pleased. screaming females. Was I supposed to scream and fa mt? He is in good shape, but please. I want to see his fa<:e contorted an pein as he contemplates some horrible social ill y cs. Brutt was-having-fun, he was happy, he danced around the gigantic stage spreadi ng joy wherever he turned. I guess I can't begrudge the SU> a good t1{11e. Maybe I'm wrong 10 live m the past. on memories of other. more intense Bruce experien<:CS. I wonder what 1s wrong. Is it him? Or me" Airporter Inn Hotel 11.AG•O •All· "l~LD WA• (II) 12 U 2 lS SOS 1 •o10 ) 01 Mrhu•uhl•• 9!.GS Col Cnu SIL C1111 Fumbling1n the dark AINDA TUlla & WO AT ITAMtO ICflH ... MOOftSTRUCK C•) S 00 7 IS' JO e•IGHT UGKTS, .. GCITY I•) S JS 1 4S 1 l> 00 By SAM BLACKWELL Of .. DlllJ,... ..... American Heart ft Association V e•OADCAST IM:WS (It) s OS 7 lS t 0 00 FATAL ATT9tACTION (•) s lS 7 40 t H • • OlllY( 11111 °".. • • ••DUS I Jt'WU •OS J M Ullf0fllt7111f( UOllUISllOlt A Bruce Spnngstccn concert 1s a collccuon of moments when hLS an1st1) as a songwriter. mus1c1an and even actor fuse into a v151on so movmg that the audience must catch T G W~ CE ~T E R ~( •·••II e•, 751-4184 J .. r e 1• "'W -fltr'"'' .... ,. "THE MILAGRO BEANFIELD WAR" (ft) l2.*2Jl.SJl..7.Jl.IHI .. PERMAN£NT RECORD" (ll'013) IZ40-2 ~ M JO.I J0..1•21 "MTURN TO SNOWY RIVER" (PO) 6·1~J0..11.IO a .oo 8ARGAIH DAYS TUlla & WID AT ST AMID SClllHllll "CASUAL SEX" (Ill) 1I0900 1045 "A TIME OF DESTINY" {t s 1~~~~~~00 "COLORS" (ft) '°"JO 1045 "ST AND I DELIVER" TUt:I & WfD AT STAflflfO SClllHlllS "ABOVE THE LAW" J} (R) 700 9110-IOO ~ UAETUAN TO SNOWY "M RIVER" (PG) SlO 7 lOUS "CASUAL SEX" ,,., us.u s 10 .JO -tl (PGI "BILOXI BLUES" 600 115 IOIS M (PG) r---------~·y il!l-1 30-1040 "PERMANENT RECORD" ------------• (P013) s JO 7 JO., JO "BILOXI BLUES" ATHEW M00£ttlCK IP01" Hs.&Ol-IOIO IREA El TORO llMME lAllllMDA •ITMTOM ~nn B1ea Ptiza Edwards Sadole~ Edwards UntVersity Pacific's la Mirilla EdYrards Vrboe Center 529 5339 581 S880 854-8811 ~-2•00 891 0567 •COSTA MESA Ellwards Town Center 7514184 •OMllGE CenturyClnedome634 2553 •PftESEN'TID IN( .... T••·•T•-ol" lto0--•oa,__ 11 its breath before erupting mto cheers. That's what we've come to expect from Springsteen. a nd that's much of what was m1ssmg Saturday n1Jht at the Los Angeles Sports Arena m the second concert of Spnngstttn's five- night Los Angeles stand. At this stage of the game. it's as impossible to imagine S{>ringslttn giving a bad concert as 1t is Jack Nicholson (in attendance Saturday night) a bad reading. Both arc too much the pro. But an actor's charactenzation 1s a proouct of ltfe experience, many hours of rehearsal and spontaneity. At ·past Springsteen concerts. }'OU knew that was the real thing up on the stage This ume there's been too rfluch rehearsing and not enough room left for immediacy. It could have been a bnlliantly d i$gu1sicd Spn ngstttn impostor. The moment that proved otheTWlsc m 'Saturda) night's 4-hour concert came when Springsteen. alone m a spotlight wtth an acoustic guitar. pla)ed "Bom to Run." the liberatma rocker that made him famous m "t 975. as the moody. slowed down. desperate love song 1t must have been written as all alone. It was like hearing this most fam1ltar of Spnngstccn songs for the fi rst time. "A80VE THE LAW" ~ , ... ~)··· "STANO a DELIVER" (PQ) S4!1-1 .... IHS "COLORS" (Ill) 5'0t·7.Jl.ll• TUEa& WOAT SfAMED SCM£NI • The approach fit nght in wnh the more 1ptimatc material from Spring- steen's the new ··runnel of love~· album. Spnngstecn and backup sing- er Patt)' Sc1alfa sang his sometimes r----------------------------~ hopeful. sometimes harrowing love songs toc-10-toc in a bit of acting that should have made Mrs. Sprinastccn jealous. * "CASUAL SEX" (R) Hll*lt• "THE MILAGRO BEANFIELD WAR"(") "BEETLE JUICE" 12'1t·l Jt.S•·7 lf.lttl (PO) "BILOXI BLUES" ______ u_!l_1_•s_1_0_• __ __,.-tf (P01,, "LAOY IN WHITE" US J.ll.S l&-1#1'.U (P013) "STAND a DELIVER" "THE LAST EMPEROR" ______ s 1_!1_, _ • ...;.,_•s ____ "It (ll'O) (P013) ET PICMl "COLORS" 11 45 1 4~-tM.l!l-I Jt.le-JI 7" lttl (A) .. GOOD MORNING 111.0XJ ILUES" s le 1 OO 11 15 tf VIETNAM" (") (P013) ..---.-.A-B_O_Y_E_T_H_E_LA_W-,-, --<• 114!1-l l!l-54$-1.t!l-l•JO _____ ,_1!1-&_J0._1_._JO ___ .~ ,,., .. ABOVE TH£ LAW" 7" UO (ft) 1f "MOONSTRUCK" (ll'O) !1.lt·7Jl.UO 011140 "WAU ITMET" (R) a JI FAMILY aARGAIN NIGHTS 12.00 TUEllWEDITHURI AT ITAMID ICMlHS .. COlORI" , .. , !I JOUOHIS "THE LAIT EMPUOR" t1.. (P011) llSJ ftCTW ~ 1• ••» "HE'TLa JUICE" * 7 •• r.:\ ... ' "LADY .. WHrTI" (ll'011) ~.J0..745-IUS "THE~Y" ~ CR) llf.l.4$-lOU ''PERMANENT RECORD" (P011) I Is.& IS.II U "ABOVE THE LAW" M. C"l T 7 ... t-... IUS "COU>ftl" '") UUJt.IU~ llA"°"* MA~• MONOAY THAU SATUNlAY tST TWO ,.UTUAl!'S I •C U •Y H0\.10A"1' • S•All_,l(Oo • f l'(A'Vllttl OOUT snno LUCAS KAAS LADY IN WHITE 111 1•s ) JS' 0 lti .. u "°'" snllOIOlllll -l wu G000 M04tNING VlnNAM fel 11llJ .. ,1S 7 u 1•>1 WMt OUMYS THI fOX AND THI HOUNO IOI lt,)S 1JS t IS 00\IY ITIMO MfCHAll J roa HIGHT LIGHTS, llG CfTY Ill .... L'Jt l ... c_. .. ~.., ll IJ1'14 '111 f •••" 1 • O•• ""'• ,. RlllC. S'lt1' ~• lltllrllSOI T..-11 MIN ANO • IAIY IN! 11. J ,. s 11 1 •• ,. PHMANINT l:ICO.D , ... ,JI llll ,.4 ...... ,, .. ... DOI.• y JTfttO ltllu. TO IMOW'f llMI M ntl ~ CONl'INUU IN! ,. Jilt WI 1'4S , .. uA.-..~MICll .... CASUAL llJt f .. IOltN IN IAlf LA. ,. M.-r--MO DMllUCIC _.. WMl.Rml11t 'I LAMIRAOA . ,,,. OOlH sn:110 MAN HNKllOMJlf OUVAU COlC>aS 19' 11• l. .. s . ·-t•ll AloNf M>fC1 PllMANINf llCO«.D 1,,_.111 12:JeJ:U4-6'4SltSO 19:U &IN CllOSS NU> NATTT THI UNHOLY ti) I IS J ll J:M t.•S ,_,,. \ SflWN KAGAl AIOVI '"I LAW 111 I II l • i:ll 1>4J •.U WllUrUI llUlf~ llU'f'IOlll A TIMI Of DlmNY 1•1ai IHI I.II SA t;I) IMS IUT SJtUt_Mm._ LOV...._~ STANO AHO DILMa <Nt , ............ " ... GATEWAY aGUf "'90..aw& GAfON 11muuic1.,,.. 11a 1a 4:ll ._.La , .... IOUTPWOUA~ vtC1'0lllA ~ICIOH CASUAL SIX ? "'1 lilt ,,_ S.lt 1M .,_ llM DOI.If SJUIO ""'YTMIW UOOftlCll llLOJU ILUIS 1.0.111 ,,., , ... IOUT "9aO lUCM 1W1A LADY tH WHITl 111 t~JittSllSUl l•U IOUTlmD-- Till SIVINTM StON 111 lbU~•s...u...iut•t<M RITilttft TO SNOWY ~ H fMI LIOIND CON'ltNUU ""' ...,i,,.,,... ... I LMYIHWMITI ...... UIA ....... ~-fMI Mft ,_,,_ CAIUM llJl f 11t ~---­•a.a.a.-. WMl Amt• IO-. .. Ult LA. 11t ........ MOWl-LAW• ---- But there were few of the bet-wttn· song mo nologues that ma<k Sprina- stttn 's reputation as a great tcllCT of stones Little that allowed the au- ditnce into Springstecn~s confidentt for a glimpse at the emotions and thinking behmd the song. It's as if the emotional honesty of this new ~oup of songs makes him want to hide bchmd pirouettes and a funkily-dresscd horn section more suited to a community vaudeville act than to backing up one of rock's (cw hving lcgends. MJybe this cnttc1sm is unfair. The new songs work. "Tenth Avenue Freeze Out" and "Back Strttts" brought the familiar fcclinf back. and "Rosalita" 1s the rock 'n roll son.a that never fails . But when the crowd walks out of a Springsteen concert not talking about th~ Sprinastecn concert. somcthina is m1ssma. Firms adopting flexible benefit plans may double Survey shows 40%0f programs in· 87 were less than a year old By ILENE SCHNEIDER ...,,...ew, o •1 1 Prospective employees of\en weigh benefit packa&es more strongly than salaries when decidma whether to accept a job offer. Not all employees want the same benefits as their co- workers. Married employees may want more or less health care coverage, dependina on the covenae their 'POUS6 -have ~ l>theT 1irms. -some employees may opt for more paid vacation days. Manr employers are replacing tra· ditiona benefit programs with flex· ible benefit plans, ac:cordina to a nauonal survey by A. Foster Higgins & Co .• a New York·based insurance consulting firm with an office in Costa Mesa. The number of employers with I ,000 or more employees adoptina flexible benefit procrams will double ·NYSE UPs & DowNs l--~---~-~-----~o --~ ---~- by the end of 1988, the survey predicted. Of 912 employers re- spond.ins. II percent had Dex pn> arams in place by mid-1987. Another l S percent will have them by the end of this ).Car. Flciublc benefit procrams are de. fined as thqse offerina employees a choice amona types and levels of benefits. Mostemployers(S9 percent) said they had implemented ncx proerams to contain benefit proeram costs. "We're sectng a fast-developina trend ... said Frank O.Bmlardino. the Foster Higins principal in charae of the survey. "Forty percent of the J:ograms an existence by 1987 were SS than a ycac.Jlld." _ What accounts for the sudden upsurac? DiBcmardino claimed that the trend is driven by a combination of factors. "The workforce 1s much more diverse today. and the costs of traditional benefit delivery systems are accelerating dramatically. AJso. there is greater worker awareness of the value of benefits. and federal tax (Pleue eee rLltlllBLlt/M) .. 1 OTC UP s & DowNs .. -- Eunice Down!o/ was a nice person Defore . . . before she underwent Fatjal Rejuwnation. BUt she wasn't nearly as friendly and energetic until she took the remarltab&e medical treatment that lifted even the ~ wrinkles from her face. ' Facial Rejuvenation changed Eunices lik. It gaYe her a second chance to look as young u she let. And because it~ a non,,urgical treatment that remcwes old skin inste4'Ct o1 - stretching it tighter the way facelifts do. she'll look SO when she~ 6.5. Fif ty-fiW when she~ 10. "tbU. get the pictu~. 1lw O'Neil Clinic CM\*> retnOW acne scan. ~on hUldi and arms. ~and varicole wins and a ranp ol other skin problems you ml)' haw ~t youtt MYe to liw with the rest ol your life. 10 eq>Wn thne Ncia1 RejUYeNtion ~un. O'NEIL CLINIC Medical DiNdo(r raly J. O'Neil M.D., will J>retent a ~ f-teminm' entidecl. ''r.titl ~: Givi"I -..,.,, Stilt• S«oM ~·· °" ~ AprU 2811t 7:30 p.m. in the Herbor ~Cf the NMtpU"llli lttort. 110'7)alllbone ROid. Newf'0'11wh. CA. ,,._tlw).nboi• Eddi Fwy. a. ..... pmceedwt. dw ~pant• ..... • .. & ,,,,.,, -~ ..... ,,, ....... ,., J.a.Jfl.W •7N .... .,,.... .,. dNEIL C fc ..... .... ,....,. ... ..... la1 la CA .... '"'-•llall c... ... c ..... ::':L ... Third Worl«S eetsusecl coDlputera WASHINGTON (AP) -fet bijtMcch products ~ as UDWU~ u used compuiers. and t.boutandl• iunkcd each year in the United S.td: But now more than S 1 million ~ of these hiah-tcch ~~ ~headed from Amttica to the Thirf World. Since lettin& up fonnally in Marett the Global TcchnoloSY Fo.indatiot has reoeived J>ledlcs of ~'*'4' dOnations wonh that ma. -.., dra\vn rtQuests for cquiP'fte1'~ as far as Ban&ladcsh and Zim said one or the founden. Philio Friedman. • With the accdcraled pece of i• novations in research and t~ n<>IOI}. a computer ,encTation CM last as htdc as t-o or three yean in the United State5. After that. • · solnccnet sett-in. Elec~fying experience A man-made bolt of ..... ~ etrlkee an model lo a Northrop COrp. IUoratory ln Hawthorne. The loc:reuecl ue of UCht- wetiht materlala and eenaltln electronic llyetema makee 11.iJa=~don more cradal than ner Ia dalen· ComJ)"ter-expert,, Amc1ican bmio- nessmcn and Third World spcciali.Sll laud the idea. Forcomputerbus1nesses. the don. tions are financially beneficial: ~ arc a tall deduction. The first thing we do is listen. We let you define your goals. Then working with you, we develop a strategy to This announcement is neither an offer to sell nor a solicitation of an offer to buy any of tbe$e MCurities. Tbe offer is made only by the prospectus. copie:I of which may be obtained in any st.a~ as may lawfullf olfer thhe securities in compliance with tbe leCUritia laws of sucla Sta~. New Issue Effective April 12, 1988 PO~ INTERNATIONAL. INC. of Hununcton Beech. California 2.500.000 Stw. Pritt: $2..00 per &bare help you meet those goals. A ~~;;::~:;;:::;::;::::;::;;~ comprehensive, far-reaching invesonent strategy, executed by a portfolio manager with intelligence and experience . Because making hasty decisions based on market S\vings isn't why you've come to us. Finding a bank with proven performance through dec- ades of changing economic climates. A bank that takes a truly individual approach to your portfolio. Thaes the only reason to come to the Private Bank at Bankers Trust. I If you have inveStable funds of $1 million or more and would like additional information, write or call: Mr. David P. C3ttrell, Director, Bankers Trust Cc>mpany cl ailifomia, N.A, 300 South Grand Aven~ Los~, California Tel. 2131620-82~. . .. .. . YPILOT/l~ • .-H.1111 MUC M>ntl In accordance with the provisions of Secuon 1773 of the LabOr Code. the St••• of Cufomla, Director of the Depattment of lnduatrlal R*atlons snail determine th41 general prevailing rate of wages, ~~to the WOf. k to be done, oopi. of the lat•t o-*., wao-rate determination• are on me at the office of the City Cleft( Md the office of the Director of Pubic Wonca of the City of Huntington ee.ctl. California Plana and apeclficatJons. together with proposal form, m.ty be obttlned .i the offtce of the Director of Pubflc Workt, City Hall, Huntington Beectt. caltlornla No bid will be rec.1V9d unleu It It ma<M on a blank form furnlahed by lht Dlteetor of Publtc Wonct The trp«lal attnlon of protpeettw bidders la c:11tt.d to tM propoaet requlttm*lta, Mt forth In the specJbfton&. for flA dw.ctlons • to the bidding. The above quantlU. •• approximate only, beh'9 gfven • a b-. tor the c:iomper1eOn of bldt, Ind the ctty of Huntlno'on 9Mch c:toea not expr.-or by lf'nPIQtlont aigtM the1 the &1"91 *'*'"t of~ wtlt GOrreepond therewtth bUt ,_...... the tight to incr .... or~ tM amounc of any c .... or Portion of the WOtk. • i. mey dMrMd MQtMIO' Of'. ~lbV the Dlr9Ctor of Pubk Worka -Cl AnaT1 Alll9 ........ Cllir Clllk Pub11Mc1 ~ C0111t -NIM_. ti, 21. _,a. , .. TUii FLEXIBLE BENEFIT PROGRAMS GROW ••• P'romU rqulat1om1 •~ la\lorablc to cm· plO)C~." Employen with flex prQ&nms n· poncd spcndina 12 l)(rttnt kn on he3lth benefit than ernrloycn without ne~ when the COil 0 health benefits asa pcrccntaseof pe~toll was C'Ompartd, "Howcvu, it's difficuh to say whether this is entirely because ot iml)lcmentina flex prosrams," said Oibernardino. "Flu propams of\cn 1rt antroduccd in conjunction with stru(tural C'hangts in health C'lrt plans Abo. the oewncs of most pmrams makes valid measurement difficult.'' Fif\y-&JX percent Of flex emplo~rs were able to make 1 determination on cost-cuttit\I effect1vcncss. Forty~ne percent of these sa1d costs were lower than they would have been without · Muru4 L FuNo s the Ou ~·· About JO pmat 11 d that thetr costs row. The most C"Ommon rcuon liven by employers for not cttablilhint I fltx Protnm is -administrative ttqWtc· men ts... pertkularly for cmplo)ttS with fe~er than 2.SOO employees Nearly 21 ~nt of all employers dted lhe administrative con«rn. "Apin. we're seeina lbe newness of this lrend." 11id Di Bernardino ... lfan emplO)-cr lookrd at flex plans several years aao. then administrative prot>-lcms certainly were a challenge to adoption. Only a few rcsourtc$ of- fered administrativ~ software. and these solutions tended to be fairly expensive. There are many sophisti- cated systems available now that arc reasonably pnced." Employer intemt in fleluble ben· efit procrams is incrcasina for reasons other than cost-<onlainmcnt, acxord· 1na to DiBcmardino. "We alM> ~ wc>rtina wath d~nu to help them ofrtr lon&•ttnn care C'0\1-Cf'llC lhrouab Ra ~· and to dnian flex prosrams for mirecs. FleA mt ex«utivci IS anolhcf' area that'• arncratif\.J&rowinJ i'!ternL'' . The Foster H1111ns survey in· dicatcs that the prevalence or flex Protrtms varies widely by JtOll"IPhic ~on. cmplo)tr 1iu and typt or induwy. Flex propams arc most common an the north ttntral st1c.n. Medium sizes employen -those wuh between I 0,000 to 20,000 cm· plo)'cts -arc more likely to have Qex proarams than employers waih smaller or laracr workforces. .. Banks and other financial services firms art more than twice as hkcly as other companies to have flex pro- grams.'' DiBernardino said • • ' II Ny s E c 0 Mp 0 s I H TR A~~~ c TI 0 ,_. :: TUE8D.A.Y'8 CLOS.a PRICES 1 Market gains modest t-.E\\ ) ORti.. (APl -The stock market I po)led some modest gains Tuesda). althou&b n g.3\ e bac ~ some or the-morning's advana durma I afternoon tradin,. The marle-t gained strength through most of the morning. but re1~.ated m the earl) aftttooon bt"lore ad' ancmg once again m the final hour. Trading "'as rclat1vcl) hghl Before the marlet o~ned. tht govcmmcn1 repont'd that the the cconom~ ~at a 2 3 percent an nu.ti rate m the first three months of 1988. That v.as dov.n from arowth of 4.8 ~t tn lhe Dl.:1ober·OC'~mber quancr. but t~ powth estimate-fell "'ell v.1thm most foteeaSt.s. "'nal)Sts said the market has taken SOmt' encou~menl from the fact that the cconom) has nol ~d down as some had feared afttr last October s crash But l~ noted that mam mdt\tdual in"eston remain l~r) about gemn1 bad into the m.atke1 bttau~ of the 'olauht\ that has follo....ed ~ crash · The Dov. Jonfi average of 30 mdus1nals. 1,1,h1ch ro~ a"'' 1scd 20.88 on Monda). advanced another 8. 79 points to cl~ at :?.044 76 Monda} ·span had 1nittalh bttn ~ned asa .,, , . ---' "5$· WHA T AMEX Dm I WH ~T NYSE Dio ~~---==-==----~ NEW YORK AP) 40f'. 2' I l 1 I AMEX LEA DERS I NYSE LE~OER S -------- 1 GoLo QuorEs ------~ --~ HEW YORlt CAP) -AMI Dow Jann ~fOrT1. ~· ... . CM ,H~ ~ v~ f~it ~ ~t.;~ 1 ri '5 Stk 1Jilt ' Hr~ Ju,1:. , '"°"' ,,) 1. Tra~ ,015. Utt~ J . .o3. 00 65 Sr11 211.n0'.900 METALS Quo TE s ""'------- I NASDAQ s u ~~~RY "------~ --------~ F0t more tntortNtton. c8I (714) 868-7661 l CALL 642-5678 FROM NORTH ORANGE FROM SOUTH ORANGE Jiit c...a Iii llir 1111 c... ... C .. CIC YOUI' AD t-..AMT OAY r .. _____ _.. .... e«"-""-" ....... ea:....-.. ~-K'Qlf' .......... ... ..., .... ,... ......... ~..., .. MA-•.-..n .,.,-"' -----.... t _,... ___ ....... ... "..,.,..,..,.,..,. . .,.......,,... ......... ~ilfttie .... ,. ......... ..,.._ W N C9U fl/I N ..a ~~tee ............ , .. c .... , ............ .., ....... --............................ .,. ._,.......,... ............. _. ... ......... ·~c;Nit--( .... ... .. ''"" ..... ...,...,. ....-.C•.., _ .. _ ..... __ ,~ ........... , .... -. ; ' ..... , . . -•A .-: . . _,~A ~·-.. ~·~ l -~· .... .,_..,,, ¥~;;,-..• ·-----------------LUil enm 3BR. 2~BA Twnhm•. Frple. attec:Md 2 car 11•· aoe. lmlMd occpy. AMt· Ing $131UOO. _,.,llyn Coombs 831-1291. Aemodailad 3BR 1'•BA. new gourmet kitchen • master bdrm tuita, fOf· mal dining wloak par- quet. Braakfas1 nook. lrple. Owners have purchased an~thar 1249.000 C_llrt H«bart1 II 131-1266 1M4 TURTLE ~OCK VIEW $287k·3BR•lamrm+deo New wt11ta carpet. Decor· ator h<HM Fran Lugo. Cantruy 2 1 prof 557-4373 ---~ iftpert 1tac• lMt UYFIKT Newer 5BR SBA. family rm 4 llrep4aoes. Private dock for 50 boal ~ 2 slips Pool & spa $1,500.000 Appl Call Jo Ann Kariton 76()..5000 Rf/JYA( ·/ ----------'\r\Xl\.lJf l':t\ ·11 REALTOAS"' . . ' . , . .... lautt '• Salt ..... ;c.u .. -~C-.. liMiiJ t•J LINDA IS~ -~... Spacious 5 bdrm with lam-It• lllZ 2 Bedroom ...... s Dan. 2 1ly & formal dining rooms, .,... breakfast nook. two A-.cwlHE ,J. Bath Home or great in-1 & & 11 _.......,cw ..,.,.... oome potential! Under· sunny pat°' Q!i!t' s P COLDWC?U. BANl(eRO ground security parking for large yacht In New· ASKING S2IO.OOO port's most prestigious •-~ 1_ guard gated community -• ,..... nn $1,495.000 631-t400 llMISI ...... Ptaia1aJ1 IOI? \41\TI Kl H0'1 lt0\11 .. ·-· REAL ESTATE Expect the best: •lllYll 11,1ILIM ay Ave. REALTORS Mas&IYa WOOO -beams l MOK-now $455.000 Nu -- stone f~ gwe a 4br 3ba. 3100l/f 3-Sly LIDO VILLAGE feeling of warmth & AIR Realty, &73-5870 area with dock for 30 mountain luxury Cus· I OPEN SUN 2-5 8klr/Ag1 bOal 'Like new 3 bdrm tom quaUty 3 BR over-custom homes w1111 every looking 18th tee & tafr. ICenu ••l .. r 1022 amenity.·Two fireplaces. I used brick & lots ol oak 'l#S'J. ........ ~ •HARBOR WOODS• cabinetry $549.000 _. 1~R 2BA. 3 level Twnti. 631-1400 GOVERNMENT _H_O_M_E_S I Xlnt lee loe .. across from -. , S 1 00 (u ) Del o.lsons w/3 decks. 2 ear ~A Tl RFR0'\01 • repair 1n-H0'1t't a- quetit tu property For• 1 gar. pool, spa, many up REAL ESTATE closures. Rapoa. Call grades. lnel 2nd l/p In ~ 1-305 744-3000eict G205 mstr br. pri.nc: only $215K fOf eurran1 Rapo list 11'8y owner 760-3083 REAL TORS 1111 ... ,1,wa,, !GLAMOROUS. eontamp ....... , ... --m-• _,,. 3br 3'2ba Old9 COM. All W• I giw lfOU the down in amen fmane1ng avail ...... FllEI ~for a lhara of OWO-1440,000 By owner. 38R. loft, 2 18A, 2 ear P· 8'9hip YelJ rNIK• l'l91 752·S.S./d 759-0774/a 809. lar119 IOI $299,000 mttlfy pymtt & we lhara Hurry! Call Lit or Chuc* appree. You reeelva NEW 3 or 4BR V~ JonH 631·1266 or· 100% tu benefits Must dectits Old CdM wlvtct#. 646-5743 have dean ered11. Agt Top qutty Contemporary .a7-8757 Dys Ev. Wknds Cap9 Cod 6#-7302 .... ,._ U.EOUFFcumn WM~~ .. ~ .. . . . HI I a Ill Xlnt location on canyon • ..._ ______ _ w/canyon & oe4lan views ,. ~ llUI, Prolasalonatly decorated OPEi IDISE Uf ftlW 3BR 28A home Beamed Magnificent penthouse c:ethngs. new klteh. lrg lot. IAILJ 1 •I with apectaetutar VteW ciOM eeoess to pvt bet1 Oneofthelaro-t unnsin $698 000 Natalie 2111 ftlll •IUI the Villa Balboa with a 759-6600 or s.8-1569 *Wlm YJIW• spacious famlly room. llv-Memll Lynell Realty In newer North Bluffs lng/dlrnng area plus two C t • tt•.. c-.-t 3BR 2' BA bedroom•. da'n. ea-II I t11 .., ""'N:° Ag9nll -::;''~ '*~~g.11t~~· mai* TIRll• . En,oy the aac:urtty of a EASTSIOE COST A MESA WM'T WT1 pted community and the 3BR 2'-"BA. 2 e&I garaoe. s 5 _,._........., &hapooU n9W ertp, sklthghts, ly 22 .0001 Well-4oc 9P9 or walk to the beaeh. 149.900 Hurry! all LIZ ::ts~a~ ui Call now fOf an appotnt· or CHUCK JONES le&leopUon 722-7381 tMnt. 1410.000 831·1266 ()( 646-5743 lH-1111 fer s.lt •CUYN Gf~E El.KJNS arg• Fatrway Ont 15 ll-,,.ll'\.'\ U1119111Um premiumv1tWgolfeoursa liilJ Rt UTOR'9 lot. $895,000 494-8230 , .... _________ 2 HOUMI on a lot Onty ~-~-__ _ $234 ,500 Call Ron t el llltt HIR through classrf ied Young 831-126& • HSI ESUPITIYll IHl11fl peetaeular viaw ovar- loolung one of Oregon'• premiere Salmon & Staelhead flahtng rlvet9. 3BR 3BA. eontamponwy eadar hOma on 20 ~ Great vacauon. t•tlr• mant home S165,000 Call Mlek or Julie Arnold at Nancy Amsberry & Aasoe. RE 503-3-45-45e5 U.Wut• 1125 WANTED A HOUSE LOT In Irvine Of 111 V1C1nty. WIA pay S5000 • CUii ;213) 515·7964 KIM fli>m, ... tab _ .. WATlll'lllT TOWNHOME Llkt new 28A. pal O, double auaeh9d gar S1200/mo. WATERFRONT HOMES. INC .• REALTORS 831-1400 Unique 4 Of 5BR 28A, 2 atory prvt h<HM In quiet. axclusll1t community Specto111 & YW'Mtlle flO()( plen. Wonderful VleWS.. Great tront patio, p1anty WISTSall •nAll of partling All new dac:Ot. 1BR 18A, frple. MOO/mo LM avt at $3500/mo. ·· Ne. dep. Cell Rutty ~au 831-1266 11 11 .. , ... u. ** ..... ** llTT•TYN Lw11918drmMWB.ii•& A wn.11, QUl9l complex E/SIOE 28r 18a. garaoe, Fllrllle# NEW. C.,pet. nestled M'long tall tr... lg yard Wtlh pltlO, WSht· Ille drapee, paint. ~an1ty, or long term 1,. P°'* & i.vtet1 landlCllpt. 1Br hk119.S750/mo flX'tur ... GaraO•· lmmtd ocepy Oouo Ilk• new w/baleony, ca-2s.e Orange. M501mo $40-3393 Hat bit 710·5000 ot .~~~~..,..Pll"!~rliil "*1f8I eeillng. frp6c;, P· TSL MGMT &42·1603 ,_ ... _.. 18R room. • aoe. pool, ape, lndty tee. Nftly rafurb ... .... 720-3980 Move-lrt Bonu11 1 NO PETS, S700 + eac. llZI ILUI I /.. apt. Enao.d patio. <* rtr AA.A.V laut S950 1500 MC. Call Velma 549-2447 $550 1bf pool 1 paran, no to lhoppmg $590/mo ~ ./ to0SeaLAM14"4·2111 -pet1646-513711-8pm t deP 382 VICtOfl&, Of \t.\\'l\~"'fl' l°'_\·11 =~--~--,...-i ••TwnhH·type 28R Call650·724' \\ • '\. ,.._ ~ _ 2BR&2BA + gar, S of PCH, 1 ~BA. w/d hkup Gar-uns.1..-a.M REALTORS e Avt June 111. S 1100/mo tga. 3033 C0011<1ga "8 UtMs ifld, 5550/mo 1665 NEWP~T HEIGHTS 18R . m ... •HR .... Ne 509~ Famleat S750 No pat• 432-7787 I~ A~ ~A. 720-11422 ~d. no pets Vec.nt .._ UNIOUE lg Exec: tam 0.atd 875-9983 $650/mo Gas & water ~hnew ~d~r~io~~ .~.-.-•• -.. =---.--""2...,.1""'4-=I home. nt Aayaest (not Ill •2Br 1''19A TwnhH. *11111111 IEW e:t~~dh~P~~:al~~ paid. 650-2256 below Coast Hwy Island A f THE BEACH I SunMt thghl pattern) beaut view. Pool, frpl. wld hkup. S950 S2ll., ctOMt, garage No pets NR NWPT HTS 1 BR kitchen, spa tub. Im· "-·-h Condo 1Bn loll. mountn /Ir .... 4Br 11 w/ Lae Carl)Ort1. No peta. 1ST MONTH'S RENT S650/mo Call JMtl Of $625/mo would consider I t s .,..,.. bonus arM.1w/trpl)38a. •722-81401722-8011* 901 PAULARINO Cra1A831·1288 pit ehld eara & prop maeu • • orry. no pool spa ocean vu $995 lamrmw/wetbar.dlnrm. BAY & OCEAN VU-;;:::: •18R 1e• S750 -v mgmt l<X radue.d rent do0$,S2000tmonow •..e'd-.·2 131592·1811 ,....... " .,. lndry rm. 3 ear S2600/mo d9e0f above Ch na Cove •2BR 28A M50 550-93-47 MA'RiNERS WALK • L!Qhl. 645-8897 or 850-4928 1800 1/f 28'+ <Mn. oat •Pool/Spa SPACIOUS 1Bdnn UwW bftQht. awy & JUSI • lew VERSAILLES 1BR. 2nd nr. S1llOO 173-7692 •Garao-01atiwashtr. lar119 elotal, ~:k: ~~rmT~':n~ quiet loeatt<>n. lull MCUr· 38R 2BA (18r hU pvt 966-9:88 833-8917 EASTSIOE lov•ly 2BR. garage S570 No pets 11y Nope11IA119"t.nofae antry).Lgllvlnnrm&den. ••EW•••-m* Near sc:tlools & shops. CALL831-8155 Yards/patios. garages, $795/ 1--·~~1211 .. ., ...--•-flraplecet & vaulted eell· mo-""" .,...,.. New earpet & paint. Lg 2BR 2BA RaH~t Cable ready. Child ~ SPACIOUS 1BR Pool. lngs. washer & dryer Saa ltatatt 171 S15501mo. 544-5887 youra nowt $8.50/mo. No $650 No pet1831-1155 lndry. carport, stove & h<><*·uc>S 840-5870 -·-111---"'1111111-1 3BR 2 ...... I--unit Pell 117 W Vle1orla E/SIOE. $175 per Mo rafrlg No pall 1939 N San Ctamante 28R • 5l6 lr~s1"300--/mo Oay1 979-9991 EvH 2bdrm Iba. frple. ene Wallace. S565 • S350 JASMINE CRK SUMMER lniat--2144 loft 28A w/pool & park ,_ 642 1401 642 5723 RENTAL 2Br , den. fvm $00o hrst/last •$300 sec. VILLAGE RENTALS 979-3848 Pam patio, lndry rm, garage. dap • · • Tennis. pool•. gated Beautiful detached house Avt 512 Agt Vi 661-9289 * 497-S.88 '* 10 by 20·_831·~:!___ Baat, ltac• ii40 12500/mo 720-3776 3br 2ba. lrple, AC. 2-ear C • ..~... EXTRA LAG 1BR New • garage. yard. $1250/mo Stat• Coast ••trt tlta •eu .. _ mleeliBJIU **** Lrg Dramatic 2BR. 2''1BA Available 511 675-809e 2111 erp1lpalnt. m· no pets. 38R 2''t8A. frpl<:. patiO, + Iott Like new Lndry. S 5 5 O + 3 5 O see laundry hookup 2 ear gar. fplc & more St450 S,.ctactll., .. H -1m_m_ae-eon_d_o .,2br-2'!"ba_sac:_1 ""2alfleld &Plltmm **646-3618** gar ms 962·1Sa!,__ Tom 831-6107 days IHatiel Hr+••• pool carporl patio. nr S Sparktlng elean large Garden Apt. 1paelous LAG lux tri-M. 2br 21ott1 NEW 2br 2ba t-lvl eondo Frptc:. garaoe. wetbar ale Cst Pit $725/mo (213) ••••-ns Gatdan apta. Beautifully 2BR. dlw, wlwcpts/drps. 2"tba. 2 lrptc:. Approx $1400 760·5064 624-159810 660-1964/E ..... _,_ landacapad grounds cable ready End gar 2400s/I Nr SunMt Beh Lovely garden indoor __ Large. attractive apll 1n a POOi & IP•. pallos/deeks, S690 No pets 645·5577 S 1450mo 213188()..9513 lndry. gar, elubhs. Oasis TURTLE ROCK POINTE Aflrlatatl beautiful garden aatllng. garage or carpof't Sorry. .--.. -• _19 Sr area $1950 731-6232 3Br 2''tBa-family in pres-L1'N Pool/spa, gar'ao• or no pet1 . lllTllT II, ..,.n IC .. tiglous gated community carl)Ort Sorry. no pets •SEVERAL LOCATIONS 29r ,...,Ba Townhouse SP•-·-1 n-lnlLASSLIASI Available anytime Can l1lu• ZSM •SEVERAL LOCATIONS Bechelof (1\,,. $590 Laundry room all built--•--•• .... Nftlbedlord • 4BR -be leased from 1•2 yrs 1BR 18A. unfurn patlO, 28drm 2Ba S800 1 Bedr~ S655 ms. good loe S785/mo h ltH.i M2·2111 bonus. 3 full BA beaull· S~mo 786-7500 agt bit-ms t 14 Agate. Rent. 398 W Wilson 831"5583 28drm 1 ·Ba 5775 2078 Thurin 2BR 1BA. c:hatm1ng cot· ful. S3500/mo Mall WfHI lffcla 2141 $850/mo for this sum-1 ~~,;----~ 2250 ~~~~c:_ ~9626 TSL MGMT 642·1603 tage. lrple. Steps to the Gulledge 720-9800 or M";:r~:r.;a~1:; ~~:O~:~I 2308<11 rAmocad1Ba ,,~2 9s815050 eae1 .. ~or !~6055 WIE ... ~tltr IJf ::,-C~ ,!'! J:,'~21~~050 760-5000 Lower 3 Arch Bay Fum _ v o -• ....... room ... w/lrg pa110 In good loc:ala. ..., RE/AtlC I :e~20:rfh~~ F~: ... ~ .. Ptai•!:!• 1 eed,;;;-----S655 ~~~:;~-:~wnhs ~~ M701mo.859W 19th 1121m11•• \t·w1'\-...r"'YI' 1u " ·11 $2000/mo Yrly Agni -.7 24 t W Wiison 631-0960 825 Center St 642-1424 LG 28' 1•,ea. frple. patio. Frig. dishwasher. 1tova \\ '\. "-~ \. Mary 81nn5 499-1082 BR BA I /d 1 ---------new carpet, pllnt. 0/W incl No pe1s S.5-4855 REALTORS • 1 • . 1 . re IQ. w . 1BR, 1BA Apt. rear yard. Baehek>r $600 Avl now $795/mo +dep • 1•1 ••-· I rt ltac• 2Ht block from beh Carport garage. Avl •m,..~ S5s75 1 Bedroom S680 2273 Mlnef•A. 645-8161 Fri:' dlshw·-!'!'!"1tov• •~=~~~~~~~liiiliiiliiiiiilllliii!iiM Yrty $800/mo 673·3662 Incl utils 620 ..,..,nter t • B S 90 •· ........... -eves Avail 5115 "-Call 9&~.6935 28drm 1 • a 7 •IST SEEi 1nel No pets S.5-4855 UNUSUAL 3BR 3'2BA. 2 Ill CllYll EAST "' .. 131 E 18th SI 646-6816 frplcs dbl garaoe. top of EXCLUSIVE GUAR 2BR 1BA dupleX Com· 2BR 1BA. O/W eatpet& --------28R 2BA. trple, enci gar-* 1U 1111• the hne appls S2150/mo GATED COMMUNITY pletely returb S1eps to drapes No pets• Carl)Ort Baehalor $590 age. all built-ins. near Newly eonstnJeted. 11ove. * *'* 2 Bdrm 2 Bath lownhOma beh $885/mo yrly George $650/mo • deposit 1 Bedroom $680 shops, $695/mo rttrig. d•shW&stlef lnel • 3BR 28A Close lo ocean Micro trpleS in LR & BR 7141526-3204 Iv mess.age 716 Shalimar 852·9966 28drm 1' •Ba S790 810 CENTER all ullls Pnvata entry Av! now! $1550~ wa1 t>ar wtd h6tups, $650 Nice tBr u11ts paid. 2Br 2Ba 1100 slf. d/w, 161 E 18th St 642-08~ TSL MGMT 642-16031-,el~iJJ~lf;ftlP.-~ o::i~.~~~:~~:·= =·o~·:ob~~!-C4.~~ no-petleii:::,Ch! ~d13~;:-;~1~~ 1 ~~~----S695 ~~; :;~·~~dGES8~~~ •1BR 1BA.lrpl$725LM N dbl Ava111mmed 241· 7383 28drm 1 ·Ba seo5 1021 Valenela (Mesa del •2BR 2BA. lrpt $950 LM ering5 M:e pallo. 2BR 2BA on water Fan: IOEll IAY VIEW 151 E 2 lst St S.8-2408 Mar). No Pets 650-7105 Pool. no pets, d/w, carport garao:gts~~~~ s' .. 2000"e ~d·epsCt6a7115btmo,~ 2Br tBa. lor, or 2 adullS •S200 BONUS• Grut E-•UIE IEW• NEW e Side deluxe 2br •722-81401722-8011• -.. _.. Lile & airy Viaw wndec:k Side loe1 LG 1BR $600 & WALK TO BEACH-8 30-5 30 955-1961 up Cable, BBQ. gar. atel Coma ... the d1ttan1nea. w/attaeh gar. wet bar IDT IET 11 • CMYOlll 3BR 2BA lower Duplex. Street pkg w/permit. Sorry. No pets 831-8427 eomplalaly remodel9d FREE wl d Relrlg. stove, -T1I ,.,.,. r N'llm« Front Garden. prklng. '* •3Br, 28a, gar. pool N/S. No Pets S965mo. Yly Beaullful 1 & 2BR aplS micro. Adults. n/pets. "" _,. -.-. S 1400/rno yrty 675-7006 $1600 mo Short tenancy incld ut1ls * * * * * POOi. rae room. laundry S7951mo 642-8760 _ 6 months only' Call lll..f312* ' 2BR 1BA. stove. relrlg, room Ready for Instant Cntl •en 2124 557-8193 lor info PENINSULA YEARLY erpt. drapes, patio, gar. l"f'IOYe-4nl ONLY $550 to 1my l(~Tll •Tlf lllfFS* 3BR 2BA. lrp1 2 lg deeks. 56751~-1932 __ '650/mo Plus $200 on 28' 11;Ba w/gar. erpts. 2BR Condo • loft. 2ba. 3BR • Oen. 3BA. palto w/d hk·up. dbl gar The classified network move-in lhtough 4130 drps, bhins, lned patio Brand new Ea11side. great location Furn $1300/mo 646-6483 putsyoulntouchw1th AUllAU&PTI. 636-4120Call 1·5PM S 1195/mo Newport Pa-$2100/Unl $1900 Agt ----the right people 530 W. Wilson 2439 Orange ·e· .. $750 eille R.E. 645-3683 759-8934 L.V Props. ::c:=::,-:ff TSL MGMT 2119SantaAna ·o· ... $735 •BRIGHTON SPRINGS• Maria F 673-9333 g!(l'aaponM 842-5878 722·90t2 ()( 642-1603 887 Viciorla 'L' S720 Baau11ful spacious eon--3BR TOWNHOME dos 2Br 2Ba wi den Pvt patio lrplc. eomm $1095 & 18' 18a $750 poollapa No pals. Loe 1n a quiet water-S 1 t50/mo 240-2160 scaped complex Frple. -w/d hkup pool jae All SBR. 4BA. 4000 slf. back w/gar & ~pnra ·No pets. bay & elty lights view. re CALL Velma S.9·2447 modet.d $3000/mo. Jim --(2131496-4379 •New Paint & Car~• BAY FRONT - 2BR 18A, din rm,~ yrd. Elegant 29R Ltdo Vig sec: . patl ~.free lndry uM. bldg $1275/mo All ITILS Pl1 WATERFRONT HOMES $895/mo. 646-1213 INC * • REALTORS 631-1400 M ... V•= fem hse. IAYS•ES 38r 2Ba 2 eat w/opener, 3BR. 2BA Cape Cod llp. cable. super clean. lg $2500/mo Avall 611 lne back yd, landaeape A 1 Debi Bibb lrt/bk S1300/mo.+ sec. 644·90~or 642-8868 ci.p. No Pats! S.5-6035 __ _ __ aft 5pm Sat/Sun all day BIG CANYON 3BR 2'.,BA 3BR 2' BA twnhM Nr condo w/pool, IP• & ten-.., · · ms S 1795mo or purettue beach. Obi gar. fned Eltz.abeth Agt 631-1268 yard, spa. frplc. sml pet · _ otc-t1245.~l Spacious 28R 2',.,BA 2 ILlfFS JM LUil atory condo, frple, 2 ear OR 28R 1 o.n. 21..\BA ar. WIO. ratr1g, patio. $1450 OR Hrbf Vu Hms unity poolltenniS 48R 3'.<,BA Portohno Small pet ~. Near Ca-mdl. Pool, spa $2300 mo, n y o n I V I e 1 o r 1 a 6 moa lse 640-5664 Bkr $1200/mo 675-4912 Ag1 HUNTINGTON BEACH Fll'llaJ I~ pd ptM CMfll ~ 2M 2BA •. ~ c-.s l ur pr 11f A C. W 'D l'\lfl r.,...,.~hflllKt. wtt blr Bt~btul tloftf pt ftftS All IU•ftltftlftct ,,~ '21501• ....... Nice 38R 2'h8A 2 story BLUFFS condo 3br 2ba. condo. Frple. 3 ear park· aitch dbl garage. lrple. on Ing W/O hkup, amaff enel green belt. c:ommun pool yard. Convn pool Nr $1600/mo. 7S.·1551 Harbor/405 Fwy $1000 BRANO new luxury 2-sty 675-4912 Agt eondo. 2br 2ba. lrple, EASTS I OE 2BRl1 BA. atteh 2-ear garage. Upgrd erpt, lg fenced yd, $1395/mo. ™-2111 The Daily· Pilot has a new way to turn your Hidden Treasures into CASH s 80 no gar. $800/mo 1939 lllllllliil-iiiilliiiiiiiiiiii.-.i Full«ton 675-5733 locatact on a wid4I luSh E/SIOE Cott909 1BR, 1BA greenbelt. thll expan11~ 1 per90n only. Part furn 3BR 2'48A beauty 11 up- N/tmkt. No pets Rats graded to au•t the milllon $550 + dep 645-2357 dollar -s>petit•. Shot1 or SHARP & CLEAN 28R-. long term 1se Ok. 52300 mo lmmad oecpy poq. HtBA Duplex Unit Ible, Doug H•rbat w/patlO & and garage 78()..5000 or 720·3980 1750 No pets. 650-4751 nr •.a..v HUGE 4BR 2BA. Fam Rm., ~ DI : ,~s.earca':r*'~.~~1 ~t~ i \'JJr tt·>X ~II 751-1190 or 549-9123. f;lCALTOAS,. with prepayment 4 Lines-7 Days s 10.80 UIWLY •HUTU NEVER LIVEO.IN Hawpon 2BR wt~. new erpts, North 2BR +loft. 2BA. 2 lnCd Jd, 131-4 '20 1-SPM cw attadl •OW Sa6a °' 2sMa.nt• Ana ·o· .... 1110 .... u. 11100. '1eo..or14 JlR 28R 2W TwnHM H1.1ge 11---------------- No cNrgel In copy«~. Private parties only. No Commercial, R~al Estate. Automotlv~. BOatfng or Employment Ads. ThHe Is no pttce limit to what you can advertise. If you nttd to setr your couch, hfgh chair or any unused JMrchilhdise-c.t Che Daly Ptlot ClassJfled statr or use the 2BR 1BA Yrfy. Lrg bfldt ytd wlauto MCeM, Obf crtyrd, 11aps to bdt a g91r.w.st .... PMo1t.2 eon¥tnlent &hopping. ppt . ...._12'41842-NM 11100/mo 173-3773 ........ 38r28e~ Prof dee:Otated. fr~ gafag9, '#Id. 201 ~ S1700/rno.173·5348 ....... .. ,.,. I I I · l __ 4 __ _ 1 . ,, coupon bek>w. Mml to: • ~ Not, JJO W • .., It.. Ccillt8 ..._ CA 92626 642-5678 NAME.~..,--~~-----~~~~ .......... ---PHONE,~-----=-~---------- ADDRESS _____________________ ~-------------~------~- CITY STATE ZJP ______ ...,.__ .......... _ AD COf'Y; 4 lne minimum, apptoprtacely 4 wordl P« h. AMr. ENCLOSED_.__ ____ _ ' .... 0Rnge COMt DAILY PILOT IT~. April 28, ttll II you ~ e..... L OM -.I I,_. .. l!!l~!!!.......!!!11!1111•~!!••!!1 tiiiiii11m1~"!!'11"••1 .. ----....---lililiiiii;iiiii;;;i TOM H1M«M0o...~' )OM. ··=0 • i •i• .. -an ........... 12.151tw .. ., ... ,n P.n ~--.r.Nny 111nmeCt -···•---· - Fftll .. IM HO..... nt-6412 opeiWnal "SK-Mt.000 Miii ,. ...,... ---uunu ~ .... ....,, flW...., cal ICd1Uf.eaS ul3te Thrifty Oii Co ~ YOUllO ._ ...... ~ bj> OI' Wll tt• 11'1 8 t IK ma • •'l'I PIT ~ Food S10r• .. ~rer11Jy AQl!ntt w/fll,p l..o.d '° ":"!o Micro 'Coqlo. 1'N.~ --•••• .... "'f~ll9rttStore ::-1 f_,, ~ ~~c..~ l_... 9'1, -"-WI-M•~· 6 e.~. • oP .... -. ..._ ·--.. C.L hOut&. HftpOrt a..ctt Managera bei Miii in· ~~~om"''" on1 & 711·1233 •· ., .. ~16CMMOO .... Mhn"er ""'"' .... oc..n w.w .,...., s-1(-. IU .... ll " ... ._ =-":'·a.vacatloa, ALSO P•llONll S.Cud ry UUI ~--iii ino. ~ Wt• aec--NU·,.. we .,.., pcan t'ueeaen1 M"'"G• need9d w1u.;.t0Wt • R E Alltatl ....._ tPParel tnv.i· • ,...,..,~tiee.16goao11Ce ~•!IP'*'*' ,.__ "9•••l1cef II honal opportu':i=: ~ ~1~~!~ ~~o:i~'9nc• ·~ On Cout HJwey Pott lid\., .. 171~520 ~~..... PIMM apply ., 7&' wk. Call PAT AICK Appy T~-frl I0-2pm /tqlft. 2t3"2·oe33 ,OVNO AIHG. Sat '124 llTI BTU _, ...__.. • Boet, eo.1 • .-... lnW-TENORE 7fl0.S701 A THE NEWPORT BEACH Tll lllllflft lllfl Vic. See Vi9W & G~-MU '"LIM .... ..,.,. viewe w!M be Tll89Cl•y. gt COUNTRY CLUB Newport Ctt .. faetllon ,,.. entod, COM. 875-3201 .,. ,...., ... ....,.. April 21 from 9·12 noon ~ UIOO e Cont Hwy NB The [fttdenl Atternatlw ~ t lmmed••t• ~· In • ,.,... llTl.l... MAN I cu R 18 T I HA IR Fi;ll-T1me for nlamkg New-GA•·KIO '*"' Ande.ton FUI ..,v;oe Ot ···••'Ill r-loealllfM ... lhtttaevail ~-·-.... STYLIST Gd working por1 Beacn Oll•c• -•n•-PtT .. ,vlcetrnall only, iiJti"""" Jiii ,....Pifl -·~ --· eondttlOfW a 1oc COfone 7em-4pm Type<40wpm& -_, ,.,.. lwJ 1 -· •-"' Del Mar 844-8292 Data Entry helpful Hrty Fot Con1111.1ttion office CALL TOOAYI 512•3138 1-.--· •age comm wtexp Call Mon-Fn.MustnavtCom· *Ml....... ~IPl'fll'lll .. ..-i .. ot--mo-1 OE LIVER DRIVER/ H 0 us E w f v Es. s Tu -~.:CHANIC'S HELPER Sheol• tor appt 720-91170 put• •lfP 49•·3104 A/C. A'"" pttig.1325 up ~ OWi In DoY• StlOf E DENTS -Now nrring PIT .,...,, tOOls gu trucks 2855ECt1Hwye7M900 home ._5 Dys/Wk U::. Wont In~!~. s100-s1101w11. Pro-~:T'c Y:Cht• 1631 llECEPTllllST •IRlfTUY, PI T •erdal ,_.._ Out nlamkr. teta sw.rd for IU<nlhKe atore Gd r...ion.t Mm«:leanlng Gen otftQt! CM "'" hr5 couraged abu t< pf\one Nies ~ •uw c.l ,J poor manag fL ..,, ~ ·-~·7•17 C8ll Cyndi 83:),..9800 ,_. hMlll'I & OT Elf,_ M.f. Day hf& Wkly pay ·-·-WI._• Pr t st1g1ou1 Newport G<l t)'Plng req 557·1135 •• -.,_,. C ,....... We 1rain Need c:.r Call _,. ,_. ~acn ~ t.rm iiiiilili•iii•-;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;1 IAllf l .UlllJlll prlrd •H ~ 540-2275 M•ry Maida 546-45 tJ or Experienoa nec:wury has unmed1ate opening SEOlnUY •• --... Live-In BalbOa laland lllltl WT-...--891-1330 • s2e-_:291 • '°' a hogNy l)fot.saional Re1pon11ble peflon to Engl111'1-speal11ng non-~IT few actlYI WMI H IEllCA&. FlllT tfflCI & e.r.per1enced P91son ans..., pttor>es & use Ill I .... amoker. Ortver s Lie NB ptK'llCe 640-2970 101111 F0t lntetrutl El\lt-IC Met<lng lonO·t•m em-comes putereo'°' small ~·· ecam ope11t1"1 c.oe t g··• v5 a can \ ~ LUW I Ul1I 17S.79701evet --•• --er p d Nr SC P~;~a plotment Woll handle tale Cati ScOlll ••--_..,_ ••--• Tl'le Or•"94' Coat1 Oaiiy Typirog & Spamah euen-!Xlsy phones hght typ•no 546-2301 -· Wlllll Need9d '°' 1·2 Oya/Wk . Piiot IS loolo.tng '°' an llal Call 17,.)957 6598 & manage reception uc:n· •10-1121•· CHUCK CURRIER HARBOR REAL TY L1v•rn. Irvine home. Loo. New~ Cent. Dental energetic person 10 u -area bcellent benel111 • • "' 551·01116/d, 854-79321• Group '4!-1122 sist our 0ts1ric1 Managets IHtCA&. IFftcl TIP llLUI flll COM RE awraiMI olc • PrefnsitH I l Tralalq ... ,_.,... Office 1714)173-4-400 ~ 1114)644-5297 .. ,..,_tat SS3t lllTIJIT lcuat Pu pert Xc mmts1P1ove d9moe-Mll&IEll 27H racy ••lsts behind the Or-Super.1"'8 Camera In de- '!'!N'!!'EW!'!'!'!!P'!l!O'l'A,.f'l'ee;c;;--3-0;.n;.;ll;.;2;1 ange curtain PIT a FIT livery and ... for lhe apt• . stor-e S58K Qr09S. work 1n the slart up phase Orano-County Aegt1t• S575 000 Motivated 01 • democ:tahc cam-S390 PLUS eommllatOt\ owner RealonOJnlCs paign Call 714-741-2102 Full t>ene"1s Can Jell lor Corp G75-6700 Assemblers to bulld sail ma<e 1nlormatt0n SHTT / IECEPTllllST 3 daya duong the -· Bi;sy 0. s olloce 11'1 C M . . t8M PC wlp 673-3772 weekeodl and hohdayS need' e.p bac• Olllte TIP lllstllTEn sun /IOEllL lfC: Applicant most have r~-;assist 4 day1.,,.k 5"8-9319 P1ea541 MOO resume to Ad•PART·TIME Wltg Reale. habit car wtlfl vahd CA • 126 tlo Dally P11ot 1111 lorm '" Costa Mna dr1YefS l"ense prool of IURSES AIDES P 0 Bo• tS60 Cosla mornings g. t PteaMni insurance and OMV Meta CA 92626 otc l!'lvllonmenl wl good prmt-out Starting pay is AU stuti5 900C1 pay and pay Catt Pete 751-5000 $7 00 I*' how plus oes b«'ehts 1 " l~· Bach RECEPTIONIST/ ~owance R ~ 1 11 em en 1 h o m e Come rn to apply at •494-9458* SWITCHBOARD •l.uratitt C.•8iHi .. Strwctwe •Pteas.-tWerk m ire ...... ..... ted lturtr ••• • • ~ •&lt•u .. at • .,,.nnlty frsr ••"t wnt•Tan hclinu• kau eo.n..i, 11.m 11t..Wtt11 IU _,. • ._Ct jNll(I Or\11••~ 1"1(10 p -ct '"'llt buO l'99 Ais. IP \t11t it ll ~~ MalH for large 38R Bayview condo. Garage, pool S525 -S625 •84•-2607• luiatn I Fiuaci1l boat• We w/1ra1n Apply 1714) 540-3008 7am MacGregor Yachts DOORMAN WANTED iHlHll ftr S1Jt 163t Pl«entta CM Woodys Wher1 2318 W PlllTUS FIT pos-1.on ava 1 w • e Bacner ~5-6265 , m59 In an e.r.Clustv• w•twlront Real Est8te olt.c• Pteaw call 673-9333 ColO~ Bani.er .. urre<ilty Sec;urrt Ol1tcer i94i•iMaa ..J ~ ii ••TllftDTU• So11y Ho rtts 111-tttt Mf,~:o~ =~~0t=hi:. IHI AITl IEIYICE ~= 1n ~sonG75~7• Avail now. $400/mo • ·.~ iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;ii;;I TmiA!MrR HIWutl11St. PART T ME lllSRflfUIS .. 4-ah has a POS•toon a~a1lable Y 5 IO< ii lu!Himll Recep-S TIP WllES S hOtlt!ll Sw1tc.hboa1d OP· er11or Oualtf•eC c;an-IP JI ~ • ~ " ,, ut11111es 548-4484 •NIUll YMI I 1 IUUllm5 lllYUS PIT MIF qu111 netghbofhood. llUllSU WI NEWPORT TIRE CENTER Good pay. !lex hfl for de-~CJ<J\~W"tJ.Y•J EZgoinn prof Nr .. __._ * IU-t822 11very 01 comp11men1ery Cest1 Ina. Cl IH21 ti.tween 9am & 5pm M·F Or call ~th at 642-4321 ellt 205 With car 10 servtee ntab lu"<:h rOUIH M·f 8-1 S50-S60 c:.Sh daily ~ ?;~e~i<ll~;" .. ~::a~~I $7 00/HOUR c n &42..C&." ~ E•letl5o0tl 4_ ~ · ·• .,..... Pubhstlet ol 1ucc:esslul phone manner ~ino P<~-, '6lfunWINl>h.UO 1, .. io l Bay $385 • '• ut ti. 140 pg1'~olor OC Auto publicattons. Resp per· ~IOlfl~Jdf!ITW~M~.nJ] 642-7822 evening• Magazine seeks last mm STYLIST sons w/PICk-Up Of Van LMl'SIRCIU lll-0141 e111 • prot~\l()nat co•-PO<lle image P.)R QUALIFIED PEOPLE 330900PI it and J b 'druun1 lowrtwXTll"\ Need re.n 25·35vrs non· escrow wlnew owner '87 Gd oppty & loeatlon COf-OMV print-out. Ina req·d. Ask for f> t l. ~ IMth f•1f'lil.¥t"> Pt~«$ trom "?' , SALES OVER S350K ona Del Mar 6'4·8-2 Must know 0 C .,. .. Mr po,;-111 ...... -,..,....,.<' smkr 3Br 1'•8a w/ spa nr ..,1 ~ .. • 0 Neill. 714-"'~" 7',.~ ,~ ... ....,-•l'-·•""" So Coast Pia.la EU",,_, HIGH PROF~G(f' ~-•If.Am--: •• ----""""'" ~ N.!IA!lv\ 1••~\ ~"' ,.,,.,,,.,. ac:ceu S350 557-902'2-' low!nO Stodt bpttc>n avt .----F/C •AAlf•RtnMr•/ tlSllEW.lS Energetic: so11w11e com-PlST CHTlll nca. pany. gtow1ng by leaps Local Pest ContrOI Co and bounds neecis Inside NM'ds Route Tech We SalM people Perteet tor train Must have 900CI young, ~res51ve 1nd1-Ortv1ng recoro Call We can olte• 1 \iefy at11 act. 1ve salary ano comP't'te t>enehts Pack• For •m- med111., cons1dera11on please contact Nanc> Speer 11 1714126 1-9500 PIHTISJHS UTU CO•lllllTIH ln~~~~I G .ts ! 1fl0t\S avail *'n; , ",..,,: f" tems Irie Nie 1 1li'lf. ,.,.,,.J '"l'Ntrru\courn wl in 3 yrs Consultingav1 au11tu1 new salon nas ~511 '"'~™• 'UF"·~·"' N/smkr prOr shr 2BR 18A 1st S50K assumes all lac1a11oom hair"Statton& l&SID gr()IO\th opptrt ui • •age Fl O" PT I , a( 1e<tt~•~1ttt~P1 .,,,,.,.u11r COM Apt nr bch . Great rightl (7 l4)92t-CARS ntll stallon fOf' rent Xlnt Full lll'M Pleasant work- TV .. ..::1 '""" A loc' S425 • utll1 Oya loc in rnlJOI' shopping d Bene W 955-2510 Eves721--0929 cen1er 1nHB 962-0116 ing con •ttons. tits .:..:.."1;..;.;:::a.;. ___ -=:...a1 I • Please contacl Carol vldual $7 hr com-Charley AM 979 6021 mission Flexible hC)\JrS PRE-SCHOOL Ctlfttll l1&hf Rni4ntial lq1t1 S.mces,hac. • l••e4iatt .,., .... la lissi .. Yi•i•, LapulUh,[J ,.,,, l..,.,t ... OebDte 64 1-304 • PARK NE\XIPORT Prof n -smkr wanted To WHU • , lllllHPll 1714)6'1-7073 Cau Tom Borsi;~ * •855-3923 • * •CLASSROOM ASST T~Sttt-s -• f 714) 644-t900 share new Irvine Condo O,pertautin 2904 P111 T11M-A/R AIC Bk FllllE IAARLlff 730·1pm •DAYCARE U~l•atiacfH ltack. IE lT IUCI If NOOI 't 5 mrn from JW airport, Rec .ws -::;~...,,,.,._, pool. 1ac $450 75&-1310 letter TllH liL Wells etc 64>0792 18 & Up• Earn S150·S2500 "•"' " "' " WlTHJ llSllUS IS lllW Daily PWl ttme l)h<>to •lrlftl ler Ital Punlied water vending No Aun Hose& Ole1 Paten modeling No exp No WALK TO BCH NR HOAG 2740 machtnesl Located at 11 llere Na1 I Co ls look-'" WORLD TALENT • 1BR $695 t &GE"'"' •2BR 2BA $89S 1 CAA nat conven1enc. store ing for i.ecs.r1 S500 10 " ""' ·lte.lbonded chains, otller high 1ralhc S45001mo comm work-•ta 18) 916-•316 Pool, spa extra parking I GARAGE FOR RENT• 0 11 t 3 1401 Superior 646 6838 BetCourl area $100tmo " es yrs proven Ing rrom home 549-4821 f/T llml _ 1rack record of high earn- WA TERFRONT on R1ver'C **~~;6968** 1ngs No pfOduct 0< 1n-C&1P£1Tlll DAVES FLOWERS Av 3Br 288 newly redec. taatrnu ventory problems Ap-Hrghly exper In all phases •891~ 18• apt wtlg pal•o no -•s U. Salt •-t PfOll S•OK needed Catt ol constrvctlOl'I 1nvOIY1ng S15001mo . dep ;;fy -• Mr Slone lor complete custom remodeling 01 FI T SEClnUY 7141982-2373. 675 8404 tat 1nlo 1-800-235-66•6 e1tt homes rn the Newport Xlnt typing sk•H• needed WEEKLY NOW• BeauUli;tly 2169 935 In Calllorn1a Bch area 1nqu11e only 11 for a leading Nwpi-t Bct1 fuml9hed NB oee11n front 1-800-235-6647 exl 935 slulls are at refined leYels Real Estate ollte:e Greal 3 2 1196 sq 11 N COSta MML -Contact (71•) 552-0428 benefits Call Gayla g~~·~~~78~pk: 2 Grnd llr 6 pvt oles .... ., ft I.Na 2914 ROLLS CONSTRUCTION ••GA•-9060• • Lounge reception w<>OI * WIDOW HAS SSS CO Resumes & referen-IEltUL lff1CE 2 R WESTCLIFF area Ample prkng at ror T Os! s 10K-up No ces required. Fun environment ....___.s 8 B 28A, 1etr1g dlw. frplc Ooor. prof bldg. AIC AYI cred V' /no pen Oen-,..,.,.,. 1100 sq It pool crport. now' 8x st •9•-oao2 nison Anoe 673-7311 * C&SIUllS good personality tor PERSONA LI COMMERCIAL LINES UNDERWRITER ASST 2 30-5 30pm Exp pref d f71419ii2-0107 PllESSllll Old esl agncy Loe J Wayne Arp.I ilrea Satitry ot)ell Benefits 1nc1 Con-0 tact Si;e 95 7. 1 t 22 '&fl9e Coast Daily P110t is looking lor a Pressman INTERIOR PL.ANT with 2-3 years ex~ience PEOPLE on a -b olflf!t press Full & PIT Fie• hrs Mst Opportun•ty l0t advance- ha11e car Call 645-0572 men1 benefits salary commensura1e '""I" 8l<· INTER PLANT PEOPLE Pt'lll'nce Call 1714 1 Full or PIT Mst have own s.2.4321 ask tor Hank car Green 1n umb • equal OPPIY t'mp•o.,P• Aestauran1 RISnPELICU •faAu4 PUT-TllE I• now accepting ~pph-•lll lltifh ... u.111 •• ca11ons tor • IHt/lt11tu • Trliaiq •• •Luci! F"4 S.rttr uiftnn ''"i'94. Appty or• Det'SOO Tuesday thri; Friday blwn 3-5 • • f' ..a II 21•1 • ,._ ... .._II "' IHH ... Cl .,. • · -•·' •• , st.4tm ••le•••· Res1au•ants 8•2-8899 sa1 • mtg PllY&n NSTA&. Cm .llllTHS Seeking entttu,..stic per-PI T •STl llSTISS Male/female Part 11me :, f?;'",.;~ ;,.s~a~ ~~~~ FHI sums ..... ,,,.,. ..... ,.i••m•aals '"'·"··· PIT,1£USIW evenings M on-Frt ECstH CdM&7j _2930 AMiPM1splilSh•lts Appls lrvlNwprt area 720-9759 wy accepted 3-5pm daoly THE N!WPORT BEACH Clll Tlllt! EARN $400-$1000/VIK •S71 H1 T•l'"'"tl • •&A._. 12 ~oor ~ C:atl 140"' 5 Pos 1 •1~ !or LV COSU1 o. ~!!·6!!10 MJ LAGUNA N 5&2-12~0 SHOP AT HOM E! 0 C AN'Poft atea Call M-F 8- 11am 432-0670 nl pet $850 mo l>'S.0302 1200 sq It on e.lboa Pen. FIT & PI T Wes1 Manne mullHask po51tl0f1 LUI PllCISSll ..... c.... llttH Ample Parking utlls pd batucttatatl 2921 900 w PCH . N B We l)fefer e•P«ienced 1n ... ,.. .. S1200tmo Call Steve FREE MEMBERSHIP FOR 6'5-171t Ask lor Tony ;~~ra::=~01~~: 12 POS1t1ons ava•lable 1 O'n••M•C PROTEC'rlOt "!'"'IP!"'"'---~..;.2';.16;.;.1 •673-0920• LADIES ( 18·•0> 0 •• Pleese contact Glynts year expenence req d lfTICE POSll ... rs F T SERVICES •CINn. sunny 2BA 1BA 1300 sq fl at $1 /sq 11-tnple If you would like to "'"1 I IPUCTIC &SST. Ward Wed-Sal 9-Spm 1 Good salary1benehts P!T for noc:e last gro.,,.1ng ~ 1 I 1714l633-t952111n,hm<>I COUNTRY CLUB 1600 East Coest H#\1 N 8 64•·9550 Make class1t1t:O advertising tilt: o~st way to save timt andgas1 laily Pilot 142-5&18 MeeArtnur Village Pool net Fully limshed base-good lootung IUCCeSSful Front olltee enltluSIUtlC, 1714) 673_3515 ea111.1ncia or O.an11 Co Nr Hoag Fie• hrs Xlnt oPPty at Beno-11on ape. t8'Vlis, c;arport, lncJtY ment. carpeted fire gentle~ 1010 CLUB che•rli;I good olt1ce 1 673-0581 E OE Type '-,,.,,sc olloce work Maon P1 Kityla S•2·8183 EQual ()poty E.mot;t M F= { S800 NO PETS 722-8011 sprinklers Great CdM to-ELITE • F0t info, call skills FI T lneluda Satur-IEmll lfflCf House•1fe or re11reO cation GAs.6505 21J.217-7507 ~rs Cerol 631-S&M Busy prop mgmt otftee llSllHllllm grell 722-8060 Ir ________ ;,_ ________ :._ ______ _ $2.56 per day That s ALL you pay lor 3 tines 30 day m1mmum In the SERVICE DIRECTORY INCREASE YOUR REACH GET IN OUR IMPROVED nlllHlllW hnk• lir•d•ry UUIWPAIH FOf more inform1111on CAU...TOOAY•I ASIF•LOIS Your $erVI09 [)!rectory Representative M2-4121 ext.110 f!lll•ill Typing phones filing IUllC ISUll PIT 1-r-MIST etc Some held w0<1t F tl Newport Beadl s most e,1(-""U" 11 var1abte hours Irvine ~SIV4P d111tn9 4 entet· For N B Reallor ~- area 26 t-6448 1 .. nmenl taco111y ,5 open eloper Wed-Sat 1 30-5 30 10 tne publac we need· ! Canne<y V1"age Realty iiiAiiiii:illli..iGEN Oll1ce-Bklrp1n9 quahhed & respon•d>le 613-3777· a taf phone$ Will train F T Of Reservallonist Recept Oua11ly Control lnsp & HAULING CLEAN UPS Painting & Wallpape< Re-~~ t ~=~°'c ~hts. NOW' Carina 675-0900 Mgr for prod sailbo<itS QUALITY WORK. FREE l'TIOYal 20 yrs eltp Clean. UP l.lllltl&ICE IUI MacGregor Yachts 163 1 EST MIKE 722-7858 prompt rMs 642-5937 llasa T1cfi8c last1hr Fo~ Cosla '4esa Motel Placenha CM leat Stmce 11 Iha Paintet you a111 1 bi.It EKp p!'el'd Wrtl train 957-3063 RUHR U ULES a n•inlw ..,...., ____. call Good transp Neat IP· p T le •+..,1n"'1an-t"'10_111_ng_car_e_f•.'"'w-.-H~";. k~18t::.C ~·=:•tg -'ARDVARK-~ae,; •• pearance 8•7-0253 HA VE 9-2 ':";..e: ~5 ~u~ Thur7-5 lmamom/nurse add1tlOl'ls Oave667-2819 guaranteed Lie 631-5347 llllllCLWllllUI phone & counler sates $20 day start tn May In my MICHAEL COX PAINTING Can bl rettred 6 hrs/Dys A NEED? Fr1tfld•y office """" traen Woodb11dge l'lm 716-5889 Luac1pia1 S t2 Hr MATERIALS 5 Dys a weett "' Hunt-Apply Pennvsave< 1660 TINY TOT HOMECARE 2 I Lanc&rt References 675-4006 1ngton Beach Call Helen Reod the clon1l•P<l p0oes Piac..,t•a Awe C M )"S In bu• ntgnly qualllted Complete serv Sprinkler/ • PACIFIC PAINTING. 964-5567 ond yO\J're sure IO lilt 111 ................ .. fully lie 751-6858 Sandi lnatJI r~lr Tr• t11m & Metteulous-Oependable ~ehandlse<>c>POf1llllltles lai"ly Pi"lel Cl la •---t remove. dnups reaa Free Local refs 96~2098 Joel In dalllfied -!Ille bftngong tla I ..met -1 Va'--t1n "'••6109 _,____ _ _._.,.., t ... 2 1111 -..... ~-PAINT E•Mlnt Complete -·-1 ----own ° ~ HC>\IMCleanmg. exper • re-GARDENING~LEAN UP prep Accust cetl Wall room • llabi., refs. reaaonabl9 Mow..ctge-tree work-lull repair Neat & Fast lie After 3pm Carol 6•&-6502 malnl A.as. 66S-5286 Loo rels S•e<.>e ~7-8076 Housecieaning/Oftlees 1'> GARDENING SERV Clean QUALITY PAINTING yrs e11p Refiable. bond9d up1 Lawns. palm tree Fair l)flCes. 11 years exp he; ins d Jenny S.8--0621 tnm, ra-age Al S49-9'61 Jonn * 673 2604 •LORIS CLEANING• DUSTY'S Land~llawn VESCO P-'INTING ANO Homes-Rentals-Offices Main Serv Wkly/month/ WALLPAPERING Ouallty 631-8948 * 6'6-0957 l t11M Free est 241-16'0 .,,.ork Free Est 969-6349 *llAll SllYlll * Full Servie9 Gardening CARPElS & W INDOWS No Job 2 8.g or 2 Smal w-nu. F,... Est. 531.2501 FATHltilG INTERiORS HANGING STRIPPING VISA-MC 673-1512 PAPERING & REMOVAL Taylof Wal1Gover1ng LIC 2•yrs Oual work 496-2029 let Us lltt Y" Sell Y •• p,_,.,t,! Cal C..11ifW , 642-5678 for. information & syrprisingly low cost. Sales HAVE A NEED? Reod the ctoss1l1ed.009es end yO\J're sure 1.o li1J •' laity Pilot &42-1111 .•.••..•...••..... CllMr8P ...... .,.eta• wtUa .. ., .... ...., .... •. ~ lad1' If you re 10 or older. a 1ob as a newspaper carrier m1gh1 be 1ust your size Ju~t send 1n lhts coupon or call 642-4333 Routes are av~rla~le now' le sot1tt.My. le a Daily Pilot carrier. r-,;~d-;:~; ~ ftn; ;;,:;;;-;; ~~;-, ing a Daily P1lo1 carrier I Name f : Address I I ' • '"' II I Phone I SIM ,, TM ~ -"" I m •.lfilt I L-___ c.t1 1eu.. ca usis J ___________ _,_ SALE CREW MANAGER 'STARTING A NEW BUSINESS?? Put you Dtrect Sales Ex- perience to good use working with teenagers. You can make $500 Plus per week. H you c.n hire, train, & motMit• a Special Sales Crew getting new customers for THE :DAILY PILOT. "' •••• Iii& ••••• ,,. Call Keith Hardie 11 11 .. .. .. lWIUlml ~ Cherry Wood, a mo. «Md, COCKATOO CAGE ~ 111'8..., epoti.a cond M4-5319 Wht powder coat, btnd fatperle,,c•. Sabre, new, Acc. 24tn JC 241n It 17' L"u'"N '"'"Y' .. -UNCH ~ 17$.M05 5\tft ~Iota Good 55in $198 844-4424 ,...,.. ..,.. ...,. cond Navy. tlot9' pnnt ------- $40 OR BEST OFFER. Ill /fl Barbara 7224385 ce ng oor sesoo -becklWlng lnCI b0o11 '°' ----.... • 1Ml1•11 $300, Cati 494-0671 hMdboard, footboard. LArge & Smal Dog HOUM ~ienced c:.-neraman tide rak. S 195 M0-8733 Wrought Iron Ible & Chf'a, IEST a.A HI.II n ••ded. M ust be CdM Tnpte ar.... a 2 babY crib & d8lk $20-Just bring us your lowest ltU!Owt 1 iSgable In .. .,... S200 Call 54M618 bonaflde Ac:ora dM end O' CM*'8 -.rtment; night 11ancb . .Wlt9ge. • 42' MATTHEWS Aft Cabin Read the closs1f1ed poge1 ' -------- ltnpplna, Plaline. Past• dettt wood, braas tnm. MOVING. King bed, 2 Nu ves 5KWL/P hdslltlwf ond you're sure to fill 11! we l~~:~NTEEO' w· llltdlot typeeetting Belt offer. 721-8591 dffllS, exercise bike, Great wet.mont ~. BUY t.,,... a plue, Must be DAY BED WM• a 8'w Barcelounger. battery-S36KOWC AYS&46-9000 lailv Pilef •Ill lllAMA .t l llble to wor1t w.. Ma"-T~ operated TV 450-8879 -------· ., 1001 OUAll-ST .. N.B. ""'-· s.i.y bWd on ~1245 SEARAY 25·1977 235 142 1111 112-2112 Tu.a --~ and skills. •840--8733• SFT Vent~~Lugg2~~2~ OMC. Low hoora. Xlnl •••• : ••••••••••••• --------through classified ,..... contect U.. °' Like new ...,.n, -·· .. 1n cond. Ownr must ... ,. Biii tlllllillilililllililiililillilililil•----------------• hleit(714)M2-4321ext DecofSofabedw/mtctilng fold over & carry on. Days759-7600. 21t during the qy end chra, Sofa. authentic an-W/whl1 lists at $1590 E119S J60-0tn. (71<•) 142~ weninos. 1iqu.. hnging lamp ' Sefl S&75 875-8943 • ..., .... MUCH M<>AEf850-0187 TWO CONTINENTAL AIR IMt/Y1tfat Qutm : IVORY matehing sofa. TICKETS Round trip RUNAWAY FOR WEEK· 0'191'sind ctl81r & ot· anywhere en US Exp END. Charter State-Of· 1oman: ..th-tone 73 • 5/25 S160 ea. 675-8513 Art 34' Cfealoc;i( Pkg Simmons hld•·•·bed; ,--1 y --1822 deelw/lldppef 675-7100 mlrronKI TV-ater.o well rft • H kiJ IMh 701f unit, new tWlf'I bed•. mat· l•-!9"'--~~"""""'!~~ ,._.._ ___ ...., ..... ~ T • tresw & leek dresw. home M 23' CORONADO SLOOP • tnnacttptlon. Wlll Perteet cond 75 ... 1984 Vlzsla Hungarian hunt· 8 HP, O/B, VHF. 4 Salls Ir.in W/P. SA. 5M-8333 ing dog) papers toted H..a gallery sli /ti WflM n•-QUEEN SIZE MATTRESS greet hOusebroken tamely $4750 · AYS ~6-~ .,.__ & BOX, OUIL TEO dog' Candy 642-6299 C.M • .-:tnc.I d1S1rlbut0<, BRANO NEWI $155. --, --38' Angleman Ketch (78) w11ehouH •tocking. Catt 848--4293 Pttl I Aa1ul1 6049 Volvo diesel Lots of xtras bring OM V print-out. Able World Crui1« ~:=.1no.5u tw ~~~~1~;c:~a:,:: cocKA too fade SASK owe AYS 646-9000 c.ii a. :rn wti1 powder coe1 brnd • --- .-I .I •--UT tee-2 ends tb71s5 CottOng new At:e 24 In x 24 1n x su,./Declt1/ltM1t• -·-·-• S2500sac 11 on SS~ $19884..,...424 704 • ._ Mt up weddings & print sofa/love $600 - NeePUOns, gr..i guest & Glass din tbll blk taq c:hra llYIAI 1111 w/Cqe 32· SUP salib0a1 onlY. No gh9 dlr«:'tlona. $550 Glass cot Mt $350. Some ¥OC&bulary $!JOO l<i/abrd, water elec. fac SHERMAN GARDENS NEVER USED! 973--04553 760-8418/evenlngs Ind $340/mo lst/ISI CdM. Call Dorothy SOFA high qualtty-;;;;; , ~-* 673-8800 * ~n. 873-2~1 used still wrapped s,.tta, c.Ma ._5 - ... ID-WOl'lh $1000, sac 1250 B rm••~ C del 2131862-8588 0 P Abdominal/ ack Looklngforejob?Hltthe t•port 8dl Arch firm an · _ Weight Mecn•ne S75 newtpl'lnt before you hl1the .9"king permanent Ind•· SOFA, high quality,~ Ofym~ set w/bench ~t-contuttdasli- •ldUaJ w/good typing uaed. 11111 wrapped $100 960-5784 .-•led--... -------llllfts (55 wpm) & enjoys WOl'lh S 1000 sac S250 -- heavy typing. 4 '' Can def 2131862-6588 •••••••••••••••• .. *tl4'1M wt!. Xlnt beo-- -1111tta. Cathy 17S-8442 SOFA LOVESEA T with ot· tomatt Sobd oak lnm . .. ...,....t Wu... looee cushions, never • 5535 uHd $450. 843-9294 , .. Udent 30+ w.nts to BEAUTIFUL 4 piece hlllng Houselh. W/H•pg exp room aet. Brown tone. Wiii start 6/4 fOf summer Never U$8d. Only S250 XJnt refs. S48-58S 1 Call 843·9294 ----,..--- NURSE. HOUSEKEEPEF\. Washer/Ory«, S300 Dm-COOK Own car lido Ing room set w/4 c:hafrs area Local Ref9'.en<:e$ Movlng-Muat NII! 673•5100 CALL 786-8758 =11erc,__u..u.=--..,..,,_ ___ ilisctllaaeeu MIS Aa~ Mii 2 Store mcwat>te md o-· "*'' racks S50 each 2 ·3o~NTAL CHAIR M1rrors 39x87 S50 1n 1 1750 080 Hydraulk:. Mirror 39x41 S25 1 wln- wt\I enal, blk llhr (714) dow a4r cond1tloner S50 ea&-3008 Pnv Party 675-1723 Of 675-5308 NlJC NOTICE Ml.JC NOTICE IRIVER WORK PART-TIME DELIVERING NEWSPAPERS. EARN UP TO $600/MONTH. MUST HAVE RE- LIABLE VEHICLE, INSURANCE, AND OMV PRINTOUT. MON- DA¥-FRIDAY 2-5 P.M .• WEEK- ENDS & HOLIDAYS 4-7 A.M. NEWPORT /CORONA DEL MAR & LAGUNA BEACH AREAS. CALL 142-4531 EXT. 2DS ASK FOR BETH Ml.JC NOTIC£ MANAGEMENT . JOIN OUR TEAM MANAGING CARRIERS. THE DAILY PILOT IS LOOKING FOR TOP QUALITY MGRS WILL- ING TO WORK HARO. WE OFFER XLNT BASE SALARY PLUS OVER $300 IN BONUSES EVERY MONTH, GENEROUS GAS ALLOW- ANCE & OPPTY FOR ADVANCEMENT. JOIN OUR TEAM & BE ELIGIBLE FOR FULL MEDI- CAL COVERAGE, CREDIT UNION, 401K PLAN. IF YOU'VE GOT WHAT IT TAKES, CALL BETH, 642-4321 EXT. 205 OR SEND RESUME TO: DAILY PILOT, 330 W. BAY ST, COSTA MESA, CA 92626 l.1111 .. mas .. w • llYll ... 11 Y• WIJ T1 IZT ..... l.11111-' I fn fr111•1, I Ut111 MlllJ DIM II Tiii Trtcld A Good Place To Start Looking Is With A Job That's Fun, Respectable, Has Opportunities, And Still Leaves You Time To Go To School Or The Beach Without Completely Giving Up Your Nightlife. EARN $6.10-$9.50 PER HOUR!!!! • Easy Evening Hours • Salary + Comm + Bonuses We Will Train Someone With A Winning Personality. Call Pat Collin 642-4536 Ext 430 It May Not Be OZ, But It Isn't Kansas Either! II ( ' ! • .; ~ .. ~ l l SHOP AT HOIE! &at11 t Mike dMlffted -'ll MIN' advertising the best 'c°::r~!: t.Mi ..iei way to aave time , .... ........ ~you--•dMelflacl 142-llll _;_·:: __ ,:.._ .. _.,._rou_~_·_and_,. t t t t t t t t t l andgaal llllyPiltt ••2-llll Motor Routes available in Costa lesa Huntincton l11ch Fountain Valler NO COLLECTING- NO SOLICITING Deliver One Day a Week - Must have dependable car and proof of Insurance. C1ll 842-1444 Ask for Joanne Craney I t TUF.SDAY, APRIL 26, 1988 • 25 CENTS Bow did Hoag heart donor die?· Police suspect homicide but uncertain if fatal head injury caused by foul play to a medical aid call ID Costa Mna at 6:26 a.m. Tuesday. A man was lyina on a Sidewalk in front of the Circle K store at 19 J 3 Pomona Ave. Offic11Js administered oxyttn and took Ramun to Hoq. where he was later declared brain dead. His death is being 1nvcsttpled as .. suspicious. .. because the injury apparently Was caused by a blow to the bead. marted the county's second heart transplant Ah.houp un1dcnuficd at the ti~. Ramirez was declared brain-ck.ad hours before the transplant Under state law, unidenttfied orpn donors can bt used 1f pohtt conduct an ··extensive-l4-hour effort to learn the "donor's name. Hoag spokeswoman Pam Bolen said. the poltee, the hospilal and the Coroner's Offacc. Police fiQltf'Printed the unconSClous man and checked the pnnts thro\Ch the state idcntiracation system wtthout success. up in the lapsie waiti• '-I.ho, coroner·s r'C'ports, JohMOD taid. The lieutenant said invesaipton have yet to piece ~ ~ Fimin:z got from his ~ to the Cude K store. Hospital Oftiici9ll said earl!~ that ak:ohol and cocaiM were found in Ramirez's blood. but Johnson said police have )'let to l"Cttivc confirmation of thaa.. BJ JONATBAN VOLZU! .............. Tbe seemingly violent death of a I 9·ycar-old Costa Mesa man whose heart was used in a transplant operation is beina invcstipted by police as a homicide, thouah authorities ate unsure whether foul World John Oemjanjuk is sentenced to death after an Israeli court found him guilty of being a sadistic death camp guard.I A5 Natl on Supreme Court to review key civil rights ruling./ M Dukakls, Jackson clash over terrorism policy on eve of major primary .I Al Sports Keith Kaub leads Cal State Fullerton past UCI In college buebaJl./81 Ind es Advice and Games Bulletin Board Business Classtfled Comics Entertainment Opinion Polk:e Log Pubtlc notices Sport a Weather A8 A3 85-7 88-10 A9 EM A7 A3 86, 10 81-3 A2 Newport Pier area littering targeted pla)' was involved. Eleno Ulloa Ramirez was found unconscious in front of a Pomona A venue convenience market early last week and declared brain-dead hours later at Hoag Memonal Hosptial in Newport Beach. Police and paramedics responded Laguna Canyon buy-out sought Conservancy seeking grant of$ I 0 million to purchase parkland By JONATHAN VOLZIE oe .. o..,,... .... A group that ho~ to block development of Laguna Canyon an- nounced plans Monday to buy the I 0.000-acrc area and preserve.It as an urban wilderness ~rk. possibly with help from a SI 0 mil hon pnvate grant. Richard Hams. chairman of the Laauna Can)'on Conservancy. said he has met wtth a JrOUP that could provide the grant. but has )Ct to hear whether the group will fund the effort. He refused todiscl~ the name of the group. . The conservancy·s plan was an. nounced two da)'s before the Oranac County Board of Supetv1sors was scheduled to vote on a development qrecmcnt with The Irvine Co. for the Laau na Lau rel prOJ(ct. a 2. I 5()..acrc development that would include more than 3,000 homes at ltiC nonhem reaches of the canyon. The acrecment would auaranttt the company the naht to complete the project in cxchansc for vanous con· cessions. despite a slow-srowth measure that has qualified for the county ballot. Conservancy members say the project would include widcn1na of Laguna Canyon Road and v1nually spell doom for .. the last rema1n1ng hint of• canyon from Malibu to the Mexican border." The development also cncom· passes the San Joaquin Hills Trans- portation Corridor, a proposed toll road that would cut through the rural canyon. Harris. who said the conservallC} has lon1 opposed the pco,ect. met Ramirez' bean was transplan1ed Wednesday into the chest of a SS.. year-old Fountain Valley doctor, Dr. Norton Humphreys. The operation Costa Mesa Pohtt Lt Rack John· son said the attempt to learn Ramirez's 1dent1ficauon before the SUf"ICTY was ~a team effort" 1nvoJvan1 The heutcn.ant also said offiocn searched kx2I massinc-penons re- pons without succcu . But Johnson said invesupton must wait for coroner's rcpons until they classif)' the death. Just 1n case. however. dc\CCtlvcs arc working the case IS a homicide. because an)' passable leaids would dry Artlat lllclaael LaYeJ'7 elaowa Illa 0 before .. and ••after•• rendltlou of LanDa C&nJon on Monday wlaere memben ol' tile LaCana canyon CcmaerftDcJ' anftiled plana to bay Dlllllt""" .... .,, '-..... tJae canyon for r:e9CI wadon u aa 1lrbaD puk. On table atack of petltlou from aapporten eee•<nc to 8top dnelopment ba tJae canyon. . wtth officials from The Irvine Co. six weeks 110 to d iscuss the buy.out "The) basially told us to call back when ""e had a check ... Hams said. "And now I think we've got 1t." Hams said the aroup wouJd spltt the SI 0 m11hon grant down the mlddlc 1f 11 •s. approved -half the money would go toward purchase of the land and half would go toward fund·ra.tstnc cffons to secure the fult. purch~ pntt. 0 Hams said be has no estimate how much the 10,000-acrc canyon. which includes Orange County's only nat~ ral lal.es. 1s wonh But Irvine Co. officials scoffed at the proposal. -The Irvine Co estimate of th~ c.an)'on value would be in the hun· drcds of mil hons of dollars.·· said Larr} Thomas.. ' ~ Pf'C'Sldcnt of (Pleue eee LAGUJIA/~) Ramun lived alone. and~ WU no s1an of forced entry or violence at his apanment. Johnson said. (Plwe ... DAaT/162) Marine pilot's health stable Air shows at El Toro to continue despite crash of jet fighter By PAUL ilClllPLEY oe .. Dlllllt .... -.. A Marine pilot was taken off the cnucal hst Monday. one day after his FA·l8 H~t Jet crashed durina an annuaJ air show ID E1 Toro. Col Jerry Cadick, 45, of Evansville. Ind.. was reponed in senous but sable oond1tton at Mission Rqtonal Medical Center in Mission VICJO where be underwent surgery His 11rcraft crashed while Cadick was anempting to complete a k>op maneuver dutal\& the annual show at E1 Toro Manne Corps Air Station. . Officials said a.e air shows woWd · conunur dcspne the accident Althouglt the cause of tbc crub bu not been officially determined by a aulJW) board of tnquiry, witna1e1 said the Homcl a,ppr.:amS '° saall al the bottom of the loop maneuver before llS tad struck thc srouncL "It was an isolated incident.. .. saMI MMlnc Corps spokcspenon Set. De- borah Brapptn1 -The air show wil continue as an open event for tbe communit) in future years." Cadkk·s plane crasbc:d in a fidd about 1.000 yards from specwon watchuia the 38th annual Navy Relief Air Show None of the spectaton - tnjurcd. Qu1ck work by a Marinr racae team may have saved the piJol rro.- almost certain death, anotW spokesperson said. Two four·man tnacks weft•• scene of the crash wit.bin IS •n• of the plane's h1ttma tk ~ ~ Gunner) Set. Kathy C...,. llid.~~- (Pleue ..... ...,. Superior language lacks only one thing: speakers BJ BOB VAN EYKEN °' .............. In takin• on what became a lifelong proJcct. Yench joined the tS wnuen m English sometimes has vef) ltttle to do with the way it's pronounced. Last draftee earns chahCe with Rams, honors in Newport If somebody t~Us you "Zc loy gi." )OU can bet he believes it. He's saying ··1 love you" in a very precise hnJO known by the very precise name of Inter· diSClphnaf')' lntcrnatfonal Refer· encc Lanauqe. or ldirl for short. ldirl is for real. ahboush. hke the Palestinians.. it has no bomelancl And its fluent apeaken. for the mOOKnt. number precitely one. John Yench hopes '° chanae that. He will ~n lcedina scm· iaan on ldirl tlus cvt"DiQ& at the Bowen Museum in Santa Ana. · A retired joutnalitt -"o a.pent most of his life in IM Far EUt. Yench. 70. said he bellft dndop- ina ldirt ..o years Ufy means Ol remov1na t~ alicl 11n· =from spokna-written ranks of visfonancs like l.ud=· Zascnhof. who. in 18&7 ck'Ve an an1final lanauaac he ca Lmgvo lntemacia, morecommon- 1)' known IS Esperanto. And Yench's branduld. ldirt, Joined a hst that includes. not OAly Esperanto. but numerous other .. made-up lanauqcs,, such as Vol- apuk and Gloss.a. .. In £nalish, our symbols art very misleadi"" so it's no wondn' people have diftkuJty and ate sometimes unable to com- municate ... said Yench. "We have 26 Jcttcn. but there art really 43 sounds: h's like an offke wkie lhett arc 43 people but only 26 desks." Often words which have 1fOUP1 oflcnm in common do not have anythirc to do with one lftC6tr' tofi<'cpc .. ly. And lllr •Ya wont c.. Ail ·Omlitr ~·· Dito Wice.ilc.li.W••:l1:\'e .. ... ti.nctl 80l't 1..uictive Cf11ll,a.:•i•..,ar vm • •• fclf ....a1111 .. Sa aalt -·-.. Em•h)t:ft ............ -*' .. H 111110 ................. .... ... 2 ti ... ~ ... ti''¥"' ....... ... .... , ........ ., ......... ... 1-,.. lk diluia __, I Yeocb said he thinks t.besc inc;Qlls1stenc1cs att at the bottom of 1han) SO<allcd learning dis- abilities. ··A lot ofumes we think kids ate slow learners when it may really~ the languqc that 1s the problem ... he said. ··1 think. forcxampk. that dyslexic kids arc simply coafmed b)' the inconsistency of our tancuaac. Ma)be they are simply straiaJ\tforward PcoPk whonpect ideas to bt linktd up in a rational way:· Yench's rattonal way of linki_ .. up ideas came to hi~ ~ aid; tbrouah c~mination of lciealific la~ ln chcmkal ftOmcftdahare,. b eumple, 'H20 denotes a lriokcuk (Pl 1111 ... COUllTIAll/ Aa) " BJ PAUL AllClllPLEY .............. His pccckccssor proved the Biblical promise "the last shall be first" 1n t 987. making Jeff Beathard's sclcc· tton Monda) as the lasl pla)'er in the National Football Leaauc dran a tad mott impressh.·c. Bealh&rd. a runnir!J back and rccchcr at Sootho'n e>reaon State. pb)"Cd his role in Monday's draft tnciously, tbankina thole who help- ed him aJoTI& the '*'ll) -people like his father. But then. Beathard's father reaJly did play a major role in his son's tclection b) the Los A,.eln Ram1; Bobb)· Beathard is ttnenl maoaecr of tbc SUpcr ao--1 champion Wub· iftl'OR Redtki1tt; ~ Owned the J33rd and la.I ptek in the draft. But the Redskins trackd it io the It.am BObb)· Bcatblrd IUde lM tradt 1evaal months llO \0 avoid pc>lliblc conftici of inltn:lt and hurt fminp TV show.turns up suspect in murder of hitchhiker ANN ARBOR. Mach. (AP) - Police here an-ested a car wash attendant Monday and held him for invcstiption in the slay1aa ofa teen- age hitchhiker 1n Southern California after the man's photoaraph was shown on a telcv1s1on pl'Ol(lm. James C. Chel'T)'. 40, was arrested after his photo was shown for I 5 secondj Sundar naaht on "Amenca's Most Wanted' and vieWCTS alerted eollcc and the FBI. Deputy Police Chief Don Johnson said. lovcsuptors from the Bannina. Cahf., Police Depanment and the R1v~1de County d1stnct attorney's office left Monday to 1nterv1ew Cherry at the Washtenaw County Jail about tbc May I 987 killins, Formal characs had not been filed. But Jobnson said Cherry's finacr- pnnu matched those of James C. Stark. a former Yucaipa, Calif.. resident whom authontics had ident- ified as the man who allqedly shot and lulled the still-unidentified teen· 11c11rlata scrv1cc stuion in Bannin&. Pohcc said they rtttived teVcral calls from v1e~ers afler Cherry's photo aepearcd on "Amenca's Most Wanted-' in preparation for a show scheduled lO air April 30. Brad Turell. a spokesman for Fox Broadcastina in Los Anarlcs, said Mond2y that tips from viewers have aided 1n the apprehension of 10 criminals in the 10 weeks since .. America's Most Wanted" made tts d.cbut. Satellite launch visible on Coast VANDENBERG AIR FORCE BASE (AP) -Two Navy nav1ption satellites ~ere launched Monday aboard a Scout rocket, and authorities were wa1t1n1 to stt tf the satellites would enter their assigned polar orbit. The launch left a spectacular ex· haust contrail clearly v1s1ble along the Oranae Coast. "The launch of cou~ was a success. but as to whether or not they have actually entered their orbits or not wc·ll have to wan until tomor- row ... So far thinas look f<>Od," said Air Force Capt John Sulhvan. The OSCAR satellites. launched at 6:57 p.m .. were to enter a 600-mile circular polar orbit, he said. The satellites. each weighing 131 pounds, are a naviptional system for submanncs, commercial shipping and in offshore oil and mineral deposit work. LAST DRAFTEE EARNS HONORS •.. Prom A l dad. But 1t doesn't bother me bccau!lt I'm gettinaa chance.·· Indeed. last year's final pick, Nor- man Jeffer'$0n, signed with the Green Bay Packers and played the entire season. thereby demolishina the es- tablished wisdom that the last pick alwa)'s makes a ~ick eJut. 4.nd Tyronne Braxton. who the Packers were set to pick last but who ~as unexpectedly drafted next-to-last b> the Denver Broncos. went on to play in the Super Bowl. More 1mponantly to local folks. Beat hard has been given the chance to JOin in the 13th annual Irrelevant Week celebration beginning June 19 1n Newpon Beach. where the last drafttt 1s wined. dined. feted. (depleted) and finall) presented with the coveted Lowsman Trophy. The 5-foot-9-mch Beathard will be tackling a tall order when he tries to make the Rams' team. Used mostly as a bloctcina baek dunng his one season at Southern Oregon State, he played under head coach Chuck Mills. a fnend of Beathard's father and a former head coach at Wake Forest and Utah State. Assistant coach Jeff Weiss said the 190-pound Beathard also saw duty as a ball carrier and receiver. He pined 680 yards on 112 cames and cauaht 23 passes for 230 yards. Weiss said. The young man 1s also a lot like his father. the coach said L "He'sa free spint. A lot of Bobby 1s ponra)'Cd in Jeff.'' Weiss said. "Nothina really shakes ham ... Weiss described Beathard as a "quiet leader" who "leads by exam- ple." Although realistic about his chances. Beathard 1s making the most of 1t. Weiss said. "He's work:.ing out and putting on some wciabt. He•s also tryin' to concentrate on his s1ud1cs ... he saad. For their part. the Rams weren't saying their selection ofBeathard was in any way a favor to his father. Although they picked UCLA run- nina back Gaston Green in the first round. and already have workho~ Charles While. Rams spokesperson Terry Nealy said 'Bcathard has a shot at makina the team JUSt like all their other picks. ..You never kraow," Nealy said. Just ask Norman Jefferson. LAGUNA CANYON PURCHASE SOUGHT •.• From Al corporate communications ... In the late 1970s. the state of California purchased Cl)'stal Cove State Park on Pacific Coast Highway for roughly S38 malhon. and that would have been for JUSt about 2.300 acres. "While I behe' e the) arc both well meaning and o;cnous. 1t 1s difficult 10 take seriousl) their proposal It's s1mpl) not reahsllc ... Thomas contends the Laguna Laurel project and development agreement would benefit the Orange Coast. "The (prO)CCt) provides transpor- tation. public service fac1ht1es and open space funding benefits that • significantly exceed current prOJCCt requirements; quantifiable net public benefits total more than S 17 million beyond those currently required by the county," Thomas said. Thomas said Laguna Laurel will leave more than 1,600 acres of open space and more than 1.300 acre{ dedicated to trills1des. canyons and three natural lakes. "We told (lhe conservancy) the public would be better served with a go-ahead or project because of the open space requiremen t~. improve- ment to lakes and contributions to public Lransportallon ... Thomas said. He said The Irvine Co. will con- tribute roughly $40 million to the San Joaquin Hills Transportation Cor- ridor through its projects in Orange County. City Counctlwoman Lida Lenny said the city suppons the conservan- cy's efToru to save the canyon. but not ne«SSanly with financi.I backina. "In terms of buyina the canyon. that's stnctly a pnvate thing.•• Lenny saad. ..We want to preserve the canyon -keep the corridor out and keel? Laguna Laurel out -and we're behind any efTon" to do that. "Maybe one will be successful: you never know." COUNTIAN CREATES LANGUAGE ••. From A l with two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen. And looking at the way it's wntten. you can tell something about the way the molecule is shaped. In scckina a similar structure for ld1rl. Yench began with an already ex1st1ng uniform system of symbols. the lntemallonal Phonetic Alphabet Then he arranged the symbols 1n tables. ltke the Penod1c Table of the Elements. In the tables. symbols arc arranged accord1n1 to concepts. so that. by know1na the S)mbol and where 1t appears Hl 'he tables. a reader or listener will always know what 1t means and how 1t 1s supposed to be pronounced Yench earned a master·s dcg1tt in hngu1st1cs from Cal State Fullerton about 10 years ago. Alan Kaye. cha.1rman ofFullenon's hngu1st1n department. said he was aware of Yench's work but did not know much about ld1rl. "In t:.speranto. tor example. all nouns end m 'o' and all adJcct1vesend in ·a: so you can tell by lookm~ at a word what part of speech it is.' Kay said ... And there are only three verb tenses: past. present and future." Unlike ld1rl. Esperanto already has a bod) ofhterature and a large group of speakers "I thank it's safe to sa)' that many of the great works ofltterature have been translated into Esperanto and the number of speakers is anywhere from I m1lhon to 15 m1llton. dependina on whom )OU believe Orange Countr, has quite a few acti ve Espcrant1sts. • said Kaye. Esperanto 1s based entirely on European languages. Kaye said. as arc a number other art1fic1al lanupges. such as Volapuk. which was dc- \.eloped m 1880 from En&Jish and German roots. Occidental. which appeared 1n 1922 and 1s based on a composne of Romance lanauases: and Glossa, which 1s a recent inven- tion based largcl) on Latin and Greek. usefulness "Esperanto 1sn 't as versatile as 1t could be." he said. ldirl, on the other hand is useful. not only for day-to-day conversation but for scientific discourse and even the automated dialogue of com- puters. Yench said. Because ld1rl organizes not only semantic concepts but aJso scientific principles. its speakers acquire more than simply a manner of speaking. They acquire with their language an entire system of knowlcdae. Yench said. 1'hinas such as v1nues and the laws of nature arc embedded 1n the languaae ... he said. Hazy afternoon4 sun expected ~towcb*lllortatheOrengeeo.twlldelttohGY _,,,.,.; •"*"1o0n 9'ift\ ~ ,.,.ino "°"' II lo 7$ d9greae, Lat•""'" end~ momtno dwdt .. """'"tonight Md Wedneeday, with Olht IOwt tlftOlnO ~om 4t to H ~ WM:S N8M w~ from ... to 10. W•t tOtouthweetwWldt 15 k"°'awlll blow through thelnnet coutat wetere tl'lle aftemoon and evenJng cwtt 2•root .... and• 2·fool weet to eouthweet awen. Farther out, aamllll ctaft 9CMtofy Is potted trom Point Conception 10 8tn NtoolM ... and tor northweet wind• to 25 knote. Southern Clllttom&a mountain ereu wlff be felr through Wednetday with moetty tunny daye and mUd tempentur. ranging from the 50t to mfd tot. Nights wile be cool wilh lowt In the Upp« 20t to new 40. Southwaat wind• to t5 mph today an<' 25 mph Wedneeday will blow through the upper delert• wner.. tMgh9 bOth days wm range from 78 to 88, lowt from 45 lo 55. Lower deeeft high• wtlt renge from 84 to 93, tows from 47 to 57. . ...... Surf Forecast ...... ,.,_...,..., -.... 74 "..... ... rww. 12 41 Loe Mfe1e1 Clly 2 10 71 !! ~ .. ~, ::: :: ~ iO a ;.':r..v .. 111<1 2 IO M u , ... c1orec:1ton w..i..i, Out!oc* '°' 11 4f W-.-cley l"11e Cl*'09 74 11 12 '" ----------74 47 ~~Tides 74 IU TOOAY ~ ~ ,.,.. low 1 06 ._,.. 12 44 ""1NQll ISS•"' 71 41 5-ldlow 1'0lpm 11 42 ~high 7Upm 11 4 t 04 44 15 53 ...,....,,.., : ~ ,.,.. low t·31 •"' ' • 71 .. =:::r Ir-7 n • m 4 1 ..,... t33pm 01 tt :: 9econd ... 7 57 p ,,, 47 ~ : Thl..,,.r-11I011m lfld111t111 70 .u 731pm 1~ 77 44 Thi moon rlMl 11 2 52 p m 10Cl.9y end 7 4 45 1911 II 3 5.3 I m Wldnlldey • 42 IO 45----------71 .. :; : Extended n 47 75 4t TllurlCllly llwOUlfl ....... day -A • ., ~ ol .,._.. ~ 11'41 Frldey .. 42 ot--pert!; CIOud)' .,.., cool IT 42 llVough SalurOIY LOWI -'lo 41IO51 13 53 ..... In 1111 toe TRAFFIC REDUCTION PLAN· DRAFTED ••• Pr om Al dnver. up to 11 points for a 12-person load. If an employee hves w1th1n five males of work. theemployeractshalfa poanL Two-tenths of a point are earned if an employee works a four- da)' week. Commission staff members have calculated that a reduction in auto- mob1le-related air pollution equal to the d1stnct's standard of 1.5 averse nders per vehicle could be attained by accumulatina 34 poants under their system. Thus. for eumple. an employer with IOOworkerscouldeam 34points 1f employees used these seven tramc reducinJ methods. • lffive people bicycl~ or walked tQ work for at least six out of every I 0 days. • Six employees took the bus for at least s1 x out of I 0 days. • Ten pair of employees rode in two-person car pools. • Fo ur addiuonal cars came<J three-person car pools. • Twenty-fivr employtts worked staucrcd hours so a~ to avoid peak traffic hours. • Eighty employtts worked com- pressed work weeks. • And six employees worked at home. .. Both the d1stnct's plan and ours are based on an employer's aood faith effort to encourage employees to get to work some other way than by dnving alone." said Adnenne Brooks. a comm1ss1on staff member. Commissioners stopped shon of approving the Tnp Reduction Incen- tive Plan. One member. Com- missioner Dana Reed, said he had received the proposed ordinance late and had not had time to read at. "There's nothrng that leads me to believe I would oppose at.'' Reed said. "I JUSt need to read 1t before I vote for It .. Comm1ss1oners did, however. vote to send copies of the proposed ord1 nance to the .\ 1r Quality Manage- ment D1stnct and several c1t1cs. including Costa Mesa. which have expressed an interest 1n the model ordinance. A d1stnct spokesman said late Monday that he had not seen the commm1on's pro~sal yet. but that the d1stnct was w1lhn~ 1n principle. to accept local traffic reduction effons. "The dastnct will accept local efTons provided they are at least as stringent as our regulation," said John Dunlap. community relauons officer for the district. "In concept at sounds J.Ood. but we need to sec at 1n wntins, Transportation Commissioners will vote May 9 on whether to adopt the proposal HEART DONOR'S DEATH INVESTIGATED ••• homAl ··we don't really have any clues as to his activities that night. or actually what weapo'n -1f any at all -was used." Johnson said. Althou&h Hoag apparently was wi1hm the law regulating transplants from unidcnufied donors. the trans- plant raised ethical questions. which were fueled by reports that the donor's brother-in-law went to Hoag 111 search of Ramirez after the operation and was tdld he was not therc. Hoag Vice President Larry A1 nswonh said Monday the brother- an-law arrived at the hospitaJ early Fnday, more than 24 hours after the transplant operation. He was told that Ramirez• body was not at the hospital. havinasincc been moved to the county moraue. After Wkin& with the brother-in- law, a nursina su~rvisor at Hoag notified coroner's officials that one of Ramirez' relative mi~t have been loqt.c:d, Ainswonh said. A coroner's deputy suggested the nursing supervisor contact Costa Mesa police. A1nswonh said police later amvcd at the hospital and were put in touch with the brother-an-law. Ainswonh said he assumed the officers took the rclauve to the coroner's office to make an identifi- cation. The hospital vice president disputed repons that the brothcr-m- law had been turned away from the hospital. "Thal clearly 1s not the case," said Ainsworth. Ramirez' sister said later Fnday that she would have ~ven the ao- 1hcad to the transplant. had her brother been idenufied at the time. Authorities said Ramirei·s hcan saved the life of Humphreys. who suffered from a dcaenerative hcan disease that was slowina eatina away thcorpn. Humphreys on Monday was si~tina up in his bed a nd eauna solid food. said Bolen. She added that Humphreys was in "fair to good" condition in Hoag's intensive care unit "He·s eat1na well. he's slltina up and his color 1s good ... Bolen said "The doctors are very pleased." Meanwhile. at UCI Medical Center. 26-year-old Huncinaton Beach mus1can Scott Headdina also made pins followina his Apnl 8 surgery. H.caddi~reccivcd the hcan of a U.S. Manne who died in a brawl with Cal State Fullerton football players outside a bar not far from the campus. No charges were filed in connection with the death. UCl Medical Center spokeswoman Elaine Beno said HeaddinJ takes two 17-minutc walks daily 1n the 1n- tens1ve care unit. She said she was unsure when he would be removed from intensive care. but added his condition was aood. Kaye dad say. however. that all art1fic1al languages share at least one s1milanl)i; they arc attempts to sim- pllf) and to eliminate ambi&uity and 1mprcc1s1on from lanugagc But Yench said Esperanto and other anifir1al languages lack some 1mponant conce pts that limit their That kind oflinkage between whole ideas and symbols is not unknown in the world. Yench noted. Many Onen- t.al lanauaacs are 1deoaraph1c. so that symbols represent not sounds but concepts. Some other non-European langua,es. such as Arabic and Hebrew. arc similar to Jdirl in that they contain a ireater degree of conformity between concepts and symbols than docs English. he said. "for example. there arc certain r==========================:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=--.-....----:;._i. ___ _ combinations ofletters which. in any MARINE PILOT .•. P'rolDAl • truck~ a re allowed 60 o;cconds to tct lO a CTash site under Manne Corps standards. she said. "Our crash. fire and rescue person- nel did an outs~ndinuob," she said. "I definitely would say their efforts and their quick response allevaated wbu routd ha¥e been a real trqcdy." Marine offic1aJs refused to s~­ late on whether the aircraft would have bum into names without the quick reaction. "The aircraft it~lf did not bum," Gunnery Set. Pcgy Cauley •id. ~ere was some fire there from the 1f\C1'1>umcr5. but that was in the Jrl11)' area and ii was immediately ex u nauilhed. •• Authont1es have not determined what ma) ha"e caused the accident. which took place before more than 300.000 spcc~tors. An 1nvctt1~tion pancl from Cad1ck's unit will be appointed to look into t~e accident. Cabot said. Witnesses ~•d they sensed some- thinJ was wrona as they watched Cad1ck perform. MHe came in low and kind of stalled. It wu like he couldn't ttt it &oina. •• Irvine police officer J.L Eppstein said. "'TM tail hit the p:ound. He a.lid for a ways and then hit a din mound. When he stalJcd. it was like tcttin1 your car stuck in the mud." semitic lanauaae. convey the same conceptual mcan1na." he said. "So you can tell by rccoanizing those letter combinations that words are related. That's of\cn not the case in EnsJish:· Yench said he bchevcs ldirl's precision will be useful in the de- velopment of such future consumer mainstays as vo1cc-act1viated ap- pliances. On the less technical side. tdirl is pctfectly capable of conveying poetry and sons. he said. Even slana 1s J)t"rfcclly possible. he said. .. An)'thina that can be SI.Id. I want to be said in ldirt, .. Yendl said . Yencb WIS bom in Ru la in 1918. With the onset of the ~volution. he and tus family fled to Shaf\ahai. China. He came lo the United States in I 963. and to OranJe County in 1970. He Jives in Anaheim. °::.:;' Ju•tcaU 642-80ll6 .......... ~.,.., • JllU do <1111_.,c.a.,.., .. l'°"m ml.._.1pf" llld "°" CQlliJ .. .. ...., "' .......,, ..... .__,. )'Oii • '* ~ ...., CoPrllr1•m .. ....,.. to • m MO .., UllPt .. ......... Cln u'll u , ... ,. 11111 .... 0-..0.-.. ...... uw-...- Auorted Dress shins From the classic pin-point oxford button down, tailored in seven different colors, to English spread stripinas and contrast collars you can meet your dress shin needs at P.0 .S.H . ' I f . ·' • . I ·I I . .. 'l . .. .· .. • ... •SI. :o .:11 • .--~ •JI