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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1986-03-03 - Orange Coast Pilot.. M ONDAY, MARCH 3, 1986 .. .. . 4 missin.g _in plane craSh off Coast .. , ,. .. _ Witness figures 'pilot panicked! before single-engine craft sank near NB pier - By STEVE MARBLE Of .. D.-, .......... A rented airplane out of John Wayne Airport crashed late Sunday about a l)alf mile off the Newport Beach coastline, apparently lcilJjng four ~pie believed to be traveling in the smgle<ngine craft. Wlnaaupport Corason Aquino'• preel- dency ezpectect to be npportedby llareo.' al- llee. A4 Coast A public hearing on off- shore oll drllllng Is planned In Newport Beach/AS Na tion Astronauts say they want to find the cause of the shuttle explosion and re- sumt flights./ AS A set of wheels, a seat and other debris including a page from a flight manual were found 'floatinc near the spot where the airplane splashed into the water at 11: 14 p.m., said Coast G uard Lt. Ue Foresman. • A team of scuba divers was explor- ing an area south and west of the Peace Mai ch offalnd walking I ;200 people, 30 from Coast, joining cross-country trek By PAULARCHIPLEY Of .. D.-, .......... Two days down and 253 to go, about 1,200 participants in the 3,235- milc Great Peace March will set up their tent city in Oaremont tonight. The marchers, including about 30 from the Orange Coast, officially began their trek after a rousing sendoff at Los Angeles City Hall Saturday. Glitches such as PRO-Peace or- ganizers' inability to secure campsites and walking insurance for the entire journey failed to dampen the enthusiasm of most marchers, although a few reportedly dropped out. World The California Department of Transportation and some cities alona ---+-Ttna marcb route' WOUJ<tir gran parade or other permits withollt SS Defense Secretary Weinberger says the United States supported the Phllllplne rebels who ousted President Marcos./A4 Entertainment Actor Howard Rollins puts a little tarnish on his good-guy Image.I /BS INDEX Advice and Games Births Bulletin Board Business Classlfled Comics Death Notices Entertainment Horo~ope Opinion Paparazzi Polloe Log Public Notices Sports Televlslon Weather A10 A7 A3 A8-9 B6-8 A11 B4 BS ' A10 A12 A7 A3 B4,8 81-4 BS A2 million insurance coverage, the As- sociated Press reported. Nevertheless, marchers and about 5,000 supporters who pthered outside City Hall Salurday were ·confident their ranks and support would grow a.s they made their way toward Washington, D.C. to demand ao end to the arms race. ' Eleanor Henry of Laguna Beach, who plans to jom her son Kevin on the last leg of the .journey, said the PRO-fcace goaJ of globaJ nuclear disarmament was achievable because it was "a grJssroots movement." "They'lUulve to listen. If they don't hsten, then we'll do it at the ballot box," Henry said. Marlene K.itajchuk of Newport Beach. who said she joined the march to restore hope to her children and others who believed nuclear war was inevitable, was ecstatic about the experience after spending severaJ rehearsal days camping out and marching in the Los Angeles area while organizers· prepared for the scndoff. "The camaraderie is infectious. At night we're dead tired, and they ask for volunteers to do some dishes or something, and you j ust get up and do it," she said. "I feel wonderful. I haven't felt this good in years.'' John K.itajchuk, her ex-husband but good friend, vol unteered to work (P)eue eee PEACE/ A2) mumapal pier where the pilot of a • But an official at John Wayne Coast Guard helicopter spotted a11 oil Airpon said it appears four ~le slick this ~orruna. said.. Oranae were aboard the plane, Which he County ShcnffLt. ~obert Rivas. T~e tentatively identified H an Archer depth of the ocean as about SO foot m Piper owned by Aero Flitt Center at ~!area. . . .. . the cou!ty airport. That might be at, be said. ..We have ~ indication there .Until the ~~!age ~s located and were four peo ,"said Foresman. . rajJed, authonues said they WQuld An Aero ·te Cent.er employee not be able ~o confirm how maby confirmed the airplane that Cf'Qhcd people were 10 the craft and from wu· owned b'v his com pan)' and ittiad what business the airpltlne may have been rented Sunday everung. been rented. "But we have no comment on Winning embrace Lama Baqh pTee llary Beth Zimmerman (factnaJ a con- arataJatory ha& after t lmmerman captured the Unlden ln'ritatlonal &off t.oarnament at llesa Verde Country Cl ab in Coeta llesa OD Sunday. See •tory OD B 1. an~ng naht now.'' the eqiployee said. The Coast Guard spokesman 11id the information on the airpllfle comes from the most rcoeat entry in a fllP.t manual that was found ftoauna w.th other debris oear the cruh lite. More than a dozen people saw or heard l~e crash~. ~f\8 to the Newport .Beach pohce. Jim Holly. a Ne~rt Beach rni- dent who was watching the onshore seareh early today from the end of the Newport Pier, said he 'Yal waJ.kiAa alona the beach when the accident occurred. "Tbe plane was comilll down the c:out like it was lootina for a place to land." said Holly. "Tbien at auddenly took off out over the ocean, banked to one fide and went down. ••tt looked like it juat went ~ .. ·• Holly said of tile airplane'& man- euverinp. .. It looked like the pilot panicked." (Pleue ... PLAJllS/A.2) AC·LU wants to . keep non-viole_nt suspects fromjail Citations pressed over incarceration .for misdemeanors By LISA MAHONEY °' .. Di.-,,..,. .... The American Civil Libert.1es Union will ask a federal judge Tuesday to order Orange County not to jail people awaitiD.g arraignment for minor, non-violent crimes. Issuing citations rather than Jaihng people arrested for minor crimes like shoplifting would . eliminate over- crowding prQblems at Orange County Jail, said ACLU attorney Richard Herman. "ThCTC are probably 600 iomatcS in the Orange County Jail now who eould have been released on cit.ation- relcasc," he said. Had these inmates been kept out of the jail syst~ inmate population in the Main Jail in Santa Ana would plummet below its ra~_ll -inm.1tc capacity~ Hmnan_ said. "This is the only county in the st.ate of California that docsn 't 11SC citatioo- rcleue," he said. Herman is confident that a fcdcnl JUd&e overseeing crowd.in& ~ema at O"range County's Main Jail in Santa Ana will order the county to do more to lower the number of inmates ancaroerated there now that an inde- pendent i~il monitor's report bas shown officials an violation of a 1,SOO-mmate cap at least three times in February. "We're going to get some real action," be vowed. Special Mo nitor Lawrence Grossman informed Judge William P. Gray m a Feb. 26 letter that the county had exceeded a cap placed on Main Jail population Jan. I 5 .. at least three days" betwun Feb. l I and 25. The letter, released by the county today, shows the county m violauoo of the c0ur1-lmposcd cap on Feb. 18, 23 and 24 when the number of inmates ranged from 1,520 to t .537. Ed Duran, the county's spokesman on jaiJ maners. was unavailable for comment. . "None of th.J.SrytS an surpnse to them.'' ~0. We&-&atrt<>N[tt----:i- for the last year to get inmate (Pleue eee JAIL/ A.2) Science building design-approved for tlCI campus By PBD..SNEIDERMAN °' .. ~ ......... The University of California Board of Regents has approved the design of a $32.5 million physical sciences buildi ng to be constructed at UC lrvlDe. The new budding 1s expected to rclfove some of the classroom and lab space short.ages now plaguing the Irvine campus. and it is expected to p ve UCI room to admit addiuonal students. The butlshng, called Physical Set- ences Unit 2, will include research and tcachang laboratories, a 450-scat lecture hall and offices for teachers and adman1strators. The 97,5~squarc-foot bu1ld1ng will be located on the central campus nng, cast of the ellisuog Physical Sc1enCC$ Unit 1. ln a long-range UCl development plan approved by the regents 10 1970, the 2. 75--acre Slte was reserved for the long.awaited science building. Construction is expected to begin next February wath compleuon scheduled in September 1988 Its new Labs will be used by UCl physics and chemistry rcsean::bcrs. "The lack of adequate research and teacbm& space bas been the major obstacle to conuoued development in the physical setcnces," said Dr. Wil- ham Parker. associate cxecutJve vice chancellor and professor of physics at UCL "With this new building. phys- ics and chemistry (departments) will make new research programs possible and enable expanded. graduate and undergraduate student enrollment. .. Going, going, Bhagwan ~ guru's goods so~d S -ngl t Q 1 f-~:; b t bid-,About 400 l<?ts were varying lengths The ha&hcst l>idd.m& went for two u asses ne n ~una, u s of exotic fabrics that would have been gold decorative pieces that were pan not high enough for throne decoration made into ~~s for the guni. . of the guru's throne. The) brought __ __ Earl).'. ~adding s~ted pnces $1 ,500 apiece. A silver flute went for -wcren t going to be barpms; nor were $650. By PAUL ARCHIPLEY About 350 bidders. many of them they going to bolster Bhagwan's purx Other h1gh -t1cket items incl uded Of IM o.11y"""' ••.it sannyasins (seekers) who had lived at much. A tally of the funds raised' by silk and sequin fabncs valued at up to Followers of Bhagwan Shrcc Ra-Bhagw1tn's Oregon ranch, inspected the auction was not complete, Prem $400 a yard. ~nccsh swanned to the Utsava Ra-450 lots that went on the auction Nishavda said this morning. Swami Santosh. a 10-year devotee 1neesh Meditation Center in Laguna block. A rcoord the guru reportedly listen-who laves. at the µ.guna Canyon Beach on Sunday to bid on the Items ranged from Lenox china cd to daily went forS3S. Eight yards of oommune,·saad the most expens1ves personal and household effects the and silverware to several pairs of the white polyester material sold for $6 a item to be offered were pieces to a guru abandoned when he lefi the Bhaawan's prescription sunaJasses ya rd. A "P&ir of Christian Dior four-piece set of solid gold throne United States in November. and some of his favorite records. sunglaucs fetched SSO. decorations valued together at Statue carved in memory of La guna Beach's greeter Restaurant orders 9-f oot memorial to colorful Art Colony street corner figure I Eiler Larsen is fondly remembered by some a a lquna Beach folk hero ,.,ho spent 33 years tandtn• on city \trttts enthu'1aSl1~1ly artetlng both toun ts and residents a they entef'((I the An Colony He '' known throughout 1he state and. some auc,t. throu&)'lout the , wo rld. Appropnately named the "Laauna Beach areetcr.' Lanen will be 1m- mortahzed an yet another statue to be e~ted 1n the Clty. lhlS lime at the Grcctcr's Comt.>r Re•uaurant near 10Uth Mam Beach Lanen moved to Laguna Beach 1n 1942. He befncnded many of the town's residents, who repaid his lundoess by scodtnJ him o n an cxpen1e--paid tnp to his native Den~ mark just before his death 10 1975. In hit later ycan they had helped · 5uppon bim. Ourina the 8S yean he hved1 Lanen preached love and in p.reo childml. whoo~ P.~ around him. mf'lmcrit.e<I by 'his stories. Even lhe City Council at one t1mr deemed him the official "l.aauna l.Auu MEil For.u s ON THE NEws Beach Grteter. ·· To remember ham, the owners of theGrtetcr'sComer Rntaut1n1 com- mamoned Whittier sculptor Gu~ Wilt0n to recreate his prncnet an a nane-foot scul~ture carved from an 800-~r-old pttte of ,,.'OOd In tl\e finished work. the arttter leans on h11 etne with a bool. of (Pl ....... OU&T&R/A2) SI 0.000. The two largeq:ucccs dJdn'. L sell .. "lfwc don't get the pncc we "'ant. then we don't sell it," he said Santosh didn't bid becau~ 'TH gotten a lot of g1f\s from Bha$W3n I don't feel a need to buy anythmg:· The proctt<h were targeted tor the 1uru's legal cxpcnscs and a portion of the profits will be used to suppon the Laguna Beach center. The auru was arrested on susp1c100 offraud last fall and struck a deal with the S government that permitted him to lea"e the COUAU"' The auction moved slowl)' and man) lcfi without b1ddmg. .. I wanted to bid on some of the china," o ne dt gruntled woman said "But It was takrng so long. I'd be here tor hours befo~ the) go t to the things I wanted .. 'leverthele~s. Santo h said the)' "ert pleased wuh the outcome. when the auction ended around 7 p.m. "We're espccaally satisfied that so man} people a mc who hadn't been (Plcue MC R..AJ?UUB/ A2) Fund shortage delays hotel at fairgrounds I By TONY SAAVEDRA room lodge Clo up to Silt ac~ of the 0t .. Delly "-4 .._.. fo1rvounds at the comer of Newpon Boule,ard and f air Onve 1n \ona lompt'llt1on from nt¥r hotel\ tn \1~ ProJ~t offinals had ho~ to the att~ has made •t IOuaJl tor complete the hotel in ume for the '86 developcn to pm finane1al becking Oran t Count) .. air 1n July for 1 future Ramada Inn on tht tiowcvcr. the PC¥lhferatmn of nt'A Orange < ount)' Fa1rarounds.. dell\· hotels. includin& the lmne Mamou in& construc11on plan tw ncarl" J and the fmba \) uitc in . nta l\na. year put a -.qucc1e on the market -The Fair Board la t wtt._ PH T"I fol"C'1 n1 dcvclopcn to down le tbf Propenat\ of ottsd.alc. A.m · un1il proJ«1 to 3 acre~ The hotel would pt I to come up wt th the fin n<'1na ~ull hl'-e 2t S roam\ but 1t W1ll be for the hotd that wu to ~1n i-.u1f\ 1n two pha~ construction last Januaf) ( OMtructaon would bcl>n ~at Former d~tin'i l llllC'<I lur a ~ 15-· (Pleue ... BOTSL/ A2) °""Oe 00Mt DAILY PILOT/ Monday, March 3, 1988 GREETER ~TA TUE READIED IN LAGUNA ••• holaAl poetry in his Croot coat pocket and a pencil anderuer~ay bealwaya canied in his top pockeL Lanen will aaain areet lbc people wbo pass by tbe mtauraol The 500-pound 1eulpture is com- pleted and was to be delivered today. •cx:ordina to Taa Fouladi, part owner oftbc Greeter's Comer. Larsen was born m 1890, coio- cadentally the same year the old redwood tree used for the acuJpture was cut by touen, Wilson said. The wood was so dense because or its qe that it never made it to the mill; instead, it sank to the bottom of Big Ri ver in Northern California where it sat for 80 years. The log was raised from the river five years after Larsen's death in 1975. Wilson, a young artist who bas sculptures displaY.ed in four cities in Japan. in Hawaii and scveraJ East Coast cities, said most of the work on the J?CCter statue was done in his Placerville studio in Northern Cali- fomaa, He began th~ work at a lumber yard whctc he slept in a tent. During bis work, Wilson said he became intngucd by the history behind the greeter. So intrigued, he said, he 1s now work.mg on a bronze bust and hfesizc oil painting of Larsen. In the 3 I 1h months It took Wilson to carve the sculpture from the 15- foot log, he met countless people w~o either knew Larsen or knew of him. That is just one reason Tony Abbasi. part owner of the Greeter's Comer restaurant, asked Wilson to carve the statue. Abbasi recalls Larsen as "a chanmng man. My folks knew him." "I'm sure everyone will be deeply im pressed (by the statue). He will be well remembered." Most of the work on the sculpture was done w1th power tools. some- thing many artists condemn - unjustifiably. Wilson said. "Carving 1s a general tenn for removing wood. Jt docsn·t matter 1f you use dynamite. 'It's hke people who use a washing machine saying you're not washing clothes because you are beating them on rocks," he said. He began the jOb w11h a chain saw. ··1cs lond of a spooky way to work because once you take something off you can't put 11 back. It removes wood so fast that you have to know what you're doing," he said . Redwood is the perfect medium for the outdoor i.culpture. Wilson said. because it has a poison property thaf keeps bugs away. "T hat's one reason they live 2,000 years," he said. If the owners of the Greeter Restaurant ca n secure penn1ssion from the c11y. the statue will sit just outside the restaurant Guy WUaon carved hla 9-foot .culpture from an 800-year- old piece of wood. More fog, low clou~ for Coast MOlet unetat>te lllf wtlt bring ~fog end low doud• to cou1al c0mmuntti. Tueedey end thunderehowen to lM cMMr\1 Ind mountalnl of South«n CelHomla.. 80(M hazy afternoon eunaNne lhould break thfough the ctoud• over tM cout, and.Inland communltl• wlll ... partly c:touc:ty lklee In the aft9m00f'I, Along the Orange CO.I II wlll be moatty cloUdy during the night and momlng houra Tu.day wtth hazy afternoon aun.t'tlne Mar the coa1t and plf1ty cioudy 1klee °"' tM more Inland valley•. High• ,.UMday In the 80I and lower 70.. OWwnlghl Iowa In the 50I to lowtr eot. . From Point Conceptlofl (o IM Mexican Border -Inner w1ter1: Light v1111~ wlnnlght and morning houra becomlno wett to .oUthW.-1 8 to 1 .. knoll In the lftefnoon and evening hourt Tueed1y. W•terly 1well 2 to 4 feet. lncreulng low cloudln ... tonight end Tu.day. U.S •• Tempe , Im 1MAN ,., -1-3 ,.,, 1-3 ,.,, 1-3 -1-3 poor 1·.2 -1-2 llllr 5 1 0.3 33 21 PLANE DOWN OFF NEWPORT; 4 MISSING ••• From Al Several fishermen said the plane's description matched that of an air- plane they recalled flying low and doing acrobatics near tbe pier on Saturday. Newport police• dispatcher Peri Ropke confirm'ed that several people complained about a low-flying air- plane Saturday but said that craft was desc ribed as a Cessna. Helicopters from the Newport Beach Police Department and the county sheriff's office searched the ocean waters after the crash and lat.er were joined by the Coast Guard cutter Point Evans out of Long Beach. The tower at John Wayne Airport usuaJly .closes about 10:45 p.m ., accordjng to Dc~is H~m. anairP,Ort official. But the airport 1s open to hght aircraft around the clock on an unregulated basis, he added. The airplane crash is the second an a week in and around John Wayne Airport. Newport Beach dcveloper- pilot Walter Scott Biddle was killed Wednesday in the fog near the county airport. • But when Larsen returns to Laguna Beach to forever greet the people. Walson said the b1~est compliment he hopes to receive 1s "that somebod} who knew him likes the statue·· "It will crack and change and grow 1n charact~r O\er the )Cars:· Walson ~Id J u\t as gracefully ~s Eiler Larsen ~~!~ • • • did ·---I ----- Author James Mi chener released from hospital Wobbly harbor tower be II demolition continues AUSTIN. Texas (AP) -Author James Michener. hospitalized since heart b}'pass surgery on Feb. 16, has been released from Seton Medical Center. the hospital said today. Michener. 79. went home Satur- lla~. said Linda Mcfarland. hospital '\pokes woman The author of more than 30 books. including the recent stsc er - .. Ti.·xas." had a qurntuple bypass operauon after checking into the ~eton emergenq room with chest pains McFarland sa id Michener will continue treatment on an outpatient· basis LOS ANGELES (A P) -Demo- ll11on work was 10 continue today on a )()().foot-tall obscrvatton tower at Los Angeles Harbor that started wobbhns m the wind Sunday. prompting the evacuation of thousands of tourists from the Ports O' Call Village s~ops beneath it. PEACE MARCH ACROSS U.S. UNDER \1/ A Y ... From Al m the 1>1x mohile km hen~ after weeh of helping Marlene tram for the march He said the c: ross-sect1on of soc1et} part1c1pating 1n the march I!> en- couraging. · "These are the John Doe~ and Jane Does of Ament.a ... he said. "There are doctors. lawyers. professionals of all k1rul<i. It's no1 JUSt some fringe group .. fhe marchers ""ere getllng '>Orne: mainstream sendoff. too. including Mayor Tom Bradley who told them, "You will deliver a message not Just to the nation, but to the whole world , that we want an end to nuclear armamenti.." ~ctor Robert Blake. who is marching the entire tnp. told hstenc~ "You got me sane again I was silting m front of the TV and listening and ...aying ·Yeah. Star Wat5 wall save us· Thank God for you " Helping make the sendoff rally memorable was entertamment b}' · \.1ellssa Manchester and Mr. Mister. and messages from stars like Ed Begley Jr .. Howard Hesseman. Ten Garr and Holly Near Celcbn11es hke actor Paul New- man. who 1s an honorary co-chair· man of the march. are expected to 101n the group later. Organizers hope the rank'> will swell to I m1ll1 on for the final mtle5 into the nation's capital. and sup- porters believe 11 wall happen. Manan Pack. director of the Or- ange Count) Alliance for Survival. said the Alliance would be busy helping the movement build toward that goal. "We'll schedule planes, buses. whatever we can to get those people to Washington." Pack said. "We're mob1lwng." And Esther Palo of North Holly- wood said recent history proved 11 can work. "It took I 0 years for the V 1etnam war 10 end There were many of us who marched. and 11 snowballed until the war had to be stopped ... Palo sajd. "And the people dad 11." RAJNEESH AUCTION DRAWS 350 •.. From Al here before," he said. "It was nice they could find out we don't bite ·· item$that didn't scil will be offered at wholesale pnces Saturday. he said Devotees hugged and chatted. many of them meeung fo r the first time since abando ning the Oregon commune. None appeared sad that the auction ~emed to mark the end ofBhagwan\ stay m America. ··it's personal It's not sad." said Sumaran, a sannyas1n hvmg 1n Laguna Beach. "It's the way of events. part of reality." Like many of the devotee\. Sumaran. whose name means "re- membrance," was on h15 way to v1s11 the guru 1n Crete Another devotee heading for ( rete on Wednesda} was N1<;ha vda. wh o --wcrs-rottect1ng q uestions from san- nyasms for Bhagwan A native of German}'. she moved 10 the L' S. to be with the guru in Oregon '\/ow that he''I gone. she plan'> to v1s11 him when she can "It changed (when he left), but 11 didn't leave a void." N1shavda said "I'm going to 'iee ham m Crete because I love him. But I doubt that I would move there I'm happy here." Santosh said about 300 unnyu1n, have been JOumeying to Crete on their own. but they aren't welcome to stay there. "They're allowed to come for awhile. then they're expected to leave," Santosh said. Bhagwan 's departure was merely another "exc111ng chapter" for his followers. Santosh said. "It's kind of a blessing. because 1t makes u~ more aware. Just when you're settled he changes -he pulls the rug out from under you -but by and large. no one 1s suffenng from at." he said. Most of the Amcn can followers arc "in a state of nux... trying out different communit1c~ up and down the West Coast, Santosh said. Although all Bhagwan's U.S. centers closed two years ago when he launched the Oregon ranch, between 10 and 15 have opened ~mce t~ ranch closed. he ~1d. HOTEL AT FAIRGROUNDS DELAYED .•• · P'romAl ~pring on the fi"t 155-room install· ment. with the remaining 60 rooms ::idded after the hotel eslJlbhshes ll'it'lf, ~1d Gordon Marks ofT N Propenie~ The revised lease aareement with 1bt fairgrounds calls for the ~ond pha~ to t>qin once the hotel main- tains a cert.am level of business. Cutbacks an the project have \heed deeply 1n10 the annual rent the fairgrounds was to have ~1vcd from che hotel. Instead of $3'40,000 a year. the stale-owned fairgrounds will rt<e1vc S258.4<X> for the smaller site 1.-, Meanwhile. TN Propen1es ·~work­ ing to meet the board deadline 1n ohta1nina financing. w11h hope~ of building the fim phn\C 1n time lor the I C)ft7 county fair ··Becau~ of the abundance of new hotel\ 1t 1s hard to prove (to financiers) that 1h1s project 1 econ· om1cally fca'l1ble," '81d fa1rvound'I spokeswoman Jill l loyd "This 1'n't aood ume 10 try and act financ1na for another hotel · the reason developers boosted the oria· mal I 50-room proJect 10 215, despite prote'it\ from neighbonng re'l1dcnts that the cicpan\1on wa\ too large But the market change has forced developers -at least temporanly - back to what amounts 10 a fi ve-room incrcasc over the onginaJ game plan. to the delight of some residents. Ho meowners 1n the College Park and Mesa del Mar neighborhoods had araued a laraer hotel would 1ncrca~ traffic. noise and other nu1\anccs population uctions at the jail ... think 11's insane. I think they have really lost control of their scnses. . .if they think a j udge is going to stand for that." he said. Judge Gray found the county supervisors and Sheriff-Coroner Brad Gates in contem~t of a 1978. order to limit Main Jail populat1on last March. He ordered them to take st.cps to reduce overcrowding and set inmate limits of 1,500 for Jan. l Sand 1.400 for April I. • The ACLU is pushing to reduce the number of inmates to 1.171. the Main Jail's rated capacity. Grossman said that more people than ever arc being referred to the county jail system despite a request from Gate'S to county police depart- ments that they use citations instead of arTCsting suspects whenever poss- ible. Such an influx makes it "unlikely unJess further steps arc taken" that the county will be able to comply with the court-ordered caps, Grossman wrote. AddiuonaJ beds at James A. Mu- sick Honor Farm in El Toro arc all being used as arc tents intended for temporary use there. There is no more room at Theo Lacy Branch Jail either. he wrote. "It seems to me that new jail construction is mandatory. Un- fortunately, it should have been under way years ago," Grossman wrote. In the meantime. the jail monitor is recommending that the Sheriff's De- partment implement the citation- releasc program the ACLU wants along with a program of early release for certain offenders, use of parole and an elc~tronically monitored home confinement system for of- fe nders on work furlough. Hennan agrees with the interim measures suuested by Grossman with the e~ccption of eloc:tronic monitoring which he saxs IS too expensive. But he.sajd it's 'crazy" to talk about spending millions on new jails to house people who could better pay their "debt to society" through aJtemate programs .. He estimated that perhaps 300 of the 3,000-plus inmates in the county jail arc a danger to society. Others would be•better off in drug and alcohol treatment programs, doing court-ordered public ·service. °ta~~~E Daily Pilat MAIN OFFICE 3JO Wn1 (lay $1 Colle Mfte CA Dlillr ......... .., o.. ....... Debrla from plane that cruhed near Newport Pier la arrayed on deck at Harbor Patrol department etatlon. County approves dredging of Huntington Harbour cbannel Portions of Huntington Harbour's main channel will be dredged under a S 1.6 million cleanup project ap- proved by the Oranae County Board of Supervisors Tuesday. The county plans to dredge about 130,000 cubic yards of sediment from the main harbor channel startina at Anaheim Bay and endfog at the southeast end near Warner A venue. Another 5,000 cubic yards of sedi- ment will be removed from Chris- tiana Bay, a small inlet within Huntington Harbour. 1 Sediment buildup is rcstritting the use 0 1 recreauonal boats an the • harbor. The city of Huntington Beach 1s expected to pick up two-thirds of the cost of dredging. The county, which is· responsible for unincorpo rated sec- tions of the harbor, will finance the rest. Dredjin, may bc&in 'as early as the summer o 1987. T&e work will take about three years to complete, accord- ing to an aide to 2nd District Supervisor Hamett Wieder. Wicder's district includes Hunt- ington Harbour. o.u, Piiot o.11..,, 11 Guaranteed M• 100•-llo• I~ C:O.te MeM CA 9211115 e•e..i.cl.O. 11'1 5'11.,....,_6 -or..-11'2 '3.?I Just call 642-6086 ~·,noey " '°" oo -,,.,... 'fO'JI ~ Oy ~ )() D m c,.. Dol!Oft 1 D m Coe>yt'(IN 1913 O<itn0t C:0.11 ~ ~t N<l -tlClf ... -''"'°"' .OIQr .. I metr• °' ~ .... ._," ...... mey Ile rep.~«j wl~ -·· oe< ~'Of -r•<Qht - O"Cl e"'" "°''•llf o•., •• C.U.11 ~ C• '"'"'' ~ '"!> ue to01 $1.C>Oc• t.>10" c:>y o••..-IS~~ "'O'I" , tr ,, 00 "'O"I~ VOL n . NO.a What do you hkc about the Duly Pilot? What don't you like? CaJI the number above and your menage will be recorded, transcnbed and de- hvcred to the appropnate editor. The same 24-hour answcnna 1erv1ct may be used to record letten to the editor on any topic. Contnbutors to our Letters column rnust i"nclude their name and telephone number for venfication Tells us what's on your mind. I -~ CCIPY w1 Ii. .,..._'° S.1.itoay "'Cl Surooly " you 00 <ICC ·-Yo4JI ~oor 11, 1 • "' e.-ei.tor• 10 • "' ..,,., "°"' CCC>Y .... tlt~tO Clfculettoft , ... ~ ' , , J ~eo.t DAJLY PtLOT/Mof_ICMy, ...,._l, 1111 • M , Halley's Coniet ·lecture planned Offshore oil hear~ng set in N ewp".).rt Joel LeVJne, an astronomy professor at On.nJ! Coast Collcae. will conduct a proar.m on Halley s Comet Thu.rsd.ay at 7:30 p.m. io &be toclal hall of Conarqation B'nai Tiedek in Fountain Valley. Levine will show slides and explain how to locate the comet and view it best at the 7:30 ~· The synqoeue is located at 9669 Talbert Ave. 111d further information is available at 963-461 l . Dlvorce work•lloJM •lated ,......, ltldf ...... ,. ,.,.u Sta'e environmental offic:ials wlll con· duct a public meetina Thursday in New- port Beach as pan of their series ot hearinp to P 'hercom menu on the f cderal aovemment'a proposed omhorc oil and .au lusina plan: ' The meetina in the council chambers 11 Newport Beach Ci'y Hall is the first of four mee,inas scheduled durinJ March rhrouabout California, 1coord1na to the state Environmental Atr1111 .,enqi. Moman1 scs ions, from 9 to 11 :30 a,m. each day, will be rcsttVcd for di~u ions witb local aovemmeni o1!ki&Js.. A&r· noons. from l to 4 p.m. will be resuved for comments from citu.cn knd iodu trial aroups and any otheT intctHtcd publk The mecunp , conducted by Gov. Dcukme1ian'1 Environmental Afraus ~ retary Janannc Sharpleu, will rcvtew the lntenor Department~ prol)Oted plan for leasinl lft.U ofT the ea1arom11 CIOQ1 between 1987·1991. They are intended to provide Joc:al officials and Othen an · opponu.nny to present their viewt on the Interior Oepan · ment's latett propo&al, which the aovemor will con ider in preparina his official response under tbt Outer ConlinontaJ bdf Lands Act. .. It ts 1m~rtao1 to be heard oow," Sharples~ said. ··since this may be the last opponunicy f'or C&libiiii to ..,... 091 befonl this plan i1 approved ud cirried out'' The Interior Oepanmeo1'1 ...... draft plan plOpOla fiYC le.uo lalet O._,. five yean. Those ..a, howsver, wilt eot be administtrcd until Interior'• pU.n it com-pleted a.od more 1tudJes are conducUd to 1detltify areas to be excJudcd &om the .an and e1'I vitoomentaJ proltJCtioAJ to be ancorpora\ed into lhem. · A series of ttu'ce workshops d~iancd to help people through the vario.us stages of a divorce will ~o Wedncday evening in Room 51 I of El Toro High School. sponsored by Saddleback College's Community Services Department. The program will be offered on three con- secutive Wednesdays from 7 to 9:30 p.m. at a cost of $38. Call the college at 582-4646 for more information. Health lecture. 11eheduled Three lectures on nutntion and hea.lth will be' offered during March at the Los Caballeros Oub Villas, 17272 Ncwhopc St., Fountain Valley, beginning Wednesday with a talk on nutrition and It.,on grille stalls crew at store ff re By PAUL Al\CHIPLE Y OflMO.-, ......... CdM residents mount drive for safe crosswalks-- cancer by Carole Hall. · Hall also will instruct the March 19 program on restaurants and social occasions, while Or. Blair Swee& will speak on aerobic dance inj uries March 20. All programs arc free and will begin at 7 p.m. Call 546-8560 fo r details. Allergy coansel,ng .et Dr. Loretta Molino. an Irvine allergist, will offer free co unseling on pediatric and adult allergies such as asthma. hay fever, bronchi tis and chronic couflhs Wednesday from noon to I p.m. at the AMI/Irvine Medical Center office. 4605 Barranca Parkway, Suite IOI. ' The program is one In a series sponsored by People for an Irvine Community Hospital. Call 857-6500 for further information. Psychologlst to •peak Judith. Annette Milburn, a psychologist known for her workshops on anger, will be me guest speaker at Thursday's meeting of the Winner's Circle Breakfast Network in Fountain Valley. Milburn will discuss ways to explore subpcrsonalities and will descnbe her recent trip to India and Nepal at the 7 a.m. session al the Oaim Jumper Restaurant 18050 Brookhurst St. Call 536-3021 for details Welght JOBS sesslons set A medically supervised weight loss program for people 30 or more pounds over their ideal body wci$ht will be offered at the Fountain Valle¥ Regional Hospital and MedicaJ Center. Heavy-duty secunty bars in a Founuun Valley video ·store hampered firefighters' efforts to douse a blue there early Sunday. Tbe fire at the Home Star Video store, 16040 Harbor Blvd.; caused an estimated $1 30,000 damage, said Fountain Valley Fare Capt. Robert Mc Vey. Probably SI 00,000 worth of video tapes were destroyed in the blaze, he said. Firefighters rece ived the call at 3:51 a.m. When they arrived at the scene, they found the front of the store protected by accordion-type wrought iron bars and a heavy-duty lock that blocked their en- trance. "It took about 10 minutes to gain entry tnto the store," McVey said. ''By then, the fire was just starting to climb into the attic, and from there it could have trav~led to adjacent stores.'' However, firefighters were able to quickly douse the blaze, and only minor smoke damage was sustained in adjacent stores., he said. · • Investigators susRCCted the fire, which started at the front of the store. may have been caused by an electrical short in a TV set. It was totally disintegrated, while VCRs sitting next to 1t hadn't received as much damage. Video tapes in the smoke-filled room had melted from the intense heat. Because the store was located in a shopping center. with at least $500,000 in property at stake. Santa Ana firefighters also responded to the second alarm call. McVey said. • 0.-, .... --.. ""'0. MMe Mias Orange County Tamara Lynn Soroneen, 20, has to catch her breath upon heariDC ahe ha• been named M1M <>nmae County 1986 at the fourth annu&l Scholanhip Pageant at <>nmae Coaat Colle&e on Saturday. Soronaen becomea eligible for the Mlaa California Pa&eant enroute to the Miu America Pageant ln AtlaDtic City. Group asks c hamber support for i·ncreased pedestrian protection By SUSAN HOWLE'M' °' ... Dellr,... IWt A group of Corona del Mar residents concerned with crosswalk safety bas gathered 200 signatures fro m fellow resi- dents in an effort to call ancnt1on to what they call a dangerous problem in the smaJI Orange Coast community. Corona del Mar resident David Paine said he and 16 other residents recently formed Citizens for Safe Crosswalks, a group organ iied to fi nd soluuons to the problem they say could be fataJ to pedestn ans crossi ng Pacifi c Coast H•gb- way in Corona del Mar. A resol ution drafted by the grouy will be presented to the Corona del Mar Chamber of Commerce Tuesday to urge its suppon on the issue. Paine said. The resolution calls for the formption of an ad hoc commmcc compriScd of city official s, c1uzcns and members of the local business communit y to study the problem. Paine said. Newpon Beach city officials say they arc frustra ted wi th the problem. They contend that steps the city has taken to make the crosswalk s safer could tum around and slap them in the form of hab1hty claims. Because Newpon Beach used its own paint to mark crosswalks on Pacific Coast ffjJhway. a state road, the city now as apparently liable if someone acts hurt in them, accordina to Newport Beach City Councilman Bill Agee. Tbc councilman said city officials took matters into their own hands when the State Department of Transportation was slo w in actina on the improvements. City workers have painted striped crosswalks in Corona del Mar. bopina to prevent accidents. City offici'1s also want assistance from Caltrans in putting liahts over the crosswalks. But Paine, who may run for the City Council, contends the city does have opt ions conccmina crosswalk dangen in the City. He said the city mouJd iDCCUK police patrols in the area to make motorists more aware of the spcc4 limit. "Anyone who lives in Corona del Mar will tell you that motorists rqularty exceed the 35 mph speed limit -~lly at mght - and often cannot react tn time for a pedestrian about to cross the street," Paine said. Paine said the city should also consider pedestrian-activated traffic signals at crossin.g.s located at Lark.spur Lane, Or- chid, Marigold, Dahlia and Heliotrope avenues. The signals arc designed to remain green at all times. C1CCpt when someone pushes the bunon to walk across the street. Pat ne said be acknowledges the prob- lems with the plan to mue crosswalk safet y alterations, including funding. He cited Caltrans as a major hurdle because state officials must approve all road work on the Coast H1ghwa). An onentallon for those interes ted m joining the program wtll be held Thursday at 6 p.m. at the hospital. located at the comer of Euclid Stree t and Warner Avenue m Fountain Valley. Call 966-8006 for registration information. Birth control dlscuned Kindergarten registration slated in Irvine bl r: th · f Kindergarten registration for youngsters enrollment sched ule: Eattslaore ·Sc:~ool 5-5 Eastshore A u JC aorum on e hucsLQJ~Wlr M\\J~~-i-tt:rii·bii;;::-;,~~.t;-::t;~;;:;. ;.;;,~ .. .f11,;,;~1 ~~~-~~ma~--~...,.., Baste• "'ius. l. "-r.r::erw-ood~.-~"( 7 · wi 0 ere u y rom to 9 p.m. y the ll c to enter u Yinc s puu ice ementary "' ...... .,.... r "''uc 5_, • : to : l 5 p.m., Wednesday 10 YWCA of South Orange County in the board room· schools next falJ begins Wednesday. 559-6 754; 8 a.m., Wednesday. This school Multi-Purpose Room. of the Irvine Unified School Oistnct, 5050 Barranca Registration will be permitted for chtl· has a waiting hst, and this registration 1s E l CamlDo Real ~I. 4782 Karen Parkway, Irvine. drcn who wi ll be 5 years old bY. Dec. 2. only for rhose wh o have alread y been Ann, 551-.3090; Registrauon completed. I · 1 d al 1986. Parents should bring the chiJd's b1nh accepted for the fall. El Toro Marlae Sdlool. 8 17 1 S.E. ssues lb be dtscusse-0 inc u e teen scxu ity, certificate and immuniza tion record. BoaJta Canyon School, I Sundance:-Trabuco, 559..081 8; 7 to 8 p.m., May 22 in birth control, abortion and basic health care needs. Although children traditionall y attend 854-8 111 : 7 p.m.. Wednesday in ' School Cafeteria. The program is free and further information may be their nei&bborhood school. the Irvine Kindergarten Rbom I . Grffatree Sdool, 4200 Manzanita. obta.Jned by caJling 542-3577· ' Unified School Distric t has an open College Park Scbool, 3700 Chaparral. 55 1-2301; 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., Wednesday in Monday, March 3 • 9 a.m., Irvine C.Ud Ca re Project Boar•. Irvine · Uni fied School District Administrative Offices, 5050 Barranca Parkway. enrollment policy that allows youngsters 551-3871: 7:40 a. m. to 2 p.m .. March 12 in the school offi ce. to attend class outside their neigh borhood school's office. Los Narujos Sdtool, I Smoketrcc. 1f space is avai)ablt and the pnnc1pal's CuJverdale Scbool. 2 Thiel, 786-3008: 552-51 71: 7 to 8:30 p.m., Wednesday in the permission is obtained. 6:30 p.m .. Wednesday in the Kindergarten school office. Registration questions can be directed Room. Nortb•ood Sclaool, 28 Carson, to a school principal orto Nancy Zulewks1 Deerfield Scbool. 2 Deerfield. 559-0100: 55 1-8567; 1 to 8:30 p.m., Apn l 9 in the at the aistnct office, 65 1-0444, ex t. 324. 7 p.m.. Wednesday in Kindergarten school office. # • Following is the Irvine kindergarten Room. Sutlago Hiiis. 29 Chn stamon West, 544-5362-, 7 pm , A.pnl 10 IA Mecba Center. Stoae Creek SdlMl. 2 Stone Creek. 551-120 1; 7 p.m .• Wednesday in Llbra.ry Mcdta Center. . 'J'ertJe Roell Sdlool, 5 I 5 I Amalfi, 854-7002; 7 to 9 p.m., Wednesday in Library. UllJvenfty Patli Sdoel, 4572 Sandburs Way, 786-2011: 7 p.m .. Wednesday in Media Center. Vista Verde ~I., 51 44 Mk belson. 786-9207; 7 p.m .. Wednesday in Mult.1· Purpose Room. Westwood Basics PlH, l Li bcny,e 544-96 70: Registration by last name, A·l.: 8 to 10 a.m., M·Z: 2 to 4p.m.: 6 to 7 p.m •• April 24 in the school office. • 7:30 p.m .. lrviae Fl.Da.Dtt Comml11loa. Ci ty Council Chambers, 17200 Jamboree Blvd .. Tuesday, March 4 Open hearing for Night Stalker suspect upheld • 9:30 a.m .. Orange Coanty Board of Sa~r­ vlson, counl.Y administration building. 10 Ctvic Center Plaia in Santa Ana. • 6 p.m.. Lagoa Bucll City Coucll, CounctJ Chambers, 505 Forest Ave. LOS ANGELES (AP)-A second Judge refu sed to close today's preliminary hear- ing for "Night Stalker" defendant Richard Ramirez, letting stand last week's dec1S1on by a lower court JUdge. · pubhc1t) about the case, he was convinced an impanial JUI) could be selected among the 5.5 m1ll1on potcnual jurors in Los Angeles County. Defe nse attorne) i:\nuro Hernandez argued that prehm1na1J heanngs are. usually one-sided proceedings at which only prosecution evidence is aired. and Ramirez' chances of finding an 1mpan1al jury would be jeopard11cd by intense new~ coveraRe of such a he an nR The preliminary he~nng will allow the JUdge to decide 1f there 1s enough evidence 10 try Ramirez on Los Angeles Count) charges stemming from attacks on 28 people in their homes from J unc 1984 to i\ugust 1985. pentagram. an inverted star often used to symbolize the devil. on the paJm of his hand. The attacker also struck m the San Francisco Bay Arcea and Orange Count). mu11lat1ng some v1ctJms· bodies and scrawling Satanic symbols at some cnme scenes. autbon t1es have said. • 7 p.m .• Oceu Vie• Scbool District, Distnct ·Board Room, 16940 B St .. H untmgton Beach. • 7:30 p.m., ButiagtoD Beacll City CoaneU, City Council Chambers, 2000 Main St. Superior Court Judge Aurelio Munoz refused today to ovenum a dec mon by Municipal CounJudge James F. Nelson to keep the hearing open to the media and public. Nelson said that despite widespread Pou cE Lo e Texan convicted of four Valley child molestations A Texas man who lost a two-year After the verdict, Judge Robert fight to avoid extradition to Cali-Fitzaera)d revoked Myer's bail, call- fomia was convicted of molesting ing him "a danger to the community" fo ur Fountain Vall ey children. and saying he felt Myer had enough O ayton Pittinger Myer, 64, was mon~ to flee the country before his convicted Friday an Orange Count'Y'o Mard i 28 sentencing. Superior court of I 0 counts of The retired San Antonio real estate molesting a l 4-ycar-0ld bo~ and three and fi nancial ~tanner could face up to girls, aacs 9. JO and 11 , while visiti llj 18 ycan in pnson. _ their family'shomein 1982and 1983. Myer, whotf fiJ,ht against extra· Hunttniton Beach Tiucves reponedly stoic $350 in crystal and SI 00 1n clot hang from a home in the 9900 block of Oceanfront Sunday. • • • If A resident 1n the 16100 block of Sher rcponed that someone tole the trailer hitch olT h1' motorhome parlccd to the rea r of his apan mcnt Sunday. The hitch was valued tit $320. • • • Pohct responded to a burglar alarm at a Warner Avenue surf shop early today and found that two juvenile thieves had ~ma hcd the front win· dow and were attempuna to steal tkateboards and wet u1ts They were taken into custody and the items they were attempti ng to steal were rc- tovcred • • • A Oescmone Ochca1e ~n patro n reponed that he left h" wa llet on the ~unter of the Fdingcr A venue stort' and found 1t tone when he rrtumcd to claim it an 'bour later. The wallet contained $300, police said. • • • A thief n:portedly broke into a prage ofa home in the 6400 block of Dunn and stole SI, 165 in fishing equipment Sundav. . . . .. Someone rcponcdly stoic $2,300 1 n Jewtlry from a borne an the 5700 block of Pinon Sunday. An unloc ked bedroom window wa the point of entry, police~. ••• Fishing acar. binoculars and a S 1,320 car stereo was reported 5tolcn from a 1984 Volkswajcn OTl parked 1n the 16000 block of Spnngdale trttt Sunday. • • • A re tdent tn the 4700 block of4go reported that someone stoic a $900 aold bracelet from his home Saturday nlaht. The vM:tim told pohct he suspects one of the. aue ts he had to tut home tUI evcnttll- Foantaln Valley dition went all the way to the Texas Supreme Court, has denied molesting the children or even being m Foun- tain Valley on the alleged dates of the molestation. The children's parents have fi led a civil lawsuit agains1 Myer for alleged psychological h&nn to two young- sters. A resident m the 91 00 block of Mallard reported that someone broke into his back yard Friday naaht and . using a sharp instrument, mutilated and dismembered two duckA. • • • thi ef reponcdly stoic $250 in cosmetics from a tudent locker at Fountain Valle High School last Wednesday • • • A Klamath River re 1dcn1 rtported that a man tned to break anto ht~ ho me cariy unday momif\a, Thr would·be thief Ocd when he rtalitcd he had been S«n. the victim told pohcc. Imne Usina a ~hm Jim, a th1efbroke into a c~r pat\ced 1n the carport of an apanment at lh( com(r 'of Bndlc Road and t.anford unday and stol e the S 1.000 car stereo Newport Beach S 170 car trrto .... .,.. ttror1t-J Ramirez. 25. 1s charged with 14 murders and 54 other counts of rape. as~ull and other felonies tn the county At an earlier hearing. he shouted, "Hru l Satan" as he ~a~ kd from coun and displayed a Deput} D1strict Attorney P. Ph ilip Halpin said he had no obJCC1ton to an open hean ng. ~tokn from a hlack 19"9 Volvo parked along 2nd ~trcct ~unda~ ••• A thief rcportt•dl~ stole an S!<O amplifier and a SI 'i lire: t'\tingu1sht•r from a boat part.cd on J trailer in front of a homt• in lht• MIO bloc!. ul Gaf) Place I nda' • • • Two S75 hubtap" were rcponcd stolen off a red I %ti Ford M u<;t:ing parked in 1hc I bOO hlc)('k nl -\n11gu.1 Way Saturda' n1g)lt • • • Th1cvc'i rcportedh '>l~ik c1 $600 l'3r stereo and the $400 comult' from a blue 1983 B\.t\\ '~01 parkC'd al the comer of Park and ( olhn~ Sunda \ • • • A Sl.229 black ~nnt.cc;kin coat wn<; reponed stolen from an I\ mum< oun cloth1na store an F3 h1on h land unda) • • • A guc<;t ol the "le" poncr Hotel 1100 Jamhom· Road. rcportt-d th.it Mlmconc broke into ht~ room \\-h1k he ~a\ a!ileC'p earl\ 'iunda\ .ind \Ink $200 Coeta Mesa The attendant of Hom t•r < ht'' rnn 1048 Bn tol 1 rtpon cd tha1 a man dn,ina a btt e To ... ota pu.l up tni<"I. pumped $~0 IO J 4h Saturd<t\ (10\l drove ofTw1tho~t pa/1ng Somcont' l"t'ponctd-. \tok S 100 from a w.ap mttt nwrchllnt\ ta'\h bo>. Sunda\' • • • Two pt"nonal computC'f" .tnd a pnntcr. wonh $7.000, ~ere reported Stolen from F1'ihcr Ru\tnC\'i (om· mun1cat1ons I 2'i F.a"t Raker \t f nday night LapnaBeac b Pola~ UTe\ll-d I ernandu \ ~pulHdl 22 on \U\('lll lOn ,,t \rim· menial burglal) Sepulveda was ar- re\tcd at t ·40 a.m. toda} on Sou th Coa'lt H1ghwa} and 1s suspcctt'd ol robbing a nt'arb\ jC~ell) store • • • In <;eparatc 1nc1dents. police jr- restcd two men on suspicion ofk"d l'Onduct. W11l1am tephen Manin. 31. was arrested at 12:40 a.m. toda\ a1 Hc1~ler Park Joc;eph Anthon~ Maninez. 18 "as arrested at ~ Ill a.m Sunda' at Hetsler Park. • • •• i.\ South Coast Highway resident reported her I 982 Volkswagen Rab- bit stolen unda\ af\cmoon # •• Police arrested Dennis Lee Hober. 2..,. on susp1C1on of dnVlng under the influence of alcohol. Hober wa~ arrested at 2·35 a.m. Sunday on < ardinal · DmC' and South Coast Highway Huntington police net four in store burglary Hunungton BeaC'h pohct ha'e arrt~t~ lour w uths after thC'\ al-l~C'dh t'lro t.e 1n10 a dru~ \tort' after \ lo\1ng 11mt' and ~n fi lli ng a \hopping lart ~11h b<'C'1 and \ lg1\rtllC\ .\ police \p<.>l C'1,man ~1d offil·er' rt''iponded tu u \1knt alarm Fm!a\ night at 1he '8\...0n-Drugs stort at E dtnJt'r .\' cn uc and her La ne V. h1:n the ,lffileTS am, ed. the' M'T<''itC'd thrC"c male JU' en1le' llecintt 1ht· \lore Hunungton lkalh (ll.lhlt' dl>J Rt ' and h1 undlcr. Offi~ Rnun T1dntl.. located and arrested a fourt h 1n trudC'r "ho was hiding 1ns1dc I he \\Ort. Pohl't ~td Th e fou rth \U&pt(t wa!I 1dcnt1ficd a' Coabncl 7.a"ala. U!. of .\nahetm The name\ of the otht'r three suspects were withheld ~use of their q es /J\&la wu plaC'Cd in Huntanaton &-a h ( it' J11 I on \usp1c1on of bury.laf\ "h1le the other thrtt wtrt ta .. en to Oran~e < "unt' Juvenak I fall pohl<' ~Id Movie crash victi~ dies Tl' O'-( \P) -One of c1 ht pc.--0ple 1nJurrd "hen a t<\m<'ra trul l t ra hw on the Mount l emmlln · Highway whi le film ing a ffill\le has d1('d at Tuc'iOn Med1caL (enter. .authontl~ ~' · RruC'\ lnp."'m n .t\i..\car , "1 ~llm ct operator trom Lm l\ngelt"> v. ho "31, worl 1n' o n the fi lm "The Wraith " d1('d \un48,. 1d La'i& Coo'-. ~uct1on roord1na)or lor Turbo uct1on\ Int of lo1 -'n lt1<" . . . Welnbe~ger: U.S. aided· rebels~ ouster of Marcos WASHINGTON (AP) -The United Statetpvc "aid and comfort" but no military intelligence to mili- tary rebels who ousted Philippines Presid~nt Ferdinand Maroos lasi.. week, Defense Secretary Caspar W. Weinberser says. Weinberger. interviewed Sunday on CBS. TV's "Face the Nation," did not PY what specific steps the U nitcd States took to aid a revolt staned by Defense Minister Juan Ponce Enrile and Lt. Gen. Fidel Ramos. He said only that the United States did what 11 could to avert bloodshed. "We were giving aid and comfort and encourasement to anything tllat would eliminate violence or· the t!t~at of bloodshed." Weinberger satd. . "We were successful at that, and we are proud of it,'~ he added. The revo lt that brought Corazon Aquino to power last iuesday was centered in a suburban Manila de- fense base, Camp Crame. The base was surrounded by tens of thousands of civilian Aquino· supporters, who discouraged troops loyaJ:to. Marcos from attacking. Weinberger was asked about re- ports that Philippines military heli· copters joining the rebels had landed first at a U.S. air base near Manila. where they reportedly received fuel and other equipment and their crews spent the night. "It was very important that that group in this camp ... not be attacked. And there were all kinds of threats that forces ... loyal to President Marcos, were going to attack them .... It would have been a terribly bloody thing to do," Weinberger said. "We wanted to do everything we could to prevent that and the presence of helicopters over this group could well have discouraged any sort of attack," he said. But the defense secretary denied reports that U.S. forces stationed at Clark Air Base and the Subic Bay Naval Base in the Philippines provided the rebels wi1h intelligence ttPortS. He predicted Ramos and Enrile wouJd reform the Philippines amied forces. a step the Reagan adminis- tration has urged to help quell a communist insurgency. Weinberger also said he would urge Congress to apJ_>rovc more military and economic aid to the new Philip- pine government. But he declined 10 predict what aid the Aquino adminis- tration would request. "I would certainly urge more military and economic aid to the Philippines. They urgently need both. As far as (military) trainers ... that would depend entirely OJl what the Ptt1lippine government wants," he said. Weinberger refuted angry state- ments by former President Carter that Reagan falsely accused Carter of neglecting defense spending. "I don't think there 1s any point in fighting the 1980 campaign all over again," Weinberger said. Reagivl "convinced the American peop1'. quite properly that not just President Carter but the whole decade (of the J 970's) we had gone down 20 percent ... in defense investment and defense spendin$. It left us in a very vulner- able position." Development of many new weapons began "in Mr. Carter's term, late in the term. A lot of it was done by Con$fess who felt that the Carter administratiQn had been much to weak." Weinberger said. Wei nberger also defended Presi- dent Reagan's proposed $320 billjon defense budget, which has been criticized on Capitol Hill. "People don't like military spend- ing," he said. At the begjnnin$ of Reagan's first term, "they recognized how necessary it was. And then they felt that ... enough is enough." Aquino win supported by Marcos allies MANHA, Philippines (AP) - Former political a!Jies of Ferdinand E. Marcos acknowledged today that President Corazon Aquino's govern- ment is legitimate but said there may be no need to nullify the NationaJ Assembly proclamaiion that Marcos won the frau<l-tainted Feb. 7 election. In a day-long party caucus. leaders of Marcos' New Society Movement also set up a special committee to estiibJ.ish haison with Mrs. Aquino's government and develqp the party as a "strong and responsible opposi-, tion." · Blas Opie, who was labor minister under Marcos, said, "Generally, there is a consensus (among party mem~ bers) that the existing government deserves to be accorded full legit- imacy through Batasan (assembly) processes." But Opie said the caucus did not resolve how the party would go about recogni zing Mrs. Aquino's govern- ment as constjtutional. He said that would be the task of the five-member liaison committee. Mrs. Aquino took an oath of office last Tuesday on the basis of' a "people's resolu tion" signed by about 100 opposition legislators. Marcos ~as sworn in the same da y but fled the palace hours later. The resolution, which had no basis in the constitution, said the election was invalid because of widespread cheating. Marcos, 68, called the election a year early to prove to critics at home and abroad that after 20 years in power he still could muster the support of Filipino voters. Terroris·ts claim they murdered Olaf Palme ... . STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP) - The Foreign Ministry said ~oday that a West German terronst lfOUP claimed responsibility for auauinat- inj Prime Minister Olof Palme within hours of his death, but sources in Bonn said they thought tbe claim was bogus. Swedish Foreign Ministry spokes.- man Lars Loennback said the claim on behalf of the Red Army Faction was made in a call to a Swedish official in the West German capital about three hours after Palme was shot in the back and fatally wounded in Stockholm late Friday night. The 59-year-old prime minister, who had been strolling home un- guarded with his wife from a film premiere, was declared dead on a hospital operating table at 12:06 a.m. Saturday. Usbet Palme, SS, was grazed by a bullet but was not seriously injured. At about 3 a.m. Saturday. Locnnback said an anonymous caller telephoned Swedish Embassy officer Peter Tcjler in Bonn and told him, "This is the RAF. We have killed your prime minister." Loennback said the Bonn embassy reported the call to the Forei,gn Ministry Saturday, and that pohce officials also were informed. Af''--Pftoto Phlllpplnea Pr~ldent Corazon Aquino (center), follower• peppered with cofl{etti at Manila rally. · The Swedish national news agency TT. which earlier reported the Red Army Faction claim , quotc-d Tejler as saying he went back to bed after the call because he thought it "so im- probable" Palme was killed. Marcos ' NY properties now frozen NEW YORK (AP) - A <;tate Supreme Coun )Udge has issued a temporary restraining order in a case involving five propenies allegedly controlled by former Ph1lippmcs President Ferdmand Marcoi.. a law- yers' grou p said today, South African police kill seven black 'guerrillas' By the Associated Press JO HA NNESBURG-Police killed seven blacks in a shootout today in a black to>Nnship near Cape Town, and said the men were guerrillas of the Afri can National Congress who had been planning an attack. Police Comm1ss1oner Gen. Johan Coetzee said in a statement that a firefight broke out whe n police stopped a vehicle carrying seven blacks near the police station in Guguletu township. He said the blacks threw a grenade at tbe police. One police officer was injured in the inci dent, he .said. · Justice Elliot Wilk issued the order Sunday nigh t at the request of the Protestants rlot ln Northern Ireland Center for Constitutional Rights. said David Lerner. spokesman for the BELFAST -Protestant milita~ts threw fire bombs and stones at police, center. bu!'fled cars ~nd cut po~er to hundreds of homes today in a 24-hour general The center 1s representing the stnk~ protesting the mainly Catholic Irish Republic's new voice in this British government of newly installed Presi-province. About 85 percent of workers failed to show up for work in major dent Corazon A uino he said. industries as r~~~~~:~e!f~~:Y the protesters brought traffic around Belfast r----:-lt-9-ir~T~h~e~· ~qor:~der~C!...b~ar~s!!t~r~an.!!:,...2!!!~0.;.-o-w-n--~ff'H'>-Y-t~....t-11\a. -me rttral town!:-41 ' ership of five pieces 6f properly people broke away fr~m a noon-time rally beside City Hall and began burning allegedly owned or controlled by the some cars and breaking the windows of others in the main business district. This view you'll never forget. ( •<i .1ht:Jd Count each finger and toe Look <.lmc:ly at the tiny wrinkles. 'fouc.h the· ""ft newburn c;k1n. Ic 's a view you'll rn:vc.'r forget. An<l one you won't want fl) 1111 ...... Th.11 \'why you're: invited to tak<· a< Im(.· look .tt South Coast MeJical Ccncer. And wl11k· you look at us, we'll l1~e<:n t<> y11u lkcaust' we all share your wish t<> rn,1ke this birch <111 you desire. . You set, no matter what y.ou have planned. H ·~ likely co fit in here. Alter- narive bmh center. birrhing chair, LeBoyer Jeliv<:ry, demand feeding, father po.Ht1< 1p~t1on, sibling v1s1ts. We offer them all :H Souch Coast . A' ;.in J<lc.lc.•d plus, you're sure toen1oy llUr C<JJSt,11 S<.'cting And an ocean view th.11, .ilmn ... 1 rTI;.lkts y<>u forget you 're in a hospitJI h ir .1 f1r..,tha nd vit·w .rnd personal cour, withrnlt obligac1on, 1usr call our rn.Hc:rniry Jc·p.ircmenc at (7 14) 499-131 I Or to find an obsterriuan who delivcr'i Jt ~>uth Co.1..,t, call 1 <800) 225 ·WELL · ~Jtllh C.oJ'il Mc·d1tJI Center, yoor community hospit..-il On ( .. oast H ighway m1J"'.1y bt·twc«:n l .... igunJ B<.'ach an<l Dana Prnnc Where the view's on u~. Sourl 1 < :oa'-;I ,\ lc<lical < :cnrcr 11872 Coe'lt Highway S<J•Jlh 1 119una Ca11forn1a 92677 (714 ) 499 1311 • I Marcos family. They include the Police. firefighters and .army troops quickly broke up the rioters. Crown Building at Fifth A venue and 5 7th Street; l:ferald Center. a shop- ping ce nter in Herald Square: build- ings on Wall Street and Madison Avenue: and an estate in Suffolk County. RUFFELL'S UPHOLSTERY INC. Whefe YOll Ool11 Covers Mort! im HAM10R 1uo .. com lil:SA-541-1156 ~ Are You Paying Too Much For Health Insurance? Suspected death camp offlclal grllled 1 J.E~USALE~· -Police were to begin questioning today of John DemJ~nJuk. a. retired Cleveland autoworker charged with killing thousands of Jews '!1 Nazi gas c~al1'_lbers at the Trelinka death camp in Poland. The Ukrani~n-born DemJanJuk. 65. was arraigned Sunday an·d denied he ever was 1 n Treblinka." I am completely the wrong person. 1 was never in that place what ever)'.~Y tells me. Trcbl_inka." Demjanjuk 5:1iid in English. Police said Den:'J3nJuk was to be questioned at Ayalon maximum security prison where he 1s being held. Police Deputy Commissioner Alex lsh-Shalo~ and ~enachem Russek7 head of investigauons into Nazi crimes, will head the interrogation, a police spokesman said. ' Reflnanclng plan OK'd for_Brazll NE~ YORK -Major creditors tentatively agreed on a $31 billion refinancin$ plan to h~lp Brazil pay its foreign_debt.beca~~ o.freccnt steps taken • Individual & Family by the Third Worlds large~! d~btor to cu~ Its tnple-<hgn inflation, a banker • Group says. The package. negotiated by Brazil and a committee representing • Medicare Supplement ~undreds of banks, wou ld reduce the interest rates Brazil has to pay and allow 640 607 1t to de.lay paymen_ts overdue from 1985 as well as payments it is scheduled to · 5 anytime make 1n 1986. C1t1bank announced Sunday. The agreement was reached BOB NEVIL becau~ of .. s1gmfic~nt progr~ss. by Brazil over the past few years on its external Im tor Oil c . me~ 1955 fin ancial accounts. said Wilham R. Rhodes, chairman of the 14-member ~=~~=~=~~~~~~~~B~a~nk~A~d~v~1~~o~r,~· C~o~m~m~1~tt~e:e~fo~r~B~r~az~-1~'l led by Citibank. so·,oooat fuheralfor slain lllayor NABLUS, Occupied West Bank (AP) -About 501000 Palestinian men, many wecpinJ and others cha.nting sl<?sans, earned the body of t~e1r assassinated mayor through this city today and buried it in the courtyard of a mosque. The funeral was peaceful but a Palestinian refugee was shot dead by lsra~li soldiers earlier in the day dunng a demonstration against the slaying of Mayor Zafer al-Masri. The funeral procession lasted near- ly two hours and was led by Palesti· nians beatina drums and carryina the Palest.ini.an tlaa. which is b&nne<t on the lsraeli-occupied West Bank. AJ-Masri, 44, a mQdcrate .Palesti· nian appointed three months aao to lead the West Bank's largest city, was aunned down Sunday outside his office. Two pro-Syrian Palestinian groups have claimed responsibility. His murder appeared to have set ~ck Israel's plans to increase PaJcsti-n1a~ contr0l over local afl'airs in the temtory captured by lsrael in the 1967 Mideast war. Foreill' dianitaries, includina U.S. Consul General Morris Draper, at- te~dt;d the funeral. Local Palestinians ~Jd !t v.:as the 1a,.st aatbcrina ever tn this city of 80,000 about 30 miles south of Jerusalem. ls~ell military sourccs said today's shoouna occurred when a S7-year-old Pale~tinla~ man attaeked an laraeU solda.cr trysna to break up a demon- stration at the Balat.a n:fuaee camp on the o.ut1ki~1 of the city. Another ~sr;aeh sold1er shot the man dead and •DJUredtheman's 17·ytar-oldson th~ sources aaid. • • r Senators ask recheck ofSoviet·sailor's xit ·Astronauts want to find answers, resume flights NEW YORK (AP) -Sixty sena. tors. want to reopen the case of the Soviet seaman whojumpcd into the M ississippi Rjver f~r months aao but was returned to ti1s ship and sent h~mc after app~ntly changina his mind about defect1na. accordina to a puJ>lisbed report. The senators arc actina amid allqations that the man wbo jumped overboard near New Orleans may not have. been the man who later told U.S. officials he wanted to return to the Soviet Union, The New York Times reported Sunday. . St.ate C?epartmcnt offic1als say they are ccrtam there was no switch. And Boris Malakhov, a spokesman for the Soviet Embassy an Washinaton, satd "It's crazy to think it was not Miroslav Mcdv1d who was inter- viewed." But several· pieces or evidence suppon the possibility or a switch, the Times wd, at least raisin, quesuons about the cate of Medvid, whose attempted defection touched off' a weekend crisis in Soviet-American relations two weeks before the Gen- eva summit. · According to an official form completed by Border Patrol officers, the man who J ·umped from the freighter Manh Konev and then was hauled k.ick.ina and screamina back to the ship last October was S feet I 0 inches tall and weighed 174 pounds. But a Navy doctor who examined a seaman 011 board the ship less than 24 houn later described the the man · in tiis report as .. short statu~ approximately I SO" pounds. Also, the man who jumped ship spoke fluent U kranian in bis ftnt eveojna u hore rd1na to the first interpreter who spoke with him. The man interviewed later spoke the lanauaae with difficulty, the State Department said afterward. Two independent handwritina analysts concluded that handwriting samples taken on different days probably were written by djfTerent people. Medvid appeared terrified as he pleaded for polit1c.1I asylum after JUmpina shjp, saying. "I want to live in a dccnt country." But the man who spoke to State Department officials on Oct. 28 and Oct. 29 was described as alternately flippant. belligerent and arropnt, and he repeatedly te"}arked that the Soviet system was superior. P~otoarapbs taken by Navy Lt. James R. ~ltz on Oct 29 arc the only known pbotoaraphs of the man 111.roela• lledYid interviewed by the State Dcpattment. When Geltz showed bis pict\ires to a man who had seen the seaman the day the incident bepn, both became convinced that there bad been a switch, the newspaper said. • SPACE CENTER,' Houston (AP) -Memben of'the nation•• aa&ronaut corps, spcak:ina for the first time publicly about the· Cb.alleaaet disas- ter. say they are look.in, forward to &ettina answers on what caUIOd the shuttle explosion an,d then resume the fliahts. Pressure for Challenger launch aired NASA needs "to have ao· o~ portunitytofindoutwhatthccauseof ~EW YORK (AP) -A 1enator the accident was, any potential prob-who Oew 1 space shuttle million Lut lcms and bow they cao be futed, year says be does not believe NA.SA implement them and JO fly apin," was pressured to launch tbe astronaut Joe Enale 111d today in an Challenter, while a col~ said the interview. • administration shou&d clear up al- Thc space aiency was allowing lcptions of White Ho'l'C pretiure. TOp justices to referee use of presidential pocket veto Engle, Charles Gordon Fullerton. ~Whatever errors were made in ·Van~ Bfl;Dd and Hanle Hartsfield to this proceu, whether they sboukl or be mtemewed at Johnson Spece should not have launebed ... whatever Center. . . . ' wu flawed in the process o( that Hl«IJ court""~ oat En&)c said bts ooofidcnce 1n the information aoina u~ the cha.in of ... r-shuttfe program ~s not shaken by command. DO one will convince me Craft'• le6al victory the disaster b~t he did e~ii:ect chanJes there was pressure from any place to be made in the decision-making outside or within NAS*that we miast w As H 1 N C\-r o N (A p ) process. T~t process bas oo!'le under launch today •• Sen Jake Garn R- Christine Craft, the television news.-close scrutiny by a Spcctal com-Utah 'd su.iida . ' caster who sued lier former employer mission investigating the Challenger • sa.i y. .. over alleged sex bias and fraud. today disaster, in which six astronauts and a Garn a~ aJona with •• Se~- lost a Supreme Court bid t.o bavc a teacher were killed. Ernest ~· ~Hollinas ~n AB<?,'s Tb.11 $325,000 jury award reinstated. Asked about the commission hear-Week with Dlvid Bnnkley. WASHINGTON (AP) -The Su- preme Court today agreed to referee a major confrontation between Presi- dent Reagan and Congress over the use of the so-called pocket veto. The court also let stand former ldaho Congressman Geor1e Hansen's 1984 conviction for falsify- ing financial reports filed with the House of Representatives. Federal pro,JCCU!ors now ma.y move.to force Hansen, S5, to begin serving has sentence of five to IS months in prison and to pay a $40,000 fine. But the bill cooditionina aid to El the device to kill a bill while Congress The justices, over one dissenting ings and statements from chairman Hollinp said the praencc of Salvador on human rights progress is io recess. The ruling allowed the vote, let stand a federal appeals court William Rogen, who said launch teacher Christa McAuliffe OD the ill- expired a month later anyway, and it president to pocket veto a measure ruling that wiped out Craft·s legal decision was flawed. Engle saJd he fated fliaht put extra ~on the was not unl.11 April 12, t 98S. that the only at the conclusion of a two-year victory. Only Justice Sandra Day was no less confident. space agency to launch. and that the ap~s . C<}Urt issued a 46-page congressional term when all House O'Connor voted to bear arguments in He said astronauts probably will pressure led NASA officials to violate opinion m the case. seats and a third of the Scllate seats the case, but four votes are needed to bcoome involved in some areas of the their own intcmal procedures. In the appeal acted on today. arc up for election. grant such review. decision-ma.lcinJprocess. but, "Tbere J t · De rt t 1 ·d th A president pocket vetoes a bill by Craft, 41 sued station K.MBC-TV arc a lot of deci.s1on-mak.ing areas and us ice pa men a wycrs w c .... : th :.:.. 1'ts 1'mposs1'ble r.or the,......, to cover all ha uJd all uu to appeals court should have thrown out ta-.Jna no acuon on e measure. in Kansas vity in· 1983, cbaflina that 1• ..... ~-t two ow asttona cteape its own opinion last year because the fiaurativcly keeping it ~in his pocket" she was demoted from her JOb as a ·of them and somebody has to make in asc of an crncrpmcy. The case had-become moor. rather than sen~ it .back to Con-news anchorwoman after being told those decisions... • proposals ran,.:. from a total escape f fftsS with a veto message or signing it she was .. too old, too unattractive and Engle al.so said there have been capsuJe to a system that al.lows each The challenge to Reagan's use 0 into law. not deferential enough to men... discussions for some time on a system individual to eject. the pocket veto was made by 33 .---.....--------------------------.·--------------------------House Democrats led by Rep. Michael D. Barnes of Maryland. The court said It will review a ruling that Reapn illegally used a {>O'.CkC~ veto in 1983 to kJll a bill hnkfog military aid to El Salvador with human nghts progress by that coun- try. The case p0scs not only the issue of the pocket veto but also whether individual memben of Congress have legal standing to sue in federal court to challenge actions by the president. After you've gained the weight NOTICE TO ALL Real Estate Managers and Brokers The court's acuon sets the stage for a decision. probably sometime in 1987, o n far-reaching questions of presidential and congressio nal powers. O n Aug. 29. 1984, the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals here ruled, by a 2-1 vote and in a one-page opinion, that Reagan's use of the pocket veto was ilJ egal. A similar issue involving lepl standing, with potential far-reaching impact. also has arisen in a pending constitutional challenge to the G ramm-Rudman Act .mandating a balanced federal budget by 1991. . In the pocket veto case, the appeals court barred the president from using By U11e Anoclated Pre11 WASHINGTON -Pentagon offic1als say they'U stop hiring civ1hans, discharge thousands from unifonned duty ahead of schedule, reduce fl iaht time for pilots and cut back new military family housing construction because of cuts imposed by the Gramm-Rudman deficit-reduction law. The cuts, which officially began Saturday as part ofa SS. I blllion reduction. also will cause the Pentagon to postpone some transfers to new duty stations, cut operating hours for Air Force commissaries and prevent nearly 12,000 National G uard and Army Reserve memben fropl attending training schools. The cuts arc being carved out o f a fiscal 1986 budget calling for outlays of$263.6 billion. Carclnogen found ln Florida cocalne WASHINGTON -Federal drug officials arc warning that the cancer- . causing agent. benzene, is turning up 10 about half the cocaine being seized in Florida. Benzene, banned in consumer products by the Consumer Product Safety Commission because it has been shown to cause leukemia. was fo und an half the cocaine seized in R onda late last year, Robert H. Feldkamp, a spokesman for the Drug Enforcement Administration, said Sunday. "We see the potential as extremely dangerous for lung dar_nage or worse._" Feldkamp said. The DEA an January asked the Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta to evaluate the possible effects of benzene used in manufacturing cocaine "before we put all the red nap out that people who use cocaine may be in danger. We have not yet determined that," Feldkamp said. Soviet dl•ldent return• nt from trip NEWTON, Mass. -A tanned Yelena Bonner, wife of Soviet d1ss1dent Andrei Sakharov got a message from her husband when she returned to her daughter's home from a trip to New York, Florida and California, says her son- in-law. "She seems much better than when she left," Efrem Yankclevich, said Sunday. A postcard from Sakharov -saying that "evcrything's all right in (their exile city) Gorky" -arrived at the family's home Saturday, the same day Bonner returned, he said. Flre• ln three •tate• till J l people Weekend fires killed 11 people in thrtt states, including two men killed an Connecticut after they tned to rescue a neighbor who had already escaped. A woman and four children died in a Virginia apartment fire! and a ~other and her three children died in a Wisconsin house that had an mope~h~e smoke detector. officials said. In Winsted Conn., fi.refiJbtcrs worked to within sev~ral feet of two residents on a second-floor land1ng 10 a duplex Sunday after trymg to rescue a neighbor. Firefighters were driven back. by heat, said the ft~ chief. The neighbor fiad chmbed onto a porch roof, and fircfighten used a ladder to rescue her. pohce o;a1d . Alling patlent glven p'6Dback heart HOUSTON -A man kept alive for 41 days with a mechanical hcan pump was in critical but stable oondttion today after doctors transplanted a human heart beside his djseascd orpn. John M. Northrup. 47. underwent 1bc nine•hour operation Saturday at the Texas Heart Institute. Hospital officials refuted to disclose Northrup's hometown. They said the patient would be monitored closely because his li ver was functioning poorly. "He's aoing to have a touah road ahead ofh1m, but they think he will survive," said hospital spokeswoman Lida Bresette. ___________________ ___, ----Newport 's Cann.ery Village---- ~(AfflJoo DINNER NIGHTLY 6:00 P.M. to Midnight Mondsy. & Tue dlJj'tf: Two Dinner• for t15.95 Wednesdqs: 6 Co une ltaltan Dinner S9.95 2900 Newport Ooul~v•r'ti • Newport 8eaeh • 67 ~·2968 , .. back from yOur last diet, callus. The Department of Housing and Urban OeYelopment . 34 CMc Ce(lter Plaza, Box 12850, Santa Ana. CA 92712-2850, la teeklng applications from q uallfled real eetate managers and brokers who wish to receive Invitations for Bids for Area Management Brokef's to manage HUD-acquired/owned propertlee In San You're going to make It this lime IO pounds in two weeks-0{\ne! 17 to Bernardino County. Applicants must be llceneed by the OMlk>n "v of Real Estate . State of Callfornla. as brokers. 25 pounds in less than two months. vanished! 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($2,00) for an employe.d individ-I l_ t.:i I I ~aVyspyWalkera witness inf riencfS espionage trial SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Jerry Whitworth and John Walker, two old Navy friends the aovemment says were partners in espionaae. confront one another in Wh1tw9rth's tnal that beains today. / · Walker, who has admitted spying for the Soviet Union for 17 year$, is scheduled to be the star witness against Whitworth, accused of sell ing Cop slain; suspect gives up RIAL TO (AP) -A man bar- ncaded in a house allegedly shot one policeman to death and wounded another officer and a hostage, said authorities who talked him into surrendering today. secrets about Navy codes and rad10 from 1974 to 1983, a period in wb1ch communications systems to Walker's he is accused of passing documents to rina for $332,000. . Walker for relay to the Sovi~tl. Whitworth, 46, of Davis. Cahf., He as the last of four men to face faces 13 felony charges, including trial 1n the Walker spy case. John seven espionage or conspiracy counts. Walker and hjs son, Michael, have The government says Whitworth pleaded guilty to espiooale chal)tl in had access to some of the most a Baltimore federal court. and John's sensitive details of Navy radio and hrother Arthur has been convicted by satell ite communic.ations systems/ a federal judge in Norfolk. Ya. Flames destroy I~S office; others bunled in Glend ale .BY tbe Aasoclated Press GLENDALE -Fire gutted an 'internal Revenue Service tax assistance office early today and another federal oflice and a savings and loan were damaged by smok~ and water. authonues said. No one was injured in the 12:40 a.m. bla'ze. Rames were shooting through the roof of the Edwin S. Johnston Building on t entral Avenue when firefighters from 14 companies arrived, according to a news release from the Glendale Fire Department. Pirefighters from 14 companies brought the blaze under control at 1:33 a.m. Offices of the U.S. Department of labor and a Citicorp Savings branch sustained smoke a.nd water damage, said fire dispatcher Judy Maass. Dennis M11yfield, 26, of San .~-:i~ lkmardino, s...urrcodered at 6:4S a-:m. -· l ~d to Rialto pofice. who were holding Cranston announces h s ca.nu.. acy him for investigation of murder. He SAN DIEGO-Calling for an end to u .S,.milttary aid for dictatorships, was to. be transpor:t~ . toJ.an U.S. Sen. Alan Cranston formally launched his campaign for a fourth term Bcrytardrno riCounty Jail. sai~r1.i41tp tDday. "You and I must sec to tt that the U.S. government never again supports po.l.'ce Lt. B h a~Jiebbard. -~ -t'HelikesofFerdinand Marcos,"Cranston said in remarks prepared fordchvery tiati~~~ t~!r:~J;~ ~f~ta~~t .. n~1d at th~ Univ~rsity of San Diego. "Our government must not embrace dictators Hebbard. ' as friends simply because they profess to hate our foes. They arc o ur foes. An unidentified hostage was shot in thelcgafterMayfield'CrashcdthrouJ.h E.r-Gov. Brown defends Rose Blrd · the front door of the house whale fleeing fro'!' police after the fatal I :36 a.m. shootmg. · The wounded hostage was taken to San Bernardino County Medical Center for treatment. Another occu- pant of the house fled uninjured, pohce said. SAN FRANCISCO -Former Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. says state Supreme Court Chief Justice Rose Bird and her colleagues are taking the right approach to the death penalty and that Bard's cnt1cs attack her only because "she stands apart" in her views. In a guest column an Sunday's San Francisco Examfoer, Brown said he's glad the state court has been cautious in approving executions in death penalty cases. Brown, who appointed Bird during his term in offic-e, also said he doubted that Bard or the other 1usticcs will "jump-On some kind of bandwagon" to hurry executi ons in the future. Hebbard said Sgt. Gary Wolfley was shot to death at a service statjon at Foothill Boulevard and Eucalyptus Levee bre-L floods San Joaquln a .. ea Street in Rialto. 55 miles cast of Los -.a A' Angeles. The officers were re- sponding to a report of a suspicious person at the ~tation. Officer Joe Cirilo suffered abrasions on has right hand when a bullet crashed through his windshield and he was struck by metal fragments, but he was able to retum to duty this mominj. Hcbbard said. May1leld apparently didn't know any of the occupants of the house. which was about a quarter mile away from the shooting scene. "It apparently was a house that he JUSt broke into when fleeing the scene," Hebbard said. Hebba.rd.sa.Ldhc. didn't know wh~ the hostage was shot. the only round fired after Mayfield barricaded himself in the house. 1 Year Tfrm. SIOO Minimum 9.25% C"urrcnt Yield• 8.88 % I ' I A levee along the Mokelumne River in San Joaquin County broke Sunday, flooding about 80 acres of uninhabited land and continuing the problems caused by last month's nine days of heavy rain. Lt. Paul Cooper of the San Joa~uin County sheriff's department said the levee washed out Sunday cast of Loch, flooding a'n area of reclaimed bottomland and knocking out electric service to customers in Lodi, Thom ton. Woodbndge and Acampo for about an hour. The levee break was the latest event in the aftermath of the devastating storms that c.aused more than $300 mil hon in damage and left at least 13 people dead. Body found durlng flshlng boat search LONG BEACH -Coast Guard aircraft patrolled tbe Pacific Ocean off San Clemente lsla,nd after finding a body amid floating debris during a search Sunday for a fishing boat reported overdue wjth two men aboard. Aircraft covered 400 square miles southeast of the 1sfa nd Sunday, with the search scheduled to resume toda)'....ChJci Petty Qffi r h rle rosb said. The bod fou nd Sunday was identi~ed as that of Boyd Phillip Reeber, the owner o the craft called C!ndy Fay, said Deputy Coroner Everett Mauger of the San Diego County coro9er's office . . ' ( $100 and make additional deposits during the year. . ~ur self-directed IRA lets you take advantage of var- 10us mvestment opportuniti es. From buying and selling stocks and bonds. To investing in a full range of mutual funds . Zero coupon bonds. Ginnie Maes. And more.** Everything you need for complete investment diversi - fication is here. .. An IRA layaway plan. If you're just starting your IRA . remember you can open a Great American IRA for as little as $100. ,You can leave it as your sole contribution , or add more funds throughout the year. rl n r•u I ' and $2,CXX> each for a two-income · _ .. ~ ~ _/ J 1 married couple.) ----I /Il __ ,,> -~-:/--l~----- 1 I • .. --------, • PAP 1'RAlll NoBlameyston'e unturned atsolree ---. UJID PDllANDft'S ...,... CALC&NI DAN•waM JIHHJl4 . . Mona and ROii PiDyaa. lrvioe, jrl ST. JOllCPB BOIPITAL J..,.,1 r.a.-.,7 Mr. and Mn. ltGP.f A;. ..... Hwt~ "9dl. iD't ~...,. .. By CAROL BUMPID\BYS ~ .... Cea: •••• Sometimes it &eemJ u if there are more than a million Irish people in Orante County. Last October a handful of them decided to ronn the Ora.nae County lriJb Fine Ans Society. To initiate the projeci Rea.and Prudi Malloy oPCned their H untinaton Harbour home forcockt.ailaa la lrilb. -. ".lrel.andiuuch~ tinycowltry, but we are really a very excitinapcople," explained founder an<t president Mealea ~..p. "We hope to raise funds for sc:holanhlps-.nd PfOIJ'U1l• toapotliaht Irish poetry, drama, literature music paintinpaJld:allowrichculturaJ heritqe." ' ' Welcoipina the 80plusauestsat the Malloy home was an Irish sign over thedoorwb.ic:hrad"CEADMlLLEt:'AlLTE" ... meanina''ahundred thousand welcomes." lt wu just the tqinnina! Irish Fine Aru Society committee members Pat Bray, Jim and Maey O'Hara.Apes and lu awm.re, Dlue Bal,Au Mar1ea. Carol Crabb and AHJ PtMrtJ left no Blarney atone unturned. If you weren't Irish when you arrived, you almost wished you were by the time you departed. Irish su~=~thcreck>n the water-front patio to enjoy ~ipes Irish jigs, o.n•y tlrisb Eyesaccord.ionandJubewl&•••lrisb SODJ (manyjoinedin).~eouldevenrcaistertowinatriptoJoyoe's"little green place" donated by Jim c. ..... ~ "fC\eapte Travel Belen and Francia Malloy wttb daaihter Kathy Bamboq. · Irtab irc>aP founder llonlca KeocJa and baab&nd Ja4;k. . "~thou&b I neverbadtbeprivileaieofmcelln&h•m, myJi'and!at.berwu lrish. I m very mteruted 10 my Irish becqroa.nd and I've been ovn to Ireland twice to investipte," said Pal Brey wbiJe munch1na hond'oeuYTCS provided by Scapte Bakery. ''f;iy husband Jaek(put KB mayor and Mavcnck star) 1s very lnsh. l'm Italian. We'rtquiteacombination,," said a very vivacious Je K.elly. "Most of us are friends from the HBareaandare involved in severaJother community orpnizations. lt\s very difficult to &eta ~up tuned, but eventually we 60~ to spread throuahotit the county, 'sajd hostess Helen. A St. Patrick s Day Ball on Marth IS at the Grand Hotel will be the Societfs f.mtfundraiser. The$50perpersonevent will featurea no--bost cocktail re<:eptron 'tiith complirhenta.ry hors d1oeuvres. an authentic Irish oomed beef dinner, and one bour oflrish entertainment. . . Actress Plouala FlH•I~ will be guest ofboQor at the bell and the winner of the Ireland trip will drawn that evening. Ticket information may be obtained bycallina Kqh, 840-7903 or Malloy,~. Guesu enJoyinaJust a wee bit oflreland at the Malloy home inclu.dcd CMrlotte and Mana Daly, lrmaand .,._.. Trlmbad, Jee Evau, Tom B~ (Irish Tourist Board), Peuyc.,ley,Dedland Joe w ... ,J .... and Beb Nehea, Jeu and Loe Zlmmennu, BenleSweaey and h .. y and Pierre ~~laMl&Hby0.01PUotStylee4iterVWaDaa. Alioe and Thomas Kahn. lrvint, boy FelnuJll Pamela and Ric Maxson. Corona de1 Mar.airl BUM'""ANA BOSPIT AL HUNT- INGTON Blial ,...,,, Mr. and Mrs. Kaia Cholakian. Hun~ lngtOn Beach. boy Juuryt . Mr. and Mrs. Terry McGushin, Fountain Valley, boy . Mr. and Mrs. llod Sanford, Hunt- inston Beach, boy JUUl'J 11 Or. and Mrs. Orville J. Stone, Huntington Beach, boy J......,n Mr. and Mrs. Greg Carter Pump- hrey, Fountain Valley, boy J~n Mr. and Mn. James Ruzieck.i, Hunt- ingtort BcAcb, boy Mr. and Mrs. Michael Hayes, Hunt- ington Beach, boy Juaa.ry 14 Mr. and Mrs. William DeBritton. Huntington Beach, girl Mr. and Mrs. Albert C. Fernald, Fountain Valley, boy Mr. and Mrs. Charles Laurence Hirscbinger, Huntington Beach, girt Juaa.ry 11 Mr. and Mrs. Donald Batstone Jr., Mr. ud Mn. ICcviA PedlMUA. Hun~...._ bOy • Mr. ud Mn. 11.,wt Rae~ HuntiQllOD Beeda. Fl P•WJlt Mr. ud Mn. Tbomll R. DofW, Fou.nl&in Valley, boy Mr. and Mn. R. W. Meedows Huntinaion Bach. airl Mr. and Mn. William Rotbbcfs. tquna Nip.el. aitt Valerie anCl Keo Wbitelad, Hunt· inlton Beach,~ p 11 Mr. and Mn. Danie Rapn, ttunt· mgton Beacb.l sirl ,._,,H . Mr. and Mrs. Thomas 1. Tucker. H untinaton Beach, sirl p._,,., Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Masuda. Hunt· ~Jn. °l:.:sf'1 MEDICAL CENTER Ja.arJU Jin and Paul Burchcci, South Lagun.a. boy /; J....,,u Michele and Cullen Brugess, Laguna Beach, boy JaauryU Mary and Russell J. Singer, South Laguna. boy P.._..,! Dorothy and William Riechers, Cor- Qfta del Mar. airl ,...,.,~ ~---.,;ll-1Huntington Beach, 1>oy Mr. and Mrs. Kevin L MelUnger, Huntington Beach. boy Elaine and Marie G. Ferguson. Laguna Niguel, Jirl ............... ..,0.... ...... AID• and Ian Skidmore with Carol Crabb. Mr. and Mrs. ~ L. Waldron. Huntington Beach, girl Ju~ll Mr. and Mn. Michael Buscemi. Huntingt<>n Beach, boy Juaa.ry u Mr. and Mrs. Dave Hyland. Hunt- ington Beach, girl Jaaaa.ryU Mr. and Mrs. Michael A. Browrung. L..aguna Beach, boy JuUl'JU Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Ciriello. Fo un- tain Valley. boy Linda and Scott Marsi, Hunungton Beach, girl Mr. and Mrs. Frank G. Villaru. Huntington Beach, boy JaaUl'JU Linda and Man Folger, Huntington Beach, girl JaauryU Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Smith, Hunt- ington Beach, girl JuaaryH Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas Frak.as, Hunt- ington Beach, boy Mr. and Mn. James Wright, Hunt- ington Beach, boy Febnary 1 Mr. and Mrs. Phil Wilcox, Fountain Valley, boy Febnary 5 F-..ryt Jane and Stephen G . Knlkc, Mission Viejo, boy Susan and Charles Ware. Laguna Niguel, boy FekurJ 11 Gin&er and Steve Geidl. Mission Viejo, boy Dawn and Davtd Lincoln. La:gun.a Beach. girt Feku.rJ 1% Susan and Jerry W. Guy, Irvine. boy Febnary 14 Teresa and Bren Briano, Laguna Beach. girt Febn.ary 11 Karen and William L Protzmann, Laguna Beach, boy · • FOUNT A.IN VALLEY REGIONAL HOSPITAL Jaaury., Karen and Steven Henderson, Irvine, boy Monique and Craig Gregory, New- port Beach. boy JuuryH Leila and Willi.am Gavino. Fountain Valley, boy Debra Scacco and Lee Cayer, Hunt- ington Beach, boy • Jennifer and Wilham Bartley, Hunt· IDglOD Beach, boy Eva Pomeroy and David Donatelli. Huntington Beach, boy Lauren Schlesser and Terrance Hofus. Fount.am Valley, girl Mr. and Mn. Denrus Watson, Hunt- mgton Beach. boy ,-llle .. Ll'C:IL..Al.cacilltll._..JD.enlbl~.lllelllee...-8e&-enitr.:un.. _&.l ...... ______ ~ __ .r..cun.aq~ &MOCtatea are a CoOI npport l rGUP and Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Michael JMRrJU ~~~ Cheryl and Patrick Smith. Fount.am Valley. girt speaker a t a recent bmcheon . Bowcrmaster. Huntington Beach. gut • Attention IRA Shoppers. April 15 , 1986 is the deadline to open your 1985 IRA . And it's not too soon to think about opening your 1986 IRA. Because the sooner you open it. the sooner your IRA funds go to work . making money for you. To open your Great American IRA or for more infonnation about all the IRA available from The IRA Store.call our toll-free Financial Line . 1-800423-BANK Great American Your advantage banlC • --· CQ6$1ALORANQECOUNTX .HUNllNCJT'ON BEACH. 9tJ2 Adialm Ave 962 24'6 •NEWPORT BEACH. S CorporMt Plal.t~ I~~.,• 81\l ll()A IC\L.\ ''Tl "ll M11111t -'\t ..... ., l~l2 • BA1.90A PENlNSl'LA f(ll I: 8&1t>i-e 81"'1 t>7l l"lOI • LAGUNA BEACH. UiO Ocun Ave. 494-7"41 • MONA.flCH BAY. l Mmlut:h Bly PW.a 496-llOI • CAPISTRANO BEACH. '\420t• Dl'ttm Par\. RJ 4~'l2Cll • C\A "<I C"L.E.MENTf ttll 'i El CJll'Nl'IO Rtal 492 ttq.S • SAN CL£Mf.N1"[.. AVCNI~ P1C'O. 40.l A.vend Pico 498-63)() • INLAND ORANGE COUNTY ·ANA.HEIM HlUS. 5550 s.a AM Canyon R.d ~I • ORANO Tl5TIN AT Hf J\1 ~ .. \' ,,lf'lh l\twn Avt cm Ml•l. PO\Jm'AIN VAU.EY tOl7.S Sla&tf Avt OC\_q 'fC). WOODBRlOGl- •520 Blmnca Pkwy ''9-SMn. LAOUN.\ KILLS. 20 )1 ~de Valmoa S86>,IOO. l:.L TORO. 2'.\688 El '1bro Rd 8.» i720 . '1l SK>'ll' n Jn ~~ \\~ (. M RJ T"t).6~. l {1l ~A "OGl 'Fl . ~11 CnM11 v.Jh """"' ·~~IO .~ Jl.IA~ FSIJC --·---""' CAPfSTRANQ 12222 Camino Capisanno 661.«J97 S,....,.... ... •Yield \hn\liftl' •n ~tcll~t 1nnu1I 'l'ICIJ t-o.'4"0 1itl •!Ir .urrtnl 1nnu<1I rlf('• l"UnHnJ 1lu1 l'f •l\l tJ'lll .;n.l 1nl('rc'1 l"i'"'-'" ,.., ·~"'' '"' ,.,... "" l111rr ,, ,, •'"" l'"""'k•I "'""''hh '"' • \f\~ \f\~ "'-''' fl\.. • "r l"i'nl ••'" m.t• • h•11~r ••••h .... 1 '' "'"1(''1 '"1 lwn~< "I'"'' ' ~"' 11 1 •th •llhdrt .. •l Ill funJ l>y '"'""'~\thin~<>. yt.r• or •Jt' nwy rtwlt '". \Ul>\Uln1ial inlfrt\I tw'Nll\ an.I hi"\"' UI\ dtlt'rrnl •tatu• fcdtral •nd •llllt llC'ftalllf"'"'' ..... ~rri· ...... '""'"' .... ,,.....,., __ """""1N Uln111~h G"f I 1nan. ...i .~ ln\Uf-(' ~ .............. 1>-tJ11n '" ( 1rn1 ~"'""'an F '"' ... ""fl' 6'inl. ••• N.• J!Ult'hit<it M•~t)' ( omrlttn'(1nlt\C,rvlc• •~•II~ 11 >'""' <•rrlll Arnru.:an I 11'\1 S.~•na• l\ilN. otffl..Y "l'lilllC ...... ,_,~.., 1""' "-'"'" R.tM ••• •t ) ~ • \ . _Merger mania goes-sky high NEW YORK (AP) -Merger mania llas dim~ siy high. The nation's airltnes are now t>u)'i~ each other at a raeid clip, fulftlhng predictions of an 1odustry shakeout 1n which only a handfol of the strongest carriers ts expected to survive. i J The contraction of the(Jlldus1ry. com mg eight years after its deregula- tion, began last summer when Untied Airlines agreed 10 buy the Pac1fic routes of Pan American World Air- ways for $750 million. Since then Southwest Airlines has bought Muse Atr. investor Carl Jcahn took control of Trans World Airlines. People fapress bought Frontier. Piedmont acquired Empire Atrltne and Nonhwest agreed to buy Re- public. Then last wet"k, Tc,as Air agreed to buy Eastern, which would create the· biggest U.S. airline operation. That was quickly followed by TWA's offer to purcha~ Ozark Airlines. More mergers are expected and observers question whether ~ond­ ary carriers such as Western, Pan Am and USA1r will remain intact West- ern. sensing the threat, says 1t 1s weighing anti-takeover measures. The industry's current giants - United, Amencan and Delta -are aggressively using 1hc1r own re- sources 10 remain dominant players by building huge route networks across the countn-. Such far-Oung 'service, 1f operated efficiently, is seen as a key to survival since it gives an airline a powe rful marketing tool for bu1ld1ng customer loyalty. In the process. such huge airlines could freeze out weaker competitors. The ma1or earners, an turn. are forcing most other airlines. especrnll} those hobbling financiall y, to respond 1n ktnd. .. The prevailing strategy 1s that in order to attract passengers ) ou will have to be able to take them anywhere," c;a1d Mar&l)n K. McKclltn of the Value Line Invest- ment Surve}. u secunt1es research OVER THE COUNTER NEW YORK 1.API -The following list shows the Over • the -Counter stocks and warrants that have gone up the most and down me most based on oercenl of cnan'e for Fridav No securilles radino t>elOw s2 or shares are included 1000 firm. And for many that has mean t JOlnina Torccs Wlth a nval. · While the rcstruch.inng continues, the tnlvclerisexpected to benefit The move toward far-flung route systems reduce the need to change airlines during a tnp. And the fierce battle fo1 customers and the airlines' cont1nu· ing push to cut costs also should keep downward pressure on prices. Even wnh fewer airlines the com- petitive environment "would prob- ably prevent fares from nsmg too much." said Joel Wechsler, owner of Federal Travel Service, a Boston travel agency. Before 1979 the government de- cided which a1rhnes flew where and how much they charged. With de- regulation, the carriers are free to invade each other's region), discount pnces and otherwise elbow their way to addttional market share It took a few years, however, for the major airlines to learn to efTect1vel) compete in deregulated skies. Burdened by their regulated cost structures but forced to cut fares to match new low-cost earners such as People E/(press. the veteran airlines lost hundreds of malltons of dollars in the earlyf 980s. Soanng fuel costs, the 1981 ~82 recession and the I 981 strike and firing of 11,000 air-traffic controllers also contnbuted to the losses. Since then. however. many of those problems have passed and United, Amencan and some other older airlines have returned to the black by bringing down their costs even though fare wars remam rampant. In pan1cular. United and Amen- can secured 1wo-11er wage scales from their unions allowmg them 10 pa} new employees only about half as much as veteran workers. Hence. the faster those a1rhncs grow and hire lower-paid workers. the faster overall cmploymen t COSl'i tome down. And United and '\merican arl.' doing JU St that Amencan 1s planning to 10\iHJc Delta's and Eastem's temtor) in th e Southeast b) establishing hub~. or II t<.lr1CnntrMed ·~r UD 17 9 B rncplOt' 2'h ~ UP 17.f omdlal P 2~ '.'ti Up 16 14 nzon wl 7 1 Up 16.7 lS ustvPel IS 2~ UP 16.S l' C10teAdv 27-16 +11 -p Up 16 4 AlfdRHhAt.c ~14 VI Up IU AFPlmao UP 161 Net and oercenra~e chanoes are lhe 1, ''• S· !t difference oe1ween he previous closino ~ Astrocom 41h Up ll~ price and Frldav ) 1as1 or Did price S~llvComp 1/'J l;.. UP UPS An~ ~ 1 UP 1 .7 Name LU I Cn£.. Pct Soler Aoe un • 2~ ~ UP ISO 1 B101uav L. I ... Up u1 ~LS~stems 2 •1. Up 14 ~ 2 Amcfiwr un89 Up tlsvl le 7 ~ UP 14 3 La 11He un 10 211. UP ~trident f"" , ~ UP ll 4 ArcPldSolrEnr 1p 3 Up u:~ 26 lmeoes h 'II s Doll~ r 1~ UP DOWNS ~ Vista 86wl l4 ~ UP Nt.r::• Lar~ 01 svlle wt 2 1 ~ UP ~ ML.)( P 1i Pharma tee ~~ I UP 22 9 Fst~en11n s ¥•01Ch0ev t7·16 UP 189 3 Fsl oml~CP s ,, ~mle• ,,, lt, Up 18 2 4 Concord omP s If you have a taste for fine art .. wr:;200'"' of home decorating supplies from Standard Brands Deco rating Ce nt er I· nter the Daily Pilot c.·o ntest fo r the best u\c of art in yo ur home Final details m toda} 's classified section. \ ~ UP 1 9 _Cht Pct. ~ 17 6 -'h I~~ -l -)/. 13 0 connccl1ng i..-en ters, tn Nttshv1lle, Tenn., and Rale1gh -Durtiam, N.C. ~lt:i m tum moved into American's turf at Dallas-Fort Worth airport, and both Amencan and Delta arc going after United jn Chicago. r The airlines wa.nt .&)'Stems strctchina to most maJor c1t1es as a marketing advanl<tgc al a time when pnce often seems to be the lone differential between one earner and another For example, ' large network, in addition to kcC'p1ng a passenger on one a,irline per trip, gives that airline more destinations to use as bonuses for frequent-flier programs peddled to busmess travelers. It also makes more efficient use of computerized rcscrvauon systems. For other carriers trying to keep pace. mergers provide severaJ ben- efits. It is quicker to expand via merger than to do it internally, and often cheaper. Buying another carrier BUSINESS NOTES can be a less costly way of acqu1nng needed airport slots, aircraft and ground facilities. And the expansion is not limited to the United States. Airlines wanting to expand overseas service can gain entrance to protected forei'1\ markets by buyina an airline already granted those routes. The atrhnes alsb sec mergers smooth mg out the seasonal impact on earnings. Texas Air. whose Continen- · taJ Airlines flies predominantly east· west routes, sees such benefits in acquiring the largely north-south service of Eastern. Mergers also have their coSts. esPt'.Cially for those workers who migh t be ousted as two airlines consohdate. But with the major carriers muscling into more markets, their rivals might have no other choice. I Land tests starting a t Beckman Center Leighton and A11odates, IJlc. is conducting geological studies for the 7-acre Bec kman Center adjacent to UC" Irvine. The site will serve as West Coast conference center for the Na- tional Academies of Sciences ane Engineering. The Leighton finn was selected by a division of the Irvine Co. . wh1c;h is donaung the land for the Beckman Center • • • The Orange Couht} chapter of the Amencan Society for Training and Development has presented its 1985 Company of the Year Award 10 Newport Beach-based Pacific Mutual Life Insurance Co .. s LlncFlnCo 110 -11 6 Allacell WI ~~ -v. 7 SoorllngLlfe -l/o I WstnBell s -5·16 Cvrcrtb$SV WI 'II 'I• 10 Apd NA un S'h ~ 11 Avae•Garde 41h -'h B S•J: alev 1~~ -~ A acell -1~ 14 Nall HMO Sl/o -~ 15 CourlerOlsP ·~ -'h lt Mlcr~o ~~ -'h ~lfl OU$e -'I• ll w1:r;:~~I h =3·l: 4 n Iv x 211·16 -'I· Nat~Lumf,r 4111 ~ Rvl j 'm v r "" 23 Four tar ~ 'l'l ~~ Aero vce v. lnlermtfrlc 6 'h NYSE UPS & DOWNS 7. i· .> • • • Newpon Beach-based lmpac& Wloes ud Spirits, a subsidiary of PAFCO Imports, will handle the U.S. sales and d1stnbution of the Bclgium- brewed Stella Artola premium beer. The lager-style libation dates back to the mid-14th century and 1s produced today by one of Europe's largest 'brew1n$ conglomerates. Stella Arto1s sales wall be launched in California. AnLona and Nevada. • • • Manofaeturtnc and ConsuU1ng Ser· vices lDc. of Irvine is selling a new. full y-integrated computer software package that 1s setting industry stan· dards. Called the Anvil-5000 CADD/CAM, the software quickly and convenien tly controls automated manufactunng. from the simplest dnlling operations to more com- plicated tasks. It can oversee the creation of a product from inittal designs through th e manufactunng process. I MACHULOA SPEIDEL Triconex alters marketif)g staff J ames Maclualda has been promoted to director of OEM marketing for Irvine-based Trlcoou Corp., which ha~ ex panded and reorganized 11s marketing department. Also a!> part of the reorganization, Charles Speidel has been nan~ed director of i.ystcms marketing and BeoJto Paa Jr. has been appointed manager of sales supP?rt· Machulda had been product hne marketing manager and Speidel and Pua were markeung mana~ers with Measaru Corp. tn Cupertino. Machulda has been with Tncone' !>1nce 1985. ••• DanJel J. Predovlc has been appointed ch1effinancial officer a!ld treasurer of Syntellect Inc., .a Phoenix._ Ar12.-based firm with marketing headquarters 1n Irvine. Prt•dov1c prev10usly worked for Sendero Corp., a Phoenix-based producer of management sof\war~ for banks and savings and loan assoc1at1ons • • • Edward L. Marinaro has been promoted to executive vice president of Western Digital Corp. The Newport Beach resident has been with the firm -which designs and supplies storage management and commun1cat1ons controller.. -since 1984 • • • Certified public accountant Paul 8. lnttor h~ Jcri ned ESI Industries Corp. of Costa Mesa as cont roller. ESI develops. manufactures and markets computeri1ed lottery equipment. electronic video games and coupon-d1spens10g terminals Before joining ESI, Dettor was in pnvate practice as a financial and system!> consultant for sm all manufactunng firms and adviser to anvec;tor groups. • • • Lynn Scbeller has been appointed manager of Bank of America's Mission V1e10 branch. The Laguna Hills resident, who joined Bank of Amenca in 1968. was manager of the Laguna Niguel branch since 1982. She as being replaced there by Clara SIUmmullng, manager ef the Capistrano Palisades Branch-in San Clemente since 1982. Schneller serves on the advisory board of the Moulton Niguel Water Dlscrlct and as a committee member of th e Costa Mesa Mar~ of Dimes. Shimmerling. of Laguna Beach. was a charter member of the Jrvlne Chmber of Commerce, director of the Capistrano Beaclt Chamber of Commerce and president of the Newpor1 Beacb Toastmasters. She also headed an American Cancer Society fund- raising drive. • • • . Janet L. Scbwettman has been appointed director of marketing and communicauons for the Oran1e Coaoty Medical AssoclaUoo . She fonnerl y worked for Ford Aerospa ce and has·an extensive background in administration of health care programs. . '*'·" .... ""' °' . : ,0. if, .. .. NYSE CoM Pos1r£ TRAN ' ~L r10.,s ------ • W H~I NYSE DID NEW VORK (AP> INr. J Prev. NEW YOltK (AP) MM. 1 ~~~~-"-T -m--dll-fl-g~t---T~~~\ 1 ___ AMEX LEADERS GoLo QuoTE S METAL S QuorE s NYSE Lt~U£R~ D o~ J o ~r s A ~ER~GES NASDAQ SUMMARY To 1 oott t L1ZS ftom ti Rote~~ o\L ... ..t ~ .. 1 r o,t1. ... i\ci mcxH m1:1 vo. ;zo..,• t.h..: W('IT id~ f1NZ"'L hor~·n Lt~ Twel4lay, Mattia • ARIES (March 21-Apnl 19): Many requests arc lulfilled. you'll have mort .. working room." Focus on creativity, ~r and romance. Sclf- eitpressio n is accented. your feelings wall ~ urt1culated. Virgo, Sagntanus play roles. · TAURUS (April 20.May 20): What appeared to be monbund will actually be ahve and kicking. Emphasis on communica11on. travel, publishing, dissemination of impof'\ant information. M{Uor domestic change occurs, will prove beneficial. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Scenano highlights aura of intngue. mystery. What appeated out of rea<'h is • actually clo~ at hand and docs involve money. Clandestine meeting lendsspice to relauonship. CANCER (June 21-J uly 22). You SYDNEY '-0MARR can drive hard bargain Reahze )'Our posJllon 1s strong, that powerful ind1- v1duals arc in your corner Law 1s also on your side. Focus on legal affairs. partnerships. scnous cons1dt'rat1011 of ••••••••••••• marital'status. • LEO (Jul> 23-Aug. 22)· Finish rather than initiate prOJCCt. Emphasis on ba<;1c issues. employment. dependents. pets and general health. You'll be called upon to meet deadline Answer tn affirmauve -means accept challenge. Anes plays role VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept 22) Emphasis on fresh '!tan. independence. courage of conv1c1tons Focus also on creative endeavors, chansma. ab1hty to get to heart of matters where love is concerned. Leo. Aquanu!> native!> play roles. LIBRA (Sep1 23-0ct 22): lntu1t1on nngs true. You'll learn more about land. saret). fu ture prospe<;"tS, long-term tnvestments. Family reur\ton IS part of scenario. helps you feel more c;ccure. Cancer. Aquarius play roles. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): You'll be more aware of your appearance, body image: wardrobe Scenario highlights social invitations, tnps, v1s1ts. ideas and humor Force!> tend to be scattered, but you'll be 1nsp1red. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21 ): Be willing to revise. review. remodel and to bnng concept!> up to date. Check source matcnal, study fi ne pnnt. realize money is involved You could lornte article that had been lost. m1ss1ng or stolen. CAPRICORN (Dec 2~-Jan. 19): Lunar po~111on highlights personaltty. charisma. ab1hty to make new start m new direction. Focus also on change. travel. vanety, intensified romantic relat1onsh1p AQUAR IUS (Jan. 20-feb. 18): Famtl} member pla)s "I've got a secret." Part1c1pate in guessing game only to limited extent. Obtain facts, not conJCCture. Many answers arc found behind scenes. clandesune "arrange- mem" proves surpn ing. PISCES (Feb 19-March 20): What had been a matter of specula1ton becomes reaht). Focus on powers of persuasion. friends. romance. Define terms. clanfy meanings. deal with Virgo and anothcr P1sce!> What had been a· secret w1 II be re' ea led. IF MARCH 4 IS YO UR Bll~THDA Y you arc sensitive. psychic, cmottonal. dynamic. creative. rebellious and stubborn You were "on your own" while still }Oung. 11 1s also possible that you were separated psycholog1call~ or actuall> from one or both parents at relat1vel} earl> age. There are two sides to vo ur nature -one is emouonal and the other ultra- pracucal. Taurus. Scori>io. Leo play important roles 1n your life. In March. you learn where )'OU stand 1n business and romance. '\pnl wi ll be memorable for vou 1n 1986 More Norwegians apt to stay single These snobs go to foot of th·e class . I read an article the other day defending snobs. w e·ve all known a few in our time. T he wine snob who sniffs at a cork like he has just witnessed a miracle. The lhera.ry snob who never reads an author whose name he can pronounoe. The tele- vision snob who admits only to watching a rerun of"A.ora and Fauna Reproduction" on PBS. The article supported snobs, saying they were dedicated souls who set a standard of excellence. If it weren•t shoes to walk in, and basketball shoes for them we·d be coverin$. our walls to fertilize the lawn. with paintings of small children with The other night I saw a "runner" big eyes and eating peanut butter. who pointed to m y husband's shoes Well. meet th& ultimate. snob of the and saj~ "Don•t tell me ... New '80s: The Running Shoe Snob. Balance 1 igers -1983." If the re 1s any individual who 1s "Thet re c)assics, aren't they? I more condescendin~ overbeanng, wouldn t run in anything else. Don't brash and braggadocio. I have yet to know how I'm going to replace them mee{ o ne. The Runnjng Shoe Snob when they wear out. .. shows up at a formaJ dinneT party "I know. I j ust had 1he heel rebut It wean ng a black tie, cummerbund. on my Hersey DPS." and a pair of running shoes that cost "How many miles you got on 'em?" S 165. Whe n approached by another ''Too many to count. But they are person who says he jogs. he will look ,getting trendy. I saw a man bowling in at him coolly and say, "I don'tjog. r m them. for crying out loud." - a runner." He will discuss his shoes I couldn•t help but remember a few with no one who does not "run" 40 years ago when I hiked to the bottom miles a week. of the Grand C.any on. I shopped for If the credentials are acceptable. he the "right boot" for three months. I will then get down to some serious had soles with a good grip, ankle shoe talk. He will tell you how his support and they were impervious to shoe is made with massive ex ternal rocks and rattlesnakes. Then I shop- heel counter, how a small arch cutout ped for the "nght" socks, the "right" (the Oral Roberts Lift) healed his backpack and the "nghf' sun hat. pulled hamstring, and how he picked I was a quarter way down when a up two minutes on his lime fro m his kid in shorts. no shirt and thongs on firm dual densi ty midsole. his feet passed me. When I was Time permiltin&..rhe will talk of · halfway down. 1he k1<J passed me hoes Past when .he was just gelling again .... going up! started and didn't know any better. I didn'1 understand 1t. I was Running Shoe Snobs are i enerally weanng signed. numbered, ltmited- totally offended by impunsts who ed11ion shoes and was sweating wear tennis shoes with a joggjng designer sweat outfit. aerobic shoes to a movie. gym I had to believe he got a blister. Wife brings bankers into sharper focus DEAR ANN LANDERS: A while back someone from Omaha wrote and asked why men in the banking business seem sexier than phys1c1ans. lawyers. professors, engineers, architects, artists or blue-collar ) oung Jach. can )OU \ 1\ual11c a workers. You said most bankers dress Q.1-A~ S<1ulh. vulnt>rublt'. you hold. •AK93 Al064 A •AQ82 The bidding ha11 prQ<.'t•t•dt•d Sou th W t'8l North 1-:ast I • Pa 88 1 Pa 8 7 Wha t do yo11 hid now" 11 • A.-llow did s1wh 1l11 1•1t:.)' qUl'"I lion gJlp 11no this qui.:'' l>t•-.pilt• a poi.s1ble m1~f1t , your l1t11H1 I!! JU"lt too ... strong for any a1·t 11111 otlll·r than a jump shill W1· would dwose two heart!>. tv ~1v1· partnl'r llH.' opporrunity of ll1ddlll1t .,padt'l> at the two·lt>vel Tlw 11111· btd wr would not contt•mplate 1 ... three• no trump. you have• an 11nb1tl.inn·d hand and should rnakt• t•wry C'ffurt to lo1•ate a fit Q.2-Both \'lllrll'ralil1· "" Suuth you hold +83 J 652 QJ 5 •A876 The b1ddinf( hus prol't•1•11t-d North Ea st South Wt>Sl I + Pass 1 NT PaHH 3 , Pass ? What do you bid now'' A.-You havt• 1:111 uwkward n •bld to make. You don't want Ill tml tit re(> no trump w ith only a '\lllJ(ll• l'I u b st.op per and a slw ky 'It oppN in the unbid maJOr .,ult. and you s h<Juldn't raise partnn's ...r•c·nnd suit with only thrc<·-card 'IUpport S1m·e partner's Jump -;tuft 1-; fon· sng to game. the solution 1 ... to makP a tempormng "prcft•n•nt't"' of t hn·e spades. and wast for partrwr I•• l larify his holdml( Q.3-I'either vulm•rnblt• .i.., South "you hold · +Q6 A KQ3 95 <tQ76a2 Your ~right -hand oppon(•nt upen., the bidding with on<· c11amc1nd \-\-hat act 10n clo you take•' A.-You certainly want lo ~t·t into the auction. but you can't afford a takt>o ut double. should partnt'r n· spund to such aC't1on with 11111' spade, you would be in an untt•n<• ble position; to bid two dubs tlw11 would show a muC'h t>ettrr hand than you have Your dub 'IUll '"not l(ood enough for a tW<>·l(•v(•J ov<·r call. so that l<'aves just om• opt 11111 one heart You don't hkc to takt· such action. even at the on<· h·v1•l on a four-card suit. but th1., '" dearly the right hand for •l - CHARLES Go REN OMAR SHARIFF Pass 2 Pa u ? . Whal cH'llOll 1111 you take" A.-1 nh'.,., p;1rtnt>r ha\ h1ddt>n !wart .,uppurt. y 1111 have surely lo n 1tt'c1 an ad(•quat1• trump suit l'O"- you hav(' 10 tl'll l~rtnf>r about y1,ur ... tn•ngth ttnd a JUOlp to four diu mond-. tt•lb ab11ut your h11(h·c11rd valut>s and th(• qua lily uf your sup pon Tlw alt c>rnttt 1vt· •~ a high re- Vl'r.,c· of 1 hr1•t• dub!>, bur t h<1! t•o11ld ((•ad to l'••mpl il'ation-.. Q.5-Bot II 'ultwrabll' ti., So111 h you hold +AQ76 A98 107 +KQIJ3 Tht• lmld1n~ ha~ pro<·t>••c.l•·c.I Wt-ttt North East South I NT Pasli Pas~ Dbll' Pass 2 Pass ? Wl1at art111n do you take'' A.-S1n1·t• mo-;t double'> 'of no trump 1·ontr;wt ... an· for penaluc.,, )'rlll l'an I 1·xpC'ct mu('h from part- rwr 1n th1• "a~ of high rards-w1th ;inything in rtw "ay ofdefen'>e. he "ould h:tH h ... en happy to pas-; All ~·•>u l'an hupt• for from partnl:'r I'> d1- <1m11nd lt•111(t II and the bes! spol for y11ur "ldP "' ril(ht Whl•n· you are now l'a.,s Q.6-~t·llhn vulnerable, a.'> South you hold +Q7Ga A I 09152 +A63Z Tlw lllt'i<lin~ h:1:-; prc11·t•1•d1•d Wf"st Nort h East South PasH Pass I + Pas~ I Pass Pa ss ? \\'hat at't 11>0 do you take'' A.-W1t h o;o much of your Mrrng1h 1·1 11u·t·ntratod in the opponent.,• -.u1h , thts ll> a do~e dec1s1on llow- l'Vl:'r. tht' b1dd111g of lhP oppont•nt~ ha-. made ll dt>ar that they do not ._ ___ .:..:,n::Jagccc>t· When resear_t,_h-cr"'".,;...;...op""u"'"1"'".,,t ;;..;1-.,----------er ha ' life for )Ourself v.11hou1 mar-~ and hiive a more polished A11 LAllDEIS -------,---JC..~-A.. ~ ... II b \! u Jona b I e \'4J0'4'11-LLb.a.a \,L' fo;c.' A>a.-1g~r..o;e ... a.._1 -tJP"-'f£"'1' P<fA"IOCUdcue~r ... a~ne<;l'o;.I' .<JO>'-f-Ll.uh~e- hol d ' --;trength, and you should Cl'rti.inly quen to .\mencan college women. L M e been mamed to a banker for 37 one 1n seven \aid }C~ When the) • • years. He may look sexy but more asked English women. fewer than one ..-., 1mportan1. he ts deeply concerned m four said yes. When they asked BOYD -..I about his responsibilities to his bank Norwegian women. shghtl) more one .._,, and his customers. My husband in three said yes •••••••••••••• womes about the millions of dollars he has loaned to people he trusts. If Pnce of cabbage alv. 3} ~ goc'I do~ n they don't repay those loans the bank after St. Paine k's [)a~ could go under. 'Vl ost common marital status of Most people thmk all bankers are People who get heac.Jache~ at ahout habitual gamblen '" either wealthy. They don't realize there 1s a the samc t1mc ever, da\ can hlamc "divorced" or ·•separated .. That. big d ifference in salary between the lo~ blotx.1 1,ugar 'or ·,0 .,3~ the accord in$ 10 a computer run on a chairman of the board and the loan medico\. criminal JUSllce data ba'>e officers who are vice presidents. Because of the farm economy, many banks have been forced to close their doors. A banker can lose his job because of mismanagement. I am not talking about the bankers' mis- management. I'm talking about the mismanagement of the people who borrow. If) ou 're planning on \U 1 nj! a phone compan). pick a little one Am<.'ncan Telephone & Telegraph employ., 1)40 full-time in-house 'law\Cf\ on th~ b1gge'>I corporate kgal \tall 1n the na lion t) \l.. ho fir'it \aid Love: l'i b11nd'''l .\ ·\ nghtcou'> soul named Propeniu\ said "F:.vtf) h<x.1) in lovt' 1<, blind · Clo\<.' enough He \-.a., not lht: on)\ uh\er"er to hnk Jo,c with d1Yh1lli\. plt:a'>c note Plato \a1d · Lu\C~ -a gra' e mental d1\ca\c .. V \l.. h.i1 mu'>ical in\trumcnt ,., ne'er oul ol lune \ct <:an ·1 he tunctf' •\ The t\mhal · <) Dtn,cr I\ the highest hig ctl) in the l 1n1ttd l.,tatt\. but what's the \ccon<l highest and the thircf' \ Phm·n" and Atlanta It 11 ta ~c' le\\ than seven and a halt minute' to walk IO work. the J\('r:tgc workn will take thnt walk. It 11 take\ more the 3\tragC' worker will go h\ car hue;. t;ixi wha1cver < >r '" '>:.t\ th<.' rc,car<:hrr'> PEOPLE Bc'>t frying pan pms1blc -to diffuse thc heat evenly and impart no tac;tc -would be made of gold 'Vlark Twain was of the opinion that the best way to t:heer up yo urself ts to ti) to cheer up somebody else. <;ome oft he Amazon Rt' er's feeder streams are bigger than the M1S'\1\- sipp1 \ r rl'nl h dlt'm1\I naml'd Dr J11-.cph Da\ 1do' ll'i w n1ends th<' great \tonl''> in E:.g}pt'c; p}ram1d'i weren't mm cd to thl' '>tlC\. but v.ere poured 1n placc -s~ nthl·t1t \lone of a II mc\lonc-lossil m" Peoplc in Nl·pal bleed their yaks once a year -toda) '-;the day, Chan. go bleed the yak -and df) the blood for dessert I hope you will pnnt this letter and give the pubhc a mort' reahstic picture of Amencan bankers. It's time some- bod)' did. -A WIFE IN NE- BRASKA. DEAR WIFE IN NEB: Here's your teller and my thanks on bebalf of all tbe bankers ud tbelr spoase1 wbo will bleu you for wrltlog. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am a 25-year-old female. attract1 ye, college graduate and a successful busi- nesswoman (computer programmer). · Three months a~o I met "Mr. Wonderful." We eoJOY each other's company, like to dance and ski, and often we go to church toi ether. But no <) What's thl' color of raw n) Ion'! sell. He doesn't believe in sex outside \ t ran-.lucent ivof) of marriage. He wants to marry me. . l .M. Boyd columnist. /'J II syndicated And that's what f'm writing about. When I was 14. I succumbed to peer pressure (like many young girl s) and started having sexual relauons. In the intervening 11 years. I ha ve had numerous ooe-night st.a nds but no live-in arrangements. Dunng that time. I accumulated some unwanted "d ividends" -gonorrhea twice, pregnancy once (abonion), and a year ago genital herpes. I am hvi ng proof of that old adage, "Your sins will fin d you out." Mr. Wonderfu l is pressing me to set a date. I don't know what to do. Should I tell him about my past, keep my mouth shut and hope he is never disill usioned. or simply stop seeing him without explanation? P~ease, Ann, help me. f am -GOING BONKERS JN COLO. DEAR BONK: Slue you no longer bave gonorrhea I see no reason to 'brlol up lbat old a.nplea1t11tne11. However, you 1bould tell "Mr. Won- derful" about tbe genJtaJ berpe1 because afler marrta1e you mast take periodic precaatlon1 to make eertalo be doean 't ~ome affected. As for tbe abortJoo, I 11rongly advise you lo tell blm. If be abould learn about It from aomeone elle, be would be deeply dl1appol11ted ud wonder wbat else lo your past you bave faJled l.o mention. • • • DEAR ANN LA NDERS: Please settle an argument Who is the ~eatest record seller of all time? I say 1t is Michael Jackson. My fnend says I'm wrong. -J.L. IN L.A. DEAR L.A.: You are wrong. Mlcbael Jackson'• album "Thriller" aold 35 mWJon cople1 but "While Cbrt1tma1'' by lrvlog BerllJI baa sold 125 mllllon record1. Yoko Ono launching concert tour By lbe Assot'lated Press COIJX1NF \.\-c<,t(icm1an)- Yoko Ono, the 1N1dov. of former Beatie Jobn Lennon, 1<, 'itart1ng a JO.week world concert tour 1n West Berlin toda~ Ono has adopted th e mo110 "World Pea1..e in\tead nf '\tar Wars,"' a rdcrentt' to Prc'>1dent Reasan 's Strategit DcleMe In- 1tiat1vc <;y'ltcm l he 53-year-old '>I ngcr 'i31c1 \ht• wtll appear 1n fiH \\(''It C1crman c111c~ dunng the to ur and that <,ht' wJll al'>o give rnnccn' 1n Auci.1 pc'>t Hungary. al\d War .. :iw Po land • , Book auppreued "J LW "ORK -Tht' la "'H'I who helped dcarClau1 von 81110• of charge~ he tncd to kill h1\ hc1rc'\ W1fc chanaed his book on the celet>raled c.ase after heing prc-;surcd by lawyers for von Bulow's ~1epch1ldrcn. ' Alan M. OenMwlt111 book had been scheduled for pubhcauon 1n March. but ha' bun postponed pending fonher lt"gal review. Peter O<;no\ of Random House \aid The review wa~ prompted by complainu from lawyers for the cl'itldren of Martlaa " •aay" voe Bolo•. who ha~ been 1n a coma .. Yoko Ono since 1980. and from severaJ othet people mentioned 1n "Rc- vers&J of Fonune. •• a., o rder denied MIDDLEBURY, Vt. -Dis- tnct J ud&e Fra.ak Malady has refused to order attorneys and pohce not to talk about cpcaine charges against Jota1 A. Zaccaro Jr., the son of former Democratjc vice presidential candidate GeraJdlH Ferraro. Ctaarle1 Tetzlaff argued that statements made last week by Middlebury Pohc:c Sgt. David Wemette to the Burlington Free Press and New York Post have jeopardized Zaccaro·~ chance for a fa ir trial. Fllmlne reaet HOLLYWOOD Mov- 1tmakcrs B•n Kalllr. and OUver Stoot arc rescheduli ng filmma m the Ph1hpp1 nes and arc relieved p01lucal turmoil there only bncf- ly dclavcd their proJects Kuhk &aid he would JOtn crews on the island nation to take up hootma of"Womcn of Valor," a CBS telev1s1on movie ~bout Army nurses held pnsoner t> the Japanese during World War I. +85 AQJ I 03 KQ.5 +AQ3 find partnt•r with -.ome IE'ngt h in The b1ddin~ ha~ proceeded one of tht• unbid !>Ults Wp would South W.-s t North East 111akl' a takt•out doublt• , TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 1 Striphngs 5 Pant 9 Stick out 14 Estate part 15 Perfume 16 Labor group 17 Derivation 18 M islay 19 Was upright 20 Cavern poet 21 Impurity 23 Stopovers 24 Pep up 26 Prom ontory 28 Negative 29 Bonus 33. Condescend 36 Welcome 37 Kiwi's !tin 38 Samovars 39 Commixture 40 Calgary or Chicago 41 Marble 42 Lambaste 43 Despises 44 Strongholds 46 Kind of tide 47 Auto part 48 Pungent herb 52 Carbonize 55 D'Arlagnan's creator 57 Future beneficiary 58 TV parts 60 Ravelings 61 Fissure 62 --once suddenly 63 · -ot Green Gables" 64 Utopia 65 Outshines 66 Scan 67 Gels DOWN 1 Monumental 2 Nut 3 Talk Stlly 4 Tableware arrange- ments 5 -Gate 6 Beautify 7 Fair 8 Having foresight 9 Vehicle to Removecf rope 11 Carnivore 12 HOOdlum 13 Winds up 22 Conserved 25 German title 27 Chasm 29 Enclothe 30 Discharge 31 Eminence 32 Time periods 33 Tight-lipped 34 Silkworm 35 Ger.und endings 36 Inherent 39 Ancestry 40 Nabs \ 42 Ute: pref 43 Pronoun 45 Menace 46 Corroded 48 Godsend 49 Drama speech 50 Reconvened 51 College VIPs 52 Decapod 53 Perforation 54 ... and - well'' 56 Golconda 59 Aves THE FAMILY CIRCUS by Bii Keane "Don't. ?e scared, P J! That bump was 1ust from a potty hole in the street!'.' MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson . .3 -J C>, .. ,_,-.,.,........,. ..... "I don't understand ... lt's supposed to be the canine caviar!" EANUTS OKAY TEAM .. WE LOST, BUT LET'S 6E 600D SPORTS ABOUT IT ... GARFIELD TUMBLEWEEDS DRABBLE ROSE IS ROSE LITS.OIVE OUR OPPO.ioos A 6000 OUl-FASHIONEP ~ ~IP, ~IP, ~URRA'r' ~ 11 ~ BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP) ' ------ "I know whit -why don't we go OUT to 11t for 1 ch1ng11~· " ~ 00 'THEY ~E UP WrTH JUST ENCWH ~s ro FILL 1HE NE~R EVERV ~Y?" IT 5A\O 1lo4AT IT'5 .. I OUN~, A . ~f.1"41~G 1'~~' .,. "'oo ~ow .. . l DOt-lt-40 .. . l1LL 11 HIP ~IP 11 BUT I WON'T ~ HURRA'r' ! '' by Jim Davis by Tom K. Ryan by Kevin Fagan by Pat Brady .. BLOOll COtJllfTT . llOON MULLINS BU iHEY'RE A c.o&ftt OF ... ..,., ... A t.lmt'fV ... by Ferd & Tom Johnson • 'TNAT'S WHY I REY qALL C,ARStYING PIECES THAT B,ACI" AND FO~H · ,AL.L D,AY. .. HOUR AFTER ~OUR .. . .1EM AN TS -· NoT UNCL&9 f Ho BRE,Al<'S .. . FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE "ffilS 16 R SIG 0f¥../ FOR ME,S4S. No ~lX"lPET Pl..ff{ef\ WAMTS f'N'(Tt'\lNG . ~E°lO HIS FRONT "7 /T~t-4 . H.1w1NG FOlJ...OV.IEO HER HUSBA ND'S CAR. LYDIA WATCHES HOR ACE ENTER THE APARTMENT elJILOtNG WITH THE WAITRESS FROM THE CLU6' FUNKY WINKERBEAN • 'I f J h I I Cf\N°I AFFORD R MISIR~! by Jeff MacNally I by Harold Le Doux by Tom Batluk 1Hl5 15 A S'flC.K-UP I J_ HA~D OVER All QOOR OOOOH ! ,__ ____ l r-----. DOONESBURY ANO raJ HA'.E A TOWN HAU. Mf£TJN(j AT I VOO!v .. ~ l l OH, ()EAR, THATS {;()116 7(}8t716HT I HAit TOBE /Al CAif.MEL 8Y 4 JO by Gary Trudeau t>f, I PfOflSlD 7HC OW1U? STATE OIAJR. !~ c.Mt- U>fl(T' ~KiN ~A M4~ ~z UWJrcmE A NEJA/- COMER~ aJNT M6Tl:R 7 R4ll.I ~ 'f(}(J1(t Fl XJN' 'X) 8'Cl fKJllJJ 'f1E ~I '\ I fASTIUX)() r I • - • \ Tanday, Maid 4 ARJES (March 21·April 19): Many requests are fulfilled, you'll have more "working room .'' Focus on creativity. career and romance Sclf- cxpression is acecnted, your feelings will be articulated. Vltgo, Sagittarius play ro les. TAURUS (Apnl 20-May 20): What appeared to be monbund will actualJy be alive and kicking. Emphasis on commun1cat100. travel. publishin~. dissem ination of important information. Majotdomestic change occurs, will prove beneficial. . GEMINI (May 2 1-June 20): Sccnuno highlights aura o r intrigue. mystery. What appeared out of reach 1s actually close at hand and does involve money. Clandestrne meeting lends spice to relationship. CANCER (June! 21-July 12) \ou can drive hard bargain. Rt'ahze :rour position is strohg, that powerful ind1- v1duals are in your comer. Law 1 also SYDNEY 0MARR on your side. Focus on legal affairs. pannerslups. senous con'1dera11on o f ••••••••••••• marital status. LEO (Jul:r 23-Aug. 22)· Finish rather than rniuate prOJCCt . Emphasis on basic issues. employment. dependents. pets and generaJ health. You'll be called upon to meet deadline Answer in anirmative -means accept c hallenge. Anes plays ro le VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept :?1). Emphasis on fresh stan. independence. courage of convictions. Focus also on crea11 ve endea' ors. chansma. ab1hty to get to hean of matters where lo'e is concerned. Leo. Aquanus natives play roles. . LIBRA (Sept. :!,3-0ct. 22)· lntu1 t1on nng~ true. You'll learn mo re about land. safety. future prospects. long-term in vestments. Family reunion 1s part of scenario, helps you feel more ~cure. Cancer. Aquarius play roles. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): You'll be more aware of your appearance. body image, wardrobe. Scenario ti1ghhghts social invitations. tnps. '1~11 ~. id eas a nd humor. Forces tend to be scattered . but you'll be inspired . SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21 ): Be willing to revise. review. remodel and to bnng concepts up to date. Check source matenal. stutiy fi ne pnnt. realize money is rn volved. You could locate a n 1de that had been lost, m1~\rng o r stolen. CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan. 19) Lunar po!>1l1on highlights persona ht) chansma. ab1l11y to make new stan in new dircct10.n. Focus also on changl'. travel. vanety, intensified romantic rela11onsh1p AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Fam1l:r member pla)s "'I've got a i.ecrl't .. Pan1c1pate in guessrng game o nl} to limited c>.tent. Obtain fact~. not conjecture. Many answers are found behind scenes. clandestine "arrange- ment" proves surpnsing. PISCES (Fe b. 19-Marct\ :!O)· Wha t had bet'n a matter o f specula11on becomes realit)'. Focus on power.. of persuasion. fncnds. romance Define terms, clarify meanrngs. deal with Virgo and another P1rices Wha t had been a secret will be revealed. IF MARCH 4 IS YOUR BIRTHDAY )OU are scns111ve. ps)'Chll. emo tional. d}nam1c. creative. rebellious and stubborn Yo u were ··on )Our own .. while sull }Oung. 11 1s also possible that }OU were sc parntcd psychologically or actuall} fro m one o r both parents at relat1 vel) earl> age There are two sides 10 your nature - one 1!> emou onal and the o ther ultra- practrcal. Taurus. Scorpio, Leo pla) 1mponant roll'~ in your life. In March. you learn where you stand 1n busines!> and roma nce . .\pnl will be memorable for YOU In 1986. More Norwegians apttO stay single 'I oung lad~. can ~nu \ •~uallll a happ\ ltfc for )OUr!>elf 1.1.1thout ma r-~ nage~cn rescan.her' p-'-u-t _1.,..h'-1s __________ _ quef') to ..\menca n collcgt' women L M ..,> ......., o ne in seven !laid \C!. v. hen the' • • asked English women, fewer than one tn four said yes. When they asked BOYD Norwegian women. sli ght I~ mo re one in three said yes Price ofcabbagc alwa\'> goc .. do\.\.n after St. Patnck's Da~ People who get hea<ldches at about the same time e'en-d<I\ can blame low blood sugar. ·or ·,o sa:r the medico!. JI ~ ou·n: planning on \uing a phone compan}. pKk a little one Amt·ncan Telephone&. Telegraph crnplo>' 940 full-11mc in-house la1.1.\er' on the b1gge't corporate kgal '>tall 1n the nation. () V..holir<.tc.J1<l "Lm·c1\hhn<l"'> .\ .\ r1ghteou<. \oul named Propentu'> 'a1<l ··Fvcf') bod~ in loH 1s bland · < lo<,(,· enough Ht· wac; not the onh ob'>Cr\.cr to link lo\\~ 11.1th d1sah1lit\ plea\c note l'lato c,a1d .. LO\(~ -a grave mental d1~d'>C ·· 0 V.. hat mu<:.1<.al in\trumcnt I'> ne,er OUJG>f tune )Cl c<1n't he tunc<l"' A Then mhal Q DenH.'.r ., the highest big c1!'. 1n the Unlled ..._tatec;, b ut what''i the second h1gh'e\l an<l the th1rd'1 .\. Phocnl\ and '\!lanta It 1t ta i..c, ll°'>'> than seven and a halt m1nu1ec; w walk to work. the 3\Crage worker 1.1.111 take that walk. If 11 take'> mon· the. a' crage worker w111 go h\ car. bu<. ta" whatever Ono \a'v the: rc\carchcrc, PEOPLE \lost common ma ntal '>latu'> of habitua l gamble rs 1c; eithe r · dn o rccd" or .. separated " I hat. according to a computer run on a cnm1nal j us11ce data base. Best frymg pan po~i.tbk -to J 1fTuse the heat even I} and unpan no taste -v.ould be made o l gold \itark T wain was of the op1n1 on that the best way to cheer up yourself 1~ to ti') to cheer up somebod} cl!>C 'iome of the .\mazon Rt \.Cr's feeder streams are bigger than the M l'i'll'>- ~1pp1 \ r rcn1.h lhl'm"1 na m1:<l Dr Joc,cph Da' 1do' tt\lontcnd'i thc grca1 '>tone'> in Lg}pt\ p~ra m1dc, \.\.Cren't mo\ cd to the !>Ill''> but v.cn: poured rn place -.,, ntht·t1l '>lone of a l1 me\lone 111.,·.,11 ml\ People m 'it•pal bleed their yaks once a )'Car -t<xia} 's the day. Chan. go bleed the ~ak -and d ry the blood fo r dess<'rt . <) \\ hat'c, the lOlor of raw nylo n'! .\ 1 ran'ilucent 1 \ nry L M. Bovd I.~ a syndicated columnist · Tflese snob_s go to foot of the class I read an article the other day defending snobs. We've all known a few·in our time. The wine snob who sniffs at a cork like he bas j ust witnessed a miracle. The literary .snob who never reads an author whose name )le can pronounce. The tele- vmon snob who adm its o nly to watching a rerun of"Aora and Fauna Reproduction" on PBS. The article supported snobs, saying they were dedicated souls who set a standard of excellence. If it weren't for them we'd be coverinf. our waJls with paintings of small children with big eyes and eating peanut butter. Well, meet the ultimate snob of the '80s: Ttie Running Shoe Snob. If there is any individual who 1s more condescendin~. overbearing, brash and braggadocio, I have yet to meet one. The Running Shoe Snob shows up at a formal d inner party weanng a black tie, cummerbund, and a pair of running shoes that cost S.165. When approached by another person who says he jogs. he wlll look at him cooll y and say, "I don'tjog. rm a runner." He will discuss his shoes with no one who docs not "run" 40 miles a week. If the credentials arc acceptable. h.e will then get down to some senous i.hoe talk. He will tell you how his shoe 1s made with massive external heel counter. how a small arch cutout (tht Oral Roberts Lift) healed his pulled hamstring. and how he picked up two minutes on his time from his firm dual density midsole. Time permitting, he wilJ talk of Shoes Past when he was just getting staned and didn't know any better. Running Shoe Snobs are $enerally totally offended by 1mpunsts who wear tennis shoes with a JOgging outfit. aerobic shoes to a movie. gym E111 ~ Bo11Ic1 shoes to walk in. and basketball shoes to ferti!Ue the lawn. The other mght I saw a "runner" who point~ to m y husband's .shoes and said. "Don't tell me ... New Balarrcc Tigers -1983." "The( re classics. aren't they? I wouldn t run in anything else. Don't know how rm going to replace them when they wear out." "I know. I just had the heel rebuilt on my Hersey DPS.'' "How many miles you goto" 'em?" "Too ma ny to count. But they are getting trendy. I saw a man bowling in them, for crying out loud ." I couldn't help but remember a (cw years ago when I hiked to the bottom of the G rand Canyon. I sho pped for the "nght boot" for three months. I had soles with a good grip. ankle support and they were impervioui. to rocks and rattlesnakes. Then I shop- ped for the "right" socks. the "nght" backpack and the "right" sun hat. t was a quaner way down when a kid in shons. no shirt and thongs on his feet passed me. When I was halfway down. the kid passed me again .... going up! I didn't understand 11. I was weanng signed. numbered, hm1ted- ed1t1on shoes and was sweating designer sweat. I had to believe he got a blister. Wife brings bankers in to sharper focus DEAR ANN LANDERS. A while back someone from Omaha wrote and asked why men in the banking business seem sexier than phys1c1ans. lawyers, professon.. engineers . arc hitects, an1sts or blue-collar wo,Dfers. You said most bankers dre~s better and have a more polished manner. ANN lMDERS I've been ma m ed to a banker for 37 ~ears. He may look sexy but more important. he is deepl> concerned started having sexual relations. In the about his respons1b1liues to bis bank intervening 11 years. I have had and his customers. My husband numerous one-night stands but no wo mes about the millions of dollars hve-1n arrangements. Dunng that he has loaned to people he trusts. If ume. I accumulated some unwanted they don't repay tho~ loans the bank "dividends" -gonorrhea twice. could go under. pregnancy once (abortion), and a year Most people think all bankers are ago genital herpes. I am Irving proof wealthy. They don't realize there is a of that old adage-. "Your sins will find big d11Terence in salary bet~een the you out." chairman of the board and the loan M r. Wonderful is pressing m e to set officers who are vice presidents. a date. I don't know wha t to do. Because of the farm economy. many Should I tell him about my past. keep banks have been forced to close their my mouth shut and hope he 1s never doors. A banker can lose his job d1s11lus1oned. or simply stop seeing because of mismanagement. I am not him without explanation? Please. talking about the bankers' mis-Ann, help me. I am -GOING management. I'm talking about the BONKERS IN COLO. m1rimanagement of the peo ple who DE AR BONK: Since yoa ao longer horrow bave gonorrhea I see no reason to I hope you will pnnt this letter and bring up tbat old 111plea1utu11. give the public a more reahst1t· picture However, you 1boald teU "Mr. Won- of Amencan banke~. It's time some-derful" about tbe genlt.al berpe1 bod:r did. -A WIFE IN NE-because after marriage you mast BRASKA. • take periodic precaatlona to make DEAR WIFE IN NEB: Here's your certain be doean't become affected. letter and my tllanb on behalf of all A1 for tbe abortion, I 1tTongly tbe bankers and tbelr spoasea wbo advise you to teU blm. If be 1boald wlll ble11 you for writing. learn about It from someone elte, be DEAR ANN• LANDERS: I am a would be deeply dis.appointed and 15-year-old female, attractive, college _ wonder what elae in yoar past you graduate and a successful busi-have failed to m.e~tl~n. nesswoman (computer programmer). DEAR ANN LANDERS: Please Three months a$o I met "Mr. settle an argument: Who is the Wonderful.'' We enJOY each other's $featest record seller of all time? I say company. like to dance and sk.i. and 1t is Michael Jackson. My friend says often we go to church to$ether. But no I'm wrong. -J.L. IN L.A. ..ex. He doesn't believe in sex outside DEAR L.A.: Yoa are wrong. of marriage. He' wants to marry me. Mlcbael Jackson'• albam "Thriller" And that's what I'm wnung about. aohl 35 million copies but "Wblte When I was 14, I succum bed to peer Cbrl1tm11" by Irving Berlin bas sold pressure (like many yo ung girls) and 1%5 million records. Yoko Ono launching concert tour By tbe Associated Prtn \OL0 (11'w l. 'Wc\t <1crme1nv- Voko Ono, the w1do\.\. o l former Beatie John ~onon, 1~ !>t11rt1ng a I 0-week world contcrt tour 1 n West Bcrltn toda) Ono ha!. adopted thl' motto "Wo rld Peace ln'>lcad of ''itar Wars .... a reference to Prc\ldcnt Reafin'" StratcgJL !.>cfcn'e ln- 1t1auve sy'itc m · The 53-year-old \Inger \a1d '>ht· wi ll appear 1n fhc Wr\t Cierman c111cc, dunng the tour. and that '>he w1ll al'io gi ve conccn' in Buda- f)('\t Hunga.t). and War<;aw Po land Book auppreased l\Jf\\-YO RK -The lawH•r who helped clear Cl .. 1 VOD Bulo"" of chafiC5 he tned to loll tuc, heiress wife changed h1 book on tht celebrated case at\er be1n1t pressured by lawyffl for \On Bulow's tepchlldrcn AJu M. Den.llowU1'1 book had been scheduled for publicauon in March. but ha.s been pOflponed ,_ Claua TOD Ba.low pending further legal review. Peter OsnM of Rando m House \.aid . The review was prompted by complaints fro m lawyers for tht children of M1111aa "Suay" voo Balow, who bas been an a coma Yoko Ono 1ncc 1980. and from several other people mtntJoned 10 "Rt· venal of Fortune •· oac order denied MIDDLEBURY. Vt. -Dis.- uict Judge Fruk Muady has refused to order attorneys and police not to talk about coca'ine charges against Jolla A. Zaccaro Jr., the son of former Dcmocratjc ~:e presidential candidate \lllf raldlee Ferraro. Cllarlea Te&1laff argued that statements made last week by Middlebury Police Sgt. Davtd Wemette to the Burlington Fret Press and New York Post have jeopardized Zaccaro's chance for a (air tnal. Fllmlng reaet HOLLYWOOD Mov· 1emakcrs Baaa lt•llk and ouver Stoae are rescheduling filming 1n the Ph1lrpp1nes and are rchevod pohu~I turmoil there only brief- ly delaved their proJects. Kulik said he would JOtn crews on the island nation to take up shootina of"Women of Valor." a CBS television movie about Army nurses held pnsoner by the Japanese dunna World War 11. 1Q._.1 -As South, vulnerable, you hold: •AK93 \ A1064 A •AQ82 The bidding has prot'cl·dt•d outh Weitl North t:a11t 1 + Pa88 l Pa88 1 Whal do you bid now·l A.-Jlow did such an t·:t~Y QUl"i· t10n slip 11llv this qt11z'! l>1•spit1.• a po~~ible miMll. your h;1nd 1s Just too strong for any a1·1 lun othl·r than a Jump <ihift Wt• would d10ose two hearts. to ~1 v1· parttwr the opportunity 11( b1dd1n~ !>padl"" 3t the t wo·lt.•vt!l Tht•, unt' bid we wm1ld not conte mplate ll> thrt•(• 11<1 trump. you havt• an u~ba lancNJ hand and ~hould rnakf' ~' ery effort to hx·ate' a fit Q.2-Hoth vulrwralih· ,1.., South you ho ld . +83 J652 QJ5 +A876 'rhc b1ddi11~ has pl'u<'Ct'<ll•cl North East South Wf's t I + Pass 1 NT Pa~it 3 Pass ? What do you bid now" A.-You have an awkwa1d r1•h1cJ "to make You don't want tu bid thn•c no trump with only a s1hl(ll· dub stopp....r and a shal..y stoppe r 1n the unbid ml\jor -;1111 . and you s houldn't raise partni>r'-. ..,<'<'Ond s1111 wnh only·thrct. .. t·ard '\upport Sinn· partner·~ jump :.h1f1 1i. fore· in~ 10 gamP, the c;olut1on 1'\ to make a• t i>rnponzmg '"preft.'r<'m·p" of 1 ltn•e spade!'>, apd wan for partn1•r 1 o d arify h1 ... holding Q.3-l\eitht'r vulnr rabll', '-'" Sout Ii you hold +Q6 AKQ3 96 ~76!)2 Yo ur right-hand uppom·nt opt.>11.., the bidding with o m• d iamond \\hat action do you takt"' A.-Yo u certainly want t1> l(l't into th(' auct1011. but yo u n m ·t afford ;i takeout double · should µartnt•r n · '!pond to sut•h urt1011 with ont· 'ipade. you would be in an unte nu· bit> position: to bid two clubs th1•11 would show a m1u·h hcllt'r hand I han you hav1' Your C'l11b ~u11 1~ n111 good enough for a t wu·lev1·I oH•r call, <;o that lt'aves JUSt om• opt 1011 on ... heart. You don't hk1• 111 tak1· sud1 action. even at the urw-lt•vt•I on a four-card suit. but th1.., 1' clearly the n l(ht hand for 11 Q,4-A ·mah. vulnl·rabk . you hold +85 AQJ l 03 KQ5 +AQ3 The bidding ha" proceeded South Wu t North East ? CHARLES GOREN OMAR SHARIFF What .u·tw11 11t1 you takt•') A.-t 'nil''!' p<1rmer ha., tudden h('art !-iUpport. yuu have ~urely lo r atl'd an adt'llll<llt• trnrnp sull 11.o\\ you ha\ e to tt.·11 p;.1r t nc-r about your strength, and a JllffiP to four dia- mond-. tt•lls about your h1J(h·card valllt'!> and tht• quality of your sup- port Tht• alH•rnat1vt• 1~ a hi~h re v<.•r:-.c uf thret• clubs, but thal c·1mld ll•1JCI to 1·11mpl!rnl1ons Q.1\-llot h \ ulnt•rahlt'. ;t~ Soul h yuu hold +AQ76 .AfJ8 107 +KQB3 The> b 1dd1n~ has pron •1•1kd. ,; Wt>s l North East South l NT Pasi; Pass Dbl .. Pass 2 Pas ? Whal act 111n do you lak<-'' A.-Smn• mo'>I rloublp.., of no trump nmt nu·t.., an· for iwnaltll"'•· you ('an't l"'\fW1·t muc h from parl- n(•r lfl tht.• \.\ a y of high ('ard:-.-w1th 11nyt hinl( in t ht• way of defenst'. hf' would havt• bt•t•n happy to pass All you <·an hope-for from partner 1'i di- ar1\11nrl IC'nl(th. and the best '>POI for your ... 1dt• 1 ... n~ht whc r<' you a[f rww l'ai;s '°'.6-'\e11lwr vulnerable, as South you hold +Q763 A l 09~2 +A632 Thl' l.11ddtnjt has proC'eeded Wt>s t North East South Prutt-P1ut1• · l + Pass l Pass Pass ., Wha t IH t ion do you take'' A.-W1th ... o much of yuur :-.t n •ngt h 1·on1·t>nt ra1 <•d 1n the o pponcnt!i' !>U lh, 1 hi'> is a do~<' dens1on Uow- 1•v1•r th(• b1c1c11ng ur the opponents lta-. made 11 d ear that they d o not hav<' a gn•at preponderance of the 'itrength, and you should cerlfunly find partnt·r with some lenjlth m one of tht' unbid suits We would make a takeout do uble TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 1 Strlplmgs 5 Pant 9 Stick OUI 14 Eslate part 15 Pedume 16 Labor group 17 Derivation 18 Mislay f9 Was upnght 20 Cavern: poel 21 Impurity 23 Stopovers 24 Pep up 26 Promontory 28 Negative 29 Bonus 33 Condescend 36 Welcome 37 Klwl°s kin 38 Samovars 39 Cpmmutture 40 Calgary or Chicago 41 Marble 42 Lambaste 43 Despises 44 Strongholds 46 Kind of llde 47 Auto part 48 Pungent herb 52 Carbonize 55 O'Artagnan·s creator 57 Fu1ure beneficiary 58 TV parts 60 Ravelings 6t Fissure 62 --once suddenly 63 · -01 Green Gables' 64 Utopra 65 Ou1sh1nes 66 Scan 67 Gels DOWN 1 Monumental 2 Nut 3 Talk silly 4 Tableware arrange- men1s 5 -Gate 6 Beautify 7 Fair 8 Having foreslghl 9 Vehicle 10 Removed rope 11 Carnivore 12 Hoodlum PREVIOUS PUZZLE SOLVED 13 Winds up 22 Conserved 25 German 111le 27 Chasm 29 Enclothe 30 Discharge 31 Eminence 32 Time per1ods 33 Tlght-hpped 34 Siikworm 35 Gerund endings 36 Inherent 39 Ancestry 40 Nabs 42 Life. pref 43 Pronoun 45 Menace 46 Corroded 48 Godsend 49 Drama speech 50 Reconvened 51 College VIPs 52 Oecapod 53 Perforallon 54 .. and - well" 56 Golcondlt 59 Aves by Bii Keane "Don't be scared, P J! That bump was just from a potty hole in the street!" MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson 3 -} ~ •• ._,_, •• _.. ... "I don't understand ... it's supposed to be the canine caviar! .. OKAY TEAM .. WE LOST, BUT LET'S 6E 6000 SPORTS A80VT IT ... LET'S 61VE OOR OfPONENTS A 60000LD-FASMIOMED l1 ~IP, ~UP. ~URRAV ! '' i I BIG GEORGE by Vlrgtl Partch (VIP) • I~~ "I know wh•t •• why don't we go OUT to ••• for • ch•no•?" DENNIS THE MENACE by Hank Ketcham _II ~ I~ c?-11 ~ • How 00 'THEY ca.\E UP WnH JUST ENOlX1H WOROS TO FILL ™E NEWSAi\PER EVERY ~y? '' I!.:..:!'" Ji___c.!DE!l,__...!Jf ·tt GARFIELD TUMBLEWEEDS DRABBLE R08&1SR08E • MEY, GAAFIEl.~ MAVE YOO ~EfN MY GOLF 5HOE5? IT 51\10 't"~T IT'!> .. 1 OU~NO. ~ !>0Mf.1~tt-1G iL.4Ai .. ~00 \(.NOW l~~o ... by Jim Davis ... .. .... ... .... '• .. I ·: .. by Tom K. Ryan by Kevin Fagan I'M PM~~""RA61tl4G, Of COOR~~ by Pat Brady \ J ~· BLOOll COU!ITY ACOllU~ ....,,,., A Urn.t TY ... by Berk•~ _,,,., ~ .. 1r;~ A IA14IU II ,_.,, urtU ...... _... llnlA_.. " by Ferd & Tom .John90n B,Ac~ AND FORTH • ,Au. D,AY ... µouR 91'NAT'S W~ THEY G4LL- 15M ANTs .. NoT uNCL&9 r ,AFTER ~Ot.JR .. . No BREAK'S .. . FOR BE'M'ER OR FOR WORSE 1fitS IS f\ S.G DAV fORME,$1S. Ho ~PET Pl.A'{E.R. WANTS ANYfHING DONE lb HIS "' FRONT •·7 .J Te:trlH . JUDGE PARKER HAviNG i=ou...oweo HER HUSBAND'S CAR. l. YOIA WATCHES HORACE ENTER THE APARTMENT· OUILOING WITH THE WAIT RESS FROM THE CLU8 I 1Hl5 15 A S11CK-UP ! ' HA~D OVER AU. QOOR. 1 . OOOGH ! j J DOONESBURY ANO 'taJ "'41-E OH, ~R, A TOWN HAli-7HA7'S 6()1N6 MW !N6 4T TD8tTl6HT I NOO'v I HAit TO 8t INCAW tL ·-8Y4 'JO \ M611R7~ S4"5 YOO~ FIXJN "() fNL fQAli/THe 7lUt15rS I "\ I by Lynn Johnston by Jeff MacNally I by Harold Le Doux by Tom Batluk by Gary Trudeau .... ,.... . --> ---~·~ J .-....., s L • - r I - ' t I ) • ' ' I Dornan shoots from the hip, hits himse.lf Congressman Robert Doman, R-Garden Grove, apologized Friday for an emotionaJt.remark initially interpreted by many as anti-Semitic. . Those who work with Doman, Republicans and Democrats alike, seemed to agree that the fiery conservative may be many things. but he is not an anu- Semite. Doman was one of a large aroup of conservatives who filed to the Ho'use podium Thursday to lambaste ABC News for its decision to interview Soviet commentator Vladimir Posner in response to President Ronald Reagan's nationally televised address urging support for a U.S. arms buildup. While berating the network with his well-known zeal, Doman shocked many of his colleagues and constituents with a reference to Posner as a "disloyal. betraying, little Jew." 1 The congressg>an 's accuracy is not in question. Posner is American born, is believed to be shorter than Doman and is Jewish. As a Soviet citizen and a public defender of a Soviet regime with clear anti-Semitic policies, Posner has been a disloyal betrayer both politically and religiously. But the tone was questionable, at best. The phrase "little Jew" has a sting to it. It sounds no less like a slur than nigger or wop or spic or any of the rest of those vile epithets that some people use to suggest that in this land of equality, some are less equal tl\an others. Such an attitude about others should morally disqualify a person who harbors it from Congress. Certainl y, one who thinks so little of his fellow men and women, could not honestly represent their interests. The reaction was swift -and appropriate. Dornan was criticized for his remark. Spokesmen fo r Jewish organizations demanded apologies, and Doman apologized. Spokesmen for Democratic organizations demanded his head. Perhaps it is hard to understand that a member of wnat we would hope would be one of the most dignified and honorable bodies in our land could ( l) say such a thing and (2) TQ_ake such galvanizing errors. So it is important to pa Y"elOse attentioo to the comments of members of the House who might, on poliucal grounds, be expected to take haJ?PY ad v~nta~e of Doman's gaffe. bigotry in his mind and hean than Bob Doman," said Rep. Tom Lantos, D-Calif. ''In his anger at ABC and in his highl y emotional state, he put together a statement which conveyed' something he clearly did not intend, .. said Rep. Stephen Solarz, D-N. Y., adding that the remark "should not be allowed to overshadow Bob's long history of support and involve ment with Jsrael, Soviet Jewry and Jewish causes." Even the Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith said the statement was "unfortunate" and declared th e case closed. Of course, Doman invites strong reaction. He has a reputation as a man who shoots from the lip and who sometimes fail s to consider the consequences of his actions. Last yea r, he gained national notoriety fo r grabbing another congressman by the necktie and calling him a "draft-dodging wimp." The two had disagreed on a defense policy question. . St11J , there may have been some real bias at the core of Dornan's remarks. Bias agai nst Posner, who shills for a repressive regime that opposes everything Doman stands for. lfOoman had the self-control to have called Posner a "disloyal, betraying little commie," for example. only short people would have been angry with him. Opinions eJ11presseC1 1n this space are those of the Dally Piiot Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and artists Reader comment is invited The Dally Pilot. PO Box 1560. Costa Mesa. 92626 Phone 642-6086 Latchkey kids advised to keep house.key hidden Edi/()(·, note 1h<'1111/mving an1dc hy• Khnol l'nnnp;i/ ( 1tH Carr0/70 appeared in the '><'</11111a .School Nc14 St'll<' ('\m11~c· ''1gna/\J ( on\1d<.'r th" .\n> stranger sitting in a car or 'itand1ng on the comer can tell with <15 percent accuracy which c..h1ldrcn arc leavmg ~hool and ~01ng home to an empty house. Ho"" Whth: ~tand1ng out front a\ the children arc lca ... 1ng om.· da) I obc;crved a 411mple thing 1hat <.ent a chill up m ) spine Most children go mg hl1nir to an empty house wore a "kc} .. o n a c;1nny or chain around the ir net ~ tor all to ~e .\ny stranger "-e>uld 1mmcd1a1t" know that the key wa\n·1for 3 hl()Clc lock since the c b1ld ""a" walk1n& '>O 11 ORANGE COASl DailyPilai mu~l be a kc~ to lhc1r hou~. an empty house wtth no ont' there All they have to do is follow the child home. Please warn your c hild a!I I have done at school to keep that kc) to your ,house hidden under their clothing and not dangling ltke a bnght shiny ·necklace for all to sec h's a dead giveaway that. the parents arc not home It is as ohv1ous as 1f your child had a sign around their n«"k advenising the fact that the)' will be home alone. I don't mean to fnghten any of you, but. I feel I must hnng this to your ~11cnt1on for the ~fcty of all children T-Teft CrtJY CA RROZZO Pnnc1pal '>equo1a E:Jemenwry School Westminster ..__..,~ ... C~1tellet Man11g•ng f 0110< "°"" L. Cefttr9I Pto0uc1.on Ma~ °°",_.., r •ly fditOt ,_~ ~ft,lt!OI Cr ... IMft SC>Qfll fdllOI ,.,.,, .... C •CUU.lion Mllfl909! ........... ..._, Marketing OwtelOf c::o ';'!~Of ''Somewhere therearefolkssltUngln a Jtttl eclrclecompostngthe most outlandish ctreulars. and l thlnk the[belleve we'regolngtoswallow the stuff they put In those circul ars. • , -.. - FERDINAND NEEDS YOU FE~DINAND WOULD LIKE A HOME. AL THOUGH HE TENDS TO BE BOSSY AND IS A BIT OF A 01,SCIPLINARY PROBLEM, HE IS QUITE AN IMAGINATIVE LITTLE FELLOW WHO THINKS OF HIM- SELF AS A WAR HERO. ALSO. HE OWNS A GOOD DEAL OF NEW YORK CITY. FERDINAND WOULD FEEL COMFORTABLE WITH A FAMILY THAT IS RATHER HEAVILY ARMED. Free m ·onogrammed s11oon scoops up junk mail junkie But just wait until the company gets a look at order.b lank ·--- A few days ago, I wandered oul 10 get the mail and, after cleaning out the mailbox, had to stop and pick up a letter that had slipped out of the bundle. I don't know about \Our house. but .. bundle" 1s the propCr word around here We get tons of what 1s euphem- 1st1cally called "Junk mail." My own feeling 1s that junk ma1l 1s badly misnamed. That stuff ic; not Junk. I find 1t highly enterta1n1ng. Somewhere, there are folks sitting in a little circle composing the moc;t outlandish circulars. and I think the) belteve we·re going to swallow the stuff they pul 1n tho~ circular!>. "How can we afford to sell the Hope Diamond for a mere .SS'! Through'a special arrangement with an we are off en ng the first one million people who send in SS, a genuine Hope Diamond, fully faceted, weighing 1n at a whopping 25 carats." This 1s perhaps the only mc;tance in modem civ1hza11on where the pcopk who are wnting 10 you .• want you to think ·they're crazy. They're not. A "whopping .25 carals" 1c; about twice the size of the period at the end ofth1!> scnlen~. An)way, one particular en\clope managed to shp from m y grasp because it was of a peculiar shape. By the Associated P re11 Today 1s Monday, March 3, the 62nd day of 1986. There are 303 days left in the year. In 1849. the Home Department forerunner of the lntenor Depart· ment. was established In 1875. Bizet's opera "Carmen" . 81u HARVEY Inside was a spoon. Not onl y that, but a spoon with our last mitta l on it. .. D1gitshack invites you to try all 50 -pieces from ONEIDA SJ L VER- SMITHS FREE for 30 days!" Gee. I don't know. I might try a fork or two. and maybe even a knife and a spoon, but all 50 pieces? That begins to sound like work. Besides. 1fone spoon works without leaking, and the others are 1den11cal, why wouldn't they all work? It occurred to me that the folks who sent this particular gem had gone to an awful lot of trouble. After all, the spoon that they had sent did have a vel') ornate "H" stam~d on 1t. I could only assume that 1f your name 1s Jones~ hou got a "J" and 1f o ur name is rown, you got a "B." I visuali2Cd a huie crowd of people stuffing spoons into envelopes. call- ing to a foreman "This guy's name 1s Van Buren. Docs he get a ·v· or a ·a-:· Or, "Smythe-Hamilton. ·s· or 'H'?" My spoon 1sn·t bad loolung, and I intend 10 keep it. rll Sttr my coffee with 11 when I'm feeltng a litt.le down. There's nothing quite like a spoon with your 1naual on 11 to raise your SptntS It also occurred 10 me that maybe everybodv dtdn•t get spoons. made 11s premiere in Pans In 1879, Belva Ann Bennett Lock- wood became the first wo man to be allowed to practice before the U S. Supreme Court. In 1885. the U .S. Post Office began offenng special delivery for first-class mail. In 1918. Germany, Austria and They sent me a spoon, so does that mean that they now have a 49piece set of flatware floating aro und there somewhere? If J ordered the stuff ($1 9. 99), wo.uld I genhat 49-piece set. o r would I get a full set and end up with SI pieces? The prospect of an extra spoon for free almost did it for me. I almost ordered the set. Then I thought, what the heck, I've already got the free spoon, and nowhere did it say that I had to return it in 30 days 1f I wasn't satisfied with 11. I looked it over very c.arcfully anyway. Yep. It was a spoon aJI right. I carefully inspected the 17-by 22- inch broadside that came in the envelope. J was looking for that always-included item, the asterisk. There were several. One said that Oneida was really Oneida. Rogers Kenwood. Another said that the flatware that was from Oneida was really imported by On- eida. Aha! As I sat there, blessing all of the little mailing lists that contained my name and address and chuckling to m~S(lf, I nouccd that there was a ye low square that contained an offfiC letters of the alphabe" all done up very prettily to show you what the 1ni1ials st.amped on the utcnsfls looked like. There was a very pretty A. and all of the letters nghl up to and including Z. I was struck with inspiration! I ordered the flatware. but not with the letter H on the handles. Can you imagine the look on that foreman's face when a workCT yells "Hey! This ~uy'!I name is rvey. What's he get?· RuSSta signed the Treaty o f Bres1- L1tovs1<.:. which ended Russian par- 11c1pation in World War f. The treaty was annulled by the November 1918 armistice. Thought for today: "Life 1s either a danng adventure, or nothing." Helen Keller ( 1880-1968). Cominunitycollege system cast adrift in a sea of chaos Lacks clear sense of rtghtf ul place in higher education By DAN WALTERS MoCa.tolly ..... a..'1oe SACRAMENTO -Caltforn1a\ on~-vaunted system of commun1t) colleges 1s in big trouhle. Declining e nrollment!> ha ve stagnated enrollment-based support from the state government thal replaced property tax re vMues after Propos1t1on 13 was e nacted in 1978. Management responsibility 1s dif- fused between supposedly indepen- dent community college d1stncl!., aovcmed by elected' boards, and a ' state chancellor's office and board of trustees that lac k operational authon ty The colleges lack a clear S(rtsc of their place 1n higher educa- tion. Al least a quarter oft he community college d1stncb are in financial trouble. many of them running mult1- m1lhon dollar annual dcficitc;, and the problem 1s mo~t pronounced in the bia urban d1 s1ncts such a~ Los A nae le,. But perhaps the mo~t troubled of the d1stncts as Oakland's Peralta. On top of the financial squcae that ha' hit all community college d1c;tncts 1n the 'talc, Peralu ha1 been buffeted by what almost everyone -outside the collcac board ar.d administration at lean -agrees hH been grievou~ mismanagement. The Oakland Tnbunc. 1n a ~rit1 of articles I st month, I.aid out o 11ory o( "JfOS mismanagement. sltpshod financ1al controls, hundreds of case' of theft. excessive spendina, que\- uonable penonnel practiCC1 and other ~nous problems .. that have brought the district to the brink of bankruptcy. Jn one. unfortunately typical, case, the president of one of the district's colleges was charged wtth attempting to receive stolen property and solici- ting burglaries. but instead of being fired was allowed to keep a counsel- or's position -without any students to counsel -that pays htm $50,000 a year and given a $37,000 cash settlement to boot. Peralta was granted an emergency S2 m1lhon loan by the Legislature last year. but still hasn't received the money Ix-cause it hasn't compltC"d w1ffl the cond1t1ons attached to the loan. Nevertheless, it is tryina 10 arrange even more emeraency bailout money from the ~tate to st.ave off what could be v1nual bankruptcy H early as April. The poltucs surrounding Pcralt.a's s1tua11on are even m ort complicated than the finances. The district's board and admin1s- trat1on arc predominately black and college officials have reacted sharply 10 out<;1dc cnt1c1sm. sayi ng 1t smacks of while racism One of the area·~ two as- ~mblymen, liberal Democrat Tom Bate'i, was accused by Pef'31ta board member tiar~y White of being "politically rac1sf ' for demanding that an outside lt\Jstce be named to mana,ge Peraha's affairs as a con· d11ion of receiving further sute atd. Peralta officials enlisted the aid of the other local assemblyman. Elihu Hams. who is black. to resist Bates' proposal. The conflict has been played out 1n recent weeks before~ Assembly Ways and Means Commit- tee and liut Wednesday, 1t came to a head. Membc~ of the comm11tce dearly "' I wanted to impose some draconian controls on Peralta as a condition of further aid. One, Democrat Steve Peace of Chula Vista. said he wanted to "take responsibility lock. stock and barrel away from an 1rresp,ons1ble community college board ... · But Harris complained that ap- pointing a trustee with czar-like powers meant that Peralta was bcmg "singled out for some extraordinary, burdensome process ... " Ultimately, the committee decreed -in a move grudgingly accepted by all factions -that the state com- munjty college chancellor would name a "monitor .. to check com· pliancc with a tol1gh austerity budJet but that i( the plan is not bemg followed, a trustee would be named to administer the district, not unhke·a bankruptcy receiver. If enacted and implemented. lhc lcaislation will stave off Peraha's immediate problems and give it a chance to survive without drifiing into bankruptcy, which 1s a real threat. But the underlying problems of the state's community oolleae system remain largely unaddrcssed by the aovemor and the lcJislature. The system has been allowed to dnn into financial and educational chaos since the enactment of Prop- osition 13. There is no clur mission about what it is to accomplish V1s-a- v1s the elementary and secondary educational systems or the other units of hi a.her educatio n. "f'"or eight years now, we have starved the damn collegt system," Assemblyman Robert Campbell. one of the few lq.islaton to take a serious interest m community collqes. com· plains. If some1h1n1 11n'1 doneb Peraha's problem• will become t c nonn. ralhtt than a horror story. - BJLLBARVST cobunalet JACK AllDEISOll and DAL£ VAN A TT A Reagan uneasy over bases WASHINGTON -At the height of the tension that threatened to envelop the Philippines in a bl~y civil war last Monday, Prestdent Reagan appeared remarkably a1 ease. In tact. the o nly thing the president seemed uneasy about was the willing- ness of Corazon Aquino, soon to become president of the Philippines, to continue the strong aJliancc be- tween her country and the United States-and tht lease of the two huge Amencan bases that symbohze that alliance. fhe president received Dale Van Atta for an exclusive interview in the Oval Office at 2:35 p.m. last Monday (Feb. 24) -J USI as the Philippines cns1s reached its critical juncture. Laterally minutes before, Ferdinand Marcos had called Washington to find out if Reagan wanted him to resign as Philtppines president. Here's the story: -Marcos had spent the weekend barricaded in the Malacanang Palace, while the two top military leaders who had broken with him were in an army camp across town. protected by thousands of unanned civilians defy- ing Marcos' tanks. l.o Washmgton, Reagan had spent the weekend trying to figure out how 10 keep Marcos from escalating the sporadic violence that could lead to full-scale civil war. Around dawn on Monday (Washington time), Reagan made a painful decision: Marcos, an ally who had been loyal to the Untted States, must be asked diplomatically to step down. This wasn't disclosed unul the next day, but we had heard rumors of Reagan's message to ~·M;-.-~~~~~-~~-~-, "Was it difficult tor you to come to a decision to ask Marcos to step down?" Van Atta asked the president at about 2:38 p.m. "Well. actually, I have not specifi - cally said that to him," the president replied. "The messages that I have sent have been for -to find a solutio n to this without violence. These last few ho urs it seems we've come very close to beginning a c1v1I war there." Reagan alluded 10 the histonc bonds of fri endship "between two peoples. ours and theirs," and said earnestly: "It's a very difficult situ- ation. We have to face the fact that this is a soverel'° country over there. ~nd there is a hmit to (what we can do). Some of those people, particu- larly on (Capitol) Hill, arc taJkingas if wr·vc got some claim where we can dictate. We can't tell them whartodo. The solution should be a solution by the people of the Philippines, and n should be one with no v iolence." Asked whether he thought he could work with Mrs. Aquino. who at one point said she favored closing the U.S. bases after 1990, ·when the current leases expire, Reagan replted: "Well now, I know she's turned around and claims that she would do whatever had to be done." His body language sugge5ted that he was not fully confident that M rs. Aquino would allow the bases to stay ancr all. But he added: "Again. I have to say that we would make every effort to work with a government that was chosen and decided by the Ph1hpp10e people." At the -time of the interview. Reagan had no way of knowing that Marcos was unsure of the signals he had been getting from the State De{>artf!lent and other American em1ssanes. A few minutes before the interview began, Marcos had telephoned Sen. Paul Laxah, R-Nev., a trusted Reagan friend who had recently visited Marcos. The embattled Ph1hppine presi- dent asked Lualt whether the State Department messages, hmting that he should step down, had come from Reagan himself. l..ualt confirmed that they had. But to make sure he had not misrepreltntcd the president's latest thinking. l..ualt rushed to the White House. He arrived just as Van Atta was leavina. La.ult conferred with Reagan and then ca.lied the discouraged Marcos back. wait later p ve us this account of the con venation: Marco~ "Does the president want me to resign?.. . Laxalt said Reagan wouldn't presume to tell Marcos what to do. Marcos: ~·well, what do you think?" Lault: "I think your lime has come. You ouatit to cut and cut clean." There was a long pause -so Iona that Lax.alt finally aslccd: "Arc you still there, Mr. Prcs1dcntr' Marcos (1n a very weak voice): "Yes, I'm still here. I'm so deeply. deeply disappointed about all this.' Jad ~ u4 Dale Vae AICI are 1yNlcaletl tolamal•b. I .. • Edison takes on Serra Zim.DlerDlan saves best for lilst . ' 5-A ou blehead er featu res Chargers at Sports Arena Edison High's Chargers, the Sunset League's No. 1 representative, have a date at the LA Sports Arena Wednes- day night in the CIF 5-A basketball semifinals. Edison plaxs in the tint half of a S- A doubleheader, bcglnning at 7 o'clock against the bigh-scorina Serra Cavaliers (22-4), the Camino Real league champions and the No. 2 seed an the playoffs. . The other half of the· semifinals, which is scheduled to begin at 8:4S, involves unbeaten and No. I-seeded Mater Oei against No. 4 seeded St. Bernard. Serra, "held" to just 86 {>Oints in a I 6-point victory over Pius X on Friday, had been on a four-game 100- point streak, including a 102-67 rout of Sunset League · representative Manna. The bigeuns in Serra'sgame are 6-4 senior Keith Malone (25.6 scoring average) and Alemany High transfer James Moses, a 6-6 sophomore with a 23.0 average. "Who knows," said Edison Coach Jon Borchert. "I think we can play with them. Oc.can View got them by 15 and they beat Verbum Oei by four points, and again by 12 in double overtime." Verbum Oei was Edison's first- round 5-A victim by a ·69-55 verdict. Mater Oei Coach Gary McKnight, who has watched his teams come out on top 56 straight times over a course of two years, is wary of a St. Bernard quintet which .pushed his Monarchs earlier this year before succumbing, 61-58. "They've very quick," said McKni~t. "David Whitmore (6-4 junior) 1s probably goin$ to be one of the premier plavers in Southern California next year." Carrozza new OV grid coach Quy Carrozzo, a long-time assis- iant coach at Fountain Valley High, football coach at Ocean View, suc- ceeding Karl Gaytan. Carrozzo, 30, has been at Fountain Valley since 1977 and bas been the special teams and defensive coach for the Barons for the past six seasons. ................................ She overtakes Ba on last hole to win Untden LPOA Invitational By CHRIS MONAHAN ......... C.1 $1 •1 I As she strode out of the press tent Saturday everung, her blue eyes aaJow, leadin& the Unidcn Invitational by four strokes. Laura Baugh brought back some mcmoncs by promisinacbampqnc would flow if she could bold her four4trolce lead. 'Dte move was reminiscent of 1962 when Tony Lema promised bubbly to the members of the media before he • captured the Fourth Orange County Open. When she entered the press tent Sunday aftern·oon her eyes were stained ·red. the onJy thing flo~ing were tears and the only memories she evoked were the ohcs she had about finisb1na second so manv times before. Not only was Baugh a spectator to her own demise (three bogies on the last five boles). but she was forced to watch the LPGA's mighty mite, Mary Beth Zimmerman, birdie Nos. 16, I 7 and 18 to capture the $49,500 first pnze at the Mesa Verde Country Oub. Z1mmcnnan finished at 7-undcr par 281. one stroke up on both Baugh and Pat Bradley. Val Skinner finished at 5-under 283, two strokes back. Zimmerman's second win on the tour comes right on the heels orher first, last week at the Turquorsc·c tassic in Phoenix. She is the first woman to win back-to-back tournaments since Chris Johnson won in Phoenix and . Tucson in March, 1984. "I can't believe it. It's amazing," said Zimmerman. "Winning last week built a lot of confidence. I believe an myself and I proved to myself that I can win. '.'I came here this week and just w;tnted to play consistently and make the cut. Someumcs after you win, you let down." Zimmerman was never in danger of doing that. She played four consistent rounds of golf (70-70-70-71 ), only to find herself four strokes back to stan the day. "I staned the day four shots behind the leader and I H o w they fial•~ed ..... Marv htn Zlrnmermen 10-70-10-71-291 SMAii Pat Bradtev 72·,... 711f'-212 Laun Bauotl •70-41·76-212 111.m Val S.lnt'!« .,. , ... 10-70-m 112.111 C.uw Kralur1 70-72·7'"'7-215 AllGe Ritzman 72·10-71·72-•S lf,1SI ' Donna C.POnl 74...,..n-n-• Beth Deni.I "· 1•·,...,,.... 17,Ja Jan SlaPhenlOll 69'-72·7•·72--'217 Petty Sheetlen ... 73• 70-76'!-217 ~nv Hammel UM> 71·71·76-~ Penny P\Jlz n-12-n -11--211 $5, 145 K1thv Beker 71·71·7•·13--219 Barbre Mizrahi• 71·70-7S-7>--m Hollis Stec:v 69-72· ,.. 7..-itf a.4,DI Amv 8em 6t-7S-77·70-'2'0 Av1ko Okamolo " 7 .. 72-71-71-2'0-LI.a Voung n-n-11-1>-2'0 Atsutlo Hluoe n -11-73-73--290 ~ JUdV Olcttlnson 72·7•·7S-70--291 Amv Alcott 73~7•·73·71-291 Clndv Flfl 71·7'·73·7)-291 didn't think I had a prayer. I bad decided to play for second. "When she (Baugh) bogeyed No. 17, my caddy, Tom Thorpe, told me I had a chance to win. I didn't believe 1t until then." "T Juess I choked, but I was Just trying to protect something that r shouldn't have," said Baugh;wbo'd led (Pleue eee ZDlllEllllAl'f/82) ( . ' DeBusk returns to Harbor He lea ves OCC to r esu me j ob as Sailors' b asketba ll coach By ROGER CARLSON Of tlle DellJ ........... Jerry Oef;\usk is back as Newport Harbor High's basketball coach. DcBusk had been Harbor's coach for nine years before becoming an assistant at Orange Coast College a year ago. He takes over for Tim Panel. who served 10 DcBusk's absence. "That's been pretty much the plan for some time," said DcBusk. "I'm really a high school coach and a horrible walk-on. I didn't enjoy it (as -a walk-on coach) and I felt totally divorced from the school (Harbor). I . . . ... Parse!, who moved over from a head coaching job at Costa Mesa, will continue at Harbor as an on-campus teacher and coach. assisting DcBusk. in addition to duties in other sports. "He did a great job, be had them right there with some great wins, beating Woodbridge, beating Laguna Beach twice." considered overachievers. In DcBuslc's nine-year reign prior to b..is m ove to Coast bis teams were 120-75, with two lcquc cham- pionships. The 1980 unit was 19-7 and Sunset League champions for the first time in 23 ycan. His l 98S club went 25-5, won the Sea View title and set the $Chool record for victones, catapuJtmg him to Orange County Coach of the Y car honors. - DcBusk will return with two all-league playen aw&Jting -6-6 Mark Cra'I, a first team selection by the Dail'y Pilot, and John Alstrom, a 6-3 scc:ond team selection by coaches. ''When l went over there (Orange Coast) 1t was an opportunity to work wilh Tandy Gillis, which bas been super," added DcBusk. "It was wath the hope that ma~be somethinJ could be worked out thcrc, but no Job opportunities came up. And I enjoyed il too much hcrc (at Harbor) to let it shp away. "l tried to pick Tandy~ bmin..tvery dafi I'm not changing my philosophy. but maybe rm a ittle more aware <>f teaching &ood man defense. But we won't necessarily be a man team." It wasn't a last-minute decision. Gaytan quit recently to take a posiuon in private business in the Fresno area. Mary Beth Zimmerman reacta to Iler birdie on the 18th bole that capped ber win in Unlden ID.ttational at lleu Verde. Panel's Sailors finished in a tic for third place and lost a bid for the ClF 4-A playoff berths with an overtime Joss· to· University. Overall they were 13-1 2 and "I've bad the ICheduJe done for a month," admitted DcBusk. "We'll So to tounwncntt at San Diesuito. Sonora and Ora.nae and have practice games apinst Costa Mesa. WoocfbridJe, Sant.a Ana VaJlcy and Oranaic m prcscason. "It was just time to get bade where J belon1." Cliburn misses workout An gel righ t-hander a b sent from session ---~ because of touc h olb u r s itis in s h oulde r From AP dlspatClles MESA, Ariz. -Angels' nght- hander Stewart Cliburn skipped S-un- day's spring training workout, due to pain m his shoulder that first flared five days ago. . Cliburn. brilliant as a 28-year-old rookie last season with. a 9-3 record and 2.09 ERA, awoke with a throb- bing ache fo llowing a throwing stint Last Wednesday. "It's JUSt a little inflamataon. a touch ofburs1t1s,'" said Chbum. "I've been getting ace treatments, JUSt taking 1t easy. l should be able to resume throwing in a couple of days." Though several Angels have suf- fercd through a nu, Cliburn is the first major casualty of the AnJels' camp. He is counted on as the pivotal long- man in a bullpen that features righty Donnie Moore and lcf\y Gary Lucas for late-game duty. "It's nothing to get all excited about," Manager Gene Mauch said of Cliburn's injury. "He just has a tender shoulder. I'm told the inflammation has subsided." Cliburn rccalled a s1m1lar injury in the same area in 1978. "That was more like tendinitis," he said. "That develops gradually. Bursitis comes suddenly, then it's gone." It 's official: Mar inovich switches to Capo Valley By ROGER CARLSON Todd Marinovich, a ~4. 190- pounder with 35-career touch- down passes at Mater Dea High, is transferring to Capistrano Valley within the ne~t two weeks where he anticipates playi ng quar- terback in his junjor and senior seasons. The move had been rumored for nearly t h r e e months. "It's a family de- cisio n , .. s a i d Marinovich , who cur- rently re- sides o n Balb oa ll&rlfto•lcb Island with has mother "My father (M11rv) has an apartment 1n the Capistrano d1s- tnct." he uid. "I said about a month ago I wasn't go1na to transfer. but I realized l made the decision too soon." Mannov1ch dtthncd to &O 1nto 1pec1ficri about has dtti11on. but admitted the offense at C•ptStrano Valley is very similar to what had bttn a pa happy situation at Mater Dc1 .. As a freshman and sophomore starter for the Monarchs in the Angelus league he had racked up 4,502 yards, but as the team's focal point. he was also the target of offenses. As a sophomore he threw 34 times a game, completing 50.9 percent. 1 "We bujlt our proaram around rum;· said Mater Dea Coach Cttuck Gallo. "But his father feels he aot hat too much durina the season, everytime be threw. and af\er he threw, that there was not enough pass protection. • "Our whole Df'Oil'llm was built around him. We spent two years developing, now he's off to some- place else. However, cons1denng the environment and the way 1t was. it's JUSt as well. there were too many nqativcs ~ound. "We're goinJ to do fine. Mater Dci is biger than any 1nd1v1dual and we'll fmd another quar- terback." Mannov1ch res1d~ an the Mission Viejo area for two years and says he knows "quite a lot of people. "The change 1s go1na to be hard, because I really dad hke Mater Dea a lot," said Mannovach. "But 11 Wlll be easier because of the offense at C•p1~tn1no Valley." Outfielders Rufino Linares and Raul Tovar. who missed the opening workouts, checked into camp to bnng the Angels to full strength. Henbber, Pena ailing VERO BEAC H. Fla. -Right- haoders Alejandro Pena and Orel Hershiser missed spring workouts Sunday with the Los Angeles Dodgers because of shoulder and back prob- lems. Pena suffered from soreness in his right shoulder after throwing on the sidelines Saturday, while Hershiscr suffered muscle spasms in his lower back. ··1 feel a lot better today," said Hershiscr. "I think I could have worked out, but the ballclub didn't want to take the chance." Pena underwent surgery on his pitchinJ shoulder a year ago. "Alejandro was better today," said team therapist Pat Screnar. "We don't consider this to be much of a setback in b..is recovery. He's going to have food days and days where he docsn t feel quite so good." Left-hander Jerry Reuss missed his third day of drills with soreness in both knees. The Dodgers will conduct the first of two i!ltra-squad games. Hcrshiser, fellow right-hander Ken Howell, and southpaws Rick Honey- cutt and Carlos Diaz arc scheduJed to pitch for one squad apinst rookies Greg Mayberry, Shawn Hillegas, Rod u "-"' *' Roche and Juan Guzman. The DodCen' Pedro Guererro take. battlnC practice on la.le flnt day of ltprinC tratotnc. Pirate baseballalumni cominit mutiny 8y RICHARD DUNN o.ltf""'C.•••• •• ,, Two swinas of the bat were all Orange Coast Collcgc'salumni team needed Sunday af\emoon a \ Coach Mike Mayne's former players taught a lesson 10 h1 current club by handana OCC' an 8-6 defeat 1n the second annual alumna baSC'ball game at Pirate Park. The alumni uploded for seven runs 1n the fourth 1nnin&-keyed by Joe Kwolck's arand lam cahomer -and held on to oclcbratc a victory which many of the ex-Pirates felt was comma thC'ir way Last year's contest ended an a tJc(l4-1 4)a0cr the alumni had taken a 14-2 l~d. but OCC assistant coach Donny Perry, who has d1rt'Cte'd tho alumna team both years, was determined not to let this one shp away "Nobody wanted to be cm rra ~ aaain aOer last year." wd Pe!")'. who (;apta1ncd Mayne's 1980 state champ1onsh1p ball club "This year·~ ( 1986) t~m " YCI) aooct. but I think the alumni had somcth1n• lo prove after last vc~r·s a;amC' " Mike Vandeberg. who played three years 1n the Baltimore Onoles' s 'item, hficd a two-run homr run in the founh inning following Kwolclt. ·,. bln'lt to II"<' the alumni a 7-2 edge. a !tad 11 ne"rr rt'11nqu1shC'd .. Thcrt's no doubt that the alumni tram had quaht} prople "~1d Ma' ne. whose tram,., off to a 7-4 •tan and will oprn ~uth Coe'lt {onferenC'<' art1on on fhu~a)' against C') prtss at home "Mo'lt of tho~ gu't'I •~ pla ing somewhere in lhC' manor leagues. and although the\ haHn·t realh pla}cd together as a team. their nprnenrc and overall ab1ht) l'C'all) showed toda~ " undl)_ \li&U chance for 1he communtt't tO '\C't' an array offormrr Pirate stars generate thr1r 1akn1 bcfof'( lea\ lnl for minor It& UC spnng tra1n1n& Kevan %w1nsk1 who' headed tor Tnpk-\ SHacu~ (ln1~rna11onal le ue). a T orontn Ulu(' Jays atlihate, \t-orcd on n error 10 give thc alumni thr1r lint run of the aame in the fourth tlcfol't' thr\ loaded thc ti.a"<'\ for l< wolek's slam ()( ( had 'ICorcd tw1('<' an the third off3lumn1 winning pitcher Rich Ke11<>88. who worked thrtt innings. '>truck out two and allowed three hits, but that wa!> the onl) tamr the current Pirates held the ad"antage The Pirate'> 'ICO~d twice 1n the fifth to ma.kc 1t 7-4. hut thealumnt pushC'd thculcad to 8-4 thr ne~1 inning"' hC'n .,hortstop Mark Van Blancom \ins.led 1n former l\nt0na State and Scattlt' Mannt-f' propt'rt\ Dave Tinoco Freshman lint baseman Re~· Peter-. and ~phomore 1h1rd hascman Roh {11btx rach had thrcc h1t<1 for ()('( Paul Elh~n. a retumina '\II \outh Coast Conft'rencc catcher. wa\ l-for-4 v. tth one R RI Pftt'r\ 11t'td Gthb' had ont RBI ap1c-ct Jim Brtnnan. wht1 \\Brtt'd fm ()( C • la,ted ' •, 1nn1ngs twfo~ \urrcndt•nnll lo.'4 olt'I..' homer Hr lannrJ two and wall..C'd one-J Ja, \.1akemwn. v.ho w.lThcd \t\t'O and struck out four worked 4''• 1nn11\I\ for()('( 1n relief of R1rnnan John 1>1,hon picked up the mnth 1nn1n1 tor thr Pimtr' . Or..-Cout DAILY PILOT/ Monday. March 3. 1988 ZIMMERMAN WINS UNIDEN hem Bl lhe tournament for the fint three days ... W~ push came to shove, l still tbouabt I could do ii. .. Mary Beth birdied the last three holes. which was awesome. It wu too IOOd for me.~ Afttf' Bauab'• botey and Zim- merman's birdie at No. 17, the two came to No. 18 tied at 6-under with Bradley, wbo was already finished. Zimmerman was off the 18th tee fint. bitti~ what she called "my best shot of llie week," a 3-iron that stopped five feet to the right of the hole. · Bau&h's drive fell 40 feet short of the bofe, but a strong first putt left her with a t().footer, which she sank for par to keep the pressure on Zim- mennan. "l did not want to leave that first putt short and J wanted to make sure I made the second one," said Baugh. But the 5-4. I I 5·pound Zim- merman was up to the task. hitting the center 'of the hole with her clinching putt. _ . Though tt\c actual winner came on No. 18. Zimmerman' put herself in position for the win with her birdies on Nos. 16 and 17, her first two of the day. On the 167-yard 16th, she htt a.4· iron 20 feet past the hole, leaving her on the fringe and facing a downhill putt on the slick Mesa-Verde greens. She sank it to pull within two strokes of Baugh. The 377-yard, par 4'17th proved to be-cven-more-i~rtant. Baugh hit her first two shots m the right and left roughs respectively and put her third shot on the back fringe. Meanwhile. Zimmerman drove down the fairway and was on the back fringe in two strokes. . Zimmerman hit first and rapped in the 30-footer for the birdie. Moments later, when Baugh two-putted, Zim· merman was tied for the lead heading for the final hole. hole. a 168-yard par 3 wtucb she had nearly aced on Friday. She also boteyed.tbc l05-yard par 4 sixth, but was still three stro\es in the lead as Zimmerman had two boaeys on the first silt, while Shceban (who started the day at S-under) bad one. "I started preny rouah. sot it going, had a couple of problems and the next thing t know I've got a (4-0ver) 76," said Baugh. "I was very tight (at the start). "I was definitely le~ agressive today and that's not the way I should • play, I know that. But sometimes. there is a difference between knowing and doing. I was trying to protect something that wasn't mine. When you try to protect a lead, it's a serious problem. "I hit .some g<;>od putts, they were just in the wrong direction. Th~sc th~putts hurt. t had one bad dnve on No. 17 and it was real· costly." "II is obviously disappointing for laµra. I know, I've been there.before myself," said Bradl~y. "She is still trying for her first win, so it effects her: I 0 times as much. · "This course bas subtle problems and it can get you. It's tough to tum it off. It's a good sign for her that she held on." Bradley started the day at 3-undcr and consequently was two groups ahead o(the te"ders when she teed off. She said her round was unspectacular and that she didn't realize she was anywhere close to the leaders. "My-day-was okay: nothing rear exciting. I j ust chipped away slowly, but surely,'" Bradley explained. "I didn't look at the scoreboard once today. When I came up the 18th, the rcactfon from the gallery told me I was close. I was pretty surprised." There were indications early on that Baugh was going to make things hard on herself. She bogeyed the third Bradley ..played a strong final round, getting three birdies (Nos. 2, 5, and 17) and I 5 pars. Bradley, who has finished in the top I 0 at all five tournaments th is year, essentially came from out of the pack. trailing by four, four. and seven shots after the first three days respecti vely. Laura Baqh had an emotional day with tean for her .econd-place flnlah (top), clieen for winner Mary Beth ~,...,......., ....... ..,.....,. Zimmerman (beiow), and reacttnc to a m.lMed putt on 12th hole ln Unlden IDTitadonal at Meelf Verde Sunday . -SPORTS BREAK ------------------------:----------, -OR~1n11:•-...__ __ _ Calgary smothers Kings. 5 -1 .Martina'• gun conflecated Duke· handles Mascot 111adness: Colonel P .J. rolls into ref, trouble INGLEWOOD -Richard Kromm ~ SAN FRANCISCO - A pistol belong-~ and Carey Wilson scored third-period ' ing to tennis star Martina Navratilova was goals 43 seconds apan as the Calgary confiscated at San Francisco International N rth c i • Flames broke open a close game en route to Airport when the weapon was spotted while 0 aro 1 n a a 5-1 NHL victory over th e Los Angeles Kings Sunday her carry-on luggage went through a metal detection From AP dispatches What is the sports world coming to? Forget Peter Ucberroth's drug crackdown, or the fact that Boston's Wade Boggs had to settle for S 1.35 million this year. All that's kinderganen compared to what hap- pened recently in the Cont inental Basketball Associa· tion, where the first signs of a sports ap0calypse, the inevitable decline and fall of an Amencan institution. ... frave-suddcnty surfaced. Yes, fans, the sad day is upon us. A mascot has been booted. Word for word, from the CBA release: "For the first time in history last week the CBA suspended a mascot On Mon., Feb. 17, Bay State mascot Colonel P.J .. who in Worcester(Mass.) is a folk hero among the drunk, was suspended indefinitely for barreJ)jng into a referee. "In a game against Baltimore, Feb. I 5. Colonel P.J., a boisterous 5-foot-4 man who dresses in a.Y{orld War I pilot's outfit, bellyflopped into referee Bob Delany during a timeout and was ejected. The CBA's suspension of Colonel P.J., who was a captain last yea r but was promoted during the off-season, lasted only one game. "For after a careful review of th e film and the gathering of accounts from numerous witnesses. the CBA determined that P.J:s actions were not malicious. Still. all is not well for P.J. He 1s on 'mascot probation' for the remajnder of the season. and Bay State owner John Ligum s is even considering demoting him back to captain." Quote of the day Sergei Babka, the Soviet pole va ulter who holds the world record. on Amen ca's BtllyOlson: "If Bill y Olson were ever in a major (o utdoor) com petiti on, he wouldn 't know which direction to go on the runway." Santa An ita race to Grelnton ARCADIA - A I 57-to-I longshot E almost stole the nchest race in Santa Anita history Sunda y, but Greinton saw to 1t that such a development didn't take place. Greinton. racing for the first time in four months, overhauled front-running Herat deep 1n the strelch to win the SI . I 39.500 Santa Antta Handicap by three- quaners of a length. Meanwhile. hea vil y favored Prec1s1ontst faded in the late going to finish suth. "Who was tha t horse. anyway?·· Laffit Pincay. the wanning Jockey asked afterwards rcfemng to Hcrat. "I c,ame down th e stretch and I started asking him CGrc1 nton) to run and I knew I had Prec1S1onist. but that other horse. oh, man. he kept on running. I was surpnscd to see he wasn't stopping. • "He (Greinton) is just a good horse at 11/• miles. He's really tough He had a lot of trouble the second half of last year." He rat had taken the lead at the start of the race and stayed on top until bemg caught and passed by Greinton. Herat became the longest shot ever to finish in the money in a Santa Anita Handicap. night. device. The Flames led 2-1 before Kromm nfled a 40-foot "She was not arrested and no citations were issued," slapshot past Kings goalie Roland Melanson 5: 16 into said Lamont Foster, the airport duty manager. "How- the third penod. ever, the gun, which I think was a small caliber weapon, Wilson made the score 4-1 when he scored on a was taken away." wri stshot after he was left all alone I 5 feet in front oft he Navratilova told airport officials she bad a permit for King{-~~ Johnson. Joey Mullen and Hakan Loob also the gun in Texas, but not in California, Foster said. scored for Calgary. "It was found Sunday when it went routinely through Brian Erickson scored for the Kings. who have lost the metal scanner," said Foster, who' added the tennis seven straight at home. The loss was the Kings' 22nd player can petition San Mateo County co~ for the loss at home this year. tying a club mark for most games return of the gun . lost at ho.!!le in a se~son set in thtl969'-70. Nav@tilova told ~rt security offi9al~ t~ ..&!In Calgary took a 2-0 lead on first-period goals by was accidentally placed in the carry-on fuggage by John son and Mullen, his 36th. someone helping her to pack.. Erickson brought the Kings within a 2-1 margin Navratilova was in the Bay area for the Virginia with his goal late in the second period. Slims of California tennis tournament in Oakland in Loob scoted the Flames' final goal with 3: I 5 which she was the top seed. She jWa5 handed her first remainini after he grabbed a loose puck and scored defeat of the season in the semifinals Saturday night by after skating in alone on Melanson. Kathy Jordan. Chris Evert Lloyd downed Jordan 1n the The Flames have beaten the Kings 11 straight finaJs Sunday. times since the two teams skated to a 4-4 lie on Jan. 9, 1985 in'Calgary. The Kings have not beaten the Flames since Dec. 18, 1984. Calgary has won au seven the the two teams' meetings this season. Karri leads Oilers to OT win backhand at I : 29 of overtime Sunday night ' Jarl Korrl scored with a sha~aneJed ~ to ~ve Edmonton a 2-1 NHI:. victory over Philadelphia ... In other NHL games, Mark Jo~•• scored three goals, including two within the last three minutes of the game, to give New Jersey a 6-4 victory o ver Winnipeg ... Alu HawortJa scored the last two goals as Washington won its fourth straight game with a 4-2 victory over the New York Rangers .. . Goalie Mike Uat stopped 24 sh ots and Stewart Gavin scored two first-period goals to spark Hartford to a 4-1 victory over Boston ... Darryl Satter broke a 4-4 tie with a goal early in the third period and Chicago went on to a 6-4 triumph over St. Louis. Knox cap~rea Honda Classic CORAL SPRINGS, Fla. -Kenny l!I Knox, a career struggler and refugee from the mini-tours, twice holed from off the green and held on for a one-stroke victory Sunday in the Honda Oassic. Knox, bounced out of the lead by a windblown 80 in Saturday's howling gales, responded with a 2-under- par 70 in the final round to score one of the most pronounced upsets in recent years on the PGA Tour. The 29-year-old. who twice lost his playing rights due to lack of performance, hadn't finished higher than eighth in three full seasons before he posted his 287 total. one under par on the wind-raked TPC oourse at Eagle Trace. · Soviet wine gymnastica. title FAIRFAX. Va. (AP) -Alcxsci Tikhonkin of the Soviet Union and 13- ycar-old Kristie Phillips of the United States turned in clutch performances in Iii their final events Sunday to cam the men's and women's trophies in the American Cup. In becoming the first Soviet to win the Cup since 1979, Tikhonk.in registered a 9.9 on the horizontal bar to slip past Brian Ginsberg of the United States. who led through the initial fivcevenls. Pacers pass Clippers, 129-112 LOS ANGELES -Herb Williams m scored 24 points and rookie Wayman Tisdale added 19 Sunday as the Indiana Pacers coasted to a 129-11 2 NBA victory over the Los Angeles Clippers. Indiana led 37-18 lcad late in the first quart.er and extended the margin to .53...25 by midway thro~ the second period. The Cltppers, losing their fourth straight, had two spurts that cut the deficit, but but they could get no closer than 12 points. A 17-3 Los Angeles run made it 56-42 with 2:25 left in the half. bul the Pacers still had a 60-43 advantage at halftime. In the third quarter, a 10-0 spurt got the Clippers within 89-77 with 37 seconds left in the third quarter. Guard Yem Fleming scored 18 potnts· for Indiana and center Steve Stipanovich added 17. Cedric Maxwell led the Oippcrs with 23 points and reserve forward Rory White a~ded 20. Guard ty..rnell Valentine finished with 14 points, 12 of them tn the final two minutes of the game. Detrolt'awln•treakendaat 10 DaDD)' AID1e scored a career-high 27 m points and joined llevla McHaJe to spark a surge late in the third quarter that boosted Boston to a 129-109 victory that ended Dctroit'S' franchise-record 10-jame NBA winning streak Sunday ... In another NBA game, Cliff a.btuoa scored 27 points and Jeff MaJoae 25 as Washignton, with 56 points from its reserves, defeated Milwaukee 125-104 and snapped the Bucks' I ().game winning streak. Televl•lon, radio TELEVISION 6 p.m. -COLLEGE BASKETBALL: Ari· zona at UCLA. Channel 2. RADIO 6 p.m. -COU.EQE BASKETBALL: Ari· iona at UCLA, KMPC (710). 7:30 p.m. -Pl\O llA81tETBALL: Golden State at Laken, KUC (570). . Watson 's Star Gazer wins Dana Poln t Series CB YC's Redline sails to victory in Class B Bob Wats.on's Star Gazer from Capistrano Bay Yacht C'lub was the Class A winner Sunday in th.e first ra~ of Dana Point Yach& Oub's Dana Point Scnes for J>trfonnanoe Handicap Racing Fleet yachts. Class 8 winner wu Redline, $31led by Fred Perez ofupisttano Bay YC. and the Cl.us C winner was Daybreak. skippered by Bob Gates out of C.po BYC I • ummary of results: CLASS A -I Stlv Oner. 8oO WehOn, C•Oltlreno &ev vc, 2 Jele_., C. S.IWn, Dene Potnr vc. l G•noelf Oovo end $\.lienne Jonn, OPYC. CLAS! a -I ltldllM, Fred P9\'e1, C.PO I V(, 2 HIOh H-. It. ~ 0 Noolle/I, OPVC,) ChubiKo II, E Fo111. Ctoo8VC CLASS C -I Ot'(l)rtell, Bob Geln, Cti>08YC. 1 VlvKe, 8111 C~t, OP VC, J ClllMM Ffredl'I", C. &urton, OPVC Lean Machine wins Hibachi Class B winner was Falcon, sailed by Jim Ure, South Shore YC. Overall series winners: PHU'·A-1.L.H n ~Clllnt. Tom O'Keefe. CeOlttreno l.v YC. 2 Mftdl'ltf. Ctrotvn NtltOn Hlll'dV, VO'fffef\ YC: J. Ve!MtllM , Mef'V L.onOott, 111\le CMlnllllen VC. ' PHltF·9-I, l'•ICOfl. Jll\'I Ure. Vov"'" vc. , Sorctt'tr, Dtnnl1 •O\tno, SSVC; ), Hot ~ttlo, Oen •wtra1 UYC. ADULT U.IOT-t ltow c;oodlne, VVC, 2 Nel!CY H\ltc:Nntoft, ssvc, a Tom """'°"'· s.svc. JUN!Ott SA80T-I CMrt Goodine, I YC; ' Trlelt GOCMllM, vvc Lean Machine, a MacC~or-6 S sJop. pcrtd by Tom O'Keefe, Capistrano Bay YachtClubwastbcoverall ameswinnerof Weather ma.rs BYC regatta South Shore Yacht Oub's Winter Hibl.chi scnes which ooneluded Saturday. Li&ht winds end aJoomy, overcast sk..iC1 Lean Machme was 1 Class A entry The kept ff'11ny sailors on the beach fo~&lboa Yacht Oub's on~esian Reptta Saturday and su·nday. Only one class. the Etehclls-22, showed up on the stanina line for outside courses and entries were on the li&ht side for inside oourses. Fifteen E·22s showed up. The winner was Fleet White, Newport Harbor Yacht O ub: at the helm of Auspice. · Summary of trophy winncn: Louisville halts Memphis St.; No. 4 Georgia Tech triumphs From AP dllpatebes [jURHAM, N.C. -Senior David Henderson scored 11 points during a late 14-4 run for top-ranked Duke as the Blue Devils beat No. 3 North Carolina 82-74 Sunday and won the Atlantic Coast Conference regular- scason basketball title. ·· It was· the first time the Blue Devils 29-2 for the season an 12-1 in tne AIT. bad won file con erence iitfe outright since 1966. They tied with North Carolina for the crown in 1979. The victory also gave Duke the No. I seed for the ACC tournament which starts Friday. The Tar Heels. losing for the third time in the last four games, dropped to 10-4 in the conference and,,26-4 overall. · 1 , Georgia Tech played Clemson later Sunday and a Georgia Tech victory would leave North Carolina third in the ACC. the first time in 20 years the Tar Heels would not finish first or second. Henderson, a 6-foot-5 guard, fini shed with 27 points, while senior guard Johnny Dawkins added 21, senior forward Mark Alaric had 16 and junior guard Tommy Amaker had 14. In other college games: Georgia Tech 74, Clemson 13; ln Atlanta, John Salley and Mark Price, two seniors who had their jerseys retired before their--final-homcpmc. led No:-4-0corgia Tech to victory over Clem son. a tnumph that clinched second place m the Atlantic Coast C'o~ferencc for the Yellow Jackets. Salley scored 20 points and Price 16 as Georgia Tech neve trailed in the game. LoulavUle 70, Mempblt St. It: Senior guard Milt Wagner nailed two free throws with one second remaini1'g as 13th-ranked Louisville defeated scvcnth- rankcd Memphis State to take the 1985-86 Metro Conference regular season crown. Louisville upped rts record to 24-7 overall and I 0-2 in the conference rn winning its ninth straight game and its seventh Metro Conference title. LouisviOe will have a first·round bye in the Metro postscason tournament, to be played in Louisville March 7-9. b dlau 80, Iowa 73: Guard Steve Alford scored 25 points as 16th-ranked Jndiana survived a second-half rally and beat Iowa , gaining a first-place tie with Michigan going into the final week of the Big Ten Conference basketball race. The Hawkeyes rallied from a 19-point deficit and trailed by only one point with possession of the ball with three minutt1 remaining. But Iowa missed two shots, Alford made two baskets and Indiana's Winston Morgan clinched the viictory with a pair of free ttir.ows. OV's DeBrouwer takes MVP honors Blaine DcBrouwer, a three-year starter for Ocean View High's Seahawks, has been named Most Valuable Player in the Sunset League by the league's basketball coaches. De8rouwcr was the lea,ue's leading scorer and operated at point guard in guiding the Seahawks Lo an unbeaten ~ason, winnina the championship with a four-pmc margin. Ocean View has two other first team selec1ion1. 6-6 senior Tony Pan~ica and 6-7 junior Ricley Butler, an All· CJf' S·A selection as a sophomore. First team honors also went to Edison's Ken Ammann and Mari na's Mtkc Meyers and Mark .Georgeson. , * Pla1er. Scllool Mott Valuable Player Blaine DeBrouwer, Ocean View Fira1Team Ken Ammann, Edison Tony Panzica, Oocln View Mike Meyers, Marina Mark GeOrseson. Marina Ricky Butler, Ocean View Seco8ctTeam Chris Cole, Edison Ste"e Pemper. Huntanaton Beach Tlm Johnson, Fountain Valley Tom Dever, Wettm1nstct Steve Ouild, Marina e ... raltlt Mt•U• Hl. 'ir. Av1. 6-0 Sr. 18.3 6-2 Sr. 6-6 Sr. 6-1 Jr. 6-9 Jr. 6-7 Jr. 6-i ' Sr. 6-7 Sr. 6-3 Sr. S·IO Jr. 6-1 So. 17.6 8.9 14.8 11.S 16.J u.o R.9 9.3 14.6 12.9 Desi Huch (Occan View); Dou1 Katc>nt (Edison)· Damn Snow (Huntin&!on Belch); Shane Morris (Ocuft Yiew)i Olen Oordon (Fountain Valley): Shane Pariteau CH~ntLnaton ~): Rich Smith (Ed.iaon); Chris Cbllnon <Westmin1tcr). W ~o~brldg_e team to beat lnSea View Break slows Graham . Estancia, Untversltycoukf - be in hunt for ch~mpionshlp ' . The~·s not much ofa change in the Sea View uague softball picture this season. Defending champion Woodbridge figures as the team to beat with University and Estancia right in the hunt. Herc's a look at the Sea View teams: Ca.taJfeN . The Mustangs have.picked up several athletes from' their basketball team in the hopes of being a stronger unit than last year's thaf finished 3-1 1. • , Tona fields, who did not see much action last year because ofan injury, wilJ talce the starting pitching duties and Jeniffer Boyette will catch. Boyette was. second team catcher last year as a sophomore. Costa Mesa's infield is still pretty raw because most of the players were on the basketball court until the Mustangs WCTC eliminated from lhe playoffs in the first round. ~cUy Garvi,n, a senior, is Me~·s first baseman, Valene Palmer is at &econd. and Lisa McBroom will handle-third-base: Stcphame ~.anson_will be_ at shortstop. Meg Mitchell. a junior, will be in left field. Corona del Jfar ... Ted Williams can be optimistic about his Sea Kings. But it doesn't stop UCI star; s e just uses er-l eft hand ln the natural sequence of count· ina. tbe numbers 43 and 44 Just go together. At lhc conclusion of this year's UC Irvine women's basketball scaso~ tbe number 43, belonaina to Chen uraham, would have been riaht there on the wall with 44, the num6er on the rwtircd jersey of UCl's men's star Kevin Magee ( 198().82). That was the talk at the 'beainruna • of the season. This was th.e year Graham was pojkd to make a ntn at Katherine Hamilton's all-time school .scorina record, the year she could become a three-time All-American and the year she finished rewriting the UCI record books . Said head coach Dean Andrea, "She w~ ready to have a great year. You could tell. if was in her eyes." This year was to belong to Graham, justas the spot next to Magce's 44 was to belona to Graham's 43. All the hopes and e'ltpectations lasted just eight minutes. · Graham's season was shattered. along with her right wrist, in the Anteaters' season opener apinst Southern Methodist University at Las Cruces, N.M: All they have to. do is win two games this season, and he'll be a game happier than last year when CdM finished with a 1-18 record. While \\'.illiams admits his squad this year is still young, he believes it can at least be competitive. ----.'.!Uamc.,,o.uua..b1o<;.k a shot Qn. the right wing," Graham recalls. "Her (the SMU player) hip caught mine and I did a 360 turn in the air and landed on my11t'OUJder. J didn't intend)O ~nl'Y fall with my ann, it was .tushnstinc[ "At first l thought I had hurt my A broken wrlat bun 't atopped Cheri back, then I looked at my wrist and it Graham:IShe now ueea her left hand. was shaped like an 'S.' I knew right The Sea Kings have two pitchers this season, fres.hman $heUy Lynch, a transfer from La Mirada, and senior Anne Johnston. Lynch can be used at a number of positions, other than the mound. and she is expected to be one of the ~a Kings' lc.ading hitters. Softball schedules Amy Johnston, Anne's sister. as also deemed a utahty player who can stand in at first, second or shortstop. Natalie Basmacyian, who earned honorable mention on ~he all-league team last year. will be behind the plate again. The Eagles have five players returning from their 11-3, second place team of'85. and their all-league patcher from the 1984 unit. Tammie Kane, who was the No. 2 pitcher last season. will handle starting duties for Estancia this year. According to first-year coach Larry Kanatzar, Kant 1s a finesse pitcher" a real smart senior:· Annie Foley will handle infield and catching duties, and Kim Braatz will take over at short. Braatz led Orange County in hitting as a sophomore with a .545 average. In Estancia's first game this season. she was 3 for 4. Laguna Beach Artist Coach Mike Roche doesn't expect to senously chatlengcthe"lcague'S1Up~eams. bot he does hope to come up with a bet~r-than-average season. He's got a better-than-average unit to d o it with, too. Returners from his 5-9, 6-14 team ofla. st year include center fielder Megan Dales, who was among the top home run hitters in the county; junior Kristen Hughs at third and pitcher: Jeniffer Cooper at second: and Shannon Maurice in the outfield. "I have good depth," Roche said, "it'sjusta matter of filling in some positions. Unlvenlty Mentioned prominently among the challen$ers in the league are the Trojans who return five from the1rth1rd place team of'85. ' University tied Saddleback at 9-5 for third last campajifl, but missed the playoffs by virtue of its record against the Roadrunners. · All-league pitcher Jeniffer Frei Uunior) is back, as 1s battery-mate Dianna Juengst (sophomore). In the infield, Erin Quon, a junior, will take first and Michele Bell is set to handle second. Bell, a sophomore, earned honorable mention all-league last year: and was the top hiner (.360). The lone outfielder returning for University 1s sophomore Sharon Littlefield. The Trojans also have transfer Tina Cooper, a sophomore shortstop. . "We have a lillle more speed this year ... last rear we were pretty slow," he said. "We have good overal talent, we're pretty solid." Woodbridge SEA VIEW LEAGUE Corona def Mar Thurs ·Fri ·Sal . Mllrch 13·1t-1S -a1 Laouna Hill' Tourna~t <TBAl, TIAs, Merch 11 -'Laguna Beact1 (hOme). TllUf\, Merell 10 -•I ·N-POrl Herbor W.o , AMII 2 -•Esle11<i• (hOme), Fri, April 4 -at ·unlver\llv, Wtd .. Aprlf 9 -'WOOdbflCIOe (home), Fri. "Prll 11 -•cost• MHa (hOmel. Wec:I , Aprll 16--et 'Saddl'°8ck, Fri, "Pf'fi 11 -al 'Leouna Beecl'I, Wed , APrll 13 -•NewPOl'I Harbor (home), Fri, Ar:>rfl 7S -a1 'E\laocia, We<I .. "r:>rll 30 -'Unlversllv (hOmel Fri, Mav 2 -al 'WOOdbrldl>t. TuH . Mav 6 -at •Co\la Mai., S:lO Pm ; Thurs .. Mev 8 -•Saddlet>ack ~hOme) Costa Mew TUH . Mare!t 11 -al S.nlleoo !OHl, 4 pm., Tues , ·Marci\ 18 -el ·ES!ancla, Thurs .. March 10 -·Saddtebeck (hOmel Wed., APrll 1 -'Laoun.. Beach (hOmel, Fri, "Prll 4 -al ·wooo1>rle19e, Wed , April 9 -al ·unlvenltv. Fri. April 11 -at 'Conw1e del Mar, Wed , "°'" 16 -··Newoorl H•roor (hOme), S·lO P.m, Fri , April ll -'Esla11<la (hOme), Wed , APrll 23 -al •S•ddleO.Ck , Fri.. APrli 7S -et •Laguna BHCl'I, Wec:I., AprU )0 -'Woodbrl®e (home) Fri., Mev 2 -'Unlvenllv (l!ome). Tun , M4v 6 -·corona def Mer (llOmel. 5'30 Pm ; Tnurs , Mav a -at •NewPOrl Harbor Estancia Tues. Marci\ 4 -al lrvlnt. Thun ·Sal , MarcPI 6·9 end TU.$ ·Sel , Merci\ 11· IS -81 CyPf'eH Tovrnement (TBAJ Iuu....Ma.teb...11-.Al FoothllL£d~.Maedl l• -at Mlu.loft Vleio. Tu.s , Marcl'I 18 -•Colla Mew <ll<>mel. Toon .. Muell 10 -•unlvenllV (l'IOme), HO pm Wed , M>rll 2 -•' •corona def Mar, Fri . "P!'li 4 -·N-POrt Haroor (hOmel. Wed., AP!'ll 9 -er 'Laouna 8HCl'I, Fri' Aorll 11 -•• 'Saddlebeclt. Wed . April 16 -'WOOdbrl4oe (hOmeJ, l om., Fri, Aorll II -a1 •cosie MeM; Wec:I .. Ar:>rll 23 -•I •unlveullv; Fri., April 2S -·corone clel Mer fllomel, Wec:I., Aprll JO -et •NewPOl't HarDOr Fri. Mey 2 -·Leoune Beac11 (hOmel. 's.30 om . Tuel .. ,.,.v 6 -•seddlebeck (hOmeJ, Tf\urs , ,.,.Y s -er ·wOOdtlfldoe N.wtlen Hal'bor Fri., Marc·ll 7 -11 Capls1r1no v111ev, Thurs .. Maren 13 -er SenllaQO; Tue1,, Merell 18-'WOOd«>rldOe Cnomel TPluf\., Maren 10 -•corona 0.1 Mer (ll<>mel Wec:I .. APl'll 2 -'University Cllorrw), frl April 4 -er ·E,11ocl11. Wed., April 9 -•s.ddlebeclt (tlOmel. Fri , April 11 -'Laouna Beach (hOme), W.o , April 16 -a1 'Colle Mesa; Fr1 , ,April 18 -al 'WOOdl>ffd9f; Wed . April 23 -et ·corone Ciel Mar, Fri, APrll 1S -al 'Unlversltv, Wed . Ar:>rll 30 -·E,1ancl• (f\omeJ Fri. Mav 7 -al 'Saddlet>acl\. TUH , Mav 6 -al 'Laoune BHch. Tf\un . Mav e -·coil• Maia (hOmel LAWN llMdl Fri, March U -al Sen Ctem.nle (OH), Tues , March 18 -at 'Corone def Mer, Tl'lufl., Marth 10 -•wooe1brid0e (nomeJ Wed . Aprlt 2 -al 'Colla Mua, Frt , Ar:>ril 4 - 'Seddl~dt ChOmel. Wed .. APrll 9 -'Eilencle Chomel, Fri, APrll 11 al 'NltWPOrl Herbor, Wed., "Prll 16 -el •un1versl1v. Fri, APl'il, 11-•corone def Mer (home), Wed . Al)f'll 23 -111 'Woodorldoe. Fri. April 2S -•cosra MeH (hOme l. Wed , April 30 -at 'S.ddlet>ecil Fri . Mev 2 -al •Esra11<la, TuH., Mev 6 -"Ntwl)()(f HerDOr Thurs , Mll>W I -•unlversllv (hOme) Sadclebacll Tuts , Merell• -el RanchO Alaml1os, Tues , Maren 11 -a1 Tuslln, Tues .. Mercn 18 -•unlvtrtltv (hOmel, Thurs . Marcl'l 10 -et ·co11a Mesa; Mort-Fri. March 74·28 -el WOOdt>fld9f Tovrnamenl <TBA> Wed., "Prll 7 -'WOOdbrldOe (hOme), Fri , A.Prll 4 -al 'L.111une Beecl'I, Wed .. A.prll 9 -et 'NtwPOrt Herbor, Fri, A.e>rll 11 -·E$1encla (hOm•lWt4 , A1><ll 16 -·corone e111 Mer (hOme), Fri. AP!'ll 19 -al 'Unlversllv. Wed , APrll 23 -'Coste Men (homel, Fri . APf'll 2S -11 'WOOdDrldoe The defending Sea View champion. Warriors lost w.o .. Ar:>rll 30 -·Le11una BMt11 lhOmel Only three Starters from last year's 24-4 squad, Which fell Fri, Mav 7 -'NewPOrl Harbor (hOme), Tue~, Mev 6 - io the 3-A semifinals to eventual champion Garden 11 'Ellencle, Tl'lurs ' Mev • -•1 •cor°"' e1e1 Mar Grove. UnlVersttv H d ' th r t f t a e t All-CIF T1As .. Merell 4 -Or•~ (hOme). Fri., Merell 1 -81 . C3 mg . C IS 0 re U~OeS r WO Caplstreno VaHtV Chrllllen (Marco Forsier JunlOf HIOhl, selecuons. Senior Jenny Allard hll .385 last year (5 HRs) Wed . March 12 -al Sen Ctemenle (San Goroonlo Park ) to go with some ou.tstan~ing pitching and Sa!'dra Fr~. Marcil u -Minion v111o <~>: TV4K , Marc11 11 ..:. Schoonover ~senior will play shortstop and pitch " Seddlet>ec•, Thurs • Maret>~ •I Ellancl1, Sat·Mon . • • . · Merell 22·7S -at WOOdt>r14oe Tournament IT8Al Pitchingwil theteam'sstrcngth.asallthrecoflast • Wed .. APrll 7 -at 'Newoor• Heroor. Fri., Ar:>rll 4 - Year's staff. which gave up only one run in league play •coroo• del Mar !hOme), wed . April 9 -•co11a Mua . • . (homt), Fri, APrll 11 -al •woodt>rldoe, Wad , "e>rll 16 -while recordtnS a 14--0 record, arc back. . 'Laeun• Beec11 (home), Fri, APrll 11 -'!>a<1<11eoac11 Tile pitching should even improve as sophomore Cl'IOmeJ, Wed .. "prll 23 -'Est•"''' 111e>me1. Fri. Aor11 2s - Tiffany Boyd, who pitched her age group ( 14) team to the 'NewPOrt Haroor (hOme>. Wed · Aprlf JO -•1 ·ce>rone e111 national championship this summer, looks to sec some Ma;,,. Mav 2 -., ·co"• ,.,.,a Tues . M•v 6 - mound action this-year. 'Woodt>rldoe (hOmeJ, Thul\, Mn I -el •Leouna BHC:l'I WMdlw1dte ll'lu" ·Sal , Maren 6· 15 -el CYP!'en ToUl'nam.nt (TBA), TueL March It -•• 'NtWPOl't Harbor, ThUrs . Maren 10 -11 •Laouna BHCh, Set ·TVft., Maren 22·2S -Woodl>rldoe Tournemenr (hOmel (T8AJ Wed., Aorll 7 -el 'Seddlel>eell, Fri., Al)f'll 4 -'Costa Mtse (l'lome); Wed . April 9 -al 'COf'ona del Mar, Fri, Ae>rll 11 -•university (l\omel, Wec:I,, APf'll 16 -at 'Es111nc1a, Fri. April 18 -•NewPOrl Herbor (hOmel, Wed , April 23 -'Laguna 8HCl'I (llOme). lrl. APf'lt 25 -·s.Od1ebec11 lhomel; Wee .• ""'n JO -at •cosre Mftll Fri. Mey 2 -•cOf'ona def Mar lllomel. Tues , Mav 6 -a1 'Unllfersltv, Thu~s .. Mey I -'Ellancle (llOmel 'oenotet Sea Vltw LHlllA game. All oemel a1 l P.m . unleu noled. SUNSET LEAGUE EclMft Thu" ·Sel., Marcl'I 6· IS-al CvPf'tH Tournemenl; T~. March ll -GerOtft Grovt 11\omeTIOHl, Sp m.; Frl.·Set , Mercl'l l1·22 •ncl "°'" 4•S -at Canyon Tovr1111men1 (T9A J, Mon ·W.O., MerCl'l 1•·26 •' Olarltr Oak TOUl'nament (T9Al Tues .. Aorll l -Sutmv Hllti ll'IOmt), S un.; TIA\., A$>rll I 8' 'WHtmlniler, Fri , APl'll 1\ -•<>ceen VI-(hOmel. Tues. APf'll lS -'Huntlnoton 8eac.h (hOme); F~I.. Aorll 11 -al 'Fovn1aln Venev, TV4K , Aorll 22 -'Marina (l\ome); Fri .. "Prll 25 -•wflrmln"tr (r>omel; T~. ""'II 29 -al 'Ocean View frl, Mav 2 -111 •Hunlinoton Beacl\; T~. /Mv 6 -•F0un1e!n Valley (hOmel; Tl'lurs .. Mev I -II 'Markle ltUl'lftll ..... 18Mch Tues , Merch 4 -at Ml!ef' Del, 3:1S pm.; Maret\ 6'-15 -•• Cvpreu Tovrl\8menl, Wed . Marci\ 19 -•f ~ .... 3 ISP m. Fri, Set , Marcl'I 21·22 -at Cenvon TourMmtnl. Wed . AP!'li 2 -La Quln11 (llOmeJ, l':lS om .• Fri-, Set., April 4·S -er Canvon TOUtntrnenl; TIA\., Aprfl a -11 'Merine. Fri, Aprlf 11 -•wn1mtnsrer (l\ome); Tues , APf'll lS -at 'EdllOn, Frl, April 18 -al 'Oc:Mn View; Tuei , Aorll 12 -'Fountain Vari.¥ (llomel, Frt, Aprlf 25 -•Merine (home), Tutl . .-.orll 1' -at 'Wttlmlnsrer. Fri. Mav 2 -•Edl$Oll (Plomel; Tue', May 6 -'Oceen View ftlOmeJ. Thur$., Mlv 8 -al •Fountain Veflev Martna T..,.,. Merell• -11 Er TOfo; T·oo,..·Sel .. Mwen 6-15 -et CyprHs Tourr\4iment; Fri ·Ser., March 21·22 end AP!'lt 4·S -el Canvon Tournament Wed . APl'll 2 -MIHlon Vleio (llOmt), ThUrs . Al)f'll 3 -el BOfw Grande. Tuai . APf'il 8 -•Hunrlnoton hecll (hOmel, Fri., Aorll 11 11 'Fovn1aln Velley; TIA\., Aprn JS -11 'OcHn View, Fri. April 11 -•wesrmlnSltr (llomeJ; Tues., Aprfl 22 -81 •ECllM>n, Fri , Aorll 25 -at •Huntlnolon BeaCl'I, Tuel , April 29 -•Founleln Valtev (l'IOme) Fri May 2 -•Qceen View (hOmel, Tue\., Mev 6 -el ·wH1m1,,srer. Tl'lurs , Mev 8 -• Edl10n (hOmel w .. 1m1Mter Tue! Merch 4 -Garden Grove (hOmel, Wed., ,.,.rch S -Pacifica (hOme), Tl'IU" · Sat , Merell 6· IS -al CvPf'Ht Tournament, Fri ·Sal. Merell 2?·23 encl Fri ·Sal., April 4·S - a l Canvon Tournament. Sat ·Sal.. Merci\ 72·29 -el Woodt>rldO• Tovrnemenl Tues , Aorll a -•Eolson (nom.l, Fri., AMU 11 -er •Hunlin111on Beac.h, Tues., Apr!I IS -'Foonteln Vallev (hOmel. Fri, APf'll 11 -al 'Merine; Tues , "prll 72 -'Ocean View (home), Fri.. Aorll 2S 11 •Edison, TUH , APf'li 29 -·Hunt1n01on 8eech ChOmel Fri , Merell 2 -al 'Foun1tln V•llev. T1As . ,.,.Y 6 -'Mtrina (hOmeJ Tnurs , Mev 8 -•I 'Ocean View •e1tnotH Sun'81 LHout oame "ll oeme' et ) Pm . unleu noled ANGELUS LEAGUE Matw Del Tues , Marci'\ 4 -Hunllnoron 8Hch (hOmeJ. Merell 6·1S -al CvPreu Tovrnamenl Mon . March 17 -el Foothill, 3 p,m, Thurs , Merell 20 -Boise Grande ll'IOme), March 21·21. "prll •·S -el Cenvon Tovrnamenl, Tues, Marci'\ 2S -'SI Paul (hOt'Ml Tuel AMll I -et •s1 Peul, Thurs . A1><il 10 -'81slloP MonlQOmerv (l'lome), Fri A.Prli 11 -el Irvine, Tuel., APf'll IS -·s1 JOMl>h1 1110me1, Tl'IUrs , A.prll 17 -et •Bi\hoo Amet, Tuu . APril 72 -•' • SI Paul, Thurs . Aorll 24 -• Plu\ x lhOmel. TU4!\. A.P!'il 29 -a1 •B11noe> MonlQOmerv Thufl., M.av 1 -a1 •s1 JosaPM. iutu . Mev 6 -'8lshol> "mal lhOmeJ 'denotu AnOeful LtellVI 11eme SOUTH COAST LEAGUE Irvine Wtc:1 , Marci\ 1' -111 'Leouna.Hflll, Fri . Merell 21 -'Et Toro 111ome1 Wtd , A.1><11 2 -11 'Sen (ltmenlt Fri AP<ll 4 -'C•Pillrano Vallev fllOmeL Wed . A1><il 9 -•oene Hltll (hOme) Wfld APr ll 16 -., 'Minion Vlt fO, Fri April II -'Leoune Hills fhOmeJ Wed Al>'ll 73 -el 'El TOfo, Fri. "P'il 2S -'San Clemente, Wtc:I Ao•il 30 -al 'CePlsrrano Valltv, Frr. Mev 2 -at 'Dene Hilll, Fri Mev o -•Min ion VlefO C l'IOme) •denotes South Co.est Lee11u~ oem• away that it was brokell ... The doctor's d.iq:Jfosis puuhe 6-3 Simi Valley Hi&h product on the sideline for till to eiaht weekJ. Sioc:e she was a transfer from I..ouiAana Seate Uoivenity, she hid aJrady sat out a year aod was not eliajble to red· shirt. Now there would be no scorina titlct, no All.American booora and oo retired number. When Graham finally did rclum to the lineup, she did so wt th a consider· able hand:icap. The cast waJ 1one, but her right wri~t remained enca.sed in a brace. The combination of the brace and a wrist that was only about 60 percctlt, according to Gnham, forced the natural riaht·handcr to play left· handed. The transition was quick. -In her fif'1t game (the oonfettncc opener apmst UC Santa Barbara) she manqed jua rwo poillll lllid .,., ~ bu1 swo~ .... later Ille bqln '°CE·n -~· __.. ... pOll\!SJ ~ ~ ... IMI .. Md two 010CXCCJ ~ Cal SUie Fu.Uet•too. Her best p.me u a ~pmw c:uac Feb. l $in an 82--69 UJ*1 of'Sul Dim> Seate. She .oored 22 poi~alTO from tbe field) and . t th rebounds. FM her dtorts, lbe WM named the Plcif.c Coat Albledc Ahociation pJayerofthc: week. Sbe'U wind UJ> her ~ ill the PCAA tourney Tbuniday throuab S..twday at Lona 8eaeh Seate. .. Anyone that can score aiYet your team tremendous subllity a.od Cheri does that ... Andree uys. .. ud tbe a11o gives us a presence of COft.fidm(le. She's playing left-banded ~~we anticipated her to play risb~ ... Tournaments clog schedule Vollqball MOWDAY HIGH SCHOOL -Coste Mete et w..t-mln1f8f', 4'30. Loara. Newport Elks games head long list of baseball-contests-~~~~~~~.v•IOAY Prep ba,seball clogs the area sched- ule th~s w~j. wi~h non-league p.nte~ • th~ m1oonty amid.st an onslaught of third. fourth and fifth-round games in the on-going 32-team Loara Invita- tional and the runnina of the eigbt- team Newport Harbor Elks Tour- nament. . Costa Mesa. Estancia, Corona del Mar and Newport ''Harbor open on the road in the first round of the Newport tournament Tuesday, while Sunset League representatives Ediso.n, Fountain Valley, Marina, Huntington Beach and Ocean View arc m action Tuesday in the Loara Invitational. An example of the fast-pac.cd schedule: Newport Harbor plays it.s third- round game in the Loara tourney today against visiting Downey, goes to Mater Dei Tuesday in the El.ks tourney, plays in the fourth round of the Loara tourney Wednesday, re- turns to the Elb tourney Thursday, and has a possible game 1n the Loara toumex Friday. Saturday there is a possib1l1ty of games in both tour- naments for Harbor. In track, the big one is Saturday at Irvine H igh where Fountain Valley. Newpon ffarbor, University, Wood- bridge and· the host Vaqueros are among the invitational's field. TODAY HIGH SCHOOL -Huntll"IJlon 9Mcfl at lrvlne, 3:15; Sen Clemen• el LHUne a..m. 3:15; Loere lnvllellollel: Downey et Newport Harbor. 3:15 !consollltlon io-1 tw.O,ell TUHOAY COLLEGE -UC lrvlM et CPlaPfNft, 2:30 COMMUNITY CO\-LEGE -ltencho Sen· 11eoo et GOldefl wesr. 2:.JO • HIGH SCHOOL -Loere Tournament ICllamolonsl'tle> twKlletl Kaletll al Loera, Los Alamitos v1. Anehelm at aroo1t11un1 P1t11, S.Vlle vs Meonoll• at &roollt>unt Perk (71. Es--me VI El OoradO •• Le Pelme P9'k (7); (contOlalfon ""'"'*'' ~et) FoUl'lraln Va-.V 11 Marina; Leouna Hiiis at Hunrlneton a..ctl; OC.en View ti Et Toro, ltlvtr"llde Nortl'I al EdlM>n; !COfllOletlon IYed<el) Sunnv Hiib al Dena HIU1, St Peul vs. La Qu1111a el 9oYMn Perl!, CVPreH al P11clf1c:.4'. Trov at trvlM; CConlOlallon IOHrs twadlel) Sen Ctem.nte et Wflltrn, Le Habra v,, KennedV et La Petma Park, Loi Amloo$ el VIiie Perk (el at 3 ellcec>I w-. notec:I); ~-'·Eiits TOUt'nament (flrSI rovncll Cos11 Mesa et Sen1e An•. ES1e11Cle el S.ddlebecll; Corona Clef Mer et Sant• Ana, E\la11<i• et SaddleOl<:k. Corone def Mar •' Sanl• Ana Vlfltv, Newiaorl Hertior et Meler Oel WEDNE$DAY COLLEGE -UC lrvint al UCLA, 2.lO, Soull'ltrn Cel Colteoe al Whlllle<", l.lO HIGM SCHOOL -Cal)ls1reno Vallev at Ul'!lvtnltv, 3-lS, Laouna 8Ndl et Dena 111111. 3 Marl1111 al Min ion Vieio. 3 THURSDAY COMMUNITY COLLEGE -Cl'l>'Hl a1 Or•not Coal!, 7 30, Goklen WtKI ., Come>IO'I ?;lOHIGH SCHOOL -~11"9IOl'I &eecf\ y' Lono 8Hc:h JOf'den et di;i~ Field. Lono Beach (CIOUOltl'ltadef') 3 ,nci 6 Pm Newoon ·Eilts Tovrnamenl FRIDAY COLLEGE -Keio, JaPan 11 UC Irvine, 7.30 Soulllenl C•I C~'-., Lono 8HCl'I Slale, 2'.lO HIGH SCHOOL -Cao1,1rano Vati.v Cl'w'ls· tlen 11 Woodt>rldQe, 7 pm Unlvtolly at Mluion Vlelo. 3.IS. lrvlne n Ana11tlm •' GIOver Stadium (dOut>teflHClef'), 3 lS, Loar• Tourn..m.nl. SATURDAY COLLEGE -WHhlt1Q1on S1a1e 11 UC Irvine, J p,m, Aluu·P•Clfk al Soulfltrn Cal COfl99e ( doul>leN•dtr). nootl COMMUNITY C<XLEGE -Mt S.n AnronlO at Goldetl west. t\000, Oranoe Co.as! at Full erton, noon. HIGH SCHOOL -Ocean View el Sen C temenle (douC>tellff dtr ) , 1 l a m , LaOUl\8 S..ch et Soult• Hlll1, ll. Cae>i1•rano v.,._., 11 Foon1eln Vallev ldo\il>lef>Ndefl 11 Wttl mln$ler el FoolhlU (ooullielleaderl 1 Pm Loera Tovme,,,..,, N-oorl·Elks Tov,.,,.,,,..,t HIGt4 SCHOOL-lrYlne •I~ H•. ~ LllOune aeedl 11 Coron• del MM. 5cl0; COit• Mew et Es~le. J~15; Univ..itv at Meter Dtf, 3:15; WOodllfldoe ., """'°'' Hartlor, J:1$; Truouco Hiiis at OcMn View, S-.JO. W•ON•SDAY COMMUNITY COLLEGE -Le Vern. 81 GOiden Wesl, 7. HIGH SCHOOL -.. lne al ~ 14111. 6:4S. ll'lltlDAY COMMUNITY COL..LEGE -Mr. S., Antonio el Golden WHI, 7 HIGH SCHOOL -El Toro •I lrvlne, s:JO, cor-del ~ •' Newoor1 Hentor, 5::11; Unlvw~ry e1 E&r11ncte, 5!30; Meler Del et co.ta Mele, 5!JO; Woodbrldllt et l.-BMc:ft, 5-ll; Merine 111 S.nte ..,_,., 7!30. SATUltDAY HIGH SCHOOL -Merine, F-t11fn V...., end OeMn V1ew al DcK Pue«lloi T~ (Sent• 8ert1are). Tnc.t and l"leld TU•SDAY HIGH SC...OOL -Meler Del al El T0to. ' THURSDAY HIGH SOIOOL -Mlulon Vlelo al Cor- del Mer,); El Modene et Un1¥9nltv, l ; FOUt1tel11 v1111ev at MllllUn. 3; VIiie Perk •1 ~ Hart>or, l , LYllwood 11 Merlfle, 3; L...iuna tills et Meler Del. l ; Wntmfnstet' 11 Lone ~ WllM>n, l, OclMn V.._ "'· ~ 11 Lot .Cabatl8f'os, l:IS, ll'lllDAY COMMUNITY COLLEGE -Sant• Alla, CMrllos at GOIOen Wnt, 2'.30; Orenoe Cont. ComDton al F IJll«ton, 2:l0. SATUltDAY COLLEGE -UC s.ni. e.rbw•, Cal ~late FUlief'lOll 811<1 AIVM--PICl11c: et UC lrv11'141 (ftllld av8'11S \lert at ll'\S, runnlne ....,," 11.n •• llS) COMMUNITY C<XLEGE -Oranoe Coasl ., S.11111 Monica lteleVl HIGH -SC~ -WoodblloM, ~. Founleln Vdev ana NewPGrt Hertlor a1 irvw. lnvll•tlonal, 11 e.m 8wlmm'D1 TWIDAY HIGH SCHOOl. -It~ At.mltos •I Mitt« Del, J. WIDNISOAY HIGH SCHOOt. -WoodbrldM II COi'-_. Mer, J; Pffw-1 HefOOI' •t Et1111'Cle. J; LHUN IMCfl et Cosle Meta, 3; ~ at U"""8r-ill'V. 3: La Oulrtte 11 Edison, l THURSDAY COLL.EGE -UC frvlM el PCAA c:tlem· Pfonsl\11>1 (9etmonl PleU) HIGH SCHOOL -lrvlM el Laoune Hfll1, 3. L.eltewOOd 11 Hvntlnoton hectt, l 11'1t1DAY COLLEGE -UC Irvine et. PCAA ctwm· Plon&r\IJK (&elmont Pllte). COMMUNITY COLLEGE -Orltnoe C0411 ti CeN"ltot, 2·30; lltatlCllo Sentle90 er Golden w.r. 2'..30 • HIGM SCHOOL -~rlt1e 1t EJtancle, 3, WOOdt>rlOQe et Orenoe. 3, N--t Herbof al , Tuitin. l , Noire Oemt er Meltr Del, l. SATURDAY COLLEGE -UC trvlne 111 PCAA Cl'letll· Pt00Slll1>1 <a.tmonr PllH) COMMUNITY COLLEGE -Golden Wtsl ti Saddle09CI< PentethlOn, 10 HIGH SCHOOL-Co\11 Mew el Mira Coste. Fovnlaln V11tev 11 San Mrlno, 10 • m MOHDAY HIGH SCHOOL -lrvltlt 81 EOl.IOfl. l!lS Foun111" Valltv 11 E• Toro, )·~~ TUESDAY COLLEGE -RIC9 at UC Irvine, l 30 COMMUNITY COLLEGE (Me\'>) -R811CN> ' Santlaoo •• GOiden WHr. 2, Cerrltot el 0r.._ COHI, 2 COMMUNITY COLLEGE (Women) -Or· •"9t Coast •' CMrlloi, ~ · · HIGH KHOOL -Foothill et Corona c1et Mar, 2.30 Minion Viele>., Woodbrldll't, 3, Huntl"9lon &eacl'I a1 L.agune a..cn. l, W*ilmlnsttr at Sen1e Ana, l , S.Odlel>ee.11 el Oranoe, 3 WEDNESDAY COL.LEGE l~I -UC trvlne et Southtr" C1• 1"1erC011eOlattK (Valltv Hunt Club. PHadeN) COLLEGE (Womenl -Waltrn Mlc:nlOan a1 UC 1rvlt1t 1 lO HIGH SCHOOL ~ El Toro •I E•lat\Cle, J. Ntwe>orl Ma~t>or el Irvine 3. EdlM>n et Untv.r '"" l Trvt>uco Hiiis JV •' Coste Mesa, l ~oun•eln Vellev at Long 8e1cP• WllM>tl, ) --------------------------------------------------------------,----------------------...------------- Edlson glrls tangle wlth Lagu~a Hllls Edison Hi.&h's sirls' soccer team unbeaten oncf seeded No. I in the CIF 4-A division, moves into the CIF semifinals Tuesday at 3: IS against visitina Laguna Hills. a romatch of a second-round contest 1n the playoffs a year aao. Coach Colleen Silva's Chargers. 24-0-2 this year, eliminated Laguna Hills last year, 1-0. Edison toppled the Hawks, 4-1 early in the ~a$0n an the Ocean View Tournament. The Sunset l..e.aauc champions are paced by forward Joy Ricfcld. who has scored 4.S aoels and Ileen credited with 26 assists. Her primary .feeder is senior .for- wird Pat Lcwln, and wat.h n1-ht halfbac k Mitch Nadon and• sophomore lcf\ half Kendra Wh1,- oand, the Charaers enter wath the favorite's label. Wh1sna"d scored twice in Edison's 4-2 first-round victory over Upland, in addition to an assist. and she connected on a goal in Edison', 4·2 1numph over Palo, Verdes 1n the quarterfinals last Wednesday. Laguna Hills. the South Coa'il uague champion for the second year in a row. and the No 4 seed in the playoff~. enters with a 17-4-3 record The other half of the semifinal" matches Torrancc(2l-1-2) at Miimon Viejo (21-3-2). UCI falls in tennis PHOENIX -Math1u Ol~son and Duke Wihlcin douhlcd up on U< Irvine's Ar1 Hemandc-1 and Jame .. Myers to lead No, 19 UniveM1ty of Mmne~tft over the Anteattn. ~-'· 1n a non-¢onfercnce college tenn1" match here unday Ols5on and W1hle1n capped Minncsota'srffort with a 4-6. 6·0. 7 6 win at the No. 3 doubks ~pot Bruc.e Man Son Hing had 3 'l)O(J effon Dt No I ~angles for l I( I With ,, 6-1. 6· 7, 6-l win .. SOUTH COUNTY LEASING 18711 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach All MAKES & MODELS NO MONEY DOWN LEASING '86 CABRIOLn '86 JmA c-tt!W.. (°"7U) ("'71 Air ~i., ""'(l .. UO) (~) $229!!.. $16~ .. tO clOwn lilo•dual veiv. U760 SO 4!own liln•OU•t v•tv. Ullltl '""'of .,.v•l'lllnl-\IJ •10 lortt ot o.a>'mto"'~ 110 •11 u '86 l·MARK '86 ISUZU 111t07•> 1•m1 ,.,iu., C1eotU> 1ms1 $149!?.. $109°,! .. tO down Rt11du•I velu• s.).o)) tO 00.." Rtt•O\•et vtl~ 'l" J ro1•1 OI .... ,.,..,,. "I JJ , , r t tt• O' "'ilY"W'nlS t66>l to M 111• • c:bled l'!'C 1!1C1 """"'"' -•• ,.._ lft """t' 10 °"""" South County leasing A<tk for Tom Murdoch 714-842-2000 LIM ITED TI ME ONLY T-BONE STEAK DINNEB Served with a SHRIMP COCKTAD.! ~~~e s4.49 Includes e A Shnmp Cocktail • Flame·Bro1led T·Bone Steak • Soup of the Day • Crisp Green Salad • Ctt0tce of Potato !ftl~flCI Pot• ?llf"IQ OoMfl ~l'tl \ _J • I Na A WIST9•N CON,.•INCI ~ DMt.1911 w L ~ct. Ga L.ltlen 43 16 nt Porti.nd , lO ,. .. , 1$\lt . ..._1. ,, lS 401 " ~ n 3' 367 21 1'> SM Ille ,. 31 35' n GOldtn Stett It '3 306 1S'h Mldw1ttDMW.. Hout ton JI 22 633 [)enylf )6 2S 590 1 .. Vt an ll )C) '°' 1 I 011tu lO ,. '°' , ., Sen Antonio )C) n .... 9 Sect amen to ,, )3 4SO II IASTlaN CON .. E•INCI Alllllll< DMslln x·&o•lon 47 1t 810 Phllldelol'll• 39 21 650 9 New Jer11v 12 lO St6 17 WaM!lngton 29 32 47S 19•)) New Yori. 19 40 117 ,. '> Central DM\Mfl MflwaukH ,, 19 "" All1nte JS is 5'3 6 I 0.trolt 36 26 .511 .... Cltvelllnd 13 36 390 1• . Cnlcego 21 40 ~4 21 Indiana 11 40 34.4 71 •·cilncl'>ld Pt•vott OOIPI - SuncleV'I Scorei lndlane 129 ClltloW• 111 Wunlneton 125. Mll.tllu .... 104 Botton 119, Detroit 109 Tlflltflf'I~' GO!Otn ''•te •t LAlllM New York a t Mllw•uktt Oatlet ar Phoenl• Houlton at See1tte Pecers 12', Cll'i>Pers 112 INDtAHA 111'1 -Ti•dele S· 10 3 S 19. W1Hlem1 12·20 O· l 74. St11>eoo,.tcn 7· I? J ·4 17, ltk htrdton 4-13 3·3 II. Fleming 7·11 4·S II, Anot,.on 1·10 0-0 16, Grav 4 1 I ·3 9. Werrlek 3·S 1 2 1, Stanlllurv 0 1 0 0 O. Merlin 4·6 0-0 I, McClain 0·7 O·O 0 Totell S7 ·91 IS· 13 119 .. adlc·IOa ......... Arll-Waahlngton C1Ufornla u".A $t1nford Oreoon Stele Al'llOl\I Sl1te Wealllneton S•••• use (antlO-W L 14 > ,, . 10 ' t I • I I • 1 10 ' 10 4 12 Or"-4 If S411*V'• sc- C•llfornle 72, Or.oon Ste le 6' T ....... t~ OWWlll WL ,, 1 It 10 " . 14. ll 14 14 12 1) t3 14 ll " 10 " ' 11 Arllone el UCLA <Cn.nntt t '' •> TIMll"MlllY'I G~ USC el OrlOOll UCLA el Ort90!1 Slete Stenford a t Wunlnoton Callfornla e t Waihlneton State S.t\INIY"\Gamn UCLA II Or.oc>n (Channel 1 e l I I> m I USC a t Oreoon Slale (Channel 2 et J 1>.ml Callfornla et Wealllng1on Stanford 11 WH hlngton State ,, SllM9V'• Gem. Arl1one at Arl1one Stet• ~cr11nnr 1 11 J·30 1>.m.) .. """ adlMI boV•' lllAVOfh C:I' SaMll'INALS 5·A (W...M9v et u .. s.-tt Arw> 7-ldbtfl' C17•fl "' Serre (22·41 I 4So-Mltw °'4' 117·01 vJ. St 81rner<1 111·6) 4-A Cec>l•treno Va lley (27·7) v• SJml llelttv' (16·21. T dtv, 7·30, at Pel>Cllrdlne Uni· ver •ltv Ct•n "') Muir 171·1 u11• (17· SJ, Wadntldev, 7 C~ Brt1-0 llndl (2S·4) "' G•nnha' (17· I), W~v. 7 30 e t lite IOI Hecllncle Helgllt• Wiiton (16·3) Vl Klltlll' (24·)1 TueMSev. 7.30 e t .Ste TBA ?·A Sin Bemer<1iflo lU-n-... Mul'~v· 111·1), Tueldev, 7.30 at •lie TBA Charter Oek (21·41 "' E<IQewood• 119•1), Tuttdl Y. 7.30 t i.lite TBA l·A Wllltller Cnrlttl1n <?S·O) vs Menn111 Fun<11mente1· (19·61 Tueldev, 7.30 ar lite TBA Crou roed• < t1·71 "' LA 811>t1tt• C?l·3) Tut\dtv. 7 lO et tlte TBA Small SchMb ~ What next? CLl~~••s ( 112) -Muwtll 4 • IS 16 13, Nlml>hlut 1·6 O·O 1 Ben1am ln 4 10 4·1 12, Jonnton 4· 1? 3·4 II. Velenllnl' S· 10 7·? 14, White 9· 16 1·4 20, EdwarO• 1 16 4·4 18, BrldQlman 0-7 O·O 0, Ceoe 0-1 3-4 3. Goroon 3· 10 3·3 9, Cron O·O 0·1 O To1e l• 37·91 36·43 112 Sun tlY Oue~ Whitney (20·SJ v• Ttml>le Chrlt tlan, Ventura (73· I), Tu .. dav, J 30 •t tlte TBA Bel Air Prep I 17·8) "' Hesperia Cnrltlen !?0·4>, Tun dev. 7 30 e t Victor Vetltv Hlgll ·oenotH f'IOITlt teem Laura Baugh c ontemplate. •hot in LPGA tourne)' Sunday. lnolene 37 73 JI Jl-119 Cliootu 17 21 34 JS-117 ThrH ·Polnl goel•-Valenline 1 Foui.<I out-None RtOOUn<ll-lndl•n• M (WIK1em• 111. Lot AllQMl '6 <Muweu IOI A• l lslt-lndle11e 2S (Ricn.rdson, F'1tm1nv 9> L<K A"9eit• II IEdwerd1 3) Total foult-lndlene 37, Los Anoetfl 18 Tecnnl calt-lndlene oetev ol game. Los AnullH 4 men on court Attendenct 6, 106 NHL C~IELL CONFERENCE Ul'Mdln lmfltatloNI C ..... ICOl'ft WEST CahfOl'n•• n ~-St '6 (et ~II Verden CCI SOUTH AleOeme 74. MlnhSIPC>I S9 Ouk• 12. NQ(tll Car011ne 7• C.eor11l1 Teen 74. Ctemton 63 Loultvllle 70. Mlml>l\I• SI 69 MIDWEST lndlene IO, Iowa 73 Mlcntga n St U . Wl.con\ln 71 Olllo St 61. Mlntliltole SS C.ent MIChlg•n 71 W M•Ch1ga" &S SOUTH WIEST Te1u Teen 63 Tun 67 TOURNAMENTS E11t C..•t c. .... MIU (~•!. Orutl 71. Lalavene 69 Hotwa 68 Bucknell 66 Mldwt\ttm C ...... ,. Clftter""• I Chlmplomhlp I ..Cav1er 01110 74, 51 Louil 66 SovtMnl Ctlftfwence ICN~I Oe v O•on •7 Tn ·Ct1e 11enoog1 tO How AP '°" 20 fll"ed I Duo 119·71 bea r Clemton 77·6' Met No l Nortn Cerolln• S?· 74 ? I<•""' C?8·31 oea1 No 14 Ol<lehOme 87·80, Deel Iowa Stete 90·70 l North C.erollne 176·4) 11ee1 Virginia 8S·79, IO•I to No 1 Oul<e 87·7' 4 C.eorgll T Kii C1J· SI Deal No 18 North CeroMa Start 69 S7, lo•t 10 llhno11 S9 S7 r>ee t Clemton 7• 63 S l(entvc~v <26·) Deel Teoneuee 61 60 r>eet Lou•\lena Ste te 61·S7 6 SvracuH 113·4 •o•t 10 No a Sr John ' 86 79, DU I Connec11cut 7S 58 1 Mem1>nl• Srate '7S·4t,. l>eat Souln Carolloa 96 7J, Deel New Ortean• l>l S2 10" to NO 13 Lou••vllle 10·69 a St Jonn'• (27·41 t>eat No 6 Syrecu\t 86 19 !>'tat ~ron Hell 81· 70 9 NevaOe-1.u lleon 111 o '°'' 10 C.a otorn1e ll~v1ne 9S·llS !>eat Loog Beatl'I ~,. '4·76 10 M cn•11en 17S·4l 1>eet N '\Con"" 97 14 bear NOf'tnwt\ltrn 86-64 11 BrtOltY (19 1 Met ll'<tla na Stott 11·S1 12 Noire Oeme t71 S! Ilea• DePeul 10· S9. be al Merouette 1•-66 13 Loul•vlfle (14· 11 Deal South Atel>eme 66· SS. 1>4!•1 Souln Cerollna 6S· 63. 11ee1 Ne, 1 Mem1>11" State 70 69 t4 Okle nome C14 61 10\1 ro No 7 Y •nH\ 87·90 04!et No 8 NOt'lh C.1r0l11111 Stare 71·69 IS C.eoroeto..,~ rn ·61 t>eet BostM (.~ 14!Dt 90· 16 Dtel P,11,1>urg11 93 61 lt; tno1ane f70 61 04!&1 M•Mt\Ole 9S I>) !>eel ION8 80 Jl 17 M1c111geo Ste'• 70·61 Mer Norttt wt\tero 91 48. beat Wl\C.OM1n I•· 71 18 North Cerohn• State '18· llt 10\r 10 No • C.Mrg1a h eh 69 S7 IO•I 10 No " ()l<lallC>me n 69 19 N8Vf 7S 4 Ot!!<l l R Cl'lmon<1 I S 17 04!•' Ja1r-e1 MAIO••O" I t 61 20 p~,.,~ 171·1 '<>'' •o ••·no·• 8 n Sm\11'M DMMon W L T Pt\ GF GA x·Eomonton Celgerv t(lnft Ve ncouver Wlnnll>t9 " " ' 94 l3' 2S3 l1 15 7 11 2IO 244 10 Je 6 46 130 314 18 JS 9 4S 117 757 19 40 6 .. 1J' 308 •·Chicago •·Sr LO<JI' MlnneM>tt TOf'OftlO 0.lrO•I Ntwrls Dlvlslen l3 24 8 19 76 8 2t 17 9 19 JI 6 13 H 5 ,. 191 66 74S 6S 261 ~ 1S7 31 109 WALES CONFERENCE Pell1Q DWlll«I 27S 737 750 lOI m Pnlll<1t11>hle •I 19 4 86 161 19S WHhlngton l9 19 S 13 7'3 71S NY tllenoer• 30 1J 10 70 7S6 731 Pllht>uron 31 26 J 69 260 721 NY Ranger• 30 19 4 ~ 223 216 New Je"ev ?O )9 J 43 233 193 AOtm• DMsien Maotrte 3S 23 6 16 274 1U Ouet>te 34 11 4 n 266 131 Bo•ton 31 27 1 69 7S9 131 Butte IC> 30 2t 6 66 2~ :n I Merttord 19 l3 1 60 7S I 253 x·cllnched e>levolf 11trth Sunclav'• kMft Catgerv S. 1<"-1 Hertforo 4, B1>1ton I Cn1cego 6, St Loul' 4 New Jer .. v 6. Wlnnle>eg 4 Wu hlngton 4, New York Range" 2 Edmonron 1 Pnlle<MIOflte I IOI) Tlflltflf'• Gtm1t .V•nn l>t9 tt Toron10 M'"flflote et Oetro11 Fla,,,.s S, Kings k o ... t>v PtrlO<ls Finl PW'lod 2 0 l-S 0 1 0-1 ~ CaJOary Jollnton I <Bredlev Hunter 1 I 11 2 C.•tgery Mullen l6 (Maclnnl•I 16 S4 Penalltel-Dion,,.. LA (trl1>e>1no1. SOS Suter Cet lh•gh·•llcklnel, 17 S4 Shffnv Ce•. maior rnvnttflVI. ~. l evlot LA lntgh·•Hcll lng), 12 54, Peterton. LA.. me.or lf•Ohtlng) 12 S4 Jollnw n, C•I (lrlPPlnQ> 13 27 Mtcoun, Cat (trl1>olng) 1341 SIClnd ~M'llcl 3 Lo• Angele\, Erlcl<ton 16 (Ntclloll•. Wllllemtl. 17 37 Ptnellle1-Su1er. Cat IPllgh·\llCklng), 10'53 Third Pertoct 4 Ce1gery, Kromm 17, S 16 S C•IO•rv, C w twn 76 !Bozek), S S9 6 CelOtrv Looo 11. 16 4S Penelt1e,~1rdY. LA ltlllhlng) 2 71 Er1oton. L,-1noo111nvl. 9 18, Mectn "'' Cet lhlgl'l'\t1ck1nel. 9 39, Quinn C•t 01ook1no>. 17 32 Sno•• on-go.I-Calgary 9· 10· 11-30 LO• "'ngetu II 10-7-21 Power·l>lev Oc>e>ortu111t1e•-Ce111erv O of 3, LO\ Ang•te• o ol S Goe tlH -C•tg•rv, Lemelin 121 •ho" ?1 ~V"I Lo• All9tffl. Melenton 130·?SI A 11 •n<I• nee 9 OS9 Rele•-Dtnll Morel L•n8'man-Swe<lt r<noJf Relldv Mrtron Academic boo•ten' lOk run 21 1 MB Zlm~mn 149,500 70·70· 70 11 ,., Pet Bredte'I. '76,400 71 10 It 6t Leura B•Vll'I '76.400 68 10 6' 16 211 "lat Skinner, '11.J7S 69 ,. 10· 10 215 Carnv Kratzetl sl2,718 10 n 16 67 A11c;e Rollmao, 117.711 n 10 11 n 214 OoMa Caoont S9 ISi ui.1 nn Bern Oen•et, S9 tS7 69 ,. 10 1J 217 Jen Stec»ltnwn. '7 .343 69 n 1• n Patt'I SllHllen SI .342 6' 73 10 16 ,.. Pennv Hammt l 16.0SJ 11 " 76 70 Pennv Pulz. 16.0S7 n n n 11 ,., I( atnv Be'8r, \5, 145 71-71 1' ,, Berllf• Mlzr•h•t . SS, l•S 11 10·15 1J HO!Jii s1acv. U.145 69·17 7• 1• "° "'mv 8en1 M.731 6'·1S·11·10 Avako Ol<emoto u.ne 1• n 11 11 U H ¥O<Jng '4.137 TJ -13 71 73 Atsuko Hlk•Dt, M,737 13·11·13 73 2'1 Juov Dlcklnton, sJ,660 11·14·1S-10 A.my AICOll 13,660 13·14 13·11 C•ndv Figg, '3.UO 71-74·73·73 m Ro1>1n Wallon U. IU n ·n ·14·13 Oete E1111tllne. 13, IU 70·19·69·74 Merer Bo1erlh, \J llS 72·72 74·74 Catnv Mor" '3. ll S 6'·73·74·77 ?fl Jane Cretter , 12,600 1S·11·11·10 Janet Cote•. '7,600 7S·7?·73·73 S Bertotecclnl, 12 ,600 13·14 73·73 Snellev Hamlin. 12.600 74·17·74·73 Pertl RlllO, 12.600 72·74·74·13 Ketl'lv Whitworth, 12.600 74·72·72· 7S Beckv Peaf\on, 12,S99 69· 73· 74· 77 Ctndv Rark k, 12,S99 69·73·74 n ,,. SIW:rr Turner. $1,961 74· 74 7S·71 MlneYtn Wu '1,96t 16·10-71·11 COl•n Walker. 'I 9.o 73·73 71 11 Bart> Bunkow,11.v, 11.960 1l·7S·73·13 Beth Solomon, J 1,960 73·72·76 73 Jull lnk•ter, Sl,960 7HH3·7S Jantt And«wn. 11.960 74·70-7J·77 ltS Shlrtev Furlono. 11 Sil 7S·14· 70·76 Mirtha Maull, II.Sil n·n ·69·n M Se>encer·OeYln, SI Sii 70-69·76·90 '" Pet Me"e". s1,J11 74·7l·71·72 Merlene H1gge \I .311 77·7HS·73 Heatntr F •rr. SI 311 11·10·15·14 Oet>01• Me nev, s I ,l 17 11·6'·14·17 N White· Brewer l I ,J t7 7?·72·74·71 ,., Mindy Moore. I 1.094 73·74·17·7J Alfl,on Flnnt'I, \1,0'I• 74·71 7S· 17 ,,. Heather Drew, '946 7S·72 71 73 Cllrlt Jonnton 1946 11·71 73 76 Laurie Ronker. 1945 7S·73·74·76 Oetdff Lt\ktr SU S 73·76·11·71 , l he I ()K Run fnr •\ladcm1c b cdlrncc. \pt'IM<tn•d h\ thl' .\ladrm1t Boo\lt'r <luh of fd1\1Jn ll11th "''" IX' run \unda\ Apnl fr IX'ginnrng al x a m The ran· ""htCh will ht-gm and end al the Hun11ngtrm Reach Pier ""'"run along the bike trail and acct\\ road Angel•' ~Jblt:Joa dcket. Ticket~ for the Angels' exh1b1 t1on pmcs at .\ngrl Stadium an Palm \pnngs arc now on sale at all l 1ckr1ron outkl\ C1ncl udrn(I Scan and T owrr Rl'(ords) or b)' phone to Tcktron 6~1300 . Thts )'ear's schedule will consist of I I &)mes played da1ly from March 21·3 1 Ansel oppo-nents tncludc Milwaukee (March 21-22), Chi· caso ( ubs (March 23), San Francisco (March 24'-2S), Clevela nd (March 26). Oakland (March 27-211). Seattle (March 29) and San Otcco (March )()..)I) The prc-regmercd fee\ arc SI() with T-sh1h and S 7 without Da)' of the racr fees arc S 11 wtth T -~h1n and S 11 wtth<'411 Entf') forms arc available ill \P<Jrt\ '1orc\ and 11 the school Trophies, m~ah and de k \Cl\ w1ll txgiven 1n I l male and 12 fcmalr rategonrs wt th a total of 132 pntl'~ f or more 1nforma1ton phone Barbara Hauk at f71 4> 968-7HO ~CJlll member-auat toarae~ The ~(hfT Tenn" l"luh of tfun11ng1on Beach will bl' ho~t1na 11 member guest 1our n1mcn1 with the Long Beath \Ute men'\ var,11y tcnn•& team Saturday and \unday Lons Beach Learn mcmbtn will Ix playing both men'\ doubl~ and mrud doubles wt1h Sca(11ff mcmbl'rs Tiu\ ,, 1 fu nd-rau.rng tournament .and proceeds *111 go Lo the Lung ~ach men·, 1<'2m The puhhc u wrlcome frtt of cha rat The Se.Cliff l ennas Cl ub 1\ located at f>Slll P1tm Avr for funhcr 1nforma11on. phone Sl6·91~8 In add1uon to the T1ckrtron locauons, the box office It Angel Stadium 1n Palm pn np will open March 10, but most rc'ICrvcd scats will likely Ix sold by that time Co.ta Ilea LL TOll•tr•don Costa Mesa Little l.cas ue w1tl hold r_qis- 1ra1ion for its scnwr d1v1MOn (1~s I l-1 S) Saturday 11 L1on1 Park 1n ( O'llA Mui Clocatc~t I 8th I and Park A venue) A birth ~1ficak "''II be ntttt'8ry Thrrr "11 donatton ftt ofS40 YouthJ 1n1rrntcd 1n the tower d1 v1S1ons (IJ« 6-12) tha t hi ve not ~1ineci up yet, may 1bo do'° For more 1nfomu111on tontaet Costa Mesa LL Pm1dcn1 Rose Ma rir Lu••• at S<4&-44 I I I 1't Lori WHI, 1741 14· 1S· 7S· 7S JO<lv Rc>Mnthll, 1748 74·74·7'·7S Merlene F'tovo, 1747 71·74·74·79 Sellv Llttle, 1747 7?·Tl·7l·ll >00 JoAone Cern«r. \640 73·74·7S·78 JOI L1Ann Ceneoev SSS 1 76·69·79 77 B•rll ThOmH, is~ 79·69· 7S· 71 Jeclo.,. BtrtKll. H~ 7?·7HJ·79 Cethv Jonnlton, \SSO 7S· 7?·7S·79 Judv Etll\ Sam• ISSO 74·74·72·11 lOl Carot1ne Gow'en Mil 73·7S 79 16 Nancy Le<IMtttr 1412 14 7S·11 71 >04 ICri,11 Arrlogton '451 14·75·11 71 306 Beverly Kteu, \~I 11·7S·81-19 -Oeoore n Mc Hettie , '425 74 7S·7S·U MMt'• ':Cm.m (II Cwaf , I'll.) 111 """'" l(no( \90.000 66·7MO 70 ,.. Andv Bun, UJ,000 69·69·77 73 Jonn Mehettev, '33,000 74·70 76·t.I JO<lle Mu<l<I, '33.000 10 72·7S·71 r.111rence Ro\t. '33.000 10 13·71 ]) ,., Berrv JaeO .tl s lt,000 ,, 10 74·69 190 Tom Pumer \16.7!!0 71·7l ·I0·6' ltl Pevne Stew•rt, l IS,000 69·74·73·75 Mike Reio, llS,000 69·78·17·7? m Lance Ten Brck. I lJ,000 74·69·71·71 Bruce Llttllle. J 13,000 1No·n ·n 2'3 Stt Yt Jones, '9,IOO 13·11 11·6' Pet McGowen, 19,IOO 17·11 7S·70 Geor~ Burn•, 19.tOO 72·70·90-71 C.erv I( ocn $9 too 70·7?·I0·71 Jim COibert '9,too n -10-n -n ,,. Ed Flori, 16,32S 69·7'·90-69 Tom t<ltt , 16.32S 1S·71-71·70 Rev Flovd, 16.32S 7J·69·8HI Tim Slm1>ton, 16,37S 69·74·82·69 Pnll Blackmer, S6,32S 70·75-76·73 Keith Fergut, S6,37S 70· 7S· 76· 73 Run Cocnre n, U ,l7S 74·7H 4·7S Bud<lv C.erdntr'. 16,32S 7?·'8 71·76 ltS Lon Hinkle. '3.900 75·69·90-7 t Roger Meltl>le, Sl,900 74·7Ht·71 Ron Strtci.. '3,900 11)-11·90-13 Curll• Str•~. '3,900 73·70-71-74 Biii ROQlrs, '3.900 n 11·16·15 ,.. Crakl Stedllr, n ,971 71·73·I0·71 Hele Irwin, 12,971 71-71 81·73 Biii Gl11ton, U ,971 61·75·1?·11 Merli Mc<:um111r, n .t11 70-71't4. 70 Leonerd Tr1om1un, 17,9)1 74 74·7'-69 WINltWood, S?,'71 77·71·7'·69 Steve Pete, 12,971 11·66·7'·73 2'7 Blttv Plefot, 17,250 n ·7l·I0·72 Frenll Conner, '1,?~ 7s-70·IO·l? Oavl• Love Ill. 12.1~ 73·75-75-74 BobOv Cl1mottt, 11.2~. 16·70·76·7S Howerd Twlltv, 112,250 n ·71 ·11·60 2" Tom we1111oot, '1,too 71·6'·9'>·73 Ken Brown, $1,IOO 71·70-71·77 L0<en Rolllrh. JUOO 74·74·71·72 Merk Broo•u . S l,IOO 7S·77·1S·76 Nystrom has J_Yqah talk.lag tohlmself LA QUINTA (AP) -Joak1m Nystrom 's tCff'nas was so precise that he had Yannack Noah talking to himself by early 1n the second set. Nystrom. the fifth seed. si mply refused to make a mistake Sunday and easil y defeated Noah , 6-1, 6-3. 6-2 in the final of the Pilot Pen (1ass1c men's tennis tournament. "J didn't need to come here and hit against a backboard," Noah said of the unerrina Swede. "He hit every- where where J was not. I would hit hard shot and he would pus me. I'~ go down the middle or hit slow balls and he would pass me. I tned everything." But noth1na worked. Noah's at- tempts to attack. were def used hy 42 unforced errors, compared to Just 17 commuted by Nymom. "Jl'~ hard to µlay a player who never misses." Noah said "He never gave me any free points. He 1ook my confidence away. I was really fruJ- tratcd. When a guy pla ys lake this. It makes a guy look bad." Nystro m said, "I wa.s hittina pan- tna shots and that was the key 10 the match. l'm very pleased. He had to try somcthina different ... try1n1 to stay back more, 1ry1na to make me come 1n. It didn't bother me that he was t,.ryma to act me to come in "I felt r could do anything w11h the ball ... especially wf th my pan 1na shots. This was the best tournament ever for me ." Nystrom dominated the match from the out t, winning five stra1aht p m« in the first .et before a scllou1 crowd or 8.164 '" kndV LYie, 11,417 11-47-79·7S ltN , .... al,411 10-1' 12·74 ~~911.tl,417 . 72•14·I0-7J 11111~ •• l,417 1 .. n.n -10 -Tim Notrl1, at,111 ,, ..... 5.75 l rad Fuon, 11,.217 7l •7Ml •7' lt.,-1WrtM,11,217 14•1'-1' ,. 01\tl '"'· 11,'17 7H3·to-n ., Dente Welton, tl, 14.S IS-12· 1•· '9 Chi Clll ltdrlew, t I, 145 61·7'·M·7l JoM Adamt, 11, 145 1t -11-n -n Ar4v Hotlll, $1,145 11•14 14·71 ,., 01vlf ''°''· 11,llS 7S·7l·7'·71 Mike NlcMlte. I I, llS n 74 .... n JOl l ren UPl>tf, al, 100 14·7J·l2·74 ,.. 80b GllcW, t 1,075 72·76·17·7' 01 nrtv 8 deo1. 1 l.07S 77·70-80-17 Cnrl1 Perrv, S l.07S 72·73·13·7' ~ s.uen. 1 l.075 '3·1'S--ll 75 -Jeff LIWI\, 11.cns 71· 70-.,.. 90 e ri.n CINr, 11,cns 71·71-7t ·7' Frid COUPIM, 11,CX>S 71· .. ·11-71 Tom G•ton, tl,CX>S 5 .... 17.75 J07 Jtfl Grvellt. 11,010 * Jim Simon,, 111000 JIO Jev Ofl\lnt, St90 s..... ...... SUNDAY'S alWLTJ UJNI If 19·411Y ......,.,...., "'"'9111) ... ST RACI. 61/J fvflonls Tele• Mv Pclre (VlnJI) II 60 OUtttandlnetv (Steven1I er ov81tv (McCarronf Timi: 1:1S. 7 20 2.10 640 260 '2 10 Also Ren: TOI You, Go1 You Runnln, F•lr Wettf', Shirer Scretchl<I WlnOow SHI. 12 IXACTA (6·11 1>11<1 \SS.IO SICOHD ltACI. 6 furlongs Yllld To C•• (Steven•> 6 IO 4 20 J 20 Celll>Onl• <Otlvarttl S 00 HO Tlmlln IH1rnendl1l 7 00 Timi 110 , Alto Ren. Yukon'• Sier, Powerful Ev ... lrlt h CH I, Neutrel PllYt r, Dancing Kin, Tat>uter, Relnbow'• Cui> Scretched Eddie ·ZIP. Conniption Fii, Dout>te Otfkll. Cordon THtltD ltACll. 1''2 mllts on turt • Httlo BIU (Mll>le) 7 00 3 IO 2 60 Cero'I L•d (t(Mntl) '-AO ) 00 Wiien IMcC.rron) 2 IO Time UO Alto Ran An<IOt. War<I c . O.nall Rlctoe. Eterno, AIH lll, Eltlentt Scretcl'>l<I Otelet>ov 12 DAILY DOUBLE (2·JI 1>al<I 111.60 .. OYltTH ltACI. I 1116 mu ... Sum Action (Velenluela l 12 60 7 60 S.00 Sir Tvton (Hernendeil 10 00 SIO 1n1u1tlv-n (Pjnce vl 3 00 Timi I 44 Atso Ren Sir RtcharO H • Jurne>lno Doctor FuH Ot Stan . Atvdld, 0 1wn O' Tiit Denet , NIQntlme Robber. lmmortatlH , Al F eYtl. tvan Pnllll1>1 Scratcht<I Get Atonl PelMno, Rl<loe Review, ,Servi~. Soutntrn HalO. l"IF,.H ltACI. 61"> lurlollcl1 on turf. Odvueu• (Bezel 11.IO 7.00 4 IO AllH nt Chime\ (SN>tmeker) 4.tO l.60 ~Boom Town Charil• (McCarronl J IO Tlmell5 4 Alto R•n Mark Thi Ltr1l, SlndY'I Ee~. Oerll Accent, Frencll'• LUCI<, Sage,._,, Pav.ant•. Mummv'• Pleewre. Morrv'a Chime>, Itta LAkt. Scretehl<I Jeuer. HoltvwoOd Pertv. Alllentln, Plano Man. S5 IXACTA (9·121 1>al<1 $129.00 SIXTH RACI. I 1116 mltft. 1mors Sort <Otvr•I JS 60 12 IO 6 IO ICY Groom IDtlehOvutv•) S60 4 40 Scral>boe* (McCarronl 3 60 Timi Ul Atso Ren Mlntveult, Acll Acll "4etr. 8111\of, TOll'ltft\t Tl'lt Hewk, Slant!'fWlr FOiiow Tiit Ot nc.t<', Stretfor<I Eu t, Untver· \II Dream ScretcM<I N<l'MI SIVINTH ••c•. One mlle Ko1hare (PlnctY Jr) S 20 Air Alert 18~1 l<emakure (McCerronl Time 1:35 4 J.40 2 60 660 400 360 Atso Ran SlvlO, llallent Geor11. Prlnu L\11>1\, V\oOt"I Ptlnct, t(lnolburv, Exclut lVt Ce1>10., Qvlp Ster Scretchld 8 111>1 U IXACTA 17·11 1>1ld \120 50 llGHTH ltACE.. 111• ml~ Grtlnlon (Plncevl I 00 4 60 4 00 Htf'at (MeH) IO 00 1160 Hetlm (o.l•hOvH•Y•I "7 4 60 Tl~· 2:00 Alto Re,, C·Alofltllltlm, Gate Oencer. Prtcltlortltt. ltoo Art, Vanllndlneham. Proof, A·Fatt Account, B·Dehar, Mv Hal>ltonv. A·R!Qflt Con Setllehl<I ..._ A·COUC>i.d·Fatt Account &. lltlvlit Con 8· COUPle<l-Grtlnton &. Oahlr C ·Coul>ltd· All>htOetlm &. Hetlm NINTH ltACI. !Vt mites MrktnTlleSkv (McCrrn> 1.20 Round Hiii (Miu) i:oreten Legion (Slack) Ttmr 1.50. H O )40 100 S.00 ,,20 Alto fltan lml>Ulslvetv, E•PC>nte,_, Mlgntv l uck, Shultlt Ont. 8otd Initia tive, C.entnt Mll\Old, Ooodlfttck, 8omblv Ser· ttfl<I«, Mr Reector. Scretchl<I Tommv Tnom•. Rlfutll<I U IXACTA (9·11 1>1ld 1111.00 12 "1Ct< SIX 11-9-9·7-2-t l Paid t214, 191.40 to one winning lleket (6 hOrMl) CortM>lltlort Pick Six Pll<I 12,759.00 lo 1CX> wlnnlno ticket• (5 "«11•) •I ~ICK NINI (._2 or I·) or 1·1·t ·9·7·2·" 1>11d $2,720.10 to 14 winning tleklll (7 '-"ti. Cerrvover II 14,247 44 An tno1nc1· 70, 1n aASKEHALL Cltv et Newoerf hedl MIN'S LIAGUIS Me11411Y C ~ J W Mltclltll 6 0 TPll TH m S I • LH lntr 81111 3 3 flt.IF. No 2 2 4 WMO 7 4 R.8 F No I 0 6 •~sc-The Team SI, R. F. No. I 21 It.I F No n 51, LHthlf 8aH1 S7 J W Mllcl'tlff 74, WMO 47 TwMllY a DMUeft Couoer ' 1 Touehl ltou end Co 4 ) New·Pec 4 3 Don Cllrk tn1, l 4 Tnlrd $fr"'9 " 7 S T evn.ttltn Wer O.Vlll 7 s ·~~ Don Clerk ln1 56, fMl'f\tnfan 0.vllt ~7 Touchl i.ou M, c-41 Nt w·PK 71, Tllltd Siring S7 ........ OM.- VIiie Non 6 I l llllfT'lch s , er1ve e unnv • -> CIHl<IY't Foot• ) 4 JONI Henry 1 i Shlmrocti L'9h11no I 6 ltl<Mlt '°"" Vllll Move 1). $1\imrOCll 11 '""' l unnv 62, JoM H9llr\t SS l llll'fT'lcll 71. CeulclY'• 'OOI' S2 w.-....v c.c~ 1.lttle 01-• 1 0 Cnovltt s i GO 'C 4 J $VCR , t ltltndlrl , , W1ttCllff SOOttt I 6 llMMt '-"" W1ttdlff Soorlt t, IWll!Olr1 0 (~II Llltlt 01-l ,, SYClt 0 (for1941) G o 6 c n , Cnovlel ., TllwMll• .. OMUlll Frtnehlt\ TrOOtMW\ 6 0 Pec:lllc Mutual ) l Tnt Frozen It_.. J l Dion Ovne.tot• .., J .) PllVlft 2 4 The ''5 ~ t S • ·~ ker'tt Fro,..., ltOM\ n. ·es ~ t> ''""'*" TrOOl!ttt 74, OMf\ Ovntttv '1 P9(Hlc ~I~ '1, l'lawti U Mitt'• ...,.,... (" L.t OllllW) ........... Jo.klm Nvttrom (Swtcteft) oet Y11V11Ctt No.ti (US ), ., ,, 6·3, 6•t (N'fllrom wlm Us.150. Noell wlnt U7 "25). .,..,.I~ (It Oeld9M) ...... , ..... cnrl• livert Uovd (U.~l cMi Ketnv .Jorden (U $ ), 6·,, 6•4 (Evert UOvd wlnl Ul,000). ~ .. Mena Mendll~ov• (Cltdlollovaklt l· Wertdv TurnOull (Au•tret11) Oii 8onnle G•duMll tu s l·Helel\t SIAon tCilChO•lo· Yaki.I. 7 6. 6· I c ..... MiWleMla s. ye lrWll > (Mlfl·~l """"' Min Son Hine tUCI) clti. Grle9, 6·1, 6·7. 6·3, MMl~Chtf tM) Ott. Derr, 6·4, 7· J, Merlcktl (Ml def. eemem, 6•2, 6-4; Keolln (UCll cMi Sven.on, l·6, 6·1, 7·6; Htrntndel (UCll Oii Ol'UOI\, 6·2, 2·6, 6·3, Uihlein (M) Oii. Mven. 4·6, 6-0, 1·6. °"*" Greu·SYtntOll (Ml Ott Olfr·larl'lem, 6·1. '"'· ._l, MM! Son Hlnl·KaP'en (UCtl tied Mer1blctw·Mer1ctttl, 4·•· 7·6. Olu on·Ulnteln (Ml oet. ~not1·Mveo. 4·6, 6·2, •·• •• .. ~~· -· ~ (et lttdllilllMm. N.C. I 1. T~rv L.Abonlt, Oldsmol>llt Ot4te II. 4'2, w ,sso. 120.- 2. Harrv Gent, ChlvrOltl Monte C•rlO ss. m . 121,110 3 ltldlard ""'""· Pontltc Grand Prl~. m . \IS,'70 4 MM11n Sl'llClfterd, 8ulell LtS.tye, 4'1, suss s. Oerretl Waltrl1>, Chlvrotet Monte Cerio $$, '91, Slt,6 IS. 6. Celt YtrllorOUQh, FOf'd Thun<llrt>frd, 490, SS,AIO 1. 8111 EMlolt, Ford Tllundtrt>lrd, 490, t lS,5'0. I Oale Earnhlrdt, Chlvrolet Monie C.rlO SS. 490, 119,SlO t. Niii 8onnett, CheVrotet Mollte Carlo ss. 4t0, s 12,110 10 Lelle SPted, Pontlec Grend PrlJ• ... 19,'6S 11. IC.vie Petty, Ford Thu~rd 4if •lo.170. 12. lltinlv WeHece, Pontlec Grel'<I Prl•, 4'7, II. 165 13. Ron eoucne rd, Pontlec Grend Prix, 416, 17,'4S 1,, Tommy EMI•. Cnevrotet Monie CerlO SS, 41S, Sl,270 IS Alan te.utwlclll FOfd Tllundvtl•rd, 413, Sl .. 70 16 Tim ltk llmO<\<I Cl'>tvroiet Mortie CarlO SS, 471, '3.170 11. l u<ld\t Arrlnoton. FMd Thundlrlll•d. 4n , U,13S II. Kirk Brvent, Pontiac Gre nd PrlM1 476. '6.S7S lt Jlmmv Mean•. Pontiac Gren<I Prl•, 47', 16,lOS. • 20 G«>H BOdlr>t, Chl•trOlef Monte CtrlO SS. '59, $10,410 °"" ... ,..,..,. DAVEY'S LOCKla ,...__, ... di) -99 enelt<• S3 rocktl\11, 1 halibut. 4S bin 29 ITllCkti'tl, 17 \Cule>ln NE~T LANOtNG -61 eng~' 37 ""d Oen, I tcule>ln, I llalfll<.lt, 1 mt Cktrtl. )7S rOCll COd, 4 cow COd WMlltncl transac:tMns IASllALL Amltlun I.Neu• BOSTON ltEO SOX-Signed Oene Wfl· llem•. outfllt<ler . to • one·vtar contrect CLE VELAND tNOIANS--Announceo reslonetlon of Fred KoenJo. thlro 1>1t1 coecPt MILWAUKEE BREWERS-Signeo R•ndV 11t1ed\t, outflel<ltr 10 • one·ver contrec:t. NEW YORK YANKEES-S1one<1 Brien Fl'her tnd Denni• Rumuu•n. 1>ltc.nt"· Mike ~. Mlkt PegllerulO and BobOv Mitchem, l11fltldtf\, .•no Ille Mete, Oen Pe.-encl Henry Corto, oulfltldtrs. and Orestes OIStra<M. 11"1 t>etema'1. to one-veer contrKh ......... LMWt NEW YORK ME T!o-SIQnl<I ltooer McOoWlll. plfchtf', IO . ont·vMr contrK I Nemld ltut tv StaVll '!>rlno·trelnlne lnllruc· !Of end KOU! PITTSBURGH PIRATES-Signed S.mmv Kht llla, 1hortttoo, to a one·vt1r cont reel POOTIALL Natltnel l"Mlblll LMeut ST LOUIS CAROINALs--+la m1<1 Mel Rtnfto lll'llnllvt lllck cOICl'I ' YOUTH BASkl!TBALL Qty .. Newoert ... di l'll'TH, SIXTH GllADE LaAOUI Hlfbof' Vlfw 1 O Ander"" 4 3 Mlrlner1 J J Newport Ht'9nll l 6 It~~ M1rlner1 74, Andlrllll 22 HIQll Kortr• IMU (Ml, 10, C.larll (A), 14 Andlrllfl 3', N-POrl t'lllontt 26 Hlgl'I tcOttrl Heu IAI. 11. Hataen (HJ, 11 TH•D, '°""™ GIUDI LIAOUI Ander"" 1 O Hert>or vi... J 6 ~wportlffcll I 6 .Kll'lt sar. AnclerMll 31, NtwPOrl 81Kn 0 • Hltlll acorers MlcMll1l1n tA>, 14. Turner (A), SWIMMING SeutMm hdk Masten Meet ,., ........ ~ ... , .. ,. ... ...... 200 lluttertt\t -I. Dtnnl• Skuolntlll (New· oort-Co.le Mese YMCA) 50 bKll\trOll• -2 Skul>l!'tkl 100 brNtltfrOll• -3 Sllu1>ln•kl SINM>ttS SOf'T1aALL " ........ a..dl '"--- ·~ MunftnofOl'I a..ctl 9, l.AK AlemllOt l to.It MIM 4, Wlstmlfl\ltr J Sent• Ant s. Whittler • 'ounleln V1t1ev llrott1 14 "ounteln v 111t• Al'llll>tK 4 ' • , + ( ' . Rollins altePs- • image tonight By JERRY 8\JClt ,,T ......... .._ LOS ANGELES -Howard Roll- ins has portrayed lO many heroic figures that he welcomed the op- portunity to put a little t.amish on his Rollms, ~ho in the past has stalTM m "A~r'sStort' and ••Raftime" and the TV 1erici 'Wildside,' plays Otis, a man who controls a aana of teen-aie thieves much hke a modem. day FaJin of Charles Dickens' ''Oli- ver Twist." The movie. which also stars Joanna Cassidy and Brandon Doualas, will be broadcast tonight. Curtis Hanson wrote and directed the film. Speaking of the unsavory role Rollins said: "l don't care how wcU he treats the kids, you ca,n 't get away with pushina drugs. Then I read ~n the script hegeu k1lled. I said, ·OK.'" The story con· cerns a runaway boy (played by RolU.1 Douglas) who becomes a runner for Otis. His mother, Cassidy, is fran- tically searchin• for him. ~ "I've been doing so many films out here I may have to relocate from New York," he said. "Or at-least become more classically bi«>astaJ. rm out here aJI the time now. The more time I spend here the more I get used to it. I've done very httle work in New York reccntJy. Just three days on this film." Soon aft.er complctin$ the ABC movie, Rollins was cast 1n the hero mold again. He plays an undercover FBI llfent in the CBS movie "The Johnnie Gibson Story ... It's about the first black woman FBI undercover agent; played by Lynn Whitfield. His la.st thrcatrical film was .. A Soldier's Story." "I like theatrical film because you can explore the subject with fewer leashes on you," he said. "There's more artistic freedom and that I like.'' i._ TURNTABLE TIPS Wh,tney's albuDltops the-charts By tff Associated P,ett. The following afc Billboard's bot record hits as they appear in next week's issue of Billboard magazine. Copyright 1986, Billboard Publi· cations, In c. Reprinted with per- mission. HOT StMGLH l."Kvrle" Mr Ml11tr (RCA) "' 2."'Sar•" St1r~lp IGruntl 3 "How WIH I Know'" Whltntv Hou,ton (Arl1tal •."TMM OrH mt" HHrt tC11>0ol) • S."Sacnt Loven" Atlantic Starr IA&.Ml 6."Sllant Runnl119" Mike a. The Mechanics IAlla ntlcl 1 "The s-tnt hboo" Sade (Pol"trelll l."Uvl119 In A,,_kA .. Jamn Brown (Scotti 8re>1 I 9 "Lift In a Northern Town" TM Of Mm Academv cwarn« 9rot J 10."Klne For e 01v" TllOmPIOll Twin' (Arlttl ) 11.''lt.O..C I( In the US A '" JOfln COWlr ~mp (Rivi ) 12."Wlltn tht Go1n41 Gall Touotl'" 8111V Oc .. n (Jive) 13 ."Nltllla" EltOll JoM (~) 14 "Rodi Mt A"*'9uS" F11CO (A&.Ml IS "T1r11n 8ov" &alll~e (Mtnl\lll1nl 16 "Runlam" Stlno (A&.MI 11 "'WNt You Need'" Inn IAtlantlC) 11."DIV Bv 01v" TM Hooten IColumOl•I ''"Thi• COUid 8t "" Nlont" LovtrtlOV IColumbl1) 20 "Sancllfv Yourself'" SllTICM Mino' IAa.M· Vlroln) TOf" Lh I "Whilntv Houtton" Whllntv HouitO<'I (Arl1t1) l."Promha" ~ (Portr1lll l."'Wtlcom. to the Rtal World"" Mr Mltltr I RC Al •."Thi BroadwlV Album" 81r1>r1 Strt1'8!1<1 ICOlumble) s "'Hlatf'.' ..... ,t (CaPllOO 6."Scartcrow" JoNI Couoar N\elltneamP !Riva ) 1 "Kntt 0-In the HOOClll" Ster1hl1> (Grunt) L"8rothtrt In Arm•" Dirt Strei!• (W1rn« 8ro•) t."Thl Ulllmttt Sin" Ouv OstlOUl'nt IC8~ Anoc:lattdl 10."0nct Uoon A Tlmt" Slmolt Mino• IAa.M· Vlroln) ' • ..... 'I r ~C>, ,, ,, ..... ·~-.... ._···~· $ :-: .. :,. ...... ~·· ---. -mfAPlW ~--~ 52MJJI lllll.l -.1111 _. ... -·~· CIDM MZ.tttJ U..n&J ..,._ .- ~---,M:l'IC .... '91ll·MI Dl•f1t.M5e IL,_ ...., .... a.asmmo _,__Til Sll·Slll Ml-74-M -"..,. .,._,WOODMCI ..-"1MI 551.fUS cunu111.-1 u..a Ni I llYll ., .... ~ l'ACR .. ,,, <m> ett•» ....... u-.. , , . ,KRUttWIT uamtw ro,. IU.llll m.uu Mom sues Don Everly over house \ NASHVILLE (AP) -Margaret E. Everly has filed suit against her son, pop singer Don Everly, in an attempt to have him sign over the title to her Nashville home. In a Chancery Court lawsuit, Mrs. Everly said Don and his brother, Phil, bought the home for her and her late husband. Isaac Everly in 1958. • .. tlM021 UAllMl4 .ramam-41M £DWamlS TO. coml .. ,. Sll·'5GO £DWamlS £l TOIO IPG-UI • OIUOlf :.a.i-49 .... ~'--1111 ... - NOW SHOWING! .. MIMI• -Ml.e770 EDlfmS calTO CDnl[ u----,M:ftlA--• .....i-M4-m0 llMmS.--T -m..- • OUIR lllll.l -U4-Jtll UAcm cono n11n1•1•1 DMlml RLME ceno The residence was originally titled in Isaac Everly's name, but Phil and Don Everly made most of the mortgage payments on the property -and took tax deductions on it -~~-······~~~§~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ until 1966, according to the lawsuit. I LUXURY THIATHS The parl:nts si~cd the .property ~ sz. • 1111 Mau. w .. IUl•r * DRIVE-INS m~ back over to their sons when the WALK-IN~ * "-!..:T~;.":.r .. ~1;·.!':,~·; Internal Revenue Service questioned ijt.UtJ N1i' m4.n4J 4 ]~>:-~s:v.=W STADIUm a the legality of the tax deductions in -···· ····-····--·····-• -I 966, Mrs. Everly said io the lawsuit. S HOUSK c•~ CIUICKSR.VC• .,.., UI ll!U "'"' llrr Sltfoy"' s She said her sons "promised" they :~~T.~s n~T.~.~ would t:nnsfenitlc to the house to bC1" and her husband "once the tax TMK HITCtea (11) f>lua Co·Hll f'rl ... 1 N'9ftt (A) benefits were exhausted." • Phil Everly bas signed his 60 percent interest in the house back over to her now that the mortgage has been paid, the suit says. Mrs. Everly is asking for a court ruling that Don Everly has abused bis "confidcntiaJ relationship" with her and requiring him to sign bis interest in the house over to her. OOn Everly was in California Tuesday and could not be reached for comment, said a secretary at Mercury-Polygram Records. His attorney, Craig Benson, said he had not seen a copy of the l~wsuit and refused to comment. The Everly Brothers became pop stars in the late 1950s and catly 1960s, recording sucb bits as "Bye Bye Love," which rose to number one on both the country and pop charts in 1957. "Wake Up Little Susie" and "All I Have To Do ls Dream." The Everly Brothen went solo in 1973. but reunited in I 983 and released a new album, "Born Yester- day." earlier this month. Alt DO PICT\!m Nml'TATtOll Ill AllOCIATIOll WTTI SllYU IOllll "'ITllW w--r PANAVISION• •• 0 ,,.., .... ' Tll·ST41 UUAa q .... rwnuifW1'\-...: w ..n-\I• ·--.. -· ,.., ... ,.,,, .... ...... ..-.. ~ , ... . C91l ... ~ \! ..i· ·--....... ~ ,.,,. .... ... ~ ... ~~ ...... l!P... .. ,.. ----· -.c..... ....... °"""'~ •'loNJ 11·• .. ~,--, ....... u-. ....... ~. -~-' D sr.t ......... ~. ,., . .._,,..._.......,... ... -.......... -.-') orettu in· oink ~ .-... _ ......... i- \l't\J~ ~-lllf .. .,. • .-,IUOI ,_ ._.c-o. ..... ...._. ..... ~ ,,. 1\'ll ...,..,. IAl_C.-_ •Wl -............. ..... ........ ~ .. ,,..,,. u ... , ... , ,,_nr... .. .,. Ac;;:;.l H omlnHI 11Utt llOMI'~ ...... ., '·'° • l :U T...: Hn'CICll (Ill) SHOWS AT •:SO & 1 :50 cEnTuAY cmeoome [:J ......... .... K ... I., I :001:10 S:Jo 7:30 &. 9'40 OOMt A110 OUT ... KVSllL Y .. ..u C•t ' SHOWS AT 1: 10 3:2S S:JS 7 :50 &. 10:00 OUT CW A"lltcA .. , SH OWS AT 12:,S J :SS 7 :00 & 10:10 IN 70MM WILDCATStaJ SHOWS AT I : IS 3:30 S:4S l :OO& 10:11 I -....au110 SHOWS AT 1 :Ob 3 : IS S:2S 7 :45 • IO:OS 11 Ac .. tmY Homlntlon1 COUHt PUllP\.& (Ill) SHOWS AT 1:01 4:05 7 :05 a. 10 ·05 OC,L TA"°"" (11) ~kU ... ifhlma re Oft I:("' Street 2 (It) OOMt A.o OUT .. ~-Ly *..U (Ill) ~'" Spluh (~) TMCCOLCMI .., ....... C"t-• ., Mad Mu S 11"0·1 >) "'ln'TYt ..... K n.f':.!~11e11, Tiii• 11 How (9') MeltTO'YtC~ IN) f't111I IOI DALMATIONS (0) Clllld ~rlCH Charttd OlllVI l!S D••• l :Jt WUayafl:H Whda/UdH U frat Uelftl let•lll ...... . ..... , • • * B ARG AIN MATINEES 11.!CiNfJA • "1Ru f Rl[JA' •<,I · 'IR> Rll.' .H, • * • \A'<.R(IA• '". Pf>H iRll.IAN f<, * • I I, •' ,. \ Al-IMj • o ! A UI * LAKEWOOD ent!!• 90UT lllmO NKll NOlft.IM'TTI ..... _,..,.OUTIN .-.Y11W111 IMta.Uwt llU IMI IJRYUWMO NmY IN .. INK (M-111 121M llll 4tl0 t.aS .... lhts 9'h WllKS 111 lll!M ti .. 11• 7.U 1'11' lAKEW Crnte1 South llUlOI tlll/hcllllr II Doi A11t1 PIX 1t1 12'MMtwt ... lttM CHUCll ...... DtLTA FOICI 111 IWIWtMt••1 ... • WOOOT N.LIN ----(M-IJI 1 .. a.a .. st .. IMI ........ NICI In IMOW ONlT OOUT lllmO MOUT .... AU NITTY IN '9NI( 1,.111 l!la WI.._.,_ ltU , .... OOHT~ HK« NOlftlllml ..... IOWNNOUT IN ... , MW r., n roff a.11 Stat .,. 1e.ae • I I ACMllMT ...,....,.noNI """" ..__.. THI COlC>a PUIPll CM-111 1.-4olJ 7•• lltU ..... .,_. In lllOW ONT IM&T ..... ~.,_.. 2 ACAOIM'f ...... noNI MUIPMT'S ICHMNCI,.. I II 1tlaf ._ t 1U 7t .. lt1U TifUNO .. AUIY ce IMJi .. MS•U IMS OOll T ITUIO PIX Ill lolJ Ml loll .... lltlJ • llOUT ITmO ... Gel ..... lt 1'/ltMM'f ~noNI OUT Of AlllCA !NI l1M41HP ... I .... ........ ...attTIMOW7 OCKM MA_,. WILOCA Tt 111 h U 4tlt ... Mt 1 .. 11 ... lllct °""' Sll·Sfll 1·00 N ... fll I :II ,. __ ,......,_.si.o11tw~111111tll"'lllft•'•" l:IO ,. ClllMm UMlf U Aililwmlf1._F .. '"-----~~· ANAHEIM 111'111! !tM(leM IM rl'f Clrot.f'I ...... ,, ""'"' TMUNDll ALLIY f1ll MIAIUN'""' c~u• uH "' JUNOf.I WMtttOltl flt ,,. ._,.,. IAOU ,,..,,. \ ------ BUENA PARK 111•1!11 ""'''"" .. w rt ..... " a-ofl ....... ,_ TMI HITCMI• IOOY DOUILI l o HABRA ....... ""u.IJ \ • ~f_..AIW "'"" '" ,... ....... -----·- HIWAY39 TMUNDH AA.UT 1• lltlAl(IN' IN! ~-*­W'llDC.Afl DtLTA FOaCI .OUT .... ,,,,_ Nm'f IN ,.._ ,..Ill .,.., ..... ..,.1111 ...... "'. .... , ...... (1) l:ll u. ll:Jt ...,IWll ......... SISTElr (N-1 J) le!!U~lt -=-• " .,..Tl MmTRl"(PI) 7.JI,~· edwards souTH COAST PLAZA '>46 2711 ft ... I', I • ... ).... •• ,. .-...... -, -r· ... ··~--­.,. ... P9U" (N.U) 7:11, , .. edwards e~•STOL '>40· 7444 ""' a .., • a "' ....... ,aflil'A ........ ..,._ "f/I" (I) 1:11,Ul, ll:lt ... ... . 'W.laTS"(I) 7:tt, t:15 llClll~ "ti.\ IUIS" (I) 5:11, l:JS. IQ •lllCllU'I,_ ,,.__ ... 1IT • RICI" (PC) 7:11, ... edwards C INE MA I CE NTER 979-4141 HAI.ti! >Ill"'.,-• l(•AM' .. Jc;• 11fR(1f I fH"fR L r.'\l'j Mf 4jA, QM:l- "TI( lfUA NIU" (I) 7:lt .... ...llt ....... "'. IOmYau"(I) ws, .. , .. a&mun ___...(I) 1-Jl tlS ..,_ lllUH•I na 111•nr 1-A,...(N.Ul "Dll • lll 111" .. .., "ltl___..CI) 1:11. t.tl •••wr" .. ... lllll Mel"' (I) till. I .. 11 ~--­ "tlTW ... "(PCJ ........ ..... "IUCATS" (I) 7:tt. tJS "fll" (I) ~ l:tt. 11:1$ IWTB-11l llTCID'" (I) 1-.Ht. • TUCl lllll'f nmo ...... "'. llllllY .,_. .. (I) l:ttkll ll:H .-s-UU.fflll .,., w-•trrtS _,IC(" 11\ t• (Pl.U) • llM:I .... STOE> ..,tr Ill 1• t:IS II acMOll' --11119 • 1llCI .... rt8IO .,.C..'9U" 1-. ltJS (N.lJ) UUYPIU ms .... ..... -... 11rr'S mlllCI" I•. US. ll:Jt (Pl.U) llJmllO ........ (1) 1a.•• ' ·---.._ .•. ~mr• ••• ti----·---.,. .. ...u- 1'A *1t fl.U) ..,_ ... ,,., .._•11••"1 11• 11·• J-.lnfl.lJ) ·---··-----11T ...... ,., ?:11.IMI '1111111m"., Hl.ld .... DU"' (N.lJ) til C.--.L .,. llfCID' (I) .. ... 1 .. ..,... .. IU1I" (I) .. ........ m:r(I) l:H.W .... UAl"" fN.lJ) l:!I. ms 111111~ (I) edwards S A DOLE BA C "- '>8, ')88C f • ... • • lo# ••• I 0 A ---.,. llfCID" (I) 1'.ll. t:t5 ---'11UCATS"(I) 7:tt.tlS edw11rd11 Mt<;,<;,10..,. ~l(JUMA, ''-''1 ...,.'.'I . .. ...... .,._..eta a.:n "WUCITr (I) tll.~t:tt. ltiS u----.,. .. ....... .... u, >IS. 1"9 ..,._ "fll'" ti) l:!l,""1.1\ IUI Orang. Coast DAILY PILOT/ Monday, M arcl'l 3. 1988 IT'S llAID TO IBEVE LR . WAS OllCE SO DIEMY 111111 FO.-MY DIEMl llOllE IUST 8Y LOOOIO Ill TllE DAILY c ALL 842-56J~l!_~·~F =cA;LL;1N::o~F:::Ro::M~N;.:oR;;.TH:.. ::oitA=No:e..:;=~~=!!!!!======"~o='=·s~~~u~SIFl=l=Ds=. =~~ ~ IF CALLING FROM SOUTH O~NQ! l!Q!rt IHcla lOlt laat. IHtla IHI 1u C._tatt 2171 C..ta... MM lut. IHtla 2140 ltwJNt ltack 2HI G1ra1u ltr lut Lett I,..... ltZS -· -· _.._....... a.·· 1,~ WYllW 38r 2L. fem rm wlretrto. 2/66. 2/IX. w/plllOfamlO UllA 111 "'1 IUWlll YILUIE Beaut furn. walk to ocn 2740 11M llWUI 3BR 2',.BA ..+ fern rm. crptt, drps. gar 11200. ocn V\I, epa & patio, to yd tBr a Hr, trig, rl'lQe. -1br·l«t75 2br·S1175 pool Encl angt car gar Very For Iott tntltle n•med Great view. Pool. tennla. Ce~I Pete, Bkr 751-319 1 mllnt. LUCiiie, 498-0500. leun<lry. pool, cwpor1. No ipa, amenities 722-6822 1 clean. dry, etec. hf cell, Nr Kelly LOOlt• Ute• amall H curlty. Reduced 10 OLD TOWN HB CLASSIC ltatla ..,_.... 2 pet• 1650. MSOlmo. .., •n. SPACIOUS 3BORM 2BA oc Falr $90 761-3531 La11le Wht/aabte. Vc;ty 13 8 ~·1g~~3~~r m I PoHlble 3br jlnl bllct to toc@XNFRONTt 931 w 19th St. 548.()492 Live whef• you f\l ve /view Next to b<:h ~ar.lllarge single garage. Hrbr & Wiiton 850-2332 ~an upper s7007i uty 3Br 281 hOl'Tl9 Lg dectt Oeklxe 2/bd tlbe uppef •Spec:tecul11 apt• age Vrly S 1250 Avtll E/11de CM Oulel area •Ut l•n pd 539-8191 Agt co11 xtra roomlor ottloe N~ w/g8f81Q9, U 75/mo. •48 •1 & 2Br. 1 & 2Ba 9'111" now VIiie Rent ala S80tmo ~0-•111 Ft1 ... Jt 1100 vma Pacific Townnou.e ly turn. Step110 tx:h. Gd Hamllton Av.. 8T5-9797. ·:~ townhOUMt 675-4'912 or 754-1792 I ' 2742 CE:3BR 2BT 2BA 2BA, avail 6/1 prkng $2500/mo ., __ ,,,.._ 18 .. d Its N * lreplacet IPlOltlla.,, :.;;••;.;;r.;•&I•;..-----~--..._ ,..,epace rent S900/mo962-1182aft8 87s--0214or385-1378 . ~..,. '·,.. u . o •Private balconles or "'"' TOllllE $130, pet•. ocean breeze. __ __ pet1. Pool, lndry 5"45 Garden patio• 1 mlle to beach. 6"2·2357 IVS In Co111 Mesa, 645-6458 lmH . · 144 Apartatatl mo. Lv mag 648-3334 ~eaiLLll Storage Spaces Avallabte ti ftr Salt , 14 28R 28A. yd. gar, poof, Ea1111de deluxe 2BR 1BA. WIY HTt ... De ~nza Bayllde VIiiage tennis gym alarm No 11.IMI 1 lev.I huge yard c.der •3 Ughtec:t tennl1 ooorta 2BA 2B . lrplc, din rm 300 E Coast Hwy.NB CUSTOM BLDG LOTS peti l.se SsOotmo Avall I l • HH decte.' frplc. w'alk-tn •2 Swimming p()()ls Amenltlet'S985 64'7-7252 873-1331 Mon -Fri 9-•pm ~ ICf• 1 2 acte. xii eree of now s.e&-723" I •• .. clOMt dlhlll(. frig wtd •S1reem1 & Ponds v.,untis bachelor with • San Juan Capl1trano • t BR #Urn, trpl, view, lnc1u'd1d. ~.r .. ge. •Sorry, no pets private sleeping atcova Ctaaercaal St5•,900K·l 26",SOOK * •HIT&l.I* * 11100/mo. yrly Incl utlts $795/mo. Alk tot Jeen •Furnllhlng• aveu Quiet' and charming I.E. Salt/Ital Atk for Lln<la G. Agent CALL US REGARDING 675-5511, call Barb or aft 631· 1264' Gu for Heating & COOktng S&OOtmo 64•·7211 agt - 71•-4'93-8812 IRVINE RENTALS 6pm•9•·23•2 ~ Paid I i /Offi It --lei.i~I \:. WESTCLIFFltbd condo. al atll ct ta I.I. Waatt4 1125 l"IH Ot11Utafftrt hl~H Puianla~ i;( WHV NOT CALL unfurn, adults, no-pets, 2769 156.666 C ash p1 u1 lll~llOO 2607 -~---· I IH-1111 S675tmo, 673-66•0 *3600. 1368. 525 & 253 SS0.000 of diamonds & •OAANGETAEE 1Br w · I •lie ltatall -Sq Ft 1617WESTCLIFF. gem 11ones WANTED Condo Patio, on stream, * ALK TO BEACH* Elegant 2•00 •f 3BR 2BA. IUWlll VILLAU • · Nwpt Ben 5•1-5032 Ag! home or lot Capl1treno pool, Jae, tennis. ale 1 ' t .. bltln• Utllt Incl tam rm, din rm. frplc, dbl 15555 Huntington VIiiage I 27M Beech Dana Point area $675 No pe11 673-5003 1650/mo Fee ga.r. StOOO 645-81&6 Lane from San Oteoo Mal 54':> sq It S•25/mo 171•)2.e-0-9780 --TIWHT .. 71-lllO E/slde IBR. gar Avall Free~· a . north on Beach charming Westclltf furn Balt:>Oa Penin Pvt entry & BRANO NEW, 2/bd, 1'1~ Q "•ttt Clean 760-9792 ••• t.11 OCEANj;RONT 28r. frplc. Aprll 1 NO 1>9tL ulel to . Addeo. Well 00 ntsmkr Qyiet ~vi nowt .... ba, lrpl, earprt, garg White water view s1100 area $440 150 E. 211t. McFadden. $395 Incl utils 722-7268 Appro11 700 sq f1 Divided twnhse near UCI Cam-646-6938 or 54•_.29• --3 01 pua, long or short term yrly Connie 675-8404 . 1 lmat 2644 Granny Ila!. Room at rear Into 3 large & mini • lease, 6•2·26•9 aft Spm C-• -. l. Aemod 2Br-;-gar. plllo. No . · · hse w/kltchenette blh llcea Prvt lront entrance. IJUlraat tlC• pets 2 people. $650/mo NOW LEASING cozy & quiet No' pets' crptd. Bthrm $395 • 1st. ltalH/CtdH FOUND ADS ARE FREE Cal: FOUND sm•ll black dog vie Goldenwest/ Edinger H B 842-8322 after 7pm FOUND smart blk Ooo. vcty Goldenweat & Ed- inger 8•2-6322 af1 7pm LOST Cat, Aedtbfown, 8- hursl & lndlanaPoll• ~ W&fd 962-6010 LOST cnarcoal gray Per- saln Cat named ~ax. vcty Hrbr Vu Hiii• Please call 1f MMtn or tound Reward! 720-2922 or 759-0911 ltatral 2102 NB 38R 2BA. upper unit, 111PS to bch, small ocean V19W s 1150, yrly Priced rite 10 please! 2611 388 w Bay 722~12 Prefer engf fem S325 + last No lse Nr !8th & S700'a 2br pool home * 2BA 2ba Upttalrt [)pix ---_ •HARVARD COURT• S 100 dep 631•92s9 Monrovia 1n Coste Mesa LOST Ferret(flke mink) NB freeway access mod look 6•2-9363 M-F 8-5 area 11 personal lrlend & 539-6191 A 1 1 Cpts/drp1 Full gar -...81iBnU Brand new apar1men11 Lel1ureWorldpvtrmtb111n companion 648-865..e HB 1 BLK to bcil, 2BA IBA apt w/sn<leck & gar $675 JAOllS llULn PlllP lllUIEIHT 71C/lll-1171 About 2 bike 10 ooean 3br lncis den up<Jated kll & gar only $800 539~ 191 g cos S700/mo. 661-3653 af1 /6 ~ 19 Ideally located in Irvine lux apt tor mat act111e BAYFRONT BLOG W,,~~:r::!~~inu?;~~.c~:', * 2BR 2ba Up11a1rs Oplx &PUTIHTI 1 & 2 Bedroom floor ptens lady S350 770-6-456 -SI i~·Ei~~~2~~~~s Penmll-00 :Cud, r•ew carpet, paint, Cpts/drps Full gar Beautlful large Apt1 In Pool & Spa PROF M/F to shr CM hm. TllE l fllTUY llUI f/p, comm pool, tennis $700/mo, 661-3653 aft/6 quiet neighborhood own ba/bd $375/mo NEWPORT BCH Ole, aprl( ~11~ 171-2048 $ 1250 mo Judy 64, 6-7171 C • Ju ~ Pool Spa No pet1 Walklng distance to avall 3-15, call 631-1862 643 SQ ft,sttwr Nr p CH ' "' +toll If any tHH t .. ar Rlili 1 · S • __ & Post ottlce 646 29• 7 < i.11au ltau--2141 1Br upstra. frplc, patio, 1~~r;' 21s1 5•8-2:~: I *Shopping Pvt room w/lndry tac In Penual ltrYicH -new crpt & paint $750 _, __ 1 * Theatres H B nr bch, 1295 w/kltc Olllll EUIAIOE 3Br 2Ba, OC'1 VU North lat/fast ~ dep Open Su~ lllfllT II * Restaurant& priv S325 F/n-smk Af1er NEWPORT CENTER 3004 Laguna New w/w crpl 2•5. 802,.+ Iris 760_8515 2BA 2ba, vaulted cell Best 1 · * Parka/Tennis Coort1 6pm & wkn<ls. 962-534'0 Full service private offices ESCOllTS·lllELI lhru-out S 1•50 mo lte ..., 150-250 sq It each No pets 818/26-4-5265 Ev 1BR encl gar llove & buy In town. only ... so. s et • c I e d u n I I s Room in No Laguna S325 180 NEWPORT CNTR DR 8• 1-5627 Ital lltatt Ftr Salt CertH ••I••• ---refilg No pet~ Ullls Incl $50 ott move In coll I w/Cathedral Celllng.s mo• ''tut 2 blks from (71 .. )710-1070 •·LMll I *llEIT llllE* $625/mo 675-6606 2035 Pomona bch & downtOWfl Aval! " en IUmFIL 2107 Studio. utils Incl, ocean TSL MGMT 8•2• 1603 I NOW TAKING now 1st/last •9•-5059 CdM dlx Suites A/C. I IHlrHtiH 3012 ltalH/CtdH C ••• UHL ••• Worlh more 3br 2ba "m vlew,secludedS350.Fee 2Br 2Ba, lrplc, balcony LA-RG--E 1/bd 78-J-1RESERVATION S FOR ----'' 509' F • · 1 oann,' •• •y OCCUP•NCY Fo Rtttl1/Jltttl1 2711 ample pkg, utlls 3 janitor * •PPLE 11-111 Pr~ate ' .. perfect com"'natlon ol frplc mod kfl 2 gars TELEllEIT lll-1110 "' ernleat-Vacant $555/mo, appt only.~ """ " r -2855 EC H 675 6900 " " "' s S950tmo 720 9422 I dtrecllone and lnlo st W'J lesson $15hr Setup me. -' ltatral 1002 comfort & elegance 1o50 many Others avail OUTST'"NDING-VIEW • 5•9-0•33 or 650-3673 UllU IUOI added 10 an excellent 53&-61'91 Agt cost ,.. Charming 2/bd, 1 ba frpl . _ -1-8~•9•2. 8 00-5 30 PM llTll Ill DESK SPC S 150/mo Gar bu111nes.s system 55•·65•0 •••1&llS -2br/2ba mobile home on L It den ore lg pauo wtbsy .,.,. Spyglau Hiii locauon Ctrtaa •ef iil 2i22 the bluHs on Treas 111 sunrr sundck. 3 btks to ••'---'-':....._. , •t••• 1ela 2'41 Wkly rentals. Low rates · SCIENCE TUTOR Bank <>~s Foreclosur-This home offers lov..,., bch avail Mar 15th I •~LI ~ I -s 135 • u /W ly C view Gd parkg 6"2 50 IO 0101,y Chem • P""'"lcs •.....-v ..... ~, pvt bch, pool, MC gate 5900, 675_9115 luxury ocean vlew on o P k olor .,. .. ,~ All areas. Great linanc1no. ocean/bay views from liv *UI( Fiii* S 1600 yr tse •99-270• mo H••flEllTI Blull I Br 2Ba lull TV, maid service. tree IRVINE/nr OC Atrporl 1 or Dr Belman 675-31•8 Luxury & Custom Homes rm, mllr sulle & beau ti-2 ~ 2 .. garage .. skytlgttta, Cute unlurn 1 BR 1 BA .,...,. kitchen Completely furn coffee, heated pool & 2 ottices avail In CPA olc TENNIS Lessons Prv & Agent 85•-2•60 ~~'rs P~':iledquetamprilyperm1 5 tr 9 p 2 1c 5 . p1t1~.2~rand new Mj11ita VitJt 2167 duplex. gar. stove, patio LP•k9~:r~~~lnewga; A~~upetlll:~ 1 •ncl dishes & unens Color lleps to ocean Kitch'• !!pOO-t•o'n~st. 't~rllb~a~y. ~~-1 Seml-prv, Cont'•ct Ian r Y Fee""" .. 3Br 2ba fncd yd St 125/mo $72~ • sec 992-2•89 1Bdrm ' · 5590 TV & Stereo. lg pvl deck 11111111 985 N Coast Hwy. ""' ' ""' Rich 536 1980 Ollll lllllll 1~:dJe::r1~ec:ifj~t3m· TEUIEIT 111-lllO Call Mrs Stlemerllng STUDIO APT, 3 blk lo t>ch, 2Bdrm 1Ba $695 1 Lndr~ rm S 1200/mo Laguna_Beactt. •94-5294 ~0~~1n~m~~~~~·uf~~t : Eaplt,..;Ht Immaculate I Bdrm VIiia 300, 2 blth, tri-tevel, FP. 8•0·6112 or 995-7157 avail lmmed. S•OOtmo 301 Avocado 6•2-9850 •99· 266 Reis pleue WUll IOTEL lrlendly atmosptter .1 _,,;,.i_r.m,"'-~------ =boa•n v~~· :.1:~ac~r;,e ~carpet, fresh p:lnti • ..,.,. ltac~ 216, 675-9115 George Lrg 3BR 2BA nr oec , ,vacant studio apt In No Wkly rentals now avail pos19b5le~~25rd212e.ms~osra11nccg.,Ckil• Cart 301& Y m crowave wu er S i•OOtmo 3BR 2BA, fam On Narcissus . 2BR 2BA 2 car gar S7So/mo Clllt Lag attlcH!ncy kit, bricl( $129 50 wtc & up 227.e .,.. :~hor~:~.,•n ll~g~\ cot,,,<:~~ ~1:';j911;11ge S 1•001mo rm wllrPIC. dbl gar Call car gar • Piii lndry wllti Dave agt 5•6-2313 pallo & carPort Beach 2 Nwpt Blvd. CM 646-7••5 lfWPllT IUCM UIYlrTTH wl d S 1050/mo lea" blka. S500/mo 1 utils, & ---For 1 yr old Nights & blinds mirrors. deluxe lmAI...,...,.. -Allison 631·1266 60_7211 A 1 2Br 1011 upstrs 571 S600 !lee 1 non-smkr SEA I Sii LOHE Full Service Building C r3 kitchen and \un deck I •BR 2'~BA hse com. pool. I ~~~\ .* -g I Joann Max 2 people. No Agt/ownr •9•-755 t 3028 w Pacific Coaat Hwy Corner or Westclltf & lrvtne WkndS M 6-4 2 • 7 26 E .. Reduced to s 1•3.950• llHICEI PRICE tenn11 vu. OR FR, $2200 I :., , Ct1t1 MHI 2624 pets $535 Agt 550-1015 .-.. rt ltacL 2669 Newpon Beach Refrlg TV VIEW SUITE • Babysitter lor 5 yr Boy, my DUPLEX-2Br Iba each mo Bkr/own 640-• 152 b-..-=-· I! • S 125 ICl-1101 COM time 3 dye/wk (714) 67 3·4400 So-ol-PCH $264,900 cus TOM Remodeled 3 1 .. 1 lllTll FREE HIT Ill~ IHI 2BOAM x 2BA s703tmo .. wk sgl, no dePoS~ 640-513• or 673-8626 521 Carnauon By owner BR.2BAw/dbtgarage,tn 1BR1BA CondoSp&r.lous IBA at S535/mo 2BR2BA 1BA, upper unit. Retrlg dShwshr, 110-..e Vacatita ltatah PIUIEOFFICEIPlCE lllYllTTEllEEHI 673-02•1or673-15..e1 Old Corona S1550/mo rooms. !lcean vlaw S595/mo All bull! ins, dshwr,balcony.vlew incl NoPets5•5-•855 2722 E 17thSt.Cosi..Mesa 675 9797 S900tmo 642-0• 17 lndry rm. nr bch & shops 2201 Pac1!1C ---600 1200 sq ft s 1 10 pe My tiome 3 daysfweell Ct1t1 Jlt11 1024 735-H 1 W 18th St TSL MGMT 6"2-1603 * 1 IHll ... lllO* LAG BCH Lux 1 BA, tleeps sq ·ti gross Avail immedr some eve/weetcnds Reta 1---------JASMINE CAK 3BR, lge **THE BLUFFS Very TSL MGMT 6"2· 1603 -, -Relrlg di•.. a•" • I • on bch maid, prtcg, C II I req d 646-60•3 112J ,000 lamlly rm view. wd firs spactOYS Exec home 3Br New 3Br 2 .+Ba. 2 car gar· incl t•m 0p~Ts·:~;.:8~Se 311•·21 (617) 658·813• a or appt to see A steal a11ttl1 prtce Under ' top cond. lovely p1110 2' .ea . retreat Neat 11 Bdrm Apt w/belcony, age. micro SI 150 mo 135 eves or write Box •3 8 3 O. 5 3 0 Cr• t g Hskpr/Chdcr weekdays. market Prime location $2300/mo 760-163• clean & avafl 3110 0. 0 pool No pets S•95/mo. Rochester SI 980-8572 2 & 3 Bdrm unturn yrly, Boston, MA 02117 · 631" 1266 t car re q 2 · 6 Pm ---------i 3BR H.BA, fenced yard Jull 1350 dePosltl O-ilde $1500/mo. Agt 6"0-5580 6"6_:3618 NwptHgta area 2Br 2Ba. summer. winter Cannery I l S ··~~I > . 759-1066 NB flOEPTllll(IOI(-Needs TLC Mull sell of PCH 2br wtcarport Vu ot ocn & Catalina troml 1Br E-stde $510 Squeaky dbl gar, d/w, lndry rm Rentals, Inc 675-4606 ta la I to ~ar•niflw Dtaestics 3011 IPYIWI 110' YlfW Della Delgado 631-1266 $800's 539-6191 Ag! lee 3BR. den. 2BA ow. w/d, clean w/wood beam $825 • MC & Cleaning 2Br unlurn Oplx 122 25th 2724 -··---· LIVE II P I ·~~~-: C JI Z Z gar s 1•00 722-7810 Celts No pets 990-2970 dep No pets .S•8-"•97 St Nwpt Bell $800 •;, blk 2 A condo 1n trv, OHIGe • Watertr""t Suitt rotessionalty decorated ~ r t1t1 HI l 4 1 -----to ocean 2131697 1505 fu $300/ p 1 ~· Loveable mature person 3 bedrooms. 2 baths & t , SBA mtn & city lights vu 1Br upstrs w/garage Reta Plll IETTlll W/YllW · rn. mo ro ' n-Newpof1 Beach 850 ~ to help Mom take care 01 family room Wooden •Jd 1•3Br2,.,Ba. E-Slde Twnhs Phase Ill Harbor Vu Hms recfd No pets $495/mo 2Bdrm 2Ba vaulted oetl-NEWPORT MARINAAPTS smkr. 552-4455 tv mag II Most dynamic view In two beaut children Light shutters designer bhnds, Lii l_._a_ I Ill 5 2 lrpk:s 1pa. dbl garage S 1975/mo Agt 6"0-5664' 352 V1e1orla 6•5-8161 ings. prvl patio/balcony. Beautflul 2Br 2Ba. micro, •·BDR HOUSE In HB NllWP0<1 Pvt enlry Avt hselleeptng 5•') day Wk hardwood floors Fire-1 •-""" , 1250 No Pets 722-8011 I . - --Avail April 111 Jae. bltln• No pell Ir pie. encl gar Prvl lmmed 1-800-258-9300 M 1 be E 11 11 places In 11111ng room & 3ba house Close to •SHARP Westside 2Br $900 s·3br mulU bath FR IB I • be 855-0665 or 63 t-6107pm beech, t:>Oll lllp available BrOOl<hurst & Adams, .,, or Eves (714)673-3962 us neat. ng • 1 11 P schools and Shopping space age kit trplc too r w new crpt o am 51 3951 S of S800 • ulll, calf before 1 speaking Reis Laguna amyroom rivatespa Great ale $159500 1Ba Duplex Tile lloors. 539-6191Agtlee cells loc on cul-de-sac POOLPATIO FIREPLACE pets 1e';;.0919';{.'~~8~~ 3pm 968-8767. av111 !Co•atrci1l Ptt,.rt,1 N•guetaraa380-95599Ve In arbor selling Beau11-MAAS~A~PLAN INC crpts. drps, w/d hkup.I -Lgpa!lo$530 751-3531 X-Lg1Br$61S&2Br$695 3-05 I 277 .Sitter !or Elderly -am-lully land1caped garage $600 •sec Must Deluxe lurn 1Br .; Den -•VERSAILLES 1BR $557,500 Bkr Linda 2131"50·0• 15 stand credll V" No pets Pool, ape, etc Walk to 2Bd 1Ba cpts, drps, gar Eastsfde 557·2&.41 * Avail now HB Condo .t5• dso ~ f1 STOREFRONT I bulatory temate Satur· BELLE CHASE LEE IES& IEL Ill 770-5629 I bch S 1295 Avl 3115 Dy No pets Adlt1 pref S700 Prv1 1Br. lrplc, pool, pallo, P;:':'ac ~2~d~r ~!c~ p111 Bth, all 1men111es Xlnt MESA VERDE days t0am-6pm Nr 15th G ' .. 2 • 6•2-0880, Ev 631 -4'897 Lse Avl now 5•8-723• gar No pell 399 w Bay 2131387•59001687•3292 960 2736 or 752--068 I 1 iocallon 5,.~ ,.123 & Placenua 673-7378 rea bdrm. bath .675 Cute 2Br 1Ba gray S S ., 759-9100 --------~ • • '. t •; (. • •• ·--•Of""' .. .,,..._.._ ...... ,..,.. COLDWC!U. BANl(eRO llarler home New pain! w/wnt shutters. wood E BLUFF-3bd, 2i.+ba, 2 Bedroom, 1 Bath, n.W I. 615 650-6357 Nwpt Penn 3'i 4 Br 2Ba Bal Penln •hr lovely 3BR --r I . I/ outside and situated on a llrs crpt. blinds Garage S 1•00tmo. carpet & paint. walk-In SHARP 2/bd, gas range. 2BA apt & 32 sailboat al 1,000 II. "• llfllll H ti I Ital cul -de-sac Ask 1ng Sm1 yrd Grdnr No pets 7 2 2 -17531760-0 s 5 1. cloaet $565/mo lmmedl· dishwasher. carpet & ~lra ~~~.,!~~~7~11~50 110101n1ng dock tn-FREE ~TANDING Maiai atrah" SIOO i 1•2.500 2218 Ptacentla 6-45-2566 Barbara or Rex ate occupancy 851-0•2• drape, patio, garg, no-credible view Pv1 beach lrg Show Room & OtttG" 1 ESCll 0 -2 Bedroom. 1 0-at":, pets, $650/mo ~5-5577. 3BR 3BA WATERFRONT N-amkr S800 673-6098 Corner of WestcllH & Irvine W FFICEI VThese Mesa Verde deals Elegant 2Bdrm. pool, apa " Frplc. iunrl, boat sllp a111, Sign space a\11 on WestcllH 1 t mmedla te opening. Tradition al kids/pets 2br wt gar $625 Brand new• Avall now carport. Large yard. No --;-AVAILABLE NOW• -walk lo Lido Village BIG CANYON Condo FIN· ICl-1101 I Salary negotiable, buea R l or ultra posh 413br hse S 1500/mo Agt, Ann pets $675/Month 2625 1BDRM wtcatpOf'l $620 $1800 mo yearly smkr. 10 shr, 3/bdr. POOi. , on experience Hunt-ea t y Incl• den • more s 1100 Greer. 759-9100 Bui . Eklen, Apt •F 648-8519 OR w/prvt sngl gar $650 673-27•7 or 675-01•9 spa S•75, 759-9135 PREITllllll LtcATill 1ngton Beach area Seek· n:l 1-7:170 539-6191 Ag! cost 720-1863 Res. 2 r 1Ba Clean 2Br 1Ba, QUIET. P.•tlo, pool, apa. Oc 2B 188 0 Female rmmt-;ntd, 2/bd, Aetall/Offtce space. 1681 ' tng enthuSlastlc, well Ol'- -• .. •wY .. .._n CholCe Eastslde 2br hm r•CLlllYE LllTIH garage, w/d hkups $650 NO PET~ 549-2•-47 n "'!1050r 0 ~ w/d, 2tba, S350 • •,+ viii/mo. a $2 00 sq It On corner ganiz.d per1or1 Call "" VIiia Rentals 675-•912 -gar, • • a ..... apt 722 ~es CM ot MacArthur & Cou1 Gretchen 6-48-1255 11·30-5 U ••• l .uo" I bll1n11e1sure patio • gar 3 • 2 • 2 cer gar.,,.. WE IFFll lo-w/11ppl1 $485 722 7610 """ B .B L-10421 hkups & yd S600s -..-· ---_..., • H1ghway -Pr1mespo1 1n 1 -------- 1111,000 •• • ar-ar 539•6191 Agt cosi ~~11 1 {~~!~59 Yrly 2~~ lr~ai~:':· c~11f;!, Want a selection of great BALBOA ISLAND bayfront Stir w/lem NB 2br 2ba La.nomark tocatlon 2• 1 t , EIOllW SlOlflllY One of the last buildable WlTHFRtlT w/HCI Cozy Nwpt Hghts 3BR TELE•EIT 171-1110 Pets & ltlda ok 720-9•22 lfv1ng? We can otter any-1BR, unlurn. adults. no dptx 2 car gar S•25+ uts E Coast Highway Suite Experience nffd only 1 t Ith n thing lrom a small apt to pets $675/mo, yearly, Jody 722·0•8•16-46-5646 11200. Corona Del Mar I apply. Immediate open- o' w canyon p11vacy •BR 2'A>ba. 2 slory 2BA 1 car gar spa lndry Exqu1111e •Br + lof1 home 2Bdrm $595 a 4 bdrm house If loolt-utile Incl 673-66•0 F to shr 3br hse In H.B 2 (71 4)675-•900 I Ing Salary negotlabte, only m1nu1es from $385.000 CWI Realty , lac $1oooimo' 8,.o.<145,. 3Bdr""" 5685 Ing In CM, NB. or HB _ _ _ based on experience Laguna Village Plans 6"6-0520 •93-0••6 __ Jae Decks Views Hrbr '" Clltfh 2BR 1BA I blk1 from beacti $286/mo I • t • I 2711 s · approved by c.11y Call to 1 -It - 1 _ 9 LOOK HERE' Adge gated Comm Al/I Pool No pets 6-45-9665 think 01 us llrst for thal even 'pal 0· 1 utll Cathi 960-8671 1 81 na eeklng well 0tganlzed see t~rt IC~ -Avall now $535 Oat takes June I $3000 780-6077 ----choice of Ideal living Ideal !or retired persons 1-"'0 sq f1 nr OC AlrPQf1 I career oriented person od 2 2Br Upper, garage, pallo TSL MGMT 6-42-1603 No pets 5•8-5306 Mele bl~ collar or c;on. Small olc w/wira .. ouM Huntington Beach ar .. IC4·1010 •B 2'h8A lam rm w/l)ar m eat br bltlns leisure Fl 1 al 01-1 -1 3003 Jettrey, S700/mo t I oni 2B "'' C II G 8 S3 patio kids ok • m on wa er re-Daaa Peiat ~ Deluxe 3br 2'~ba furn 8 rucl on w er lhr r $792/mo 832-• 190 1 retchen 48-1256 l/p cov deck/pa110 •9K &•t I I done g rea<2,y 2br wtgar Agt 6-40-8161 -ffff Adult comm. no pell 3•6 2Ba Beech Condo wHh 11.30 am to 5 pm REAL ESTATE HELPLINE (feel ownr 8181810-5917 * • · 1 O* kids pet $795 uty free •EASTSIOE lovely new 2Br 1Ba ~t area View. mo·s leaae. pool, tennis, same S395 + S200 dep het•t PrtJtr~f l Ill ~- Foreclosure A E Problems IHtr llltrtl IJ hatr Fbncadslc3bbrll1 ttse .. 111dds/petds I 539-6191 Agt lee 2Br 2Ba. D/w, w/d, bale. patio, gar, lndry S725 Gym, lrpl, view, 2 encl All 6 30pm 661-2985 27H , '-- 1 ns s .. a ey Y gar S950 • $950 MC. •98-•008 or 2•0-730 I patios. S 1250. 722-7067 Mate n/smkr stir 2Br 1 Ba 1 Free references 855-7292 Must self. great buy' Beaut s 1 5 o 0 1 tt er s 8 " 811 IN E w PO AT C A E ST Avall 313. 631_3u 6 COMMERCIAL-C D M • 01.S•llJWFl.flF Ctrt-al •el Jlar 1022 -5BR 4ba, 4000 sl bay & 539 6190 Best Alty lee CONDO 3 BA 2'.+ba. ._ UNFURN Upstrs 2Br 2Ba, Enjoy the Luxury of the Balboa Penln Apt 1400 ' Income, S21K. NNN P Illes vu $625K 631-•696 ---I Ocean view Pootltenn11 •PlCIFIOl TWllll Den. frplc, lg balcony, dbl beautllul eurroundlngs of '-" utlls 67S.5809 Peter ~0-7('1()/Agent 1 Newport Beach E 1,,..,. BEAUT ' UNIT DUPLEX LHllY Ctlll'I S 1500 per mo N t H BA gar No peta $775/mo Ill AHfff WT M/F 18-25 ahf furn dplx F ng 5 yr9 old, ,1n1 ren1a1 prop llllllll YlfW Brand new 3br 2"'•ba llp IAdrtan Realty 5•9-85~7 P gta epac: nu 1 33~21 Cheltam Way. Apt In a ep-aclous 2Br 2Ba 3Br 2Ba at 52n<I & Rivet. S~A"RK7L21NG 6 Unit Eut-Ing lrm has need for IBM toe 500 btk of Narcissus •BR 2BA form din rm. Inc yd dbl gar. pet ok P~ din area, garden apt Deck D Open Wknda or By NB 2 blk• b<:h 631·6522 .,.u • K grou Aaklng Dlaplaywr11., Operatore to many ament11~ to 1111 corner tot betut cond color S 1095 642·9666 Newpof1 Creal 3Br 3Ba, lndry tac. pool, carports Appl Call 2•0-1891 or Twnhme w/2 f~lca, 2 car $695,000 Bkr 9S3-1220 I w/ ..,. & weetcend avaK- Great '""es' opportuni-Acacia Tree RE 6-42-1355 MESA VERDE-3/bd, 2/ba :~lyba~~:a;edca~~; Ex~efi'C~;, ~1o:i~~:::5 --~ 661·3208 ~~.;~~: M1':~d w8rd ~~nd~5;pt ~~B12~ m~~ la11an1 I Fiaucial ~i~:~ 6,,~~ 1:~ ty, lavor11blf' linanc1ng 1HVH-S2•2.500 Must see dbl garg encl yd gar· $1200/mo 592-•6-49 Baal. ltacla 2'46 ttkup1 CallM•-0509 bch$350+ utlle963-5<416 mull tntervleWlng Mon, avail S.e75 000 Laura to apprec Highly up-dner $1150 557.2382 ---I i March 3 untll I"""', c;•ll 760-91•6/E 756 012910 graded 3br ~ba Ctr met 1 I lfWPlllT CHIT mfe81iBllU 2Br 2Be upper •·Pie)(. NR Beach & Lido Shops M/F, 2BR iPac1001 E/alde H •HI for appt. ....... 1963 Port Weybridge jMESA VERDE 3 or 4 Ba Spaclooa JBr 2'.+Ba. new Clean & airy No pell. 3/BR 2 bth f·P d/waah apt Lndry, d/w $350 1 O.J!rtaaitit1 2904 COMMERCIAL c. 0 M OPEN SAT/SUN 1-5 den spa, dbl gar va· crpt, w/d. refrlg. Im-lfW lHIMITI 7812 Ronald S650/$700 Garage like new St195 ·~ ullls 642-•307 eeit'r'?s&lon For Sale 3 lllllU IUYIOll Income $?11" NNN Ownert Agl 759-1870 ' cant gardener & water maculate $1500 leaM Feeturlng' b!NUtlful lan<I-w/garage 5•5-7831 61 •ClubhouM998-5868 MIF 30'1 lo shr ;m COM operetort, brand new 112·11H 640-7000/Agenl NEWPORT HEIGHTS-~~~d50N~oi~6-~~;~ & v111aRental1675-4'912 scepe, BIJO.. pool/1pa ••lg 2Br 2Bawaiii"'lo NeWport Penln1ula 2Br hM clean prof person equip 17th St .C M Full llE lltCI s218 5001< Mull Sell• NB DUPLEX Huge upper Patlo/decte1. Garaget or tx:n PatlO Gar S776 No 1'~81 Steps to beach, S3sOtmo ~ 'n utll avlli price $10,000 Clah, Uk MINIG£R Tl IOUI c our 1 es y 1 0 Bk r M V Executive • BR 3ba Ocean view. •BA 2'hba. carports Heat P•ld pets 760-17131857-1776 garage yrly S 1000/mo 3-12 days 662•336o for Jot'tn 213·'434'-7•68 ft ft 6,.2• 7 190 remlly rm redwood spa lrplc, s 1500/mo Sorry. no 1>9t1 HLIU 2 II/Ill -VIiia ~1111 875-4'912 eve 675-1259 Af1 6pm 213·•3A~ 1120 A3e1~~~1~g1~•;:r~~~~ '11400/mo 5•e-9950 DOWNSTAIRS Ocean Bectl $690-=:~g M I rt la 21'9 M/Fr"p nonamkrtolhr "BIDS WELCOMEfor 111e j ''::=t~:'r.::1ngforfull two muter suites on an 21Y'w,~~T i~~!!.C~~. M 3 bv• E1x 1 ecm1u 1 tlvrem hr'!'_.w40odBA ~~00,;~R 2b•, frplc, ~~~~ 28• 1795 f~~1e'.0b1~7~ gar. nice 2br 1ba, S350+ of Trucking Company af\a09f. overtlzed lot In ltte 200 LOFT Assum 1st , u, dy 1 '1..., 506E "--an,:ront 825C.nter8t.642·1424 Att5:30980·4814 YOU '!tutti E/C.M 631-3117 through Cheper 11 Mu•t enjoy wOl'klng with block of POlr\NIUa Ask-spa, g1r ner nc d · ...,.._ Proceedlng1. 0.10llne children. Experience lngS390,000 can 1 186,000 Call Agt, Ann15 1400 5445.9950 Both unfurn Rent untll •FREECABLETV.Lg1Br Wat«trontApt Fvrn 2BR DESERVE N/1mkr ahr 2Br lrvtne 3/18/88 MlnlmunbldNt helpful. l44-l2 1 l Br1zot11 640-7033 -June 30 Call O.nlM & 28r Qrdn Apt• Pool 2ba, st 200/mo yrly Condo S350 • uttls Own at $9157 3 t Single tuO· -illllU "lllT-PLUSH CONDOS w/11111 1161 1164 9-&9m $525.-$&55710W18th 4S33·9181or53e-952• THE BEST! 8eth6carJ)Ofl851·9328 cHaful l)fdder 10 be Weoff.wanexcetttntben· rs; stream• Gar w/opnr ---I efit r.1°1r"'-....,,, Overllzed IOI Mull MUI w d hkup new decor Av! RENTALS AVAILABLE 38r, 2Ba $825/mo Move Nwpt I ... s.9k prof fem n-awarded all .... ,. Of'I .... ..... _... V9· • ' · I $318.000 Includes plans now 2br 2b• S9501mo, Now S 1000-$4'000 In 3/1 1"3 Melody Lane. 1mlcr-1tir delux 38d hm ,.,m, ot caah within 10 Cltlonl hOllda19, bonu• ; . PASH PROPS 720·9•22 1brl750111mo. $500 FerguaontHlhn642·1163 (Euttlde)no peta. BUY ·r11nessCenters nrb<:h w/aameS525tmo d1ysof11COeptanc4t 1 program •n<I d4ntal In· -1 S a..•-0793 ·~"3700 Catt 1·800--«2·5285 .. I turance Salary plua -------sec 5•9·2•47 SEAVtEW 3BR 2,~BA + Judy 851-9000 eno1s, w1mm111g " • --I __ ml!Mge relmbur*'*'t tam rm Great vltt# Pool, 3BR 2BA twtiH 1tyle, · f urnished/ Prof clean n/1mkr ahr lg aYntatll mle81iBAU I. n n I 1 I a cu r It y . carpor1, erpl/drpa. $755 through' classified Unfurnished O\Jplex Nwpt Shra Bite to o,,.rtaalty 2HI 1 "&::"~1 o~~ p~y~ lat U1 Ilea, YM Sell Y .. p,.,.,.,1 Cal ClellffW, 642-5671 tor Information & surprisingly low cost. -S'200t mo 213/430-3829 Wkdys 955-2802 • Month to M onth tx:h S•<lO .. 1.11111 8· lOpm We B S1 Tl••••H SE.AVIEW 3BR -2'MiA .. 75 28r 281. 2 pe1to9, 842-&818 64&-7971 or1vmag ...... ,u.. M::!. c': A~cg·~~ o..4et ftr le9t lam rm Qr .. 1 view Pool, llUnOry. no peU, gd IOC Modflls open d11lv 9 6 R.apon quiet pro! n/amkr ~: Good oe>pot1unt-• m or 2-" Pm (C•rcvte- F "'IC lulled oelll dbl t • n n 1 • • • c: u r 1 1 y .i1 etter 5pm S.9·2750 Sorrv "0 ptm lam ltlr 3Br 2'n81 Nwpl ty ult be IOoillng to oon o.pt ) r,, · v no• S?~OOtmo term1 (213) -M..a Condo Gar. POOi, mah a llUOCeMful bu~ ,&4:,'i~ 6 tP• No~~ 430·3629 Cetta ••u 2124 C.ta Mt11 2124 Nt•wpori Brntt Nr. 1ec $325/mo 111, 18'1 & nen Mechelle 875-tNO 868 W 18th STEPS TO BEACHI 3Br 880 hvintt AvflnuP NC 722·744'1 A'il now Chan., Yeoht IOOklng for 646-2739 964-4183 1 2'-\Be. 1550 1/f Nu cpt.. WOODLA• YILLAGI 1,.1 l&lhl Ammie non·tmkr. !em &0% pertner. Profltable p11n1 S1375 497 338 1 pref COM 2BR 2BA hM eatabllatled bullneet Ex· s.p.rate HouM 2BR & Of· _ • 64S·n04 · S•75 , '" uUfa 759-0281 cellent tu ldvltltagta flee. 18~ Wettald• r•I• UPI* Unit Oplx 28r 281. A•A•TMlllTI --Call Barry 875-648• • no Piii $575 mo g.ar ~n vu, blk to bc:tl Ntwport Br•th So RMMTl ahr 3 BR Condo, Cell An1wer AO. na s 1000 • utllt 875-8339 C01u II '"IO • nu• ,,,()fr. \lf1t tpll Ou fl tOllllOtlJOI• ""'I 1700 16th St,,11 PQOI, IK. c M SM>Ofmo •trt~n. 'J. I 1 642 4300 '" hrs or (1111)369-4539 ''° • In !rf'fWAf\ ~So tout Plu~ •hilt only m•ftlllt\ 10 ,... 111 Oovtrl ...... Utll 722·7642 w160\1Yfl .. money fo, ---I DM~ C>•~ "••adabit NO pt IS PtJAY u. ... L<nJ ~ T 0·1 •10 0001 "' Clffn ( tl<fe 28r En<I Unit I VIiia Balboe 28t 281, fatn· -~ ROOM ON BEACH • · u., no Dtw dbl Ovel\ ..., "'•tto 11y 11100 VIII .. _, 1 I ,...., • IHI • UllllT MlllS Mllr Br PY1 bl M/F 1·2 crec:tltv /no .,.,-.11ty Cell .. " · rm. • ,...., a 1 ~ ~··• • • lcllc, 1'urn apt, e>.lllaon AMOC 873-7311 lrplc gar pool Ctble TV 875 4912 OR 7~· 1792 U..Lll ..... 1111 ' avl S7'5tmo ~5-4008 I VILLA BALBOA Exec 1Br ' 111.... Uft.M11 500 + dep S 138 Tom 9 sp11Clou1 2er 2ea poo1 • o.n. 1nc1 trptc:. w10, a1c I 2 llllllllS ' MH·tl 11 e33-0eeo1W •73..e2291H haMactanb -~;;=mi:=::.:.: E•tc COMO nr CM Clvle & Olhef upgradee. Poo4.j l\otff!~I', farlfH ftr lt1t"""'-......,.,.....,.-. __ C.nter $825 882-1700 I IP•. MC bldg • IUI> I w , IUT • "' wana ... ntt ........... IHI prkng g.11 Grell! 1oc -WI rtlUIM l4'H M "J"!1 Pl ip.-.. ,,.., Jiii!!~~~--~--- Ata yf)U l>Owdlng '" w k to bQh s 1050/mo It) 10x30 Ory dlJ ~ Dbl m-/PU .... b0r-Oom''•ndttmo.•.xt1t 8•0H:Jg£v/645-8136 1 Tll lUIMI..., lN~•t 142·1 wide drive $100/mo 20yrt.xp Cal "'Alf*lmertt1nt111111lte0 j ,.8-9~1Ot848-4 152 50-2758 Otw 831 8"4 $2.40 per day Ttlet'a ALL '(04J pay !Of 3 fines. 30 di'( minimum lntM SERVICE DIRECTORY CALL TOOAYll Allfll Liii Your ooo;i.~r·A"er•ttOn• Cat>t.-.P.,..Lbdc.-.tc 35 tr• ••P wry &42-0H1 fiiitj.,'* &Y ai;an wl,... 1'(1t9m NOfl to•IC. IU .. n. 9009 &45-5133 t ntt ' SOVTJI COUNTY VOLKSWAGEN • ISUZU . - Orenge Coat OAJL Y PILOT I Monday, March 3, 1988 fajC mncr "8JC MJ11C( NI.JC M>TIC( NlJC M>TIC£ I rta.IC NOTfC( rtalC fl)TIC( NlJC M)TIC( NI.JC M>T1Cl Nl1C .,TIC( ... o:-C1~1!1'( ............ -trr lllO flfl'f llibcofttfector " •• ulnetrvmentNO $1id .... WlllbelMlldon· TMnemeendeddreMof -,.. CMIW OfM~ ~~o~.~ ~~~0(1:· OIV!N ttl•t ..... d -....... rMIMIO In NOTlCE 18 H&AHY unOef him ..... pey not .... 13:..0aoit of Ofi'kllal Ae-Wedn••d•Y· March 12, ::ecC:UC:C:ie<.~! ... ~ ... 1):Sl~ = c.... ..... c~,,..,,. ACTIOM. enoe~ Stat• of ~ ~:-o:..~-= .. S*oe ..,,....., llOOIM, •VEN \Mt Miiied b&dl w11 then IM llPedlled ,,..~ ~ 1Ht. et 1:00 AM .. at u. PEAIOA oouRT'ofl CAL~ PublllNcl 0ranoe eout NOT1c1 11 HIHH 1212'. ~ wh: TM City eouno11. P.O. Ind ... be °'**' Ind be~ by IM Purcn.-ret• of -0-to all work· Dated: leo1ember 18. IYonl enlfanoe to Oranoe FOANIA OOUNTY Of OA-naa.. Piiot ,~ 24, 25, CMWM Thee C~ said prOC*t)' le~ Boll t100, co.ta Me9e. (;all.. ~ llled lloud ., tM lnO OMelol\ in ttle City of men ernploreed In IM •· l~ Courlty Court1 lkllldlna, 100 AHQI! •700 ~ c.n'« ;.';di 3 ttee LAND ,,.,.Tai CCMlllOA-In general ... All 140Clt In lomla 82e2t-t100 on "' •~•• .. ~ ""'e end lrvlne, C111tornle tor ~eo:tMoontrac1 LH1or Cllaun A•· Cl'W'o Cent« Ottw W•t. Oft~ Weet POltol'. 83e ' MT·M4 AnoM. 1 _,., ......... le tnlde. It~. equlpmMt befotw"tN "°"" t1:00 a.m pl~wlll bea•"S.OOde-::=.no. ~~'.· t~. ~oontr.:!o~= •'°°'ra1.,..p'1ra1ncu•r•f~lpn1e, oen-and San1LAn1.CIM!fofnll t27~!; Santa Ana ,CA.ei102..oe38' T,......(111,......-,~ and 5od. w1u of '"'t on'rldey ~2t. ttee." -....... -.,.,.. ul ot n Af the tim. ol the 1n11-The name lddrw and .. .,..... .,,,...... ~ adWW1 bUelneM known etlall be the r•ponttbltty °' Poelt ,_...,!of MCll Mt Of ~lptnent. euppllee tr.,,. with ell the 'ell rerNflte A#ldW> Ptnate1ultoe, ltd • • publ'"Uon 01 th19 notloe. • ................. nu'm..-. ..1 :........ rta.IC NOTICE .....,1 ..-• Deed of u ADW T AOVER11SINO the blddtf to dellll'tt Ille bid bid dooumanlt to"*"'* Po"tatlOn. utlllti. and ell s.ctlon 1717.5te>o-11*wlt" Celltornla llmtted pattner· tn. totlll amount of the un-·~·--..., '" ...-..-Trwt ,.... M#tllMrl • and located 111&20 Nutmeg ..._ ,.. .... ,.,_,,,.. Ofllce .... '*' r-..m In good condition otw henv Ind fklllti. .. othet appllc:.able requite-11\lp plld betance OI tile obi!-tltf. •ttomev. °' pMlntltf N011C8 M Dl1'AUU ... ,.. ........ .., o.y N. Pl s It• t 10 Coet• tot ......... , .... u • ~ wtttlln H cte,. ett. t"-b6d necHHry therefor, u mente of the Cellfoml• LA9Me· Ktio.o K'*°ONI. S:C~:::C, by tM abow =~ :' J,t!c°'::.'y ': ~ CORDIOt ,.,,.,.ry 11, ...,..... .,.. ...... .MM ~,' C:,.,1y of 'Orenge. =~~ ~ ~=·mutt conform =t•"'tOf'~,.:in= La~=s ANO SPECI-an:~~= deactlbed ~of lruttend mero ·d• telelono d•I ...... DHWURt ......,, ......... Tr--.. ::: 81•1• of Celltornle t2t2tl Ind reed ~ •I 11:00 """ATIONS A lull ... of •tlmeted Cot1I, el'pentee. e ............ del Otn\andante 0 .......,, ... Ua•tr ... Ill Tile blilk tran•• wlll be a.m Of .. eoon tllel'Nfter end be l'9'00n11Ye to the modifleaOone 11 Northwood ,..., . : ,,.,...ne"er end a 1 .. M to Ind adv 1 n c e I I 1 d~andante que no MO'T1Ca MO.FAULT 8eftk OI .......... • QOnlUmmtted Ofl or ~-u P.,ectlcable on ,rldey, oonlractdooumenta. COmrnunlty Pertl t.,_ 511catlon11tivallebletof tn. lmprovemante located set4,098.00. t~e~•~Ja..-1 AMOIUCTIONTO ..........,,, ,...., ..... Oft 1,,.1tthd1yolM11Clh,11H. M ......... 21 t"'.·.· lnlheCoun• Eactl bidder etlall tubmlt, with llC)9Ul'tenencet tnenito, llt> Without cllal'ge at tM upon lhe land deecflbed II IS ........... ...._ th1t el the --' .,..,, • llU. \MDIJt ,. ...........,, Ii 1m .. = fl._. t .. "" ' "'""' ,... , ..... ..._ ... _,_ ........ -M.. In 11..-.. ._d .. ~ wit"' t..... · chulng OMtlon. 15020 ~,......-11.,, .,...._._ C111111er, q., OSS ._,.. --, • and oelme meiy be _, a di Charnberl, Cl:~:-· 77 ..,.. '"" '"'m ,.,.,__, """' ,,... _. --",,. SlndCan A lnthe ·---time of .... the 09fnlng bid COOK 840 ..-.-.. c.nter OIBM ,...,., ,,..... .,.,._,Ill WELLIFAA008ANl<,N.A . Felr0.""9 Coela call-lhe contrllCt document•. a ~Ilona on' n1e 11 the yon ~ The 111u"old ..,. .... mty be .... t"41n the total Orlva • ;iooN .. wport ~ANT NOTICIE ,... ., 0....... ..._,."' e1erow o.e>art!Ml\t, Ae. tofnla r« the~ of Mat of the propoeed IUbcon· office of ttie Oltector Of Pub-City of INll'le. SptclflGetlonl crealed by a ..... tllecuted lndebtedneea due awn' CA t2t1S...etst I Pa.:.............. .... ............ "' D .,.., .. eacrow No. to2·6 t 17. 2323 L.Aeo'111 & MATERIAL TO IN· trecton 'Ori tt\la project u lie 8erv1oM. and bid doeunllni. ~ be by The Irvine Company, • tt avall1ble, the expected DATE: IF.-lla) DeC 1; ........ W. . 0r-.. Ce~1 C-a~ N. &~rt. Sutte 409, STALL SECURITY UOHT· required by the Subletting OATEOFOPENINOBIDS: malled,~ '::f~ (~Michigan corporation II opening bid m1y be ob-1986 • FYOUR"'°"RTYl8 .. di ...... w...-ea: Santa Ana, County of Of· ING AT A!A COMMIJNfTY and Sul>COntre<:llno Fair 81<11 will be r«*Y9d at lhe qu..ti nod llf lor ~ the 1 .. 1or end Chuen A•· tal~c:llno the follow-0err L °'"'..._ C:leftl 'OMC:LOI._ MCAUM let• lfact _.. • Pef IMfl ange 1 State of Callfoml• CENTER Pr~ Act. Govt Code Purchatlng OMtlOn In the ~art 'YI pr ~ toell•I•, a c.tltOfnl• Gen-Ing t number on Ille ., ... ,rta V...,.._ ~ YOU AM MMN> .. YOUR t<IOOfded ... Mell 1n peee 927M di . .it f the Sec 4 100 et 1eq. cuy ot INtne located at ·~~~A~~ COM· eral Pettnerllohlp Ind Aaocho day before thl .... (714 tJ PAY•NT.. rT llAY M • OI •• ull:Rn • ...... All Claim• ~t be re-..,:::io::_ ~ :. ob-Eam bidder muat 1Ubmit 16029 $erld Canyon Av· O O"I< T. ~floe. ltd , M ...... 8113-t&U Pu ... _....,. Of ,. __ ~ 80LD WITHOUT ANY NW ...... ,.,. "'°'4df'I celved et Ihle eddr .. by the _..._.. ....., ,....... I the with MCtl bid certified or enua. lrvlne, Cellfornla PLE1'K>N F W " 11pon the term1, convenente Dated· Feb t7 ttee """"'""" llll09 ....,.., CCMMT ACTION. __, r.: ftOteC•) tet ..._ (MUI} ta$ 1 ... -.. at u .. .., .. _ 0 caetllef't cl'MIOk P•"•ble 10 92714, untll tt.30 im. on c:tty wtll reteln 1en (10) n<I condlllon• contalMd .1..-I A. IC .... 81HO. Oally Pltot March 3, 10. 17, mar"-"..,. ............... lo Oft9 ,J..!eee... t8thd1yolM11rch. t .un· PUfc;hulng ~t a1 n Fu "' ~1 of the bid 1mount untll 24 1988 --..... -... -·--.... thl bulk lrll\lfer alto "-'--"-ta ..... cati. ttle DISTRICT or. bid bond Marc:h t8, t988 It wlllClh ........ ' L l'*eln. recorded In boOI< T"UITll. 1711' Von • M·"'"" ..... _,_ -· "'tood Ttl•• the ltenettol•I lnclvdet the tran•f•r of ~:YWI. ~d ... :.Id '.._ , .. In the form Mt forth In the time 1nd p1eoe bid• wth be 111 work 11 c;ompllt9<1 to,,,.... 13874, ~ 971 ol Ol'flc:lal llwmen, lull• 1IO. trvtM, """ atanc!Mt llf ,.,-. ilt OI lfttereet ..-MOii deed lfQen 1 which cue ,.,.n a. "" ' """ ..... """"'' _,, ~ "" pu--........ "'°'"'"'" °' 'f A' -··· CA GM4 (114) --,_ - ---· ... ... ..,,,_ -"'":. M. ," bo _,,.; W-•o•ho '"""""' °' '"° amount not 1e11 then 10% of be 1ubmltted In Hlled the requ.t ~ 1 ~ Slid l.... •lfecta rMI Publllhed Ofenge Coat P18JC NOTICE ,._ ,_.-.... .,.... .,_ cW9d ;r:r .. ..,..., ~°'. 1';~~1J. • on wtlloll City Cler'lc. ~~ ~ the maxlmum amount of bid envetopte menced on the tile ltlOC:W • propen,y llltueted In ,,,. Delly Piiot February 17. 24, • .,..._. _... ..,. dfM 11f..,. --iecti TM• the ftquor lfQenM It trens-llm41, In a ~!!!.......--=.: · u 1 guerant• th1t tlle bid· outllde, "Bldl for NOfth· City wlll ~Y the nt 90 $tate of catlfornla, County arch 3. 1988 K n. """"'8d "' ... tot ,.. 1weeo11 ot .._.. IR, ol Identified on the...,,_ ....... dar wlll en11r ln10 the wood Commun I t y retal~ upon 1 c pttlanc:, of Or"'°° a'nd dMc:rlbed u M·951 NOTIC• M .............. , OI row -._ 111•a~ ...... tet wNatl ~':'o.~ ~°:"&:;;QI. tile Bid Item Number~ the propoMd oontrlci ii th• PMk-Crtft Room Modi· with t requ r • lollOWI: DIEATH M OOWlt, -"*" .. ........., WOtl deed .. ......., .... So ,., .. known lo the Opening 0.t•. I Mme II 1war0ed to IUCh llcetlont". 8ld •M-4 t5 Government Code S.CllOn Parcel 1. DID11C NOTtc[ JHUI 8 f\.OMI ftwtl --..a de1t Pf'°' lo ed IR tl'9C t Each bid lhall •pee I)' bldderlnthe-totrellure LOCATION OF Tf4E 1«02an<ltM Pl'Ovlllonlof LottotTrect No tt033, r-UPU N ..,. ... .,. ........ oooun ~ tranalerff•, 111 builnea•MChancteYtfyltam .. aet to enter Into Mid contrect WORK The work 10 be per-the cornracl document1 u .nown on Map recorded ' SUMMONS ' 'T': ~~= feult "'If M ~ "-,..;' ~~.....C.AL namet end eddr ..... ueed forth In ttie apeclflcatlOnl. MJCtt eecurity w111 bl lorfeh ' formed hereundet 11 IOC&ted penalnlng 1~ "Sub1t1tutlon In 8ootl 488, Paget 43-44 of (CITACION JUDICIAL) H TATE NO. A•1l1ta (wMati dett .. reoot ..... 1 eALACI! M NO 000.00. by Trentfetcn tori lhe ttv~ Anylllldall9llceptlona 10 the Thi DISTRICT r~ In the City or lr'llne, County ol Securhlel Mltcellaneout Map1. Officlal NOTICE TO DEFENDANT To all helrt, benellclattee, .....,.. Oft eNa IMldoe). TOQITHIR WITM AC· ~· latl pUI, I ~= ~~lions rm.191 be clMr· the right to rejeci 1ny or 111 ol Orange 11 4531 Bryan • T:ART?~~·C TAii A~ M ~NII Sj Records of Orange County (AllllO I Ac;uHdo) MECA creditors end contingent t fl It e"' o u n t I 1 CRUID INTlltl8T AND ti,1':. i=:;•13 19ee ly In the bid. and failure to bldt or to w1lve 111y Ir· lnterMCtlon of Bryan llld · ec n ca Parcel 2· SERVICE CO., end DOES 1 creditor• and per9001 who SI0,12:1.71. •of Aueuat 1l, UTE CH~I W AHY ' ADVUtTISINO NI forth any Item In the regulwltlel In any bid• or In Yale Avenue queatlon• relatlve to thtt An undivided 37' 14% lhrougl) 20, lnclutlv• m•y be otherWIN lnlereeted 1M, endwtll ~ ...... HA• NCO. AU DUii ~ART~elfomle • 1peclflcatlon• •hall b• the bidding DESCRIPTION OF WORK. P~~:!'~ to~ng ~· JeeMhold lnter•t In lot 4 ol YOU ARE BEING SUED In Ille wlH Ind/Of •tale of:IJ~IOCICMlftt ll1;1mee OW· AMD,AYAa.IUNDa"THE • t, .. • I y • A ~r:r ground• for rejecilon of the Puf'IYllr!t to the prolllllons The work to be performed 1 recl o on Trlci No t 1033, U th-Own BY PLAINTIFF· (A Ud. le est1 JESUS S FLORES rent. You "'9' ROt heM to Ta.Ml8 M THI! "'°"'II· on ' 'p Id t bid o1 Section 1773 of the Labor lhall Include but not be lim-Morgen, Anoclate E?cl· on Map recorded In 8ootl demendando) ARTHUR B A peUUon hu been filed P1f ttle etttlfoe Ul..,td pew-ORY NOTE· Sc hnelder' r•• en ' Each bid lhell Mt lorth'the Code of the Stile ol Call-lted to· Construction ot 1 neer. at (71') 857--012'4 °' 488, peges 43 .... of Mlt--BIATC11EA. ~. Oy LINDA M. FRY In the Su· tlon of,_ eooount, "9ft PAILURiTOPAYTAXll, Tr9!"fer• t full namea and realdencM of fornla the DISTRICT hu ob-~ flat tongue end groo11e questions rel•Ung 10 the bid oellaneous Map1, Offlclal YCMI have !I CALENDA" perlor Court of Orangel lfteuttl "'" peyment •• AU IHM IN U , IN· 0:;1u":t~a~~7'19~. ' •II perton• •nd partlea tained from the Director ol redwood siding <*lfng. •II proc:en contect Robert J. Record• of Orange county. DAYS ~" 1111• tumlftOM County r1que1t1ng that demeftcled, but ,_ _, eulllANCI AND/OR flRIOR 'I · M-970 lnl.,•ted In the pi'opoaal. 11 thl ~anment Of lnd"'lrlal ieoor and meterlel1 A walk Laporte, Purcilallng Agent. Slld property 11 common· II ~ on JOU to flte I LINDA M. FRY be eppolnted peJ the _, etatM INCUMl .. ANCll AND the bid It by 1 corporation, Ael1t1ons the ganeral through ollhepro~ereets •l (HC)-660:-362.8 1y koown..u2902A AtldhlU trpewrlt .. n rHponM et u perllOflel repreeentetlVe eltoft . .......,, ,_ __, 8UCHADVA)tCUTHEflE· Itel• tile nllMI of the of· prevailing rate of per atern scll<tduled for Me<cil 10, BY ORDER 01 thtl City Avenue. Cotta Mela, Cell· ttlll court' --to lldmlntster tne eetete--ofl ,_ beneftclafy or lftOft-, o " I W H I C H fltalC NOTICE lie«• wtlo can llgn 111 wagn and th• g1nar11 1986 et tO·OO am at Nor1h-Council 01 1"° Clly of lrvlne fornl1 92626. A letter Of pnone c.ae wlll the decedent. ....-"'ef "'utuetty aji'ee IDtl1'C1ARY HAI .. .., agrMmtnt on behell of the pravelllng rate for hotlday wood Perk. DATED February 27 · YOU ARE IN OEFAUL T not Pfol«t you; your type-The petition request• In wrltlflt Pfiof to the "-OR W1U PAY; -1( m4I cOrp()ratton and wtlettl« and overtime work In the lo-COMPLETION OF WORK 19~~TY OF '"VINE IY· UNDER A DEED OF TRUST wrltlan reeponM muet be 1uthorlly to edmlnl1ter the the~°' ...... poeted Thet br reeeon thefwof, NOTICE Of' mor• than one o~ mu•1 callty In Wllietl this work llto AH work it to be completed NAN<:Y C LACEY 'CITT DATED SEPTEMBER 1. In prOf19f lepl form "JOU estate under the lndepen-1 (whlctl !NJ not be ..,.., tM ~. ,_.....t APPllCATK>N fOft 1lgn. II the bid 11 bY • pert· be per1ormed for MCh cralt within 10 conMCUtlve WOfk· CLf"K . ' I 1983 UNLESS YOU TAKE Wllf'lt the cOUf1 to hMf ,_ dent Admlnlttrlllon of &-theft the end of ttle ttw.e-MMttdery uftdef IUCll CHANGE .. nenhlp or a joint 119nture, Of type ol we>r11er needed to lngdayslromlhedetespeci· ACTION TO PROTECT ca•. Illes Act "'onttl period 1teted deed,heee1~aftb• OWNl .. ltw Of . 1t1te lhe ""'* and ed· execute the contract TheM fled In the NOllce to Publtlhe<I Or11l98 Coes1 YOUR PROPERTY IT MAY " JOU do not fie JOW A lleeflng on Ille petltlonl.00 .. ) to, eMOftl ottlet ...,_ed lo Miid T,_... e ALCO+tOUC MWMGE dr ..... of all general part· ratH are on ftle at the DIS· Proceed Deity Piiot March 3• tOM~=~ BE SOLO AT A PUBLIC reeponN on time, JOU nteJ wlll be held on MARCH 12,J ttllft91, (1) PfOYJde M · wrttt... DeGlerlllton OI De-UC!NM nert end joint 119nturera. If TAICT office located al 5050 LIOUIOATEO DAMAGES SALE IF YOU NEED AN EX· !Ole the -· end JCMlf 1986 at 9:30 A.M. In o.pq dlttonel tlme In wtitetl to fault end Demend !of..... t •n.. the bidder 11 I IOle Barrenca Parkw•y Coplel For leHure to complete the PLAN AT lO N 0 F THE Wevff, .,._Y end prop-No. 3 el ·100 Chile Center cure tM defeult bJ tr-t. end liae clepeefMd wttf\ To Whom II May Concern: propnetorWllp or another m1y be ot>talned on request work on lime. liquidated P\Bl.IC NOTICE N A T U R E 0 F T H E wty m1y be telllt'I without Drive Weet, Santi Ana. CAI of the PNP9f'! or ottlet· NW T"•tee MOii deed encl MOTLAGH, Mehdi Is ap-entity tha1 c1oea bUtlneet A copy of l'-r1l• shall damaget will be UMUed at PROCEEDING AGAINST turthef wemtnt tr-the 92702 Wtef: (2) _.....tie tcfted.. .. doc:-...b e_...dlll plying to the Oe~rtrnent of under I llctlllOul name, the be i>Otted at tne jOb Ille ooe hundred (I 100) doll1r1 NOTICE OF YOU, YOU SHOULD CON· eowt. IF YOU OBJECT to thel ute of peftMftle lft order to clltlaattone teeured tMte-Alcoh04k: ~age Control bid •hall be In the reel name IUhellbemand1toryupon pe< cllendar day over con· TltUITE£'1 SALE TACT A LAWYER n-..,.. ottlet lepl,.. granting of the petition. you ewe row de«eutt; Of both llf, end.,_ dec4af9d end for "41" On Sele a-& ot the blddef with a~ the CONTRACTOR to whom trtet time JAMES A. SCHMIESING, (II I llree1 l<ldreaa Of qutr.menb.. You "'9J went thould either appeer at the (1) end (2). ctoee flef'ebr -.ct to cauee Wine (Pub. Eal Pl.) 10 Mii nation following thowlnp the contrect I• •warded, and PROPOSAL GUARANTEE u duty appQinted '(ru11ee common dHlgn11lon ol to call en ettomer rtgtlt heerlng and state your ob-I 'ohWtnt the ••l*•lton the tNet ptopetty to be eleohotlc bevereget 11 9475 "OBA (lhe llctltlout name)': upon any subcontractor I ANO BON OS· Each bid Shall under lhe follow Ing de-property Is ShOWfl above, no •••Y· " JOU do "°' 9lft0Wn jectlona or file written ot>)eo-of the time petlod retened eotd to Ntle~ the obtl-Hell Ave .. Fountain Valley. provided. tiowev•, no tic· under such CONTRACTOR. be accompanied by a tc:rlbed oeed ol tru•t, Will warr1nty I• given H to Its en .itomey, JOU "'9J call IN'! 11on1 with the oourt before to lf'I tM flrtt pengnptt of gettofta eecurect ~-CA 92708 lltlou• name lhall be ueed IO pay not len then lhe u.id ceflllled Of CUtlMlf'• check SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION completeness or CO<rect-attOfney reterrel eentca Of lhe hearing Your 'PPM'-... nottce, un6eM fM obi!-Detect. Febtuefy .. ,... Publllhe<f Orange Cout unlea there II a cunent tPeclfled rll• to ell workers or by a corporete surety TO THE HIGHEST Bl ODEA ness) The beneficiary under a lepl eld offlcie (i..ted lf'I 1nce may be In pereon or by getlon being *ecloMd aenti of W•trRIMlw bf: Dally Piiot March 3, 1966 reglttretlon wllh thl Orange employed by them In the ex· bond on the form lurmsned FOR CASH ANO/OR THE H id Deed of Trull, by tM ~ booll). your attorney Upclft Of a ........ wrttten Nonnllf'I Joelt, Vice Pr_. M-968 Cc>Ynty A«:order In CaM of ecutlon of the contrect I Oy the Owner 11 guarantee CASHIERS OR CERTIFIED reason of a bntlCh or default o.apuea de que le lfl· IF YOU ARE A CREDITOR .. ,."'ent betwelfl JOU dent corporatlon1, Include the No bidder m1y withdraw I thll bldOer will, If en award CHECKS SPECIFIED IN In ltle obllgatlona 1ecur@d tr .. V.n .. t• clteclon Ju· or 1 conllngent creditor of end row cNdttOt penntta • IPB 704IO n11D•JC NOTICE namet of the Pr .. ldent, any bid for• period of llxty la made 10 him In IC· CIVIL CODE SECTION threby, tteretof0<e execut41tl dlclel u1ted tleM un p(uo the deceaMCS, you mutt flle ~ petlod,_ JOU hew Publlthed Orange Coul l'UUL Secr.tery, Treuurer, end {60) deyt after llle d1le set cordance with tile terms of 2924H (p1yable 11 tt>e 11me and dellveted to ltle uMer· de 5 DIAi CALe.NOAJtlOI your claim with the court or Oftly the ..... l1tftt to atop Dally Piiot February 24, F aoM4 M•neo- tor lhe opening ol btds hlS bid promptly MCUnt ot .. 11 1n11wtu1moneyolthe slgnedawrlttendeclar1tlonjper1 preun ter una present 1t 10 lhe pereonlf the .... of JOUtptopeftfby Marctt3, 10, 17, 19116 ACTITIOUl •U ... SI The City Councll of the A peyment bond and a Workmen s Compenutlon Unlt9<1 Stat•) 111 right, tttle of Oef1u1t end Demand for reapueeta eac:rlta • me-representatf'o/e 119polnte<f by peytng the entlN -' M-955 ME TUl!NT City of Coste MeM reMtVel performance bond wm be insurance and llablllty In-and 1n1erett con11eyec:I to Sale, ind written notice of qutna llf'I 11ta 00!1•. the coun within four month• derNnded by rour c:redl-NA ITA tile right to re~ eny or all required prl0< to execution aurance Salo ctlecic or bid· end now held oy It under del•~ll and of election 10 Una carte c un• llemede from the aate of Orll ISr tOf. To find out the ..,._,t P\&.IC NOTICE Tiie followlng '*'og' '$ bid• of 1tte contract and 1hall be der1· bond shell be In en 14.ld Deed of Trust In the c1use the undersigned to t•fonlca no le ~· soance of letters 11proV1ded 1CMI "'uet peJ, °'to 9"1ft99 ~~~ &~~m. ~ E.~;h Oated: February 25. 1986 1n tile form set tor1h In the amount of not lea.I than proparty hereln1fler de· sell said propeny 10 ullsfy protecc:lon; "' ,..puaat1 In Sec11on 700 of the fOf peyment to •top the K 23194 St • Cotta M ... , CA 92627 Publllh.O Orange Cout contract documents S t500 00 Only bonds •• scribed l&KI obUgallons, 1111d tiler .. eac:flta e "'equine Ilene qua Prob1te Cod• of Celllornia tor.ao.ure,.:!r=,. prop-NOTICE Of s Daily Piiot Merctt 3, 1986 Pursuant to Section 4590 sued by comp1nlel wtllcnl Trust o r KHO S A O 1l1er ,the undersigned cumpllr con In for-The ume for llllng claim• will eny la In tOf I UUC TRANIRA C Bee Dyke wlmwear. Inc M-9&6 of the Government Cod• of are rated "A" or "A+" 1n the KHA,LOOHI. 1n unmerrled causea said notkle of oefaull m a I I d 1 d 11 I 1 oaI 1' I not axplre prior to lour llf'IJ other,_, contact: (lec9. t -101-4107 ( allfornla corporation), ' the St1te of Cellfoml1, the "Best Aeling Guida" ~II bel men and of elecllon to be re-apropladu 11 u1t9d qulere months from the date of the IENEFICIA"Y: WHI· U.C.C.) ~~n:e~:'i~n?.~~~;'d, ) contract wlll con111n aceeptea Fallure 10 submit ~f1e11ry-CHAZAN AS-corded October 15, 1985 as que la oone -uche 1u, hearing notice 1bove. lftlnaterllenll Alt1t~Mr. Nor· TO WHOM IT MAY CON· Thia builneaa 11 con-, PAC~ VIEW provlllon• permitting the eccept11>1e bond• will be SOCIAT,£S • C111torn1e 1n1trument No 85-398387 of cHO. I YOU MAY EXAMINE tM mllf'I Joeb V.P. CERN ..,. ..--...... .., succaulul bidder to cause for rejeetlon of bid 1G-•I P.artn1,..h1p 1nd Offlclel Aecordtln the office II u1t9d no ~I• 1u file kepi by the court If you MAILING ADOREll :t251 Nollet 11 hereby given to duct ..... by· a corporetlon -..vn•-r..- IUbllllute securities for any PREVAILING RATES OF RANCHO PENASOUITOS. ol lhe Recorder ol Orenge,reepueale 1 Uempo. puede are a person Interested In W11t"'lneter AYe. Wfft· the Credllors of KAREN L H:e-,~:m~i Cemetety •Mortuary moneys wlthhel<I by 11'\e DIS· WAGES In eccord1nce Wllh LTD , 1 California L1mited County !Mfdet el CHO, y le pueden the tttl1te. you may _..,. lftlnltet, Ce. 12113 COHEN. Tr1n1'1eror(1). mu y, Ch..,_i • Crem9tory TRICT to ensure per· the proVlsk>ns of Sec11on l P•rt~hlp Sald aalewlllbemadebut qulter1ulOlarlo,1u dlnwo upontheexecutOforedmln-Telep"one: (7 14) wt'ION txllinett addr ... 11 wiihh:.s~J.;:' fn:;1 3500 PKiflcV19w0rl"9 formance under the con· 1773 of the Clllfornla Labor A~ded· September HS, I without covenant or war-' olre• co1a1 d• 1u 1s1r1tor, Of upon the 1t· 111-4t1t 1520 Nutmeg Place. Suite Cou ty Y F.:U • Newport Beach lrlC't Cooe, tne geoeral prevelllng t983 renty. express or 1mptte<1, r• propledad tin Hlao ~ torney 10< the executoi or " rou llewe any quea· 1 tO, Costa Met8, County of ~noa n on •ry S.4-2700 Oo'lemlno 8-d, l y A. rates ot per diem weget end Book & Page 83....06982 gardlng Ihle po1sesslon, Of ctonel por pert• de I• COfte. 11<1m1n1str1tor, and Ille with tlon1, rou ltlould CCN1tect • Orange. Slate of Calllornla, 8· 1986 ,_..197 ltenleJ C«•J, Secret.., holld1y end overtime work In Place Official A41COfdt of encumbrances. to pay the h l1tan otfoe r~ulaltoa Ille covrl with proof of ,.,. tawrer or tM ...,.,.nment 92826 that • bulk tranlfer 11 PubUshed Of1119' Cout Publlsned Orengo Co.st 1"8 loullty 1n wntch the wor1< Orange County Aecl<><der rem.,nlng principal 14Jm ol leg ..... Pu.di que uated vice. 1 wntten request st•I· egenc:y whldi "'If Mff fin-about to be mad• lo h 3. Daily Piiot Fet>ruary 24 IS to be performed hu been1 Reel Property Affected A lhe notes secur_, by said quiet• II.mer. Uf'I ebogado Ing that you daeira 1?8Ci•I 1ured your INI\. TA AT AN ADVERTISING Dally PllOI Marc:h • to, 17 March 3~ 1986 oblalned from lhe ~rector: 1uble11ehold tt1l1te aa deed of Trust. l'lfth Interest lnmedlei.mente.11 no con-notice of the flllng of an In-Notwtt"8tMtdlfta the feet INC • a Cllllornla torp<>f· 24· 1986 M·9e5 HAMOtl' LAWN· MT.OLM Mortuary • Cemetery Crematory 1625~-Ave. M-963 ot the Oepanmenl of Indus-created by !Hal ter1aln un· es In said note provided, ad· oce • un ebogado, puecle ventory end appralaernenl of that JOUf property la lf'I etlon, TransferMI, whON ---------' tnet Retat1ona, a copy ofl recorded 9Ub ... M , upon vanoes. If eny. under the llem.r • un -.lclo de ref· est81e assetl or of the petl-fOfecloeure, you !NJ °"9f bullnMa 11 30 I W. Werner.1---------P\&JC NOTICE wtuch It on file In the olflce of eno IYl>Jeci l.P all ol the term• of said Deed ot Trust, erencle de ebogldol o • tiona Of aocount• mentioned your pr~rty for ..... Avenue. San11 Ana, County PlllJC NOTICE the City Clerk of the City ol term•. covenent• 1nd lees charges end ••penses une oftclne de 1yud1 legal In Section 1200and1200 5 of Pfovtded the .... le con-of Orenge. Sl•I• of ce11-1---------CostaMeaa 540-5554 1rv1ne end w\11 be meae avail· provisions thereon provided, ot the Trultee Ind or the (vN al dlr-ectorlo tafe-the Callfornle Probel• Code. duded prtof to ttle -fornl• 92707. ot>le lo any lnterasted party a orandum thereof tru1t1 creeted by said Deed fonlco). GAME" a MAltlHACK, duMoft of..,. tw•~lnure. The property to be \reM-r UM1. Ti.. oontrec.-lernber of Trutt. c ... No. 47.c741 Alt 1 t. ,......._ ...__Ill. YOU MAY fer-red Is localed et 1520 0 CHICK IVERSON Chevrolet • Porache • Audi 4'1 E. C111t 11.,., l•Q•rt leach 173-otOO Highest Quality Sales & Service 0 HUNTINGTON CHRYSLER/PLYMOUTH Visit our A ward Winning Service Department. The # 1 Chrysler Corporation facility in Or ange County. 16661 BEACH BLVD. HUllTHIGTOll IEACH 842-0631 • 540-5164 ' .. "SPECIALIZING IN MERCEDES BINZ" And all Other Fin• European Automobilff l.A.'a only authorized °'n•t dealef AU MAKES AND MODELS 714-557-4040 0 CREVIER BMW SALES • SERVICE • LEASING "Where Professional Attitude Prevails" Spec1a1111no In European o.llfftJ. Exc.eftent a...ctton of New end ceretully prepared U-.d IMW'• always 1n stock 835-3171 208 W. 1et St., S•nta Ana Corner ol Broedw•y & 111 St. Ck>Md Sund8)'1 OSTl!RLINQ SAUS -SlhlC( -lllSllC -PAITS Overseas Delivery Speclallsts OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK BMW -ROLLS ROYCE 1540 Jamboree Rd. Newport Beach 840-IWIQ~ •JIM &LEMONS IMPORTS 13111 Ou•ll SI. -New C•' Loc•tlon 1001 Ou•ll 1#1. -R ... ,. Olt1l•lon World's Largest SeltK:tlon o( IT\ Mercede$ Benz v:::J 833-9300 Wet · Uuitc · Pn · Senlce · WJ S.. o sOOili C..ounty-®-lli}. VOLKSWAGEN/ISUZU CALIF'S a 1 & LARGEST VOLKSWAGEN DEALER NEED WE SAV MORE? Paris Open M-Sat 8 • 5 30 Sal 9 -4 p m Service m-Fn 7:30 • 6 p m 11711 BEACH BLVD HUNTINGTON BEACH 714/ 842-2000 0 NABERS CADILLAC m 2100 HlRIOR ILVD., COSTA IESA (114) 140-1100 (213) 181-8288 •Best Prices •Convenient Location • Great Location • Super Service •Courteous & Knowledgeable Sates People PACIFIC OCEAN o COMMONWEALTH VOLKSWAGEN &n 'FAMILY STORE SINCE ·53· --~ Salu .. Service -Lea•in g ~ Ml-0110 0 THEODORE ROBINS ' FORD U.S.A.'s # 1 Thunderbird Retail Dealer Modern Sales, Service. Parts. Body, Paint & lire Depts Competitive Rates On Lease & Daily Rentals 20IO 11 .... r lh~., C.st1 1111 ••2-0010" 140-1211 8 HOUSE OF IMPORTS • Eue of Ownership terma • Lease convenience-12· 72 mo • Select from 100-+ new and pre-owned • Oellvery In Eurqpe option diet Mercedn 714/213 137-2333 Sent• Ana (5) f ,..wey 1a Beech In Buen• Perk f / .....,... • ,_ S'• •"""" .. 0 108 LONGl'll• Or.tnge County's Ofdest & t..rg.st PontfM O.alershlp .-hath 81Yd. & tn• ""'l'den Otow Frttway 1714 HZ-6611 171416a6-2IOO We perform ~II PonttaC'9J..rr.1nty wonc, ~rdless ol ~re )'OU ortglnally purchawd your eo1r. a.a llCNIDAY WDll .... "'"1L .... P ... I [iYl]@i]@OO@ BUICK l.otu. JAGUAR 1SUZU the PROFESSIONAL APPROACH • 71 4 -979-2500 2925 Harbor Boulevard • Costa Mesa. CA • & rnagD1 PONTIAC • TRAHS AM • FIRtBIRO • ~000 ST£ • P~RISI( NHC • BOfHYllll • GRANO PRIX • S~BIRO CONVlATIBll • T 1000 ~ • GRANO NI We sen uctt•••lt a rncv01 PONTIAC FIEllll 2480 Harbor lhd. Cost1 Mtu Newport Bt1dl 714/549-4300 a magni SUBARU SLASHES • PRICES! e LIQUIDATING 1985 MODELS UNOER NN CIRCUMS'IAHC£S Wl Will NOT BE UNDERSOLD! • SUBARU 2480 Hirl>of Blvd. Costa Mesa Newport Bt1eh 714/549'"4300 e OIAIQE COAST JEii /IUIAUL T # 1 ,. Th ,,,,, ,,, #,. IH, SMtt FM I Y11rs · O.Dln2e. sALes -Loa"St • seRv1cE >m "•"-l l¥O • LEASING eotn •U• 541-8023 • ACCESSORIES OEPt 9 UNIYIRatTV OLDIM081LI HONDA 2llO Harbor Blvd. Coe .. M-540-0713 ' - MONDAY, MARCH 3, 1986 So~i.et sai.lor~swap . suspected Seaman. lntel'Viewed second time may not have been the one who jumped ship NEW YORK (AP) -The Soviet seaman wbo told American officials Jic had chanaed his mind about defectina may not have been the same llilor wbo jumped ship in New Orleans, accordina to a report pub- lished Sunday. said Sen. Gordon Humphrey, R- N.ff., who is leadina the call for an investiption. More than half the Senate has co-sponsored a resolution callina for a new inquiry. returned to bu ship may not have been the same man who later told American officials ""10 ~ oome aboard the ship that be wan\Cd to return to the So~t Union, The New York Tlmet reporte<t State Department official• ay they are certain there wis no switch. But the newspaper II.id teveral pieces of evidence at leut railC quatiou about tbe cue of ~.d:!i wt.o. attemptod defection off a weekend c:risil in Sovict-U.S. relatiou t-.o weeta before the Gen- eva summit. weJl)led 174 pound.a. But a Navy doctor wbO eumined a weaman aboard the lb.ip • than 24 boun later daaibed the man it\ bit1 report u .. abort stature, approximaio- ly l SO" pounck. The Times aaid two ~ •t baDdwriti.na ualyau OOGC1 1bat baDdwritin& l&l'DDlea tam OD dif- femU days probebly were written by d.itfer'ent people. Furtbermcn. Medved ....,ed terrified 11 be p'er'1ed for ~tical uytum after jumpiaa lb.ip. ayiac •1 want to live in a cfeceftt COU.Dtr)' ... But the man wbo spoke ao S..~ Depart- ment officials Oct. 21 and 29 wu ''.Somethina smells fishy here." Members of Conpns and others say the man who Jumped into the M1uissippi River on Oct. 24 and was .. It's crazy not to think it wu not Mirollav Medved who was inter- viewed." Slid Boris Malakhov, a spokesman for the Soviet Em busy in Wubinston., ~ An plftd.a1 form comDlet.ed by Border Patrol officm laid the man whojwnpcid ftom tbeSoviet ftisbter Manbal JC.oaev and then WU hauled lcictiQI and ICft&IDiDc a.ct to the ship WU S feet ) 0 iDCbea tall and Abo. the man who jumped ahjp 'IJ)Oke fluent Ukrainian dwina bit fint even.in& ashore, aocordina to the fint interpreter who spoke with him. Tbe man interviewed later aooke the lanauar with difficulty, the State• J)epartment said afterward. described .. ~=t, .....__ /Al) ,_ Procl•matlon Toa~ofmoretban a mtlllon cbeerlni Plllplno•, Pre•ldenl Aqal.Do deoW. tbe ,_.. tontlon of baalc dae proce11 rtcbt.. Al5. A••••lnatlon A W•t Bank Arab mayor, Zaf• al-llurt, la fQmlei4 adlI ID a blow to 11.ldeut peace. Al5. Callfomla Former governor Brown attacks critics of Bird court./ Al Sports The Angela' Stewart Cliburn ml8898 the club's workout because of shoulder paJn./81 Newport Harbor High has a new, but f amlllar basketball coach./8 1 Entertainment Actor Howard Rollins puts a llttle tarnish on his good -guy lmage.//85 INDEX Advice and Games A 10 Births A7 Bulletin Board A3 Business A8-9 Claaalfled B&-8 Comics A11 Oeattr Notices 84 Entertainment BS Horoscope A 10 Opinion A12 PaparazzJ A 7 Pollce Log A3 Public Notices B4, 8 Sports 81-4 Televl1lon B5 Weather A2 Small ];>larie plunges into sea By JOHN LONGWEU.. Of .. 0.-, ........ A smaU aircraft plun,ed into the ocean about a half mile off the Newport Pier late Sunday ni&ht. Newport Beach police reported. A sea and air search located the wheels, a seat and other 1maU debris from the crash. but failed to tum up the main wreckage or any sian of survivon as q_f midnight. "A resident spotted the plane fl yins low over his house and then he looked up and saw it go down in the ocean,•• said police djspatcher Peri Ropke. Police received 17 calls from rai- dcnts near the pier wbo saw the plane go down about 11 : 15 p.m., she said. Ropke said the plane matched the descnption of a sinJle-engine Celana that bad drawn the U'C of residentl1be night before when it had been seen doing aerobatic tricks just off tbe coast in the same area. She said there was some confusion, however, as to the description of the aircraft. HeliCO£len from the Newport Police Department and ~ County Sheriff's Office were dis.- patched to search for the debrit shortly after the calls came in. They were joined by U.S. Coast Guard and county Harbor Patrol boats. Cancer agent in cocaine common WASHING TON (AP) -Half of the cocaine seized in Florida late last year contained benzene, a carcinogen that has been banned from consumer products because it has been shown to cause leukemia. a federal official said Sunday. "We sec the potential as cxtrcmelr, dangerous for lung damage or worse, ' said Robert H. Feldkamp. a spokes- man for the Drug Enforcement Ad- ministration. The agency in January asked the Centers for Disease Control in Atlan- ta to cYaluatc the possible effects of benzene used in manufacturing co- caine "before we put all the r_ed flap out that people who use coca1nc may be in danger. We have not yet determined that." Feldkamp said in a telephone interview. The COC study is expected in April or May, he said. Benzene began to show up 1n cocaine in early 1985 after the agency took steps to prevent illqal drug manufacturers from obtainina ether. previously a key chemical an mak.in& cocaine, Feldkamp said. Six years ago. DEA officials de- termined that 98 percent of the ether being shipped to Colombia, one of the primary cocaine expo~ina oountncs. was aoina to drua traffickers, and only 2 percent to legitimate users. Cocaine is processed with ether and other substances to make cocaine hydrochloride, the product rcachina (Pleue Me CANCER/ A2) • .... .......... lllr~ ...... Wlnnt.na· embrace Laara a.ap pYee llary 8etb Zimmerman (faclDC) a con- &ntalatol'J bq after 21mmerman captared tbe Unlden lnTltatlonal •oUtouDUDeDt at 11 .. Verde Coantry Clab In C.ta II_. OD 9aaday. 8ee etoly OD 81. . Possessions of Rajneesh. don't go cheap Laguna commune auction draws 350 ; his prescrt ption s u nglasses sell for $50 BJ PAUL AllCBIPLEY °' ... ..., ....... Followers of Bbap'an Sb.RC Ra- ~neeab swarmed to the Utsava Ra-~ Meditation Center in [apna b Sunday to bid oo the penonaJ and household effects be abandoned when leavina the Un.i\Cd States lut November. About 3SO bidden, many of them sannyuins, or seekers, wbo lived at Bbqwan's Ore&on ranch until it was vac:a\ed when be left America, in- spected 4SO lou that went on the auction block. Items rinsed from Lenox china and silverware to several pain of the Bbapan's pmcril'(ioo sunaJaun and some of his favoriie RCOfdl. About 400 lots were vuyina lenatbs of exotic fabrics that would have been leWed into robes for the puu. Early bidd.ina suaested prices weren•t aoin& 10 6e bupim~ nor were they toina to bols1cr Bblpan's pune much. A record the pru teDOf"IC!dJ}' listat- ·ed 10 daily wait b'S35. E.iabt Yards of white polyester material IOld for S6 a yard. A · of Christian Dior sunatasses ~ SSO. 1'he biabest biddina went for two said decorative pieces that were part of the IUJ'U'• throne. They broulbt Sl,SOO apiece. A silver ftute went lor $6SO. Other hiab-ticket items included silk and sequin fabrics valued at up to S400a yard. Swami Santosh, a l()..year devotee who livn at the LlpDa Canr>n commune, said tbe most expemtves item to be offered were pieces to a four-piece ICt of 10lid .,ad throoe decorations valued totetber at $10,000. The two 1.atJcrpiecadidn't tell · "lf we don't ICt the price we want, then we don't sell it,"' be said. San\Olb didn't bid. .. rve ~a lot of &ifts from~ I don't fed a need" to buy anY1hial."' be aid. Tbe proceeds were WFted for tbe auru·s= apc:mea. He wuU'ftlled on .. ,~ or had ... Ill ..., ("W I W WA.INC Rl/.&aJ PCB crosswalk said dangerous By SUSAN BOWLETI' °' ... ..., ....... A group of Corona del Mar resi- dents concerned with crosswalk safe- ty have pthered 200 sipiatures from fellow residents in an cffon to call attention to what they call a danaer· ous problem in the small Oranae Coast community. Corona del Mu resident David Paine said be and 16 other residents recently formed Citizens for Safe Crosswalks., a group otpnized to find solutions to the problem that could be fatal to ~trians crossina Pacific Coast Hi&bway in Corona del Mar. A resofution drafted by tbc group will be presented to the Corona del Mu Chamber of Commerce Tuesday to urge its support on the issue. Pamc said. The resolution calls for the formation of an ad hoc committee comprised of city officials, citizens and members of the local business community to study the problem, Paine said. Newport Beach city officia.lt ay they are frustrated with the problem. They contend that steps the city bu taken to make the c:roawa1b safer could turn around and slap them in the form of liability claims. Because Newport Beach med its own paint to mart croawalb on Pacific Coast Hi&hway, a S\lte road, tbe city is now aps>&!Cntly liable if someone sets hurt an them, aa:ordina to Newport Beach. City Councilman Bill A&ee. The councilman said city officials took maners into their own hands when the state ~t of Transportation was slow m actins on the improvements. City workcn have painted striped crosswalks ID Corona del Mar, hopina (Pleue ... caoeaw ALS./ A2) Spirits big~ at start of peace march 'Camaraderie infectious,' says woman from Newport, despite initial problems By PAUL ARCBIPLEY °' ... ..., ......... Two days down and 253 to 10. about 1,200 participants in the 3.23S- mile Great Peace March will set up their tent city in Claremont toniabt. The marchers.. inchadina about 30 from the Oranae Cout. officially bcpn their tre\ after a rousina scndofT at Los Anaelcs City Hall on Saturday. Glitches •uch as PRO-Peace or- pnizers• inability to secure camps!te and Wilkins ansurance for lhe court joume~ 1 failed to dampen the enthusiasm of most marchers, althouah a few reportedly dropped out. The Cahfom1a Department of Transportation and some catJes along the march route wouldn't srant parade or other permits Without SS million insurance covcrqe. the As- socia ted Press reported. Nevertheless, marchers and about 5,000 supporters who gathered outside city ball Saturdiy were confi-detlf' their ranks and suppon would grow u they made their way toward Wuhinaton, D.C. to demand an end to the arms race. Eleanor Henry of Lquna Beach. who plans to JOtn her marching son Ke vm on the tut lq of the Journey. said the PRO-Peace soal of slobal nuclear disarmament was achievable beause at was "a pusroots move- ment.'' "They'll have to hsten. lftheydon't hstcn. then ~·11 do 1t ID tbe ballot box." Henry sa1d. Marlene K.Jtajehuk of Newport Be~ch, who wd she joined the march to restore hope to her eh11dren and others who believed ouclear war was incv1tablc. was ecstatic about the experience after spcndin& tcveral (Pl--.. 9PllDT8/ A2) Statue carved in memory of Laguna Beach greeter l.Alau IEll Video store security bars hamper firemen Restaurant that commissioned statue hopes to place it near south Main Beach Eiler Larscn is fondly remembered by some as a Laauna Beach rolk hero who spent 33 ycan tand1n' on a ty streets enthu iastically arecuna both tounsts and residents H they entered the Art Colony He is known throu&hout the state and, some attest. tfiroua)lout the world Appropnaltly named the "Laauna t Beach arccter.'' Larsen will be 1m- mortaliU:d in yet anothCT statue to be erected ID the a ty, th11 lime at the Greeter's Comer Restaurant near south Main Bc.tch. Lanen moved to Lq\Jna Beach in 1942. He befnended many of tbe town's residents. who repaid h11 kindness by send1n1 him on an expense-paid trip to h11 nauve Oen- markJUSt before h11death in 1975. ln has later years they helped support him. Durina the as ycan be lived, Lanen ~ love and inspired children. who oft~n pthered around him mesmerized by hi• ltOries. Even the City Council at ooe time deemed him the official .. Lasuna Beach Greeicr." To remember bim, the ownen of the OtUter'• Coratt Rntawut oom- m111ioned Whittier tculP'Of Ouy Wilson to TUTttte hi1 pretence in a 9- root tCUlpture carved ftom an I()(). Focus ON THE NEws year~&d ptec:e of wood. Jn the ftniahcd wotk, the puter lcam on bis cane wit.b a book of pGtVy in bit front ooet pocket and a penal and eruer people say be alwa~ canied in bis top pocket Lanen will .-in p-tet the peopk who pus by the restaurant TM '°°"pound IC\llpturc lt com~ (PleMe .-8TA TUS/ A2) By PAUL ARCHIPLEY ............... Firef1Jhten were thwart~ b heavy-duty tcamty bus 1n a Foun- ta.1n VtUey vicko 1tore that stalled their efforts to dou~ a blve there carl_y Sunday. The fire at the Home tar Video store, 16040 Harbor Blvd . cao~ an estimated S 130.000 damafC, 111d Founta.1n Valley Fin-Capt Robert Mc Vey . Probably S 100.000 worth of video tapes were destroyed an the blue. he ~id F1refishtcn rc<:cl ved the call at l :S 1 a.m. When they amved at the ICCot, the)' found the front of tbe store protected by ac:corcba.n-type wn>\llhl iron ban and a heavy-duty tock wt blocked thetr entrance. "It took about 10 minu1CS to pin entry into the tore." McVty aid. "By then. the flre was J\ll\ swu,. to climb into the an.c. and from there it could've traveled to adjail:ent l\Oftl." Ho~. filtf\ahia. were at* to quickly doutc the bLu.t\, and onty m1nnr moke damaee was ....,ned (Pleue-VID90/ U) ' Al Orange CoMt DAILY PILOT/ Monday, Merc:h 3. 1986 STATUE OF GREETER C~RVED •.. hoaAl pletdl and was to be <JclJvercd today, accordiq to Taa Fouladi. part owner oft.be Greeter's Co~r. Lanen was born 1n 1890, coin· cidentally the same year the old redwood tree used for the sculpture wu cut by logcrs. said Wilson. The wood was so dense because of its age ~hat it ~ever made it to the mil~ lnstead, n sank to the bottom of Big River in Northern Califorrua where it sat for 80 years. The sinker log was raited fro'm the river five years af\er Lancn's death in 1975. "' Wilson. a young artist who at 27 has sculptures displayed m four c1t1cs 10 Japan, in Hawaii and several citi es back east. said most of the work on the greeter statue was done in his Placerville studio in Nonhem Cali- fornia. He began the work at a lumber yard where he slept in a tent. During his work, Wilson said he became intrigued by the history behind the greeter. So intrigued, he sa1d, he is now working on a bronze bust and lifeme oil painting of Larsen. In the Jl'h montbs.-L.LI.LJUA-D~-- to carve the sculpture from the 15- foot sinker log. he met co\.antle'>s people who either knew Larsen or knew of him. That is just one reason Ton) Abbasi, pan owner of the Greeter's Comer restaurant, asked Wilson to carve the statue. Abbasl recalls Larsen as "a charming man. My folks knew him." 'Tm sure everyone will be deepl ) impressed (by the statue). He will be weU-remembered." Most of the work on the sculpture was done w1th power tools, some-· thing many an1sts condemn - unjustifiably, said Wilson "Carving is a general term for removing wood. 1t doesn't matter if you use d} nam 1te. It's like peo~le who use a washmg machine saying you're not washing clothes because you are beating them on rocks." he said. He began the Job with a chain saw . .. It's kmd of a spooky wa) to work because once you take somc!ffimg off you can't put 11 back. It removes wood so fast that you have to know what you're doing." he said. Redwood 1s the perfect medium for the outdoor sculpture, said Wilson. because it has a poison propeny that keeps bugs away. "That's one reason they li ve 2,000 years," he said. If the owners of the Greeter Restaurant can secure perm1ss1on from the city. the statue will s11 JUSt outside the restaurant But when Larsen returns to Laguna Beach to forever greet the people. Wilson said the biggest compliment he hopes to receive 1s "'that somebod) who knew him hkes the statue " .. It will crack and change and gro-... 1n character over the years." W1IM>n said. Just as gracefull}' as Er ler Larsen did. Guy Wilson carved hla 9 -foot sculpture from an 800-year- old piece of wood. RAJNEESH AUCTION DRAWS 350 ... From Al struck a deal with the lJ govern- ment that permmed him to leave the country. The auction moved slov.h and many le ft without b1dd1ng. · ··1 wanted to bid on some ol the chma." said one disgruntled woman "But It was takmg so long. I'd he here for hours befo re the)o got to the thing'> I wanted.·· Nevenheless. Sant0\h ~1d the\ were pleased with the outcome , 1,1,hcn the auction ended aro und 7 pm "We're espec1all} satisfied that ,., many people came who hadn't been here before." he said "fl v.as nrlx they could find out we don't bite." Items that didn't sell will be offered at wholesale pnces Saturda)o . he said Devotees hugged and l hattcd many of them meeting for the fiN ti me since abandoning the Oregon co mmune None appeared sad that the auction seemed to mark the end of Bhagwan ' ''a' 1n .\mcr11 .. a .:It "<, pcr'>onal . It'\ not \dd 'aid ~umaran J <.ann}a'>tn li\lng 1n I agunJ Reach ·· 1 l°'> th e " a\ of l'' t'nt' part ot rcal1t\ ·· I 1!..e ma n' of the dcH1tt·c1, ~umaran "h1J\l' name mean'> .. rl'· mcmhranlc ·"'•"on hi\ "'a' 111'1c,1t the guru 1n < rl'lC I mg111ngonaEuropcan\Jl al1un I lJ <.cc Ah.1g .... ;1n then pla' 11 h\ car·· -\nolh\.r dl·\ 11tcc .heading for ( ry:·tl· 11n '-'t•dnc\JJ\ "'a' N1c,ha \da "'h 1 "J' l•1lh.~, ting 4u.:-'>t1on' lrnrn ' . O\a\ln' l11r Bhag.,..an .\ nal" c DI ( 1trman) '>hl· mu\ t:d to thc l \ 1obc .,..1ththcguru1nOrcgon :\m\ that hl'\ !l•>nt: 'he plan\ to '1-.11 him "'ht·n '>hl· 1..in It <hanged l\\hcn he ldtl hut 1t d1dn 1 ka\l· .i '.11111 '"ha•dd \J1d · I m ~ 11ng I•• \1.t· lum 1n < n:k hnau<ot· I Jrnl' him Hut I duuht thal I '~ou1d m11\e 1h1·rt l"m ha pp\ hn1 \Jnto\h \a1d c,anma~in'> ha \\ ht'ln 1ourne) ing to< rt'll' on tlwir ov.n hul thl'' an·J1·1 v.d11111w 1•1 'tJ' lhln: Ht1\.\n l'r \llffil' VJIJ .1n: \ta\ 1n11 1n nc.srh' hotd\ .ind h•1uw' · " I h1·~ rt· allu"-t J to t 11rn1.· lor J°" h1lc thrn thn a• t'\fWllnl to ka 'l' · "ant<•'>h .,,11d Bhag.,..an·, 1.kp.1nurt· "'a' mt•rcl} anotht•r · nutmg th.iptcr for hi'> lullu.,..cr<o '-lanto'ih ... 1111 It \ ~tnd ol .1 hlt'\\lng tx·~lt\.l'>C tt ma ~c<; U'> moll" .t .... Jrl. Ju'>l .... twn \ou"rc \Citied ht· thangc, -he pulls thl· rug out from urtdl·r \OU -hut h} ;md larg1· "''on '' \ulknng. from 1t ·· h \,ll<f \lo<it ol thl \ntl"rllan lollo"'t'r\ ;ire in J '>late cil fh1\:· trying out d1 lkrrnl u1mmun11ln up arl"<l qown the \\'l·\t < oa'>t ..... into\h 'laid \lthi>ugh ;all Hhag-...an·, l \ l n tl'r'> t ln,u.J t \' • 1 '" r' age' v. h1. n ht· laum·hed tlw < >rq;••n 1Jn1.h bet~t·en tr1 and 1 "i h.He 11pcned \tnte the ranch dn,nl h1· ,,nd SPIRITS HIGH AT ST A R T OF MARCH ... From Al rehearsal days cam ping out and marching 1n the Los .\ngcll's area while organ11ers prcparrd tor 1ht <;endoff ··The camaraderie 1<; 1nlc<.11ou' \t night we're dead med and thl') .... ~ for volunteer-; to do some d1she' or something, and you JU'>t gt·t up and do 11 ... she said "I fed won.derful I ha\en·t felt th1 .. good 1n )Car'\· John K1LaJChuk her n-hu5bJnd but good fnend \Oluntn ·rrd to .,.,r1r1' in the s1 ' mobile k1tchcnc, alll'f v..l'rk' of helping \.farlcnt· 1ra1n tnr lhl' march He 'i81d the uos<i·'il'C t1on 111 \Cx.H'I' that'\ pan1u pating wac, enrnuragmg "The~ are the John Doe'> .rnd Jane Does of Amenca." he said ·· rhere arc dm. tor'>, lawyers. profec,<;1onal\ ot all kinds It''> not JUSt \ome frtngl' group I ht" m.1rl h<'" ''l'rt g1.·1ting \clllH" rn.1111,trl'Jm \l'ndoll too 1nd ud1ng \1.1 111 fc1Jl1 llr.1dk\ v.ho t11ld thl'nl 'I iu "ill d1·11H'r a mr\\,1gt• n"t 111\t ;1 tht· n.•:1 .n h111 t111hr "'h"I .\1 rid th.ii \\C -..1nl ,1n l0nll 111 Olll k.H .trrnamcnl' · \<.l11r l<oht•rl Hl.1kr ~ 1111 I\ mart 11111~· thl 1·1111re trip t11lu ll\tl·nl·r' ., 11u "'"' nw ,,Jnl' aga1n I "'·" \111tnl 111 trnnt ol th I V and li\ten111g .ind ';.i' 1ng 'l',11 "it,1 r '-' .tr<o "''II '-" l" U'> · I hJnk. <••>cl lnr \l>U •• I klp•tf'f rnil ~l' thc wntlntl ralh fl1"rT1Clf.4{)k v.,1\ cnter1a1nml'OI h\ \kl"'-d \1Jm hl\ter and Mr \1 "tn and mc.:<i<.Jgn trom star'> hl..c t d Ekgk\ Jr llo .... ard Hc~..eman. Ten ( 1arr 1nd 1 lnJ(\ Near < clchnttc\ like actor Paul '\.l•\1.- man. who "an honorar; co-<:hair of th<.' man h ,1rl' l'Xpccted to J01n the g111 cp l.11l·r r >1~·.1r111,.1 h11p1 lh• rank' \\Ill \l.\~llt1,11n 11\1ll:•n l••rth• f1n,l111tln 1n111 11J1 lli1tc11n-. ~.1p1tnl tncf \llf}- nort~ r' h< Isl ll ' I I .:1pJ>l 11 \IJn,111 l'at ~ t!1rn ti•J 11 thl C )r- .1n~w <.011111' \111.tnll tor \unnal \,}Ill till' \llt,IOl I l\illilld ht_• hU~)' hdp1n~· 1f r •'O:'P• 1 l h11cld t11w;1nl that >:10,I · \\t· II ,1.ht•d11lc.. pl.1111' hu'l''I. \hill Cl \'\.,lfll.,~c"lhn'i.'fl\llJllCtU \\ •"h'"•'tnn · l',ll ~ ..atJ "\\ t"re r11nh11l11ny \nd I \thc-r l'.tl•• 111 :'\.orth llnl h '' 011J ,,1111 en l l1t l11'tt11n prt1\ nl 111 an \\I IT~ ··11 1110~ Ill c.ir' for thl.' 1ttn,1m ~ar to l'nd 1 here v.crc man) of u' "'ho mar~ hnl :inll tt \nowbalkd until the ""r had 10 tx· \topped." Palo <,.11d. ·And tht pcnplc dul 11 · CANCER AGENT COMMON I N COCAINE.· From Al mo~t user\ "It wa'I unhcord of to m.rnu fo c1l111· cocaine "'11ho u1 ether·· f l'ld~.trr1p said. The DEA. howrHr 1n 1t<i l.am pa1gn to curh drug ahu\c ohta1n1.·d the coo~ra1 1on of t•ther m.inufJ1 turef1 to hm11 the Ociw uf tht• substance to cocaine maker\ "We do know that de,p1te the campa1411. the supply of cocaine has not diminished. So 11 wa' nece'>sar) to find out what wa'> llemg uo,cd 1n stead." Feldkamp said In January J 98S DF \ officiali. bepn tesun1 confiscattd cocaine to detenn1ne what was ~1ni used as a substitute, and test re'lult<1 mcrcaStna· ly showed bcniene. 8y last November and December. half of the cocaine set.led 1n Flonda conwned be&UCQc. Other tamplcs had been procn~ with toluene ' m<.'th)I et h~I kl·tonc. and mdh)lenc chlllrtdt• '' h1ch .ire nut thought to be .1 .. harmlul .1 .. ho·n1cne r h(' ( un \Um('r Product \,1kl\ < omm1'>~1on h.t<i banned the u~ of hcn1en( 1n con .. umrr f)roduct\ It 1\ 11<.l·d prn11.tt1I\ m ga\olinr .ind 1n 1.J11oraton<:' -Dr Jame\ I I ukc former medical cit.im1ncr for th e D1stm t of Col- umbia \aid \tud1c<1 havt" hnl ed hcn1t nc to lrukr m1a and other hemotologll al cl l'orctcr\ a' IAt'll a"' birt h dl'fct t\ Worker t'l(pm urc to bcn1cne and fi,c other rhem1c.i.I~ -an.cn1 <:, a~hc<ito~. chlonne nickel and J>rl· rolt um d1~11llAtC\ -arc hcltcved rcspoM1ble for 20 to l8 percent of the more than 600.000 cases of canrcr diagnosed in the United State~ ever) >tar accord1 na In a National IM1ttutc for <>ccupa11onal \afct) and I k alth • \tUd\ utcd in ~un<l.1' n l11111n' 1)f I lw V. a!.h 1 n11ton Po\ I Dr \\11nc\ Wolh' head of tht• Puhh1 ( 111un Hc:ilth Rl''><<mh Gmup. w11~ quotl·d h' the n<.'W'>PM>Cr "" calltng hcnn·nc un "cl(trcmcl) potent caronogcn · that "h,t\ tx·cn known for two dt.'ltldC\ to co1u!lt leukemia 1n human'>" Rcnunc 1~ .. , cry dangerou'i at low le' cl<; c' rn l<.'vrl' of one f)art pt"T m tllton or le" V.nlfc '>llld ()f thl· nth l·r l hcm1cal' found rrunt h 1n ,nca1nr <1mJll c1 mount<i of tolucnc arc l no-...r1 tu pose no danacr. methyl cth~I ketone cnu\C\ ~lon 1mtAt10l'I\. nd mcth > lt nt> chlondr 1~ da<1\llird 3\ a carcinogen. althouah not :l'i dangl'toU\ a\ bcn1t nc, Worfe \lld T hr • Food and J>rug d m 1nr~ tra11on ha~ proix1~d bannina the u~ of m<.'th\ lrm· l hlondr 1n cnsmct1c'> W c~THER --- Overcast to-linger along coast ' Low, OYercut ciouds wlH N~. dMrlng pat1tllty thla etternoon over the Oreno-Cout, the National WMthet 8etvlce aald. Although the cloud• will return tonight, theY wlll be mosUy cleared by Tueedey ettemoon. High• will range from the mid 80s at the beactwlt to the low 701 ll'lllnd Lowt tonight wltl be In the mid SO.. OV9r the lnMt coaatal waters, Ught v11lable wlnd1 wllt blow through tonight, except for 90Uthwest wind• 8 to 14 knots thl9 att.,noon. The westerly swell ls 2 to 3 fMt. Low clouda with partial cleating this atternoon through tol'llght. U.S . Temps HIQ~. lowt 1l><0119h 0 p m llinOay AlbWly Al~que "-'Mio A11Mle " 5f 73 SS 52 23 .. llO Allentk CITy Auelln e.htmof• 81rrnlt19llem 91-Cll ... u at 17 70 31 97 36 M 20 '3 26 79 45 38 25 S2 21 llO 52 93 55 42 21 33 18 36 21 S2 15 41 34 55 25 51 21 5t 21 41 25 44 21 42 22 M 20 41 21 36 14 71 45 40 19 13 29 51 33 31 19 ,, 49 ... 42 .. 41 42 22 S7 28 eo 20 .. ,.. 41 " 43 30 Calif. Temps SMte MllN Sant• MonlCa Slodclon r.i-v.,.., T0trMCe YOMtnlte~ 83 &5 eo " N 41 8ol .. Boelon lkiflalo &urtlnglon. VI c...,., Cl\etleelon.S C CMtlMlon. w v Chet'IOtle. N C Cheyenne CNctlQO Clnclnneu CieYeCancl Columbl• s c Columt>vt.Otl Concord N H Oell»-f l Wortl! Oeyton o.n-0..MOl!lM o.lron EJPMO felfbenll• Fwgo FleQel•" Grenet RloiCla GrMCFlll • Gr-.boro,N C Hwtlofd 70 36 ae M eo 36 40 23 es eo 40 13 11 ,. 42 25 49 21 '3 30 .. 39 46 24 55 36 6t 35 51 37 '° 41 .. 70 13 36 n 35 41 32 54 31 32 22 81 33 79 64 70 21 40 27 87 32 )() 18 Helene Honolulu Hou11on lndlenepoll9 Jecileon.M1 """- ~ 45 M 22 eo 32 H 22 57 36 41 23 31 21 59 31 12 17 75 51 41 23 73 27 36 31 5f 35 Eztended Kan ... Cny SOVIETS SEAMEN ••• From Al t belligerent and arrogant. and re- peatedly remarked that the Soviet system was superior. The Times also cited photographs taken on the ship Oct. 29 by Lt. James R Geltz. the only known photo- graphs of the man interviewed by the State Department. When Geltz show- ed his pictures to a man who had seen Medved the day the incident began, both became convinced that the freighter's crew had pulled a switch. VIDEO STORE BURNS ••. From Al 1n a<lJaCcnt stores. McVey said. Investigators suspected the fire, wh1t·h c;taned at the front oflhc store, ma~ have been caused by an electrical shon in a TV set. McVe> said the set was totally d1c,1ntegrated, while VCRs sitting new.t to It hadn't received as much dllmagc Video tapes m the smoke-filled room had melted from the. intense ,heat. Because the store was located in a shopping center, 'with at least S500.000 in property at stake, Santa Ana firefighters also responded to the second alann call, McVey said. Ma n convicted in Fountain Valley child ·molestations A Texas man who lost a two-year fight to avoid extradition to Cali- fornia was coovtcted of molesting fou r Fountain Valley children. Clay ton Pittinger Myer, 64, was convicted Fnday in Orange County Supcnor coun of 10 counts of molesting a 14-year-old boy and three girls. ages 9. I 0 and 11, while visiting their fa m1l) ·s home in 1982 and 1983. After the verdict, Judge Robcn Fi tzgerald revoked Myer's bail, call- ing him "a danger to the community" and saying he felt Myer had enough money to flee the country before his March 28 sentencing. The retired San Antonio real estate and financial planner could face up to I 8 years in pnson. Myer, whose fight against extra- dition went all the way to the Texas Supreme Coun, has denied molesting the children or even being in Foun- tam Valley -an Orange County community 35 miles southeast of downtown Los Angeles -on the alleged dates of the molestation. The children's parents have filed a civil lawsuit against Myer for alleged psychological harm to two young- sters. County approves dred~ing of Hun t ington Harbour cnannel Pon1ons of Huntington Harbour's main channel will be dredged under a \I 6 million cleanup project ap- picJ\ cd by the Orange County Board uf ~uperv1sors Tuesday. The county 'Plans to dredge about I 30 000 cubic yards of sediment from the main harbor channel staning at Anahei m Bay and ending at the \uutheast end near Warner A venue. o\nothcr 5.000 cubic yards of sedi- me nt -...111 be removed from Chns- 11ana Ba}. a small inlet within Huntington Harbour . Sedi me nt buildup 1s restricting the use ol recrcattonal boats m the harbor. The city of Huntington Beach is expected to pick up two-thirds oflhe cost of dredging. The county, which is responsible for unincorpo rated sec- uons of the harbor, will finance the rest. Dredging may begin as early as the summer of 1987. The work will take about three years to complete, accord- ing to an aide to 2nd District Supervisor Harriett Wieder. Wieder's district includes Hunt- ington Harbour. Surf Report 54 llO 85 55 ft 41 LOCATIOM Im CMll. Z4lme IMc:tl 2-3 w ..,,,. Monlol 2-11 w ~9Mcll 2-3 w Sen OleOO County ~ w OullOOtt IOt Tu.der Ullle clw>ge Ti dee ==r ._..,. 8-ldlOw TOOAY 1:11 Lift 1001 ...... 5'81 p.111 • l:OI pm TWIDAY Flr'lll lllO'> "'-!ow ~ .. ~low 3, It ..... 11:29a.lft.. 8:12 p "'-10-.27 p"' $ 1 03 28 u $I ..0 3 33 28 ~ .... ,......,n..,.,,.... Mlu Orange County Tamara LJD.D Soron.en, 20, hu to catch her breath apon hearlnC abe bu been named Miu or.nee Coanty 1988 at the foart.b an.naal Scbolar- ehlp Paeeant at <>ranae Coaat Colle&e on Satardaf. 8oroneen becomea eltclble for the Ml•• Calif ornla Pa&eant enroate to the lllM America Pa&eant ln Atlantic Clty. CROSSWALK CALLED DANGEROUS ..• From A l to prevent accidents. City officials also want assistance from Caltrans in puttin g hel'ts over the crosswalks. But Paine contends the city docs have options concerning crosswalk dangers 1n the city. He said the city should increase police patrols in the area to make motorists more aware of the speed limit. "An)'onc who lives in Corona del 'v1ar will tell you that motonsts rc~ula rl) c'ceed the 35 mph speed MAIN OFFICE lJl'J '°'"' a... >I C.0.•t i,i.w C• limit -especially at night -and often cannot react in time for a pcdestrain about to cross the street," Paine said. Paine said lhe city should also consider pedestrian-activated traffic sianals at crossings located at Larkspur Lane. Orchid, Mariaold, Dahlia and Heliotrope avenues. The signals are designed to remain arecn at all times, except when someone pushes the button to walk across the street. Paine said he acknowledges the problems with the plan to make crosswalk safety alterations, includ- ing fundfog. He cited Caltrans u a major hurdle because state officials must approve all road work on the Coast Hlghway. - "The real question is not how we protect ourselves from I~ liability, but how we protect our c1t11ens from being hun," Paine said. D•llJ Piiot o.tlYety It Queren.tMd .,., •"''•' 8° • •seo Cotll ,,._ CA 926'6 C.e6''eoeot 842·S618 out.-' .Olor•I 641 o&311 Justcall 642-6086 Monoey FtoOly n )nu do not ,....,. v-oe0tor by 5 lOpm ui•~oo• 'P"' -rOi' COOy • Cit t<'f •'9"' '~' 0'1nqo C. 1\1 p,~ GOl"IM•• '°Cl • .,, tll)fe\ ~"JCt'llo()r"\ .OClt.I ,...It .. or ·~­ ..,.,, ,.,_, •. ~ ,..., Of •0'~11'1) • ~f ~··~ C)fif" ..... ..,, ~ "'"''~' ""- • ou OO•'•-i# Cool ., c;~·• M•MI Ce•toone r ·o eoo St.Dte•f'•'(>"I to. c• .. u 1\ l'l'l(lr<tllty D, ,700"'0":1•, VOL. 11, NO. 12 ( . What do you like about the Daily Pilot? What don't you like? <!all the number above and your messa,e will be recorded, transcribed and de- livered to the appropriate editor. The same 24-hour answerina SCTVtcc may be used to record letters to the edjtor on anr topic. Contributors to our Letten column must include their name and telephone number for venfication. Tells us what's on your mind. ~ \t1"'°'' e<'CI ""'46, " 'IOU dCI 'IOI ·..:--,0... topy Dy 7 • "' fA bel- 10 I ITI •ncl yQUf 'OCIY ., I be-·ltO Clrculetlon Te .. phonee Mc)ll Ot•nge r.-11 ,,, ... , ..... UllWN .... ---