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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1986-03-04 - Orange Coast Pilot-- TUESDAY, MARCH 4, 1986 Laguna cops start sobriety stops An ti-drunken driving tactic to make coastal debut; it's contested legally By ROBERT HYNDMAN OfllleO.., ........ ' The Laguna Beach Poli~ Depart- ment will set upa sobrittycheckpoint Friday in an effon to keep drunken' drivers off the road. Traffic will be directed through a roadblock where motorists will be Nlzon honors A clrl•e la under way to make Richard Nlzon '• birthplace a national hlatorlc •lte. A 1 Sports Ken Ammann and the Edison High Chargers are at the Lqa Angeles Sports Arena Wednesday./81 Entertainment Golden West College comes up with a zesty, fun-filled production of Shakespeare's "Twelfth Night." /85 INDEX Advice and Games Births Off-daty Fountain Valley POllce offlcen int.ended to contlnue picketln« ill front of City Ball until toni«bt'• City o.ltr ........ ..,o.iw ......... Council meet:lDC. They bope to will pabllc npport lD their 4rl•e to will JalCher pay and l'IUUlteed WOTkiDC term.•. Driver in chase deaths sentenced Santa Anan given 15 years-to-life for Mesa smashup By STEVE MARBLE Of ... o.ltr ........ A Santa Ana man was given twin sentences of 15 years to life in prison Monday in a preccclent-setting case in which he was convicted of murdering two Costa Mesa teens in a 1984 car accident. Ruben Mayorga Valle, 23, is the first pcnoo in Orange County con- victed of murder in a traffic collision. AftcT listcnin~to the mothers oftbe- two yout,bs plead for a maximum sentence. SUpcrior Court Judge Wil- liam McDonald ordCT'ed Valle to serve consecutive 15-ycar-to-lifs,. sentences and added c-.igbt months for grand theft auto. ' McDonald described Valle's crime as .. horrifying." Bulletin Board Business Classified Comics A10 A6 A3 A7-9 B6-8 A11 Police officers picket for higher pay Valle wasdrivin&a stolen van when he ran a stop light in Costa Mesa on Dec. 12. 1984 and broadsided a car. kil~ Ro Williamson and .8IDy Dearina. ~ alJe WU bc:i.oa cbocd by police at the time oft.he accident. Williamson and Dearin& were both I 7 and students at Estancia High School. They were driving to school when their Volkswagen Bug was struck at the intersection of 19th Street and Placentia A venue. Death Notices Entertainment Horoscope Opinion Paparazzi Police Log Public Notices Sports Television Weather 88 85 A10 A12 i A6 A3 88 81-4 85 A2 By ROBERT BARKER Of.,_ Deir .... IWI Off-duty police officers formed a picket line in front of Fountain Valley City Hall today, hot>ing to win public support in their drive to win higher pay and a guanntec of current working terms. Detective Chris Kielich, vice presi- dent of the SO-member Fountain Valley Police Officers Association. said that officers are seeking pay increases to bring them up to the pay of the average police officer in Orange County. "We're doing a better than average job," K.ielicti said. "We just want the average county pay." Kielich said the unhappy officers would maintain their picket line throuptout the day and tonight when the City Council meets at 8 o'clock. The peaceful picketing climues a contract impasse that began when the previous contract expired last fall in the city of 54,900 people. Assistant City Manager Ray Kromer said today that when wage and other benefits are considered, Fountain Val ley officers actually would rate 12th of 23 police depart- ments in Orange County if they accepted the latest 5.5 percent offer. The total package -pay and benefits -for a police sergeant currently stands at $63,251; actual pay for sergeants is $37,000, Kromer said. The total package for officers 1s $53.078. The current pay alone for officers is $32,000. Kromer sajd. "We're talking about salary," Kielich said. "Irvine, which has about the same tax base as Fountain Valley pays its officers. $3,223 a month. Our officers are paid $2.506 a month." (Pleue Me POLICE/ A2) Valle. who was convicted Feb. J 3 by a Superior Court jury in Santa Ana, asked the youth's parents for forgiveness before McDonald hand- ed down the sentence, a court officer stated. ~fense attorney Michael Horan claimed during the trial that the (Pleue eee Slt1'TENClt/ A2) Mother's slaying ruled an accident HB injury suit settled for $9 million By STEVE MARBLE Of !Mo.ityl'lletltaift By STEVE MARBLE Of .... Deir ...... ..,, Huntington Beach city officials agreed Monday to pay up to $9 million in damages to the family of a 22-year-old man who suffered critical head injuries in 1981 when he was hit by a car while riding his bicycle in a marked crosswalk. The settlement with the family of Philip Harbin Jr. was reached just minutes before the lawsuit was to go to a Supenor Court jury in Santa Ana · to determine damases. Jurors had already decided the cn y was !table for Harbin's injuries. Harbin. who was 17 when the accident occurred. has been in hospi- tals and other medical institutions during the past fi ve years and is underg~ing therapy at a treatment center 1n Te11.as. "He'll be receiving treatment the rest of his life,'' said Wylie Aitken. the attorney representing Harbin's parents. Neal Moore. a Long Beach attorney who represented the city. said Hunt· ington Beach agreed to the settlement out of fear of what the jury might do He carted the lawsuit a ''classic example of deep pockets." "Deep pockets" is a ·slang phrase used to describe lawsuits in which several defendants are named but only the one with the most money 1s targeted. The structured settlement calls for the city to pay more than SI m1llton immediately and as much as $8 million more over the course of Harbin's hfe m medical costs and future payments. In addition to monthly medical payments of$3. I 00. the city agreed to pay SI 0.000 a month for the next two years for Harbin to continue special treatment. Also. the city agreed to pay Harbin graduating lump sum payments e"'ery fi ve vears. The payments would start (Pleue eee 11'JURY I A2) A Superior Court jury refused to con vict a 26-ycar-old Capistrano Beach man of murder Monday even though he admitted killing his mother and stuffing her body into the trunk of a car. Instead, jurors convicted Matthew James Lombard of involuntary man- slau$hter, which is punishable by. a maximum term of four years in prison. Salvage company joins sea se,arch for plane Jurors said they ·believed the woman's death was accidental and that Lombard's efforts to cover up the death were the result of panic and shock .. Deputy District Attorney Tom Matthew Jama Lombard Goethals said he was "surprised and disappointed" by the verdict and predicted Lombard will be free within two years. Jurors deliberated the case almost three days before retuminJ with the (Pleue eee JURORS/ A2) By STEVE MARBLE OflMOel!J .......... A private salvage company joined sherif'f s Harbor Patrol boats today off the coast of Newport Beach as the search resumed for an airplane that apparently carried three {>COplc to their deaths Sunday when 1t crashed into the ocean. But the Coast Guard. which had .Davis backs sea d,rilling, calls oil foes 'demagogues' Senate hopeful air~ conservative views while in Mesa for campaign fundraiser By PAUL ARCHIPLEY OthOel!JNeCIWf Callin& bf'fshorc oil dnllina oppo- nents "dema.gogu~·· who aren't thinkina of their natJon's interests, state sen. Ed Davis said ocean 011 production can be aocomplished without harmina the environment. Dunn& an 1nterv1cw with the Daily Pilot ~fort attcndina a $125-pcr- pcrson cocktml party fund-rai&cr in .. ' Costa Mesa. Davis espoused his conservative views on the issues, iocludiog support for of'fshorc oil drillina, the Strategic Defense fn. itiativc, immiiration rcfonn and an active foreian policy m Central America. He also said his campa1an for the Republican nomination for lJ.S. senator hasn't been hun by the Bobtn Fiedler affair. in which he charicd that her camp off'trod him SI00.000 to pay his campaign debts 1f he drop~ out of the raoc. Davis said oil drilling off Cali- fomia 's outer continental shelf can be aooomplished without hannina the environment or destroying the C$thet1c vah~e of the coastline. Citing the Grace Platform operat- '"$ 22 miles off Santa Barbara, Davis said "Youc.an'tevc:n.sce it. That kind of offshore development is impon.ant to the economy and secunty. "The last thing we'd want 1s to come in and put production 1n an unsiahtly location "ihe people in anta Barblna wt'rt allegedly anu-oil ." ht said. bur they headed the search. suspended 1t.s effons late Monday and said it would not resume its efforts until there is some indication the plane's wreckage has been found. "lt does not seem possible they could have survived," Coast Guard Lt. John Ochs said. The passengers were identified as Philip Teffiey of Irvine. who was the pilot; Barry King of Newpon Beach. Paul ARCHIPLEY PEOPLE IN THE NEWS voted down an 1nlllattve lac;t Novem- ber calhn& for the elimination of offshore oil productton "The people who are against 11 art dcmaaogue!I who don't have the nation's interests at hean." f>av1 .\aid. The nation'" 1ntt'rests ul~o he 1n a "rong 11tand on ( 'cntral mcnc•. he ,,.Id "We ,hould de<:larc a new Mon~ Doctrine for the Wc'ltem lkm1- sphtrt that sayc; wt W111 not tolrratr (Pl ...... DA VIS/ A2) and Benigo Villa. 38. of Costa Mesa. Coast Guard scuba divers were joined Monday by the Orange Count) Sheriffs dive team at the crash site. Sheriffs Lt. Robert Rivas said. "Thev'vc collected all the debns. and the~·s nothing left to look for." Rivas sa1d. Debris included a pair of wheels. a baggage door, two seats. insulation and a shoe. he said. Divers also fou nd part of the flight manual bearing the regJStration number of the Archer Piper that had been rented from Aero Aite Center at John Wayne Airport. .\n employee at Aero Flight said the three men had taken the plane out for a night training flight. Teffiey was (Pleue eee SltAJlCB/ A2) J~dge o:rders hearing on OC JAil.crowding By USA MAHONEY Of .. Oellr ......... Orange Count) offic1ah ha ve be-en called on the carpet to e~phun wh \' they have not obeyed a federal court order rcquinng them to hm1t the numberof1nma1csa1 tht matn men·, 1a1l in Santa ~n3 to l.SOO. ll S Dlstnct Coun Judge Wilham Gray has S(t a Mar<'h 20 heanng m Santa Ana at wh1ch supervisors mu~t show cau$C for c~Cttdtng the court- ordcr'Nt I JOO-inmate hm1t at lca<it th~ days last month, t'kputy ( oun- t)' Counsel Ed Duran has con finned "l would cucss hc''i not <'Om1n1 to conaratulatc u~." he '81d Oranac \ountv su~rvtsol'\ wtr<" found in rontrmpt of roun a vear ~o tor not compl)'lng with orders mucd h\' C ,ra, tn 1978 to relteve over· aowdmg at the Main Jail. C 1ra\ ordered the county 10 reduce 1he m'matc population from more than 2.000 to 1.500 by Jan. 15. a feat which requ1rcd a number of actions including thc hast) constn.icuon of modular Jail bu1ldmgs at tht James A Musick Honor Fann 1n El Toro. He also ordered a fun her rcductJon of inmates at the Main Ja1l 10 1.400 b> •.\pnl l But the henff s Department has not been able to stay under tht <:JP dunng February de~p1tc tnnsfcmna inmates to modular hou Inf and a 1cmporar) tent c1t at Mu\Jck and (Pleue eee .JAJL/ A.2) ! A2 * 0rtinge CoMt DAILY PILOT/ Tueeday, M1r<:h 4, 1988 Probe of cracking homes over BJTONY AAV EDRA °' .......... __ Upholdina a $40,000 soil repon that residents say is tainted, the Costa Mesa City Council refu~ Monday to order a new aeoloaiC4tl study into land movement that has rep0rtcdJy dam&&ed 14 7 homes. W1tn little discus ion. council members accepted a city inquiry that charactcnzed the geoloa.ical repon by consultant l.eiahton and Associates as "accurate and complete." Members of the North Costa Mesa Homeowners Association. the group that accused the Irvine-based geolog1- cal firm \WO wCelts ago of having a conflict of intertst. did not speak at Monday's meet1ns. In a memorandum to the col1nc1I, City Manager Allan Roeder said 1t would cost about $50,000~to take another in-depth look into the source of cracks plaguing homes between Sunflower Avenue, South Coast Onve, Fa1rv1ew Road and Bear Street 1n north Costa Mesa The c1 ty-<:omm1ss1oncd oils stud} last )'Car concluded that homes were cracking becau~ of clay soil that had a tendency to e'pand and <:on tract llowever. homeowners have clung to susp1c1ons that the damage was caused b) corutruc110n uf the c1l}· approved outh Coast Plaza mall annex along Bear Street. l hey claim cxcava11 un for .in underground parking lot has drained ground water from beneath adjacent neighborhoods. cauo;ing the land to, o;cttle and house~ to crar k Roeder said thecoum.:tl rnuld hire a geologist for $2,000 to $1 000 to audit the report by Leighton and A.s· ~oc1ates. Councilman Da ve Whl·der '>ug- ees tcd the audit be rnndut led to further validate the crat l.ing home~ repon But lhe mot1on died tor lack of • sceond from counctl members wary of the lepJ ram1ficat1on!). The city 1) facina 107 h1b11J1y claims -some a k1ea for SI mallaon apiece -from residents whose homC\ have repdrtedly cracked be• cause of the ground movement. Many of those chums have been denied by the council. setting 1he sta~e for homeowners to file un against the c11y. More than "80 claJm~ arc from residents reprc~nted by 1he an · Francisco law ijnn of Patrick Catalano. a speciaJi I in land move- meot litipt1on. Dissatisfaction wtth the report by Leighton and Associate~ he1gJucned after residents leafned the firm was indirectl y linked wnh mall-owner CJ. Seae~trom & Sons While working on the crncluna homes study, the aeoloSJcat con<;ult- ant aJsd helped prepare the en- varonmenual impact report for the proposed 98-acre "Home Ranch" business center -another con· trovers1al Scgerstrom prOJecl 1n nonh Costa Mesa. However, Roeder told council members Monday that technically Leighton and Associates was hired by the city-and not the Segerstroms - to work on the ''Home Ranch" report. Roeder continued that he could hnd no indication that the study on land slippage was prejudiced or compromised by work on the other repon.· SOBRIETY CHECK •.. From Al decision The Cit} of Anaheim ap- pealed to the state Fourth D1stnct Appellate Court. which refused to hear the case. Its refusal allowed the Supenor ( oun <_lec:1c;1on to stand. Thalman said But 1n the other case. a 1uven1lc court -which 1s a branch of the Superior Court -ruled 10 favor of the city's nght to operate sobnety checkpoints. That ruling, Thalman said, was appealed by the defendant and is pending before the Fourth District Appellate Court And in a scparate--case. the ACLU filed a lawsuit again!>! the city. But the state First Dtstnct Appellate ( ourt ruled in the city's fa vor. Based on that ruling. other law enforcement agencies are allowed to operate sobriety checkpoints But .\nahe1m has decided to d1sconunue 11s propam unuJ the appellate case 1nvolv1ng the Juvenile driver 1s heard, Thalman said. "While it was operating, we had overwhelming suppon for the sobne- t}'<hcckpoint pro~:· Thalman said · "The idea isn't with these. programs, is to act as a deterrent to keep drunken driven off the street, and we feel it's effective." Laguna Beach police agree that the program's high visibility may keep tipsy drivers from getting behind the wheel in the first place. In add1t1on, the police department has long offered a ''tipsy taxi" program in which officers give local residents a lift ho me 1f they feel they are too intox1c~Led to be dn\>ing. "But 11 onl y works if they come to us first,'' Cavenaugh says. "If our officers stop them. it's 100 late." INJURY SUIT SETTLED FOR $9 MILLION ... From Al at S50.000 and would reach$ iOU.000 h} Harbin's 52nd b1nhda> lromcally. Huntington Beach c:ll) officials rejected a S2 6 m1ll1on claim filed by Harbin's parents 1n 1981 According 10 coun doc uments. a car dnven by a teen.age girl struck Harbin in a crosswalk at the 1nter- sec11on of Warner .\' cnue and Nichols Street. Although another motorist had pauo;cd w let Harbin pasc;. the girl swung aro und the 'ilopped car and ~truck Harbin The g,rl was nut cited 1n the accident. The girl's insurer ~Hied out nt court for S300,()()(), Moore ..aid. ~we were left holding the bag.'' the c1t)"s attornq said The ( ll\-Counc.:11 ordered a traffic signal installed at the in1e~ct1on several week.slater. According to the lawsuit. parents and administrators at L1bcny Chris- tian School had been campa1gn1ng for improvements at the 1n1crsec11on for more than seven year!> before Harbin was tnJured. Administrators at nearby Oakview School said they bused students across Warner Avenue rather than permll them to cross the busy street Ralph Le) va. the ci ty's former traffic engineer. adm111ed dunng the :?11i week tnal that Cit} official'> considered the 1nterse<.:t1on to be dangerous. At the time of the acc1denL. Leyva said the intallauori of a traffic signal had long been delayed by lack of money and red tape in secunng a federal grant. Harbin suffered serious head in- JUries in the accident and remained 1n a coma for two weeks. ~itkens said. He said the youth later was moved 10 an·1nstitut1on that spec1ali:zcs m head Injuries. "He's of normal mtqlligencc now but he has no understanding of cause and effect.-the attorney said "It'\ like a computer that's been pan1all~ shut down.·· SEARCH FOR PLANE ... From Al described as an e'penenled train ing pilot The ~arch "'as '>tym1cd b) tht· under'-'aler terrain a'i well as fog that rolled over the ocean late ~onda\. Rnassa1d · "It's 1n an area that'c, -.cl"\. \tccp.'· he said "A little further in. \.OU might have a shot at 11 " ( oast (iuard Pett~ Otlit·er (1rcg Drew said the cra\h \tie wa~in water that Y.ac; at lea-;1 l IW leet deep Rl\as said two 'hcrifr-. Harhor Patrol boa ts and a helicopter would 1nc;peu the ocean again to<la)' hut barring an} developments. would su-;pend their search b)' nightfall \ private -;a l\'age wmpan)' bac;ed in ( arlsbad will keep \earching furthe airplane ""reckagc a ( ()ast <1uard ulliual said \ '>pt1kcswoman tor the l11ght school 1.A.Ould not 'ia) whether her compan\ had hired the sal .. age cre1.A. ~ore than a do1en 1.A.1tnesscs sa"' or heard the crash off the NeY..pon Pier at 11 14 p.m Sunda} One w11ness.J1m Holh o t Ne\\.pon Bt'ach. said the plane wac; fl}tng east 1.A.hcn 11 sudden!-.. Hered out over the ocean. banked to the we<;t and then splashed intci the ocean 1 he accident 1.A.a'> the -;ci:ond in a week here Ocveloper Waller Scott B1dcl le of "'iev.port Beach wa<, killed Wedne<;- da} when his plane crashed 1n a parking lot about a quarter m1k lrom John Wa)'ne A1rpon SENTENCE ... From Al collts1on was an accident and that Valle wa~ a psychotic state from }'Can; of drug abu<;e He also said Valle had eaten a large quan111y of sugar-filled food before the colhs1on. In a tape-recorded police in te rview pla~ed for juror~. Valle 'itates that he feels no remorse for the dead youths and wanted to "kill people, lot'> of them·· But 1n the same 1n1erv1ew, Valle sobs and says he did not intend to kill Dearing and Williamson. He tells police he deserves to die. A psychologist who tesufied for the defense said Valle was suffenng a "psychotic reaction" at the time of the accident and behaved hkc a "scared rabbit'' when he saw pohce were chasing him. POLICE PICKETING ... Prosecutor Rick King insinuated that the explanation for Valle's reck- less dnving was akin lo the so-called "Twinkie defense," named for the defense used by Dan White 1n his tnal for killing the mayor of San Francisco and a supervisor White's attorney argued years of catmg j unk food helped cause the murders. From Al Poh<:e nego11awr \tepren ~th er ..aid the ac,soc1at1on 1\ -;cek1ng a 6 I percent raise for olhccr'i and a 6 Y7 percent pa" hike lur sergeants wh1k the cit~ 1s olknn[! a 4 5 perct·nt increase ~1her also ..aid tht• <:11) I'> tn ing .. ,,, ta kt• al.A.a' ·a \ lau\c prolt'cting police benefit., '>Uth a<. ""ages hour\. worl.- 1ng cond1t1<>n'> and promottCJn ~tan­ dards and I\ tr) ing lo cut batk on o'en1mc pa} Otlicrr'> wuu Id ha' t' to work I 71 hour" 1n a tour·1.A.cek 1.A.C>rl. period be tore he1ng t'llg1 hie fur ""ert1 me pa~ he 'laid Horan called the 30-year sentence e"<Ce'\s1ve ~d vowed an appeal. according to repons. ~~~ORS RULE SLAYl~CCIDENTAL ... \Crd1<t Judgl' I c<inard l\lh.1Umk '>l't c,cntcncing f1ir \rml 11 I om hard who ha\ lx•t•n 1n < Jrangc C ount\ Jail c;incc h1\ .irrc\t on I ch ~11 l'JX5 cla1mt•d hi\ m111hcr'<> death • •n I c•b 8 wa'> a<< 1<.lental In a' 1deutapc ul a p11h<c inter' IC"" pla)ed for JUTUr\. L omhard ..aid hi\ 1n10~1cated mother put a hand on h1'> -;houldcr and that \he It'll In tht• ll11or and 'itruck her head ""ht•n hl' tm·d to hr11'ih awa.,. her hand \hc grabbed nH .1n1l I ){Ul'" I kn<K ked her d~r1 h•· \.11d durin[I the \ 1dcotaped rnlt'r' ll'l.A. I om hard also adm11tcd that he ""a<; not ~urc whether h1~ mother wa., dead v.hen Ile put her bo<l~ on a hldnkct 1n 1hc trunk of her '"'' ~ F r>rd ~aH'rt< k "I JUSI got scared " he told polic C But Gocthal-; loldjuror'i th::it f mil~ Mae r ombard wac, '"h()~ !It'd" v.1th rnr>e and wire and blindfolded "'''h .1 ~~~~F Daily Pilat MAIN OFFICE VOL. 711 NO. 13 '· hath towel The prosecu1111'\.11d the videotape al\o ~howed 1hat Lombard al lir\t lied to police 1nvc-;11ga10r<. h> cla1m1ng h had nothing to do with hi'> mother 'i dt'ath ··\\ h' would I kill m> mom''" I omhard asl.ed JI one point in the 1n1erroga11on ·\he take'> care of me " \\. htlc (,octhals said an autop'iy rt.'\eJkd <;1gn'> of trauma to the I.A.Oman·._ head and che'it Puhhc Defender Joel Baruth \aid the "'oman apparent!) died of a heart aot l3tk -1hc re-;uh of 'itrC'i'i and the ht•ad tnJUr. C 10<'thal<; ao;ked j uror~ to return \\Ith ,'I vcrdic:I of ~ond-dCifee murder pun1 .. hable by IS year~ to hfe 1n 1a1l Baruch <.aid Mrc; Lombard haras!>cd and tormented her son because ofh1s inabihty to hold onto a jOb Sull. Lombard loved h1'i mother, he said Lombard's first murder tnal came 10 an abrupt hall when Jurors were accidentally shown a grisly picture of the woman's body as it appeared 10 police officers when they opened the trunk of the car five days after the woman died. McBnde \aid the photograph was prcJud1c1al and declared a m1stnal The ~cond tnal opened Feb. 18. 1986. Lombard reported his mother- m1ssfng three days after her death.'" When her car was located two .Oays later in San Clemente, he reportedly asked pohce to open the trunk He was arrested several days later after confessing. Delly Piiot O•tlvery 11 Querenteed M1lf..cM1 F''<lt1 tt ~· ~~ Just call 642-6086 • t-..... flll ,~,. ru•~ ov }'.I:>* ••r<:r•1c •"'1 '""' t«• ... r.. ,.. ... -0 \\hat do .,..,u la ke about the !A.ii) Pilot., What don't \l}U like"< all the number above and }'Our me,<;.age "'II he re,orded. tran\Cnbed and de- h\ered to the appropnate editor The "lme 24 hour an,y,.enna ~rv1ce ma> be u~d H• rel ord lc1ter~ 10 the editor on any topic ( ontnbutor\ 10 nur utteM column must include their name c1nd telephone number for venficat1on f elh U'i what's On }OUr mtnd I ,~ ..,,... -c.-... ' , c,.r., o-, 1 I .. CA ,,_.., •e tQ A '9'\ .,..:l ,o.1 COOf • ~~ ... Ml Circulation T•leptton•• WEA THER A warm wind from the Hit Wiii k..P Southern California In Its sunny, dry, ..,ty.aummer mode. the National WMthef S4tNte. r9P<)rtt Mid-~ bHchgC*I, hOW9V9', will find fog and low Ciloudl atoog the cout In the morning and evening houri through Wedneaday. After the haze burns ott. temperatures 1hould PMk In the low to mid eoa aJong the coast with highs In the 70. to low 801 tntand Tonlghl'110w1 are expected to range from 46 to eo Al<>ng the Orange Coast II wlll be mostly sunny and warm Wednaday. Patchy low clouds along the 1<>ulh co .. t tonlQht with huy 1i(te. and loettl dente fog elMWhere. Hight Wednetday ranging from the low and mid eoa at the beeches to the 70. and lower 80a further Inland. Lows tonight 48 to 60. From Point Conception to the Mexican Border -Inner waters: Light verlable winds night end morning hours becoming aouthwnt to w .. 1 8 to 16 knot• afternoon and evening hour• Wednesday W81terly twell 2 lo 3 feet. Night and mornlng low clouds and patchy dense log, malnly over south wat9ft. Partlal cturlng and huy sunshine In the a.tternoon Wednesday. U.S •. Temps TOOAY em tMAl'I 1-S "* 1·3 .... 13 ..., H t ~ 1·3 ~ 1·2 ~ 1·3 ,.., 8->d NQtl e 57 p m Second IOw 10 21 p m ...... _. WU>NSteDAY 443em 12 27pm 7..22pm 1050pm u 07 37 25 DA VIS BACKS OFFSHORE OIL DR ILLING ... From Al . / an) government that 1'i 'iubscrv1cnt to prosperous and successful people the Soviet U n1on or any other foreign have tolerated such a system 1s power," Davie; said. incomprehensible," he said. Calling Cuba and Nicaragua Soviet Davis sa~ a lack of leadership and puppets. he !><ltd the Umted States planning 1n California is panly re· should encourage democracy for its sponsible for that problem, and called· Lalin neighbor~. on Congress to force the admin1s· .. A.c; bad as Somo1a wa~. at least he tration to give the state its fair share of was an indigenous pirate. and that's a federal highway dollars. \Ao hole lot be Iler 1 han a foreign set of He also suggested a ballot prop- pirates." he said. ositton askjng voters whether high- " The prt's1 dcnt should say. ·c ict out way users should pay higher fuel taxes of there hy th<.> authonty of democ-for transponation needs. · rac) of the 21st ('entur)' of the "I look at all the docile human We<;tcrn Hemisphere·" beings sitting in their cars and Da' is said the na11on's interests listening fu the radio, and I get so also 1.A.Ould be served ""11h implemen-damn mad I want to get out and throw tarion of the S1ra1eg1t Defense In· bombs or something." 111at1' c popularly called Star Wars. Davis said the Fiedler affair that ( 111ng op11m1st1c prediction'> that dominated headlines dunng the early \DI would knock out 90 percent ot part of the race hasn't harmed his :rn} 1ncom1ng m1ss1les. he qa1d ab1llly to raise funds or reduced .\menca's retaliatory ab1hty would suppon for his campaign. remain intact and thus discourage the He ~•d that he raised $16,000 at a \ov1ets from attempting a surpnsc prev1ouscoc:kt.all pany 1n Chatsworth attack. and raised another $6.000 in an ''My theory 1s the liberals think the encouraging response to a recent MAD doctnne (mutually assured direct-mail appeal. A dinner for 500 destn..icuon) 1s good. and they're tn Apnl at the Century Plaza was half afraid 'iDI would be destab1lmng. sold out even before invitations were "In fact. that was the So' 1ct ~ailed. he said. response It's interesting that Ame~ .. Those three examples lead me to ca's hbcrals have had the 1dcnt1cal believe I haven't been hurt." Da v1\ reaction as the Soviets. said. 'Tm doing a'i well now ac; I was "SDI must be good or Ciorhache v before the Fiedler caper." wouldn't be i;o upi;et -or the Da vis also said people statewide liberals." he s~ud. While Davis believes SDI will keep have pr.used him for alerting the Los Angeles D1stnct Attorney's office to what he alleges was an offer by the Fiedler camp to pay off $100,000 of his campaign debts 1f he would drop out of the race. A judge later threw out the cha~es 3JainSt Fiedler and her campaign aide. Paul Clarke. "Whal it will do to her campaign only time w11l tell," Davis said. out enemy missiles. he 1s frustrated that the federal government has done little 10 keep out illegal 1mm1grants JAIL OVERCROWDING .•. Blaming a string of U S. attorneys general forfa1hng toenforcc 1mm1gra· lion laws at the border, he said Washington should prohabl} quad- ruple the number of border guards. "The bad guys have been the attorne>., general who haven't done a good JOb It begins and ends there •\n}thing el~ 1s ac;1nine. ··11 \hO"'-S how stupid people get when they go to Washington." He find" Southrm Cahfom1ans equall}' stupid for suffering their traffic woe<; without demanding solu- tions. ··orange County '"a transit d1sas-. ter area Try to get out of Irvine in peak hours. How so many interesting. 'l From Al filling all available beds at rheo Lacy Branch Jail in Orange According to a coun-appointed observer. there were more than 1,500 inmates in the Main Jail at least three times last month. And because of incomplete stat1st1cs for some days. it 1s possible that the county violated G ray's order <;everal more times. Special Master Lawrence Grossman said in a lcttcrto the Judge. Duran said he docs not know why the Sheriffs Department exceeded the hmtL\ set by Gray. He said he was expecting a report from the Sheriffs staff this morning. "The obvious answer 1s mo~ inmat_cs," he said. But Grossman says the county has not done all it can to reduce inmate population. It docs not, for example, use citations to free people brou$ktt to the jail on suspicion of committing minor. non-violent cnmes. The Amencan Civil L1bert1es Union, which sought the contempt. finding against the county last March, marntarns that suspects in minor crimes should be given a citation and ordered to appear for arraignment instead of being jailed when they are unable to raise bail. Comfortilt')e feminine. fed petty 1n lhlS bataste ootton dr~~ wrth hanke<duef hnen ccilar A M1J1 JIT'Cf• Cuthnane Design WESTCUFF PLAZA NEWPORT BEACH, CA (7141842-7091 I .. j Brain infections talk at UC Irvine Dr. StanJey B. Prusiner, professor of neuroloay at tbe UC Sa.n Franc11CO School of Medicine, wilJ J)tetent a lecture on an unusual infectious -sent that cautes desenernive neuroloaical diseast1 Wedne1-- daY. at 7 p.m. in the Science l...ec1u.re HaU at UC Irv me. The prOJtlm is free and opc:n to the public. Call the Neurotc1encc Association office at 8S6-S847 for more information. Frlend•lllp Day planned American-Canadian Friendship Day will be obser:ved Wednesday at the Laguna Beach Lawn Bowlina Club when 15 Canadian 6owlers will join SO local club members for a social tournament at Heisler Park. The games will start at 12:30 p.m. foUowmg a lunch at the clubhouse. Call club president Ray Nichols at •96-2978 or tournament chairman Page B«kett at 494-2628 for more information. Hebre• coarse bJ Lagana Chabad of Laguna will offer a course in beginning Hebrew startfog today and running for six weeks at no charge. !he class is geared forbegmncn with little or no prcv1ous expenencc. The class will be held at 21542 Wcsle).' Ave., South laglJna, and more information is av11lable at 494-4282 or 786-5000. Bruh palntlag d1•played Oriental Reflections, an exhibit of Chinese brush painting by American artists, will be on display from today through March 29 at the Huntington Beach Library, 7111 ·Talbert St .. Huntington Beach. Supervision work•hop •et A supervision workshop, introducing partici- pants to the responsibilities ofa supervisor, will be offered Tuesdays, beginning tOOlgbt, in the Univer- sity Community Center's mult1-purposc room 1n Irvine. Sponsored by lrvtne Valley College, the course will include orgamz.at1on. duties, human relations and trainmg. and wlll be taught by management consultant Janet Christensen Masuda. The cost is $65 and more 1nformat1on IS avaJlablc at 559-3333. CIJlaese culslne offered Gourmets can sample a Chinese-style buffet wit_h I 0 ent~ at a ~dcpeback College program on Chmese cu1sme, which meets today at 6:30 p.m. in prepartion for next Tuesday's dinner. The cost of the slide presentation and lecture is S 15 and docs not include the price of the dinner, which is o ptional and runs about S20. Call 582-4646 forfurther information. Volunteers needed The High Hopes brain trauma learning center in Costa Mesa is in need of willing people to volunteer time 1n assisting with head-injured young adults in group-supervised class situations, physical condition, sw1mming and other activities. No experience is necessary and volunteers may set their own hours. Call the center at 646-7458 for further information. Tumbllng, dance offered Oasses m dance and tumbling a.re continuing at the South Coast YMCA. 27781 -8 La Paz Road tn Laguna Niguel. Classes arc available for children from 3 to 12 yean of age 1n tumbling Tuesday and Thursday afternoons and dance on Wednesday afternoons. CALENDAR Tuesday, March 4 • 6 p.m., Lapa.a Beacb City CoancU, Council Chambers. 505 Forest Ave. • 7 p.m .. Oceu View Sc•ool Dl1tr1ct, District Board Room. 16940 B St .. Huntington Beach. • 7 p.m .. Huttaaioa Beacla Plamlll.g Com- ml11loa, City Council Chambers, 2000 Mai n St. • 7 p .m .. Hut1.D1toa lleacb City Scllool Dtstrlct, 20451 Cra1mer Lane. • 7:30 p.m .. lrvl.De Vilified Scbool District Bo11Td of Ed1catloa, District Administration Center. 5050 Barranca Parkway Wednesday, March 5 • 9:30 a.m .. Oru ge Couty Board of Saper- vtaon . county admin1strat1on building. 10 Civic Center Plaza in Santa Ana. • 7 p.m.m Hantlqioa Beacll Planaiag Com- ml11loa, City Council chambers. 2000 Mam SL Pou cr LoG Minister faces molestation charges By PAUL AftCRIPLEY °' .. ...., ........ A maruster from Fountain Valley was arrested Monday on chatats of moles ti nu I ().year-old airl. The Rev. Merle EdWln Means as being charaed with one counl of child molesta- tion and o ne count of sexual usauJt, said Fountain Valley police Lt. Rick Christensen. He was booked into Oranae County Jail The Twilight Zone? Monday, with batl set at $2,m. Ana-.n· meot will be scheduled at West Oranll! County Murucil)91 Court. Means, 43, is pastor of the Church of Reli&ious Science, I 0000 htamo1.tnt BJvd. in Down~. Aocorchng to Christensen the VlCUm, who also tives in Fountain Valley, is the daU&btcr of a fem.ale friend of Means. Th~ •lleacd incident occurred Doc. 28. Means ancf the airl were aitti~ Jn a cbaar waicbina TV, and the P,1 hid flUen asleep, Cbristenxn said. Her mother wasn't at home. Means allepdly was fondl1na the ptt wbtle she slept. Tbe"pbonc rana and she jumped up. " Means told the arrcstm' officers on Monday be was mcttly &iVUll the prl a mauaae wlule she slept, Christeltten said. The victim told a fiJ!friend aboul the incident, who told her mother. That woman in tum taJked to 1 the victim's mother. and she caned the police. 3heldin separate fracases By ROBEBT BABIER °' .. ...,,... ..... A wife aUqedly chas1og her husbe_nd with a butcher knife, a husband ttportedly pointing a gun at his spouse and an 18- year-old youth aUegedl y holding a jagcd beer bottle to the throat of a 10.year-old boy were arrested in separate assault cases in Huntington Beach. a police spokeswoman said Monday. In the first incident, Cbarfone Swarl>riclc. 32, came home allegedly after., drinlcinaand reportedly picked a fight with her husband James, also 32, accordana to ~~-Bergstrom. She grabbed a kitchen kD.ife and chased her husband, who grabbed therr 3-ycar-old child and hid behind a locked bedroom door at their home in the 6000 block of Julien Street. He called . .....,..,.mi'!:t police on the Emergency 911 line. Police arrested Mrs. Swarbrick and lodged her in --------' c1 ty Jail on S 10.000 bail, Bergstrom said. Dilllr,...,.... .. '-...,.... In the second incident. John Tatich. 36. UC lntne atudent ltlrk llcCa.ne of Huntington Beach walb amonc a fatarlatic-look:l.DC foreat of metal eculpta.rea beetde the road in front of ucra Pine Arta Vllla«e. ._ alJcaed)y attempted to choke his wife Kathleen, 34, and then allegedly pointed a Ruger .357 Magnum at her. Police arrested Tatich after Mn.. County's job opportunities gain4.5 percent during '85 By LISA MAHONEY OflMDellr .......... Orange County employment op- portunities grew a moderate 4.5 percent 10 1985 with booming expansion in the constructton industry takmg the lead. While boosts in construction htnng totaled 15.2 percent, overall employment opportuntt1cs increased only half as fast in the year just ended compared to 1984 when JObs grew by 8.8 percent. statistics released by the state Employment De- velopment Department late last week show. Compared to Orange County's boom years when the number ofjobs skyrocketed by 10.5 percent in 1977 and I 0.8 percent in 1978. I 985's employment p1cture may be characterized as "plup.ing along about the middle of the road,' said Labor Market Analyst Alta Yetter Gale. The number of workers mcreased by 9.000 for a JahuaJY 1986 labor force total of 1.19 m1lhon. Orange County gained 3.3 percent more jobs in 1981 while 1982 employment figures recorded a l.8 percent loss. Mild growth occurred again in I 983 when 3 percent more employment opportun1ucs were reported, she said. But. despite an 8.8 percent Jump 1n JObs in 1984. "the rate of growth has been slowing" since the late 1970s. Gale said. Turning to the county's unemployed workers. Gale noted that the 1985 Jobless rate averaged 4.4 percent. The figure· is represeotatJve of montbJy ralC$ which hovered just above 4 percent for much of 1985. Fewer Orange County residents re· ported that they were out of work m January compared to December 1985. Statistics adjusted to a March I 985 benchmark show unemployment sliding from 3.8 percent in ~mber to 3. 7 percent for January. Last year. 4.6 percent of the work force was JOb hunting m January. January unemployment fell well below the seasonally adjusted state rate of 5.8 percent. Nationally, unemployment stood aJ 6.7 percent during January. The na- tional rate is also adjusted to take expected seasonal fluctuations into accounL Mann and San Mateo counties recorded the lowest unemployment rates m Cah- forni.a with only 3.6 percent of the labor force unemployed. ln Orange County. wholesale trade employment increased by 3,100 dunna January as more striking Teamsters apd Meat cutters returned to work after settling a contract dispute. Retail payrolls fell by 7,IOO as holiday sales workers were Jet go. The number of factory jobs decreased by 1.300 with the largest losses r.cported in machinery, furniture. chemicals and rubber and plastics industries. Tattch's 12-year-old son ran to a neip- bor's house to call polic:c after Tattch alleledJy ripped out the telephone in the • residence, located in the 17000 block of Rotterdam Lane. He also was arrested on suspicion of assault with a deadl}' weapon and lodged in jail on SI 0,000 bail. In a third mcident. an I S.ycar-old boy allegedly struck a 10-year-old boy in the arm with his fist and then held a broken bottle to has throat in an argument Friday at Scapinc Circle in Huntington Harbour. Mather allegedly came to vistt the young boy's older brother when the two became embroiled in an argument over who owned an expensive sports car in the driveway at the residence. ............................. ~ Services Thursday for boating victim Services· for Boyd Phillip Rebel". who died LO a fish.ma boat aoCldent last week.cod, will be bcJd al 2 p.m. Thunday in Santa Barllara. Setvica are 9dtcduled at Welcb-Ryoe Mortuary, 4SO Ward Drive. Reber, of San DitfO. is survived by his wife O ndy and their daughter, and bJs mother, Fay Reber of Corona dcl Mar. Jo lieu of flowers. the family aw that donations be made to Orangewood home for abused children, at 3400 Irvine, Newport Beach. NOW rallying pro-choice birth control march By LISA MAHONEY Of IM 0.., ~ twt Orange County chapters of the National Org.an1zat1on for Women arc helping to coordmate a march for reproductive freedom 10 Los Angeles March 16 in which at least 500 count) residents arc expected to part1c1pate. As of last week. county residents had reserved enough tickets on a caravan to the Nattonal March for Women's Lives an Los Angeles to fill I 0 53-seat buses. said Wendy Loiano, NOW South C_o~st Chapter spokeswoman "The pos1t1vc response is tremendous," she said. The march. which Lozano said will draw participants from Texas. Nevada, An- zona. Oregon, Washington and Alaska. 1s intended to hammer home a woman's right to rcproducuvc freedom through abortion and birth control. she said. Clung local and national surveys that show the maJOnty of Amencans support a woman's right to have an abortion. Lozano said marchers will be v151blc proof that .. America is pr0<ho1ce." NOW is coordinaung the march for about 250 sponsonng groups along wtth a similar demonstrauon~ for March 9 1n Washington. D.C. to counteract efforts by others to outlaw or restrict abortions. Lozano said. Those efforts include legislauve rem- edies ltkc the JUSt failed "choose hfc" 1nitiat1ve attempt. proposed amendments to funding bills and a ndcr on the C1v1l Rights Restoration Act 1n add1uon to harassment. arson and bombtngs at abortion and birth control clinics. ~he said. "Cahforn1a and Orange County are pro- cho1ce. Every year. the Orange Cou nty ~ nnual Survey comes out announcing that over 60 percent of our residents support abortion on demand. When the numbers arc added of those who support aboruon under cerutn condiuons, this percentage swells dramatically toward 91 percent.'' Lozano said The Los Angeles march bcgms in Century Cit) and ends wt th an all-da> rail~ 10 Cheviot Hills Park. Buses will leave from four Orange County locauons early tn the mommg to amvc at the as~mbl} pomt by 10 a.m Tickets ma" be reserved b' calling 520-0669 . • .Irvine girl, 10, dies after falling out of moving van necklace were reported stolen from a home in the 1900 block of Pt C'landge last week. Laguna Beach >\. commercial burglar) was re- ported Monday at a !rec Top Lane address. Musical instruments were stolen sometime bctwC"Cn Feb I 0 and 14. the v1ct1m said The 'aluc of tht' loss has yet 10 be determined Irvine man arrested on drug, teen sex charges .\ 54-year-old Irvine man sur- rendered to the authonues afler a 14- month mvcstisauon hoked ham to St'~ and narcotics offenses invoh 1ng tet"n-age girls. In ine police Slld tod.a). cvm m1ttcd against Ju,·enilc\ fum1sh1ng mmors with narcot1c<i and possession of narcotics. A IO-year-0ld Irvine 11rl who flew out of a van when a passenger door swung open died at the hospital Monday from injuncs she sustatned 1n the Feb. 24 accident. Suzanne Renee Merritt was pro- nounced dead at 2:25 p.m. at Western Medical Center in Santa Ana1 where she had been treated for head mjunes suffered in the accident. Irvine Sgt. Tom Hume said. Banttncton Beach A gum-chew10a~ bandit reportedly alked into a Btook.hurst Street ranch of Downey Saving." and demanded cash Monday af\cmoon. He got way with S 1,800. police said. He was described a' a 6-foot, 170- pound white male Wlth thinning blond hair and a b1a nose • • • • The au1 tant manager of a Brookhurst Street Pin.a Hut reported that wmcone broke! into the office and stoic $260 1n cash Monday he told pohcc 'ihc suspects an employee commmed the thcfl • • • Someone reportedly 'itolt" a S 140 red Mumy BMX bicycle from thr front yard of a home 1n the 17 ICX) block of EnJ)ewood Mondoy oca.ntaln Valley Some<>nc repartedlY hrnkc mtn a The acodent occurred at 5:36 p.m. tn Irvine when Mcmtt wunding 10 a 1977 Dodge van with her 16-year-old sister. The van was traveling east· bound on Bryan Avenue when Mer- ritt's sister made a left tum onto Westwood. The passenger door Oew open and Merritt fell out. striking her head, Hume said. Traffic investigator Doug Coffing home tn the 9500 block ofCamauon and stoic $50 in cash Monday. • • • A wallet containing $440 10 ca'h was reported stolen from a home 1n the 16300 block of ndlewood Stlturday • • • Thieves reported!) broke into a home 1n the 18700 block of Mt Cimarron and stoic $2.075 in aud10/v1deo cgu1pment, a S3.000 mink coat and $35 1n ca'ih Monday • • • A camera and a v1dcoc.as!Ctte recorder. worth $2.040 $700 1n cash. $310 1n clothing and a SI SS nfle were 'itolcn from a home 1 n the I I 300 block of tonccrcss after the th1ev" ran - ~ckcd the hou~. the v1ct1m told pohcc Monday lrTlne A car 'tcrro and a P" ychcck were rcporttd 'tolcn from a Volk'iwa en said the girl wasn't weanng a scat belt. He said there 1s no mdicat1on the door latch malfunctioned. but said m- vcsugators believe 1\ may not have been closed properly or may have been opened for an unknown reason while the van was movmg. ('offing today said police do not believe any crimmal ncgli_gcnce was mvolved m the 1nc1dent and said no charges arc pending. Sc1rocco parked 1n front of a home along Morgan early today. . ' . A videocassette recorder. a camera and Jewelry, worth $3.800. wt'rc reported ''°lcn from a home along Jefferson Monday. • • • ~ v1dcoca ~llt recorder was re ported 'itolen from a home alona Rockwood Monday. • • • Afieri)ry1n1 one of the Windows. a thief reportedly stole the car stereo and a coat from a white Toyota ( ehca parked in the 17200 block of (led Hill \'t'nuc Monday l'f ewport Beach Rufl'um'i norc offietaJs reported Monday that someone stole an $850 crystal natue from the Fa h1on I land 'tore last wtek • • • A SI ,SOO gold watch. a $2.000 sold rope hm<'cltt and a $2.500 diamond ••• An unkno"n 'andal entered a locked Woodland Dnve homr and spilled black paint 1ns1dc. thl" '1c11m told police Monda> Nothing "'a~ stolen. but the vandah m cau~ an estimated SSOO damage. Teen critical after crash <\ Fountain Valley tttn agtr tn- volved 1n a weekend motornclc accident rrmaint'd ho p1talt1cd toda~ with cnucal inJunt' We 1m1Mter pohce offin•r Rohcrt .\mrcn '31d the acndent took phu.r 1n his cit\ \unda\ aflemoon in a Southtm Cahtom1a fd1\0n nJh1 of wa' nonh ofThorpc 'enue and t'l\\I of ~antuckct ~trt'Ct A.mrcn '1A1d Don lm l Ink sen I"' was nd1n1 h1'i motonde throua)\ the gaded din field when hc lost rontrol of bas vch1clc and cruhed The nffit·tr <1A1d l lnk~n v.ac. not v.t'ann1 a helmet at the ume o( thr aoctdent. The tttn--er wa'I lf'f'atcd at thr scene. then ru hcd 10 thc trauma center at Fountain Valle' Rrg1onal Hospital. where hc remained in mt1 I cond1tton early toda' a ho~p1tal c,pnkMwoman \.iltd gt. Richard Bowman said felon~ charge were filed last Thunda~ against Richard James Mclane. who hves n~r Irvine H\gh hool 1 He said Mclane sun'tndered himself to Orange Count)' Central Court. He said Mclane was booked Fnda~ at Orange County Jail then was released after po\\tng SI 0.000 0011 Rowman ~1d Mclane fac~ 10 felon~ charges that include~\ mmcs The poltc-t sergeant said the' 1ct1m" "ere all femak. lxtwetn the agrs of I~ and 19 and that most "ere In 1ne re 1dcnts He said thl" drug chargC'\ main!\ in'ohe cocaine Bo"man said he did not lcno" Mclane·~ occupauon He declined to say ho~ Mclane made." conta t v.llh his '1ct1m but s.a1d thr allegro offense~ tool. place 1n McLanr'c. home The sergeant "3td lhC' "arrant "3" 1'i~uedaflera 14-month 1n\C\tlg:ttHrn b> ln1ne office" and thC' Orange Count; Dlstnct -\ttomc\ '<i c.taff Holdup suspect seized ..\ man ~uspccted of rohh1na a tlunungton Beach \l\ln " and loan Monda\ was arrt'ited earl\ today b} f Bl aJents who bc'hcvc ht '' rt<1pon 'itble tor at least 16 other holdu~ Hunt 1 ngton BcaC'h pol Ht "pokc .. woman Jo .\nne Bc1c;trom \.'ltd thr su'lpccl. John i\fon1n 8 v.a~ arrc'itcd at \ a m in a t O'i "npele\ arta motel ~hr \.11d ~lon1n " ~u f)('(l~ 1lf rotlh•na the Oo>Nnt) '1n ' and l.oan om~ 8\ ~oro~ 8rookhu~t 4it in Hun11na1 on Beath ~he ~1d the holdup OC'tUrrN at 11 SS am Mon- Ja\ v.hcn a man cntt"rt'd 1nd1catt'd h<' had a iun 11nd dc'man,trd mone\ from tt'ller The roh~r Oed "11h ahnut SI !(!XI Rcrastrom '41d ~~ 1d 11 tclltr dc.·'i(·nhed lhr man ll'i tall. ltndrr. "1\h .a mu!ltachc hald1n1 Mond h 1r und wirc-framr cyc&Ja Rcra tMm ~1d F81 agent' matehcd tht descnpuon to thA1 of .\fonm. •ho wa" al~ bttn& \OU~t 1n l·onn«t1on with rohhtn" at 16 other financial 1nc;t1tut1on'i. 1ndudmg 10 rnmm1tk'd m recent month' 1n Orangt ( ount) he U.td S6~) was v-11f'd ~hen "fonin ..,., •~fled he \&1d tht' suspttt wa. ~an hdd 11 I 0\ Angele' Count~ Jail. ' Reagan pushing military support for rebel group Refusal woufd create 'h a ven forterrorlsts two days from U-.S. · -~ WASHINGTON (AP) -Presi- dent Reagan, batthni long odd~ 1n h1\ fight to resume military aid to anti· communist rebels an NicaraJua. ts warning that failure to provider the financing could create a terronst haven "two days' drivtng lime·· from the U.S. border McCurdy said nearly all the swing vot~ in the Hou~ art prepared to vote against the proposal but predic- ted a compromise pacbge probably' will emerge from Congress after the current request 1s defeated. Reagan, seeking to dramauze the threat he sees from the Sandan1stas, said Mondat 1r his request for $70 million an direct military assistance and SJO million in non-lethal aid dies an Con~s. 1t could m~an ·•con- sohdation of a pn v1leged 'sanctuary for terronsts and subvers1 ves Just two da)s' dnvang ume from Harlingen. Tcus." • Forced drugteSt proposal lashed Civil liberties group. labor union call ing tactic a ·wuch hunt' WASH INGTON (AP)-Charging "witch hunt'' and illegal searches, a civil liberties group and a labor union said a presidential panel's proposal for drug testing 'in government work places would violate the oonstnu~ t1onal ng.h1s of federal workers. One 5en1or adm1nisLrat1on official. spcalori'g on cond1t1on he' not . be identified. said Wh1tc House strategists calculate they need to tum around about 40 votes in the House before the Easter recess ifReagan •~to succeed in genin' SIOO m1ll1on 1n arms and other assistance for the an 11- '"Those who would invite this strategic disaster by abandoning yet another fi~t1ng ally of this country in the field will be held fully accountable b) h1stof)." he said. Contra leaden Arturo Cruz. Adolfo Calero acan at a White Houae meeting Monday. and Alfonao Robelo flanked Prealdent Re· Reacan meeb $100 millio n for rel>ela. The PrC°Stdent's Comm1ss1on on Organi1ed Cnme issued a report Monda> saying the U.S. drug prob. lcm ha<1 become a threat to national securi ty and justifies drastic measures such as drug testi ng on t.he JOb andin1sta fighters known as Contras The adm1nistra11on picked up one nev. &nate supporter Monda~ but lost a kc) Hou~ moderate in the debate as Reagan kept the focus on Nicaragua by inviting Contra leaders and some of their pnvate Amcncan backers to the White Hou~ Religious leaders attack 'Nicaraguan lies ~ Sen. James Sa\..er D-Tenn an· nounced he had changed h1\ pos111on and now support!> m1htaf) aid tu the U.S.-backed guemlla!>, but he ~ug­ gested the mone}' ~hould nut be spent for six months to allow 11mc for the two sides to begrn peace talks. Sasser said Reagan probabl> ha\ about a S0-50 chance of v.inn1ng congressional approval of hi-. aid plan. However. Rep Dave Mc( urd) [). Okla .. a moderate on th<' House Intelligence Committee who sup- ported non-lethal aid for the ( ontrac; last year. said he will oppose the admin1stra11on's new request WASHINGTON (AP) -Nearly 200 religious leaders, including bishops of some Oft'fie nation's largest denominations, are accusing the Reagan adm101strat1on oflymgabout Nicaragua tojustifycfTorts to overthrow the Sandmista government. .. A scaffold of deception 1s be1 ng constructed around :"J1caragua," Catholic, Protestant and Jewish leaders said in formall) declanng they will fight President Reagan over new congressional aid for Nicaraguan rebels In a statement scheduled for delivery toda} and d1stnbuted to reporters Monday. they accused the admimstrat1on of i$lloring worthy Sand1n1sta peace in111at1ve!> -seeming to prefer "the 1inancing of terronsm to the pursuit of peace" -and of covenng up reports of human nghts atroc1t1es b) rebels backed by the l · S government. ··we refuse to allow the deception to go unchallenged or to accept the senseless violence." the statement said. ''Together we say. 'In the name of God, stop the lies, stop the k1ll1ng "' Signers of the statement included 21 Roman ( athohc. Method 1st. Episcopal and Lutheran bishops. SECCRITY PAC IFIC BA K Great Family Take a top officials of the United C~urch ofChnst. the Chnst1an . Church (Disciples of Cbnst), the Mennonite Church. the Unatarian Universalist Assoc1at1on, the National Council of Churches and more than a dozen Jewish rabbis Also today, as part of a national campaign called "Crosses of Sorrow and Hope." organners said that in Washtngton and more than 75 other c1t1es cros~s ~ere hems displayed beanng the names of Nicaraguan c1v1hans they said had been killed by U.S.-backed rebels since last June. Today's declaration came one day after Reagan. 1ntens1fymg his own drive to win SI 00 m1lhon in LI S aid for the rebels. said denying the aid could kad to establishment of Soviet military bases "on ~enca'\ doomep." Reagan also said reJect1on of his request .. could \\ell dehver Nicaragua permanently to the commun1'>t blcx ,. as well as "threaten the secunty of the Panama Canal and inaugurate a vao;t migration march to the United State\ h~ hundreds of thou~nds of refugees... ' The religious leaders ~1d 111s prcpostcrou'> to relc:r to CIA-backed rebel'\ as .. freedom lighters." a'> Reagan d<>C\ Save up to 90% off American Airlines tickets. ~t 11111\ l'.Klli( l\tml., \\;H11'\ 1(1 t.1kc vo11111 I hmai1. Or 10 '\ic\\ )i1rk ( :11 '· Or 111 .1m of mcm.: th.111 100 uuc ... trom I lorn~ulu tn '>t.C :n11 x JC 111ucd1hlc \J\ tng' It \ the ( ;rt:Jt b1n1h · 1 Jk<:olt .md \11t1 <.Jll '\J\l' up''' 'XI"•• 1111 ,11rlJr<.· b-. 111Jklllg <.cr1.11111111.1lil\ 111g dt·po"u" n~'' through .\prd \(J1h. t1M1. I \'l·~'-1'1'~11·."-· 1 ~ I II \I I· I,) Your \\dl-plJu.•d dc:p<Nl t1J .1 q11al1f\.tng ~u1m' P.1ul1t ltanl-. IR\. \;I\ 111g\, or mtere..,t chcckmg au.oum earn\ \OU a· takeoff I >ismunt ( :cnifi- <.JH: ,,"c1nh 7c;o1i, off your c;ccom.I cic·kct Jnd 90'Vu off the third and fourth tid<.ct \ \\hen \OU buv vour firo;c roundtnp t ll kct. I )1~ounc ( A.:nafa:atc' ar<: \'alid fnr cra\d throu,gh I k<.cmlx:r IS. 198fi." make the minimum ~ .'\II YOU have lO <lo I~ to ~ r<:qu1rcd dcpo-;it in one JX.'A ( 1f t hcc;c :I{'( 'Oil Ill\: lnd1.,J1111I Hc11rr11u.-111 \u· .. urtf llR \I Pcr'lft0t1l lnvci.lmcnl 1•u1~1n,C" 1\i•c11un1 Pcnon•l ln-.,,.cd Money Mukcl Aecounl Pcrwoal lntc~c.;<.:hcck1na \ccount' °'c"' \ccount \1mrmum Openma I k1>4t<11I SI 'IHI F:u1111n,c c~. Minimum dd1tiom1I Ucpo4!1I SI, CiOO Sl.500 S2,500 sz. ~(10 +Prrm ... t lftt~\I ()Nd~.., IH ( f,,tHf lf'\tl"t,.0 f .. I It 'ff',. t \4of~' '41t,kf'• lf\tfff•f ( hf't ,,, .• J'f•I $2,500 , .......... .,, ...... ~, ~.., IMMA '"' lfth_"f', .. f tt... \_.. \tt·••ftf """" ~ .... .,.. • .,,.,-u.1_,h.n th.,. \•ctt-nt' .. -'l..i K•tt~ m4w•Mt ~ .. T~.,.«I,...._~.,. I ............ ..,.,_.,. ..... ,,,,..,,".,,.,ht' ......... , .. ,..,.~.f ''•.&td•t ,. ............... ~, '"" c:'Ct't ......... ~.,. .... ..,,..,. , .............. ( And here arc JlM ,1 k\\ of \IJlll travel p<,.....,1hilicic..,: •An Aloha JOl1rnc\ co I lo11ol11lu or Maui for \Un and lct\ure. • A \k1 trap to NC\\ EnglJnd. • /\ \llll·\O<tkcd .,,eek Ill Puerto J~ 1<.o. St.'l11111n ..... or St.( :rm\.. • A tnp 10 I )1\lln \\orld 111 ( >rland11 . • /\ big<. IC\ 'l\ll co ;\ic\\ )i>rk, ( :hirag1' or llt >\COil •And lllll( h. much morc ~> g<.·t 111 on th<.: ( ;rc.11 bm1I\ · takcC1ff. It de IC' ~rcat thing' for \t111. Eam'i vo11 nmnl.'Y. Sa\<.'' \1111 mun<:\. And ~Cl\ vm1 out of to\\ n. I Billig sentence: '* years, dismissal \l. A5Hl..""(' IO" <.\Pl -C on- ' icted Na'~ hcan \urgcon DonJI '1.1 B1ll1g. '>('nlenccd to luur 'l'.tr'> in pnson and Mlkred d1"ml\\l'<l lro m the \.en Kt' for lhl· dc.ith'> 1il 1ltrel· patient\ at Bcthr\da 'a' .ti H11\p1t.1 I. could bl.· parokJ after It> nhlnlh\ A JUI'\ of nine "-Ja,' 11ft1il'r' dehhcrated ~O m1nUll'' 'l.fonda\ ht-fore \Cntcm intt him tc1 four \l.'Jr\ in pnson nrdenntt him d1~ml\<.ed - after app('al" arc \llmpklrd -and requ1nng him 10 forle11 futur1• JlJ' B1lhg. ~ '\ thr lormcr \hid of hl'Jr1 \urger) al tklhl'\da ~ hcrt' l'r1•\1lknt Reagan "a" treatC'd lor \dOl1·r. "'Ill \1.'neh"tl·rmatthe l \ D1\\rphn.1n Rarrat~' ,u I 1•r1 L ... a,cn~orth .._Jn "Forcing someone to submit to drug testing 1s 1he equ1 valcot to illegal search and seizure." said Kenneth Blaylock. president of the American Federation of Government Em- plo) ces. the largest federal workers· union ..,1th 210.000 members. .. Orug\ have no place at the federal 1.1.ork 'i1te or an)' other work site. We'll support an) reasonable plan to elim1natt• drug abuse or to rchab1ll- t:ite cm ployee'i suspected of ha vmg a prohlem:· Blaylock said. but, "We oppose the witch hunt approach." • In a rt•pon to President Reagan, the comm1'1'i1on called drug trafficklJlg and ahu'>c "the most scnous or- ~n11ed t:nmc problems in Amenca toda' ·· It ~·d the president should d1relt all federal agencies to for- mulate "1mmed1ately clear policy ~tatcmen t!I. wi th implementing guideline'>. 1nduding suitable drug te..,11ng program<; " Rights r e defined for inmates hurt in riot V.. .\\HI "I< .JON I.\ Pl -I hl' \u- prcme ( ourt 1oda) mJJl· 11 morl' d1l1icult for pmon rnmatl'\ lnJurc:d b) guard'> dunng a dt'\lurhaml' to u•n- tend the-,. wen· \ub1eu1·d 1t1 · t rul'I and unu\ual pun1\hmen1 .. B} a 5-4 Hite lhe JU\tltT\ k1llnl .r la'-'SUll h' an rn1ured Oregon \t.lll' Pcn11cn11a~ inmale '>hot <.lunn11 .t 1980 d1c;1urban(e Led b> Juo;t11.~ ')andr<J I )J\ O'Connor. the 1uun·, mJJllrll\ \Jld there "'a\ IO\UfTit ient l'' rdl'Ot'l' to sho"" that thl' \hooting nt Cin<1ld .\lbcr'> wa~ the H'\Ult of an' '111la11on ofh1s con~t1tu11onal right\ ··The 1nf11l lllln of p;.11n 1n the ltiur~· of a pn~on 'ie<. llnl' ntl'J\urr doe\ not amount 10 uud .rnd uMu\u<il pun1\h· mcnt s1mpl~ hetau\l· 11 m~n cJflf'ICJr in retrospel·t that tht• ckgrn· 111 torte authon1cd or appllnl '-"<I' un· reasonable ... ()'( 11nnor '-"fflll' 'ihc \aid the han "n l'rud and unui>ual pun1\hmt•n1 u1n1<11n<.·d Ht th1.· < 0Mt11ut1on'<. Eighth Amendent nnl\ applle\ to "unnecessary and \\JnLon infl1Ll1on of pain" -not 1nad' ertente or a good-faith error in rudgmcnt Tht' dc1.1Mon has its roots in a June ~7 19t!O. 1nc1dcnt at the Oregon pen11cnt1af) 1n which several inmates became ag11ated about what the} rnn<>1dcrcd m1streatmen1. .\ $Uard was taken hostage dunng the 10C1dent. and Albers' lawsuit contended that he was trying to act a!> a peacemaker . .\c.:rording to thc law<1u1t. Alber.. a!>kt'd Harol Whitley. tht' pnson\ ~cunt)' manager. for help in moving wme older inmates to a safer area The \Ult ~1d Wh1tlq later led an a\..aull un a ccllblock to regain control , ~nd that Alber-. was shot to the knee dunng that assault Other inmates also were 1n1ured. and the ho'itagc guard was released unharmed Uninanned rockets 111ay launch satellites briefly By the Associated Pres<1 V. .\'illl""<' I<>"" -I ht· l<'atwn <Jdm1nl\tra11on "debating whether to rcsurrell unmanned lhro'-".Jwa-. roe.kc!'> a~ a tcmporaf) replacement for lhc grounded 'hullk lkel 1n ckli\t•nnp. military and commercial ~telhtes into space .\<. 11ng 1" •\ 'v\ ·\dmrnl\tra111r Wilham ( 1raham announced Monday hc has ordt•rt•<I tn\.l'\11gatmn nl the f'X)\'>lhilrly a' part ofa search for "alternative approat hl'' · ha'>l'<l on th1: prl'm1-.e that the Jan 28 ( hallengcr explosion could ground lhl' lhrtt• rt·ma1n1ng orh11cr'> for up 10 18 month~ The announcement '\aid unm.111111:<1 rtt<.~ct' -u ... t:d rnfrcquentl> m recent years as shuttle ni,hl\ mult1plwd -could 1kh .. cr natmnal <;ecunty ('iurve1llance). sc1ent1fic and <.omnft·rc 1al equipment and commun1cat1ons satellites, mto space A dml n l stratl on denles Soviet sailor swap V. ·\\I I IN< 1 r OJ'. -I X.·<,p1tc Reagan admrn1'itrat1on denials, members of C ongrr" h,1v<.• rrm•wcd call\ to probe charges that the Soviets used a stand-in for failed ddectr1r "11ro<,lav Medv1d to tell US authonties he wanted to return m the \uv1et I n1on Medv1d iumpcd into the M1ss1ss1pp1 River from a ~v1ct grain frcrghrc:r al du'>k la't Oc.t 24. only to be sent back 10 the ship by agents of the l • \ Hordt>r Patrol the nc:itt morning. State Dcpanmcnt spokesman ( harlc., Redman \a1d oflic1al'I who ~w the sailor 1n the sick bay oft he ship on <kt 2'i and qur ,t111ned him on Oct 28 and 29. po'i1tivcly identified him a'i Mc:d"1d thmu~h l'Ye-w1tnc\'1e'i, photographs and an 1dcnt1fy1ng mark on hii; heel ".\llcgatHin\ that the Sov1eto:; pulled a sw11ch are wi thout foundation," Redma n told reportero; Monday aOer a New York f1mco:; ..,tory dr~U5'1Cd 'iUCh a scenario Guardian appolnted for Connie Francis . NE:.WARK, N.J -A Juctec has appointed a l~gal guardian for si nger Connie franc 1s, w.ho 1s hosp1tal11ed in a psychiatnc clinic for manic- dcpres'11vc psychos1\ Superior ( ourt Judge Murray G. Simon appointed accountant Anthony C nncoh to take charge of the ~•nacr and her affairs. He was descnbed 1n court paper~ a'I a longtime family friend who ha\ advised the ~1ngcr profo'l'i1onally and pcrwnally M15'S Franc-1-. wtt\ taken to the M1am1 Mental Health< enter 1n January after a di'iturbance at the Cirand Ra y tfotel in Coc<>anul < 1rove, fl:l . au1hor111e'> '-•nd Suspected Israeli SPY.'S wife relea~ed WASf fl NC il ON -Anne Hcndc-r.-.on Pollard. whose hu'lband h. \been accu\Cd of \py1ng for 1-.rael, ha<, been relca'ICd from Jail after bond was set for her by a federal Judge. official\ \<Ud loday Henderson-Pollard had been held at 1he Washmgton 0 <.Jail without bond 'lmce her arre'll Nov. 22 on a charac of posscn1ng daso;1ficd government document\ I lcr hus~nd, Jonathan Jay Pollard. a c:1vilian Navy cc,untcncrror1c.m anoly". wa'i arrested a day earhcr outside 1he hrneh Cmbll'l'IY rn W1nh1ngton and char&ed with spying for Israel. At the 11me ofh1!t arrc~t. he told the FBI h1i; l'lrncli contact'! had paid him $2,500 a month for more than a year Medlcare patlenta' death rate due probe WAstHINC,TON -The aacncy th11l run' Medicare is telhna quality control hoard\ 1n 41 statelli to take a clo\Ct look at aberrant ho'lpit.al stati~tacs for Med1rnre patient\, 1ncludin& unu'lually hrah or low deatti rates. The Health (Uc F 1nonc.:1n1' Admin1'itrat1 on "3Y~ peer review aroup'l are bc1n111vcn the name., of ho'ipital'i that arc rcportina stat1,t1C<11 out11dc the norm 1n arco, such a\ death rate' mtc'i of med1~al comphua11on~ and vera c lcnath'i or stay While the ahc-rran1 figure., may have lc11t1ma1r e.11plon1u1ons, the a ency u1d, It want'i a 11()\('f look to \l'e 1f they rcnc I 'illhst ndard care for Medicare l)allC'nl\ Up to $10 billion in assets missing in Philippines MA~ILA (AP) -The head ofa com111ission charge'<! wtlb recoverina any · wealth illegally ac.cum.ul~ted by depo~ President Ferdinand E. Marcos said 1oday that up to$ IO b1lhon may be missinj from the treasury and enterprises cont~ollcd by Marcos' associates and relati ves. Jov1to R. Salonga, chairman of a Commission on Good Government established by _new President Cor- a:zon Aquino" told a news conference that "maybe >5 billion &oS 10 billion" in assets was missing. . By comparison, the Philippine budget in 1985 was only about S3. l billion. SaJonga did not elabora\c on what assets were missing or what was believed to have happened to them. Also today.justices of the country's second-highe!t court, the Court of Ap(>Cals, s.ubmitte<l their resig- nations, and the official Philippine News Agency said at least fi ve of the Supreme Court's 12 members also quit. Aquino urged the justices. all appointed by Marcos. to step down. Justice Minister Neptali Cionza'fes said Court of Appeals Jusltce Ramon Gaviola met with Aqµino to submit 18 resjgnations and assured her all of the court's 38 JUSttces would step down. In setting up the Commission on (lood Government, Aquino charged 1t with recovering "all ill-gotten wealth" accumulated by Marcos and his friends and relatives. ''including the takeover or sequestration of all business enteprises and entities owned or controlled by them during his administration ... by takmg undue advantage of their powers." Meanwhile, hundreds of sup- porters of Vice Mayor Johnny Wilson of .the Manila financial district of Makau demonstrated today against Marcos' baggage to be inventoried HONOLULU (AP)-Reprcsenta- ti vcs of the Central Bank of the Philippines will receive an inventory of 22 crates believed to 'co-ntain cash and valuables that came from Manila with former President Ferdinand E. Marcos, say attorneys for the bank. The crates, believed ta hold more than $1 .1 million in Philippine cur- rency, have been in the custody of the U.S. Customs Service since Marcos and 89 others arrived here Wednes~ day. Following a hearing Monday in· U.S. District Co~rt. lh~ U~. C\lstoins Service agreed t'O h'ofd' the currency until March 17 and proviae the inventory to attorneys of the Philip- pines central bank. In New York Monday, a judge temporarily blocked the sale of$350 milbon worth of New York rcaJ estate allege(jly owned or controlled by Marcos. A Long lsla°'d estate and one of Manhattan's tallest office buildings arc among the five pro~rtics affected by the o~der. the Aquino government's appoint· ment of Jejpmar Bi nay as ''offic~r in charge'' folTOwing the death ofMakatj Mayor Nemesio Yabut. Carloe de Coeta Nora ' ~lames .k ill · 15· people in Venezuela CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) -A fire engulfed a 14-story downtown Caracas office building and i S people died, including the Chilean am- bassador and nine other embassy employees. police said. Two of the embassy employees, unable to escape the smoke and flames from the fire Monday.jumped to their deaths from the top floor, state television said. Police said a short circuit in the building's first-floor electrical plant caused the fire, and that they had 'in principle" ruled out the possi bility of foul play. They said tt quickly spread to the top floor wher¥he Chilean govern- ment offices were located. Firemen continued to hose down the building this morning. and said an investiga- tion would begin. Accomplice Libya urges suicide squads seen after ~gainstU.S., Israel interests slay ing of Palme STOCKHOLM. Swede!'\ (A P)·- # Police said toda y a taxi driver told them the suspected killer of Prime Minister Olof Palme ran to a getaway car and was dnven away. The report from Stockholm Police. Commissioner Hans Holmer was the strongest md1cation yet from in- vestigators that the killer of the Swedish leader, shot in the back Friday night as he walked from a film premiere. had an accomplice. Holmer. speaking in a news con- ference broadcast by Swedish Radio, also announced a $70,000 reward for information leading to the arrest of Palme's killer. The taxi driver, Holmer Sflld, saw "a man scat himself as a passenger in a car. wh1c:h drove away." The ta-'1 driver was able to note only part of the vehicle'\ rcg1strat10n number and police did not want to provide a descnptlon of the car yet, Hol mer ..aid Holmer !>aid tht' reward was bcmg offered partly bet'au~ "I hope there are people sheltering or who have sheltered this man who arc w1llmg to turn him 1n." Meanwhile, a laboratory specialist said today th at local police hunting Palme's killer failed to contact specialists at Sweden's national f<lr- ens1cs laboratory 10 help 1dcnt1fy one of the bullets fired by the assassin. By tile Aaaoclated Pre11 TRIPOLI, Libya -Libya's legjslature has called for the formation of suicide squads to attack U.S. and Israeli interests, the official JA NA news agency reported today. The Libyan news agency said the General People's Congress ended its an nual meeting Monday night in Benghazi with a call for "working for forming suicide squads to wreck U.S.-Zionist interests everywhm:." The final resolutions. according to the English-language version of JANA. also catted for "wrecking U.S.-Zionist embassies 1n the Ara b homeland." Zionist is how Libya's media refers to Israel. .. S. Africa to lift state of emergency CAPETOW N -President P. W. Botha announced today that the state of emergency imposed last July to quell anti-apartheid unrest in South Africa wilt be lifted, perhaps by Friday. In a brief statement to a packed session of Pa rliament in the country's· legislative capital, Botha claimed the racially motivated turmoil had subsided to "sporadic and isolated incidents." Botha said conditions have "improved sufficientl y to enable me to announce that a proclamation will be issued in the near future, most probably this coming Friday, which will lift the state of emergency in those magisterial districts where it still applies." Belfast recovers. from protest strike BELFAST -Businesses and factories reopened today after a violent 24- hour strike. called to protest an agreement givin$ the Irish Republic a role in Northern Ireland, vi rtually paralyzed the province. Police said 40 people, including 35 police. were in1ured Monday and about 40 people were arrested. Protestant leaders called for a peaceful strike to protest the Nov. 15 British- Irish agreement that gives th e predominantly Roman Catholic Irish Republ ic a formal consultative role in running this British province. where Protestants outnumber Ca tholics 3-2. Scott's food bozes found ln Antarctlca WELLINGTON. New Zealand,--New Zealand Antarctic researchers have found a food dump left by British explorer Capt. Robert Scott during his 1912 quest to be the first person to reach the South Pple, a government spokesman said today. A fic:ld party found several boxes offood on Ross l~land during the summer season JUSt com_p~etcd. said the spokesman for the Science Department's Antarctic div1s1on. Th~ cache incl uded candles, tins of cocoa. egg powder. 1am, sardines and matches. Some items were dated 1910. Look w.here $10,000 in rare coins can get you. Since l<Jl!O, cl11.•11ll. of ;annes Tulvin~ Rare Coin lnves ents havt· rn1oyNJ avera~r profits o ~% ol yrar after all commission~ a f re-.. If as we h<'lirvl' our port folws ronttnur to apprrnatc at this rate. $10.000 will yield a net profit of S l<l,l lfi after iust fi ve years In 10 yrar~. they will yield a net profit nf S75.IJ44 111 11ddilion to cxccptrnnol per form11nce, grm quality rare r9~ns offer investors safety. liquidity, taxahon at fovorahlc Long Tcro1- Capi1al Gains rate~ .and the most SQphisticated marketplace of all tangihlc investments Coin~ also qu11ltfy for u~c m most Ddined 8cncf 1t Pension Plans and mo~I othrr corporate pension ancl profit ~har ing plans Al Hennr\ Tulv ing Rare Coln lnvrstments, we've been serving 1nvr~tor intrmt\ ,inrr 1976 In lt'n ye-rtr\, not noe tl TRC( rhent ha~ rvc r lo~t rnont'y or ha<I e port loltu 1n anything hut 11 profit'po!iition . s 10,000 1986 12,400 1987 15,376 1988 l9,066 1989 23,642 1990 29,3.!!_ 1991 36,352 '" 1_99_2_ 45,077 1993 55,895 1994 6_9d!_O 1995 8_5, 944 I <}9b Our outstanding investment ~r· VICt'S include: • PurchaSt' programs designed for ~horMerm y,ains or long·tenn income •Two ou1stand1ng lt4u1dat1on programs • Quarterly updates on the perfor manre of all client portfolios • A monthly newsletter fillrd with cxperl advi ce and analysis • Lever1ged Rare Coln ln•ettment Portfolios'"'· o unique program that allows tnvestors to double their buy· Inf( powff and reap additional profits • The nhility 10 ust your portfolio rl~ instant loan collateral with no qu"lifyin~ nt'cessary For 11 fr ee information parkc:t drtalhng our managed rare com invc~tmcnt portfolio~ call us toll frrt' ill 800-8!;4.51~ !imldt-California) nr at ROO-R.~16 !outsidt California) Or return lht coupon below . \4•rvinR /r1w·~tor~ .\lm•i> ICl7fi. S'i (}()(} l"itfol Mmim1m1 R11q11/tf'Hlt>t1t r·---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------1 ! c ~ > · Free Information Pa cket. i I HANNES nJMNG ~~mr ! : "' ~I. _-:-'J/ Aclolr • I I~ I : 1,1, -1' .. ~ ",,,,,,..,..,,., ,,,,.,~ ,, ,, ~WI!! Ritt h \1 '•11• JIJI \1i1r / 1p I ••lf ''"'l"''I ll-111 h l A ~lMO t lrl~f'M·nr 7141 ~'>I Ull/ llt\ l'hu11t 1 H•1' l'~••nr \ I I• I A l~lll~ 454 ;1i'll 0111 <A 1m •~t Wlh OP J /•'186 ' .. ) . ' Orange Cout DAILY PILOT /TUMdfl1, March 4. 18M * Al Border traffiG b.acked ·up bycarsearchesfordrugs SAN OIEOO (AP) -Motonats exporterofhcrolnand !Jlarijua.na" to U.S.:MexJc:an ~rder ~ _. .Ula driving into San Oicao from Meiuoo the United Stat«, Dh11lon said. Ke MeXJcan President ~ de were held up nearly two hours as U.S. added that American authorities Madrid. . Customs officials conducted riaotou.s have ·expreued dissat11faction with Aft.er the meetina with de la ear aeatebes to quell what they say is Mexico's efforuapin,stdruatramckp Madrid, committee cbaJna!_! an a11nnin1 iocreue in the now of i.,.. . Clw'lcl ~I. 0-N.y.1 ~ _. illegal drup from south of the border. About 32 percent of the heroin and more oooperat1on Crom MeucG m 1M The move affected northbound IS percent of the marijuana 1muc&Jed intem.atiooal wai apinst ~ Ud drivers Monday at the San Ysidro into the United States oriJinates in forincreated border survdl"!ett· ot Port of Entry a.nd the border pte at Mexico, accordina to the U.S. House Alfonso Bustamante, ~· Ota¥ Meu. customs officials said. Committee on Narcofics Aouse and -r:ij"uana's tourism bureaut laid Mel- Typ1cally. northbound motori,sts ex-Contro!. . . . . ican custo'!'• offi~iall nave bOe:D perience a wait of about 20 minutes, The intensified mspecbons an the asked by their Amencan ~1Cf'Pm11 said Ourdlt Dhillon, chief customs San Dieao· reaioo come .about six toilTI, rite in the ~t 1111~ dnll inspector at San Ysidro. weeks after the committee held am Lill by steppin, up a.heir own ''Mexico has become the No. I several heariOJS in cities along the bo t iOJpections, OCHof&\ of Nixon pushed as landmark By tile Ataoctated Preaa The Reagan administration and California congressmen arc trying to make Ri chard M. t-Sixon's birthplace a national historic sit.i:, saying they want to "preserve history, not judge iL" The National Park Service and 30 of California's 45 House members are urging enactment of a bill requiring the government to acquire and preserve -at unknown cost -the I 'h·story frame house lh Yorba Linda where the former president. who resigned 12 years ago, was born in 1913. "Tliese national historic sites are not monuments to presidential ca- reers but, rather. are maintained by the National Park Service to preserve our history," said the bill's principal sponsor, Rep. Witliam Dannemeyer, R-FuJlerton. "This bill is consistent with the treatment of other modem presidents and will benefit future generations.'' Dannemeyer said in testimony prepared for a hearing today by the House Interior National Parks and Recreation S-ubcommittec. · The idea of turning the bungalow into a publicly supported museum has been ~orsed by Nixon. The IC$il'itlon also would require, the Interior secretary to add Nixon's onetime law office in La Habra to the National Register of Historic Places 1f it meets criteria for such status. Night Stalker witness grilled LOS ANGELES (AP) -The preliminary hearin~ for ''N~ght Stalker" defendant Richard Ramirez opened with a witness testifying how he found his mother dead in bed and with the homicide investigation focusing on his brother who had been treated for mental illness. Jack Vincowwasquestioned sharp- ly Monday by Ramirez' attorney, who tried to suggest that Vincow's brother could have killed Jenny V1ncow. 79. of Eagle Rock. Ramirez is charged Wlth a total of 14 murders in Los Angele!', including Mrs. Vincow's. Vincow said he had told detectives ' 3 more deputies resign ID · San Bernardino sez probe By tile A1toetated Prest SAN BERNARDINO -Three more sbenffs depuucs bne ~ed because of a probe of alleged sexual misconduct that bc&an with a youoi woman volunteer's rej)Ort sho had been raped by• dCl)Uty, said Sheriff fl<>)'d Tidwell. Eight sheriffs employees l\ave been suspended in the probe by an internal adminjstrat1ve boar{f, and three of those workers. one of them a woman dispatcher, quiJ early last weclt..The latest miJ11ttions were handed in Friday, Tidwell said. The investigation bepn when the woman volunteer, an 18-ycar-old Explorer Scout, reponed she llad been raped by a dCJ?Uly after • weddjng 1n Victorville Feb. 14, Tidwell said. She also descnbcd sexual relations with four other deputies before she turned 18. he said. In•urance woe. haunt peace marchen CLAREMONT -Liability insurance problems continue to shadow the Great Peace marchers who were refused permission to use a high school athletic field as a campsite· on the third day of their 3.23S.mile walk across America. The marchers had planned to spend Monday night on the athletic field at Claremont High School: Instead, about 10 area churches opened their facilitiesand offered housinJjn private homes, said PRO-Peace spokeswoman Bobbi Cowan. "They're taking them in. They're feeding them. They're fi ndina homes for them to stay in Monday night," said Cowan. ••People arc rallying to support t~csc marchel"5 in their effort.'' Mllllon• 1n lottery wlfJ)Jlng~ unclaimed SACRAM ENTO -Nearly 10,000 lotlCry winners have failed to chum prizes totalingS3.8 million-and 11 of them would have picked up thousands or millions more in grand priu drawings. Altogether, one out of every 33 priz.cs worth S 100 or more has not been cla1me-d. These were the conclusions Monday of a study conducted for the Associated Press by lottery accountants. who counted the unclaimed higb~ier prizes ofbctwecn SI 00 and $25,000 in the fi rst three games since the Oct. 3 startup. NOTICE TO ALL Real Estate Managers and Brokers The Department of Houatng and Urban Oevetopment, 3~ Civic:: Center Plaza. Box 12850, Santa Ana, CA 92712-2850. ls seet<lng applications from qualified r,a1 es1ate mMagera and br~er• who wlah to receive lnvttatlona for Sida for Area Management Brokera to manage HUD-acquired/owned properties In San Bernardino County. Appllcenta mu11 be lloensed by the Division of Real Estate, State of CalJfotnla. u brokers. Applications may be obtained by wrf11ng to the U.S. Depart- ment of Housing and Urban Development. 34 Civic Center Plaza, Box 12850. Santa Ana, CA 92712-2850. or by calling the Property Disposition Section at (714) 836-2446. A Pre-bid Conference will be conducted on Wednesday, March 5, 1986 at 10:00 A.M. In tl'le conference room, San Bernardino County Board of Realtors. 1798 N. "O" St.. San Bernardino. Specific geographic areas wlll be outlined at the Pre-bid Conference. Deadline for return of bids Is 9:00 A.M .. March 12, 1986. Completed bid pac~ages must be sent to: .. /.l•~•wt~o,, +Oc. ~'.s. Otp¥tment of Housi1c Mid l)b1n Dev4"apment ~· ·1 r.~=rtm ~ : Boa 121SO •.i . ..~ Santi AN. CA 92?12-2150 0>•11eo • ..-. earheraboutthe relationship be tween Bids will be opened at 10:00 AM .. March 12, 1986, In Room hi s mother and his brother. but said 720-721 , Federal Building, 34 Civic Center Plaza, Santa Ana. neither she nor he had had contact withthebrother~r yean. ~~~~~~C~a~l~tt~o~rn~~~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~. "TAKE IT ID THE MAX!" "s ';<)Ur bocly and yOU realy ~ 10 m~kP rt1e rto<;t d -Thal mMfiq fflt1Q Wf11Qhl and Qel1lf1Q 1n c;/'1>1f'IP taking )QJI bocly al tf'l8 W0\I 10 Ill~' n •noons commm•nq yQUr!j911 !0 S()E'n(~"<J '~ lt13n ,111 horn tr tl'.'e ••• ,. ... l ~*" itl l''<f>IC/91' t•(')(.iiam lhal can promse ·resv11s Anes ngrn roN we ~ madf' meornt-sh•o tM'•l1'XJIY Allclf<t:ll"M! "' th11 ""IQ Ihm h<l<. • 'Ill ,1-ctudtng 1n0v.c;.iaty c;u~ v.«'knll flfClQ! trn~ rwJ1r1v>'"ll "-'otkl•w.>-'"'' \ftlt~ '" N.i\lhl '' ano ~eiO'\f' eQu<pmPOt and muc.n mmi • Uf'l.CVCU • HM.ITIWS • AEAOelCS • IT!AM • SAUNA ...... ~ • NUTMIOft MA oona .... ,.Awn .... _..,...... 0311 s 8"llOI DOWIWV-M~ 8311~­ .._ .. QMVI_ eM H DO 12821 Htrtxw ~ TWO-YEAR MEMBERSHIP • NOW, ONLY ... s 91 PER MONTH I FOR 24 MONTHS WITH JUST '25. DOWN • NQH..AENEWABLE-ARST VISIT INCENTIV~ ... _.,... ..... ------ .........,.._.,....,, 24'8 £ °'1w'tglil~ ""' MWfiWWI0091a ..U-8M l llD 56$1~ St!WI ' . . Three·for ~with Diana and BUI Otton (left) and Glenda Jl.aUenmaker. Costa Mesa resident Lawrence W. Kellner, 27. was recently named as a scm1-finahst 1n the I 986-87 White House Fellowship compet1t1on. Keller was one of 116 scm1-finaJ1sts, · according to Admiral James B. Stock- dale, Chairman of the President's Comm1ss1on on White House Fel- low!)h1ps. The '>Cm1-finallsts will be 1nter- v1ewed hv regional panels or leading c1t1zcm who will '>Clect the national finall'>l'> for cons1dcrat1 on b> the President\< omm1sc;1on The final selctllon of the 1986-87 SHOCKED! ~' o .... \..,l o\ .... I • A I . .. ... ... ..... ·-\ ... . I Ulltn l•SUlAICl . '~,-A. !sl 19\i 4 • 631-7740 441 Old lffwpot"t Bl1rd N••porl lkKh, Ca Fellows will take place an Washington May 15-18. The White House Fellowships were established m 1964 to provide outstanding young Amencans wuh firsthand expcnence 1n the process of governing the nation. Except for CIVIiian employees Of the Federal government, American citizens in the early stages of their careers are ehgjble to apply. Kellner IS the manager or Ernst and Whmney in Newpon Beach. Once selected, White House Fel- lows serve 12-month appointments the shore s interiors INVENTORY SALE °" Lompa • 'ict"'" • ToW.. • A-let 642-2255 2640 Avon St., Newport leoch '----~--"----........ ---~ ....___, Antique sale for art's sake a s-uccess a vw. Dea lo the large muJu-levcled bu1ld1ng. they round Onental, cow/try French, 1 • Bnush, Italian and Meucan food. A Baccarat magnum-sized pepcrwclJht made m 1848, priced at $6,SOO, Costa Mesa mayor Norma HerU.OI wa~ honorary cha1~.~nd manl&Cd and brouabt by LarrySeJmu. wasjustoocofthc LteaSuresat the 14th annual h . Tom SWttNJ')' was there. "°"'saw Marla antique s&ow spo0t0red this past weekend by the Affiliates of the Lquna An to stop by the party.· ·CO: ~:·re Dina and BUI on ... Allee and Gilbert Museum. ~~ B~~~ J::Se!mue~ (the first re male and current president of the "l'vebcencomin&totheshowforfi~e ycirs. I think," said the Santa Cruz Laguna~hambcrofCommercc). Galland PeterOclt1, YolhndLew WMtaey, dealer. ''It's more like ciabt yean," said cochairma.o Pat A~." &ca~se I've 0 Ea ue a.od VMu LevlD, Sam and Fruceaca ReUbor1, TCMW Monow been mvolved thatloqandyou.havebeen here every year. · (o~c!ofthe Linen Store, Fashion Island). 8eCttyM0tPlaza1,Pefite1~and::-1" "Thisismyfourthorfifth year,"saidLawraceDeatlteny,Coronadel Voloa~,ClaadetteandDoaSUw andSouth oast o s-••rt Mar antique clock dealer. "This is thequauty show in this area." . Epaa, Jim Henwood and Tom Sutley· More than SO dealers from the West Coast displayed merchandise at the M day the show was over and Atha was her doing bookwork ... "We will aff'airbeld this year in tbeMen:antiJeB.uiJdingofSouthCoast Plaza Village robab~n make'SiS OOO thisyear. Last year's pr~wereabout$20,000. I'm (due to buildina renovation going on at the museum's Laguna site). eery haJpywith th~ results and than le it was our prettiest show. Close to 4.000 First to see the items were par1YJOCf'S attending the preview party on attended. Tb unda y evening that lc:icked off the tbree-da y event. They not only bad theopponunjty to view antiques and chat with exhibito~ but couJd eat thetr .. way around the world ... "The exh1b1tors reponed very nice sales and they loved the locatJOn," Athaa.dded. as Special Assistants to the vice president, to members of the Cabinet, or to the President's principaJ staff. They also participate in an education program that includes off-the-record meetings with rank.iog government officals, scholars, diplomats, journal- ists and leaders from business and industry. • • • • Jack and Lynn Beitstock of Costa Mesa and Don and Judy Devor of Tustin are excited about the birth of their grandchild. Adam Merrill Devor was born Feb. 7, and the proud grandparents de- FOUNT AJN VALLEY REGIONAL HOSPITAL Juury%1 MichelJe Denzine and Gerald Hau. ----, Are You Paying Too Much For Health Insurance? • Individual & Family • Group • Medicare Supplement 640-AJS anytJ~ IOfDI. scribe him as a "darling little boy." He is the son of Ken and Sharon Devor. • • • The Kiwanis Club or Corona del Mar recently honored four grocery store managers for their contribu- tions to charity. The men honored were Bennie Haskell, Albensons; George Spink, Hughes El Rancho; Frank Spielberger, Ctlsons; and Jim Fitzpatnck, Safeway. • • • Jack Ray, 69, or Ne~n Beach, had the time of his life recently catching Marlin and Tuna in Cabo San Lucas. Mexico. Jack Ray. Dan Ray and Loren Mollner reserved . a boat through Bisbccs on Balboa Island. Costa Mesa re51dent Enn Mollner said. "The weather was good. the cerveza was ~old" and all three men arc looking forward to a return trip. • • • Junior School Cadet David Rich. son or Mary Rich of Huntington Beach. was pan of the Missouri Military Academy's halftime show at the University ofM1ssoun -Kansas State basketball games 1n Columbia. Mo. Costa Mesa, boy January t3 Deborah and Mark Locascio. Hunt-Pamela and Da vid Schult1 Hunt- ington Beach, boy mgton Beach. boy .. Jaaury U Ja.auary ts Karen and John Stebbmgs, Hunt-· Lon and Craig Crandall. Huntington ington Beach. boy Beach, boy LeAnn and Michael Jones, Hunt· Rosemanc and Richard Hagen. ington Beach. boy Huntington Beach. boy Leilani and Lewis Glenn. Huntington Patnc1a and Frank Hansen. Hunl· ~Bea_c_h_. _bo-'y'------------. ington Beach, boy RUFFELL'S UPHOLSTERY INC. Juaary %6 Ahcia and Bren Calhoon, Hunt- ington Beach, boy Lynda and Jeffrey LaVone. Hunt- ington Beach, boy January 28 Laurra and Ricardo Bcnoldo. Irvine, boy ~ ..... ,......,,'--..... At left, Pat Atba and ~ Selman ha...tac a •wet0tj' talk. ID picture at boltoln left, Alice and Gilbert Van C&mp joln Ken and llarla Bird for an Orlentaldlnaer. Below, Laura o·aaa ftndtl the cheeee table. . Rich 1s a member of the Junior School Bngad1crs dnll platoon. . The M1ssoun Military Academy 1s a pnvate military school. • • • We'n• interested m news about local people. Do you have a neighbor or fnend who's done something panicularly noteworthy? A colleague who deserves credit for a JOb well done? Send us your people stories. and we'll pnnt them in our 'Faces' column. 'Faces.' c/o Daily Pilot., P.O. BoJ< 1560. Cos ta Mesa. 92626. February 3 5heme and Jay Parsons. Huntington Elrch, girl February C andra and David Pierce. Fountaul Valley, girl February S B1cti Thi Vu and Thanh Huu Nguyen C osta Mesa. boy Elaine and Thomas Marten. C osta Mesa. girl February I Nina and Stephen Krull. Huntington Beach, boy Elsie and Gary Maunzi. Costa Mesa. boy Febnaary 7 Does your kitchen have the ''Good Housekeeping seal of approval?'' Melynda Turner and Lanny Perry, Costa Mesa. boy Sandra and Alvin Martin, Fountain VaJley, girl Karen and John Fell, Huntington Beach, girl Juaary ti Theresa and Allen Polk, Huntington Beach, girl Yvonne Lynn Peck, Fountain Valley. girl Marylynn and John Boenje. Costa Mesa, boy Carolyn and David Witherspoon. Hunungton Beach, boy Februry 8 Linda and John Maize. Hunungtoo Beach.boy Judy and Jarvis Mitchell. Fountain Valley, gJrl If so, enter the Dally Pilot's " "Living Spaces" Contest. Be ellclble to win S200 of home decorating supplies See contest detail' and entry form In today's clas~lflf-d section • • Robena and Michael Wall, Hunt· ington Beach. boy Catherine and Mark Strayer, Hunt· ington Beach, boy Suzanne and James Moore, Fountain Valley.boy Sandra and Richard Steinbach. Hunt- ington Beach, g>rl Juury 31 Janet and Stephen Zajicek. Hunt· ingto'l Beach, boy Febraary I }(jmbcrley and Wilham Neal, Hunt· ington Beach, boy Mary and John Smith, Irvine, gJrl Februry t Kathleen and David Waddell, Costa Mesa, boy Febnary t Karen Ann Welch, Fountain Valley. girl Carol and Robert Leasure. Hunt- ington Beach, girl Februry 1e Shem Ann Baker, Costa Mesa, prl Februry 11 Tracy and Wayne Taylor, Hunt· ington Beach, ajrl Jeri and Danton Weiss, Huntington Beach.boy Eleanor and Darius Djalivandi Costa Mesa, girl -- Februry n Alma and Charles George, Costa Mesa, boy Newport's Cannery Village---- r=(Arf .~oo DINNER NIGHTLY 6:00 P.M. to Midnight. Mondays & TuetdlJ.}'I: Two Dinner• for • t5.95 Wednesdsya: 6 Courie ltallan Dinner 19.95 2900 Newport Boulevard • Newpot't Beach• 875·2M8 , . . t •, Orange Cout OAJLY PiLOTIT~. Mercft 4. 1111 A7 COMPLETE NYIE COMPOSITE TRAN8ACllON8, Al County's co~mercial diversity has surprises Manufacturers of soft frozen lemonade, secret doors, laser art creattngjobs here By MADGE HAMMOND Olilr""C..1 U • 1 What do the Irvine Co., a manufa~ turer of secret doors and rotating rooms, and a franchisee wbo markets soft frozen lemonade have ii\ com· moo? They were among 86 businesses participating in Sbo~ '86 to mform the public of the diversity o( the county's economy.and to reflect the business community's positive impact on ruidents' lives. Approximately 1,000 persons at,. tended the free show sponsored by the Economic Development Corpor- ation of Orange County at Birtcher Tech Center in Santa Ana. EOC's 40 member companies sec its mission as ·promoting and ad- vocating business and industrial ex- pansion to create jobs in the county. Research and Development Co., provided information about Spev trum, a 2,2()().acrc ""master-olanned research, tcchnolOI)' and &usineu center the OOtn.J>aPY is developin1 near the San DieJO:Santa Ana mo. ways Jl.lnetion in Irvine. Kubly told the Daily Pilot his compan~ expecu to close a trans- action in abo\it two weeks in which a major firm will purchase approx- imately 20 acres for a facility in Spt'.Ctrum's segment designated for h1ah-tecbnol01Y industries. easily, aaid the ltpieteftcat.tVe Of tbc Irvine firm, wb.icb ii tbe weMa'D distributor of l-'D 8uDer ProdueU. Wb,n the Olympic torch beaten ran throuab Soutbcm Calilomia. be # said, 4'we worked with 10 cities and sav«l them S6,oocr by arrivillt ahead Of tM f'\JDDO'S, CMbtiftl eacb toWn to '* tbe same banoeJ with wo:rdio& tailored to the city. Some of the best-known firms with exhibits at the &bow wae Northrop's Elecaro-Mecbaoicaf Division ~ Birtcher. CoJdweU euur eom .. metCial Real Estate Services; H\l· mana ~ Plus· the Ncwpon Bach Marriott Hotel k Tenn.it Ou~ Ticor Title Jnsurance; Knott's 8etTY ~~r Southern California Editon; Auip.U Abbott Personnel Com~iesj Peat. Marwiok., Mitchell &. Co •• ua New· p<>n Pharmaceut.icaJJ lntcmatioftal. °"" ........ _, .... ~ EiiJbty1la 8howcue ezhlbtton d.laplayed thelr wa.ree at Bhtcher Teeh Center. , Tbe soft frozen lemonade franchisee was one business that EOC was instrumental in bringin' hCT'C. l.aser art attracted people to Unique Elcctronia.' booth, whete company owner Jim Walin oflrvine pointed out that automated doon which operate like those on Starship Enterpnse and rooms that rotate with the sun are a few of the unusual electronic and electtomeebanical in- stallations his firm offers. Others include televisions that remotely lower out of ceilings or appear out o( furniture, voioe-ac: uvated boOkcases that rotate into bidden wet bars or wine rooms, and automated room dividers. Focusina on today's soph,istiea1ed communications tcchno[OI)' were GTEL/General Telephone;· Pac Tel Communications Sy11ems and Pac Tel Mobile Ac:oeu; SW'Tel Corp.1 an Jrvine-bued firm that produces hiah- technology telecommunications equipment ; SCR Tele-_ MUTUAL FUNDS '· Randy G. Daniel of ltv1ne, who lived in Dayton, Ohio until six months ago, noted that he and his partner. also from Ohio, chose Or- ange County for launching their business after conferring with EOC executiv,e director Frank Smith. Lemon Quench, headquartered in Santa Ana, soon will have its product on the mark.et at several Southern California locations, including Sea World, Knott's Berry Farm and the San Diego Zoo, Dame! said. The Irvine Co. booth was one of several at the show Friday and Saturday that reflected Orange Coun- .ty's CWTCnt office building boom. Dave Kubly, saJes and marketing manager for the Irvine Industrial NEW YORK (AP) -The fottowlnv U1t 1tlow1 the ·Over • the -Counter stocks •nd w.rrents ttlet have oone UP the most ·~down the~ besecl on ~~~rfi1-. 'Treci'rnv ~w l2 or 1000 snares are Included. Net and Pef'Oenteoe ctlanot'S are the diff9renc.e between the prevlou1 clos ng price end Mondev'~t or bid price. Ne~ 1..asl Cm Pct. l i~8nd b 91/4 V4 Up 54.1 1 ~~~~m ~~kl i~'' ~ H~ •~l: S Ad~tlc 'h l11t UP 6 A~ridnd' _. Up . l 7 Inf I.I 4 ~ UP .1 I g ala j ~ UP l 9 Hckl 1,,_ l~ Up .4 10 omm 5-1' UP .s The firm, headquartered in Mission Viejo with a lab in Irvine, also provides standard services such as cable TV wiring and installing telephone. electronic security, inter- com and satellite systems. At the ~vec Enterprises booOI. Ron Christenson demonstrated bow Velcro, • material first used on astronauts's space su.its for quick release in case of fire, is making it possible to provide retailers with banners at relatively low cost. The material makes it easy to place letters, numbers and graphics on banners and to remove them just as communications; and &ho Com. munications of Huntington Beach, which sells and rents cellular teJe.. phones.for automobiles. A CalComp booth featured a color plotter/printer for paper output and overhead transparencies. EA.SY Brothen Productions of Anaheim showed a promotional video it made for the Economic Development Coq>., which received a speeial.- ~ition award from tne Cali- fornia Association of Public Infor- mation Officials. Kinch Video Pro- ductions of Irvine also was rep- resented at the show. Amona Orange County publi- cations on exhibit were Li~ Street Chronicle, an award-winning re~ {Pleue eee 8ROWCA81t/ A8) PetnPrc wt RvncoScl StetutGme tntrovn. n Thunender i 1tOCkGrp d>r111 i'ilt8~rm wt ~l~O~ R tvPe! a Rltv S· Tell , .. PtOll vco s rstaoutn vl111Prc t tell.Div etmProc -llG1llftl!l'li------------------ NEW YORK (AP> -The following list snows the New Yortt Stocil ExcNinoe stock• •nd werren11 tnet neve gone up the most •nd down the most besed on cieretn~chenoe r9911rdlns of VOlu,,,. for v. No ~ur I lredlno belOw 52 ere lncl-·l.lded. Net end percenteoe cneooes ere the dlffet"ence betwMll the Pf'evloys closlno price and Monda v's 2 P.m. P r I c e ll ~r .. ~TrK' • 19lot + 1~ UP l .. vl&ldU" Of ~ S'-V, UP S Mdll98•t ;tU.': ~~ 2~ 8: ·.. I erll.~Drlll 14 wn ,fr'"'l1"wt }o~ ~ UP ~ne 15 XTR lrlC ~ 2Ve UP . sin Inion l yi tlil 2~ UP .6 1 etrdl r 1 l p S ,... UP .1 '} enkAmer 1 1tnAlr pfC 24 1~ UPP .9 1 rrc.ntrl tr~Fn J '!~ I~ U .9 l l..MrPetr1 r~o~•e PIA fl• ~ 8: u it ~o:.1~~E•P ~tell 21--1"'1 UP 7.~ l R:ro~at CV Of V " J UPP 7. Ga tHou J ~I-en 4 11. u 6. 1..9'1 ellnd oru 5 TOV. ~ UP 6.6 ~e~}C " N II 1 ~S + 21/• Up '·' ~~~I s l ir.:t~is~ Lasi: =C1: ortf~j 4 ~f~: i enieiceng ~"" -,,,., 8U ,J:, s uNc.R" NO~ get the CD you can add to. Here's a new advantage. a fixed rate CD you can add money to. It's called Deposit- Plus and it works like trus: During March, open a new Deposit-Plus CD with a minjmum of Sl.CXX>. 0 The opening high intercs1 rate i~ ~11amn1eed for six months. Anytime during that stx months, you can add to your original investment in any amount up to the amount of your original deposit. ·The new deposits earn interest at the oriRinaJ guaronr'ed rare Limited Offer: Deposit-Plus is only availahlc during the month of March lMti uo 10 ,~.000 "4onunum & '4< ... 111 8 50;:_ • Yldd• 815 ~"'"' • Rate siattltw M SI .Ollll Mlnlmuon. 6 ~•llh 790 ~ C urrmc • Yirtd• 7 60 ~"'"' 8 R,.u y;y Open your ac.count today. Call the toU-fret LJ Financial Line now: 1-800-423-BANK. Great American With 18 officcurrvina Orange County· Anlhefm HU.ls EJ T0t0 \bur advantage bank. .. a.o. bland Fountain Valley ...._ Pmlmul.l Kuntinp>n Beach Capbtrw 8tach Lapnai Beach Htwpo11 &ec:h Orantt San Cktnentt San Juan CapUcnmo Woodbrid ,,.., ....... ~, ... ,.. ..... "" •• , ...... '-...... -...,..,..,.,, .. '" ,, . .......,.\f+~··f .... """' .............. ,.......,..... ......... '" ... ~ .................. ,....,..,f ..... ~".,. .... ··-~----- °C'Wmtt'~ ._,. • .......,.,. ...... y.Wliootd .. .,,,....,_ '*-~ ... -._ ... ._...._,. -.-, p•.,.. _t_ .. ~1 lw' lrll .,...,..,,. h .,.. -•IN _,_'* I-,,,,...._Joo'• "'•IM ... \ ,..__"""'!""!'f TI>tcw-""'"""""" ... ....,,. .. ,........., l'N•"-• .. ..W.•••t"411 .-... '""""" .. "98 M••,,_,,,...,.....~,.. \lm io 1 4Ah••-..,......,.,.._,""•·•--.._.,,.,. ~~ ,_,..._ ~ ·~•Mft'l"'r tM •M'.~_.. .. r4ffttM--ptw•M...._#\ •lltf,_,,. .. ..,_.,....,..~ lfw-W•t.,•..tllritlf1~.....,.._,• ••'ft)A.w .;~"""" • I ~ - - Orange Coaat OAIL V PILOT I Tuesday. March 4. 1986 Fixed Rate Home f4uity Loans. On Sale Now · Fixed Interest Rate• Annual Percentage Rate••. NeW Steelworkers' chief breaks. union leader mold By EARL BOHN ,.,....._ ...... PITTSBURGH -For Lynn R. Williams, president of the United Stet I workers of America, the Depressjon- era images ofhungry1 adJe workers remain as vivid today as when he was arowaoa up in Canada. "Dad was a minister witb a working<lass consrcga- tion. and as a preacher's family .... there were Christmas Eves l can remember taking food baskets to families," Williams said in a recent interview at the union's international headquarters. "It sounds corny. bu1 I thought this isn'1 the way things should be," Williams said. On Saturday, 40 years after he joined the labor movement in Toronto, he took the oath ofofficc there for his first full term as the union's president. "If there ever was a time, just as there was 50 years ago. when working people need the voice in their future ,, ~ that only a strong union can provide, that tjme is now." be Lynn Williama, head of Steelworkera said in his inauguration speech. The Toronto c.crcmony underlined that Williams 1s Pittsburgh Steel Corp. and union bargainers at s1>. other the first Canadian ever to head the USW, and the first major steel makers continue to backpedal in negotration\ non-U.S. citizen to lead a maJOr U.S. union. to replace the 1983 pact. which expires on July 31 . Williams, 61 , was appointed acting president of the Nonetheless. W1lhams. who has spent nearly a union ·~ November 1983 upon the death of Lloyd decade on the 1nterna11onal union's staff in Pittsburgh. McBnde. the union's founh president. Williams won a says the role of organized labor 1s t'qually important in bitter election in March 1984 over union Treasurer Frank tough times and good umcc;. McKee to finish McBnde's term. He was declared "Think what would have.' happened 1fwe didn't have president without opposition late last year. a union," he said. "Members understand. Whatever The collcge-.edacatcd Williams. who is recognized as difficulties we face today, unions have kept things from an aniculate Sf>?kesman for organized labor, breaks the getting much much worse m~ld of traditional "leaders . of r:najor manufacturing · "The do~nward spiral of the 1930s resulted in part unions. He rose to the top ofh1s union not from the rank-from the companies slashing wages. So the labor and-fil~ ~u~ from the ranks ofuniOf! organizers. . movement has played a const~uctivc ~ole m de~~1ng with Williams came to power at a time when low-pnced the economic upheaval in the industrial sector. steel impons and an economic recession were ending the Williams born in Springfield, Ontario. got une ofh1s USW's t.radition of fatter .and fatter contracts. earliest ghmp~es of the labor movement during a sit-down Active membership m the USW has fallen to about stnke against a Canadian foundry. 700.000 workers. half the number of the early 1970s. .. A couple of us kids were up there watching. and my Fewer ~ha~ 200.000 of~he union's members hold jobs an dad came along and dragged u\ away because he was the shnnk1ng U.S. steel industry. Two years ago the union afraid of what we might get invol\ed 1n," he said. decided to broaden its organizing efforts outside the steel Williams became a social worker for the YMC' A after industry. . his family moved to Hamilton an IQ38 and he auended Eight months before Williams replaced McBride, the college on a YM CA scholarship. union had signed a national steel contract that reduced Once he received ht\ liberal ans dt'gree. he was ea$.cr Crocker has never before offered California homeowners such a low rate on fixed rate home equity loans. In fact, our rate may be one of the lowest you can find for this type of loan. So, if you're a California homeowner in the market for a loan. your timing's just right. payments will stay the same for the full term of the loan. wages and benefits for the first ume an us history. to work for a union He became involved m a 'itnkc More concessions followed when union members against a Hamilton .. 1erl maker m 1946. and began h1' settled a 98-day stnke early this year against Wheeling-career as a Steelworkers organizer the next year You can borrow from $10,000 to $200,000, depending on the value of your home and your personal. financial strength. And bec:ause it's a fixed rate loan. your So come talk to one of our loan experts. You can visit your nearest Crocker office. or call us toll-free at (800) 548-HOME, ext. 712. But don't delay. Nobody likes to miss a sale. 'k.iit m tH('<.1 •10 ~tbruary 3 and 1s ~ub1tct to ctiangt without JJnur llHtlU.• •• llw Annual Pt1ttn1:1ge Ratt 1\ ba!ltd on a $30,000loanf1K1801t11J11tlis with d f1xt'd rdir uf 11 ~and a monthly payment of $353 97 Agreement would let NY banks into state !..f\C'RAMENTO (AP) -An agreement between bankers 1n New York and Californ ia would allow major Ne"' York banks 10 enter California·~ lucrative market. The agreemen't must be approved by the California Legislature and Go\.. George Deukm.e11an. But a state assemblyman who has specialized 1n banking legislation said that with California banks now 1n support of the plan, 1t ~hould be enacted "within 30 days." "I believe it's going w mean increased competition, which means higher interest on dcpo~11s." said A<>· semblyman ( harles Calderon. D·Montebello. "It should also mean greater access to consumer and home loan~ and more money available for small busines!> loans." California banks have blocked reciprocal banking proposals wi th New York for ~ven ~car\ Last week\ agreement between bankers as!>oc1a11on'> an Ne\\ York and California would allow some ~ec1prornl banking beginning next year and full inter'ilate banking h\ 19">0 <iJ Crocker Bank Are you paying too 11uc for copy & co11p11ter paper? CREDIT LINE ivtO EY MATRIX CERT IFICATE OF DEPOSlT .87%. .50% ANNUALIZED YIELD CURRENT RATE ~lnlmum 1rr111 ol I H~r ~llh St0,000 mintmum \pj)h•·' 1111n11111I I ll'Ar tnk1AI r1 )(1tlAtu•ll n·11uir1·' ~ \ltl\\ldO!l.1l 11tlo r• ,, 1~ 11.1111 l11r 1 .irh "11lulr 1~ Al \11n11~11 qdil h 1" ol 1111 dA1h 1111np111111t11111: "h1·11 11111·11·,1 '' 1!'11 •ni dt'(ll"'' fur"'" \1 .ir 1o r111 H.11t 'wl1l 1111! rnm ,111'111·1 i 111 1 hJrtl(• ~ 111111111 11111111 111 'NTJNGTON BEACH LAGUNA tlll.IS FEBRUARY SffCIAL-We Otlvtt 8'-'iJ 11 HIGH(Sl QUALllY I j Cun 4 9 (a>6 10 • ta..n '28." C\ 127 ·" u 126 .. Cl WESTERN 642• l 221 P,\P£A &l>AC~ACilNG G randra!'I ~old watch c;randma·:- ' irtorian lo<:krt Tlw sih er !'lervic:c car ried auoss the Atlantil hy great grandma on her wa\ 10 America Th<• hah} head!'I that ide1H1f1l'<1 \our daughl<'r the first 11nH· you ht•ld lwr i11 )Ollr ariw. Fa1t1rl) llt'irlowm! ·\ml'rican !'la\'111~s familit'!\ have heen hrin1ittnR thl'm to w. for safe kecp- tn~ for mort than 100 yt.•ars Our safe dt'posit hows arr full of tlwm \\ h)? lk<.:au"it.' .. mart 'avrrs know that n:all\ important thin~.., artn't al\.\ 3)' !'lafe at homr \\ t' ).(t'l t 1 w 'ma rt mum.•\ too! Tlw mont'} that hard worlung peo- ple \\allt to ~nm The mon<') hcmg ,a,cd for \H•dd1n~ rings and hah~ things 1ha1 \\ill ht· pa,..,t·tl 011 to futurt.• ).\l'lll'T:.t(IOll\ A111n1<.a11 Sav ings, the famil y !'lavings plate. Wh<'rc saving:. arcounts hkt· the n('xihle Monr) Matrix CD are rn:.tom tailorl'd 111 meet }Our famil> nr<·ds. no" and 111 the future. ChC'<:k out our high interest ratt.'!I Check into our tentury of service to California familit.'S When you cto. you'!! want the American • avinl(S famil y look ing after your monr~ and your 'family hci rloom!I too! Gr •. fS[le MUI Acrnunts insurt•d up to SI00.000 SEAL BEACll ~'1111 \ Bn,tnl 1)2 "lH I .ti '°It Ill Oo\\. l'f) I "l>i j 11~1! \IXllll ~8 ~II f.dtnger Av~ 9Uw .. (di lluntington c~nlt:'r) 1~1 +HM< llll 24085 F.I Tqm Rd .. 9l65 ~ (at Pa.c;eo d~ Valencia) ,~14) no l816 ~01 Pacifk Coll.\t llwy. 90740 (at Main) (21~) 594 AA~5 CrARl>f. 't <,ROH 121 ti C1;trCll't1 f1fll\t' Hhd 1J~Ct t ~ I at llarhor ({lvd 1 Ht NTINGTON llARBOL R lh91l Algonquin ~t 'JU..+4 ( t11 11 unungton Hc1rhnur ~hopptn~ f.tn wn ('HI X46 H5 5 ORANGE 1965 ~ Tusun A\'e 9266'> rnorth i>f Taft) ("Iii) 9~~ 1620 Tll TIN 641 E F1~1 St . 9l680 (.ii "Jt.'wport AVl' ) ("14)8U HXI ERICAN SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION ' c • -- -- Electronic execs named to counci1 Three local electronic executives have been named to the Orange County Council Executive Committee ol the American Electrorues AssocAatlon. They are: Robert Kleist, president and <:EO uf PrlDtTonJx, Ille.; Roger Jolansoo, president and CEO of Western Digital Corp.; and Bob Quest, pre!l1dent of Advanced Controls, all ol Irvine. Other committee additions include Nick Yocca, a partner with Stradling, Yocca, Carlson & Rantb of Newpon Beach: and Gregory R. Ro11, a partner with the ( osla Mesa office of Arthur Young & Co. AEA has an office 1n Irvine • • • Wanda Lee 1s the new pre<,1dent of the Personnel & lndu&trial Relatlon1 A11ocAatloo, an organ1zatmn of personnel director.. and professionals from companies in Lo'\ An~eles. Orange. Ri' ers1de, San Bernardino and Ventura counties. Lee 1s vu:c president ofhuman resources and adm1nistrat1vc scrv1cec; for Proficient Food Co. of Irvine and a resident of Laguna Hills. • • • Ray Malavasl, former head football coach and no"' '1u· president of Halo Technologies, Inc. of Co'ita Mesa. wa\ the gut.'St speaker at a recent luncheon at the Disneyland Hotel Halo 1s the uni) manufacturer in the world that produces holograms on site • • Tbomas E. Hya.01 has been appointed pre~1dent ol Bio-Flow Corp .. a developer and manufacturer of medical inst rumen talion and devices. Hyans had been vice president of the VLI Corp. ot lrvme Hyans· appointment 1s part of a move 10 e'\pand the lllmpan} ·!> management team Joseph W. Rovan ha-; relinquished his rol<' as president to concentrate on development ol manufactunng operations as vice president of operation<. • • • Cbri1topber D. Witucki has been appointed manager of the ( u<;La Mesa branch of Glendale Federal Savln1s and Loan aftl·r <.umple11ng a 12-month management tra1n1ng program Before JlllnlOg vlendale Federal. Wnuc,k•e• artment manager and marke11ng re~arlh analyst for the U tore • • • Richard R. row lt1 has been re-elected prc'o1dent ol the Newport Center A11oc:latloo by Its board ofdirc<.tors First elected to the board in 1969, Marow1tz owns Newport Chil dren's Bootery. I k 1\ a member of Hoag Hospital's 552 Club. • • • Thomas J. Riddle has J01ned Pertee Computrr Co. of Irvine as marketing mana$er for the firm 's business computer.. Riddle had directed international operations at CIE Systems, which manufac- tures small business computer systems. He bnngs more than 25 years of experience in computer sales and marketing to his new pmt • • • Sam Canon has been appointed d1rcuor of dc!l1gn tor Coleman/Culley Arcbltects cJf Irvine t-k hnngs 26 year\ of experience to his new post • • • New directors of Sprillg Mounta!D E1crow Corp. m Newport Beach (formerly Sbearson/ Amerlcu Expre11 EacTow Co.) have been announced. Included arc: F rank O'Bryan, president of Spnng Mountain; Mlcbael H. Jacobson and Oarlstlne M. Sand erson. hoth executive vice presidents of <ipnng Mountain. Robert Kramp, who owns a Ri ve rside insurance agency, Robert L. Rote.o, president of New York-based Mauam Group, I.De .. and Robert L. Stllwell , president of Ryder, Sttllwell I.De., a l.o'i Angeles-based financial management firm . SHOWCASE '86 •.• FromA.7 g1onal business monthly published 1n Irvine, and Martin Browcr's Orange C'ounty Report, a monthly ncw'llcttcr published 1n NewJ)On Beach. Other exhibitors included Sleep at Sea of Irvine, which provides linens for yacht'i and recreational vehicles; Quant and 8oros1hcate Instruments Corp of Santa Ana which docs custom fabncataon of glassware for customers hke univcrs1t1es. semi- conductor compan1c'I, medical equipment dcsianers and manufac- turers and food proccslOrs: Swttt Scn1at1ons. a candy an'l2 &Jf\ &tore m South Coast V1lla1e that produc~ hu,1ne , cards an chocolate: pcc1al- ues lntemattonal. Miu1on Vie10 promot1na the third brake h&ht for vehicles, CIMCO. Costa Mesa, spcctahz'mg an thermoplasuc . and the Lakes at South \oiut ap.inmcnt\ in Costa Me'8 Orange Coast C'ltcnng fmm the } ( osu1 Mesa lountry ('lub was con- cessionaire for the show. In add1t1on to businesses, U( Irvine, Cal State f.ullenon, the Unit- ed States Mann~. the Santa Ana Police Depanmcnt, Orange County Shentrs Department and ,imilar oraanazations were rcprc-.ented EOC executive director Sm11h said he was plea~ wtth the ,ho-;1l'c; c"habiu but that "from the per- spective of attendance. we would have hoped for more people to come outand see the lt1ndrnfth1nas Oranae County produces." math hoped that next year's show will "have substantially irtatcr par- t1t1pat1on. from the ~hools part1t'u- lorly." because the show offers a "tremendous opponunity to educate students 1bout opponunitaes and \t1muh that occur wnhtn Oran.ae Countr.. And it's the next acncrat1on that will keen thi\ county growina" I • ' ' • I WH AT AM EX Om Nt:W YORK. (AP) Mar ' AMEX LEADER S GoLo QuoTES Due to transmission problems 1n New York, today's hsttng will not appear In the Daily Piiot METALS QuorEs WH AT NYSE 0 10 NYSE LEADER S Dow JoNE S A~£R~G£S .. NASDAQ SUMM ARY Due to transmission problems 1n New York today's listing will not NEW YORK ~> ~.~1 -£flveN01ft0• • IM·Counler ''"'"'' ,vP91led uY r-S[ appear in the Daily Pilot LAt..,.• NtflM I( ';5· AMIN ~ Cl'llCl'l'I 2.79 , 1~~ +I~ MQ$ele\I '· • .... +I MCI l 1 -'l a uar I, , 6 19· 2 -7· l? trJ'Mv 1'~ l 2 13·16 +S-~6 Intel '• -I'-'> CiluH ' , 7 l~ 1•"• -'• Pl'lrmcl I, , '"' t '• S.aoa1e • ~ Maonal •.1 I ~ t .. I ' HOROSCOPE WedDesclay, Mar~ 5 !JllES (March 21-April 19). Many will claim )'OU arc~ a "master marupulator." This is be<:ause you fintsh project close dc:al which adds to your prestige. possible profit. Key as combination of persuasmn and d1plo~acy. Taurus plays role. TAU~ (Apnl 20-May 20): Being close to the sea would prove bc~~fti?ai.·-Focus on journey, communsc.ation, diplomacy. education. spintual values. Look behind scenes, discover pertinent information previously hidden GEMINI (Ma} 21 -June 20) Reach beyond previous ex1>«tat1ons. lnd1v1dual who was ne~ttve an reaction -------------to financial request will now do turn- about. Means you are goinB to get the funding! Cancer, Leo. Capncom figure prominentlv SYDNEY CANCER (June 21-July 22) Favorable publicity accompanies yo ur OM•RR efforts. You receive attention previous-·" I} denied. Focus also on legal status. ••••lllil•••••••• special nghts and permissions -and . marriag~. Anes. Libra natives play outstanding roles LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)· Stress independence, creauv1ty, courage. p1oneenng spint. You'll learn more about health, employment. pets, people "ho make promises they cannot fulfill Be direct. get to heart of matters where romance 1s concerned. VlftGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)· \ ou·re pulled an two d1m:t1ons -choo~ course leading to fam1l}. home. secunty. Esche"' intngue. Focus on e\ntement discovery. enhght~nment. Intuition as on target. family member ":-.mcerc and wall prove 1t. LIBRA (Sept 23-0 ct. 22)' Display versauhty and ab1hty to laugh at your o"n foibles Older indi vidual will be impressed. will malee substantial ofT{'r. 'ou are due to ~u."1ve gift. ;.-ou'll also get 1n,itat1 on to tra,el. agiuanan plJ~'i rOlt". SCORPIO (Oct 23-No' :! I) Define terms. rebuild. remodel. correct rl'lenl error Focus also on '1s1ts. tnps. ideas. abilt t:,. to state case an franl. rnmpell1ng manner ( ~clc: moves up. JUdgmt•nt, 1n1u1uon will be on target l aurus pla\ s role SAGITTARIUS (NO'-. 22-Dec. 21): Personal inH•!>t1ga1ion pll)'> d1' 1dends You'll learn more about mone) and hoy. to collcct ii. D)nam1c mt•mbcr ol opposite ..e>. will become \aluable all\ Kn o"' 1t. respond Jtcordingh Gemini figures prom1nentl). · CAPRICORN (Dec. :!:!-Jan. 19). Don't be afraid to asl -)OU arc hll'h· 10 ret'et'e ever) thing }OU need. Focus on finances. desires. asp1rauons. home 1rnpru' ement. l 1nusual gift, representing token of aflectton. 1s .. on the wa) " AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Protect secrets. be d1 c;creet. realize that unique rcla11onsh1p can only continue 1f you handle dclt<:ate matters m delicate manner Message will become ancreasingl) clear. Pisces. Vi rgo 1nd1\1duab figure prominent!) PISCES <Feb 19-March 20) Wish come-; true 1n drama1ic fashion '>potltght on ach1e,emcnt. amb1t1on. mone) and lo'e \ ou'll wm in .. outstanding perfonnance:· You'll be more popular and -.ou could hll financial Jackpot. \apncom figures pr-0m1nentl) IF MARCH S lS YOUR BIRTHDAY \Ou arc d} nam1c. crea\I\ e. 1nqu1s111ve, and could have writing talcnl. Sel(-exprcss1on is a nel'esstt\ for H>U. not a lu\ur. Gemini. Virgo. Sagittanus play 1mponant roles 1n }Our ltk. \ ou are seo'>ttl' c to moods of others. arc succt>ssful 1n dealing"' 1th public. man' peopk da1m )OU an: a mind reader. In actualtt\, \OU are d1scern1ng. perceptn e. ca pa bit: of sensing pulse of general trend<, qdec; \-tarth and ~ccmber ~111 be outstandmg for \OU 1n JIH!6 Husbands stay clear of the dirty clothes L.M. Bovo Now we say 'Take mycar please ' When l thought about at -which wasn't too often -l always assumed people stole cars that were sorta plain and basic and blended into the flow of traffic without arousing suspicion. I figur:e<t they'd be rather nondescnpt, possibly beige or gray with a m1n1- mum of flash and chrome. Wrong. The No. I car that is stolen more often than any other is a Buick, followed 'closely by a Cadillac El- dorado. Porsche and Pontiac Grand Pnx. The car I dnve didn't make the top I 0. I'm not sure how I feel about thar. except rm wondering who told crooks that to stan it you had to pump the accelerator three aqd one half times, let 1t rest for exactly 16 seconds, tum the key, floor it and hum a German walu. Possibl) another reason why my car has remained intact is that cars are usually stoltn for "JOY ndcs." Assum- ing "joy ndc" translates to a ride in a car that 1s shiny, sleek and inspires looks of envy and can be ridden in comfort. my car is out. Car wash attendants demand hazard pay. There are' tennis balls rolling around under the brake pedal, there's a chip m the front window. "secret sauce" stains on the seat covers and radio dials permanently set for the Barry Man1lo\N Network. Look over the cars driven by our children. I would have been w1llini to bet that the) could have left them in a world-class ghetto with the keys in them and the windows rolled down and no one v.ould have looked twice at them. ERMA Bo11Ec1 Also wrong. You ~nnot imagine our shock when one of our kids called saying his car had been stolen. He was sack. He'd jus.t put a dollar's worth of gas in it. "How did they get the motor to turn over?" we asked. "They hot-wired it." "Why didn't you think of that! Why do you think they took itr' "The poli ce said for the pans." "Which one?" "I can't imagine.'' said our son. "What are the chances of getting at back?" "Given the odds of having 11 stolen in the first place ... the same as Lee lacocca buymg a Mercedes." Three. months passed when the pohce called hir:ri one day and said, "We've found your car. Come pick 1t up." Wondering how he was g0tng to get 1t on a bus, our son went to the yard and there was his car, shining hke a new penny. The . motor had been tuned up. there was while pile carpet on the dashboard. a religious statue dangling from the mirror and a "HA VE A GOOD DAY" bumper stt~ker. Someone had put 10 new points and replaced a bald ure. Even crooks have pride. Variety can be the spice of a sex life IJE.\R .\NN LANDERS I was interested 1n the letter from the man "'ho enJOycd making love in the car Has v.1fc felt guilt' and wanted to knov.-1f11 was the .. Christian" thing to do. You said so long as 1t was pn' atL' not dangerou\ and reasonably rnm- fonablc It was nobodv's busines!>. I mamed one in a m1ll1on. She .,,.a., total!~ uninhabited, "1lhng and cager to make love anyplace at an} ume I must SS)' we dreamed up some might) unusual sttuauons. We tra veled 4u1te a bit and II was not unusual for us to puJI off the road in the m iddle of the day 1f we ran into a wooded area. a \acant house. a sandy beach, a calm lake or an in' 111ng motel. On oc- casion. when the mood came upon us and none of the above was available. we JUSt u~d the car. ANN UNDERS routine. (an you suggest something that might help') -MILWAUKEE, WIS. DEAR MILWA UKEE: I don't know what you mean by "variation." That word can cover a wide range of activities. Go to a bookstore and browse around for just the right book to give your wife. Read It and underline lbe parts she needs to see. Stay, away from pornography. Select a ' hlgb· quality sex manual. There's a world · B RIDGE l\orth South vulnt>rablt• Soutll <k<tl:-> NORTH +A .. ' A4 10 9 WEST +8652 Q 8 QI\ 4 +86 .. 3 •AK Q JO 7 6 2 EAST +QJ 109 7 762 A KJ 87 •Vold SOUTH +K 3 KJ 109 ~3 632 •J9 Thi• b1ddtn~ South West 2 Pass :1 Pass Obit' PaseJ ll Pass Pass Pass Opt•n111).( lt•ad North 2 NT 4 5 + Pass Pass Four nf E.ut ;J 4. Pas8 Obit> You ... ho11ld bC' thnllt•d wht•n your oppon('nts pay you tht.• <:om- plimt:nl of rf'<'ol(nizing yo11r -.k ill at t he l(aml' Hut you havC' a njlht tn frel an1b1 valt•nt about thP ma111·1· when t IH' l(<''ll Llrl' t'O"t" y1111 p111nts Tin., hand 1-. from the playofr to dt•tt•rm1m• th<' winner of lhl' H111stnl(l'r Board·a·Matth Tt·am l'hampionsh1p at the recent Fall :\ort h Am<'rican Championships. AftPr six S('ssions, the U.S team 1 hat 11nly a few days earlter had "'1111 th£' Wt>rld Team Champ1on- ... 1i1p wa~ t wd with thal of Dr (;e11r~1· Hosenkranz of Mexico C'1t y, and a I i ·dt>al playoff wa'l '>l'hl'Ci· ult'd Simng South for th£' l l S. team wa'> Pt•tC'r PPndt·r His two dia· 1111111d orx•nml( hid showed a weak I\'\ o-b1d 1n ont' of the m~or s u1b :\orth'.., two no trump asked for danfa·atu'm, and the rest of the I OAYS/i] · I I I' L J 1 CHARLES Go REN OMAR SHARIFF aur twn was 11at11ral .-t W{•st might h1tVl' rt•ad his part- nN for a dub vmd, uut ht• t>leC't(•d to lead a tow dtamond East won t ht• ktnl(. and hi' (·nuld havp insured th(' c·1111tra<·t ·.., d(•foat by returning H l<1w diamond to hts partner's 411e<•11 ll would not haH~ b<·en dif. fic-u 1 t for \\' t"•' t 11 work out what was 1(01ng on 1n-.tt•ad, Ea:.1 11lt•c·tt•d to <'ash the aC'I.' of diamonds irnd then "hift to r lw qm•t•n of !-paclc•.., Of•(•lan•r won. and t h1• full' of I ht• cunl ra<'I now Ii lll)(t>d on dt•t·larn bringing tn tht• I rump Miit without loss. The per- centage play 1s to take the finesse, but PC'nder unhesitatingly cashed lht' a('e and kin~ to park up the queen Why" Dl'dan•r n ·altt('d lhat. had East hf'ld l lll' q111•1·n nf trump~. ht• could tw !>ltrl' of ... n>nng .:t lrtt k with the lady h~ l1•acl1n~ a third diamond and fon·in~ dt•l·lar<'r to ruff in dummy S1nt·t· lie• dtd not do that, <frrlan·r n•a'lon('d h<• dtd not have t ht• q111•c•n. anc1 "" wok the antt· pt•n•t•111 a~•· ph1y for hi" n mt raC't The Ho ... c•n kranl t1•:1m lost t ht> hoard. but wpnt on to v. in t ht> pla:voff b} ii "t'ort• of i -5 0 I I .• GtMny ~ me -llCM-0 • A R F' I R . lldvOI ..._ .,,_ ,_,0 ..,. i:."" I' I (' J too crittcal When not>od; . . _ _ a10..n0 '(OU _,,,. eo meaiRi•• I [( L I p 0 y I ~" ~td .,,,,,..,.IOCn.tck I I I' r o oft'IC\•'• ~. '"""' •• o-<-·•d -· --· .~ !;.;:..O"Y.; ';:." ~:"f ;: ~· e ·::·; .. " V&!•I~ [' I' r j' I' I' I' 1· I' I 0 .... :.:"" I 01 I I I I I I I I !'>urve~ taJ..crs ..a~ one husband in 20 makes the bed in which he slcepc; One husband 1n 25 cooks h1~ own dinner One husband in two tosses ht~ din~ clothes into a hamper But onl~ one husband in 46 C\ t'r takes the dirt' dothes bacJ.. ou1 of the hamper to do 1.1.hate,er )Ou·rc c,uppo-;{'d to do ~•th them V.111 ha\t to rc.,carch th" lurthcr ~land h~ makes lemon JUtce a good salt substitute This kept up until "'e w en~ 1n our 60s. when m } beloved wife passed away . I always felt as 1f we had thl' healthiest se>. life of anyone I )<new because we never stopped turning each other on Sex was always unpredictable. 1magmat1ve and fun Our sexual compatab1htv spilled o.,er into all areas of our hie and we were d1vinel} happy of difference. ,.---------------------------- TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZL·E \ u~ntuf"\ Jgo a lamil~ not \noot\ enough to rl'ler to tht' .. hired girl" J'> a maid .. oltcnt1mco, calkd her .. I 11- 11e ~he "as the domnttt for Jll 1. hores. l1111t• "'a-, Pio" girl < hicken lcc~r '•fop ml'l han1L '>hl· 1.1. a~n't L.illcd L.11 baLJ... then. unlc'i\ her nwralc, tame into 4uc'>l11>n A .. I 11 .. "'J'> a L1a1c· "ho me.,'>ed around 1n tht· ha,mow l \l·ntu:tlh I 11 turm·d tnto a· '\Oph1'llLJll'd mon1J...n and L1111e droppt:d uut I kn•>IA " I 11 or 11.1.11 no" hut n" I 1111c\ <an \OU.,,,, the 'amt·' <) lt,IH' llWrl'l'\l'r h\.•en an\ pt•opk an hl\tllr\ "'h11 d1dn·1 hu1.L· name,·• \ \L11ol.1r'> think not There h,1\t' tx-en pt•opll' who'' l kt•pt their n;mw' seer ·t th11ugh CJ H(I\\ dol·' thl' men 1c 1r11!11 If\ com pan: in '>Ill to tht• auto indu,11' ' A Oue\n I l'\l'll uinw dn'\t' \1m 1es nuv. "'irk .'no 000 pcupk < .1r-, tlHtT mtlhon :--. .. kmt>n JUl\C dot·, nut t.1\tt· l1~l' When 'ou fi nail~ get ) our '1deophonc -that compact tele- phone and computer an one -)ou'll be able to call up a menu of local restaurants to see the restaurants' menus. And makl' reservations. 1f}ou wish. Or so say'> our Chief Prognostt- rator (ireat "ac, the dangl"r of catastrophic fires m medieval c1t1es. '-lo the powt'r'I rang bells at !>unset. .. lOU\ re fcu" bells "cover the fire" hells. That phra..e turned 1ntc our "-Ord "curfew." ongmally not a crime ~eterrent but a drfensc against wild ltre ·c 11\C me hhcrt\ or g1\l' me death .. ha' 11s Spant\h counterpan "Better 10 die on )'Our feet thun It" c on \our knees." \:o tnhutun Oow~ rr1t11 the la't I .t'i() male\ ol thl' "ltll· Kl\t'r sail hut the SJmc tac.k hu(.I\ 111.11 L.M. Boyd is a syndieat~d dl'tt'l l '\alt dt>tct t lemon JU Ill' I h1'> columnist. PEOPLE ) ou can~nuh1s letter tf)OU want to but no name or city. please. Just call me BEAUTllFUL MEMORIES. DEAR BEAUTIFUL: How lucky you wtrt to find eacb other. It wai a perfect match. Lots of readers will be envious -especially tbe man wbo wrote the next letter. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: M)' wtfl' and I have been married I 4 years. I thou$ht I was getting a prize when I mamed her because she was a virgin. Now I am no1 so sure We make Jo,e evel) Saturda) morning at precisely the same time, 1n the same bed and the same way. Any suggestion from me that we should try a bit ofvanat1on bnngsa firm rebuke from her. "It isn't decent! It isn't moral. Arc you crazy?'' Ann. I am not a kook. nor am I interested in far-out stuff. I am JUSt bored with the ·same. mechanical • . . DEAR ANN LANDERS: You were dead wrong in the advice you gave to the boy who eats one thing at a tame. first all the peas, next all the potatoes. then the meat, and so on. M ) mother did that and her table manners were atrocious. She poked through a casserole like she was looking for worms. She separated corned beef hash into two piles. meat and potatoes. When she ate pie a la mode, she shoved the pit> to one side. ate ll first and b) the lime she got around to the ice cream 11 was a liquid substance. Watching her eat could ruin a pcrson·s appetite. Mother It ved to be 9 1 and her eating habits became worse as time went on. I hope the boy's mother puts her foot down before he develops more mealttme odd111cs. -N.N. IN FLA. DEAR N.N.: Tbere ls notblng 111- mannered or barmful lD eating one food at a tlmt. Tbia la vaslly different, however, from separating the meat from the potatoes in corned beef bash as your motber did. I agree aacb behavior Is weird and anappetli- lng. Stars shine at old-time film festival 8 y tbe A11ociat~d Press SANTA BARBARA -Old Santa Barbara recapturt•d !loll)· wood'~ Golden Era to open ti\ lir'it annual lntcma\tonal film Fcc;t1\ al. motorcading celcbr1t1c~ like Ted Danson and Rob(>rt Mitchum to the theater in antique car... Other '>13'5 at the opening included C hristine Labtl , Danson'-; co-star 1n the festn al- fcatured "Ju\t Between Friend\", Jue Ruuell. James Woods, Stuart Wbltmu and 18-year-<:>ld Timothy Glbb11, making his film debut in .. Just Between Fnends." Trial delay asked LO AN<iELES -Director Jobo Landis' lawyer has asked a Judge to postpone the mov- 1emaker· involuntary man· slauanter tnal in the "'T w1h&ht Zone" helicopter cnish that killed actor Vic Morrow and two ch1I· dren nearly four yean a10. Anomey Jamn Neal has filed • motion ask.ma upttioT C'oun Jud&c R.oter Born 10 put off the ars teh1 I liJj nillliill Ted Dan90n Deputl> Dntnct Attome)' Lea Pctrwln D'A•ottJno filed a motion oppo ina the dcla\ Neal said he was husy defend- ing Lou1i.1ana (10v Edwin Ed- wanll 1n a federal racketeenng retria1 that begin~ March 24. The first tnal ended 1n a hung Jury Landis and four othct'\ arc charged with involuntary man·· slau ~ 10 the deaths of Morro~ JobnLandU and child actol""l Myca Olbo Le, 7 and Reoee Cllaeo, 6, ma fiery cra'h July 23. 1982 Wham! to apllt LONDON -The top pop duo Wh'am1 will soon be history. afier "the most amicable split m pop history," GHrte MJeMel said M 1chael and AM.rew R" I T will record t~e last Wham! smg)c this week 1n Los Angeles and pfay a farewell concert in London lhis summer. Michael said. Michael and Ridgeley decided seven months ago to quite whale at the top. having achieved every- thing they wanted to when they started four years at age 17, Michael said. Wham! shot to fame in 1982 with the s1n~lc "Youn'-Guns." Their htt'i in- cluded 'Wake Mc Up Before You Go Go.'' and the duo have 50ld more than 30 m1lhon rCC'ords. World'• oldest? LJBERTYVll.LE. Ill Mamie Keltll, bom three years before Custer's la'it stand, may have claim to a spot 1n lhc Guinness Book of World Records as the world's olde~I pcnon, relauvc"I ~1d . Keath. 112. was born March 22. 187 3. accordana to rcletives. That was two months and 12 day before the banh ofEllu WUJJam1 of Wales. recognized by Guinness foTiowing the dc!lh of Sh1gcch y10 Izumi of Ja n at 120. liliiiiilmr ACROSS 1 Garbage 6 Scampers 11 Law court 1-4 N0<man Vincent - 15 Poet T.S - 16 Hurrah. Sp 17 Roman judge 18 Coat fabric 20 Emancipate 22 Shower 23 Promlseful 25 Play backer 28 Parley 29 Ordlnal ending 30 Railroad car 32 Hallmark 3-4 Streams 39 Weirdest 42 Ruaala,.area 43 Fights -45 Betimes 46 Is angry -49 Verse 50 Mr. Carnegie 5-4 Bleak 55 Unique peraon 56 Greek letter 58 Convince 60 RLS and FOR 63 Cumulus · 66 Mr. Whitney 67 Tripod 68 lnMCt 69 Hide-out 70 Penumbra 71 Goose genus DOWN 1 Uolock. Poet 2 Nurtured 3 Equable portion • Thorooghlare 5 Leavings 6 Ctalr - - 7 Declarer 8 Narrow Inlet 9 Male anJmal 10 Use a dirk 11 Stall 12 Hawaiian greeting 13 Sublease 19 Female "Gt" 21 Coolidge 23 Bute again 2-4 Sea mammal 26 Anlala 27 Jacob'• son l'REVIOUI fl'UZZLE SOLVED 30 Barracudas 31 Hicks 33 Wrong. pref 35 Open range 36 False 37 Diacritical mark 38 Utterer 40 Troika 4 1 Golfer. at llmea -4-4 Cooked CJ amt 47 Argument 48 Vetch 50 Having a high roof S 1 Soap plant 52 Soviet hero 53 Sett-esteem 55 Synthetic fiber 57 Eternities 59 USC's rlvat 61 Stadium yell 62 Judah king 64 Wield 65 The· Ger THE FAMILY· CIRCUS by 811 Keane "Daddy invented a NEW way of doing moth: thin~ing." MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson SCHOOL CAFETERIA >--) "'Who let you in?"' PEANUTS T~E.,, SAY ™AT MV GREAT· 6RANDFArnE~ WAS AJ.WAVS EARLY ... NO MATTER W~~E HE WENT. HE WAS ALWA't'5 EA~L V. ' Y' GARFIELD TUMBLEWEEDS .DRABBLE ROSE IS ROSE • IF HE WENT TO A BALL GAME~ TO A ~W, ~E ALWAYS 60T lltERE EARLY, AND WAS ALWAVS T~E FIRST ONE TO LEAVE ... BIG GEORGE by Virgil P'rtch (VIP) lZ--- "Now th.at'• whit I call a domineering mother." DENNIS THE MENACE ~ r • • ' by Hank Ketcham ~"";. -~~ ~ 't ·'IF rr ~'T FOR MR . W1LSON, niER~'o BE A 61e 1 EMm ~PACE 1N lHf WORLl). • -I by-Charles M. Schulz... J s by Jim Davis by Tom K. Ryan by Kevin Fagan "l,l'M ~~ ORABeU.I t UNOEl<~t~NO WE. ~AVE. !le>Mf.11-\1~ I~ CDMMOt.l ~ by Pat Brady BLOOll COtmTY MOON MULLl?fS by Berke Breathed. "'"'*-fjQlll 1,. MlrU. H~ 11f«T-60 1" 1'&(- ~ sc.MJCI. <M PAY- ' by Ferd & Tom Johnson l SEE· WHAT MAV~ Yoo Bot.1.1X~t> · AHt> l 80L>Gf4T Ttl/S COFFEE, Mtt. H,ARTBUF?N ~ ' AND .A iWINKI~! 10 BRl<5HTeN YoUR D,AY UP THIS T IME, L..ADY P.? , FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE -by Lynn Johnston JUDGE PARKER I NEVER SAY DID YOU REALLY MEAN IT ANYTHING I DON'T WHEN 'l'OU SAID YOU Ml&H'T MEAN, YOUNG LADY ' LOAN ME MONEY TO BUY A CAR, MR. PRIDE ? ~- FUNKY WINKERBEAN by Jeff MacNally by Harold Le Ooux A LIGHT .JUST CAME ON IN "THAT THIRD · FLOOR AAA.RTMENT 1 NOW r KNOW WHERE HE'§. BEEN HAVING HIS LATE· NIGHT 6USINESS MEETINGS' by Tom Batiuk <AJHAl'S W~G W11H DOMBROUJ5KI '5 PIZ.ZA ACROSS "THE. SfRE.E'T ~ DOONESBURY 'fW KIOIJ, l'~ ~VER. REALLY fJf£N Jfl'T/tACTW 10 '4EU MA~ M4CJ(} 81./T 6(.l'. I Cf)()W ~y ~A KXX an OF MYS/f,/.,F ~~ >a11 \ A' by Gary Trudeau IUHY I TH"< 15 TH! . Y(XI (Jf.AZ y ; ~ ~~ ~[~ l(Jfl> ) I . Of~ Cout DAILY PILOT! Tueeday, Match 4, 1986 ·'(Cesar) Chavez may have spurred so many boycolls over so many years that to many liberal consumers. he's become like the boy who Suspects of minor crimes should stay out of jail Whenever the subject of jail comes up, as it does frequently in Orange County. these days, it might be instructive to remember the story of a 17-year-oTd boy named Craig. Craig was a troublesome kid, not a bad kid, but one who hadn't quite grasped the concept of authority as it related to him. C raig violated traffic laws with som e regularity and accumulated a pile of citations which he chose to ignore. Eventually. he was arrested, brought to court and was found gtrilty. His parents. determined to see that their wayward son learned a lesson. asked the judge to sentence him to jail. The judge complied. . Within 24 hours, Craig was found dead in "his cell. cried 'wolf. ' " -- H e had been tortured and beaten to death by a pack of cellmates more accustomed to the violent life on the nether side of the law. Not every inmate's stay ends as tragically. but stories of physical a nd sexual abuse behind bars are common. Perhaps the cages bring out the animal in some people. Or maybe the level of civilization among the criminal population is generally lower than it is outside the~jail. Flying's fun if you've got skilled captain in cockpit The pornt of this anecdote 1s that jail 1s an awful N h b k · I 1 d The firc;t time I met Harry place. ot everyone w o rea s a soc1eta ru es eserves c ampbell \\a., on a brand ne\\ to be punished there. Only those who are a threat to airplane (before World War fl) fl}1ng others or who owe a very large debt to society should be 10 .\lbuquerque. N.M Also on board caged. wa!o a fnend of mine. Harold M o re pragmatically, places that cite minor of-Zellerbach f · · · This wa'i 1n the days wh{'n every fenders and allow them to remain out o Jail until or plane had a fan-t)pe propeller. 1 he unless the} are convicted have a head start on the present Jel propulsion had tx.·t·n problem of Jatl overcrowding. mvenied but not yet "proved." w no These are not radical ideas. passenger plane used 11. r In every countv_ in California except Orange The plane designers of that day did e"eryth1ng they could th1nl-. of to County. police departments use a cita tion-release make the planes fl y faster. Thie, program to handle the case.s of minor, non-violent pamcular plane \\-as a linle wr1rd offenders. And here. where the overcrowded jail has looking, but 11 was fac;t d fi d I d t k t I f th · t t" The passengers 1n the salon frlt h kt: cause a c era JU $e o ta e con ro o e SI ua ion, p1oncel"i ofa son. So. naturally. mo'>t both the coun-appotnted j ail monitor and the county ol the talk as we left Lo~ .\ngcl~ wa' sheriff advocate a c1tat1on-release program. ::ot .. \Oietfler th1:. \tas a good plane. ShenfT .Brad Gates has appealed to police-depart-Harold Zellerbach capped the cun- ments around the count)' to adopt the program. which \l.'t'>auon ·aid he ... I don't kno"' 1...a h I h k h I 1~.-,,.. abl much about deo;1ening planes. but I wou 1.;1 e P 1m cep l l' Jal popu.w:H-1-0n"" manage e want to tell >Ou tlm·lfSagooopTanc and humane tc ... els 01herw1~ the) couldn 't get th1' Perhaps the pres~ure the federal court ts exerting captain lo tl> 11 .. and the suppon of the county's top law enforcement ThC' captain wa'> Harr) Campbell. officials will force Orange County to join its counte rparts .\s 11 turned out. he later becamt.• a across the state Even 1fthe c itation-release is enacted for good friend 01 mine. But all I knc"' about him up to that 11me was lhat practical reasons alone. It 1s the c1 viii zed way to treat Harold Zellerbach had such a high society's least offensive offenders. opinion ofh1m he ""as willing 10 trust Op1n1ons expressed 1n 1h1s space are lhose of the Daily Pilot Other views expressed on this page are lhose of their authors and artists Reader comment 1s invited The Dally Pilot. PO BolC 1560, Costa Mesa. 92626 Phone 642-6086 Dornan, Badhazn could use less01Js in class, elan l o thl' fd1111r Our t""o great Hcpuh11rnn u>n- gres\mcn Rohl·rt., l>ornan and Badha m rl''>~l 11\l.'h. an -;1111 rep- resenting 1h1' count' v.1th <,uch rla"'' and l'lan ta~ aid While the rcal>onc; tor his tnp to the U.S S.R e!>Cape us. he claims to be pnvy to the blackest St"crets of the m1l1tary-industnal complex Ma)'bc he was tr)tng to interest them 1n a piece of Star Wa rs. his precious skin to him .\n~way, Mr Zellerbach's con- fidence 1n him made a lasting 1m- pres-;ion on me . So much c;o. that a >Car later I put 11 to good use I was president of a research and de\ elopment com pan> called For- ec;trong We had a contract with Wc)erhaeu~r Timber Co. to find fea<11ble adf)1tcat1on'i for a wood fiber calledfa.(~aloy . .\<;part of this. we had succeeded in developing a guard for huge 1ncend1al) bombs. The wa) these born~ were made ""'as to form lightwe1~t steei sheets into C) hndC'rs about six leet long and 18 inches in diameter Unless ade- quate!> protected. 11 was possible to rupture this skin with a slight blow. So. natural!). for shipment 11 was nece<,sary to have a guard. That~uard was fir'>t made hy fastening t"'o-b}- lours together w11h steep straps. It was WALTER BURROUGHS not '>Stl'ifactory and very costly. So, the rhcm1cal corps talked to us about a heller wa> of making a guard Well. we had the way. And we made a prototvpe. So far '><l good . In the-m<'ant1me. Forel>trong had been purchal>Cd b) National F1re- "'orl-.s Ordinance Corporation of "v1assachusett~ ThoY wanted me to meet with their chief cnsinecr about hu} ing another plant in the East which had attempted 10 manufacture hardboard This being the middle of the summer I asked my 16--year-old daughter Toni 1f she'd like to take a tnp wtth me 10 the East coast Our first stop wa'i to be Washington. D.C It looked like perfec1 weather for fl)1ng. lJnfonunatcl>. 11 didn't work out that way I'm \Ure )OU mu'lt have hcJrd that lightning doesn't 'itnke an airplane. Sorry, fol k'i. II doc!".. M) daughter wac; o;1111ng 1n the window seat on the left side of the plane and. JU'lt as we got near Grand J unc11on. Colo .. a bolt of lightning rushed b\ the window That put one of the engine'> out of operation and humed a hole throufh the tail. The captain calm y ellpla1ncd that being hn b) ligh tning was moo;t unusual but that the remaining three engines could carry the plane very nicel)' Ho""'ever. under regulations. 1f the) stopped to refuel -which the) would have to do -they could not take ofT again without a special clearance And that they would have to wall for The big plane landed at the airline's repair base m Oklahoma and lhe great minds that run aircraft companies sent on a smaller plane from the coast to finish the flight to Washington. D.C. Washington. D.C .. was lovely but I got a call on arrival from the headquaners in Massachusetts to fly there at once. They suggested I take another airljne. I did. my daughter and I. but when we saw the plane -which literally rattled - my daughter was· pretty nervous. But we got to Boston after an unscheduled stop ~n Delaware. Next day we drove out to the plant 1n a rentedcar I had to go back a~in the following day but Tom said,· Dadd}. I don't want to go back lo that plant agam. l"cthke to stay in Boston." So. she stayed and amused herself tn the city. That night the papers earned the stol)'_ of a new plane that had l'iilfen apan intvrissoun It was an identical plane 10 the one we were scheduled to take to New York. You can't blame a 16--year-old kid for being a little womed. but I persuaded her we could get to New York all nght and. after that. we could fly to the coast -that she could go nght through but that I would have to get off in Chicago. I did and here 1s where Harold Zellerbach's appraisal of the pilot came in. The pilot's name was Capt. Harry Campbell and he was as skrllful as Mr. Zellerbach had said. My daughter calmed down at once and had a lovely tnp home. Har:ry Campbell? Well. let me tell you. Like all great fl yers he finally retired. And he retired in Ncwpon Beach. We saw a great deal of each other in the intervening years. Unhappily. he died last week. It seems.to me that I'm losing too man y of my specially good friends. But. when a person has It ved such a good life as Harry Campbell. a person can only reJ oicc that he lea ves such a fine history of achievements. And so many fine memones. Walter Barroagb1 11 tbe Pilot's founding pabllsbu. 11<.11>11 had that \.1r Hadham 111\t first plJlt ,I\ mo\t frn 1ucnl n1cr'' lO Mr ~olau 111 "'-c"' York -a Demou a1 1oc1 Rut ""l"re proud -ac, one 111 thl' m11'1 aflluent coun11c<, in the u1un1n -to <,cc that hc'c, l ilrr) mg the P<:'ntJgon flag at our t•xix·n'>c to such rowerlul m1lltan ent1t1<.'' a' Ponu$al. lklgium Denmark anu AU\tr\J The other Roben -Mr. Dornan -seems to be expanding his role a~ self-appointed Master-at-Arms of the Halls of Congress. His Rambo-like courage in the face of the funn y little Vietnamese guard with the turned· around hat 1!. trul)' a crcd11 to Orange County and the country He says he doel>n't know how we foc;t that war. I don't either Ma ybe their leader5 sta\ home and work llANK \fARLS Nc~pon Beach -4lli1iiiU4MH IUl!i!Mllil·J---------------- Burea u cra ts give grudging ·\\for f\racl. we l an onl\ hoix· that he can ton' 1nt"c ll'I do' l'lh military estahli'>hmrnt to a<.crpt mon: mill- By tbe A11ociated Press Toda)' 1c; Tuc'i<.la' ~1Jrl h 4 lhl ldrd Ja\ •>I llJX6 I here <He '112 J.nc; kft in the year TOda~ '<, h1ghl1gllt 1n t"'1111' On ~arl h 4. I ,1!11 thl· C on,t1tut1C1 n ol thl· l n1tcd \tall.''> "'Cnt into cflcct as the firs1 federal ( ongn·" ml·t in•\ie" ) orlr. Howt'vl'r. the lawmaker<, had to adjourn for the lack of a quorum On this date In 1681. England\ l\.1ng ( harlc'> 11 granted a <.haner w Wilham Penn for an area of land that latt·r hem me l'enn.,ylvan1a In 1791 . Vermont hl.•tame the 14th 'it.ate In 1837, the llhno1\ '>tnte lcgt!ilature granted a City rhancr to C h1cago In 1861. the (on federal )' adopted the Stars and Bar\ !lag dcc;1gn In 191 7. Republican Jeannette Rankin of Montana took her c;eat a~ the first woman elected to the l · ~ fl ouse of Representative\ One year ago: Prec;1dcnt Rl·agAn pre\wd < ongrcs\ lo move ahcao w11n tn <' MX m1ss1le program. rnlling 11 vital to l '.S. 'leCllflly Today's birthday\ ~tngtr-aC'trl.'5l> Barbara McNa1r l'i 47 Aetrc"" Paula Prent1n 1s 47 Rock mu\lc 1an C hn'i Co)quire I!. 38. >\ctrcs'i Kay 1 cn1 1' l l Thouaht for today· "Rcgrc t 1c, ao appalling wa'itc of ener&) '>OlH an'1 hu1ld on It, it's only good for ""allowing 1n .. -Kathennr ~;in,ltdd ;luthor ( 1888-1923) ORANGE COAST QailyPilot , / / KaNft Wittmer ''•"II Zlnl r '1 I ~ TomTMt 1.l~ oiiiO "Of d•IO' Oofl ,.,_.., ly f dotr>1 ,_CIMM ~(Olla< 01 ... Sfteff ~ lcd•IC:- / ' t l'oe.r1 L Cantr ... ", t>dlJC r «' Mana get f«fl K ..... c;.,c;,j111t.on Ma~ Howwd~ Matll,.lll'IQ Ol1.cl6t c~~Df apology to whistle blower WA.S HI NC1TON -As a retired >\1r Force officer. MHon M Hna110 probably should ha ve guessed wha1 the outcome of his complaint to the government would be He asked the '-" hne House for an "1ndependen1 1nqu1ry" into the of- ficial harassment II( his son, John. an Energy Dcpanment whistle blower. Instead, the White House turned the matter over to the same burcallcrat~ the )Oungcr Hnatio had exposed. Not surpmtngly. the reply the father got tended to gloss over the mistreatment his son had received from his bo!i'IC'i Herc'!i the stor) "I do not have faith that an explanation hy officials of the Dcpa11- mcnt of Energy would ~ fair anrl al·curate," Myron Hnat1 0 explained to President Reagan in h1~ letter of Oct 9. 1984 He. therefore, rcqucc;tcd an 1ndcl)(ndent 1nqu1ry into the harassment of his son which we had reported 1n this column John Hnatto's offense wa'> tclltna congrcss1onal 1nvest1gaton about 5e· cunty lapc;c'i at government nuclear weapons plant'i Not only did ht~ recommcndat1on'i go unh~dcd. but Hnauo wa, '!lapped Wlth an offietal repnmand and threatened wi1h the Ion of his sccunty clearance. which would have c:ost him h1 )Ob Belatedly. Hnatto received a gn.idf· 1na apology from the DOE for th1, response The bulk of the cntici~m. first from Hnat10 and then from Rep. John D1nacll. O-M1ch., was leveled aaainst ~ • Wilham Hoover. director ol ttft Energy Dcpartment'c; Office of Mili- tary Apphca11ons, Jame'i W. Cul- pepper. fonncr deputy assistant di- rector forsecunty affair'i, and officials in the Office of Safeguards and Secunt). Internal tile!> of the White Houc;c Correspondence: Unit. obt.amed by our associate l ony Capaccio, show that the cider linat1o's letter to the president asking for an independent 1nQu1ry was sent to I foovcr and company for ac11on. In fact, the final ve..,1on of the reply to Myron Hnat10. submitted to the White Hou<;e for release. was signed by Hoover. Hoover told us he bore "no malice aforethought toward John Hnat10.'' He s:ud th e lctte1 to Hnauo·s father was "coordinated by my staff." and added. "I didn't provide any facts." Hoover commented. "I would ha ve bct"n JU St as happy 1f wmc:onec:lsc: had responded to 1he White: Hou ~. frankly" The Wh1lC' llou\C reply. dated Jan 14. 198S. contatned no outngh t he<i but tl hardly gave a complete vcf$1on of some event~ For cumptc. the letter ~1d Hnatto's reprimand was "for what was thouaht at the time to ht a v1olat1on of ()()( rqula11ons .,llnd proctdure\ rt"prdtng -proper hCnd- h na of clu\tfied matcnal "It failed lo note that the rcpnmand1na offictal had testified "Both my 1n111al 1n- qu1nes and d1scus!l10n~ with Mr Hnat10 1nd1cated to me that h1~ JACK AIDERSOI and JOSEPH SPEAR actions had not resultdi in the compromise of classified matenal." The letter did note that "due to Mr. Hnatio's belief that the OSS (Office of Safeguards and Security) actions were excessive. a letter of apology was issued for any misunderstanding or unwarranted actions directed to him:· It did not mention that the apolOJY was i'5ued under the pressure of Dmgell's investigation and an in5pcctor general's report cri ticii1ng the actions taken against Hnatio. Nor did the letter to the father d1sclost that one of those who had "coordinated" the respon~ had once referred to the inspector aeneral's repon as a "p1tte of (excrement)," and that this offictal and a colleaiuc had argued against givina John Hnat10 the apology. Footnote: Dingcll's invcsuaators plan to review the arcumsta.nces iurround1na the Whtte House response. Becau!e ofan investtpt1on into the harassment of John Hnat10, an EncraY Department spokesperson declined comment. J•~ AIHlt,.,.. utl JOit,. Spftr •rt 11•dlcatf:fl ti0IUJll11t1. T homuBU.. columnl•t THOMAS Euas Grapes of wrath exaalive in 80s? Can grape boycott succeed a second time for Chavez? Cesar Chavez warned &ig farmers 1n Caltforn1a the other day that "those who choose to ignore history are destined to relive ll." But the real question today 1s different. as Chave~ and his United Fann Workers Union gear up for another year of attempt1ng to spur a bo)COtt of Cahfom1a table grapes. Toda} ·s question is not whether fanners can afford to ignore the success of the grape boycott of the 1960s and earl)' '70s. but whether it's Chavez whom history has passed by. The chansmattc union leader today seeks to use essentially the same tactics that worked so well for him 15 years ago. 1n an era when hundreds of thousands of demon- strators took to American streets mostly to protest the war in Vietnam. But both Vietnam and that grape boycott. ke yed by marches on Sacra- men 10 that were joined by every liberal political leader of the day. are httle more than distant memones today Chavez knows that boycott achieved its political goal only after Edmund G. Brown Jr.. a close poltt1cal ally. was elected governor. Yet he claims a boycott today can force a more pro-union. or at least a neutral, stanc.e on the state's unique Agncultural Labor Relations Board --0r per~er the boafg_ __ irrelevant. The board was one of Brown's first creations as governor. giving farm workers the same protection other workers enjoy under the National Labor Relauons Act, which spec1fi- call) excludes agnculture. No other state followed Cahfornia's lead. so the ALRB 1s s11ll unique. Farmers agreed to accept the board'<1 creation in 1975 to end a decade of stnkes. bloodshed. arrests. i>ropcny damage and red_uced sales of table grapes and some wmes. Chavez was delighted with the board. as Brown stacked its early membership in the union's favor. One early member was LeRoy Chat- field, a former Chavez aide. Another was then-Msgr. Roger Mahony of Stockton. now Catholic archbishop of Los Angeles, long regarded as typical of the churchmen who assisted Chavez through his long boycott years But today the pro-union board ma1onty has been turned into a pro- grower maJOnt)' hy Go\o George Deukmej1an. adding to the fury created in the union by the board's general counsel. Deukme11an ap- pointee David St1rhng. St1rhng has spent much of the past three years reducing ALRB-<>rdered awards to worker\ and dismissing cases before they could reach the board. That's why Chave1 has again resorted to the boycott tac11c which worked so well for him in his you nger days. "Growers ha ve taken the Deu- kmeJian adm1n1stration's cavalier at- t1tude ... as a signal to ignore other laws, particularly those governing the regulation of pes11c1des sprayed each year on California fields." Chavez claims. "The enforcement ol many of these laws 1s a Joke" In his new boycott effon. Chavez plans to warn con~umers of alleged pest1c1de contamination. using last summer's tainted watermelon episode as an example. Hts new boycott aims lo circum- vent the ALRB as much as to tum it around, hoping to put direct press\lre on growers to sign union contra.c1s and observe pesticide regulations. "History will repeat itself. and agribusiness will learn its lesson once more," ChavC'l trumpets, citing a 1985 poll indicating 42 percent of Caltfom1an5 will support his new effon. But to succeed . any new grape boycott must go far beyond Cali- fornia, a!oi the earlier effort eventually did. So far, there's little evidence that the new Chave1 effort can catch on nat1onally. Chavez may have spurTed so many boycotts over so many years that to many liberal consumers. he's become like the boy who cned "wolf." No one can take any Chavez effon hahtly. and history is sometimes repeated, but the burden of proof 1n today's mOfC conservative era is clearly on Chavel and h1! union to demon t111teth11 their day is not past. nom .. Ellaa 11 a S.1ta MMJca. batt'd col1m1l1t 011 11ate IHftt. * TUESDAY, MARCH ... 1988 Tom ttennat8d nemid 8Wlc director •I Golden w-. m. USC'• Derrick Dowell won't pe.; the reet of .. the ••••llL R Ammann can-put .·foes away, Amen Edison's Chargers bounce into semis with a ll-leagu e ace At 6-21h and 175 pounds, be is the prototype ofEdison High baslcetball. Unshakeable, quietly confident and talented. That's senior Ken Ammann, a two- year AU-Sunset League selection, who blends with the Chargers' five in forming one of the most difficult basketball situations to solve for the opposition. They'll be going for a berth in the '~. • CIF 5-A finals Wednesday nieht in a 7 o'clock showdown with Carhino Real League champion Serra at the Los Angeles Sports Arena. With nine losses · this season, • Edison is the Cinderella team of the ptar.offs so far, and Ammann just smiles when reminded the Chargers are underdogs. "Everyone thinks that all the time," he responds. He'U smile again when reminded Edison bas been beaten nine times, three times by Huntington ~ch, a team whic:.Q d id not Qu.,lify for the playoffs. • "We know anybody can beat us," he said. "But, we know we can beat anybod , too." Ken Ammann Long Beach Poly, the 5-A's No. 4 seed, will attest to that after watching a 14-point second half lead meltjn a 54-53 loss Friday night. "To be honest," said Ammann, "I felt lilce we might lose by 20 in the first quarter (as Poly streaked to a 19-8 lead with a 17-2 run). But I didn't want it to end that way." It didn't, of course. as Mike Henderson came off the bench to score I 0 in the fourth quaner, sharing scoring honors with Ammann with 14. "We've all got the green hght to shoot," said Arn~rior to Mo n· day's practice seuion. Serra, the No. 2 seed with a reputation for Oining with I 00 points every time it takes the coun. is the favorite. But that might just be what the .Chargers like best. since they've been tbe underdogs so often. It's not just an ovem,ight situation. Housed in the same league with Ocean View, wrucb has dominated the leque the past couple of years with high-powered transfers, the Chargers are constantly fighting for No. 2. But because ofClF infractions against Ocean Vic<V, they've become No. l from the league. · This is the same school which was denied a berth in the playoffs by district officials a year ago because of an ineligible player, a situation the district was aware of,. but would. not divulge until the season was over: The league's principals voted that Edison had to forfeit five games, then after realizing the unfairness of it, reversed the decision. Then the final blow -the princi· pals reversed themselves again, lcav-lnf. Edison out in the cold. 'That was the worst.~' recalls Ammann. "Now, what a difference. For the seniors, 1t was an inspiration for this year. We lcnow what it's like not to be there." Ammann is Edison's leading scorer with a 17.6 average in league, 17.4 overall, but his value goes a lot deeper than simply scoring. ~ ......... ..,~ ........ The ~bargers don't have a guard who averages 25 points a game, or .a 6-10 post man, but what they do possess is a combination of multiple shooters, quickness. reasonable suc- cess on the boards, and, an un- shakable confidence that keeps the pieces together. In short, they don't fold. Ammann was the focal point of box-and-one tactics by Poly, which surprised him in that the Jackrabbits felt confident ofzooing the rest of the Chargers. .. He's a very -intelligent player," said his coach, Jon Borchert. "That's the key word for him. He knows bow to get open offensively and what shot to take. But I'm more pleased this year with his to tal game. (Pleue eee EDISON'8/B4) Edt.on'• Ken Ammann la the plcll.ng force In Char&en' hunt for the CU' 6 -A buketball cbamplon•hlp thla week. . Carrozza: OV job a challenge New football coach hopes to turn program around Positives have been few and far between in the another I've been involved with Fountain Valley last four years at Ocean View, as far as football ts forthe last 18 years." concerned. Carrano has been 1 n charge of dcfensi ve ends, He succeeds Karl Gaytan. whose two-year the lciclcing game and research and development record ts 4-1 6. under Mike Milner, and leaves with high marks. ~~~-------aytan succeeded Steve Comes~-. w-_-o_sc __ t_w_o---=-=.._.~c...;._g_ets e JO m going to commit year record was 3-17. su1c1de," was Milner's comments a few days earlier By ROGER CAR~N To say it's a challenge ts an understatement. But after Monday's announcement of his appointment as Ocean View H1gh·s fourth varsity football coach, Guy CMrozzo says he loolcing forward to it. A product of Fountain Valley High and an assistant coach with the Barons for th'e past 10 years, Carrozzo says his first priority is putting together a staff. He is presently in the early siages of forming one from the rem ams of the Ocean View staff and hopefully a couple of others, from within Ocean View and Fountain Valley hif.h schools. "I know it's a challenge, • said Carrozzo. but with as many appltcaots (31) as there were, they must have seen some POSttive aspects to the job." And Colflesh succeeded Ken Moats, who tn when it appeared he had the inside track. four years was· unable to get the Seahawks a CIF The comment was ID Jest, but 1t reflects playoff berth, but did threaten the .500 mark with Carrozzo's standing at Fountain Valley. an 18-20-1 overall record. .. He's a highly efficient coach," said Milner. "I think there arc qualified players hungry for "'He's a great organizer and motivato r and there's su~s." said Carrozza, "and with an on-campus no doubt in my mind he will be successful at Ocean staff and strong administrative and community View. He'll build the type of program parents and support, with quality facilities." players will want to be associated with." · Carrozza is the second Fountain Valley "One thing," said Carrozzo. "is to get a lot of product in the past three years to talce over at people involved. It sounds sort of textbook, but I another Sunset League school, the last being have to be a Pied Piper and get as many kids out as George Pascoe at Huntington Beach. " I can. If you find 20 players who may be average, Pascoe and Carrozzo were teammates on the maybe one will be the diamond in the rough. There 1971 team and the latter admits the ties run deep are some pretty good numbers at ~n View." for him at Fountain Valley. . Ocean View opponents next season include "It is kind of an emotional thing for me," Kennedy. Newport Harbor, Santa Ana Valley,'St. admitted the Carrozza. 30. "In one capactity or (Pleue eee CARROZZ0/84) Guy Carrozzo Oilers, ... Artists, ·NH win HB' s Haack sharp; Laguna, Sailors get first victories Hunu~o· Beach Kiah's Jeff' Huck pitched a four-rut shutout Mondar to biJhlight b.i&b 9Chool bascbal P.lay. The 01len turned back Irvine, 2-0, while Newport Harbor and La&una Beach posted their first wins or the season. Here are lhe highlights: Hutla,.ao. Bad t, 1"tae t: Haack, a senior, struck out seven, walked one and gave up four singles in putting Irvine away in a non-league game. The Oilers ga've him all the support at the plate he needed in the fint inning when they nursed a free pus and pushed the runner to third on Sean fralcy's single, the run scorinc on a pickoff play at second. Huntinaton Beach added an in- surance marker in the fourth when Andy Lewin singled with out out, was m oved to second on a walk, went to thud on a fielder's choice and scored on Irvine's second error of the pmc. Irvine's Rick Smetanka struck out fi ve and walked fow in m' inninp, but was the loser for lack or support. The Oilers provided Haack with errortcss defense. Fraley and Lewtn went 1 for 3 and Greg Chizek was 2 for 4 for the OilCR. who got doubles from Chiz.ck and Fraley. ltv1ne's Mike Moceri. a senior centerfielder. was 2 for 3, pushing his batting average to . 727 (8 for 11 ). Lapna Bead I, Su Clemat.e a: The Artists put together a nine-hit attack and rode back-to-back tbrce- ruo innings for their first victory in two starts. Gary Scott was 2 for 3 and Tom Trager was 2 for 4 for the winners, who broke away from a 1-0 lead iwth three in the fourth and three m the fifth to dispose of the visiton. lo the fourth the Artists= opened with singles by Todd Rose and Ty\cr -Aguinaldo;-t.beo after a sacrifi-oc by Paul Ramirez. picked up RBI sina)cs from Scott, Trager and Kent Chesley. .... Newpert llart.r 7, 0..-, 4: Stu Hatch unJoaded with a tw<Hun homer in the first inning and was 2for 2 with 4 RBI to pave the way for Harbor's first victory in three Loara Tournament games. Hatch homered in-the first with sophomore shortstop Tony Wren aboard, but Downey ued it at 4 before the Sailors punched out three runs in the bottom of the fifth. After two outs, the Sailors iota pair of waJlcs before Brad Zenz smgled to dnve in two runs. Steve Kalatschan provided some 10suranc.e with a run- scoring single to wrap it up. Lakers get show back in order Angel pitchers get work Abdu l-J a bba r 's 34 k eys 127-1l7win over Golden Sta t e INGLEWOOD (AP) -While the Golden State Warriors have the NBA 's poorest record, they're any- thing but pushovers for the powerful Los Angeles Lalcers. The Warriors battled baclc from a 99-87 deficit entering the fourth quarter to cam a 112-112 tie with the La.leers Monday night before Los Angeles, led by i{arcem Abdul- Jabbar, got its act together and earned a bard-fought 127-117 victory. "It's hard to explajn," Golden State forward Purvis Short said when asked why the Warriors have played the Lakers so tough this season, "We're a finesse team and so are they. We like to run and they like to run. We just always seem to match up well against them." L.. Said Golden State center Joe Barry Carroll: "I have no explanation for that. Sometimes you just ao out there and things work out. Other times, you go out and there seems to be a conspiracy." Abdul-Jabbar, playi ng despite a sore right shoulder he said didn't hamper bis play, scored 25 of his 34 points in the second half and also had eight rebounds as the Lakers beat the Wamors for tht second time in four aames this season. Five of Abdul-Jabbar's points came con~ut1vely. breakin& the 11 2-1 12 uc and givina the Lakers the lead for Jood. Af\er rookie A.C. Green put ma rebound basket for Los Anacles. Abdul-Jabbar scored apm, making 1t 121-11 2 with 2:14 lcft and clinch10.a the wtn. Abduf.Jabbar, the NBA 's 1Jl-t1me le.ad.in& scorer who tum' 39 next month. hadn't played last Saturday n1aht when the Lakers dropped a t 2).106 dec1s1on at Phoenix because of h11 tore n&ht shoulder Earvin "MllJc" Johnson added 21 points and had a aame·h•ah 16 a 1 ts for the Lakers 11# .... ,, .... La.ken forward Kart Rambla loem Illa &J•••• u b e puta up a 1bot lD Monday'• 127·117 Ylctory O't'er Golden State . ' First intra-squad game set; s ix players sign contracts From AP dl1patcbes The Angels ended one phase of spnng lJ'alning Monday m Mesa. Anzona. and start another today with the first of three scheduled intra-squad games. Left-hander John Candelana and relievers Gary Lucas and Donnie Moore head the puchJOg rotauon for today's eight-inning game. Todd Eggertsen. Tony Fossas. Ray Chadwick, Doug Corbett and D.W. Smith are also slated to take two-inning turns. "l. like to get them on the mound in game situattons, before the serious compet1t1on begins," said Manager Gene Mauch. referring to the exh1b1tion season which the Angels open Fnday agamst the San Diego Padres in Yuma. Right-handed reliever Stewart Chhum missed his fifth workout with shoulder pain ascnbed to burs1t1s. Cliburn 1s said to be at 70 percent strength and ts expected to resume throwtng over the \.\>eelccnd. Meanwhile. General Manager Mike Port announced that six players have signed 1986 contracts. The~ 1ncludr p1tchrrs Carl Wtllts and Chadwtck and infielders Cra1g Gerber. Jaclc Howell. Gus Pohdor and Bill Memfield. Henbl.er, Ho•ell •harp on moand Orel Hersh1scrand Krn Howell p1tchCd two scoreless innmgs apiece and their Los Angeles teammatrs backed them with a 14-htt attack as a <;quad managed by mstructor Kevin Kennedy brat a squad run b Coach Joe Amalfitano 14-3 Monday m the Dodgers' first intra· squad game of the spnng at Vrro Beach. Howell allowed one hit and struck out thn.'t' in his mound stint. d1splay1ng a lutball that ho,ered aro und the 90-mph range "It wa'l the first outtng. but the arm feels good." Howell said "That'c; what \•ou ti) to do an ~pnng tra1n1ng. build up the arm for the c;ca'iOn .. Regl ~ackeon taka battinC practice. Sutton's dream (300 wins) nearing M A ( P) -Plt( her Don \utton of the An els. five win' awa) from 300 m his 20.ycar m"or lc~ue career. U}S he 1111 can '1 come to anps wtth the fact that he' 'l<l clo~ to the coveted mark ··t don"t thin~ I've evt•r had anything m mv ba\t'b311 larttr to draw on to prepare me for what happen' when I win liH• more pme~ ... Sutton u1d Monday at the Anaelf \pnna tnainma camp hC'rt' ··1 JUSt rully don't lcnov. that I" 111 knn" how to rcaci I hke to kno" ahead \t> that I t'ln kind of PrtP' l'C' and not lo..c 1t -\OU know. he tn control ot the situation But I don't think tt "Ill he: possible lt'c; a whole ~parate de.al "I think that will he a moment that v.111 stand out above evc')th1n1 rl"K' f v(' ever bctn able to do 1n ~port!. 1 JU~t hope 1t can come tn '\nahe1m an front of the home fol k' •• 'utton. "hl' tum~ 41 on .\pnl 2 I' tr) ma to ~ome the 1 'hh pitcher to reach the 300 v1cton plateau He \.'ltd he ha~ done 1t the hard wa) wtth onh o ne 20.Wln season 1n htc. c:i~r wheruc; the othel'\ had at lea~t thrtt ThC' "OJtCI~ acqutrt'd <\utton l.i~l ~ptember from the Oll.land A.'s and he "'ound up last season wtth a I 5-10 f"('Cord wmn10g 12 of IS dce1s1ons tn o ne '' 1-month \trt'tch. The .\ngcl' arc ht!I fif\h team and he ho~ h1sla t "l don't ha"e man) )'can left. or \EAR left. or \ll'hatever tt 1 ... utton ..aid. ~1t'h1na his 11">11'& hair .. But I'm plea!ied to know lhat bamna \Omc ~or change., ru be firushn\I m\ t'arecr at home tn f'ront of the pcopk that I "tarted 1n front of. and ln an atta that has rully come to be (Pleue Me SUTTOft/BS) .. 81 * Orange Coast DAILY PILOT I Tu.day, Mwch 44, 1986 Edison hosts 49ers, UCSD GWCpicks Hermstad as new AD Edie.on H\ab School will be lbe aile ......._______.... Lona Beacb State's non-co of ereoce volleyball match with UC San Diqo Wedoelday niaht, be&innina at 7:30. Hamdorf to replace him as Rust ers' polo coach By CRAJG SHEFF Golden West hu been without an athletic director "One of my fii; t ob~tivcs is to suppon the f for the past two months. coaches and to make their job easier by bavina my I ttcnnstad is the fifih AD m the school's door open to them. Just knowj~I that I'm history. 1ntere ted in their P'°'"'m I think wall be a belp. I The matchup or the nation's seventh-ranked 49ers and the Tritons, No. IS 10 the nation, in· volves a number ofOranae Coast area products, as well as All-American Al A Southland native, Hcrmstad attended Long "Also, I think I'll be ~ble t~. represent them Beach Wilson Hiah ond Lona Beach State where he without havina to be 'yes man. DllllJ .............. tarred in water polo and swimming, He coached nt Concemina Lhe aquatics proaram. Herm1tad Lakewood High for three )'ears before getting the says 'it'sthe best in t~e U.S. wit~outadoubt. There job at Golden We~t. is no other community collcae 1n the country that Jane of Lona Beach State. With Jane at Lona Beach State are Ali Tazerouni, a two-time California Interscholastic Volleyball Associa- tion Pla)'cr of the Weck, and Corona dcl Mar High product Guy Putnins. Tom Hennstad, one of the mo~t i.urccssful aquatic coaches 1n the U.S .. ha been selected Golden West College's athletic director. Hcrmstad, GWC'$ only water polo coach in the school's20-yearhistory. will surrender his head coachina duties, but will continue 10 be active in the program, he said. At Golden We~t he has had nothina but can match our ovc~ll cccord in water eoto and success, winning seven of the last eight state polo swimmini. I'm lcavina it in &ood hands. •. cha~pionships and winning outright or sharing I 7 G!)lden We5t's w~te~ polo team captured the StrlUJht conference titles. state t1tll' rcc.cntlyt winning ovet 22 pmes. Th~ Amona the Tritons' squad are Edison High products Scott Hurst and Chris Carpenter, in addition to Eric Hallman of University and J~fT Ken Hamdorf, the Ruslltrs' head swim coach. will become the water polo coach. Hcrmstad, 46, had a11cmptcd to become the Ru tiers lost fivr ttmes this past sea on, the most4 school's athletic director twice before but was not • by II GWC water polo team in the past 10 year~. ' succe sful. ' The GWC men's swim team is also derendina Hcrmstad succeeds LuAnn Terheggcn-Selsky as athletic director. Terheggen-Sclsky took a maternity leave last summer with Dick Stricklin 'ierving aci the interim athletic dircctonrnt1I Jan. I. ''I had some encouragement from staff state champion. . . m~mbers that J really respect, so I went after it. I Hcrmstad. a Seal Beach resident, has a son thank 1 have some leadership abiljties to make \he who is a Junior at UC' Berkeley and a daughter who Babcock of Mission Viejo. Tom Hermetad department a little bit better," said Hermstad. is a senior at Wil on High. Southern Cal's Dowell is through for rest of season From AP dtspatche1 m LOS ANGELES -Junior forward Derrick Dowell of the · University of Southern California won·t play in the Trojans' final two games of the basketball season, it was apnounced Monday. Dowell. the Trojans' top rebounder and S{'('ond- lcading scorer, was suspended indefinitely by Coach Stan Morrison last Wednesday and didn't play in Southern Cal's 85-64 loss at Stanford last Saturday. "Derrick and I agreed that it's m the best interest of the team that the suspension be extended through the remainder of the season.'' Morrison said m a statement 1SSued b> the school M<u>da)'. "Derrick has classroom com m i tm ents and rcspons1b11ities ofT the court that must be met. "He is very anxious 10 meet all those commitments and will llorrlaoo be reinstated on Monday. March IO," the coach ..aid after mreting w11h Dowrll Monday morning. Dowell thus will be eltg1hlc to pla)' for the r ro1ans again next season. Southern Cal. 4-12 in Pac-10 play and 10.16 overall. pla}'i at Oregon this Thursday night and at Oregon State Saturday afternoon. Dowell started 19 of his team's first 25 games and averaged 15.5 points and 7.8 rebounds. As a sophomore. he averaged 11 .6 points and 8.3 rebounds in helping the T roJans to a 13-5 league record and a 19-10 overall mark. Southern Cal tied for the Pac-10 champ1onsh1p with Washington. Do...,ell's suspenc;1on came as the result ofa series of incidents during the T rOJans· 65-63 loss 10 C aliforn1a on Feb. 24 Mavericks complete a •weep Rolaado Blackman scored six of his 32 m points in the second ovrrtamc, including a dt'Cisive dunk with eight seconds lefl. as the Dallas Mavencks beat Phoenix I 39-138 Monday night and swept their four~me Na tional Basketball Association scnes this season. Elsewhere in the NBA Monday, ''eteran Gerald Headersoa seored 23 points and rookie Mlebael Phelps added a career-hi$h 17 to lead Sea Ille 10 a 118-105 victory over Hou.ston an a game that saw the ejection of Rockets center Ralpll Sampson and Coach Bill Fitch ... Terry Cummings scored nine or his 23 points in the fourth quarter and . Keany Fields added a career-high 23 points as Milwaukee defeated the New York r<..nicks I I 5-108. Clark sets Tor~nto club r ecord Wendel Clark scored t w1te to set a club record for most goals by a Toronto rookie in leading the Maple Leafs 10 a 6-1 victory ovrr the Winnipeg Jets Monday night. The win was the first for Toronto over Winnipeg since Dec. I 9. 198 I. a drought whrre the Leafs went 0.13-1. The two goals ga\>e Clark 29 for the season. one more than the total registered by teammates Walt Poddabny and Peter lbaacak dunng the 1982-83 season ... Elsewhere in the NHL. Dino Ciccarelli scored three goals and Brian Lawton tallied twice dunng a fi,e.goal second penod to earl) the Minnesota Nonh Stars to an l!-5 decision over Detroit. Olson Pac-10 coach of year Lute Oh.on. whose A111ona Wildcats m lead the conference. has been named Pacific· I 0 basketball Coach of the Year. The 51-year-old Olson. 1n his third season at Arizona after a nine·)'car slay at Iowa. won the Pac-10 award for the first time. It is determined by the votes of head coaches in the conference. The Wildcats had only one 1985 starter returning for this season. but they took a 22-7 record and 13-3 Pac-10 record into the final "'-Cek of conference play. . Anzona pla)ed at UCLA Mon- --·-·"'""'"' day nigh I. and . its final regular season game is scheduled Sunday at An1ona State. COLLEGE BA SKETBALL ., ....... _ .. Dowell started the game but pla\ed onh nine minutes. all in the first half. He had four points. one rebound and three personal foul!;-. Wac;hmgton. with a 12-4 conference record. 1s th~ only other team with a chance at the Pac-10 title. But Arizona beat the Huskies twice this season and would recei ve the Pac-IO's auto- matic berth in the NCAA Tour- nament 1f the teams tie for the UCLA'• Montel Hatcher ,(12), Reggie Miller •urround Artsona'• Steve Kerr Monda . "He \loCnt into the tank after his third foul tn the <.al game." Morrison said of Do"'ell last Wednesday .... hen he announced the suspension. "'At halftime. he "'as uncom municauve. he fell sorr) for himself. and he "'as 1ust out of 11. .. Oleon 111le. Wildcats chew up UCLA ,... Quote of the day Alan Bannister. Oklahoma State·s 7-4 cen1er. on how he became so tall: "My mother was 5-7. My father was 5· I I. But the postman wa~ 7-2." Bridgeman out for one week LOS ANGELES-Junior Bridgeman of the L<X Angeles ( hppers will be sidelined for at least one ""eek after 11 was diagnosed Monday that he had sulTcred a partially torn ligament in his right thumb. the NBA team said Bndgeman. a <;wing man. hu n the thumb on hie; shooting hand lac;t Tuesda} night in Milwaukee and had pla}ed 1n nnly one of the Clippers' three games since lhat 11me Dr Ton~ Daly. the Clippers' team ph)s1c1an. examined Bndgcman Monday and upon disco, er} of the tnJury had the thumb placed tn a cac;t. Bndgeman, 32. will wear the cast for a minimum of one week. at which time he will be re-e,amined, the Clippers said. adding that Bndgeman .... on"t be replaced on the roster at this time 1 hat leaves the duh with 11 active players. Guard Norm Nixon. who sat ou t Sunda) 's 129-112 loss to Indiana with a pulled left hamstnng, is listed as questionable for ton1ght'c; game against ClcH·land al the Los Angel ec; Spom Arena . St. Mary's fires football coach [il MORAGA -Joe Deluca has been released from his duties as head football coach a1 St. Mary's orCalifomia. e1Tcct1\>e immediately. a1hlet1c director Donald McKilltp said on Monday. Deluca, 53. headed the Gael football program for two seasons. com ptlt ng an overall record of 8-14, including a 3-8 mark last season. He sen ed as defens1 ve coordtnator for six years at St. Mary's, before succeeding Dick Mannim as head coach in 1984. Deluca wac; a linebacker at the Univer'ilt) of Montana and pla~ed one season profess1onall) at Vancouver in the (anad1an Football League. Olson took O\>cr lhe An1ona program a )ear after the Wildcats fini~hed last in the Pac-I 0 with a J -17 record. The)' were 8-10 1n his first season and improved to 12-6, with a 21-10 overall record. last season. Olson's first collegiate head coaching job was at Long Beach State 13 ycar'i ago. He has an overall .66 7 winning percentage. Olson also coathed at Marina High Sl'hool and Long Beach (tty College. Pac-10, PCAA honors stars Ke' in Johnc;on. who totaled 48 points m and 16 assists in three (ahforn1a Bears' \ ICtones. was named Pal'1fic· I 0 basketball Pla~crofthe Weck on Monday. The guard from Sacramento. made I 8 of 33 shots from the field and 12 of 12 from the foul line. In \al"s road game against Southern Cal. Johnson made two free thro"'s w11h no 11me left on the clock to se11lc a 65-63 thriller ..... Cal also beat Oregon and Oregon State. Jn Sunday's OSU game. John on recorded his I 50th ass1s1 of the season to '!Ct a school record. Meanwhile. Rich Ancma of the Un1 .. ers1iy of Pacific, who led his team to three Pacific Coast Athletic Association basketball vJctones last week, has been named the PCAA 's Player of the Weck. Anema. a 6·8 senior from Lodi, scored 86 potnt'I and had 23 rebounds as the Tigers beat San Jose Stati:. Cal State Fullcr1on and UC Santa Barbara. ~t San Jose on r cb. 24. Anema had 24 points and sn reboundc; during hi s team's 65-61 win over the Spartans. At Fulleron last Thursday n1gh1. he poured th.rou~ 42 points .and had eight rebounds during the Tigers 85· 77 O\ert1mc triumph overt hr fitans. And at Stockton on Saturday n1gh1, he had 21 points and nine rebound<; ac; UOP "'-hipped visiting UCSB 80-64. Television, radio TELEVISION No e"ent'i ~hedulcd. RADIO 7:30 pm. PRO BASKETBALL ( leveland at Cli ppers. KMPC (710). ArJzona State clinches a tie for Pacific-! 0 c hampionship From AP dispatches Thanks to a nearly perfect second hair at a place where they hadn't won previously, the Arizona Wildcats have clinched a tic for the Pacific-I 0 Conference basketball championship ac; v.ell ac; a benh in the NCAA Tournament. fhe W1ldcat'i trailed host UCLA 44-39 at halftime Monda y nigh t. but made I 5 of their 20 Ooor shots and 19 of their 22 free throw attempts in the final 20 minutes en route 10 an 81i· 76 triumph over the Bruins at Pauley Pavilion. "I've been coaching for 30 }ears and I could not feel any prouder of a group of )oung men than this team." Amona Coach Lute Olson said. "There's not been a week that has gone by this )car that we have not gollen belier. "The fact that we just kept scratching and clawing is a credit to the character that we have on this team. lt would have been easy for us to crack in the first half when UCLA was playing so well, but we didn't.'' The wtn was the first for Ari1ona at Pauley Pavilion. The Wildcats had lo•n 11 straight games on the Bruins' home court. "lt's great that this 1s the first time that Arizona has beaten UCLA at Pauley," Olson said. "lfwe could play in one place other than Tucson 10 clinch the Pac-I 0 championship, it would be at Pauley." Freshman forward Scan Elliott scored 28 points to kad the Wildcats. Guards Craig McMillan and Steve Kerr added I 8 and 15 points, respectively, for Arizona and center John Edgar had I 0 points and a game-high I 0 rebounds for the winners. The Wildcats, winners of seven straight games. have a 14-3 Pac· I 0 record and a 23· 7 overall mark. They have one regular-season game remaining -at Arizona State next Sunday. Washington is In second place in the Pac-I 0 with a 12-4 conference record. The Huskies. 18-l 0 overall. complete their regular 5C3Son at home, entertaining Stanford Thursday night and California Saturday afternoon. If Arizona and Washington finish the season tied for the conference title, the Wildcats will receive the Pac-I o·s automatic NCAA Tournament benh because they beat the Huskies twice in as many games between the team'i this season. UCLA. whieh dropped an 85-60 dec1s1on to Arizona Chargers, FV sweep net foes Spinks is ready with plan A ... or plan B Sunset League tennis ,quad\ from Edison and Fountn1n Valey ht~ schools were easy winllcr~ Monday in an abbreviated schedule Here's how it went: Edtto• 17, ln'IDe 1: The Chargers cased past their v1sttor, behind standout play from s1ngle'i player Bobbie Dye, who moved up two notches to play in tbe No I slot. and doubles players teve Amoll and Nori OtsJui. with all hands swcep1na their opponenu lo improve Edison'\ non·leaauc record to S· I. f'outaJa V11le7 11, El T•rt 7: The Barons woo their tceond of three non- lcque e1,couoters With a virtu112 out or J .a~ccp in ev~ catcaorY at El Toro peced by the doubles team of Ctesbman Mike Mell and 1<>phomore Russell Yee. NEW YORK (AP) -Mi chael 5p1nks promised Monday that "Plan A and Plan R" will both be ready for the fir!it defen\C of h1\ I ntemational Boxing Federation World Hea v)wcight Champ1onsh1p aga1n<1t ex· champ Larry Holmes at the la'I Veg:t'I H1hqn Apnl 19 "Plan A 1~ to fiaht nll out. grab him, throw him to the mat. do whatever 11 ncce'isar)," said Spink'I, who took the crown from HolmC'S last Sept. 21. "Plan B 1\ 10 use cverythina )Ou'vc got, box him and blufTh1m. Last timr. I u~ Plan 8 If he fights rou&Jter. I'll ao to Plan A. Either Y.3), he won.'\ ha'e hts way "'1th me tn the nna. Hecouldn'td<> 1t then and he won't do 11 now " Hol me~ ~peculated on the Spink\' battle plan. "If he don't fight, it's aoina to be l>onna." the ex<hamp said. "He'll Ix runn1naaround the nrtaand I'll be sU\nd1na an my comer watching him " The Holmrs-Sp1nk~ fight '' pan of a stvcn-bout "llcav)'wc1ght World 'itnc'I." co-promoted by Don King and Butch I .cwis and designed to unify the division champion,hip by the summer of 1987 < urrcntly thr~ fighters. pinks. Pinklon Thomas in the World Boxing Council and Tim Witherspoon in the World Boxina Assoc1at1on. own heavyweight titles. The scncs will be telcvi~d hy Home Aoit Office. Thr scn~s beg.ins March 22 when Thomas defends his title against Trevor 8crb1ck at the Rtvlera Hotel 1n Las Veps W1lhenpoon wtll m~ke a WBA defense 1n May or June. Then the Holmc,.Spinks winner fights an IBF challenger tn ~ptcm· bcr followed by the ThomaJoBerblck winner apanst a WB ' challenger 1n November or [)c('cmber That will be follov.ed by a WBA-WBC unificalion fi&ht in March or Apnl 1987 with that winner mcetina the IBF champ in May or June 1987 for the sin&Je titk. One fiJ,ht in the ~nes will be held 1n Pcn.h. Australia. the promote~ '81d ' • '• Spinks will receive $3 5 million for the fight with llolme~ taking SU. I he champion could have made more - per hap as much ns SS million guaranteed -for a dcfcn~ against Gerry Cooney, but Lewis said he felt obliaed to aivc ltolmcs a chance to regain the crown. "Larry didn't have 1011ve Mike a shot," Lewis said. "It wa' an optional fiaht. Mike put himself tn Larry'~ place. He said he wanted lo asvc htm a shot back .. Spinks became the first ha.ht heavy· weight champ lo win the heavyweight crown. He thinks the rematch will be much hkc their fint fiaht. "With the stuff I uK, I can't lose." he said. "I don't thmlt it'll be any different Maybe more intense for a while. I know he' achi"J. He wants 1t back ro bid I can understand that. He m1~s it, misses people romina up to him and sayina 'H1'ya1 champ. tie's hunina. but I'm gonna hun him wone." pink\ said he had to ao to "Plan 8" for the nrst flaht at Tucson, Anz., last month, tell to 8-8 in le.ague action and 14-12 overall with two games left on its schedule. The Wildcats took an early 2-0 lead, but weren't on top again until Elhott's three-point play with I 5:50 remaining gave them a 51-50 ad van Lage. Neither team led by more than three points after that until the Wildcats outscored the Bruins 14-2 to turn a 68-67 deficit into an 81-70 advantage with less than two minutrs remaining UCLA d1dn"t threatcn seriously after that. Forward Reggie M1llt'r, the nation's fourth-leading scorer, led UCLA with 29 points. but was held to only eight points in the second half. Guards Monte! Hatcher and Jerome "Pooh'" Richardson added 12 and I 0 points respectively, for the Bruins. · UCLA Coach Walt Hazzard said the Bruins must win at least one of lhe1r final two games in order to compete in a post-season tournament. The Bruins. who won the National Jnv1tatton Tournament last year, play at Oregon State Thursday night and at Oregon Saturday afternoon. "It's a .15-win minimum for us to go to the NIT," Hazzard said. "If we are 15-13. "'e thtnk wc"ll get a bid as defending champions "I'm very d1sappo1n1cd "c lost our last home game. Arizona is a g~o<l team . I hope they represent our conference well in post-season play." No. 1 Duke unable to convince 'em all From AP dl1palche1 Duke. the top seed m this week's Atlantic Coast Conference toumamcnl. remained No. I in The Associated P~ess college basketball Monday and missed being a unam1mous selection by one vote. The Blue ~vils. 29-2. received 62 first-place votes and 1.259 points from the nationwide panel of SJ?Ortswnters ~nd broadcasters. Kansas. 28-3 and cham· p1ons of the Big Eight, rece ived the other first-place vote and I. I ?5 points lo hold second for the sccond consecu11vc week . Duke hc1d the top spot by wmning the ACC regular- scason title with an 82-74 victory over then-No. 3 North C'arohna. which dropped one spot 1n the poll. Thus. with one week ofvotina remaining before the NC AA tournament gets underway, the only teams to hold. the N~. l rankina this sea~n have all come from the ACC. Geora1a Tech was No. I 1n the prescason polJ and North Carollna began its reign with the first week of the regular season. Kentucky, 26·3 and champions or the Southeastern Conference, Jumped from fifth 10 third with t .080 points, 35 more than the Tar Heels, 26-4, who held the No. t spot for 13 week~ before being dethroned by Duke in last week's balloting. · . St. John's. 27-4, moved from eighth to ftfih with 938 points, 12 more than Gror,ia T cch, 23-5. whkh finished betwee~ ~ukc and North C arolina in the ACC standinp. . M1e~1gan, 2~-4 and currently tied for first place W1th ln.d1ana 1n th~ Big Ten. improved from 10th to seventh with 829 potntci afler victoncs over Wisoonsin and Nonhwestern last week. Sy~cusc, 23-41 and co-champions of the Bia East with St. John s. fell ~o spots wtth 805 points after losina to the Redmco 86-79 tn the showdown for the top spot in the conference. B~dley, with 719 points, became JUSt the second team thu season -alona Wlth t. John's-to crack the Top Ten after. not bemJ ranked 1n the prneason ~II. The Braves, 30-1,Jumpcd from 11th to ru nth after fin1shsn1 as rqulat·SCJSQn champions or the Missouri Valley Con-ference. The .Top Ten wa.s rounded out by Mempttis State, 2S-4', which felt thstt spou from last week's poll aOr:r faJlinatoNo.11 Louisv111e70-691ntbcpmcthatdccidcd the Metr~Confc.renet rqul1Me.t1<>n title. TheCard1nalS, 24-7. finished with 604 points. ' " I ,. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT ITueedeV. MMlh '• 1• * - • u ........... Pitcher Don Batton tried Illa toach oat in bu ketball form during Monday'• •Print tralntnc. while Bill llarrifleld ehowed off h1a dog to Ray Chastwtck. . -{:Mij:i'IJm--------.. -------------------------- Hernandez 19ne pl~yer to appeal Reds' Parker, Yankees' HOilandsay tl}ey w ill accept Ueb erroth pena lties From AP dlapatc bea Keith Hernandez of the New York Mets i~ the only major-leaguer who has said he plans to appeal a decision that imposed penalties against 11 players in lieu of suspension for drug use. signing wtth the Reds an December 1983. At the New York Yanktts' 1ra1n1ng camp in Fon Lauderdale, Fla., patch- er Al Holland said he would accept Ueberroth's penalties as an alterna- tive to a 60-dav suspension. Holland was one of four players a one-year c.ontract, leaving the club with three unsigned players -catch- er Mark Bailey, infielder Bert Pena and pitcher Julio Solano. Boa ton Veteran second baseman Jerry Remy. trying to make a comeback after seven knee operations. reported to the Red Sox's ·training camp at Winter Haven, Fla. wtth swelling an his left knee. Second-year rchef pitchers Steve Farr and Mark Huismann, both right· handers, were an camp but had not agreed to terms with the club Mon- day. S. Fruclaco Scott Garrelts and Rick Wans worked two perfect inmngs apiece Monday in a pitching-dominated Giants' intrasquad pme which endedina 1-1 tieaftere1ghtannmgsat their Scottsdale traimng camp. Su Diego The Padres' starting corps of out- fielders got some defensive taps dunng a special mstruct1onal session Monday with retired Gold Glove outfielder Amos Otis in Yuma Now a minor league instructor an the Padres organization, Otis was brought into the Padres' spring train- '"~ camp at the suggcsllon of San Otego Manager Steve Boros SUTT01' ••• Pi'oa8 1 home few me ud my &malt· .. , love OtUee Cou!r.• taid &M tcuna Hilla re.ident. I pla)'Cld 15 WI ia LOI AQ(ldel Cb tM ), but 1 ecver ,.Uy feh liu i1 as ome. I think theft's a Wiii that ~beyond the hoUte and tM nei&h ood that you have 10 coe- sider sometbina home aad J acver really con.lidettd it bome. Now. I have an area and place that'• home ... The 6·1, J9().pound riabt·budcr said aittin! this clote to 300 w:Ui1 it• tribute to • how hard I've workod my butt ofr and stayed in shape so that I was lady to play. ·'The way T see it ri&ht now is u Lona u I can be productive and not embarrass myself or 'the club, 1 want to continue to play," added Sutfon ... 1 absolutely love playina buet.ll It's a peat sport and a great job ... Sutton holds the major ie.cue record of 20 consecutive seasons wub at least 100 st,rikeouts, ranks founh all-time in games started (672), sixth in strikeouts (3,31 S) and I Otb in shutouts (S7). He's played on five World Series teams, started the 1977 All-Star Game and broke Hall of Famer 'Don Drysdale's Dodacr re- cord of 209 wins in 1979. But every interview these days deals with Vlctory No. 300, .. I've tried before to explain that even with the playoffs, the World &ries and the All-Star pmcs, the game doesn't cbanae. The hoopla, the magnifying glass and the spotlight& arc biger but the game doesn't change. And that's the way I'm go~ to approach my next five wanJ, Sutton said. "I want to stay as much me as I can and that is to take a very analytical, logical approach to it ... and then to lose my cool afterwardl. .. BfUilO will fight Coetzee t onight LONOON (AP) • Frank Bruno aims to fill a I ().year void io British boung and set up a fi&ht for the world heavyweight championship. Tonight the European champion clashes with former World Boxin& Association titHst Geme Coet.z.ee of South Africa in a final eliminator for Tim Witherspoon's WBA crown. Not since 1897, when Bob Fitz.sim- mons held the title, has Britain bad a world heavyweight champion, althou&h many Bntons have tried. The laat time a British hcavywe1&ht fought for the world t1tJe was May 1976 in Munich when Richard Dunn was stopped by Muhammad Ali. Sul Bruno JS rcprdcd as the best British heavyweight prospect since Welshman Tommy Farr. who, 1rona- call)', died on Saturday at the age of 71 Dave Parker of the Cincinnati Reds wd Monday be w.oulclpay illpcrccn of his salary to drug rehabilitation programs. accept periodic drug tes- ting and perform I 00 hours of public service work. The penalty, m lieu of a one-year suspension, was handed down Fnday by Commissioner Peter Uebem>th. who faced a two-month suspension AUula undtr the commissioners ac ion on---1'e""ra""v'""'e ... s.--....,a-=n""a""g=er Chuck I anner drug involvement. Lee Lacy of Balli· said has spring training experiment of more also agreed to donate five using outfielder Billy Sample at third percent of his 1986 salary to a drug base as worlang well so far. -Prep as et ball log prevenuon facility or program, be .. He has shown us dunng infield tested at random for drugs for the dnlls he can throw well enouJb from remainder of his career and perform third." said Tanner. ''It gives us 50 hours of drug-related CQmmunity versatility if he can play the position, Hemanda announced last week- end that he would fight Ueberroth's decision. service this year. plus i1 would give us added punch ··1 wanted to wait until I had all the with the ba1. especially against lef\- ins and out of it." Holland said. handers." "Now, I have a grasp of everything Sa I ti "A grievance wtll be filed through the players association," Hernandez said. "When a decision is made by the arbitrator, I will make my decision on what I do." that happened. I feel pan of at isn't mp e, who has been an out ielder fair, but you can't have your cake and exctusavely during has major league cat it, too. The most important thing career, was obtained by the Braves · · be · from the New York Yankees dunng Parker, JefT Leonard of the San Francisco Giants. Dale Berra of the New York Yankees and Enos Cabell of the Los Angeles Dodgers, have opted for compliance with Ueber- roth's ruling. is we want to put It hand us. We the wanter in exchange for minor were wrong." fi AtlanJa'~Claudell Washington and league an aelder Miguel Sosa. Larry SOrensen of the Chicago Cubs, also facing possible two-month suspensions. have not announced their intentions. Tuaa The Rangers signed third baseman Steve Buechele to a o ne-year contract for the 1986 season. Joaquin AnduJar of the Oakland A's and Lon nae Smith of the KAnsas Citr Royals have not said what they wil do. In other baseball news: Ed Correa. Jose Guzman and Dwayne Henry -all rookie nght- handcd pitchers -also made one- year deals. Ctacluati At the Reds' spring training camp in Tampa, Fla., Parker, wearing a handband that said, "Ueberroth.'' said he plans to play this year and would leave any challenges 10 the commissioner's decision to the Major League Players' Association. Parker, who hit .312 last year wnh 34 homers and 125 runs batted in, testified in a federal drug trial an Pi ttsburgb last year that he used cocaine wbde with the Pirates. He said he stopped using the drug before Reds outfielder Eddie Milner suf- fered an tnJured left wrist in a manor two-car auto accident while en route to a team workout. After undergoing X-rays at a hospital and having the wnst wrapped 1n a plastic bandage, Mainer part1c1pated an most of the daily workout, skipping batting prac· tice. Toronto Lef\-handed reliever Gary Lavelle, plagued b) elbow m1senes through- • out much of 1985, again has a tender left elbow and will be unable to throw competitively for three weeks. Houston Kansas Cit}' First baseman Glenn Davis. who set an Astros' rookie record wtth 20 homers 1 n I 00 games la st year, signed Rookie left-handed patcher Tony Ferreira signed a contract with the Caty Royals. leaving the club wt th two unsigned players. Prep track schedules SE A v 1•w LEAGUE CwtM ...,tMr Tl'lurl., Mardi 6 -Minion Vlllo (l'IOmel; Tl'lun • Maren 13 - 'WoodbrldcN (l'IOme), Sil., Marctl 15 -11 Buell Clllll lnvll•llonal 11 New_.t H1roo< (TIA). T'hut's •• Mardi ?O -•I 'Cotti~ Se t., Merell H -11 Or1noe County ClllmPlonll'llot lbon) (TBA) Thurs .• .-.Pf'll 3 -11 'University, Sit , APf'll S -11 Min ion Vleto 1nvlt111ona1. Tl'luri . APl'll 10 -•e111ncl1 ll'IOmll. Sii . Al>f'll 12 -11 Art.Idle lnvlllllonal (TBA); ThlJrs .. APf'll 17 -'Slddllbtck (l'IOmtl), $11 . APl'll 19 -11 Orenoe Covntv Chemolonll'llot lolrls) (TBA); Set .. Al>l'll 9 -11 Tustin RlllYl (TIA); Tl'lurs . Aorll 24 -11 'Leoune BllCl'I. Fri. APl'll 2S -et Ml. SAC lnvllellonal (TIA) Tl'lurL, May I -'NIW_.I H8f'bOI' (llOme), Tuel . MAY 6 -See View Lff9Ut prellms, 11 s.ddllOKll (T8A). Fri • Mlv 9 -Sff View Le111ue • flnels, 11 ~tt (TIM C"tlll MeM Tl'lun .. Marcil 13 -'Leeun• 811Cll (llOmel, Tl'lun , March 20 - 'Coron• dll Mar (home) TllYrL, AIWA 3 -11 'NewPOrl ... Cl'I; Tl'lur1 ' Al)rll 10 -• UnlYWlllY, 'Thurs., AorM 17 -11 •Woodbf'ION. Tl'lur's , April 2• -11 ' SldelltOlck Tllut'L, ,,..., I -I I • £1ttnell. Tut• • ,.,..., • -Sff View L11oue or.ams. 11 SeodllOlcil IT8AI. Fri. MIY t -SH View L11oue F1net1 11 S.ddllCIKk (T8A) ••tMcM Thurs., M#ircn 13 -'Newoort Htrbor (l'l<>ml). Set , Mtrell IS -11 • ... ell Cllll\ tnvl11tlon1l 1t New_.1 Herbor, t.30 • m , T,,u,.. Mlrcl'l 10 -11 'Woodtw~. Sit , Mlrct! n -Orenoe Covnlv Chemolontlllol (bo~) ., Minion Vlllo, 9'30 • m • Set • M8f'C,, 19 -Pu1dlnl G•mtt •' OCC1c19ntll COllMe. UO om TIIUI'•. AIM'ft l -•I ·~. !.et ' Aorh s -II Or1noe County Cf\llmPlon'111PI (olrl•) (TIA), Ttlurt . Aorll 10 -•• 'COtone dll ,.,..r, 5411 APl'M 12 -., ArCadll 1nvll1tlon•I (TIA), Th\Ks., APl'ff 17 -'L•oune IMKll (llOml). $11., AIM'll It -V11ttne:l1 lnvllallollll 11 Ple<:emi• HIOll, 9 1.m 1nd •t Tualfn lnvll•llotlll, t • m., Thur1., AMII 2• -II 'Unfv11u1tv Frl·Sal .. APl'fl 2S-6 -Mt SAC lt1vll•llon11, 11 W1lnul IT8AI. Tllurs . 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Eo Miii' •S 67 "'" "·~· . , 61 Siii ,...,._, •• ~ Ct, .0 Mir Ill' I I " Ml" t•oc"' .. ... trv M•• " n St '''"' s ,, '1 , •n VI y• SJ •• ,.,,., ,.. .. )l Clf ,, $1, Anl'-' .., •• O.tail V•n' •• •• 111tes•mtn,1er• • ., Mtf\11 MCllll<I ·~ Yl~\I ~· . _ ... . . • - N8A WUT ... N CONn-•NC8 ~eellc OMUM w L fJc1. Ga L.Men 44 16 733 Pof'llend 30 )4 469 16 ~JC 24 36 400 20 QlllMr1 n ,. .'67 n $Hiiie n JI .l67 n GOiden Stitt 1t 44 .30'1 ?6\l'l Mldw .. , OMtleft HOUllOft 3' Z3 '13 Ollnvtr 36 2S S90 2 D1lll1 31 19 517 ..... Utl l'I 31 30 .50& 7 s." Antonio 30 32 .. .1'2 Secr1mento 27 33 4SO 101'2 llASTllRN COH~•••NCE Alilflflc DMt*I x·Bo11°" 47 II 910 Pllli.otiohll )9 21 •SO ' New .Jtrwv 31 30 516 17 W1an1no1on 19 n 47S 1911) New Vorto 19 41 317 19 C9"tnll DMUeft 11.·Mllw1ullM '3 It 69' Atlent1 JS ?5 Sl3 7 Detroit 36 26 Sil 7 Clev9ilncl 23 36 l90 1 ..... Cl'licellO 11 40 34' 71'h tndlene 21 40 34-4 11'.IJ x·ctlncMd otevoff O«tll Mel*Y'• Scerll L.llren 177, Golden Stitt 117 Mllw1ut1H 115, New Vork lot Delle• 139, ~-Ill (7 ot) S..111• Ile. Hou1ton lOS T'"""9'1 G- Clevelllld 11 ~ W1anlrioton 11 New Vork Pnll1dllohl1 11 Alllnle N1w J1n1v 11 Otlrol! Bolton 11 Chlce110 Hou1ton 11 Denver Sen Ant0<1lo 11 G040tn State Uteh •I S.cremento llldlene et Porllerld uken 121, Wamon 117 GOLDllN STATll -ShOrt 11·20 9·12 31, Smith 7·9 2·4 16, CerrOll 3·6 3·S 9, Ftovd 4·1 3·4 12, Tteole 1·17 2·S 19, Huston tH 0.-0 O, B1tt1rd S·9 2·2 ll. Whftltleed 6· 10 S·S 17, Connor 0-1 0-0 0 TOl•I• .w-eo 16·37 111 LAKllRS -R1m1>b 7· 11 2·2 16, SprJoo, 1·4 0-0 2, Al>dul·Jel>btr 13·11 I · 10 3'. JoMM>n I · IS S·6 11, Scott 7· 13 0-0 IS, Wor1hv 3·4 2·2 I, Cooper 4·11 0-0 9, KUOd\111 1-2 0-0 1, McG" l ·S 0-0 I, Green ,.9 0-0 12 Tot1 t1 S3·9S 17·20 127 Sc-bv OUlrten Goldlfl Stitt 33 2S 19 30-117 Lilien lO :n 37 21-127 Thr"·POlnl llOllt-FIOvd. THgle, Bellerd. McGee 2, Scoll, C-Fouled out-<:1rrOll Ree>ounot-Golden Ste le 42 CSmltll 11), Lot Anoe!H SO IR1mbl1 16) Aulsts-<;o!Oen Sti tt 33 (Hulton 9) Los Angeles 36 (Jol!nM>n 16) TOlll fouts- GolOln Stet• 20. Lot Anoetts 27 Tectlnl· CllS-GOIOln Stele llleoel defenll, LOl ""~'" lflt01I defense A-16,0.S C ..... scoreos WEST Artron• ... UCLA 76 IAST Felrlelgh Otcklnaon 13. St Francis, N v 12 (ol) SOVTH Notre Dime ?S, New Or111ns 67 Mleml, Fie 66, HertfOf'o 62 SOUTHWl!ST Olll1hom1 St '7, Ollllh<>rn1 114 Nlcl\olls SI 76, SW Toes St 69 S.m Hovston SI •. SE Louisiana 69 TOURNAMENTS AllentklOC~ ( OWH'npienllllp, S1 JoseOll's n. We11 v rr111n11 64 Bit s.uth c..-..-CFlnt Reund) N C ·A\hlvllll 64, lh<l!Of'O 62 AUQU1t1 67, Cemobell SS Baoll\t 71 Coestel Cerotine 70 W1ntl'lroo 76 Armstrong St 12 Coll C ....... AtNefl< A\Mdl!Mn ISlmHINtt) Nevv 62, N C ·Wllmlr19ton 60 G«>r11e MIM>n 62, Rlehmonc:t 60 I Ht CM st c:.wr.nc1 (~ltNll) Dreuf to. Hohtre 76 ~· Atllntk AINlfk Clnlwence I ChlmciM111H11) F•lr11t ld 67 HolV Cro" 64 Mlueur1 v...., c~ (Flnt RMIM) Bradlev 61, WHI Tues St SS llllnolt SI 71, Wlel'lll• St 70 Orekt 12 Crelg11ton 5' TulMI 61. lndle n1 St SO OtllO Veley C~ (P'lnt Reund) Teoneuee Ttch 71, Voung\Jown SJ l>8 Murray SI 71, Austin Peev 66 Mloote Ttmienee II, E Ktntucli.v 6S Sou1Nlnd Ctnfwlncl I F lnflll eund > MCNHH SI 13, Tt•H·Arllrioton 11 AP toe> 20 Record Pts ""' 1Du~t16?1 29·? 12S9 I 2 Kanla\ •I 1t 3 1195 '1 3 Kt'llUC~ V 76 ) 1090 S •Nor II\ Caro11na 76·• 10.S 3 S SI John s 27-• 931 I 6Ge<>rg1e T~c• 13-S 976 4 1 M•crHgae 7S· • 829 10 I Svrecuu 23-4 IOS 6 9Braoiev ?9·1 119 11 10 ~o"'' S•ete 25-4 699 7 11 Lou•s•·l e 24·7 604 I) 11 Notre D•""• 71 S S91 17 I) Nev Lal 111'91\ 1t·4 416 9 14 Gto<oetown r, 6 .W 1 IS Is O• •"O"'• 24·6 390 14 16 '"0 .,... 20·6 l60 ,, 11 M·'" gan S•a•e 10-6 271 17 11 Ne~; 7S·4 191 19 9 •'<M 10 I 119 20 N C.arot na S••tt 11· I 1 SI 11 Otntr\ •ece1v1ng volt\ P-olne 40, Toa1·£ Puo ll St JOHC>fl'\ 29, Purdue 11 Alebama 20 Arizona 18, J ecksonvllle 12, R1cnmono 10 JCaY1tr Ohio 9, Virginie 1. Mar;1ano • Oid Dominion •. Tern~ l . viro•n1a T~l'I J Miami, Ohio 2, Cl\velend Stat~ 1 Norll'lel\ttrn t Ohio lJ I A•·Wfft Coe" AttlMtk Conference ll'llve< of"" YHr Owavnf' Pl)IU Sr Pt1>1>4trdtne First THm Jeff COflO•I Sr Fred Harr \ Sr Steve IC en1t110,, Sr ForrHI lo/'rl(pn1•• S• Pete Muro'lv Sr Dwavne Poltt Sr P•ul Rot>trt,on Jr Ktlth Smlln Sr Sc;oll Tl\Omo\Or J• Eric Whit• Jr Gonuge Portlend S.nte Ctare Lovoll $en Dleoo Pto~rdlne SI MA!ry'' l0\1041 San Dlevo Peo11«dlne PCAA tournament Pllrlnes C"Thur\dev et TM f'eruml 2 0 m -$1" JO~ SI ~' Paclfie • o,,, -N•.,. J\flo•co S• "' Uta h Sr 1 om -Ntv l a\ 'lleou "' Frflno SI 9 om UC " Cal St•tt Fullerlo" j ! '9dlc·10t ........ ...,,_ Wtillllllton CallfOtllle UCLA Stenford 0r-s1.,. Arnone s11,. W1W11Mt°" Stitt USC ClllLW WL u 3 12 4 10 ' I I • I I I 7 10 ' 10 . ,, Ort900 4 12 ~V'•k­Arlrone M, UCLA 1' • TllWMIY'• 0-usc •• Or9- UCLA 11 o,._ Sti tt S11 nf0f'd el w11n1no1on C.lltornl• et W11nlneton $Ille s.-.v-.o- Cnr .. WL 23 7 lt 10 11 • " 12 I• " 12 13 13 14 13 16 10 " ' 17 UCLA •• Oreoon (Cl'llnntl , II I pm I USC 11 OreDon Stele CCl'llllntl 2 et l D.1'11'.) C•llfornll et W1anl119ton Stenford •• W11Nneton Stell ~V'sO-Arl~-11 Arlt-Stele (Cl'llnnei 2 11 ) lO P.m.) Hltfl IOM be¥1' •Wfh Cll' SRMll'INAU S·A <w.-...v ., L.A '""' Al"tftl) 1-a-..i• 117·9> 111 wre 121·4) l.'s-Metw Oii• (27-0) vi St .h'nard (11·6) ..... Ceolstrano Vetlev 127·21 v• Simi V1.,.v• 124·2), tonlollt, 7.30, 11 '"-d1na Unlvtf'· 11tv Muir (17·2> vs. Ooml1111Utr• (72·S), Wtd"ftdlY, 1:30 et Cel Stitt 0oml"9utt Hllll l ·A BrH·OOnoa 12S·4) vs. GentiN· (27·1), Wtdnesd•Y. 7:30 •I Orllerto High Hlcitnd1 Hllohls Wllaon (26·3) vs. Klllfla• (24·3), tonlollt, 7:30 et Cv1>rtn Colteot 2·A Sen 8tf'nerdl,,g 12'·3> va. MUrl)lly• (11·7), tonl11hl, 7:30 et Sen Gor11onlo High Charter Olk (21·4) v1. Edolwood• ( 19·1), tonlohf, 7:30 11 Roni O.k High l ·A Whittler Cllrtsllen 125-0) V\, Mersh•ll Funoamen111• (19·6), tonloht. 7:JO et Pasedtnl High Crouroeds 11'·1> 111. LA 8101111• (21·3), lonloht, 7:30 11 Senti Monlce COlllOt Smal Sdletts Whltnav 120-S) YI TtmPle Chrlstlln, Ventura 123· 1), tonight, 7:30 •• Ctf'rlto1 High Bet Air Prto (17·1) Vl Hfloerl1 Chrlt lien (20-4) tonight. 7 lO et Vlclor Vetllv High • Otnotfl l'IOmt teem Hltfl scMd 91r1t' llt&IVeffl ( T lllltflt, 7:JO l CJF SEMll'INAU 4·A Muir 128·0) vs Gellr 176·41 at &lllr High Lynwood 12S-l l VS Butne (76·0) •• Comoton COlllOt l ·A Brta·OCll!Oa IU·3) v' W1l11Yt 17S·4) 11 Diemono Ber Hlgll Loulsvllle (2S-'l v1 Foothill 117· II 11 Tu\lln High 2-A Clllno 127· 11 •• l • Mlrede 121·41 et Blol1 Colltol Arltsle (17·1) vs Lomooc 122·3) 11 G1'1r HIOll Women'a~ flt Wtst 'Mndlar, N.J.) Flnt Reund ~ Caterln1 Llnd<lvlst ISweoen1 Clef Ann Henriduson ~S.~, 1-S, 6-1~ ~re Pof· tt r (US l dllf Jo Durie (Engllnd), 7·6, 6·3, At1n1 Whllt IU.S ) def Ellrtbttll Smvtle (Au11r1ll1 ) bv dtfeull, Atvcl1 Moulton (US I Off Annebtl Croft IEnollnd), 6· I, 6·7. Olene B1le11re1 IA1a1rell1) Oef Keltrlne Mlletva 18 ulllerll), 6·7, 7· t, 6·l . Peanut Lovie IU SI def Heten M:tlell (Cenadal 6-7 6·0, 7·6 Hltfl Wt.,i '9nnll E clMn 17, h'Vlnt 1 ~ Dve IE 1 oe1 LH . 6·1, def Jemn. 6·1, dt1 Lt, 6·3, 0 Moore CE) won 6·3, 6·1, 6·4, Nguyen !El won 6·3, 6-2, lost 2·6 °°"'*' Arnoll·Ol\ull IE) Clef. Bel~·Kuoter, 6·3. Off Lu·tltu1trlslmu , 6· l. def. Sol·Detv, 1·6, Pfaff·G Moore CE) won 6·2, 6·l , 6·?. Coors·Kemell <El ""°" 6•2, 6·0, 6· t Founteln Vllev 11, Et Teri 1 ~ Caoueno (FV) loll lo Hou1ton, ,.4, Oef Acneto:. 7·6. def Vlnaon, 6·4, AklOY (FV) lost •·6. won 6·2, 6·0, LH CFV) lo\I 1·6, 1·6, won 6·4 OIUtllft Mell·VH Cl=V) dt1 Cuerei-HudM>n. 6·•. IOSI to Sotlkt<·L•. s-1. Oef Vo·D1tll11, 6·• Nguven·Ho IFV) won 7·S. loll 4·6, won 6·0. Hu111aw1·Klm (FVl won 7·6, IOU I 6, WO" 6·• CIF Too 10 ••• l Sente Berl>lre, 2 Mlreltllt, l Bever IV Hltls, 4 FoothlH. s L•oun. BtlCl'I 6 un1versl1v. 7 Edlaon, 8 Corone Ot4 Mer 9 Mire C01te, 10 Newoort Herbor ~ . ' . " Women's loflbMI SOCAL COLLEGll SCHEDULE S.1 , MA!rch I -• M~ultr'' Coll1941 (nome), Set , Merell IS -et UC Sin Diego, t I 1.m.; Tuts . Merch 18 -·ce1 Lut11tr1n tl'IOmll. 2 om, S.t , Merell 72 -• Atuwi Pecfflc (hOmt), 1 D m , Set , Merell 19 -81 Christ COlllQ« S.1 , Aorll S -UC Sen Diego fl'IOmtt, 11 a m , Wtd , Aorll 9 -CIVlll COlteot (l'IOml), 2 om., S.I . Aorll n -et • Cal Lull'ltren. Wtd, April 16 II L1Verne. l D m .. Thurs., AorM 17 -Lovoie Mlrvmount lnomel, 2 o.rn. Set . Aorll 19 -et •Aww Pecfflc, 1 pm . Set , Aorll 26 -11 'M11ttr's Cotltol, Tuts. APl'll 29 -11 Chrlsl COiiege; 4 D m Fri -Sat , Mev 2-3 -NAIA Dltlrlct Olevoffs 11 SI Mlry's (TBA) 'dtnolft NAIA Dlllrlc;t Ill lllrnt A" 01me1 11 noon. unieu noted AM Qlmtl~I ~ . ' . . DNeln' ............. ~ $oat., IWtrdl e -H-•on 11 KtulmmH • 10-JS un $utl , MarCll 9 -Hou•IOll 11 Vtf'O 8"cll Mon .. Mlrcl'I 10 -&oltOll et Vtf'O 8Hch Tuea .. Merci! 11 -Cincinnati et TemN, 10 a.m. Wld.. Merch 12 -MontrHI 11 w .. 1 Pelm hlc:h Tllun., Merch 13 -TIHl 11 Vero 8MCh Fri., Mardi t• -Clnclnn1t1 11 Yero 8aadl Set., MerCl'I IS -H-ton 11 KlnlmmM $vii., Marcil " -At11nt1 •• Vtf'O BNCh Motl., Matc:ll 17 -Detroit 11 Ve<o 8t4IC'll Tun, M1rct1 11 -Tu11 11 F'omoe"I> 8Mcll Wtd., Merell " -Houtlon •• Vtf'O hlcll TlllK• • Mlrc:h 20-~la 11 Vero 8ffch Fri, Mlrdl 21 -Atlent1 11 Wat Peln'I 81Ktt Sat., Mlrc:h 22,-Detroit 11 Llklllnd SUn... Merell 23 -Cl~lnnltl 11 Vero 8lecll Ml>n., Merell 24 -N4tw Yo<'k Mets 11 St Pe1er.our1. 1~ 1.m Tues , Merdl 2S -F'tlllldelohll 11 Clelrw1ttr Wtd • Mlrc:tl 26 -MontrHI II Vtf'O 811Ch Thi.rt , Merdl 11 -MlnnlM>ll 11 Vero 81eeh Fri., Merctl 21 -Tt J<ll 11 Pomc>ano 8NCll S.1., Merch 19 -At11nt1 et Wnl Pelm Beech Sun.. Mardi 30 -St Louis 11 Vero BHCh 5'.ln., Merell ll -Mlnnlsote 11 on.ndO M.on .• Aorll 1 -New Vork Mets et Vero B .. ch Mon., Aorlt 2 -Monlrtel et Vtf'O BtKll Tuts .• Aprll l -Attenl• II Vero 81ec:h. 9:30 1 rn Wtd . April 4 -C•llfornll •I ~ Sledlum, 7:3S P m. Thun., Aorll S -C1Ufornl1 11 OodQI< Stadium Fri, Aprll 6 -Celtfornl1 at Anehllm Steolum • All 01rnts 10.JO e.m .. unlln noted Hltfl Idled (-·INWtl H""""'"" 8aedl 2. lfvlnl 0 Hunllnoton 8ffdl 100 100 0--2 7 o Irvine 000 000 0--0 4 2 HH Ck •nd McClendon, Smtlen~ •• L•lo· Oii (7) lllO Hebe<,,.,.,.. W-H11C11 L-SmallMI 2B-Cl'llrtll (HB), Fretev (HB) L.111#11 ... di I, SM a.m.nt.·6 ,,_ .... _, Sin Clemente 000 OSO 1--6 11 7 L•guna BHc:tl 001 331 "~ 9 O Grffll, B1rtltt1 (4), Bek.er IS) end Henre, Nens, McOonelO (SJ, Remlrtr (6) Ind TreDtr W-NHss L-GrHlt 1B-Auten (SC), Arreoll ISCI, Berlltll CSCI HR-Chrlst1en11n (SC) HIW-1 Hertler 7, Oewntv 4 (LMre lnvltatllMI) Downev 100 1?0 l>-4 S I NewPOrt Harbor 202 030 x-7 1 l Bullos end Perrv, Crelg, Sterktv IS) Miium (7) end Torett. W-Sterkey L-BullOl 1B-Whllt CD), WrMl !NH) HR-Hatch INHI H ltfl lc:hool re'* Ines l~nMMll TW 10) CIF 4·A PoL. Scnool, Lffout 19'5 record 1 Meler Oii, Ane-IUl 74·2 • 2 Simi V111ev. Mermonte 2•·7 3 Oct1n View, Sun11t 21·1 4 St Paul, Anoelul 1•·9 S LB POlv, Mo«t 11·8 6 Llkewood, Mo«e 13· IO 1 St JOM 8osco Ott Rev 20·5 I Rldonc»,-a.y ~ 9 Fon11ne, Citrus a.er 16·7 10 Notre Dime, Del Rev 6·6 Olhtn Hoover 119·1), Westmlnslt< lt·ll·l), Noga .. s 120·5), El Oorldo (13·10) Rowtend 120·S), LOI Alemlto• 111·9), MINI· ken 171·6), Huntlrioton Beech ( 1S-l l • CIF l ·A t Gahr, San Gat>rlt l Vattev 26-4 2 Lomooc Norther" 2•·6 l El S.Oundo, Plonttr 12·1 • North, IVY 11·9 S Gllt>d0f'1. B·Hellnt 23·6 6 Senti An1 , Ctnlurv 12·S 1 Rio Mell, Chtfhnel 77·3 I Hert, Foo1hlll 13-9 9 We11ern, Or enoe 11·1 10 Senta Bert>ere. Cnennet 11· 11 Otlltra Veltncle 117·7), UC>le no (I•· 10), Corona I 11·1), Foo1hlll r 12-1•). ,_lhemt>ra 113·11, Edgewood (25·41 CIP' 2-A Minion \lltk>, South Coe\I 20-1 Dlt mond Bar. Hacltnde 27·2 Norte Vl1te, Sen Al!Orees 72·6 • Et Toro. South Coes1 17·9 S ArlHle, Sut>urben I•· 10 6 Plonetf', Whltmont 15·5 1 Arrovo. Mlulon Velllv 70-4 I Qvertr HUI, Golden 17·7 9 Mount•ln View, Min ion Vettey 16-l·t 10 Chino, Haclendl 19·1 Oll'ltrl Le Quinta (21-3), Coac:Ntlll Velley llS· 10), Saot1 Cter1 11S·61. Aooore fl0-9), Geroen Grove 113·7J. S.uous 113·•· 1), Canyon 113· 10· 2l CIP' l·A I Beldwln Perle Montvltw 19· It 2 Montclelr Prto, Atone ••·• ) Whittler Cnrl1tl1n, Otvmolc 12· l 4 C111m lne0t, S.nle Fe 16·• S Vuceloe, Sunti.lst I• 11 6 S.nl• Y""· Trl-Vellev 13·9 1 Charter Oek, Ml>nlvlew 17· 11 I Wtl>b, AIC>fll 16·6 9 St Anlllonv, Ci mino RHI 13·9 10 St 8 oneventurt, Trl·Vellev 11·7 Olhtn Atescedtf'o I 19·6), Be1umon1 ( 11· Ill. Aoulna1 ( 19·2!, Orenoe Lutheran (16·10), Sen Merl,,g (14-11); Blelr Cll-111. Btoomlrioton ( 12· 10), Sen Dlmu 172-SI, Ve lltv Cnrlsllen (8· 10· ll, Blanoo ( 16·S) CIF Smll Scllootl 1 Cron roedl, Dtlohlc 2 Llnfltld Christian, Christian 3 Ltfflngwell Cnrl1tl1n, Acedlmv •. TtmPleton, Trl·Counlv S Providence, DttOl'llc 6 C111ow1c11.. Preo 7 Vlll1"1>111 Preo, Fr" Linet I Rosemond, Desert lnvo·Smett 9 WOOdCrtst Chrl1t11n, Christian 10 Mlmmotll, Otwrt·tnvo·Smell Hltfl IOM •lllttNll 27-3 20·5 1'·6 17·3 1'·9 13·7 ll·S 1'·6 1'·1 10-10 COii• Mell d9I Westmlnller, 13·1S, IS·S 1S·12, 15·1 NHL CA1#91Ll COMl'IR•NC• Sl'll.-e~ .11·Edmont011 Celoerv l(Jnta Venoouver Wlnnloee W l T ~ 0, GA '°' 14 • t4 336 M3 32 u 7 71 2tO 244 70 31 6 46 230 314 1• JS 9 45 rn 2$7 19 0 ' " 732 31' x·ChlcaDO x·MlnneM>t• St Lout1 Toronto Detroit Nwrlt DlvlsNfl 33 24 • 29 ?7 9 19 76 • ?O 3' 6 13 46 s WALES CONl'l!R•NC• Pllllldtlohl• wesntnoton NV llilnotr"s Pllllbur'O/I NV R111Mt1 NewJersev ,.,tl10 DMIMft 41 " 4 .. 267 3' " s tl 243 30 23 10 70 25' 31 ,. 7 " 260 )() 2' ' 64 223 20393'3133 A•ma DMIMll t9S 71S n1 m 216 m' MontrHI JS 23 6 1' 774 214 Quel>ec 34 27 4 72 16' 2'll Boston ll 27 '7 "· 159 2'll •vlf•to lO 2t 6 " 24' 131 Hertiord 2't J3 2 '°• 2S 1 2S3 •·cllnclltd ollvoff t>trlh MandlaV's ~ Toronto •· Winnipeg t MIMftOll I, Oltroll 5 T ......... 1~ Buffeto et Phlladtlollll St Louis 11 Quebec N-Jerwy ., WHhlnoton MonfrH I et N-VOf'k llllnderl Plttaburgh 11 C11Derv Edmonton 11 Vencouvtf' HIGH SCHOOL SOCCER 9"I' air •vett1 IT .. V't ~. l:lS) 4-A Simi V1t1ev 11 ThouwllO o.1u, 7:30 Sent• Monlce II All• Lome l·A Lomooc et E1P1r1n11 Burbank et Mlftlkln , .... ' Monrovll 11 Brt1·0Clndl Central 11 LI Sette l·A Elll'-t 11 ADOUre Celll>lses 11 St 8onev•ntur1 Gtftl' CIF IUYeffl (TadlY't ~. l:IS) 4-A Leguna HIN• II •dhen Torrencie et Minion Vltlo l·A Arcedl1 et L• Qulnl• Welnut 11 Bl11'10o Montgomery 2·A Moo<oerk et Aooure 0.11 Perk II M.owovl1 DMp ... ftlhlfte DAVEY'S LOCKl!R I....._. ... di) -'6 1noltf'\ I S6 Cl ilCO l>IU, 23S blue ~rch, 10 JhHO,htad, 2 wl\lta flan , 2 sculoln DANA WHARF -113 enoten .56 l>IU, 6 It roek cod, 29 cow cod. 1 Ung Cod, 19 "-Psr..d, 3 Kuloln, 21 °"" oerch ..... (It~) LIGHTWEIGHTS -Steve Llllle !Reed· Ing, Pe.) def. PIOl"I> Cuevu (Muleo CIM. 10-round unanlmoul dtclt lon (Little ts 13·4, Cutv11 Is 3'1-10) JUNIOR WELTERWEIGHTS -ROdo"o Gonzelez (Mllllco Cltvl def. Jemev OCl1n- burotr (\lencouYer, 8 .C ), IO·round une nl· mous dtcltlon. <Gonzelez Is ll·l. Oiltn· burger Is 16·3-1). BANTAMWEIGHTS -Tony L00t1 CS.Cremento) def Roberto Centu ILu V11111), 10-roulld unenlmous 01dslon ILOPtt It 17·0) MendlY'• tnMecfteM 9AH9ALL Amer1cMI LMIUI KANSAS CtTV ROVALS-Slonlcl Tony Ferrler1, pltcl'll( SEATTLE MARINERS-Slllnad ln- flalders Dannv Ttrtel>ufl elld Harold Rt· vnotch , e>ltchln Frank Wllll, Karl ant end BIM Swift 1110 oulfletden, Al Cl'llmben end tven Cetdtfon TEXAS RANGERS-Sloned Ed COf'rH. JOSI Gurmen Ind Dwevna Hl!lf'V, OllCller\, •llO Sttvt Buechllt. third bl11m i1r1, lo one· veer contrectt NtlltMI Lta9Ut HOUSTON ASTROS-Slone<I Gllnn Davis, first 1>11eman. to a one·veer con· tract BASKETBALL Nltltnll ........ Atwdltlell ,.fLEVELAND CAVALIERS-Ptecto El'?~' Jontt. fol'ward, on 1111 lnlurtd 1111 MILWAUKEE BUCKS-Slone<! Rlcli.v Pierce, 11u1rd, to • lllrM ·vter extentlon of "'' current contrect 11111 txPlrtt 11 Ille end of Ille llllon • FOOTBALL ......... , ..... LAffyt BUFFALO BILLs-Hernecl Jot D1nlll1 rtctlvtf's coach ST LOUIS CAROINALS-Nerned Jim JOhnson ~slve line coech HOCK•Y Ne"""' Hecan LMttUe CALGARV FLAMEs.-41ecllled Diie ~,.,, dttlnllmln, from Motleton of the Amtrlcen Hoelltv l.ffgut COL Lil Gil MISSOURt-Hemed Jedi L~yet 1th- letlc director EDISON'S AMMANN ••• P'rombl "He has become one of our better rcbounders (about fi ve a game) and has more assists. "He understands if he doesn't akc his shot he's still important to the team. presence at the Sports Arena will open som~ eyes of poten1ial colleae recruit· ers. but Ammann seems unfitted by it all. "A good example was the Poly game. He was content to give himself up against Poly's box-and-one and get others open." Ammann's knowledge of the game g~s back to when he was 1n the early, early development, tagJng along to "Hopefully I'll play baJI some- where 1n coll~e." he said. Maybe 1t didn't Kem too 1mpon- ant at the moment for Ammann. R1a}lt now he and his teammates have ;ust one thioa m mmd, to improve on goals already pJncd. the lockerToom with his dad, Ken, M tan _.. -ln 4 who was an as istant to Herb Livsey U8 ga W &.U Mardi 12, JJ, 14, J5 4t 8 :00 p.rn.. Mardi 16 4l 4:00 p.m.. at Orange Coast Coll* for sevenil years, in addition 10 coachina the freshmen at Edison and a year as Newpon Harbor's bead coach ( 1976). "He's been around gyms his whofc Costa Mesa Hi&h'• volleyball team swept to a four-set v1ctory at West- minster in non·lea,ue1ct1on Monday ni&ht. tak.ina a ll-1.S, IS-.S, 1.S-1 2, I f..8 decision bchmd the play of middleblocker Kns Olsen and setter Cullen Shirley. JVa!tmar Thmtre IOEl TICJ([TS lAI I (7 14) 997·6812 Wtt~ys bttwt.tn 9 00 o m and 4 <JO p "' Vl.~A N MASTL.RC ARf> ACCf..PTI: hfe," has father reveals. The I 8·yea.r-old picked up his jump shot u an ci&hth arader and in what is now his third year with the varsity, he has ~fined it into one of the smoothest and consistent acts 1n the Sunset Leasue. Borchen 1s 19opcful h111 team's '· A full round of Sea View ~ague play 1s m store today with Mesa at Estanda, Lasuna Beach at Corona dcl Mar, University at Mater Oei and Woodbridae at Ne'Tn Harbor • I Getting a close look San Diego Padre. Manager Steve Boroa watches intently u a player leacla off Ont baae during a bue-runntn,g drlll Monday at the team'• tralnlng camp in Yuma. Another loss could end Hearns' career LAS VEGAS (AP) -fhomas Hearns won't address the issue, but manager Emanuel Steward faceo; 1t head on -another loss and Hearn.,· boxing career ts almost cenamlyo\er at we age of 27. earns. who fight s Jame~ Shuler Monday. s1mpl)' cannot afford to lose agam 1f he wants to retain the market.ab1hty that has made him more than SI 5 mil hon m the nng since turning professional. And ifhe wants to pursue his dream of four world titles, he must not only bea l Shuler 1 m pressi vcly, but follow 1t with a wm m June over Marvelous Marvin Hagler. who stopped him m the third rounc,1 of his last fight. CARROZZO. • • From Bl Paul and Santa Ana. f)lu'> 1hc h:agut· teams. 'Tm JUSt going to talk softly and try to put toether the best football team we can." he adds C.arrozzo anended Golden West College for two years. then graduated from Humboldt State. A resident of Santa Ana. C arro110 and his wife Annette have one son. Michael. 2'h. Carrozzo says his offensive philosophies revolve around Foun- tain Valley's multiple pro offense and envisions a balanced attack. De- fensively, he leans to the multiple 50 front. As for his own respons1b1ltt1es, they'll become clearer a\ his staff comes together. A business teacher. he'll continue at Fountain VaJley until a pos1t1on becomes available at Ocean View 1n September. ··He's got to have a sensational victory in this fight," said Steward. "'ho has guided Hearns' career from his days as a teen-ager 1n Detroit. "There are a lot of questions to be answered 1n th1sli&hL" Hearns, despite his 40 -...ins m 42 prDfess1onal fights. has lost his two biggest fights by knockout. Sugar Ray Leonard stopped him in their wel- terweight un1ficat1on bout in 1981 and Hagler knocked him out when he tned lo win the m1ddlewe1ght tllle last April But S1eward points out Hearns was 1n both of those fights and con- cc1vably could have won either or both. "In both those fights he had moments m whteh he was winning. .. said Steward "It's not like he didn't belon11. 1n the nng with either of those guys ,y • Sull. Steward acknowledges that his fighter will be known more for his losses than the fights he won ifhe isn't able to beat Shuler and avenge h1i; defeat at the hands of Hagler. "To get his proper due in history, he cannot lose agam," said Steward. "All ofh1s accomplishments won't be remembered 1fhe loses again. People will wonder whether he was a great fighter or a greatly managed fighter who was m the nght place at the nght time." Not surpnstngly, Hearns doesn't want to talk about a possible loss. Even fighters with 1nncrdoubtsabout themselves don't voice them pub- licly. "I haven't even thought about 11," he said. "h's something I don't think about. I don't want a thought like that m my mind at all." Backhand in trouble, l;>ut Lindqvist wins WEST WINDSOR. N.J. (AP) -Potter. the seventh seed, fought off Catarina Lindqv1st was lackmg her two set points m the 10th game of the best weapon. but the talent that first set and went on to beat Jo Durie makes her Swooen's top woman of EngJand 7~. 6.3. Potter had eight player was enough to overcome the aces and seven double-fauJts. problem. • White won by forfeit when Eliz.a- Lmdqvist, seeded fifth, came on beth Smylie of Australia was fol'Qed to strOnJ m the second set Monday, retire because of a back spasm while winning eight of the last nine games to leading in the first set. defeat Ann Hcnricksson 7-5, 6-1 in Moulton. a bif. serve and volleyer the opcninf round of the U. . from Camuchac , Cahf., needed only Women's ndoor tennts cham-45 minutes to beat Annabel Croft of p1onships. Great Britai n 6-1. 6-2. lindqvist was not pleased with her play in the match at the Princeton Indoor Tennis Center "My backhand iihot is usually my best, but it hasn't been working well lately," she said. "Maybe J wasn't movina as well as usual and that was aff~tina my around strokes." "At least the 5CCOnd set wu better. I played better in the closing games." Lindqvist. runner-up toCiechoslo- vakia's Hana Mandhkova here tut year, held at love 1n the 11th pme of the opener and then broke Hcn- ncksson the next game to win tbc set after two deuces. The 22·rc.ar-old Swede broke away from a I· tic tn the second set and won the next five ptncs. Hen- nclc son, ofMahtomcd1, Minn., man· qcd to taJce only five of the fmaJ 21 points m the 76-mmute match. Barbara Potter, Anne While, Alycaa Moulton, Diane Balcnrat and Peanut l.ouie also po~tcd first-round victories 1 Wooden speaks ln HB Thursday Former UCLA basketball coach John Wooden will speak at a benefit for the West County Family YMCA Thursday at 7 IS p.m. at the Dwyer School Auditorium 1n Huntinaton Beach. Wooden, known as the "Wizard of Westwood," will deliver a Wk based on his "Pyramid of SuCXlCSI," to campa1ancrs and friends of the YMCA durina their annual Curnnt ~ns Cam.J>Aian. The campaip raises opcra11n1 costs for the comina year. The public 11 inv1tcd to attend and tickets arc available at the door with a SI 0 donation. For more information conllct Laurie Sevano 11 847·YMCA Bob Hope stgnedfor his 25th Oscar cast LOS ANGELES (AP) -Bob Hope wilt make his 2Sth Oscar appearance on the S8th Annual Academy Awards/resentation on Monday, March 2 . Hope, who will be a presenter, has appeared on the Oscar show more times than any other person. His first a~ pcarance was in 1939. He was host of the 25th annual awards presen- tations in 1953, the first to be tele- vised, as well as Dope the 38th anpuaJ show in 1966, the first time in color. He aJso was the host of the academy's SOth an- niversary awards show. Hope frequently jokes that he's never won an Oscar, but actually he has received five awards, including two Oscars voted by the board of governors of the Academy of Mo- tion Picture Arts and Sciences. By KATHLEEN CUMMINGS 0.-,. .... C.I LJ I *21 "Nothing that as so 1s so." says the clown. And so it goes in a zesty e ntertaining production of Shakespeare's "Twelfth Night," by the Golden West College drama department that even a Shakespearcpho~ would be hard pressed not to eoJoy. This is a comedy of friendship. romance and brother/sisterly love, with wry illuminations on gender and class, where the proud are brought down and almost everyone gets wfiat they want. It is leavened by some excellent comic characters, most notably, Fcste, the clown «Chris Balogh) who acts as impresario. Balogh commands such poise and assurance, he 1s able to render aJI the humor and meaning of his lines. He reels out has macaraonac word-play hkehemadc ii u~n.the.spot.-1 never knew how funny Fcste could be. The httJe sea town oflllyria, seems a "tale of two cities." On the one level, we have one continuous festival led by artful booz.crs. Sir Toby Belch (Dennis Jude Deja) and hjs cohons, Fabian (Keith David Dillon) and Sir Andrew (Dan Merket), but for an occasional intrusion by the delirious- ly pious Malvolio (Mike Owens). 'Crammed with uc:ellencies as be is," Malvolio is a proud prude and all around wet blanket. who sasheys in and out of the festi vities like some effeminate royalty stepping through cow pies. 'Some people arc having entirely too much fun." Owens. who has expressions that could peel varnish, plays MaJvolia a bit too broadly, somethmgoftcn done with thjs part, which tends to tip the balance of empathy more in MaJvolio's favor that tt should go. He is so palheticalJy imbecilic that when ·~ ... -. 9'0«" ·--""-., .... . .,,_ f ...... ~-,,, ,,, .. . _,,_ ll'C-. ~- ·-, __ Mil•'' u-~, .. ~ ..., .... __ .... c-o 1>'~1 ·ll-·--""" .. ., -...... .,_ l!!!B. --....... .... ""'~· .,. 401\'. ---· Ql.l11t ._..r...,..~· "'~ .,.,_,,.._,.CD11it-.-·· .. ..__. .............. ~ GOLDIE HAWN r~-' ~ I ,. ~' t • 1' ....... •I ' • ,, j r-' t · · I l IMA llWll 11£A PlW szt.SJn ._,. IM~I tsZ,.ttl Mnlm& CDWMDSMMIOR '9'11·3501 ---CDWMDSllS3IOllVO> MM14tMZ20 -CllDCll U.-2553 -- orettu iDDiDk nTm CDWMDS SMlllUIACK Sil·-... CDWMDS llOU..:l 551·•H5 u-. MICFAltDSQIMM (211) Q14l3 u ... rACFIC ;ATO.U SZS.1111 rACl'IC .... r.•m.11541 UITllM mwMDS•JCll 54t-7444 ITllTll ~~ COfTD •• ..., fiiiWI• • NOW IHOWINGI _.....,I MWM-IU4711 • ..,., 4 .,_a.ID con. .... -1'51-4114 u ---~ n.. CIJl1U PACK LA ... I .,....... _.,_ ..... ,.. _,11 .... -~~ -u.-•u •cmcam:1 n...•1•1 .._.al.Ml CIJnD ..-11 ttlO --.....i ~'-----....... -~~~~~~~~~~~~-:-.~~~~~~~-- I Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/Tu.day, March 4, 1988 INS . ! -t:10- • 80UNDIE8 ttoum(•U SHOWS A~ 7:00 a. t :OS Ac~emy N om lnnl llUlltPHY'S .. WNCE .,...,., 1 :40 • 1 :51 -tJO- quite fond of the 'lad'. .. Othcn in the lively cast arc Phil Longridgc, Scott Hjelmstom, Dave Loo~dgc, Timothy Morell, Marion Christie, Sheryl Ann Babcock. and Timothy Morell. Susan Thomas Babb creates some stunning costumes, especially Olivia's gowns, and Steven Wolff Craig's picturesque villa garden set is beautifully lit by Kathy Pryzgoda. Charles Mitchell 1s the commendable director. Final performances arc Thursday through Saturday at 8 p.m. and Sunday at 3 p.m. in the Golden West College Theater. For tickets call 895-8178. QUtCKSlt..VER CPO) S HOWS AT ,,30 .. 1:4'0 THE .. TC .... ( .. ) ll'hn CO·Hlt Prlt M Nltlll (A) THE HrTCHDI (ltJ SHOWS AT ':SO a. l :SO DEl. TA f'CMtCa ca> · ll'lut llf ttlltmare on l:{m SlrH I l (A) CEnTUAY ClnEOOmE [;1 &14 2553 c11.rm•n & S•nll An• wy DOWlll AllO OUT "' -.v"R .. LY .. LLS (It) ll'lut SplHh (POI . ... STTY .. .... K .... tn 1:003~105:207:30& tM DOWN AlllO OUT ... -.vs ..... y .. u.s , .. , SHOWS AT I : 10 3:2S S:U 7 :50 a. 10:00 OUT CW AP' .. 9CA ..-0) SHOWS AT 12:,S 3:5111 7:00 .. 10:10 IN 70MM WILOCATSllltJ SHOWS AT I: IS 3 :30 5 ,4sa:oo a. 10,u sH~~orl1 s 5:25 7:4'5 lo 10:05 ' 11 Academy N omtntlo ns COLOtt "'" ........ , SHOWS AT 1:05 4':05 7 :05 .. 10·05 V1$11 OU• ··~._ • IO• IU-Slfl~[]fl[)I .... _,. 1a1 u1ou' KOOM f»urnu1 ,~ .. ,,_.. ..... , 11 """"' noNI THI COLOll PUaPLI (N.IJl Iott 4111 111e ltdl IMIMI P9CI llf MOW OMT DOUY lft90 M(:l(fQft191'11- --0UTlfllwaTllW111 IMJ loll l.U •11 IMJ M&NWIL PllTIY IN ... NtC !N-lal ,,,. ,,.. •• ,. .. u .... 11.tJ 9'h WllKJ l'ltl 1a.• ,, ..... 7.U 1a.11 AKEW c.~1 ... South UIJIU4 t111/JK•ll) II Otl ""'• f/X 111 121• JI.et .......... . CHUCll ...... DILTA POtlCI 1111 IWtwtMt••1•SJ ANAHEIM 1?141"! !Mlleee I"• fm ~ ........ ~ TMUND .. AUl'f 111 lllMIN'"' CLUI UH 1!111 JUHOll WMIHOU • • WOOOT MUN IWIWI .... lllm !""111 , .. a.at ........ .... ...._ ..cl llT IMO'# GMT OOUIT nulO MOU Y lllNOWAUI NITTY IN PINK ,._ u1 121• i.ao .,. ..-e.u 10.40 OOUIY ITIBO HICa "°'Tl/alTTI MMIU• DOWN•CMll llvmT llW111 niJJ ,_U JIU .. 1 ... • ll~T~nc>M """" .......... ntl COlOtl PUaPU,..u1 •••1111a 1a.u ...,_..cl llTMOWOMY MLLYNUli~ ...... 1 ~ NOM96AY'IONJ MUllPMY'l IOMAHCI .,.,,, 1111» a.II ttU 7tlt ta.11 ... "°'"'11f111 ...... 10WN•Mlll11¥aYllW1!111 HIAVINl y too (N.U) nft HfTCHll IOOY DOUIU loHABRA ........ .: UIJ lr-T"I MUT ..... e """ ... "'"" ....... lMlf---·-· n.-:c0t..oa flU ............. ., Mad Mu 3 (11'0·1 )) PRE"TTVt ...... K Tllaf':;!~11en , Tiiis It N ow (A ) THUNOll AUIY Ill , ... a. ...... ''" , ... , OOlaT 1n110 f/X Ill l1U )t4J )its l11S 10.U • 110 ... ,. 1nao .... ~ 11 ACMleMY ..,_..nc>M OUT Of AllllCA '"' l1M 4tH 7t4'0 10.40 ........ 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"Fir' (I) He.Ht.10.IO IZ,MJIUIW liO.Ol MAMI "Wtl.KATS" (I) U.M!Jlllwtl _., llllmll "fin llW" (I) •• ltH, lt.ll IZ.MIWllWfl "TllllEI AUD'' (I) 130, u s edward1 CINEMA S46-3102 HA11t80R 8LV0 I &O&M"J COIUM(I A ..... ,.. 4 TUCll DOt.IT STOlO 11 ACADDW ·-nlS "Off Of AfltCA" (PC) 710. lt:tO edward• CINEMA CENTER 979 .. 141 MtlllJOa I L VD I t OAll!I Mf I t VfllDE Cl NT( a COI TA lffSt $2.0t TIES I WED QUCll IDlllS "Tl( tUTl fOIC(" (I) 7 10. ,.. u.•ooam llCI llOl Tt "MWllOfTll 1£YHU llW" (I) HS, 1,'tO, lUe R.MDlllWO c flQMS ICM(U "TllE lfTClll" (I) H S.1U. 90 IZ.MDQIWU l AGMlOllY ....... IAllS~ "lllm'S ttUICf" ..... IS. lllS ~U) edward• HARBOR TW IN 831-3501 .,.., ... <...,.tit a •1l •ON coaTA MllA U .MIWllmt 4 ruai OCUT smro IDOi*• "WllJCATS" (I) 6tl I IS 101) H.MTIUIRI "'1•un ..... sr ,,, 1 1S.tl~ edwardt ME SA 8'6-!>02!> .,,.,..01111 •t wn a • ,, ... '' Ot1" tft ,. Mt son n • .. Olllf TIE 111" 6• IHO CNl .... UCU-(Pl-U) u ltftlU MW" (I) 115..,. lt:lO H.MJBllDI "tteil tr '"' u• "Tl( KLTl feter' (I) ••.1011 U.MDQlmt •*flmU AWY" (I) 7JI HS edwards WOODBRIDGE 551-0855 ····-~···•',. "''" ... r•v'9•1f ·1 1 >li.1 U -.u.un "IMS(" (I) 6 IS, 1:1'. It.IS ---!ZMIWI WI "ffalllftl" (PC) •• "Tit£ tUTl fllC(" (I) ,'40, IHO ....... ,.. ''WILICATS" (I) 1•. t-IS IZ.llJIUIWI II &CAOOfT ._ ... "Tl( Cll.M rwt.r' 1 M . t-45 (PC. U ) edward1 UNIVERSITY SS..-8811 '"AMr~1\DJll Al•t'"tJ•1•M V(I l"Y'INf ; J' .• j-i .. -·; :° .. I : DCUISM Dl5W"'rT "IUDl" (I) 7 lt. Itel W lf rn.o "llllm'S IOUllCE" 1 u uo '" IJ) IZ.MIW&ml,JM! IVTSD HMO "Tiil llTCIH" (I ) 109 Ht. IZ.• ., ... TIP! flClUSM CIUIDlWl "UH" rtl 45 UM DI' 11H. TM! "f 1r r11 u.• ., .. Mb • ruca oom Sft)(O "ton I OUT 1• 1m1u 111u.s" 111 00 *15 10 I~ edwards EL TORO 581-9500 tl TO•O •O A' TW>H l'lt•9 l'\A/A , l. ~ I j • fUCI OCU'f SfOICO "F/I" (I) 7to tl5 P.MTWJ&Wll 11 ACAOOl'f • ._ IOl5 • 4 IUCI DO.If S 11J1£0 "Hl COLOI '11.,U" 1 • 10 15 fK.IJI n.oo run a mo SAll ! IU D J.UllS ~ "IU.,IT'S IOllAICl" 600 115 ".""Ill U.MIBll!U WllMUll "IMS(" (I) 1l0 tlO ••••PM:t tlOOD' ~lCll "WIUllCI stSTtlS" (PC· ll) '•s 10 IO» ··--Pml 4 llAC* SlUIO "mTTI*rtll" (PC U) II n t •~ • 41 I .. ! ., ·~) >n H' 1• ".WS tf ... (PC ll) IJ ---. ...,. *" PmN" • 7.ll. ltlt;;•I) ..... 4fMCI ........ ..... .•. IOOlYllU"ll) t•11s lt:H . ...... ..,_. wurno .. MINT'S~" 1-. tlS "'-U> ....... ~IWJI ......, ... lllttlS" """) us.t.te.'"' edwerds HUN TI NGTON 848 rJ\M NI & '' .. ' M. , ... I "' .,., M•,' ho flt,, ,... .. • JUrCI 9CUY S1UlO llACMOft-IOIS 'WT tf RICI" (PC) u s,1 ... edwardt v1u AGE CINEMAS 891 OS67 ........ -1! • " " ...... ·- ,. ·•"f't ..... .,,, ••• ...... ''--'"" :7 -. . "IMS(" (I) 1-. .... -11.MIIUIWfl-._. ... ''Wl.ICATS~~I) ------· f'IS. u . lt:.ll ...... 4 JUrCI 9CUY SlOlO MllUY-D "Pllm • ,. .. s •. 7 ll. tlt IK-ll) ..... ,.,. llOOD'flw:J ..._., .. smtlS" (PC-U) !145 ••. 1 .. edwards WF S TBPOOl'I 530-~1 •t••111••trf11f ' •fllr>f)• .. n1•'' (.a•OI ... lllov 'ftAY fll KATr (I) .... "IHINI EYES" (I) ,U, BG "llOI UCU" (PC·ll) He, IO·IS '1HICll•" (I) 1·1s edwards SAODLEBACI< S81 -SUC f ' )-JI •C I ' •t\ II'• f. ~ f' "')•C IZ.MllQlm lllTR .... "Tl( lfTCllr (I) 7 IS. t:IS p•ggaw .. ,.., fll NATI" (I) 600 ... 1000 P.MTWl l Wll "TlllHI awr· (I) 7l0 to U .MTllllm GOU)( MAMI "W1LKATS" (I) 100 t u UMJIQIDI 111(1 IQT( ...... IOUT I• IEYllU •tUS" (I) 615 l lO IOJI IZMJIUIBI "HUA FtlU" (I) ) •S "lltl lACU" (PC·ll) S• lilt edw•rd1 MISSION VIEJO MAll 49~Hl11() ' ( '• • ' •• _.._ • 6 I v•1111•• "flCI .... (C) I 15 YWUCATS" (I) lJI HS ... lits IJ.MJIQlnt "HWl&MTi. ICVHU lfUS" (I) 1 4~ ... "~ llO IOlO II UllU.• Patel t rtACI OCU' UOIO .. mm.,. .. ,,. ue s• l ~ U\ "'-l>l edward• SOUTH CO A ~T LAGUNA ·~. , . , , \ I ' ... • •' •• A"W Ii ........ et•--"flr (I) •• 11\ 1011 M Ot1nge Cout DAILY PILOT/ lueaday, March 4, 1986 • CALL 642-5678 IF CALLING FROM NORTH ORANGE IF CALLING FROM SOUTH ORANGE IAYFHITMllE WIYIUCI Partially remodeled 3 Bdrm home 1n prime lo cation near the Harbor en1rance Private pier and float Sandy ~ach. huge IOI $ 1,395 000 (7 14 ) 673-4400 (l l 3) 611-1811 759--9100 • :1fr1lJ' .f ~ ~ i:.4' • r,..MPA"'f~ COLDWeLL BANl(C!RC C.raa ••I Jlar 1022 coUbeMIXL-C 6 u 11\CiOfTle, $21 K, NNN M0-70001Agent I '( (If 1111 ,/,/. I/fl, ... /,, /u du • ,,.i l-' ~11 : 3407 E Cont Hwy . CdM REllCH PRICE OUPLEX-2Br 1be ea<.h So-ot-PCH ,26 ... 900 52 \ Carnation By owner 673-0241 or673-1541 let Us Helt Y11 Sell Y ,., p,.;.,t,! Ctl C111111W , "642-5671 for Information & surprisingly low cosl. LIVING SPACES ENTRY FOR~ INTRANT'S ADDRI S5i NAMI: . () DAY PHONI NUMll •1 IVINING 'HONI NUMlll1 CAUG09tY: 51ND I NTlllS TO • I " LJ\41NG SPACE CONTEST c/ o DAILY PILOT/ HUNTINGTON BUCH INDEPENDENT 330 W. IAY ST. it COST A MESA, CA 92626 •. ------------~~----~-----,-c--,.-~~~--------=- I LOST MY OW• UT FOU• HIM AFTER I PLACED All AD Ill THE CLASSIFIEDS • IT'S AS EASY A8 PIE TO ADVERTllE IN THE DAILY PILOT'S CLAISIFllD PAGEi PRIVATf PARTV RATE (No C11nc•ll11t!of\) 3 H,., 5 time minimum $ 6() Pf#' lll'llt EKamp;;-rn,;., 5 ct.ya 19 00 • ThlH r•t•• onty 1tpply 101t1m1 •dWHtlNd fOf • Pf/c• of I rOOO 00 or lftU • Pr~ m1J1t t>e includtld 111 •'1 • Ritt• ~ not •pply to Com,,,.,cl.IJ accounta or RHI E1t•t• • NO CANCFl.LA TiONS 0A CHANGES one• ,,.,. td tw• run. °"'°"* It '~""' for ti._ fl.Jff •mount ,.111 FOR MORE DET AILI I CALL 142-5171 · f1tneu Centers Tennis, Sw1mm1no • Furnished/ Unfurnished • Month to Monrh Mod el' open daily, II 6 Sorrv. no pet& Ntwporl But:h No 880 lr111n1 A1111nu11 l11 l6thl MS.11CM Newport Buch So 1100 16th Stree1 !et Oovtri w .snl ~' R.UI M.'1111¥)"'1 f't~llft '· !(I jl1 I 'i l!flf 1 ' II t, ~ 1'1 , "If I"'' I If• t I BIO CANYON Condo F/N- amkr, to anr, 3/bdr, pool, 1p1 $475, 759-9135. Ladyto•r. guy, aecluded trop1C1 . prv ba, frptc. beam1. S.400. 5.46-1104. Mwpt I•. PfOf fem n· amkr·thr ct.lux 38d hm nr boh w/Nme 1525/mo &4&-0793,64!>-3700 Ammte non-tmkr, l•m pr.t. COM 2BR 28A 11 .. ~75 t 'A 11tll1 759-0281 ROOM ON 8!AOH M1tr Br, pYI be, M/F 1·2 ~r•.. kllc1 turn apt, t500• Olp w13e Tom 8 833-0880/W 873-tnt/H Hlftl II tat ntt lo& c;; ;;u Ga bbl wldt drive t 100/mo 646-9501 Of ......... 152 Encl lf'OI °"' gw. Vwy c!Mn, (fry, ee.c. "' Olllll "' OC ,.., HO 751-3531 ------~ Cuttt1 IMn J.nmtTu ;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;iiiii m.rpet o;y ciMn entry i French ooo;, FRANK bOss@tbAR w/rtflW tyttem. Non toxic, By NOfmen The Doorman 30 yr1. Al Tu Con1Yllent FINE ~TIAd By RJCh. $2.40 per day Tll1t'1 ALL you pay for 3 un ... 30 day minimum In the SERVICE DIRECTORY CALL TOOAYll All''" l: YOU< Slrvtc. DWICtory Rapr1Mt1lattva 142·4'21 tit. IOI klH1 nu eggl. &45-5133 Oek & Fir. 857-000R Sr. Ch. Rat ... S.8-7828 Ctant/Cnnttt Drrwall J.1tn1dn o;i:;;::aya, p1tlOS. path•. • oRYWAd fXPIRd • fOfoRIRd. wAifiRd. etc No jOb too l!Nll. All Textur• & Accou111c. GRAMMAR for IChoo4 or ard Sinor 18 yre of ht(>PY cultomera. 'Uc. i~. Thenk-Yolil 983-4 l 14 RAINBOW PAINTING Ou1llty 11 our policy 650-88'8 JEFF Lie 8688 Reu. Mick-. S3&--0553 Fr .. •t. Kevin 722-929<4 bu.,,_.. 894-1525 _, A A A PAINTING Int/Ext QlW Cut tftrtcaJ W .. Mlfiat LOWEST PoNlble pnce. Fri;n(f Of BUI wl •. Wkdaya, , .... DJm• I L.tncut 10 Step Service. 862-3235 eve·• only ctlllck:et•. can OuaHtywonc, ,, .... 1. 18RIKXWX LANDSCAPE DAN SAL YER PAiNTNG LIM 8'M185 aft 8Pm 1425513 9e8-7401 Sod. CIMn-uP9 Malnl UC •425924 MOTH R WILL BABYSIT RESID/COMM'LllND 28 Sprlnkler1, etc 850-4147 C111 Anytime 964-2017 Mon rl Eaat8'de Colt1 yrl. Do my own~. uc. C1een UP9•Tr• TQPPlno GLASGOW PAINTING ---.-M. 722-1393 #279CM 1. Al &46-8128 Sh1plng-Removlng·H1ul lnt1E11t 30 yrt 1xper • -MIKE 850-3283 r1f'1 8'2-5214 Cjtufal DON'S ELECTRIC PAl NTER NEEDS WORKI RoeiNli ctEXRINd 498-M11 8etvlCI ca119• TIEii 1n11ex1. ce111ngs. r111n cab SERVICE: 1 throoughly dryer outlet• etc, ~. TC>P'*'/remov9d CIMn· (28) yr1 exp work guar c!Mn hou11 540-0857 NEW/REPAIR. OuaMty. No up, new lawn1 751-3478 Davia Pa1niing 964-3837 Aetutlcal 1 fl THE SILENT PARTNER jObl to 111'1 .. I. rlMOOU>ll. Tr .. ITrlm/CIMnup compl PAINTING Int/Ext repair•. bobeM Xc608"1cs Comm ' Rllld. 15yr• lllP Fr• •t .. llc'd. 831•2345 gardening CompetltlV9 cab refinished, Pef*lng NEW ' OLD Cl!ILINGS own aqylp, 11111. r..., nftal__ prtcel cnucti 842·2873 25yr local ,.,, 979·5294 SPRAYED 527·2589 848-1833~• • eftar 4 FENCE A;elr. u;; I Oki. LAWN & YARD CARE. UNIQUE PAINT E.xqullltl Aeouttlcl A.-HouMCteenlng 14 yr1 exp. Wood, chain llnk, patlo'1. Alea RllM. Fr• Ell. tO yr1 In the Harbof ArN aprayld or remove Dry· rlllabll, rMI, frM •t. own fr .. •t. Greg, 9M-O 118 957-8'20 Fr .. "t 854-2732 w~ Rapalr1 &47·7901 Ir~ Pine 845-9868 Daffi Fir Tll lllD... P1~rlg -- REBLOWN OR PAINTED REStD'L/COMMERCtAL Lawn-Tr..-Sllrub ln1t111 ANOYSiJJALLCOVERtNG Alto lnl/Ext Painting free 111. El11. 848-3254 FIREWOOD 179·50'.4 Cord Tr .. Trim and Remov11' 1n1tall1tlon & Removal l lel288597 831-9296 Sonia 722-8055 Winter Special. Oual. mix. i..wn Main a Rototllllng. Int. pelntlng. 54MOl3 ----Oeltv .. Jim, 838-8581 8 I k'-I t II Repel A,,n .. ce ...... UI. -pr n ... ni I • 8-ftoer. Expert Wllloovertng jil:-Faraltart We tP1Clalt11 In 8!>flng & ti Fr .. Elllm_!tll 648-5 11a111uon1 All• Coneull- Dltallld c:tMnlnti C1ll for wttbiNd SERVICES I< c TREE SERVICE 11'11 A1110nmt 581-8590 A llfVlo4t now 546..0757 RMI. retM. Open wt1nd1 Top, trim, removal Qu1t11y - Rafr1g·1. ••-'*•· dryetl. & RI Md Sllop SIN. at reer of 11rvlc1 Fr.. Eet 1'1&1111 llTI" r1ngM. D/W, A/C AM Tr~I :atnedlnciud.; 197& 0.-enga AV9 CM. Oaya/Evee 53e-8698 DEPENDABLE QUALITY Community Appllanc•. s~ ~"5/0bl "44 Portable M(V, ~ 1 l...alld~·""'ng Srvlnkl1r1. Workmenlhlp 84_2-6813 7899 A1t1r Clrele. B Pk .., __. ,.. 240--0717 or 522-2323 Lloy 873-7218 1n 5pm ~ Sod Cllan-upa 20 )'fl In We 9el1 lhd hang together VACANCIES VACANCIES XMeW HANDYMAN .,.. Tony 8'&-5124 Hl(IQl1trt, Advtoa to the Al Special Pre Spring Rltll Cerpentry. r.notng, win-ilMUy cr&ry 83 730 ~~;,;,... .. ~~.,..,~-We dO II alll 857.0742 dows. plumblnO. INlrNte, 7lllllWlll * Pl11ttr/Drywall ~Murltclng • Roofl'j & We will dMn y04/lf hCiUM: tJ~~L· ~dci. .. ~1~!" EST •7•3175 REFS lnl./Ext patch plaltarlng, Witarprooftno• 83 l 199 apt-c:ondO-ofc 1r .. •t. ..... ,. "" _.,.. ....,.. " rr cu1tom texturing, qulllty Aapt\all-rapalr-pnclng 10t1 Rea Olofla 83 I 85e9 FENCES-OATES Tr .. trim Maaonry wonc. Gen a.en work Prot>tem .. No f>rob- apt comc>tl•·heeV'f roller Dume> rune C.M.IN 8 upe, tr• trim, removal llm•I •32888' 554-7831 Joa 84~289 7am-9Pm Cltt~ 1tntfft w~ Jim Whyte. &42·72ot guar'd StlV'I 835-4833 Pl..W., . ...... IEWIAdi AtfUWKSHS •GEN. HOME REPAIRS. Specialllt. btOCk, r.nce.. ~.~~-... ~.ll!"'!!l!"! ... ~'!"1,.~!"" xa:;;; Xf1 I ( Newpof1/Coet1 Meta .,.. Pa6rlt Drywall. Carpentry cement. plelltere. r•tuoeo H W.-~ oOO Nennette e3 t .... & tO .tc. Gary 84M277 PTL r-...1r1. etc 24hr 54$-0729 ~~done rtofl r>telgrl 8etv lroctlur... __. TypeeettlnQ GRAPHICS -HAN YMAN LARGE and STUCCO MA80NRY·TIL! DRAINS CLEAR From 15 N!WPOA1" 72().9191 C..trlttln ""'"· I DO IT All.I No Job to am•ff AK IYPll F~•. OltpOMI Haet•. ..................... 531-5579 Pet or IYI ~ ,, .... , lie 831-2345 841.()9()7 PaA 7b-ooee T~':itt~~d tu~~ ~~~::: Odd :iot>e Done. Wlndow9, lnlat Expwt ~ic. 6 Fl.pair 0 UR 8 P E C I A L IT Y B I WILSON a SONS palnt~c. Sr Cltt OIK -32 yr1 l •P Reeld'l/Comm GRAPHICS NEWPORT Rm Add Remodel Klto frMll1. Bud 846-7819 *'"' ..,.* lie #40903$ "4-8919 720.0'91 B1th Tl141 1357487 IM. CL!AN & !XPERT Or11n1 cleared or r~red BOOKKEEPING Raaa 30 yr11xp $48-17~ Garage openara 01iC>Oe-~-2l~r.:;:e•~ All plumt>lng rapalfa. Low r ... Pereonal or amall ROUS CONSTRUCTION all lt Etec C.b1Mt1. r1t11·rlft POO &31 3187 Bu .. neea 545'-0U4 ,...., Conlt IA1mod911~. CIOM11. WL 548-8'94 1 •ABC MOVINO• 1 a •• 1~ C~ --'"' e ii.: ~ a Cer.tul T 138048 ..;.;;""'..,.,_..,..~~...,. =~=!1.--,... ..... Uc1M88594 lnl 552"'" .. LO RATU 552.0..10 IE8466F REPAIR •pert .,,,,_. ry 1t~ __ .,._ • p•-•W• CAN BEAT ANY 810 BY Repelr-~:._Addltlone .,.., .. _,,.. ()atage & Yetd Clnupe -·-- - -50% 722·7537 0oor .... c 54 .... tlCI I IUW.. .>on · a.cs-.• 112 ,.._.,, _.. •· fUe BUILD OR REPAIR Mfc ~ or;::;li HAUU I CLEAH-UI' 0.-angeCo Ot1olNil tiilil!lil111 .. """"'"-."""'"'.,..... .... etalf9, dOorl. toe.kl, 8peo14111~ In Comm'I Yard, owaoe. trlllfl. mtlc Student MCMrl Jneured IXPUU TIIWIO*Mlable, ~ rnotcflnQI a trim end 1 ~,.. 191 &Awn ..,..,, hedge trims Uc Tt24-431 ... 1"""27 r~--~betll u1e tOe 0on tM 59411 5<ta~n23 1313924 • 5"5-0711 * HEW warenou.e St0taoe kltc:Mn c.. 722-t713 AllHE'T8 & CA,.P£N• TRACTOR AfNTAl ke HeuflnCI McMng Cleen• ..,.:ua ., .... CiMat.t - TAY. Small )OOI. ,..,..,.. Of Ol)«ated. oractlno. \IPI. 7 Daye LOMIC,..... Car9Nl-Court...Chete> Ltr TH IUHiHIH( iH "• Mtlmal•. &4&-2003 d•mo. heullng, rtH Ctill Barry. 722 ... 73 1y ht IOt .. f41.3MS &unlhlnl window..--... -, ..... wttend MNtce St --'"• Ooof~bey win--Clair Conat &4t-4t31 alJ fanl. Ltd Call (714) 146-5.HO ~:ptet• pe~ "~ enfr , 8" y 0 0 M Al-•:rs• wllt60We U77«6·P=·lllO ~~~o~~o:t:! BXNCI LtiiOAi rm. PAACNTS ,~~~ -=~ :c'..T....T ~Aepetr-An•iiiOM"" "°"' flnoer\191 ~ayl NIQM~. IWfoom, '--fin H • ....,11yn I ~•l'llnlf·LOdtlMIC Dally P'llot r.11111111d 1 C....... '20 U0-3CMI loerd/Ctn IOf the (lderty H-' 1 cNfMly .-..p? °' 3 .. .,.._,. ._..,&42-o&e7 Adi To t•u your Id a.-:--In "'IV L.ag lch llOme ,.,_~'?HowlbOu• ., ,. . -.... -. , . -,_,,,,... '°" & ~ 10 """' "°"' P09nO caM 842· 71 Ind 191' a mvlv 1tt9nl , Wiim\ Ot i.acn ~ llOW 10 pl., "1 Davin Md de'fout, Cl•lll Cl fled Ad·VllOf l*P · H w • .. ... fnendfY anvtoroment Lot of •Iffy~.,. :1"'••r•lfw1Y1WOfillnG you 9H.MtlnQdoMr~ ht 4 ... t241 ICMl'lllldlnClllMHlld t f J , Call TC Ask for Ron 842-4333 If '" .,. 11tH1 .. 1tte 114 •••t tt , ............ WI WANT YOU! .... ,.,., ............ ,. w .. ... ..... ,. .................. . .................... ., .... .... , .............. 14. C.T•rl Mf• T.C. (714) 642-41SJ .. Orange COMt DAILY PILOTIT~, Metch 4. ttee Apply m person at the operation offtee, 5401 University Or , lrvme. Ca. HlJl8WS GRllL Come Join the Party! Openin1• Now Avall•ble CAR ROUTES Earn Extra Ca•h For Delivery Of Thi• Paper HUNTINGTON BEACH FOUNTAIN VALLEY INDEPENDENT Deliver 1 day a week No collecting no soilc1ting Must have dependable car. truck or station wagoR and insurance CALL 842 -1444 Ask for JoAnne Cran y Fit> 8111 81 t Tu"-~ dlum, QflY Pd '350, ... Ing S150 873·7325 8otl K~I Wittler I OK ~ Vtttlng S.. Midi Pent•" c•m•r•. •ltte lypwtlr TC)p! Cond Or .. I prleft 84 l 993 1 Iv mt0 MEMBEASHIP !fl BAlcBO.t 9AV tlU810f .. ll l anr•tt 1n(f ,9, "3 t N 8 TF.NNIS CLU8 F'Ull r AMIL Y Mt MhFA8HIP S7SO 000 '12-$4t0 ,, .... ,.. MU u"''-pm·-"· n:;a 9(IOd hQlnl fOf 10 yr Old Aull Coc1111 Sp1nl1•, oood compe.,10" tnr old•• tndlvldu•I 8'& t5~ .... l'l'l9Q J .... lry/hra/Att un ' 4 • I --- -0rW>ge Cout OAJLV PILOT/ Tueeday, March 4, 1986 hll I 1z'r1le Mtl ti Am• .. ,...,.. tltl AetM taett4 1101 MIJC"NOTICl "8..C fl>TIC[ MtJC M>TU Ml.ICM> NlJC NOTU M>TU ~ i'tx!N!! LUSE llT UIE 19111llRllfUI 1_ .......... cm ..... _cw___ .,.,,. To cm o. vou AM .. DIPAUU ~~ ,J,:110 uoo.494-T64a · ILL lllEI DEUVEAYDEPARTMENT OUTH COUNT\' ro~~~· c~~_:.. ~Y, ==~~ .. °".:':!: AND~'OC* c~o. !XOTIQ Pif ...Sneb f(lf McLAREN'S BMW VOLKSWAGEN NOTICa Sohool Dialtlct: IRVINE NOTICI ..... YOU TMI AC110M '°" COAITA.L MILK, .... ~= .. I. Col bl n-.4 I lllELS II. INVTIMQ 911>1 UNl,1!0 _,_-.. TO flflO'NCT YOUR fltMMl.. ,....,. ........ .. ;.._:. n--~-•t ... n ... _nwu3,, M·F tlll ", S·8 tlll t I Slel'JZl" "'" ·--........... "'f Calif I "-I U C.C ~ --.. -""",. ,,..,_ • NOTICE 1$ HEREBY gMln 81d DHdllnt· 10:00 NOTIOI! IS Hl!RHY O!Ytn !P'TY, IT MAV -.. Tl'9 orn I .,..,•r • l"Otloe Ill~ gt.len 10 Large aquerlum. hot ... •lft ii I 820 S. Euclid SI. th•ttlle City Clwl( of the City o'otoek •.m. of the 12tt1 ctty ttltllht City Cltl'lc Of the City A "'*IC aM.&. • YOU merit of '1lfl .,,_ Owne S:: redltor. o( tit• within roci. wooden •tend. 1111 Fullerton, CA of f'oun1lln Velley, C•11· of MlltCI\, tMO ot Founteln Vtlley, Call· .-.0 AM DP\.AMATIOM the Clly of NtwpOl1 ~ trlNW,...,•) '"-' • 11~8300 tornle wtH reoelve IHled P19QtOf81d~:5060 !omit, wfll ttctlw Meled Of' THI NATUM CW THI heY9 ~td t permit to "'' l~,.: 04=~~·· P9t Mo.+ Tu 213-$81-8701 Pf~ untU the hour Of 8arrlll'IC!a pt~ unlll ttle hour of NOCllDIMO AQAHdT dredge t , 100.000 CK.Ible bl.Ilk trene• Ill tbout to be • No money dOWfl 2 00 pm on Frldey, Mllnlh Pro1ec1 ldentlflC1tlon 2:00 p.m. on f!rlcSty, Mardi y~ YOU IHOUU> CON-r= or Mdlmtnt ltOITI ~~~bed~ Gotden Ret AKC Or~ red 14, tOM, kw c:onllNCtlOn Of N#M. Pontble Ollteroom 14, 19M. lof the COMt~ TACT A LAWYIJl ~ BlyJ. ..... ·---· -· . ., ~ ~ . PM IU . LAAOE SELECTION OF lhe Trtlllc Slon• et Eni. locttton CuMfdtlt, Unlwr-Uon Of tile Tr•fllc 8lgntl•.. NOTICI cw pott e.cn. °'.,. \;Ol#lty The ,,.,.,.. end ~ Sir~ $400 4~ °f" & •-H •• !.'!' R NEW & USEO BMW'SI Avenu. llnd Wetd Street, In tlty Pttll. E .. 18hofe. WOOO-!1111 Avtn~ t nd Wtrd TWU8TD'I IALE PAOJECT O£SCAIPTION ~~ OI ll'lt :~ -YIM.& L• llAll... eoCOfdiano. w11h Ille Pten. tHldge High, INIM High 8trtet, In eooordenoe wtth NO. _,11 The pro.tect w4ll remcwe IP-.. ---· .,.. GREAT p 0 TENT I Al 112.. VOLUME SALES 91\d Specific.lion• Pleet Plant .,. on Ille: Ill• Pl•n• •nd 8peclfl· On MA.Aet4 24, 1MO. •I proxlmelely t.100,000 cutHCI 5Ts,2E .,: ..... ~vs~ w~. Witch Dogs, Aluklan • SERVICE a LEASING PropouJ.t lhall be 1>1... lrvtM Unified 8ohool 0.. cetlont. 10.00 A.M., et THE REA.A yllfdt of Mdlment lrom lht -· • ....,... M I & G P9t Mo. + Tu '"' et1ted un<* Melid COWi lrlct, 5050 8arrtnQI Proe>ONlt thall be pr-. ENTRANCE LOBBY ON 5TH Upper Newport Bay Meea. CA 92627. S 8 emut erman No money down 3670 N Cherry Ave LONG end 1111111 be tceompenled NOTICE 18 HEREBY enled under tMled COYet STREET OF CHICAOO EcoloOIOal ~. ~ The nema(a) lltld buelntM hephlrd mixed. S50. Or cap. red. Bf,.ACH by one of tilt lonn• ot bid· GIVEN tlltt the ebov• lltld an.ti be eocompenlad TITLE INSURANCE COM· jeCt Wiii dttc*'I end eddr... ~ Ille Intended 9e+-S593. 'II TIYITA (No. Cheri')' blt-405) dtrt Meivrlty required by ntmt<I SctlOOI Di*trlct for by one of tilt f0tm1 of bid· PANY LOCATED AT 601 N. lilt exlttlng eooM9 channel lrenafertt( .,.; CHUNO· ONL y 2 LEFT AKC Blecil (114)11 .. 1110 Sectlo-i 10 of Ill• Specltl· Or•nge County, c.llforni., dert MCurlty required by MAIN STREET, In the City of from 1"8 Coeat Hlghw•x H 0 u N c H I A N Ten, Mini Ooxlea, 1 fem. OllllllA WAIU Trade-In• WelcQme cation• All proPQ .. I• lh•ll ecllng by •ncf through ti. Sec:110n 10 or the speoin. S1U1t• An•. COUnty Of Or· Br1dge to lht "Nerrowe · (217-78-U94) & VI-HSIA 1 male S300. 549-7309 1211 OPEN SEVEN O~YS be marked Proleet No Oove<nlng Boe1d, herein· c:etlont. An prOl)C>Mlt lhell enge Slltt of Ctlllornlt, .,. .. of mt bey with I CHIAN (t29-50-3501). 512 2175-Elll• Av.-nue tnd •tier referred to .. "DIS-be merited PropoNI tor Pro-c A l I F 0 R N I A R e . pr()C>OMd bUln of 8'>9fOlC· W•t 19th Streat. Oo.te Plea" IUI Per Mo +Tu Wmrd S1r .. 1, and malled or TRICT", wilt teoalve up lo, jeCt No. 2775-Ellll A"*-CONVEYANCE COMPANY, lmalely 35 eurltoe tu• M .... CA 92e27. I- .Ost No money down dellverllCI ao u to be In the but not ltter tMn the~ MCI W111d Strwet and malled 8 Callfomlt oorpo1etlon, II below tile "Old 81111 WOttlt l'Nt Ille pt09«1y I*" Or~ red hands of the City Cl«k In her lltttd llm., Miiied bid• fOf or dellll9rtd to N 10 be In duly •ppolnled Ttu11" Dllta." Spoll trom lht projeet nent h«ato la daeotlbtd In BABY GRAND '11 llUAI Hiil office on tile City Htll. 10200 Ille twerd of • oontrlCt for tilt lltnd• of the City Cler1t In under thtt ctrttln Deed of wlll be dlec>OMd or In the general u: Reettun1nt end New Keya, $850 S 1 JI 10 fHH•r YOU Slater Avenue. on or befO<e tilt •bow project. her olflce In 1he Clty Htll. Trutt txtcUled by NOAM.AN ooeen •t the 'PPfoved Loe i. IOctted •t: 5 t2 Wttt 19th 714-527-0217 I • """ 11\i< llovr stated At Illa Cl-. Blda lhtll be~ In 10200 Sttlat All9nUe, on or H HALL, AN UkMARRJEO Angelee 3 OOMl1 dltc>OMI Slr .. t, Coet• M .... CA Per ~o + hx f()ll MAKING US ignited lime ah bid• r• lhe place Identified tbove, b9fore tilt hOur t1tted. Al MAN u truttOft, reoorded tHa. 92fl27 Plano CoMofe, llke new No monev down 2 cetved wlll bt OUbllClly oc>en· end lh.,1 be opened 81\d the Mllgt\tttd time all bid• ~ JUL v 30, 1982, u lnttl'\t-The project la part of 1 T1'9 Bu1tn.1 name UMd thre>ughovt Gd tone, eott Or cep Jed # td •-•mined end dtc:ltred publk:ly reed aloud •t tile received w111 be publlcly rnent No. 82·264011. of Of· Coinprentn•lv• Sediment by Mid trtnlferor• •I Mid IOUCh. Top of ll'le line. '11 l&ZIA m . 1>V lhe Clly Clerk. Bk:tde<• t bove-tltted time tnd openecl, eumlned end • llclll ~di of Orenge Control Progrtm fOf ...,._ loc1llon It: COLONIAL Tuned & delivered S 1475 1201,11 and Ille publlC are Invited lo piece. cltred by the City Clark. Bid-County, Stele of Cellfornlt, pot1 8-v end lhe Stn Diego KITCHEN. 847-5672 be preNnlatllle deelaretlon There wlll be • .$10.00 de-ders and Ille publlO .,. In-unde< the power of .... Creel< Wttenhed. That Mid bl.tltl tr~ It p M + Tax ol said propose.la poelt requlr.ed fOf ttetrMt of vlttd 10 be prettnt 11 tilt thtftln conl•lned, wlll Mii •t file ~ti COtnmlsllon Intended to be coneurn- WANTED: Plano. Wiii P•Y Noermo~ey dO't"n Ali bids so received, exam-bid document• to guerenlee d • c 1arat1 on 0 1 • 11 d public auction 10 the"'"'*' wtshee to obtain lnformtllon meled •t the ortloe of: COS~ Cashl 714/952·9186 U S 1ned end declared wm be re-he4r retum In good condition ptopOeal•. ' bidder for cuh. or Ch«Jk u to e..iet In detttrnlnlno MIC ESCROW CORPOR· I i S 'II TIOYrl cT•AP·0rEedUOA ,,,,., IN • .A. ttured by the City Cltf'k to within 35 deys •tier tile bid Allblduof90elved.exem-~bed beloW, pey•blt•I whether• l*ml1 enould be ATION.328S.Atltntle81Vd .. ~rt •I I • tt1t1 City EnglnMr and Illa opening dtte. Intel tnd dtcl.,.ed will be re-the 'time of Mlt In lawful granted for this project •nd # 103. Monterey P•rk. Call- ; YofXL GYM, Uke new 1233 ANO TRYING HAROCR Cny Attorney for cheeking Etch bid mu•t conform terred by Illa City Cter1c to money of tile United Slat• If eny reetrlc:tlon• 0< con-f0tnl• 91754 on or •fter s 160. Call aft 5:30 TO 8£ _ } 11nd repor1eo 10 Ille City and be reapon.ive to tile the Clty Engl-and the of Arnatlet. wtthoUt w•r· dltioN lhOuld be placed on MAR 20, 1988 75g..s.71 Per Mo " Tax Council al 111 regulmr meet· contract documtnte. City Attorney fOf Checking ranly expr-or lmptltd u the proleel For 11111 The name •nd eddr ... of No money down • SALES 1ng on April 1. 1986 e.c11 bidder "'-II 1Ubml1. and reported to the City to tltla, uM. pon1u•on Of OU'P<>M. tile pemil\ wtll be Ille peraon with whom rv, Ster•, lllffr••iH Or cap red • SERVICE P11or 10 C-Ommenclng on lhe form tuml8hed With Council •• It• regultl meet· encumbfencee, 1111 rtght, lltM CONlkMWed •t tile Com· eltlma may be fMtd It cos- ' _.. 'ti llllAll IT PARTS wOlk Ille conlracior and 1111 the eontrtCt documents, • Ing on A~I 1, 10.. end lntereet now Mid by It mleelon'• Marcf\ meeting In MIC ESCROW CORPOR-..v • 1 IJ : LEASING subcon1rmct0<1 shall obtain Hsi of the pr<>poMd aubooo-Prior to commencing u .uc;n Trull .. In end 10 the Loe Angelet: ATION, 328 S. Atlantic 8tvd , 19" RCAlno remote. • ~1111 • b\ltineu license lrom the trecrtor1 on tllla P'Oject u wonc. tile contrtctor end .ti foltoWlngdeecflbedptoperty DATE': Thu~•Y. Merdl 11103. Monlllf9Y Perk, CA VCR/VHS wired. TV cart Per Mo 1 Tb (11,.~ , Al!GI r 1,.,v! ~ ~ y C11v or Fountain Valley In IC· requited by the Sublattlng 1Ubconlr11Cton 9hall obtain lltutled In the tlOfMllld 13, 198& tt7~. Attention-: Ther ... S235 cash. 646-8272 No money down 2()9W 1 ......... AIW ON IHI WI , t , cordance with Ille City Mu· tnd Subeontrtctlng Ftlr • boalnaee lloenM from the County end Sl•t•. to wtt: TIME: 9:00 t .m. Tmmom end the fut d.y fOf Or c:ap rid. 0&.09ED 8UHO.\YI n1c1pal Code No Volume l, Prac:ttcee Act. Govt Code City or Founttln Vtlley In ac:-LOT 80, OF TRACT NO. PLACE: Ramede Hotel. !Ulng elalma by eny cnclltor Hltac:hl VHF, almost n-, 'II TIYITA p /I ft4 [V[RY MOOCL & COlOR fill• 5. Cllaplors 5 04 and See. 4100 et aeq. cordenoe with the City Mu-100 t8, IN THE CITY OF 8833 Brl•tol P1r1twey. Cul-lhall be MAR 191 1988, wtcordless remote con-CALL TODAY 5 06 Each bldde1 mutt tubmlt nk:lpal Code No. Volume•1, COSTA MESA, COUNTY OF ver City, CA 90230 wttlcll I• the botlnaee di)' trol S300 obo 642-3014 $144,11 BMW '81 3201, 1 ownr, In accordance wtlll tile with HCll bid certified Of Title 5, Clleptere 5.04 and ORANGE. STATE OF CALI· PtlflOIU 1n1er .. ted In tni. befOfe the conaummatlon Per Mo. " Tex 39,800 ml. ate<. atr, enrf p1ovtslons ot Sections 1770 ca.nler'a check paytble to 5.08. FORNIA, AS PER MAP ~E· pennlt ere lnvlled to mt.k• date apeolfled above. G&r111 S.111 I 0 ed $10,500 obo 720·0354 lo 1777. lncluaive. of Ille Ille DISTRICT or a bid bond In eeeordance with the CORDED IN BOOK 426, written comment• or ••· So fet u ls known 10 Mid WErWJcepllrllf DATSUN 79 B2 lO, For Lat>or Code of tile Sttte of In the form Mt fonll In the provlllona or s.cilont 1770 PAGES 4 TO 7 INCLUSIVE pt ... their v1awa et the Intended TrtNferea Mid In· Calllorn111 tile City Council eontrecl dooumenle In en to 1777. I~. of the OF MISCELLANEOUS Merch meeting. Pereon1 tended Trenlferor UMd the flll PIElllT CAJ1 Sale s700 Contact Belh ol lhe Ctty of Foun111n Valley amount nol lea than 10% of labor Code of Ille Stet• ol MAPS, IN THE OFFICE OF mtklng prHtnlttlo na fOllowlng addltlontl buel- Tr1a1rrt1ti1• PAii FH H llT (714)631-0149 llH ny reso1u110n adopred tile maximum amount or bid C•llf0<nl•. tilt Clty Council THE COUNTY RECORDER eoould confine their •t•t• nee. nlln'lM and~ All leases sub._. tt 1 60 OAT.SUN Tg B2 l0 Cass a Do . 9300 I 'Ile prevlllllng hourly rtle of 11 • gumrantee lhat Ille bid· of the Clly of Fountain Valley OF SAID COUNTY. ment• to t!Mt project Orel within tilt tnr .. yNrl 1Mt ... ,,, Gtatral 7011 182 sehoc:k £1ec: 19. am/tm radio, tull canvass, exll cond 19950 645-6015 .... , ..... 7012 17' Western ·84, fully equip!, 40hp Yamaha wigs.I trlr. PP 646-8239 ,...... 2 dr 4om 11 .S nsci 111at11 •ntlc weges ror each «:f•lt or type der will enter Into tile llu by reeoMlon adopted Tile tottl emounl of Illa 1tttemen11 will be hettd, ptlt: None. mo term C E l. with r&-xlnt Cond ~s.-:171 BUICK 7 9 Rlvlel'a white ol workman or mec:lltnlc Pf'C>P<>Hd contract If tile tile prevalllng hourty rtte ot unpeld pnnctpal balenc:e, bul, fOf ecc:urecy, 111.1 lml)Ott· Dttad: Feb. 21, 1980 slduals Fig ures al ___ Ian lrtl"lr Int loaded I nee~eo 10 e).eeute tile eon-Mme rt 1werded to 8UCfl w11g19 for etch eretl or type lnler•t tllerlon, 1ogethef enl tM'tlmony 9'\ould be CHUNO-ffOUMO CttlAN. F M.S ·F.l.B Auto leue OA TSUN '80 310GX. ale. clean t owner reg serv' , lracl wt11cll wlll be awarded blddet In the event olltllure of workman or mechanic wtlh reuontbly eetlmaled IUbmltted In writing YMt .. A CHlAN, ln-..d cenltf' dellvlf)' O.A.C 4spd. am/Im/tape, good ' Id ' lei me sucoesstul bidder, ts lo en1er Into eeld contrtet, needed lo ••eoute the eon-coet1. expen ... end me!-Thepennlt&p9llettlon, r• Tr..._... HAR.Oii Lull.I! cond Leslie 644-6333 S~~ecC ~~~~-i;r3a8ged oe111rm1ned by Ille Stale DI· IUctl eeeurtty will be forfeit. trtct wttlch will be ewetded vanees tt Ille tl!'M of tile In-leted documenll, the corn-Published Ortn09 Coal • _ ___ a r~1nr or Industrial Rel•· DISTRICT reservea lhe 10 Ille succeNtul bk:tde< ... ltlal publlcatlon of this No-mlNlon'• propc>Md require-Delly Piiot M•ctl 4, t988 YOUICARIUllT HONDA 1978 ClvlelcAO TISevllle, Orig 11on1 rlgllllo rejeotanyOl'allbld• defetmlnedbytheStateOI· OcemreSt21,3-49.73. men11, 1nd ell related · T-058 (l 14)114•2IOO Wagon. auto, ac cruise. ownr loaded xlnl cond Th• con1rec1or allall orto walveanylrreguferttlet rector of lnduotrlal Rela· Currently dtted CUhltrt documentetlon mey be In-DI-IC MftTIC£ S 18 0 O ob o ( 7 1 4) s499g 73 l -7020 p•ov1de such compensatlOn In any bids or In the bidding. Ilona Check• 0< Certified Cheek• apeeted •nd c:opled at the __ .--_-. __ nu ___ _ (213) 110-0211 736-3098 att 6pm _ _ tr1Sura11oe as required by lhe Pursuant to tile provision• Tht contrtetor 111111 payeble to tile Truat" 0< Cornmlltlon'e Ol.trlci Of· NOTICE --CAO '78 Seville 74K ml Lar;or Cooe ot tile Staie ot or Section 1773 01 tile Labor provide 1ucll eompeneatlon bidder mr• ~t•blt to nee 245 Weet Broedwey 18' Edison flee: Bay Lnch 1386 l Harbor Blvd. G G. MAZDA ·71 RX2. new brks new baltlbrks exll. snit Cal•lorn1a, and sll.,1 execute Code or the Stale ol Cell· lnauranc;e u required by the Tru•tee provided proper Sulie 380, Long 8Mch. CA D ~~51 988, fiberglass gd cond --------& clutch good cond 1 ownr $6250 631-63-40 a ontractor s oertllicale re-lomle. tile DISTRICT hqob-L•bor Code of the Slete of ldenllllcttlon le evtlltble. 90802 (213-590-5071) be-8~ ·~~ ~PW'. $4750 obo 432· 1866 I $395 obo 786-5746 C-AO 84 Eldorado blu'" Qtor.,1r1g sa•d compenutlon l•lned lrom tile Director ol C•lllornl•, end lhall execute From lnfonnetlon wttlch tween the houra of 8:00 • m. oM;j'"':"~..'!... · : " 11~Qu11emen1s Tile contrac-the Oep.,tmenl of Industrial a eontraetor'1 oertlflcllle r• the Trull" dtenle ,.i1eble, end 5·00 pm Mondey . on . .-u ....... i..ndletpt, MAZDA '81 RX7 red gd •mmac. 39K m1 lea Iller, tor shall turtllet reQulre &It Rel11lon1 t ile gener 11 gardlng said compenutlon but IOI' whlctl Trvat" mall• ttirough Frld.Y. F~ more In· Speciflcatlont for ONE ( 114-26' F/B Sports Fisher Nu engine VHF sound6' Sleeps 4 head galley cond ale: am/Im $5900 loaded lease S398/mo ~ut><.Ofltractors 10 s1mllarly prevelllng rtte ot I* diem requirements The C!Ontrmo-no repr-.it•tlon « war· formallon, conttct Ptler WHECTEL0 DRIVE UTILITY •lill•liimmllC"" 957-2565 or 759-5484 41 mo·s lelt 646-6475 cirov1de such compensation wagH 1tnd tile generel IOI' eh&ll lurthe< reQulr• 811 rmnty, tilt ltreet tddreat(•) l<amder(2t3-690-507 t I TRA 1 R. In of tllaea $6800 A VS 646-9000 40' Pac.8maker Yacht Flush deck Att Cabin llvjjable luxury afloat I L A I 1 0 I MAZOAGLC STATION CAO 85 FLEETWOOD 1n.uraF'Ce ror All or tile IUb-prevailing rate fOf llolk:tay auboontractor• 10 tlmlletly ·or olher common daelo· Publlshed Ofenge Coal It • Illa tent OS nge es n y WAGON '83, air am/Im White/blue 16K mt <.Ot\lr•ctors &mployees The I nd overtime work In tile lo-provide IUCll compenaatlon Miion or the above de-Dally Pilot Mtrch 4, 198e lt)ICltlcttlon• In keeping A h . d Cl ' 5-spd, gd gas mll, looks & ••US; SELL MAKE ton1r actors '"o subeon1rac-cellly In wfllcil this work Is to lneurance 10< ell of tile tub-.crlbed ptoperty 11: 1090 T -oe3 WlftFll tllent~lcleeVal~ llltob~ Twin 98's 110v plant radar S48.ooo ~vs 646-9000 t t "" tors shall turn1s11 rile City • be performed for eadl cralt contrector•' employee&. The STONE BAOOK LANE. o ou ..,, -7 lo 1 .. , u orize ene I runs good. S399 5 OFFER 494.4959 cerlll1c111e of waiver ol or 1ype Of worket needed 10 eontract0<8 end IU~trec-cos TA MESA CALI· equipment 9Ulttble for l!Mt Call David subrogellon under tne tflfml execute Ille contract. These tori lhall turnllh tile City 1 FOANIA 92827. ' f'tllllC NOTICE Mrvtoe demand• of ttle de- 30' '81 Formula 302 Off-r oealer I 160-7311/548-2020 NABERS Ill tl'lf'I worker"s compenaa-rain tre on file at tile DIS· certificate ol waiver of Stld property i. being ptttment Involved. All m•· I MERCEDES 86 230 SL, 1101' insurance TAICT olflcle localed al 5050 eubrogallon under the terrne 8old ror tile purpoae of P•Y· K na7 tarl•I furnished ttltll be tut>- Shore, xlt COfld frlr. twn 425hp Fastl 895-5137 WE LEASE ALL I CADIL AC No Dtd Niii t>e constdered Berranea Coplel mey be of lhe worker"• eompenaa-Ing tilt obltottlont MCUf'ed NOTICI Of' ject 10 lnapeetk>n 91\d tp-Euro style, am/ m Becker l Jllil''\~ 11 is rnede on Ille of. obtained on reQuest A copy tlon ln1Urtnc:e. by aak:t deed' of Trust lndud· DIA TH Of' P'OYtl of tilt Director of Put>- MAllES AllD c5a3ss5-0~01"; Gc:onaryd S 15·000 11C'1a1 blank lorm turn1sl'led 101 tl'ete rlles shall be PoSI· No bid wlll be con.idered Ing'"' end ••PtnMt of the ~ MNATI Oil.AMY lie Wortle. Thlt equipment 37'SedanSportfishe<.f'Nn Chrysler V6s du~ c111rts. FIB tabs New Survey I\ n LARGESi SEl<ECTION b~ lhi! <.lty an<i 1s made In ed 81 lhe job site. unlM• II la made°" the of· Trvst• tnd of Sllle. AND OF NttltC)M end &II"-compontnll .ntil MODELS OF MERCEDES 73 280 "dr oflatemOdel low m1lf'aQf> 11c.i;Q•<Jence w1lll tile II sh.,lbemt ndatoryupon flclal blank lorm lurnlahed O.ted Febt\tery 5, INIS TO ~STDI be,_ end thall not htY9 am/Im cassette idnl Cad1llae1 In Orange '""v""°"~ ot tll•S No11Ce and !l\e CONTRACTOR to ..mom 17y the City end It mede In c Al I' o" NI A "!. ESTATE NO. A-1111111 been u9ed In Clemon9tratlon S County• See us tooay• '"' p1opo~a1 requirement• t~ con1rac11s award«!. and eccordtnee with the CONV!YANCI COWAHY. Of othat Mnllca. All equip. FINE c ond 5500 O'b o 540-9100 end ~ond1t1ons set lortn upon eny e11be6ntrac1or provlslon•ollhlsNotlcellnd •..WT,_...,.,.._. To tit heirs.~. ment end tceeUOrlee 9UP" 53&-0 lO• Gary uno111 !.echon 2 or 1he Sr:>eel-1 undf!f such CONTRACTOR. the prOl)OHI requirement.a ne I(..,, Ea-a.. Ya creditor• end contingent plied lhllll COl'l1ply wtth the EUROPEAN ~-2600 H&rbOr Blvd ht. 11oo"S Eech bidder muel 10 pay nol lesa than tile said and coodltlon1 Ml forth ,.,_...,t. ... , CtfttM Aw· credlton, end P9f.oN wt1o requlramenu ol tppllctbla $1",900 646-9003 S.il ... ,. 7014 201 Balboa Sailboat w/trlr COS1 A MESA bt! 1oc .. n5(>(! 1n accordance specified ratea 10 all wonce1a under Section 2 of tilt Speci· anue, Nortlukfee, Cell· may be otllatwlM lntereated California Codee end Feder· Good cond $3500 obo CARS _ with 1pp11cao1e stale laws employed by them In tile ex-11cetlon1 Eaoll bidder must tofnle t118, T11111r-Mo. In 1he wlH end/Of •ttte ol: al Sefety Regulttlon• In .432-l866 W£ IUY lU 11Al£S P11 w ant 10 Calllornl•lecutlon 01 Ille contract be lloenMd In llCCOfdtne:e (111) 701-2175 PETRA RENATE DELANEY force --SPECIALIZIMI USED CARS & TRUCKS CuvPrnment ""Co<re Sectlon No bidder may wlll'ldraw with •pplleable et•I• rtwa. --Put>llthed' CJrange Cout "~ h .. ~-iMad Gu9illy, mater~ ptr-'84 CAT ALINA 22' \ II COME. IN OR CALL FOR 4590 11'>11 con1ractor will be eny bid lor a perlOd of Sixty Pur•uant 10 Cellfornla Oally Piiot Fet>ruery 18, 25, by PETER R. STEUER In Ille formance cllereeterl•llc• Keel, Honda 7.5 $8000 Fil££ •pp••!Sll enl•llAd Ill posl approved (60) d•Y• after lhe date Ml Government Code Section March 4, 1988 Superior Court of Orange end price quotations will be Evee 64"· 766.<I IE II CEDES IEIZ *II '13 3001* • "" OJeCurot•t>~ w1\n rhe City or an ror tile apenlng of bide. tl590, Ille contrac1or win be T-04E Counly requHtlng th•t tntlyzed by oompetenl City Salllng St. Pierre Dorey 28. Red/Pal Super cond . ser DeULLO approveo llnenctal 1n1111u-A P•ymenl bond and a entltled 10 po91 approved PETER R. STEUER be llP-1111tll0ritles end the equip- gatf rig w/45 ' mooring i ~·~ ~ vice records low mllet. 1 c•moLET lion 1n ord&r lo nave.,,. Clly perlormanoe bond will be MC\Jrlllet willl tilt City or an pointed .. penonal rep-ment Willet\ In their opinion Newport bay Sf8.000 , f j :I yr warr Lease or buy I 182l1BEACHBLVO rf'leufl funds re1a1ned by required prior to execution epproved flntneltl ln•tltu-PtllUC NOTICE reaentetiwtoadmlnlatattlle otler1themoellUlttbltlM· 631_6263 ••-I I (024305) HUNTINGTON BEACH tn1• C •IV 10 1n1ure per-of Ille contract am! shall be lion In orde< 10 htY9 the City eetete of the deoedant. lura end beat ler'Vee the ; ~ .,· 1 121,tll s•l-IOll•,1:•t-"3"l lormance ot1heconlrmcl tn Ille IOt'm Ml forth In the release fund• retained by ftCTTTIOUIMl ... U The ~llllon requt1t1 lnter .. t of the City wlll be St nlana 30/30 "Snafu" " v• • • P ~") 'Pt!C•llcellons and co-ilract documen11. tile City 10 lneure per-NAME ITAT'lmNT tuthortty to admlnlltet lhe purchued. G 8 3000"• In JIOCli to --Oll•C••t o•oposa1 forms 10 be Purauant to Section "590 formence of Ille eonlrac:t The tollowtng pat90nl tre -'•1• und« tilt lndef>an-Tile City apeoill<:ally ,... rand Prix, loaded·tull 557 MQ40 choose from CHEVY 77 v5 Ctprtce u'W)(l to• 1>1dd1ng can be ob-of the Qo119rnmen1 Code or Pl•na. aptc;lllcatton. end doing boal,_ u : Metro-danl Admlnlltrttlon of &-..,_ lhe r1gllt to reject eny race. Dys 752-9277 ... JIM SLEIOIS Classic loaded Sharp' 1a1•11 .. :1 on., at tne oft~ or 111e Slate ot C.,ltornla, Ille olflclal propoMI forms to be pollten Printing, 3178 ttt• Act. or 1111 Pf'QPONll end walYe Sli,a/Dtcb/Storlft I ASK FOR JIM ~ IMN•TS (84 ITLJI S1695 FORD rne C11y fng•nt"er C11y Hell contract wlll contain used f0< bidding can t>e ob-PuHmen # 114, Coat• Mata. A hMrlno on Ille petition In)' lnformtlltlM. " 18 Pinto low mlles Co\I or said Plans and provl1lona permllllng the tafned only 11 the otflce of CA 92628 wlll be held on MARCH 2e, Oevltllon1 from tll•H 7022 4 ~HI Dtitt/ JHps 1001 Oua11 St .NB 4spd, 11EA779) S 1095 s1 • .,v1f1<.at10ns is s1s oo. in-aucceulul bi dder to ine Clly Engineer. CJty Hall JOMC>tt Rltk•. 3828 So. t988 at 9:30 A.M. In o.iL epeclllc:atlone conc.mlng -1-0-1-,--1-L-l'"'P_S_A_Y_A_l_L_ 9030 833-9300 Chaney s 540-2826 dys r111d111q ta• 11 111e btdder re--1ub1111u1e M1Cur111es tor any Co11 ot said Plen1 end Rower •H. S•n11 An•. CA No. 3 at 700 CMe Center epaclfled dlmentlon. et· '79 SUBUg U Sta tion NISSAN '65 300ZX. 5 spd, CHEVY 61 Vette. loaded '1<111 11181 tne Plans and moneys wlllllleld by tile DIS· Speclllelllona la $15.00. In· 92707 Drive Weet, Stntl Ant, CA paclly, qutllty or per· De Anza BayS1de VIiiage .., Sp .. ,;1t1c1111oris be sent by TAICT to ensure per· eluding 1ax II the bidder re-Thie bu1lnH1 11 con-92702. formence, may not be con-300 E Coast Hwy. N B WagoR $2100 OBO by I Hop show rm cond. wlltttan custom retsr m1tll 1ne malling and t1and· formanee under Ille con· porte lll•t tile Pt•n• and due1ed by: an lndMdu., rF YOU OBJECT to lhe aldtred unlesl lt>IClfle or 673-1331 Mon -Fri Q-'4pm March 15 8•0·6281 loaded' 9K m1 musl sell hatch bra sllp skn 11n11 r arge shall be en ad· lrael Specllk:atlont be ..,,1 by Joe Alikee grtnllng of !he petition. you maximum requirement• trt S 15.450 (818)359-2486 S 10.500 ot>o 159-0904 d111on11 SS oo NeHller tile Oovatnlne 8oerd, a, A. mell. tile malling and hand· Thia 1tatemen1 wu nled IN>uk:t either 8PPMI' 11 the Mt. and provided tll•t the PRIVATE SUP IEW 'II JEEP PEUGEOi 84 w C EVY 8 l'<l '"'t ol lhfl Plans and Specl-Stanley Corey ling chmrge lhall be an ed· wttll the County Clark of Ot· lletr1ng end •t•t• your ob-matlYlacturer 11Ubmlt toll CS. Excellenl Location CMEROIEE 505s loaded 21 Kag~~ 1~ 8 de~ veil~ ;"~'~ 0 r.c111in1·~ M• Hie eos1 or mall· Publlahed Orange Coaal dltlonal $5 oo. Neither the ange County on Jtnuery 22. jectJone or nit written oblec-acrtptlon end •XPlan.tllon of 673-9319 11 comes with bucket •Int C-Ond 650•3797 17 141759_0904 •n\I net r.andhng will be re-Dally Pllol February 25 cost ol the Plen1 tnd Speet-1986 tlon• with tilt court be40t• the Ju at Ill c t ti on for SLIPS AVAIL 25.30 & 40 seals radii! tires luntled Mercll 4 t986 flea11on1northecioa1ofmaJI· f2ll'1ll tile '-rlng YCNr te>PMr· P'C>P<>Hd deYlallon bued 3333 w COASiHWY.NB rSer,,.9738)(Slk•2674) 1 CHRYLER LeBaron 8tl Tr .. C•lyreseNesineriglll T-05€ lngandllandllng wtll be r• Pubflllled Ofenge Cout enoemsybetn~orbyon ecc:epl•ble englneenng 642-4644 9.5 Mon-Fri Hiii CHICK 29K m1. $8950 992· 1955 Evel,n McClendon, City nunllC NOTICE Tile City r~ Ille right March"· 1 t, 19MI IF YOU ARE A CREDITOR No quoteoon wtll be CIOO- conv di cond i ·lras ro re1oc1 any or all bids I funded Dally Piiot Februtty 18, 25. 'f04JT attorney. . Pfletio.. WANTEO TO BUY Balboa ORANGE COAS1 Clerk of the City of Foun-r-vo to r•ject eny or all bide T-G42 or • contingent credltOf of lldered wnteh In 8lt'f manner Island Shore Mooring Jeep/Renault IVERSON WE BUY CLEAN, t1ln Valley, C111tomi. NOTICE OF EH lyn Mee~ Cit)' Ille decMMd, you mull flle deer-the Quality or 675-8829 eves I 2524 HarbOf Cos1a Mesa LOW M ILEAGE Dlllflod February 1966 DEATH OF Cleft of the Cit)' of FCMm-DUD•1c Ml\TU'C your eltlm wttll tile CIOUrt or wonc pefformance of lhe I 141 1023 I POHC,C.Hf DOMESTIC & IMPOFH f'ubl1stieo Orange Cout taln V.elar, Calfornlt rUIK. ""'~ preeent It to t!Mt pet.onal equipment deecrlbed In fllilc. Tr1D1portatioD T I. -AUDI CARS, TRUCKS & VANS 01111y Piiot M11rch .. 1966 HAAWY CURTIS Dated Februtry 1986 NOTICE -rep<etenlttlve eppolnted by theae epeelflcttlon1. racal 9035 <Ill Vklll II I 1 ; .06Q SOMERS t ke Publlall«I Or•n0e Coast ...,... the court wllllln foor month• Bid Opening: MARCH 14, ll1ghh1 (Jualllv I • HARVEY SOMERS Dally Piiot March 4, 1968 DIATM OF from the dat• of flrat le-1986 Ca•ptrl 1014 ·74 EL CAMINO, classlc .,.,1 .. & "••vlu PU8LIC NOTICE AND OF PETITION T-059 BERNAL LnANO 90WER wanceofletterauprovldtd JOHN R. HAM,TON, -.. 00 Good work horse! TD ADMINllTER ._ Lii 90WS" In Section 700 of lhe FIMJ flleneaet 1975, 2611 COBRA trailer. s 1650 540-9327 CHICK Not•--of ESTATE NO. A111I03 f>tlll.IC NOTICE AND OF l'ETmOM Probal• Code of Ctllfomlt. Publlthecf Orenge Cout sell contained A· 1 cond /•'EBSON """ To all heirs, t>enellclarle$, TO Ao.HllTI" The time fOf fifing cltlm1 wtll Dally Piiot M~ll 4, 1988 $4500 obo 646-5848 FORD '81 PICk·UP F250. .,-, i .,,., ~.... 11 ' Publle Stle er&dltora end contlngenl NOTICE TO EITATI! NO. A1111A not expire prior 10 lour T.057 pi s pl b auto air. u s F c,..., 11~11 of Abendoned c.redllo<e and peB<>nl who CREDfTOfll OF To ell helre, benefleler .... montht from tile d•t• of tile '69 VW Camper 1 ownr, lo am/Im duel tanks 60K Nr .. port Brarh WE WAIT TOUll Property mey be otllerwlM interested BULK ntANIR" eredltore •nd contlngeol 11eer1ng notice •bc>Ye. PlB.JC NOTICE ml 12K on eng ong wood mi $5500 642-2574 CLEAi ISEI CARI NohCA' •s g•ven tnal lhe tn lhe will and/or estlt• of (9ec:t. 1101 .. 107 Cfedltore. end pertone wtio YOU" MAY EXAMINE the '.;'9 $3D080000oEb~ 6o4to2:3H2o5me9 Vans 9040 673-0900 SeeVeoodcnSantos ~~~e~~~;:n;;;1:0~~~; ~:aA~!~v~~Rlbt~~ERS Notice l~·~·~Y given to ~·,h.~!':':::::': = ~ec>~tie,,::.,:!cr.'t: FlCT!!.~f~=• Ha•men Franc~ loeker A·53 A pellhon 1111 ~ filed credllor• ot t"'e wlt"ln BERNAL LELAND BOWER ....... -·te, you m-........ ,.., ~~"'V P9f.oN .,.. (Bin Sur) 20· •leeps 5, •77 Dodge. Semi-custom I s 280 N " " .... _.. -· -... dol .... _, CO .. "T .. .. WE Lr •SE I aie commences •• by Lawrence Orin Somera In nemed 1ren•feror11) thtl • tka LEE BOWER upon the executOf Of edmln-no ...... neu u : ""' 360-4B, AC. CIC, PIS V8 '318 eng, rune & look s ~ Sullivan Santa Ana Land-Ille Super10< Court of Qr. bulk lranater 11 •bout 10 be A petition llu been filed latratOf, Of upon the ti· CERAMICS, 2633 W. Cotll aelf contain equipment gd $2500 obo 549-0783 ALL IAIES lord reservas tile rtglll lo bid ange County reQU91tlng that made on pereonaJ Pfopefty by Tarry R. Bower In Iha Su-tornay tor Ille extc:tJtor or Hwy, Newport Beech 92M3 Good cond $8.995 Call 83 Dodge Van con-1utsulP Suo1ec11ocance11an L•wrence Orin Somers be herelnatterdMerlbed. perlor Court of Or•no• edmlnlllr•tor. end flit with Rodney Ro~ .. W.itece, 631·1272 version 21 K ml, loaded I IODELS llon In O¥enl setUement be-appointed •• personal rep-Tile n•m .. and buslnaa County requeetlng tllet Tany the court with proof of ..,. 2288 Paeltle J • Coete ,-82 VW Camper Weslfalla w1extres Must see I IWIM!n landlord and obll· reaentallveloadmlnlatertlle eddr ..... of tile Intended R. Bower be tppolnt~ u vice,• written raquaet lltl· M .... CA 92627 like n..., wlnt cond low S 13.900 540-9205 llarhr l1hr1 FORD '66 MUSTANG V 8 g11s1edGplodartley.. e91ate of the decedent. lren•lerora are: LILY CHOO personal f9PAIMlltlllve 10 Ing tll•t you deelre ~I., Jean Merle Wtlltoe, Mme ... ~ ~ 13861 Harbor Blvd. G 0 " The petition reque111 &nd DAISY HO. 370 A E. edmlnlster the Mitt• of Ille nollcie ot 1,,. flllng of.,, In· Thi• bualneH 11 oon- m 1, St2.000 or offer Aati••H, 554-2800 auto. air, good restored Published Or11ng411 Coaal authority to •dmlnl•ter tile 17111 sir .. t,Co•t•M .... c •. deciedent. ventoryend8')P'lilMmenlof ductedby:lluat>endandwtfe 852·9583 cond $3495 533·4242 D11oly Pt101 Mari.11 <1 11 1966 eatate undf!f tile lndepen-Tile loeatlon In Ctllfornla The petlllon requHtl •t•t• __.1 or of Ille pell· Rodney R Wallece t?ouse Traner 16 Air y Clanin 9045 FORD "71 l TD 4 dOOr rts T ·061 denl Administration of Ee-of Ille chief executive otlloe eutllortty lo admlnllter tilt tlon1 Of eooounl9 mentioned This .te1ement wu filed Stream type Seit-con· "6S T-BIAO xlnl cond . new bullt engine. xlnl cond , Illes Act or p<tnclpt l bull,_ office •t•t• under tilt lndee>en· In SectJon 1200end1200.6 or wtlh tile County Cler1t of Of· talned $1 200 497-5800 I ires brlls pnt. like nu S950 545-3087 PtJBLIC NOTICE A llM.rlng on Illa petition oflhe Intended lr1U11lerOI' II: dent Admlnlltrltlon of &-tile Cellfornlt Pfobtt• Coda enoe County on Ftt>ruwy $<t700 OBO 495-0733 will be held on MARCH 12. eame tat• Act 24, 1988 •••ercicl••/ -FORD ·73 Marq Siii Wgn q FICTmous BUSINEH 1986 ti 9 30 AM In Dept All other buslnee. namee A hMrlng on tile p«ltlon ar., I """'· A~ '101• Sc Aato1 ··~rtt4 9100 pgr beaut cond wire wtils NAME ITATtMENT No 3 II 700 Civic <Anter •nd •ddr ..... ultd by tile wtll be held on MARCH 12, '°' ,........_, I01 I. c.... Publtlhed Orange Cout llltrl 1011 hitch/rack $995 650 6 l30 Tt'9 followrng persons are Drive West, Senta Ana, CA Intended lr1U1sleror within 19MI tt 9·30 A.M. In Dept, redo9hod., •• ~ Delly PllOt Metch 4, 1 t, 18, 1990 H d 750 '72 VW BU • newish brks, _ _ _ dotng buSlnMS u Exolk:a 92702 lllr" yeere IUI yeere lut No 3 '' 700 CMe Center CA t1101 25. 19M S t 595 M~~ a E rras mul ll"r 11r es. batt FORD ·75 Grand Torino Who1e1111e Flowers and IF YOU OBJECT 10 the pul .o l•r u known to Ille Drive Weet, S•nl• Ant, CA ~blllhed Orenoe Coat --------'I..;-90:4~ Y -s Alway' garaged great Wag, xii cond wl xtroa nu Fo1t11ges 176 Del M1r Av-granting of Ille petition, you Intended trtneferee ere: 92702 Delly PllOt M1<Gtl 4, 6, 1 t, f'tllllC fl)Tll'C 640·90 19 cond $2200 642-9655 tlres/pnt $1450 640-5074 enua Costa Mesa, CA ellould either appea1 at Illa none. IF YOU OBJECT lo the 1988 ------·--~-- 1981 suzuKTR M 125 TOP $$$ PAID --. 9?627 hearing •nd .,.,. your Ob· Tile ntmtl(•) •nd buelnee. granting of the peUtton. you TW-005 dirt bike, new rebuilt ang, AUDI ·7e lOOLS. runs Ok, FORD ·77 Mustang ri 302 ~•11th he<esa Burt<e, 176 lectlona or Ille written oblec· addreu ol 1ht Intended lhouk:t either appeer et tile good cond Asking $750 needs some work $500 For Pampered eng. 50k orig ml S2450 ,,., M" Avenue Cotta 11on1 wllh Ille coun belore tranafMee(I) 81•' KATY LAI, hetrlng end •t•t• your ot>-1--------- obo Call 831•1272 ot>o 642-4538 Meroe<les Benz obo 240-0176/498 3204 M11~" CA Q2~?7 lhe !leering Your eppeer-6842 Capatone Dr .. Hunt· jectk>M or ni. wrttltn obi«> f1t8.1C fl)llC( rn1• bu11neu 11 aon· •nee may be In person or by lngton BMctr, Ct. tlon• with the court l>e#Oie 1--------- A•lt Lt11l•f 9010 ""'"' lllEllATI OUI aucltlQ by an 1nd1vldulll yOt.ir attorney. Thet the l)(operty pettl-the lletr1og. Your eppw. AC11'TIOU9 .,... .. ____ _. _ _. ____ ,_.. Top Mereecles Prk:et Paid Ruth Burke IF YOU ARE A CREDITOR n.nl hafe1o It dteor1btd In lll'ICt rney be In PtrtOn or by ....... ITAT-.e'T L...,111 Tl Lir •SE CALL PETER ot RAY r11., "41~1 wn llled 0t 1 contingent creditor of genertl ... Ah ~"'9,. llx· your ettorney The 1o11owtng .,..-.on. - .,.. 5'I Hiii IF tlPMTI wtth II•• County Cl4wk ot Or· tho cteoMMd, you mut1 Ne turee. equipment IQOtCNr IF YOU AAE A CAEOITOR doing ~ •; Potomec I A-'-PllHOT1 SIMPLY THE BEST llllQ9 County on January 23, your Cltlm with the court or with the ln'f'tlntOty of 1toctc or • contingent credhor of Landing O..llcpme11t Com-"o-'.-~" ... -,., se'u~o·PSEe~N~OE·LL1v"e~nov •111 IHOEHI 1988 ertw11 11 10 ,,,. ~ on hind 81\d QOOdWlll end 111e dtCIHMd, y0u ""'*me ~•Joint v.mn. 2tt12 .. , ,., " " ? 13 or 1 14 637-2333 ntl017 rep<tMnltliv. IOOOln~td by tredt neme of the oertlln 'f04Jf cletm wtttt lhe court Of l"J' OltlVI Othot, Suitt 100, HST PllOIS 1540 JAMBOREE RD r> ... tii.~1 "° O•ln(l(I Cout tile coort within l0ur montll1 b4.lllneu end It loelttd 11: preaant It to the '*"°""' UQunt N19u11. CA 92tn HUNTINGTON BEACt1 NEWPORT BEACH VOLVO 76 2•2DL, • eyt, 2 Oally t>11n1 f.!!t>luary 18 25, lrom the d•t• of flrat le-370 A E 1711'.1 St .. Cott• ,.....1et1Ve eppolnttd by 8ui.Potomao, Ltd., e CHRYSLER/Pl YMOU TH Adj11cen1to Fashion latand I dr, run11 ""1111, 87k ml, Marc~ • 11 1986 IUtnet of ltt19fUI ptOVlded M .... C. lhe court within four montM c.llfof"'8 llmlted per1nar• 842-0831 5,.0•5164 I Open 7 Deya a Week S1500 obo Ev/wknd T-055 In Section 700 of the The &ullneea neme uwo from the C11tt of flrl1 • •hip, 16538 ltrnetdo __ 640·6""4 494-99811751 ·5433 dy Probate COde of Calltomt•. by Mid tranalatore 11 Mid auenoe of i.tltrt 11 provided Cent« Drive. SVltt 200, Sen Try Ink on your flnger• In· I VOL VO .80 Gl -pw, dr lks, POOLIC NOTICE POOLIC NOTICE Tile time for """" C!ttlmt wtll 1ocet1on le. HAWAIIAN In Stcllon 700 ot tlle Oltgo. CA 92128 tlNd of bll•ltr9 °"your tee1 II you re 1ooto 1ng '°' e ear sun·rl am/Im llereo not expire Pflor 10 lour RAINBOW Probtt• Code of Caltromla. Potomtc Utndtng, Lid., • • lhop Clltlllfltd c1aea1tled llu news for you S IC 213'9 K U400 mO<ltht trom tile d•w of tile Th•t uld bulk 1r&n9far 11 Tile time ror flllno cltlml wtll Calltomll llrnlttcl pennar. -6500 649-01 IA FlCTITIOUI BUllNHI FICTITIOUS auarNHI hMtlng notice •bova Intended 10 be conaum-not •xplr• p<lor to lour •hip. 16539 8trnltdO Y.Lyo •111L • ..... r!!.Af~_!.TngA~~ ... r. NAMI! ITATIHttNT YOU MAV EXAMIN! the mated It the office of OP-montn. lrom tile d•t• of the Center DtNe, Suite 200, 8en MOTOR ROUTE A vailable In Irvine area $300 to $600. No collect- ing. 3-4 hours a day. Mon. thru Friday afternoon. Sat. & Sun. morning. Call 642-4333, ask for Kirk. ORANGE COAST lllJPlllt 330 W. Bay St. Coeta Mesa. CA •..... I ,,.. """''" ,........,.. .. Tt141 lotl0Wlng P41f901'1t ttt Ille kepi by tile COUt1 If you PO~TUNITY E8CAOW, 734 hMrlno notloe •bov9. Oltoo. CA 92128 Aulo tlr l1>11ded 15,000 doing butlne11 a lnduair111 d o 1 n g I> u t In ea a •a Ire 1 C*ton lnt.,..ttd In No TUllln A..,.., Ort19t, YOO MAY IXAMIN& the flll1 bul!Mlt la con- mllee ;.,..o )'Mt w&rrlnl)' Mtrl11nge Dlv111on of VITACMROME DIVISION OF ll'lt et11te. you 1N1Y ..,.... California 92et7 on or tn. tllt k~ by the oourt tt ~ ducted by. )Olnl \!9t'ltutt rema1n1ng $14 200 Vllmchrome Grepl'll Ct VITACl1AOME' GRAPHICS upon lhe ••ecutOI' or ac:trliln-Mlref\ 20. ,... .,. • pet.on Int••'*' In aui.Polon'\90, Ltd . I (7141720-81 t4 Group, Inc 384 Cl"'lon St CIRCJUP INC 2•76 W La tatretor, or upon the tt· Thia~ 1rantf9r le IUb-the .Ctte, you may Ml'YI Cellfomle llmlted pt1r1ner. vw '88 11.~. , ..... , ••It C09tt M .... CA 92628 Ptlm.1 1'118 Antlltll'I\, CA lorney tor Illa executor Of }eel to Cellfoml• Uniform upontht111ecutor0ttdfrlln.. 1hlp , BY: I Ull Al· --vv ..., Yttt chtome Or1pl\le• 928-0t edmlnltll'lttr. 91\d Ille with CommtrC!ial Code s.ctlon 1111re1or. Of upon ltlt It· IOClAT£S. LTO . • Ct#-tr11ntp $1450 obo Group 1~. Ca11t0fnl1 c0< V11•cr.,,omt G11p111ca the coufl wtth proof or--8108 tom.y lof Iha uecutor or tornll llmlttd pett,,.,1N9, 494-2552 or 497 45g7 poreuon 247!1 w l• P11m1 G10<1p rnc • CahlOl'nle COf lllOI. a wrlt1en raquee1 ettt· Then.me end edd,.... Of 9dmlntstrttor, end lllt wlttl ly: The Bult Cofi>or•tlon, • vw ~9 BUG. good cond , Ave • Anaheim C.A 9290 I par•lllon 24 75 w LeP1tmt, Ing lh•t you d4Mlfe apeclal tll• per1on with whom the eourt wlttl proof Of ..,.. Callfomlt oori>orltlon, 0-. painted, w/redlo, mag Tilt• bualn•H 11 eon I Analleom. CA 92901 notice of the flllng Of en In-Cillme may be filed le Op. lltca, • *""-' '*"*' attt· •Ill Plnntf, I)' Aobet1 A ducted by • corporetion Thtt bu•triH• I• eon· 111t1IOf'Y end eppt~t of Pof1Unlty &crow, 134 No. Ing lhet you ~ ~ Wyatt, Ya Preeldtnt whla, foo+(a pood S 1800. vnecn1ome Oraplllea oucre<I by "oorPOt1t1on "t1te taat11 Of of tile petf;. 'Tuatln Ave., Or11f191. ca. and notlOt of the ftllna or en In-• "11111 It...,,,.., Wiit llltd 875·305g Cll ltltr 15pm Group Inc Anna MH \1 111c11rom• Graphic• tlona or eooout1t1 ment!Ontcl tile IMt dsy 1of """O c111me vttntOtytnd 8'>9f~OI wlttl the Count)' Olef'k of Of· VW 81 Rabbl1 Otl IOWnlf Snoddy Corpormte Sec Group Inc. Anna MH In Section 1200 IU1d l200.5 of t1y eny cr.dltor ~ be eetltt llMll Of Of the pttto. llf'IOt County on~ 3 f. driven a mtlnt w/TLC nu relary Snoddy Seaetery tilt Ctlilornhl Prooltt Code Mardi 19, 19". """°'1 It tfle tlon9 Of eccount1 mentioned 19141 edl I /b I f I fhfl 1tt temen1 wll Oled Thia tl&l91Mt'tl wet flied lf'Ml4 J.. 8dlei. It., ef bueiMM dsy before tM lnlectlonr.l009ndla00.lot ,_,. ' 11 •f Ktr wlthtneCountyClarkOfOr w1tn1tw1CountyCWtlofOr· M•••,.•· M111•,er & oontUl'l'VNllon d• eptd-thtCtllforntaProtlmCodL ... D•H", Heellt I No dings, llltl• new S38~ enge County on ~try tnOf1 Co11n1y on ~ H•tfl•e. 11N c .. , •• fled abo'le ,_,, Ill ..... 111t ,,. ...... ""*'•••et Law, 2957 8akttr. Co.t• MeM 11 111&6 11 11188 o.tw.. ........, ..... CA 0.ted· rlCI 2fl. '"' ...... 1111 CNM ...... , ................ ... '*717 ,.*7JI -KATY LAI, 1AtHtle4 ............. CA.,.., ....... CA llttt Wilen Ille flll --•l•rt Pu~ Ot•,. CoMI Publahed Ofanoe CoMt P\ibltehtd Otenoe CoMt ff••••.. ""*'*' °"'"" ~ ~ o.-.,.. OoNt FlCTITIOUI DU .... I NA• ITATW•NT The lollowlng ptl"lon• •r• doing b1.1911'1Mt .. : A) toe.1 MOiiing and Sl0taga: 8) Nor· ct1c Mo'llno a Storage 8.28 "8" Hemltton St., CO';te MtM. CA 92827 Jwnee Ptultan, 911 "8" Hlmllton, Coett Meat, CA 92927 Steoey Pautetn, 811 "8" Hmmllton, Coste Meea. CA 92627 Thia t>utln... le con- dUClted by: tiu.bend t .nd ~· Sleoay P1111l11tn This •tltemant Wiii n1ec1 wllh ,,,. County C.k Of Of· enge Coun1Y on ~ 13,tMO ,_ Publllhtd Oranoe eoemt Delly Piiot February 1'. 25. Meteh tl, 11, 1NO 1 turning ii thmetot11<nlo Deil; Ptlot ~ery 11. 2&.,Dt •ty Ptlot r90f'*Y ti 2$. Dllt)' PKot Febtuery 25. 2e, PVt:IAlneO Orenge Colet 011111 Nol '*'-Y ZJI, 1t, Delly l'tloC ,.,_,., 21, "!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'11!1!1~!!!!~~ Cllultltlcf IOI title> wtlh pre Mttel'I 4 It 1980 Mtrch 4, 1 t tGM Mllfdl 4, 1911 Odf Pt1ot M.-dl {. ttee tiltrell 4, tMt Mlltdl 4, 11, 11, 1111 !: _win_1w_m_11_n .... 1en.....,11_nce;.;;.. ___ 1 T-04'4 t 0.t!J TW4M ' T-4G TW4U __ T~~:::::•:.i_..:::=======::... .. • TUESDAY, MARCH 4, 1986 Laguna cops.start sobriety stops "But lbcrc won't be a huge backlog recently received advanced training lbc past, there has been some deblate a state Appellate Court last year of cars backed up the road " be said in the recopitioo of intoxicated over the l~ity of the program. rcfuJed to consider a Superior Court "De~nding Oh the flow 'of traffiC: drivers at a seminar the depenment Program criucs, including the Ameri-rulinl that the roadblocks were un- we'I pull over every third, or every sponsored for Oranac County law can Civil Liberties Union, argue that oonsututional. Anti-drunken drtvtngtacttc to make coastal debut; it's contested legally By ROBERT HYNDMAN Of .. Dellr ......... The Laguna Beach Police Depart- ment will set up a sobriety checkpoint Friday in an effort to keep drunken drivers off the road. Traffic will be directed throur a roadblFk where motorists wit be Nlzonhonon A drl•e la under way to make Richard Nlzon '• blrtbplace a national hlatortc alte. A 1 Sports Ken Ammann and the Edison High Chargers are at the Los Angeles Sports Arena Wednesday./81 Entertainment Golden West College comes up with a zesty, fun-filled production of Shakespeare's "Twelfth Nlght.''/85 sto(>pcd and interviewed briefly by pohcc officers to determine if they are driving under t.he influence of alcohol or drugs, LL William Cavenaugh said .today. The exact location an6t hours of operation of the checkpoint wiU not be disclosed beforehand. fifth . or every 10th car. There enforcement aacncies, Cavenaugh stopping motorisu without probable Two lawsuits were filed qainst tbe shouldn't be any real delays." said. cause is unconstitutional. City of Anaheim followina the police The sobriety checkpoint in Laguna Laguna Beach police intend to '_'ln one judicial area: the check-department's sobriety-checkpoint Beach wiU be the fint by an Orange operate the sobriety checkpoint per-points were upheld. lo another area. proaram in December 1984, Coast city. However, ~a Beach iodically, especially during the they were struck down,'' Cavenaugh Anaheim Police LL Jim Thalman police will be assisted Fnday by the Oiristmas holiday season when ·wd. "Butpcndinganyfurtherappeal ·d California Hi&hway Patrol whose police believe more motorists tend to to the state Supreme Court, we're sail · M · · ... 1 ,..._ officers are well-acquainted with the .drive under the influence of alcohol. allowed •0 ~.. n one case. a uruC1.,-. vuurt • • .,.~ judge ruled against the aty and a pr<>IJ'8m. While the CHP and other -.cncies The Anaheim Police Department Superior Coun judae upbdd the In addition, Laguna Beach police have operated such checkpomts in bas discontinued its roadblocks after (Pleue eee 90BlllSTT I A2) Dellr ......... ., ............. Driver in chase deaths sentenced SantaAnangiven 15 years-to-life . for Mesa smashup By STEVE MARBLE Of ... 0.-, ........ A Santa Ana man was given twin sentences of 15 years to life in prison Monday in a precedent-setting case in which be was convicted of murdering two Costa Mesa teens in a 1984 car accident. Ruben Mayorga Valle, 23, is the fint person in Orange County con- victed of murder in a traffic collision. After listemng to the mothen of the two youths plead for a maximum sentenc.e. Superior Coon Judge Wil- liam McDonald ordered Valle to serve conaccutive 15-year-to-life sentences and added eight months for grand theft auto. McDonald <kscribcd.YallU crime as "horrifying." INDEX Advice and Games A 10 Off-duty P'011Dtain Valley police omcera intended to continue pickettnc lD front of City Hall antll tolllibt'• City Council meetln&. Tiley hope to win pa.bllc ~eport lD their drl•e to win hlCJler pay an4.a-rantee4 worklDC tama. Vallewasdrivingastolenvanwben he ~ a nop light in Costa Mesa on Dec. 12. 1984 and broadsided a car, ~ Ro Williamson and Billy Dearing. v>".ue was beina cbued by police at the time of the accidenl Births A6 Bulletin Board A3 Business A 7 -9 Classified B6-8 Comics A11 Police officers picket for higher pay Williamson and Dearing were both 17 and students at Estancia High School. They ~re driving to school when their Vollcswagen Bug was struck at the intersection .of J 9th Street and Placentia A venue. Death Notices B8 Entertainment BS Horoscope A 10 Opinion A 12 Paparazzi A6 Police Log • A3 Public Notices B8 Sports 81~ Television BS Weather A2 By ROBERT BARKER Ofh0.-,Netl'88 Off ~uty police officers fonned a picket line in front of Fountain Valley City Hal l today, ho(>ing to win public support in their dnve to win higher pay and a guarantee of current working terms. Detective Chris Kielich, vice presi- dent of the 50-membCT Fountain Valley Police Officers Association, said that officers are seeking pay increases to bring them up to t he pay of the average police officer in Orange County. "We're doing a better than average JOb," Kie lich said. "We just want the average county pay." Kielich said the unhappy officers would maintain their picket line throuJttout the day and tonight when the Clly Council meets at 8 o'clock.. The peaceful picketing climaxes a contract impasse that began when the previous contract expired last falJ in the city of 54, 900 people. Assistant City Manager Ray Kromer said today that when wage and other benefits are considered, Fountain Valley officers actually would rate 12th of 23 police depart- ments in Orange County if they accepted the latest 5.5 percent offer. The total package -pay and benefits -for a police sergeant currently stands at $63,251 ; actual pay for sergeants is $37,000, Kromer said. The total package for officers ss $53,078. The current pay alone for officers is $32,000, Kromer said. "We 're talking about salary." Kielich said. ••Jrvine, which has about the same tu base as Fountain Valley pays its officers, $3,223 a month. Our officers arc paid $2,506 a month." (Pleue eee POLICE/ A2) Valle. who was convicted Feb. 13 by a Superior Court jury in Santa Ana. asked the youth's parents for forgiveness before McDonald hand- ed down the sentenc.e, a court Qfficer Staled. Defense attorney Michael Horan claimed during the trial that the (Pleue eee 81tlfTElfClt/A2) Mother's slaying ruled an accident HB injury suit settled for $9 million By STEVE MARBLE Ofho.llyNolltalf By STEVE MARBLE Of .... 0.-, ........ Huntington Beach city officials agreed Monday to pay up to $9 million 1n damages to the family of a 22-year-old man who suffered critical head injunes in 1981 when be was hit by a car while riding his bicycle in a marked crosswalk. The settlement with the family of Philip Harbin Jr. was reached just minutes before the lawsuit was to go to a Superior Court jury in Santa Ana to determine dama$es. Jurors had already decided the city was liable for Harbin's 11\Juries. Harbin. who was 17 when the accident occurred, has been in hospi- tals and other medical institutions during the past five years and 1s underg~ing therapy at a treatment center 1n Texas. "He'll be receiving treatment the rest of his hfe," said Wyhe Aitken. the attorney representing Harb1n·s parents. Neal Moore. a Long Beach attome} who represented the Cll). said Huni- ington Beach agreed to the settlement out offear of what the Jury might do. He called the lawsuit a "'classic example of deep pockets ... ··0ttp pockets·· is a slang phrase used to describe lawsuits in which several defendants are named but only the one with the most money 1s targeted. The structured ~ttlemcnt calls for the city to pay more than SI m1llton 1mmed1ately and as rnucb as $8 milhon more over the course of Harbm's ltfc 1n medical costs and future payments. In addition to monthly medical payments ofS3. I 00. the ci ty agreed to pa y S 10,000 a month for the next two )'ears fo r Harbin to continue special treatment. Also. the ci ty agreed to pay Harbin graduating lump sum payments every Ii ve vears. The payments would start (Pleue eee UCJURY/A2) A Superior Court JUI')' refused to convict a 26-year-old Capistrano Beach man of murder Monday even though he admitted killing his mother and stuffing her body into the trunk of a car. Instead, jurors convicted Matthew James Lombard of involuntary man- slau$hter, which 1s punishable by. a maximum tenn of four years in prison. Salvage corilpany joins sea search for plane Jurors said they belteved the woman's death was accidental and that Lombard's efforts to cover up the death were the result of panic and shock. Deputy District Attorney Tom Matthew Jamea Lombard Goethals said he was "surprised and disappointed" by the verdict and predicted Lombard will be free within two years. Jurors deliberated the case almost three days before returning with the (Pleue eee JVllOR8/ A.2) By STEVE MARBLE Of!MO.-,Net•talf A private salvage company joined sheriffs Harbor Patrol boats today off the coast of Newport Beach as the search resumed for an airplane that apparently carried three people to their deaths Sunday when 1t crashed into the ocean. But the Coast Guard, which had Davis backs sea drilling, calls oil foes 'demagogues' Senate hopeful airs conservative views while in Mesa for campaign fundraiser By PAUL ARCRJPLEY OtllleO.-, ......... Calhng offshore 011 dnlhng oppc>- nent "demagogues" who aren't think1na of their nation's interests, state Sen. Ed Oaw1 said oocan 011 production can be accomplished without hannina the tnvironmcnt. Dunnaan 1nterv1cw with the Daily Pilot before attcnd1na a $1 25-per. person cocktail party fund-raiser 1n Costa Mesa. Davis espoused his conservative views on the issues including support for ofT&horc oil dnlhng, the Strategic Defense In· itsatsve, 1mmigrat1on reform and an active foreign pohcy in Central America. , He also said his campaign for the Rcpubhcan nomination for U .. senator hasn't been hurt by the Bobbs Fiedler affair, in which he chal'J~ that her a.mp offered ham $100.000 \ to pay his campaign debts 1f ht dropped out of the race. Davi, said 011 drilling off Cali- fornia's outer continental sbelfc.an be accomplished Wlthout harming the environment or destroy10g the esthetic value of the coastline. Citina t.he Grace Platform opcrat· l"J 22 miles off Santa Barbara, DaVls said "You can't even tee 1L That kmd of offshore development 1s important to the economy and sccunty. "The last thin& we'd want is to come in and put production an an unsa&htly locauon. "fhe people in Santa Barbara "1Crc allcttdly ant1-01I," he said. but thty headed the search. suspended 11.s efforts late Monday and said 11 would not resume its efforts until there 1s some ind1cat1on the plane·s ~kage has been found. ··tt docs not ~m possible they could have survlVed:· Coast Guard Lt. John Ochs said. The passengers were identtfied as Philip Teffiey of Irv ine. who was the pilot: Barry Krng of Newpon Beach. PAUL ARCHIPLEY PEOPLE IN THE NEWS voted down an 1nsuat1vc last Novem- ber calhng for the elimination of offshore oil production "The people who a.re against 1t arc demagogues who don't havt' the nation's 1ntere'lts at heart," O:iv1s said. The nauon''i inttf'C'Sts alw he 1n 1 nrona stand on Central Amenca. he said. ··we should declare a new Monroe Ooctnne for the We tern Hemi· sphere that says we will not tolerate (Pleue ... DA VIS/ A2) and Berugo Villa. 38, of Costa Mesa Coast Guard scuba d1' ers wcre joined MondaybytheOrange Count~ Sheriffs dive team at the crash sit~ Sheriffs Lt. Rohen RI\ as said ··They·ve collected all the debm. and there's ooihing left to look for ·· Rivas said. Debris included a pair of whcds. a baggage door. two scats. 1n~ulauon and a shoe. he said. Divers also found part of the fl1ghi manual beanng the registration number of the Archer Piper that had b«n rtnted from 4.cro Aite Center at John "avne Airport. i\n employet at Aero Flight said the three men had taken the plane out for a ns~ht tram1ng flight Tefficy was (Pleue Me SEARCH/ A2) Judge orders hearing on OC Jail crowding By LISA MAHONEY °' ... ~,... ..... Orange County officials ha'e ht'<'n called on the carpet to t'itplain ""h' they have not obeyed a fodeml court order requinng them to hm11 tht' number of inmates at the main mC'n·., Ja1l 1n Santa Ana to I .SOO U S. Distnct Court Judae \\lilham Gra) has set a March 20 ht'anna in Santa Ana at which supeTVISOI"\ mu'lt show caust for e'~tng the court· ordered I .SOO-tnmate hm1t at lea'it thrtt da)s last month, ~put) C oun~ ty CounSC"l Ed Duran ha'i ronfirmcd ··t would gucs'i he'" not comina to congratulate U!'," he ifttd Orange Count 'IUptrv"o" ""<'rt fou nd in contempt of coun a year aao tor not complymg with orders issued h) C 1ra)' in I ~78 to reheve ovcr- 1.ro""ding at the Main Jail. lira\ orde~ the count} to reduce the in.mate population from more than 2.000 to 1.500 b} Jan 15, a feat ~htch rcqu1~ a number of actions 1ncludmg the ha'it construction of modular Jail tluildinpat the James A Mu 1ck Honor Farm 1n El Toro He at ordCf'cd a further reduction o( inmate atthe Main Jail to 1.400 by Apnl I But the henff Otpanment has not bttn able to ta) under the cap dunng February dcsp1tc transfcmna mmat~ to modular hOUSll'\f and a icmporary tent Cit'\' at Mus1dt and (P\eue eee JAB-/ A2) r .. A :A9 * Of'Mge Cout OAll Y PILOT I Tuesday, March 4 , 1988 Probe of cracking homes over WEA THER Sunny, dry-weather lingering By TONY SAAVEDRA °' ... ..., ........ Upbolc:bna a $40,000 soil report that residents y 1 ta.mtcd. the Costa Mesa City Council refused Monday to order a oew ie<>luiiCJ\J study into land movemeot thac ha repQnedly damqed 147 homes. With little discus'lion. council members accepted a city inquiry that charactenzcd the geological report by consultant Leighton and Associates as "accurate and complete." Members of the North Costa Mesa Homeowners Association, the group that accused the lrvi ne·b&sed geolog1· cal firm two weeks ago of having a conflict of interest. did not speak at Monday's m~ting. In a memorandum 10 1hc council, City Manager Allan Roeder said 11 would cost aboul $50.000 to take rePort 81.111he mo11on died tor lack of a second from council memtxrs wary . of the legaJ ram1fica11on~ The cny is fac1na I 07 hab1h1y claims -some asking for $1 million apiece -from residents whose homes have tcportcdly cracked be- CJ\U$C oflhe around movement. Many of those claim have been denied by the council. setting the stage for homeowners to file suit against the city. More than 80 claim~ are from residents represented by the San Francisco law finn of Patrick Catalano. a specialist in land move- men1 litiption. Dissatisfaction with the repQrt by Leighton and Associates heightened after residents learned the firm was indirectly linked with mall-owner C.J. Sqerstrom & Sons While working on the cracluna homes )tudy, 1he acoloaic.al consuh· unt abo helped prepare 1he en· v1ronmcntaJ unpact rePon for the propo5ed 98-acre "Home Ranch" business center -another con· troverstAl Scaerstrom project io north Costa Mesa However. Roeder told council members Monday that technically Leighton and Associates was hired by the city-and not the Segerstroms - to work on the "Home Ranch" repQrt. , Roeder continued that he could f1nd no indication that the study on land slippage was prejudiced or compromised by work on the other report. another in-depth look into the source of crocks plaguing homes between unOower Avenue,. South Coast Dnve. Fa1rv1ew Road and Bear Street SOBRIETY CHECK ... From Al m north Costa Mesa. decision. T)le city of An~he1m ap- The city-comm1ss1oned soil~ stud} pealed to the state Fourth Q1strict la~t year cor\Cludcd that homes were Appellate Court. which refused to cracking bccauS<' of clay soil that had hear the case. Its refusal allowed the a tendency 10 expand and contract. Supenor Court decision to stand, However. homeowners have clupg Thalman said. to susp1c1ons 1hat the damage was But in the other case, a Juvemle caused by CODStruCUOD of the-Cl~-OGUft -which IS a branch of the approved South Coas1 Plaza mall Superior Court -ruled in favor of annex along Bear Street. the city's nght to operate sobnety They claim excavauon for an checkpoints. That ruling. Thalman underground parking lot has drained said, was appealed by the defendant ground water from ben~atll, adjacent and is pending before the Fourth nt'1ghborhoods, causing the laf1d to.· District Appellate Court.'· settle and houses to crack And in a separate case. the ACLU Roeder said thernun,·11 could hire a filc<1 a lawsuit against the city. But the geologist for $2.000 to S3,()(X) to audit state First District Appellate Court the report by Leighton and A't· ruled in the city's favor. ~oCta tes. Based on that ruling. other law ' Councilman Dave Wheeler o;ug-enforcement agencies arc allowed JO gested the audit be conducted to operate sobnety checkpQints. But further validate the cralktng homes Anaheim ha5 decided to discontinue 11s pro~m until the appellate case involving the Juvenile driver 1s heard. Thalman said. "While ll was operating, we had overwhelming suppQrt for the sobrie- ty-checltpoinl program," Thalman said. ··The idea isn't with these programs is to act as a deterrent to keep drunken drivers off the street, and we feel it's effective." Laguna Bea~h police agree that the program's high visibility may keep tipsy drivers from getting behind the wheel in the first place. In addition, the po)ice department has long offered a "tipsy taxi" program in which officers give local residents a lift home if they feel they are too intoxicated to be driving. .;:·But It only works if they come to us first," Cavenaugh says. "Jf our officers stop them. it's too late." A watm wind trom the eut wlll kMP Southetn Callfornla In 111 1unny, dry, .. rly-aumm.r mode. the Natlonal Weather S.rvloe reportl Mid-~ b.aehg~I. however, wlll find tog and low elOYdt elong the cout In the morning and evening houra thfough Wednnday. Alter the haze t>urn1 oft. ternperaturn should PMk In the low to mid 801 along the cout with high• In the 701 to low 80. Inland. Ton1Qht'1low11re expected to range lrOt'I\ 48 to 60. Along the 6range Coaat It wlll be mostly sunny and warm Wednesday. Patchy low cloud• along the south eoa1t tonight with hazy akin and local MnM fog elaewhere. Hight Wednesday ranging from the low end mid 60s at the beachea to the 70. end lower 801 further Inland. Lowa tonight 46 to 60. From Point Con~ptlon to the Mexican Border -: Inner watert: light varlable wind• night and morning hoora becoming aouthweat to west 8 to 18 knots elternoon and evening houri Wednesday. Weaterty swell 2 to 3 reet. Night and morning low cloud• and patchy denae tog, malnly over south water•. Partial clearing 1nd hazy 1un1hlne In the a.lternoon Wednesday U.S .• Temps .iun-. 2 35 ~en., 41 29 l .. v~., eo 66 Hlgll. IOw !Of 24 llOuft enotng •I ~ pm Unle ~ 911 : ---------------------Albtony 4' 18 ~ ~ ,. ,.,_ v-., se n z=que : ~ "4IMllllMCll .. 66 Calif. Temps v_.ii.viy 12 40 Anellof9Qe 74 04 M..._.. 37 37 :::::~City ~ : ~w°!:0t1y :! :~ ::J'.:",..:0'4-•-*'0••~fm41 Surf Report iw.un 7 5 41 Oro«>a 4 1 2t Eutal<a 5 7 51 8attlmore 44 35 Of1endo 72 52 Ft~ 76 63 llltmlngf\wn t1 33 ~It 41 3t LM>cae1tf 75 44 80lte es 3s "-• ae 91 Loa Ange1M 13 &1 Botton 45 21 "'1lllMKQl't 42 32 Oek!MCI ee 54 l!klfl-'O 42 29 Pottlancf,Ma 41 20 Paao Aob19t 75 41 ea.pe. 541 32 Pon1en0.0r ~ eo 42 Rad 8tu1I 10 62 Ctl«IM1on.8 C &3 41 Pr--43 t2 Aadwood Olly 70 52 Olettwton.wll 41 38 RWu~·-· $1 32 seer-to 11 52 CflWIOfle.N C 84 31 ~ ....,, 54 32 ~ 12 41 ~ 52 25 ,_,., SI 37 San Diego 87 55 CNceoo 311 28 Alctlmond 44 37 Sen FrtnCICO 72 65 llZ:alMAN 1.3 latr 1-3 '* . .., ,., 1-3 pcMW •·3 poor 1·2 poor 13 , ... C~tl 38 33 81 LOUl8 43 38 Sloctiton 70 411 c~ 31 30 St Pel~ T ampe 71 ?! Hlgll, low lot 24 hou<t tndlng •I 5 p m Tides Columbua,Oll 38 33 Sall I.Mt• City 80 gv Apj)le Valley 80 40 O.,._Ft Wooh 85 .44 San AntonlO .. 78 4S a.r.tow 80 411 Oeylon ,29 32 SMttle 11 47 Big &Mt 82 31 TOOAY Oen-51 29 St>t.-.eport 7 I 41 81t11op 71 40 s.c.ot1C1 high 8 52 p m .3 3 o.. MOW-38 34 spo11-U 311 Blythe llO se S.Cond tow 10>21 p._m. 2 1 O.lrot1 38 3~ S\'Tacuta 43 25 ca1a11na 82 52 OuMh 311 26 TOI*<• 50 29 Long 8Ho11 72 54 El Pa.a n 39 Tue.on Bl 541 MonrO'l1e 78 51 Falrt>enu 07 ?4 Tul.. 84 3~ Monl•ey 12 48 FarQO 38 111 Wuhlngton 45 3.,. Mt. Wlleon ee 44 l'lagtlalf Sii 28 WICl\lla 82 34 ~ BMch 88 54 Grlll>d Rapldt 40 30 Wllll-Ba1t• « 30 Ontatlo 74 48 ftl>WlaC>AY 4:43 • m 12 27 pm 7.22pm 10 !!Op m 53 01 37 25 GtMI FaHI 85 45 Ptilm Springe 11 58 &in .... IOOity '" 5 52 pm ..... ~ ~ r. Extended :=.,dine> ~~ :! :ednetd..,ate 11 arunch•••-oein Houelon 75 60 NIOIJt and momtng IOw-tnd log San Gabri.I 78 54 5 52 pm lnO~ 38 37 Wllll hazy •llwnoon auMIWM Hight In Sen JoM 72 41 Moon 'Miia lodey et 11 43 a m . ltMe Jedlton.Mt 11 38 11\e uppedlOtto upper 70t lows In the SMI• Ana 75 63 Weon.deyat3 I lam . ancletttegeln JedltonYllle 841 $8 mtcl-40e end 50L Sanla C<ur 87 47 0 e1 12 47 p.11'1 INJURY SUIT SETTLED FOR $9 MILLION ... DA VIS BACKS OFFSHORE OIL DRILLING .•. From A l at SS0,000 and would reach SJOO 00() b) Harbin's 52nd b1rthda\. Ironically. Huntington Beath Cit) officials rejected a S2 6 million claim filed by Harbin's parent<; 1n 1981 According to coun documentc;. a ca r dnven by a teen-age girl 'itruck Harbin in a cro'ii.walk at the inter· section of Warner A venue and Nichols trcct. Although another motorist had paused 10 let Harbin pass. the girl swung around the stopped car and struck Harhin. The girl was not clled 1n the accident. The girl's insurer settled out r•t court for S3CXUX>O. Moore said "We were left holding the bag:· thl' ell) 's anornc> ..aid Th" Cit} ( ounc1I ordered a trallic signal installed at the intersection !><:Vt'ral wet'~ latt'r According 10 the law!.utl. paren1s and adm1n1s1rators at Liberty Chm- ttan School had been campa1g01ng for improvements at the 1ntcf'St'Ct1on for more than seven year!> before Harbin was IOJUred. Administrators at nearby Oak view School said they bused students across Warner Avenue rather than permit them to cross the busy street Ralph Le} va. the c11y'~ former traflic engineer. admmcd dunn_g 1he 211 week tnal that Cll\ ofltc1al' considered the interse<:lton to he dangerous. At the ume of the accident. Leyva said the intallat1on of a traffic signal had long been delayed by lack of money and red tape 10 securing a federal grant. Harbin suffered senous head IO· JUnes in the accident and remained in a coma for two weeks. Aitkens said He said the youth later was moved to an institution that specializes 1n head 1njunes. "He's of normal intelligence now but he has no understanding of cau~c and effect," the attorne} said. ·· 1 t'<. like a computer that's been part1all~ shut down." From A l any government that 1ssubser~1ent to the Soviet Union or any other for~gn power:· Davis said. Calling Cuba and Nicaragua Soviet puppets. he said the United States should encourage democracy for its Latin neighbors. "As bad as Somoza wac;. at least he was an indigenous pirate. and that'~ a whulc lot better than a fort'1gn ~el of pirates." he said. "The president should say. 'Get out of there by 1he authority of democ- ra<.:y of the 21c;t (entur} of the Western Hemisphere.' .. SEARCH FOR PLANE ... Davis said the nat1on'c; interests also wo uld be served with implcmcn- 1at1on of the Strategic Defense In- 1t1at1 .. e. popularly called Star War"i. From Al dc~cribcd a~ an experienced 1ra101ng rulot 1 he search was St)mted b> 1hc underwater terrain as well ac; fog 1hat rolled over the ocean late Monda-. R1,as said . "fl 's 1n an area tha1'<, 'Cr) •neep.'' he said "A httle further in }OU might ha .. e a shot at 11 ·· ( oast ( ruard Pell) Officer ( 1rc:g Drew said the cra~h s11e "'a" in watl'r 1ha1 was at lea.;t 180 fee t deep. Ri vas said two c;hcnff'> H11rhor Patrol boats and a helirnpter Y.ould rnc;rx·ct the <Kean again wda) hut h<imng an} development!>, would 'U'>p<:nd their o;earch h) nightfall .\ priva te \al,agc compan\ ba'>cd 1n ( arl'>had will h•ep <.earchtn!! for 1hc ;mplane wreckaf(e ii ( 011'>1 < ruard SE,VT''E'NCE ( 1ting o pt1m1st1c: prcd1ct1ons that [j,, ~ • ....,.___..........· !L~ouldinock 0111 90 percent of utlic1al \aid \ c;pokes .... oman for the From A l an) incoming missiles. he said 01gh1 S\.huol v.ould not !Mi) v.hether .\menca's retaliatory ab1hty would her mm pan\ had hired the sahage coll1<>1on wac; an accident and that remain intact and thus d1~ourage the crt'" Valle was a psychouc state from years Soviets from attempting a surpnsc \fore than a doz.en wilnl''>!.essawor of drug abuse He also said Valle had attack. heard 1hc uash off tht• "lt•wport Pier eaten a large quantity of sugar-filled "My theol) 1s the liberals think th1..· at 11 14 pm '°)unda} ~'1ood before the coll1s1on. MAD doctrine (mutually a'isured ~a tape-recorded police 1nterv1ew destruction) 1s good. and thcy·rl' One v.iines.,. Jim Holl;. ol NcY.port pla)'ed for Jurors. Valle.sta1ts that he afraid DI would be destab1h1ing. Beach. said the plane wa., flying ca'tt fcelc; no remorse for the dead youths "In fact, that was the Soviet "'hen 11 suddenh veered out 0"er the and wanted to "kill people lots of response It's 1n1cres11ng that Ameri· ocean. banked lo the we\t and then them." ' t:a's liberals have had 1he identical ~pla-.hed mto ltu: OLcan But 1n lhe same 1nterv1ew. Valle reacuon ac; the oviets. r he accident "a' lhl' c;eu1 nd 1n a sobs and sa>s he did not intend 10 kill "SDI must be good or Crorbachev "'l'Ck here Deanng and Williamson. He tells wouldn't be so upset - or the r>e,elopcr Vvall t>r "irntt B1ddk nf police he deserves to die. liberals," he said. '·"·v.pon Beath wa~ killed Wcdnc't· A psychologist who testified for the While Davis believes SDI will keep da\ when his plane crashed 1n a defense said Valle was suffering a out enemy m1ss1le!., he t!i frustrated parking lot about a quartn mile from "ps)chot1c reaction" at the time ot that the federal government has d one John Wa) ne Airport. the accident and beha'led hkc a h1tlc to keep out illegal 1mm1grants. "scared rabb11" when he saw police Blaming a stnng of U.S. attorneys were chasing him general for failing to enforce 1.mmigra- POLICE PICKETING ... Pro~cutor Rick King insinuated t1on laws at the border, he said that the explanallon for Valle's reek-Washington should probabl) quad- less dnv1ng was akin to the so-called ruple the number of border guards "Twinkie defense," named for the "The bad guys have been the defense used by Dan White in his tnal attorneys general who haven't done a for killing the mayor of San Francisco good JOb It begins and end.,· there and a supervisor. White's attorney >\n)thmg else is asinine. From Al Polite nl·g1111a11ir \tcpt-cn \1h l'I said thl· 3\<;1x.1at1on I'> \Cck1ng J f1 I percent ra1\e lor 11tlic<:'r<i and a f1 117 pcrlent pa' h1l..l0 lor <;crgeant\ '~h1k the lll) I\ ofkring a 4 ) rx·r(l'nl tnCfl ,J\(' \il\rral\ll\J ld thcut\. 1'tning .. t•• Wk•· a"'~l' .. a tlauc.t· pr<1lt'lltrl)( pohlt' hencfit<. 'iUl h a\ wages h.o4lr\. work- ing lOnd111ons and pmmouon c;1an- ddrd., and t'i tr')mg lo cut ha1..k on 11\crt1mc pa> < lf'l 1c<"r'> Y.OU Id ha' e ICI work I 71 hour\ tn a four-we<:'k work pcnod he lore be1ngehg1hlc tor overttmt' pay. hc '>atd argued years of eating JUnk food "It shows how stupid people get helped cauc;c the murders v.hen they go to Washington." Horan called the 30-ycar sentence He finds Southern Californians excessive and vowed an appeal. equally stupid for suffering their according to reports. traffic woes w11hout demanding solu- ti ons. "Orange County is a transit disas- JURORS RULE SLAYING ACCIDENT AL ... ter area. Try to get out of Irvine in peak hours. How so many interesting, From Al 'crdiu Judge I rnn;ml \.h Urnk '>l'I c;entenc1ng tor .\pnl I I Lombard. who ha' hcen 1n <>rangt· t ounty Jail s1nte h1\ am''>I on I ch 20 I IJ85. claimed his mother·, death 1m Ft:b 8 wa-; acodcntal In a \ 1deotapc of" p1Jlt(c 1n1en 1cw played for Juror<. l om hard ~•d his 1nto·<1cated mother put .1 hand on hie; shoulder and rhat <.he kll to the flour and struc k her head ~hen he tnt:d 10 hrush awn her h.tnd · ~he grabbed me and I gue\\ I knocked her down .. h<' \,ltd dunng the '1deotapcd intcr.,.1ev. Lombard also adm1t1ed that he wa<; not sure wht'thcr h1i. mother was dead when he put her body on a blanket in the trunk of her 1972 ford Mavcnck ··1 Just got scared." he told police But Goethals told Juror~ that Emily Mae Lombard was "hog-lied" with rope and wire and blindfolded w11h a ~~A~~E Daily Pilat MAIN OFFICE • •.•_,,. A c.r~,·11 • ·~n <>• •• ....... tlO'" ........ . ~· ,....,.~ ... , r. .. , ..._.,. ul C"°Y'9'°' • • VOL 71, NO. 13 hath towel. The prosecutor said the v1d,cotapc al'io \howcd that Lombard at fir'it lir d to police 1oves11ga1orc; hv claiming h had nothing to do with his mother 'i death "Wh) would I kill m> mom·1•• Lombard asked at one point in the interrogauon "\he take'> care of me .. While C,octhal' o,.a1d an autop!I) revealed \1gm of trauma to the woman·~ head and che'il. Public Defender Joel Baruch '>aid 1he wom!Pi apparent!) died of a heart attack -the rc'iult o f •itre'i'i and 1he head 1n1urv Goethah a!.kcd Juro~ to return v.1th a verdict of second-deg.rec murder, punishable by IS years to hfc 1n 1a1I Baruch \a1d Mr\ I ombard hara~\cd and tormented her son becau~e of hi\ 10ab1lity to hold onto a 1ob. S11ll. Lombard loved his mother, he said Lombarti's first murder tnal came to an abrupt halt when JUrors were accident.all} shown a gnsly picture of the woman's body as It appeared to police officers when they opened the trunk of the car five days after the woman died. McBnde \31d the photograph was prcJud1c1al and declared a m1stnal The )('(Ond tnal opened Feb 18. 1986 Lombard reported his mother m1ssmg three days after her death. When her car was located two days later in . an Clemente. he reportedly asked pohce to open the trunk. He was arrested several days later afte1 confe!>stng. D•lly Pilot Dell very It Guar•ntMd """"""' ,.,.,., " , ... 00 Justcall 642-6086 t•·•••.--Dy •Joi:.,.•rw-•Y•fr,., """' r'"*-" CoVt • t•• ,.. ····~ v. hat du )OU hke about the Daily Pilot., What don't you hke'> (all the num~r above and your message will be recorded. trtnscnbcd and de· h\ered to the appropnate editor fhe \Gme 24-hour answenng service ma) be u~d to record letters to the editor o n any topic C ontnbuto~ to our utters column must include 1he1r name and telephone numtxr for venfkat1on Tell\ u\ Y.hat'\ on your mind 5•'"' •• •AC S·A••· " '°" ,,, "Ct 1..-.~ '°"' °'. !>'( 1 • ... • ""'"'• ·o •,.,. •"" •°"" c "' .... ,... 1@' •Jrffl"~ Clrcul•tlon Telephonff v ... •'O" (;.o._,.!' ••n ~ ( :w prosperous and successful people have tolerated such a system is incomprehensible." he said. Davis said a lack of leadership and planning in California 1s partly re· sponsiblc for that problem, and called on Congress to force the adminis· tration to give the stak' its fair share of federal highway dollars. He also suggested a ballot prop· osition asking voters whether high- way users should pay higher fu el taxes for transportation needs. "I look at all the docile human beings sitting in their cars and _listening to the radio, and I get so damn mad I want to get out and throw bombs or something." Davis said the Fiedler affair that dom1oa1ed headlines during the early pan of lhe race hasn't harmed 1u.s ability to raise funds or red'-!ced support for his campaign. He said that he raised S 16,000 at a previous cocktail party in Chatsworth and raised another $6.000 in an encouraging response to a recent d1rect-maiJ appeal. A dinner for 500 in April at the Century Pla.za was half i.old out even before inv1tat1ons were mailed. ht> said. "Those three examples lead me to believe I haven·1 been hurt," Davis said. "I'm doing as well now as I was before the Fiedler caper." Davis also said people statewide State Sen. Ed Dana have praised him for alerting the Los Angeles District Attorney's office to what he alleges was an offer by the Fiedler camp to pay off S 100,000 of his campaign dcbt'i 1f he "'o uld drop out of the race. A judge later threw out the charJeS apins1 Fiedler and her campaign aide, Paul Clarke. "What it will do to her campaign only time will tell," Davis said. JAIL OVERCROWDING ... From Al filling all available bed'i at Theo Lacy Branch Jail tn Orange. According to a coun-appQinted observer, there were more than 1,500 inmates in the Main Jail at least three times last month. And because of incomplete statjstics for some days. 11 1s possible that the county violated Gray's order several more times. Special Master Lawrence Grossman said in a letter to the judge. IJuran said he docs not know why the Sheritrs Department exceeded the limits set by Gray. He said he was expecting a report from the Sherifl's staff this morning. "The obvious an'i\\er 1s more 1nmate'i ... he said. But Grossman sa}s the county has not done all 11 can to reduce inmate population. It does not. for example, use citations to free people brou~t t~ the Jail on suspicion of committing minor. non-violent cnme'i. The Amencan ( 'ivil Liberties Umon, which sought the contemp~ find1 ng against the county last March, maintains that suspects in m inor crimes should be given a citation and ordered to appear for arraignment instead of being jailed when they are unable to raise bail. Cornfortat)e. feminine. feel pretty 1n this batiste conon dress wrth I lankerd 1ief hnen collar A Maureen Culhnane Design WESTCUFF PLAZA. NEWPORT BEACH, CA (714) 942-7081 Brain infections talk at UC Irvine Dr. Stanley B. Pnainer, proftuor ofneurolOI)' at the UC San Francisco School of Medicine. will present a lecture on an unusual infectious aaent that causes dqencratave neuroloaicaJ diseuea Weclncs- day at 7 p.m. in the Science Lecture Hall at UC Irvine. The propam is free and open to the public. Call the Neurosctence Assoctation office at 8S6-S847 for more information. Frlend•hlp Day planned. American-Can.dian Friendship Day will be observed Wednesday at the L&auna Beach Lawn Bowling Oub when 1SCanadian6owlen will join SO local club memben for a social tournament at Heisler Park. The games will start at 12:30 p.m. following a lunch at the clubhouse. Call club prcsjdent Ray Nichols at 496-2978 or tournament chairman Page Beckett at 494-2628 for more information. Hebrew coune la Laguna Chabad of Laguna· will offer a course· in beginning Hebrew starting today and running for six weeks at no charge. The class is geared for beginners with little or no previous experience. The class will be held at 21542 Weslex Ave .. South Laguna, and more information .1s avatlable at 494-4282 or 786-5000. · Brush palntlng dl•played OrientaJ Reflections, an exhibit of Chinese brush painting by American artists, will be on display from today through March 29 ·at the Huntington Beach Library, 711 1 Talbert St., Huntington· Beach. · Supervision work•bop set A supervision workshop. introducing partici· pants to the re1~nsibilities ofa supervisor, will be offered Tuesdays, beginning tonight, in the Univer- sity Community Center's multi-purpose room in Irvine. Sponsored by Irvine Valley College, the course will include organization, duties, human relations and training, and will be taught by management consultant Janet Christensen Masuda. The cost is $6S and more information is available at SS9-3333. ChbJeae cuisine offered Gourmets can sample a Chinese-sty le buffet with I 0 en trees at a Saddleback College program on _Chinese cuisine. which meets today at 6:30 p.m. in t. prepartfon for next Tuesday's dinner. The cost of the slide presentation and lecture is SIS and does not include the pnce of the dinner. which 1s optional and runs about $20. Call S82-4646 forfurther information~ Voliinteen needed The High Hopes brain trauma learning center in Costa Mesa 1s 1n need of willing people to voluntecc time in assisting with head-injured young adults in group-supcrv1sed class situations. physical condition. swimming and other act1v1tics. • No expenence is necessary and volunteers may set their own hours. Call the center at 646-74S8 for further information. TumbUng, dance offered -----a asses in dance and tumbling are continuing at t..be South Coast'YMCA. 27781-B La Paz Road in Laguna Niguel. Oasscs arc available for children from 3 to I 2 years of age in tumbling Tuesday and Thursday afternoons and dance on Wednesday af\emoons. CALENDAR Tuesday. March 4 • 6 p.m., LapAa Beacb City Coa.acU. Council Chambers. SOS Forest Ave. • 7 p.m .. Oceu View Scbool Dl1trict, District Board Room. 16940 B St., Huntington Beach. • 7 p.m., HutiDston Beacl9 Plu.D..la1 Com· ml11lon, City Council Chambers, 2000 Main St. • 7 p. m .. HuttD1ton Beacb City Scbool Dl~rlct, 204S I Craimer Lane. • 7:30 p.m., Irvine Unified Scbool District Board of Ed.acatlon, District Administration Center. SOSO Barranca Parkway. Wednesday, March 5 • 9:30 a.m .. Oru1e Couty Board of Saper· vl1or1, county administration building, 10 Civic Center Plaza in Santa Ana. • 7 p.m.m HutlD1ton Beacb Plallll1D1 Com· ml11lon. City Council chambers, 2000 Main St. PoucE Loe OrangeCoulDAllY PtlOTfT~. t.Woh4, 1MI • A8 Minister faces molestation charges By PAUL ARCHlPLEY °' ... ..., ....... ' ~ minister from Fountain Valley was arrested Monday on ch.araes of motestma a I 0-year~ld &irl. The Rev. Merle Edwin Means is beina charse<f with one count of child molesta· lion and one count of se~ua.I assault, S&Jd Fountain Valle¥ police Lt. Rick ChriJtensen. He was booked into Orange County Jail The Twilight Zone? Monday, with bell Kt at S2,SOO. ArTaian- ment will be acheduled al West Orange County Munlcipal Court. Means. 43, is pastor of the Cburcb of Reli&ioui Science, 10000 Paramount Blvd. in DOwney. Accordina to Christensen, tbe victim, who also lives in Fountain Valley, iJ the daU&hter of a female friend of Means. The aJJeaed incident occurred Dec. 28. Means and the &irl were sittina in ·a chair watchiaa TV. and the girl had fallen u leep, Christmsen said. Her mot.her wasn't at home. Means allcpdly was fondJjna the &ill while she slept. The phone raoa and she jumped up. Means told the arresun4 officers on Monday be wu merely J.IVlDI the &ill a mas.sa,e while she slept. Christensen said. The victim told a prlfnmd about tbe incident, who told btt mother. That woman m tum talked to the victim's mother, and she <;alled the police. MCIJ'll &old police tbe .Dtt"a mother _... tr)'lna to aiet beet at him 1*8.-be called off a planDed wcddift4. ~aid. However, police said they are planniQS to file uotherclwte ~ Meam for an earlier .. massaaioa.. inddent with the wne 1Jrl that bad been Wimelted by a 14- ycar~ld boy who was visitiQI. ~ be was afraid to •Y anythina •• the time," Christensen aid. Means bas no put crimmal re<lOf'd. be said. 3heldin separate fracases By ROBERT BAUER °' .. .,... ........ A wife allegedJy chasin& her husband with a butcher knife, a husband reportedly pointing a gun at his spou5C and an 18- year-old youth allqedly holding a jqged beer bottle to the throat of a l~ycar-old boy were arrested in separate assault cues in Huntington Beach, a police spokeswoman said Monday. In the first incident, Charlotte Swarbrick. 32, came home alJegedly after drinking and reportcidly picked a fight wit.h her husband James. also 32, accordina to ~!!!!!Ill Bergstrom. She grabbed a kitchen knik ~ -and chased her husband. who grabbed their J..year-old cb.iJd and hid behind a locked bedroom door at their home in the 6000 block of Julien StreeL ttt called '~-9.!~ poHce on the Emergency 911 line. Police arrested Mrs. Swarbrick and lodged her in -------~ city jail on $10,000 bail. Bcrutrom said. ~,... ..... .., '--rwr-In the second incident, John Taticb, 36, UC lrrine •tudent Kirk McCune of HantJ.DCton Beach wa1ka amona a futurlatic-looklnC foremt of metal 9C111ptu.ra beside the road tn front of UCI'• Fine Arta Vllla.tre. . alleaedly attempted to choke llis wife Kathleen, 34. and then allegedly potnted a Ruger .3S7 Magnum at her. Police . arrested Tatich after Mn. County's job opportunities gain 4.5 percent during '85 By USA MAHONEY Of ... 0..,,... tt.11 Orange County employment op- ponunities grew a moderate 4.5 percent in •. 19&,5 • wj~ c.x~siDn in the eon~ in(iustry taking the lead. Wime boosts in constructi on hiring totaled 1 S.2 percent, overall employment opponunil~nacased o~J~ fa&Hn the year JUSt ended compared to 1984 when JObs grew by 8.8 percent. statistics released by the state Employment De· velopment Department late last week show. Compared to Orange County's boom years when the number of jobs skyrocketed by 10.S percent in 1977 and 10.8 percent in 1978. I 985's employment picture may be characterized as "pluping along about the middle of the road,· said Labor Market Analys t Alta Yetter Gale. The number of worken increased by 9.000 for a January 1986 labor force total of 1.11.J million. Orange County gained 3.3 percent more JObs in 1981 while 1982 employment 61ures recorded a 1.8 percent loss. Mild growth occurred again in 1983 when 3 percent more emplOY!flent opponumties were reported, she said. But, despite an 8.8 pcrcentjump in jobs in I 984. "the rate of ~owth has been slowing" smcc the late 14'0s, vale satd. Turning to the county's unemployed workers. Gale noted that the I 98S JObless rate averaged 4.4 pcrccnL The figu're 1s rcpreseotativc of monthly rates wtucb hovered just above 4 percent for much of 198S. Fewer Orange County residents re- ported that they were out of work in January compared to December I 98S. Statistics adjusted to a March 1985 benchmark show unemployment sliding from 3.8 percent in December to 3. 7 percent for January. Last year, 4.6 percent of the work force was Job hunting 1n January. • January unemployment fell well below the seasonally adjusted state rate of S.8 percent. Nationally, unemployment stood at 6.7 percent during January. The na- tional rate is also adjusted to take expected seasonal fluctuations into accounL Marin and San Mateo counties recorded thrtowest unemploymenrratcS m Call- fom1a with only 3.6 percent of the labor force unemployed. In Ora.nge County. wholesale trade employment increased by 3.100 during January as more strilcing Teamsters and Meat cutters returned to work after settling a contract dispute. Retail payrolls fell by 7,100 as holjday sales workers were let go. The number of factory jobs decreased by 1,300 wit_h the largest losses rcponed m machinery. furniture. chemicals and rubber and plastics industries. Tatich's 12-year-old son ran to a nci~· bor's house to call police after Tatacb allegedly ripped out the telephone in the residence. located in the 17000 block of Rotterdam Lane. He also was arrested on suspicion ofa.ssault with a dcadl).' weapon and lodged in jail on S 10,000 bail In a third incident. an 18-year-old boy allegedly struck a I 0-year-old boy in the arm with his fist and then held a broken bottle to his throat in an argument Friday at Scapine Circle in Huntingt.On Harbour. Mather allegedly came to visit the young boy's older brother when the two became embroiled in an argument over who owned an cxpcns1ve sports car in the dnvcway at the rcsiden~. Services Thursday for boating vtcti111 Services for Boyd ·Pb1Uip Reber. who died in a fishina boat accident last weekend. wilJ be held al 2 p.m. Tbunday in Santa Ba.rbe.ra. Services are scbeduJed;at Welch-Ryce Mortuary, 450 Ward Drive. Reber. of San~· is survived by his wtfe Cindy and thc1t daughter. and his mother. Fay Reber of Corona del Mar. Jn lieu of flowers, the family asks that donations be made to Orangcwood home for abused children. at 3400 lrv;.oc. Newpon Beach. NOW rallying pro-choice birth control march By USA MAHONEY Of 1M D~ l'l'ol Ii.ft Orange County chapters of the National Organization for Women are helping to coordinate a marcfl for reproductive freedom in Los Angeles March 16 in which at least SOO county residents arc expected to participate. As of last week. county residents had reserved enough tickets on a caravan to the National March for Women's Lives in Los Angeles to fill I 0 53-seat buses. said Wend y Lozano, NOW South Coast Chapter spokeswoman "The pos111ve response is tremendous.·· she said. The march, which Lozano said will draw participants from Texas. Nevada, Ari- zona. Oregon. Washington and Alaska. is intended to hammer home a woman's rig.ht to reproductive freedom through abortion and b1nh control, she said. Ctting local and national surveys that show the maJOnty of Amencans support a woman·s nght to have an abortion. Lozano said marchers will be v1S1ble proof that "America is pro-choice." NOW 1s coordinaung the march for about 2SO sponsonng groups along wnh a similar demonstration set for March 9 in Washington, D.C. to counteract effons by others to outlaw or restrict abonions. Lozano said. ThoS( efforts include legisla11ve rem· edies like the just failed "choose hfe·· 1ntt1at1ve auempt. proposed amendments to funding bills and a nder on the Ctv1l Rights Restoration Act 10 additJon to harassment. arson and bombings at abortion and birth control clinics. she said "California and Orange Count} are pro- cho1ce. Ever) year. the Orange Count~ Jo\nnual Surve} comes out announcing that over 60 percent of our residents suppon abon1on on demand. When the numbers arc added of those who suppon abon1on under certain conditions. this percentage swells drarnaucally toward 9 1 percent." Lozano said. The Los Angeles march begJns 1n Century City and ends with an all.<fay rall} in Cheviot Hills Park. Buses will leave from four Orange County locations early m the morning to amvt' at the assembly point by 10 a.m Tickets ma" be reserved b~ calhni 520-0669. Irvinegirl, 10,diesafter falling out of moving van necklace were reponed stolen from a home 10 the 1900 bloc~ of Pt. Clandgc last week. La&una Beacb A commc-rc1al burglary was rC'· ported" Monday at a Tree Top Lane address. Musical instruments were stolen sometime between Feb. I 0 and 14. the victim said The value of thr loss has yet to be detennined Irvine man arrested on drug, teen sex charges .\ 54-year-old Irvine man sur· rendered to the authonucs after a 14· month invest1eauon linked him to ~x and narcoucs offenses mvoh 1ng teen-age gJrls. In 1ne pohcc said toda) committed against Juvenile' . furnishing m11)ors w1th narcotic' and possession pf narco11cs. A !~year-Old Irvine girl who flew out of a van when a passenger door swung open died at the hospitaJ Monday from injuries she sustained in the Feb. 24 acetdcnt. Su1.anne Renee Merritt was pr<>- nounced dead at 2:25 p.m. at Western Medical Center in Santa Ana1 where she had been treated for head injuries suffered in the accident, Irvine Sgt. Tom Hume said. Hunttniton Beaob A gum<hcw1ng bandit reportedly walked into a Brookhurst Street branch of Downey savings and demandecl cash Monday af\emoon He aot way with S 1.800. p<?hce said. He wu described a a 6-foot. 17~ pound white male w1\h thinning blond hair and a big nose • • • The assistant manager of a Brookhurst Street Pina Hut reported that someone broke into the office and stole $260 in Cl'h Monday. She told police she suspects an employee committed the theft • • •• Someone reportedly stole a $140 red Mumy OMX bicycle from the front yard of a home 1n 'he 17100 block of Enatewood Monday oantaln Valley SomCQne reponedly hrokr into a The accident occurred at S:36 p.m. in Irvine when Memtt was riding in a 1977 Dodge van with her 16-year-old sister. The van was traveling cast· bound on Bryan A venue when Mer· rin's sister made a left tum onto Westwood. The passenaer door flew open and Merritt fell out, striking her head, Hume said. Traffic invesuaator Doug Coffing home in the 9SOO block of Carnation and stoic SSO m cash Monday • • • A wallet conuiin1ns $440 in cash wu reported stolen from a home 1 n the 16300 block or Sandlewood Saturday. • • • Thieves report~ly broke 1n10 a home an the 18700 block of Ml Cimarron and stoic $2,075 1n audio/video equipment, a $3.000 mink coat and $3S in cash Monday • • • A camera and a v1dcoc.a~~tte recorder. worth $2.040 $700 1n cash. $310 1n cloth1n1 and a SI SS nne were stolen from a home m the I 1300 block of Stonecttss after the thieves ran sacked tht bou_~. the v1C'ttm told police Monday. lntne A car stert0 and a paych«k wrtt' rrported stolen from a Volkswagen said the girl wasn't weannia scat belt. He said there is no mdtcat1on the door latch malfunctioned. but said in- vestigators believe ll may not have been closed properly or may ha ve been opened for an unknown reason while the van was moving. Coffing today said police do not believe any criminal negligence was involved in the incident and said no charges arc pendina. Scmx:co parked m front of home along Morgan earlv today. . ' . A v1dcocao;sctte recorder. a camera and 1ewelry, wonh $3,800, were reported stolen from a home along Jefferson Monday • • • A v1deoca scttc recorder was ~ poncd stolen from a homc-along Rockwood Monday. • • • After pry101 one of the windows. a thief reportedly stoic the car stettO and a coat from a white Toyota Cehca parked in the 17200 block of Red Hill o\ venue Mond y • • • An unknown vandal entered a locked Woodland Onve home and spilled black paint inside. the \ 1ct1m told pohcc Monday. Nothing waci stolen. but the vandalism caused an estimated SSOO damage. Teen critical after crash A Fountain Valle' tccn·agcr in· "olved 1n a weekend motorqcle accident remained hor,p1tah1ed toda with cnt1cal ll'IJunts Wc~tmin~ter poltC't offic-cr Rohen Amrcn ~1d the accident took place 1n his city W\dl) afternoon in a Southern Cahfom1a Fd1'i0n nght of way north ofThof'P( I\ venue and ca~1 of Nantucket trttt Amrcn said Don Enl l 'lnkscn. 17. was nd1na his mo1oryck throush the araded din field whrn he lost con1ml ofh1 veh1clr and rra hcd The offit-er Newport Beach said Ulnksen w not wcann a Ruffums store offic1als reported helmet at the time of the aocident Monday that someone stole an SSSO · The tccn·agcr was trtatcd at the uystAI statue from the FashJon bland 1ttne, then rushed to the trauma nore lasi week center at Fount.am Valley Regional • • • Ho p1tal. whCTC he n:mA1ncd in SI . .SOO aold Witch, a $2,000 ao\d.,. <T1tJcal cond1t1on e.arly today, a rope bracelet anJ a $2 SOO diamond ho p1tal <>poke ;woman 'ltd gt. Richard Bowman said fclom ch.arg~ wen: filed last Thu~) against Richard James McLan~. ~ho hvcs near Irvine High School He s~ud Mclane sumndercd himself to Oranic Count} ( entral Court He said Mclane was booked Fnda) at Orangt" County Jail. then was relca'Sed aficr po<>ung S 10.000 bat I Bowman w1d Mclane face' I Cl felo ny charges that include~:\ cnmr" The police ~~ant said the' 1nim' "'ere all female. bC'twC'<'n the age" of I' and 19. and that most werT Jn 1nr residents. He said lhc-drug charp.1'" mainly involve coc~ine. Bowman said he d1d not kno~ Mcl.anc'.s occupation. He drchned to "8}' how Mclane made contact w1th his v1cum • but \lid the allegrd offense took place m Mc Lant"'i home. Thr ~rgc,an1 ~·d th( warr.mt ~a~ 1r,,urd after a 14-month tnve.,Ugat1on h} In 1ne oflictrs and the Orange Count) 01\tnct Attornt'y's ii.tan Holdup suspect seized .\ man \u l)«tcd of rohh1ng • Hun11ngton Bea h ~vings and loan Monda\ wa' arrt tcd early toda) b~ FBI agents who bche .. ·e he 1~ rcspon· $1ble for at le~\t 16 othc-r holdu~ Hunt1naton Beac h polHc \poke v.uman Jo Anne Berg,.trom ..aid tht· O\flC\'t. John *'fonin 'R wa arrt t<-d .ll ~ a m 1n a Lor, -\n le\ aren motrl he ~1d .\fonin " sur,P<'('l('(i of rohbmg the ()owney Saving~ and L03n office at 20002 BrookhuMt . l in Huntington Bearh he ~id the holdup CX'CUrrtd a1 11 ~~am Mon- da) v.hcn a man ent<'ttd. 1nd1c.atcd hr had a aun a dtmandt'd monr-. from a t(llcr The rohh(or Ocd ""Ith aho111 SI ~l~. Rerg trom \aid .\hr \lt1d o trllrr drc;cnlle-0 thr man a\ tall. slt"ndcr with a mu tat.he hlld1na hlond hair and ~•re·framr e"egla sn. Bc-rgstrom s.a1d FBI agrnt\ matched thr dC' npt1on to th.at of "fonin. who wt\\ al\O bcina sou&ht in conncctton w1th robbcncs a1 16 mhtl financial 1n t1tu11on~. mclud1~ I 0 commuted 1n rcct'nt months 1n Ornnic C'ounty he ~td SMO 1u\ ~11ed v. hen A.fon1n v.a arrestrd Sl'lr id thr ,u.,peict was hc1n1 held at lo!> Angelt'\ Count) Jail. . A4 * Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/ Tu.day, Match 4, 1086 Reagan pushing military support for rebel group Refusal would create ·h aven for terrorists two days from U.S.' WASHINGTON (AP) -Presi- dent Reagan, battlin~ long odds in h~s fight to resume military ai d to anti- communist rebels 1n N1cara~ua. 1s warning that failure to provide the financtng could create a terronst haven "tw.o days' dnving time .. from the U.S. border McCurdy said nearly all the swing votes in the House arc prepared 10 vote against the proposal but predic- ted a compromise package probably· will emerge from Congress after the current request is defeated. Reagan, seeking to dramauze the threat he secs from the Sandinistas, said Monday if his request for $70 million in direct military assistance and $30 million in non-lethal aid dies in Congress, it could mean "con· solidation of a privileged sanctuary for terTorists and subvcrs1 ves Just two days' driving time from Harlingen, Texas." , Forced drug test proposal lashed Civil liberties group. labor un~on calling tactic a 'witch h u nt' WASHI NGTON (AP)-Chargjng "witch hunt" and ilJegal searches, a dv1l hbcrt1cs group and a labor union ~1d a presidential panel's proposal tor drug tesung io government work places would violate the constitu· uonal n ghts of federal workers. One senior adm1mstratron official. speaking on cond1t1on he not be 1den11fied. sa id White House strategists calculate they need to tum around about 40 votes 1n the House before the Easter recess if Reagan 1s to succeed in gemn$ S 100 million in arms and other a~s1stancc for th e ant a· Sandinista fight ers known as Contras. "Those who would invite this strategic disaster by abandoning yet another fighting ally of this country in the field will be held fully accountabk by history," he said. .... ~ Contra leaden Arturo Cnas. Adolfo Calero a&an at a White Houae meeting Monday. and Alfonao Robelo flanked Pre.ldent Re• Rea&an aeek• $100 million for rel>ela. The President's Commissjon on Organized Cnme issued a report Monday saying the U.S. drug prob- lem has become a threat to national security and JUStifics drastic rneasurcs such as drug testing on the JOb. .. The adm1n1stra11 on picked up one new Senate supporter Monday but lost a kev House moderate m th e debate as· Reagan kept the focus on Nicaragua by 1nvit1ng Contra leaders and some of th eir private American backers to the While House. Religious leaders attack 'Nicaraguan lies ' Billig sentence: "Forcing someone to submit to drug testing is the equivalent to illegal search and seizure," said Kenneth Blaylock, president of the American Federation of Government Em- ployees, the largest federal workers' union with 210.000 members. · Sen. James Sas~er. D-Tcnn .. an- nounced he had changed his pos1t1on and now supports m1l11ary aid to the l '.S -backed guemllas. but he sug- ge'>ted the monc) should not be spent for six months to allow time for the 1"'0 sides to begin peace talks. !lasser said Reagan probabl) has about a SO-SO chance of winning congrt'ss1onal approval of his aid plan Howe,er. Rep Da ve McCurd). D- Okla., a moderate on the House Intelligence Committee who sup- ported non-ll"thal aid for the Contras last year. said he will oppose the adm1n1strat1on·~ new reQue'it. WASHINGTON (AP) -Nearly 200 religious leaders, including bishops of some of the nation's largest denominations, are accusing the Reagan administration ofl yi ngabout Nicaragua to justify efforts to overthrow the Sandinista government. .. A scaffold of deception is bcmg constructed around Nicaragua," Catholic, Protestant and Jewish leaders said in f.ormall y declaring they will fight President Reagan over new congressional aid for Nicaraguan rebels. In ~ statement scheduled for deli very today and d1stnbuted to reporters Monday, they accused the administration of i$floring worthy Sandinista peace initiatives -seeming to prefer "the financtng of terrorism to the pursull of peace" -and of covering up reports of human nghts atrocities by rebels backed by the U.S. government. "We refuse to allow the deception to go unchallenged or to accept the senseless violence," the statement said. .. Together we say, 'In the nani~ of God. stop the hes, stop the killing .... Signers of the statement included 21 Roman Catholic, Methodist, Episcopal and Lutheran bishops. SEClJRITY PACIFIC BANK Great Family Take a top officials of the United Church of Christ, the Chnst1an Church (Disciples of Christ), the Mennonite Church; the Unitarian Universalist Association. the National Council 4 years, dismissal of Churches and more than a dozen Jewish rabbis. WASHI NGTON (AP) -Con- Also today, as part of a national campaign called v1cted Navy heart surgeon Donal "M. "Crosses of Sorrow and Hope," organizers said that in Billig. sentenced to four years in Washington and more than 75 other cities crosses were pruon and ordered dismissed· from bein$ displayed bearing the names of Nicaraguan the service for the deaths of three civihans they said had been killed by U .S.-backed~rebels patients at Bethesda Naval Hospital. since last June. • could be paroled after 16 months Today's declaration came one day after Reaga . A Jury of nine Navy officers intensifying his own dnve to win SI 00 mil hon 1n U.S. aid deliberated 90 minute-; Monda) for the rebels. said den} ing the aid could lead to before sentencing him lo four )ears 1n establishment of Soviet m1hta f"\o hascs "on Amcnca·s pnson. ordenng him dismissed - doorstep." · after appeals arc completed -and Reagan also said rejection of his request "could well rcquinng him to forfell future pa}. deliver Nicaragua permanent I> t0 the communist bloc" Bilhg, 5S, the former chief of heart as well as "threaten the sccunh of the Panama (anal and surge!) at Bethesda. where Presiden t inaugurate a vast m1gra11on march 10 the lln1ted Statec; by Reagan ~ao; treated for cancer. will hundreds of thousands of refugees ·· <;enc hi., term at thc.· l I ~ D1sc1pllnaf) The rellg10us leaders said 111s prepostcrou<, to refer 10 . Barrack~ at f ort LcaH·n"'onh. Kan . CIA-backed rebels as "freedom lighkr\ ··a~ Reagan docs. "Drugs have no place at the federal work site or any other work site. We'll support any reasonable plan. to eliminate drug abuse or to rehabili- tate employees suspected of having a problem," Blaylock said. but. "We oppose the witch hunt approach ... . In a report to President Reagan, the comm1ss1on called drug traflicklng and abuse "the most serious or- ganued cnme problems in America today .. It sa~d the president should direct all federal agencies to for- mulate .. immediately clear policy statements, with implementing gu1dehnes. including suitable drug te!>llng programs." Rights redefined for inmates hurt in riot WASHI NGTON I \Pt -l he Su- preme C oun toda~ mJdc 11 mor~ difficult fo r pnson inmate' 1n1ured b) guards dunng a d1~turhancl· to con- tend they "'ere suhJ<.'<.ll·d 10 "trud and unusual pun1shmrn1 ·· By a S-4 vote. the JU\lll CS killed a lawsuit b> an in1urcd Oregon State 1980 d1i;turbance Led b} Jus11tc Sandra Da> O'Connor. the coun's maJont> c;a1d there was insufficient ev1den<:e to show that the shooting of Gerald Albers was the result of an> violation of his const11ut1onal nplls "The infl1ct1on of pain an the course ofa pnson secunty measure does not amount to cruel and unu'iual punish- ment s1mpl} becau'>e 1t may appear 1n retrospect that the degree of force authorized or applied ... was un- reasonable." 0 '( on nor wrote. She said the ban on cru el and unusual pumshment contained in the ( on~11tut1on's Eighth Amendent only applies to "unnecessary and wanton 1nfl1c11on of pain" -not 1nad'-ertence or a good-faith error 1n judgment. The dec1s1on has 1ts roots an a June 27, 1980. tnc1dent at the Oregon peniient1ary in which several inmates oocame agitated a60ut what illey considered mistreatment. A suard was taken hostage dunng the inc1de.at. and AJbers' lawsuit contended that he was trying 10 act as a peacemaker According 10 th e lawsuit. Albe~ asked Harol Whitley. the pnson's secunty manager. for help in moving some older inmates to a safer area. The su11 <.aid Whitley later led an assault on a cellblock to rt'gain control. and that Albers was shot in the knee dunng that assault. Other inmates also were injured, and the.· ho.,tage guard was released unharmed. Un111anned rockets 111ay launch satellites briefly By the Associated Press WASH INGTON -The Reagan aJm1n1\trat1on 1s debating whether to resurrect unmanned. throwaway rockl·ts a'> a 1emporary replacement for the grounded shuttle Oect in dehvenng m1htal) and commercial satellites into space. Ac11ng NA \Administrator W1ll1am (1raham announced Monday he has ordered invec;t1gat1on of the po<,<.1h1h1y a\ pan ofa search for "alternative approaches," based on the premise that the Jan. 28 Challenger explosion could ground the th ree remaining orbiter'> for up to 18 months. The announcement said unmanned rockets -used infrequently 1n recent years as shuttle flights mult1phcd -could delive r national sccunt} (surveillance). scientific and commercial c.·qu1pmentf and commun1ca1ions satellites. into space.· Administration denies Soviet sailor swap Save up to 90% off AmericanAirlines tickets. WASHINGTON -Desptie Reagan admin1strat1on denials, members of Congre'>s have renewed ca ll~ to probe charges that the Soviets used a stand-in for failed defector Miroslav Med v1d to tell U.S. authorities he wanted to return to the Soviet Union. Medv1d jumped into the Mississippi River from a Soviet gram freighter at dusk last Oct. 24. only to be 'iCnt back to the ship by agents of the U.S. Border Patrol the next morning. State Department spokesman Charles Redman said officials who saw the sailor in the sick bay of the ship on Oct. 2S. and questioned him on Oct. 28 and 29. positively identified him as Medv1d through e)c-w11nesses. photographs and an 1dent1fying mark on hi s heel. .. Allegauon'! that the Soviets pulled a switch are without fou ndation," Redman told reporters Monday aOer a Ne w York Times story discussed such a scenano. Guardian appointed for Connie Francis '-K.l 11111\ l1,1ul1t lbn" \\Jill'> to 1.1h.c: "'" 111 I l,1\\,111 < >r lO 'c" )i1rk ( .11' ( >r IC 1 ,111, 111 more th Jn JOO u t1c'> lr11111 I l111111l11l11 to ~t.C .rrn\ .11 mncd1hlc "·" 111g,. It' 1hc ( •ft:.11 l·.1111.i, 'I:1k<.:nff .1111 I \1111 L ill ..,,,,c: 11p tCJ lJO" .. on .urfan: '·'' in~'I. or 111tcr<.:'>l t.:hct:km~ at:count cam' vou a '13kcoff I )1~oum ( :crtifi- c:ltl" \\~Jrth 75% off vour -.emn<l uckct Jnd <JO% off the thi~d and fourth ticket~ "hen ~ou buy your fir-.t mundt~p ·11ckct. I )ic;count ( :crtificatc~ arc vahd Ii' 111.1"11w u:rt.1111'Ill.11th111g ~kplNl" IH>\\ tl11n11gl1 \pril \t)th, l<JHh I'\ l·S I \11·.'\'l '-i ·111 XI H .) \0111 \\c:ll-plJt cd dcpo,1t to <1 q11.1ltl\ 111~ 'x·u1111\ Pal 1ftt Bank IH:\. ln1l" 1du11f fh11rcmcn1 '"'•lllll 111< ,, -"t'" ,, ''""" Mrrl1m11m ( Jfl4.1H111t l>cp;.-11 11 '"" f-•t'ltllljf \ll llUlll Mm1mu1n \JJ1111u111I l>ePfl"! 11 I J. l\IH) le 1r travel through I )cn:mhcr 15. 1986.· make the min11n11rn • :\II you have to do i~ to ~· required dcpo~it in or\c /!4.~ of the\\.: acc:ount': l'cn11n11I l'rraotial lnsurcd Pen411flal l11~c•lml 111 ~1onr) Market lntrrutlChcricmt """" 111,C• •\ccount \«ount' \l l llUlll - Sl.~oo 12.500 12.500 IZ.~00 ~oc f-hi1hlr !'ooc f-.lii1blc •Pwnot'r IN~tt•t ( hit,• nt 1• • t • ' ·• t t • 1 Mr' 1 1l'lu t1.t \4 .,, \4u'-"' ,,_.,,,._. t ._,.<••nc Pt.,1 (~ ...... ~,.,..,..,..,,...,...,I'••-'" IMM" ... 1,.,.,,,.,1 ,,_,~ .... \, .. ,.,.,..,,..., ....... ..,. ... ,.,.., ...... , .... .._..., P...,..R<t .... hoowolilt "" dllf T ...... ,,, 1 ............. """••h I .,.,.__,.,.., ro,.,....i'""" .. ,hl••,., .. ,,..11ot l ltl"'•"'"""'"' .. ll...,.1 l'ftmnt."'•"""'I \...a ....... _ • ..._...,..,....,..,.of'!\11 ~ .......... , • I And here arc JU't .t fc,\ of )Ollr travel po~sibi htic': •An Aloha journey to I lonolulu or Maui for un and lci'lurc. • A ski trip to c,.'\\ England. •A sun~oakc<l \\ctik tn Puerto R1t·<1. St.Th(lma' or St.C :mi'<. • /\ trip to I )i..,ne~ World 1n Orbndo. • A big ciry ... i,it to ;\It:\\ Y<irk. ( :hicc.lgo or Bo'iton. • And much. much more. So ~ct in on the ( irc:Jt l-am1h "Jakcoff. h doc'> great thin~' for you. Earn~ vou morK."\o. S.t''C' \Oll nl<>OC\ And g~ts you out of to\\ n. NEWARK, N.J -A Judie ha'I appointed a legal guardian for si~er Connie Francis, wh o 1s ho!>p1tah1cd 1n a psychiatr\c clinic for man1c- depress1ve psychosis. uperior Court Judge Murray G. Simon appointed accounta~t Anthony C nncoh to take charge of the singer and her affairs. He was dcscnbcd in coun pape~ as a longtime family fn~nd who has adv1sed the si nger profcss1onally and personally. Miss Francis wa!> taken to the Miami Mental Health Center in January after a disturbance at the Grand Bay Hotel in Cocoanut Grove, Fla .. authont1c!> 'laid. Suspected Israeli spy's wife released WASHINGTON -Ann(' Henderson-Pollard, whose husband has been accused of spying for Israel. ha'I been released from jail after bond was set for her by a federalJud&e. official~ said today. Hendc™>n-Pollard bad been held at the Washington D.C. Jail without bond since her arrest No'V. 22 on .a charge of possessing classified government documents. Her husband, JoOAthan Jay Pollard, a c1y1han Navy counterterrorism analyst, was arrested a day earlier outside the lsrach Emba'l<iy 1n Wash1naton and charged with spying for Israel. At the time ofh1'I arre<it, he told the FBI his lsraeh contacts had paid him $2,SOO a month for more than a year Medicare patlents' death rate due probe WASHI NG fON -The agency that runs Mechcare 11 tclhna quality control boards 1n 41 statcc; to take a clo~r look at aberrant hospital stat1s1Jcs for Medicare patient-., 1nclud1na unusually h1ah or low death ntes. The Health C arc F1nanc1ntt Adm1nl\trat1on say~ peer rt"V1Cw ~ps are beina 11vcn the names of hospttal~ that arc rcport1na statistics outside the norm 1n areas 1uch as death rate~. rate~ of medical "omphcat1ons and averaae lcnaths of stay. While the aberrant figures may have leg1t1matc cxplanauons. the .,ency said, 1t want'I a clo~r look to ~c 1f they rcncs;t 11,1bst.1ndard care for Medicare patients. . . Up .to $10 billion in assets missing in P~ilippines MANILA (AP)-The head of a comm1as1on charged with ~covcnng any wealth 11lcptly accumulated by deposed President Ferdinand E. Marcos said today that up to SI 0 billion may be missin.a from the treasury and entcrpnscs controlled by Marcos' as!IOCiates and relatives. Jovito R. Salonaa, chairman of a Commission on Good Government established by new President Cor- azon Aquino told a new conference that "maybe SS bilhon 10 SI O ball ion" M arcos' ba~age to be invenloried 1n assets was massing. By companson. the Philippine HONOLULU ( budget in 1985 w•s only about $3.3 AP)-Representa-.,. "' ti vcs of the Central Bank of the b1Lhon. Salonga did not elaborate on Philippines will re<:cive an inventory what assets were missing or what was of 22 crates believed 10 contajn cash beli~ved to have happened to them. . and valuables that came from Manila Also today,Jusuces of the country's with former President Ferdinand E. second-highest coun, the Coun of Marcos, say anomeys for the bank. Appeals. submitted their resig-The crates, believed to hold more nattons, and the official Philippine than SJ.I m1llion in Philippine cur- News Agency sa.1d at least five of the rency.:have been in the custody of the Supreme Courts 12 members also U.S. Customs Service since Marcos qu~qumo urged the ju~tic~s. all ~d. 89 others arrived here Wednes- appo1~ted by ~arcos, to s~cp down. iollowing a hearing Monday in Justice Minister Neptal! Gonzales U.S. District Court, the U.S. Customs said .Court of Appeals·J~succ Ramo!' Service agreed to hold the currency Gav1~la m~t wtth Aquino to submit :larch 17 and provide the 18 res1gna.ttons a.nd ~ssurid her all of ., to attorneys of the Philip- tbe ~ourt s 38 ,JUSUccs would step , pi ral bank. down. . , . . York Monday a Judge In setting up the Com.mission on tcm~' 'ly blocked the saie ofS350 9~ Govemme!'t, A~ua n~ charged milhon worth of New York real estate 1t with rccovenng all ill·gottcn allegedly owned or ~ytrolled by w.ealt~" accumulate~ by ~.~rcos ~nd Marcos. A Long lsland estate and one his fnends and relatives. .including of Manhattan's tallest office buildings the. takeover or ~uestrauon °f ~II are among the five propenies affected business entepnscs and ent1t1cs by the order owned or controlled by them dunng · his administration ... by ~ing undue -------. ------- advantage of their powers." Meanwhile, hundreds of sup- poners of Vice Mayor Johnny Wil50n of the Mantia financial d1~tnct of Makau demonstrated today against the Aquino govemmenrs appoint- ment of Jejomar Binay as "officer an charge" following the death ofMakat1 Mayor Nemcsio Yabut. I Ca.rloe de Coeta Nora Flames kill 15 people in Venezuela CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) - A fire engulfed a 14-story downtown Caracas office building and I S people died, including the Chilean am- bassador and nine other embassy employees. POiice said. Two of the embassy employees, unable to escape the ·smoke and flames from the fire Monday.jumped to their deaths from the top Jloor, state television said Police said a short circuit in the building's first-floor electrical plant caused the fire , and that they had 'in principle" ruled out the possibility of foul play. They said 1r qu1clcly spread to the top floor. where the Chilean govern- ment offices were located. Firemen co ntinued to hose down the building this morning. and said an investiga- tion would begin. Accomplice Libya urges suicide squads seen after againstU.S.,lsraelinter~sts S1£!.ying of Palme By Ute A11oclatecl Pre11 TRIPOLI, Libya -Libya's legislature has called for the formation of suicide squads to attack U.S. and fsraeli inLerests, the official JANA news agency reported today. The Libyan news agency said the General People's Congress ended iis annual meeting Monday night in Benghazi with a call for "working for forming suicid~ squads to wreck U.S.-Zionist interests everywhere." The final resolutions. according to.the English-language version of JANA. also called for "wrecking U.S.-Z1001st embassies in the Arab homeland." zjontst IS bow Libya's media refers to Israel. Orange Cou1 DAIL V PILOT /Tunday, M.c:h 4, 1Ne * Al --. Borde"r traff~c b~cked up bycarseaiChesfordrugs SAN DIEGO (AP) -Motoruts drivina into San Oicao from Mex"° were held up nearly two hours as U.S. Customs officials conducted riaoroqs car searohes to quell what the~ uy ts an atarmina increase in th~ now or iJlepJ drup from south of the border. The move affected northbound driven Monday at the San Ysidro Pon of Entry and the border pte at Otay Mesa, customs ofTLcials. said. Typically, northbound motorists e1'- pcrienc.c: a wait of about 20 minutes, said Gurdit Dhillon, chief customs ins~tor at San Ysidro. "~xico has become the No . OCHome of Nixon pushed as landmark By Ute A11oclatecl Pre11 The Reagan administration and California congressmen arc trying to make Richard M. Nixon's birthplace a national historic site. saying they want to "preserve history, not judge it." The National Park Service and 30 ofCaJifomia's-45 House members arc urging enactment of a bill requiring tbc government to acquire and preserve -at unknown cost -the 1 'h-story frame house m Yorba Linda where the former president. who resigned 12 years ago, was born in 1913. "These national histonc sites arc not monuments to presidential ca- reers but, rather, arc majntained by the National Park Service to preserve our history," said the bill's principal sponsor, Rep. William Dannemeyer, R-Fullenon. "Tbjs bill 1s consistent with the treatment of other modern presidents and will benefit future generations," Dannemeycr said in testimony prepared for a hearing today by the House lntenor National Parks and Recreation Subcommittee. The idea of turning the bungalow into a publicly supported museum has been endorsed by Nixon. cxPon.er of heroin and marijuana" to the United Stales, Dhillon sa.id. He added • that American authon~ have upmsed diuatitfaction with Mexico's cf'f'orts q,ain11 dru1 traffick- ina. · . About 32 pctt;ent of the heroin aod l S percent of the marijuana smugled into the United States oriJioates in Mexico, accordina to the U.S. House Committee on Narcotici Abuse and Control. The inten.sified inspections in the San Diego f'e&ion come about six weeks aft.er the commjnee held several hearings in cities alona the U.S.-Mex.acao border ud met w1tb Mexican Prntdent Miaqd de la Madnd. After the meet.in& with de la Madrid, commiuce cb1innan Charlet R.aoael. 0-N.~.1 called f« more cooperation from Mexicoio the intemat\qqat war •inst drup and for incrtUCd border aurveillaOClt. Alfomo Buatamante, pretldrat of Tijuana's tourism burcau1 said Mex· ican customs offiti.ala nave been uked by their American cou.oippens to ;Etc in the fJlbt apiD.lt drul sm ina by mppina up their own bol\ in1pections. 3 more deputies resign in San Bernardino sez probe 8y tle Asaoclated Preas SAN BERNARDINO -Three more sheriff's deputies have resigned because of a probe of alleged sexual misconduct that began with a young woman volunteer's rcpon she had been raped by a deputy. said SherifTAoyd Tidwell. Eight sheriff's employees have been suspended in the probe by an internal administrative board, and three of those workers. one of them a woman dispatcher, quit early last week. The latest resignations were handed in Friday, Tidwell said. The investigation began when the woman volunteer, an 18-year-old Explorer Scout. reported she had been raped by a deputy after a wedding in Victorville Feb. 14, Tidwell said. She also dcscnbed sexual relations with four other deputies before she turned 18, he said. Insur ance wroee haunt peace marclaen CLAREMONT -liability insurance problems continue to shadow the Great Peace marchers who were refused penmnion to use a high school athletic field as a campsite on the third day of their 3,235-mile walk across America. The marchers had planned to spend Monday rugbt on the aihletic field al O arcmont High School. Instead, about 10 area churches opened their facilities and offered bousi~in private homes, said PRO-Peace spok.eswoman Bobbi Cowan ... They're taking them an. They're feeding them. They're find.in& homes for them to slay in Monday night." said Cowan. "People arc rallying to suppon these marchers in their effort." Mllllons ln lottery winning• ancJaJmed SACRAMENTO -Nearly 10,000 lottery winners have failed to claim prizes totalingS3.8 million -and 11 of them would have picked up thousands or millions more in grand pnze drawings. Altogether, one out of every 33 prizes worth S 100 or more has not been claimed. These' were the conclusions Monday of a study conducted for the Associated Press by lonery accountants, who counted the unclaimed high-tier prizes ofbctween SI 00 and $25,000 in the 6~1 three games since the Oct. 3 startup. NOTICE TO ALL Real Estate Managers and Brokers STOCKHOLM. weden (AP) - Police said today a ta:it1 dnver told them the suspected killer of Pnme M1n1'>terOlof Palme ran to a getaway car and was dnven away The repoa from Sl.OC.kholm_£o Commissioner Hans Holmer was the strongest and1cat1on yet from in· vest1gators that the killer of the Sw~1sh leader. shot an th e back Friday night as he wal ked from a film premiere, had an accomplice. S. Africa to llft state of emerg_ency_:;_ __ _ The l~slat1on also would require the lntenor secretary to add Nixon's -onettme tawofficc m La Habra'to-rttc The Department of Housing and Urban Development. 34 Civic Center Plaza. Box 12850, Santa Ana, CA 92712-2850, Is seeking applications from-Qualified r..i estate man.gera and broker• who wish to recefve Invitations for Sida for Area Management Brokers to manage HUD-acquired/owned properties In San Bernardino County. Applicants must be licensed by the Division ot Real Es1ate. State of Callfornla, .. brokers. CAPE TOWN -President P.W. Botha announced today that the state of National RegisterofHistonc Places if emergency imposed last July to quell anti-apanhe1d unrest in South Africa will it meets critena for such status. be lifted. perhaps by Fnday. In a bnef statement to a packed session of Holmer, speaking in a news con- ference broadcast by Swedish Radio, also announced a $70,000 reward for mformat1on leading to the arrest of Palme's killer. The tax i driver. Holmer said. saw "a man seat himself as a passenger in a car, wh ich drove away." The taxi driver was able to note only part of the veh1cte·s registration number and police did not want to provide a description of the car yet, Holmer said. Holmer said the reward wa'I being offered partly because "I hope there are people sheltering or who have sheltered this man who are wi lling 10 tum him an " Meanwhile. a laboratory specialist said today that local pohre hunting Palme's killer failed 10 contact specialists at Sweden's national for- ensics laboratory to help 1dcnt1fy one of the bullets fired by the assassin. Parliament in the country's legislau ve capital, Botha cla1med the racially motivated turmoil had subs1d~ to "sporadic and isolated incidents." Botha said conditions have "improved sufficacmtly to enable me to announce that a proclamation will be issued in the near future, most probably this coming Friday, wruch will lift the state of emergency in those magisterial districts where it still applies." Belfast recovers from protest strUre BELFAST -Businesses and factones reopened today after a violent 24-'. hour strike, called to protest an agreement givlne the lrisb Republic a role in Northern Ireland, virtuall y paralyzed the province. Police said 40 people, mcluding 35 police, were in1urcd Monday and about 40 people were arrested. Protestant leaders called for a peaceful strike to protest the Nov. 15 British- Irish agreement that gives the predominantl y Roman Catholic Irish Republic a formal consultative role in running this British provmce. where Protestants outnumber Catholics 3-2. Scott's food bozes found ln Antarctlca WELLINGTON, New Zealand -New Zealand Antarctic researchers have found a food dump left by Bnt1sh explorer Capt. Roben Scott during his 1912 quest to be the first person to reach the South Pole. a government spokesman said today. A field party fo und several boxes offood on Ross Island dunng the summer season JUSt completed, said the spokesman for the Science Dcpanmcnt"s Ant.arctic d1v1S1on. The cache included ca ndles. tins of cocoa, egg powder.Jam. sardines and matches. Some items were dated 1910. Look w.here $10,000 in rare coins can get you. SanLr 19110, clients of Hanne!i Tulving Rare Coin lnveslments hc1ve rnJoyed averagr profit \ of 24% a yea r after all commissions and fees. If as we bdieve our por1 fohos continue 10 apprenate at th1 \ rate SI 0 000 will yield a net profit of SI q 316 after JU~l five yew. In 10 years. they wall yield a net prnfil of S 75 944 In add111on lo cxccptaonal per formancr, gem quahly rare coins offer investors safety. liqu1di1y. taxation et favorable Long Ttrm Capital Gains rates and the m<>sl sophisticated mafketplace of all tanRiblc investments Coins olso qualify for use an mos( Defined Bendit Pension Plan~ and most other corporak pension a11d profit sh11rinK plans At Hanne Tulvin~ Rsre Coln lnve~tment , we've been st>rvmg investor interests since 1976 In ttn yr1m, not onr llTRCI chent ho~ ever lost money or h.xl a port (oho m anythmg hut a profit po.-iihon s 10,000 1986 12,400 1987 ----15,376 1988 19,066 1989 23,642 1990 29,316 1991 36,352 1992 45,077 1993 55,895 1994 69,310 1995 -~944 1996 Our outstanding investment ser· vices include: • Purchase programs designed for 'hor1·term gains or long·term income • Two outstanding liquidation programs • Quarterly updates on the pcrfor mance of all chent portfolios • A monthly newsletter filled with expt>rt advice and analysis • l.everaged Rart Coln lovntmnt Portfollot™. • unique program that allows investors to double tbtlr buy· inR power and mp edditional profits • The ahality to use your portfolio as instant loan collateral with no qualifyinit nttessary for 11 frte mformahon packet drta1ling our managed rare com investment portfolios. call us toll fret at 800854-5179 (U\Sldc California) or at ~~16 (ootsidt Califom11l Or return the coupon ~low .Y.n•in~ lm•c•\tttr.. .~Im I' I </16 H CJ()() l"itwl M it1im1m1 Rt>q11irPmn1t r-------------------------------------------------------------------------··-·-----------! c ~ > Free Information Packet. :' u • 'ti.n.. rn~ 1ULVING rllY"'IJ"'I~ SIM ! ""-.~~ I -~· I o;.., ,..,. 1'1W '"' "'" '" , •I!) 8 IC~ Si ~Ullt IOI} ~'"J'Of' bit l A ~IM.0 lrlliitarM (fUI UI U(IJ In lA ii'·~ S.'117' I lhll CA ,rx_ ·~ ..... Cny llt.' l'lmnr I ~~~--11r < "'''---- Ru1 Plmnt 1 OP 3/4186 ' Night S talke r witn ess g rilled LOS ANGELES (AP) -The preliminary hearin~ for "Night Stalker" defendant Richard Ramirez opened with a witness testifying how he found his mother dead in bed and with the homicide investigation focusing on his brother who had been treat~ for mental illness. Jack V ancow was questioned sharp- ly Monday by Ramirez' attorney. who tried to suggest that Vincow's brother could have killed Jenny Vincow, 79. of Eagle Rock. Ramirez as charged with a total of murders in Los Angeles. including Mrs. Vancow's. Vincow said he had told detectives Appllcatlons may be obtained by writing to the U.S. Depart- ment of Housing and Urban Development. 3-4 CMc Center Plaza, Box 12850, Santa Ana. CA 92712-2850, or by calling the Property Disposition Section at (714) 836-2446. A Pre-bid Conference will be conducted on Wednesday, March 5, 1986 at 10:00 A.M. In the conference room, San Bernardino County Board of Realtors. 1798 N. "O" St., San Bernardino. Specific geographic areas will be outlined at the Pre-bid Conference. Deadline for return of.bids Is 9:00 A.M .. March 12, 1986 Completed bid pac.kages must be sent to: ~•mo,, ~ I +~ U.S. ~ of ltousl1C and lkb111 Dnttopnent ~· * * \ 34 CMc Ctnter Pbu =» or.-.. ...,. \ ! Bo112150 • .. _ ...., •• ~ Santa Ana. CA 92712-2150 ., .. ,.JQ ... earherabout thcrclauonshapbctween Bids wlll be opened at 10:00 AM . March 12, 1986, In Room his mother and his brother. but said neither she nor he had had contact 720-721, Federal Buildlng, 34 Civic Center Plaza, Santa Ana, with the brother for ye.~ars~---_J~~~C~a~li~fo~r~n~la~.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "TAKE IT ID THE MAX!" 11 s .,.our l'.loc'f ano .,.ou cea11y v.ent to mai.e tl'IP most f:J ~ Th.11 ~ lelr.tnc;i ~ aro .,)t'tt•"Q 111 '\l'lal)lt taKing .,.our bcXfy 8' the W1f1of kl hlne-;s' ~ means ccrnmimng yOunelf to <;pen0nq ~ rh..,,,, w1 •'OYr tt" time a 'M:'e" ,, an ~c~ ptograrn !hal can promise 189Jl!s Ano rl{lll now >"41 -..e made membefsh'o 1!<11 rw:;-. atlofmhle ~ ~ soo ttw l'1a<:, ~ ;i• rQJding IOOVl<lJally 9.J~ ~ (ltoc;llYM "tlJ!rllo<Y-.. ~ncP tne la!est 1n Plla1}'M11<, ~no eicerczge equpmerc and muc:n "'OOfe ·Uf"E~ ·IWIT1WS·~ • ST£AM • SAUNA ·~ • ltlUTJllTION .,.,_ TWO-YEAR MEMBERSHIP • NOW, ONLY ... s 91 PER MONTH I FOR 24 MONTHS WITH JUST '25. DOWN • NOH-R£NEWABLE-FIRST VlSIT INCENTIVE "' __ .... __ .. __ _ DOW_, __ ....,. 83'11F~-.. u.....--..-..... n MISTMAlllf ....., ... ,.1110- W•n flUU.DTOll_..,....,, 2'8E~;,,.,,. .. Wfi(Wnl0091a -.--:nu 1 ?ltl1 HaitJOr B1W1 1257' ~ v .... SMoef I 1'!5nt11 Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/ Tuesday, March 4, 1986 I P~PARA ZZ I I fh__ -- - Three for tea with Diana and Bill Otton (left) and Glenda Haggen maker. Cost.a Mesa resident Lawrence W. Kellner. 27, was recently named as a sem1-finahst an the 1986-87 White House Fellowship compct1t1on. Keller was o ne of 116 semi-fi nalists. according to Admiral James B. Stock- dale. Chairman of the President's Commission on White House Fel- lowships The sem1 -finallst'i will be 1nter- v1ewed by regional panels of lead111g c1t12ens who will select the national finalist~ for consideration by the President's C omm1ss1o n The final selcrnon of the 1986-87 SHOCKED! "' " ....... ,,a. .. I "A '1 . .. .. ...... -;. ... ,. . .. \ ... \ . I IAHITT lllSUUllCE • ~, _,.._ Est 1911 ~· • &31-n40 441 Old N••PGft IJl•d N•wport hech, Ca Fellows Wiii take place in Washington May 15-18. The White House f ellowships were established 1n 1964 to provide outstanding young Amencans with firsthand expenence in the process of governing the nation. Except for c1val1an employees of the Federal government, Amencan citizens in the early st.ages of their careers are eligible to apply. Kellner 1s the manager of Ernst and Whinney in Newport Beach. Once sel~ted. White House Fel- lows serve 12-month appointments the shores interiors INVENTORY SALE °" Lompt • 'lcfw" • Tobi.I • A«M-lft 642-2255 2640 Avon St., Newpcwt leach '--____ ....__ -- AntiQ.ue sale ~or art's sake a success ByVlMDeu A Baccarat map um-sized paperweight made m 1848, priocd at $6,500, and brouaht by Larry Selmaa, was just one of Che treasures at the 14th annual antique sflow sponsored this past weekend by the Affiliates of the Laauna An Museum. "I've been coming to the show fo.r five years, I think," said the Santa Cruz dcaler:''lt'smorclikeeight years," said cochairman PatAtU. "Because I've been involved that Iona and you have been here every year." "This is my founh or fifth year," said Lawroce Do•perty, Corona del Mar antique clock dealer. "This is the quality show in this area ." More than 50dcalers from the West Coast (ijsplaycd men:handisc at the affair held this year in the Mercantile Building of South C.O.St Plaza Village (due to building renovation going on at the museum's Laguna site). First to see the items were partygocrs attending the preview party on Thursday evening that kicked off the thrce-<lay event. They not only bad the opportunity to view antiques and chat with exhibitors. but couJd cat their "way around the world." • as Special Assistants to the v1cc president. to members of the Cabinet. or to the President's principal staff. They also participate in an education program that includes off-the-record meetings with ranking government oflicals. scho lars, diplomats. journaJ- 1sts and leaders from business and industry. • • • Jack and Lynn Beitstock of Costa Mesa and Don and Judy Devor of Tustin are excited about the birth of their grandchild. Adam Merrill Devor was born Feb. 7. and the proud grandparents de- scribe him as a "darling little boy." He is 1he son of Ken and Sharon Devor. ••• The Kiwams Club of Corona del Mar recently honored fo ur grocery store managers for their contribu- tions to charity. The men honored were Bennie Haskell, Albertsons; George Spink. Hughes El Rancho: Frank Spieloerger, Oelso ns; and Jim Fitzpatnck, Safeway. • • • Jack Ray. 69, of Ne~rt Beach, had the time of his hfe recently catching Marlin and Tuna in Cabo In the tarae multi-le.vcled buildina. they found Oriental, country French, British, Italian and Meiucan food. Costa Mesa.mayor Norma Hertao1 was honorary chairman and managed to stop by the party ... co-chairman Tom Staa1bvy was there. Also saw Marla and Ke• Blrd, Jack and RaUI Boyle, Dtua and BW OttoD, Allee an~ Gilbert VuCamp GleDcla HagtDmaker (the first female and current president of the Laguna Chamber of Commerce), Gall and Peter <>cu. YoU and Lew Wk&~. Dr. E11ene and VMu Levlla, ~m and Frucetca Reim.bore, Tocld Morrow · (owner of the Linen Store, Fashion Island), Betty Mott, Peter and ~a11e Volo1JllD, Claudette and DoD Sllaaw and South Cea st Plaza folks-mura Egu, Jlm Henwood and Tom SanUey. Monday the show was over and Atha ~as her doing bookwork ... "We ":ill probably make $25,000 this year.~~ year s procec~s were about $20,000. I m very happy with the results and thank It was our pretuest show. Close to 4,000 attended. "The exhibitors reponcd very nice sales and they loved the location, .. Atha added. San Lucas. Mexico. Jack Ray. Dan Ray and Loren Mollner reserved a boat through Bisbees on Balboa Island. Cost.a Mesa resident Enn Mollner said. "The weather was good, the cerveza was cold" and all three men arc looking forward to a return tnp. • • • • Junior School Cadet David Rich. son of Mary Rich of Huntington Beach. was part of the Missoun Military Academy's halftime show at the Umversity ofMissoun -Kansas State basketball games in Colum bia, Mo. 0.-,,... ...... ..,L# .... At left. Pat Atha and Larry Selman haYinC a •wetclatf' talk. lJl picture at bottom left. Allee and Gilbert Van Camp join Ken and Marla Bird for an Orlentaldt.nner. Below. Laura o·~ flDda tlae claeae table. Rich 1s a member of the Junior School Bngadiers drill platoon. The Missouri Military Academy 1s a pnvate m1htary school. • • • We're inreresred m news about local people. Do you have a neighbor or friend who's done something particularly noteworthy? A colleague who deserves credit for a job well done? Send us your people stories. and we'll pnnt them in our 'Faas' column. 'Faces.· c/o Daily Pilot. P.O. Box 1560. Costa Mesa. 92626. FOUNT A1N VALLEY REGIONAL HOSPITAL Cost.a Mesa, boy January t3 February 3 Juu.ry U Michelle Denzine and Gerald Hair, -----, Are You Paying Too Much For Health Insurance? * Individual & Family *Group * Medicare Supplement 640·6015 anyt•~ BOB fDl Deborah and Mark Locasc10, Hunt-Pamela and David Schultz. Hunt- ington Beach, boy ington Beach. boy Janury Z% Janury t5 Karen and John Stebbings, Hunt-Lori and Craig C randall. Huntington ington Beach. boy Beach, boy LeAnn and Michael Jones. Hunt-Rosemarie and Richard Hagen. ington Beach. boy Huntington Beach. boy Le1lan1 and Lewis Glenn. Huntington Patricia and Frank Hansen. Hunt- Beach, boy ington Beach. boy · 1-----'----''-----------. Janaary ti RUFFELL 'S Alicia and Brett Calhoon. Hunt-ington Beach, boy UPHOLSTERY INC . Lynda and JefTrey LaVone. Hunt-ington Beach. boy Whlf• Yu Oallr Coven Moret January %8 Sherrie and Ja} Parsons, Huntington Beach. girl February 4 Sandra and David Pierce, Fountain Valley, girl February 5 B1ch Thi Vu and Thanh Huu Nguyen. Costa Mesa. boy Elaine and Thomas Marten. Costa Mesa. girl February• Nina and Stephen Krull. Huntington Beach, boy ~=~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~J_~19~22~HM:•~~oa~a~vo:: .. _::C~OS~TA:_lll:~SA-::S«-~~ll~5'~ Laurra and Ricardo Bertoldo. Irvine, boy . Elsie and Gary Maurizi, Costa Mesa, boy February 7 Yvonne Lynn Peck, Fountain Valley, girl Does your kitchen have the ''Good Housekeeping seal of approval?'' If so, enter the Dally Pilot's "Living Spaces" Contest. Be ellalble to win $200 of home decoratlnc supplies See contest details and entry form In today's classified ~ctlon Melynda Turner and Lanny Perry. Costa Mesa. boy Sandra and Alvin Martin, Fountain Valley, girl Karen and John Fell, H untington Beach, girl Juury U Theresa and Allen Polk, Huntington Beach, girl Roberta and Michael Wall, Hunt- ington Beach, boy Catherine and Mark Strayer. Hunt- ington Beach, boy Suzanne and James Moore, Founta1 n Valley, boy Sandra and Richard Steinbach, Hunt- ington Beach, girl , JuuryU Janet and Stephen Zajicek. Hunt- ington Beach, boy Febnary I Kimberley and William Neal. Hunt- ington Beach, boy Mary and John Smith, Irvine, girl February% Kathleen and David Waddell, C'osta Mesa, boy. Maryl ynn and John Boertje. Cost.a Mesa. boy Carolyn and David Witherspoon. Huntmgton Beach, boy February 8 Lmda and John Maize, Huntington Beach, boy Judy and Jarvis Mitchell. Fountain Valley, girl February t Karen Ann Welch. Fountain Valley, girl Carol and Roben Leasure, Hunt· mgto n Beach. girl Febnary 10 Shem Ann Baker, Cost.a Mesa, girl Februry 11 Tracy and Wayne Taylor, Hunt· ingto n Beach, girl Jeri and Danton Weiss, Huntington Beach.boy Eleanor and Darius Ojalivandi, Costa Mesa. girl February 1% Alma and Charles George, Costa Mesa. boy ----Newport's Cannery Village---- r=::(Aff ~DO DINNER NIGHTLY 6:00 P.M. to Midnight Mondays & Tueadays: Two Dinner• for •t5.95 Wedneada,ys: 6 Courie Italian Dinner t9.95 2900 Newport Boulevard • Newport Beaob • 8'7&-2968 7 OranQe co.t DAILY PllDTITu.dll)', MM'Ch 4, 1tel A7 COMPLETE NYIE COMPOSITE TRANIACTIONI, Al . Geuaty_!_s-cemmereial diversity has surprises · ., easiJy, said the ~~tentative of I.be lrvinc firm. which as the wes1CrD distributor of )..0 Baonet Products. MU TUAL FUND S Manufacturers of soft frozen lemonade, secret doors, laser art creattngjobs here NEW YORK (AP) -The follOwlng 1111 "'°ws the New Yont Stock Excf\anoe stocks and warrants tn.t n.ve . GOM uo the moat tnd down the most baM<I on J:;c:ent of c:Mnoe r~rdleu of volume No r lradlng below s? are Ind· ·uded. et and oercentage chanoes are the difference between lhe orevlO\ls closing or Ice a nd Mo ndav•s 2 1>.m. O r I C I N11me j FloCoAtn pf White cons Am ¥(:,'""' i ~fi:1 ~16of l Unlvtr Co rll H~s C NA pf l11,Yn11 u..s LUI c~ Pel 10 I uo fl'l '9\.'J 1 Up . ~ 'h UP lk ·~ ~~ J 6th ~ UP 12.6 1l4 + "• UP 1i .o RoTedlMeel VlstaF 16wt vslnc rex s eltwt Ast~ne CmdPr'OO wt F!ArtACQ lflt . ameTch A, ver ~Metl ~~enMedlc c.ouslnHme CableAdV HerltMEnt No~ get the CDyoucari add to. Here's a new advantage. a fixed rate CD you can add money to. It's called Oeposit- Plus and it works like this: E.... uo to S.50JIOO Mm-lll & ~Ill Sw'l'-14 Sl.telll M-m. t ~tll During March, open a new Deposi t-Plus CD with a minimum of St.000 ° The opening high interest rate is guarwueed for six months. Anytime during thm six months, you can Olld to your original investment in any amount up to the amount of your original deposit. The new deposits earn interest at the oritiiJtol guarr11uet'd rn1c. Limited Offer: Deposit-Plus is only available during the month of March. 850~ • Ylt\cf• 815 ~"'"' • Ract 7.90 ~~· 1 &o ~ltM • Rlit( y;y Open your account today. Call the toU-free U Financial Line now: 1-800-423 -BANK. Great American ~advantage bank. .. With 18 office~ ~tn~ Oranp County: Anahtim Hills "' El Toro Balboa Ill.and Fountain V alJcy a.. ~ftlllla Hundncton lkach Caplltrano Beach a...,una Beach -- U l\JMHills Lquna N~ Ml.Won Vitjo Monarch Bay Newport &c.cb or.. San Oemt:ntr a Juan C.pbtrano Woodbridp: When the Olympic torcb beaml ran lhrouah Soutbem California, be wd. "we worted with 10 cities and uvest them S6.00C:r by arrivinl ahead of the runnen, enablina eadi' town to utc the ume banner with wording tailored to the city. Some of tbe best.known firms with exhibits at the show were Nortb.rop·a Electro·Mec:baoical Oivisioo; Bitt.cher. C:OJdwelJ Banker Com- mercial Real Estate Services· Hu- mana Care Plot· the. Newport ~h · Marriott Hotel l Tenilis Club; Ticor Title lnsuruce; Knott'• &rry Fannl· Southern California Edison; Abipi Abbott Personnel Companies; Peat. Marwick, Mitchell &. Co., and New· port Pharmaceuticals loternationa.J. Focusing on today's sophisticated communications technology were GTEL/Gcncral Telephone; Pac Tel Communications Systertis, and Pac Tel Mobile Access; StarT el Corp., an lrvino-bued firm that produces high· technology telecommunicationt equipment ; SC R T e l e - communicatioru; and Echo Com- munications of Huntington Beach, which sells and rents cellular tele- phones for automobiles. · A CalComp booth featured a color plotter/printer for paper output and overhead transparencies. EASY Brothers Prod1.tctions of Anaheim showed a promotional video it made for the Economic Development Corp., which received a spcci.al· ~tion award from the CaJ~ fom1a Association of Public lnfor· mation Officials. Kinch Video Pro- ductions of Irvin~ also was rep. · resented at the show. Among Orange County publi- cations on exhibit were Li~ Street Chronicle, an award-winning re- (Pleue eee 8BOWCA8&/ A8) 5 PalnPrc wl 1: -I 'l1 ' Rvnc~I ~ !i Stat~me ' lnlr h it ThuMMer JV ~slodtGr1> 't. _ ,,. 101 tron ~'"' -~ 'f: r!~rlll -'lo 1i N rm wt ·~ -\l'i ,, Cal"!clo Wh -l'h ••• JS Mel oll ''"' -:.,. ;·· l' R¥Jttvkr~ 1f; -1~ .2 -1 ··~ It ~Tell -Ph owttk l v. -1 h i HIVhPIOll 2~"· -II) I r Pavco' -2 ~ ~lrif~h 'le -,,,. nvlSE c v. ~fell Iv '"' atrn oc Vi -'h LS?O" "''"-.... 0 .. .,,,. • ...,,.1._,., ...... .....,,._ ........ ,."'''-••'"·...,.·r-to·--''"'"''-.. ..... ,_,,.,., ., .. -..-~ .. ..,.,.'-, ,,., .. , •-•-•-.......... - !:_~ -cw-r..td""""' ,. .... ""',,~ -yw~l-nttlrtw!T'IOI,. --.11 •• _.., .-_, ,....,........,, • ...., -.. ... """~ • ...-. "'"'"'" afl • <kr ... • -... •\!It -....I ,,_ .-,_ '"·"'11"~ ••" •• '"' 'IM ._.._......_._, ,,.,Wft91, .... ~~·trwwr-rn",...,...... ,,...,""'9 ..... lllJJIHt-tn ... ("1i11••.._~.,,flt'f .............. M.i•~.......,~ ... l •tt ttt\• ............. ~.,, .. ~., .. ,.~4111JW~··-~-"" .•• ,.,..,..,.. .. ..,.. ___ ......._ .. ..,,,._ Nl-irololf<lfl"•"''l'°' ......... __,.,,..,...,11 ... ........, ... _,,... ,..,_,. .. ....,.....lf ....... h "\tll •··~--· • -~~---~----_ ...... _________________________________ ...._ .......................... io.i:ii.i."---....... ~~ ---~-~--~--- .. ,. ,, • A8 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT I Tuesday. March '· 1986 Fixed Rate Home ~ty Loans. On 'Sale Now. . New Steelworkers' Chief breaks union leader mOld By EARL BOHN ,.,.,..... . ...., r PITTSBURGH -F-or Lynn R Wrlhams. president of the llntted Steelworkers of Amenca. the Ocpress1on- cra images of hungry, idle workcr5 remain as v1v1d today as when he was growing up 1 n (·a nada. "Dad was a minister with a working--dass co~grega­ tion and as a preacher's family ... , there were Chnstmas Eves I can remember taking food baskets to families," Williams said in a recent 1nterv1ew at the uoion's internationaJ headquarters. "It sounds corny. hut I thought this isn't the wa~ things should be," Williams said On Saturday, 40 years afler he JOtned the labor movement in Toronto. ht' took the oath of office there for his first full term a~ the union's president. ''If there ever was a 11me. jUSt as there wa 50 years ago when working people need the voice 1n their future that only a strong union can provide. that 11mc i'I now," he said in hjs inauguration speech. "'~ Lynn WUUam•.· head of Steelworkere Fixed Interest Rate• The Toronto ceremony underlined that W1lhams ts the first ·canadian ever to head the USW, and the first non-U.S. ci tizen to lead a major U.S. union. Pittsburgh Steil Corp., and union barga1nero; at six other maJor steel makers continue to backpedal in negotiations to replace the 1983 pact, which expires on Jul) 31. Williams, 61. was appointed acung president of the uni6n in November 1983 upon the death of Lloyd McBride. the union's fourth president. Williams won a bitter election in March 1984 over union Treasurer frank McKee to finish McBnde's term. He was declared president without oppos111on late last year. The college-educated Wrlhams. who 1s recogn11ed as an articulate spokesman for organized labor. break'> the mold of traditional leaders of major manufacturing unions. He rose to the top of hi s union not from the rank- and-file but from the rank\ of union organizers. Williams came to power at a ti'me when low-pncl"d steel imports and an economic recession were ending thl' USW's tradition of faller and latter contra<:ts. Nonetheless. Williams, who has spent nearly II decade on the tntemational union's staff in Pittsburgh, says the role of organized labor •'> cquall} important in tough times and good times. "Think what would have happened if we didn't have a union," he said. ''Members understand Whatever difficulties we face today. un1om. have kept things from getting much. much worse "The downward spiral of the I 930s resulted in pan from the companies slashing wages. So the labor movement has played a construcll\e roleJA..dcalln&-\Ulh the economic upfieavaTin the industrial sector." Williams. born m Springfield, Ontario. got one ofh1c; earliest glimpses of the labor movement dunnga sit-down 'itnke against a Canadian foundry . Annual Percentage Rate•• Acti\e membership in the USW has fallen to about 700,000 workers. half the number of the early 1970s Fewer than 200.000 of the union's members hold JOb~ 1n the shnnking U.S. steel 1ndu'>tl). rwo years ago the union decided to broaden its organizing efforts outs1de the •ilccl 1ndustl'). .. ;\couple of us kids were up there watch mg. and m)' dad came along and dragged us awa} because he wa') afraid of what we might get involved 1n." he said Wtlhams became a social worker for the YMCA after his family moved to Hamilton 1n 1938 and he attended college on a YMCA scholarship. Crocker has never before offered California hom eowners such a low rate on fixed rate home equity loans. In fact, our rate may be one of the lowest you can find for this type of loan . So. if you're a California homeowner in the market for a loan, your timing's just right. You can borrow from $10.000 to $200,000, depending on the value of your home and your personal financial strength. And because it's a fixed rate loan, your payments will stay the same for the full term of the loan. So come talk to one of our loan experts. You can visit your nearest Crocker office, or caH us toll-free at (800) 548-HOME, ext. 712. But don't delay. Nobody likes·to miss a sale. •f<art in effect "" February 3 and 1s 'UbJt<'t to change without 1Jnl1I nu!ICe "The Annual Pm:ental!' Rate is ba9cc:I oo a $30,000 loan for 180 month!. with a fae<l ratr of 11 60!' and a monthly payment of S353 97 Eight months before: Wtlhams replaced McBride, the: union had signed a national steel contract that reduced wages and benefits for the lirs1 time 1n its history. More concessions followed when unioQ member!> settled a 98-day strike early this year against Wheeling- Once he received his liberal ans degree. he was ea~cr 10 work for a union He became involved an a stnke against a Hamilton steel maker in 1946. and began hi s career as a Steelworkers organizer the nex~ year Agreement would let NY banks into state SA(RAME"'ITO IAP) -An agreement bct\.\e<.'n hankers in Ne\.\ York and ( ahforn1a would allow major New York banks to enter C ahfom1a·s lucrative market The agreement must he approved b} the ( ahfornra Legislature and Go" (1corge DeukmeJtan. But a state assemblyman who has 'pccialized in banking leg1slat1on said that with California banks now in support of the plan, 11 should be enacted "w1th1n 30 days." "I believe it's going to mean increased compct1t1on, which means higher antcrc'it on deposits." ~1d A'i- scmbl) man Charles Calderon. D-Montebcllo "It ~hould also mean greater an·e'S<; tu consumer and home loan~ and more mone) a' a1lable for '>mall husiness loans.·· Cahfom1a banks have blocked reciprocal banking proposals with New York for seven )ears Last week''> agreement between bankers a<;soc1at1ons in New York and Cahforn1a would allow som<.' rec1pr0<:al banking beginning next year and full antcr!>tate banking b) 1990 ~)Crocker Bank Are you paying too 11uc for copy I co•puter paper? ffBRIJARY SPfC/Al-We Oeher gi,,~ 11 HIGH[Sl QUALITY CREDIT LINE \1,.,,,.,.r rr•r ...... ~10NEY MATRIX CERTIF ICATE OF DEPOSIT .87% .50% A ALIZED YIELD CURRENT RATE l l tuts • 9 t:a~ 10 • tun 128.H C S2J. H l 9 6." Cl -WESTERN 542-1221 P&P(R & P&C~AG•,.0 G randpa~ ~old ''all h (1ramlrna\ \ 1nonan locket The siher ~en 1n• car ried aero~~ th<.' Atlantic by grt·at grandma on her \.\a~ to America The hah) heads that 1den1ified )our daughtN the first lim<· you hrld her in your arm' Family lfcirloom'' Aml..'riran Saviug~ familil'\ haw h<:l·11 lmnJ.!,ing tlwm to u~ for ~aft· keep mg for morr than IOO H'ar .... Our ,afe depol-1t hoxr~ art full of them \\ h)? Berau't' ~marl \aver~ know thal r<·alh important thing~ art'n·1 alway~ ,afe at honw IWt· g('[ lll<' smart mone~ too! Tlw monc•y that ha rd working pto- plt· \\ant to grow Th t· morwv being .. awd for wtdtl111g ring' and hah) thing~ that \\ill hr pa..,~<'CI on 10 lu111n· An1tnra11 Sav111g,, lhl' fam1h \aVtn)(~ place Where !>3\ inR~ atw11nh like thC' nC'xthlr Mont.'} \1atm C D art tu Mom tailored to meet ) ou r famil~ nc•pch. nov. and in thl' futurl' Chcrk oul our high intere~t ratt·~. Cht'ck 11110 our century of ~ervirf' lo California familiC's. When )OU do, you'll v.a11t thC' American Savings family look- 111g after your mmlC') and }Our famil~ heirlooms too! \flnimum tnm 111 I \t .tr "Ith i1111HHI minimum \ppl11, II• tc rm •if I" .u l1·1l1r.1111·11ul.1t11H1 rnrum·' A \t1h\t;111llAI 1111t ro I p• I tit In! 1rl1 >' lll1tlr.H1 .ti \11n11JI \ u hi hN·d •'1111,111\ 1 ompoond111j1 "'h1·11 llllc rl \I I' It'll on dt·fll'"' 1111 '''" """ 11•m1 1(.11• 111 ht ,1111111 rni '"hi• 1 I lt1, ti.111111 111lht111l 111111u G)•ESCJc ~~UI \JJlJ!W (.O\TA \11.~\/M°'T.\ i\~\ ~1J 11) \ Bmtol 'l2~1~t I.II \1111011"°1·rl 1~1 t i ')~11 IXltO (1\Rl>I \ Crl(O\ ~ 121 ti c,,1rd1·11 C1r11\t Bhd 11~111 ~ (:II 11.irhcrr Hhd I n I l q I \{(i<l(J HI !NTIWiID~ Rf.AC.II ~x ~o fdingtr A\ 1· 1J2Cl't .. 1 .11 llunt1n~1on <.1·111..r) 1,I t i X·tX n22 Ill ._.l INGTON llARBOl R 1€1\Jll Al~onqum St 9Uw9 (tn ll11ntingto11 Harbour \hopp111g C••lllt'r) ('I-.) x .. 6 ~~~~ Au:ounb Insured up tn SI00.000. l.AGl'NA HIUS HOH~ El '!bro Rd . 9lM ~ (at Paseo de Valencia) ('14) -70 l816 ORANGE 19M N Tustin AH' . 926M (north of Taft) r'l4 ) tp4 1620 SEAL BEACH 801 Pacific Cna~t llW) 1)()140 (at Main) (ll ~) ~94 AA~' TlJSTlN 641 F. F1r.t St . Q2MO (:U Nrwporr Aw! ) ("14) 1H2 2~81 ERICAN SAVINGS ,AJ\JO LOAN ASSOCIATION ., .. ' Electronic execs named to council- Three local electronic cxccu11ves have been named to the Orange County Council Executive Committee ol the American Electronics A11oclatlon. They are-: Robert Kleist, president and ( FO of Prlntronb, lne.; Roger Johnson, prer,1den1 and C EO of Western Olgital Corp.; and Bob Quest, president of Advanced Controls, all of Irvine. Other committee add1t1ons include Nick Yocca, a panner wtth Stradling, Yocca, Ca rlson & Rauth ol \il·wport Beach. and Gregory R. Rou, a partner with the C o'ita \k~1 .ollice ol Arthur Young & Co. AEA has an office-an ln.111e • • • Wan Lee is the new prestd<.'nt of thl' Personnel & Industrial Relation A11oclanon, an organ11at11111 of·J)l'r\onncl d1ret.·tor~ anti p'rofess1 nals fro m companies an Io' \ngek,, Orange, R1'lier'iid1.·. San Ber. ard1no and Ventura count1e\ l t.•c: 1r. ~rec president ofhuman res es and administrative ~en llt.''i ·1or Proficient food Co. ol lr~·1 d a resident of Laguna Hall' • • • y Malava.1, former head loot hall u1ac h .tnll no\.\ 'tu• p s1dent of Halo Technologies, Inc. ut < ostd l"vk..a v.a, the: guc\l speaker at a recent luncheon at the 01'ine~ land I lokl. I lalu 1') th<.' on!\ manufacturer in the world that produ<.e'i hologram-; un '>Ill' • • Thomas E. Hyans has been appointed pre'>1den1 of Bio-Flow Corp., a developer and manufactur<.'r of mt:d1cal 1n<.trumentat1on anti devices. Hyans had been vice prcs1dt-nt of 1hc VLI Corp. oJ l,.vine Hyans· appointment is pan oi a move to e"pand the company's management team. Joseph W. Rovan has rt'linqu1<,hcd hr<; mle a\ president to concentrate on development ol manufactunng operations a<: vice president of operation\ • • • Christopher 0 . Wltucld has been appointed manag<.'r of the< osta Mesa branch of Glendale Federal Savings and Loao after completing a 12-month management training program Before JOtning ( 1kndalc Federal, W11uck1 was department manager and marketing r<.'scarch analyst for the USC bookstore • • • Richard H. Marowiti ha~ been rc-elel tcd prcs1d<.'nt of the Newport Center Association by tis board of dtr<.'<:tor~. First elected to the board in 1969, Marowit1 owns Newport Children's Bootery. Hr I!> a member of Hoag Hospital's 552 Club. • • • Thomas J. Riddle has joined Pertee Computer Co. of lrv1m· as marketing mana$er for the firm's business computer-;. Riddle had directed 1ntcrnat1onal operat1oru at CJE Systems, which manufac- tures small business computer system ... He bnngs more than 25 year. of experience 1n computerlsale<; and marketing 10 Ill!> new poM ., ... Sam Carson has been appointed d1rc<.tor of design tor Coleman/Caskey Archltttts of Irvine lie bnngs 26 year\ of experience to his new post. . . . . New directors of Sprlng Mountain Escrow Corp. an Newport Beach (formerly Shearson/Amerlcan Eicpress Escrow Co.) have been announced. Included arc: Frank O'Bryan, president of Spring Mountain, Mlcbael H. Jacobson and Christine M. Sanderson, bot h executive vice presidents of Spnng Mountain; Robert Kramp, who owns a Riverside insurance agency; Robert L. Rosen, president ot New York-based Munm Groap, lac.: and Robert L. StUwtll, president of Ryder, SUll•ell lnc., a Lo5 Angeles-based financial manaaement firm. SHOWCASE '86 ••• FromA7 fional business monthly published in rvine, and Martin Brower's Orang.e County Report, a monthly newsletter published 1n Newpon Beach. Other exh1bttors included Sl~p at Sea of Irvine. which provides !mens for yacht<; and recreational vehicles: Quan1 and Roros1licate Instruments Corp. of Santa Ana, which docs custom fabricat1011 of glassware for customers ltkc univcrs1t1cs. semi- conductor compan ies. medical equipment designers and manufac- 1urcr!I and food processors: Sweet Sensauons, a candy and aiO store in South Coast Villaae that produces bu•une<;<; card 1n chocolate: Spec1al- t1es lntemat1onal, M1ss1on VicJo. promotina the third brake ltght for vehicles, C'IMCO. Costa Mesa. pec1al111na in thcrmopl1st1cs: and the Lakes at South ( ·oast apanmcnt .. in o ta Mesa Orange Coa"t C'atcnna from 1hc Costa Mesa lountry l 'lub was con ccss1onairc for the show. In addition to businesses. llC Irvine, Cal State f-ullerton, the Untt· cd States Manne'i, the Santa Ana Pohcc Dcpanmcnt: Orange County Shenff't Dcpanment and s1m1lnr oraanizat1ons were rcpre~nted. EDC executive d1n:etor m1th u1d he was pleased wtth the 'ihnw·~ ex h1b1ts but that "from the per-~pect1vc or attendance. we would have hoped for more people to come out and sec the kinds ofth•nas C>ran,1e County produce . " . mith hoped that next year's show wall "have sub ~nt1ally art•ter ~r­ t1c1patlon, from the ~hoots parucu- larly," because the ~how offers 1 "trtmcndous opponunny to educate students about opportun1t1es and .umuli that occur wuh1n Oranac < ountr,. And 11' the next generation that Wlll keep th1 county growma" J Orange Cout DAILY PILOTIT~, M~ 4. 1•**M WH AT AM EX Om WHA T NYSE DID Nt::W YORK (AP) ~r. • NEW YORK (AP) rM( • 'l l AM EX LEADER S NYSE L £~0£R S NEW y RK (API -!>Illes, • p,m . Tuesday •nd ,,., !tie 1~ HEW Y~I( CAP) -~. 4 P.m T~csav or?~ alld net cnanve of lhe 10 most eel~ ew York cr,:r l'xc:hanM m 1 o s , __ 1 St .. E ch .. :,.., I···-luues, 1radlno na llonallv a l act ve Amer-n oc.. x ... ~ ~.....,., more than s 1 tra d lno na llona llv a l more Name I_.,,. La .. • st CM.. than $1. t Chg. WnAlr Lin •. • 111.o'J l.,_1 -1 v. PecGE , , 22~ th =:s • ir.~112• + ~ Am Motors ~. S, 4~ -~ev~a_rm + nutl<Odk s i. S4ih -~ exesAlrCP ,,.. = ~ ankAm« 1.ff , i \.'J -lit tarkHld· ,... 1,_ BM I, 14 -lV) Wan Lab '• -,. c l !,\ -iulf~•. n ~ ~. + 1-16 ~7~ s 11: Yl + I elmed 1~ Amer T& T l 112 -I/• AT Ind SI/• +J-~6 Gen Moton : :1 11. + 1~ 090.!JYPce 2 + la Soulhe.rn Co 1.4 , 23 TIE comm 6~ + ~ AmExpress 1 ~ l -2:1Tel l , 14 lh •t • om~dls 1, , 34\h -\It GoLo QuoTE S Due to transmission problems in New York. today's llstlng will not appear in the Dally Piiot METALS QuoTES l·l·l'Miij'iill NEW YORIC~A ) -nal w Jones veraves for Ti Y·. ,. .... s °'*' "" Lew a.. - d ''m' 17m·rn''7912 ,~,1 20 Trn .7 . .44 . 1~ ~tt~ 2 s·~ . I m~ 6 . := . Indus 1~024, Tran e,ls;J Ullts 6SSlk NASDAQ SUMM ARY ..,_. ......... ~.-...-I ~hcz. 1 shnL .;i -r r~n .. ~ 11 t.U.Ll'.n tom 1."'.;Ct 1 }ll .. \. m~x !Or ~ Mv C';:;-rdc;(l G"I N..~ 01 iC.'01 '" 5'~~liz ~ilo;i ti.I~ Wilh r,pi1t.. yOM COn~l-1\Ji l·ICI) ftir u\t.Ut~_,t.c.. fi . ~i CIJmfbr m wtu t.a. blu; i:cn .1 pin ~1 .. \ - /ADVICE/G HORO SCOPE Wednnday, Marclll 5 . ARJES (March 21-April 19): Many will claim you ure u "master manipulator." This 1s because you finish pro;ecl. close deal which adds lo your prestige, possible profit Key 1S· combioation of persuasion and d1plomacy. Taurus plays role. · TAURUS (April 20.May 20): Being tlose to lhe sea would prove beneficial. Focus on journey, commun1cat1on. diplomacy. education. spiritual values. Look behind scenes. dm·over peninent informntron previou!tly hidden. GEMINI (May 21-Junc 20): Reach beyond prev1ou~ ex pectations. lnd1v1dual wh o was nc~ti ve in reaction -------------to financial request will now do tum· about Mean~ you are gom$ to get the funding' Cancrr. Leo. C'apncom figure prommentlv CANCER (June 21 -July 22): SYDNEY 0MARR Favorable pubhcll} accompanies your cffon s You receive allentron previous- ly denied. Focus also o.r legal status. ••••••••••••• special ngh1s and perm1ss1ons -and mamaRt .\ncs. Libra na11 "es pla> outstanding roles LEO (Jul> 23-Aug. 22) tress independence. trcat1 v1ty. courage. ptonecrrng ~pint You"ll leam more about health. t;mplo} ment. pets. people "ho make promise~ the) cannot fulfill Be direct. get to hcan uf maucr<> where romance 1s concerned VIRGO (Aug. 23-~pt. 22)· \ ou'rt• pulled 1n two d1rcc11on!> -choos.: cuur r leading to family. home. )CCUnt). F.~ht•w 1n1r1gue F<><:U'> on e1>.C1Ccmcnt, d1scovl"ry. enlightenment. lntu111on 1s on target, family member 1' ,incerc und will prove 11. LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 22). D1<,plav ver!Wlttllly and ability to laugh at yo ur ll\.\ n foible'>. Older ind1\ 1dual will be impressed. will make o;ubstantial olTcr 'l ou are due to recr1'c gi lt. )ou'll also get invnauon to travel. Sag1ttanan pla)'i role. SCORPIO t<kt 21-No" .:? l ). Deline term'>. rrbu1ld. remodel, rnrrcll rl'lcnt error. Focus al'>o on "1'>1\\. tnps. ideas. ab1ltty to state ca<;e 1n frank. rnmpelhng mannn ( Hk moves up Judgment. 1ntu111on will be on targrl. l .rnrus plays rok SAGITTARIU ('lu' ~Dn 21 ): Personal 1nvest1gat1on pa)'> di\ 1dends You'll learn more ahout money and how to collect 11 f))nam1c ml.'.mber of c1ppo\lle '>C'< "'ill bcrnme "aluabk ally . Kno" 11. respond Ju.ordingl\ Cicm1n1 liri,urc' prom1ncntl> CAPRICORN (Del .:?.:?-Jan 19) Don't be afraid to as!... -\Ou an: hkcl> IO receive everything you need ~CK U'> on finances. desires. asp1ra11ons. ho mt in1pro.,.emcn1. Unusual gift, rcprc-.cnt1ng token ofafft-ct1on t\ "on the wa) · AQUARIUS (Jan 20-1-eb. 18) Protect ~rets, be discreet rcalt1c that unique relat1onsh1p can onl > conunue 1f you handle delicate maller.. in delicate manner Message will become increas1ngl) clear-P1scts. Virgo 1nd1,1duals figure prominently PISCES ( f-eb. 19-March 20) W1<>h rnme'> true m drama tit fa<ih1on '>pothght on achievement. amhttmn. money .rnd lo"e. You'll turn tn ·:outstanding performance" You'll be mon: popular, and ~uu w uld h11 financial Jackpot. ( apncorn figures promtnentl ). IF MARCH 5 IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you arc dynam1l, c.rcattvc. 1nqu1~111ve. and could have writing talent. Self-expression I!> a nccc!>!>llY lor- :.-ou, nut J luxut] Gemini. Virgo. ~agntanus play 1mponant role) in your hie You arl' <>en)1t1ve to mooch of other;, are !.ucce!>\ful 1n dealing w11h public. man) people da1m )OU arl· a mind reader In actuality. you arc d1 stcrn1ng. perccp11 ve. capahlc of <>ensmg pul<><: of general lrrnds. C}cjes March and Occembcr will be outstanding for )OU in 1986 Husbands stay clear -----o~lhe dirty clothes ~un-e\ taker<; S3} on~ hu'>band 1n 20 mall.cs the hcd in wh1 rh he !>lecps Onl· hushand in 25 ux1ks his own dinner One hu~and tn two lO'>')(''> h1~ din~ dothl''> into a hampcr But uni\. nnl' hu\haml in 46 cva ta ke' the din' duthe~ halll. out ol thc hampcr to dci "hatl'\l'r \ou'rc \uppo\cd to d u 1.111th them ~ill ha' r to rl'\(.'<Hl h thl\ .. lurthl'I .S!~lJ h) --.. .. \ ll'nlur. .igo a tamli' n111 \noot) l.'nough to refer to the 'hired girl" J'> a · rt1a1d" oltt·nt1mc., lalkd her "I 11- lll'" \he "d'> the doml'\lll for all lhorc<, l.1//tl wa\ l'lc1" jl.lrl ( h1l kcn lccda \.11ip ml't han ll \ht• wa'n ·1 l .11 kd I 11 hat ~ 1 hen u nlc'>'> her m11ral\ «lml 111111 qul·,1111n .\ "L11" 1.1.a\ a l 111 tl ""htJ rnl.'.\\c<l around 1n th\· ha\m11 ... I H'nl u.ilh I 11 turnl·d ml<• a \11phl\l1l.1lnl mon1 ki.:r Jnd I I/Ill' <llf•Pflt.'.d 11111 I kno"' a L11 or 11.110 no"" hill 11n I I/Ill'\ C .rn \OU '\a'- lht• \,Jml I IJ ll,1\• II 1•11• "\\"t hi.TO JO\ pe11ph: 1n t ,,11,1 •. \d111 d1dn'1 hJ'\: namt'\ 1 \ \do 1l.11\ lt1111k 0<1l I hl•rc ha\r hn llt" pl, "'h1 i'. ,. kl•pt th t•ir narnc' <>c • ·1 • fi,.u~·h I) II 1.• l'I•' thl' n11J\ll tndU\ll \ ~111IP11 t/t' t11 lhl' <1Ulll IOdU\11 \ ., f \ I 1•11 \t ' '\l II ~lllnl' t lO\C \!111\ ll' ,,,.,.. 'or ~ 111111111i p1·11plc <.tr\ lh • II i1J11 •II ".1 I 11111n 1•11 • do• 'not tJ\ll" likr '>a h111 t ti1 ~.1111\ 1,1,11 huth 1t1a1 d1•11 l \,tll d\,'lt't l ll'lnt111 JUltC f h" PEOPLE L.M . Bovo makes lemon JUtce a good <,alt sub'\l1tutc , 'When \l)U finall:.-gl·t your "1deophonr -that compact tele- phone and rnmputer in ~nc -~ou'll be able to call up a menu of local re~taurant'> to sec the re\taurants ' menu'> .\nd make re<>ervat1om, 1fyou w1<,h 0r \O '><!\'>our ( h1d"Progno\t1- lal11t < in·at "'a" lhl' danger C)I tat.i\trophrc lire\ 1n mcd1c.,.al llllC'> \o the power<> rang hclh at \Un\Cl lfJU\l rC fcu" bell\ "CO\Cr lhl' llrr" tx·lh That phra<,c turnl·d into our "ord "curlew." ong1nally not a u1mr deterrent but a defense aga1o'>l wild tire < 11\c mt· Ii hen} or give me dc111h" hJ\ 1h Span1-.h counterpart "Heller In die nn your tect than ltvc on \.our knee\.. · '-o inhutaf\. flnw\ 1n1C1 th1· l.1\t I 4)f/ miles of itw "-1k f<1v1·r L.M. Boyd I.~ 11 '<yndlrat~d co/umaisl Now we say 'Take mycar please ' . When I thought about it -which wasn't too often -I always assumed people stole cars that were sona plain and basic and blended into the flow of traffic without arousing suspicion. I figured lhey'd be rather nondescnpt. possibly beige or gray with a mini- mum of flash and chrome. Wrong. The No. I car that is stolen more often than any other 1s a Buick. followed clollCfy by a Cadillac L:l- dorado, Por;chc and Pontiac Grand Pnx. The cnr I dnve didn't make the top 10. I'm not sure ho1.11 I feel about that. except I'm wondenng ""ho told crooks that to start 11 you had to pump the accelerator three and one half times, let 1t rest fo r l'.Uctl y 16 seconds. tum the key, floor 11 and hum a German wallz. Possibly another reason wh y my car has remained intact 1s that cars arc usually tolen f-0r ''joy ride5." Assum- 1 ng "joy ride" translates to a ndc in a car that ts sh iny. sleek and inspires looks of env} and can be ridden in comfon. my car is out. Car wa,.sh attendants demand hazard pay There:: are tennts balls rolling around undl"r the brake pedal, there's a chip in the fron t window ... secret sauce" ~ta1ns on the seat covers and radio dial!> pe rmanent!} set for the Barry Man•low Network. Look over the cars dnven by our children. I would have been wilhns to bet that they could have left them 1n a world-class gheuo with the ke ys 1n them and the windows rolled down and no one would have looked twice at them . E111 BOllECK Also wrong. . You cannot imagine our shock when one of our kids called saying his car had been stolen. He was sick. He'd 1ust put a dollar's worth of gas in 1t. "How did they get lhe motor to tum over?" we asked. "They hot-wired it." "Why didn't you think of that! Wh y do you think they took 11'!" .. The pohcc said for the pans." "Which one?" "l can't 1magrnc," said our son. "What arc the chances of gettrng 1t back'./" "Given the odds of ha ving ll stolen in the first place ... the same as Lee lacocca buying a Mercedes." Three months passed when the poltce called him one day and said. "We've found your car Come pick it up." Wondenng how he was going to get 11 on a bus. o ur son went to the yard and there was his car, shining like a new penny. l he motor had been tuned u~here was while pile carpet on lhe dashboard. a reltg.ious statue dangling from the mirror and a "HA VE A GOOD DAY" bumper sticker. Someone had put m new points and replaced a bald tire. Even crooks have pnde. Variety can be the spice of a sex life DEAR ANN LAN DERS: I wa'> in terested in the lelter from the man who enjoyed making lo\ e in thl' car Hi s wife felt guilty and wanted to know 1f1t was the "Chns11an" thrng to do You said so long as II was pn,atr. not danserous and reasonabl> com- fonable 11 was noboch"s bu~iness I married one 1n a mlllton. She wa'> lotall} unmh1b1ted. willing and cager tn mak~ 1~1tftyplaee at an<y-ttme. must say we dreamed up some might) unusual s1tua11ons. We tra\eled quite a bll and 11 was not unusual for U'> to pull off the road in the middle of the da" 1f we ran into a wooded area. a \'acant hou..e. a sandy beach. a calm lake or an 1nH\lng motel. On OC· cao;1on. when che mood came upon U'> and none of the ahove was available we JU'>I used ·the car Thi~ kept up until we were in our MK when my beloved wife passed away I alway!> felt as rf we had the heal1h1c~t sex life of anyone I knew because we never ~topped turning each other on Sex was always unpred1ctabl.e, 1mag.inat1ve and fun. Our sex ual compatab1lity spilled over into all areas of our ltfe and we were d1 v1nely happy You can print th•'> letter 1f~ou want to hut no name or city. please. Ju!>t c all me 81:.A UT ll FUL MEMO RI ES DEAR BEAUTIFUL: How lucky you were to flod each other. It was a perfect match. Lots of readers will be envious -especially the ma.o who wrote the next letter. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: My wife and I have been mamed 14 year., I thou~t I wao; gelling a pnzc when I ma med her because she wa!i a v1rg1n. Now I am nol '>O sure We make lo.,.c· ever) Saturday morning at precisely the same time. m the same bed and the same wa y. Any suggestion from me that we should try a bit of variatron bnngs a firm rebuke from her "It isn't decent! It isn't moral. Are yo u crazy?" Ann, I am not a kook. nor am I interested 1n far-out stuff. I am JU\t bored with the '>amc. mechanical ANN UN DE RS routine. (an }'OU suggest something that might hclp'I -MILWAUKEE. WIS DEAR MILWA UKEE: I don't know what you mean by "variation." That word can cover a wide range of acllvlUes. Go to a bookstore ud browse around for just the right book lo give yo ur wife. Read It aod underlllle the parts she needs to see. Stay away from pornography. Select a high· quality sex manual. There's a world of difference . • • • DEAR ANN LAN DERS: You were dead wrong in the advice you gave to the boy who cat!> one thrng at a time. first all tht' peas. next all the potatoes. lb.en the meat. and c;o on. My mother did that and hci.-table manners were atroc1ouc, She polccd through a casserole like she was looking for worms She separated corned beef hash into two piles. meat and potatoes When she ate pi e a la mode. she shoved the pie to one side. ate 1t first and by the ume she got around to the ice cream 11 was a hqu1d substance. Watching her eat could rum a pcr<>o n 'c; appetite Mother li ved to be 91 and her eating hah1b became worse as tt'me went on. I hope the boy'!> mother puts her foot down before he develops more meall1rnr odd1t1c~ -N.N. IN FLA. DEAR N.N.: There ls nothlllg Ill· munered or harmful la eating one food at a time. This 11 vastly different, however, from separatlDg the meat from the potatoes In corned beef hash 11 your mother did. I agree such behavior Is weird 111d unappetlt· Ing. Stars shine at old-time film festival B\-the A\'I0<'1ated f'tf''" \ \ "'* f \ A \ f< R \I< \ -r >Id l),tnlJ Harhara rel.1pturt'd Holl~ wood\ ( 1cildl·n I ra to open 1i\ fir\t .mnual lntl·rn.rnonnl Film f c\ll\JI motoruiding ulC'hm1c'\ like Ttd Dao,oo .ind Robert Mltchun'l t11 thl' thl'Jtt'r 1n antique CM\ Ottl('r \t;_ir' al 1 hl 11pcn ing 1ncludl·d ('brl11 tioe Lahti, Danr,on\ to \!<Ir 111 tht lc'il1val- featurcd · Ju'>I Rt·1""l'Cn f nend., .. : Jane Russell, Jftmt's Woods, Sturt Whitman and I K-ycar-old Timothy Gibbs, making h1'> film debut tn ··Ju\I fk1wecn ~nend\" Trial delay asked LOS NG El l \ Diret tor Job Laacll•' lawy( r ha\ ac,ke(j ,1 ~udae to postpont· the m<"'- acmaker's involuntary m,1n - 1l1uahter trial tn the '"l w1hith t Zone" hehcop1er crn'>h thut k1llrd actor Vie Morro• and two lhll· drcn ne.arty (our years aao Attorney Jama Neal ha'> tiled a mot.ion as.kloa Supenor < ourt J ..,_ lO put oO the 4 a . , Ted D&n80D Ocputy r>1~tmt Attr>me) ~a Pu~lo O'Agostlno filed a motion uppo\1ng the dela) \ital '><t1d hr wa' l'>U\) defend· 1ng Lou1!>1ana (1ov Edwla Ed· wards 1n a federal rackelccnng retnal that hcg.tn\ March 24 The fir<>t tnal r nded 1n a hung JUr'\' und1\ and four other'> a~ charged with involuntary man- slau ter 1n the deaths of Morrow Johll Landla and ch~ld actors Myca Onto Le, 7. and ReattClten,6, 1n a fiery er.uh July2l 1'182. Wham! to •pllt I ONDON -The top pop duo Wham' will ~n be history. after "the most 11m1cable split in pop hi~tory," Georte Mk'-el said Michael and Aadrtw Rid elev • I will record the last Wham! single this week in Lo'i Angeles and pfay a farewell concert in London lb.is summer, Michael wd. Michael and Ridgeley decided seven months ago to quite while at the top. ha ving achie ved every· lhmg they wanted to when they · stancd four years at age 17, Michael said. Wham! shot to fame in 1982 with the single "Young GuM." Their htt~ in· eluded "Wake Me Up Before You Go Go," and lhc duo have sold more lhan 10 million records. World'• oldeat? LIBERTYV ILLE, Ill Mamie Kellia, born three yean before \uStcr's last und, may have claim 10 a spot 1n the (1u1nnc s Book of World Record 3~ the world'' oldcsl person. rel ttves iatd Kc11h. 112. w" born March 22, 1873, accordrna to relatives That was two months and 12 days before the b1nh ofEUu William• of Walet. recoanucd by Guinness follow1n1 the death uf Shia.cchyio Izumi of Ja n at 120. BRIDGE ~ ort h Suut h vulrwrnblC' So111 h d1•;.d~ NORTH •A4 A4 10 9 +AKQ t 0762 Wt:ST +86 1\2 . Q8 Q 6 4 +Hfi4 :1 EAST •QJ 1()97 762 AK .JH7 •Vold SOUTH + K !I KJ 109 ~:1 632 +J9 Tlw btddtn~ South We11t 2 Pass :1 Pass Obie Pass !'> PaH PasH Pass ( )pt·n1nj( lead North 2 NT 4 6 + Pas11 Pat111 ~·1111r of East ;) 4. Pass Obit- You sh .. uld ht' 1hr1llt-il wht-t1 your opponents pay you I hf' <'Om pltrnent of r<'mgnizing yo11r s kill HI I ht• game But you hav<• a ri).(ht t11 'ff•rl ttmbival<.'nl about tht• math·r w h~·n. the gc•st u r1• <'O'>t., yo11 polnlS This hand 1<1 from t ht• playoff 111 cl<'termint> tlw w1nnt>r of tht· lfr1sin~N Hoard-a-Matc•h Tt•arn ' hampionKh1p at the rt'<'<'llt Fall :\<1rth Am t'racan Champwn-.hlP!> After six ~c.>...'!s1ons. the l' S team I hat only a few days earlier had won the' Wurlc1 Team C'hamp1on ... hip was lied wi th that of Or (;t.•org<' Rosenkranz of Ml'x u·o City. and :1 12 df'al playoff w.t<, '><'h<'d 11 lt•d S111 1ng Soul h for th<· l ' S tf'Rm \>\a~ PNt•r l'Pndt•r l11s t w<1 d1a mond openin~ bid <>howt·d a weak r wo bid tn onf' of th<· maJ<>r sutt!t. :'\or th 's I wo nn I rn mp ask1·d for dart fi<'atl~n. and t ht> rt>st <if the• CHARLES GOREN OMAR SHARIFF a1w111111 \\a' n.1111ral \\ 1•-.1 m11(ht h;I\" n•;ul 111 .. part· 111•1 tor a t l11h \ r11tl. hut Ill' 1·h·c·ted to )(lad a lnw diamond East won t ht• kin~. anti h1• < n11ld hav1• 1n!>11red t h t• n>nt r:11•1', 11t-r1•at by rl'lttrning a Im\ 1h1tm<>nd to hts partnt>r's qm'rn It would nnt h:n.·r h('rn ctlf· 111·1111 Im w,.,, II• \\ork 11111 wh111 wa' 1(1>1nlo( 1111 · l11-.11•ad , Ett<,I t•l1•1·11•cl 111 n 11-i h thl' a c·1• of cl 1am1111d' 1tnd t h t>11 .;h if t to 11!1• quc•1•n 11t' <,plld1•<> I lt•c lan•r won, ;111<1 I h1• fatt• of t lif: cont ra<'t now lt 111~c·d on rlro dalt'I hnnl(tnjit Ill tht> trump .;ult w1th11111 lw~s. Th" p<>r· rentaJ(P play 1s to takC' the finesse, hut Pender 11nhP.,1tatingly cashed l he ac·e and kin~ to p1 r k up the QUl'l'rl Wh) '' 1>1·1 lan·r n ·;1li1.1·r1 I h;lf. had East lwld ltll' q 1u•1•11 11f trump'i, lit• 11mld 111' ''lrt' of" onnj( a trll'k with !ht• l.uly l>y l1·ad111~ a I htrd d1a1111111d and l11ri111)! <l1•1 larrr 111 rtrll 1n d111r11ny S1111 «' Ill' dul 11111 <lo lt1i1l. di'< lan•r rc·a,oru·d 111• d1d 1101 li;I\ 1• t lw 4111·1•11 a11d "' 11111k ttw anti p1•r1 1·nt<11i(P play l'or "" 1·011\nl<'t The H11,1•11kra111 lt•arn lo<,\ l ht• ltnard hut wc·nl 1111 lo \\ 111 llw ph1y11ff h) ,1 "111 1' ol /-'°) ' WOlt •••• I • Granny QAtVe me _,.. tounci 1---A_R~f .. l~R__,_ a<IYIU-ahe l'IM•Cl me~ r 1 I"' I too Ct1t1c:el When nobOo,. .._ .... _ __.._ -"'·---'·'--' "'°""" yool -10 _ ...... ·c L I P J v I ~. ~.c:t ' • ,...,. 10 ,,_.. I I I I• Ii o """... ... ..... . ,.~ -- -• -tit '""" Pio,~.-.. ') ...... h _....._...._...__.__._...... • , ..... '4.1 •·tr, .• , .... , .. ... Ir r !' I' I' I' r I' I t)•••YA f lfl •• j .'Vt I; • I I l I I I I I I TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACAOll 1 Garbage 6 Scampers 11 Law coun 14 Norman Vincent - 15 Poet T.S. - 16 Hurrah: Sp t 7 Roman judge 18 Coat fabric 20 Emancipate 22 Shower 23 Promlseful 25 Play backer 28 Parley 29 Ordinal ending 30 Railroad car 32 Hallmark 34 Streams 39 Weirdest 42 Russian area •3 Fights 45 Betimes •6 la angry 49 Verse 50 Mr. Carnegie 54 Bleak 55 Unique person 56 Greet< letter 58 Convince 60 RLS and FDR , 63 Cumulus 66 Mr. Whitney 67 Tripod 68 lnMC1 69 Hlde-ot.1t 70 Penumbra 71 Gooee genus DOWN 1 Unlock poet 2 Nur1ured 3 Equable portion • Thoroughfare 5 Leavings 6 Clair -- 7 Declarer 8 Narrow Inlet 9 Mate animal 10 Use a dirk 11 Stall 12 Hawaiian greeting 13 Sublease 19 Female "Gt' 21 Coolidge 23 Bute agaJn 2• s.a mammal 28 Finials 27 Jacob"• son PREVK>UI PUZZLE SOLVED LADS A C RE ROOT 30 Barracudas 31 Hicks 33 Wrong. pref 35 Open range 38 Fatae 37 Dlacrlllcal mark 38 Utterer 40 Troika • 1 Golfer. at limes •• Cook.ed c1ems 47 Argument 48 Vetch 50 Having a high roof 51 Soap plant 52 Soviet hero 53 Self-esteem 55 Synthetic fiber 57 E1ernflles 59 USC's rival 61 Stadium yell 82 Judah king ~Wield 65 The: Ger THE FAMILY CIRCUS by Bii Keane "Doddy invented a NEW way of doing math : thinking." MARMADUKE .by Brad Anderson '-''*',,.,..., ••• , ••. ,..,,... .... ". "Who let you In?" PEANUTS THE'< SAY Tl-IAT MV 6REAT· 6~ANDFATMER WAS ,.\LWAY'S EARLY' NO MATTER WMERE ME WENT I-IE WAS ALWAY5 EARLY v GARFIELD TUMBLEWEEDS DRABBLE ROSE IS ROSE IF HE WENT TO A BALL GAME()( TO A~, 14E ALWAYS 60T TME~ EARLY. ANO WAS ALWAYS TME FIRST ONE TO LEAVE .. ~r:J ··>· . ) 1' M E~VE.!>DRoPPING T"E. ~£ NE.~T iO u!> BIO GEORGE by Vlrgll Partch (VIP) tt:----- "Now that'• what I call a domineering mother."" DENNIS THE MENACE by Hank Ketcham, ( --~ \ ' .. I 1'lF IT ~1T FOR MR. WILSON, 'THERE'D SE A Bl GI EMPT'( SPACE IN '™E WORLP .• by Charles M . Schulz ~ ,f Orange Cout OAll. V PILOT 1Tueed9Y. Match 4, 1.... All BLOOll COU!fTT 11001' llULLl1'8 "I AHt> I ~Ot.J<a~T Tf//S -ro BRl~HiEN 'fol.JR D,AY. OR BETTER OR FOR WORSE - by Bef'ke Breathed by Lynn Johnston by Jeff MacNally "1 JUDGE PARKER by Harold Le Doux by Jim D~vis by Tom K. Ryan by Kevin Fagan ~l.l'M RM.P\{ DRABet.£1 1 ON0£.R~ll\to40 ~ AA\JE. ~l"IWG IN COMM.~ I by Pat Brady .. 010 YOU REALLY MEAN IT WHEN 'YOU SAID "t'OU Mlc;,HT LOAN ME MONEY TO BUY r.-. __ A CAR, MR. PRIDE? FUNKY WINKERBEAN A LIGHT .JUST CAME ON IN THAT THIRD· FLOOR A~RTMENT ' NOW I KNOW WHERE HE'S SEEN HAVING HIS LATE·N IGMT B USINESS MEETINGS• -~="' by Tom Batluk WHAl'S WRONG W1114 DOMBROW5KI '5 PIZ.ZA ACR055 'THE 51RE£T ~ DOONESBURY \ A >al /QOJ/, I 'It A£.VE1'. ll£ALJ. Y IJfl;N AT'TRACTW 10 AEU ~ M40(1, BVT. (J()() I C.OULD Rl!AUY ~A F<Xl. ()IT ()f M'f'S£V ~ )Qj I by Gary Trudeau "' I. I Jl/57 ~ TO TE.LL YaJ 'QI f?£. MY !Jl«Jf;'57 FIW I ~VlV T 4RE T1C5C EYES f(¥!. ~ 7 (F (aRSf ~y ~ SWT LI' v04.\i WHY. I TH~ IS IHINA. Jal CMZY 1 ~ MA~ao ~t~ f(J~ ' All Orange Coat DAILY PILOT I Tuesday, March 4, 1986 ·-----·'(Cesar) Cha v~z may have spurred so many boycotts over so many years that to many liberal con~umers. he's become like tl]e boy who cried 'wolf.· · · . Suspects of minor crimes should stay out of jail Whenever the subject of jail comes up, as it does frequently in Orange County these days, it might be ·instructive to remember the story of a 17-year-ofd boy named Craig. Craig was a troublesome kid, not a bad kid, but one who hadn't quite grasped the concept of authority as it related to him. Craig violated traffic laws with some regularity and accumulated a pile of citations which he chose to ignore. Eventually, he was arrested, brought to court and was found guilty. His parents, determined to see that their wayward son learned a lesson, asked the judge to sentence him to jail. The judge complied. - .. Within 24 hours. Craig was found dead in his cell. · · He had been tonured and beaten to death by a pack of cellmates more accustomed to the violent life on the nether side of the law. Not every inmate's stay ends as tragicall y, but stories of physical and sexual abuse behind bars are common. Perhaps the cages bring out the animal in some people. Or maybe the level of civilization among the criminal population is generally lower than it is outside the jail. Flying's fun if you've got skilled captain in·coCkpit The point of this anecdote is that jail 1s an awful place. Not everyone who breaks a societal rules deserves to be pumshed there. Onl) those who are a threat to others or who owe a very large debt to society should be caged. More pragmaucally, places that cite minor of- fenders and allow them to remain out of jail until or unless they are convicted have a head st.an on the problem of jail overcrowding. These are not radical ideas. In every count y in California except Orange County. police departments use a citation-release program to handle the cases of minor, non-violent offenders. And here. where the overcrowded jail has caused a federal judge to take control of the situation. both the court-appointed Jail monitor and the county sheriff advocate a citation-release program. ShenfT Brad Gates has appealed to police depan- ments around the county to adopt the program. which would help him keep the Jail populauon at manageable and humane levels Perhaps the pressure the federal court ts exerting and the support of the county's top law enforcement officials will force Orange County to join its counterparts across the state. Even 1fthe citation-release is enacted for practical reasons alone. Jt 1s the civilized way to treat society's least offcns1 vc offenders. Opinions expresseo in 1t11!. space are those or the Da11y Pilot Other views expressed on this page are those or thetr authors and artists Reader comment 1s Invited The Daily Pilot. PO Box 1560. Costa Mesa. 92626 Phone 642-6086 Dornan, Badhalll could use lessons in class, elan Tr> tht• [ d1t11r Our t1.A.o grt"at Kl·pu h.it.;in -con- gres\men Rohal' I >ornan and Badham rt.''>IX'\11,ch .trt -.1111 rep- resenting th•' l<•unt' .... 1th \U(h da"" and cla n tar) aid Whale the reasons tor has tnp to the L .S.S.R. escape us. heda1mc; to be pn vy to the blacke'it sccrctc; of the m1htary-andustnal complex Ma .,.,he he was trying to intere\t them an a piece of Star Wars The first tame J met HafT) Campbell was on a brand ne.,., airplane (before World War II ) flying 10 Albuquerque. N 'vt. Also on board was a friend of mine, Harold Zellerbach This wa\ an the· da}<; when even plane had a fan-type propeller. T ht.· present JCI propulsion had tx.·en invented but not yet "proved, .. ~o no passenger plane used 11 The plane designers ofthal,.da} dad everything they could think o.f to make the planes fl } faster Thi\ particular plane was a l11tle we1nl looking. but 11 was fast The passengers an the salon lelt la kt: pioneers of a sort. So. natural!}. mm1 ot the talk as we left Lo~ Angele'> "'a' .,., hcthcr this was a good plane Harold Zellerbach capped the rnn- ' crsa tton ~a1d he. "I don't kno.,., much about dcs1gn10g planes bu1 I want to tell -,ou th1~ lt'<.a good plane 0 1heru1se the~ couldn 't get th" capuun to fl\ 11 " The captain "'as HarT) Campbell .\s 11 turned out. he later became a good fncnd of mine But all I kne"' about him up t0 that ume was that Harold Zellerbach had such a high op1n1on ofh1m he was willing to trust ht'> prec1ou' skin to him. An~wa} Mr Zellerbach's cun- fidcn<:c tn him made a lac;ung am pre\'.10n nn me 'o much c;o that .i year later I put 1110 good use. r ~a~ pre~1dcnt of a rest-arch and development company called For- cstrong We had a contract with Weverhaeuscr Timber Co. to find feasible applicat1om for a wood fiber called S1lvaloy. A<. pan of this. we had succeeded tn de' eloping a guard for huge incendiary bomb., The wa) thesl.' bomb'> were made was to form hght1.A.e1ght '>tcl.'I shct.'t'i into cv hnders about w, feet long and 18 inches an diameter Unless ade- quate!) protected 11 was possible to rupture this skin 1.A.1th a slight blo.,., So, naturally, for shi pment 11 was nccessan 10 ha .. ea guard . That guard .... ac; first· made by fa-;ten1ng two-b)'· four<; together w1 th steep straps. It was . WALTER BURROUGHS not ~tlslattory and very costly. l)o, the chcm1c:al c:orpc, talked to us about a helter wa> of making a guard. Well. we had the way And we made a protot) pc So far o;o good. In the meantime. forestrong had been p\Jrchast.•d h:. National Firr- ~orb Ordinance ( orporauon of 'vta~\Clchusem The) wanted me 10 meet "'1th their chief ensmecr about hu) mg another plant in the .. East 1.A.h1ch had attempted to manufacture hardboard This being the middle of the \ummer I asl.ed my 16-year-old daughter Toni if c;ht•'d hkc to take a tnp with me to the East coast. Our fir!tt c;top was to be "'a!.hangton, DC It looked hke perfect weather for flying. l 'nfortunatl·lv 11 didn't work out that wav I'm )Ure 'ou must havl.' heard that lightning doesn't stnkc an a1rplanc. 'iorry. folks. 11 doec; My daughter wa!> sitting 1n the wandow scat on the left side of the plane and. JUSt as we got near Grand Junction. Colo . a holt of hghtnang ru.,hed h~ the window. That put one of the engines out of operation and burned a hole through the tail. The q1pta1n calmly explained that being hit b~ hghtnsng wa<; moc;t unusual but that the rcmaaning three engines could carry the plane very nicely However under regulat1ons.1f they stopped to refuel -which the)' would have 10 do -they could not tal.c off again w11hou1 a special clearance And that they would ha ve to wait for The bag plane landed at the aarhnc'<; repair base in Oklahoma and the great minds that run aircraft companies sent on a smaller plane from the coast to finish the flight to Washington. D.C. Washington. D.C.. was lovel) but I got a call on amval from the headquarters an Massachusetts to fly there at once. They suggested I take another a1rhne. I did. my daughter and I. but when we saw the plane -which literally rattled -my daughter was prelly nervous. But we got to Boston after an unscheduled stop in Oclaware. Next day we drove out lo the plant 10 a rentcdcar. I had to go back again the following day but Toni said. "Daddy. I don't want to go back to that plant again. J'd lake to stay 1n Boston ·• So. she stayed and amused herself 1n the city. That night the papers earned the story of a new plane that had fallen apan in Massoun. It was an identical plane to the one we were scheduled to take to New York You can't blame a 16-year-old kid for being a httle worried, but I persuaded her we could get lo New York all right and. after that. we could fly to the coast -that she could go nght through but that I would have to get off in Chicago. I dad and here 1s where Harold Zellerbach's appraisal of the pilot came in. The pilot"s name was Capt. Harry Campbell and he was as skillful as Mr. Zellerbach had said. My daughter calmed down at once and had a lovely trip home. Ha~ Campbell? Well. let me tell you. Like all great flyers he finally retired. And he retired an Newport Beach. We saw a great deal of each other in the intervening years. Unhappily. he died last week. It seems to me that I'm losing too many of my specially good fnends. But. when a person has laved such a good hfe as Harry Campbell. a person can only re1oice that he leaves such a fint history of achievements And so many fine memones. Walter Burroagbs is the Pilot's founding pabllsber. It'<, tno had thJI ~fr Aadham lo\I fir<;t pla{C a\ ·mo\t frequent flier" to Mr ~olar1 of ~,.,.., York -,1 Demotrat 11>11 Hut \i.t·'rc-proud -a\ one of thr m11\I af1111t.·nt loun11c<. in the countrv -to r.ce that he'\tarn 1ng the Pentagon flag at our expense to sueh powertul malital) en11t1c'i J\ Portu~I ttelg1um Denmark and Au<;tna The other Robert -Mr Dornan -seems to be expanding his role a!> '>elf-appointed Master-at· .\rm'> of the Halls of Congress Ha~ Ramho-like m u rage in the face of the funn) little Vietnamese guard with the turncd- around hat 1., trul~ a crl'dll tn Orange ( ounty and the countf) -11w:11:ta1.na 1;;1;tJa.1;t.M:1.1 .. ______________ _ A.\ for 1 .. rac·I wt• lan onlv horx· that he can con' inu: tl\ d11' t\h mll1t<1n e'itablic;hml.'nt ICl ancpt mmc mill He sa ys he doc\n'I know how we lo'it that war I don't rather Maybe their leadt.•rs '>la\-homt: and work 11.\-..:K 'F.ARLS "kwport Beach Bureaucrats give grudging apology to whistle blower By tbe Auoclated Press \\-.\SJ II NGTO"' -As a retired ~\1r Force officer. Mvron M Hnat10 probabl> should have guesc;ed what the outcome of has compla1n1 to the f oda' I~ Tucc;da v Mar('h 4, the 6 'rd da\ nl 111l<11 r hl'll' Ml' m:! da\\ left go\ ernment would be. an the year · He asked the \\-h1te Hou"" for an Tod.i~ \ h1ghhgh1 in h1\t111 ~ ' "independent 1nqu11')" into the of- On March 4 1-rx9 thl' < 11n\t11u1111n uf the l n1w11"it.•h.''1.A.cnt into ctlec1 fic1al harassment ofh1., c;on. John. an as the fir!lt Federal< ongre'>' met an "c"' Y or!.. Ho"'c~cr lhl t.i .... makerc; had to Energy Department whistle blower. adjourn for the lack nf a Quorum Instead. 1he White House tu med the On 'this date matter over to the ume bureaucrats Jn f 681 . England ., K 1ng < hark·-, I J granted a chMtt·r 111 Wilham Penn for the younger Hnat10 had exposed. an area of land that lat\'I became Pcnn~yl vanaa Not urpmrngry, the reply the In 1791, Vem1on1 ht'\ amc: tht> 14th \late. father got tended to gloss over the Jn l837 the lll1 nol\ '-late lcg1'>la1ure granted a Cll) <:harter to Chicago mistreatment h1!t 'iOn had received In 1861 . the ( unfcc.Jeracy adopted the ~tars and Bar-; !lag dc,1gn from has bos'IC'i. Herc's lhc story: In 19 17. Repuhltcan Jeannette Rankin of Montana took her 'iCat as the "l do not have faith that an first woman clcc·tcd 10 1hc l 'i Jf ou\t' of Representati ve<; explanation byotlic1alsofthe Depart- One year agO" Prc<,u.knt Ri:a1pn pn·.,scd c ongrc\'i 10 moH' aticact with tile ment of Energy would hr fair and MX missile program. ca lling 11 v11al tot Jc;;. <.et.:urm accurate.'' Myron Hna110 explained Today's h1rthd11)" ~angl'r .lt m·..., Rarhara Mt Nair "47 Act re~., Paula to PrcMdcnt Reagan an hts letter of Prentiss is 47. Rock mu\luan < hm \(1111rc '' 31:< At lrc'>\ Ka) Lcn1" U . Oct. 9, 1984. He, therefore. requested Thought for to<la-y "Rcgrc-t I\ .in appalling wa.,te of energy you can't build an independent 1nqu1ry into the on it. it's only good tor 1<1.al10Y.1og 111 .. -Kathcnnc Mamfield, author hara sment of his son. which we had (l 888-1923) reported an this column John Hnat1o·c; offense was telling ORANOE COAST D1ilyPilat Tom hit M«<>llq"'Q ft;· °°"' ,.,.., f_.iy fdtlOI T-CIMlfl ..._,fd1l()o ,_obef1 L CllfttNtl r1oe1vc1oon Mo~ TetrrflC_.. r "tUlehOfl ~•NIO' Mow""9~ l.A11rkf1110Q D<llCIOI o~!a ~'!~Of conve c;1onal 1n vest1galof'!I about ~­ cunty laP'ICc; at government nuclear weapoM plant\ Not only did ha'> rccommcndallon\ go unheeded. but Unat10 wns slapped with an official rcpnmand and th~tened wit h the lo~ or his sccurtt~ clearance, which would have cost him his Joh Belatedly. Hnn110 received a grud$· ang apology from the DOE for th!' re,pon~. The hulk of 1hc cntl(.1sm . fim from Hnat10 and then from Rep John Dingell. D Mich . wa\ leveled against 'Wilham Hoo,er. director of the Encrg) Departmcnt''i Office of Malt- tary Apphcat1ons. James W. Cul- pepper former dcp~ul) assistant di- rector forsecunty affairs. and officaal'i 1n the Office of Safeguards and <;ecunty Internal files of the While Hou~ C orrespondence Unit, obtained by our associate Tony Capacc10. show that the elder Hnatao's letter to the president asking for an independent 1nqu1ry wa<; scn1 to Hoover and company for ttctaon In fact the final version oft he reply to Myron Hnatao. subm>ttcd to the Wh11c House for release. was lligned by Hoover. Hoover told us he bore "no malice aforethought toward John Hnatio." Uc said the letter to Hnat1o's fa ther was "coordinated by my staff," and added. "I didn't provide any facts " Hoover commented. "I would havc- bcenJu~t ac; happy if <1omeonccl~ had responded to the White House, frankly" The White I louse reply. dated Jan. 14. 1985. contained no outnght he\, but at hardly gave a complete ven1on of some cvent'I For example. the lclter said Hnat1o'c; rcpnmand wa" ''for what was thou&ht at the umc to be a v1olat1on of DOE rcaulauon and r.rocedure~ reaard1na proper hand· 1na of classified matenal "ll fatlcd to note that the rcpnmand1n1 official had teJttfied· "Both my 101t1al in· qusnc'I and d1M:US'l10n'I with Mr Hnat10 indicated to me that h1~ • JACK AllDEISOll and JOSEPH SPEAR actions had not resulted in the comprom1M: of classified matenal. ·• The letter did note that "due to Mr. Hnatio's behefthat the OSS (Office of Safeguardnnd Security) actions were excessive, a letter of apology was issued for any misunderstanding or unwarranted actions d irected to him." ll did not mention that the apolOJY was issued under the pressure of Dingell's investigation and an inspector general's report criticizing the actions taken against Hnatio. Nor did the. lener to the father disclose that one of those who had "coordinated" the response had once referred to the 1nspccto'r general's rcpon as a "piece of (e~crcmcnt)," and that this o fficial and a colleague had araucd qAJnst IJVlf\8 John Hnatio the apoloay Footnote: Dmgell's snvcsttptors plan to review the C1tCumsianoes surrounding the White House response. Because of an inve tiaat1on mto the harassment of John ~natio. an Energy Department spoke person dcchned com~nt. J•d AH~l'IH ud Jtlftp/I Spar •re 1p#Jcated colamlll1t1 . TbomuEl.lu column tat THOMAS ELIAS Grapes of wrath era alive in '80s? Can grape boycott succeed a second timeforChavez? Cesar Chave1 warned big farmers an California the other day thal "those who choose to ignore history are destined 10 relive 11 ·· But the real question today 1~ different, as Chave1 and his United . Farm Workers Union gear up for another year of attempting to spur a bo)cOtt of California table grapes. Today's question as not whether farmers can afford to ignore the success of the grape boycott of the 1960s and earl~ "70s, but whether it's Chavez "horn hastof) has passed by. The chansma11c union leader toda} seekc; to use esscnttally the same tactics that worked so well for ham 15 years ago, 1n an era when hundreds of thousands of demon- strators took 10 American streets mostly to protest the war in Vietnam. But both Vietnam and that grape boycott, keyed by marches on Sacra- mento that were JOmed by every liberal pohtical leader of the day. are little more than distant memones today. Chavez knows that ·boycott ach1eved Its pohucal goal only afte r Edmund G. Brown Jr.. a close poht1cal ally, was elected governor. Yet he claims a boycott today can force a more pro-union. or at least a neutral. stance on the state's unique Agncultural Labor Relations Board -or perhaps e'en render_ the hoard irrelevant. The board was one of Brown's first creations as governor. g.ivang-·fann workers the same protection other worker'I enJOY under the National Labor Relations Act. which specifi- cally excludes agnculture. No other state followed Cahforn1a's lead. so the ALRB is still unique Farmers agreed to accept the board's creation 1n 1975 to end a decade of strikes. bloodshed, arrests, property damage and reduced sales of table grapes and some wines. Chavez was delighted with the board. as Brown stacked its early membership in the union's favor. One early member was LeRoy Chat- field. a former Chavez aide. Another was then-Msgr. Roger Mahony of Stoclclon. now Catholic archbishop of Los Angeles. long regarded as typical of the churchmen "'ho assisted Chavez through his long boycott years But today the pro-union board maJonty has been turned into a pro- grower ma1ont) by Gov. George Deukmejian. adding to the fury created an the union by the board's general counsel. Dcukme11an ap- pointee David Starling. Starl ing has ~pent much of the past three years reducing ALRB-ordered awards to worker-; and dismissing cases before they could reach the board. That's why Chavez has again resorted to the boycott tactic wh ich worked ~o well for him in his younger days. "Growers have lakcn the Deu- kmeJian adm101strauon's cavalier at- utude ... as a signal to ignore other laws. particularly those governing the regulation of pesticides sprayed each year on Cahfornaa fields," Chavez claims. "The enforcement of many of these laws as a joke." In has oew boycott effon. Chavez plans to warn consume~ of alleged pcs11c1de contam1na11on, using last summer's tainted watermelon episode as an example. His new boycott ajms to circum· vent the ALRB as much as to tum it around, hoping lo put direct prcss-urc on growers to sign union contracts and observe pesticide regulation~. "History will repeat itself. and agribusiness wall lcam its lesson once more," Chavez trumpets, citing a 1985 poll indicating 42 percent of Californians will support his new effort. Rut to succeed. any new a.rape boycott must go far beyond Cal1- fom1a. as the earlier effort eventually did. So far, there's little evidence that the new Chave1 effort can ~tch on nauonally. ChaveL may have purred 'IO many boycotts over so many years that to many liberal consumefl. he's become hke the boy who cned "wolf." No one can take any Outve-L effort hghtly, and h1 tory 1s sometJme repeated, but the burden of proof 1n today's more conservative era 11 clearly on C"havn and his union to demonstrate that their day 1s not pait. TlaomH E1la1 t1 a Suta Moeka- ba1ecl eitl•m•l1t oe state tnu1. • TUESDAY, MARCH ... 1986 Tom Hermetecl named ethletlc director •t Goldin W•L 112. u s c•Derrlck Dowell won't ,._,the reel of the ••••· R Am~ann can put foes a\Va y, ·Am·en Oilers, .Artists, NH\Vin Edison's Chargers bounce into semis with a ll-league ace "We've aJl got the green light to shoot," said Ammann pnor to Mon- da}"s pracuce session. :scrra, the No. 2 seed with a reputauon for flining with I 00 points every time it takes the coun, is the favorite. But that might just be what the Chargers like best, smoc they've been the underdogs so often. .. HB's Haack sharp; Laguna, Sailors • At 6-21h and 175 pounds, be is the prototype of Edison Hi&h basketball. Unshakeable, quietly confident and talented. That's senior Ken Ammann, a two- year All-Sunset League selection, who blends with the Chargers' five in forming one of the most difficult basketball situations to solve for the opposiuon. They'll be going for a berth in the CIF 5-A finals Wednesday ni$bt in a 7 o'clock showdown with Cammo ReaJ League champion Serra at the Los Angeles Spons A'l"Cna. With nine losses this season, Edison is the Cinderella team of the plar.offs so far, and Ammann just smiles when reminded the Chargers are underdogs. "Everyone thinks that all the . time," he responds. He'll smile again when reminded Edison has been beaten nine times, three times by Huntington Beach, a team which did not qualify for the playoffs. "We know anybody can beat us," he said. "But, we know we can beat anybody, too." Ken Ammann Long Beach-Poly. the 5-A's No. 4 seed, will attest to that after watching a 14-point second half lead melt in a 54-53 loss Friday night. "To be bon·est.," said Ammann ''I felt like we might lose by 20 in the first quarter (as Poly streaked to a 19-8 lead with a 17-2 run). But I didn't want it to end that way." It didn't, of course, as Mike Henderson came off the bench to score I 0 in the fourth quarter, sharing scoring honors with Ammann with 14. lt's.notj~st an overnight situation. Housed 10 the same league with Ocean View, which has dominated the league the past couple of years with high-powered transfers, the Cbargcrs are constantly fighting for No. 2. But because ofCIF infractions against Ocean View, they've become No. 1 from the league. This is the same school which was denied a berth in the playoffs by district officials a year ago because of an ineligible player, a situation the district was aware of, but would n,ot divulge until the season was over. The league's principals voted that Edison had to forfeit five games, then after realizing the unfairness of it, rcvencd the decision. Then the final blow -the princi- pals reversed themselves again, lcav- mg Edison out in the cold. "That was the worst," recalls Ammann. "Now, what a difference. For the seniors, it wa.s an inspiration for this year. We know what it's like not to be there." Am mann is Edison's leading scorer with a 17.6 average in league, 17.4 overall, but his value goes a lot deeper than simply scoring. Dlllr,...,......, L..,.,... The Chargers don't have a guard who averages 25 points a game, or a 6-10 post man, but what they do possess is a combination of multiple shooters, quickness, reasonable suc- cess on the boards. and, an un- shakable confidence that keeps the pieces together. In short, they don't fold. Ammann was the focal point of box-and-0nc tactics by Poly, which surprised him in that the Jackrabbits felt confident ofzoning the rest of the Chargers. "He's a very intelligent player." said his coach Jon Borchert. "That's the key word for him. He knows bow (o get open offensively and what shot to take. But I'm more pleased this year with his total Jtamc. (Pleue eee EDl80Pf'S/B4) Ed.t.on '• Ken Ammann la the nlding force In Cbar&en' hunt for the CIF 5 -A baaketba:O champlonahlp thla week. Carrozza: OVjoba challenge New football coac h hopes to t urn program a round By ROGER CAR~N To say it's a challenge ts an understatement. But after Monday's announcement of his appototmcnt as Ocean View High's fourth varsity football coach. Guy Carrozzo says he loolung forward to it. A product of Fountain Val~y High and an assistant coach with the Barons for the past 10 years, Carrozzo says his first prionty is putting together a staff. He ts presently in the early stages of forming one from the remams oftbc Ocean View staff and hopefully a couple of others, from within Ocean View and Fountain VaJley hif!l schools. "I know it's a challenge.· said Olrrozzo. but with as many applicants (31) as there were. they must have seen some POSitive aspects to the job." Positiveshavcbecn fcwand far between 1n the last four years at Ocean View, as far as football is concerned. · He succeeds Karl Gaytan, whose two-year record 1s 4-16. Gaytan succeeded Stive Colflesh, whose two- year record wa.s 3-1 7. And Colflesh succeeded Ken Moats, who in four years was unable to gel the Scahawks a CIF playoff berth, but did threaten the .500 mark with an 18-20-1 overall record. "I thlDk there are qualified players hungry for success,'' said Carrozzo, "and with an on-ampus staff and strong administrative and community - suppo~ with quality facilities ... Carrozzo is the second Fountatn Valley product in the past three years to take over at another Sunset League school, the last being George Pascoe at Huntington Beach. Pascoe and Carrozzo were teammates on the 1971 team and the latter admits the ties run deep for him at Fountain Valley. "It is kind of an emotiontJ thing for me," admitted the Carrozzo, 30. "ltl one capact1ty or another I've been involved Wlth F-OUnWn Valley for the last 18 years." Carrozzo has been ID charge of defcns1 ve ends, the kicking game and research and development under Mike Milner. and leaves with high marks. "ff he gets the job rm going-to commit suicide," was Milner'scomments a few days earlier when it appeared he had the inside track. The comment was in jest, but it reflects Carrozzo's standing at Fountain VaJlcy. '"He's a highly efficient coach," sajd Milner. "He's a great organizer and motivator and there's no doubt in m y mind he will be successful at Ocean View. He'll build the type of program parents and players wtll want to be associated wtth." "One thing," said urrozzo. ··is to get a lot of people involved. It sounds son of textbook, but I have to be a Pied Piper and get as many kids o ut as I can. If you find 20 players who may be average, maybe one will be the d iamo nd in the rough. There are some pretty good numbers at Ocean View." Ocean View opponents next season include Kennedy, Newport Harbor. Santa Ana Valley, St. (Pleue eee CARROZZ0/84) GuyCarrouo get first victories JiuntinJton Beaeh Higb's Jeff Haack p1tched a four-bit shutout Mondar to highlight high school basebal P.lay. The Oilers turned back Irvine, 2-0, while Newport HarboT and Laauna Beach posted their first wins of the season. Herc arc the highlights; Bau.,io. Beacll Z, lrvDe t: Haack. a senior, struck out seven, walked one and pve up four singles in putting Irvine away in a non-League game. The Oilers ga vc him all the support at the plate be needed in the first inning when they nuncd a free pus and pushed the runner to third on Sean Fraley's single, the run scorina on a pickoff"~~~od. H untington added an in· surance markeT in the founh when Andy Lewin singled with out out, was moved to second on a walk, went to third on a fielder's choice and scored on Irvine's second error of the game. Irvine's Rick Smetanlca struck out five and walked four in six innings, but was the loser for lack of support. The Oilers provided Haack with crrorless defense. Fraley and Lewin went 2 for 3 and Greg Chizek was 2 for 4 for the Oilcn, who got doubles from Chizek and Fraley. lrvme's Mike Moceri, a senior ocnterficldcr, was 2 for 3, pushing his batting average to .727 (8 for 11 ). Lapu Beacll I, Su Clemate I: The t,\rtists put together a nine-bit attack and rode back-to-back thrce- run innings for their first victory in two st.arts. Gary Scott was 2 for 3 and Tom Trager was 2 for 4 foT the winners., who broKe away from a 1-0 lead iwtb lhrce in the fourth and three in the fifth to dispose of the visitors. In the founh the Artists opened with sin&les by Todd Rose and T yler Aguinaldo, then after a sacrifice by Paul Ramirez, picked up RBI sinl!lcs from Scott, Trager and Kent Chesley. Newport BarMr 7, Dowwy f : Stu Hatch unJoaded with a two-run homer in the fint inning and was 2 for 2 with 4 RBI to pave the way for Harbor's first victory in three Loara Tournament games. Hatch homered in the first wtth sophomore shonstop Tony Wren aboard, but Downey tied it at 4 before the Sailors punched out three runs in the bonom of the fifth. After two outs, the Sailors $Ota pair of walks before Brad Zenz Singled to dnve in two runs. Steve Kalatschan provided some insurance with a run- scoring smgle to wrap It up. Lakers get show back in order Angel pitchers get work Abdul-J a bba r 's 34 k eys 127-l l 7wtn over Golde n State INGLEWOOD (AP)-While the Golden State Warriors have the NBA 's poorest record, they're any- thing but pushovers for the powerful Los Angeles Lakcrs. The Warriors battled back fr9m a 99-87 deficit entering the founh quarter to cam a 112-112 tie with the Lakers Monday night before Los Angeles, led by Kareem Abdul- Jabbar, got its act together and earned a hard-fought 127-117 victory. "It's hard to explain," Golden State forward Purvis Shon said when asked why the Warriors have played the Lakers so tough this season, "We're a finesse team and so arc they. We like to run and' they like to run. We just always seem to match up well agamst them." Said Golden State center Joe Barry Carroll: "I have no explanation for that. Sometimes you just go out there and things work out. Other times, you go out and there seems to be a conspiracy." Abdul-Jabbar. playing despite a sort right shoulder he said didn't hamper his play, scored 25 of his 34 points in the second half and also had eight rebounds as the Lakcrs beat the Wamors for the second time tn four games this sc-ason. Five of Abdul-Jabbar's potots came consccut1vcly. brcakmg the 112-112 tic and givmg the Lakcrs the lead for Jood. After rookie A.C. Green put tn a rebound basket for Los Angeles. Abdul-Jabbar scored agatn1 making it 121-112with 2:141ef\ana cltnchina the win. Abduf-Jabbar, the NBA's all-lime leading scorer who turns 39 neitt rnonth, hadn't played last Saturday n1&ht when the Lakers dropped a 12)-106 decision at Phoenix because of bis sore n&ht shoulder. Earvin "Mq.ic" Johnson added 21 points and had a pme-h1gh 16 ass1m for the Lakers • ................ Laken forward Kart Rambt. lOMa bla ... ...,. u be pata up a abot lq Monday'• 127-117 .tctoTy onr Golden State. • First intra-squad game set; Six player s s ig n con tr act s From AP dJspatcbes The Angels ended o ne phase of spnog train1Dg Monda)' ID Mesa. Arizona. and start another today with the first of three scheduled intra-squad games. Left-hander John Candelana and relievers Gary Lucas and Donnie Moore head the p1tchmg rotatJon for today's eight-inning game. Todd Eggertsen. Tony Fossas, Ray Chadwick. Doug Corbett and D. W. Smith are also slated to take two-inning turns. "I like to get them on the mound in game situations. before the serious compet1t1on begins, .. said Manager Gene Mauch. referring to the e~h1b11ion season which the Angels open Friday against the an Otego Padres 1n Yuma. • ,Right-handed relte' er 'tewart Cit bum mJSsed h1i. fifth workout with shoulder pain ascnbcd to burstlJs 01bum ts said to be at 70 percent strength and is expected to resume throwtng over the "'~kend Meanwhile. General Manager Mike Port announced ·that six players have signed 1986 contracts. They include pitchers Carl Willis and Chadwick and infielders Craig Gerber. Jack Howell. Gus Polidor and Bill Merrifield. H enll111er, H o•ell •harp on m.oand Orel Hershiscrand Ken Howell pitched two scoreless 1001ngs apiece and their Los Angeles teammates backed them Wlth a 14Jlit attack as a squad managed by instructor Kevtn Kennedy beat a squad run by Coach Joe Amalfitano 14-3 Monday m the Dodgers' first tntra· squad game of the spnng at Vero Beach. Howell allo~ed one htt and struck out thr« m his mound sunt. dtspla~ tng a fastball that ho' ered around the 90-mph range. "h was the first outtng. but fhe .mn feels good.'" Howell said "Thar .. what you tf) to do tn spnng training. build up the arm for the season ·· Recite Jackaon takes battlDC pracdce. Sutton's.dream (300 wlns) nearing MESA ( "P)-Pitcher Don uuon of the An els. five: wins awa) from 300 1n hts 20-year m"or 1e-.uc carttr, says he st11l {"an 't come to gnps wuh the fact that hc"s so close to the coveted mark. "1 don't think I've ever had a.nythtn& m m) ba~ball career to ··draw on to prepare me for what happens when l wtn fi ve more pmc ... utton '31d Monda~ at the An els' pnna tra1nma c-amp here .. , JUSt ttall)' don't know that~ll lnov. how 10 ttacl I like 10 kno~ ahe d \0 that I can kmd of prtpart and not lo\C 11 -~ou know, be m control ot the s1tuauon. But 1 don't thtnk 1t will ti( po 1blc It's a whole separate deal "l thmk that will be a moment that will stand out above rveryth1na cl'iC I've ever been able to do tn spom I JUSt ho~ 1t can come tn . nahe1m 1n lront of the home lolh ·· utton, who turns 41 on .\pnl 2 t!i tr\-tng to become thc I Qth pitcher to reach the 300' IC\Or) plateau. He ~td hc has done 1t the hard wa\ v.1th onh one 20-W\n ~n 1n ·hl'i carttr whetta the other\ had at lca,t thrtt The nicls acqui1"<1 utton la'it <;cptcmbcr from the Oakland A's and he .,,. ound up last season with a I S-10 rtrord. w1nn1n112 of IS dcas1ons tn one '''>·month su~tch The Anaclsarc his fifth team and he hOpcs his last "I don't have man) ~~rs left., or 't E"R lcf\. or whatever 1t ts," utton s;ud. ~rttchmg his &reying hair "But rm pica~ to know that bamna \Orne maJor chan~. I'll be fin1 tuna m\ C&f'CC'r at home 1n front of \hr prople that I t.arted 1n front of, and 1n an area thl\ ha rcallv come to be (Pleue eee SUTTOR/BS) • Or9tlge Coast DAILY PILOT/ Tuesday, March 4, 1986 CALL 642-5678 IF CALI.ING FROM NORTH ORANGE IF CALLING FROM soa,TH ORANGE Ital Estate Fer Salt 81 .. n ZC.••n IAYFlllTlllE UllYIUCI Partially remodeled 3 Bdrm home In prime lo- cation ~ar the Harbor entrance Private pier and float Sandy beactf. huge lot. 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Rates. 6-46-7828 customers. lie. 280&«. $2.40 per day That'• ALL you pay for ,3 lines. 30 day minimum In the SERVICE · DIRECTORY Than11-Youl 963.-.11• Ctant/Cncntt Drywall laatrutill RAINBOW PAINTING &tc;:;aya patio. path• ~VWALl TAPING • TOf o RING. WRITING. ouallty Is our policy etc No ·Job too ama11' An Textures & Aecous11c. GRAMMAR for scnoot or 650-6&46 JEFF Uc 8688 RM.. Mldley. 536-0553 . Free .... K4Mn 722·929<4 bullneu. 99"· 1525 A.A.A. PAINTING Int/Ext cw Dlllrical Wdlcafi•t LOWEST possible price. F'rletld of Bili w• •. Wkdays. PlllJll IUITlll I wneut 10 Step Service. 662·3235 eve'• only ChlkScare. Call Oualltywork. treuat. JSHIKAWA U NOSCAPE DAN SAL YER PAINTNG CALL TODAYll Uta 6"6-6185 aft &pm. M425513 96&-7401 SOd. Ci.an-ups. Malnt. Lie U2592• ·Ill fll llll MOTHER Will BABYSIT RESID/COMM'L/IND 28. Sprlnklefl. etc. 850..t147 Call Anytime 984-2017 Your Mon.-Frl. Easttlda Coat• yrs. Do my own wonc. Lie. Clean UP9•Tree T~ng GLASGOW PAINTING Service Direct""' Mesa., ... 722· 1393 •278041. Al 646-8126 Shaplng-Removlng-Ha\11. Int/Ext. 30 yrs exper • -·' MIKE 8so.3283 ref's 6-42-521• RepraMntatlve Cltuiat ltnict DON'S ELECTRIC 142·4121 1Jt. IOI MBIN's c lEXNINd •98·9671 SaMce cans. TREES 1~~~~E::i~~~.'fii?!K~ SERVICE: a throoughly dryer outleta etc, bonded. Topped/removed. Ciean. (26) ytS exp .. w~ guar. •~---~~--clean houM. S40-0857 NEW/REPAIR. Quality. No up, nflW lawoa. 751-3'478 Davit Painting 96-4-3837 .lnutitaJ C.W..t THE SILENT PARTNER )obt to amal!· reuonable. Tree/Trim/Cleanup oompl PAINTING Int/Ext repairs. MODERN ~ics. Comm. a Rasld, 15yr• ex.p Free eet .. lied. 831-~5 gardening. Competitive cab. refinished. papering NEW & OLD CEILINGS own equip, Nils. guar. f ndat__ prloes. Chucll: 6-42-2873 2Syr local refs 979-529<4 SPRAYED. 527-2589 6"6-1833 before 8, attar"· FENCE R;arr. J$9W l Old. LAWN & YARD CARE. UNIQUE PAINT Exqultlte Acoustic. R• Houtee6Mnlng 14 ~ e~. WoOd. chain lln~tlo'a. Reas Rates. Free Est. 10 yra In the Harbor ArN. aprayed 0t ramow. Dry-reliable. rMI. tree 911. own tree 911. Greg. 118 · 957-6"20 Free est. 854-2732 wall R-s>alrt. &47-7901 tran1 Pina &4S-9866 Dell• ..... TIE Um SGlll p1 fiat REBLOWN OR PAINTED RESID'L/COMMERCIAL rtrEWoo' D s79 II\"% co;:a Lawn-Tr ... snrub 1n11a11. AN~S WALLCOVERlNd Al*> Int/Ext Painting free .. t. Elsa. &46-3254 FIR ,i,N Tree Trim and Ramoval. Installation & Removal Llc#268597 631-9295 Sonia 722--8055 Wint• Special:..~~a,!"1•· Lawn Main & Rototllllng. Int. painting. 548-4013 Dellv .• Jim • .........., __ , Sprlnkler Install ~Ir Anllaact WI UI I• innal itfrim Free E.stlmatn ~5 Ex1>«1 Wallcoverlng In· fuaitart We ~lze Jn Spring & ttallallons. Reas. Consult· Detall9d claanlng. C.it fO< wtt&Nd SERVICES K.C. TREE SERVICE ant AlllQnmt. 581.&590 I MfVlce now. 548-0757 Aeu. rat•. Open wtcnd1. Top, trim. removal. Ouallty -------- Rafrlg't , waahara, dryers, aahed & RlnMd Stiop Serv. at ,..., of urvtce. Free Est. UUll '111 IUTI" rangae, O/W, A.IC. All Tr~W lnclUOed 1978 Orange Ave. C.M. Dayt/Eves S36-e696 DEPENDABLE QUALITY Community Appliance. S 1 ..... ~ .. 5/Dbl W Portable MN. ~831 L.and .......... nn. Sprinkler•. Workmanatilp. 6"2.e813 7899 Alter Clrele, 8.Pk. ~"9 w...... -..._.. •.• 2<4()..()7l7 or 522-2323 Lloyd 873-7218 aft 5Pm lidyaaa Sod. Cleen.u~. 20 yr1 In We galuhcl hang together •-VACANCIES VACANCIES MRICXN HANDYMAN area. Tony 64S-5124 Hang/atrlp. Ad~ to the li-~~~"""""!I"""''!'!"'..--Spaclal Pre Spring Rat .. Carpentry, fencing. win· ~ cr azy. 839-0730 RMurfect,:. ~!.. & We do It alll 857.()7'42 dowa. plumbing, mallte. *iiiiiiHI * Pl11ttr/Dryw1ll oofl .. ., we wtn cteen your hOUM tub encl. etc. And Yee lnt./Ext. patch plutenng. Watarpf nge 831..t199 apt-«>ndo.ofc. free •t: Jnu9 It lord 833-1402 EST. 875-.3175 REFS. ouatom texturing, quality AIPflalt--raptllr-prklng Iott RMs. Gloria 831-65e9 FENCES-GATES Tree trim Ma.onry work. G«I. Clean work. Problama·NO Prob-- apt. compl9x-Mavy roller. Dump runt. C.MJN.8. upa, tr• trim. removal. lamsf •32686-4 55,..71131 Joa &4M2et 7em•9pm CJ.tW., ltnlett wee. Jim Whyte, &42-7208 guar'd. S1eve 83s-4833 llllMll llmMI" sewlNdi XMAX+loN§ •GEN. HOME REPAIRS. Speclalltt: bloek, fencea.-'21 ........... a'• 1-· 11H Newport/cc.ta Meta area Paint. Drywalt. c.iro.ntry cement. plentart, raetUClCO • _.. ~nit~: NenMtte 831~10 etc. Gary &45-.5277 PTL rapalre. etc 24hr ~729 'IGoOd lob•d~hff ~lnQ. GRAPHICS HANDYMAN LARGE and STUCCO MASONRY· TILE DRAINS CLEARFt~ N-twPOR'f. 720·9111 C.trlltln tmafl. I 00 IT ALLI No Job to email. All IYJ>". Fauceta, Dll90MI, Hear..-. ,,,, • ... I .. 531-5579 Pat or lw mag. Free .... Lie. es 1·2345 &41-CXI07 Pa R 722-90ee T~':i,:~~ :J;cH·~~ eomm"9,.J~i1.J.., Odd Jobe Done. WlndOwS, Expert & Repair 0 S~ECIALITY . Bl WlLSON &SONS palnt•yd-etc.Sr.CIUOlec. ..,-. 32yraexp.Retld'l/Comm GRAPHICS NEWPORT. Rm.' ·Add. Remodel Kite. he nt. Bud 5'5--71119 r -•-UC •409035 964-8919 720-01tl Bath. ti ... ~357487 IM. YOU BUY e I INSTALL CLEAN&EXPERT Draln1deat.:10trep9lred •~• 1~" Over 25 yurt eKJ*lanoe II pl bl ....,,., L BOOt<KEEPIHO. Aeea. 30 yra exp. -1 -Gar9g41 opener" ~ l ie T • 118 •• ••2288 130-13_53 A um ng "'-'"*· OVf F .... P«.onel or 1mall .... Lt El4tC cabinet... • ,.,...., .... POO 831-3187 BuafMaa. 545-oaa.4 ROLLS CONSTRUC~N Cloae1L WL 6..a..MM .. ABC MOVING .. ~iii~~;~; N.-Cont1.IA9modallt1Q. Qvlcl( & Cw9f\.ll T13a048 Llc84ell59" lne.. 5&2-0428 ..U, LO RA TES. 552-0'410 iiw.._,'"',_"'91'1l"'!''l'P try ,._ t i"'RmuNd . UoVINd ,...r-A9mod'l-Addtttona ..-atnttlea Gat•& Ywd ~nupe lflhWI .U• ~. 722·753'1 ~c. MM9t0 aauwu.. Jon MS..a102 11-11--• TUt --. BUILD OR REPAIR MC cm"'ol;I ~ HAULING e CLEAN-UP St~M~Tn:,*' EXPERT tm;;:FQtaQ; Watts, atalre, ~ !odla. Spedallrtna In Comm Verd, garage. traaf\, tn19c, ' .... T1"._.31 6'414427 r.uonat>Mt-Aemoclet-.b~th ralllngt moldlna9 & trim. an<! Aeelcf'I. Fr.e a.l. Lawn _., hedge trims. ......, .. 147810t Don tt.4·5949 541-8923 •313924 * 545-o7SS * NEWWarehouMStor9g41 khc:Mn c.11 722·9183 81N(TS a CARPEN· TRACTOR RENTAL. 8et'9 Haullng. ~ a..n-.... ,.... 1U TRY. Small jc>ba, rapalft. or QPeratad, grading, ~ T o.y.. L.OWlt ratae. C..-.fUl~r1~ LET THI SUMSHINC IN .-tlm•t•. MS-.2003 derno. h1u11ng. ,... Celt Berry. 7U·M 73 8y hr/Of p19ce. MWMS Sunal'llne wlndoW cfolanl"" r•t•. wtcend ~ St ·.., Ooon-motdl"P"bay Win-C1a1r Contt &48--4831 t •ty u!!t ltd. Call (114) "'4-~980 d=.:ptete pe~ n~ c'nr FOA Yo Oft AIH,r!Qt\t WlndOWI ••774411 'p~ Whit a Wonderful WOftd DXACI CHiOAi. rm. PARENTS. Pt'IV•teoome. C•nlng]kr..,, Aepa'tr or Snopplng, r ight at _, ..... , ................ Latin N 8 M.,-. 640--7020/E &48-0792 or "3--o•.e Ooon-RIPelf·AtMratlona your f\noenlpt ~yt "'""' """'·-""""• · ' ,.,.. ----~•Penef·LOdl.-.tc Dally Piiot c 11ulfled 1 L...one '20 M0-3CM8 Boltd/Cere lat the Eld«ly = ::::=.:~:!:,, 35yraeicp JerryM2.0517 Adt To~~ your ad. !iit!lljl I c.tlU.p ~Iv. leg Bdl tlofM. IOf"lleOMlotune~plafto ~ ... ~d-~,daui· call 642~ 78 end i.t I ru~··=-r attention, Warm I OftMCf\~hOwtOl)layl1'? ;; ;de we :L-.. #Ofka-Cf...,fled Ad·Vleof heli> · • r..-lrlendly envt0roman1. Lot• ohc>ec.itty ~.,. -·1• "'" you tnvctonertoh llaa 494-1241 adveftlMd ll\~ • Call TC Ask for Ron 642-4333 /\//)~ A~s UToft R6N> 1\-\\S ,, '" .,. ............ IN •••••• I ........... , WEWANTYout Ne.,,., ......... ...,,. Wt wll ..... ,.. ............. ,It' ... . .................... ,... ... ...... ,.., ................ . C1H T•rl Atk '" T.C. (l 14) 642 -4JJJ • Apply in person at the operation office, 5401 University Or., Irvine. Ca. BUI8WS GRILL Come Joii the Party! • •• e ••• •• •• • • • • ••••• ••• .... Antq walnut Winthrop d4l9k $350. Office desk • DELIVERY DRIVER I s 100 eeaut1tu1 ~·' • · . • China cabinet & bOOk : • oaet 11150. 640-.8&48 • Dally Pilot motor route : Bl.ck vtny1 Lazv eoy ctial• : available in Huntington • 125 o0o 645--062' • Harbor area. 1-2 hours • Dinette aet .,,,. et1rt s15 • • Refrigerat or 1 75 • per afternoon. • 546-.11390 Ask'°' Merk : Call 642-4333; Monday -: Englllh AntlQ~ din t bl : Friday 10-5 P.M. ~sk for ·: ~2;:,~.~~~;'6 . : Art. : Hld9+t>e0 tota. 5· s115 • A pau 01 bOOkc•Ht • Orenne Coest • 2·~·ice· ... 1100. End : • e TatMt 115 87).2919 : Delly Piiot : IUleellawu II • 330 W. B•Y Drive • cREXP ....,_,d'Y'« 175 • c-·-..... CA • • -.._bed. HI A • v•.,. t • oat>.'.';;1 S25 ae Coet • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • •• •• • • • • • • • r.ctt drauer deatl S 10 . . ... t lnOf'a 12o.t139 Openin1• Now Available I CAR ROUTES Earn Extra Ca•h For D•llv•ry Of Thia Pa,,.r HUNTINGTON BEACH FOUNTAIN Y ALLEY INDEPENDENT Deliver 1 day a week. No collecting. no soliciting. Must have dependable car . truck or station wagon and insurance CALL. 842-1444 Ask for Jo Anne Craney Feb Biii BIMI rux. m.- dtum, gr91 Pd S350, •· tng S150 87$-7325 Bot> K~ W..,_ & S.C ~. VIII mg s.... Mad\ Pentex cemere., •lac ~r Tapt Conc1 Gr•I PflOee 8'4 1 ~993 I Iv m9C1 MEMBERSHIP 1<1 BALBOA BAY CLUB tot sale T annlt Incl •9'4·9631 NB TENNIS CLUBF'Ul.l FAMILY MEMBERSHIP s1ao1oao 112.~eo '"'" " ifti Mother pm IWl'y. nMd OOOd hon'l9 kH to yr OllO Autf Codler Spenl I goOd com.,anlon fo• older lnclt vldu a l 84$-tstc) Iv rn90 Jf'ftlrr/fu./Alt 1111 ' 88 Orange Coal OAILV PILOT/ Tuesday, March 4, 1966 Golden Rel pupe, AKC. •lll1 Pedlgr .. on Dam & Sit•. MOO. 4~1 , GREAT POTENTIAL Watch Ooga, Alukl•n Malamut & German Sh41phard mixed, $50, 9~593. ONLY 2 LEFT. A!<C Blllcil Tan, Mini Doxlel, 1 fem 1 male $300. ~9-7309 Piaa" Cbt••• IOSI 8XBY GRAND .. ....... I 1111 Pet Mo.+ Tax No money down Or up. red. 'MUllLUO lll&IMYIUI 111• P., Mo. t-Tax No mO'\eY down Or cap. red. "'"'"' OlllSllA W&lll 1211 Par Mo. + Tax No monoy down Or cap. red New Keys. $850 7 14-527-0217 Plano Contole. llke new I '11 llSW JOOSI 1111.10 Par Mo . .+ Tax No money down Or cap. red. throughout. Gd tone. sort touch. Top of the llne Tuned & delivered $1475 347.5672 WANTED: Plano. Wiii pay Cas~I 7141952-9186 ~rtia~c..41 6065 l OTA GYM. Uke new $160. Call alt 5:30 759-5471 TY, Sttrff, lltctrealea 60IO 19·' RCA/no remote. VCR/VHS wlrecl. TV cart $235 cash. 646-8272 Hltacill VHF. almost new I w/cordless remote con· 1ro1 S300 obo 642-3014 Car111 S1J11 Tr1a1rert1tioa loatt, Geaeral 7011 ·82 Schock Elec 19. amtrm radio. full canvass, exit cond. $9950 645-6015 .... , ..... 7 12 17' Western 'S4, fully equlpt, 40hp Yamaha w/gal trlr, PP 646-8239 18' Edison Elec Bay Lnch 'lllAD&Ul 1201.11 Per Mo. + Tu No money down Or C.p red 'II TOYOTA GELICA IT 1233 Par Mo. + Tu No money down Or cap. red 'llSllUtn $111 Per Mo jo"'rax No monoy down Or cap. red. 'II TOYOTA P /I 414 11••.11 Per Mo.+ Tax Or cap red. WE WILL Ill YOIR PllHEIT OU PAii Fii Ill Ill All leases subject a1 a 60 mo term C.E.L wtth r&- slduals Fi gures at F M.S.-F.1 B. Auto lease center delivery 0 A,C HUIOR LUSlll YOUR CU MART (11•) 11•-2100 (213) 110-0211 13861 Harbor Blvd. G.G. fiberglass, gd cond ---------- $4750 obo 432-1866 M-F t111 g, s~s 1111 a 628 S. l!uotld St . Fulltr1on, CA 7 I 4-$80 6300 213--691e6701 1.ARGE SELECTION OF NEW & USIH> BMW'SI l•IUOl-VOLUME SALES SERVICI! & LEASING 3670 N. Cherry lwe. LONG BEACH (No. Cherry exlt-405) (11•)111-lllO Traci.Int Welcome OPEN SEVEN DAYS NJUC HOTIC£ ..a.tc M>TICE 1100 f'tBUC NOTtCE _ _..;..,;;.;;;c.;;;m~.;.;Of~~-N011C&1'0 CfT'fOf YOU AM IN DIPAUU -.!O~~ ~o SOUTH COUNTY VOLK WAGEN & 1 uiu '°\MTAtHVALUY, COMTMCTOR• FOU'11'TAIMVALJ.IY, UNDPADDDOI',..,.,., ~-CA&.IPORNIA CAU.INO FORM>• CALWOMllA DATID AA.Y 11. 1tll. UN-AND UP'UCATIOtt OMDITOM OI' NOTICI 8'hool Olatrlct: IRVIHE NOJJCI Llal YOU fMI ACTIOtt POI' COd'TAI. IUUC TR ...... UNll'lf!D INVTING llDI TO MOT9CT YOUR~· ~ ~ (leOI. 1101..-NOTt~mli=V gl\19fl Bid DHdllne. 10 .00 NOTICE IS H!REBY given .,.n. rT MAY• tO&.D AT The Calllornl• Depart· u.c.c.) that tl'lt Cl~ Clerk ot Iha City o'clock a.m ot 111e 12th day that the City Ci.tk or tl'lt City A flUllLIC IAU. • ~ merit of Flltl end Gan:_~ 0,~2N:. 18 ::'~ "'::f h~ 01 ,_ounta v 11-. C•'I of Mardi. 1980 of Fountain Va"-', Calf· ... D AM IXPLAMA •""" tile City of ~t .._., .,,. n • -•· .. • Place of 81<1 R~.ipt: 50&0 f0tnla, will r~"'t ~ OI' THI NATUNI Of fHI hav. reque.ted a pennti to named tr.,,...,Ot{t) ttlllt 1 ~~.:111u~~:_e ~ Berranea propo1&11 untll tl'lt hour ol ,.tOCllDIMO AOAIMIT dredge 1, 100.000 cubic bulk tranefef It at>out ·10 be 2:00 p.m on F1lday, March ProJect lden\lllcaUon 2·00 pm on Friday, Ma.rch YOU, YOU IHOUlD COM-iard1 of Mdltn41flt lrom ~'!i9 o;; ~::OC*1Y 1~ 1~r~~1~or8c.:::~~~11~~ :_~on~g~·=~.:;~= 11~ ~~~ne 'fr.~'::;,::.~ TACT A~=~ : ~.,;~ ,,:•~ and ~ Avenue and W11d SlrMt, In 1lty Parl!, Euti1110<e, Woo<J-Elll1 Avenue and Ward TIWITll'I IAL.I PROJECT 0£SCRIP'T10N: loddrre-Of f~ :lrt: accorclenee with the Plana brl<lge HIQh lrvlne High str .. t, In accordance With NO. 10l111 The proJeet wlll remove aa>-trant etOft are. and S~lllcallona. Place ~Ian• .,. on Ille: th• Plane and 6peclfl· On MARCH 24, 1988, at p(Oxlmatety I, 100,000 C\.lblc TSE & FON YSOU w~. PrOp()HI• shall be pre. lrvlne Unified Schoof Of• cation•. 10:00 A.M., at THE REAR yard• of Mdlment !torn the s 12 W•t 19th tr .. t. """ta enteo under l8$i.d co-...< trlet 6060 S.rranc. Propotale anall be pr... ENTRANCE LOBBY ON STH Upper Newport Ba)' M .... CA 92027 and snall be 110GOmpanled NOTICE IS HEREBY anted undet IMled cover STREET OF CHICAOO feoloOIOel ~. Thepro-The name(1) and bualneta by one of the lo""' ol bid· GIVEN thal the above· and shall be llCCIOITlpat\led TITLE INSURANCE COM· jeCt WlM ~ end widen add,.... of the lntend4'd ders Nturlty required by named 8'hool District fOf by one of the form• ol bid· PANY LOCATED AT 501 N. the exlttlno ecceea etlannet trtinlf•eeC•J .,.C ~H1U~N Secltlon 10 ol the Speolfl· Orange County C.lllornle der• 110CU•l1Y r~ulred by MAIN Sl'REET. In the Ctty of from tlle Coat Hlghwa1. H 0 U N 0 cations Alt propoaal1 thall ecllng by an...:1hrough lit S.Ctlon 10 of the Specif!~ Santa Ana, County o4 Or-B'rt<toe lo the "NarrOWI ' (217-78-8•9•) &. • YI-HSIA be 'marked Project No. Governing Board. hereln· cations All proposal• ahall aoge, State of Ctlll0tnla, .,.. o4 the bay with • CHIAN (!29·60-350t), 512 2715-Ellis Avenue end elter referred to u "DIS· be marked Propotal !or.Pro-CAL IF 0 RN I A RE· prQPOMd bNln of approx· W•t 19th StrMt. Colla Ward Street and meli.d or TRICT", wtll rec:etve up to, ject No 2775-Ellla Aven111t CONVEYANCE COMPANY. lmately 35 141rface acrM MeM. CA 92027. delivered '° es to be In Iha bul not later than the 8bove-end Ward Streat end malled a Calllornla corPot•tlon. u belOw the "Old Salt Wortc• That the property pertl- nands of the City Clefl< In rier stated time, Miiied bid• tor or dellvered .o u to be In duly appointed TruetH Otke." SpoU trom the protect nent hereto .!.'_~bed In office tn the City Hall.~200 the ewarCI ot a oontr8Ct tor the nands of the City Clerll In under that oertaln Deed of Wiii be di.poeed of In Ille genettl u 1"Wl1urant and THAllM YOU Slal11r Avenue. on or ~lore the above p1o)eot her office In the City Hell, Trust executed by NORMAN OC9atl at the approved Loe It I0041ted al: 5 !2 w .. 1 19th nn the hour stated Al lhe de&· Bl<ts shall be reoelved In 10200 Slater Avenue, on or H HALL. AN UNMARRIED Angelel 3 oc.an dl9')0UI StrMI, Coate M.... OA FOii 2 !JS ''"''"' '""' " ~ .. ,. "'' ~-'""''" .. """'" ... , .. "' """ """'· •• MAN .. """M• -... .. .... ~ celYed will be PVblloly oe>en· and shall be operled and the designated time all bid• on JULY 30. 1982. u lnetru-The protect la part ol 8 The 6ullneet name uMCI 4+· tld examined and d.Clared pvblklty read aloud al tile recielved wlll be publicly menl No. 82·2&4017, of Of-Comprehensive Sediment by •.id traneftwora at MHI by tile City Cle111, Bidders above-stated time and opened, examined and d• llClal Records of Orange Controt Prog11m tor ~ looatlon la COLONIAL and the pUbllc are Invited to place. clared by the City Cleril Bid· County, Stale of Clllllornla. port Bay and the San Diego KITCHEN be present .111 the (leclaratlon Tllefe will be a s 10.00 ae-ders &llel tile P1Jbllo are In· under the Power of Ula Creek Watenned. That Mid bUlk Iran.tar 11 01 tald proposals posit required for each"' ol vlt&d to be pr-nl at the therein contained, wtfl Mii at The Coutal CommlMlon Intended to be contum· All bids so received, exam-t)kl documents to gu.aran1ee de c I a rat Ion of •a Id Wbllo auotl~ to Ille highest ~to obtain lntormatloh maled at the office of; COS-u A lned and declared wlll t>e re-heir return In good cond111on ,proposals blddeflorc&ah. or cheek u to ualel In determining MIC ESCROW CORPOR· IN .S. , lerred by the City Clerk to within 35 days alter the bid All blduor-ivea, exam-described bel~, ptyable at whether a permit ahould be ATION. 32B S. Alluitlo Blvd .. AND TRYING H&ROER the Clly Englneor and the opening date. lnad and decl11ed wlll be re-tbe !1111e"'Of'Nle In lawful granted for this p<oJeet and 11103, Monterey Pl!fk. Call· " Clly Attorney tor checking Each bid must conform leired by the City Clerk to money of !tie United Stain II any reatrlotlon• or con-fornla 91754 oo Of attar JO BE ] and reponed to the City and be responsive to the the City Engl~ e.na the ot America. without war-dltlone should be placed on MAR 20. 1986 -• ~uncll al Its regular meet-conlrac1 doeurn&nl9 City Attorney lor checking ranty express Of lmpli.d u the pro)act. For this The name and addr .. of • SALES lr>g on Aprll 1, 1986. Each bidder Shllll submit, and 1eported to the coy 10 title, UM, poueatlon ()( purpoee, the permit Wiii be the peraon with whom • SERVICE Prior 10 commencing on the form lurnlslled with Council at Its regular meet· encumbrancee. all rlgl)t. title coneldered at Iha Com· cfalms may be flied It COS· • PARTS work. the contraotor and au tho con11ac1 documents. a Ing on Aprll 1, 1986. and Interest now held by It minion's Maroo meeting In MIC ESCROW CORPOR- LE SIN aubeontracto•s shall obJaln llat ol the proposed subeon· Prior to commencing as SOCtl Tr141 .. 1n and tl) the t,ot A{lgelea: ATION. 328 S. Atlantlo Blvd., • A G a business license from the traotors on thlS project as worl(, the contractor and all lollowlngdetertbedproi:*iy DATE: Thu,..Oay, March #103. Monterey Park, CA tARC.l SI INVI N 111111 Cit~ 01 Fountain Valley In ac-required by the Subletting subcontracior!I shall obtain sltuetecl In the alor ... ld 13. 1986 91754, Attention: Tiler ... <lt; lftl WI Sl c 1 cordance with the City Mu· and Subcontracting Fair a business lloenee from the County and State, to wit: TIME: 9:00 a.m. Tamom and the last day fOf · 1 JA niclpal Code No Volvme I, Practices Aci Gov1 Code City ol Fountain Valley In ao-LOl' 80. OF TRACT NO. PLACE. Ramada Hotel. flllng cfalm1 by eny OfedltOf EVERY M00£l & COlOI! T111e 5, Chapters 5 04 and Sec. 4100 et seq oordanoe wtth the City Mu-10018, IN THE CITY OF 6333 Brl91o4 Parkw•y. Cul· ehall be MAR 19, 11108. CALL TODAY 5 08 Each bidder mutt submit nlclpal CO<le No. Volume I. COSTA MESA, COUNTY Qf var City, CA 90230 which le Ille buslneas d1y BMW '81 3201, 1 ownr. -In 1ilc.cordance with the with eacn bid certified or Tiiie 5. Chapt~ 5.04 and ORANGE, STATE Of CAL1! Pertone lntereeted In thl& before the coneummatlon 39,800 ml, star, air, snrf prov1s1ons of Secllons 1770 cashier's check payable to 5 08 FORNIA, AS PER MAP RE· permit are Invited to make date epecltled above. $10,500 obo 720-0354 to 1777. 1nCluslve. ol the the DISTRICT or a bid bond In accordance with tile CORDED IN BOOK 425, written comment• or ex· .SO tar u 11 kn<>wn to u10 DATSUN .79 B210. For Labor Code ot lhe Stale of In the form sat forth In the provtalons of Sections 1770 PAGES 4 TO 7 INCLUSIVE press their vMlws at the Intended Tra,_leree aald In· Sala $700 Contact Beth Calltorr1lt1 the City Council contract documents In an to 1777. lncluelve, of the OF MISCELLANEOUS March meeting Persons tended Transferor uNd the (714)631-0149 ~~~h~~%:~;~a~~:1: ~i:~;~~~~~~~t1~'tf~ ~~?if~r~:'~t!f b~~ sd:,e~: ~::scJ~Jf!,E ~:~~:D~~ :'t!'::;gcon':1~·~~,8~1~;: ~:,.:d:~0::Sr:.:; DATSUN ·79 B210 Cass a Dt i 9300 I the prevelllng nourly rate of as a guarantee that the bid-ol the City of Fovntaln Valley OF SAID COUNTY. ments to Ille project. Oral within the three )'9Ar8 lut 2 dr 40m ti • S 1750 nattt attt C waqes for each cratt 01 type der wlll enter Into the has by resolution adopted The lolal amount of the stelements will be heard. put None. >tint cond g~6-n11 BUICK 179 Riviera, white. of workman or mechanic proposed contrac1 If lhe lhe prevailing hourly rate of unpaid prlnclpal balance. b1JI, lor accuracy, all Import-Dated. Feb. 2t, 1980 __ I tan lrthr int loaded I needea to execute ttie con· same IS awarded to auch wages tor each crelt or type Interest tflereon. together ant testimony SllOUld be CHUNQ..HOUHO CHtAM. DATSUN '80 310GX, al e. clean 1 owner reg serv' tract which will be awarded bidder. In the even I of failure of workman or mechanle with reuonably estimated eubmllted In writing YH411A CHIAN, Intended 4spd, am/Im/tape, good n ' d · d to the successful bidder, as to enter Into said contract, needed to execute Iha con-costs, expenlM and" ad· The permit appllcefloQ, re-Tr~ cond Leslle 644-6333 S~~cb ~1ni~ ~%~ge · determor>ed t>y the State DI· such security will be forfeit. tract wnlcn wtll be awarded vanoes at lhe time ol the In· lated document•. the l;om. Publlelled Orange Cout -----____ .. _a • recto1 ot lndus1rta1 Raia· DISTRICT reserve• the 10 the successful bidder, u ltlal publication of this No-mlaalon'a proposed requlr• Dally Piiot Mard'I 4, 1986 HON DA 19 7 8 C 1vlc CAO ·77 Sevllla. Orig t1ons right to re)°'t any or 111 blc:l1 determined by the State DI-tk:e ere S121,3"9.73. menll. and all related T-058 Wagon, auto, ac. cruise. ownr loaded xlnt cond The cont• actor shall or 10 waive any lrregularttles rector of Industrial Reta-Currently dated CU11ler1 documentation may be In-1111111"JC NOTICE $ I 8 0 0 ob o ( 7 l 4 ) s4999 731• 7020 provide such compensation rn ar>y bids or In Ille blddlng. lions. Checks or certflled Check• apected and copied al the r~ 736-3098 att 6pm. ___ . __ 1r>surance as reQulr&d by the Pursuant to the provlSlona The contractor shall payable to the Trustee Of Commission's Dlslrlcl Of-____ NO.....;.TIC_.;..E ___ _ ----------CAD '78 Savllle. 741< m1, L11bor °'>de of the State of of Section 1773 of the Labor provtda such compeneallon bidder are aoceptable to !lee 245 West Broadway MAZDA '71 RX2, new brks I new batt/brks exit, snrl, Ca111orn1a, and shall execute Code of the Stare of Call· insurance as required by the Trustee provided proper Sulia 380. Long Beactl, CA ~VfTINQ INDI . & clutch. good cond t 1 ownr $6250 631 6340 ii con1r er.tor's cerilllcate re-lornla the DISTRICT has ob-Labor Code of the State of ldent1ncat1on le 1vallable, 90802 (213·590-5071) be-Date. February "25. l986, $395 obo. 786-5746 -,-Qlird111g said compensation talned from the Director ol Calitornla, and Shell execute From Information which tween the hours ol 8:00 a.m. Speclf~tlona~o. ~PW: . CAD 84 Eldorado. t>lue. rPqwements The contrae-the Depanment of Industrial a contractor's certificate re-the Trustee ~ rellable and 5·00 p m Monday Dlvlelon. Public lAAdacape: 26' FIB Sports Fisher MAZDA 8l RX7 red. gd lmmac 39K ml leathe· '101 'nell funner require all Relallons tne general gardlng said compensation but for which Trustee makei through Friday .f(,, more In-S~flcallon\t2[0ME (1)4• Nu angina VHF sounder 9~o7n2d5:~c am7~~m5!~~ loaded. lease $398/mo subcoritractors lo Similarly prevaltlng 1ate of per diem requirements. The COl'ltrac-no reprMentatlon or war-formation, contact Peter WTRAH CETLO DRiil~ IH~LITY Steeps 4 head galley • or • 41 mo's left 646-6475 providt< 'vch compensation wages 8nd Ille general tor shell further require all ranty. the atreel addreea(ea) Xamder (213-590-5071 I R $6800 AYS &46·9000 L A I 1 Q I MAZDA GLC STATION • , t. •nswanc.t: !or all of the sub· prevatllf19 rate tor holiday subcontractors 10 slmllarly or other common deaig· Published Orange Coal1 It Is the Intent ol theae 40' Pacemaker Yacht OS nge es n y WAGON '83 air am/Im C~D 85 ~L EETWOOD col\lractors' employees The and overtime work In the lo-provlde sueh compensation nation of the •bove d• Dally Pllol March 4 1966 specification=• -Jn ~ .. ping 5 d d · n' k i. hlla/ blue 16K m1 contractors and subeontrae-1catlty 1n which this worl\ ts to 1nau1ance for all of the sub-scribed property la· t090 ' T--063 wllll the P<>:I of the City FluslldeckAttCabln A th • dCI t ·SP ,g gasm •100 s M UST SELL MAKE 1ori.s1111lllvrn1,h tne c11ya bepe<lormectforaachcral1 contr1C1ors'emp1oyee1,Tha STONE BROOK 0LANE. of Fountain alleyloobtaln liveable luxury afloat U Off le ene runs goodC j S039~5 OFFER 494-4959 cart!ltcate ol waiver of 1 1 or type ol worker needed to oontrlciorsand subcontrac-COST A MESA. CALI· equipment eultable IOI' the Twin V6's 110v plant radar al av d ----s11broga11on under the 1erms Hec:ute ltle contract These tors shall lumlsll the City a FORNIA 92627 P\B.IC NOTICE aervloe demand• ot the d&- $48.000 AYS 646-9000 Dealer 760-731115-48-2020 NABERS 01 1roe worwe1 s comoensa-rates are c5n Ille at the DIS· certificate ot waiver of Said property la belfl9 partment Involved. All ma- 30. '81 Formula 302, Olf· MERCEDES '66 230 SL uon •nSl,rence 1 TRICT office located at SOSO subrogation und« the t«me sold tor the purpoee of pay-K 23137 terlal lumlshed shall be sub- Shore, xii cond Trlr. twn I WE LEISE ILL Euro style am/Im Becker CADILLAC No Old .viii be considered Barranca. Coples may .be of lhe worker's compenaa-Ing the obllgatlons teeured NOTICE CW ject to lnspecllon and ap-25 F 895 l cau Xlnt • ond s 15 000 •Hll4'Ss 11 1R made on ttie ol-obtained on request A copy tlon insurance by said deed of Trust lnclud-DEATH CW provaJ otthe Director of Pub- 4 hp asl! -5137 lllES AID I 536-0104 g · LARGEST SELECTION t1c1111 t11unk form furnished or these rates shall be post· No bid wlll be conaldered Ing f-•nd expen-of tM PflllA llllNATE D£LANEY lie Work•. Thie equipment 37' Sedan Sportflshar. twn r ary t>) lhe Ctty and ts made in &d at lhe job slle. unless It is made on the of-Trustee end of Sale. AND CW~ and all lie components Shall Ch I V8 d I t' MODELS OF MERCEDES '73 280 4 dr, oflate mexlel. IOW mileage acc;oroance with tne It shall be mandatory upon tlelel blank form lumlsned Dated February 5, 1986 TO ADMtNllttlll be new and anall not have Ftr't:~s 'Ne::e s~':vr,;. am/Im cassette. xlnt Cadillacs in Orange prov•s1r.nH1f 1h1i. Notice and the CONTRACTOR 10 whom by the City and Is mede tn c Al 1foRN1 A It E . E•TATE NO. A-112011 been used In demonstration s14,90o_ _ 646-9003 FllE cond, $5500 obo Countyl See ustodayl 11111 proposal requ1rementsl thacontract1111warded,and accordance with the CONVEYANCE COWANY, or ott'Mlr service. All equip., 536-0104 Gary 540 91 OQ Rno cond1hons set rorth upon any suocon1rac1or I provisions of this Notice and .. Ntd TruelM, 11y auz.n.. To en heirs. t>enellClartes, ment and accessorlea sup. Sail loata 70f4 O • ur>der Sec tion 2 ol rhe Spec1. under such CONTRACTOR, the proposal requirements ne K8'1y. Execudff vac. creditors and contingent plied Shall comply with the • . COST A MESA Of! l•c 1>nsea 1n accordance speclllad rates to all workers I under Section 2 of the SPBCl-enue, North ridge, Call· may be othetwtae Interested Californla Codea and Fed«-20! Balboa Sa'lboat wttrlr. EUR PEAi ~" -2600 Harbor Blvd heat ")"s Each bidder musl to pay not less than th• aald 8lJd conditions set forth PFMWent, tota1 COft»1n A•· credltore. and per.ans wflO requirement• of appll<:at>HI Goexl cond $3500 obo CARS w11r. .1eiptocable state laws employed by them ln thee•· lica11ons Eacn bidder must tomla t1S21. T...,,..one No. In the wlll and/or estate ot: al Safety Regulallons In 432-1866 WE IUY lll llllAIES Pur5.,an1 to Callforn11 ecotlon of the contract be lleensed In accordanoe (111) 701.2515 PETRA RENATE DELANEY force . . 84 CAT ALINA 22. SPECIALIZllUi USED CARS & TRUCKS Gow•r nmim1 Code Seeuon No bidder may withdraw wllh applicable atate laws Published Orange Coast A petition hu been nled Ouallty, melerlals. per. l(eel Honda 75 Foooo -----e<>ME IN OR CALL FOR-4590. thli con1Lac10Lw11Lt>a LI4>8tlod ot SW.v PuU1uant_10 CallfJlrnla Dally PJlot february_Ja,_ by PETER R. STEUER In ~he for ma nee characterlellc• "° <.1nt11•ed tn post approved (60) days atter ltie dale set Government Coda Section March 4, 1988 Superior Court of Orange anefPrlce quotetlon1 wlll &. Eves 6«-7664 ' MERCEDES IEIZ *11111 '13 3001* FRH APPRAISAL ...cur•lles with !he City or an tor the opentng ol bids 4590, Ille contractor w111 be T-04E County requesting that ana~ed by competent City Sailing Sf.Pierre Dorey 28. / Red/Pal Super cond., ser-DeULLO approvt!d tinar>c1a1 1nst1tu· A payment bond and a entitled 10 poet approved PETER R STEUER be IP-authorities and the equip. gaff rig w/45' mooring i j'"' ~ vice records, low mlles I CNEYllOLET llon 1n order to have the City performance bond wUI be seourllles with the City or an pointed u peraonal rep-men1 which In their opinion Newport bay $ t8.000 . . i . <I yr wsrr Leese or buy 182 t 1 BEACH BL vo re•~11.sl'! lur>ds retained by required prior to exeeullon approved llnanctal lnaUtu-flta.IC NOTICE r_,tatlve to edmlnlster the offers the most suitable fee- 631_6263 •1 • 11 1 (024305) HUNTINGTON BEACH ttoe Coty 10 msure per· of the contrec1 and Shall be lion in order to have the City estate or the decadent. lures and best MrV9ll the OJ • 121 Ill lormar>r.e or the contract In the form set forth In the release funds retained by FICTlTIOUl llUllNfU The petition requettt Interest of the City wlll be Santana 30/Jo "Snatu" ; • ' ' 1 1 (i l•l·IOll; &•1·3331 Plar•!> spec:1l1c;at1ons and contraC1 documents. the City 10 Insure per· NAME •TATIMENT authority to admlnlater the purchU41d Grand Prlll loaded I II 8 3000's n stock to CHEVY .77 8 C 0111,.,.1 propoc:;al rorms to be Pursuant to Section 4590 formanc. of the contract The lollowlng ~are estate under the lnd8'*t-The City speclllcally re-. -u 557 4040 choose from • V apnee used tor 1>1dd1nq can be ob-of the Government Code ol Plans. *~'tlcellons and dOI"" buSI~· u : ••-1r~ dent Administration of Ee-eerves the ""hi to reject any •ace. Dys 752-9277 • Classic. loade<l Sharp• """"' .... ........ "'""' ~ '"' Jll SLEIOIS tained onl~ at the ottice of lhe State of Calllornla, the official proposal forms to be polltan Printing, 3176 111" Act. or all propoaals and waive Sl., /DocLt/St . j ASK FOR JIM JR <841lLJ) $1695 FORD the C•tyEngmMr C11y Hall contract wlll contain usad lorblddlngcanbeob· Pullmanlfl14,CosttMeea, Ahear~onthepetltlon any lntormalltles. I I • ora1e --' 11-llTS 78 Pinto low miles ..... AC 6 D 1 7022 14 WL I D · /J ,.. · Cc.st t)f said Plans and provisions permitting the talned only al the offloe of CA 92628 ... ,11 be on MA H 2 . av attona from lheee ----------·' •ff nye tepl 1001 Oua1I St .NB 4spd, ( 1EA7791 $1095 Spec111cat1or>s is $15 00, In-successful bidder to the City Engineer. City Halt Joseph Rltkea. 3828 So. t.986 at 9:30 A.M. In Dept. speclllcatlone concerning IOAT SLIPS AVAIL 9030 833-9300 Chaney's 540-2828 dys clu<l•r'IQ •aJ< 11 tne bidder re-substitute securities tor any Cost of said Pl8ns and Flower NH, Santa Ana. CA No. 3 at 700 Civic Center specified dlmenelon. ca- De Anza Bayside Village 300 E Coast Hwy. N B 673-133 1 Mon -Fn 9-4pm • 79 SUBU RU Station NISSAN '85 300ZX, 5 spd, CHEVY 81 Vette ioaded ;>Ori~ '""' Ille Plans and moneys withheld by the DIS· Specllleallons le $15.00, In-92707 Ortve West. Santa Ana. CA paolly, quality or per· · · S1'.w:11tc:0111ons oe sent t>y TRICT to ensure per-eluding tax. It the bidder re-Thia buslneH 11 con-92702. lormanoe, mey not be con Wagon S2100 OBO by :~~0J>~,8~~wmt,rr;;_u~o:j ~ri:t~n h custo~ r=ar ma•I •hi' malling and hand· lormance under the con-poris that the Plans and ducted by an lndlvldual IF YOU OBJECT to the lidered unless specific or Marci'! 15 840-6281 a c r a •• s PS n • 111nq r M•g~ ,tia11 be 8,, ad-tract Spee11lcat1ons be sent by Jbe Rltkes granting of the petition, you maximum requirement• are PR1;vo.n: SLIP Excel,ent Location 673-93 19 S 15,450 (815)359-2466 $10,500 ooo / ~9-0904 d1t1ontil $5 00 Nellha• 1na Governlnt Boerd, By A. mall, the malllng and hand· Thia statement was flied etioul<I either appear al the eet, and provided that the •EW 'II JEEP PEUGEOT ·84 V"agon CHEVY ·54 Vette. whllred er," 01 tM Plans and Spec1. Stanley Corey ling charge shall be an ad· with the County Clerk of Or-hearing and state your ob-manufacturer sut>mlt lull de-CHEROlff I 5055, loaded, 2 l K rnt, 1 0 8 d 8 d $ 1 4 5 0 0 1tcat1C1ns nor the r.ost of mall-Puollshed Orllf19e Coast dltlonal SS 00. Neither the ange County on January 22. jecllona or flle written obJeo-tcrlpllon and expfet1?°'; ot It comes with bucket 1 xlnt cond 650_3797 17141759•0904 mg and nandllnQ w111 be re-Dally Piiot February 25 cost of the Plans and Speci· 1966 Ilona with the court befOfe the Justlflcatlo !or seats radi al tires luPCleo IMarch" 1986 llcatlonsnorthecoetofmall-f..-n2 the hearing. Your appear-proposed deviation baaed SLIPS AVAIL 25.30 & 40 3333 W COAST '1WY ."lB 642-4644 9-5 Mon-Fr1 (Sera9736) (Stk it2674) CHRYLEA LeBaron 84 The C11, re5etVe5 the nght I T -OSf Ing snd handllf19 wlll be re-Publlahed Orange Coast anoe may be In Ptll'IOll Of by oo accec>table engineering I.I.. con11. xlt cond A rras 10 rA1ac1 any or all b1ds tundad. Dally Piiot February 18, 25, your •ttorney. practices I I I WANTED TO BUY Balboa Island Shore Mooring 675-8829 aves 291< ml. $8950 992 1955 £ .. lyn McClendon, City I PtJ8llC MnTICE The City rBSef'VeS the rtght March 4, 11, 1986 IF YOU ARE A CREDITOR No quotation wlll be con-ORANGE COAST c i.rtt of the City of Foun-""' to reject any or all bid&. T --042 or a COl'ltlngenl creditor ot stdered whletl In any manner Jeep/Renault WE BUY CLEAN, tel,, Velley, Cefllornle NOTICE OF Evelyn McCi.ndon, Ctty the deceased, you must Ille decreases Ille quallty or I CHICK I IVERSON ' 2524 Hart>or Costa Mesa LOW MILEAGE OateQ Februttry 1986 ICler'k of the City of foun-your clalm With lhe court or work performance ol the 141·1023 DOMESTIC & IMPORT Pun11~hed Orange Coast I HA~::~8:Tla taln Veltey, Celttomla MLIC NOTICE prM&nl It to the per10111I equipment described In CARS. TRUCKS & VANS D111ty Ptlgt March " 1986 SOMERS aka D8ted· February, 1986 repr-tetlve appointed by ti-speellleatlons. Misc. Tr1n1port1tion I POHS< Hf AUOI I C••rra 8014 1975, 2611 COBRA trailer sell conla•r>ed A. t cond $4500 ObO 64b-5848 '69 VW Camper I ownr lo m1 121' on eng ong woo<l 1(1\ $3800 00(J 642 3259 ·79 DODGE Motor Home !Bog Suri 20 \lf!ePS 5 36-0-48 AC. ~ (. P S self contain f!Qu1pmer.t Good COr>d $8 99~ Cell 63 1 1272 Tracks 74 EL CAMINO. classic 400 Good work horse! $1650 540-9327 F'ORD 81 Pick-Up F250, pi s p/b auto air, am/Im dual tanks. 6-0K mo $5500 642-2574 V1n1 9040 17 DO<lge, Sem•·Cuslom. I VB 3 18 eno runs & looks ga $2500 obo 549-0783 '81 Ciodge Van con- 1ers1on 2 I K m1. loaded 82 VW Camper W&s tlaha w'e •tres Must 'ee like new alnr '-Or r.t tow S 13 900 540. 9205 m1 $12.000 r;r otier 852-958" Anti•aes, House lraHl'l• 1& ;i,, ~-C~l~•~u!!l'i!!"c_• ____ _ Stre11m type Sell r.on 65 T BIRD xlnt cond • new talned S I .200 49 7 ">600 1iras hrks pnt like nu $4100 oeo 495-0733 Not1rcrcl11/ -Sc.,t•n 8018 Autos lm~rte& 9100 1980 Honda 750 'n vw BUG newtstl brks. S 1595 Many E•t•as mullter t ires bait 640-9019 .Alway, garaged greet cond $2200 642-9655 1981 SUZUKI RM 125 --dirt bllle, new reou111 i:1ng AIJDI 7f:. 100LS. runs ok. good cond Asking S7">0 nee11s some wo11< S500 ObO Call 631 127;' ObO 6t12-4538 Aato Lt11i•1 9010 LHllll TO LEASE A,...,..., PllllDTt ....... ,., l ~IF VIWI I I lll11hn1 l.J"ahty '.>al~• & S.rvl<~ CHICK IVERSON •~s E CoH t Hwv , N<rwport S.ech 673-0900 WE LEASE ALL IAIES I MODELS ll1rlltr l11hr11 13861 Harbof Blvd G G &54-2800 For Pampered Mercedes Banz IMIHl&TEO&H f op Mercedes Prlcu Palo CALL PETER or AA y IHSI If llPHn .i.a llllOllES 213or714 637-2333 T -060 I HARVEY SOMERS Publlshed Orange Coaat NOTICE°' the court Within louf"months Bl<I Opening· MARCH 14, ---------AND Of' PETITION Dally Piiot Maren 4, 1986 D£ATH cw lrom Iha date ol nr11 ... 1986 PUBLIC U/\TICE TO AD&&<MISTE• T-059 BERNAL ULANO BOW1'.R euanceollettetsuprovlded .IOHN A. HAMPTON, 1~ -" " ab LIE 80Wllll In Section 700 ol the "'"' ~ Wf WllTYDUR CLUI HED CARI See Veno dos Santos THEODORE ROBINS FORD 2060 HAR&OA BlVO. COSTA MISA 642·0010 Holle. of Publlc S•la of Abendoned Properly Noll<.!' 1& given 11181 Ill@ undersigned wlll sell al auc- l1or> abandoned pro~r1y by tlerman Franc!< locker·A·S3 Sale commences at 280 N ISvlllvan Santa Ana Land- lord reserves the r1gt11 lo bid 1 81 sate Sub1ect to cancallan- llon In event settlement be- tweer> lar>dlord and obll- --g111ea party. FORD '66 MUST ANG V-8 s. Glodlc:h auto air. good restored j Puo11shed Orange Coast cond $3495 533-4242 Daily Pilot March 4 11, 1986 >ORD 71 LTD 4 door r,_, T-061 1>u11t engine xlnt 'ond S950 545-3087 POOLIC NOTICE ESTATE HO. A131to3 PtJBllC NOTICE ANDO' l"ETJTJOH Probate Code ol CaU10<nla. Published Orange Coa11 To all heirs, benellelarlM, TO ADllMNtlTllll The time for flllng Clelmt wlll Dally Piiot March 4. 1986 I creditors and contingent NOTICE TO ESTATE NO. A111U2 not expire prior to tour T-057 creditors, and persons wh o CAEDITOflS Of To all heir•, benellelarlea, monthe lrom Ille dale of the may be oth-!ae Interested BUU< TltANIF£A credltore and contingent helrlf19 notice above f'tBLIC NOTICE In the wlll and/or estate of: (Sece. t 101-41CJ7 creditors, end pereon1 who YOU MAY EXAMINE the HARVEY CURTIS SOMERS U.C.C.) may be Olherw!M lnt8fMted ni. kepi by the court II you FlCTITIOUI llUSINESI aka HARVEY SOMERS Notloe Is hefeby given to In the wtll and/or •tale of: are e peraon lnter .. ted In NAME STATEMENT A petition has been filed creditors of the within BERNAL LELAND BOWER the estate. you may ~ The fo41owtng persons are by Lawrence Orin Somers In named transler0f11) that a aka LEE BOWER upon the executOf or admln-doing buslnen U ; COAST the Superior Court of Or-bulk transfer Is about to be A pelltlon hu been filed latrator. 0< upon the at-CERAMICS, 2633 W. Coat ange County requettlng thll made on personal property by Terry R. ~In the So-torney tor the executor or Hwy, N-port Beech 92063 Lawrance Orin Somera be hefelnalter described. parlor Court of Orange lldmlnlatrator and Ille with Rodney Robert Wallaoe. appointed as personal rap-The names and boslneu County requesting that Terry the court wllh PfOOf of ..,. 2286 Pacinc "J" • Co1t1 resentattve to administer the addresees of the Intended A. B~ be appointed as vice, a wntten req\Hllt 1111_ Mesa. CA 92827 . estate ol the decedent. transfer0<s are: LILY CHOO personal repr9-'llatlve to Ing that you deelre special Jeen Merle Wallace, eame The petition requetts and DAISY HO. 370 A E. administer the eatat• of the notice of the flllng of an In-Thi• bualneu 1• con-aulhorlty to administer the 17th Street, Costa Mesa. ca. decedent. ventory and appral.-nent of ducted by: huebend and wlft estate under Ille lndepen-The locatlon In Call!Ofnl• The pellllon requHtl eatate ueeta or ol the petl· Rodney R. Wallace dent Admlnletralloo of Es.-of the clllet executive office au1h0<1ty to administer Iha Ilona or acoounte mentioned This stalem.nt wu flied tates Acl or prlnctpaJ buall'IMll offioe ealate under the lndepen-In Section l200 and l200.5 01 with the County Clerk of Or· A hearing on the petition of the Intended transferor le: dent Admlnlttflllon ol e.. the Cellfomla Probate Code. •noe County on February wlll be hetd on MARCH 12, aame tales Act. 24, 1986 FORD '7'3 Marq Sta ~n 9 FICTITIOUS BU81NE88 1966 at 9·30 A.M In Dept. Alt other b1Jelneu namea A hearing on the petition Otey A HlrNt. Att-ya FI01fM pgr beaut cond wire. whls l NAMI! STATEMENT No 3 81 700 Clvle Center and addresses used by tlle wlll be held on MARCH 12, fof ftetHtooef, »1 f . Coto. Publlehed Orange Coast hitch/rack $995 650-6 l 30 The tollow1ng persons are Drive WMt, Santa Ana CA Intended transferor within 1986 at 9:30 A.M. In Dept. redo 9MI., "'°°' ~ Dally Piiot March •. t t, 18, _ doing business as: Exotica 92702. three years IH I Y98" last No. 3 al 700 Clvl<: c.ntw CA '1101 25. 1986 FORD ·75 Grand Torlno,Wholesele Flowen and IF YOU OBJECT to the put so fer u known to the Orlw WMl, Santa Ana. CA Publlaned Orange Coast T-Oeot Wag. xtt cond w/xtras nu Foliages 176 Del Maf Av· granting of the pelltloo. you Intended tran1ferH are: 92702. Delly Piiot March 4. 5, ·11, Pta.IC NOTICE !lrest pn1S1450 640-5074 enue Costa Meu CA should either appear at the none IF YOU OBJECT to Ille 1986 92627 hearing and state your ob-Tiie name(a) and b1Jllneaa granting of the petition, you TW-066 FORD 77 Mustang II, 302 Aul,, The<eea Burke, 176 tectlona or flle written objec· address of Ill• Intended 1hould either 1PPMf al the eng 5011 ong ml, S2450 Del Mar Avenue, Costa Ilona wflh Ille court bel0<a tranaferee(e) are· KATY LAI. hearing and etale your ob-1---------- obo 240 0176/~9&-3204 M~I! CA 92627 the nearing Your appear-8642 C.petone Or , Hunt· jectlon1 or ftle written ot>Jee. "8.IC NOTICl This oustness la con· anc:. m11y be 1n person or by tngton Beech, Ca. tlons with the court befor.1--..;..;;.;;.;;;;.;..~~;;.;;;..-- ducted by 111n lndlvldual your lllO<ney. Tlltl Iha property 1*11· lh• hearing. Your 8')pellf· PK:TTTIOUI ., ... ,, Fluth Burke IF YOU AAE A CREDITOR nent hereto la delcflbed In ance may t>e In pereon or by NAMI 8TAftMIWT Thi• statement wu tiled Of e contingent creditor ol general ea: Afl llJrnltute. nx-your attOMey. The fOltowlng peftOl'lt er• Wllll lhe C0unty Clefl( ot Or-tha d~. you mull flle turM. equipment together IF YOU ARE A CREDITOR doing bUllneee -Potomac anoe C0un~ on January 23, your olalm with Ille oourt or with the Inventory of 1t0<1k or • contingent credltOf' Of Landing oe ... lcpm411'1t Com-1986 preeen1 It to the penonal on hand end gOOOwlll end the deceued, you mutt file pany, a Joint Ventu,., 2"82 FlCTmOUI llUSMll NAMI aTATl•NT The fo4lowtfl9 P91'10f'il ere doing botlneet u · Al Cout Moving end Stor9Qe: B) Nor· die Moving a Storage, 6111 "8" Hamllton St., Cott• MeM, CA 92627 Jamee Paut.n, Ota "8" HMnllton. Coeta MeM, CA 92827 • llSTPllCH HUNTINGTON BEACH CHRYSLER/Pl YMOUTH SIMPLY THE BEST Sales -Service • Leasing EUAOPEAN DELIVERY 1540 JAMBOREE RO NEWPORT BEACH AC1111r.nn1 to Fashion Island Open 7 Days a Weeic tl40-6444 '2M01T repreMnt8tlV• appointed by trade f\atne of the oer'tlln your efalm with the court Of l"Y Gi.nn Oftlle.1. Sult• 100. "ubllahtld Otenge ca.at the OC>Yrt within fOUf month• l>ullneM and 11 1ooeted at: Pl'Ment It to the petlONI i..ouna NlgUel, cA 928n VOLVO '76 242DL, 4 cyl, 2 Delly Piiot February 18, 2~. from the date ol lln1t 1 .. 370 A E. 17th St., Coat• reprwentattve ~nled by 8ule•Potomao. Lid., a dr. runs well, 87k ml, March 4 I 1 .1986 euance of Ml11«• u provided M"8, Ca. the court within four montha Catlfomla llmtted pertnar· Stac.y P~IMn. 818 "8' Hamltton, Coat• M... CA 92627 • 842-063, 5.t0-5164 Try ink on your linger• In 11..-ct ol bllatetS on ~our IMI II vou ,._looking for 1 c ar • enep clualllecl ctus1tut<1 ii .. newa tor tO\.I MOTOR ROUTE $1500 obo Evl wknd T-055 In Section 700 of the The Butlneet narM \lted trorn the date Of n,.t I• ehlp, 10638 Bernardo 494-99611751-5433 dy Probate CocM of Calltornlt by Mid trantferora al uld Mianee of re1t.,. u prO'w1ded Cenlw Drtve, Suite 200, S•n VOLVO .80 GL-pw dr lks. PU8UC NOTICE PU8l.IC NOTICE Tllo time for llllng clalm• wm locetl~ I•· HAWAIIAN In Section 700 ol the Diego, CA 92128 . not e11ptre prior lo lour RAINBOW. Probate Code of Callfom.la. Potomac Landing. Ltd., a sun-r1. amllm ''"'*0", 9( n3tl 9( 2MOO montllt lrom the date of the That aatd bulk tr•neter 11 The time fOf flllng claltnl wlll C.itlornla llmlted P8!'1Mf· $6500, 649-011• '1CTITIOUI IUIMll ,teTmOUl llU,..U hearing no1'°41 tbove Intended to be oon1um· not expire pnor to tour 1h lp, 18530 Bernardo Y.lyl ••• --.l. ..... NAME ITATIMINT NAMI ITATIMllfT YOU MAY EXAMINE the mated at the ottlce of: OP· montha from the d•t• ot the Center OrM, Sult• 200, San Th .. IOlloWlng peraone are The lollOWlnQ pereone •r• Illa kept by Iha court. If you POATUNITY fSCROW, 734 l'l6aMO notlc. aoow. Oteoo. CA 112128 Auto. air, loadfld tS.000 dOlngbuelnasH lnduttrlll do1n9 buel neu u are a perlOll lnteretttd In Ho. Tustin Av.. Orange. YOU MAY E.XAMIHI! the Thia bulln... la con· moe!i Two yt1ar w8rranty Mt r k 1ngs D1v111on ol VITACtlROM6 DIVISION OF the Mtlte, y0u may *"-Calllorf\I• 92607 on or after flte k9')t by lhe court. If you duoted by. jOlnt ...,,lure r&malnlng s 14,200 v II 8 (;1lf Ome 0, ephlc' VITACHROME GAAPHICS ul)Ofl th• l•ICUl()f Of adlTllno-March 20. 1908. are • pw90n lnlweattd In Bul•Potomeo. Ltd., • Thi• buslf\ .. a I• con- ducted by: huttw1d and wife Stacey Peulaen Thi. ttatement wq flleo wttll the County Cl«k ot Or· •no-County on flet>fuery t3.1908 , ... Publlthec:t Orange Coul Delly Piiot February t8, 25, Maren 4, 11. 1908 1 (71•) 7~0 81 14 Group, I~. 384 Cllnton St GROUP INC 2A7~ w Le 11tr110f, ()( Ul)Ofl the at· Thi• OUllt tran9fer .. IUb-the .. ,., •• you may ~ c.llfornta llmlted pe.rlMf• I Cost1 Meu,CA92826 P111me Ave Anaheim. CA torney tor the ••ecutor 0t Ject to Calllomla Uf\lform upontlleexeou10t0fadmln-ahlp, BY · BUIE AS · VW 68 Bug. red tt•lt Vllachrom• Grap111e1 0280 1 admlnl1trat0f, end flte with Commerclel Code Section lelretOf, Of upon the It-SOCIATES, LTD., a Cell-1 transp S 1450 o bo Group, tnc , Catlf0<n1a cor-v1tac 11rome Gt tphlct the court With proof of..,. 610& tomey tor me PeciulOf Of fomla llmlted pertnerltllp, I 404-2552 or 497 4597 poratlOI'. 2•75 W La Pa1m11 Group inc . a CaHlornta C<lf· V!Oe, a written 1eque11 1tat· f1'l9 name. and actor.a Of edmlnlttratot, ano ftle with By: The lkltl COtporatlon, a vw .69 BUG gOOd cond I Ave AllllheCm. CA 9280 I I po<etlon 247$ w LaP.tlma, Ing 1h1t you dMife IC*)l11 the peraon wltll whom the court .ith proof of Mt-Cellfomla oorporatlofl. a.n- pelntt1d wt ad lo • Thia bua1n1u Is con· An•Mlm CA 02801 notl04! Of tntt nung ot an In• d41fma may 1>e filed It ~ vtoe. a written ,.queet atat· eral Pettner.:. 8Y Robert A. Available in Irvine area. $300 to $600. No collect- Ing. 3-4 hours a d ay. Mon. thru Friday afternoon. Sat. & Sun. morning. Call 642-4333, ask for Kirk 'ORANGE COAST , · ' • mag dueled by a oorPot•llon Thlt bu11neu 11 eon· ~tory and llPP'alfem«rt of ponunny Elotow. 73' No Ing that you dealf'9 IPedll wYtttt. V1ca ~ I whla, looka gOOd $1600 I Vll•chrom• Graptilc• I dUC1ed by 1 00tpotat1or1 •late UMt• °'of Ille petl· 'rwilln A~. Or~C.. and nofloa of"'-flllng of en ""' l'hla lt•tement wee l'hd 87~·305Qcallener5pm Or0up, Inc Anna Mea Vltacnrome Q11phlCt t1on10<eoc;ounttmel'llloned thelUfdaYlor aalrM YenlQfYand~aleerMntOf wltlltheCountyCletkofOr· VW '81 Albbt1 Ott 10Wn# SnQdOy Corporate S&e· Group Inc Anna Mae In s.ctlOn 1200 end !200 5 OI by any or.ctltor be Mt•te ....0 Of' of tlle pet!-ange County on J1nu11ty 3 t, driven a maJnl wlTLC nu re11ty 8noddy s.ettt•ry the cai11orn1a Probate Code Maten 19. tN6, wNctl la lhe Ilona or 1CCCM.1nt1 memloned 1NO radtalltball f 1 Thl1 tl•lttm41fll wq fli.d Tlltt 1t1l~t was flied 1tMet '· .,..,... .Ir .. 11' DulinMa csey Mlor. !he In hctlon 1200 lllld 120CU of ~ No dings Ilk&:.! ~850 wtth the County Clerk ol Or-with ttttl Covnty CNlfk of Or· MeHn•. M •t11,e r I oonlUl'M\&tlOn d•I• ~ theCallfomlePro«>attCode, MeOeHlf, Heo8'1 & 2957 9 •111 "'~t M •noe County on F'eoruary ano41 CO'Jnty on "ebruery H119hea, 8't0 d e•p111 fled at>O¥e. T_.,, ll ..._, lit ,,_ ....... A..,_,. .. Law. • er,""" 11 tlN 11. t986 •11 11186 OfM,.....,.,. ~CA Dated. F~ H . t98e ,_, tt11 CNN ler.et. , ................ IM "°°717. "°°"11 ... KATY Ut, ltttettfed ._....,_..CA._, ~CA_.., wn., tho fall IN~ ttll1 Publlelled Otenge Cou t Pubtlslllld Ora~ Cot91 Publian.d Or.,.a Co.1 Ti•,...... PublWled Otanoe Coelc Pu.,..,_, Orange Cout 1"'":t::'•t1mem 1umto 0111y PllOI 1"19t!tu1'ry 18. 25. Dally Priot rec1\jary 18. 26. Oai1>f "''°' FtibtW'J n . 2'8, P\ll>llll*J or.,. Coea1 Delly Ptlot F*'*Y ff. It, o.Hr "'°' ~ H , ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!11!!!~~~!!!1!!!~ c:t...i tor IM!fp wttn ~· Marcfl •. 11 1986 Marr.fl 4 11. 1 86 Mardi 4, tMe o.ity P1fot Mll'Cll 4, tMe Mardi 4, 19" Maron 4, I 1, 11. 19M .: "-wt...;.;n,;.;llf'_;;,.m.;;.1;;.;1n.;,;len;;.;,:.•l1C4t:.;.:,::;....._--1 T 044 T~5 TW-06• T-ot2 TW-063 T-048)1 _::::::::===:=::::::::::. lallJ Piiat 33-0 W. Bay St. Costa Mesa. CA .. •• .. r J I I I TUESDAY, MARCH 4, 1986 Son· not uilty of murder Jury instead rules death involuntary manslaughter; mother ~it, put in trunk Jurors said tht) believed the woman's death "a" accadenlaJ and that Lorn bard's effons to cover up the death were the result of panic and shock verdict Judge Uonard McBnde set sentencing for Apnl 11 Lombard. who has been an Orange County Jail since his arrest, Feb. 20. 1985, claimed his mother's death on Feb. 8. J 985 was accidental. "She grabbed me and I guess I knocked her down." he said dunoa the videotaped 1nterv1ew. Lombard also adm11ted that be was not sure whether his mother was dead or ahve wheo he put her body on a blanket an the trunk of her 1972 Ford Mavcnck. By1STEVE MARBLE Ot ... O.., .......... A Su.pcnor Court Jury refused to co11v1ct a 26-year-old Capistrano Beach man of murder Monday even though the man admitted he !tilled his Na!1 •argeon Donal Billig la .entenced to four yean in prison for death of patient.. A4. Coast Construction of a Ramada Inn on the Or- ange County Fairgrounds has been delayed for nearly a year./ A3 California Peace marchers sheltered by churches, residents after losing camping site.I A4 Nation U.S. officials dispute the- ory that the Soviets switched seamen on Im- migration authorities./ AS \ World Communist guerrillas at- tack a police truck In the Philippines In the first assault since the elec- tlons./ A4 mother and stuffed her bod) 1n the trunk of a car. Instead, jurors convicted Matthrw fames Lombard of an voluntary man- slauehter. which ts punishable by a maximum term of fou r years an Jail Ckputy Dastnct .4\ttom~ Tom Goethals said he was .. svrpnscd and dasappoanted" b)' the verdict and predicted. Lombard wall be a free man an less than two )ears Jurors deliberated tPle case almost thrtt days before returning wa\h the In a videotape ofa pohcc interview played for Jurors, Lombard said has aotOlUCated mother put a hand on his shoulder and that she fell to the floor and struck her head when he tned to brush away her hand. "I Just got scared," he told pohce. But GoethaJs told Jurors that Emily Mac Lombard was ''hog-ued" with rope and wire and bhndfolded W.tb a Deli1 l"lkl4111Mloe., o...111 ....... A Cout Guard cutter and helicopter aearch for debris from a •iqte-englne plane that plunged-into the water about a half mile off Newport Beach Sunday nl~t. At left are the only thing• found from the wreckage, incladin& wheel•, a age door, two .eat., in•alatlon and a •hoe. No trace bu been found of the ree men who had rented the plane for a night training flight. S~arch for plane wreckage halted 30i:ange Coast men on training flight aboa~d plane that plunged into ocean By PAUL ARCIDPLEY OI ... 0.., ,.._. atett The' Coast Gvard suspended m search Monday for three Orange Coast men who crashed into the Pacific about a half mile off Nev.port Beach late Sunday in a single engine aircraft. Coast Guard Lt. John Och~ <1a1d the search was suspended Monday after· noon "pending further develop- ments." The passengers were 1den11lied a\ Phili p Teffiey of Irvine. who was tht: pilot. l:farT) King of Newport Beach. dnd Bcn1go Valla. 38, of Costa Mesa. Coast Guard scuba divers werr 101ned b .. the Orange County Shenffs dive team Monday at the site where the airplane splashed into the ocean at 11 ·1 ..t p.m. unday. said Shentr .. Lt. Robcn Rivas "The~ 'vc collected all the debns. and thert:'s nothing left to look for." RI\ as said Debrt'> tncluded a pair of wheels. a baggage door 1"0 seats. insulation -...../ an<J a shoe. he said Ui\ ers also Toun<f part of the ll1gh1 manual beanng the rcgt'>lral1on number of the Archer Paper that had been rented from Aero Fhght Center at John Wayne .\1rport An employee at Aero Flight said the thrtt men had taken the plane out for a night training flight The search was St)mted b)' the underwater terrain, Rivas 1>a1d. "It's an an area that's very steep." he said. "A lmle further an )Ou might have a shot at Jt." Coast Guard Pell} Officer Greg Drew sard the crash ~ate wa!> in water that was at least 180 feet deep. More than a do1en witnesses saw or heard the crash on the Newport Pier The 82-foot Coast Guard cutter Point Evans was stationed at an 011 slick where ~rchers found floaung debns while two uttht)' boats and a helicopter searched a 75-squarc-male area Monda) An 1nvest1gauon as being con- ducted b) the Federal Avaauon .\dm1nastrat1on and the National Transportation Safet)' Board. The accident was the s«ond an a week here Developer Waller Scott Biddle of Newport Beach was killed Wednes- day when has plane crashed an a parking lot about a Quarter mile from John Wa)ne .\1rport bath towel. The prosecutor aid the videotape also showed that Lombud at 6.nt lied to police ll1 vestJ.p10rs by claimioa be had nothma to do with bis rnotber'1 death . • • "Why would I kill my momr• Lombard asked at one point in the anterrogauon. ''She takes care of me, .. While Goethals said an aut0pay revealed signs of trauma to tlH! (Pleue eee 110TDa·a1 A2) OCJail releases sought by ACLU JUdge asked to free some suspects to ease crowded conditions .. By USA MAHONEY Of ... OllllJ ......... • .. The American Civu Liberti« Union wtll ask a federal j\Jdao. Tuesday to order Orange County not- to jail people awaiting arraignmenf for minor. non-violent crimes. Issuing citations rather than jailina people arrested for minor crimes like shoplifting would eliminate over- crowd1 ng problems at Orange C.Ounty Jail. said ACLU attorney Richard Herman "There arc probably 600 inmates in the Orange County Jail now who could bave been released on citation- rclcasc,'' he said. Had these inmates been lc:ept out ~ the jail system, inmate population 10 the Main Jail in Sant.a Ana would plummet below its rated 1.17 I-inmate capacity, Herman said "Thu, is the only county JD the siate ofC~.hfom1a tbatdocsn'1 usecitatioo- release." he said. Herman 1s confident that a federal Judge overseeing crowding F.Oblcms at Orange County's Main Jadin Santa Ana will order the county to do mott to lower the number of inmates incarcerated there now that an 10de- penden1 jail mon1tor"s report bas shown officials in violation of a 1.500-anmate cap at least three times (Pleue .ee ACLU/A2) Sports Guy Carrozzo is busy putting his football staff together at Ocean View High./81 Davis says off-shore oi! foes 'demagogues' ·I Minister charged 'Yith molesting 10-year-old Tom Hermstad has been named Athletic Director at Golden West./82 Entertainment Golden West College comes up with a zesty, fun-filled production of Shakespeare's "Twelfth Night." /BS INDEX Advice end Games Births By PAUL ARCHIPLEY Of ... Delly ..... 818ft Calling offshore 011 dnll1ng oppo- nents "demagogues" who aren't thanki ng of their nation's interest\ state Sen. Ed Davi\ said ocean 1111 production can be al.·compho;hed without harming the environment During an interv1rw w11h the Pilot before attending a S 125 per pcnon cocktail party fund-raiser an ( O'>la Mesa. Davis espoused ht'> con servative views on the issue'\. includ- ing support for offshore 011 dnlhng. the Strategic Defense ln111at1 \C 1m- migrat1<?n reform and an ac11"c torc<gn pohC) 1n Central Amenca He also said his campaign for the Republican nom1na11on for L' S \enator hasn't been hurt by the Bobbi Fiedler aOaar in which he charged her lamp offered him SI 00.000 to pay his campaign debt<; 1f he dropped out of the race D:i"1" \31d oil dnlhng ofT of < aldornia ·, outer l.ontinental shel f can be accomplished wnhout harm- ing the environment or destroying the aesthetic' aluc of the coastline. C 11ang the Grace Platform operat- ing 22 males ofT of Santa Barbara. (Please see DA VIS/ A2) State Sen. Ed Davi• By PAL'L ARCHIPLEY OltMOellyl'tlolll.9fl .\ mm aster from Fountain \ alle) v.as arrested '-1ond3\ on l hargcs ol mole~t1ng a I 0-\ear-oftt girl The Re' Merle Fd" an \1 eans t\ being charged \\1th ont·count of child molestation anti one n1un1 of \t'·rnal .tssault said Fountain \ dllc' pohn.· Lt Rad.< "hmtrnc,t:n He wa., hooked 1nt11 Orangt: C oun n Jail 1\1nnda-.. "11h hail set at $·~ 500 .\rra1gnmen1 "111 be o;ched- uleq .ti \\e'>t Orangl' C 11unt' \tun1r1- pal ( llUn '-.kan' ..t I ,., pd\tm 111 thl' < hun.h ot Rehgious Sc1eoce. IUOOO Para- mount Blvd in Do.,.,'Tle) .\ccordmg to Cbnstcnscn. the VIC· 11m .,.ho also 11\CS an Fountam \-alle' 1s the daughter of a female tnend of Means The alleged 1nc1dent occurred Dec. 28 '-1 eans and the girl were sittina tn a 'hair watl.htng TV. and the J>rl had tallen asleep. C'hnstcnsco said. Her mother "asn't at home. '-leans alleged!\ was fondling the girl v. h1lc she slept The phone rang and <>he Jumped up. ~ '<teJn'I told the arresung officers on (Pleaae eee YIPfISTER/ A.2) Bulletin Board Business Classified Comics A10· A6 A3 A7·9 B6-8 A 11 Border patrol checks creating long wait at crossing Death Notices ., Entertainment Horoscope Opinion Paparazzi Police Log Public Notices Sports Televlsldn Weather B8 B5 A10 A12 A6 A3 B8 B1-4 B5 A2 .\N DIEGO (.\Pl -l 1 \ Cu<, toms stepped up 1t'\ hanlc again'lt drug smuggler5 Mondah imposing 101ens1fted ched.s along harder sta- tions an the San Diego region for thl' second ume since the torturc-'ila)'ang of an Amencan drug agent. The stepped-up check created delays of up to one hour. 45 minutes for northboud traffic pas ang through the San Ysidro Port of Entry and the border gate at Ota) Mesa. customs officials said. T' p1l.ill\ nonhbound motonsls C\pt'flC'nce J \\alt of about 20 minutes. ~•d Gurdtt Dhillon. chief l u<,tums inspector at San Y'11dro ( u<,tom\ 1ntcns1fied It<; bordrr .,un.e11lanle mca<1urcs an rc<;ponst: lo an alarming increase an the now of illegal drugs from Me<taco into the United State'>. Dhillon ~1d. "'Mc'tlco ha'> become the No I r <tportcr of hero an and man1uana" to the United States. Dhillon said. He added that .\mcncan authon11c" Making connecting flight to John Wayne 'no problem' All ft takes 1s lots of optimism. a good pair of s hoes, and plenty of persistence It he&ans a couple of weeks ago on a sunn> Monday af\rmoon an Aonda I'd conclud<'d a 'lhort v1s11 with the family and wa'i prcpanna to Oy home to Orange C ounty Earlter an the day, I'd confirmed my rc>ervat1ons to honrd 11 S, IS p m Oa&ht to Dallas-Fon Wonh There. I'd have a lem1N'lv 90-minute layover before board1 n11 ,1 9.41 pm. flight 10 John Waynr i\arport Then I hit m" fi~t h1llh The sign at 1hc nonda a1rpm t -.;ml my .5.1 S 01p,ht ""''" now ..cht"dulc:d 111 ICl\IC at 6 ~() "No probkm ''>aid lh<' man an lhl' blut mcncan ·\1rlinr'I uniform He said I'd 1u~1 be dntn& m\ la>''" l'r 11me 1n Aondn. rather than 1n Tc\a' Mv plane would Jlfl\(' ~11 II om g1\1n me picot> ot 11me to rnnn<'ll for Orange C'ount) he ~ad ~oon another po tponemC'nt wo~ announC'ed and the T e'a~ tOUl h· down umc v.1<1 bumped ahead tn ~ I~ pm I a\ked a ticket ent af l\1 ha"c trnuhlc mak1n1 m' lOnncctton "No prohlem ·· \he "'11d Rut hl'r lOmputcr 1nd1 a1cd my Aonda l11~ht v.ould arriv(' 1fl 0 Ila' al C'1atc '1 \.f) < >ranac f'ount> )Cl would tall ofT from 1ate 15 -1n ano1hrr trrm1nal \h<' told me the terminal\ v.cf'f u'nnt\ H·d h\ Q \" 1ft littk mo\ln{l v.11lkv.a\ und that at would tdkt JU t 1 ha\e C\prC\'l('d dl\\Jtl\lac11on \\tlh "1e\1cn·., ellort'> against drug 1ratlick- 1ng .\houl '2 percent of th~ ht:r111n .md 15 pcrn~nt of the man1uJna ,mugttled into the l n11cd S~1cs onganatl·<. 10 \1e\1co acl'Ordang to the l 'i Hou~ ( omm1ttcc on "larcottc\ .\hu~ nnd Control 'The more ngorous ans(lt'<"ttnn' in th(' an Diego rcgmn come J~llll '" v.eek., ancr the comm111tt h('ld \e .. cral hennntt!> 10 c 1t1t·s alon2 1hc PHIL SNEIDEllAI tew minute' to mak(' m) ~a' Imm µtr 1t1 Pl<' I l'\ked II th<' Or:anac < llunl\ tl11f.ht. al'tli on .\mcnt an. lnuld ht-akrtC'd that • t IC'a'\l t1nc p:w.cngrr m11.1.hl Ix· 1:hcd.ina 10 :u thr hunrr "fl.lo prohlcm .. \ht· rrphrd · The re 1lrrad)' 1v.-1trc or the dcla) • M~ ~·1 ~ tllJtU fln1th hftt>d oil ru~ ~tort 7 Th<'rt wa\ a httk \tlk trtl' to (Pleue eec MAKINO/ A'.1) l \ \1f.'\tl.tn hortll·r 1nd nwt '4tth \k\llar Pn•c,1Jcnt \11l1ud lk la \tadnd \fter the ml"'t'tlOl( "'1h •k l.i \ladrad u1mm11tl'l' , h.111 ma A < hark'> Rangel. D-'\ 'l l .1111.'J IN mon.-coorerat1on trom \1e\ICO in thl' 1ntrrn:u1onal "ar again\t Jni11' and tor increased border suf\ e1llJnH' ~lfon~ Bustamante. prt,1dcnt nt T11uana's toun m hurcau 'i.Jld \k'\- tlan cu\tom~ ->ffil·13l<, ha' c hcl·n asked b} thr1r Amcm:an n11intl·rpart~ "' looix-rate an the fight against dru& 'muggl1ng b~ ~tepp1ng up their own t'lc.1rdcr 1nspect1oos There ha'i tlccn no decision yet by \lc\lcan otlic1al~ on the rcqucsi. Ru'itamante said !)an D1C"go D1stnct ( ustoms agents .,c1zed 131 pounds of cocaine 1n tbe P3'>t three month . Dmnct O,rcctor ~llan Rappopon said In all of last 'ear Cu toms agents here con· ti\\.ated 104 pound\ of cocaine. (Pleue eee BOIU>&•/ A.2) County employment growsmoderate4.5% 8 USA MAHO~EV OfhO..,NellWI Orangr ( ount' <'mph" nH·n1 op· ponunatt<'' &rt'" a "''xle171h' .i ~ pcrttnt an IQ~~ "1th hot'mtnp <'' pan'>1on m the cuMtnn 11nn enJu .. tr. taking thr lt'ad ~ hal<' boo'1\ 1n rnn<.tructmn hinn1 11italt'd I' : pc runt. O\ <'rall <'mplo\ • mC'nl npponunallC'\ 1ncrca\t'<i ooh half It\ la\t tn thr \t'Af JU'\I C'Od~ ~um p:u'td to IQ 4 h('n Job JITW b\ ~ 8 p(l\t'nt, \IJtl\tll'I ttl~. S<'J h th \lite C:mpl<l\rn('nt l><''clopmrnl t">t- panmrnt lat<' lut W<'<'~ \how • < 11mP1rt'd lo Ora~ County's hnom \C-Jr'\ ~hen tbe number of JObs 4'kH(l(k('lC'd b\ 10 S perttDt ID 1977 and 10 ~n:ent in 197 , 198S's emplo' ment pacturt ma) be cbarac· trnu·d ., "ph.1 n alona about tbe middle ot the road." satd Labor \iark<'t .\nal\~t \lta Yetter Gale The numht-r ot orkm 1n<TC1'4:d by Q,000 for a Januar) 1q 6 labor force total of I I~ million Oran ounty 1id l ) percent mort JO 1n 19 l v.-hile I l ctnoloy- men t fiau ~ tttOnkd a t Den.'ICftl (Pl ....... EMPL01'1Blft I AS) A2 Ora. Co t DAILY PILOT/ T day. March 4, 1986 . BO ERPATROLSLO S CROSSINGS ... ,.rom J 'H atl rl v1te111n111ugh (1h1· 1\1 pound l'r to• n111t) ~ould h.1, <-bn 11 CflOU&h ltt ti'" t II i.ml If' )OUOje)~·~I Ill • I IJ11 1i.111\l !1ttj 1,i. C'ourH n•, fi• rrq•\ 111 lrn h .. R .. p !)Op{lf l <.'11rl 1· 1h1 11 • 'I i ~ '<'hot•I ,,~,· hl <. CILI 11 Ill'\ 1111' l,1 t1 'II I I I ,lfl' "1111111 I •!Ir ""'"'' " l•lll(ll 1 \' ., l>ll1l( I ·I •I• ljl '1 ' I . I '"" I h~· I ~1d11 tp I·"' I .. ,, lhl I I I •u 1 t tt)! tflll 11''1 111 up 1., M A I r l \ .. . 1 I I ( " MIN I ~ I F 1 •t rr ,.t I? l 11 fl~ I I \ \II ... '" \I I I ' Da ily Pi Di I OJ VOi . 79, NO. 83 ~3n r dro """''( Ol(fl\an hordt·r ~hl'd.:­ Jlt•tnlsrn1l\Hk thl '\,1n I >n gu n:g1un at l 'nh~l· lht 11tcd lh" 11111• r , · e g rl di es in hospital a1 ter fall ou of moving car \t n1•1t1C'-,1, l .1~ l, Iii ~ nt• \kt1tll ,,,,, 11 .1d ,ti. !"/ p 111 ,11 \', {' I fit I I !l '\,trll I ' I lo I I I al " .1 111Ir'111 •Ill n \krntt l'lil'> 11d1ng 1n a l\J I I >od~l \JO ~•lh her lfl·)l':tr·old ''""'1 I hl' •an ~a' 1ra,d1nr, c.:a\l- hc1l11HI on Hr)'an AvenUl' '~hen Mn· 1111 ' ""tl'r mad1 a lett turn unto \.\ n t '' uod I I•' l'-'"l'lll(CI door lkl'I orx·n and M mlt fdl 11u1 \tnl 1ng her hc.:ad. I hmll' ., 1 d .._Ill' V.,t\11 t \\l.'ctrlfll!. ,1 WcW tlt:il, anJ 1h1 L111111 .1pp:i1rntl~ "'a'n't latched rrcipu" hl' \illd ODERATE 4.5% ... 111111her111 l.1 lllf' Joh\ dl•,rea">cd h\ l 1 1"1th thl' IJl~t'\I lo\\l''> reported tn m,1d1111l'r\ lurn1turl'. lhemrcal\ 1nd 1 uhhl'I .ind plJ\ltl '> indu,tnc~ lhlH Y.t'll" I 'JOO k\\cr gu\nn- 111 I t•h'> ,1 '' J'>on.tl tllTrl·.1~~ in pu+.l1l '1 l11111l ,1Jll1ng. tuok platt' "l" 1 l' mdll\lf\ l'mplm ment al\O .lt'd1111·d ilunnii. h1nuan Y.llh I 000 ' ,, 1 1t1hc, ll'l<lflkd whrk -.ea,onal 1qh l '"''' .11 hotl'I' c1nd amu\crrn:nt ~ p.1rl.:~ Y.( rt hutkred hy gam' 1n 11ll\ll\I \\ \\ f\ Ill'' I 111.11c t 1n•.ura ncl' and real cc,tatc •n h1~trl\'\ r1 rortl'd '>l.llll'rt•d la\ olT'i 1111,1111 !! .iqo t'<1\1111rn' '111cc Dncm- .,. h I \\hill' th ,1tn\lfUtll11n tndU\lf't 11 p 1rtul .1ll1"111~ll01r1h' · I / \.,r I\ ul111r.1I pa\ roll\ rtl\t' h\ )00 ECT " .... ,I '" Ph' du11n1' thl' month hul m1n1ng lhl ''·''' ll ll\ 2tl!)p11\llllln'> NER RELEASES ... ' nH .111t11nl lh ,.111 mon1111r I\ 11d11w 11t.11 1h1 \hc.:nff'> I >t·· fl rnplt OI\ Ill lht llt<lll•IO· rr '1-1.11n th\'. \C I I. ~.mt' •11 ,t i'r"~·r till 11l 1·arl) rdl'J\l II 11 h'r' J\1' 11f pJmk I , r1111i. ,tll\ m11ntt11r ·d • r '" 11t1n1 ,,.,tcm 1<11 111· " 11 ~ lur luugh I ' • l•tl lhl' lntl'rllll 111 11'4l 'tnl h\ ( ''""m.111 ' r• 1 I qJ 1•l;•l( fl lfl 11 '' h I• ,J\\ I\ loo 1'111 ti 'lid (\'lf,1/\ In 111••11' 1111 n~·" rt: 11plt 't11J t 11u Id ht'.lll'I l1 ht I • l'l\ · 1hrnugh ,.,p ... \ !11: I' till •un ' >l IC' ( >lhl'r\ rl d U,! 111.f a•r I I ' II •1111.' OPROB LEM' ... ·- I I I ''" ,, rid II I 1ng11 • I 11111!! \ . " I, ti 11 • I \• ll•\l t'1l iltll•I 1 I '" 1'\.',11 I f11 ''·'~~,lVl' dq1;1rl ' rl' dtrl'llu! lll .i \mtltnjl., 1tr<'d ,.,01111 \1h11 \pt•nt tht· 11 1111111· ... n1ri11r .1,l•111tk h11' I•• ~H .... ~1~ rw ,,,@i..,,_;._ Lil l\I\ I ·~~ p r, Allf1h'fl r 1c\ ,1111 Jnt..I ""'"' an 11 111. ' .. uro:\ \fla11r, dcpu1~ 11. I I 1111 I I d h· .;hil' Ill l)ll k 1q1 11 • ' "•h:tl ti 11\\a'1n thl 1 1 r , I• •L. 11· 1 li11 I \\;J\ rnll of 11 ~ ttl m n~ I ,,•.ir 11 I 1 .. c1n·1 tx·c.-n <;ma rl I I 111 IH llllrt k ltl k\\ l'\fX'O\J\{' '.I!. 1, m par~ • i! ".lrid had left m" 11 r 1 fl<' , 1111 , front I hrrr . ,i.,,.·p\ ,111i:11dant on Jul~ 1 , ' I 1 .1'1k II• n,,., m' ftt> and hrad I t I r3 ~ l'l-<fatl'd '1 .ill I U\lfll h;1\l' 11n thl ""' 11 t n moral of th1i, I Dally Piiot Delivery I• GuarantMd Just call 642-6086 .. ~-~· , Ml ' .. ,~ t •lQp -~····" • ,v ,, I/Ill t-. :--.~ I) 4 .. Circulation TelephonH .. ~- WEATHER ~ --~ Hazy sunshine to peek through Late rtoght and mor ntng fog and low cloud• along the Orange C.u t w111 bufn otf to hazy aunahlne today and Wednetday, the Nauonal Weather Service Hid Temperatures wtll range from the mid 60s along the beaches to the low 701 Inland Lows tonight wlll be In the mid· and upper-50s Light variable winds will blow during lhe night and morning hours Bl<'ng the Inner coastal water\ This 1_1fternoon southwest to west winds will range lrom 8 to 16 ~l\OtS The westerly swell ls 2 to 4 feet. • Low overnight cloud• and fog wlll lest through the morning hours, breaking to partly cloudy skies this atternoon Along lhe outer coastal waters, northwest winds wlll blow 10 to 20 knots with lcx:ally stronger gusts near Point Conception Combined seas ere 5 10 8 leel , U.S. Temps ><.en• .. C111 •• 30 L .. veo .. 80 S6 L 1111e AOC.~ 6S 47 HIQP>t IOnl"' .. gtoSpm IUMdly lou11vdfe 43 )1 HI Lo Mempl>o1 !SJ 40 Alb••11 0 lS M1emo Beacn &6 48 Albuquetque 63 43 MICl...O·OO•n• "' 46 37 30 Calif. Temps · Sen•• Seti>••• ea 46 Set'I• Crut bl 17 s en11 Mane 10 50 Am.,•MO 63 37 M1tw-• .__8119 23 04 Mpl .. 51 Pl•J 38 )2 ... , . .,,,. 63 •2 NHIMlte 53 38 76 52 • High• low• ll1<009t S p m Monday $81118 Mon<C• 61 SS 80 40 Stoc1<1on 70 4t All.,..1< C•lr 4J 29 N-O<IUM .A1Jahn ,., S7 -Yor~ ·~ 211 AP91e Veltey w ... 11e1c1 • 74 48 1.,_va11..., 56 :.>9 Batel OW llO 49 Totre<>ce 61 .51 ~I 16 .a Yo-"'1eVty 12 40 81()8-62 JI lllahop 71 40 Surf Report Blythe 90 5e Calahn• 67 52 Eureila 57 50 LOCATIOtf Sal DIR Fr~ TS 50 l tanCUI .. 7S 40 Zume 8MCll 2-3 w lot19 8Ncll n M San1a MonlC8 2..J w HewpOrt 8NCtl 2 J w Lot A~ 73 51 San OleQO Co<;nly 3-4 w Mwyevllle 71 S3 Monrovta 76 51 Ou1iooll tor W.00...0•Y LMtl<I rt'l .. •Q41 Mon1et>ello ,., S4 Mont.,..., 62 46 Tides Ml Wll9on 61 .. NMdi.t 87 511 ~8MCh 66 S4 TOOAY Oakland 68 si Flrtl tllQh 3 Ill am ~ I OnlatlO 74 46 Fltal low II 2~ D m !l 3 Palm Sprl"ilt 91 Sil ~high 11 S2p m 1 Puedetla 71 S3 S.COnd IOw tO 27pm Puo Roblee 75 43 '#£ON£10AY A.o 8lutl 70 ~ r.,,, "'°" 4 43em ) 11.o'WOOCI Ct1y 70 46 F1<11 IOW t2H•m , 1 seer-lo 71 SI S.Cond hlQh 7 22pM I 1 Sellnu 72 411 s..:ono tow 11 <;0pm Is Sen Bemetdlno 71 S4 San Gel>#~ 71 S4 San OleQo 67 S9 Sun ,.,.. today al 6 t8 a rn and 1 . SanFr~tco 72 S4 ~et5S2pm San.loM 72 46 Moon n-lt'Cl•1 •1 2 08 • m 9ncl 1 • Santa Ana 1~ SJ llQ8l<I ., 11 43 ._,,, 8•11·mo<• 44 21 °"'•"""'• (_\11 64 40 B<•mtnQh•m 67 42 Omana 41 J3 81 .. •!"le(C., ... 18 Or•endo . 12 3a BooM as 17 Pnolade4'••-48 2S Botti on 4S 19 Phoet1'4• 86 61 Sunato 41 71 P~llburgh 4? 32 B<lfllnQIOfl VI •l •to Potl•ar>d Or fl() 39 ~ '>6 l7 PtovtdeoC" 43 23 Ch••lnlon S C. &3 A(j ~•'-'Oh 68 38 Chertolle.N C 64 :J6 Rapid C.llr SA 36 Ct.eyen~• .,, 'lO Reno Ml JS Chl(;eQO 39 JO AochmC>r'ICI •• 30 ClnGlf'l\Ato j7 33 SI le>ult 43 3S C-arod 39 32 St Pete I •MP• 71 44 C~umbla SC 87 38 Sen Lakf! Coy eo 37 Columbue 0 11 38 3A San Antonin 71 68 Conco•d N., 43 13 San Juan PI• 86 Ml • o au .. fl wr,111 6S 55 Sea Ille 91 42 Oayton 35 33 $IO<J• Fell\ 37 32 Oen•Ot S9 3a Sp0k1n& 52 28 O.S Moutft\ 36 34 Syrtw.u!MI ~3 22 Ottrroll 3a 32 Topeka 50 31 fl PellQ n 31 Tue.on 81 63 Fe1(ben-.' 05 2<J Tutu 64 36 Fargo 18 31 WashX'h •S 3~ Grand Aep•O• 40 ll WllkM· He GrHt f111a as 29 GtMn~OOttt '' < ... 62 )4 Extended .... ,,, .... ,g 45 20 ... 111.,,.. ~9 i6 Hono'v•u 83 15 1 N•Qlll anc "'°'"'o0,,,... CIOO.Klt.,.., IC>Q HOtJatot 7S ~ wtlh ,...., alll!tfl')()n ..,.,,,,..,.. Highs in lnd1i1r>AC)(>fl• 38 33 1"9~600IOUPP@' 701 lOWSlnll'WI JllC~Ml<' ,,.. 71 so ""° 409 and ~ U"4WttJ 44 3t DA VIS FAVORS OFF-SHORE DRILLING ... From Al l><I\ I\ \Jld .. , OU l'an'1 C\ell \CC It I 1JI ~ 111d ol olhhore dc' clopmenl 1<. 1111p11rl,H1 I t11 lh<' l'l1JOllOI\ clOd <,\'llll It I hl' l;I\ t I h 1 ng. \.\l' 'cf \\ ,1111 I\ 10 ui1ii.· 111 .ind pu1 produu1nn 111 an 1tn\l!!htl\ lol'allon I hc pl·ork in ~anta Hnrharn \\l'fl' .ill '!.'•''II' 11111-1111" hl' .,.11d. hut thl'\ \ 11tnl d11\\11an11111tatne 1;i,, l\Jo\l'lll· ll\ 1 ,Jilin~ for 1hc chrn111,11urn nl • 1hh1•rl 11il produt 1111n I ht· pt·urh· l'lho Jfl' i.l!!a111'>t ti .m· 1knl,ll!ll)llll'\ '.I h11 dllll•I hit\ l thl' • .1111111·, 1rttt'rl''>l\ .11 hl·an •· I ),1," '·"" fl,tl Ill! ... llll l'l\ <I \II It\ lfl ,t ' 1 1 ~1.11111 " • l r al \ 111 " 1 I '"' \ ~ ll•ll'llll 1l1 l.111 .1 n " \1rnro,... • ' \ l ;. , 11 :11. "'"' • 11! •11•! inkr.tlt 'llr1•ttl1t>·111\'1il'""''"·n1 I•• .... 1 I Plltll llf ,tn\ nthL'f lcllt'l!!ll ,., " I I J \ , ..... 11d c .1l11ng c uha and :"l.1tar.1)!1t<1 ""'Ill r11pp1:1\ he 1,J1d tht• I '111tl'd "ilall'' ,1J1111ld ,·m11uragl' dl'ni1111a• \ tor 11-. I 1tin nt 1ghhor'> · '" h3d .1c:. "nm111<1 wa., al ll';l\t ht"· ,I\ ;i11 1nd11 1111u'> p1r.1tl . ;ind th n '.1 hnk Int t" tlt'r than <i ln11·1v11 "" 111 I 11 '\ ti ,,11 J l 111· prl.''>ldt·nl ,1iould 'o:t\ < ll'i11Ui ol thl'fl tn the: ,w1h11nl\ 111 d1·111rn 1,11\ 111 1°ht· 21\t Cl'niul\ 111 tlw \\ l'\tl·rn I krn"phl'lt · 1);1\ I\ \atd lhl.' 11<1(1011 \ 1nl1 ll\I\ Jl\u \\ould tit· \l'r' t'<I "'1th 1mpll'ltll'n r,won 111 lhl· \tralt•g1l I >clt>n\t' ltt- 11.111\ e poflularh talkd \t.ir "-'.tr' C 1l1n1t 11pl11111\lll pn·d1l1111n<. 1h<11 ..,DI v.uuld knock out 90 percenl ol an~ inrnmmg m1ss1les. he said Amenra·s retaliatory ah1hty would remain rnLact and thus discourage the 'in' 1e1c, from attempting a <,urpn1,c n1tark .. M' theory 1s the hhcralc; think thl' 1\1.\ D do1:tnne (mutually ac;sured dl''>lruct1on) is good. and the}' 're afra rd \DI "ould he de'ltah1h11ng. .. In foci. that was the <;ov1ct rc<,p1111sc It's 1ntere\l1ng that Amt·n· ~a·, hhcrals have had the 1dc.-n11rnl rt'3L t1on a<. th<> <;ov 1ets. "(\DI mu<.t he good or C 1orhachcv \\ouldn'L be ~o upset -<>r the lthcrals · he s~ud 'A h1le l>a" l'i hehevcc; <;()I wrll keep .1 l Ill m} m1c;c;1le'I. he t'> fru<.trated that the federal gmcmment ha<i done h ttk to ket"f) out illegal 1mm1grant'> ~lam mg a stnng of U ~ •ltlorne)'> \!•·n r11 for fa1hng to enforce 1mm1gra- 11u11 ta\\<. at the horder. he <;aid \\ "hing!on \htluld prohahl> qu,1d 111rlc 1hr numhcr 11f border guard'> . r he had gu\c; have tx·cn lhl·· attnrlll') !. general whn haven't done a good 1ob II hcg1m and t•nds there \nvth1ng el\e t'i as1n1ne "I 1 <;how<. how stupid people gt•t "'ht•n thn g11 to Wa.,h1ng111n · lie findc; '\nulhcrn ( ahtorn1a11' l'qualh \lupid fnr .,unc11ng th{'11 11.tflil l'IOC<. \.\1\houtllcmand1ng 'oOlu lton\ c >ranite < nunty 1'> a tran\lt d1sac,- ll'1 area fry 10 11,e1 out of Irvine 111 peak hours I lo"''><> many 1ntt•rec,t1ng. pro<.pNOU'i and 'iUCCCS<if ul peorll' ~ tolerat~d ~uch a \\'>t~m 11, 1nrnmprchenc;1hle:· he said [)a' 1c; <;;ud a lack of kadc.:rsh1p and planning 1n < ahlornrn 1 part ot the blame. and calkc1 on c ongrt:~s to force the admin1c;tratmr to give the slate nc; fair share of fl.'d• ral highway dollars He also suggec,t~d a h:lllot prop ositron a\ktng Hiter<. "'hethL·r high· way u\er'> should pay higher fut'I tal(e'i for tranc;portatron needc;. "I look at all the docile human beings c;1tt1ng rn their care; and h'ltcnrng to the radio. and I ~ct <>O damn mad I want to get out and throw bomh'I or •.omcthing. · Da' I!> ..a id the Fiedler a1Ta1r that dominated headhn.:-<> Junng the earl~ part of the race hasn't harmed h1~ ab1lll} to ra1c;e funds or reduced \upport tor his campaign He said that he raised S 16.IX>O at a prc" 1ouc; coc1a1I paJt) in ( hato,v.orth and rai..ed another $6,000 in an encouraging response to a recent d1rcc1-mail appeal. A dinner for 500 1n \pnl at thl' < cntury Plaza was half c;nld out even bdon: 1n .. 1tat1ons "ere rnniled. he said .. I ho'it' three examples lead me to heltcvc I haven't been hurt." Oav1<, \a1cl "I rn doing as well now'.\\ I wa\ heforc the f1cc1lcr l'apcr." Oa \IS also \a1cl people ~tatev.1de have rrar<,ed tum for alerting the I.,<)<, Angeles d1s1nc1 auomey'c; <1tlicc to what he allege!> wa" an ofTe1 h\ thl' Fiedler camp to pJy off $1 U< ' • •I his campaign dl't>t\ If he woul• ' out of the race. ..\Judge la1er thr{'w o•J' t ae,a1nc;1 f 1edlcr and t,r.1 t 1 •r aide Paul ( l.ar~ "'A hat ll will do 111 hn , uni~ ttmc "tll tdl.' I a""~ .. ................................................................................... , MOTHER'S DEATH INVOLUNTARY ... From Al ""rim 111' hl'.td and lht'\l P11hhl I li.'ftnder J11d HaruLh <,;11d thl' q1111Jn apparent!) d1t•d ol a heart allalk -thr n·<.ult ol '111'\\ and lhl' !wad 1niun ( 111l'thal' a\kt:d 1urr1r\ to return "'11h a \l rJ1t I 111 \l'l11nd dt·j!rt'l' rnurclcr punl'>hahk h\ I~ \C.:<11' 111 lllt' 111 ,,11 l Harud1 \aid M r' I omhard h.ira....,ecl :ind tormcntl·d her <.nn ' J ht·l aU"l' ol h1<; 1nah1l11v 10 hnd '-"Ofk or hold onto a JOh ~!Ill l.omhard tovrd h1<, m(lther. h{' satd l.ornhard'c; fir.I murder trial oiml' 10 an abrupt halt when Juror1, wcrt• acndentl) shown a grrc;I) picture l)f the woman·.., hod} a!t 11 ,1ppearccl 10 pohcr olliccrs when lhl'}' opened till trunk of the car five duy\ after the ~oman died. Mc Bride said the photo11,raph wa' ' prc1udic:1al and tk ,., , T hl ..,ccond 1 rral 11p.'ro• d " ' • f ch I~ 1 umhanl rc p1111 I . hi\ mother m ~,11ii 11 • ·1 ,1 • alter her d{'ath 'A hen hlr tar '-"a'i lc1ratt·d two day' 1 1 r 1n ~an c lrmentc.:. hi: r{'portedl~ ·1<,,kcd pollc.:emen Ill c1pcn thl' trunk I h. wa'> arreo;ted ~vl'ral tlay<. later ,1ftcr ~OlllcS'ttng 10 J)OliCe. Comfortable. femininP. too pretty 1n thrs hatrste r..otton drec;.s wrth hc1nk1:~rJircf hnP.n collar A Maurren Cullinane Design <!i!,..eaJ1iiirkt</'e', /·~· WESTCUFF Pl.Az.A. NEWPORT BEACH. CA (714) 642-7061 ) I