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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1986-03-24 - Orange Coast Pilot' TOllOMOW. FAIR I ** MONDAY, MARCH 24, 1986 U .S~ attacks Libyan patrol boat No vert lcation to Li yan claims that . U.S. jets were shot down in Gulf of Sidra tending U.S. planes and ships into the rqion to cbaUenp the assertion by Libyan leader Col. Moammar Khadafy that the 1ulf belongs to LibyL wu the firina of two looa-n-surface..tCHir missiles by Libya.-~ "TbiJ attack was entirely un- provoked." extended their operations into the disputed Gulf of Sidra. Co1 · ona1 leaders were called to the~ Houte for a briefioa off' Libya's coest. Tbespokesmu said the U.S. naval exercisea will continue in the uw • Jona u Americao ofticia1s deem it necessary. WASHINGTON (AP) -U.S. aircraft shot and set afare a Libyan patrol boat today after Libyans fired six missiles at American planes, the White House said. The White House said no U.S. planes were damqed by tht Libyan missiles. Libyan television cliamed U.S. aircraft had been downed. Chargera' man Da't'e Wbite .... been picked to replace BW •orlrman •• ltdleon BICb '• bead football coach. Bl. World Libyan forces fire at least two anti-aircraft mlsslles as U.S. planes crossed Col. Moammar Khadafy's "llne of death." I A7 Sports Duke and Kansas make It to the NCAA basketball Anal Four. /81 Entertainment Yooban't fight video re- corders, s0 HBO will en- courage their uae -to tape HBO movies./ A 12 INDEX Advice and Games Bulletin Board Business Classtfled Cornlea Death Notices Entertainment Opinion Police Log Public Notices Sports Televlslon Weather A10 A3 A8-9 B5-7 A11 84 A12 A6 A3 84, 7-8 B1_. A12 A2 College may <;levefop its excess land ByPHil.SNEJDERMAN ot ... Dmllr ......... Coastline Commuruty College - the college without a campus -may soon have something more valuable, a stake in an office complex and industrial development that could earn the district more than $9 million over the next 20 years, the district estimates. Coast Community College District trustees have endorsed tentative plans for developin& excess property around the coUeae's Fountain VaUey beadquarten into liab~industrial and professional office buildinp. A raolution of intent mued lut week direc1ed dittrict staff to punue more detailed buildina plans with (Pl-..e ... COASTLIJllS/ A.2) White House spokesman Larry Speakes said at a White Houte Speakes said: "The ship is dead in the briefina that the U.S. forces were ~~. burmna and appears to be conductina peaceful exercites when 11~ There are no apparent the planes were fired on with SA-2 survavors." . and SA-S missiles. The U.S. Navy P~ were am~ng "We have no repons of any ~hose based on t.ru:ee aircraft camen casualties and no loss of U.S. aircraft 10 lt?e. Gulf of S1dra. The R~n or sbipa was reported," Speakes said. adm1ru1trabon bas made a po10t of. Speakes. referring to what be said A Libyan television report monitored by the BBC bad said ~t Libyan air defen1e1 abot down thiee U.S. ain:raft over the Gulf of Sidra. but S~ said there were DO f:J.S: cuualtiea. ! £.artier, Pentqon sources bad said Libya fired two or three anti-aircraft miuiles at U.S. warplanes u the jell croued K.hadafy's "line of death" and Defeme ~ Cup.r w. Weinbefler had declined to say even w~ the pknes bad entered the aulf. ~said: -rhis was not an act c1c:siped to r.vote a .~nJe ... " from Kbada1X:!lut. be said, it wu in •~pPOrt of tBditional" maritime ~ts of access in the disputed Gulf of Sidra area of the Mediterra.Dean Sea ... ........ ,......,a..,.. ··we are there on a oelCefUI ex~1" be said. addina ~if they ete attaceo then they · are to dd.d themadves." Speakes said: "We now comid« aD approacbina Libyan foroea to baw hottile intent. We'1"Ctlef'Ve the npt to take additional mea.swa aa eveau warrant" Lion killed in Caspers Park Attacked child on Sunday; officials call behavior rare By STEVE M.Al\BLE Of .............. A full-srown mountain lion, be- lieved to be the same one that mauled a S-year-old El Toro lirl Sunday, wu killed today in a brushy area of Ronald W. Caspen Regional Park.. The mountain lion, which weipcd about 100 pounds, was shot with a tral\quilizer ,r..n but was killed when it began to ~t with dogs that were used to track tt. It bad been hoped the animal could be removed from the popular oount-y park near San Juan Capistrano, authorities said.. The m ountain lion was first spot- ted about 8:30Lm. and cocnem:t two hours la1er by a pack of bloodhounds owned by Joe Shows, a profelaion.al bunter from San Bem.ardiDo who wu hired by the county. Anne and Kara Cbitjlan, center, of Ca.ta lleM take tludr bn&k, were anaware of tlae tr.t8 lllllboa med to bold for frtenda to Balboa Jaland for a tute of tbe local froaen U.t8. col.Jete etadent8 Jean aco da.rtni tlae heyday of BU Week, Tile Chico State colle,e madenta, ~ their 8PriDf wlMm daoe•nda of teen-acen woald take OTer tbe area. "He shot it with the dart, but it ran up th.is hill and the dop olwed it." said a out l'QICT ... Jt started fiabtin& with the dop and be Md to till it in order to save the dogs." Authorities said they were per- plexed by the lion ·s behavior. Balboa during spring break: . That was the week that was Rowdy pre-Easter parties in Newport were quelled by city's get-tough policy It's time to go floging off to the grains. Or have you forgotten? Easter vacation has arrived. which means little unless you're a student and get a one-week break from the books. But there was a time along the Orange Coast when the coming of the spring break convinced local resi- dents to hide or get o ut of town. Motel managers would raise their prices. Lifeguards would say goodbye to Sumner may run for Congress on . Democratic ticket Party dissatisfied with extremism of official candidate BJ TONY SAAVEDRA Of ............... Oranae County Democratic leaden are attempt.Ina to coax local party chainnan Bruce Sumner into rwmina u a write-in candidate qainst Art Hoffmann, a Lyndon l..aRouche foUower unopposed on the Democratic ticket in the Newpon Beach conaressional primary. Sumner, 60, a former state as- semblyman and retired Superior Court judce, is expected to annouooe his decision at a news conference on Tuesday. Sumner said this momina that be was leanina toward enterina the race. .. Sure, I admit I'm intrigued by the idea," said the Newport Beach a~ tomey. "We're now presented by a crisis in the ear:t>'·" Democratic leaden were alarmed last week to learn that Hoffmann, 29, a technical writer from Santa Ana. leisurely afternoons. And police chiefs would grab for their antacid tablets. In Newpon Beach, Easter vacation meant Bal Week. And Bal Week. to the teen--.n of the '50s and '60s, meant it was bme to race to the beach -flog off to the pns., they called it -for a week- lon1 party. Bal Week was a Newport Beach was unchallenaed in bis bid for the Democratic nomination June 3. lf be wins the primary. Hoffmann (Pleue _. SUllJUR/ A.2) ROBERT HYNDMAN RETROSPECTIVE tradition. As surety as the swaUows returned to Capastrano, tens of thousands of bjfb school and coUege students would mvade Balboa Island and the Balboa Peninsula to celebrate the rites of sprina in ways only leen- (Pleue eee BAL WBSll/ AS) "This is a very bizaJTe situation, .. said county Parks Supervisor Tony Gimbronc. "Mountatn lions just don't stalk or attack people." There bas not been a documented attaclc on a bu.man by a wiJd mountain lion 10 California for at least 60 years. "I can't even think of a recorded death or serious injW)' from a mountain Hon anywhere m the west- ern states," said Ron Hein of the state Department offish and Game. Laura Michelle Small, visitioa the park with her ~nts and an older brother, was saved when a hiker clubbed the mountalll lion with a large stick until it dropped the girl and (Pl-..e eee ALISO/ A.2) PSA suit claims favoritism over new AirCal flights By ROBERT HYNDMAN oe ... o.11r ....... Pacific Southwest Airlines 1s char&- iog Oranac County officials wtth favoritism in granting its rival. Aar- C.al, additiortal flights out of John Wayne Airport while limiting PSA depart~ to the current level. PSA officials asked a federal coun jud&e Friday to block a new Oiabt· allocation plan scheduled to take effect April I . The plan p ves AlrCal 20 new fbabts per day for 1ts qwet BAe-146 jets, but hm1ts PSA's same Bntisb-made Jets to the cumnt 12 daily departures. "The favont1sm is rampant and blatant, .. PSA Vice President Dennis O'Dell said today. "Whatever new allocations are made, we feel, should be made on a fa1r basis."' Airport Manager Georae Rebella refused to comment today on any aspcctS of PSA 's IClJOn. "We'U ~ spond to the allepuons in court. .. Rebella wd. The San Dlego-bucd PSA was the first to use the BAc-146 jets at John Wayne Alrpon and surprised county officials last year with the jet's quiet performance (Pleue ... PfJA/ A.2) Irvine distributes funds from lottery Borderpatrolagentsc~ch ·695 aliens; freeway snarled BJ G. JEANETl'E A VENT Of ................ Irvine Unified School District trustees have alloc:ated more than S8",000 in state lottery ftmds from the flnt quar1er and earmarked another $600,000 that is expected to ani ve thJ.s week. The board ap'Ced to det~te S93$,lOS of the lottery money for secondary school coun1elors and the elementary fine aru prosram and an additional $670,000 for a lilt lb.at includes capital equioment. aenual ' ' ,.. 1 music, coun1elon. ICbool supplks, maintcnaooe and a trial prosram to ease hiab ICbool Enalisb teacben' workloed by providina subltitutes. 'Ibe baud bad bme leeway, how· evet, in bow it oould appropnate tbe money. In what Deputy Superintendent Joe Holder called a courapua move on the pan of tbe prcvtous ICbool ~ he noted that tNstees bad anuc:ipated the lottery funds and included them ID the 198S-86 bud&et ~ ... LOTnaT/A2) r By SUSAN BOWLETI' °' .............. U.S. Border Patrol qents netted nearly 700 UlepJ ahens at the San Oemente cbeckpoiat Sunday. fot'Clna motorists mW'llina from San Dacao and Mexico to wait lD bumpc-r·to- bu.mper traffic dunna the S'h-bour sm\llmlin& crackdown. In lddf tion to the 695 captumi at the San Clemente check'po1nt. the fJ Centro rubltanon reported a week- end total of 91• Mexx:ans attempttna to enter the Un 1 ted talt:S 1Ucplly. accordina to Paul .Villanueva of the Border Patrol. AJeots cbeckina Am- trak trains bro\llbt in 63 mott ahcns between Oceanside and an Oemente Sund.av. he added "It's a ba ," wd U Border Patrol pok man Ed Pyeatt. "h 's wbat we call an 1ntens1vt traffic stop." The traffic stop at the n Clemente checkpoint bepn at • 30 p.m and ended at 10 pm .. Pyeatt wd At 10me points dunna the crackdown. the traffic was tii.ckcd up to Oceanside. he wd Because Sundays art traditionally congested days at the bot"dcr with tounm rctum1na from weekend tnps to Mei100, Villanueva sald tt•s a busy dayfor muaknwhotakcadvanlllC of the addlttonal peopk to hide ilk:pl ahens 1n then ca" "The dam 1mua&Jen mow that UDdal_ IS a busy Oay," Villanueva uid "ThCJT'• a t~mendoul amount ofpeopl~" (P\eue-ALISP18/ U) . . [ Al** 0Nnge COMt OAJLY ~LOT I Monday, M•ch 24, 1888 A winning poster Dina Fa.rrla, left, a Newport Harbor Hl&h School mentor. t.awardeda $1,000Kholar- •hlp for her wlnnlJll entry ln the and- drunken drlvln& poeter conteet eponeored by the Coeta Meaa Medical Center Hoepital. Preeent:t.nc ~e award to Jl'arrl• are (from left) hoepital admlnletrator Norman Martin, hoepital chairman Dr. Johnnie Bet8on and Co.ta Meu Mayor Norma Hertsoa. Ferrla la planning to attend Cal State Long Beach ae an art m-.jor be&lonlng neztyear. Hayden to head four HB Ji braries Ronald Hayden, 37, was appointed director of the Huntington Beach City hbrary system Fnday Hayden, who will succeed WaJter Johnson. has been acting director for five months. He was Johnson's second in command for several years. The library system, which includes the Central Library at 7111 Talbert Ave. and three branch hbranes -at Marn Street. Graham Street and Banning A venue -circulates more than I million ttems a year and numbers 116,000 active card-holders. For its size and number of employees, Central library 1s considered one of the busiest in the nation. Irvine firm recalls heart valves. By tbe A11ociated Press The lrvine-ba~ed manufacturer of a widely used mechanical heart .. atve that has already been involved 1n four recalls has issued a voluntary recall for more than 2.000 unamplanted 'ah es because some have been damaged The recall followed '>IX complatnt!> lrom .cardiac surgeon.-. around the nation who had to discard damaged .. ah es dunng hean operations said Robert Curtis, president ofSh1ley Inc. The recall of the standard model of the Ionescu-Shiley pencard1al xeno- graft was announced 1n a Feb. 27 letter to hospital adm1n1strators and cardiac surgeons throughout the country. The valves, made from preserved animal heart tissue. are not supposed to have folds an leaflets that control blood flow But the surgeons dis- covered that the leaflets of some valves had been folded. '"The chances that one of th ese folded valves was implanted in a patient 1s extremely small,'' said Curtis. who signed the recall letter. Tests show the fo lded valves to be "essent1aJly no different" from un- damaged valves. Curtis said. But he said there was no conclusive way to determine 1f problems may develop 10 patients later . PSA SEEKS TO BLOCK AIRCAL FLIGHTS •.. From Al Since then the '\lcwpon Beach- based .\arCal has ordered !.IX of 1he same Jets and expects to ha\'e four flying b' Ma ) But ()'Dell said he can't under- stand v.h ' Orange ( ount.,. super- ' 1soo d1stnhuted add111onal flights une.,.enh The · .\arport ( omm1s!.1on ap- proved a 14-fhght increase f'cb I 3 tor .\arCal. \\lhach had reque\ted 21 more flights for the 1hret>-month· pcnod begtnntng Apnl I. O'Dell said he was at the meet mg to ask for su add1t1onal flights for PSA , but has request was denied O'Dell said he later met With county super- visors v.1th a s1m1lar request. But when the board met Feb 26. super- \.ISOrs granted AarCal 20 new flights and PSA's request for sax flights was agam denied. O'Dell argued also that A1rCal cannot even use the flights Apnl I thev have been allowed since they w1lf have only two of the BAe-146 Jets on hand. PSA. meanwhile. has 20 of the Jets and expects dehve11 of four more l\1r(al spokesmen were un- available for comment today. .\ heanng on the request for the prehmtnary injunction w11l be heard .\pnl I an U.S. Dmnct Coun an Los '\ ngl'les COASTLINE MAY DEVELOP LAND ... From Al ~e .... pon [)e, clopment < o Chancellor Da' 1d Brov.nell c.:au- uoned. huv.n er. that thr rt.·.-.olutaon rcprc\cnt\ "a proposal for mamage. not the ""edding Itself" More formal development plan\ will be rt•tumed for the tru\tces' apprmal an the coming weeks. he \aid Bro"' nell 11> top admtnl\trator of the < oast d1'>tnct. lhhlch indudes Orange < oast. C1olden Wl·st and < oa.-.thnl" colleges three acres. lca.,.ang an additional 5 5 acres for commercial development chat can provide a source of re\enue 10 help pay for the college bu1ldmg. Chan cellor Brownell said the d1s- tnct an1t1ally had trouble attracting development proposals. Changes in market conditions prompted the dastnct 10 seek new offers last year. and Newport Development's plan ~as selected as the beo;t The chancellor said the plan calls tor construction ofbuild1ngi; to hou<;e profes.-.aonal office~. light manufac- tunng and high-tech bus1ne~ses He said the structures would comply with Fountain Valle) land-use guide- lines Brownell said the tentative plan caJli; for the district to r~cc1ve monc:y from the lease of the propen) and from the rents paid b} bu1ld1ng tenants LOTTERY FUNDS SPENT ... From Al toward a wider range of expend a tu re~. I WEATH [R l.__ Fair front fixing to follow f ~g A Week, dry w.eth« front broug~t cootet temparatur• end eorM cfoudt to Southern Callfornl• today, along wtth morning fog aJona tha cout. Fair lklae will prevall Tueaday, llOC;Otdlng to tha Natlonel WMthef s.tvtoe. Temperatur .. will beln tha mlddi. to upper 80• along Iha coatt Tueaday. Along the Orar1g9 co .. t that• wlll be night and morning ooaatal fog and low cloud1, fair lklae Tueaday. "Hight In the mid· end upper 60• along the beaohee to the 70. Inland. LOWt In the mld--40. to mld-50a. From Point Conception to tha Mexican Borc:Mlt -lnntf watert: Light wind• night and morning houra becoming weet 8 to 1e knot• with 1 to 2-root wind wavee Tue9Qay afternoon. W .. terly awall 1 to 2 feat Panly cloudy with locally dentt fog, bteomlng fair TuMday. U.S •• Temps 71 ., 70 S2 51 :ll 46 23 ee a1 fitQ ~~ :::: CoWJ _. U.S. cracks down on cactl smugg11ng 16 " $1 4$ 66 41 7g 41 5e 31 87 47 51 31 , SN>.,,,, Aa.n F"mu Snow Oti:ludto ~ St11>0naty ~ "''~' ...... _ ~· '<O•• vs OeQ• "'c.,,...,..o . 90 " 57 3" 42 2t 51 44 44 31 .. 38 ,, :sa Calif. Temps Surf Report "u .. ,. 83 u 97 u .. 54 1• 41 51 42 74 41 $1 41 &3 )() 87 48 17 50 71 62 eo " ,, 47 57 ,. LOS ANGELES (AP) -Federal authorities arc stepping up efforts to crack down on a pncldy problem: the smuggling of thousands of rare and endangered Mexican cacti into the United States. The Wildlife Fund said dealers and collecters arc smuggling as many as 20,000 rare Mexican cacti into the United States every year. Thousands more arc ilJegaJly exported from Mexico to other countnes. SUMNER MAY ENTER CONGRESS RACE ••• From Al would be the party's candidate an the race for the seat held by incumbent Repubhcan Rep. Robert E Badham. He also would wm automatic mem- bership to the Democratic state and county central committees. Calling the pnnc1ples of extremist LaRouche .. anathema" to Demo- crats, Sumner said the party needed a strong write-in candidate to block Hoffmann's campaign. He said it is not Likely that a Democrat will win the 40th Con- gressionaJ District scat, a post in what many consider one of the most solidly entrenched GOP areas. However. he said Orange Coast Democrat!> deserve an alternative to LaRouche d1sc1ple Hoffmann in the primary. Sumner explained he wasn't too concerned about Hoffmann in- filtrating the Democratic central committees, but was more afraid of the lone candidate using the party as a soapbox to espouse LaRouche's rad- ical philosophies. "Democrat& on the streets don't reaJly care what the central commit- tees do, but people look up to their candidates," Sumner said. adding that ha ving a LaRouche advocate as the Democratic standard bearer would be an embarrassment. A big name 1s needed for any write- m campaign to have even half a chance. Sumner held the Laguna Beach assembly post for eight years before being defeated m 1964 by John G. Schmitz. Afier 18 years on the Supenor Court bench, Sumner retired 10 1984. Sumner said he was first ap- proached Friday by vanous party leaders with the idea to enter the race. "As we pondered who could run, who had the name ID and the v1abihty, at ktnd of narrowed down to someone who had instant cred1b1hty as a ca ndidate," said the veteran pohttc1an ATTACK ING MOUNTAIN LION KILLED •.• From Al ran, according to reports by 1he child's mother. The child may have been an the la on 's grasp for as long a!> five minutes before Gregory Ysa1'i, 36, of M1 ss1on VieJO rescued her. She suffered severe cuts and bates to her head and underwent surgery late Sunday at Mission Community Hos- pnal in M1ss1on VieJo. The girl was flown to the hospital by helicopter. Her condition was upgraded from critical to senous early today, accord- ing to hospital spokeswoman Jan Walker. The child reportedly was grabbed by the mountain hon about 2 p.m. as her family explored a stream border- mg a nature trail "I saw this thmg -1t looked hke a big dog -come after her It grabbed her by the head and ran off." her mother. Susan Small. told the As- \OC1ated Press. screammg." The mother said the mountain lion sprang from the brush. grabbed Laura by the head and dragged her away. Small sa1d she tore through the brush and when she found the cat, "it still had her (the girl) by the head." A team of sheritrs deputies, county firefighters. park rangers and county animal control officers prowled the park until darkness forced the search to be suspended. The search team, bolstered by Shows, resumed the hunt at day- brcalc. The park was closed through- out the search. Incidents of human attack by mountain hons -also ltnown as cougars or pumas -arc so rare that several authorities speculated that the lion may have once been a family pet that was released. "Either that or there's something wrong with this cat," said Gimbrone before the animal was shot. brought the mountam hon down from lhc htll!>. He satd the hills are plentiful WJth '>mall game_ "But there have been increased repons of mountain lion sightings," he added. ALIENS ... From Al Officals said U.S. Border Patrol agents nonnally arrest an average of about 200 allegal aliens daily. '"If 1t isn't a record. it's sure approach mg one." Pyeatt said of the number arrested Sunday. Angry motorists who spent at least an hour wa1tmg 10 traffic that crawled aJong the San Diego Freeway often yelled at mspcction agents as they eassed the San Clemente chcckpomt. Pyeatt said Bro"' nell said the plan could gencr- Jtc $11 2 m1ll1on for the dastnct over the nc>.t t""o dei;ades The funds ""ould t>c used 10 offset the co.-.t of the four·'>IOI) ( oasthne headquarter.-. hu1ld1ng, lhh1ch opened an the '>um- rner of t 9rsJ approved an September "B) ancludang $941 ,000 of lottery revenue an the 1985-86 budge!. we were able to preserve proj!JClmS which our ne1ghbonng d1stncts discon- tinued." said Holder m his repon to the new board "There was no wammg, no nothmg." she said. "I didn't know where she was. but I could hear her Hein said it would not have been lack of water or fish and game that dependmg on the perceived needs of .thed1stnciandthead~uacyofs~tcl~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ funding. / "There were a lot of people cha t hollered ~t us. when they went by," Pyeatt said. · It was a pretty good backup ... a real hassle." .. It wac; alwav'.i our intention to develop the pror)crt} surrounding the bu1ld1ng. ·• Brownell said l r approval 1'.i obtaaned from lhe hoard construction could begio w1th1n six months. he said The board agreed to follow a three-s Hu TT ER s s p E c I AL LY tiered approach to spending lottery funds The first S l million would go ( oasthne opened an 1976 a~ a lOllege w11hout a campus offenng d asses at community centers and rented rooms The i;ollegc ali;o rented admanastration offices an Fountain Valley Trustee Greg Smith, who took office 1n December. quesuoned the earher board's ac.:tions. saying he wa s "reall> concerned with that kand of policy" to sustam existing programs: the p R 1 c E D second SI malhon would be used toward the enhancement of pro- grams. and any add1uonal funds - because of their uncertainty-would fund one-time expenditures sut:h as Fnc year'> ago da'>tnct trustees decided 11 wa'> unwa~ to continue renting offii;e space The d1stnc1 then purchased a vacant 8 .S-acre parcel at Warner A venue and Ncwhope Street and built a college hcadquaners there The building contains Coastline of- fices and a cable tekv1<,1on center, but 1\ not used for clas~s The project was funded b} the Ja.-.tnct's sale of ce naficate\ of part1ca- pa11on. similar 10 municipal bonds r ht• < oastl1nc (enter cx·c.·upu~s only MAIN OFFICE If the lottery funds had not ma- tenalazed, he said, "we would have had to examine the contingency fund. If there had not been sufficient contingency funds, we would have had to cut back." Smith said mstcad of cuttmg the secondary counselors and elementary fine arts program, there may have been other atea$ of lesser pnonty where cuts couJd have been made. In his report, HoldereS"timated that lottery revenues for 1986-87 would increase to about $2 5 million and suggested those funds could be put books and capital equipment. Jn other action. the board: •Agreed to house the county's hearina-impaired program 1n portables at the Deerfield Elementary and Vcnado Middle School sJtes, and at Un1 vers1ty High School at no cost to the Irvine school d1stoct. •Requested add1t1onal infor- mauon about a proposal before the C11y Council to increase the speed hm1t from 25 to 45 mph on Michelson. a road that serves two elementary schools and one inter- mediate ~hool. Delly Piiot o.tlvery " Ou•renteed Justcall 642-6086 •A ._.,.1 ..,., ' , 1 "'01 "• ... ,~ , ... """"'" bt ~.)I\()"' • o.•o-• ""' A'O rOV coc.r .,. ,.. ,.. ... ,, ••v'1-t' •"~ S..,, ~. ' ('>J t)O "'O' ....... yW .... -.... <\.I • ' ' .. What do you lake about the Daily P1lot'l What don't you hke~ Call the number above and your mes,.ac will be recorded, transcnbed and de· hvered to the appropnate editor. '"°' cry r 1 ,.. c.-OI.,..,, 10 • "' • 11 ,w-e<vr ,. r,._.,.. ' .... ,. }' ~·,.. The same 24-hour answmna scf"'.•1cc may be used to rttord letten to the editor on any topic Contnbutors to our Letten column must mclude tbcar name and telephone number for venficau on Tellt u• what's on your mind ' • Circulation Telephonet The time Is right to enjoy the cool comfort and beauty of these attractive moveable shutters, ... In the colors, sizes and styles you want! Call (714) 548-8841 or548-1717 HElllWOOD MAIUFACTOlf 19n Placentia Avenue • Costa Mesa, CA '¥l62J ( 32 Year• E>tpertenoe Manufacturing Quality Shuttera • OtMgre Cout CWLY PILOT/Monday, Merch 24, 1 .. * Al Mayor's breakfast focuses on airport Editor dated by 'Bal Week' memories I Dennis Hom. chief of operations and faciJjtics at John Wayne Airport, wlll be the featun:d speaker Thunday at the Fount.am Valley Mayor's Breakfast, scheduled for 8 a.m. at the Fountain Valley Reaional Hospital, 17100 Euclid Ave. The prosram wiJI be held in the docton' dinin1 room adjacent to the cafetena. The public is invited and those anendint should RSVP to the city council secrcwy at 96S-4403 by noon Wednesday. bJ•arance .emlnar •lated Problems with expens1ve and eluStve liability insurance wall be discussed at a Costa Mesa Chamber of Commcn:c seminar Thursday at the Holiday Inn, 3 131 Bristol St. The 7:30 a.m . breakfast meetina will feature Vance Hickin, regional man- aacr for Safeco f nsuranoe. ffic~n1 who is responsible for the company's commercial underwriting in California and Nevada, will advise business leaders how to reduce their insurance costs. Reservations arc $6 and can be made by calling 650-1490. Hypnotl•m film 1JCIJeduled Dr. Maya Bajly, a psycholoaist and hyp- notherapist, will offer the free showing of a hypnosis film Thursday at 7: 30 p.m . in her office. 25041 Cabot Road, Suite 202. Laguna Niguel. The film deals with the use of hypnosis to cure cancer and as ancsthsia in major surgery, and Dr. Baily also uses tt to overcome smoking, eating disorers and sexual d1sfunction. Call 499-5409 for more information. CPR course Jn Clemente San Clemente General Hospital will offer a four-hour course in cardiopulmonary resuscitation Thursday at 6 p.m. in the hospital classroom. Regmration is required and seating 1s limited. There is a $5 cha rge to cover the cost of materials, and details arc a va1lablc at 661-44-0S. Rable• c11nlc ln Newport A ne1&hborhood. low-<:ost rabies vaccinauon clinic for dogs will be conducted Thursday evening at the Newport Beach Fire Station, 868 Santa Barbata Drive. The inoculation clink will last from 7 to 8:30 p.m. and the cost is $3 per dog. Call the Orange County Animal Shelter at 634-7287 for further information. Recovery actJvity offered People recovenng from a stroke or heart problem can participate in South Coast Medical Center's actjvny center Wednesday afternoons at 2 p.m. in the ocean view auditorium. Programs arc ~ial and spouses and friends are welcome. Call Stina Wolf at 494-3380 or Doris Rogers at 496-8329 for more information. Exerclse claStt conducted The Jewish Community Center 1s holding a new stretch and tone exercise class at its facility, 298 Broadway in Laguna Beach. The classes. taught by Rachelle DandiottJ. arc held Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays from 7:30 to 8:30 a.m . Call the center at 497-2070 or 833-l.017 for further information. French club to convene Jacqueline Perry. commander of the Legion of Honor and High Officer of the Order of Merit. will speak at Friday's meeting of the Alliance Francaise of Orange County at 8 p.m. in the Bridge Hall offhe Congregational Church, 340 St. Ann's Dnve, Laguna Beach. Perry will discuss hercxpencnces in the French Resistance Movement during World War II. The program will be in French and admission is $3 for guests and $2 for student~ under H Monday, March 24 • 6:30 p.m., Cotta Men Ptauta1 Comml11lon . City Council Chambers. 77 Fair Dnvc. • 7:30 p.m .. Laaua Beaell Ar11 Comml11lon, Council Chambers, 505 Forest Ave. • 7:30 p.m., Lapu Buell Downtown Specific Plu . Counctl Chambers, 505 Forest Ave. Tuesday, March 25 • 6:30 p.m., lrvlne City CoucU, City Council Chambers. 17200 Jamboree Blvd. PoucE Loe By DIXIE LINDSAY °' ............... There aren't too many tbmp that make me feel really old anymore, but I had an expenen~ in the Daily Pilot newsroom that was a poiptant reminder that l am. alas, approechma 40. The n:poners were huddled a.round a picture. lauahina hystencally. r strolled over and saw it was a photo of a aroup of teen·aaers sittina in front of a house on Balboa Island during Easter Weck. The photo was yellowed ... dated lookinJ ... and the youna reporters were lau&hin& at the hair and clot,hing styles I &lanced at the picture. turning tt over for I.he date. Uh oh. • I was dated 1968. I. on the other b.a.nd. had not been on Balboa Island dunna Easter Week in 1968. I was preanaiu with my f1r11 child and teachina nunery school. My years for rajsina bell durina 'Bal Week' were 1964-67. All of a sudden that .. dated" 1>1cture didn't look qujte so dated. Back an the Dark A&es. when I wu a tecn-aatr, the thina to do was to spend an entire year saving money to stay in a house with 30 other ajrls on Balboa 1$land durina Easter Week. • High schools had soront1es and fratcrnittcs an those days, and the prime purpose of those hedorustlc groups was to raise money to spend on Bal Week rent. It was not a cheap vacation. The bOUICS in tbote days cost about S 1,000 a week. Now we're u.lkina nace houses. mind you, with boat docks and b1a a1aJs windowt. Althouah the owncn of those lovely homes would be appalled at the thou&ht of a few dozen tccn·aae ,;rt1 or boy• at.ayina there. lhe money waa IO anT1C1ive that many, many families opted to rent their homes. Keep 10 mind aJso that the option of not rentioa your home was beio& stuck on Balboa Jal.and with thousands of bcU- raisina ieens; several dozen nQ doubt n&ht next door. It Wis not a pretty pictu~. We usually man.lfCd to find the most laid-back mothCT an the universe to cbapen>.ae.. and alOot willa a cot&._ • older si1tet or two, we were in buannt.. Ooce we anived on the ialand (frol:n landlocked Whinier) the parties beeaA. • And they didD'& end until the MICt Wiii over We're talk.Ina wcek·I~ alwnber pany. We're talk.in& beer drinki~ sem..,. tn bath.inf 1uill (rain or shine) rwarmial lhrouah the sueeu day &od niabt Days we partied on the be.acil. NiahtJ" panied in our houte, the boute next door, or any boost on the i&land with an open door . We really didn't have to worry about ru1nin1 anytbina Hice furo.iture ~1 because our thouchtfu1 landlofda WOUJO wisely move aJl their t>elon,;np in10 the Pta&C and secure it with a hefty s-d]oclt. BAL WEEK ONCE MEANT ALL ROADS LED TO NEWPORT ••• From Al aaen could truly appreciate. They'd arrive on motorcycles, scooters or in souped-up cars jammed with surf- boards. guitars. ice chests and sleeping bags and pack local beach houses to tend to their seemingly insatiable appetite for fun. The Bal Weck celebration dates back to the 1930s when college students wouJd descend on Balboa for a break from cla~ that was typically more raucous than restful. By the late '50s. the crowds were larger and younger, With more high school students looking for a piece of the action. By the mid-60s. Bal Weck was draWlng a nationwide following. much to the dismay of local police departments which com- batted the problems the teen-agers brought with them. lnoneni&htalone1n 1965. 77girls, 142 boys and 17 adults were booked into Jail following several Bal Week parties. ac- cording to the Daily Pilot's files. Most of those arrcsts were for intoxication. illegal possession of alcohol. sleeping in cars and curfew violations. By the late 1960s. police bad had enough. Stepped-up enforcement quelled any more mjsch1cf and within five years, teen-agers were heading off to places like Palm Springs and the Colorado River to celebrate the sprin_g break. And Bal Week died. But what a life it led. Weeks before Easter vacation began, the local citizenry would begjn to talk ner- vously about the am val of the tccn~agers. Pohce would cancel any vacation plans and call upon reserve officers to help manage the crowds. Some teen-agers, having apparently forgotten about Friday's scheduled classes. would arrive early to stake out pnme locations. They would rent a beach shack and spill the cost a dozen ways among them. They'd hook up their stereos and speakers for non- stop rock 'n' roll back,ground music. They'd hang hand-scrawled signs that read "Booze is the Answer" or "Girls Wanted -Only Blondes. Brunettes or Redheads Need Apply." The gllys were 1ntcre.sted in the surf. the booze and the girls -but not neccssanly an that order. The boys called the girls "bunnies" and the girls called. the boys ··creeps" or "con anists." In 1964, Ea5tcr Week was plagued by rain. But that didn't dampen the spirits of the young visitors, some who had Lravclcd across the country to be in Newport Beach. The biggest concern. clearly, wasn't the lack of sunshine. but the disappearance of what really made Bal Weck popular - girls. A 21 -ycar-old resident of Rhode Island told a Daily Pilot reporter: ''I've come clear out here because this IS where the girls are. I'm not giving up. I've been here two days and haven't met a gal yet. But l"m not womed; they'll find me .. A 19-year-old man from anta Fe. N.M .. shared that opttmism. "I know the story here so I'm sticking around for parties tonight. We've run into parties every- where. I'm not worried about finding the girls." A teen-ager from Orange lamented. "I guess 1f it's too cold. we'll Just sit around and cry." His younger brother. a 15-ycar-old, had other complaints. ''The surf 1s awful but I'm gomg to stick around. It doesn't seem that the g.arls wi ll even look al you unless you're 18." Where were all the girls dunng Bal Week 1964? "We're d~~ but can; mg our bathing ............................. Aak anr. male what broacbt him to Newport Beacb da.rtnc Bal week and be 11 tell yoa lt wu the .... tile MUf and the &lrla -bat not necau.rlly lD tbat order. Tb.la 1988 •PrlDC-break crowd cbecb oat the latat In women'• 8Wlmweu wblle wonderln& which party the younc lady wll1 attend tbat e'ftfttna. suits in case we get a break in the weather. We're staying. .. said a 15-year-old girl from La Habra. "But most of the g>rts have been Easter shopping. 4 ' Rian or shine. there wCTC aJways panics. There were reports one afternoon of a driver and his passengers, weanng Beatles wigs, crujsing down the road in their hot rod, waving a butterfly net at bikini-dad girls promenading on the sidewalk. Police wouJd sometimes roust as many as 16 people living out of one miniscule apartment. The traffic Jams leading onto the peninsula were often so bad, motonsts would run out of gas while waiting to move forward. Balboa Island residents were given dccaJs for their cars to let police know they shouJd be allowed to move past the lines of overheating station wagons and get home. But when the traffic came to a halt. teen- agers took it an stride. "Who needs wheels? We'll just banzai over on our earth pads," o ne young man said as he started walking over the bridge to the peninsula. Bal Week's decidedly hedonistJc bent one year attracted legions of Chnsuan preachers intent on spreading the word of God to vacauoning teen-agers. and lettmg them know there was more to hfe than wine. women and song. About 400 members of the Campus Crusade for Christ hit the beaches m 1966. approaching teen-agers w1th "'I've ac- cepted Chnsl mto my life. will you accept him into yours'>" Whtie many teens said they were impressed with the Crusaders' sin<:enty, few were swept up by religious fervor. Saad one young woman, .. It's a good thinJ. but they want you to accept Jesus Cbnst right here with all these people around." Bad timing, they agreed. But Crusade spokesmen said they were content to plant the seeds for later spiritual awakenings. Local police officers, however, W'Crc more interested 1n ruppingproblcms in the bud, and pruning the existtna concerns. The tecn..agcrs. they dcaded, bad worn out their welcome and were becoming increasingly bold with their dnnking and partying. Once, when police raided a Bal Weck party in 1969, a youth tned to nee with a police helmet knocked off a patrolman's bead by a fellow party guest. Other tcen-.agers believed the laws didn't apply to them. "That I 0 o'clock (curfew) stuff is OK for younger kjds, but us 17-year-olds can take care of ourselves. .. a youth from Granada H ills said. In 1965. during the peak of the Bal Weck celebrauon. Newport Beach police passed o ut pamphlets containing rules, laws and places of entertainment to the student visitors. Among other Items, the pamphlet pointed out the phone number of the local hospital. a recitation of the laws concern- ing Juveniles. lo1tenng and dnnkmg. and where dancing was approved. (The Rendezvous Ballroom W*iJ Optn f°1'o1J1 I p.m. t9 mi(lniaht. Boys wtre rcquittid to wear' ties; gi.rTs hid to . wear skiru or dres$CS.) T&e area near the ballroom was allO the site of fistfiabts, police recall. Custom can were the bia thin& then and fiahts started over them. Car ownen utcd to perk in the vicinity of the Rendezvous so the11 can could be seen aod admired by people on their way to the dances. "But as soon as 10mcone as much u l&id a hand on one of those S 12,000 babies, the owner would just haul off and hit )lim," a longtime resident rccalJed. The police gave plenty of warninp. And h•ving done that, they sW1ed to set touab -:--assunna locaJ citizens they were "utiltzing our manpower to the IJ'Clt.esl CJtteD\." By the late 60s, officen would not hesitate to apprehend youths, ta.kc them to the station and call their parents to retrieve them. It didn't matter if the parents were several hundred miles away. ln fact, one summer. the City Council was al.anned by how high the pohce depanment's pbooe bill bad risen and questioned whether officers shouldn't c:aU the parents collect. One Ba.kenfield man was called to the Newport Beach jail two nights in a row. The fint night. it waa for bis son. The next night, police called for h.im apin. After he insisted it must be a mistake (his son was grounded). he was told this time it was bu wife's younger brother who was in the hoosegow. At least one youns man was slugcd by his father in the pohce stauon aft.er beina forced to pick him up after driving all the way from Glendora. Pohcc also pressured local hotels and the owncn of beach houses to stop rentJna to teen-agers. By the late 60s. more and more properties were leased to year-round residents or those who would stay for the entire non-summer period. The stepped-up police enforcement and lack of rental houses led Newpon Beach city and pohce officials to declare Bal Weck all but dead by tbecndoftbedecadc. A few years earlier. the pohce chief reponcd to the Ctty Council that they were winning the war against tecn..aae mer- rymaking. ''Seeman&Jy there was a more disciplined voup in 'Ne~n Beach thjs Easter holiday," the chief reported. "This is not to deny tut we bad our unwashed. our bearded and our feminine-ha.ired maJes. But the vast maJonty were down here for a iood time and they behaved properly. - By 1971, the war was dcclamd over. Bal Weck was dead. "The kids want to go somewhere where they're not goina to be hassled and they can do their own thing. And it's not the Orange Coast anymore." sajd a police captain. '"They know we have rules here and that we stt to 1t the rules arc followed. The} would rather go some place like the Colorado. Raver where they don't have to worry about rules." Today. it's with a sense ofnostalg>a that stories ofBaJ Weck arc related . A favonte 1s the one that occurred one Sunday morning 1n 1964 -the last day of the Easter break -when a Newport Beach police officer came upon the stall form of a bedraggled youth sleeping beneath the Balboa Pler. The officer woke ham. "Arc you all nght'>'' he asked. "Oh. I'm OK. man ... the blcary~yed youth ~ud "I'm JUSt tared from Easter Wed." Fog shrouds Orange Coast, blamed for fender benders GoodaJc reported Saturday that someone stoic has ICkpccd red Un- 1veca Grand Rally bicycle from has open garage. The loss was cstunated at S 150. • • • An Edison High School student from Huntington Beach told pohce Saturday that she inadvertently left her purse on a bench in Founuun VaJJey before boardmg a bus. When she returned 15 manut~ later. the purse was gone. The loss was esti- mated at S 11 0. stole some Jewelry. • • • A generator and wheel cover were stolen from a motor home Sunda> afternoon at the 9600 block of lrvmc Center Dnvc. • • • An IBM personal computer :md cartons and $84 an coins were reported stolen from Liquor Mart. 1125 V1ctona t.. about 4·43 a.m Saturda}' Entry was made b) smashing a fron1 window. • • • .\ 1clev1s1on set wonh S 150 was reported stolen from the London hop. 2505 Cadillac Ave .. about 6 a m Sunda) Entry was made b) prying the front door By STEVE MARBLE °'_.,,...,,... .... A thick fog rolled off the wanrung Pacific early today. smothering the Orange Coast an a dense hue and trigerina a series of minor traffic mishaps io the beach cities. Visibility at Newport Harbor was cut to less than 100 feet early toc:by but no naviaational problems were reported, accordma to a sbenfl's Harbor Patrol spokesman. Several accidents along Pacific Coast Highway in Huntington Beach and Newport Beach were reported but none involved serious inJunes. police reported. The fog. which burned o ff by m1d- momini. is expected to be a frequent viaJtor throuabout the week. accord- ina to the National Weather Service. The fas banks an: formed by the wanning ocean and the cool momin& air, a weather spokesman s.a1d. Freeway traffic wa snarled alona both the San D1eao Fr«way in Costa N rt Bea h transmitten at Avcnada Campo. ~ . c Police said cable service was knocked Pol~oe SAi~ three thcf\s occurred'" out to area subscribers Saturday when the Lado V1ll&ie area Saturday, ap-1 a aolf can apparently ,truck the parently by the same bandits. transm1tter. A wallet was i..kcn from a punc 1n • • • the Comer Table store whale the clerk Two aolf cans were damaged at a was reportedly kept busy by one of the aolf coul'1C at t 000 East Coast suspects. Htahway. The owners reported an Another wallet wa, taken from a $800 loss af\er the vandalism. purse at Udo_R~alty. Pohcc said SSS About s7.0CXJ•,;J:weiry was taken turned up m11san1 ~f\cr the thieves from the bedroom shelf area of a apparently reached into the handbea home an the 3000 block of Carob throua.h an open window T d da 1 ere Tb th rd tbef\ 10 the small shop-wo nnp an 8 pen n w e L _.. th y ll reported ma ma. • pma center OC:Curn;;u It c i lllC A mall box valued at SI SO w., Com~ny, where the su~pects made stolen from outside o home on ofTWlth a rep0ned $1 24 in cash. The M ntccito Drive ca h appal'tntly was taken from ca5h o • • • drawer while the clerk was showing Two tclcvn1on sets valued at a total merchandise to one of the suspccu of SJOO were reported stolen from 1 Officials at G~u·p w Cable re-home 1n the 2000 btock of East Ocean poned damaie to one of thc1t The bursJars app&rcntl) entered the Mesa and the Orange Freeway today as a result of traffic accidents The accidents, however. were not blamed on fog. A dump truck Wlth two flat tires blocked a lane on the S:ln Dteao Freeway at F•irvicw Road. according to Caufom11 Highway Patrol spokes- man Paul Caldwell. Also. an overturned truck o n the Orange Freeway near lmpenal High- WI} forced closure of two lane early today. house through an unlocked window • • • The window of a car was sma,hc,t while 1t wa parkeji on 44th Street The owner reponed SI 00 damage • • • The owner of a Cadillac Coupe o· Ville was surpnscd when his I 984 automobile wa, missing from where he parked 1t an the 4000 block of Seashore Dnve Saturday He Wis even more ,urpnsed to find 1l P1rktd about a male away l'ouataln Valley A real est.ate aa.cnt repontd unda} that someone 'llmashed a rear plate aJa s wmdo~to enter a vacant n-nt.al ho me on he 16000 · block of Hyacinth hr tn!rudeM al"l spra)' painted sniffi11 m 1dc Dam c was nttmatc<I at $300 • • • .\ rM1den t of the I 1800 hl'X k <)I I ' • • • The owner of Wicker Rattan Dis· counlS, I I 76S Edinaer A vc .. reported Saturday that someone had stolen a larae ratt.an·framed mirror worth S 199 from h11 bu 1neu . • • • A resident of the 9800 block of u Ampola A venue reponed Saturday that someone had stolen the front viii from has red 1986 Ford pkkup lruck. The lou wH estimated at $200 Irrlne A bicycle wa1 1tolcn at the 1700 block of Jamboree Boulevard Sunda> JUst before m1dn1aJ>t • • • fhree cars ~re broken into at the 16000 btock of Construction Cu'Cle We\t unday naaht about 10 p.m. A radio was stolrn through a smashed Wlndowon a locked car. ear keys weTC used to stul a stereo rtom a locked car and a radio was \lolen from a flatbed truck wtth the keys. • • • About S200 c.sh and Jewelry was stolen from an ai>1nment at the 80 block of Promenade Sund•> ntlht about 1 pm • • • video cassette recorder valued at about $8.000 were stolen from the Hilton Hotel office at the 17000 block of Jamboree Sunday morning • • • A 1972 brown Ford pickup truck with a white camper was stolen at the 14000 block of Culver Drive unda)' about 6 a.m. • • • A stereo was stolen from a locked vehicle on the 1700 block of Von Karman Avenue Friday af\emoon about 1 pm -... Some tools and a tool box were taken from a car at the 16000 block of Annstrona A venue f-nday mom mg about 10 a.m i.acuaa Bea.ch A blue I Q85 Hondn ('" ll was ~tolen • unda} o n Mountain Road and C~\ trcet. the victim told pohce The car wa, hst setn at 3 \0 p.m. • • • An e t1mated S4,()()() an currcnl· was reported stolen Saturday from a uth Coast Hlf':-al locatton The T ·top of a Corvette was stokn unda on South Coast H1ah•i•). the v1c11 m told pohoe The Jo\.~ wa estimated at $600 • • • A I of $2.200 was reported unda} foJlowin' a commemal hur alary on Nonh ( OISC HtJ)lWI\ th1tf entered a home on the 600 block of . tanford unda-. t'vcnint Coeta lleea through the bedroom wtndo~ and ~n unknov."TI amount of 1.1prtt1c • • • A set of golf clubs, a watch. sung)a~ .. and a calculator. all worth $1 ,4~9. were rcponed from a locked car ·an the: 2000 block of Oranac Avenue. between 2 1.m . and 1 a.m S:uurday • • • T -tops ~orth S 1.200 were rcponcd stolen from a C'heV} C"maro bctwtcn 7 50 p.m and Q 40 pm Fnda at 660 Tov.n Center Dnve HuntinftOD Beach Entenna through a ~ar shdan1 ilass door. 'IOmco ne burtanzed a home on the 17500 block of Putnty. a rrs1drnt "'ported und.ay The lo included s1h·erwarc and a c.mera • • • I\ grctn I Q7Q Ford L TO wa rcponed stolen unday from behind a coin laundry at 17th Strtet and Ora nae A venue. The lo~$ wa est1· mated at Sl.200. • • • Someone bu.1"&11rucd a Palmdak rn1<lcnt' blue l9l 2 To)'ota cha h.ttchbe k \\lh1~ at was parted un- day near Beach Boulevard and Pac.fie C oas1 H l&hwa The l •flcl uded JC'4-tlry worth S 120 aod cloth\ wo rth SI SO • • • A man ~ported uoclay that h11 red and s1lvtt I 98S Kawasaki motorcyck """ stolen from the v•cuuty of 2t11 Uttt and ~fie C t H --~ The lo v.-as ntamated at SS. , t Senate committee nixes 'minimum tax' on bonds Prices of private hospitals attacked Calcium., garlic essence 1nay help prevent cancer By tile AHoclated P~u WASHINGTON (AP)-The Sen- ate Finance f'omm1tt~ today handed its chairman. Sen. Bob Packwood. a defeat an 1t!i first vote on his wide- 1 ang1ng plan for overhauhng the federal income la>.. By a voice vote and without dissent. the committee rejected Pack- wood's proposal to subject to a "mtn1mum tax" the antercst earned on tax-exempt bonds already o wned hy a few hundred thousand of the wealthiest couple$ and 1nd1v1duals. ~ull to be decided 1c, whether such hoods bough t in lhe future w11J be taxed ·· 1 o ta\ these after the} 've been bought as a '1ola 11on of fai th" wnh an"esto~. ~1d Sen Ru\c,cll B. Long. D-La· If these bonds, which are 1SSued by state and local governments for a variety of projects, are taxed, stud Sen, Lloyd Bentsen, D· Teu s, "there is no question bllt they are..soang to be paying higher taxes at \he school district. city and county levels." Packwood noted esu mates that 56 percent of tax-free bonds are owned by 0.5 percent of the nauon 's wealthiest families "We arc not ta~kin' about taxing the poor ...... he said, ·not even about taxing the upper-middle ancome -we are talk.mg about taxang the n ch, the very nch." As far as re venuei are concerned , the loss was an ans1gnificant one for Packwood. JW,t symbohcally, 11 was a bagger one for the Oregon Re- publican, since i\ came on the fint vote taken o n his plan. Packwood had wanted the first votes to come on less controversial issues. but his hand was forced last week when a majority of the commit- tee, reacting to a vinual shutdown of the tall-free-bond market, demanded action. The manam um tax. Oh the books sance 1969. affects only a few hundred thousand of the wealthiest couples and 1nd1v1duals. Packwood has sev- eral proposals for toughening that tax. includang making at apply to previously tax-exempt bonds. The Treasury Depanment Joined Packwood an advocating that all bonds already issued be taxed. Even before today's vole. most committee members d1sagred. · WASHINGTON (AP) -Private hospitals charge higher rates but provide poorer service, according to a study that calls fo r-profit health care facilities a "growing danger .to our health care system." The National Council of Senior C1t12ens charged Sunday in a 60-(>8ge rcpon that investor-owned hospitals also shon changc the public b).' failing lO serve the poor or contnbute to medical education and research. DAYTONA BEACH. Aa. -Calcium and the chem ical tha t gives garlic its aroma might help prevent colon cancer by inh1b1tina e.arly changes in the colon that can lead to the disease, researchers say. The links arc suggested through a method of research that c.an indicate promising leads in cancer prevention without full-blown experiments that can take years, said one scientist reporting the results. More study will be needed before definite links between the substances and colon cancer prevention can be established, however, and it's too early to make any dietary reco mmendations based oo the studies. researchers said Sunday. Shuttle cabin may have hit water intact CAPE CANAVERAL. Fla. -A pon1on of C hallenger's crew cabin may have hit the ocean surface relatively intact, according to sonar images of the sea bed where divers are attempu ng to recover wreckage and astronaut remains. Sooarexpen Robcn Kutzled o n Sunday showed rcpon ers aboard the trackin& ship G. W. Pierce a sonar map indicating debns scattered in a small area I 1 to 18 males northeast of Cape Canaveral. ff the cabin had been shattered by lhc fuel tank explosion. lhe debns would have been more widely sc.anered. he said. Search contlnues for tainted capsules Soviet scientists seek joint trip to Mars In a repon based on government and academic studies, as well as news accounts, magazine anaclcs and a nec- dotes, the council said for-profit hospitals charge higher prices but .. provide medical care which is inferior to that in the non-profits." "f or-profit hospitals are more PHILADELPHIA -An association of over-the<ounter drug manufac- ture~ t~ay raised to $900,000 the reward for anformation leadang to the conVlctaon of drug tamperers as the search for contaminated capsules of three recalled products continued. Over-The-Counter Medicine Trade Assoc1at1on representative Jack Walden announced the group had set up a toll-free phone lane. 1 ~800-222-3081 . to receive confidential mformation on product- tampenng. Walden defended the industry's use of c.apsules as dad the head of the federal Food and Drug Administration, Frank Young. ~ .\~Hl NC1 fON (>\Pl -Just ac, a pn~s1dcn11al commission ts about to recommend pla cing U.S. manned 'ettlemenh on 1hc moon and Mars. a lllP "iov ICI ~pace sc1cn11st says his , ountr) would welcome inter- 1w1mnal cooperallon on a Mars PWJCCI. RoaJd Sagdeev, directo r of the Soviet Union Academy of Sciences' Space Research Institute in Moscow, told the magazine Aviation Week and S~ac~ Technology that an unmanned m1ss1on to return samples from Mars "would be a perfect lead-in to the ma1or mission for a manned ex- Early Bird Dinners -.,. '7 .SO Featu ring Prim e Rib o r Fresh Fish Complete dinner with choice of Soup or Salad and Dessert -~ BALBO A 4 to 6 PM 7 Days a Week 601 E Balboa 673-7726 ped1t1on to Mars... profi table because they co ntribute A manned Mars mission 15 10_ considerably less than non-profits -and an many cases not at all - to the el uded in a telephone boo k-s i7cd community in the form of free care to bluepnnt for Ame nca's space fu ture the poor," the repon said. sent to the White House by the T Nauonal Commission on Space, he study accuses for-profit hospi- wh1ch has held hearings around the tals of dumping poor patients onto Ferraros accompany SOD ~~ourt overburdened public facilities. It also· country for more than a year. said an vestor-owned hospitals "make MIDDLEBURY. Vt. -Former vice preside t ial candidate Geraldine The interview with Sagdeev. as well negligible or no contribution to Ferraro accompanied her son to coun today for a ean ng on drug charges as a repon on the commission's medical research and education." against the Middlebury College senior. Ferraro and her husband. John recommendations appears in scpa,r-The study was attacked immedi-Zaccaro. sat quietly in the small counhouse as an attorney for their son John ate stones 1n today's issue of Aviation ately by the trade association for Zaccaro Jr .• discussed the status of the case with the prosecutor and jud~e. Week. anvestor-owned hospitals . Zaccaro. 22. was arrested Feb. 20 and charged with possession of cocaane with 1--------------------__:_------. intent to distribute after he allegedly sold a small amount of the drug to an undercover o fficer. ,_II J llO..ou>I TOllACCO CO 3mg DOCTOR IN tOWNl MEET THE NEW Hi, I'm Dr. Karl S'Wope, D.C. PROFESSIONAL QUALIFICATIONS Did ~ou kno~ t.hat becoming certified as a c hiropractor reqwres a minimum of six years of highly specialized college training? Today's Doctor of C hiropractic must complete 4 485 ho~s of . classroom iz:ist":'ction and pass a ;igid chiropractic board ezaminahon before earning a license. In most states, continuing educational seminars must be completed for annual license renewal. In addition, I have completed courses in ~ork site injuries and nutrition. In 1985 I was honored to be named Vice President of the Clinic Interns Action A11ociation. To further my continuing education I have received s~ial trainign since colleqe in Physiotherepy from Dr. Richard Ackerman and Orthopedics from Dr. Rory Pierce. I have also visited a number of chiropractic clinics to study their methods and procedures in San Dieqo, Hacienda Heights, El Toro and Costa Mesa California. ' Addi.tion~ly, I d~vote. three days every month attending a nationwide seminar in San Francisco or Los Angeles to stay current on the latest c hriopractic advances. ' This is the kind of traininq and professionalism I offer you. U you have hesitated visiting a chiropractor J5er- haps you didn'.t know t~at chiropractors go to such' 9reat lenqths to continue their education and provide you with the latest techniques and the most qualified service. So you see, what you don't know, can't help you. Call m~ today and let me help you. Did you know that the symptoms most commonly treated by chiroprac tors are: Back Pain HeadachH Painful Joints Neck Pain Arthritia Shoulder Pain Stiffneu Buniti• Arm/Leg Pain Numbn... Hip Pain Cold Handa/Feet To introduce you to the healing world of chiropractic please accept my special offer: ' Now is lowest. FREE SPINAL EXAMINATION FREE THIS MONTH ONLY FREE This examination normally costs $35.00 or more. It will include an orthopedic test, a neuroloqical test, a blood preswe test, a spinal aliqnment check, an ezamiuation for restricted or ezce11 motion in the spine, a muacle strenqthne11 test, and a private consultation to di1euaa the resuJt1. By US. Gov't. testing method. SUR GEON GE NE RA L'S WARN ING: Smok ing Causes Lung Cancer. Hea rt Emphysema. And May Compl ica te ( ) Disease. Pr egn anciy. CfotV IHf LOWEST OF AU ARANOS SOFT PACK IOOs FILTER. MENTHOL 3 mg "te,... 0 3 mg nrco1.n1 ev per cigarette by FTC method (714) 432-1135 Dr. Karl Swope Swope Chiropractic Office 2850 Me1a Verde Dr. E., Suite S Co.ta Meta, CA 92626 Houra 10-1 and 3-7 Mon-frt for Accident• or Pert0nel Injury - •' Letters key link in~naval ecuuon The 1ovemment contcn<h that only someone with Whitworth'• knowled&e of the WaJktr esptonqe operation wouJd b.ave been able to provide the FBI lhe details in the leuen , which were siJned "RUS.'' The Ok.lahoma .. born former ebicf petty officer faces a possible life prison term 1f convicted of the 13 counts of esptonaae and tax evasion on which be 1s beina tried. Or1ngt Coat OAIL V PILOT /Monday, M.-ctl 24, 1NI * M Pro.ecutort sar be J>O(ketcd some docvmenu a.nd pDOtotnpbcd others They say be puled aJona iM xcrcts from 1974 to 1983 in a senes of meetinp with Walker, a Navy buddy, at locations around the world. In oxc.baAJt. aovemment anomcys say he rece1ved about $332 000. OefenJe attorneys, hOwevcr, say Wrutwortb's lonatime friendship with Walker has been misinterpreted. Whitwonh's rcurement to a mobile home in the ama1J uoi~t_f iowa oli Devis. wbett his .m lt1ldied llr a doctorate tt lwdty the llllilrk ola ma• even on i/X edee of such wahb, tbcy have said. Critical to both aides lo the biA1, u pectec:fto tut up to t.bnle montbl, it testimony from Walter. wbo ~ awJty lO espioQllle ln • Baltimore federal court. WaJkda brol.bet, At1bur, was convicted oo apy clW'lel LO I DOD•JUty trial. spy case Spy n etwork chief to give testimony in Whitworth trial "TAKE IT m THE .MAX!" ' AP' ;t11a Kermit the l"rot and Scooter ~ preeent the award for the bat animated oort rum at toDJ.Cllt'a a.car ceremonlea. ' Stargazers convene for Oscar ceremonies LOS ANGELES (AP) -Star- struck movie fans gathered outside the Los Angeles Music Center over- night for the S8th Academy Award vigil a chance to grab a ghmpsc and a snapshot of a legend in the flesh. While some one billion viewers worldwide waited for tonight's poss- ibly surprise-filled extravaganza, the fans were jut as happy to spot their favorites amving at Sunday night's rehearsal in sweat suits, jeans and limousines. On a balmy Cahfom1a night, the faithful who crowded the "Artists' Entrance" screeched approval as such superstars as Barbra Streisand, Cher, John Huston and Alan Alda appeared fora run-through rehearsal which was hardly glittery. In Jess than 24 hours, the rumpled actors and actresses were sure to be turned o ut in tuxedos and sequms - some hoping for the magic moment when a voice announces: "And the winner is ... " Will it be "Out of Africa" for best picture or "The Color Purple"? Or will both favorites be beaten out br, such lonrhots as "Prizzi's Honor. • "Kiss o the Spider Woman" or "Witness"? Will Meryl Strecp take home another best actress Oscar for her luminous portrayal of a writer in "Out of Africa"? Or will the academy give its golden prize to newcomer Whoopi Goldberg for her touching portrayal of an oppressed black wom!n in "The Color Purple"? SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Some anonymous letters and the testimony of confessed spymastcr John A. WaJker Jr. arc expected to play a key role jn the espionage trial of retired Navy radioman Jerry Whitwonh. Arguments were scheduled to begin today for Whitworth. 46, who is accused of parlaying a top secret security clearance and ac.cess to classified Navy documents into $332,000 in cash from the Soviet Union. Whitworth 1s accused of giving Walker documents on Navy codes and communications systems. The documents allegedly included infor- mation about secret military code machines to a contingency plan for war 1n the Middle East. U.S. Attorney Joseph Russoruello bas called W!llkcr's ring, whkh in- cluded Walker's son and brother, the most serious U .~. security breach since the case of Ethel and Julius Rosenberg, who were executed after being convicted of selling atomic secrets to the Soviet Union in the 1950s. The defense was dcaJt a major blow last week when U.S. District Judge John Vulc.asin ruJcd that prosecutors can introduce four anonymous letters to the FBI that offered information about a SQviet spy operation 1n exchan$e for immunity from pros- DOW19r-•t.a?• 8311 Florenoe Ave. GAWNOROVa- AlllDD 12821 Hattor BIYd Sewage spill closes Mission Bay SAN DIEGO (AP) -Mission Bay's most popular water skiing area remains closed because of a sewage spill and will not reopen until well after Easter. county health officials Easter's in Bloom at South Coast Plaza say. . The spill, which sent from 1,500 to 2.000 gallons of pollution 1oto the bay each minute. was discovered Friday, but the water remains fouled. Dr. DonaJd Ramras. the county health officer, said it's not known how long the sewage was pourins into the bay before the spill was noticed. The cause of the spill was dc- tcnnaned to be a blocked sewer main. which was repaired Fnday. Ramras said the spill has con- taminated waters ofT the northeast comer of M1ss1on Bay, frCJm Crown Point to JUSl nonh of the visitor information center. ''It will get better. but very slowly." Ramras said. noting that the qu.aran- taned area 1s 1n the pan of the bay fanhest from the ocean "It gets the least natural activity to destroy the pollution. I would imagine it will take a week and maybe two weeks to clear up." Con tractor destroys prized Joshua trees YUCCA VALLEY (AP) -Nearly 450 Joshua trees, protected dcsen plants that arc landmarks here and in the nearby Joshua Tree NatjonaJ Monument, were destroyed by a contractor. authorities said. Land developer Ray WbJte hired the out-of-state contractor last week to clear a road and boundaries on 60 acres south of Highway 62, spokes- man Bob Blevins said. He said although White "knew better," the contractor did not. and 449 trees were removed and de- stroyed. Two drugs for AIDS declared Ineffective SAN FRANCI CO (AP) -Two upenmental drugs that doctors had hoped to use an treata ng AIDS victims suffering from a tube~uJos1s-!1ke disca~ were found to be ineffective, said researchers from UC San Fran- cisco. Clofazimine and rifabutine are ineffective in treating AIDS paticnls suffering from MAI because the concentration of 1he drugs an the blood cannot be boosted high enough to kill the disease without beina toxic to the patient, the researchers said. , About 50 percent of AIDS patients arc diagnosed as havi ng the debih· tat1ng ill ne ss MAI . or M ycobactcrium av1um-1n - traccllulare. the researchers said. Missing seeing eye dog recovered near Sylmar LOS ANGELES (AP) - A lost guide dog was safely recovered by its trainers late Sunday after a weekend of Starchma in the San Fcmando Valley .. "We're all a lot n:hcvcd n&ht now, sa•d Man Shepard, who work, ll lntcmationaJ Gu1dinll f yes · Brent, a nearly 2-year-old German shepherd with more than $8,000 worth of care and traan1na 1n au1d1n1 the bhnd, had ptnu:ked and run ofT when a Gu1d1na E~cs stafT mcmb(r brOUf)H It homr fnday. ~he \aid ~. .r. . :'" ~. ,. I ·, ··.. ~, ~' ~ ·, • :.:t. ; .,,, .-·" ··~ E . II . . . I . h . ··· .. aster m a tts pnngttme gory 1s e re at ·~. ,. South Coast Plaza. The Easter Bunny ha.., "'" arrived and our a nnual diwlay of flowc:rc; 1~ m bloom to welcome the spring season . Come :-c.:1.· 552 yellow, pink and red tulips, 4 75 Ea,tcr lil1e-., and 102 freesias1 with greenery a nJ hangi ng b.1,kcl' everywhere! Photograph' with the Ea,tt>r RurHl\ .lft' avnilahlc:. He will he \htnng in the: arou .. d Cnurt l'l1 the lower level every J .1y through Ea,rer Jurmg m:ill h1 iur .... SOUTH COAST PLAZA an Dieso Fwy. ac 3333 Br1ecol t., Co ca Me a, A 92626, (7 14) 141 l 7l1'1 Valet Park1n1-S...ar erect entrance tn Mall ac l. Maanm -8rb1ol 1ree1 entrance 1n Mall at P1re1·~ -unflowtr enrranct 10 rarkina nruc1urt Mall HouN-Weekday 10 10 9, • a1urday 10 co i, SunJa\ 12 10 t-. I .. ·TWO-YEAR MEMBERSHIP • s NOW, ONLY ..• 91 PER MONTH! FOR 24 MONTHS WITH JUST 125. DOWN •NON-REHEWABl.E-ARST VlSfT INCENTIVE PUUDTOM-..,.....tt 2A8E.~N4 MlfPOllflC091a mM-t•HH 566 19th &rwc ' ' • How can nation turn its baCk on the Contras? About 25 people picketed Congressman Robert Badham's Newport Beach office Friday, celebrating the House's narrow defeat of President Ronald Reagan's request for military aid for the Nicaraguan Contras and protesting Badham's vote in. favor of that aid. That small group was not indicative of the district's sentiment, but neither was it the exception that proved the rule. According to Badham aide William Schreiber the congressman's mail has been running about 60-40 i~ favor of Contra aid. ~ That the House and the ~istrict are so evenly split on this issue should be shocking to anyone who values freedom and democracy. Through<?ut its relatively brief history, communism has proved itself to be the political antithesis of democracy. Where the two have come in conflict, they have been enen:u~s. as naturally as dogs a!ld cats. ~he Sa~din1s~ government of Nicaragua is a Marxist regime wtth all the characteristics of its communist predecessors. It is a repressi ve force that destroys individual liberties and eliminates religion as a matter of policy. Communism in Nicaragua will be no less a threat to human rights and human values than it has been in the Soviet U nion and Cuba. As a m~tter of doctrine, communism seeks always to extend itself, to export the "revolution .. that is common to all Marxist governments. !hat the ~andinistas_ mstaJled _themselves by ousting a tyrant in Anastasio Somoza 1s not sufficient reas<?n to accept them as a legitimate force in the hemisphere. Rather. they are a legitimate threat in the hemisphere, as serious as Fidel Castro and the spirit of Latin American communism , the late Che Guevera. Have we fo rgotten the principles this nation is supposed to symboli ze? Have we forgotten that we were establis~ed by rebels who fought to throw off the yoke of oppression? Or have we been intimidated by the national disaster that was Vietnam? . Ever since it becan:ie. public knowledge that the United States was providing covert assistance to the rebels fight ing to establish a free government in Nicaragua, the chant of "No more Vietnams" has been echoing around the nation and through Congress. It has been sung especially loudly by the Ho use Democrats who seem to have adopted it as a banner to represent partisan differences between them selves and the administration. Although the tho ught of Amencans fighting a nd dyi~g on forei~ soil for fo reign causes 1s odious, the desire to avoid another Vietnam has clouded the Nicaraguan issue. In a speech Thursday, House Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill. D-Mass., reiterated the argument against aid to the <;'ontras. A pattern of increasing involvement must mev1ta~ly lead t<? U.S. troops in Nicaragua, he said. That simply 1s not logJcal. Each step can and must be weighed before it is taken. It makes no sense to assume that one action is inexorably linked to a future action and will proceed of its power like a boulder rolling downhill. This 1s policy-maki ng by crystal ball; o nl y a Gypsy fortune _teller would advocate it. And only the communist regirnes we are persuaded not to challenge will benefit from 1t. · Americans used to take pride in the clai m that the policies of the United States were formulated to "make the world safe for democracy." The vote of o ur representatives in Congress last week make us wonder if those words mean anything. Opinions expressed in this space are those of 1ne Dally Piiot Other views expressed on tn1s page are those of lhelr authors and artists Reader comment 1s •nvlled The Daily Pilot PO Box 1560, Costa Mesa. 92626 PhO!le 642·6086 Rep. BadhalD. 's journeys add perspective to votes r II thl' I d11or Rcpre'>Cntat1vc Roht:n ('. Ratlham " an C'tampk of"' hat i:I suhstan11al number of lOngrec,sm<'n <.hould be doing -that ,., getting thl'H head<; oul of their man1n1 gla~scs. the Wall \treet Jo11rndl and TV and '>(:Cmg things for them<,flvt'' The \ IC\Ao or thc .... orltl I\ quite different than 1hc nnorm: one 1m· aginc:d from.! V.-a<.h1ngton arm chair When we arc a<.king our reprc.-.cnta- 11vc:~ to make dec1<.1ons which govern 1hc live~ of all people of the world we want those human computer-. to click 1n with maximum input When Rep Badham interacts w11h our fm:nds 1n diverse pans or the world. he I'> involved w11h many people upon whom our guns are aimed Perhap!. the v1s1on of those other. nonJfac;eles~ human beings at the other,qnd of the bomb site will become al'l important ingredient in the input to the mind behind the thumb that rc:st'I on the red button of destruction Keep going. ( ongressman Badham, and take your emissary wife along. You arc tak..ing life nsks which we should all applaud rather than cn11c1lc I f.L. JA( K CALDWELL Ncwpon Beach Tax dispute hurts little guys Io 1he r dttor \.\.hcnc \cr 1he tount> lax J'i\C\Snr "''n" a point ag.a1Mt J he Irvine C o he '" not hunina them. but he 1~ hurting hundred\ of '>mall bu111ne\\<'\ that lca<,e trom Jrvine MO'il or these busineS!IC'i cannot ORANGE" COAST Daily Pilat douhle or tnple their sales to m~t 1hc~ hom:ndous rat~'I Panicularl y h1\ fict1l1ous value~ wall put many small bu'linC~\C~ oul of business ,,eMZlnl (d1!Qr f-Talt "4AIUIQl"Q f Otl() Def!,..., v ty Ed•tOI fefltC.... ,,,......, (Clo!Ot c, ... .._. Soon• Co.tor IRWIN TEWART Laauna Beach "-eryc~ Controlt<tr Rolloert L. C•ltetl PrClduetion Manaoe< Twry K_.. C•rW.llOl'I Ma~ ............ ,_,, t.Aaflottlf\O [)lt~10t c~'!~0t \ · 'Gallfornla 's offlclaldom Is beginning-but only just ~Inning -to a waken to the vast socioeconomic change that Is occurring Jn this state as It approaches the 21st century. " ~'T LEAVE~ WmwTIT! ... 'Yougetwhatyoupayfor' isn't necessarily the case Bargain hunters can save-but · retailers are tricky I guess al there's one thing 10 th1~ whole world that I -along with mo\1 other people -can't rc.-.1111. 11's a bargain. Retailer<; of courSe undcrc,tand th1'i quirk of human nature vcr) thoroughl}'. and make maximum hay while the maximum sun shines b; offenng m101mum pnces I've known people '-"hO let the !>Carch for a real bargain rule their lt"es People ""ho spend S20 or SJO a )ear for membership in a "duh'" that allow'ithcm to shop in thedub''i \torc for a 5 percent d1scoun1 I did that once myself I paid ~35 to J01n the thi ng, and 1t was onl}' after I left. clutching my little plastic ID card in m) hand. that i '>topped to do some math Lei's see now Five percent of S 100 1s SS. so I'd ha ve 10 spend a minimum of $700 in that store 1n order to break e\ en on my S )5 membership I don't reall)' knov. 1f I ever <;pent the whole $ 700 m that store or not. and after a v.h1le I stopped canng. After all, I did get a little plastic card with my picture on 11. Which was, by the way , another facet of the merchandising plan. The seller want· cd you to think that he wouldn't sell to anyone who didn't have that card. lending a feeling of cxclus1v1ty to Bill HARVEY membership He wanted you to feel as 1f yo u were one or the chosen few. Never mind that he had five cameras set up sokly to take pictures for that card Then there an· people who will drn c to a grocerv store that's much fanher lrom their home 1n order to sa\I: 10 cent!> on a loaf of bread. without a care in the world about the extra gasoline they bum or the extra ume spent 10 gelling to the other store These are usually the same people who horde cents-off coupons. Before I get nasty letters from coupon savers. rm not saying that you can't save actual money by redeeming coupons. rm ~ymg that unless you redeem them at your regular stttrt'\ you're probabl) not saving anything. One bargain that's extremely fasc1naung are the rebates or low finance rates ()'our choice) that arc being offered b) car dealers. Think about that one rr you buy a $I 0.000 car. and take the rebate. you are given $500 back. but you will pay the higher finance rate for the whole SI 0.000. not the S9,500 that the car cost. If you choose the low finance rate, you'll pay lower interest. but on the whole SI 0.000 That $500 is sort of an illusion. No matter what, the car dealer ends up with it. If you take the money. he ends up Wlth the higher interest; and 1f yuu take the interest. he gets the money Over the years. I've become vel) leery ofbargams. In the first place. it's extremely hard to tell what's a bargain and what's not unless you know how much the retailer paid. What he paid is. of course. his business. and be ain't telling. Lookin$ al tt reahstically, the rcla1lcr 1s tn business to make money. and he isn't $oing to do that if he sci.ls you something for less than he pa1d for 11. He'll try to make money by any means a va1lablc In my misspent youth, I worked as a salesman at a carpet store. Do you have any idea what carpet costs? No? The owner was banking on that fact. As part of my lrasning. I was taught to read a code on the tags attached to the carpet that told the cost of the carpet. the code was m-o-n-e-y t-a-1-k· s. with them standing for I, the o was 2 the n was 3. and so on. A carpet that was tagged ays cost $7.50 a yard. Then I was taught to stand b) the front Wlndow. That was so I could see what kmd of car you drove up 1n Whal you paid for that carpet might well ha vc been dctcrm 1 nod by the fact that your Caddy was 1n for service. and they gave you a VW as a loaner. That was many years ago. and I suspect that things have changed somewhat. but the old saying abou1 "You get what you pay for" isn'1 neccssanly so. Somcumcs. you get less. -ll1!1i1'1'1Ilm----------------- By tbe Associated Preas Today 1s Monday, March 24, the 83rd day of 1986 There are 282 days left 1n lhe ~·ear. Today'-; highlight in history: On March 24. 1882, German sc1en11 st Roben Koch announced in Berlin that he had discovered the bacillus responsible for tuberculosis. Officials becoming aware of shift in state's makeup Starting to address problems inherent in two-tier society SACRA MENTO -This 1s the time of year when Cahfom1a school children descend on the state Capitol ltkc so many locusts on a wheat field. Each weekday morning, dolcns of bUSCS pull Up IO front Of the ('apttOI and disgorge their cargoes of young· sters. The children then are taken on tours of the building and. 1f they happen to v1s11 on a Monday or Thursday. pay brief v1~1t~ to th e gallenes of each legislative house to watch the floor proceedings. The theory, of course, 1s that the pupils will come away from cra- mento with greater knowledge of their cultural hentages and the work· 1ngs of their i.tate government. More likely. most probably consider their Sacramento field tnps as welcome relief from the tedium of the classroom dunng the cap1tal''i bnef penod of benevolent 'ipnng weather Whether cducat1onal tool or treat· ment for spnn& fe ver. the Sacramento field tnps do no harm. and perhaps some good f ron1call). however a11 the sea onal pedagoa.ic hordes '!wept throuah the Capitol Wcdne<iday. the)' m1s~d two events which dircC'tly relate to their future as adull Californian~. In tandem perhaps. thc<ie evcnt'l 1nd1Cate that Cahfom1a''i offi cialdom ·~ beginning -hut onh JU~l begrn· ninJ -to awaken to the va'lt soc10C('onom1c rhanae that 1s occur- nng 1n this sate as 1l approache' the 21 'lt ccntut) A tale comm1ss1on ham«! to review California's higher c<.lucalJon muter plan •latCd tile fint of the day's events -release of a repon that points to deep-seated problems m the state's once-envied system of com- munity colleges. The system was on$i nally designed to provide h1gh~uahty but low,osl undergraduate instruction in conve- nient settings -a way fo r the nonaffiuent lo begin chmbmg the educational and economic ladders. But somewhere along th e hnc. the com mun1tycollegcs lost theirseose of d1recuon. As Proposition 13 cen- tralized financial deeision-mwng in Sacramento and colleges began battl- ing wuh declining enrollments, the system became distorted. The higher education commission recommended_ that the community colleges be given a new mandate of preparing students for transfen to four-year colleges. "It 1s not enough JUSt to provide a campus. a classroom and an instruc- tor to those who seek postsecondary education." the report states. "Though that 1s an essential first step, its meansngfulness 1s diminished 1f what 1s provided is not of the highest quality There must be a commitment on all ~1de~ -from the state, the collcgc'I and from the 'ltudents -to excellence and accountab1ltty." What that means 1n practical terms no1 only is more money from Sacra- mc-nto but more policy and oper· at1onal authonty beina given to the state community collcae board, weld- ing what 1s now a h1ahly deccntralitcd system into a truly statewide network. h will not be an easy task to accomplish. aivcn the protective and paroch1al 1nchnat1ons oflocal collqe officials. But the altcmauve probably a a continued dca.y of the system and, Wlth al, the hopes of millions of undcrclas<s C altfom1ans of movina up The second event wa'I nothcr news confettn(e. thl'I one 'ltajl.Cd b) ' DAN WALTERS Senate President Pro Tern David Roberti, to spotlight the fact that nearly 5 million of California's 26 million people are functionally il- literate, i.e. they read al less than a ninlh~gradc level. The state's illiterates arc, not surprisingly, concentrated in Cah- fo rnia's underclass and many arc recent immigrants. That inability, 1lhtcracy expcn Jonathan Kozol noted, becomes a hereditary trait and 1s one of those factors that separate the underlcass from those wh o can enjoy the ma· terial and cultural advantages of California. Roberti is proposing a very modest $600,000 proaram to expand the anti- illitcracy proanams in public libraries but acknowledges that it's less than a full·scale a"3uh on the problem - one lhai.can onl y arow mon: acute as the Caltfornia economy continues its shift away from manual labor llnd heavy industry The decline of the community college system and the stubborn cxis~cnc:c of illiteracy arc only two of the 1nd1cat1on~ of Caltforni31s shift into a two-lier 'IOC1ety. With ran: citc.cpt1ons, · such as Roberti'1 1lhtcracy bill, however pohtic1ans prefer to '"10rc what 1s happening before their very eyes. prcottUp1ed u they arc with tbe short-range and wholly 1m:levant matten of mainta1n1nf and cnhanc- ina their polt11caJ po it1ons. Daa Walun I• • ~•lftl ~l•m•l11. ( DANWALT&R8 cOlumm.t JACK AllDEISOI and DALE VAN A TT A Modified airliner can best Stealth WASH JNGTON-Groanma and gnmacmg over the budget lilcc a prof ess1onal wrestler on camera, Congress 1s about lo cry "Uncle!" to the Pentagon and approve the Au Force's crackcrbraincd, $80 billion new toy: the Stealth bomber . We've already reported Stealth's long list or deficiencies. including the most senous flaw of all: the acknowl- edied fact tha t the bomber. supposed· ly mv1s1ble to radar. won't be able to fool the old-fashioned radars the Soviet Union still has deployed. Now we've unearthed an 8-year· old PcntaJOn study. still classified Secret. which shows that a souped-up commercial Jetliner. with refine· ments. could do a better JOb than Stealth at a fraction of the cost. Ye1 this poss1b1hty isn't even being con· s1dered. With us customary ngjd1ty, the Defense Depar1ment, from Secretary Caspar Weinberger on down, ts 1ns1st1ng that 11 must have its planned 132 tealth bombers. Herc's why this program 1s such a panicularly waste- rul and woodenheaded boondoggle: Lrnhkc the 8-1 bomber. wh1ch was designed for use an either nuclear or conventional warfare. Stealth will be treated like the crown Jewels. Sources told our associate Donald Goldberg that Stealth 1s to be used strictly as a second-smke weapon -that as, after an exchange of m1ss1les The super.secret bomber will be rolled out of the hangar only after the nuclear holocaust has already begun. It can't be used before 1hcn because it's too c~pens1vc to lose and for fear that merely fl)' mg It w1ll give away 1ts design o;ccrets. Never mind that the 1nv1s1b1hly to radar would hardly be necessary to the confusion and contlagrauon that follow a nuclear missile attack. Over· look the fact that even in peacetime. with nothing better to do. the Soviet air defense m 1983 to6k two hours to locate and shoot down the unarmed Korean Air Lines plane that had been wandenngaround 1n Soviet air space. Ignore the poss1b1ht)' that the KG B will find at least one vulnerable cm ploycc among the 30.000 who 'II be working on the Stealth bomber. and be able to buy 11s secrets long before 0-Da}'. Why doe'i the Air Force insist on the tealth bomber, then'> lt''i hard to escape the conclusion that the eir.- p1lots who run the Air Force are still hypno11zed by the glamor of manned aircraft Even under this Dr Strangclove spell, there are few who w11l argue that a cruise missile with a small radar signature 1s an infinitely better penetrator than a 'llow-fly1ng plane (which the Stealth must be to make ll<, suppo~d 1n v1<;1b1hty work al all) ~hat the Pentagon should be buying as a sample plane that 1s hardened agai nst some of the byproducts or a nuclear exchange - hke electromagnetic pulse -and can get up fast enough to be safe 10 lhc asr where ll could drop au-launched cruise m1ss1lcs to devastate the Soviet Union. A plane like that would be a credible dctcrTenl; Stealth 1s not. The sttll·secrct Pentagon study fo und j ust lhc plane that could do the JOb. The CMCA. or "cru1se·m1ssile- carrying aircraft," could be a Boeing 141 or an a Lockheed t., I 011 simply rcdcsiJlled to meet the Pentagon·s second-stnke requirements. But no one 1n the m1litary-i ndustnal com- plex will lobby for this simple solution, which would produce few profits or promotions. Give n the reality of Washington. the cheap answer 1s out. But there's still a way to lop off a sizable pan o( the Stealth bomber's $80 billion price. ~f Congress can talk the Pen- ~gon into 132 more 8-1 bombers mstcad of Stealths, it would save the taxpayers approximately $55 billion. PRESSING PRESSER: The Presi- dent's Commission on Ora&nazed Crime has had no luck at all try1na to squene mformation out of Team- sters union President Jackie Prester. Aoeordina to a crime commission d~f\ report, Presser has been deposed twice, but he took the Fifth Amend· ment. more than 2.SO times. One question he refused to answer on ar~unds that it might tend 10 tn- cnm1natc him. "Arc you the general president or the lntcrnat1onal Brotherhood of Teamsters'" MI Nl-EDITORIA L. Former Education Secretary TcrTtl Bell's stock ha• always been hi&h with us., but nght now it's soarina. In lhc current is uc of Phi Delta K.apl>*n mqazine, he lambastes the fana\Jcal but mercifull y minuscule faction of naf\t·winf.C:rs who. he says, tried to impose 'radical and off-the-wall ideas" on his department. Ultimate· ly, he Mays, the zcaJots wanted to ehmmate the public school system altO&Cther. Terrtl Bell 1s a con- 1ervat1ve Repubhcan, and 1l probabl y pained him to take on thox wbo a~ on the same 11dc of the poh11cal r~cr J•d .uftnee ud O.lt Yu AU. .,. •Pllb'H ~••l11J. ... , -_ ~-------- - --- OrMge eo.t OAll Y PILOT/Mondty, Marc:h 2,, 19ee * A7 U.S. warplan~s dodge two K~adafy missiles in gulf Bhopal settlement rejected by lndla NEW DELHJ. Ind.ta (AP) -The Jnd1an So\/Cmmtft\ bas delcribed •f "totally uuccepuble" Unioo Carbide'' tentative ..,.eement W'llh pnVllC laW)en to pay f 3SO million to vteum or lhc Bhopal 111 disaslcr . .. Uaaon c.tbide 11 Wtiftf every ltP to c~ that w cue le1lled f'or 1 ~low amount... id a wnncn suu-mctu from t.br Miniwy ofChmtlcals and fttUbzcn. Earlier \Oday, a m10Jstry spokesman 1n a ~tatemen1 read O\'Cf lhc telephone reiterated that only the aovemment could ~ptt"Sent the vietims. W ~~INGT9~ (AP)-Libyan forces ftted at &east two anu-11tcraft missiles today as U.S. planes crossed Col. Moam.mar K.hadafy's "line of death .. and conducted operation~ over the disputed Gulf of Sidra, Pentagon sources sasd. d1scuu the matter only 1f not identified. ''But they didn't hit anythina and just reu into the sea." be said of the missiles. , No Ameri~n pla~cs were hit by the msssilcs and there w~re n<? 1mmcd1ate reports of the Uruted States respond1n, with attacks on the Ltbyan coast, lhe sources added. The sources. who earlier had acknowledJed rccc1V1ng reports from the 6th Acct about missile finngs. stressed that the snformuion arriving at the Pentagon was "fragmentary." .But they added it now appeared clear that at least two Soviet-mad~ SA-S surface-to-au missiles bad been fired from .the Libyan c-0ast over the Gulf of Sidra toward ;\mencan planes. . Officially, the Pentaion and White Ho~ slapped a hd of secrecy on the status of the U.S. maneuvers in the Mediterranean. Robert Sims. the Pentagon's chief spokesman, would say only that reports of Libyan missile firinp we.re still being invcstiptcd and could not be confirmtd as yet. The spokesman added be hoped to be able 10 discuss the status o( U.S. forces later today. The latest maneuvers began off the Llbr.an coast ~turday night, Eastern time. It was not until Sunday rught, however, that the first Navy jcu beaan flying southward over the Gulf of Sidra. DO YOU CARE? ... . "The initial report said JUSt one, bl!t now they're saying they detected two," said one source, who~ to The initial flights were described bt the sou~ as uneventful. Tiie Libyans recently received several baneries of SA-5 missiles from the Sov1e1 Union. • OPEC disarray cuts oil prices By Ute A11ocl1tecl Preti demonstrations throuahout the nation Sunday co'm- memorating Pakistan Day, celebrated as independence day here. About 60,000pcoplecbanting .. Zia isadog.l" and .. Down with the Americans! .. marched through this city of about I million and listened to anti-government SJ.>Ce<:hes calling for the end of military influcnc~ in polittcs and immediate free clecuons. Korean• rally for electlon• Do you care enough to devote one or two hours at the end of your work day to express your concerns for the elderly and poor with an organization that can provide the programs and financial support to make a difference 1n many lives here in Orange County'? Do you care enough for the elderly and poor to offer your ideas on ways these people can have a better life for their families and themselves and become an asset to your community? about people who are m critical need. who have low or no income who need · • Food •Shelter • Health care • Freedom from Abuse • Self-Prtde • Employment • Self-Sufficiency GENEVA -OPEC 011 min1sten ended n1ne days of negotiations today with no agreement on a comprehensive strategy to reverSc the oil market d~line, and their failure to resolve the crisis sent prices into a fresh dive. James Audu, a spokesman for the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countnes, said the 13 ministers would resume negotiations Apnl 15 in an effort to agree on major cuts in 011 production. Oil futures prices dropped sharply after the adjoumi:rtent. O~ the New York Mercantile.Exchange the May delivery pnc.e of West Texas Intermediate, the main U.S. crude and an import.ant market indicator, dropped to S 11.20 a barrel. down $2. 74 from Friday's closing price. before recovenna to JUSt over S 12. SEOUL-About ~0.000 people gathered in Pusan for the l~'lcst anu-govemment rally in sa years, and oppos1uon leaders demanded direct presidential elections 10 policf addresses today to a special session of the Nauona Assembly. But supporters of ~sident Chun Doo Hwan stood by the president's position that c~nsututional c~anges allowing direct presidential elec- uons can be considered onJy af\cr' Cbun's term expires and Seoul hosts the 1988 Olympic .Games. Political leaders debated the issue, which has become a rallying point for Chun's opponents, in their policy addresses to the Nau~nal A_sscmbly. The assembly convened a 20-day special session Fnday to debate the proposal which b.as brought the government and opposition forces to stalemate. YOU CAN MAKE A DIFFERENCE! Come express yourself, 1f you care No U.S.-Turkey pact ANKARA. Turkey -Secretary of State George P. Shultz will leave without a new agteement on defense and economic cooperation between the United States and Turkey. a U.S. official said today. The official, wbo spoke only on cond1tton of anonymity, said the two nations will not be able to settle differences before Shultz leaves for Athens, Greece, after ending three days of talks with Turkish officials Tuesday. Lower-level diplomats w1U continue trying to settle the issues. said the official. The initial five-year term of the pact passed in ~mber, but continues until a new accord is signed or the old one 1s renounced by one of the countnes. PUBLIC FORUM -MARCH 26, AT THE HUNTINGTON BEACH CITY COUNCIL CHAMBERS - 2000 MAIN STREET -6:30 P.M. Strikers let Americans onto bases CLARK AIR BASE. Philippines-Strikers stopped most Filipinos from entering U.S. mili tary bases today. the third day of a walkout by 22.000 Filipino workers, but allowed American personnel and their dependents free access to Oaric Air Base. At Subic Naval Base, spokesman Lt. Cmdr. James Van Sickle said Americans were being advised to stay away from base gates followi ng two clashes involving Filipinos and Americans that left 12 people inJured over the weekend. The clashes ~portcdly occurred when servicemen tncd to pass the barricades to enter the base SPONSORED BY ... Rl otlng spreads l n Pdlstan RAWALPINDI. Pwstan -Tens of thousands of people crowded etty streets calling for President Zta ul- Haq's resignation and shouting ant1-Amencan slogans in one of the biggest oppos1t1on rallies since martial law was lifted Dec. 30 The Movement for the Restoration of Democracy, an alliance of 11 oooos1t1on oart1cs. staged I .~.,)Y'J \, I ' I\ lt<;;-~,rb ~ 1_. ~ .. -""! ff ' > \ __ _,,,, . 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H•\ '"'l' \'11 n ••"'' '' '" '1< '"" """ .. ,,.,nlflllUk1 ,r 4~20 &rr••• Pkwy~ •LAGUNA H1U.S. lAIOI ~da' v.Jconca SM-~IOO· F.1 TORO. l.168A El~' Rd lli(). 172\1 • Ml'i.\Kl'-1 Vil-JO.~"':< ~11 MJ 1"'\ie>\4tl • l "'' ,._ ,K,t l l \1111. < • "\allr'I " ... ., 0N\ ~11\ • '~" Hl~'i C APl\'TRANO, )2:2ll Cltnlal> Capim'wltl f161--0IY'7 " ... _ . ..__{_ No single ~ayto attract unmarried shoppers They flt all buying categories: changing, focused and settled ByC01TENTIMBERLAKE .,....._ ....... NEW YORK -Sdltng to 1>1ngk~ ts doubl}' more complicated than one would think, a recent study says. The study, conducted by J.C. Penney Co., the nation's third largest reuuler. found that there are three dtsttnct types of single lifestyles. each with its own shopping patterns. So e singles' lives were in a state of change, Penne)' found. the second group, each 1nd1v1duaJ seemed to have a stron focus for his or her life. The third group had a sense of being ~euled. the company ~1d. "It wai; quickly apparent that the singles wen: not homogeneous," Penney said an its report. Because of their sheer numbers, what singles th1nll. and how the) shop is vaJuablc information to rctajlers. In the last 25 years. the number of singles 1n the l n11ed States has doubled to almost 77 million, Penney said. Singles represent 43.1 percent of the populauon 15 year; or older. fhe number 1n the 25-39 age group has nearly tnpled, Penney said. In the same age group. four ltmes as many single~ ma1nta1ned their own households in 1983 as 10 1970. "Singles must be recognized as a major force 1n our society." Saten1g St. Marie, a d1vs1onal vice president for Penney. sa1d."The state of being single had come into its own as a valtd choice ofltfestyles. with a whole new set of m>ths and realities that need to be explored." WhY Jo Rackemann feeling no pain. • 1S f'u,1,c.u11 ht 1 l.1l lw, Ii 1d-id1t, J111nr pain Mtllton•,c>f Americans suffer t hrornc p.1 trl pr11blt 111' Y1 1 111n' u1111111.1 I r r('.H mcni frequ<:ndy offers little relief Just ask Jo R.Kkc·m.um '11.,I (I < rk lr<1m ~>lHh L.1gun..i 1en ycJr' :>-:• • 111 dt 't·l11p<:d 't<.'\.N{' migraine headaches The pain <ind creat - mc.·1w~ tha1 t11ll11\.l.td wt·rc nc 1rh1n-" ,bore of ..t nightmare hnalJ). I • .md hu de"' 111r ti 1ok.1 v.hule new approach The Pain MJn..tgernent Pro~r.Hll ..it !-ii 111d1 C AIJ'r M('dttJI ( .t. 11ct r Hc:rc Ju frnmd 1 ( 1111u r n< d. 111ul11d11o<.1plinary ceam. An Jcupuncrurist, J rhy ... tc .d tht.•r,tpt-.r I !w1kC'db.1<k l('<.hlll<.1,tn, ,I psyc hoJogtSC, A dietitian and ii ph..rmatt'-t C A10lh1111n,c d1<·11 d1wr\{· ,kill~. chey went co work on borh tht' phy\lc.tl ..in<l p ... yd111l11g1l .. tl ·"JXtl' 11f J11.., p .. un They cJughc her how m stop it hdor<: ar be~Jn And ru iv. ,ht. ' \H II 11n ll{'r 9. .1y co rec;11m1ng her arnve l1fescyle If ;ou re plJ.'{llt,I "irh .111) l hr• 1111t. p.1in problem that does n't re pond co u111H·nr1onJI rrt-.1tnw111 .... k \111ir d11t 111r ..ibout chc PJm Management \.enter at <..,< 111C h ( .o.1~r Or t.J ll 11' f 11r 11111n 111tur111.t1111n todJy A f wr Jll, if Jo Rackcmann is kl'<.' Im~ nu pJIO, wll\ 'h' 11tld \• '" ''':-====== Pain Managtm.nl Center '-;<,. 1tl 1 c ·, >. t"'' .\I< y lie , 1/ < ·, ·111< ·r "1~ ') > ~I Highway Soult'> LAqurit Ca1iforn11' 92677 f714 1 499 1311 Penney's study included 25~ to 39~year-olds. The men had incomes ranging from $25,000 to $50,000. The women had incomes ofS 17,500 to $50.000. Since singles reside mainly in urban areas. Penney held focus groups in five c1ttes -Chicago, Denver, Houston, Los Angeles and Washington. Separate focus groups were held for s1 ngle men. single women and single women with children. In all, there were 12 focus groups with a total participation of I 00 people. It was a statisticaJly small sampling, meant to bnng issues to the surface and to suggest implications rather than to provide conclusions. Penney said. The occupations of participants ranged across the board. All the participants were high ~hool graduates. About half were at least college graduates. Generally responsible for their household finances. the majority had never been married. The o thers were divorced or widowed. Penney found that changing singles buy to satisfy shon-tcrm needs. Such consumers will buy anywhere and are focused on fashion and price. Someltmes these consumers buy 1mpuls1vely. at other ti mes. they are willing to shop for the best price. Chang.ing consumers are influenced b) ad5. signs and friends. They arc the least brand onented and the mo-st sale onented . They arc also the least sc:rv1te oriented. but they find the return pohcy important focused consumers buy what they want and !ihop pnmanly in specialty stores ~nd better departmcnt,stores Pressured for time. they focus on fashion <lnd quahly These focused consumers arc influenced by conve- nient locatton. appropriate sclecuon, personal service and knowledgeable salespeople. They are strong!) interested 1n designer and national brand~. Thesc·consumers are the mo~t "°"'tCt: oncnted and the least ule oriented. Settled consumers buy according to pnorat1es 1n t~etr overall plan. They select stores for product and reputation and arc focused on quality and value. They plan their shopping and use consumer guides to compare pnce). They are influenced by sale ads for dcmc:d merchandise. NEW YORK (AP) -The followlno list 10 shows the Over -Iha -Counter 11 stocks and warrants that have oone up 112 SANDT,. tin I? + ll'tl VLICor~ ~ + l'tl Up 18.S Up 18.4 UP 17.2 Up 16.9 4 iMI Furn s olumbFsl 2 -~ 17 • -21'l S'• -~ 1 ,, ! :1 the most and down lhe most t>aHd on 3 percent of c1111noe for Frldav 14 No H curlllas lr11dfng t>alow S2 or 1000 IS snaras are Included. 1 1 6 Nel and percentage chanoes ere lhe 7 dlfferen~ i:rcrw .. n Intl cirevf~s ctoslno 1J Name 1 o~~~h ~ ~n~h~, 2j~ I 1~ 8~ : ~ 4 ConcplOev 14 ~ Up .0 t Kave>ro 1h UP .g MacroCh WI 1/• ~ Up . ParkOtllo 12 2 Uo ·i I I S~rlorEI 12V. 2 Up • 32 9 Jee Laser 3~ ~ Up . Ramtek •'~ + ~ SlanWsl no H4 + 11-16 Al1acell wt j'h 'h lmr~nc s VJ W• 0 /gll rn un 1 1/• 13,4 v st• 11m 3 S-16 7-16 HarllEn wt 4 'h Hvt>rl~11 3 ~ PacWsl nc 6 3,4 RoT~h ad 5 ~ OlgllTrnA 3 1-16 ~ Vl•tt Flm un 673't 81/• LlfacaraCom 4\i'e 'h BarberGr .. n 6'4 l/o Name HammondCo Blau811rrv SovarelonCP DOWNS LAI st Cho 41/• -lT/4 23.4 -"" I -l:V. ~i lti 1 Up 14. Up 14. uu~ 1•. .. 1•. Up 14. Up 1~. Up I .8 Up 1 .6 ' mMobl un e ~A~~o, 9 ~wrid'wt lo vl•n CP 1 omPUscan 12 omputAut 13 e ( be 14 s:f!d1~a1am 15 Transtactr 16 VLSITch 17 Mol)llerm ti CllHllh WI ff LH<MrOev Alaska NII AllSauR 22 ConoruVd wt 23 Maverick 24 NMR Centen 25 PlonrCm un 1~:: = 1~ 2\o -lt 7'> - 1 2 7-16 -5-16 2 -'• 2 -·~ 19''• -211. 21/e 11• 1214 -l'h ~=~ 6 ., ->.. 9 -1 2 • • • 2 • • 2 • • 2 • • ,.,., "1 I . l f 1 l 1 .s 1 .s l .s l ·' 1 :~ 1 . l :~ 1 . 1 l -l:i1\~llJ!IEm~---------------- Pci. Uo 14.6 Up 11.7 UP 9.4 UP 9.2 Up 9.1 Up 1·3 Up . Up . UP 7.4 Up 7.3 11 ~nstar pf 12 mrkCP 13 Un IOrlll l• LlllvEll wt 1s ~aco 16 rlAmFst 17 tadng811I ll ~&~ICO of ~~ i~~~,·~~~ ~ n1 ~rge~.12pf 4 ow11n S ortak Inc N11me 1 FtBcpTax 2 Not Homes 3 vlSlorageTch 4 lnermed i; Wlllm1EI .. Uo 7.1 6 FinSl81tr Up 6 7 7 AvelonCP n · I Savin l SOot ~~ H 9 Kut>OtaLld uo 6.S 10 Texaslnll Up ~ l 11 Zti>~la CP Up '9 12 RTI Corp UP . 13 LL. Corp l·6 14 Ma1-,HVF 8~ J 15 Mccrm1n1 wr 8~ j lt ~~llldwUld UP O 11 Augal uo •:9 ~ He1111th1 Am0 UP d 21 W111~h re 11 Pci 22 ~rea~ree I ll 6 23 ~hlllPPt s 1::2 ~4 Vellev Ind J 7 JS ~~~xEno 7.S • t MetropFn ' 10~ -'• 31' -• s. -~ ~-2~ 3~ -35'a -• 2• -1 ~ 2 'le 2 -18 2 -Vt 1~-~ 2'1e -• 2271'1 -1 • 13~ -loo 41. -'• 30 -11) 37 -.... 91 .. -') 2'> -.. 1~ -:-. 51A -1• 171-'e -~ 7.• 69 6.1 6.6 6S l:! !:.9 .7 i 4.a 41 41 41 • 1 47 47 • '--·. -------- Or1ng11 Cou1 OAILV PILOTIMondey, March 24, t-**A-9 NYSE COMP OSITE T RANSACTIOHS .............. °'9 " j II 1 :;i Ir ~ 22 WH tH AMEX Orn NEW YORK (AP) ~r. 14 T1 ' AMEX LE ADERS NEW YORK (AP) -s.tn, 4 om. Mondev one. and rwt Cf'lenge of Hie 10 most adlw American Sto0 EXc:tlenOt luu.t, lredfnG natlonel!Y •y more tn.n s 1. ,JA1l!1713~t." -~ yo l~loo S' 1 -V, =m ,7 -•t. n , v, -1 rt , 1 6 K.v rm . , I ~ + -W~b9 , '-+ v, f~xHAlrCp 66, lli + ~ GoLo QuoTE S META LS QuoTES HEW YOAK (All'! -S901 _,..,_,. INlll one- ~ -IO 25 o.119 I* -.nd. NY C-t1P01 mon1'I CllOl9d '" c...., -1~13·,. o.111 . pound us o.t!MltOM C...., -68 10 oen1.t 0.--.na. NY 0-) 8')0I monttl Olo..o ,,, &....-• !1'4-1t _,, •• pound DM • S5 OW1i. 1 pound delMorlO no 11 L(.._ ... W ... oomooell• Pf'OI Pl' Ill I ---"706 '* --~"Har..-.... -"163 0.-lfoy .,.,,_ NY Com9JI 1001 _,.,, ei-11 Fn ..,_, • 1250 oo..129$ oo '* re 111 llMll New v~ ,..._ ... 1800 ... llOO ~~iroy --.N Y I =~ W HlT NYSE Orn NEW YORK (AP) Milr.14 Tl l NYSE L £~0 £R S D o ~ JoN£S AvER~GES ,._...,,Mardi Zi A.RIES (March 21-April 19): You'll learn m ore about legal afliurs. abou1 \ rl&hts and permissions. about the strength of your own "case." Focus on preasure, deadlines, responsibilities, long-range prospects. Mari.t al status, panncnhips emphasized. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): What appeared to be a menial task could actually lead to major assipiment. Know 1t, dig deep for information, check source material, fulfill basic obligations. You can attract wide attention and reach biucr audience. GEMJNI (May 21-Junc 20}: Good lunar aspect coincides with discovery. SYDNEY excitement, creativity. children. chanie, intensified roman~. You'll get to heart of matters., you'll make new Stan and imprint rour own style. CANCER (June 21-Julr 22): Emphasis on land. property, rca estatl', residence, relationship with older ind1-o viduaJ. Family reunion figures. prom1-• MARR nently. You'll be on more sohd emo-•••••••••••••• tional-financial ground. ·LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Emphasis on trips. VJ sits, ideas, special messages. You'll be invited to attend gala social event. Emphasis on appearance. wardrobe, popularity. Short tnp could involve relauvc. . VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 22): You get facts, figures concerning financial status. Focus on inventory. personal possessions. basic values. You'll have solid opportunity to increase income potential. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22}: You'll have greater freedom of1hought, you can profit through written wo rd. Circumstances swmi 1n your favor, you'll be at rwit pla~ at "special" moment. Gemini. Virgo, Sagitt.anus figure prominently. . . SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): Ma1or domesuc ad1ustment dominates. Secret is revealed. you gain information previously "classified." Individual behind scenes could be regarded as special ally. Taurus. Libra natives figure in dynamic scenario. SAGl'M'ARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21 ): Emphasis on mystery, glamor, clandestine arrangements. Romantic interests intensify. vigor returns, self- cstcem makes "comeback." Many desires are fulfilled, power.. of persuai.1on heightened. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): SpotJipit on presttge. standing 1 n community. chance to display execuuve abilnies. Love relat1onsh1p grows strODJer, you 1mpnnt style and impress superiors. Cancer and another Capncom will play featured roles. AQUARWS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Good lunar aspect coincides w11h creauvc challenge, physical attraction, children, chan~e. travel You'll be "released" from obligation. Morale soars. personaJ honzons grow larger Anes plays role. PISCES (Feb. 19-Man::h 20): What had been hidden will be re' ealed Emphasis on financial requirements. taxes, hcense fees, possible news concerning inheritance. You'll get to heart of mailers and romance will tntensify. Leo plays key role. IF MARCH %5 IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you'll be atpable now of streamlining techniques, of getting rid of superfluous matenal and culling expe:nses. You'll sweep through pretense. you'll separate fact from wishful thinking. Cycle will highlight m ystery. glamor, romance. Pisces, Virgo play important roles in your ltfe. You arc daring. talented. an innovator. and )'()U also are spiritual. Sense of d1recuon and purpose will be rest()rcd 1n Apnl. October could be outstanding fo r you in 1986. Fortyish females find favor with Frenchmen Q. What age do the French mean when the) speak of "a woman of a ~rtain age"? A. Fort)1sh. h's 1ntenuonally 1m- prec1sc. What they mean 1~ an experienced, suuall} desirable woman. That sort of desirability. like beauty itself. 1s in the eyes of the beholder. so the phrase holds dif- ferent mcafung for different people. On all birds that fly great distances. the meat 1s dark. L.M. Bo Yo Nrv. Jcrc;c) law proh1b1ts noisy soup slurping. Confessions of an incurable pack rat l finally dnoovcred why I'm so tired and irritable lately. My "trash flow" is at flood stage and it is stressing me out. I knew if I waited Iona enough, modem-day psychologists would put a name to my problem, which is how to get rid of aJl the litter in my house before it starts to grow. "Trash flow" bas a nice ring to 1t. What it amounts to are all the magazines. newspapers, fiJe folders, . boxes. wrapptngs. clippings and ex- ~ss 1unk that I am reluctant to pitch, Like garbaJe, 1. will bury no trash before its umc. Most people do not understand the ritual that accom- panies every btl of trash around the house. And that's where the stress comes 10. Every item takes a decision. I must JOtn 1t, si~n 1t, pay it, protest it, answer it. bum 1t. read 1t, store it, use 11 or toss it out. Some things have a longer shelflife than others. Take the five garbaie bags filled with styrofoam squigghes commonly referred to as ''ghost poo." Who in their nght mincf would throw them out as soon as they are received packed around somethi ng breakable? You never know when you'reBoing to send a glass chandelier or a Ming vase to someone and need them to protect It. For some reason. the subscription cards that fall out of magazines survive the trash cut. No one seems to know why, but invariably when they fall out, we carefully put them back on the same page so they can fall out again when we turn another page. We save magazines for 15 years and they still have a card in it that says, "If you subscribe before Jan. 5, 1971, you can still have 15 issues at half price.•• I am always saving the front pages of newspapers where an earth-shak- ing event is recorded. I know I cannot outlive its historical value, but I always think it will be a great legacy for m y children. (This, despite the fact that one of ~Y ~ds ~ppcd th~ir chewing gum 10 a 81-Centennaal Commemorative edition right before my eyes.} The truth is, the decisions are coming too fast and it's getting harder and harder to channel the items with any order. J am in over my assimila- tion. The rotation system has gone to pot. I was only supposed to save the coupons for dog food until (a) they expired or (b} I got a dog. The invitation to a party in 1973 should have been tossed long ago. I am too old to renew m r subscription to Seventeen Maga.zme. Am I really going to make a mirror o ut of the seashells I collected in Florida? Do I need 84 margarine tubs for leftover dishes? Do I really believe Mrs. Butterworth syrup bottles arc going to sell for $175 at an antique fair before I go? Only my trash flow knows. No need to stay near air-polluting clods DEAR ANN LANDERS: Recently a fnend and I }lad breakfast at a cafe. Just as we staned to eat, a man sat down at the next table, ordered a cup of coffee. lit up a cigarette and started lo read a newspaper. He was turned sideways so that his cigarette was four feet away from my face. His smoke dnfted straight into my eyes, nose and throat. I \Cl) polhel) said. "Sir, your smoke is in my face." He rephed angnly, .. Tough'" and conunued to read his paper. I told him I was recovenng from a viral lung infection and had trouble breathing. He said. "That's your problem." ANN lMDEIS for home arc small comfort when my 5-year-old son cries for his daddy at ntllht. We had a wonderful mamagc. Not a day goes by that I don't gneve for my first and only love whose li fe was cut shon because of a senseless accident. To su"est that a widow 1s luckier than a divorcee is the most insane statem ent r ve ever heard. It made me so funous I got a headache. -C.D. IN HOUSTON. BR IDGE ANSWERS TO WEEKLY BRIDGE QUIZ Q.1-As Soulh, vulnt•r3bl<', you hold: +J 9 Q987 0 AJ983 +AK4' The bidding has proceedrd: North East South WHt I • Pass 2 ' PaH 2 V Pas8 ? What do you bid now'? A.-If you play that a two-«>Vl'r one response is forcinf( to gam~. you tan simply s~t the trump u1t now by bidding three hearts. Ir you do not, you rannot afford that a<.· t1on since partner might pass, and to bid four hearts could easily re- s uli 1n your missing a slam There- fore, W t' suggest a bid of thret> clubs, with vigorou!S support for hearts at your next turn Q.2-As South. vulnt•rable, you hold: +10 ~'AQ76S J982 +Q83 The bidding has proceedc-d· North East South West 1 + P&8s 1 NT Obie Pass Pass 1 What action do you takr'! A.-Since you are nrar maximum for your response with stopp<•ri. 1n a ll the unbid suits, wr !>Uggrst you pass and be happy to make a dou- bled contract, perhaps with over- trick!> worth, at this vulnl'rab11ity, 200 points ea<·h The alternative I!> to redouble. hut that might forc·t- the opponents to a contra1·1 whrrt> a double would not be quite 3!) 111· crat1ve for your side Q.3-As Smtih, vulnerablf', you hold +AQ83 . AK962 73 +A2 The hiddi'ng has proceeded North East South West Pass Pus I ; Pass 4 .. Pass ? What action do you take'? A.-Since North is a passed hand. his jurtlp to game shows a hand t hat revalues to at least the equiva- lent of an opening bid in support of hearts. That means you arc in t ht> slam zone, and we would certainly make a move The obv1oui. ont> 1s a rue-bid of four spad<">. to 'lee 1 f that inspires partner Q.4-A~ So111 h, vulnerable. you hold. +AJ53 AK102 +AK876 The b1dd1ng has pro<'et'd<'d South West North East I + I Pas11 2 ? What du you hid now" A.-The auc•tion makes 1t a n~r tainty that you have an eight-card CHARLES GOREN OMAR SHARIFF flt 1n some su11. and you want to be in gamt' in that '>Ult The obvious <'hot cc lies bet ween a double (for takrout. na1urally) and a cue·b1d of thrcc• lwarts . Sinre we don't real· ly want to give partner the oppor tunlly of ronvrrt1111( to a prnalty double. Wl' µrt>fer the cue-bid. Q.6-As South, vulnerable. you hold +Q6 86 Al02 +KJ7643 The b1ddinl( h~cs proceeded West North East South PHs I + 3 ? Whal do you bid now'> A.-F.a .... t'-. prl'empl ha.s lifted the a11l't1on lo ctn uncomfortably high ll'\.el, and you will have to guess. We can think of too many hands that partnrr m11(ht hold which will uffer no play at all for 11 tricks, so we wu11ld rulr uut f1vt! dubs, and four dub~ ask., for u~ to be left han~inl( WP would opt for three no trump a~ thl' most flrxible bid under t h1• t'i rru mstance:. If the de- fl'nders clo run five tncks tn a ·maJor, w1• will apologize lo part· ner Q.6-I\t·1lh1•r vulnerable. as South you h11ld +AK QJ :J Q92 +1 06642 Partner opl'n'> the biddin~ with Ont' dub \\'hat do you respond" A.-Your t•ho1cei. are three clubs or t wu no trump Although techni- f ally we need 13 points to Jump to two no l rump, our fifth club makes up for th<' I h1gh·card0point we are -.hon Sinn• our hand 1 baJanced dnd 11 tnrks could be too h1~1l· Wf' woul_d opt fur two no trump For Information about Charles Goren's new newsletter tor bridge players, write Goren Brtdge Letter, P.O. Box 4426, Or· ludo, Fla. 32802-4426. I did not ask him to stop smoking, I merely asked that he keep the smoke away from my face. In the next hour as I sat there. he smoked seven cigarettes. This is1ust one example of how most smokers do not give a damn about non-smokers. What would you have done if you had been in my place? -SEETHING IN ENCINO. DEAR HOUSTON: It 1boald come ; ------------------------- Q. Was there really a merry old soul named Old King Cole? A. There was a Kmg Coel. all right. He ruled Wales in the fifth century. The Romans had JUSl left, so he was probably merry. If you'd like to execute a forge~ of a gregt painung. JUSt ask perm1ss1on of the registrar at the Nauonal Gallery of Art That worthy even will lend you an easel and a stool Those Amencans whose ancestors came from Scotland don 'tJUSl do well but vef"} well. evidently A 198::! U S Census Bureau study checked out eight groups of European descend- ants. The Scots were the best educated and the most hlccly to wind up in JObs with high incomc'i Their roster listed the h1ghec;t proportion of mamed men Don't use your great great grand- dad's compass. said I. The magnetic North Pole shifts as much a~ 700 miles per century The <;tup1d1ty of this remark has JUSl been pointed out to me by a Polish Aggie Whereabouts of the pole changes. all nght. but nothing JS wrong with the compa'is. I'm out to lunch frequently. but rarely stay that long. A dictator Lmcd Cabrera u~d to run Guatemai~ In 1898 What he did first was proclaim his own birthday a national hohday. Second, likewise h1l> mother's b1rthda} Cost of the cultured pearl depends on its size and color, but I can tell you the current cost of the seeded oyster 1n which that pearly is cultured -$8.50 C) Will a buaard cat a dead skunk'' l .M. Boyd is a syodlcated A All but the scent gland columoist. PEOPLE DEAR ENCINO: I would have asked the ho1te11 for another table the moment tbe clod said, "Tough." To sit for an hour and iAhale tbe smolre from seven cigarettes does not 1bow a great deal of lote1Uge11ce. ID the fotare, I sagest that you patron- lte only reataarants that have oo- smoklog secdoas. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: This 1s for that crazy lady in Toledo who said people should stop fee!J ng sorry for widows and save their sympathies fo r divorcees. According to her, widows get respect and condolences. hfe 1nl.uran~. pensions. cars. paid-for homes and no ex-husbands to ~I with. Divorcees get npped "t>ff financially and have to answer such questions as. ..I wonder why she couldn't hang on to him." All 1 can say is, I wish I had had a choic~. My 33-ycar-old husband was electrocuted while working around the house. I found him myself. The insurance and the car and our paid- .. no sarprtse to yoa tbat tboa1a11ch of wldow1 flooded my office with reaponaea. I haven't 1een sucb angry mall lo year1. Tiie women wbo were botb divorced and widowed sappllecl the most sarprtsl11g mall. Tbey loalsted that tbe palo of divorce waa eotJaing compared with the agony of harylng a ha1ba.nd. ID tlle lotereat of falrne11, llere's a letter that reflect• the other aide of tbe 1tory: DEAR ANN LANDERS: Although I resented "Toledo's" bitter tone. I must agree with her. She said widows were much more fortunate than divo~s and she 1s I 00 ~rcent nght. As a woman who was widowed at 25 and divorced at 45, I firmly believe that separation by death is infinitely easier. It doesn't involve the awful feelings of rejection and fa1lure,1 nor does the widow find hcrsclt on the defensive asking herself, "Where did I fail?" The emotional wounds of my divorce still have not completely healed. Just sign me -DIVORCED IN 1980 AND STILL HURTING. Rudy Vallee recovers from surgery By tbe Associated Press LOS AN0ELES -Rudy Vallee, whose image as a Yale University graduate crooning "The Wh1fTenpoofSong" through a"' megaphone endured a 60-year radio. movie and Mage career. 1s recovering from throat surgery. official~ say Vallee. 85. was admitted to Cedars-Sinai Medical C.cnter \CV· era! days ago. according to ho\p1. tal spokesman Ron Wisc. who said that Vallee wa-; expected to be moved to a pnvate room shortly. Vallee·., wife of 16 years Eleanor, has rcquec;ted that no other informatJon bf rclea~d about her husband'" condi11on o r ailment. Wisc s:ud Yoko aeee •.elf' LONDON -Yoh 09o de- cided to "stick 1r through" and watch the ennre performance of a muSte&I btJed on the hfe of her alain husband, eJl-Beatk Jon LelaM•. that included her own poruayal. .. , was very scared about ao1ng. ... Ono said. "Dunn a the Rudy Vallee ... pcrforman<% I kept th1nktn1 whether I 'ihould ihp away qu1ct- ~ut then I decided to stick 1t w~ ·;1beral use of Bcaoo music, "Lennon" follows Len- non's !Jfe from school daJS 1n Liverpool throUf.h the crea~on of the Bealles. their success an tftc 1960s and breakup in 1970, his mamage to Ono and his indepen- dent career before he was shot to death in New York in 1980 Cap the critic NEW YORK -Defense Sec- retary C.•P_!r Welaberter, once known as• Cap the Knife" for his budget~uuing zeal, turned his blade on Robert Ladl1m'1 new spy thriller in a book review in the Wall Street Journal. "The Bourne Supremacy" is "a bulky book (that) attempts too many gyrations that o nly confuse the reader," Weinberger arii>ed in his review. The book is amicted with "tuf)id 1raveloaue" and "one-dimensional" characters, and its "djaJ~e falls strangely on the ear, with lines Lhat arc wooden and at 11mes preposterous," be wro te. LudJum said Wednesday he wu "mo t flattered and not a little alarmed that an ex- t.raordmarily busy man such a1 Mr. Wcinbcracr has the time lo read a thriller " He added he would read the secretary's re~iew carefully, "for I consider him to be a muter of fiction." TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 1 Muddy going 5 Tails 9 Saturate 14 Frown 15 Way oll'\ 16 Dental work 17 Toward 18 Cetus star 19 Stereotyped 20 Flushed 21 Pitch WOO 22 Clvil wrongs 23 Diiemma 25 Tumble 27 Dory accessory 28 Decant 29 Fuel 32 Fetch 35 Crankiest 3 7 Irish isles 38 Stall 39 Upbraid 40 Cautions 42 Pool shot 43 Farm animal 44 AbOut 45 Thrash 46 Body joint 47 Oversee 51 Namely 54 Hit hard 56 Goodbye 57 Mad 58 Street S<>Ynd 59 Locale 60 Basketballer 61 Celtic 62 Noble 63 Coasters 64 Sign over 65 Linger DOWN 1 Eat nolslfy 2 Eremite 3 Surpass 4 Master 5 Treat (metal) 6 Law 7 Aircraft 8 Aoea 9 Warp 10 Came out - 11 Resembling. Sutt. 12 Jack -tar t3 Rubberrnteks 2 1 Execute 24 Conveyed 26 Hasten 28 Prostrate 29 Auto part PREVIOUS PUZ2l.E SOLVED 30 Re 3t Hold back 32 Ealing spot 33 In --lined up 34 Unordlnory 35 Amended 36 Teheran native 38 Ruination 4t Seasons 42 Vernacular 45 Acclaimed 46 Kicked up a check 47 Game animal 48 Playing card 49 --period or time so Set lo go 51 Tw11cttea 52 Spotcen 53 Compen- sation 55 Mythology 59 Danish ISiand • • THE FAMILY CIRCUS by Bii Keane "Would you eat the top of my yogurt, Mommy? The fruit ia at the bottom." MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson "The candy store. malt shop and bakery called-your sweet tooth is really acting up!" PEANUTS GARFIELD S~E WANTS YOU TO 8E ~ER PMTNER IN Tl4E SPRIN6 Ml)(ED DOUBLES TENNIS TOURNAMEN T i ------1 f f x BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP) "Judging by his expression, he'• ll1tenlng to the new a." DENNIS THE MENACE by Hank Ketcham !~ I , f 3·1'1 ~ ~ r '~f PRESSEO HIS 800 COUECTION IN OUR DICTIONARY ! " 51-tE'S T~E ONE WITH T~E FAT FACE, THE FAT'SOD'f' AHD THE FAT LEGS ... by Charles M. Schulz by Jim Davis WHY I'S IT I ALWAY~ HAVE TO GO ON PIE.TS? OH, ~URE., I'VE. PUT ON A POUND OR TWO ••• 0 0 TUMBLEWEEDS DRABBLE ROSE IS ROSE t'IP 'l1J .fJ4 J<W YOOfl. f) ~. by Tom K. Ryan MA~f WE SHOOL.17 KNOCK OFFANP GET SOMEi}rn\IG IN OUR IUMMIES1 G1J"YS .. by Kevin Fagan eor w"v~r WIU.1"E. to&f.l""eoi~ il-41~" 7 by Pat Brady -· -,. --- BLOOll COU1'TY MOON MULLINS EAR TIZ ... cnng. COMt DAILY PILOT/Mondey. Mardt 24, 1988 All 'lff~ WELL '°"' TfU.. ME CM 51MT (t6HT l6E.. l4llt '""""" "' .*'°" llUPfJll: <Nf'I. Mii. /5 -..Ur.• 10 MY urr HtRi m •mtm.~ \ by Berke Breathed by Ferd & Tom Johnson S~t: LOST HER Vote&. f-/EY, EMMY! HAVE Y,A t..oal<'ED IN HE~ F~IT? FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE by Lynn Johnston SHOE JUDGE PARKER AFTER RECEMNG L YOIA ~IOE'9 F"f'Vl.NTIC CALL. SAM DRIVER PHONES ABBEY SPENCER' FUNKY WINKERBEAN OOHH ... CAJHA"f A HORRl61..£ DREAM ... DOONESBURY ~6a>, ()pp:)tiounity knocks but Ohce ... by Jeff MacNally by Harold Le Doux .------~- 1 DREAME.D IHA'i l WA5 CL.IMBIN& 11-IE. ROPE IN 11-IE G£)M ... A~D ~A-r 1 FEl..l A~ BROKE fW.) u:6 A 5€(.0ND 11ME ! I 'M SURE LYDIA WIL.L WANT~ 10 KNOW ... el.IT LET HER MAKE THE DECISION WHEN SHE (:£TS THERE I by Tom Batluk Tf WA'E> DEJA VU AU. OVER ~IN ! by Gary Trudeau 'f<R£ Ht ()B), R4PPY V!iTA S4Y. 'CWlUN,' HARLJM!al, ~ ~ 'clUlSt, THAT MA5 'IOI¥ ff ClJt.NTY ~WP ROI/TE n AJD 1'0I A« lifA6AN Sof)S ~OU 1W f¥l'f${)f!WEFflQH ~I .-..../' J MATTER. IOlPIS "!() NXJaJf 1" . ' • <>ning. Coeat OAJLV PILOT/ Mondl)', March 24, 19U DCUT SlDlO '1'llm • Nr (K·ll) ll:IS. ns. 4 IS I IS, I IS. l•IS lAllH IMCCllO "CIOSSIOAIS" (I) 1·00. JOO 500 100. too •SAT OfU 10 0 AM lllOODl AUDI ...... & 1£1 SISTEts" 1"·13) 1245. J IS 5 JO 14S t 4S "ton & OUT 1• 1m1u lflW" 111 11:00. ?'OS. 4 I 0 1·1s. 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(PC-13) I 00 4 00 7-00 "S "llOUSE" (I ) (I I • 10il5 "UCl TO FUTUIE" '· 10 "CO.IOTS" (C) LI IS. 1150. l JO "CHE IUIS II" (C) II JO I IS l'.00 "IUtnY'S IOUllCE" S IS. 1·JO, 9"40 (Pi Ill WM. I DISl£f'1 "SUEPllC IEAUTT" (C) 11-00, 2:00. 4:00 600. HO tSO !JCl'ISM OIGA4i£MJO "IWll" (I) 1 'S 4 JO 1 JO IO·OO aAtrH IMCCMO "CROSSIOAIS" {I) I 00 JOO 500 100 900 • IUC• OOlBT srmo lltlW.l m TOii "CU•C 110" ("·13) I IS l JO HS I 00 10 IS "DOQ I OUT HI IEVEILY •lllS' (I) l lO HS 600 llS 10 IS llWY 11 Ul IGllt( "JUST IETWU• fllEllDS" ll 00 2 JO. 4 0 (f'G.Jl) 71S. 90 Sf{\'£ WTTCl&IG "POLICE ACADEIY 3" (PC) 11 JO, l JO. 4 JO ' JO .• JO 10.20 WOOOT MUii "llAHAJI & IH SISTHS" 11 IO HO 4 40 '" ll) ••s u s ion "IUmr·s IOMAllC(" (Pl:·ll) IOOJJOiOO llS 10 15 MMY mo lllOOlll: "JUST lflWID flllllS" (PC-13) I JO. •I~. 100 tJO UIPHMACCllO "CIOSSIOAIS" (I) 11IS.115 4 U 'JO uo. 10 20 • IUCI UOlO "PllTTl.,... (JIC.13) U ~t••• 1411-S IUS • t'bCll smro .._._.'"°U) 1.11,M.I• ... ,.,, -t'OO- l ='AOAIN? * * ''TM Kirkwood Hlunting I Wolf ~~~~. lte,OOOPVIWID W1CJ1P If CINCINNATI NEWS ..,, Hl.L. WONOERWON<8 NIE1CN4 P\AYHOUSE flMllE THE L()fl) HAVE OUN. WIU TRAYS. MOYIE * ** "North Olllu Forty" (1979) Nlcll Nolte, Mac Davis. CID PHl. COUJNS: HO JACKET AEOURD-80lD OUT fE =-' UIU.£A I IEHNY Hl.L. AllEJICAN P\AYHOUSE IOOYWATCtt IN SfAACH Of M flSffCT DAY 11 =THI L()fl) * * ·Miiiing In AcilOn 2 Tht Btgin· ning (INS) Cllud< Notris. Soon- Tec:t Oti STAATAae MOYIE * * '"' '8eyond The lomll" ( 1983) Ml- Chael Caine, Rlchtrd Gefe -t:30-l~NEWHART * * • "Stella Dallas" ( 1937) Barbare Stmnwycl(, John Boles. e 8EH HAOEH EASTElll SPECIAL -10:00- (l)THISOAY • ORSTlAH LFEmW MAGAZINE NIOKT BALL.EAY MOYIE • t 'Fraternity VacatJon" ( 1985) Slephen Geoftreya, Shefte J W-.c>n CD ~ "Naughty G1tl$ Need l M Too" NoOlle) SOUDOOLO MOVIE **'.+ "Fllliog In Love p9841 Ro!» et1 DeNlro, Meryl Streep. CZ)MOVIE • • 1.+ "The Leopard t.lan" 119431 OetiniS O'Keele, Rita Corday. -11:30- -12:30-• QI LATE NOHT wrrH DAVI> l..ETT£RMAN IRATPAT'AOL llUfl9C)ENT N£WS t.9VOAtmN LOV!, AMSICAH STYLI NEW l.ITtRACY: AN lfTROOUCTIOH TO COMPUTERS 111 MOAE Af.AI. PEOPLE PRAISE TH£ LOAO MOVIE t • • •; "The 1(1lf1ng Flfldt" I 19841 Sam wa1erston. H11ng s Noor CZ)MOVIE u h "Sy;1ng Shilt (1984) GOidie Hawn, Ku11 Russell -12:40- fl (J)MOVIE • t ' The G11I Called Hall8' Fox ( 1977) Ronny Coa Joanelle Romero • (J) SCAAECAOW AHO MRS. KING • * ~ "Swface" (1983) Al Plcino, Michelle Pfeltlet -8:30- 18 VALEM JOKER'S Wll.D 1 i CAGNEY & LACEY AN~ATM~ AWAIOJ: THE WINHER8 1 Cl) REMINGTON 8TEflE 8 8E8T Of CARSON OOOCOUPLE «INIGHTUHE MOVIE MOVIE . t t 'Avenging Angel' ( 19851 Belay RU$$4111. ROIY CalhOun SJtll wrrc.JC ·rouu 1CM£1Y l" ll'JI, UI. 4cJI 'JO. l:ll, IO'JI (PC) "NWI I MT II IMILY llW" (I) I JO, HS HO, l'JS, IO:IS 4 TlAClt OCUT SIOlf 0 M1CHAD. m '°" "CUIC IO" (PC·ll) I IS. l:JO. S:4S. l·OO. IO:IS "CIR llDs 2'' (C> II.JO, 1:10, l'50 "llAlllAI I •U SISTHS" '4S, 1.IS, t-lO (H.U) 11 ACMDl'f AW• IOIS "TIE COLOI rtl"U" (PS.Ill I JO, 4:JO. 1 lO. IO:lS "OUT Of AntCA" 2 50. HS "MUIPIY'S HIAICE" 12 45, 5-M, 10-~ ... , llllJ lllOOll( "JUST IETWlH FllHIS" (PC-13) 12 to, l:JO, U S, 7 IS, t.4S OCUY STIJfO ""Em Ill Piil" (PC·ll) I JO. l JO s JO. 1 JO. t JO "C0-i6TS" (Cl II JO. I 'OS H S "CIOSSIOUS" (I ) • JO, ' JO •• JO. 10 20 ....... '"' 12 15 2 IS • IS '1S. 115 10 IS IMIT rno lllOOlll. "JIST IETWU• fltOIS" (PC-13) IHI. 2:15, 4·JI. 1•. t!S 11 ACMOn AWMD IOIS ··n1E cotot rumr 12·0 , l4S CPS. Ill 'u. t-45 SID[ lllTTOm:K "'8UCE ACAHll 3" (re) 12. 2 ••• '· .. 10 "Fil" (I) 2 2S. '20. 10 10 "IOUSE" (I) IZ:JS 4 JO UO 1 edwarda II SADDLEBACK S81·5880 i El TORO 110 Al lllOCllJIHD ' fl 10110 ,J I' l #l' 11 u, too, zn "ton & OUT t• IEY . lllUS" (l l •·JO,' JO, I JO. 10 JO "IOUSE" (I) 114S HO U S "IACl TO THE FUTUlf' no 'JO 10 JO 1'1il "Ct.IOTS'' (C) 11 ·M IZ•M Z,J) "lllCllwtU" (I) "f/J" Ill Srt\'f~ "rGUCl ACllEIY l" (rli) 12 2 • ' I, 10 •MT DISlln "SUE'11C IWTr' (Cl llJOI JOJJI SlO I JO 9JO ....... (rel) UJI. UO Ut 6 29 11' It 15 edwarda MISSION VIE JO MAU I:' ,0 ,., TO (.IH•W" .. a,, f • "Plfmll'*" I 00, J10 511 (N.IJ) 100."' • SAi <11.f It.It ..i llUTCl9 ....... (JIC.13) 1 •, )-4$."' tn, 1t11 * * "T.-idef IS The N!gllt ' 11962) -12:S5- Cl) TRAPPER JOHN. M.O. • PM MAGAZINE !IENNYHU THE~ MOVIE I THESAINT AMENCAN P\AYHOUSE • SUP£NO<X:EJI I SHEENA EASTON · IC ONE 8EHINO M SCENE.S SPEEDWAY fAOM ASCOT MOVIE l.Jtnrlf~~· Jason Robards Jr HAWAII FlVE-4 MOOf.AN "-ATURITY PRAISE M LORD THE INCREDIBLE TIME TRAVEl.S Of HENRY 0S0000 -1:00-e IHOEPEHOEHT HEWS Lee 11an1n nan In ••The Dirty Dosea: H•'~ "The Stlioog" (19801 Jacll Nlcllolson. Shelley Duvall 8:) HeOHT GAUERY 8 AN EVEN1NO AT THE ACADEMY AWARDS: THE WIHHERS TheNeztlllulon•• to- nJ.aht at 9 Oil NBC. Channel•. -11:35- (C)MOVIE CD li'OVIE HOHEYMOONERS -t:OO-• (J) KATE & AWE O CltMOVIE * * "RoNtlouse 66 ( 19a..) Willem Dafoe. Judge ReinllOld Cl) COMEOY 8AEAK * t * '.+ "The Bay Boy I 19841 LIV Ullmann. Kl8fer Sutne<tand • • Wyoming Ootla• 119391 JOhn Waynt Ray Hutlon tD COMEDY TONIGHT Cit ALL IH THE FAMILY Gi) PRAISE TH£ LOA() '1) JUNE CAIN MIU.EA • • ·~ 'The C>trty Dozen: Nexl Mis- SIOn" (19851 lee Marvin, Ernest Borgnme -10:15- Gi) REUGIOUS PMORAMMINO -12:00-• {!)COMEDY BREAK G)MOVIE • • ', 'Tile Ahen Encounl8'a (19761 OI HEWS -10:30- Gi) KOO AHO DRU AXTELL Cl) INOEPENOENT HEWS 8 AN EVENING AT THE Ar.AO£MY AWAJIOS C)PAULRYAH -1:55:: 8 9 BARSARA WALTERS SPECIAL • COMEDY TONIGHT -1:20-($)MOVIE -11:00- CJ HEWS CD MOVIE • • • • 0 atNEWS e CARSON'S COMEDY Cl.ASSICS I EHTERT AINM£NT TONIGHT 7000LUB MOVIE 1C)MOV1E • • • \ 'Avant!' ( 1972) J~ Lem- mon Juliet Mills t • t "Modntgllt Express" Brad Davis. JOlln Hurt (1978) • "The Bawdy Adventures Of Tom Jones'' 119751 Nlcity Henson. Joan Collins I BIZARAE 8AAHEY MILLER tl!) BUSIESS REPORT • *'h "Oekola" (19451 John Wayne. Veta Ralston -1:30- llHEWS -2:00-IJ (I) NIGHlWATQI II RECORO GUIDE a.IA Piii 952-4993 tlA llllVES I •n llDA S4i-3102 EDWMDS CllJM RlWSll-~ EDWMDSll TC.O llW lllWIMI MIMT•llMIMl-4311 D>WMDS IUIJICTON -154-1111 D>WMDS l.lleSITY -'37-G340 MICmMlilMAU -634-!1361 PACflC <aNU DI ... U-tM-2400 -'34·3'11 PACFIC LA mADA I t1A cm CDml ITAllTll • EDWMDS Vl.lMiE COfTtl ftl-0567 GUIG HD ... STAOlllOl-lt 63'"'770 MU llWlllRO 529-Sll9 . ""~._, .. ,~--" 9 -·-.... ._ .... ,..,.. ---- UlllU MICFA»OSQUM[ (213) 691-0'33 u--PAc.tc CATIWAY TRECOMED\' WITHOUT BRAK.f.S. llllANll S23-lill um&llMI EDWMDS SO. COASl lMUM 4!17-1711 PG 1J ~~fA?i~~AGurj·p·1 Rf ,,_: tlA llJVE'S • ts2-499l .sfllllA IDWAllDS IWllOI TWll 631-3501 -_ .. ---... _.... . ... .... . ·---. -CIOClll '34-2SSl NOW PLAYING •111t.e .._IUOI ._. .. @!' ... fo--atGt~COi\ ~\t~ •91•l·~ COtll llUA • IMUllA M1US t0.1'0 l .. I ~II' f.,,_,.~ 9,. .i •• "O\M ~ .. con••u• IM116•1 '""..,"' '..... ,,.,..,. • L4 ~ Px·f< \ ·~· ••114 " ........ 99< 2'00 • ~lOll IOCI! -¥11-'0 lC-flct' l'\•lf"!l'·_,...lto! fftli'Ot~ "'0"'0 ,..,._"9S.6m ~ ( .. -~"'"' ••llll5 llillD _,.,. P1t-N'"1 lloAN ,.,, °" .. "' 82• ta/O ~ P¥1"tc \()M'IO' o. .... U-9'16' ·-·~ ·~lllP '-"e!.l<ISl>l CB--· L• ......... ~••••,._~ ntm IDWMDS SADOUJAClt Sll·SUO ........... EDWMDSatMTD C001( 141-0770 ... EDWMDS IJIVOSITT 154-Ull UITI Ill EDWAIDS BllSTOl 540-7444 ITll'nl IDWMDS VIUGE cono n1-G567 wnrwtu ,Ac.tc tlWAY 3' Ila ... ftl-36!13 •••••• • •••••• • • * BARGAIN MATINEES MONDAY THAU f RIDA v 1 <, T J Pf RI 11IH.4Alll< f <, * * <:.ATURDAY 1•,f] PfRfORMAN<.f <, * * •r .i·H !At '\'A'4f.lt'. if&! 1~1 * LAKEWOOD nt•r f>11111u1 tYIJfocotty S ,,.._., ..OUC:I ACADIMT J :IACIC IN TINNtHO !NI n1•i...tt1tt.l1.,..11 .. DOUT IYlnO MICHA& UA'°" OUNG HOI IN-UI IMl•UStU•ill~ OOUT~ MOU T lllN9WAlO NITTY IN "HK "°"' , ... a.11 ... , ... , .. 11 ACAMMY NOMlfMTIOHI IMMllif ,.. '" t4tOW TMI COLOl PUIPU,..111 •. --h ll .... ,,. 1..U LAKEWO 0 (f!'nler Soulh llAD (NI llJlRIN CAHOllS !N I #lllll'fm.9- ..,.,...,_,.,~ 1MI WOMAN IN -,.,,. LA MIRADA OOUT ITmlO llllCMMl QAlON CM.ING HOl f,..U) lllaSS a.U S.U Ml I .. DOUT n.90 MOU T lllMeWAlO NITTY IN ftlNtC (,._UI ,,.. llaJI 4oU"" Ml IMI MMT nLll MOOU JUST llTWllN PlllNOI (,._U) ''°' a.•1tH 11• 1•11 IMl'tt MAIKMIO CIOIMOADI (II Utat :lo» 4M ........ t•H *" "°"""'"' ..... DOWN llHD OUT IN UV'Hl :'( Hll&.l rtG , ... ,, .... , ... 1•1• BUENA PARK (lltlU I .. 701l •f1Ctl• IW tf k••ft C.·.f! ..... ••Tll•*" MICMMl QATC* CM.ING HOt C"-UI ftADINO "'-ACU (Ill ... NOlftl'Nml -DOWN AHO OUT IN llVUl Y MIW 1t1 llV'lltl T Milli '°' !It WMt....n IUIPtNO 11M1TY f'I n. JOU9Hl'T °' NATTY GANN lfllt Lo HABRA ........ -. ! . GATEWAY DOUT lft'llO llAD (NI 21Jett•11•1a.il ..... ~ NICI llf t4tOW DOUY IT9IO I I 11/UtMMT NCMMNATIONI OUT Of NIJCA tNt • I ..... , •• , .... POLICI ACADIMT 31 IACK IN TaAINtNG tNt ,... ........ Mii ... wooeT MUH HANNAM 11HD Hll llmUlM-l*l • , ............. ,w IM9llil l'9CI llf MOW C-.A .... ••ntllftt MOUT .... M.9 """ ............ 1 .. NIT OHi Of n. 9UYlfM.111 1. IClllN "" tit 2. ttOUll 1'9 a. NMID UOllll e WHArS HOTI WHAT'S NOT? You can't beat VCRs, so HBO joining them By FRED ROTHENBERG UT..,..._W,._ NEW YORK -Home Box Office. the nation's largest pay-cable service. is learning to hve with the video casscne recorder, once considered the bane of the pay-cable industry. Next month, in a start.hog on.air campaign, HBO wiJI urge subscribers to tape films at their convenience and begin a video film library. "If you can't get on our schedule, P.Ut us on yours," one HBO promo wlll say. "A year ago we wouldn't have breathed a word about VCRs. Now you'll see mention of them all over the air." said Steve Scheffer, HBO's executtve vice president for film programming and home video. .\ccordsng to HBO, subscriptions were flat sn earl y 1985 but improved m the second half of the year, despite mcrcased VCR sales. Scheffer said the only negative impact from VCRs was tn homes with more than one pay- cable service. HBO's latest promouonal push notes that, with 60 different films a month, viewers can program their VCRs to make HBO a more valuable service. "The Hollywood studios may not completely endorse this (taping) cam- paign," Scheffer said, "but HBO feels because of the enormous amounts of mo ne y we're paying for movies, we have the right to demonstrate their value to the consumer." Scheffer also said VCRs were beginning to influence Hollywood movie-making, which will benefit pay-cable and its older, stay-at-home crowd . Not too long ago nearly every moVle utle seemed to be some variation of"Surfboard Teen Lover." Now, the studios a.re making a higher propon1on of adult-oncntcd films, Scheffer said. "The VCR is partJy responsible," he added. "The VCR has made available an older population that doesn't necessarily go out to the movies." Accordmg to Scheffer. last sum- mer's slew of screaming teen films "was the last gasp of those exploi- tation movies. when the studios only had their eyes on the youth market in their pursuit of the mcg.a-hit." Last gasp for the theaters, maybe. but HBO will carry last summer's adolescent assault this summer. It takes about six months after the~tn­ cal release for films to be available on cas.senc and another six months before they reach pay-cable, so the graying of Hollywood cinema won't be nouccable on HBO until late this :U-= ·:=..~-year or early 1987. ...., .....,.,.. ~· • 111' ·=..,-.~·,:.. mm:s1 The 58 th Academy Awards wiJI be ~-"'"' ._,,, -broadcast on ABC ton~· t. •cat,... V\ l ""-• .,,....... ,_,_,,'-·-~· Rcagardless which 1Jm Wins best ,,.,. ...c,~~ .,,.-i . Sch ffi . -·-~ 11.)<t -picture, e er said the winner ... c---· ·~ wouldn't~et any added cable value ~ I.it~~ ;~;:....--• =s-.:".::O ·;~n"' from the scar. It didn't help HBO's •·-c-·-c-•. ., showinp of "Gandhi" or "Chariots .. --·---J of Fire,· he noted. ~~~~~;;;;;;~~~ COMING THIS THURSDAY TO A THEATRE NEAR YOU. -' _ .. -....ouwt"'C1Yl'tl c;oN'OllA0-... -... ...... ~ lUXU.V THfATllS SJ. S 111 J Mtlt W••k•111 Ill Mii. 0111)1 Stl., Sw n 1 & * l'tofldt ' Unl•u NOl•o St 1 Academy NOmln:ttlon• OUT Of' APIUCA fPQt 1 10 4 ,20 " 7 )0 In 70 MM . 4 1>4 ltUJ )Ml OllAllGUMtft1,.t.t CIU•I[ ~A .. S n (OS SHOWS AT I U lU&.U 7 U&it U anTURY ClnEDOmE ~ )4 l!i!tl c11., .... n & S.n~ Ana flOllCI ACADIMY llt (PO) 1..U l.U ,.., '4UMJ ~ ""'° OVT •• 9CYll•LY .. l..U C•t SHOWS AT I 10 l 21 $ JI 1 SO & I 0 00 C lllOU ltOAOS Clll ~MOWS AT 1 JO l l O I >O 7 4 0 •I to OU.-N0 ..... 119 SHOWS AT I 00 S.20 s 40 1 100 a. 10 20 "'..,.,.., ... .... K ... tal 100l'IOl2o7JO t40 lt~NOI!·--· Cot.Oii ""9PU! t•t IMOWI AT t 40 Sr•O 6 7:4 0 DOWlll AlllO OUT "' .VS•LY .. U.& .. , ,..,u Spl.tU. (f'O) Pll&tiW ......... .,...11. Tfl1I Wo 1'fltft, Tfllt It N•w (lit I O•I~( 1111 h•• I >I WU1yt/l H Whdt/U.~11 U f1tt U•ltl. 111 ... J _, l . . Edison tabs White as football coach ·. Chargers' def enstve coordinator. a former QB. succeeds Workman By ROGER CAllLSON Of .. ..., ......... Dave White, as expected, is the new football coach at Edison Hlgb. Wb.ite;30, succeeds Bill Workman who 10 days ago became the new head coach at Orange Coast College. White, a Huntington Beach resident, has spent virtually half bis life in and a.round the f.<tison program. "We didn't open it up," said Edison Athletic Director L~ Clower. "Our principal, Jack Kennedy, o~r activincs director, Bill Tangeman, and myself met with Dave for about six boun and the decision b.as been made, pending our bOard's approval Tuesday night." The only surprise is that Edison was able to persuade district officials to sidcstee the custo~ waiting period and peper work involved an opening the position. The choice of White comes as no surprise because of the overwhelming backing from the administration, fellow coaches, past and present athletes, along with percnts and boosters. All of which helped lead to the decision not to even open it up. .. That's probably the biggest thing JOing for me, .. said White ... It's tough to follow Bill, but n's easier with the knowledge you have the support. "I came here seven yeanagoandobviously it was my goal, and I felt I was qualified two yean ago. The last two years I've bad a lot of additional responsibilities. Bill was kind of preppina me for it. .. White, Workman's first quarterback: in 1973, bqan bis coaching career at Edison in 1979 after two years at Oranae Coast College and graduation from Oregon State University. "That was the best thin' (worki~ with the defeue) that could happen to me,·· wd White. 'Offense had been my whole life, especially the pessina pme. •• White anticipates his staff to remain intact and is working on secunn1_ an additional on-campus assistant. Presently the Char&en have Harry Schmidt, Terry Lorentzen and Oower as on-<:ampus aides, •Ud by walk-ons Brian Gloshen and Scott Strosnider and RandX Williams a fuJl-timetrainerwho most refer to as "coach. "Defensively we're not goina to cbanle," said White. "We're goina to get aJ\er it. with a big play defense, with aggressiveness and emotion. • "Offensively, R.aleaph Carter is of OOW'IC aoing to act the ball a lot. But you have to throw to win." It would appear the transition from losing 1 S-year veteran Workman to a first-year coach will prove to be of little consequence. White oomes from a system which produced four other bead coaches and a college assistant -Mike Henigan (Marina, 197}-77); Mike Sc:arpece (Lona Beach Poly and presently Glendale ColJelC), Orea Henry (Huntin&ton Beach, 1981-82). Barry Wat.en (West- minster, 1980-82) and Russ Purnell (former USC assistant). "Bill always let the coaches coach," said White. "He knew this is what I wanted to do and I reallY. feel prepved. "I'm constantly in contact with Bill," oontinued White. "I've got a list of do's and don 'ts, and the don't list is pretty long." White bas been a successful bead coach in girls basketball and will coach the South in the Orange County All-Star game at Orange Coast June 21 . "I'm going to coach the girls next season because thc~·s goin_a to be a lot of seniors who have been with me. But it'll be JUSt for the one year," White adds. ---- -_. -~ ~ ~ MONDAY, MARCH 2 ... 1886 The YMkW. worried .a.out pitching, .... Mnd In ..... - Pl8rera 11ve PGA chief....._ 1noon11111nt ....u. II& For the la.st four years be bas been the defensive coordinator. but be says offense is his real love. White splaying career was strictly u a quart.erbeck, playing for Oower as a freshman and ~omore and Workman as a senior after sitting out bis Junior !leUOD _.. .. _......, (P1eue ... SDl801'/llS) Daft Wlllte will MMXull BUI Workman u Mt.oa RIP'• Med fooa.D cwla . ........................................................................................................................................................ ~, ii' No.1 , No. 2 on way to Final Four[ Top-ranked Duke ousts Navy, 71-50, in Eastern final EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. (AP) -Top-ranked Duke, which hadn't played a ranked team or one with a dominating big man in three previous NCAA tournament games. took: on Navy and ~I I David Robinson · Sunday and demolished the Mid- shipmen 71 -50 to earn a berth in the Final Four. Robinson scored 23 points and bad I 0 rebounds for the I 7th-ranked Middies -but Johnny Dawkins bad 28 points and seven rebounds and Mark Alaric added 18 points for the Blue Devils, who raised their record to 36-2 and left Navy's final record at 30-5. When they get to Dallas for the semifinals next Saturday, the Blue Devils will put their 2()-game winning streak -the longest in the nation - on the line against No. 2 Kansas. "Kansas, I think, has like a pro team. They can hurt you in so many different ways," Duke Coach Mike Krzyz.cwski said. "We're just happy tObcJoingthere. We're going to enjoy this nght now." Duke put its victory away by intermission, turning a 20-16 dcfic1t into a 34-22 halftime lead. "I really think: our defensive intensity and our offensive rebounding pick.ed up im- mensely," Knyzewski said of the Blue Devils' decisive 18-2 run. Dawkins hit only four of I 5 shots in the first half, th.en canned bis first seven in the second half as Duke kept Navy from getting closer than 10 points. · "In the first half. I think I was a little nervous ta.kins my shots. Going in at halftime was a &ood thing for me," Dawkins said, "because it gave me a chance to settle down. I came back out very positive. Coach told me to keep on taking my shots, to step up with confidence. I did it that way and fortunately they went in." Off to a slow start because of poor shooting, Duke turned a 20-16 deficit into a 34-22 halftime lead and never were headed. The closest the Middies came was 3~26 early in the second half, but the Atlantic Coast Con- (Pleue 11ee DUD/82) UCI makes finals of tenni~ tourney Anteaters get by Ark.-Little Rock: meet Duke for title UC Irvine's men's tennis team, riding a sweep in doubles, droppc:d the U niversity of Arkansas-Little . Rock. 6-3, Saturday to advance to the finals of the UCl-Newport Marriott Classic at UCI. The Anteaters met Duke, a S-3 .uptet winner over Maryland. in the tournament finals today. Bruce Man Son Hing and Darren Yates teamed for a 7-6, ~ victory over the Trojans' No. t tandem of Mikael Knuw and Richard Pcmon. which ii ranked 26th 1n the nation. ''We really executed, .. UCI Coach Orea Patton said. "The Swedes (on the Ark.ansu team) h•vc charac- teri1dcaUy played ~e pme 11tttn1 on the buchnt. We tned to force them out o( their rhythm and attack thcu tee0nd lefVC." The tntqy worked aJI alon1 tht doubles line, as Julian Barham and Mark: Kaplan moved past their oppo- nents, ~2. 6-0. and Ken Derr and Art Hernandci took a 6-4, 7-S decision at No. 3. "Julian and Mark were JUSt awesome," Patton saM. "I think I have a areat combinatton there ... Kaplan and Barham are }-0 1ogcther. In singles play, Kaplan took the No. 3 spot and manaaed a 6-2, 4-6, ~I outtng. "I moved him up to No. 3," Patton explafoed, "and he ~ with flying colors. The kid has definitely been catina bis Wheaties for breai'Tast and spinach for lunch." ManSoo H1naand Yates each won thetr sm&Jes matches to round out the Anteaters' points. "I'm alad we beat th1s team from Arkansas, bccaute we beat a bunch of human backboards," Patton said in reference to the Tro1ans' sttff' play at the buehne. In othtt matches unday, AIJLOOa lite defeated Chapman. S-r; and Harvard dtfcattd W1ch1ta tate 6-'· one Patton to set up toda}"s fif\h place match. Utah downed Fresno State. 7-2. and Anzooa dropped Indiana, 8-l Tbe thud place match pitted Maryland aptnst Arkansas this morning at UCI, .,h&Je ASU met Harvard for fifth place. Kansas outruns NCState. 75-67, for Midwest title KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) Basketball-happy North Carolinians were UJ*l two years l&O when Danny M.annmg, a natlvc son, deaerted them for cotlclt life in Kansas. They bad no idea be would reappear some day to break their beans. The ~ 11 Mannina, a native of Greensboro, N.C., outlcorCd North Carolina State l ~ 1 in a key stmcb in the SCClOnd half Sunday, rallyi.na SCClOnd-ranbd Kansas to I 75-67 victory over the Wolfpmck in the finals of the NCAA Midwest Ro- ponal. Coach Jim V alvano's Wolfpeck was Jeadina S 7-52 with $:53 left wben Mannin& went to worlc-!COrin& five straiabt 6eskets to vault theJaybawk:s to their fim rmaJ Four appcaraooc since 1974. "When we were down by five. we all looked at each other and said we could do it, and we did it,.. said Mannina. a sophomore and unani- mous selection this year as Big Ei&ht player of the year. Mannina. who finished with 22 points, caused an uproar in Atlantic Coast Conference country when he enrolled at Kansas after his father, Ed Mannina, accepted a job on the statr of Jaybawk:s Coach Larry Brown. Manning said the Jayhawks ran their plays in the crucial minutes exactly as they are diagrammed. .. What I tried to do was post up and &et the ball on the block and get my shot," be said. "I have to credit my teammates for penetnttina and then bein& able to get me the ball in the right position for my shot. .. The Jayhawks, the top seed m the Midwest, will meet No. I Duke. 36-2, in the NCAA semifinals next Satur· day in Dallas in their first Final Four appearance since 1974. "I told the kids be.Ore the pme it's a real credit to get to the Final Four." Brown said. Otake'• Danay Ferry (top, left) and Jola.DD7 Dawk.lna :r;.w their elation wltb win ba SUtern Recioaaft wlaile a.-y beDcb (bottom) bu Rak.lna feeunc ID late put of 1ame. N.C. State Coacll Jlm ValT&Do [rf4Jat) leta laoppln.C maCl Oft!' call u Illa team fell to K•n•• ID lllcfwettt Rectonal flna.I. The Wolfpack. the 1983 NCAA champions. were looking for their second Final Four berth in four years. "I always want the game to live up to final eight or Final Four expccta. (Pleue Me KADA8/B2) Landrea11x center of dls pate . Veteran angry with Dodgers, says he's being mistreated F'rom AP ~1pakH9 VERO BEACH -Veteran center fielder Ken Landreaux expressed unhapptncss and anger unday over the way he's bemg treated by the Los Angeles ~$ quite obvious_" Landrcaux said about the allcacd mistraunent. "It seems bkc evcryth1nc't fine e•cept center field. I have a lot of 1ccompJ1shments 10 the m_,or leques and they act hke I haven't done a thJns.." Durina the Winter, Dodgers' executives raved about 21 -ycar-old center fickler Jose Gonz.alcz., who was (armed out Sunday. But they also said that even 1f Landrcau• pl~~ a lot. be miaht be platooned 10 center wtth Rcg1e Williams. ~ LandrcauA. 31 as tired of such taJk. "I think it's a fact that I've ~n unal)prcoatcd." he wd. "fve hit .300 before. I know I can bit 300. They tnow I can hll 300 "They undemte me. They undcttsum.atc me h Jtt t 1howswb&t klndof chanctcr tb.ve bcc.tusc I'm Sl•IJ here "All they bave to do 11 make the hneup, kt me pla)'. not point a finacr. They say they've a<>t th~ youn.s ktds comina up. I was way ahe.ad of them when I""'' tbeu aac But l shU bad to wait unul 1 could play," Docs he want lo be traded' "No. I'm nred of mo' tna around," Landruu1 saad "But they'll pick tht time. I'm urc of th.at.·· • Manager Tom Lasorda wd: ••lAnd.rcaux is the center fielder. no question about iL I think the py'a capable of acbievi':\4 some good numben.. I hope tbas 11 the year be will. I think he's aot a lot of l&lenL" Will Landrcaux be platooned with Williaml? "That's 1<>methln& we're go1n1 to decide when the season begins," Lasorda said. "He could play every da)'., WC ml&ht platoon htm. We've aot to make that dects1on .... What about Gonzalet? "Gonzalei wdl play in Triple A," Lasorda said. "He's got a ton of talent. but Reggie Williams is ahead of him right now." Rea, Dalllel• rap Dod6en, 7-5 Pinch hmer KAI Damds RBI s1na)c ~parked 1 three. run upnsina in the et&hth tnnina to carry the C1ncinnau Reds to a 7-5 Victory over the Oodacn. After Los An&CJCS starter Orct flenhilCT pitched five sc()rctesi1nn1np, Cmcinnab j umped on reliever Alc1an~ dro Pen• for four runs in the sixth nuuna and scored tbttc umcs off'losrr Ken Howell in the eiablh. s.n~ I•• eai. by Az16eJ•. B-4 ln Palm Spnnp., Ryne San~ ooUCC'tCd four btlS' and drovt in three run and Keith Moreland hit a two-run homer as the 1caao CUbs beat the Anacls. ~.in an· cxh1b1tton pme. ndbefl inaled tWlCC before drilh.na an RBl tn~· 1n the fif\b Moreland then p~t the Cubs a > I lead with ht fint ho~r or the spru,.. •luch came otl nabt·banda Ktn Fonch. who allo-ed t 2 htlS and five n.ms, I .. -* OrMQ9 Co.t OAJLY PILOT/ Monday. March 2•. ttee BASEBALL • Tewksbury gives Yanks a hand with arm Brunanskyshlnes,Gooden rusty in Twins' 6 -5 triumph P'rom AP diJpakHI The New York Yankees, who weren't surc·tbcy had enough su.nina p.itching ev~n with Brin Burns, may have more than enoUgh without him. Bob Tewksbury continued his bid for a major-league Jbb Sunday by pitchina s1x innings as the Yankees blanked the Texas Raoaers 3--0. the third consecutive exh1b1uoo game in which they have not surrendered an urned run. The 25-year-old nght-hander, who has a 49-22 record and 2.57 earned run average in fi ve mtnor-league seasons. allowed three tUts. In 16 mnmgs this spring he bas yielded 11 hlts and three earned runs for a 1.69 ERA. Texas starter Charlie Hough went six .innings and ~urrendered five hits and one run. It came in the fourth on consecutive doubles by Ken Griffey and Don Baylor. The Yankees scored again off Greg Harris 1n the seventh on Don Mattingly's two--run double. i SPORTS BREAK 3-tiDle losers? . Mets hope this season a charni From AP dispatches ST. PETERSBURG. Fla -The New a York Mets want to believe the Nauonal League East title of 1986 1s theirs to lose. Problem i~. that's exactly what they've done the past two seasons. Now. says catcher Gary Carter, "there will hopefully be no more knocktng at the door." Though they had the best record in baseball dunng the past two seasons. the Mets had only two second- place finishes to show for 1t In 1984, they won 90 games and finished second by 61'1 to the Chicago Cubs Last year. lhe) won 98 games and were second to the t Louis Cardtnals, "ho won 10 1 "What could happen next )ear?" Mets pitcher Ron Darling asked aftenhe 1985 season finale. "Are the Pittsburgh Pirates going to win 130 games. and we finish Carter second agatn?" But now. as the Mets tune up tn spnng tra1n1ng for their Apnl 8 opener at Pittsburgh. another arntude " taktng shape. Could the third lime be the charm? "We'd hke to be he' e that." sa~ s Davey John~on, Mets manager since 1984 "If we perform up to our ab1lit}. then we should have a good chance to wtn. But sometimes you have to pla~ better thlln your ability. "The fact remains that we haven't won and our JOb 1s unfulfilled.'. he said." Let''\ put 1t th1s wa y, I am kind oft1rcd of catching the bouquets at the weddings I don't want to be the best man again this year." Quote of the day Georgetown Coach Jobo Tbompsoo after the Hoyas were eliminated by M1cb1gan St.ate in the second round of the NC <\A toumnament. "The past four year'> I've been workmg overtime. This year 1t looks like I get an early vacation, but 1t 1sn't necessaril y welcomed ... Soviet skate judge suspended GE~EV A., Switzerland -A Soviet fiJure skaung judge who ga'e unusuatty high marks to a Soviet skater faulted by other judges at the 1986 World Cham- Ill p1onsh1p has been suspended for two years from 1ntemat1onal compet1t1on by Soviet skaung officials. .i\n offi cial from the World Figure Skating ( hamp1onsh1ps said ~unday that Tauana Danilenko ga ve mark s of 5.9 and 5 8 to Soviet skater Alexander Fadt>cv 1n the men's free skat1ng compet1tion Thursday night Fadecv fell twice and did poorly in his routine, and the rest of the nine-Judge panel ga ve him marks 1n the 5 4 to 5 6 range A 6.0 1s a perfect score. Fadeev. the 1985 world <:hamp1on. needed a first or a '\Ccond plate in the free skating to hold on 10 his title He finished fifth an the free skating and third overall Bnan Bo1t.ano of5unny"ale became the new world champion, replacing Fadcc" The ""eek-long compet1- 11on ended Saturda' ( hnst1an Fehlbaum. 'lpokesman for the Organ1za- t1on ( omm1ttee for the World Figure Skating Cham- p1on-;h1ps. confirmed repon~ that Sov1c1 officials suspended Ms Dan1 lcnko nn ~aturda)' Chicago takes Norris lead, 5-3 ~ Bebo Wl1100'1 powcr-pla) goal '>nap~d a J. l uc late 1n the ~<.:ond penod. tnggenng C h1cago to a 5-3 victory Sunday night O\ er the Ne"" York Rangel"\ and into undisputed po'>sess1on of first place 1n the NHL's Norm D1v1 <;1on . El~ewhere 1n the NHL, Bobb y Gould scored at 2:54 of the third period 10 give Washington a 6-5 victory over Ph1ladelph1a. snapping the Flyers· s1x- game wmn1ng \trcak and pullin$ the Capitals to w1th1n one point of the Patrick D1v1s1on leaders . LaJllly McDonald, Al Macinnis and Colla Patterson scored on three of( algar; ·.,first fi ve shots at Winn1peggoal1e Dao Bouchard and the Flames defeated Winnipeg, 7-4 ... Roa Frucls \Cored with 3 30 rematning when hts pass from behind the net deflected ofT the back of Boston goalie Pai R1ggm 's leg to lift Hanford to a 5-5 tie Wlth the Bnuns Meanwhile. Dwiaht Gooden of the New York Mets . bad lus second consecullvc mediocre ouuna, Last )ear·~ National League Cy Youna Award wtnner wtth a 24..C record pve up thr« runs on seven hits tn five innings as the Minnesota Twtns edged the Mets 6-5. Tom Brunansky sinjlcd and doubled off Gooden but three New York errors in the c1Jhlh inning allowed the Twins to scott three runs. Ftrst. right fielder Tim Corcoran booted Kent Hrbck's single and Brunansky walked. Roy Smalley grounded to first but Kevin Mitchell'~ throw to second hit Brunansky in the back and rolled 1nto shon left field for an error. Hrbek scored and Bruoansky followed him when left fielder George Foster's throw h11 shonstop Rafael Santana 1n the back for another error lo other eltlubition games: Tigert 7, Blee Jay1 t : Make Lap hll lus Sixth home run of the spnng and drove in four runs. Lap bit a three· run homer off Toronto ace Dave Stieb in Detroit's four- run first inoingand singled in a run tn the eighth. The runs were the first this sprinJ off Stieb. who had pitched 12 scorele'ss ininngs in tus three previous stans. Alan Ttammell also homered for Detroit, Lloyd Moseby for Biggs wins with one hand RENO -Olympian boxer Tyrell m Biggs, fighting with a broken nght col- larbone, outjabbcd and outdanced hard- hitting Jeff Sims Sunday Lo wan a unani- mous decision in bis first I 0-round fight. Biggs, who said the collarbone was broken by a hard Sims ri~t in the second round, fought left-banded for the remammg eight rounds, throwtng fewer than a dozen ineffective rights. "I panicked just for a mtnute, then I went back to mov1 ng. using the jab a lot," he said." I decided ifhe was going to win. he was going to have to beat me. I knew as the fight went on, be was mine." Although Biggs' left eye was swollen nearly shut and his ri~t shoulder was heavily bandaged as he sat 1n his dremng room, he said Sims apparently didn't realize how much damage he had done. "He was not aiming at my shoulder any more. He was going for the ribs And that was fine with me." Biggs said. Peete takes 5-stroke victory :'-IEW ORLEANS -Confident !I Calvin Peete, h1sauthonty established by a 66 in the morning round, cruised to an unchallenged 5-stroke victory Sunday in the double·round wmdup of the USF&G Classic. Peete, who led by 4-6 shots throughout the afternoon. added a 4-under-par 68 over the final 18 holes to become the first double winner on the PGA Tour this season. He won this one with a 269 total. 19 strokes under par on the Lakewood . Country Club course, and collected $90,000 from the tot.al purse ofS500.000. With the 12th victory of his late-starting career, Peete added another chapter in his remarkable rags-to- nches story that once included a stint as a traveling peddler to Itinerant farm workers. Pulz overtakes Bradley to win TUCSON -Penny Pulz fired a !I course-record 8-under-par 64 Sunday to overtake a fading Pat Bradley on the final three holes and wto the LPGA Tucson Open bv four strokes over Betsy Kmg. Pufz. a 33-year-old Australian. started Lhe day seven sh ots off Bradley's lead and wound up wtnning the $30,000 first-place pnLe, which was her second LPGA title ever and her first since 1979. She carded three birdies and an eagle on the last four holes to finish with a 12-under 276 tournament total. Pulz's round of 64 topped the previous record at the 6, 124-yard Randolph North JOlf course set by Patti Rizzo in 1982 and tied three limes this week -b~ Bradley, Rosie Jones and V1ck1 Fergon. Two homers in same inning NORMAN, Okla. -Catcher Chns Howard hit two home runs an the same inn mg -one of them a grand slam -as Oklahoma buned Nonheastern Oklahoma State. 29-4, in a college baseball game Sunday. Howard led off the nine-run sixth inning with h1~ first homer of the season. then followed it up later wuh a grand slam. The two homers gave Oklahoma six for the day The Sooners rapped out 21 hits tn raising their record to 14-1 I . Drexler sparks Trailblazers Clyde Drexler had 32 points, 10 m rebounds and nine assist'> Sunday night, leading Portland to a 112-102 National Basketball Association victory over Sacra- mento ... In other NBA games, Joe Barry Carroll made a 20-foot jump shot as lime e:icpired, giving Golden State a 113-111 victory o ver Denver. which led by 13 points after three quarters . . Ricky Sobers scored 15 of has 17 points tn the final penod, including a breakaway layup with 29 seconds left. to lead Seattle to a I 07-104 victory over San Antonio Television, radio TELEVISJON No events scheduled. RADIO 7·30 p.m. -PRO BASKETBALL: San <\ntonio at Lakers. KLAC (570). TUESDAY'S RADIO 10:30 a.m. -BASEBALL: Dodgers vs. Philhes, from Clearwater, Aa.J. KA BC (790) I p.m. -BASEB~LL: ::.an Francisco vs. Angels, from Palm Springs, KMPC (7 10). Toronto Red Sox 3, Ro)all l: I 1pper p11rhed u. shutout innings. He allo~ed thrtt hll , truck out four and did not ~all a battc-r in h1 IOf\$C~t ouuna of the spnng. teve Balbom·s t'1ghlh 1nn1na homer ofTT1m Lollar prevented the "orld champion Ro)als from being shut out for a fifth ume. S<:bu's broken-bat sinale snapped a~ tie in the seventh inn1n1 Baltimore Jumped to a 4-0 lead 1n the founh 1nn1n1 against Charles Hudson, includ1og Al Pardo's 1hree-run homer. Cardinali s. Expos 3: Wtlhc McG~ doubled home \ltncc ('oleman Wtth te wmning run 1n 1he eighth inmng ' and scored one out later on a wild pitch. St. Louis bunched six of 11~ 11 hit~ into the seventh and eighth inning~ ofT Montreal rthe-.ers Tim Burke and Jack O'Connor after And) Van I) ke homered off Bryn Sm 1th an the fifth . St Louis startc-r John Tudor yielded all the Montreal runs ID the first fi,e innings. WllJle Soi I, Plrate1 4: John Cangelos1 had th~ hats and scored two runs. Chicago erased a 2-1 defic1t by sconn,a four runs in the founb in ntng, capped by Joel Skinner's two-run homer. ladlu1 13, A'• 5: Andre Thornton home~ and doubled while Juho Franco and Canntn C,asul~o ~lso homered. Franco, wh o hil a solo ho"!'cr ID th~ first toning, broke a 1-1 tjc with an RBI single 1n the third. Glut• 1 Marlaen 0: Mike LaCoss, Bill Laskey and Mark Davis ~ollaborated on a five-h11ter and Ch1h Davis singled home the game's only run against Mike Morgan ID the third mning. LaCoss, a veteran major-leaguer but a non-roster pitcher. scattere9 four hits over the first five innings and lowered his spnng ERA to 0.90. Braves%, A1tro1 1: Dale Murphy's second home run ID two da) s. an e1ghth-1nnang shot off Jeff Heathcock. was the w1nn1ng run. The two-ume National Lugue MVP is batttng .435 for the spring wllh sax RBis. Houston's run was Eric Bullock's leadofT homer ID the first off David Palmer. PblJUes 8, Orioles I: Philadelphia took advantage of six Baltimore errors to score five unearned runs and Rick Brewen t, Padres 8: Randy Ready. who had three hits, walked to force ID the go-ahead ru!' in the 12th inning. After Ready was walked on four P.•tches by loser Rich Gossage, Rob 06Cr's grounder dro\!c;.m the eventual winning run. • K.anNe forward Danny Mannln& file. ln toward the buket aa North Carolina State'• ltmJe Myen (left) and Nate (riiht) defend in MJdwe.t final. DUKE .•. From Bl ICrcnce champions broke away to a 56-33 bulge midway through the c;econd half as Dawkins scored 14 points from intermission to that point. Robinson scored 15 of his tcam- h1gh 23 points in the first half when he received little support from the Middies' second-and third-leading scorers, Vernon Butler and Kylor Whitaker. They combined for three points in 1he first half. In pulling away late in the first half. Duke ran ofT 12 straigh t points in outscoring the Colonial Athletic As- soc1auon champions 18-2 for the re mainder of the half as Alane hit four field goals and Dawkins capped the spree with 1wo baskets before the half. 1nclud1ng a spectacular backwards dunk. Duke made only 16 of 42 shots from the field 1n the fi rst half. but 20 points came on second and th ird efforts as the Blue Devils dominated the boards in the first half led by 6-8 senior center Jay Bilas. the least regarded of the Duke starters. Balas tvabbed eight rebounds without scor- ing a point as Duke beat the M1dd1es on the boards 34-1 5. After Dawk.ins' basket pul Duke ahead 56-33, the Middies made a I 0-2 run 10 cut the deficit to 15 points as Butler and Whitaker each con- lnbutcd four points but 1t was not enough. Whitaker, who had been averaging 13 I points. finished with 10 points, and Butler, who had been averaging 16.6, scored eiibt points. In reaching the Final Four, the Blue Devils beat Mississipei Valley State, Old Dominion and DePaul before facing their first ranked team Sunday. It marks the Blue Devils' fifth appearance in 1he Final Four. the last tame in 1978. KANSAS WINS REGIONAL ... From Bl tions," Valvano said. "I thought this was a great college baskctbalf game. When we were up 57-52 I felt very confident. But then Manning broke loose on the baseline." The Wolfpack seemed to be taking control with a 6-0 run midway through the second half. Ernie Myers climaxed the spree when he stole a pass by Kansas' Gre~ Dreiling and was fouled while driving for a layup. He missed the free throw, however, resulting in the five-point North Carolina State lead. Then Manning went to work from the left corner, sconng his team's next fi ve baskets as Kansas took a 62-58 advantage. Dreiling, rebound in~ a missed shot by Cedric Hunter, put in a follow shot that gave the Jayhawks their biggest lead of the day, 64-58, with 4:40 remaining. Dreiling, playing with four fouls, sank key free throws down the stretch and finished w1th 19 points for Kansas, 35-3. One of the Jayhawks losses was a 92-86 setback to Duke in the finals of the Bi~ Apple NIT. North Carolina State was led by Charles Shackleford and Chris Wash- burn with 20 points each. Nonh Carolina State had taken its first lead of the second half with 12:58 left when Shackleford hit a JO-footer from the lane for a 47-46 advantage. Thirty seconds later, Manning picked up his third foul as Washburn put in a sl am dunk to give the Wolfpack a 49-46 lead. Brown becomes the fifth coach to lead two different teams to Final Four appearances. Brown took UCLA to a 5CCOnd·place finish in 1980. Ron Kelloaa h•d 12 points for Kansa5 and Calvin Tho1 mpson, who scored 26 in the semifinal overtime victory over Michigan State. had nine. For the Wolfpack. Bennie Bolton finished with 12 pomts. while Nate McMillan had 11 . The Jayhawks managed their 35-33 halftime lead despite having Man- ning and Dreiling or the bench for about the last fi ve minutes of the first half. Dreiling, who had been slumping in NCAA Tournament play, gave the Jayhawks a bag boost with I Oftrst-half points, countenng the 14 tossed ID by Shackleford. However, Dreiling wenl to the bench with 4:04 rcmaintng when he bumDCd Washburn beneath the Wol(pack basket for his thtrd foul. North Cuolina St.ate, which beat Iowa, Arkansas-Little Rock and Iowa State to reach the Midwest title game had its last lead of the first haJf at 14-13 on a basket by ShackJeford. Then Hunter canned a 10-footer and Dreiling, not noted for his touch at the free-throw line. sank 1wo foul shots to put Kansas back in front 17-14 Sabres sack Kings, 6-1 BUFFALO (AP) - Mike Fohgno scored two power play goals to lead the Buffalo Sabres to a 6-1 National Hockey Lca'gue victory Sunday over the Los Anacles Kmgs. The V1ctory gave the Sabres 76 points, one more than of Hartford. They are battling for the final Adams D1 v1sion playoff berth. Pro golfers on Beman: He cards inconsistent marks Al so sconng for Buffalo were Phil Russell, Dave Andreychuk, John tucker and Gates Orlando. The Sabres also got strona play from aoahe Jacques Cloutier. f'rom AP dlapatebH Deane Beman. comm1.,.,1oncr of the PC1A Tour the put 12 years. 1s a ce ntral figure in the controversies rockrna aol f ., big leaaue · He ha4i reached a cnt1cal potnt 1n h1'i tenure where he must demonstrate he ha\ the support of the player<;," Thompson 511d .. If you ask him, I'd thank he'd say 1he weakest pan of h1~ game 1s communacauon Wlth the players" -wrona wnh the Amencan lour Many of the players are afraid to uilk about 1hcm That\ not naht. to be afraid the tour he won four tournaments before succecd1na Joe Dey Jr. as comm1sS1oner. "He's an outstandina businessman. He's a very good man -an excellent man -for the Job," said John Mahaffcy1 a PGA champion. "We were playing for SS million and now we're playing for $28 million. We have a strona orpni1ation, an orpniut1on we can be proud of." Jim Foll tallied for the Kin~. who completed a five~aame road tnp with a 1-4 record. The Sabres Jumped out to a 4-1 lcad after the flrst period and coHtcd the rest of the way. Thouan most to ur playcn will note that purses have increased and the tour itself has become more f'inanc1all y secure under Beman. aome arc qucst1onina a~pe~ '" of h1<1 per- formance. "If you look at what. we're playing for now and what we were playrna for when he took over the usumption Is be'' done• &oodJOb -that'~ 1( you a"ume he's the onJy man who could have done It," said Leon1rd Thompson, a tour player. "Out of the player mcetmp ""e've had, there arc a lot of ptaym who have quesuons. I'm not say1n1 all the players. not even a m..,onty. but a lot of players wtth Question\. ~, That complaint was cited by at least one other _1>layer. "There's not enough commun1cat1on ~­ tween the tour office. the administration, and the players," Phil Hancock said. "I don't hke wmc oft he th1nis 1hat are ao1 na on. but I don't know enouah about at to '-ly As far as players concemcd. l>cane 1s a little aloof" Seve Ballesteros of Spam, who drew a controversial one-year 1us~ns1on for failure to appear an 1 mimmum of I 5 U.S. tournaments last season. toolc an even stronacr st.and. "There are a lot of th1nas-no. a few thanas "Oc.ne Beman thinks the playero; work for him. That's not nght. Deane Beman 'ihould be workina for the players." Balle.st«ros said.c And Mac O'Grndy has voiced several bitter criticisms of the commissioner. tri11ercd by Beman's decision to fine him SSUl,l. for alleacdly insultina a volunteer at a 1984 tournament and then taking the mone> out of O'Gr1dy's purse ll thc I 98S Bob Hope Classic Beman, •7. cnJO)'ed an outst1ndin1 career as an amateur aolfer, winn1n1 the US. Amateur in 1960 and 1963 and the Bn\Jsh Amateur 1n 1959. At aae 29, he abandoned a car~r u an insurance citccutivc 10 1urn pro In \I\ year\ on aid Don Pooley. winner of the 1985 Vardon Trophy. "Hes done an outstanding 1ob His duty is to improve the conditions we play under, the purses we play (or. He's done that We were totally dependent on television, but not now. If, 1n ncaotiations. the TV peckqe fills throuaJt, we can Uvc with it. can survive It, A few yean before, we couJd not. He ant1c1eated the problems and provided solu- tions.· t I With just under two minutes pl1yed l.n the p me1 Russell opened the econng on a SO.toot llapshot that deflected off a Kina defeodcr'1 stick past L.A. &oalie Roland MeltnJOn Fo• dellected a Bcmie Nicholls shot put Ooutier for lot An&etes• onJy &oel at the l S:l l mark or \he <>PCoina period. a<?uilcr, makina tlis fin& •J>Pcar. ance 1n Buffalo's last 11 pm m.14e several Cll~ptional saves in the first two periods and ended up with 24 for thepme. ' ' £Iden' 1'9111•faJ.u ecbedaJe Mon., March 14 -$an Antonio (home); T~ .. Man:b 2S-at Denver; Sat. Match 29- ll Seattle; Sun , March 30 -Golden State (home). TomJ.J, .o..aat'oram A lim1~ number or Choice tall art 1v11lablc !Or an &CC ~t1na exhibition reaturina the aormerOlympic1cedancln11oldmedal winnina team or Jar.ne Torvill and Chriatopher Dean to ~ held Fnday and Saturday nl&ht at the Fo~m ID lnalewood. Tues , Apnl I -Seanle (home), Thurs., Apnl 3 -Sacramento (home); Sun .. April 6 -at Hounon; S.1 .. April 12 -11 Sacramento, Su.n., April 13 -0.llaJ (home). ,. To~ youna ak.atina champions will join the aour-ume wo~ld champions for these pcr.- formaboes, which arc pan of their current world tour. Ticlceta ~ available at the Forum Boll Office and 11 all T1clceimuter locations. For information phone (213) 480.3232. A.aalaelm Boat 8bo• The Anaheim Boat Show, fcatunna a wa~ variety of boats, boatil\I VIC*llOI\ infOrtnAtJOil and accessories, wilJ be at the Anaheim Convention Center, 800 W. K.atella, April 9-13. Sbowbounatt 3-IOp,m. Wednesday through Friday, 11 a.m to 10 p.m. Saturday and 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. SundaY.. Admission wdl be $4.SO for adults. S2 for cluJdreo 6-1 S and free for children u.n~r six For information phone 999-8900. Dodier duet. oa Ale Ti&eu fo~ all Dod&crs' reaular sea.son pmes. elloeJ>t opcruna day, arc now on sale 11 the Dodier Stadium "ficket Offioe. I 7SO Stadium Way. and all Tackctmaster and Tickctron locataons. Ticket office hours are 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m Monday throuah Saturday. · Ticket prices are $6 ror box seats SS for reserved eeau and SJ for Jene,.i admisslon scats ($2 for children u.nd.Cr 12) sold oo the day of the pme unless previously announced. LoD6 Beacb Graad Prl% tkket. Ticfeu for the Lona Beach GBnd Prix (April 11·1 l) are now on sale at the Grand Prix box offioe, 130 N. Pine, Long Beach, and at au Ticketmaster outlets. For further information phone (213) 436-99S3. EDISON PICKS WHITE ••• From Bl following an operation on his knee. He quarterbacked Edison to a 7-2 record as a senior, completmg 81 of 158 passes (51.2 pen:ent) for 1,522 yards, a year best remembered for a 28-24 loss to Fountain Valley. ln that I 973 thriUer be completed I 5 of 30 for 274 yards.. He led Orange Coast to the national championship in 1975 with an 11-0 record earning AJl-South Coast Con- ference honors. In the Avocado Bowl that year apjnst Rio Hondo, White completed 20 of 26 passes for 237 yards in sparking a 38-14 win .. After three years at Oregon State (he red-shirted a year because of a sceond knee operation) White came borne to Edison, where he spent a year with the freshmen, then was elevated to the vanity as a running backs and defensive backs coach for two years. For the past four ,Yea.rs he bas been the defensive coordmator, spending a lot of bis time in the booth, rather than on the field. And be admits he bas missed the.field action. "My biJ&cst plus is a real good relationsh1p with the kids," said White. White also said the Chargers' voluntary drug-testing pr~ will continue and "Jet better" wtth Randy WiUiams very mvolved. "Our kids know it's there because we care," said White. The defending Sunset League champion and CIF 5·A co-cham- pions, Edison figures to be strong again with all-league runnfo& back Carter, a 210-pounder, returning for his junior season. Six other starters arc 10cluded in a list of 35 lettermen who return. "We open in Maui," said White. "That's not a bad first game as a head coach." White and bis wife, Sue, have a two-month old son, Mathew. Da•e White Pitchers in position of power Players have little to do when one hurls a no-hitter No offense, but ifl wcrcn 'ta pitcher, l wouldn't play softball in the Sunset or Sea View League. Sure, there's the golden glove mystique of the infield, the stunning over-the-shoulder catches of the out· fielders, and the makc-.a-stand or give-u~the-land bravadoofthe catcher, but who needs it? Ifl really wanted to run, I'd ~o out for track. rf1 wanted to be behmd the plate I'd be tatinf dinncr. If I wanted toputonaglove 'ddoitm thcring. With the caliber of pitchers Orange Coast area teams have, there isn't much chance for any recognition, nor any practical experience at any other position. And you have to be more than good SHARON FRUTOS GIRLS SPORTS ~·~ J to pitch in these parts ... you ha vc to have a faster fastball than a speeding bullet, have a drop more powerful than a locomotive. and a rise able to confuse tall opponents in a single arc. So why bother. While Patti Russell (Woodbridge) and Jackie Oakley (Ocean View) are busy hurling no-bitters, there's not much action outside the line offire. Whatdothosepoorgirlsdo in the outfield? They' re instructed to stay alert. How many blades of J!&SS can · you count before all the umfonns look green? Sea Kings swim to relays crown LONG BEACH -Corona dcl Mar High's boys swimming team, behind some record-breaking perfonnances, captured the Cl F Relays cham· pionship Saturday night at Belmont Plaza pool here. The Sea Kings won the cham- pionship over S2 other schools, includina Mission Viejo and defend- ing champion Long Beach Wilson. also broke the 4x 100 freestyle relay mark with a time of 3: 13.0. The old record (3: 14. 9) was set by Foothill in 1977. Really, though, being on a team with a ll'Cat pitching stafl'is the easiest way for a non-pitcher to catch a league crown. It's not all bad being behind the mound -ah scenes. And while we're on the subject ... Much ado was made about the abscnccofOa.kley in Ocean View's Cy))ress Tournament games. ·A.umors flew of her unhappiness with the team and oftbe possibility of the All-CJ Fer not return mg this season. It was all a curve. Jaclc.ie Oakley was suffering from an injury to a fin~eroo her pitching hand, the same ailment that almost kept hcroutoflast scason'sCIF playoff games. While the Scahawks dropped tbc1t first few outings, and with tt their 34- game winning streak, Oakley is p1tchingand almost back to form. In the Canyon Tournament's first round Saturday. she patched a three-hit shutout an I 0 mnangs while strikmg out 17. Russell, one offourquahty Wood- bndgc pitchers. struck out the same numberofbattcrs in her 14-0. no-hit gem last week over Newport. But theno-hittcrsand shutouts haven't seemed 10 have a diverse effect on programs in the area. Every school stall fields a team, and even the losing ones have been reporting their scores. Instead ofbci ng discouraged by the lack ofhits they arc getting, players seem 10 be thriving on competition, and maybe even counting the blades of grass in the outfield. Maybe it wouldn't be that terrible playing the field, as long as softball remains a spring sport. BOATING Orenge Cout OAJLY PILOT/Monday, Match 24. 1Ne * • otrJ.·~...a1..,,e TM. Southern C.liforrua Women·• MU Buketbe.11 Club'• Run. •nd Gun Jlfls' bukctball l~~ for stAth, te~cnth and (11.btb iraden wUI bqin Satwday, April 5 a.nd run throuati Saturday, Mal 10. Tbe leque • l().pme tcbedule will bt played Saturdays at Oahr or Anesi& htab schools. PlaYCr rqmrat1on fee ia $20 and includes a Pl.If or basketbell shoea, a uniform, inaiuanoe and a clanac T cam coaches wtll .bt pared S I SO For information phone (213) 43~376. Ram•• celebrity toama.ment Ram plaYCrs Jobnrue John.son, Leroy Irvin, Jeff Kemp and Ball Bain Wlll be amona the p&rtlC1J)&Jlts in the Rams Boostu Cub's third annual Celebrity Golf and Tennis C1a.s,11c., Monday, Apnl 14 at the Yorba Linda country au~ ~ Ent'): fees att $ISO (Aolf) and SlOO (tenrus) and will 1oclude lunch, refreshments and a dinner banquet featu.rina an awards pinen. &auon. The aolf will be a shotaun stan at noon and the Lennis will be a round robm doubles tour· nament. All proceeds will benefit the Amencao Cancer Society and the Orange CountyTra.uma Society. For infonnation phone the Rams Booster Club at 974-5030. or write P.O. Boll S908,-0range, 92667. : Ju.lor ft11t1cM•• .,.,_ea.., The annual Ju.n•~ ~ !pont C.p. with pn>ftMlOft.11 1nstnaa.ICl9 ia .,na audl u buk.etblllJ, ttnnit, 1w1•ft\UW aod uKk and field, will bqio Tuada~ and ruo tbroulh San.1rday II S.Od.Jcback COJlqe. poru ~lebritiet 1nclud1D1 Pit Hacke, Lyao wann and Jetr ~1).. u weJJ u o\hcr mcmbcn Of the Ram.I and Ra.Iden Will JOllNC1 and ~ with the campers. Buttt wiJI psct up the campers ellCb day to return them home an.etCKh day' a events. wll.icb nm from 10 Lm.. 101:30 p.rn Joluul~ li&tlda IMlllon ~ The Jofinny Mathis Seruon C'lulic. featunQI 26 of the 30 ~ mooty winners oo the PGA tcruonaolft0ur. will bqins today with prKticc roundJ and run lhrouab Sunday's fift.11 round at the Mounwn Oaie Country Ou.b in Lot Anjtln. Pro£ess1onaJ oompctiuon will ~ Fridlly ttirouah Sunda_y and the pro-am wUJ be Thursday and Friday, with celebrities luch u MAtbts, Glen c.ampbtU, Jamie Farr, Ktn Howard and olhcra.. Dlrecuons: Take the 405 frttftY to the Mulholland Onve eiut, be.ad t0utb on Sepulveda and follow the s1sns to the public P9tkil\I. a h.alf mile south of Mouownpte Dnve. Tickets are pnocd at $2 Monday thto\l&b Wednesday, $8 Thursday and Friday and llO Saturday and Sunday (youths under 18 ..-.:.half price) are available at Ticketron ou.tlets., or by phoninJthc tou.mamcnt office at(21l)390-36S6 or(213) 390-7803. Easter break in the action Tiwnd9Y S"'1mmf'W ........ ,. Some tourneys slated, including 3 -team OCC event HIGH SCHOOL -lrvlM 'ti S.11aMa al 8rooknurt1 Pal1t (~). S om HIGH SCHOOL -Me9-Del al AlamenV. 1. Tournament action 1s on tap this week for Orange Coast College and a handful of area high schools baseball teams. Otherwise, the area schedule is light with most schools' athletic teams taking a rest from competition. OCC hosts a three-team tourney Tuesday and Wednesday. In the opener of the double elimination event Tuesday OCC faces South· western at I I :30 a.m. with the winner taking on Kings River at 2. The tournament continues Wednesday at I 1:30 Wlth the two losers of Tuesday's games matched and the wtnncr of that game taking on the winner ofTucsday's second game. Meanwhile, Golden West will play its annual two-game sencs with LA Harbor Tuesday and Wednesday. Tuesday's game will be at Harbor wttb the Rustlers hosting Wednes- day's contest. Both start at noon. Jn high school action, Estancia and Costa Mesa arc involved in the Bolsa G rande Tournament while Irvine and SaddJeback play in the Santa Ana Elks classic. Estancia mets Capistrano Valley this morning and played again this afternoon at Bolsa Grande HiJh. Mesa took on Pacifica this morning and also had a second game. Irvine contfoued play m the Santa Ana Elks tourney, as the Vaqueros met Saddlcback. Irvine outlasted Orange, 8-5, in a first round game Saturday while Saddleback was turn- ing back Foothill, I ·0 BuelMJJ TMaV COLLEGE -Soulllern Cellfornle C~ et UC Sen 0'-, I HIGH SCHOOL -Ocean ll'lew et F"omone Tournament, 8olui Grende Tourn&n*ll Colle MeM .. Peclflce. (10-30), E"•ncl• VI C.PO Vellev et eotw Grande I~ rouno eame1 follow 11 I.JO), WoodbrlOlle v1 Fulle<ton e l Glover StM!lum 17 o m I In Anaheim Lion\ Tournament, lrvlne et Seodt«leck lnoonl In San•• Ana Ellu Tournament TUftdlv COLLEGE -Lovola·Mervmoont e t UC 1rv1,,., 2.30, Soutllern Celllornla C~ et Le Vtf'M, 2:30 COMMUNITY COLLEGE -Goio.n We" et LA Herbor. noon. O.•noe Coe II Tournament (OCC YI SoutllWetlern, II JO. OCC·Soulh· western winner vi Klno•a Rlvw, 2 I HIGH SCHOOL -Servi!• al Mater Dal.· Pornone Tourname111 (Oceen ll'lew), Bolui Grende Tournam.nt (Cos•• Mn•, E1tencla l, Anaheim Tournament IWoodbrldoel. Sant• Ana Ellu Tourname111 !Irvine, S.dcl..o.Cill Wedinet49Y COLLEGE -Wtll Coe\t Chrl1tlan et Sovtllerll Cel COl'"8 (doulllenffelerl, noon COMMUNITY t:OLLEGE -LA HerbOr ., GokMll WHI. noon. O.•-Coe\I Cotleoe Tourna"'*"I (LOUll''s brecllet ~me 11.lO, cl\llmolon\lllo oeme, 2 I HIGH SCHOOL -8olH GrencM Tournament !Coste MeH, E\lancle), Pomol\e Tournament IOcH n View), Maler Del •• Plut )( ) lS ,,,. .. COLLEGE -UC Santa &arbwe et UC Irvine, 2:30 HIGH SCHOOL -Unl11eoll'( VI We1tmln1ltf' (00ut>let'9•0tf'), T8A Lo.r• TOUU\ameflt con· IOletlon oame -Marl"-al OcMn View s. .... COLLEGE -UC S.nle &.rt>are et UC lr11lne. 1 HIGH SCHOOL -Torrence al ~oort Ha rbor (dol.I~>. 11 • m , EdllOfl et ll'elencla (OOU0141hffeler), 11 e.m Sunclev COLLEGE -UC Senta 8arbare al UC INIM, 1. Volleyball 1'1Wndav HIGH SCHOOL -Ealancle al Sen Marc~. T8A, Leouna hecll al Sent• Monica, • 4S ,,,.v HIGH SCHOOL -&1ancla et Sen Marw1. TeA Trac.t aad '1eld w ..... v HIGH SCHOOL -Matti' Del et 81\tlOO Monl~.l. ,,,.v COLLEGE -UC INlne el Stanforo Fetll'fel. Satwd9V COLLEGE -UC lrvlna et Stenforo Fnllval HIGH SCHOOL -E"anda et PaMOet'll Gatnft ( Oc:cl09ftta1 CO!leve) Enter Now An~ 81 E11911111 to Win $ 200°° Tea ala n.ut"Mllav COLLEGE UC lrvlN •• 8-....Grev Claulc ,,,..., COLLEGE ye lrVIM •• 81ue-Grev c1au1c S.twdav COLLEGE UC lrtlne ., 8~ • ., Cla.ulc S4'ftdly COLLEGE -UC lrv'lnt al 81Ue·Gniv Claulc SoltbaU MeMllY HIGH SCHOOL -Edbon at CNner 09k TCKKnament, WOOCIDrldee Tournament T._.v HIGH SCHOO\.. -E~ at Charter 0.-. Tournement; Woodllldee Tournemem W1•1•y HIGH SCHOOL -Edhoft a1 OW.. 0.... Tourna"*"t s.tw•Y COLLEGE -UC 1n11M al UC Sell Oleoo, l.lO • "' of Home DH1r1tll9 Supplies Ir•• CATEGORIES Best use of water in house or garden-do you hove ceramic mermaids in your spa? Or· do you hove a ko1 pond 1n your garden or fountains 1n your foyer? Enter your display today. Best children's play area-Hos your child's sandbox gone chic? Mom & Dad, this category is for you to show us how creative you hove become to amuse your child. Best use of art in decorating-Art tokes many forms , but we'll be the 1udge of that. Enter your best use of art 1n decorating today. Best overall kitchen-ls your kitchen country? Or is 1t on "80 's" gourmet type. This category rs wad e open or ' space saving" if t~ot' s your type. Of the seven events contested, CdM won five, including meet re- cord-shattering perfonnances in the 6xSO freestyle and the 4xl00 free. In the 6xSO free, the team of Jeff Harvey, John Rohrer, Bob Seely. Jason Likins. Enc Vmjc and Enc Ford clocked 2: 1 I .S 1 to wipe out the old record of 2: 13.42 set nine years aao by Foothill High. A Corona dcl Mar school record was established in the 4x50 medley relay. The Sea King foursome of Seely (backstroke), Scott Marumoto (breaststroke), Jeff Thomason (but· tcrfly) and Vmje (freestyle) clocked 1:41.01. wipina out the one ~r-old record of 1 :42.4. CdM also captured the 4llSO breaststroke and the 4x50 backstroke relays. ln the breaststroke n:lay, the quartet of Larry Zubnn, Bay Bentley. Jim Wagner and Marumoto was timed in 1:57.3. In the backstroke relay, CdM had a clocking of I :44.43. The foursome included Seely, Rand Tucker, Likins and Ford. OCC captures race CONTEST RULES '"'' CC.,.•tl I ~·O'-'.:t •ece .. •eC!C>'>M> ~00.. °"'°' O':C-.cw:!"' ol 0 "'-COl'CIO llOO'-_,. -Cl'.......,_, wQ("' No <~CO_ .. 1~ --C~• .... -'f lot-Pi"d ...,..,o~·•••,.,._., The.,...,...,.b4t oc.__,,.ed~ 00ot .. •"111-ol :lw_, Ti.. ~.,p.. e..cclfoe ~l'f 01 .... Doti) ,Cit IWO"'ij' ,. lleocll ......._,..,. D'CI ~ b. .,.,...., 1 ....... -·be llOf._,., l>'t w~ ~·, ., .. or......._,~,.,. cio... The six swimmers in the event averaged 21. 9. Ford had the best split (21.4), followed by Likins (2 t.S). Coach Mtke Starkweather's team CdM also finished fourth in the 4x50 buttcrlly relay. MARINA DEL REY -Tbe Or· ange Coast College saihna team, led by skippers Nicki Scandone and Enc s m,cr. won the fifth race of the Paetfic Coast Intercollegiate Yacht Rac101 Assoc1at1on, Southern Scnc'i, sailed Saturday an Ayin$ Jrs. UC 1rvmc, with skappcf'!i Gal') Gramcux and Jon Pinckney, placed third. In the sixth rtacc sailed Sunday. l IC' Irvine was the winner and O('C was second. Summary of result'\ Sharrar, ex-OV coach, accepts USC assignment Race five-I. ()('(. Nickl n· done-Enc 1nacr: 2. UCLA. Paul Bla,nk·John Carpenter, 3. UCI. Gary an USJStant coach1n1 spot with Capo Grarncuit•Jon Pinckney, 4 USC 1n 1980-81.ln 1982,SharTarbccamea John hidden-Ban Hackworth. S varsity assistant at Ocean View and San Oteso State. Joann Norman· Ken Sharrar, fonnerly an assist.ant football coach at (°)ttan View H1.Jh. will leave h., head ooachma ~tt1on at St Anthony H1&h hoot in Lona Beach to accept a araduatc as utant coachin& ~1hon with . Sbarr&r s re pon1tbiht1s Wllh the TroJ&ns will include '"t.a input, film analys1S and offensive scouuna. He will be attcnd1n& school at USC on a schola"h1p harnr prepped al Dana Hills and Cap11trano Valley Hllh. and acctpted rrmaancd lhcrt until 1983. Debby Wilhu, • hlllTl.f wlll remain It 1 Anthony ....--------------- throU&)\ the school year. and will ~ involved tn the screen1n.a for his replacement. Me &ska anyone interested in appty. U\I for the post. which includes a teac.bina usi_anmcnt. to phon.. t. Anthony Prinapal 1s1cr . Manon K.lkuk.awa at (213) 43s..44Q6 RUFFELL'S lJ»HOl.STERY INC . Raoc $1x-I. UCI. 2 OC . 3 llt' between USC and UCl A: S n Otego State. Standmg aftcrsiuace~ I U C'. 11 potnts: 2. UCLA. IS. 3 (tac), OC ('and UCI . I 6: 5. n Oteao State, 18 Auspice wins '\u~p1cc. 'loppcrcd b)' r1eet White ot the hO\t club defeated IS nvol~ ~unda) to v.m Nt'wpon Harbor Yacht Club's Etchclls-22 lnvt\alaonal rqatta sailed an the a«an off New- pon Beach. ond wa Fant Try co-sk1ppt'rcd b) JoufJcnsen and ~·knnmatr. NHYC and third wa Bushwad.t'r. K.Jrn McC'~. 8.llboa \ acht nub TRI TECH MARINE DYNO TUNES Your Johnson. E"vmrude, or Yamaha Cruse N' Carr1 call 714-646-6918 'kl< ...... ~t.oc~lftdllf'°""' c ....... _. .. ,°"' .. l]OW lo¥~ .... COllo M ...., .,,,. ~ ~ oo o .. r .... --. ""'4 3 t•a. I'll-• ... .,. ,_., .... '°' ... """ C>l'O'"O'~ ...... '""" ~·· -·-'O be o.d-,,...,, Act' 11 , ... ~ ~ ""'• .,. ~~i~......_.Ole "O'~ ('"'I'""-" tt.,_..Oldo_....0_. .. ..,,. ,, ""' o.,.., ,..,. -"'ll'O" a..x11 INtoo-•~ <•<..,..,,. Olto ~ '"°''~""'°" e.oc-~ , ___ ........ "V'..,.,.., ... ' ""'°"*• ............. --loo °"""'""'-,,. .... I •"'(I ,,..x " ,.,.,-<>" (c•rt .. .,.,.... ~ -"'(lot""" .-<o<-oor'I'.......,. °""' ewo -~ r- Q'"9">"• ~. Nt ""''°""~; °"" ~--,...,, .... .,. LIVING SPACIS INTRY FOIM INTIANT'S NAMlt ADDllSS: + DAY 'HO NI NUMlll1 IVININO 'HONI NUMlll1 CATIOOIY1 SIND INTallS TO LIVING SPAa CONTEST c/o DAl.Y Pl..OT / HUNTINGTON 11.ACH ~ 330 W. IAY ST. COSTA MISA, CA 92626 ' NIA WHTillU• eo .. , ••• NC. ,.allc DMllell w ~ G.a v ~'" s. 11 lllOf llelld ,. '1 ~x 2t 41 S..ttle 27 ... • ~ 16 .. Goldtn S1e1e n 47 IWdwetJ OMsMft ~ Hou•tort 44 n •10 •·o.<lvlf '3 29 St7 111 Oeltu le 31 S43 Sil> IJl•h 36 36 soo 111 San AnlonlO » 41 43t 13 S.c.arneftto )I 41 431 1J•1 eAST•lllN C.oN,.lt•NC• AMl!lk DMtleft v·Botton 11 Pl'tl~le Naw Janay Wuhlnoron New York 51 1) O 1S 3S 37 33 • 22 so camrw OM11e11 •·Mltwal.lllM 49 n 1t Atlente 4' 2t ,(·0.trOlt 41 31 Ci.Ye141nd 1• 45 lhdlene 1S •7 c11doo 1• 4' •·cllnc~ plevofl oerth I I• 653 11 "' 13 '6S ,, . .., * ,. '90 '" S6t 366 317 l33 $'1 ..... n ,.,,, 2S ') y·cllnc~ dlvl\lon 111141 11\d 11141110" bafth lunclllY"l k-S..11141 107 San AntOlllo 104 GOkMn Slate 113, o.tlvet 111 f>o<tle!\d 111, Secre manro 101 T ....... t', Gamet San Antonio el L.alcan Pt'1led9fl>l'tl1 et wunlno1on Oallu 11 lndlene Houlton ai Bolton SHllle II Ulen Tu.tdlY'l Gamet Lllttf'I al Otnver Atlanta 11 Cl1v1lana Ntw York et Cnlceoo New JerteV 11 Mllwau~M OttroH e1 Go!Mn Steie Porueno e1 Seu emen10 HCAA TOURNAMENT EHt lt"6onal (II 1111 Ru1'Mlf'fwd, N . .1,) Sunde Y" 1 , INI Duke 71 Navv SO Midwest Re911-I < 11 KMIMI • Cltv, ,..._) S4'ftdlV'l "lnll 11.ansu TS North C1roiln1 St 67 The Final Four (at Ol&ll) SllUrdeY'l s.mM!Nls Ouk• 136·11 vs 1<1ns11 13~·31 LSIJ 126· Ill v, LOUtlvllle 130 I~ CllemclleMlllp Meftdlv, Mlrdl Jt Semll1na1 winner\ NIT ltt New v...-1 TONIGHT'S SEMIFINALS w vomlno 173· I 11 vs FIOrloa 119· 111 Loul•l•n• T ecn t 19· 131 vs Ol'loo S• o 11· 1•1 CHAMPIONSHIP Wedrla\dlv Semlflr\01 wlnnert NHL CAMPBELL COHf'E'-EN<;E SmvtM DM\len •·Ecmon10" 1 CaO•"'" W L T l"h GF GA S2 IS & 110 3'1 "112 J6 29 9 e1 3n m N nn1PfWQ 2• •S 6 S4 271 350 l(lnet 22 ·~ 1 S 1 264 )6S va,,co~,,er 19 .0 13 SI 149 1'6 a·Cfl •CIOO a SI LOU•s •·MlnnHOte r Torort•o Ot troot Norm OMll8n l6 29 • JS JI 8 34 )I 9 13 ... 6 16 SI 6 SO 31S ,. m n 303 Sl ?'#4 38 147 WALES CONFERENCE P1..-iu Dlvhlel\ :m 776 211 l SI )81 I Pl'l1il~lpn1e ~ 22 4 100 Jll 119 ' WHl'l11101on 17 71 s 99 11• 74S N 'f ll!anOtrl 36 76 II &l 296 7S9 P1t1souron 33 lJ 8 14 19• ?73 NV llanoen l3 3S S 11 250 250 New Jersev 2• '6 3 SI 276 339 Adlms DlvlMoll Qvet>ec '° 29 s es 307 271 "Aontrul 17 3 I 6 90 J II 262 BOllOn 34 19 10 79 119 267 BuHalo JS 33 6 71> 117 273 Harlloro )6 3S 3 75 30S 28S ' chnche<I olavoff bertl'I 1 r11ncneo Olvhlon title SundaY'l S<orfl BJ"e•P 6 Kitlvi 1 .Nul\1no1011 6 Pn11•oe10'11• ~ Boston S ~erttoro S Ca oa•• 7 W•nn•04!9 • '" C•O'> S New Vor~ lhnoe<l 3 Tonl9tlrl ~"'" (' ti><'' e• ¥orrf'\()l8 w'«t,.(,OUJ" .. " a' A11t'!f!10f'9 Tue'61Y's G•~l 8Ct\10" ' "'"''" "0'-,'" N,.._.. 't'CI"'" ~b'"Of'' at Nt'w Jersev ~ omQMC' •' Dt " ··' S' I •' N~.. (Q• ~ 11,.anOtrs • "'.a 9 ... ••• .. S.br~s '· Klncn 1 scon bv Ptriach First P9f'lecl I 0 (>-t • 0 1--. a,,..,,o ~~\\~ • Tunf'r I Si 1 B,l'a·c. lonl)rtvc•u• )~ Smoln P~rre.ull/ I JO OP j L?\ An\11'1~\ rll• 9 ~•ChOlltJ t\11 • 8.;f•a n r.,c-~r 79 l'ollono Annrrvrn,. I~ 00 S Butta10 l-0•10110 37 :. ,. p,., "~\Iii I IS Sl DO Penel· "·-Du"' B..,f •oo• 1no 1 SI Pat1erso11. L.A rovon,ng 6 33 ~"\~II Bv• 1rr1001nol. o 09 L•1lvll'<l I A "' no1no1 11 4S. Pa""'"" l A 1~111 . ~· oamei 18 00. 8..,H~!o Of'ncP't ,., ''" ov c. ')l1ynr '"''"Y ~ JM"~ 10 00 s.< ond Ptr 1o<I ~,._,,~ "1fH"& f t' ... a 0¥ 4 P OOW "CJ I J Q ~,,... '" Bw' ,,. iJ' '' r• ,.,Q j •9 t-10\Jl •v Su• nV')11o 'Q r 0? f" t•O" l A NJIO no II O• Tlltrd P«IOCI 6 8,11~10 I •0" l4 Andrl"I' l• ~OuS •• ll 44 l>L B .. +11 o Or a"OO 17 \11 •nu 1• :» '" Pe.,a•••n T •••or L lo ~ 11" \1 r> "G I) l'°f"V"~' B ,1 ~Ill'\• '' c• ~o I l ~"',. Bui or oo "Ii 710 lwt s L & "b 11•'0 '' \II L.01'1'0 /4 M \(0"'<'.S•-4C 1 JttMf ""1),('CA"dv(.f , •\"•"Q 1 H O•• ,.,,. B"'' 11o•d "o '' 10 S"O'\ " on~ os Anoe t \ 6·7 11-2S 8 ""•'<-11· !0 M Powtr·o·ev °""°"'"''·el Los Ar>g~ H 0 '•' • Bulla o l of • Goa H · .o, •noe•u .Ye•a rson lt. sl\01 \·)0 S111e1 8utltl0. Ctou•1er 11~,2•1 &tlendence 16,'33 °"° ... fl.rltM OAVIY'S LOCKI• (Nlwoort hldl) IJ2 enOlfW't •• fOOll\l'I, ... <•llto OA•\ I? t111d beu. 2)S rnt<kettl NIWf'OttT LANDING ~l enoler\. ~ lllld o.u 40 w:ulol11 131 marlltr~ 1 hi II but ...... (et __ , HF/4VYWEIGHTS -TY'!'tll 9'091 08! Jeff $1Ms, uMnlmous ~. 10 rouncs, 19i.P I• now t 0, SllM la 7.l·4~ lJ JUNIOtt HEAYYW IGHT$ -OHie OcaJlo def SllllO MaldoftNO UNnlmoln ff(lslon, 10 rVVflOt (Oca-'o, !Pie WtA c:l'leMPiofl, II now 22· •· 1, MeldOf\lldO II I>·•) f ~ . . "' .. •XHlernotf eAMIALL cue..·• .. Melb • Cet hlrn~ C?llceoo 10 I 030 I 00--. U 0 Anoel• 100 001 101.--.. f I kllderson, Keouon 161. $1'111111 !ti 1nd L•k•. Cllrllll'NU (7), Merlln m. P:or.cti, Bryden (6), Corbtll (t ) •rid Boone. Miiier (6) W-S1ndtrt0n (1·0) L-Fortch 10-11 . S.-L Smllh (2) HR1-Chlce110 Moreielld (I), Anoet• -0.ClncH (7) ltecb 1, ~ s (I f Y.,. ... di, l"le. Clnclnnetl 000 00. CXI0-7 11 l o~, 1:io ooo 001-s • 4 lloblnlOft, Wel•ll C6l. Smith (I ), Fr1nco (91 •nd Vi n Gorder, Bui.,.• (2), HerllllMr. P-(6), Howefl (I ) end Sclo•cla, Trevino Ill W-Wtflll 11·0) L-Howelt C0-21 S.v~r•nco (I) l!JCNbttton baMMI AMERICAN LIAGUIE W L Detroit 12 4 Mltw•ultM 10 • New Yorlt 10 • Texas • 6 Toronto 9 6 Cleveieno t 7 MJn"flOI• 9 1 Cnlcaoo 9 I Oeklelld e I P"d. 7SO 71, 625 S71 57\. S6l S6l S29 soo A119'tl 1 I "' 400 B•lllmou 6 9 K1nS1l City S I Jes l3J 333 Boston S 10 S.allle • S 10 NATIONAL LEAGUE Al .. nl• 10 San FrancllCO t Cincinnati t PtllledtlPnla 8 SI.Louis I New Vork 1 San Dleoo a Oodllen 6 Chlcaoo 7 Pllht>urgll S Montre.I 4 Houston 3 NOTE· Sp11t-1qued 111~• \lllndlnQs ties oo not SuncltlY"l k- ClllCIOO Cubs 11, A""8H ' Clnclnn1t1 7, DedeW1 S St Louis S, Montr111 l Al .. 1118 1 HOUlton 1 s 667 s 6'3 6 600 6 S71 6 S71 6 S3I 10 ..... 9 .00 11 ,.., • 3'S • 308 12 200 count In PnllaOtlPhl1 • 81nlmore 6 Cnlcaoo w1111e Soa 6 PfttlOUrOll • Bolton 3 KenSll Cllv I MtnnelOtt 6, New Vort. Mell S Ntw York Yank"' J, Tun 0 Detroit 1, Tor onto 2 Clevtlanc! 13, 0.klanO S Mllweukee 9, Sa" Dleoo I Sin Frencisco I, S..llil O TedlY'l O.mn Sin l=rancllCo vs All9tts el Pelm Sorlnos o.deWs •• Ntw Yori< Mets ., SI Petenbur11 Fie Houlton " Boslon el Winier Hevtn Fl• Cfnc111nall vs Montrul e t W111 Palm 8ucn. Fie SI Louis vs Pnl11oeton11 al Clearwellf F .. Toronto vs K1nsa, Cltv 11 Fort Mvtrs, Ft1 Ba111more vs Cntcaoo Wnllt SOa Pfll\buron vs O.trOll er Laktland, Fie Cltvtteno "'' Sin Oleoo er Yuma, Arl1 TlleMSIV'• ~ S.11 Fr•ncl1co v' Aft99h at Pelm Sorlnol Oed9en vs Phlla0811>111• I I CIH n ... 1tr Fill Boslon vs Pilllbufllll •I Braoenton F141 St Loul\ "' 0.lrolt 11 L1keland Fie Clnc1nna11 "' Tt11u er Pom1>1no. Fie MIMH OI• "' Toron10 81 Ountdln. Fla At11n1a vs Monlrtel et Wilt Pllm 8Hcn Un1ver1•1V of Arl10111 "' C1tve11no •' Tucson Mtlwaulr.M "' 0.klano al "'-" 11 cn1e.100 Cvos vs Seattle 11 Temoe Cle..,tllno Vl Sin Ooeoo el Yuma AM Kenw' Cuv "' N-Yon Yanktti a1 Fort Llu<lefdlle Choc•oo Willie Sox "' Houlton at K1u 1mmee "'• B111omorir vs New Yori.. Miil at SI Pete<\buro Fl• COMMUNITY COLLEGE Sou1tl CoHt COl'Mt •ICA W L GB Or1no1 Co.i• 7 O RenChO Slnt11100 6 2 I '> Ctrrllo1 S 3 1 .., Cvoreu S 3 2 "> Fullerton • • 3' , Sadoi.bacit 3 4 • Golden West 3 S • '> Ml San Anlon10 7 6 5•.., Comolon O t 1 .., SllUrdlY'l ~ Orenge Coast '· Ctrrllol 3 Cvor~u 7, Ml Sen Anto,,10 4 ~ancl'IO S.n111100 10 Slddlebac~ Fullerton 11 Comolon 0 HIGH SCHOOL STANDINGS s~ LN eue w 2 , L T Gii 0 I 1 0 I I I I I 1 I 1 0 I , 2 0 I ' ? 0 I l Tuesdlv. Acwl I EOlton "' Founre1n va11ev at M•le SQuare Park 17 om t Wedllesdly, A.IWI 1 WeS1m1nster al Marone 13 lS om 1 Ocean View "' Huntlno1on Be1cl'I et ""''te ~u•re Perk 17 o m 1 SH ~W LNVU- W LT Gil Coro~• C•I Mer ~ I 0 Cosla Melli I I O Esta ncia I I O L1gun• Btacll I I 0 Newoorl Hart>Qr I I 0 SoddleblCk I 0 0 Un1versi1v I I 0 WoodbrldOt I I 0 WtdnHdlV, Aprt 1 (3:15 p.m ) e,1anc1e al CorOlll dll Mar Leoune Beecl'I a t Costa Mu• Unlvtrlltv et Newl>Ol1 HarDOr Noooorlooe at S.doi.t>ack Sou1tt Cout LNVU-w LT Gil lfv ~-1 0 0 Dana H ~ I O O E Toro I 1 0 M•Sl•O'I V et0 I I 0 Cao Slflno Vellf'v I I O Levu11a Hills 0 1 0 s..-c~•e o 1 o WldMMSly, Aprt 2 (l p.m.) ""',... al Sen Cl9mente C1oh1,.no Vetlev el Dena Hitt\ E Toro at Leouna Hllll HIGH SCHOOL VOLLiY8ALL SuftMt LMtue l.MWI W L EOllO~ ) 0 FO<Jnt•ln V&lltv 2 I ,.....rine 7 I L• Quint• 1 I Octen lllew 1 1 Hun11noron 8fft" I l w.,,,,.,,.,,., 0 4 w~,. "-""', Fount1in V•liev •' loitoft Meflne 11 We11m111"tr LI Qulnl1 •I HunllflOIOt\ IMCfl See V\ew L"we L.._,. w~ NeWOO"I H1rbor j 0 Wooeftlf ldilt ) I C°'one Otl Mer l 2 '''•ricll , f UOuN 841eeft , 1 Cotti~ 0 4 1Jnl~1ttv O ' ,........ •• ..,.. i ~ WOCl'!tlt!OM el !ll'llKl8 .....,_, H¥bor ., '°''' ~ LA°""8 &Mdl at Ullh•11Ull\I ~ .. WL s ' 4 I • J ) I 4 , I 1 0 , OWrll WL • 0 • 7 s ) J ' l , , s 0 4 UP&OO.Uk ,., ..... ~, Jff Cel•ln PHii, S90,000 274 Pet McGowan, '54,000 271 Tom SIKkmenn, '24,000 Oreoorv L•Clthlf, $24,000 Nick Feldo, $74,000 Oov9 Ttwtlt, $24,000 211 Oon Pooln. 11,,S50 Dick Ml•t. 11'.SSO BIO '''"''°"· '14,S.SO Oen Barr. 114,SSO Tom Watton, S14,S.SO 212 Cner1e1 8olll119, S9 ,SOO Sieve Elklno1on, 19,SOO LI MY Wtdkln1, st.soo Tonv siu,, 1t.soo Andv MHM. 19,SOO Ronnie Black. st.SOC> m Mlkt SYl!lv•n 17,SOO J1v HNI. S6 21S Keftnv Knox. U,27S BIN Glluon. u.11s MIU Hulbert. '6.27S .. n.s Fred Couolel, M,600 Bob LO/Ir, M 600 01vl• Lovt Ill, U ,600 Mlkt R1ld, 14,600 Lon Hl11klt, 13,SSO Georoe Arcner. 13,SSO Oen Forsmen, SJ,550 OaYld Gr ellem, '3,SSO Grt0 Norrnen, 13,SSO 297 Chris Ptrrv, S2,9S9 01n Halloorson, 12,9S9 Roel Curl, S1.9S9 ,.. Oavt RumtM41s, S2,l61 SltYt Pete, Sl..361 Nick Price, S2,36 I Ktn Brown, $2,361 Btn Crtflsnew, S1 ,361 Mike McCuttou11h. $2,361 David Peoote1, S2 ,361 lilt Mlkt Nlcoletlt, 11,950 Tim Norris, SI.ISO Gii Mo<-oen, Sl,ISO J'90 C•rv McCord Sl,464 llot>erl Wrenn. s 1,464 WOO¢V BlackDurn, s l,'64 lllO Aoltl, 11,464 Af\dy Oln1rO '1..464 1'1 8111111McC1llil lr,s1,24S Ron Strack 11.145 m Ger" HellDe<o s 1,200 1'J Mark Hevet 11,IS1 Joelle Mu<l<I, II, IS2 Rlcll F9tlr, Sl.152 Tonv Cerde, S 1 IS1 Tom Sllaw, s I, 152 ,,~ Oennll Trl1tl9r, s 1.115 Larry Nelson. Sl.1 IS 29S Clareoce Rose, 11,095 Morris Hat1llkv. Sl,09S 196 o A Wtlbrlno, sl,OIO 61•'1·'6·61 69 ... 9-61·61 73 -70-6'-'' H •61·'4·10 e-n -61·69 11 ·69-69·6' 71-71 70-69 72·64· 11 ·" 73·65·1'·69 n -n-61·'9 11·7'·6'·70 n -10-10o10 14·61·61-n 71·11·69·71 12·69'-71·70 74·71-70-'7 75·70-7H7 71·69·10-73 n -10-6'·1' 70-61-73·73 73·73·te·10 7S·7o-71·61 7•-69-69·73 13·'9-n-11 11·73·61·73 70-71·71·73 10-n-n -11 73·6'·71·74 73·68-73-n n -10-n-11 7'·n·73·61 70-7'·69· ,, 1s-6t-n-11 16·69-10-n 11-n-15-10 11-74·1'1·11 15·10-11·n 1'·n ·73·6t 71·75·70·7? 73·73·74·61 76·70-6f·74 1s-66-11-n n -n -11-73 14-n 7•·69 73·1 l-73-73 u -10-n·" 73·71·71·74 7'· 11·7S· 70 n-1'-n -n 71·73-73·7• 11-1 S-10-JS n -73·73·7• 70· 74· 13·16 12·69·74·71 n-67·76-73 7•·71·73·7S 73·1'1·73·7S 76·70-1S·73 71·75·73·7~ 75·71·75·74 71-74·1!·78 73·73·73·17 TUCMlf'I Ooen fat Tuc'41!1, Art2.l 276 PtMll Pul r '30,000 llO BtlS• Kl110 S 11,SOO 291 Jlf•l•n Brllt s 10,134 M Blackwelellr. s 10,933 Pit Br1dltv s 10,133 lS? V1c1tl F troon. s7 .000 Zll Amv Alcon SS 900 .. J1n SttonenW<\, M./00 Ju<lv 01<11.lnW", U,700 Rosi• Jone1. SA.700 215 Cnrl• JotlnM>n, 13,320 Aile• Rllrmen, 13,320 Joelv llowntl\11, 13.310 Berb 8unkowskv.13,310 Barb Tnom.s, 13,310 .. Allu-o Hlk•oe. '1,500 S.ndra Si:>uzlcn, '2,500 OeC>Olt Mauev 12,500 Bonnlt Lauer. 11,500 A Mlrle P1111. s?.500 217 P11tl Rluo, S2, 104 Ctnov Mickey, n , 103 Pa! Mtvtr\, 12, 103 -Bthv Barrell, sl,760 Lori Gtrbaci, 11,760 Oewn Coe, S 1,760 ShelllY Hemltn, Sl,760 Mlu leMcGtorv..11.760 Nencv Ladbeller, Sl,760 Allee Miiier Sl,760 ,., S.nora Hevnlt, s 1,'70 AvekoOl<amo10. Sl,,70 S11t rr1 Turner S 1.•70 190 J t<lmbl"·S1mon, 11,:no s.nore P•tmer Sl.310 Julle CO'e. Sl.320 1'1 Donni Ce POn1, s l 110 Sue Ertl Sl,110 t<ern,.n Youno. 11.110 tce1nv Be•er. II UO M J Smlll\ I I 120 m Stec>nenlt F erwlo, S910 Nancv lluofn. S910 Ott>oren Sklnne< 1'10 Dff<lff Luker. sm 291 HHlner Or-. S6S5 P~nnv H1rnmel, U SS O•Dolt Han, USS Conni• cn11i.m1. uss Kelnv Hite, USS Jo Ann Prentice, USS Donna Wnlre, USS 0 Mel"erlln, USS Lill Youno, USS I( Poltltwatt, USS C J C•"lton, 1450 K1tl'lv Wllllwor1n, MSO S G1llY11tn, «SO HHtl'ler Ferr 1370 Denise Stret>lo. '370 C1tnv JonnllOtl, '370 m l<ro\11 ,t.rrtnoton. tJ08 Mlr!Pll Nau ... sJOI Merv Owvtr l307 Kt''" Mun<11noer, Sl07 12·11·6• ... 73·71·70·66 70·69·71·70 70-69·69· 73 65-61-n -76 1S·7•·61·6S n-69-69-n 11 • 74· 70-69 69· 11 • 71-13 10-73·65·76 70-74·73·68 10-n -n 10 13· 10· 71-71 69·73·n -11 70-11·71-73 7 I· 76· 70-69 1'-11-n-•' 6t ·1S·71-71 71·71·73·11 70-70·1CH6 14·11·10-11 11·73·11·11 71 73·69·7• 1•-73-73 68 1'·13·70-11 73· 11·73· 71 75·70-7172 73·71·71·73 78·61-68·7• 1'·10-10-1' 1s-n-n-10 69·1'·7S·71 68·72·7•·1S 71-75-74·70 75·71·7?·71 7?·1'·13·71 7•-73-13·71 71-75·73·1'1 7'-n -n -13 13·70·7S·7l 73·11-n ·7S 76'-11·1'·11 1•·13·13·7'1 n -1•-n-1• 10·75-n ·15 1S·n ·1'·12 13· 16·, 1-73 72·7S·13·73 74·70·76·73 74·75·70·74 71>·7'·71·14 16· 73·69·7S 70-79·70-7S 75·72·71-7S 74·71·73·7S 16·13·73·1'1 7'·11·1S·13 n ·n-n·n n-10-16-n 73·7S-n ·7S 73·73·73·76 7•·7'·7S·1J 13·76·1'1·7S 73·16-n · 1s 1s-n-n -16 L.aur.n HOwt, »70 C MOnttof'l'*'V. U10 1.a urt PeterllOl'I, SVO ... fnerne~.sns Leur• te\llltl, ms Sue FOOlefl\ef'I, ms Ellllne CrolC>v, 0 3$ 1" O.OOlt Au•tln, 5113 Sulle Btf'OOV, t112 su11n Tonkin, 1705 -)01 7'·75·7l·7S n·n 12·1' n 14·1•·1' 76·1'1 ... Hl '9·11-eo-n 7S· 73· 7S· 7S n 1•·1N' 1314·11·H 1s-n-1'·1I 7'·7S·7S·76 Pem Alltn 7•·7S·7'·76 M.trcl eourth 13· 13· 1'· 76 s.ler'I twma"""" (el IMlllf1 Wtl•I 27t O•le Oouol1u SA0,500 •7· 70-6'·66 216 G•rv Pl111er 11•.300 11·69·61·61 17• cn1 cnl ROC1rloue1111.s.2 69·71·70-61 Jim Ferr" S1e.s.1 70-6'·'9· 71 LH El<ler 113,SOO m -Bib C•ll*' it,1e1 Arnolcl P1lmet 19,717 212 Dan Slkt1 Sl,77S Bob Chll"IM SI, 100 ... Howle JO/lnson 11, 121 HerOld Htnnlno $7, 11 I 1flS Brue. Cr at'l\OIOll 16,?n 2'1 Mike $oucne• u.en -Orvlllt Mcodv 14,173 8ob GoelbV M,173 Cnerlle Owen& SA,173 G1v Brewer SA.en 8111 Smlln u.en n -n-16·61 219 Peut Hernev '3,1IO Chrl•lv O'Connor tJ,TIO Miller Barber U ,7IO 290 Georoe Lennlno '3,37S 291 G-1.ittler $Ut5 a 111 J.Olln•lon su es Tommv 8011 12,MS Hervle Wero 12,tlS OOn Jenuerv '2,915 s..... ...... 69·70·70-10 7).66·61·73 61·71·61·73 69·6t-73·71 71·73·71·67 '9-61·71·76 12· 74·,, ·67 n -11-69'-61 1•·70-61·14 71·7'·61·7S n-n-n-11 1>-n-n -10 7S·14·70-ff 77·67·71·74 7'-n -10-11 73·7S-69·71 61·73·74·7S 74·n ·71·74 11·61·70-7S 1'·11·6'-n n -7'·74-ff 11-Js-6'-n SUMOAY'S lllHULTS '""' .. ., ... y ~ ,.,......, 'Ml.ST lllACI . IV. Mlle\ Pvremld Zotti (Vln1t1e) t..IO uo ;uo NI VfOlnlt (C.llanon) 3.60 3.00 Travel (C1m1>11) 10.60 Tlmt• , • .,,, AllO Ren. Dlldelm, Vorleuler, Orle<ltel Wev. Bftt L..W, T11>Vllr, C'-n. Perin, Hardtohehdla, EK/I Sa1tcne<1 8omt>ev B1rtan01r. Rooue Sttr, Vlclory LN, Le Vernt'• Bio Mtc 12 IXACTA I 10·3) 1>1lcl UU O SICOMD lllACIE. IV. Mflel Turf Mlr1ndli (OelehOU•SIVt) 3.10 1.60 140 l<Mo Dallno (M811) 6 00 uo Miu hlllflV HINt (MCC1rronl 4 00 Time; I :49.4 Al10 Re n· Chehlne, Double Btoomer, Plum1>1lr1, Glorious Am1ton, Bold W1v, Olnemlle, B•I 8rl111'1. Scr1t<Md: Rtlonlno ~v. F041'."l VIC· lorv, l<erlbe Lake, v.,.onlcl's Qvt\t TH•D ltAC•. 6 Furlono• Sal>ltmtlef Shower• t Vinti) 7.40 Oonttlkrls tOllvarts) Klttv'• EvervwMr• (Bllct..) Time 1:11. )80 3 00 • 20 '·'° 300 Also lten: Ale>lralt, Sl>lrklv'' Drum Tute Ml1, 010 Svmoot, River 9f S11r1 Scratcnec:t· GrMntboro. 12 DAILY OOU9LIE lt·71 paid '13.60 f'outlTH ltACIE. I 1116 MllM OouClll Sheno (Hewlev) 440 UO 2 IO Gooo Commeno CMenl 6IO •.40 Rlooe Review IMcCe rron) J 20 Time 1·44.J Alto R1n. Smooth ~t«, 01mon•s G.me, Norll,.m Bldolr, FUii Of Siers. Sir Tnon, Servino, II Vou'rt ReedV, Ce1>t1ln 08INllCUl, lntulllv-., Scr1tehld· Clear CholCI, C11r•1 Cl'llrm, Vernon C:.•til f'll'TH llACI . About 6'" lurtono• on l\lrl .t.mtrlcan Leolon (Pncv) 710 4.40 '.00 Emoerador Al Norte (Merq1) 10.00 7.20 Frtncn'' Luck (Ketnl4) 20 20 Time. 1 IS I Al10 Ren Or•I Aor..,,...,,t, O<lvu.ul. Rl•lno Churn, llu Lekt, Donner Panv. AOHnt Cnlmtl, ll'l Never Dull. Mr Cr.romacopv, Maurtlock Scr•lcritd Ru•n1d, Pen11nce. Arnenotherbrotner. Oedlclte IS IXACTA 18·4) Palo "'4.SO SIXTH lltACI. I Milt. K011111lan (ShoernelC'erl Tuono !Crowder) Murello !McCerron) Time 1.36 ' 400 320 2IO 13 40 6.00 3.40 Alto Ran Wlt1n, Ever Brllll1n1, Fire Age ln, Loll 0 Wlll'lel. Bold Conc0<0t, E1r1n To Garv S.Cretched G-1111111on, Mr Director SIVENTH lllACI!. I 1116 Mlle\ Ullll'Nll PltHurt (Vlnttll 37 IO IS,00 S 00 81rllnd (Plncev) 7 oo 3.IO AKenslon (McCerron) 1.60 Tlmt I f2 4 Abo Ren Vellenl Georoe, Feouro.A Pre1tndtr, Vloor'1 Prlnct , MHll """rvel. E11chnl111 CePlldt Screldled None SS EXACT A 12· ll pakl M7S SO No Whle>-Medl• Marvel .. GHTH ltAC•. I 1116 Mlle• Hlclden Llohl (Sheme"erl ) 40 Tw1Uon1 ltldOt (MCCerronl 4'n Em1Ken (Vetenzuelel Time. I •1.1 110 110 110 7 10 , 10 Alto R1n: F1mllv Stvil, Lei'' Jov Trim Cotonv Scr•lcl'ted· None IS I XACTA 14·1) paid Sil.SO Mlnul Show Pool U,.JI0.16 BrN dan· Cue> Awerds To Hidden LIOhl, Twllloht Rtoo. & An Emortu FOii •hd Nomln11or Awerd1· sS,000 A·Coul>ll<I· Fernllv Stvil & Twlllohl Rldoe MINTH lllACIE. I 1116 Mlle1 BICIOUln (HlfnlndH) 23.60 11.60 6.60 Fortlon Leolon (Mezal IU O 7.40 Knight Skllno (o.lahOUUIV•) 3.60 Time. 1.43.3 AllO Ren Tom, R1r.1>e, Morwrtv Bov, lltltf'Vt, Envious Dene«, D1r1 You, Too Much For T v , Allllr llrll1ln. New Circle ScretehtO Mummv'1 PIM1ur1. SS I XACTA 111·6) 1>1ld Sl,193.50 S2 ...CK SIX (2·1-1-2+ 12) oeld 111,796 IO to 17 wlMlno 1~1t1 <6 ._.,.,, Comoietlon Pick Sht paid S:Mf.40 10 1t tlckltt cs norsel. 11 P'tC.c "'"' (10-t·7·2·1·•+•·nl oeld s I, 122 '° to 17 wlnnlno tldlett II llOOft) Carn'Olllf°' "'' 1 • SS Alltl\dlnct ...... Mllln'• ........... (et ,..,, M't9nt "8. .._.,IMI lv•n Lindi (CttdlOstoYeklel def Jlrnmv Connort cu.s l, 6-2, 6-0. (Lendt win' lS0,000, COMOfl wlN $25,000) ~ ..... L•Mh\rldr" Gorn.1 (EQueCIOr) def Pellf Ooohen CAuttr1ll1)·P1ul McN•mH tAul traUel, 7•S, 6•4, (Ltndl·Gome1 •Piii SJ0,000) Min'• 99Ume"*" <•• llf'vu.b. .....,,,,, SMiies f'lnal Mal• Wiie~ (Swedtf't) Oii. BroOll'lck Dvlt.t (Au•trtlle), 6·1, 6·) (Wllancler wlnl IS0.000, Ovke wlm S2S,000l Wernen'I Teurne"""" (et ..._ Yeti!) SMiies "'""' Mertine ~vr.tllove (IJ.S l def Hane Menollkova (CzldlMIOvaklal, 6·2, 6·0, 3·6, 6•1 (N111retllove wins SUS,000, Mlndllko111 wlM $60,000, Slefll Cral won '30,000 H tnfrd Cll4lce winner wn.n Chris Evert Ltovo wltnor-EvMl·Lk>vd w.-aw•rded Sll,0001 c....,. tennis UC ntV1NIE CL.ASSK UC 1rV1N 6, IJ ... ArlreMll J Slnlte\ Men Son Hlno llJCll def Nlll\S\Oft, 6·•. 6·1, Mllm9rtn (UA) def Yeti\, 6·3, 6·'· l(e!>lln (UCll def. Penlon, 6·1. 4·6. 6· I; Olf°r (IJCI) def. KnutH, 6·2, 6·4, MoblUl (UAI def. Berhem, 7·6, 6 4, Ven Loo (IJAI def. Htrnenoez, 6·3, ""'· ~ Men Son Hlno·Y1tes llJCll def Knutu· P.,.s$Oll, 7·6, 6·4, B•rh1m·l<11>llln (UCI) ~-Moblu•·McClulkev, 6·2. 6·0. D•r Hernandez IUCll def. Menuon·V•n Loo. 6·•· 7·S. OTHER SCC>aES Ouk• s, Mlrvlend 3 Arl1on1 Stele S, Chloman I H1rv1rd 6, W1ctllta St. l Ut1/I 7, Fr .. no Slllt 1 ArbON 9, lndlen1 1 New MoklO S, llllnoh 1 Hou1ron 7. Northwllt1n1 1 ~ I I . .. s.ler'I ........ HUNTINGTON a a ACH LIEAGIJE • DMUtft Senti Ane 7, Fount1ln Vetttv 81ron' o Whitter 9, Wettmlnller S Coste Mtu 7, Lo• Alemlro1 O Hunllnoton 8Heh 7. Fountefn Vellev Amloo' o C DMJMll trvtne 21, Hunllnolon h•Ch 1 C0tta Mil• 16. An1ntlm IS Seal B1ectt S, FulltrtOll S El Monlt 17, Mlulon Vlelo 1 a..ttne Dene hint YC i-HR, Ilic. PHRF ,t.-1 Mlkt O'Aolsleno Sun J1mmer. 01111 Point YC. 2 R1ndV H1nMft Rlskv BuslMU. OPVC PHRF 8-1 R1ndv Noon111. Hlon Ho9e$, OPVC, 2 LAiia McCabe, Ram· paoe, OPYC. 3 Ron Rea111n Crtv Foit. OPYC:. Crul•lno C.lau-1 JoM MurOflv, Rad· llhe, OPYC, 2 Bruce Lotrl, A11tlclo4ltlon, OPVC; l l(erl LllMY, Sole> Ille, OPVC Winos 1111111 10 rnooeratt. WMtrend tr.Madlem 9AH9ALL AIMf'ICMI LAewe OEIROIT TtGERS.-OOtloMCI Matt NOllH, catcher, 10 Nestwltlt of the Amer!· can Au od•llon. Au loned Brian Oenm1n 11\d PaUI Volot, l>ite'-s, ourrlQllt to N11h· vine. <>Plionecl Rlcktv Barlow, pitcher. ro Gtem Fall• of the Eestern LN9ut. MINNESOTA TWINS-S.nt Oeve Meltr, oultleldtf', •nd Pal Olml>llV. CAICh· ar, lo TOleOO of the lnttrnetlonel L11oue Slnl Andre 0.vlcl 11\d Ailit Mlrle, oul· lleldlrs, •nd Frenl< Eufemia, Chlrllt MJtChelt, Lil Strektr. AMen Anoerson, 1no Eric Brotrlme, l>ltcllers. to rllelr minor· ltllOIM ca.me> for rNuJonment TEXASRANCERS-s.<11 OonWtldMl l>ilchtr, JOll Mota and JMrv Browne, lnfltlden, 8oCI Brow.,.. oum.lder. •hd Mike Stantev. catctwr. to their mlnor·lffoue camo for rNulonmer11 TOftONTO BLIJE JA Vs-Pieced Gerv Llve!M, pltdllf, on the 11 ·dav dlllbleO till Optioned Mike S/ler1>1flon, HCon<I bu~n. to Svrecull of the ln1ernetlona1 Lteout. RthJl'MCI Miii Slark, carcr..r. 10 tl'ltlr mlnor·ll•llUt camo for rHulonment NatleNI LAeWt OOOGERS.-s.nt a 1tvlno G1IYH, Oen· nl1 Powtlt, Scott Mlv end Hector H1rldl1, ollchtr•. Jeff H•mlllon, lnfltlclet-, •hd Joli Gon111t1, Ralott Brvent, Ed Ametuno end Stu PedtrlOft, outfltlci.n. to A~que of the Peelflc COISI LHOut •rid Fe!llt Tele<le , ollchtr, to Sen Antonio of the Ttnl Ltaout - PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES-Pte ce<I Tom Foi.v. ShOl'l•IOI>, ,,,. 21-dtv dlllbleO llsl. Sent R•mon Carebllto •hd JoM c-. 1>11~•. Ri v Romen 11\d Joe Cle>0ttonl, catc11er1, Rlckv Jordlir1 end Randy Dav, lnfltlcltrs, •rid Kevin Ward, oulfletdtf', to their minor ·INout c1m1> tor r .. u lonmenl. PITTSBURGH PIRATES.-Senl Sten Fenller end Orlencle Llrld, e>ttd,.n. BeMv Ol$1efeno, &obbv Mltetk el\d Rick Renterlt, lnflelders, •nd Berrv &ondt, oum.tdtr, 10 their mlftor•IHOUt (Ami)'°' f MUlonmtnt SAN FltANCISCO GIA.NTs-ft .... lld One Oweft, Infielder. Sent Mtkt Wooderd, MCOnd be-n. to Phoenix of the Pac:Hlc COlll LNOIJt. COLLaGI IOAH<>-Hemed Tim FIOvd bllkllblM COICtl WICHITA STATE-Narneo Eddlt Fooltr DHk•tbln coectl -Ji•li,j!ii!letl¢S.ii•1(4r1•$1i~l•r---------------- aAJK9TI ALL (try .. c..-MeM MIN'S ~IAGUIS lluMYmtn ltOOlllel Wanlbel \mall ,,,. '°"" Stemmers llud~ Cervlf' Hlllfl Heck Inc It NM WMO Fr mo E lacf rl( The loo ·~ 9 OMt*I C DMUell Ctlv ~letlan .. "Hool MeeMnl Cosfl'IO' kooter l"ifl Soud hv• lontOu•ltrS Wtlklft ill llaot1st Tic E·TK Vtn 0. W.-~ In Yo MlfNll Otv ..... .,.., .. dl ADULT LIAGUIS ,,. ........... , MMet.,.-ac ~ JW Mll~ f,.. TMl'I ....... 8elll 9 I ' . 6 4 ' 6 3 7 , . ' I ' 4 • 4 s s l , 1 ' • • 6 s ' . 0 10 10 1 ' 1 s s j j I t I t 10 0 . , s $ WMO 4 • lt.8 .F No 2 1 I lt.9 F No I 0 10 TlltMllV"t 9 OM'*' Couoer N-·PK Touthl ltou end Co Don Clerk In' Tlllrd $irlno Tume11l1n W•' O.vll• ·~-Third Slrlno 54, Wer Oevlb (7 f I 7 3 s s ' ' ) 7 2 • Ntw·PK 61, TO\lcill Ross SJ Couo1r 1, Doll CL.en. In• O lforltltl w......-.... ~ VIII• Nova lllltffflch tr•v• tulln• Cu llclv ' llOOI• Jot!n Heflrv Stlernrock Uoflllnl: -----Ville "°1oe 71, tftllirlOI '4 ' 1 1 l j s s s > 1 I t CeuldY's Fooit 7', lreve lunov S6 Joflll HtnrY 70. SNrnrodl " ....... .,..cc ~ Ultle Otw«i coic Cnovi.t '''ender\ $YC• W"tCIHf $clOnl TlttwMllY'• .. ~ llr~Tr009W' o.on °'1'ettv PKlflc Mufuel Tiit ,.,....,, ·-Tht 'U IMt1 Ple'(WI tO 0 1 ) 7 ) l 1 2 I I ' 10 0 7 J ' ' 4 • > , , . YOUTH I AIK., .. ALL Qty .......... leedt ~ C:....... 0..1ulaiL ...... GttADtll J.4 Owl ........ Anderlffl. '1, U P11tne I• ..,,.... Andel'Mlll 36. F ounte ln V11lev 33 ,......, Andtl'Mn 42, Sent• Ane l7 Tournemtnt MVP Oenltl MeCMllllen (A) (NOTE· Ander-Mn wll'IJ Orenoe COUlllV CNmolonltllP ..,, the '-th •lreloflt ., •• , end lld't•nces to the SOuthetn C.lllornle CllemlllOll•lllD In Costa ~) TMtll ~ 0.t'llel MK.Miiiian, O•rlfl Turlltf', Scott e.tTll•. J.tl Roll no.roar. Jwemy MAN, Adrien a.rrv. SI..,. Hemltton, FrencJico ~ ef\d TOdd Ollvtf Martina claims tourney Na vratilova gets by Ma ndlikova in quick four sets NEW YORK (AP) -When the women decided to ma.kc the Virginia Slims Championships title match a be~t-of.five sets affair. they neglected tu tell Manina Navratilova. "h was a quick three secs," Navraulova said af\er crushing Hana Mandhkova 6-2. 6-0. 3-6. 6-1 Sunday to capture her third stnug.ht season· ending crown at Madison Square Garden. "Emot1onally. 1l wasdjffereot," she said. "But we weren't our there that long. There were no long-rallies." The match lasted fou.r sets, the first ume women have played more than three sets since 1901. But this was the third year a best-of-five sets format was used, and Navratilova won the first two years in three straight sets. "This was really a showcase for wo men's tennis, and a showcase for me," she said. "I wanted 10 win here. "The crowd was great. T hey want- ed ii to go to five. but they were happy it went to four." The last women's match to go more than three was was in Philadelphia 1n July 190 I when Elizabeth Moore defeated Myrtle McAtecr in five sets. The victory was worth S 125,000 and brought NavrauJova's earnings the past week, including 1985 year- cnd bonuses. lo $386,250. Man- dhkova collected $60,000 Sunday and, combined with winmn.g the doubles lttle Saturday, earned S 117,500 fo r the week. West Germany's Steffi Graf toolt third place. worth $30,000. when Chris Evert Lloyd withdrew from Sunday's scheduled match between the semifinal losers. The official explanation for Lloyd's withdrawal was "faugue:· and she was awarded fourth place. However, instead of the $23.000 awarded to fourth place, she was given $18.000 -the difference between fourth and a quanerfinal loser-with the other $5,000 going to Pam Shnvcr, who played an exhi- b1t1on against Graf before the title match. Playing some of the finest tennis of her career. Navratilova was com- pletely dominating in the first two sets as Mandhkova was able to hold her own serve only once. Douglass t r iumphs b y4 shots INDIAN WELLS. Calif. (AP) - Dale Douglass fire.d a final-round, 6- under-par 66 Sunday and pulled away to a four-shot victory in the $300,000 Vtntage lnv1tat1onal seniorgolftour- nament. Douglass. who had the lead outright or a share of 11 from the outset. finished at 272, 16-under-par, and earned $40.500 for the victory, his first on the senior tour. He lost in a playoffin lhe Senior Roundup at Sun C11y West, Ariz . 1n has first tour- nament on the senior tour. Douglass carded three consecutive b1rd1cs on the etghth. ninth and 10th holes to open a two-shot lead. He had been lied for the lead wtth Gary Player after seven holes. · Douglass then added birdies on the 13th, 14th and 16th holes to pull away to Lhe victory. Player, Wlth final-round 68 Sunday over the par-72, 6,907-yard Moun- tain Course, finished second at 276 and earned $24,300. He has yet 10 finish further back than fifth in four senior event'i. Chi Chi Rodriguez and Jim Ferree finished tied for third al 278. Rodriguez carded a final-round 68 while Ferree had a 71 Sunday. Each earned SI 8.562 for the week. Lee Elder shot his third con- sccuti ve 2·under-par 70 Sunday 10 finish at 279. earning S 13.500 for finishing fif\h . Billy Casper and Arnold Palmer each faded from contcnuon with one- over-par 73s Sunday and finished at 280. eight shots back. Garllts sets dragJDark OA INESVlLLE, An. (AP) -.. Big Daddy" Don Garlits shattered drag racing's newest pcrfonnance ba.rri~ Sunday in winning the Motorcraf\ Gatornationals drag races before a record crowd of 40,000 at Gainesville Raceway. Garlits, 54-ycar-old pan1arch of draJ racrng's unhmited Top Fuel d1vis1on, drove his new strcamhner throuah the quarter mile course in S.~ seconds at 272.56 mph '° a semifinal conquest of Dan Pastonm of Richmond. Texas. In the final, the ~i.gnmg Winston World Champion beat defend1na Gatorn.at1onals cbmp1on D1ck LAHa.1e of Lansini. Mich. Garlits covered the course in 268.6S mpband 5.503 seconds apin11 lali&Jc·s 259.36 mph and S.S631eCOnds The victory earned Garlits $27 • .SOO 1n cash and awards. He also became the third drivtt in NHRA history to win 30 tour events. · The fastest seced ~ 1n drq raona pnor to Garf its' ctron Sunday wu lM.'46 mph by Joe Amato of Old Forae. Pa a mont.fl aao In the NHRA teaJOn opentt in Pomont. ) ' --~ ... .. , • <. ...... ,c..M O..al 1112 11Tm1Wr1Wi Very choice "Bayalde eove·· End Unit rwntwne at watera •dg• "Bayfront" w/f\111 vt.w. An -.gent & dl9tlnctJY9 Adult home &653,400. aJ.~N'VT~EI ·-m.&.*'* .,.~·-·~~llT Sherp 3 bdrm, 2 beth. 2 l10fY condo 1 btodl from S. C. Plaza. Pool, ape + carport. Onty 183,900. Other 2 bdrme • $88,999. 3 bdrma $79,999. 2511 w ~. Cel Sue Seewwd 831 • 12M R&'M*A .. . .. FIB mt RM.Ulm Of YOUR properttee. NO obllgatlon by TOP PRODUtER. Call PATRICK TENORE S31-12te R&'M*~ .. . . . 7~Q-Q100 .,--~ ). • j & ., . . . -·~ ille' ,..., . • ..,, ~ .·'llit-. ' . t •Y. ~ I t{'* --• .J,L.... coLDweu. BAN~eR ~ ' Sen y .. ,,., .. ,,. Cal ......... 642-5671 for Information & surprisingly low cost. ------ 0nnQe C0Mt DAILY PtlOT/MoncMy, ~ 24, 1tee • .. ( • * 0nnge C0Mt DAJL Y PILOT I Monday. March 24, 1888 !!ii';;i ... a.t.I/.._ Mii ttlaaJul/Tr.... W. 1111 ...... 1131 Aa~ti tlll lar!f! laltl • ....,. ... , la~, Aitt1 laf!rtM tlM w ••m• ....,tton111t sns xn !ngiith = rn ....... Htl CWAa NH JAGUAR ·13 x.ie ~ .... ... 11•··· SAL.ES A&SEM81.!AS wit mirror uoo I t. ..... IHI ,., Rona. 786 Lu Pl YMOUTH St zd73·~':2b0dywtl. Sl700, Pw1..ame fOr "9111/ ~ ... '"m rt-pp •m ll&m.L•*PIJ PACKERS 975-20M 'U S1195. Many ExtrH W NICE 1 ow• v """"' O.veio,e.en• P~erty • only. MeoGregor Yacht•. SH/AEC. CL.EAKS Furn: Frultwoocf dlnJno M0-(1()11 Ap alJOfl.71!#iml MAZDA RX1 ·eo 5 epd, =""' * Hn • w,. lllPTillllT 1131 Ptac«ttle, CM. S 111,000 YUi Needed lmmedlate(y tc>< &mell room Nt & ~. 2 tofM ~ 5-41--8797 11Jntt, •le. attreo. 10 ml, ,...:0 f"aght ~~· CottaMeNAr.. OECKIHO ~!Of/ betting N.-Produo1 and lltl ·Ptldwtekly ....... and mlec. l48-1230 1980 HOOO. OL.500, lt\aft red $50()0/obo 854·1 ..... WOfd prOOllMlng ex~ A P<*tton la lmmedletely Wa.terprt Mutt be famlllar Mlti(etlng Conoeptl TAC TEMPOAAAV SVCS IUW LUf TllU ~. mectanaJtv per-MEACEOES·BENZ3oo80 perteia ortl'd Could .,....,.. '°' • recap-/Eluto-Otck, Trowel 1 Res>Mt Ofd«tl Reeldueltl •5000amput I 12• NB 1325. "'~215' Ttu1prt1tlla *!~.,...,.1 1~215 .. t dMI llU I .. UY 1 • ..i. bl. tthr, tnrl, 27K ml, leedtoFuti..•tme'.w1tut,,,. ttoNatlnour~o.. BroadcutSya.142-7222 NoCompetltlonl (714)U2·M2• -at_,., ...,.. ~IYIU -14..oh-M0-2t98 adv•noement. 8•1ary '*1mtnt. Exe.lent Inter. INDUSTRIAL ENGINEER 5 No Tr9lltll lfUI handfnad9 g\lllta . -..883--- oommeMuraM wtttl --per'tONI etc.lie and typing yra exp In tranttormer. ~· Trelntr;xl ATTENDANT For Unooal from l'nldwMt. p,.. 1900'• .. ....al 1111 ...,.... 1n1 peNia.Forfurthetlnfo, tklllt0f"5W1)mrequ(red. Induct~ •• po..,-IUP.: Cell 02-731-071 ~FTS~t~. I= ::..:::·~=··= 10 bft.' rtL!fglut sEX-•••1 "ftLt"2h caill 84Q..1no =~•I ~~I~ pllM Purchatln9. Bl· SalM 1..-dy w/eJU)trience. 1418 SE Brletol at S150 to S450. AL.SO SOOUTEfl"Sallorpe>w«. Engine: 1031 CCM -p M Ill&.... Include anawetlng ~ tpk/wrlt• ~ ~,otflt,torGlflStoreln RedhlH, CM ~78 Mthogeny OuncMt Phyfe 1185/0bO, 548-1449 p:a':; ~mally Tvotno. bt*"o, phonet, =:'h.r ~elre: ~P-=~·~ axro SalM ~~:·w«k In EARN =~=~,~~ '""' h t tM1~!4c~TE CHICK IVEaSON ,IT~ Co11a Men dut•. l!.xoellent Nlery & Ma,g-Tran lno 2925 Veil Fiow.r Shop. p'"8e can 5 matctllng dial,. '550 21' 81!.XRlv, butt Mill L Price upon requut a.s-M40 beneflta avallable tor Commetce, CA 900.o Atlcla or Diena betWMn MONEY for all or told MS*'•tely Low Hours, Extrat 813-921-2838 Ask for PORSCHf AUDI ClfEVROU!l tlt9h•tt (211.11111 Salo & S.,vlu llm&L lfflll quallfled cendtdat... " PllTI tp PlllH t0..2pm. 833-1888. 759-t877 11e.ooo OBO 968-t•09 IAlll 01 f.iarlanne. An lrvlne Co. Meda 011'1 lntereet.r.---can:(71•I 5 deya a wMk. Incl. Sat. SALES Reptile Whotetale hlturlq tM A..... 1 till DONATE boat l marine MMLI 1~a-tH_.,l,_.•-~-,-.. -r-T7.l u Frldav Part-time. Call for 2•1•217 · Wiii train. Apply at: Firm looldnn for ...,eon IAl.Y PlltT ~ -ulrvnant. Unique to I 'I p t••o ... ..... mra ... , ......... _. ... JOOE Tu' DI =tats. runt an llPPt. 250-0632 STATE FlRI erineyaever vv toMllreptlle/amphlblana • ......,. .-r .. ~ 09portunlty (Corporate • .. ,_ .... , gd, t>Yt ndl wk. llllUL .,-1 Plec.nt11 Av, Coeta MeN and reta1ed hatd goodl. ir you ate IOOklng '°'extra LES 957-8133 too). For con1u1tat1on $299.98 ~/obo. 873-o632 CHICK IVERSON --.-llSlllAICE I lllf• llP&lllll call 71•·635--&331. tPen<Slng money, or lltce 780-712• Mr. Stewat1 L~,r.:.".'C'.9.'1.~. SW..,. .... ......., C-o1 •""'" -· SALES-RETAIL ~.~..:.~ ~~ "/'), ~.~~ "m'ci loob 1 J4 P., Mo tTp ,., U S I C040t1 ttw11 N•'"'po" ~h ~ lrvlne ofo. 552-5M8 Coe1a Mela, CA 92&28 Min 5 yra e~lence E~ Mon-Thur 5-9pm, Ferm Of win Prtz• and 648-5137 an 1 tam 27' SOtiNG. 8 HHt, 80 L .... P~lt PeXOPERATOR Equ&l()ppty.Employer 142-7222 M Sun 12·5pm, $450/nr Awards CallUlnowl We AecondRetr"' .• wuMre trallet, cover. 2 rlcl. gd CapCoet 2,280 Call Mr. Tom 844.-8880. have ~al oc>enlno-In ... d •5000 646--3008 Cap Red. $8,ll02 613-0900 SECRETARIES lflYIOI ~-IOIAlt Nettle Cre9k. Fash la. C.M., H.B or F.V. Ofyera 175 to $225. 1830 con · • • Re91dual S18, 1$8 ALrcf~~~KS 20 nraJ~~:::.R~p exp, N.ed gd drv g r~d & YIOIT UUIPlllH 642--4333 Superior, CM 631-3197 12' IL... Total Payment• Of SIMPLY THE BEST SaJ81 -S«Vloe -Leulng R .... tt to v•lktCA. llc lnl1tN & _._ WAJhor lt ~ $'4ot-N Flnnlth m•d• TARGA 119,078.llO Wa need you now to wor1c eaume or,.. er : vice electronic garage Must ba exper'd, am-8 t S Sl 5 D/ h · • 1 h 11• OAC CEL In top So. County Com· 920 Glenneyre Suite z. door opener. Benetta. bltloua-rellabla. Comm . ' oa love , WI r 1977. F berglats o ' Stk# 139-402 EUROPEAN DELIVERY 1p--O-R..,..S"""CH'""'E:-=:;;'73 911 Terga, 1S.0 JAMBOREE RO. olk/blk, xii cond, $9,000, NEWPORT BEACH 6•8.0382. panlel. We offer OOOd Laguna Beach 92851. Wiii train right peraon. only. Boat knowledge 1100. 6'4&-58't8 . ulHalllng w•nches. pay end beneftta and the SECRET ARV FIT 1590·B7 Superior Av, CM helpful. Rela 850-.4448 Whirlpool wshr/elet dryr center cockpit· teek II 1 IOE Adjacent to Fashion Island ----~=~ Open 7 Deya t Week PORSCHE '78 912E, SK ml opportunity to ftnd a r• Accurete typing for W.P.. Operator S250. Elec typewriter cockpit bench•. aft $199.98 w. ardlog career. ·It dlctaphone akllls, . TlllllE Cl1L-/IHl1ar1al1 $125· Vlklr8 MW m~ cabin, VolVo dleMI. no TRC TEMPO .... RY SVCS A "' • • p elec1ronic.. llmlted aea ""' · apelllng and good Niii PlllH 5920 84/80 •• 5. entex mli.a. New S'T2K, Must 4500 C(7~) 8:2~~:.NB wl numb«a, 631-8480. Some •XP A.B. Dick 380 Operete our 32' company $100. Lv Ma,g S.1-9131 Mil. 250--0.14 Wkdy9 0< 940~.-4 ol\ reblt ef'lg. great cond. air $12,500. 557·33S. IDWTI IUIPW 83 t-7838. 873-2637 •R••n••y daelrable Good benefita. HOSTESS FIT vesMI for bay crv1.... an!tue 14 722_9480 Wkl'lda, Viv ,..__.,, T --1111 Call Scott 140-9053 Tip Mon-Fri, days, Apply In ~" ypfat-Mu.t be ae-Part Of Full-time FOf' amall Parton 3-5pm, 212 E Small etah operation and I llY FllllTllE CATALINA 27' Per Mo.+ Tax 60 L .... Paymenta Cap Cott $23,860 Cap Red. $7 ,25 7 DELIVERY DEPARTMENT --- McLAREN'S BMW WE LEASE ILLUIEI llllELI curate, mature, com· Flnanclal Corp Some klH SSlO 17th St, Coate Mesa. minor malnt~ ex-'78 Inboard, Trad & grNt pualonate, 5 day 22'n/hr loan knowledge & word perlenoe required. Neat LES 957-8133 cond. Only s14,ooo Realdual $13,599.80 Total Peymenta of $12,718.llO OAC CEL M-F tlll I , S-S 11118 828S. Euctld St Fuller1on, CA 714-eaO 6300 213-691-6701 wk, perm poe, 148-1831. prooeaatng exp helplul. SANDWICH SHOP. PIT appearance ....,,tlal. .. lion-Head din. room 951-8110. Mutt eeel 557 981 1 M F9 K-•-1-•-counter help No .. P/T lllUT&IY . . . .,. ·-=HIT m'--::....1 evea/wknda Irv/CM Knowledge of Coast chalra 1315. 2 pull up HOBIE 18 wltrlr, owrtet lllMrlaNrl 13861 Harbor Blvd. G.G For NftPOf1 Beech office. IEOlnllY/IEQ.PT. ---"' 971·1739 957-27.,. Guard regulatlona and chairs $200. Fr. ctlea1 mu11 ee11. xlnt cond. xtra Mutt be good typlat. 2/3 For New Boat Broketage. Needed for Automotive & aalety procedurea re-$300. Zebra rugs $800-clMn race ready $1800 Stk# 1 ... 178 lll·•MO &&•·2100 OV-lwtl. 15.50/Hr. Call F/tlme Detalla 850--44_.6 Real Eat ate Claaslfled WA IT RESSE S AN 0 quired. S 1000. Ladlea dHk-dlalr OBO.' Brad, 722-9740/E Ask For Jim, Jr. Sally 64().4772 . Advertising Salea at a HOSTESSES • Lele ..,,.... $$327505 .. ~7·"· rv~"2hall bench S•"t•"a 30130 "Snatu" A•tn W1at .. LARGE SELECTION OF NEW & USE.D BMW'S! -------111191 llOln&IY /IEOEn rapidly expanding toe.I nlngs, graveyard. Apply To apply, pleaae ... : ., ~....., -· -· RECEP/SEC. p pt flll newspaper Aggr8111ve, at The Grinder, 1400 Pa-Grand Prix, loaded-full to car, L•ll&Ol•W VOLUME SALES SERVICE & LEASING 3670 N. Chel'ry Ave. LONG -SOllTff COUNTY VOLKSWAGEN & Congenial Prof co wlll hone, typtng, ng, gen-self-dleclpllned lndlvld-cine cout Hwy. NB Daryl Landrum 841aut. oak kng sz water· race, Oya 752·92n pr r*"""", will pay euh. train, must have pleaaant erel office duties. Hours Callfomla Recfeatlon bed. must be aeen, ooet -.. - volce/pesonallty, type 10-4 or 9:30 to 3:30, ualt may earn excellent GtHral Company S 1000 utt $800. 843-5192 l--..1/lki ... h Call .wry 722-1148· M F I C t S_,._ Income (aalary + com-,...... 011 I Dri /J 40-50/wpm, 15.50/hr, on-r · ompu et ,. i--•-) ..__flt d 1137 Ba)'llde Drive Kl"" Mattr ... /box anrgs T WlaM " ';I; --•1 .. 1o 891-02..,. 1em1 & Appllcatlona m .....,n • """"' 1· an B kl c del M CA "• ...,... 30 ...... 8" am ""· 852-8734. EOE · advancement 09portunt-an ~ orona 81' S150. Excel. cond. 181 Tri Aull cnlr m 90 BEACH (No. Cherry exlt-'05) (114)11 .. 1110 IStlZl ll•PY-.T/11 ty Saleaand/oradvertll· DO NEY SAVINGS {714)644-9730 675+1881,875+5606 hpEvln.w/trlr,fullcanvu llW'll -• ' IHlnllY Ing eXPtrtence helpful A growtng Msoclatlon has GENERAL OFFICE wtllde curtains $4900. -n E.ntry leytl, fron1 office ap-., __ .. reau-10. the followlng employ-Must Sacrlflc&-Only &-12 E/720_ . ....,.. 1 0163•1900 1 11111111 Tr~lnt Welcome OPEN SEVEN DAYS pearance. Lite typing. Thinking of starting a new ...,..., ...... menl oprrrtunllles· Needs a think on your feet mo'• oldl e.aut oak bdrm ...... ..... career? Why not conSldet P. Blevlnt · peraon, for busy olc .• 400.. unused aofabed -----.---It comee with bucket ... 11 heaS)~~o ':i'~~~aln. Eacrowl Bay Escrow IUlll OUST co TA MESA w/gd phone mannerism• •• $350· bar stool• S75; u,./Dtcka/lttrl_Jt I and radial tlree. Yourt for Mr. Stuart. •58-1103 being active atnce 19•7 IAILY PILIT CUSTOMER SVC TECH typing 60/wpm, call Kim aofa/loveaeat 1500; 70ZZ Immediate dell~. wants to talk to you. Call P.O. Box. 1560 Loan servloe experience Waller 640--0218, NB. oak/glass: wall unit $350; 231 COlumbla on :Q)i moor-I (Stk# 2781) (Ser# 2948) • .--,---> llllPTllllST Lynn., 547-5625 Co.ta M .... CA. 92828 required. Cuatomer Mr-CASHIER/CLERK col tbl 181 $450; eleg. Fr. Ing. Xlnt toe. $12,000. ..... ••l•a PIT, pereoneble. mature vice background helpful Dependable flt or pit, J w Prov. din rm, sacr. Si350: 873-8755 eva/wknds ORANGE COAST _....._ peraon for property Wlll·Ell QUALITY CONTROL Airport Gift Shop, Bettle All xlnt. P.P. 5•~705 Jeep/Renault .. 9\. • mgmt co . w /buay llEOl...-IST ••ortgana banklrvi b~k-Tun-Satam,852-9188. 35'MOOflng&30'Cu1tom12524Harbor CottaMeu phonet 8·30 1pm Mon rn-Tefemar1te1lng m .-... -RATTAN lrultwood color Sloop, Alklng $25,000. ••t I021 Fri muitbe~bletowork Everyotherweekend ground preferred. • .. llllP/TF/T w/glua:Cof1blaet $450; MustM11873·4891 -• 6 .___a•--.oou• Sat Mpm. Good phone receptionist needed. Very lllT PUT THIE .Ill Audit Ing experience -wall unit $275; din. Ml T • S ~ ..... ,. """"'-"' ~ mannen must &42_1603 way real eatate office. 2 II Tlnl helpful. Typing required. Mature & depend. pereon. S500· cotton prlnt aofa/ Up to 22', Shallow drah,, RC I 11t1ctlon Of new & _____ .___ position• avalleble. Sat & Attention Homemakera, Cotta Meaa Auto Wutl. lovat S550: xlnt 543-<4705 $150/mo Call 873-2747 188 CheY 1 ton tow tructt carefully &rwared 11-/0UU/,.._ sun 9.5 and Sat & Sun l'l"'h 1ehOo1 Mnlor•. c:ol· BENEFICIARY & DEMAND Call Jay or Linda a.tS.1039 or 875+0149 I Hof-500 on back _., un•• 10-2 Phoneexperl8ncea • 1tudent1 & moon-TECHNICIAN Jll1etl11aM•I lS S•so0. 5•8-2881 o; Pf'90Wned M I In G=~tl~~~~~ mustl Mull be rellable, llgnteral T.iemarketlng Seeking lndlvlduel wltn ex· OUlfflll BOYi bOnk sea. i200. r9CI 41' SLIP IEEHI I &42-1357 ltock. person wllllng 10 learn reaponalble and well nrm need• 8 people wtlo parlance proceaalng u-0 181 lege Dataun Camper IMll & Call 951·6110 w/lnfo It dOll make 1 Cfll• good communications groomed. Salary com-are lntereated In making sumptlona & payoffs. ther dut . male col M........,./Offer 64-4-2110 IOIT ILIPl IYllL '1 'll ~ Tll PIOl·IP fer--wtw• you THANK YOU enaerate with ex MEGABUCKS! We Typing required Student, PIT: non-1mkr ..,,..... Camper 1hell am/Im ._....., !~~1!~ &,.,~g111~tl~~· =~ ;.rlence. Call Jean o; promote this areas finest Dark aolt resi d S.0-5335 N.B TENNIS CLUB FULL De Anza Baytlde VIiiage I stereo cata, 'red, xlnt purchete your BMW., F~2US Joan8311266 newspaper Onlyrequlre-COLLECTION COUNS FAMILY MEMBERSHIP 300E.CoutHwy,N.B. ahape. 12750. Guy GORP LR aecepted at: L'Garde Inc.~ ment 11 a plea.aant tei. Wiii conalder training for EXPER CONSTRUCTION $750/0BO. 722-6460 873-1331 Mon.·Frl. 9-4pm 640-3393 or 540-5012 Ev • - 1555 Placentia Av, N.B • ·~i~~~-phone voloe Hours: M-F mortgage loan collec· WORKER • ~~ • 30 9 OO S llons Experience =•ltrl l Need pvt Dock or Sllp for,Et Camino '88. 1 owner, c•1J1\Ae&..1111 ~Sel;I ~th~ln~~s~fas~t~w;tt:n~D:•:il'~!!"!!!!!!!!~ 5· pm to : pm, at· · Carpentry & Ex? Cabinet 41' s llbO t 1 N t h 8....,. bit 1 •;oov Piiot Want Ads ' ~ ·---•• urday9·00amto1:00pm preferred. Good tele· Maker631·2345. Apcomp FrankHn Incl 1 •. n wp 250 p, "7"•re motor 20IW.tet...,_Ana Start at s. oo per hour. phone & clerlcal sklll re-m 0 n 110 r , 1 1w1 r 8 , area. Eves 493-0456 S 1600 Call 540-9205 CLOllO ~YS Comm!ulona & bonuses. quired Ill.I FllNllll S950/obo, 962-5028. PRIVATE DOCK. Easy' ,QM C '7 9 SIER RA IN U.S.A. Openings Now Available Private desk and phone,, HUNTINGTON BEACH F/tlme. Mon-Fri Mod«n MACINTOSH XL (LIH access NWPT ISLAND CLASSIC 1S.V80, p/W, _B_M_W-,-7-_.-Ba-v-.-Boe-/-bge-.a-I· ';.~~~!', ~e. ~~n~ INSURANCE CLERK ~-1~~9plant ~~s.i~ 2110) computer 1 Mb 1225/mo 760-8865 I p/a. pl dll. t/w,50a~r/~. loys, tnrf, amTfm atereo ANO TRYING .. ARD£R tervt.w call M11y Grant at Wiii l'landle Insurance fol-memory 10 Mb hard SH 0 RE M 0 0 RI NG new trs, am/~m7oo m , tape. Xlnt cond. $3950 642-4333 bW1n 9em-3pm low-"P In con'""m., loan HLJYllY/ITIOI disk. Lm than 1 year old WANTED On Balboa I xlt cond, 3 /obo, obo 850 2314 145+.053 CAR R 0 UTE S M·F or 642·5678 aher Dept Dealing-with cue-F/T. Mu1t be 18+ Able lo $2500/0BO. &42-5528. l1land Call Collect•_644 __ ..a_8_96 ___ _,........,,_. BM~ '81-3201: 1 ownr. 5·30pm M-F tomera & *"encie.. Good ntt 150 lbs .. benefits. Peta I •-taala m9 818-502-0220. . 1vu1 TO 8£ -1 ·SALES •SERVICE ·PARTS •LEASING Earn Extra Cash For Delivery Of Thi• Paper HUNTINGTON BEACH FOUNTAIN VALLEY INDEPENDENT Deliver 1 day a week. No collecting . no solicit ing. Must have dependable car, truck or station wagon and insurance CALL 842 -1444 Ask for JoAnne Craney II '" .,, Hth11ltttle •-' w11f te , .. , ......... , WE WANT YOU! ... ,,.,., • ., •te1111rr. Wt wtll tt-',.. ... ft ..et ll~teriptlHt ,, ..... ,..., ······~'· ... ..,.,.,, ., ......... llrtlft4. Cal T•rl A,.,., r.c. (7 t4) 642-4JJJ ~ , ..., 250 o le s c M • ,.. V1" 19.;;.,._,. __ .. .,.-. 39,800 ml, tter, air, 1nr1 Cati today start tomorrowll general cerlcal akllla re-0 t. · · FRENCH LOP RABBITS SLIPS AVAIL 25,30,35 40' DODGE '83 Van Con-S10,500 obo 720-0354 quired EASY Asaemble Workl for EASTER 4 w!(a old 3333 W COAST HWY.NB I veralon. Lo ml, loaded BUICK .70 Elec tull pwr, Pl~~ :v~:~~S1~1t!!~f,~ CONSUMER S800 per IOO. Guar. pay· S20 ... Cali S.5--485• 642•4S.• 9•5 Mon-Fri I s::.~·5.w~~~~ He. 211< ml reblt 455 eng, l AkGI SI INV[NIOJIY ON TH£ WfSt'COASI shop In Atrium Court, F.1. LOAN CLERK :;::1~j11No ,!~~.ln~el~:. Lhuo Apao akc fem, t7 •lac. Traaa,.rtatita &.1 S 1000, 642-5583 Approx25/hrawk,poten-Min 1 year Teller ex· dressed stamped mo, smart, aflectJonate. nt•H, DATSUN '81 280ZX GL EVERY MOOEL l Cat.Of! CALL TODAY tlaltogrow lntotlt.Aut perlen<:e0<knowi.dgeol envelope: ELAN VITAL tree to gd hme Claadca 9049 5spd, t-top, loaded. Mgr pot Call 720-1223. pos1fng debits/credit ~· .903 .,.18 Enl-prlae Rd 1838 ' C .. JIU 1114 ~,..,,,.-..,_...,..._..~ counting entries Typing ·--. 631-. 1 o ige • on S6900.PP71 .. 522·6557 Ital Estate Salts preferred Ft. Pierce, FL 33482 Poodle Pupa, Teacups, 181 Kenikm trlr Mii' cont. Stakebed Truck. Into & HONDA CIVIC '78, am/fm Co 1••11WTUJIEE Toy. Min. S250 up., 12000 obo. 521-5208 Pix evtll tt 646-7049 72M ml, nu tlr•. excel Establlahed small m· Good salary ber*lts & -546-2'48 21871Newland113. HB. Beat offer over $8,000. $1395/obo 770·0771 merclal Brokerage firm In pleasant •~rroundlnga. Thinking or starting • new ;.=;;; Corona del Mar with ex-A PP 1 y 1 n P 8 r 1 0 n career? Why not conllder cepllonal reputation 8.30am-4.3opm or call Escrow: Bay Escrow needs an experienced Personnei ~9--0902 being active since 1947 eelf motivated t/t Sales HWIEY ••Ytll.I wants to talk to you. Call agent. Call Mike Isaacs. C-M Lynn at 547-5625 '!;;;~~4=~!!19 ............ REALONOMICS CORP 3200 Brlatol, oeta esa 1--------'t:: (714)675-6700 Equal Oppty Employer FMl IHYIOE !!!!!!!!!!~!:!!.!!--Drywall IAlllWIOl IHP eisAYWxl( fXPIJJd • Complete cieetHJp. gen'I PAINTER NEEDS WORKI I . I• 1y p•1101~ • • • • • • • •: Kit & counter help for CM GrM1 time to J.ellnancie. All Textur• & Accouatlc. melnt, tree trlmlng, free Int/Ext, celllnga, relln cab llt Moo-Fri, exp, mature. CALL NOW. S.2-4449 Free at. Kevin 722-9214 eat. Mauro. 962·9973 (26) yrs exp .. work guar female, S4.25/hr, call Joe $ 40 d o ... p 1 ti ,,.. 3637 Wkdaya 524-60~. 2. per ay LOTUS 1-2-3. PAV ROLL. lltcfricll ISHll(AWA LANDSCAPE a .. ,, 8 n ng ,,...._ e e '#!(ends/eve 528-7027 That't •LL you pay for Pickup & delivery, too. ••-•rum.,.. Sod. Clean-ups. Malnt PAINTING Int/Ext. repairs, Tl.E OFFICE CLElll e ~-------" Gene, 979-<>551 P--. ,. Sprinklers. etc. 850-4147 cab retlnlthed. papering • PAIT Ulll ITYUIT 3 llnes. 30 day minimum Quelltywortc. free"' 25yr local refs 979-5214 •e Very busy circulation office needs e reet shop .. gd loc. LM In the Typing, cRHumead. Re· ,_.25513 968-7401 TllEES TEACHERS PAID • station. Jerry 840-2428 SERVICE pons, oneapon ence, Topped/removed. Clean- • Part time help answering heavy • malllng. 722-7804 RESIO/COMM'LllND 26 up, new l1wn1. 751-3476 CONTRACTOR IS back · • lllllOLWfll yrt. Do my own work. L.lc. -· Free estimates. ~6-45 19 • phone traffic. We have mce cus· Good Hourt. Good Pe~ CTQRY Carpt•; #278041 Al 646-8128 Clean Upt•TrM Topping UNIQUE PAINT tomers' Applicants must be n eat • Ired 875-057 DIRE -., __ .. Shaping-Removing-Haul e · ' carrequ • · Exper1 trpentry °""' .. ,ce DON'S ELECTRIC MIKE 850-3293 10 yra In the Harbor. Area • responsible, and have a pleasant • Lt••••y OLlll P/T Reptlr-Remod'l-Addltlona 498-967! S8f'lloe calla, Free eat. 954.2132 • telephone personality. Some light • ..._ CALL TODAYll 0oor1 .. 1c. 648-4980 dryer outlet• etc, bonded. Tree/Trim/Cleanup compl ,,.---..,..----- • Subltltu1ecle<k pot Ill FOi LOIS R gardening. Competitive P1~rla1 e office work also. Hours are approx needed for NEWPORT BUILD OR REPAI ELcCTRICIAN prloes. Chuck 642·2873 .._FA"'°AA .. T•H'!l!ll'N"'d•,..1N1111T"E,.R!'l'lio .. RP1S"'" e M on -FM, 8:00 AM to l :00 PM, start-e BEACH PUBLIC Your Walla, 1talra, doors, locl(a, Lie .t233108 Smell/large ..,..-----,,,.--=--- k A I e LIBRARY clerlcal/publlc Service Olrec1ory rallloga, moldings & trim. Jobi & repalr1 541--5203 Gardening. Full Service HANGING/STRIPPING • mg salary IS $100 per wee . pp Y • contactexpdetlrable Repreeentatlve #478106 Don 964-5949 . Mow~an u1>9-tree VISA-MC 673-1512 e tn person. Mon-Thurs. 2:00 to 4·00 e Muathaveoncallmln 142•4121tlf,J01 0oor .. moldlng .. baywtn-NEW/REPAIR.Quallty.No work.966-2716/Etvma,g. ANDVS WALLCOVERING e PM Ask for Eileen. • avall 19hrt/w!(, to Incl dews. complete patios. lobs to •mal!, r~~~· OLIS FINN. LANDSCAPE Installation & Removal DAYS/EVE/SAT, additions, quality work Free nt .. lied. 1• Plant~eprlnkler .. prune-Int. Painting 5'8-4013 : ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT .• S6.58/hr.1ppt1ca11on1 #477.,.8Paul54tl-8850 Fa I lawn.Horttcul1me1.tu11 wega1ashdhangtogetner may be picked up and Exper1 Carpenter Reakfl C •I malnt. reu. ref a 548-6027 Hang/strip. Advt~ to lhe : 330 w A~~u~~ OP~~R~~~~;~::_'o~~ 92626 •. c;~~:~~~~an Comm'I Small/la;ge Jobai FENCE J!lepalr. New I Old. ••M•..!f. crazy. 839-0730 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• __ c_1emen __ te_0r_, N_B_._ Aleo Int/Ext Painting 531-3225 John 775-8082 rr'~t~~:~'.n:J>~t~·:· B~WOR~ SmatlMfoba. Pl11ter/Dryw1ll lllAIEll TU.llEE Llc#288597 631-9295 Door ... Reptlr-Alteratlons ....... ""'n, . Olla 818• lnUEXt. patch pfaaterlng, $ $ SALES MANAGEMENT OPPORTUNITY Crew Supervisors are needed to work in a fess ional management It Ion. now pro- pos- We now have openings fo r mature adults to supervise newspaper sales crews. Aesponsibllitles will include hiring, training, and motivating teens In obtaining new cus- tomers for one of the area 's leading newspapers. For an excellent opportunity and earnings of $500-700 per wk, Call TC A1k for Ron 642-4333 ... ______________________ .. And Countet Help. 108 Cablneta-Panel-Lock...etc Flt..... lrvlne. R41 •· 675-3175 cuatom texturing, ~ellty Creem & Glha. Balboa Exqulllte Aeouatlca A. 35 yrs exp. Jerry a.2-ose7 FtREWoob 176 5811% co;a Block, Brick & Concrete worlc. Problem ... N-; • :.Jb- 957-8320 Carolyn aprayed or remove. Dry· lrflll Winter Special. Ou.t. mix. Very ~:~~2! Lie. ~3'?0864 554-783 I wall Repalra. S.7-7901 ,Home Carpet ory a;;;; Dellv . Jim. 636-8561 ( l Pla•~iat Very attractive aophl1t1~ cated female to wortt • few houri a week. Mint have a good voloe. Great pay, plealant condltlont. Send replyl to: Ad 200. Delly Piiot. PO Box 1530, Costa Meea. CA 92826. 'FUaaee I :i~~l)'lt":·~~~g:· ••••ltla . =::'.~a=:::or-,. ............ ,-Et~•"'"1_H __ -,,-I0- •1aitar1 ego Jibs GUNS. 1 t26% over repatrt, etc 2•hr 645+0721 ~All plumbing & heatt~ APPli~NCE sEAVlcel .. nl/ acrete coat. For appt. call STUCCO MASONRY-TILE DRAINS CLEAR From St5 Refrlg •.washer•, dryers, bflvewaya, patl09, path•. l48GUNS °' 63t-0659 No Job to 1mall. All types. Fauoeta, Dlapoaal. Heater. ranget. DIW. A/C. All etc. No Job too 1mall. Bu•;•• Free Mt. Lie. 831-2345 &41--0907 P&R 722·9068 Community Appllance. RMI Mickey 536--0553 _ 7899 A11er c1rc1e. B.Pk. · • FENC -oXTes Tree trim niat Pttl IJI• 240-0717 or 522-2323 llt Dump runt. C.M./N.B. • ... 1-c XLvPSO POO( SER· Piil •mil TIOI a. L It Mott; whl btb:;tlt your area. Jim Whyte.142-72oe c• ., .. N-& ex"-PER*T VICE: Rellable. low rates Lloyd Pest Control needt n.!llill hlld M F I El Id """"' route technlcan, we treln, Pafiang Area R;pah I c , on.-r . • e •GEN HOME REPAIRS, Over 25 yeara experience Weelcly. 647. 7753 mu-ha--~ drlVlnn .. ~.·rt~·~ Aoofl~ & C.M. 722· 1393 Paint. Drywall Carpentry Lie T· 119 428 730-1353 ,-; I •• .... '·• .,.... ..,. etc. Gary 646>5277 PTL . ' rt~f I• r800f'd. c.11 r Teytor am waterJ)roo • t31 199 uaJal " H ABC MOVtNGu FULI'RVfct PROP only 979~21· aphalt-repalr-prtdng IOtt MOiiN S cWRINd **H.ANDYMAN** Oulotc & Caretut Tt3804e EATY MGMT 3% Bk; ntn llLIYDY t complex-helVY rotter SERVICE! a throougtlly ':.r~.;::·~ c:! ':n:' LO RATES. 552"°410 AMERIL.AND 997o0941 Domino'• Pta.a. Gd drlv-oe ... M2tl 7am-9pm dMn houM. 640-0857 IT .... .Ull •m~'CI Ing record. w-ve + tlpa • ulaftl HouMciMnlno 1• Y'9 exp. ITmlll..,.. M. --ir•• • •••i Upto$8/Hr.1Me18olaa rallable,re•.lree•t.own • Of CoOrlolnal r•1-.. -- Chica, apply 2-5 d611y. vert Serv ~ OQO tr11na. Pina e.5-988e Oetla Gar-ve I Yard ~ Stu=MoWrt TnMJred Reader. Paat·Future S5 ad RESPONSIBLE WOMAN =.Ing.· Q~~r~ HOUSECLEANING. Ex-Jon 14 192 Lie. T124"'38.84t-8•27 650-2758 Ola,,. 631-8914 tor olc help & ...... 3--4 NEWPORf. 720-9191 per'tenoe, own tranap.. Haullng. Movtng. Ctean-NEW WerehouM Storage lta ellai/ llm P~~1~°tF»1~~081i~NT AL pl W P very rellable. 631-5091 upt. 7 Daya. Loweet ratee. llYll Ill Add'na-oetlon·Remodii f~11ord R0~~ .... UI I -Call Barry, 722-8873 • Too Ouallty Low Prlee. SEWING MACHINE OUR s'1°ECl~l.ITY We~• In Sptlng & Y•UUJWIUILI ~!r~~;:.~ Free eat. Lie 631-23•5 eomm:J:::g:5eng111h GRAP~~~e ~i'r'PORT. = :s'~·~f;'0< ANYTIME. 522-8573 Palad.. -•• I H lmir "*king, 631•213'· c M e1 'A'Comp ,-aoo1ncom. vAcANC1Es vACANClEs a.... u FiRenumNd iiY Rldl. •udaNXtEm SHOP PERSON Ing N•l'I Electronic 8~ Pre Spring Rat• ard Sinor 18 yrs of happy Go-Karu. Single Cyl MIC Reptlle Wholeeale Firm M•HO-Cent• Saye We do,, 8111 457~742 30 yr• Al Tu ConlUltant cuatomera Lie 280M4 Seootert.Moped1,MOW8f1 !Ootelog fOt pereon to Nit W Never mlal another Sr. Cit. Rat•. 648-7828 Thank-Voul "3-4114 ~\~,'~~:vale'•'!t', 1 .. 7 w 0 I k W 11 h r a p • c.11. No eqylpt puroheM tfllten t-'•• BO ,.., v tlle/tmphlblan-, mult be nee. Smell hkup & mth~ I.I. WILSON i SONS I '~--,:;= Wll ouPArl~l~NG '~Ui able to work daya. and I• lnolt 50 1 Minute Am Add Aemode4 Kit~ ......_. ""'-... ,, ,.._. ~p-R-T-flli!! ~Tr~3~•llon, M • g I I M 0 c • I I Bath. me. 1357417 In•. Tll mll... ""''" lie I r~abi;R~!~th 1 -800·5U~OO 17 After L.ftn<-T,....ghrub ln•tall. A.A.A. PAINTING Int/Ext kitchen Call 722•9783 l'ELEMRKTG TO BUS voice lnatrvciton dep,... T,.. Trim and Removel L.OW~8T poaelble prlee I _ E.Xpertenc.cs Paraot1t Mailbox 19002 on Touch Lawn Main 1 Rototllllng: 10 Step hMot IMl1...S235 Wla•ew ltaalat 'ifiliii;7;133-aM83niiisii""1t.r Tone Phone. Sprinkler lnetllll, Aaipelr. DAN SALYER PAINTNG : LET THE SUNSHINE IN II t Ht F,.. Eatlmet• ~ Uc #•2582• Sunthlne window ci.ant HH To ftluH• \our ~ In Comm'I K.C.TREESEAVICE Ca11Anytlmeff4.2017 Ltd C•l1 (714)&46-5910ng 1---~....,~~~-1-'.f't l<l·,ull and 1 F~-;'4 Top Trim. Removal. Q OW PAINTING • Ptttc Wltldow c.aning Am~~ ~''"''" l>trt-f'lflr\ 0uall1y eaNtce. ,,... &t. Int/Ext 30 Y'9 exper , I We 8190 wash mlnl·bllndt I l 'Jll '11~ MIM213or531..teN refa M2-5214 Nftpenar• 720-1101 exp .-1ng~t .ir -_ w/t»tp or pV1 lndMdual 642-56 71 .., ...,!!__ ....... ~-.... L.anO~ SPftM..,_, HOMEOWNER EXPERTS All-Bright Wlndowl wtW) dWl lf'et IM beet. ~T ._. .. _, .... .......,,._, Sod C"9n-uf>• ~ yr9 In Int/Ext. Acout Celllnga CteaningfScreen Aeoalr Plaeleca:llOl!leeall--t010 Oek & Fii'. 857-000A ... Tony ... $-5124 Ucl284597 131·9295 84e--079hr 963-~ ' •• I Or.,. eo.t DAILY PflOT/Mondey, MltCtl 24, 1Nt * 87 Aaltl Jae!!! II NIUCNO PORSCHE '71 I 1180 NA l' u RE O TIU ~ M)TIC( PlllJC liOnC( NlJC llOTIC( "8JC M)J)C( NI.JC llOTIC( PWlJC llmC( 1 PmJC llmCl Pm.IC U1Cl Cpe. b*.. 76K,..... 1M50. P'ROCEtDI F TH ! H · MCUIWTY I 8'6-78'3«1"'"3074 YOU YOU ~o AGAINST M0.rr 0f'WAY~-~ oledMN~llliblMyfol'~ Thl9 ouein... •• con-""*· Obe ~. 1•1 ~blllhed OrMOI C09ll nodceollN ... ol-."'-8edJo.,I*. ........ of CrMlllllft, , ,82 r--TACTAL.AWV~~LO CON-INC ltr....,_L._. ~ ot \M ..,_ .. bY.,,lndMduel ~ A*"'9, eo. ......... DUyPllotMsal 1l,24,31, WfttOl)encJtppr..._..of Tt\iltt....,.,~._. llUTTIRNU> IUMCU. ~ ueQO urt>o pV~ Or _,,.. 1M Gtfier OOfNftOI\ Mwv;y "°9el'I ..,. tlt27 Apft 7 1Ne ---OI of the peo. W\llln ..... et ~ e C [" ... _,.. enroof1'Mth lntr. Priced Ori toil Dally Pllo W'99 COM ~ion, If wry. ~ Tiiie ~ -tied The loc:auon In c.litcwNll ' U.Of7 tlonl °' eoeounte tJ..,ltiOI_. _,. ~ .. e.. Aeo mon. • _., .., s'"1ed under 13000 beet 10:00 A :ri:i~ 3~ ~ 11 1 W..cl\ 2•. :%:1 ,_. with the eouncy CW\°' Or· oA tne dllW ...cutNI offloe In~ t200 end t200 6 Iffy i. "°' • ,_,,.... ._..,. TRl9t99.....,.,. ,_....,.. 1NP9&cieen 720-1212 OR!ENWALO ot .., ..... be mede,but .,. COunt~ °" '*'-Y or pMdp4if ~ offtot .. _II'-.~ of u. ~ ,.,.obtt9 .... or" ........ a..'° .......... ..... ;:::;:;;:::;;::;::;~;;::== AE8N1CK .. "'"" • n d P\lllC MftftH Wllholit OOt'l~I or ..,._ 20. 1Ne ol U. lnttnded 11---0f .. ..._ .., llW. Cod&. .,.,.,., .... not---... ""9d In ... ~ o.d .. \.UftlftlK.ft eg.n1 1 • ~·1~t9d nunw. rwity,•.-Otlmclled,r. ,..... ..,.,.. .. tlt>ol4 ...., ............ .....,_, llM!det Of llt'J lloeMte, TNll..,..,ti¥C~ GRU °' Ille VILLAGE ,,_....... getdtnO title, pc11111lon, or Putihtltd OrtnQt CoMt The nwnt Md ~ .... a. llf r ·-· illl ._. 9'odi In ftliCftl, fOOdMI, 0t C>WN AHO fliHFA ANH . SOCt~T~~:T~~~NCtiAS· ..... ,.,. encumbr•ncee. lnctudlno DeltyPllotM•c:ti 10.17,24. eddreee cf the Intended ~cnOTICAC109IETO~~J..r. Ct •=n .... JW, All--wryotWlrwllrl'llllldngto O"MIEH. HlU88AHO AND pur I er and NOTa Of' ..... Cihargea Md •l*'MI 31, 1He tt11W1er• r.. eo.t. M... """ -"""' · ...... CA_, tN ~ ott1« 1t\M N Wlirt. ~ JMN 21, ATt~:' to IM O(Cl.AA-l'MllTll"l IALI of the tNlt .. ~ of the ..... 73 "-Otvtlopmeot ~. 11 (Avteo • ~l Mf:CA Putlllal'Jed ~ CoMI ~ « ~ 09rteln tta. In .... CIMoe of .... SUZUKI ~ . ........ 770-7001 ; -•Ot\' .... )( .. f1. ·~ l•k•, ,,_, ; • CONOIT?crN;o~~~A".:S, YOU ARE IN 0£FAULT 1r\IN or•i.d by Mid OMd , .. Ortw, P.O. 8ox i200, HRVICt_CO. end DOH 1 0.ity Piiot ~ 1l, 11.. 24, ltema ol lmprov..,,e nla c-it)' Aacoldlt ot 1M1 $TRtCTtO E· UNDER A DEED OF TRUST of Trwt, lo pey the r~ Co91e ...... CA t212t thr°"'-1'1 '-"• lnCilullW 1tN .._,_,""9 io IN lllM!ty, County, .. AlcofOet'a sn-"CCJA . NS (ll•ttlnaltef DATED 9127/16 UNLE.$$ Ing pttndpal Mnt of the PlaJC ll)TIC( Thel th!t pr~ petV-YOO AAE MINO IUlD MT.OU WNdl -cotltldlted '-"Y wument No. a.m11t, ~ tH4 : Ir~~ In Book YOU TAl<E ACTION TO note ~ by N6cl Deed nent Mteto la o.atbtd In BY PlAINTIFIP (A Ud le•• "-nit l7WOUClft "'9 li)UrC:Mll9 rwon of a bNecltor dlfaAt ~ =~9~~4. In-PAOTECr YOUR PROP· ot Trwt to wit· S43.k4.75 fl'ICTITIOUI .,..... 5· ~ov.Mentl ~~_!'Ufll 8 .. _ .. ~TIC( "' °"' ,.., PIOC*'Y bo/ the WI ~ ., patbllleJICt ;;;;;;~--..;;..;.;;;==::::;= °' . Coull ._cje of ERTY, IT MAY BE SOLD AT WIUI lnltr•t t'*9on from ..,.,.. ITAW 10 the Aeell)' (ftll· '"'"'" ..... .._....., .--...... .., r...... °' IN ~ MQKed TOP ••• PAID •• ~.eel ,fY·t::"fOf',_I, A PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU 1/1185 •t 11375,. per TM!ollowtng~.,. '"'.. eQutpmentloftllllt ol:'. ~:.CN..MIDAA ·-Detld MMc:ft•O.t... ,.,.,.by, Including that 0 IUbJtct NEED AN f.XPLANATION annum u prOYI~ In Mid doing ~,.. ... H«ll'• cenalll bUtett'IW known... -... ._ lleOTICa TO COtTA •••• .. •• ~ OI daf&llt, NOtlc• Of FOf' Pampered :;~ YUlldl In tM '*nt OF THE NATURE OF THE not• pllAI all CO.II, cnergee "rogen YONrt &l'IOOOt #45 Pie·A-o.11, and ioo.t9d It la ...... .,. ,_ .... • ~ °" DllWLC>Plmff AGINCY, Mlldl -. r!IOCWOed No.,.,,,_ MwcedNBenz SEL~~P~Bl~~~~ILL PAOCEEOINGS AOAIN8T andtnyendtlltdVanota. '23M Ofehld Hlff P{ Santt 1197 Partl A.-.e, eo.ta :u:·"--,..,.... .. nw;;;;;°" 18\'1 eaCWITY UM) • ber 11, 1115, .. Aecordaf'• 1111111nuu TO """ON YOU, YOU SHOULD CON-TMbeneflctwyunderMld AMHl•.CAt2707 MMa.c.llfornta .... waow NTI WTCM'W~YMRWICU. "'-l""'*'I No U..~947 F THE HIGHEST BIDDER TACT A LAWVER Deed of Truet hetetofor. ... Jutta L• DaYia 23M Or· Tllat Mid tranai., of the A lttW • ,.._...... · INC., 9Ji ~ L ..,_. Will SELL AT PU81.IC Tog~ir~:~ald ofO.'!.;~S=able 11 lime On 4/10/&e at 10 00 A M ICUled end dell'4r9d to the c:tllcl Hiii Pt , Sanla Ana Hie. lltma Of lmprovamenl1 ~ 1" ":.!r.: ~:ario 1 ~ Ortnge CoMt AUCTION TO TH[ HIGHEST 111llSI tf ••m Un11ao Stat ) I~ of ttll California General Mtg Ser-underaignad • written Dec;. CA 82707 Pw1.irnng to t~ RM/ty II \ft 11 :!.'....1-I (e-. 1111_.,., 0....., Piiot MMdl 24, ttN 81t)()(R FOR CASH, lewf\14 " lront ent • • u!!'_outaide \'Ice M lhe duly ~led ltfat!of'I ol Oef9'111 and 0.. Thia buainMa It ~ Intended 10 be conaum-.,.:-::' --• .._ ,.. u..c:.e~ ~ mcJM11 ol tne Unlt9d SU• • 5"~ ~ located •• 4350 VON to Deed of TNl1 R9corde0 Nota of Oefeutt and a.;. Julia lee~ be filed. et 1111 omce of S. -· ......_ ~ 10 on a "•it or"""°'* tMlnll .. lal l._1 rane. to .... tN!lcS-Trust• under Incl puflUant mend IOf 8•. Md Wfttlen Ouct9d by an~ mat9d, and Ill clUn• may •-,_ u...._ i. ,_,' I I°' • ~·· cfteclt drewn 2130'714837•2333 ~GRM~~w.?~.?N BUILD-on .111185 ~ment no. 11on1os.a ThlundllalQned Thie at11emen1 _.. tMeO curlty Land l Aloht of Way I ,.., dO !!._ .. ,.. :::=, '::::'..!:!"O:: P\8JC N011Cf a mt• cw ..ow11 Cll'tdh - 1 • ""T BEACH, 85242ee& Of Otftcltl Rao-C*'9ed MIO Notice of o.. wttll thl ~ly Clen! ot Or-Servloee, inc . ,,0 W ee.an '"II •RM .,. -,.. _, ~·.... I llNOn. 0t • atat• or teoarw1 ~'dll~OANIA •II rlgllt, tltle cord• In the otnc. of tlla Rio-fault and Election to Sell to ange County on '•bfuary Bl11d • Suite 428. Long .... h ..._ .,. ,.. ::':., ~~o :'9 ~ I ~ M""'Ot and IOet\ MtOC191!of'I and nter:.C, COOV9yed to. corder ol OrlllQt County. be recorded In the ccxinty I 20. 19&8 BMcn, CA. 90802 on Of aflaJ • ...., 'i:~·~ ,,,... 10 be m.oe on onty theee NOnca TO domlcll.cl In tNa atate. Ill no. by II. undw Celllornla 111M:ut9d by· where tll9 real property la '101m A.pt'll 8, 1984, Md the l'-1 tftr ..._, -....,._ Qatt.;n "-of lmpt ~Of' payable et the hma of ult H id DECLARATION OF LAURENCE M ROTH i loceted. I Publllhtd Orange Cout day !or nung ctalm1 t>y eny fWtt. ..,... troM ..._ o..... 111\lllNR °" .. flClht, tttle and lrlt«•t ~~~E~e\~~~~NDfTIONS 11no1t man Will SELL .AT OATE.317/le IOallyPUotMaroll tO, 17,24, eredltorofMldhemaoflm-~ ..,_......_. ~~.;::!:l' •llO'W rTa ·~by lt ... Trwt• In that l NS In Ille PU&LIC AUCTION TO THE CAUPONelA ••"Al 31, 181e pr0\'9tnlntl Pertall'llno to ---,. and IOeat..:I ONLY Iha' ,..., ...... TO ,.., property lltv•t• In Mid *VIUI '14 llL11f ~operty 11,luetao In Mid HIGHEST BIDDER FOA MOllTQAOI HR.VICl,f M-872 tne Realty, ahall be Apf# 8, ......... .-. y._, ...,,.,.. bueinW ~ ..,:'rortti THSRUlrt Counl)tin4Stat•.deeer11*1 Blue/blue, II.Illy equip . nty~ Stat• deacflbtcl CASH (payeble 11 time ot INC., 401 W•t Ille>~ 1e&e, whk:n la Int butlnaea '° CNll 11t ....,_, ...... Mr9ln n.i.. ca.ca...,.__.., aa followr sunrl . 1dnt cond., ooty 11 Unit 38 u a11own and tale i,; lawful money ot the .........., CltJ, CA -. I day before the CCN*.lnwn.-_.,_ • ,.. • Mt kMW'll T · • "T lraneactlOn 11 u.e .C.) L 0 T ~ A ND T H E 1•K ml (161034) Oeacrlbed In Ille con-U111ted SltlM) Al the Nortll PtloM: (t1t) ...,....,,.., aa P\BJC tl)TIC( llon Oat• apecilled ab<ML .,........,,,_....., .. .,. ~:::::: ..=i =1 NotlCI It llereOy gf14n to SOUTHERLY 18,00 '!ET •11 Ill dominlum pla11 recorded fron1 entranoe to 1~ County Mid Tnaa ... • ., ....., L Thia 1r1n1ler of Improve-,.....,,....., .. ~ • ~ ~ en ~ OF LOT 8 IN BLOCJI< 21 OF Or Reaton'abte Olfert ~prll 21~ l979 In BOOll 126491CourtllOUH, 700 CMc ........ Alt. a.cw..., ~~:a=• menta Pertaining to the A•,::~= (llW "' ~~:~~·.!at :1:::,00:: In c.111111'1 It-of impro.,.. TRACT NO 772772. IN THE 01'°0tt1cl~) I~ 1748 lnci'*velCanter Drive w"'· Sanla H MaOO I Thi follow!"" ,__,.1 .,. alty la aubiect to Callt«nl•, ...!:=.::.. • ,. 11 "*'" Penall'llng 10 the ,._ 1 menu Perta.ning 10 tn. Rao-CITY OF New po RT .111 IUllll ., eoorda of Dr· Ana CA Publllhed Ofange Coe.at ··• ..... ~, Uniform Commercl.i Codi ----.. • --.. le ..._ ...-...... ot •"'Y 1N1 e tranaflt ie tboul , BEACH, COVHTY OF OA· flNlfl 1"f~ County, Ca ati right. tltle and 1n1w•t Diiiy Pllcl March 17. 24, 31, 1 ~:~ ~~n~a: 3~ S.Ctlon 8106 ~ •• ::-~=).-t;;: T~ !: ;;y-end to be mede on onty tt10M ANGE, STATE OF CALI· llreet •ddr ... and.conlltyed to and now l*d 1984 C --, ... __ ......_ Thia Iran.,_ ot only thoM WI lilt ................ ll'lollld be mec1etcarta1n 1tema o1 tmprove-t FORNIA.. AS SHOWN OH A IOOI Qvell St.. NB Other common deatgnatlon, by It Under Mid Deed of M~12 """*Pt .. Newpor1 ........... certain ltema of I~ • ' DIAa CA.LIM> ~._...--"*'IS P.nWllnO 10 the Rio-MAP THEAlOF RECOAOED 833-9300 II any. of the,.., property Tr\41 In tile propeny lltu-CA 92"3 menta Pattell\lng to thl .... ,.,. ,, .... ear .. , .. •1 Mid la~l ~ alty (rixtur.and~)ilH BOOK 23 PAGES 5 ANO "1ttl a...ant1'c 13-ducrl bed •boo ltlated In Mid County c.11-Petrlcla Bray Cunning, altylanotanormetlullbulk ,..,, uea ..,... • ,.... number I 1 l 7-7481, and ioc.t.cl OHL\' at tne 8MISCELLANEOUSMAPS n .,.. .., purported to be 72 Eagle lornla deaertbln ttte land ~ MnTIM' 381° CllWWltl Pl.. Newport Mle of Iha bu..,__ s.ld .... Ml Mte _.. pereon to contact II Kay but1ne1t tddf.. MC fotttl RECORDS OF SAID OA· BUICK '78 ESTATE Point, lrv1n1, Celllornlt •lheraln· g ~""''~ Bwti,CA82ee3 1renatwdoeenotlncludethl1 UMwtao_.....,..18«911 httaln Thie tr..-:tiOn II ANGECOUMlY 92714 j THOSE PORTIONS OF Thia bulln ... I• con-tranater of any iic....-. 1•1•••'*8 M le ---.. Tne name and ~,NOT coic:.med wtttl any The etr ... edOr ... or WAGON. Good cond . The underalgn•O dla-LOT 1 OF TRACT NO 8280 UMTID ITATll due1ed by. an lndlvldu111 11oci< In lrade, goodwlH, orlproteoolott: ., ~ ~rw of I~ Intended,°"* td<Jr' .. •t wtllcfl Mid oo-c:ommon deelQNtlon S2000 OBO. 963-2574 clalm1 any 11.ablllty fOf any I AS PEA MAP FILED IN DtaTNCT COURT ~~lrlcl~ ~•Y ~unnlngftled any ot~ tranatar raletlng to._....,,•........_......_.,. ~~ :t:~~ Tranaferor(a) mtgl\t be of the rMI p<opetty herein· BUICK '78 Aegal Cpe ltd lnoorrectnest of the llr .. t BOOK 379 PAGES 33 TO CE~DtlTIUCT 111 amen WM Ille bualneaa other 11\an the oumr r con IH tor-' lioc:ated Sltldi!.toftmpro....-above Oucrlb•d 11 Full powe<, lmmac. 6.5k addrau end other common 34 INCLUSIVE OF MIS· °" C~a..A with the Counf'/ Cler'k of Or· purchlM ot' tllONI '*1aln "'•I d • d •'..!:/.•I•• ~oyota. 595 Waat '8th menta P~ to tM Rao-purponed to be 419 82ND m1. $287.5? Nwptr II Mtrt deelgnatlon, it iny thown CELL.ANEOUS MAPS AE· sJ~C>,;~'coC:~!TTIONIN·. ~~8~ty on ~ lt•m• of lmpro11e m•nta ......... al ...... 8~6-:.:· Coate MMe. CA. alty la on file In the ofrlce or STREET. NEW P 0 AT 6 2 079.5 E 543-88 hereln 1COADS OF SAID COUNTY r...,.,,. ' Ptr111nlng to the Realty, ... le ccwte eecuct. M TM.loc:etlon In Calfomialtht Trwwt.r• end wry end BEACH, CAUFOAHIA 4 • Yes 23 Wit~~}•le wltl be m~. but DESCRIBED IN PARCELS :rq~rd:':" ~~· ~~ Published Or•,.,!= whk:ll are conlldeted ~ C.:-......, -· ol tN dMaf eucutlw office aM lnqutnel ltlOUld be meat The undetaigned hereby CAD '79 Sedan~ VIiie, 1 ""'" co11enan1 Of •II· AS FOLLOWS -.,,... ltemt through the purc:haM "° ... -., pt"'dpel bualneM at Mid olftce telephone d..clelrna d ¥abllty lcw any ownr, grMI cond, lulty ranty,t11pren or1m9fiad,r• PARCEL 1 HARBOUR NATIONAL DellyPllotMan::h 10, '7,24, of tne real prot>Wty by the neai1111•e~ ...... ~thtlntanc Olfloe number 19; (2t3) 437-74e1' lncorractw In Mid WMI loaded $4000. 548-78.52 gttdlng tltle, P<>SMN!On, or UNIT 35 AS SHOWN A.ND SANK, Plelnllft 31· 1989 M i75 Trani,.,... ......, .. ~\a,..... :.rne .;:trwwfwor la. pW'IOf1 lo contact ... ~ eddrw or Other common tneumbranoee, to pey the DESCRIBED IN THE CON YS. • Oiled: Mtfch tO, t989 ....., 1111 --"' ..._. T Beteet cltelgnellOn CAO '81 Eldo Blarltz, nayY remaining principal aum ot DOMINIUM PLAN AE-GREGORY KOPP, PA-COITA lllllA "E· ' •• , .. CHH d• ... ht llama and bull,.,... Thi nerne and bu91-Said ... wlU bl made Dlue wlta.n teath Int. orig the llaruecured by uld rMI CORDED ON AUGUST 3 TRICIA KOPP, and DOES flt&.IC fl>TIC[ DIVIL.OnlENT AQINCY, Pl aaiteded .en a.Ito .._ add,. ... ol _'hi Intend.ct lddraat of the lntenel9d w1"'°"1 wtrranty, tJq)MIU or ownr, lo ml, exit, fully property, wtlh lntWMI ther• 1979 IN BOOK t t937 PAGE ~~_!hrougll TWENTY, In· 8Y: llCURITY LAND a ~~ PlllM de 19 00::-· ~ 1C:-.!.,.,.. ~ 1rentt.Ofi1) ., •. Sot Seid-lfn9tled, regttdlng tltle. poe. equip $10,300. 720-9095 on, .. prollfdtd In MIO 91 AND RE-RECORDED .. YW. Dtfendanta. '1CTfT10U9 Ml..... RtQHT Of' WAY llJWICll, ~ ..,.. ,...... ...... F • I ---·· m.,., db• °'llC*'Y World ....ion. or encumbl'ancea, NABERS CADILLAC LARGEST SELECTION or l•I• model, low m11eaoe Cadlllaca In Orange Countyl S.. u1 tod1y1 &•0-1100 2600 Hatt>or Blvd COSTA MESA CADIL~C '81 Sedan Sev- ille dleMI, cherry cond, Dough! enotllet, wlll let go below wholeaalt l 759-8048 Of 780-5090 WE Ill &LL IAIH USED CAAS & TRUCKS COME IN OA CALL FOA FREI APPUJSAL 0.LILl.0 OIEYHUT 1821 1 BEACH BLVD. HUNTINGTON BEACH 147-10111141-1111 WIW&ITYHI OWlllDIUI See Veno doe Sento. THfOOORE ROBINS FORD lOt>O HAR&OR Bl VO CO~TA MHA b41 0010 FORD '8.5 MUS.TANG 289 all orig .. look• good. runt good $1600 . .548-7755 FOAD '77 R~o. ahell, t lr, auto. 64,000 ml $2495 Obo 770-0771 FORD '78 Pinto. rebft 2300 eog. 4-apd, new brka & Ure• $700 obo 759-31.57 FORD/Mualang Claaslc '65 Gd cond Nds eome wrk 722-t 1631844-4038 OLDS '76 Cuttus 2 dr hd- top, IUP9t' ctn. x~thape, gn trans 64.4-1080 elt 4pm OLDS '77 Delta 88, 4 Or, ale, p/11, p/b, auto, plw. $2000 OBO 552--4865 OLDSMOBILE 1981 Cut Supreme Brm, 2 dr. 48K ml, allpwr, c/c, 1111, nu trs . 15250, 875-5.519 CC&Ra, adllanct1. II Illy, SEPTEMBER 24, t879 IN ~~Of' N,._ ITATl.llmn' INC .. 9'1 K~ L ler..c ~-=-.,_~ C:..~c~ 9~~1200• 1889 • 1U1 Pllftl A~: to utltfy the~ bet- undef tile temia of Mid BOOK 11900 PAGE 1000 -The tollowlng peraona .,. Publlthed Orange Cout ...--• • WI ---Th the . I-Cotta,,...._ CA 12827 -of the Not• °' other CC&Ra. .... cl\argaa, end BOTH OF OFFICIAL Re: l\:Ullatel doing buakw ... Motlva-Delly Piiot Marc:tl 24. 1888 '"" ................. -a1 ptopeny '*' The loeatloll In calltomia obClgeUon w:ured Oy Mid •xpenw of Ille TNltM and CORDS OF OAANOE c..e.... tlonal Advertlalna ~ M--032 ooe • lift ·-0•••• ....... nent ':~la OW:rtbed In of the Ohi.t uac:utt¥e otllc:e OMd of Tl'\.ISI, with im .... g~i;e. Alru.tt Ct'Mledbyaakl COUNTY.CALIFORNIA .fri ~k~-JWeo UM, 2" RONI El\., Coeta ::::..•:-:::::~~en to t~I °' ~ bua1nMa omc. ando1'1eraumt•P'~ s PARCEL 2 OEc-£ D Mesa, CA. 82827 lllllDI •c ..,,.TICE _......__ tur• end -·tpment) of ttlat ot the Intended ,,.,,...,Ol II: "*91n, plu9 lldvanc.a, If TM total amount ol the AN UNDIVIDED t/49TH .-~N A.NT. You .,.. ,,_.. Mk:tlall L EJlla, 26& RONI ..-~, "" llM ,... __ de ayude ..... oertaln -.-. Same .. atiove any, llf1dat the terms thereof unpaid balance ol Irle Obll-INTEREST AS A TENANT IN by IUtnmoned and reqult9d L.n .. Coeta ~ CA 92827 • ... J!.'! .. dtrectorto .... Oetl8-T ~ .!i~: I Thi nerne and ~ Md Int....... on audl ad- gallon MQured by the pr~ COMMON IN THE FEE ~erve4 Gpon 1 Scllall, Tllla bualneaa 11 con-NOTICE TO ~). No 47_.,_. at: 585 ~.!i 19111 St'9et 'addr ... of tile lntenO.O vencaa. and plue f ... , erty lo be told and rMllOn· INTEREST IN AND TO THE rMu °"· nc. ducted by; an Individual CMDfTORI Of ... ' Colte Mela Callfomla 'I transfer• t1 Coetl MMa Cihargae and aJl.l)tnMt of Iha able •11matad coeta, U · COMMON AREA Of SAID Plalntltra ettom.y, wtlOM Mich ... l. £Jlla nAHef'P Of The name and eddr ... of That Hid• tr . Aedt"91opmenl A.gancy, 11 Truat .. &I'd of the tn.iat• pan ... and edY&nCM" the LOT ANO TRACT AS SUCH •ddreaa I•: sooo 8lrch Thi• ltltement WU tllad lllPRC>vo.NTI Ille eoun It: (El nornbl'• y ant'-ot tne Fair Or1ve p 0 Sox 1200 erMted by Mid Deed of time Of lht Initial publk:atlon TEAM IS DEFINED IN THE =· ~~=· N9wpor1 Willl tlle County Ctertt ol Of. NftT A...a TO ~~~ ~~~ -~:~~ ~~~ t~m~o'f.;~1 Coate M.M. CA 8282& ' Trvat. The total amount of ol the Notioe ol Sile I• ARTICLE ENTITLED "OEFI-to trie° complaint.,..~""': ange Counf'/ on February THa MA£. TY FOANIA COUNTY Of OR-lntenOed 10 be conaum-That 1111 ~operty peru.. N6cl OOllgatlon, lnC4udlng s 1.572 92 NITIONS" OF THE DEC-llerawttll ~ 25, 191e , ..... tt01-t107 ANGE '100 CMc Cent mated. and all claim• may Ml'lt hereto .. o.ctlbed In rteaonably aatlmeled .... The bane&lary, VILLAGE LARATION OF c ove-U90ll you ,..,.. UC e ) . er be tied •I the omc. of s.-general .. lmpr0\19mW111 oh8rgteand~ofthe GREEN MAINTENANCE AS-NANTS, CONDITIONS AND wllllln 20 dl yt after MMce Publlarled Orange Coat Notice la hereby Qtven to Or1ve Weat. p 0 Boll 934• curtly lAnd a RlQtlt of w I Pertaining to IN RMlty (fix· Truat ... at tile time of lrlftlal SOCIATION, under H id AES TR ICTI OHS RE· :C!':.!''::r::·d~ =:: Dally Piiot Maroll tO. 17, 24, credltora llalllng an lntlf'llt s-;: ~:;.;A.:~~~ ServtcM. Inc .. 110 W ao.:. tu,_ and ~1) of that publk:atlon of thla Notice. It CC&RS lleretot0<e txtwl9d CORDED ON JULY 28, 1979 \'Ice llyou falltod~ ludQ-31, 1889 in certain Items of Improve-telepllone n~mbet of p..in-Blvd.. Suite 426, Long1 '*111n buatneee known •: 1182,834 52. and dellY9rad to tile under-IN BOOK 11830, PAGES I b def It wttl be' tak M-891 ment1 Pertaining to Ille Rio-tlft'a att or plalntttf 8Mcll, CA 80802 on or ahw Of.,.,-, World, and IOcltM Dated: MatClh 4. 1e&e elgned I written Dac:laratlon 783 TO 844 INCLUSIVE OF ;,,.: you:, Ille rellet:: alty 11\at a tran1ter la ebout without :":'riorney 11· (EJ April 9, t889, and the laatl at 1889. tH1 Parle AYlflUt. 8UTTE"PIU.D ...... Of Oefeutt and Demand I~ OFFICIAi. RECORDS OF mended In tile cornp!Mit P'l8JC N01lC£ to be made on only tl\OM nornt>t• le dlr«:don .yet ~ day fOf ftllng ctalrna by any Coate Mesa. Calltomll VlCll, lite., • CaMomla Sile, and a wnnen Nolloe of SAID COUNTY (THE "OEC-DATE· AUG 28 1"5 . certeln ltema of lmp<o....-mero de telefono d •I credit°' of Mid ltema ot Im-Thet said llantfer of the ~ • ,,,...., br; Oel1ult and Election to Sell LARA TION .. ), AND A.NY LIOMAJlo A. MOIMAM. F1CTITIOUI Ml ... N rnenta Penalnlng to tne Rao-abogado del Oemandant• 0 prOYtfTIWl\I Pertaining 10 ltema of lmpro111m•nta 'Aetfle '""11T Tile undwalgnad cauMd AMENDMENTS THERETO CLEM. !tr. ot.tN ....... NAMI ITATl-.n atty(ftxtur•andequlpment) cs.I Oemllldanlt qua ~ the ~ty. lhtlt be "Pf1I a. Pertaining to tile RMlty '-Dim MRVlCll, • Cillo; Uld Notice of O.laUlt and EXCEPT THEREFROM DapltJ c...t. The followlng perwont ..... end IOcated OHL y at the lllt\Ct abogado .. ) Janet l 1e&e. wtlictl la tne ~ Intended 10 be conaum-tCN11t1 corporetlen. It• Elecllon to Sell lo be r• All Oil, Oil RIGHlS, MIN--(SEAL OF THE COURT) doing bualnMtea· Callfomla builneu lddr"'9 Mt tonh C.lllalw, Eaq.', VOSS ~ day befor• lhe ~ mated. end ell c:leiml .mcy ee-~:,.uw.. corded In the county wtler• ERALS, MINERAL RIGHTS. Publiahtd Or Cout Reflectlona, t312 w . Coftlnl nereln. Thie transectlon la COOK 840 Newpor1 Center tlon det• apecltled ebo'4. be nted, at the offloa ot S.. t, N. tllerMlpropertyl110catld NATURAL GAS RIGHTS DallyPllot Mf/Kc:tl~24 3 1 Ave. Orange CA.92e&8 NOT conoameo wttll any Drive ' 1700 Newport Thia tranat. of Improve-\~~~& RiOht ot,..!!!!. ~:'.:.~·\~·~ DA.TEO: Mardi 3. 1888 A N D 0 T H E R ,\pt'll 7 1989 • . • Don A. 'Moyer, 843 otner lddreet at wtllell Mid 8Mc:'1.'CA 9285a-&9~8. menta P«talnlng IO ttle Rio-...... -... -11ow . ..._. -----• •P ..... Q"l lNWA.LD and HYDROCARBONS BY . M-008 Donallu Way. Colt•~ Tranaferor(•l mlgllt b• DATE: (Fec:tia) DEC 17 atty Is aublect to Celllornta BIYd., Suite 429, long (714) ..... "llNICK, • Truetee, 4llO WHATS 0 EVER NAM E CA. 92&28 located. Said 1111 of Improve-1885 Uniform Commerelal Code 8Mch. CA 80802 on or alter Publlahed Or1lnge Coe.at Ven Karmen. lutte .o. KNOWN. GEOTHERMAL Thia bualneaa la con-"*'"Pertaining to the Rio-Gery L Qranvllle, Cleft. Sec110n 6109 Ai>nl 9, 1eae. and the \Mt °= Piiot Maren 10 17, 24 MewPott IMcfl. C.....,.,. STEAM A.ND AU PROO-due1ed by 1 generll part· atty la on flit in tile omce of 1y 8eefN Ve6erdea. o.pu.. Thia transfer of onty thOM! ::0 fol '!',~ ...... ~ Oy lllf'J 1 M-005 .-0 (714) M1.f001, 8Y UCTS OEAIVED FROM ANY P\ll.JC NOTICE nerahlp thl Tranafer .. and any and tJ certain nema of trnpfOYa-· tOf "' ,._. l.,.,. of lm- a.rMt ~ Of THE FOREGOING, THAT Don A Moyer all ioqulflee ahould bl made PubllShed Orange ~t menta Pertaining to Iha ,.._ P'C>Yementl Pertaining to --------- Publllhtd Orange Cou1 MAY BE WITHIN OR UNDER FlCTTTIOUt..,..... Tiiie .\a1emen1 wu 111«1 at Mid office. tele91\one Delly Piiot March ~. tO 17 elty la not I nonnll f\ill bullt the Aeelty lhell be A.prll 8. PlBJC fl)TIC£ Dally Piiot Maren tO, 17, 24. THE PARCEL OF LAND ..,... tTAT'lmNT wttll the County CIW1t of Of. number la: (213) 437-7481. 24 t988 . sale of the bull-. S8ld lee&, Wfllctl .. the~ --------- 1989 HEREIN AB 0 VE 0 E • Thi lollowlng ~ at• ange Counf'/ on Fet>Nary per.on to contact ti Kay M·Me 1~ doea llOt ~the day befor9 the coneunvna-M-899 SCRIBED. TOGETHER dolng~U:VIP Com-20 1eae Bereat transtw of any Hoen-. tlon d•t• ~ above , _________ WITH THE PERPETUAi. munb1Jona. ProfeealonaJ • ,..,. Thi name and bu--etoca In traoe, goodllw4d. or Thie tranaflt of lmpfove- Ptll.JC fl>TICE RIGHT OF ORILLINO, lnaure nc• P ub lloatlo ne, Publllhld Of Cout lddr ... of the lnlended Pllll.IC NOTIC£ any ottw trenafer doea not "*'" Pw1Mllng to the Rl-- 1---------MINING, EXPLORING AND 2•95 Cempus Drive, IMna, Daffy Pilot Marcnir 17 24 1r1n1leror(a) art: L•n Include the transi. of any ~ 11 ~~~Calif~ • .., OPERATING THEREFOR CA ln715 31 1e&e • • • Morgan. db• Lan Moroan LEGAL NOTICE llcenMI, •took In trld•, ....... onn .......... ,_CUii .,..... NOTICI TO ANO STORING IN ANO RE-LRV, Inc. a Calll~nle COi· ' M-974 Molora. 585 W111 t9tll NOTICE IS HERESY QOOdwCll. or any otner tr-Section 9106 CMDITOll9 Of' MOVING THE SAME FROM porallon, 2486 Campua StrMt, Coeta Meta. CA. GIVEN 11111 Ille followlng fer reltllng to the bualneea. Tllia transttr of onty tnc- TRANenll Of' SAID LANO~ ANY OTHER Orhle, IMM, CA 82715 82827 llema of found Of MYeel other than the purCl\Me of certain lteme of ~ U.C.C.) ~WTI LAND. INCLUDING THE Thia bualneu la con-rtBJC ll)TJCE The loc:etlon In Celllon1le property IVYtl baefl helcl by ltlOM oert,., llama of Im-ment• Perte!Nng to the,.._ ~ice 11 ~ g1YW1 10 .. '" AIMMQ TO RtGHT TO WHIPSTOCK OR ductM by. a COl'PQratton of the Chief uacvtlve otllc:e lhe Pollc:e Oec>anment ol the p<O¥amtnta Perta!Nng 10 elf'/ la "°' a nonnal NI bUlk credit Of I l'levtng an lnlereet n. Ml.1.TY DIRECTIONAll Y DRlll J amH A. Ao bert1on, f1C11Tl0Ue IUllMEll or principal buW-office Clly of Coeta Meaa fol a the Realty, wtlidl .,. con-.... of the butlnMa. Said In oertllln ttema of ltnpro-.. (leca. t101-4t07 ANO MINE FROM LANDS Prelldent ..,.._ STATlm:NT ol the Intended trtnafw0t 11· period In uc:.a of nm.ty eldered r•lty llama ttwough ir-fer doM not Include tM menta P«Ulnlng to die ,._ U.C.C.) OTHER THAN THOSE Thi.I att ltmenl wu llled The foltowlng P«IOfll .,. Same u above. (90) deyt: tne purchue of the real translll ol eny Ileen .... t1ty tllet 1 trlllSfer II about No1toe 11 nereby gtven to HERE 1 NA e o v E DE -with the County CW!< of Or-doing bu1lneaa 11: In-Tile name and bualnest Mant repe cllaln, Peugeot property by the Trantterw. ltoclt In lrade, QOOdWIU. or to be mlld• on only tl'IOM credltora 111\llng an Int SCAIBEO, Oil OR GAS anoe County on Fel>ruary aurance Utigatlon Con1Ull· lddr ... of Iha 1n1end9d 121pc1 blk•. Royce Union Det«t· Matcll tO, t9M enyolhW traneter relating to oertaln nerna of Im~ In oer1aln ltemt of tmpr WELLS. TUNNELS AND 25, 1986 anti. 2485 Campue Drive, tran1,.,_ Is· Coate Men bike, Senyo AM/i:M CMMI· COITA Ml IA "l· the butlnMI. other tl\an l~ menll Per1elnlng to the ,._ mente Pertaining to lhe SHAFTS INTO, THROUGH '101• Irvine. CA 927l5 Aed•welopment A.gancy. 77 I• recorder DEVILOPMIWT AGl.NCY, r."Cf\&M 1 of l'10N cenlln atty(lbctur• and aquipmen1) atty tllat a trantfer la about 0 R AC A 0 SS THE Publlahed Orange Coe.at Jamee A Aobert1on & Aa-Fair Orlve, P 0 Boll 1200, NOTICE IS FURTHER 8Y: llCUNTY LANO 6 ems o lmprov•manh and IOcated ONLY 11 the to ba made on only thOM SUBSURFACE OF THE Dally PilOt M11ch 10, H. 24. soclat•. Inc A Delaware Colla Meaa. CA 92628 GIVEN tllat II no owner IP-N0KT OF WAY llRVlClt., Ptr1.llntng 10 Ille Aeelty, bu-"-eddlWI let lonll certain 1tem1 ot Improve-LAND HEREINA.BOVE DE· 31, 1888 oorporallon. 2485 Campua That tlle property pertl· pears and prOYel hll ~ INC .. ly: Kactwyft f , .._. wNctl are oonlldered ~ herein Thll trensectlon 11 menta Pertaining to the~ SCRIBED AND TO BOT· M-993 Drive, lrvlne. CA 92715 nent llreto la deecrlbed In erthlp of the propeny within PutJllSllad Orange COMt lletM through tlle purcnue NOT c;()llClfned Wltl! '"Y ally (llxturet and equipment) TOM SuCH WHIPSTOCKED Tiits bualn•n la con-general .. : 1mprovemen11 Mven (7) day1 followlng the Delly Pllo! MtfCll 24. 198e of the real property by Ille otl!et eodr .. at WhlCtl Mid and located ONL y at tne O A O IRE CT ION AL l Y due1ed by. •corporation I Pertaining to tile RMlty (Rll· publlc.llln of thla Notioe. the M-020 TrensferM Tran1teror{s l mlgllt b• busln-lddrMI Mt lortll OR IL LED WELLS. TUNNELS flt&.JC fl>TIC[ Jam ea A Rooertaon. tur .. anct equlpmenl) of tllat title thereto lhall veal In Ille Deleo Mll'Cfl 10. t988 loatled SeiCI laat of lmpro-. herein Tiiis trlllltCllon la A.ND SHAFTS UNDE~ AND Pretldenl I certain bualness known u llndw. 11 there by one. Of In C O 1 TA ME 1 A RE· 1 mentt Pertaining to the FW- NOT concerned with iny BEN EA TH OR BEYOND THE lt•MOOI Tllla atatement waa filed Len Morgan Mot0<a. and tile City of Coeta M .... In Pl&.IC NOTICE ~~ AOEMCY • alty II on Ille In tile office ot ottiw lddr ... at wtllcl\ Mid EXTERIOR LIMITS THERE· FlCTJT10UI llUllMEll Will\ Ille County Ciani Of Or-louted at. 585 w .. t 18tll wtllctl cae the property I Y. llCUNTY LAND • IN Tret\$,.,.. and any and lran•feror(a) mlg llt b• OF, AND TO REDRILL. RE· NA• ITA~ ;~"f.,°''"lY on February Street, Costa Mesa. Call-Shall be SOid al publlc auc:.-..::ro ::r' ~ll~ ~ &JI lnqUIMI ttlOuld bl maoe toul«I Said 11at of Improve-TUNNEL, EQUIP, MA.IN-The f<Mlowtng pwaona are · """' lom11 llon 11 1 Ume and dtl• to bl CMDfTOR9 .. _,. ~·-,.. at NHS oKICe 1.-,hone rnenta Pertlillllng to Ille~ TAIN. REPAIR, DEEPEN OOlng bullnlll aa: FJ01MO Tri.t Mid 1ranst11 of the lllnounoad Of Publlelled 0r1"gl Coast number ii 12131 ~7-7'61, ally la on Ille In the office ot AND OPERATE ANY SUCH THUNDERBIRD PASEO Publi.shed Orange Coat ltema ot lmpro11em•nt1 DATED M~ 18 le&e nlANVUI M Delly P1IOI ""tre1124. 1~ per90n to COl'ltact ., "''Y lheTranalar .. endanyandWE LLS O R MINES . DEVELOPMENT, 3919DaJlyPllOIMarcll10.t7.24, PertalnlngtotlleAMlty ls fU. Nl'Tl4. CHIEF M =~ "4-424 9e<WI all Inquiries thoukl ba made WITHOUT, HOWEVER, THE Westerly Plact, Sult• 100, 31· t9&8 Intended to be conaum· POUCf THE MAl.TY n.. "*"" 11'<1 ~ at nld office t•lepllone RIGHT TO DRILL, MINE, Newport Beach, CA 82660 M-980 mated. and all clalm1 rnay Publllhed Orange Coat I (laa.. t te>l-4'107 flt&.IC fl>llC[ ador'eu of IJ'le W.len<>ec number 11 (21ll 437-7481 STORE. EXPLORE AND OP-T·Blrd PaMO Ltd. •Cell-be flied, et the olfloe ot S.. Dally Pilot Marci\ i•. ieae I u cc) 1r111:1••oru1 ere Sony• person 1o contact I•· Kay ERA TE THROUGH THE lornla llmlted 'partrWthlp, P\lll.JC NOTICE ourlly lll\d J A1g111 of Way . M-0351 Noiice 11 ~~ ~ 10 ~ AND AC<:mrbfT ANO ~wemtt and Ero4 l(irem11 Bafllt SURFACE OR THE UPPER 39 t9 Weaterty l>taoe, Sult• Servlats, Inc .. t 10 W. Ocean crediton 111 an •nl H£Al TM IYMOPlll 0, dbl Sony 1 °"9satna111nll Thi name end bualn ... 500 FEET OF THE too, Newport Beach, CA K-~ B•11d . Sult• 429. long· Pl&.IC NOTICE lncertalnlt::::of lmPf'-:! THfANNUALITAn.wT 11\Cl 411eratoons 198. Par~ addrna of Ille Intended SUBSURFACE OF THE 926e0 FlCTITIOUI wa..u Beec:ll, CA 90802onor anar ment• Pet1a1nong to lflt At-• YEM~~ ._. ... Costa M-.. CA tranalwor1sl are JOl'ga and LAND HEREJNA80VE OE· Peclflca Thunderbird N,._ ITATl•NT Al)(ll 9 1986, and tile laat K DMO etty thet 1 traniter 11 ebou1 J1, 1tl9 M n. lillAM-92C2~ • lkluvfna Ullo• and l11an SCRIBED, AS RESERVED Peaeo Auoclat•. Inc., a Thi folloWlng per1ons ate day for n11ng elalml by any NOTICE CW 10 be mlde on only thOel HATTAN LR ~ r.,... IOC:atoon on Ca tf0fni1 Ulloa, dbl George'• Mell· IN THE DEED FROM THE c.utomla corporation, 1801 doing bull.-.... creditor OI Mid Items Of Im-DIATM Of certain Items ot lmpf~ COWANY, t1l WllTS1TH OI !"It~ llltQilr.t ootQ lean Food, 597 WM1 19'11 IAVINE COMPANY, A WEST NawpOfl Boulevatd, Coata BROWN & SONS JEW· provarnen11 Pertaining lo ADii.LE IC. IUCf, menu Pert81nl 10 the fW.. S'Tillml. MEW YC>Nt. NEW °' ~onooai ~ otflca S1r .. 1. Costa Mete. CA VIRGINIA CORPORATION, M .... CA 82e27 ELERS, 25100 Merouerlte the Realty, atWI bl April a. A.l(A ADILI.a fttCE llty (flllt~ ..!: equipment) y~ 1001' Of Iha intenoec t,_f9f()! ., 82827 RECORDED DECEMBER Tllla bualn•H II con-Pllwy, BklO F, Ste C, Mluk>n 19841, wllk:ll Is Ille buslntN ANO Of N'T1TIOM and located ONL y at tile otal admitted anetS Same U aoo .. The locetlon 1n ca11f0<nla 29, 1978 IN BOOK 12012, ducted by: •general part-\llejo, CA 02881 day before the coneumm•· TO ADMINtlTIJI buslnMS lldelr-Mt tonll $93 l 8 1 '.036 Tote I' The neme erd business of the clllef •xecullva ottloe PAGE 71 OF OFFICIAL RE-nersl\lp . Robert C. Schwtttz. Jr .. tlon dat• apecilled above EtTATl NO. A-1m.G l\er'eln Tiiis trena.ctlon ii llabllit-903,02',307 Capi-f eclct.._ Of t"• •nl•ndlld or prlncipet buaineN of!IQe CORDS Jolln M Manin 5555 VIila del Dia. Anaheim, Tiii• lranafw of lmpro-. To all '*"-· beneflQlarlee NOT concerned wllh an t.i P••d·UP 8.883.2•8. Groas t,..,,SftfM •s Cost• ~~ of the Intended tr11111«°' 11 ALSO EXCEPT THERE-Tiii• alatemant wu flied CA 82807 menta Pertaining to 1119 Rt-credllOf"I end contlng•nt other lddr-11 wtllc:l'I ~ pald-tn and contributed I ~opment Aoenc, ' Same aa ebove. FROM THE SUBSURFACE wltll Irle County C1ertt of Or· Gordon Perrin•. 5555 ally la IUbject lo California ctedltOf"I, and Plf'IOl'll wt\O Translaror(•I mlgllt b• IUfplul Soecial IUf"l)l;Js Fllr ~ P 0 Bo• ,,.00 Thi name and bualneaa WATER RIGHTS. BUT enga Counf'/ on Fel>ruaty Vll11 Oe1 Dia. Anlhalm, CA Uniform Commercial Code may be othenirlaa 1n1w .. 19d located Said lilt of Improve-funds 141 509 580 Un-Coste Mete CA 92626 addr ... of tile Intended WITHOUT THE AIOHT OF 19, 1986 92807 Section 8106 In Ille Wiii and/or .... ,. of "*'" Pentlnlng 10 the.,__ IHlgl'ltd l\md• (IUfl>IUt ) Tl\lt the ~~ Pt<1 . lrln9tarM la· Colla MMe SURFACE ENTRY AS RE-fl0141t Mary C Sctlwartz, 5555 Thll lfatltfer of onry IN>M ADELLE K. RICE. AK.a alty 11 on ftle In the omct ot 7.594 89 I UM'I ILOM) trom nenl hereto •s deacnbecl r ~t Agency, n SERVED IN THE DEED Published Orange Cou1 llla1a del Ola, Anaheim, CA cenaln It~ ol lmpro..,._ ADELLE RICE Illa Tranlf.,_ and and operatl00$ 5 499 M2, In-general IS lmo<Ovemtrlt Ftlr OrlY•. P.O. Sox t200. FROM THE IAVINE COM· Dally Piiot Mardi 17. 24. 31. 92807 mentl Pertaining to Ille Rt-A petition hat baefl "*' all I ,,_ allould ~ a -10ea-11t1 Capital I Pwlainlng to the Rea•t) '1~· ----------Coet• M .... CA 92829 PANY , A WEST VIRGINIA IA.pfll 7, t889 Feltll Pwrlne, 5555 VIiia Illy II not a normel lun bulk by LORI ANTICOUHI RICH at ~ otttce ltltOhon• and Sufl)lln during 1985 lurtl and eq"•i>mentl Of llllt DU••te ..,,.TIC£ Tl\at the P<OPlf'tY pettj.. CORP 0 RAT I ON, A E ·I M-009 det Dia. Anaheim. cA 92807 Nie of lhe bualnesa Said TEA, AKA LORI A RICHTER number Is 12131 437•74161 4.482 742. lnaur•nc• •n I oertaln bull,, ... "now" .. __ .-....;.;uu..;.:.:.;;...;.;""~~;__-nent 11ere1o 11 cleacrlbed In CORDED DECEMBER 28, Tiii• bullneu I• con-1renafer doaa not lnctud• tlle In the Superlof Coun of Or· perton 10 OOl'ltact 19 Key F o' c • N • t I 0 n "" Id • Sonya• Drauma411"9 enc general at:· lmpro111menta 1Q781N BOOK 12012. PAGE ducted by· ~partMra tranafw of any llcenMI, ange Counl) req11Mtlng 11111 BerMt 22,893,689 Accident and I Alteratlont . and toca:tld at _...-rn!~I .., ... _11 Pertaining to the Realty (ftx 71 OF OFFICIAL RECORDS Robtr1 C Schwartz, Jr llOCk In trlld•. goodwlll. Of LORI ANTICOUNI RICHTER, The nerne end bullil'ell Health i>rem"'me NONE, 11'-1887 Perto. Aveoue Cotti .. ,... '',..,., _,_ tul'M and equlc>menl) of 11\al PARCEL 3· P\8.IC fl)T1C£ Tllla atatamant wu llled any Other tranafw relallng to AKA LORI A RICHTER be addr... of tile lntlNSM tural'ICt 1" Forot CallfOfntt M... Cel110rn1a ,,...... ITAT'lmNT cenelrl bull,_ known aa NON-EXCLUSIVE EASE· I wllll 1119 Counf'/ C1ert1 of Or-the butlMM. other than Ille appointed u Plf'IOl'lal rep-tranitw0<1tl ere Monem.cs &oalnMs Pege ~ 312 440 Thlt Mid trana'9r o• 1"t The followlng l*90l'll ere George'a Malcan Food MENT'S OVER SUCH PROP· I(.,_ ange County on Merctl 12 purctllM of lllOM oer1aln r-tetlveto ldmlnlster the Amara dba Parti A~ Acclda nl a "d 11••11" Items of lmpro1tame It doing bu111n1N -. Corpor· and locat9d 11 597 w .. i ERTY A.ND FOR SUCH I FICTTT10UI MIWN 1984 ' ll•m• of lmpro 11•m•nt1 •tete ot the deoedanl Olacou~t Marte•• 1881 Pllftl prwniums • Ow.ct Cal• Pertaining to Iha Reelt~ •• 11• Flnanoa Aaeoc:Mlt• ot lltll Street. Coat• ~. PURPOSES. All AS SUCH NA• ITAT'lmWT nont1 Pertelnlng to Iha Realty, Tll• pellt1011 r•quHtt Avenue Costa M... CA lomla B419lneal Pege NONE intended 10 be consum- Orenoe Counf'/. 4380 Roc«y Calllo<nl.. EASEMENTS A.RE DE-Thi folloo#tng Plf'ION.,.. Publllhtd Orange COlll wlllch .,. Clonaldafed r..ity authodly 10 admlnlatw the 82827 . Wa hereby c:wtlty lh•t Ille mated. Ind •h clllf'l't "''' POlnt AoM, Anaheim, c.11-Tll•I aald tranaler Of Iha SCRIBEO IN THE SEC· doing bualnwe at: Daily Pllol March t?, 24, 3t, ltema through the PllH:l\Ua •ltlt undaf the lndepen-Thi tocetlon In C.Hlornll above llemt •rt In IC• bl filed et Iha omce 01 S~ lomla 92807 llama ol lrnpro11ement• TtONS ENTITLED "UTIL-DESERT HARBOR AS. April 7, 1988 of the rMI property by the dent Admlnlttralloll ol e.. ot Ille c111ef eucutlve office eo<denot wttrl thl A.tlnual ~tty Li nd & ~IQlll of WI) Bu •lne.. A•10urce1 P.nalnlng to tile Realty la ITIES. SETILEMENT ANO 80CIATIS, a Calllornla M-018 Tran•I•• tat• ACl or prlrlCipal bullneat otno. St•lement tor th• )'Mr SIN~. Inc . 110 W ac..•1 Cent.,, Inc., • Celllomla Intended to be con.um· 'ENCROACHMENT" AND Joint Ventur•. 3918 w .. 1. Oeted March 10, 1984 A hitting on tlle petition of the Intended lrana1erOt 11 ended December 31, 1085, 81110 • Sult• 429 long C«l>Ofatlon. 4380 Aockyjmeted llnd all ct.im. mmy "COMMON ARE.A EASE-erly Pleet, Suite 100, New• Pta,IC M)TJCE COITA MllA RI· wlllbllllldonAPRIL11Ne SemeNaboft mac»etothelneur•nceCorn-Buc:ti,CA 80802on0fatl., Point Aoed. Anaheim, C.. be !!led et fhl omo. ot s. MENr' OF THE ARTICl..E port heoh. CA t2te0 DCVWl.Of'ISWT AomteY, at 9 30 A M 1n Dac>t NC> a.1 The name ancs buloMM mtaaioner of IN Stet• of ~· 9 10l8 eno 1ne 1aa1 lotnta 12901 I~ a AIQhl of Way Of THE OECL.AA.A llOH l N.-J .. M Menln o.v.iopiMnt I _,1 IY: llCUMTY LANO 6 100 C1YIC Center 0ttw w .. 1. ~ of IM lntenOICS Calltomla purwt lo law ~ fol l~tnQ ct tw.1 bl ""' Thia t>WIMll It con-, Inc.. f 10 W OoMt1 TITLED "EASEMENTS" Company of A'1rOn&. 31 18 NOTICI TO WT Of' WAY llRVICSI, Stnlt Ana CA 12702 1,....,.. 11 Cotta ..._ t.llCNel Morr_.), Pnili-cred tor o1 Mid ,..,,.,_of im. dueled by . OClfl)Ot9tlon Blvd.. Suite 428. long PARCEL 4: w .. tef1Y P141oe. fkitt• 100, CMlllTOll9 °" INC .. 9': Kettwyn L..... I, YOU OBJECT to H'le Rect ... 11oprM11t A 77 dent And,.,. CorMlll. Sec-PfO-.nt• Pertai\1ng 10 8ua lneu lllea ourca 8eecf1 CA. toe02onor a"-NON-EXCLUSIVE EASE· ~ 8aach, CA 92ee0 111AMtfaR Of' Publlthed Orange Coeet granting of Iha pet,,IOn you Felf Drtve p O ~200 rtlll'f ' 1'-AMny """ t>t A~ll 9 Center. George Ocnmua., Aprlt 9 19M and Iha IM1 MENTS OVER SUCH PROf'-Hlil To,> De'lllO~. Inc.. !WflOYlmNTI Dally Piiot March 24 1Ne lhould either ~ ., the Co.ta ....... CA 82628 . -"" wt!lCl'I .. the but•neu Praetdent dmy 10t' Mng Ctaime by 11ny ERT'\' AND FOR SUCH a C.Ufomla CO<Pot~llon. Nll'TA.-o TO M~H lleetlng and •tata your oci.. That lhl 'pr.....-pertl Put>llal'led Ortt1gt Coett d~ befOtl t~ conairnme Thia atatement WU ftled cr9dlt0t of A id ttam• of Im-PUA POSES AS SUCH 48·830 Monr~ StrH I, TW MAl.TY jectlons °'Ille written ct>~ nant llrlto la ~bed In Oelly Piiot Mtr,1124 2$. 28 tlon det• IPIC•ftae al>Ove with Ille County Clettl o1 Or-provamenll Pertaining fO EASEMENTS A.RE DE· lndlO, CA (a... 1101 ..... 107 flt&.IC N0T1C£ !lone w!lll !he ooun bafort gentr1'1 11 lt'llpro~ta 27 28 1988 M-(>341 Thi• trant!er 01 1mptov. •not f:_Ounty on FebrUll)' tM Aeelty, tt\all be ApfU 8, SCRIBED IN THE SEC-Tiii• butfl\... I• con· u.c .C.) the llMtlng Your appear. Penainlng tot~ RM/ty (II•-"*''• ~·•ning 10 r™t ,. 27, 18.... 11M. wtllcn It IM buau-TIONS EN'TITL!O "OWN-ductM by Joint \l'Ontur• Nollet "' hll'eby gllten to I(.,.. 1111()1 may bl In PIAOll or by turee and tqlJIC>mtnt) of 11181 lltv It MAbjtlet 10 CatlfOf"'' ,_,.. day blfor. the oonaumma-ERS RIGHTa ANO DUTIES, t M Manin, P~t Cf'edltora having an lnler•t fftCTTTIOUI _,..... your attorMy c:.rtelll bullMla tmown u P\B.IC fl>TIC( UNfolm Commerc1.i Coot PublltMd Orange Coeet tlon dale tpeClllecl t bO\'e, UTILITIES A.NO CABLE Thie atatement WU tiled In oertflln lttfnl of lmp<ove-NA• ITA,.._,,,. IF YOU AAE A CAEDIT<>fl Part! A.venue Oiecount Mat· SecllOl'I 9109 Dally Ptlot March 10. 17, 24• Ttllt trenaflr of lmptOV. TREVISION", "UTILITll!S ... ,wtth tne County Clerk ot Or-menta Pertaining 10 tne ... T~ folloW1ng panotlt.,. Ot I contingent cndllOf of k-1 Md IQc.lted at tN 1 YOU AM ... Dm'AUl T Th ttan•'-' of onfy tt>c>M "· 1Ne M ,.,u menta Pttt.intng 10 the A.-"SUPPORT AND S!TTLE-anga County on Febrvary Illy tfllt a tranalwr ta 1boU1 dot bualneU 11 Illa O.O•••~ )'OU~ flle Pant Awnue. Coeta MMe UMDCJI A M D Of' f'Ml9T c.w1M1 It-()( tmpro..., ....,.,.. tlty la tubjecl to Caltlomla MENT'', "INC"OACH· 11, 1tae to be rnaoe °" onty thote wi~MINOTON-MOOA your Cl.im wfffl IN coun Ot Cal1f'ornla DATIO ~a. tllS. u. "*''' Pertaintng 10 tne"'" ---------UnlfOtm Commerclal COde MENT'' AHO "COMMUNITY I '10141t certain IMrnt Of lmpr<MI-PARK ASSOCIATES • Call-pretllll It to the pet'tONI Thet Mid fftf\t ... ot the ~ .. YOU TUI Aeno.t alty. not . norTftll IUI bull< PtaJC M)TIC£ hctlon 8109. 'A.CILITIH IA.IEMENT', 1 o.-....-.. ......... 6 rnenll Pertaining 10 the ,.._ torni. general pen~1p rtetlMllt•llW ~,_, by ll•ma or tmprovtm•nti TO lli'ROTICT YOU..~ .... Oi IN bl.I-... Slid IC ... MOTICaOfl TRUITD'llAU .......... c .-...•L.C 1, ..... Treet 101'1 YOU AA! IN DEFAULT UNDIA THI OECLAR· ATION OF COVENANTS, CONOITION8 AND RI· 8TAICTIOH8, AS ANNl!XCO TO THE 8U8J!C'T ttftOP· l .. TY. UHLH8 YOU TAl(I ACTION TO '"OTIOT Y~~ rTMA'I' H 80t.O AT A P\JllUC I A.I.!. " \'OU NftO AN IX· Pl.ANA TION 01' THI Thie trentt.r Of onty lhote OFTHEAATIOLI! l!NTITLlD 1111etoet.:;o .. ...,_ "9DwJ llty(ftll\lfeuncf equtpmen1) 30eo Pullman Slt•t Cotti the court .. tlllrdour montn. Pattlllnlng to the Aee1ty 11 Plrt,rT MAY M IOl.D AT trwltf doea not flldUOe Ille c«taln llemt Of Improve-"l AH MENT8" IN THI DfM. ,._,,....., end located ONLY at the M ... CA 12828 from tile date of !ll'tt It-1ntend4td IO be contum-A "'9&JC 1AL1.. • YOU tran.1111 ot any !>Oen ... mt11tePertelnlngtothe,_, O!CLAAATION OP: COVI· .... CAl910 buelneat addf9te Mt f0'111 w~,mln gto n-Matll l a tu41nctafletferoaproY'ld4ICI !NIM, ttld all cialtnt ~ NUO AN ID\.MllATIOM 110Clt In It~ goodwill Of atty It not e normal full bull! NANTI, COHOOIONI ANO Pvbhned 0nnoa eo.t ....,_ Thia t~ la ~ a California C0!1)0f· In Section 700 ol tll• be n1eo et Iha omce ot S.. CM' TW MAt\111111 Of' THI ""1 OU. tr.,.._ ,_,tno to ufe of thl butlneet. 8ald A£ s r A 1cT1 ON 8 A I!· Dally Piiot Metcfl 11'. 24, $'1, NOT oon011ned wftll any ttion · 3090 PulllTlan s1,_ ~t• Code of Callfom11 cunty L.encl a Alaht o4 w.,,, NOCHD•o AOAIMI TI the ~. other '""" lhe tran ... doee not lnc:tVOe Ille COAOEO ON JUN! •• 111t Apri 7, 1Ne otMr ...... at wNCl'I Mid Coele MeA CA 92928 • Thi Ilene for ~ clelmt w+tt ~ Inc nG w <>c.an YOU.. YOU IHCKA.D CC*-~ of fiw.. ml1alrl trlnlfer Of tny 11ceneea, IN 800K 111•. ttAG! 420 M-010 Tra ntleror(e) mlollt b• Oefted ~ alopment eor no1 ·~ I>"°' 10 tour l !YG Su1!9 4H Lone TACT A UW'fllll 11•m• of 1morovam1111a •todt 111 .,., goodwlll, or OP' OfftCIAI. MCOAOI <>' IDcMed l.td 1191 ol lmp'ov. l>Oflllen • Oallfom•• oor mon1111 trom the d• .. ot the 1eecf1 CA 80I02 on°' aft• NOT1Ca Of' Pan~ to ,,,. "'-""'· any other trant ... relttlt'lo IO SAID COUtflY (THI "MAS.. •• M' Ml\-f'Mfl .. ~to tne ... po1111on' 18901 Ventura 1*MQ no(tce •bOve. Aprtl 8 ttae and tM !Ml '""11ftl'l IAU wNOll'I ... ~ ~ the bWlnaat. other tNll\ 1hl f(" 0£CLAA.AftOH"). AND ... _ ""'IW. any .. on flla In I.ht ofb of &Ml tne1no CA 11430 YOU MAY !.XAMIH! the day tor ftllng cs-by any r.a. "'°' mn ~ tlWOUOfl the~ purchue or ttlOM oan&1n A.NY AMINDM fNTS meTr.,...,...andanyMd Thi .. bualn•H la con-l1lak11C1ttr,t1,.eoun lfyou credl!OfOfNid lttmlOl lm NOTICC IS 1'4["flY o4tl!ia'991~0,t,,. hem• ot lrnorove me nta THIAE"TO f1C11Tt00t .,...,. 1111~ lhOIM be~ ducted by • oener.i part· •• • per.on 1n1er•ftd 1n pr0141Mn\I ~ .. nlf''G to 0 1veN. lf\at on Wedfteed41Y. Tt~ .. PttUlnfnO to tile Aeetty, Thi •• ,. addr ... end MAim STAW at Mid offtce ~M ntrlNCI ll\e •t•1•. )'OU 1'1\1)' ~ I~ ~tty "' ... be ~· • AprH 2 19" .. •O 00 OMed Mlf'Cfl \0. 1 wtllfh.,. ~ r...ity °''*common dMlgnatlon. TN tcllOwtna pet1ION.,. number .. (tt!i) 431-7481, Tlrllotlty p Hogan, Senior upon 11'11911.tcutOI Of .CSmtn-1818. whiicfl la the~ o'CIOct. AM °'.., 441) '" C OIT A Ml lA "'· tt.-nt thrOUClfl the purctlaMllf any, of the rMI property doing buelneu u penon to oontact II Key Vice p~ l•tr110t 0t voon tlle 11 d•y bltore the oontumma thl roon-"' ..-for a.a. OIVIL.°'. mwT AKltCY. Of 1M t.i property bo/ the d u crlbad a bove t 1 TAAO&WTNOI. 50t e Wyr. 9erw1 Thie ttat.,,..,. wu flleO ~ fOt thl P4ICIU10t or tlOn d .. apec:lfled ~ w.tl!M'I !tie ofllcel Oil OcMoar1 I Yt MCUNTY I.AND I Tn111•• 11urport1d to '>• t7 lie A¥1 , tenta Ana, c.ill. The nlfN .no ~ wtth the Countf ~Of Of· llO!ftlnlttral0t and ftM wnt1 T1Q ~ ot lmpt~ ~eorc TtWt o..t ~ WT Of WAY WV.CSI, o.'9d ~ 10. 1... Cl.OVIA, l"VINI , CA 82101 ~ ot tM lrlt~ .. County on MWCll t2 tlle court wfth proof of Mr• mantl ~ 10 Ille,_. ed 11 ~ M ._.. MC.. 9rl......... ....... C OITA MllA RI• t2114 IUftcy~.1()1 M';\'· ir~llw. ~alH ,... ·~ 1 Wfltten ~t tttt· .ny it ..Ol&Ci to Calfotnle .,,..,.luila~, .,..,_ Cfl . °"'91 C.... DIVll OfJmN'T AQIDICY, The undenlQMd TNtt.e tta Satlta Ml CA t2101 IWMI W'IC Wlll"IMG H P-.llllO tNlt 't\'IU deelr-e .oec; 1\Jnifotm c:omm.uat COO. ~ta Ana ~~ 01 Or· }o.!J PllOt Merdl ,_ ~ -.... , ' - * 0renge COMt DAILY PILOT I Mondey. Mwch 24, 18H Ml.IC ll>TICl MlJC ll)llC[ MUC "11lC( MUC MJTU MUC "11lC( MUC 11>11CE .:=TO ·-Oely""°'Metdl24,1Me ~Oll-tl MlllleCl', of the Not1Ce of a.le 11 r.n~...-Oflf\'IPlllMl.,... TMIMALTY ·-~..::.i"lr.1:-~TOM°' c~o-M-«M> m eecuNTY LAI!!,.• • uu.eo. .., 'e Utte. p cu m ·on, 0t , ..... ~ MOTa,_!O... Delly • WT°" WAY-WIODl Tlt'I I FIR CMt • vr WT Of WAY lllWh;aa, The ~. 00:"° "'°""' w-. to ~ the u:.,~ C,_ -_.. •9'CttWmJm J:"a.atlt!IOf "8JC ll)TJC( IMC.. 9'I ~ L ...... Fll'lwO QOMMUNITY A8·•rwNlinlng pr1nalpel eum of Notlc» • ~to TIUif~I,_ Of NlJC 11>11C( NllT~to 1 --"'-·• PWlllNd OrM99 C019t SOCIATION, undef uld'IN•ueouredbVMldl'M1 °'*"1ore MlllllO .nim.r.t ..,.018 ""8 ntlMM.TY I ~ TO • ..,. OellyPllotM.,Clht4, 1 ... ~M~...outed ,1property,WltllrMrwtUW...1 lfloert.inHerNof~ NRT.-.OTO ·- ............... ,.__ _ .. ·~· _l '90TICI TO M-423 8fld ~to ... under-on, .. ~ In Mid ,.,., .. ,.,.,,llnlnO to the.... TMIMALTY lllO'IUTO U.c.c..) -._,...._ CMDITW Of llor*' a wrttMn O.CWllltOf\ C'&&Ae. advWICl89. " eny, .ity thet I Ir.-., It 1bout ( ..... "'1_.., Cl9ff0M Of ..... ~ QMr\ IO U.C.C.) TUlll .. Of fltllJC MOTIC( o( o.teult end Demlncl tor under the twml of .., I to be Ndt 11'1 °""' thoea u.c.c., TllUllFU cw CNdtorw heYlng en lnt.,. ~ II Mteby lllVM to ~!WI a., end a~ Mota of ~.-...... cNtgee. 111C1 '*'*' 1tem1 of lmpr~ Notlot le '*'9br oMl'I to .. lllOVWTI In oenaln ...... of imoroo.. ctecllton l\e¥lng WI lnw.1 Nlln...-0 TO IC~ Del..,_ end IDlctkwl to .... ·~ of the TN9tee 8flCI "*"-PtNlnlna to die .. cndlton helllnt"' Inter-PMT.-0 TO U.11''"1 ,,..... ~ IO the Re-In 0911Wt i.eme of lmpr~ .,.. MM. TY '901"1C8 Of The undertlQMd ~lot the tNIU ctMted bV Mid llty (flxtlaW 1114 equipment) WI _,. lten'9 of ~ TMI MAL n I MC QA" nan llty "* a tr..-_ 11 ~ ,.,.,m ~ to the A9-, ..... ,_.-4117 TllU9TU't t.A&.a Mid NotJoe Of o.tlult end CCIAt end ioc...d ONLV 11 tN """'9 ~ to IM ,... , ..... "'1_.., I Emily M. Mc Gavrm. '° e. meoe on ONr trioae 11ty that• tranaler 111bout u-,;.% ~·t: .._ Election to lell to be ,.. The total amount of the ~ eddf .. Mt ronn tlf'f that a tt.,,., II~ U.C.C.) a ,.....,,1 of e.Iboe. ~ ~ of ~ to be tnede an °""' ttioee Notlot 11 Q1¥w1 to • CCl'Oed In the ~ty .._. ~ blMl'.ce of IM obi-~ TNt tt'11111Wrt1on II to be IMde on Oltty ..,.. Nottoe lit Nr«ly f//rVftll to I ~ March "-"' ~ to n. ,. est.in ltema of ~ aedttOl'9 ne'lllrlg an lnweet UNt 1 • the ,... property 11 loc.Med. geUOn MOUfeCI by the prop. NOT concerned wfth eny oenaln iteme of ~ crdore ~ an lnWeM IWQ 9'y(tb!ILWWancfeQulclment) rnenta Pertalnlna to the Re-In oartatn lt«N of lmpr~ ,.,...... DATED-Maten'· 1... erTy to be aold 8fld ~ olMr addr-.. •• wtl60h aald "*"' ~ 10 , ...... In oartelrt lteme of~ l , 18ee, 1n Newpon ~ IOcMed ONLY at IN :zc~~WJ!.~L ti menta Pertaining to the,_. u~~R A~EIH D':lC~~T O"llNWALD and ..,._ •tlmMed ooete. ex-Ttan1fator(1) mlglll b• 11ty(fbctvrauncfequ1pmen1) "*'t• Pertaining to the,.._ Beach. Mn. Mc ...... eddww ... lortll -·-vrlLV .. IN ally tllat I tranelw .. a~t • MINICK,• T ......... penw 8fld advtll.cee at Iha looetecl.laldliltoflmpr0'<'9-end ioo.ted ONLY It the ally tllat. ltanelet .. lbout G vre and her late herein. """ tflnMCtlon It ~ adCSraee ... fOtth to be m.ot on only thoae ATl~OVENANTS, Vefl K...... ...... ... time of the lnlttel publlee1lon menta ,.,.,,alnlng to the .. ~ addf.al ... foftll to be IMde on only thOM' • n NOT conoamed -'th any ~. Thie trllnNCtlon le certain ltema of lmprcw. COlfOITIONS~ ANO RE-~ ..... C••nele of the Notlca of &lie la alty II on Me In the offtoe cl ~. Thie traneactlon la certain Heme of ~ husband, moved to °"19C ~et wtllctl Mid NOT oonoerned wtth any mant1 Pertalnkio to tlla ~ STRICTIOfllS, AS ANNEXED .... (714) •1....-., ., 1116CUe. the Tr.,..,_ 8fld eny end NOT oonciemed -'th Mi ment1 P.rtalnlng to tfla A9-• Balbot In 1923. She Tran•f•ror(•) mlgll1 b• Otl'lar ldclfeN •• wNctl Mid alty {lhnut• ancf equipment) TO THE SUBJECT PAOP-..,,... ...... tn. t>enellc:l.,y, DOE .. ~ etlOUld be INda other addreM at wtllctl Mid tlty (fhttl.ll'• eincf eQUlclment)' ~ The Frei· loo.Md.S.lch•tofl~ Tran1feror(1) mlgllt b• and ioc.ted ONLY ,1 tlla ~~O~N~ga ~c:t,l:~~ Pvbllahed Otenoe CoMt TAAIL CONDOMINIUM As. et Mid oftlce.1. t~ Tran1leror(1) mlgllt be end ioo.ted ONLY et 1t1el ~u I the P~t mem. ~to the~ localed SaldltstOflmt)fOfto ~ lddre. Mt fortll YOUR PROPERTY IT MAY Deity Piiot Mereh iC, t7, 24, SOCIATION. und•' Hid number II: (21<1) 43T-74e1: local.eel 8aldlie1oflmpt0"9--buelfl9le addf.al ... rortri • ent 0 • afty .. on • In fM offtcl of ment1 Pertaining to Ille ,... l'lareln Thie lreneac:tlon II BE SOLO AT A . PUBLIC 1~ CC&RS heretof«e ~ per.on to contaot le: Kay menu PertMllna 10 the Re-l\anlln. Thll tfaneactlon la Teachen Amodation Ille Tr.,..... and any and elty .. on Ne In the otnoe of NOT concerned wtttl art't SAL£ IF YOU NEED AN EX-M"'"8 and de!Mted to Ula under· 9eree1. tlty .. on • In {he offtoa of NOT coricernad with any and active In Ebell II lnqulttee ehoukt be made the T ran.i.r .. and any Md otnar addr ... it wtlidl Mid P A Tl o N o F T HE llgnad • wrttten O.olefetlon The ~ and ~ the n.,,..., .. and any end 01Mr addr ... et wtllCtl Mid W G She • Miki omc.J. telephone all~ ~ICS ~~ Tran1lerorf1) mlgllt be N ~ATN U R E 0 F T H E •-II' ~TIC( of o.tlUlt end DemMd fOf adctr.. Of Illa lntenOed .. lnqulrtee lflould be INda Tran1feror(•) might be ,_ ~ ~ brou,!>.:__ number 11: (2ta) 437-7481 It ..., .,.,_, t_. ........ loc:ated Saldlletof~ow-r\IUU\f"" Sale.andewnt1enNotlotof ~•) era: Ml<:tlMI at Mid offtoa. ~ loc:ated a.IOlltfoflmpr0"9-1.aSu.rvav.,..,. i'J •1C1 '°" S*'tOn '° c:on!K1 1a: t<aY number it (2t3) 437-7481. menta PenalnlnQ 10 the ~ ~~c~~·~~L<f/b~T K,.,, o.tault Ind Election to W . Pelle dba San aw Tr°'*""' number 11: (2t3) 437-7481: mentt Partelnlno to the,. Dattn Mc Gavttn of e.r.. c:' to oont.c:t 11 Kay eityleanftlelntlleoffloeol TACT AUWYER. • NOnCCOf The under'llgned caueed FleflandP9tl,11t5Pw11A..,. per'IOll to contact le: Kay a1tyllonlllelntheofftclot Irvine 7 srand· The name and bu8ir1M1 •I the Tr_,.,_ and any and On 31 lHe TMllftl'I IALI Mid NoOoa of Del'IUt lllCI -· Coeta MeM. CA. Bereat. the Tr..-.r .. end #ti/ and ' 4 eddf9M of tile Intended The n~ and bulinaM all lnqulrlae lhould be made Mardi • • 81 Electlon to a.I to be ,.. The ioo.tlon In Cellfornla The name and bualrleaa 811 lnqUlf'9e thOllld ba INda chlldtto and ~at ".,,.._,Of(•) .,., Olft Scout ador... of tlle Intended 11 uio omca 1~ to~ A.M. the law offlcee of ,::•~ e«d-1 In the county "'*8 of the ot"9f ...cuttw offtcl addr... of the lntenOed at Mid Oftloa t~I g,randch1Jdren Ser- Councl of~ County, trenaf«orC•) •,.: CM•tlna num~ It· (2131431-7•111. ~ES~~:=~~~~ UNt1,Tr;..~ therNl~=ltlOceted or ~nclpal buelrleae offtoa trtnaler~!{!).._~ra· Co•ta number 11: (213) 417-7481; vices will be prtva~. ~t ~ ~~;:r*· ~~11';.jTI~~· ~~~KPe~Lfv~ =~ to contact II Kay agent f~ the OEeRFIELD YOU AAE IN DEFAULT ~~T:i:wAL3D 1~ft d r.!n.:=t,..,....Ofle: =:Cr~u~:n~ p«aon to CC>fllaot la: Kay pa c if I c View rt! location .~ c.llfornl1 enue. Co•ll Meae. CA. T: 'natM end bualneal ~,g~=~ ASSOC:~~ ~~g~R o~H~o~iNcAi.:r~-MINICK. -T........ The name, ~ ~ Parle A~. Cott• ....... e.rr:t. neime end bulllnMel Mortuary, Dlttcton. of the Ch6ef axecutMI Offlce 112827 -acklr"' of Ille Intended the OECLARA~ OF CONDITIONS AND RE~ v ... I(..... ... -. I acklr.. qt the lntenOed OA. t2U7. acklr ... of Illa Intended 644-2700 or prlnclpel butilnea office Tiie location In Celllornli traneferorC1t aur. Ralpl\ Cor· COVENANTS CONDITIONS I STRICTIONS. AS ANNEXED ......,. le-,'C .. mele trwfwea la: Coeta ~ The locatlon In California tranef~rot(•) ere: Amir --------- of IN Intended tran1feror 11 °1 Ille clllel executf\le omc. rlgan Ind Ir-M C'bfr!Oan, AND RESTRICT16Hs (her• I TO THE SUBJECT PROP-.... C?.:''__..· ., RedevafQ9ment ~. n of the Ch6ef execlltlYtl offtcl BedleoZUman, dba Cheep - 8eme .. aoov._ or pnndpel t>ullMM °"': Ob• Corrigan C1meru, !natter "CC&Ra") rec:otOed ERTY UNLESS YOU TAKE ........ Fair onw. P.O. Sox 1200. Of principal ~ oMoa MIMI• Rent·A·Car. 5711 SAYERS The nerne and bull-~ftlle lnter:•rll\fferor -18~ Patti A~. Coet1 In ~ 11589, Paoatt 332, ACTION TO PROTECT Publahad Orange eo.t CotteMeM,CA92e2e. Olthelntendedltanefetorlt: W• ttttl Street. Coet• JACK C. SAYERS. *'<Sr ... of tlla Intended Tu a Mw. CA 112927 lndullve. OtflQal Racordl of ' YOUR PROPERTY, IT MAY o.My Piiot Marc:h to, 17, 24, Thet the proper1Y perti.. Sime u abov9. Meae, CA. t2t27 , born June 24 UH4 , ttanafef .. le: Cost• M... lie Mme ano bu"'-1 The locallon In c.llfoml• Or County Calltomla BE SOLO AT A PUBLIC ttae nent l'lareto. ~bed In The """' and bualnMe The locatlon In CWlfofnla '1 It Aedeveiopme11t ~. 77 ao0r... of t~lntended of lhe clllef uecutlW offtcl u ~xed to ·111e eubtec:1 SALE. IF YOU NEED AN EX-M-997 general aa: lrnpr~ta addf.. of the lntenOed of the dlW exec:utlYtl office Fairbanlu, A U a Falt Ottw, P.O. Box 1200. lranaler .. II ,. M~ or principal bull-office propettyveatlnglntllanemel PLANATION OF THE Per1.inlngtolheAaalty{ftll-Ir.,.... la: Coefe ...... Of pr1nolpel ~ offtcle j Paaeed away after a Coeta MMe. CA ns2e ~6 A~2oo ol Iha Intended transferor II ol Patrlcla Aerro WILL SELl. N A T U R E 0 F T H E PtBJC M)TlC( tur• end equipment) of tMt Redevelopment ~· n of the lntilnoed trllMferor le: 1 en gt h y i 11 n ea a, n:.·t!.r~ l:'::i.!:'11~ C~taM:.,CAll28~6 • s-;,:~.~nd ~ ~~E~~~~sl~=F6~ ~~3c~~l~~ou~Ag~ KMt21 =ai;., ~k':'.: ~~C~t2e2e~200• ~~end bulinMI March 21. 1986, ln general 11: lmptovements That Ille property:~ addr ... ol Ille Intended CASH (peyable It time ol TAcT A LAWYER. NOTICa Of Pete. and loc:eted at: 189S That tlla PfoC*1Y 1*11-addr ... of the Intended Newport Beach . Per1alnlng to tlle Reatty (fill-I nent ~i~ l~m~tl tran1f•M 11. Coet• Meea M1e In lawful money of Ille I On Mercta 31, tHe, at ~ATIOM fOlt Patti AYeRUa, Coeta Mala. nent l'larat~ It deac:i1bed In If~ It: Coeta Meaa Beloved husband of tut•l•ndbu~ulprnent) of th1t C1ntng to ,ti/' ReeJty (fix· ~~~J Ac;:cr~ United Stal•) it the outllde 10:00 A.M . .,,. law omc.. of CHANCM .. ~~ tranef« of tlla ~~lng~o t~~(,.!' RedeJ91opmenl ~. 17 Gwen, devoted father certa n .,,_. known 11. nd 1 I) f !hit a ' ve. ll · trori.t 1r1trance to Iha bulld-G R E E N W A L 0 a n O 0 ......... Of ·-·1 . Fair OrM, P.O. Box 1200, f J hn and Wend Girt Scout Council ol Orange tur .. I equ PfTl4IR o . Coela Mell, CA 92828. Ing located at 4350 VON RESNICK, u duty 8'>9Qlnted ALCOHOUC ltem1 of lmprovemanta tur• and ~I) of that Coeta MeM_ CA t2e28. o O Y County. ano loclted II. ~8 certain bullnea known u . Thal Ille Pl'oC*'Y P«tl-KARMAN OAON BUILD-llgent lot Ille OOE TRAJL llVSMQI UCDe8E Per1elnlng to the AMlty 11 certain buelnW known •: 'That the property pettl-Proud grandfather of WMt Plumer Street. Colt1 ~.~ed K~:i' ,:;~nl~ik ~ nent hereto 11 deectibed In ING, NEWPORT BEACH, CONDOMINIUM ASSOCIA-3117/M Intended to be conaum-Coetl Mau Munldpal Em-nent l'lareto la deecr1bad In 5 wonderful children. M ..... Calffornla-eo, C II-oen-11 u lmorovement1 CALIFORNIA all right tlUe TION under and pu,_,.,..t to To Whom It May Concern· meted, Ind .. c:lalme tnay plOYffl Federal Credit ganara1 aa: !mptovemen'9 M I l I Tllat UIO transfer ot Ille enue t1 Mesa, • Penalnlng to Illa Reetty (fh1· Incl lnter•t conveyed to Ille DECLARATION OF MORIKAWA Mani N a be nted, a1 the office of: S.. UNon, end ioc.tec1 et: 18n P.rtalnlna to the Realty (fix· emor a serv ces ltem1 of Improvements tor;~. llld f 1 tlle tur•andequlprnent)oftllat Incl now lleld by H uncs« COVENANTS COfllDITIONS RANGEL Eddi9J .,.~~I fUall1 of Way Pert! AYeRUa, Cotta MeM. t1KWancfequlprnant)ofthat Wednesday, March Parulnlng to the Reatty It Item: 01 1~9;r~~~ent• ~n bullneeec known-~ aalo DECLARATION OF AND RESTRICTIONS Ct*• 1ng to 1119 Olpw1ment of~, 81 d slnG.lt•' 1 ~02 l.'l'!f. OoeeriLon"' Cemomla.T ..... _ _._. tr~ _,, ..._ 1 certain ~ known aa: 26 at 11 A.M .. Pacific Intended to be coneum-1 .,.,.r..,in 9 lmefU. .,.., COVENANTS CONDITIONS lnarter "CC4Ra .. ) recorded cohollc Bevwage Control fof v ·• u '" "• • ·-_,, ·-"' u,. ChMP WhMlt Rent-A-Cer Vi Cha l 1n li mated. and all clalm1 may rn~ngt~o ~': =m~ located 11 1893 Penc Av· ANO RESTRlCTIONS In Ille In~ 11589, Paget 332, OH SALE BEER a WINE Beedl.CA.toa02onorelter ltem1 of Improvement• 8fld IOce1ad et 571 w..i ew pe · _ eu be flleO, at the otflce of Se-I mateo ln<I •II clalma me enue, Cott• M.... Cell-property lltuateo In Mid lnc:lullve, Otftdal Aecord1 of BOHA FIDE PUBLIC EAT. "Pfll II, 1He, Ind the last Pertaining to the AMty la 19ttl Street. Coate Meaa, of flowers donauont ~o a Rloht or W1y be m.d 11 Ille olfloe of· S:. 1orn11 County and Stet• deecrtbed Orange County. Cellfomla. ING PLACE to ..., Mcohollc t day tor f1llng clekN by MY lnleNMd to be oonaum-' Cellfomla. I may be 1ent to The , Inc., 110 W Ocean CYrll L'1nd & R Ill of We Tll1t Mid lrentler of Illa u : Unit 1 aa lhowll and~ u annexed to Ille eub)ect beveragu at 17185 I credit« of Mid Herne of Im-mated, Ind .. cfalml ""'YI Tllet Mid trenefer of the American Cancer So- Blvd., Suite 426. Long S. Y 1~ W ~ llem1 ol Improvement• ICrlbed In the condominium property ve.tlng In the name Brool!llurlt Fountain Valley ptovemenll Par1111nlng to be Ned. etthe oftlce of: S.-'ltem• of Improvement•' f vort 8Nch. CA 90802 on or atter 81 ~leess~e 1 426 Lon Pertaining 10 trie Realty 11 plan recorded In Book of Patricia Fierro WILL SELL PYbltahed Orange Cout I the Reelty, lhall be Aptll 8• OUtlty L8fld & Rlclht of Wey Pertaining to the Aeelty •1 dety or your • te "Pfll II. 1986, end the lut I v ,; CA 90802 · tt 11 Intended 10 be coneum-11586 Page 1678 otflclal AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO Dally Piiot March 24 1He I f988, wNc:n 11 Ille bu*-Sanlloae, Inc., l 10 W. OoMri lntanOad to be c:oneum-charity. Pacific View day for llllng cl1lm1 by lllY Be~ 9 986 : ~ '1 ~ m11ed. Ind 111 clalm• m1y Recofds of Illa County of Or-THE HIGHEST BIDDER FOR ' M--033 dly b«or• the ooneumma-Blvd.. Sult• 428, Long mated, and .. claim• inay Mortuary Directon., creditor of sak1 Items of Im· ~prl 1 • fl~t cia~ 1 by u be flied, et the office of: Se-ange State of CaAlfornlL CASH (peyebla 11 time of tlon date lpeClfled eboVa. Beach, CA. 90802 on Of efter I be ftlad. et the offtoa ot. Se-N 't B h proYements Pertllnlng to I '~1 or 1 ng Id~ me f jY cvnty Lind & RIQlll of Way TtMt •1reet addr"' end ..,. In lawful money ot the Thia tr..-.r of lmpr~ April t. ttH, and the last I Wttty lM\d l RWlt of Way I e w P 0 r ea c · the Realty. thall be Aprtl 8. c~0=11" Pert4:':i 0 7c; Sefvleel. Inc . 110 W Ocean otller common dee'gnetlon. United Statee) at Ille outaAOe rtaJC fl)JIC[ menta Per11inlng to the Re-day for ftllng c:talma by #ti/ 1 s.r.loea, Inc., 110 w. 0oeeri 644-2700 ttH, Which ls the business rhe Rellty lhlll be ~ 8 Blvd • Suite 428, Long If any. of the rMI ptoperty front 1r1tranoe to lhe bullO· ally la eub)ect to Callfomla cndHor of Mid it.. of Im-Blvd.. Suite 428, Long! --------- day t>«ore the c:onsumma-11196 Wh.Ch ll tlle ~---Beech.CA ll0802onor1tter described ibove 11 Ing localed •t 4350 VON ,..,. Uniform Commerdal Code prOYlfrlenta ~ to18eech.CA.t0802on0fafler1 tlon o11e specified i t>Ove O• belor• the consumm•-Ai>fll II. 1vse. and the 1111 purported to be 4 t Snow-KARMAN, DAON BUILD-FlCTITIOUe .,..... Sac:tlon s 1oe. the Reelty, "*' be Apr1I 8, Apr1I II, 1Me, 8fld the laet I Th11 transfer of lmptove-Y d fled bove d•y for nMng clalm1 by 1ny 1>erry Irvine Calllornl• ING NEWPORT BEACH ~ ITATDmNT Thia Ir-fer of only thoM ltH. wNdl la the bul6nw day tor ftllng delrM by llPf rnenll Pertllnlng to the Re-~~ 118 ~I I • Cf editor of Mid lteme of Im-112114 • CAL,IFOANIA .. right 111.e The lollowtng pertonl .,. QertMr'I 11eme of lrnproo..-day bef«e the ~, credleor of Mid fternl of !m- alty II tub)ect to Cal1lorn11 m:,,,.,~18:,,1 ° 10 ";'::;<>;:: pr~ta Penalnlng 10 The undersigned di•-ano lnlereet conveyed 10. OOlng ~ aa: BEA'S ment1 Pertaining to the A9-tlOn data ~ above. prowment• Pertaining 10 Unltorm Commercial Code I ng c hi the Realty Shall be Aprll 8. d llms eny lllblllly lor any anO now held by It under SWIM & SPORT. 30t E. 17th arty le no! I normel fUll bulk Tllla .,.,..., of lmpr0'4-• IN Aeelty, 8'1911 be Aprtl 8 I s.ctlon 6106 ~~~f:msu~n!a~ c:;! t986 wt11c1111 tile bu.ir-tncorrect,_ of the itr .. t aald DECLARATION OF St. Coet1MeM.CA92827 Nie ol Ille bullneae. SakS menll Pertaining to tlla Ae-1 teee, .Nd, la.the bUllrieel Tiiis tran1fer of only lhOM Section 6106 Oly belore IN conaumm. adOrese and Olller common COVENANTS. CONDITIONS a.. 0)4<• SwlmwMr. Inc. tranlfer cSdlla not Include Ille ally la eubjed to Callfomla day befOfa the coneumrna- pat1aln Items of lmptove-Th 1 1 f I)' lllOM Uon dete 14>9C1fled above dellgnellon 11 any ltlown ANO RESTRICTIONS In the (Celllomla corporation). tr_,., of any llc:enMe, Uniform Con'Wnerclal Code1 tlon date apeclfted aboV9 rn.nta PerteJntng to the A&-c.er1 '1 rans er 0 f '7 Th11 tranal« of Improve-herein • · property tttueted In Mid 1eo22 Reeeda Boulevard. llock In trade, goodwlll. or Sec1lon 81oe. llhll ,,..,,..., of lmprOV.:; elty Is not e norm1l lull bulk men~~n P=~lno 10 ";::;,o;:: ments Pertlln•ng to Ille Re-SalO aale Wiii be made, but County end State deeorlt>ed Tanana, Callfornll 91358 any otl'lar tranei.r relallng to Thlt tranat. of only thoea j menta Pertaining 10 the~ I' eale ol the l>uSlneu Seid any 19 nol 1 nor~al lull l>ulk llty 11 aubject 10 Clllfornle Without co...nent or war· 11. Unit 1 u lhown and de-I Ttll• ~1lne1a 11 con-Illa bull,_, other tllen Illa certeln ltema of lmpr~ ltly " eubjac:t to Callfomle transfer does not lnclu0e lll41 sale 01 Ille buslnesa Said Uniform Commercl•I Code ranty, expr•• or Implied, r• IC<lbed In Ille condominium ,aucted l>y. • corpora110fl putcll ... of tllOM certain menta Pertaining to the ~ Uniform Conwnerclal Code 1ransfer of any llcenaes. transler doee not inciude Ille Section 8108 gardlng lltle. ~. or plin r~rdeO In Book Bee Dyke Swlmweet, Inc. Item• of Improvements aAty II not a normal full bulk Seetlon a toe. stock 1n trlli<I•. goodwlll. or trensler 01 iny tleeneea. Thie tren•I• ol only thOM encumbrancee. 10 pey Ille 1 lSll&, Page tST8 Offlcla1 IHelmu1 Behenlicy. Prealdent Pertaining to tlle RMly ..... ol the ~. Said Thia trlNfer of only ltic.9 any 0111er tran1fer relating to SIOCll in trlde OOOWlll. or certain Item• ol lmprov. remilnlng principal eum ol Recorda of Ille County of Or· Thia ltalernent wu llled wtllc:h era coneldered rllllty trenafer doea not Include the oertlln "atne ol lmpr~ Ille ~slness, other than 111• eny other tranat! relating 10 rnen11 Pertaining to Ille ~ Ille llen MCured by a1Jd ,.., ange, State of Callfom4e wltll Ille County Clettt of Qr. lteme tllfougfl Illa purc:heM treneler of any lficeneae, mant• Pertaining to the A.- PertB1ntng to the Realty. ~r;.~~1 ° Improvement~ treneler Ooel not lnciude the cCaRa, ldveno.. If any. 11 any. 01 tlla real propeny not2r7 Deted: March 10, 1He the bYalneae, other then the treneterdoeenot lnduCSa Ille ttems of lmpro .. ements ~ ~nose cerui sale ot Ille ~Ii-Slld on u · provlOed In aalO other common Oellgnltlon 18. 11188 Transfer... any other tr..-.r relatJng tol..,. of the buelneaa. Seid wnich 11e conso<lereo really Pen1tn1 10 Iha Reelty. trlNler of any Ileen-. under Iha t«m• of 1111<1 deacrl b•d above 11 Publllfled Orenge Coea1 COITA MflA "f· purc:Nee of thoee oertmn Ir.,..,. of any ~. purchue ot thoM cen11n the bu ther tlwl the alty II not 1 normal tun bulk property wltll lnter .. I Illar• Tiie ltreel ador-and .noe County on Fel>ruery of the real property by Iha ltoc:ll In trade. goodwlll, Of 1t1y la noc a normal fU11 bulk I ttema 1hrough the oorcnue wtllCh ng onllOered eetty 11ock 1n 1raoe. gooOwlll. or CC&Ra ,_ ~ Ind purported 10 be: 41 Snow-Diily Piiot Mln:tl 3. to. 17, DEVIL~ A•NCY, Item• of Improvement• lltodl In trade goodwll Of of the real oroperty l>y tne Items t~r~h the pur~ue any other lrenefer rellUng to expenM. ot the Tf\lllee and berry, lrvlne, · Calllornla 24, 1988 IY: MCUNTY LAND a Pertaining to the Aeelty • .ny 01Mr vemd.r relettnii to t---------- Transteree 01 the rul property by the the buslnaa, otl'lar tllen Ille of the truat• c:r•ted by lllO 112714 M-986 MOHT Of WAY llJllVtCta, wfllc:h are conalderad rMlty Ille bualneae, ottlW then the Detect Maren 10. 1986 Transleree purchaee of t"<>M certain CC&Ra The underelgned 011_ INC., II)': Katlwyft L ...... ".,,,. 11\fougll Illa pul'd\aae pun:f\&M of ttM>M cer1aln C 0 8 TA ME 8 A R £. 0 11.0 Mercn lO 1986 1tem1 ol Improvement• Tiie IOtal amount ol the Clllims any U1b111ty for any I l'tlllJC M)TIC[ Publllhad Orange Cout of the rMI property by the item• of Improvement• , .... Olaultle4 DEVELOftWNT AGENCY, ' c 0 8 T 4 ME 9 A RE. Pert11n1ng to Ille Realty. unpaid balenc. of the obll· lncorr. ec:t,,_ of . the ltreet Dally Piiot Marc:ll 24, 19811 I Tranefw .. , Pwtalnlng to IN Aeelty, 8Y: HCURrTY LAND I 0£VELOftWNT AGENCY which are conl!Oereel realty gallon aewred by the prop-addrMI and other common I llOll M--025 Deted: Merell 10, 1He wtlictl are contlderecl raelty RIGHT Of WAY 8£RVICE8, eY· H'.CURITY LAND a 1tem1 through the purcllue arty to be sold and reuon· deelgnitlon, II any etiown NOTICC TO COITA MllA RI· lterN ltlfougll the purdlaae INC., er. Kethryn £. 8wMt A.0HT OF WAY HRVICEI ol the r"I Pl'oe>et1Y by the 11>le estlmeled coctl ex-herein • CMDfTORI M Someoneyouknowtumlng ~MT ACllJICY, of the rMI property by IN Put>llSl'led Orange Coast INC .,·Kathryn E ....... • Traneleree penlet ano ldVIRC49 at Ille SllOaaiewlllbemlde but ~ °' I Sweet t8?Clualftedll._ ll"t: MCUMTY LAND • Tr.,,...,... 842 1818 01,1ty Piiot Merell 24. 1986 P~t>llshect Or•noe Cout Oiied March 10. lllH time of Ille Initial publk:ltlon ,WltllOUt covenant or ;.,.,. ....OVU.NT• grMI piece to buy that first WT' Of WAY ... we... Detect Matdl tO. 1M8 - M-029 1 COITA MllA "I· 1 1 NltTAIN9tG TO CM INC .. ~"""""' L...... COITA MllA RI· 0 CHICK IVERSON Chevrolet • Porsche • Audi 441 E. C111t Hwy., l1w,1rt ltaoh 173-0100 Highest Quality Sales & Service 5ADDLEBACK$ Safes e Lea sin • Service Parts ONLY MINUTES AWAY IRVINE AUTO CENTER 1-800-831-3377 714-380-1200 -J:· Nlal•ID l&nilfl "SPECIALIZING IN MERCEDES IENZ" And a ll Other Fine European Automobiles l .A 'sonly authOfiHd C"n•t dealer AU MAKES AND MODELS 714-557-4040 0 CREVIER. BMW SA LES • SERVICE • LEASING "Where Professional Attitude Prevails" lpec:let111~ In Europeen 0.ffvery. Excellent Setectlon of New end cerefully P'•P•rad UMd 8MW'1 always m stock 835-3171 208 W. 1at St., Santa Ana COfnet or Broadwey & 1at St Closed Sundeys $ SAuP fJ~R~l,HG,HTS JR Overseas Delfvery Specialists · OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK BMW -ROLLS ROYCE 1540 Jamboree Rd. Newport Beach 840·D'l441 e JIM SLEMONS IMPORTS 1301 0111111 SI. -N•• C•r ~I/on 1001 QuMI St. -Re .. ,. Dl'll•lon 0 World'6 LargB~I Selection of 0 MerctKJa Benz A. 833-9300 W.. . .._,.,. P.U . S..W. My S.., 0 ~ County-®-00- VOLKSWAGEN/ISUZU CALIF'S :: t I LARGEST VOLKSWAGEN DEALER NEED WE SAY MORE? Parts Open M-Sal 8 -5.30 Sat 9 -4 p m Service m-Frt 7 30 • 6 pm 11711 BEACH BLVD HUNTINGTON aEACH 714/ 842-2000 0 NABERS CADILLAC til .. 2100 llAlllOll ILYI., COSTA IESA (114) 140-1100 (213) 111-1211 • Best Prices • Convenient Location • Great Location • Super Service • Courteous & Knowledgeable Sales _People BUEN.- Ptl RI< PACIFIC OCEAN . o COMMONWEAL TH VOLKSWAGEN ~ 'FAMJLYSTORE8INCE 'S3' a ~ Sal•• -Servic. -Leuing ~ Mt·OllO 8 THEODORE ROBINS FORD U.S.A. 's # 1 Thunderbird Retail Dealer Modern Sales, Service. Parts, Body, Paint & Tire Oepts. Competitive Rates On Lease & Daily Rentals 20IO 1.rMr llw•., letta lesa ••2-0010 " M0-1211 0 HOUSE OF IMPORTS • Ease or Ownership terms • Lease convenleoce-12-72 mo. • Select from 100+ new and pr&-OWned • DellvefY In Europe option da.1 MerC*tff 714/213 937-2333 Santa Ana (5) Freeway @ BMch In Buena Park I ·v BUICKLolus JAGUAR ISUZU the PROFESSIONAL APPROACH 71 4 -979-2500 0 2925 Harbor B oulevard • Costa Mesa, CA • • a 1l1CJCTOl a lllCl'JO'l PONTIAC SUBARU • TRANS loM SLASHES • f 111£811!() • ~ST[ e PRICES! e • PARISllN ON ALL • BOHNCVU£ • GRANO PRIX 1986 • StMlflO CONVU118U • '1000 MODELS • CAAHO AM lNlf R Altf ClflC(MSTAHC(S W( Wll NOT BE UNDERSOLD! • SUBARU 2418 ...... aw. Costa ... ""'*1 Btxh 24'0 .... lhd. 714/549-4300 Costa Mtsa Newport a..o 714/549-4300 9 ORANGE COAST JEEP /RENAULT # l ,, .,.., .,,, ,,, llw JH, 11111 lff I YtllS 1oan~e. SALES . ..,~~~9=~~· t : ~~~:~~ I ' 541-102:3 • ACCESSORIES OEPt • UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE HONDA 2llO tt.rbor Blvd. Coetl M-540-0713 Cj I I ) ,_ 25~ MONDAY, MARCH 24, 1986 Gas-pump prices tumble Analyst calls price drop last two weeks unprecedented, predicts further drop decreucd an averaae 7.91 cents a pllon nationwide. He said there is a possible decrease of2 cents or 3 cents cents more before prices level off. The average price of all gndcs of gasoline -fulJ.-service aod self- scrvicc including all wes -bas now dr~pped to 9S,76 cents a gallon, be fallen a total of 24.26 ccnu a pJ.Joo, Lundbera said. .. All o( this ii unprecedented.," he said. .. It's a collapt!e over three timel as le'Vete u the eiaht-cent drop in the fi.nt quarter of 1982, '#h.icb was the previous an~time recorded drop in avcnae retail prices. rest of 1986 could approximate S 18. 9 billion. .. he ti.id, explainina that bis ftaures were bued on a projecied annual uJes of IOS billion p1lom of ptOli.De and a 24.26-<:eot.....UOn reduction for the rest of the year. to tbe pump," be satd. . Lundbefa's two-week survey foUad that the av~ )>rice of......, leaded It lelf-tervlce it DOW fl.96 cents a p.Uon, "'IU1ar u.o'eeded is 88.22 cents a plloo and the price of pmnium unladed is S l .o.4.5 7 9C1111 a p.llon. LOS ANGELES (AP) -Retail psoline prices fell nearly 8 cents a plJon over the past two wcelts, and an industry analyst said Sunday the reduced rates could save motorists nearly S 19 billion at the pump the rest of this year. Chargers' man Da•e White hu been picked to replace Bill Workman •• Edi.on BICh '• head football co.ch. See Bl. Nation The battle over Contra aid goes to the Senate thlsweek./M Fossils found In Antarctic Indicate great reptiles l!ved longer than prevlou~y thought./ M World Pilgrims converge on the Hoty Land during Palm Sunday./A5 Thousand mass In anti- government rally In South Korea./A5 Sport& Duke and Kansas make It to the NCAA basketball Flnal Four. /81 The New York Yankees get a hand from a new atm./82 UCl'a tennis team ad- vances to the finals of the UCl-Marrlott Clasalc. /81 Entertainment You can't fight video re- corders, so HBO will en- courage their use -to tape HBO movies.I A 12 Buelnesa Selling to singles Is doubly more complicated than one would think.I Al Entry Blank on BS INDEX Advice and Games Bulletln Board Business Claaslfled Comic• Death Notices Entertainment Opinion Pollce Log Public Notices Sports Tetevlalon weather A10 A3 A8-9 85-7 A11 84 A12 A8 A3 8<4 , 7-8 81-<4 A12 A2 Prices at the pump finally caught up with plummeting international crude oil prices during that period, said Dan Lundberg. who surveys 17,000 p'°tine stations in SO st.ates bi-.wcelcly for his Lundberg Letter. As a result. all arades of psohne said. · Since the beginning of 'March, gasoline pnccs have fallen almost 14 cents a gallon and since January have Amle and Kara Claltjlan, center, of ea.ta lleea take tbelr frtenda to Balboa laland for a taate of the local frosen treat8. The Clalco State collece atudenta, enJoym, their 111>rtna "Should the drop in prices &evel off and remain where it is now, the savinp to the motorina public for the wrhe averaee retail pJOline price in the United States bu at last joined the free fall in international price collapee. It's ca"'ll'lt up after an almost surprilina la& of two months and bu at tut worked its way tbrouab ............ .,, ......... brmk, were mwan of tile tr.• BllU... wd to laold I• coll .. e .a.deata ~-CO dart.a& die MJda7 of Bal Week, when thoaanda of tMD-acerw woatd take onr tbe area. World oil prices have lllmbled from an aven,e of $28 per bl.m:t ia December to an averqc of SJ S pet • ~·· College plans office project Coastline could earn $9.2M over 20 years by developing land By PBD. SNEIDERMAN °' ....... ""' .... Coastline Community Collqe - the collqe without a campus -may soon have something more valua~r a stake in an office and indusuiaJ development th.at could brio& $9.2 million in revenues to the district over the next 20 years, the district estimates. Earlier this week. Coast Communi- ty Collese District trustees cndoned tentative plans for devclopina excess pro~y around the coll•'• f'oun~ tain Valley headquarters into li&bt- indust.rial and professional oftioe build.inp. A resolution of mtent directed district staff to punuc more detailed buildin& plans with Newport ~ velopment Co., a Newport Beacb development firm. Chancellor David Brownell cau- tioned, however, that the resolution rcpraents ~a proposal for rnarri.aee • not the wcddina 1tsel!" The way it was during 'Bal Week' More formal development plans will be returned for the trustees' aPJ'.f'Oval in the coming wee.ks, be wd Brownell is top administrator of the Coast district, which includes Oran.ae Coast. Golden West and Coastline collCJCS. Rowdy spring-break parties in Newport were quelled by city's get-tough policy It's time to go flogging off to the grains. Or have you forgotten? Easter vacalJoo has arrived, which means linlc unless you're a student and get a one-week break from the books. But there was a time along the Orange Coast when the coming of the spring break convinced local rcsi- dents to hide orget out oftown. Motel managen would raise their prices. Lifeguards would say goodbye to leisurely afternoons. And police chiefs would grab for thear antacid tablets. In Newpon Beach, Easter vacation meant Bal Weck. And Bat Week, to the teen~crs of the· SOs and '60s, meant it was lime to race to the beach -flog off to the Irvine manufacturer recalls heart valves By lk Auoctated Presa The lrvin~bucd manufacturer of a widely used mechanical heart valve thAt bas already been involved in four recalls has issued a voluntary recall for more than 2,000 unimp!anted valves because some hAve been darnaaed. The recall followed six complaints from cardiac surgeons around the nation who had to discard damaged valves during heart operations, said Roben Curtis, president of Shiley Inc. The recall of the standard model of the Ionescu-Shiley pencardial xeno- graft was announced in a Feb. 27 letter to hospital administrators and cardiac surgeons throughout the country. The valves. made from preserved animal heart tissue, arc not supposed to have folds in leaflets that control blood flow. But the surgeons dis-- (Pleue eee HEART I A2) grains, they called it -for a week- long party. Bal Wcelt was a Newport Beach tradition. As surely as the swallows returned to Capistrano, tens of thousands of hifb scbool and college students would mvade Balboa bland and the Balboa Peninsula to celebrate the rites of spring in ways only teen- agers could truly appreciate. They'd arrive on motorcycles, scooters or in souped-up cars jammed with surlboards, guit.an, ice chests and sleepina bags and paclt local oncamttb Change in water-sale policy may increase local supplies Interior Department quietly paving way for armers to sell extra water to others WASHINGTON (AP) -The In- terior Oepertment has quietly de~ c1dcd to try to nuke 1t easier for farmen in the arid West to sell water they tet from the aovcmmcnt, a move that Could make more water available to Oranae County and the mt of Southttn California. A draft policy statement says the department will chanae its water supply conttaets and will 1uppon ICCJ'1at1ve ehanaes to faahtate Cl· chanees between wtllina buyers and sell en. But then:'s no mention on the ke}I question ., to who sets to keep the tarae profits that almo t 1ncv1tably will be aenerated. Already, a proposed deal hint~ at the profiu involved. The Metro- poli~o Water Distnct of Southern California, whole wholesale cus- tomcn mcllldc most Orange County commun1t1~ has bffm:d to pay the Imperial Valley lniption Dtstnct SI 00 per acre-foot of water -a quantity for which the dastnct's farmers arc now PIY•na SI 0. (An acre foot is afmost 326,000 &allon enou&h to supply a fam1l)' of Jlvc for about a year.) The question of who &ell the profit was d1scuned at a Feb .• 20 meetJna In Denver of a wk fortt of the Western Governors AUOCtAllon by Undcr- sectttary Ann Mclau&hlin and Dale Duvall, bead of the Bureau of Rcdamatton. accordtn& to Jo Clark. a staff member of the task force. Offiaals who asked not to be identified made av11lable a copy of the policy statement and supportin& documents, the muJt of three yean of work by a dcp&runental task force. The statement. however. bas not bttn t.ssued., and a fWl-b4own speech on the subJ~t scheduled by Md.aut)\lin in Denvcrwucanccllcd. Offic1al1 said 1t was pulled beck to pcmut further toundanp of tcnll· ment amoaa key mcmben of Con- IJUS. and lbc pms of otbcr business has kept oftkws from conctnttauna on how to ~noounce it • Oi1CUss1on of water salC'I has srown (Pl--... WA TSR/ A2) ROBERT HYNDMAN RflRO SPf Cll\f beach houses to tend to their seeming- ly insatiable appetite for fun. (Pl-..e .. 8PR.llf0/A3) In an intcrv1ew last week. be said the plan could generate $9.2 million for the district over the next 20 years. The funds would be used to offset the cost of the four-story Coastline bead- quarten building. which opened in -the summer of I 983. "It was always our intention to develop the property surroundina the bu1ld1ng." Brownell wd. If final approval 1s obtained from the board. construction could bcain withm six months, the chancellor said. Coastltne opened m 1976 u a (Pleue eee COASTLJKS/ A.2) State lottery funds allocated in Irvine By G. JEANETJ'E A VENT °' ...... ""' .... The Irvine school board allocated more than $8'44,000 in state lottery funds it received from the first quarter and an earmarked another $600,000 Clpected to amve the 1CCOnd quarter for specific prosrams this week. The board &arced to des1inate S93S.20S of the lonery money for secondary school counselors and the elementary fine arts program and an additaonal $670.000 for a ltst that includes capllal equipment. acneraI music, counselors, school supplies. mamtenance. and a tnal program to ease high school English tcacbcn' workJoad by prov1d1n1 substitutes. The board had hnle leeway. how- ever. in how at could appropnate the (Pleue eee lllVIlU/ A.2) Academy A wards may produce some surprises tonight HOLLYWOOD (AP) -The S8th l\c:adem' Awards will be u.nvciled toni&bt amld e_itpcci.lllons that the cn-emon1es could produ~ one o(Olcat's ~ surpnses. ' Unhte the pttVIC>u~ three )Car> when the wmners were predictable, lhc race for bnt film a h1evement' of I qg5 ha\ result~ 1n no strona favontes. "Out of Afnca." romantic tnanale \Ct in the v1v1d land.Jcape of colonial A.fnc:a. seem, hke a aood m1ddle-of-thc-road cho•~. But there also a.s strona uppon for "Pnw'\ Honor:·• comedy· drama of du9haty an the Mafia un~orld. and "Ki of \M p-tder Woman ... the pntoo cell benle of wdl\ brtween a fiery rcvolullonary and a moV'le-mad homotuual .. The Color Purple." l~ drama of a blade. fann woman's hfclona struak for lelf-worth. ~ppearcd out of the runn1n1 when d1rtttor Steven ptelbcfa was not amona the film'' 11 nom1nauon · Bu1 the Onuton Gudd award to ptC1bcT'I on March 11'1d1 \fd that he does indeed have adhcm\ts 1n the film commumty. (Pl--... 09CAU/A2) Aa OfMoe COllll DAILY PILOT/ Mc>May, Marc:h 24, 1988 A winning pot1ter ...... ..,...., ..... Dina Furia, left. a Newport Barbor lllCJa 8obool Mllior, laawarded a $1,000 ecbow- 9blp for Iler wtnnln& entry lD tile and- dnm.ken drt'rint poeter contat 9P0mored by tile Coeta Ilea llecllcal Center Boepttal. Preeentl.DC tile award to Farrla are (from left) boapltal admlnlatrator Norman llllartln, bo.pltal cbalrmaD Dr. Jolmn.le BetlloD and CoMa Me.a Mafot Norma Rertsoe. Ferrta la plannln& to attend Cal State Lone Beacla u an art IQjor MllDnJ.nc nut year. WATER SALES POLICY ALTERED •.. From Al in recent years. Congress has been unwilJing to authorize large new supply projects. and growing c111es have been willing to pay far more than farmers can pay. Thjs discussion threatens to upset a century or more of specialized law, custom and inst1tullonal arrange- ments. Jntenor's Bureau ofReclamauon 1s the biggest single supplier of water 1 n the West and even 1f 1t 1s not the supplier it often owns the p1pehncs. canals and reservoirs. A document explaining the new policy says it promotes market incen- tives, reduces government regulation and "actJvely fuJfills our stewardship responsibilities to increase the usable supply of quality water ... all the while helping to bring down federal spend- ing by reducing the need for new construction." The statement says .. pnmacy 1n water allocation and management decisions ... is re-affirmed to rest with the states." Jfproposed sales meet state law and do not infnnge the water nghts of third parties. any need ed changes 1n federal supply and payment contracts ··will be made 1n a routine and expeditious manner." and needed changes· in federal law "will be supported." Such a change might be the re- moval o f language in a statute confining water from a particular S!JPPIY. pr:ojcct to a particular irriga- uon distnct. •'The posture we're taking is, ·we won't be an impediment.'," said one official interviewed on condition of anonymity. Environmentalists may worry that the policy will encourage reduced stream flows and wetlands but prob- ably will support the policy because "it wilJ rcducc pressure to build large projects," this official said. "Some of the people in the water community arc apprehensive (over water sales). but the actors arc o ut there (proposing deals)." another official said. Staff members of the House In- terior's water subcommittee. accord- ing to one staff member who insisted on anonymny. staned to draft a bill last year to permit farmers of the Westlands Water Dtstnct in CaJ1- forrua to sell some of their water. Renewal of an old controversy over the d1stnct's payment contract side- tracked the work and the baJI was not introduced. The drafters expected controversy over whether the farmers would get to keep all the profits from selling their heavil y subs1d12ed water. or would have to surrender some to the federal government. "If you sell this stuff, should the government recoup something? I think yes," said the subcommittee staffer. ··But as long as the govern· ment is made whole. who could objcct?'. Clark of tbe govcrnon· panel said the aovemors had not dilCUSSCd the quellion. but the staff concluded wind&JJ profits were .. a very real problem .. in wjnnina support for water sales. "Al tbe staff level. our position is that a windfall should happen, and it sbou14 be divided," ~n the sclJing farmers, the fedet'&l aovern- ment and the stat.cs, wit.b the state share going to a development fund of some kind lo the past, bureau pohcy has barred profits on water transfers, she said. "That's no inoentive for a farmer to give up his water," she added. "We View this as a pos1t1ve step forward," sbe sa1d. "I believe the fean of water markets arc way overstated." One of the draften of the policy statement said he also thinks the government should recapture some- thmg, but he doesn't insist for fear that farmers would prefer to keep gettina the water 1fthcy couldn't keep 100 pen:ent of the profits. "The government benefits by re- duced agricultural subsidies and rc- ducecl payments to build water pro- Jccts" under the policy, this official ariued. Anaheim gains jail fight support Two state lawmakers from Orange County have vowed to help Clly officials m their light against con- struction of a ne~ county Jail near Anaheim Stadium The county Board of Supervisors this week selected a site a half-mile from Anaheim Stadium as the best location to build a S 138 mllhon Jail designed to hold 1.500 inmates. State Sen John Seymour, R- Anahe1m . said Fnday that he will "pull all the stops to see that it's never built there." Assem blyman Richard Robinson. 0-Garden G rove. said he will work wtt h Seymour to keep the 1all out of Anaheim Seymo ur said, "'The underlying basis 1s that a Jail needs to be built . but let's put 11 in an isolated area of the county whe re land values are low." OSCARS MAY PRODUCE SUPRISES ... From Al A spill vote could resuh 1n a best- p1cture Oscar for ··witness.·· the highly sattsfytng cop c..hase through Pennsylvania Amish country Tonight's gala prom ises to he the most star-filled in recent years, thanks to the recruitment b) producer Stanley Donen Jn recent times the Oscar''i star power wa\ largely limited to presenters and nominees. The director of "Singrn' in the Ram .. and "Seven Bndes for Seven Brothers," Donen enlisted alumnae from MG M musicals to grace a musical number by Howard Keel, "Once a Star, Always a Star." The stars: Jane Powell, Ann Miller. Marge Champion, June Allyson, Kathryn Grayson. Esther W1ll1ams, Cyd Char- isse. Lcshe Caron, Debbie Reynolds. "Because of transponauon prob- lems, they would have '° lea ve the location for four days. and the company can't afford that." ex- plained Bob Werdea, Academy pub- licist. -... L Ha.Z)r afternoon sun in forecast U .S. Tempe Hlglw. IOW llv!Mlll I p,m, s..ICMy .. l.e 51 21 n M n M M 24 .. ,, .. 12 74 44 Ill 2.4 • 21 47 H ti M ao tt .. ar .. 13 16 2t 11 87 13 " eo at eo a2 11 '6 541 II ff'1 n ae aa $3 11 14 .. .. 12 l5e u It .. n ,, --s.r..t• HOU u S °""' fll C:O.O-•• 9'0C*10n T.,_V.., T- Tlda TODAY '"' 10W 1 ;,41 e.m. :::r-747a.m. --t-1911.m. ._.,Nall •=*' p II\, l'W90AY .... M 21 71 111 1.0 &.• -0.I u 31 44 31 ff a 2A 541 M 5e 21 a 24 51 a4 SI 24 95 70 70 50 ., a7 Eztended 2-.24 Lift .. .21Llll 2:4tp.lft. l:Np.m, o.a u -0.J a.a 71 21 42 32 13 M '2 .. COASTLINE MA YDEVELOPPROPERTY ••• From Al collqc without a campus. offenng classes at community centers and rented rooms in numerous oei&b- borbood locations. The college also rented ad.mint .tration offiocs in Fountain Valle> Five ycan ; district trustees decided it wu nciaJly unwise to continue rtntill 1ffice space. The district then purchased a vacant 8.5- acre parecl at Warner Avenue and Ncwhope Street and built a college headquarters on at. The build.in& conwns Coastline offices and a cable television center, but is not used for classes. The project was funded by the distnct' s sale of certificates of partici- pa tion, similar to municipal bonds. The Coutline Cent.er occupies only three acres. lcavina an additional S.S · ICRS for commercial development that can provide a source of revenue to help pay fol' the college building. Chancellor BrowneJJ said the di.s- tnct injtiaJly had trouble attracting development ~posals. Changes in market condttions prompted the d1stnct to seek new offers last year, and Newport Development's plan was selected as the best. The chanoell« said the plan calla for construction ofbuildinp to bouie light manufacturing and hiab-t.cch businesses and professional offices. He sajd the structures would comply with Fountain Valley land-we guide- lines. Brownell said the tentative plan calls for the district to receive money from the lease of the property and from the renu paid by building tenants. Director for Huntington library syste111 appointed Ronald Hayden. 37, was appointed director oftbe Huotingt<>n Beach City library system Friday. Hayden, who will succeed Walt.er Johnson, has been serving as acting director for the last five months. He was Johnson's second in command for several ~- . The library system, which includes the ~ntraf Library at 711 l TaJben Ave. and th~ branch libraries -at Main Street, Graham Street and Bannina A venue -circulates more tha'n one million items a year and numbers l 16.000 active card-hold- ers. Small quake jolts Torrance TORRANCE (AP) - A small earthquake rumbled through the South Bay area Sunday night. prompting more Lhan JOO calls to ~Ii~ but causing oo damage or tnJunes. IRVINE ALLOCATES LOTTERY FUNDS ••• P'romAl money. In what Deputy Supenntendent Joe Holder called a couraJeous move on the part of the previous school board, he noted that trustees had anuc1paled the lottery funds and included them in the 1985-86 budict approved in Se:artember. .. By including $941,000 of lottery ~venue in the 1985-86 budget, we were able to preserve pr~ms which our neigbbonng dJStnCU djscon- unued." sa1d Holder in his report to the new board. O ne school board member. Greg Smith. who took office in December. quest1oned the earlie r board's ac- tions. saying he was "really concerned with tnat k.ind of pohcy." If the lottery funds had not ma- terialized, he said, "what we would have had to do was examine the contingency fund Jf there had not been sufftetcnt contingency funds., we would have had to cut back." Smith said instead of cutting the secondary counselors and elementary fine arts program. there may have been other areas of lesser priority where cuts could have been made. In his report. Holder estimated that lottery revenues for 1986-87 would inCfQse to about $2.S million and suacsted those funds could be put toward a wider range of Cllpenditures, depending on the perceived needs of the district and the adequacy of state funding. The board agreed to folJo~ a threc- tiercd approach to spcndina lottery fund•. The fint SI million would go to sustain exist ing programs; the second $1 million would be used toward the enhancement of pro- grams; and any additional funds - because of their uncertainty -wouJd fund one-time ellpenditurcs such as books and capital equipment. In other action, the board: •Agreed to house the county's hearing-impaired program in portables at the Deerfield Elementary and Venado Middle School site, and at University High School at no cost to the Irvine school district. •Requested additional infor- mation about a proposal before the city council to increase the speed limit from 2S to 45 mph on Michelson, a road that serves two elementary schools and one intermediate school. Donen has remedied that by 1nv1t- ing past winners to sit 1n the a udience Among those who accepted. Sidney Poitier, Lee Marvin. Ohv1a de Hav1lland, Robert Duvall. Jose Fer- rer, Joan Fo ntaine. Ernest Borgnme The acting nominees arc expected to be present. with one exception. Harrison Fo rd. nominated as best actor for "Witness," 1s filming "The Mosquito Coast" an Bel12e. formerly Bnttsh Honduras. with Australian Peter Weir nominee fo r his direction of "Wnness." Nor will Paul Newman appear to accept his special Oscar for "his many memorable and compelling saeen performances and for bis personal integrity and dedication to has craft." Newman will accept from Chic.ago, where he is filming "The Color of rF====;::::::;:;;;;;;;:;;;;;:;;m;;;lliiiiilla;ia;m;sm--~----=---=-m:=-=-=:::::1=-=:::::s==========iii Money," an update of"The H ustler." Alan Alda. Jane Fonda and Robin W llhams wi II act as hosts for the ABC telecast, which begms at 6 p.m. HEART VALVES RECALLED BY MAKER ••• From Al covered that the leaflets of some val ves had been fo lded. ''The chances that one of these folded val ves was implanted 1n a patient 1s extremely small," said Curtis, who signed the recall letter. Tests show the folded val ves to be "essentially no different" from un- damlltd valves. Curtis said. But he said there was no conclusive way to detemune if problems may develop 1n patients later. The recall in volves about 2.000 °c'6A,.~~E Daily Pilat MAtN OFFICI 330 Wftl h y St C.0.t• o.l~.. 1' ..... .oar-llo• ISM ' •• ~ • 1iU• val ves made between May 1984 and January 1986 and distributed in the U nncd States, and valves sold 1n other countnes. Previo us recalls due to defects were in 1980, 1982, 1983 and I 98S. The new recall letter asks hosr1tals to ''quarantine" the vaJves unt1 they can be exchanged. The company said there was no danger in usmg one of the quarantined valves m an emerg- ency a' long as 1t had no folded lcafleti. The company and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration said there were no reports that patients were having unusual or increased prob- lems related to 1mplaoted valves made during the period covered by the recall. Shiley plans to inspect aH the recalled valves and then reship those without folds, Curtis sUd The recall letter blamed the folds on deflCiencie' m the "final packing procns." ~':' 11 QuarentMd ~-.,., 5871 --l 9<)tore ~•l •ll' Justcall 642-6086 lot•-"'Oif F ll(laf II f "' 00 ~ ,,... '°'" II*"" l>y \lOom C.-~t 7orn CCloY<'9"1 1913 C>t~ _fl p,~ L r .. -•0t-...,.,.,~ .01or e1 ..,.,, .. or • ., ...... '"""' ...... ~ be ,..,.~ .... "OU\ ~ .. - -O! COPVl'OM .,.. &..,..., Q.OM "°'lege "'Cl OI C<A>• M~• • •' '"'" IVP9 '"' toOt S..O.C•!1<' o, C•"_. I' ~ '°"""'• Dy ...... 1100_.,,.., VOi,.. n. NO. a . What do you hkc about the Daily Pilot? Whac don't you hke'> Call the num~r above and your messqe will be recorded, tranJCribcd and de· livered to the appropnate editor The same 24-hour answenns serv1ce m•y bt used to rcc~rd letters to the ednor on any topic Contnbuton to our Letters column m1ast include their name and telephone number for venfiauon Ten, us what's on your mind -'°"' '"" .... Cle ........, ~--~·. "°"·~~~ ~00. .,_ 1 • m ~ c.tort •01111 .cl~~ Cit ~ Clrcutetton Tet1pt•ooe1 lol<)ll 0.tl'Ql ~ly ,,._ Mao4ID SHUTTERS SPECIALLY PRICED The time Is right to enjoy the cool comfort and beauty of these attractive moveable shutters, .. .I n the colors, sizes and styles you wantl Call (714) 548-8841 or 548-1717 HEJllWIOl MAIUFICTOllf 19n Placentia Avenue • Costa Mesa. CA 'll62:f 32 Years Experience Manuf ectur1ng Quality Shutters c I j