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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1986-03-26 - Orange Coast PilotORANGE CO\Sr • -----, - TOllOMOW: I ' Ii FAIR 1, -PORl~UTaONAI * - WEDNESDA Y,_MARCH 26, 1986 Two Dien. found murdered in bar Police cordon off area, awaiting search warrant; victims remain unidentified inside the establiihment, did not say whether there was any obvious sign of bow the men djed. ' A janitor, wbo was not identified, off," said Webster, who noted that a search warraqt would be necessary before detectives could enter the apparent crime soene. -----------~------------found the bodies at about 4:4S a.m. detectives initially classified the inci-inside an office area in the Lion's dent as a homicide. Den, 719 w. 19th St, according to Lt. By STEVE MARBLE ud TON\' SAAVEDRA Investigators at the scene co1.1Ld not say whether there was apy indicatiop how long the men had heel) dead or if there was any sign the bar had been ransacked. . .... °"' ........ The bodies of two men were found early today by a janitor inside the offices of. a Costa Mesa bar and Easter recipes Dre.. up traditional feut. for Eaater, or 9tart yoar own tradition with newldeu. Cl World Libya calls for Arab suicide squads to attack U.S. embassies and other Interests worldwide./ A5 Sports Orange Coast sweeps a pair of games to move into the final round of Its own tournament./D1 INDEX Advloe and Games BUiietin Board Bustness Classified Comics Death Notices Entertainment Food 87 A3 85-6 06-8 88 04 84,05 C1-8 81 A6 81-2 The names of the dead men were ·not irnmed.iately known and police~ who were awaiting a search warrant before continuina the investigation Bones no help in Bradbury - mystery Fragments too few lP determine identity . of child, expert says By STEVE MARBLE Of .. 0:-IJ ......... Bone fragments found by hiken in Joshua Tree National Monument last weekend near the spot where then-3- year-old Laura Bradbury disappeared to 1984 will not be enouJb to resolve the question of the Huntmgton Beach girl's fate. A portion of a human skull and other bone fragments were studied Tuesday by a Cal State Fullerton anthropologist, who confirmed that some of the remains belong to a young child. But Dr. Judy Suchey said the fragments arc not enough to learn the answer to other questions, including whether tlie child was male or female, said San Bernardino Deputy Coroner Phil Alexander. "All we can say is that most of these are bones arc from a child between the ages of 2 and S," said Alexander. "There's nothing more we'll beableto learn by studying thc_m." He said a few of the bone fragments belonged to animals. A two-day search in the rough terrain in Joshua Tree was halted late Monday with sheriff's deputies un- able to find any other bone fragments, said Capt. Gene Bowlin. "At this point there's really nothing else we can do," said Bowlin, sta- tioned in Morongo Basin near the desert campground where the bones were found. Gary Webster. , .. We checked to make sure there we"' no suspec\s lurking in the shadows and then sealed the· place "(But) tt•s definitely a homicide," said Lt. Rick Johnson, who is headina The cb.Ud la ftne, bat ber mother 19 apeet after accident. Baby in infant seat unhurt as truck flips By PAUL ARCRIPLEY °' .. .,..,,... ..... An infant seat helped save an 8-month-old baby from harm when a truck she was riding in flipped over on Newpon Boulevard at the entrance o(the Costa Mesa Freeway Tuesday, police said. "The kid wasn't even crying," said Costa Mesa police Officer Dale Birney. Theresa Cromwell. 26~ was drivina north in her pickup truck with her ~ter Amber strapped into -a bat&' ~t beside her when the accident oeounedM t~:lO.ua.. Mid~. Cn>m•U. who al9o wu Milrina her 1ea.\bett. u~ bet dautbter and crawled out of thec:ab ... 11:bed. A witneM laid Cromwell was in the right-band lane when a vehicle in the middle lane pulled in front of her. Cromwell veered right into the gravel and puddle<.overed shoulder and lost control of her truck, Birney said. the investigation. A coroner•s deputy was called to the scene but was sent away while police waited for the search wananL The tavern, situated in a com· merical area between a IJ'OCCfY store , and a neighborhood market. is known to cater to gays, according to vice Set. Tom Boylan. . . It is located neat the Police Depart- ment's· new west side substation, . opened 11 an outracb. don to tbe laflC Hilpanic community in tbe predominately low·income ~ borhood. Accordina to city buliDell record:I. the bet it owned by a pu1Detlbi_,. Tbe only name lisled on a buliDeM llceue ia Lawrence L Rohr. said a city employee. MetebantJ in lbt ~ said· (bey ~-TWO&Allf/A.I) ·Mayor cleared in conflict probe .._ ......................... 'It was really only a matter of time, •. Voss commented . By ROBERT HYNDMAN Of .. DlllJ ........ The Orange C.Ounty district at- torney's office has cleared Fountain Valley Mayor Fred Voss of any criminal wrongdoing followin& its investigation into his business deal-. inp. "There was insufficient evidence to find any violation of criminal law with reprd to the alleged conflict of interest," Deputy District Attorney Maury Evans said Tuesday. The district attorney's office in- vestipted Voss' relationship with a development firm seeking to build a condominium oomplex in Fountain Valley and whether there rni&bt have been a conflict of interest that would prevent the city councilman from voi!h: investip_tion, which bepn in February, concluded late last week. But Evans withheld comment until after be talked to VOii Tuesday afternoon. "rm obviously glad the investip- tion bas been concluded and evtty- thing is now cleared, .. Voss said. .. It was really only a matter of ti.me." Earlier this month, Voss wrote to Ora.nae C.Ounty District Attorney Cecil Hieb, complaining of delays and demanding that the investiption be concluded. Mind and Body Opinion Paparazzi Polloe Log Publlc Notices Sports Television Weather A3 04 01-4 84 A2 The sJcuJl cap a.nd other fragments were located on top of the sand in an open flat near a wash and a large outcropping of rock. said Bowlin. She tried to pull back onto the roadway, overcorrected and careened across all three north- bound lanes, be said. The truck was skidding sideways and struck a guardrail. causing it to flip over. It came to a stop agai nst a telephone pole, resting on the roof of the cab. A tnack CaJ'l7iDC a motber and baby ru.,. a.er at freeway entrance. Having enclosed clips of1oc:al news stories, Voss wrote: "As you can see, I continue to be crucified in the local press while the investigation seems to go on forever.•• (Pl--.ee VoatJ/ A2) (Pleue 11ee BO!OtS/ A2) ' Mauled child improving; no answers to lion attack El Toro girl suffering from partial paralysis. tear in her rtgh t eye that will impair vision By PAUL ARCBIPLEY OtlMDllr ......... A S-year-old girl who was severely injured when attacked by a mountain lion Sunday continued to improve this week, but she is sufferinJ some partial paralysis on her right side and her right ey~ was badly .damag~ . Meanwhile, authonttes exammmg the animal's carcass have so far found no reason why the apparently healthy cat would have attacked the girl. Laura Michelle Small was de- scribed as serious but stable Tuesday at Mission Community Hospital in Mission Viejo. The El Toro girl bad undergone several hours of surgery late Sunday and early Monday to repair the Trouble at home brings teen-agers to Laguna shelter When patiences wear thin and emotions run hiah, sometimes famil- ies just need a little time apanJ. says Barbara Dykes, director of the ;')()uth Orange County Youth Shelter. Teen-aaers are aoing through a lot of chanaes, said Dykes. But when th~ is no place to retniat, they often hit the streets. To prevent family clashes from rcach.ioa warlike proportions, the youth shelter off en teen..qen 1 place to calm down while the fami_Jy works toaetber in counsetioa. said IJykes. Th~ three•bedroom, beach_..tyle home in Laauna Beach is run by Community Service PfOlrama, a non-profit orpniution foul'lded by UC Irvine professor Or. Arnold Binder as a diversion prosnm for juveniles. Although underaoin1 coolidenble renovation to meet fire standards, the house has a homey atmosphere ao.d is comfortable and safe for the teen- aaers who visit. usually for no more than two weeks. • LAuu 1£11 Focus ON THE NEws "We act a lot of first-time dis.- closures of child abuse," said Dykes, notina some of the cbanaes that oome about i-o teen~.,en' bchavion durina their stay. Everyone 1harea household mpon1tbilila 1od follows strict boUIC rulea to help the howe run u a family mi&ht. AdotetQCnts qca 11-17 stay at tho ltome while attendi Ill their feaUW ICbool. Children rc<lCiVe indi· viauat and aroup couMClina and. (...._ ... BOID/A2) damage inflicted by the mou~~n lion when it pbbed h~r ttead m its jaws and earned her off into the brush at a wilderness park in South Orange County. ~ . . . . Gregory Ysais of M1ss1on V1eJO, who was hiking .nearby saved La~~ by swinging a stick at the cat until 1t released her. Surgeons cleaned out and st.itched up puncture wounds and pe~ormed some plastic surgery and other re- pain, said hospital spokeswoman Jan Walker. (Pleue eee MAULED/ A2) Brace Sa.mner Dmlf"" ...... ., o....-.... Chanel D.claampe. us.1eta a h8' &om Lorie Helm. a hoaae •aperrieor and •apport cocmeelor at the •b.elter. ) Sumner makes it official: He 'II run Democratic leader challenges follower of ultra conservative By TONY SAAVEDRA Of ... o.llJ .......... Rather than let a follower of ultra- conservative Lyndon LaRouche run uncontested for the Democratic nomination. Orange County party chairman BruCt' Sumner is entering Newport Beach's congressional pri- mary as a wri~in candidate. Sumner, a former state as- semblyman and retired judge, an- nounced Tuesday that he will attempt to prevent LaRouche advocate Art Hoffmann from becoming the Demo- crats' standard bearer io the 40th Congressional District race. Hoffmann became lbc only name oo the Democratic ballot after the party failed to field a candidate for the (Pleue eee SUllRBR/ A2) Newport council members blas.t citizens 'survey By SUSAN HOWLETJ' Of ... .,..,,... ..... Members of a local politic.al action comminet who presented a home- owner survey to the Newport Beach City Council Monday we~ blasted b)' council members. who c:alled the quenionnaire "a ham" used to disguise a fund-raisin& effon The survey was conducted b) Newport 2000 last year. h was scot to 12,019 randoml} chosen Newport Beach homes, and 12.2 percent of the people sampled responded. The urvey asked quesuons on issues dealll\I with John Wayne Airpon, bay polluoon tra.ffic, de- velopment and other CltY concerns.· but councll members tenn((l it an "unfair'' and .. slanted .. way to set answers N~rt 2000 bills itself on tbc survey as "an orpnil.ation of lona- tcrm re~1dcnt\ of Newport Beach who are concerned v.1th the dct~oraung quaht' of hfc m our area. "The purpose of thu survey ts to act your optmons on the things that are bothenna you and to determine if you will help us support the right kind of candidates for the November 1986 election," the quesuonnairc sa.id. But Councilman John Co" said ~ was shocked by the survey. which be said violated all the rules of a fair markeuna qucstionn11rc de l&Jlcd to ehClt f&tr answers. Councllman Bill Agtt ap'CCd with Cox. sayma the quest1onn11rc was desiancd to acoerate oontributiona and politJc:aJ power for Newpon 2000 1nste.ad of truthful answtrs about the conce.ms orNcwport Beach rnidenu. "l thint h~s deceitful," ~ said. "The thing that offends me about this as they att not honesL Wbal =re dOt"I heTe i pla)'1f\I with~ att tryina to aet pcoolc ftiahte . and are usina \bat f'ear to'" SCt the anl"'m they want. .. The s~. which..,.. mailed to homeowocn. included a covu 1etw:r (Pleue ... RWPOllT/d) U * Otang9 Ooalt DAILY PILOT/ Wednelday, March 28, 1988 MAULED GIRL SUFFERS PARALYSIS ••• Prom Al Don and usan m&ll, Laura's perents. ma10tained an uound·tbe- clock vaail at the hospital as hundrods of wcll·w11hers called and WTOte encouraaement to the family. Don Small. an opucal eqineer at Perkin-Elmer in Garden Grove, said his wife went home Tuesday after- noon for the first time to try to get some sleep. Small said his daughter was awake and aware or her surroundings. "All the signs arc aood. She hasn't had a temperature for over 16 hours," he said. He praised those who had cared for his daughter, from the park rangers to the medical staff at Mission Com- munity. The family also was grateful for the concern and prayers being c:":presscd by fncnds and strangers ahke. "The response has been over- whelming," Don Small said. "People we've never heard of have been sending gsfts to Laura." Although insurance is expected to cover her ho~p1tal care. a trust fund }las been ~t ut> for the extensive rehab1htat1on she faces. It's too soon to tell if the paralysis 1s pmnanent., but doctors told the Smalls that Laun will have impaired vision in her ~t eye at best. ''So far there s been no infection m the eye. but the doctor \Old me she won't have nonnal vis.ion," mall said. The eye has a tear in it about one centimct-cr long, he said. "We're trying to save lhe eye. A~ythina after tllat is a bonus.'' Small SA1d. A preliminary autopsy of the cat lhat attacked the child at Ronald W. Caspers R~<?naJ Park reveal~ nothing to 1nd1catc a reason for its bizarre behavior, ~·d Dr. Nila Kelly of the county Health Care Agency Authoriues sa1d lbe attack was virtually unprecedented. Mountam lions arc wary of humans and avotd rather than attack them. Kelly wd the animal was not rabid and, contrary to reports that u was malnourished, the preliminary au~opsy showed a relatjvely healthy animal. "There was no ell<:eSS tat outs1dc. but he was normal inside for a young male lion," Kelly said. "His teeth were in excellent shape.'' The autopsy reveaJed the cat was between 2 and 3 ~rs old. Pathol<>glsts in l.os An,eles County were scheduled to study tissue sam- ples under the nucrosoope, look.ioa for endocrine imbalances, tumors, cancer, nervous system duordcra, "anything that could cause 1trao1e ~hav1or," Kelly said. A theory that the cat may have been domesticated and was released into the Oeveland National Forest is virtually impossible to prove, said a spokesman for the state Department of Fish and Game. "The cap11vity thing is an attractive assumption. but unless we have something to go on there's no reason to believ~ that.'' said Carl Wilcoll. He said an examination of the mount.am hon revealed no evidence of captivity, such as dedawing or collar marks. "We have no indjcation other than its behavior," Wilcox said. "It's kind of a mystery." Persons interested in contributing to the Small Trust Fund should send con\ributions to Mercury Savings, 23021 Lalce Center Dnve, El Toro, 92630. BONES ALONE WON'T SOLVE MYSTERY .•. From Al "It ~ems pretty obvious that they were carried out there by an animal." said Bowhn. "Possibly a coyote.'' Accordi ng lo San Bernardino pathologist Dr. Irving Root. it ap- pears the bone fragments belong to a child who had not been dead for more than two years. Roo1 said the frag- ments have been exposed to 'i unhght for Jess than six months. The find, made by a Twentynme Palms co uple hiking 1n the area. occurred about two miles nonhwest of the Indian Cove campsite where Laura disappeared Oct 18. 1984 Though the area was searched repeatedly after the girl vanished. Bowlin said It would have been easy for searchers to overlook something 10 lhe boulder-strewn land!oeape. .. I've always thought there was a poss1b1hty that something frealmh might have happened. like she gol wedged bet ween some rocks or some- thin$ of that nature." said Bowlin. Michael and Pan) Bradbury, parents of the missing child, are on vacation in Northern California and could not be reached for comment. But a family friend said there 1s no reason to gsve up hope for Laurc1 's safety. "There's certainJy no conclusive proof that there's any connection between these fragments and Laura." said Lauri Flash, a volunteer at lhe Laura Center in Huntington Beach. "We're not looking at anything any differently and there's no reason for us to believe that tb.Js is Laura," sajd Flash. who takes anonymous tips and distributes informatwn on missing children at the Huntington Beach center. But Bowhn said that, except for Laura. no chLldrcn have been re- ported missing in the Joshua Tree area. "But I'm not going to draw any conclusions." he added. Laura disappeared aft.er going with her older brother to an outdoor toilet about 50 yards from her ~rents' campsite, according to shentrs io- vest1gat_ors. The girl's brother.I Travis. said that when he emefled 1rom lhe outdoor restroom. his sister was gone. After an extensive search, sheriff's investigators concluded the girl had probably been kidnapped. A composite sketch of a man seen in the area at the time was released It showed a burly, bearded man with a potbeUy who was believed to be traveling in a blue van. No arrests have been made in the case though a Pasadena woman was detained at one point because her own daughter closely resembled photographs of Laura. The search for Laura Bradbury has been one of the most intense and wcll- publicized hunts in the nation. Her likeness has been embossed on milk cartons and grocery bags and her disappearance has been recounted on national television. NEWPORT CITIZENS' SURVEY ASSAILED •.• From Al that outlined the group '> pollucal i:oncern'i "The lt'ttcr bao;1call} '><l' '>. •thc co unul 1s lous} and let\ get nd of them · .. Agee said The 3 I -question sun C\ also l:On- tained a portion asking for a S200 SI 00 or \ 'iU rnntnbuuon directed to '-ev.pon ~<Kl() treasurer Roger Van- degnft NC'v.pon :woo c;pokcsman Louis Scott introduced the sun c.,, a!> an honc'it one bac;ed on his se\leral years in the ad\Crtl'ilng hU'ilne\S ··rm \hcx:kt'd he (Scott) would lend ht\ name to '>Ucha '>ham." Cox said He added that the lOunul '>hould not allow 1self to be duped by a poltt1cal at lion c11mm111ee trying to collect funds. .. Cox 1s making an emotional statement," said Newport 2000 mem- ber Paul Ryckoff. "That's up to him." Ryckoff also 1s a former mayor of Newport Beach R yckoff said the survey was "rcla- t1 "el> unbiased.. He added that although the qucsuonna1rc was de- signed to be fair. 1t may have represented some of the views of the poliucaJ action comm1tlee. "We're not the ultimate unbiased. political pollsters m the world." Ryckoff said. One of the questions on the survey that council members said was a question that dealt with the City Council's relat1onsh1p Wlth local de- vclopers "Should we try to elect new council members and count) supervisors who will be more sensitive lo the needs ofresidents. and less concerned with the interests of the big de- velopers?" Ninety-two of the surveyed resi- dents answered yes. and 8 percent answered no 10 the question. Newport 2000 officials said they planned to file a traffic management initiative Tuesday with the Newport Beach Ci ty Clerk m an effort to ease congestion on city streets. Tuesday afternoon, City Clerk Wanda Raggio said the 1ntiat1ve had not yet been filed with her office SUMNER ENTERS RACE FOR CONGRESS •.. From Al scat held h" fi"c·term (10P IOC'um- bent Rep Robert E Badham Snubbing Hoffmann. Sumner 60. challenged LaRouche himself to a debate lahcling the ph1losoph1es l'<.pou<;ed b" the ultra-conservauve 'lev. Yorker as 'spooky" and having no place 1n the Democratic Party A.mong LaRouchc''i proposals 1s a hallo1 mca'iurc allov.ine health of- liualr, to quarantine v1ct1m<. of A I D~ and a .,pace dcfcn'>c ')"lem u.-.ing Ja-;cr., ~umner ..aid Libya 1s one of Israel's mosl slndent opponent!.i. while the United States 1~ one of lsrael's strongest alltes. Sumner rcponed that his campaign would center on spreading the word to the distnct's 97. 713 Democrats that Hoffmann was a nghttst hawk hiding in donkey's clothing ··11· .. not so much a question of selling (my candidacy)," he said. "The proccs~ 1!.i 10 tdl people he\ a La Rouche follower and that''> enough." the media Sumner said. adding that adven1sing and d1reet mailings Wlll also be used. along with some networking among party organiza- 11ons. Sumner estimated his campaign would cost about $50,000 or "what- ever 1t takes." Af\cr Tuesday's news conference. he was scheduled lo meet with top party supporte~ to discuss campaign fund-raising. Ocean breezes will dispel smog Cool oceen u wtl rnoY9 Into Southern Callfof'Ne on the Mela of • r.tr.tlng high-pr ..... dome .... today end ..,ty Thuredty. drtvlna sway the emog that ha pltQUtd Intend r..ics.ntl llnoe Monday. Mote hot, emoggy weetMr wet on tep today. wtth unf'IMtthy air predicted tor the San Gebrtef and Pomona v.iteye. M the hlgh-pr-.ire dome mOYM away, 1tln, hot elr wlll ~ repltlQed by oootet air off the Pecfflo, tcioordlng to the National WNther a.vtce. Along the Orange Coat It Wiii ~ fair through Thur.d•y but tofne fog and low o6oud1 elorlQ the OOMt during nlQht end morning hou,. and hazy eunehlM ln the ettemoon. Hlgha lrom 87 to 72 •1 thebMctNleend 78 to 84 Inland. Lowa 47 to 57. From Point Conception to the Mexlc;en Border -Inner wateir1: Light varteblt wlndt night and momlng hourt through Thureday exc.pt eoutmweet 8 to 15 knote tn the afternoon and evening houri. Sw.tt west 1 to 2 feet. lncteulng night and morning fog and tow otoudl tonlaht. otherwl .. fair liclee Outer watere: Wind• dtmtnllhlng end becoming vartablt moetty north 5 to 15 knot• with 4 to 7 -foot comblned .... tonight and Thureday. lncreulng night and morning low ctoud• and fog SllOwt •• tonight, otherwl .. falr aklee through Thureday. 1..=....:..:..:..:..:.._.:::._,...:..:_:......;;.;;w_ .. ;;., __ ~_._-lfO~M._.;;u..;:s;...o.oi.,...--o1~c.o-,-,,.-',......J0 ~ .,, eo ....... • .. U.S . Tempe Calif. Temps t1 11 ~ 1t 57 ~._,. tO 4' .....,.._,, 12 .. Ontwto ......... 71 43 :f:i IOw tof 24 holn-9ng1116 pm ~ fl 17 .. &A I I u NtHnt 83 4t .... PM .. S4 .,__, 71 41~ IO 4? ::T:QUe n ,. ....,,.... .,. 51 lula• St ... Ian~ '° 41 '° 41 .... ONelw 74 47 F-72 5t~ n, eo ~ 26 24 .... y~ '° al ~ 71 41 ..,.,._ 7J ... Allanlll 73 •• Nortolk.VL " 41 ~=-~~a.ma-75 53 AllllntlC City 54 .. =-City ,, 53 Auetln n 51 1t 41 "-~ 10 43 8altlmore .. ... °'191..oo n 11 .... """ 13 : Surf Report ~ l'9 47 Piiied 11$1 IM 86 42 AedwOod City 72 67 42 "'-"Ill IO 12 8-'-IO 74 61 loalon &a 44 =:r'w. 74 12 ....... 71 41 lOCAT'IOtl .. 8MAN 9uf!1llo 70 21 47 as Ian Oleoo ea 56 Hunllngton 8eeall 1·21•1• 10 CMI* 53 23 P°""*'«l,Ot. &t .. tan FrlnCltOO 71 M ~ CherMlon.8 c t5 M "'~ 51 41 ..,,....,.. ee 49 ~ Jetty, Newport 1-2 poor OMrleelon,w v 7t 54 =rClty 72 41 ~V""'t T7 41 40tl'l 8lfWI. ~ 1·2 ~ 0Mnot1e,N.C. n 51 158 21 ..,...,. 82 63 22nd 8~ Newpott 1·2 ~ gz~ 53 2S A.no 14 $4 .__, 7t 41 Belboe WedQe 1·2 poor 72 44 Aletlmoncl n 41 Ilg._. 14 27 ~ l!leeCll 1·21•1f to ~l 77 55 81 Loi*. 71 5e 8Wiop ,. 3.2 poor ~ 7ti lie St ...... T~ n 11 lllytM tO u a.na.rr-w 1·2f•lt 10 Columbua,Oll. 71 57 Seit Lele• City M 35 Cet .... 5t 62 poor O...FI W0<111 74 57 8411\ AntOlllO 71 66 °"'-City 73 54Wew~eo Dayton 71 51 8Mnle 54 41 l0ft9 9-dl 70 63 .... OlrKtlon: ~ 0.-112 31 Slvewport n ... ...,,...... 10 ... o.~ 73 .a Spoil-41 H ~ 14 ... '*'°" 74 as ~ • 117 MOl...o.eo 90 ~Tides °'*6tll .. 30 T~ 74 ... ~=:n 13 SP-'° 42 T-15 52 • 41 FllrtMlnlla 24 oe TW. n 541 TOOAT Fargo 57 21 WMlllnglon 17 41 8->(llOw S.13pm 0.0 "'-"'"' 83 27 Wldlll.i n 50 Smog report ~hlgll t-.27 pm 5.1 Gr8nO Aepide 72 47 wa-a.n. 14 41 TMUMOAT Or.if ... 52 27 Flr91 low 3 41 a_m 01 ._..,,. 41 24 Polwint ~d ..,.. (Siii): 0..100 ~ l:MLm. ... ~ 14 13 Eztended good. 100.200 ~..,,......... IOw 3."'4pm. 0.6 HcMloll 70 61 l*IPe; 100-300 ~ ..,, ... 8-'ll fliCl'I t:&I pm 6.1 ~ ... ~. 75 as 300-600 IWnrdoua. '"' llgur9 .. ~ .... 19 46 tnc:nMlnQ night -~ todey'• pal~.~ .. ~ Sun .... ·~ et 1_'1)9 p"'. ,.... ~ 71 .. --•llHleoodS~ dtwf'1M1*nedpal ~-54 LITI __ _.,, .. ~ 41 47 ,,. Ffldey ow~ ~. e: to p..m • ic-Clly 73 43 ... bu! lluy. -~ =a-.... ... •· . ' 10CM2 Moon ,... todly • 7:0t p.m., .... ._.V*OM 12 M HlgN~omeo.1111'19 io Orenoe ~ 100.111 ~et1·14 a.m.-tte..~111 ll!ti. l'loclr 1e !ii 70. 46 IO 51. ~ L0e MQielea.~ ... 1• 100 1:.20 Liii HOME OFFERS TEENS A SHELTER .•. From Al three times a week. parents and kids meet for family counseling. The teens' stay at the shelter, said Dykes, "allows the family a cooling- oft period." Dykes said the shelter doesn't expect miracles m only two weeks. "We help them to identify problems they can work on," she said, seated in her small, crowded office. "Most of the families we know will not solve all their problems in two weeks.·· she said, adding that many of the families arc referred to othcr agencies for future counseling. If families arc still under too much tension to reunite after the child's two-week stay at the shelter. Dykes arranges a temporary foster home. "Some arc just normal growing-up problems. while some parents arc just really overrestrictive," said Dykes. ''It's just a matter of gctting_the family working together,'' said Dykes, ex- plaining that ba~ic communication skills arc what is usually lacking in the fam ily. Communication is exactly what is missinj in I 4-year-old Bob's reta- tioosh1p with his father. "I have family problems ... wtth my dad," he summarized. He is soft-spoken, articulate and poHte, but be seems somewhat afraid. It's only his second night at the shelter. "There's been too many divorces and too much moving around," said Bob, who has moved to 10 d ifferent homes in Orange County since he was born. "It's bard. You have to make friends real quick," be ell plained. School has not been difficult for him because "I Like going to school because of the people. I like getting away." As the oldest child in the family, Bob said his goal is to "change the way my dad acu and treats my brothers and sisters. I'd Hke to know why parents do they stuff they do.'' His first night of family counseling is only hours away. "I'm scared, because l haven't talked to my dad in a week," be said in almost a whisper. But being at the shelter for just one day has helped him, he said. "Before, I was scared to even talk about it But now it is easy to talk because everybody's got a lot of problems here," he said. About one-third of the youngsters who visit the shelter are status offenders. violating cwfew and truan- cy laws. The shelter serves over 300 famil- ies a year in short-term counseling and crisis intervention. Fees arc calculated on a sliding scale with the highest fee set at S 196 a week. The staff consists of and coll~ graduates or "house supervisors.," who work around the clock either runnfog the house, making lunches or checking beds on the hour. "lt is a wondCf'ful training ground because It is crisis intervention and everything peaks here. ln some ways we function as a family," said Dykes. TWO SLAIN .•• From A l were unaware of any uousuaJ inci- dents at the tavern and said activity at the bar seemed no different than normal Tuesday evening. VOSS CLEARED IN CONFLICT PROBE •.• From A l Voss accused the prosecutor's of- fice of "participating in a politically motivated smear campaign by those opposed to my re-election.'' In an interview Tuesday, Voss also said he expected a more complete response from the district attorney's office. includinga letter and details on how and why the investjgation was initiated. Voss said he believes the investiga- uon was motivated by political opponents and intends to issue a statement concerning lhe issue at the City Couoctl's nellt meeting. ApnJ I. According to Evans, the district attorney's investigation was prompt- ed after the matter "came to the attention of our office." Evans would not specify who alerted the district attorney's office. The inves~tion focused on a proposal con.s1dcred by the City Council th.at might have saved l.S. Properties of Irvine more than $200,000 in fees. Voss voted for lhe proposal when it appeared on the council's Feb. 19 agenda and denied he bad a business relationship with the firm. However, Voss acknowledged thAt, until last fall, he was a partner in another firm with I.S. Properucs principe.ls David lsraelsky and ex- Fountain Valley Mayor Bcmit Svalstad. · When you look at the millions of Joltars behind the LaRouche move- ment. I think 1t\ time we take them un," said <)umner, refcmng in part 10 the llhno1s v1ctonc'\ last week of two LaRouthc followers receiving the Democratic. nomination for llcutcn- anl governor and secretary of state Hoffmann. 29, a technical wnter trom Santa Ana. said county Demo- crats were "shooune themsclve\ 1n the foot" and nslong the pany''i stature by pilling their chief 1n a wnte- tn campaign. Sumner has conceded such efforts are extremely expeno;1ve and difficult to win "We're going to try to come up with a few bucks," said restaurateur Rich- ard O'Ncsll, a Democratic financier who had amved for the meeting. ··campaigns like this take a lot of~------------------------------------------­ Sumner'<, relurn to the political nngcamedunnga news conference at party headquarters 1n Santa Ana He la<>t held lcg1c;lat1ve offic.e as a 'itate lawmaker repre'ICnting the Laguna Beach area Imm 1956 to I Q64 umncr retired from the 'iu- pcnor Court hc'nch m I <184 atler I 8 ~ears as a Judge and nov. prac:tKt''> law 10 Newpon Beath He U'>t'd thl' fighting th1~ week Ix-tween I \ and l 1byan m1htary fore.cs in tht• < 1ulf of~1dra to point out the "ab.,urdit) •. ol LaRouchc'~ poht1· cal theonc~ Democratic aides distributed photocopies of 31'11cles from J LaRouchc-oncntcc1 magazine that claimed lsraclt tompan1cs wNc bankrolling I 1by.1·~ terronst rcgsme "How you can \.1Y that, knowing the facts, is part ofthc mind-t>oggling aspects of the LaRouche position." MAIN OFFICE HO" • '~"'"' " -.Ot • ~. ~ • ~·• u~ • ~J~:>t Hoffmann was also infunaled thal umner's mv1tat1on to debate wenl to ac11vtst LaRouche instead ofh1m "I cons1d~r that the attitude of a person in Disneyland ndmg on a vcf) dark nde. He's refusing to face rcal11y." Hoffmann ,..1d "He'c; run- n1ng agamst me. I'm the one who'\ on the ballot." Hoffmann wasn't familiar with the LaRouche-attnbuted an1cle linking l~rach oil operations with Libya. but o;a1d "If CLaRouche) says 1t. then I'm confident (the hnk) 1s there." Sumner's succ.css m the June 3 pnmary depends on how well his suppcrterscan inst ru ct Democrat on the wntc-1n proce s, a two-pronacd method 1n which voters must first pnnt the candidate's name rn a selected area an~ then punch a hok 1n the corresponding space. His campaign will lean heavily on work." O'Neill said. Wnle-1n campaigns may also drain funds from other Democratic races in the county, political observers said. Sumner admitted the party was learning an expensive lesson for failing to run a candidate on the ballot. He said two potential Demo- cratic hopefuls had decided.at the last minute not lo run for the con- gressional scat, allowing Hoffmann to ''shp in" unopposed on the party ballot. , Looking toward the November general clectton, Sumner s.ajd he would be a credible candidate to break the Republican hold on a d1slnct where Democrats arc out- numbered 57 percent to 31 percent. Sumner predicted he would gain some Republican votes from the battle within the GOP party between incumbent Badham a.nd oppcnent Nathan Rosenberg for the nomi· nation. "It shows dissatisfaction with the incumbent on the Republicans' side," umncr said. "That can't do anything bu1 help my candidacy." Dally Piiot DetlYMJ I• Guaranteed ~~1 ~ • ..,., " to-I (lo) c.a-.•.01t)l "4J •us c..-~ ..,..or,. ~2-02· Just call 642-6086 • 1 ·-.,,.,, ~ Dy • X\ctl c... -•7pm ' ' What do you hlcc about the Daily Pilot., What don't you hke., Call the number above and your message will be recorded, tran~bed and de- h vued to the appropnate edttor The same 24-hour ansv.enna service ma)' ~ used to record lett~rs to the editor on any topic Contnbutors to our Letters column must include tbe1t name and telephone number for vcnficauon Tells UJ w~t's on your mind • llnQ '°"' ~., -lie -~ S.!"°'d.11 ~.,., "'"°9r If '°" 00 ~ -~ f/1f1'f by 7 I "' (.H .,...,.. •O •"' Mid.,.,...~_. rot-red Cfrculatlon Telephow KARATS ANO OOLO what the mar.kings m.an What la 14-karat gold? It 11 an alloy of gold with other "'9tatt, In which the amoun1 of pure gold equals 14 part.t, mixed wtth 10 parts of the other metalt. Gold It alloyed becauM pure gold (24 karat gold 11 the only gold that can legally be called pure gold) 11 too IOft to be practlcally machined and U8ed In )eWelry, SometltMl, In thl• country. you will eleo ... 10--keret and 18- kerat gold. Again, thl1 tlm_ply dealg- natti the formula of gofd In retatlon to 10 part• of other met8'1. The higher the karat rating. the higher the percentege of gold In an object. NO gold jewlfry It legatty required to bear a kerat gold mark; however. the law Nyt that If • karat mark II uled. It mutt be eccurate. Allo the maker or ....., mutt ptaoe thla regl1tered tredemark belld9 the kerat quellty mark. The National Stamping Act It the law controtltng the marketing of g<Md. The ,._...ry lnduatry, through lta own .....,elera Vigilance Commftt•, ,,..~ that the lew II obeyed. protection ~ and e.tt• BulfMM Bureeua are further backupe to thll control. with a delightful bunny. chick or duck from our colfectlon of minl-anrmals by SWAAOVSKI Crafted of 32% full lead A ustrian crystal, they'll please young & old alike. Silwf cymM pt Ices s!Mt at s J 6 00 JC From the people making crystal a legend SWAROVSKI · ]EWELE~ lll#CS J ... 1835 Newport Btvd., 0-152 Costa Mesa COSTA MESA COURTYARDS . Festival of Arts jurying planned Proof of re idence in tip code ares will be required for anists wishina to eltllibit in the 1986 Festival of Arts in ~na Beach. The juryina is scheduled for Saturday in Irvine Bowl, 6SO 1..a&una CAnyon Road. Alona with proof of residence io are.as from Newport Beach to San Clemente, th~ pieces ofthe artist's current work in each medium must be submitted between 7 and 10 a.m. that day. Juryina will tAke place between 10 a.m. and 3 p.m., after which anasts may pack up their works, no later than S p.m. Cop of year lunch alated Reservations are beina accepted for the 23rd annual Costa Mesa Policeman of the Year luncheon April 2 at the Holjday Inn on Bristol Street. The event, sponsored by the Cost.a Mesa Tomorrow business group, as $9 per person. Reservations arc available from luncheon chair· woman Jean Robins at S46-I 772. Easter egg hunt 111 Valley C.ndy and prizes will be up for grabs Saturday when the city of Fountain Valley sponsors its annual Easter egg hunt at 11 a.m. at the city's Recreation Center. The event, co-sponsored by the Fountain Valley Jaycees, will be open to children up to 9 years ofage. The center is located at 16400 Brookhurst St. and more information is available at 839-8611. BustriptoBowloffered The Irvine Community Services Department's Performing Arts Section will run a bus tnp to Easter sunrise services at the Hollywood Bowl Sunday. The bus will leave at 3 a.m. from the Civic Center at 17200 Jamboree Road and the cost is SS per person. Call 660-388 1 for registration-infor- mation Conversatlon clau carded "The Art of Conversatjon," an eight-week workshop with author and speaker Mort Stein. will be offered by the city ofNewport Beach from l 0 a.m. to noon Mondays, beginning this Monday, at Manners Library, 2005 Dover Drive, Newport Beach. Stein wall focus on ways to stiumulate conversa- tions, Limit small talk, overcome cultural anemia and cultivate humor. Call 644-31SI for further details. CPR classes at hospital Saddleback Community Hospital in Laguna Hills is offering monthly four-hour Heartsaver classes, designed to help people offer fast, effective first aid in cases of heart attack, d rowning and other emergencies. Classes arc hclf from 5 to 9 p.m. on the second Wednesday of each month at the hospital, 24451 Health Center Dnve (formerly Via Estrada). The cost is SS to cover class materials and more mformat1on 1s available at 770-372S. Scbolanhlp available Applications arc now being taken for the Nllncy Reagan Pathfinder scholarship award sponsored by the National Federation ofRepublican Women. The deadline for appLtcations is Tuesday. The $1 ,000 scholarsl\ip is for a woman student seeking an undergraduate or post-graduate dcgrcc in druJ and alcohol abuse research. Call 646-6101 for additional information. An Invitation: Attention organization president• and eec~ r9'ari.: We want to Mtp malt• your upcoming eventt, meeting•. ternlnars land fundr....,.. sue- ceeaful. Send t>nef announcementt lnduding time, pl.a, cott (If any) and a phone numb9f for additional Information to: Bulletin Board. Daily Piiot, P.O. Box 1seo. eo.ta M .... 92929. Repor1t of yt:Nf club or organization'• ec:tlvtti. -Hk• communl1y ..vie. projec1t or eleetlon of ofl'IC*• -the>Uld ~ dtrec:1ed to the Community ~ Editor at the Mme addr ... Non-returnabte blectc and whit• photogrepha .,. wetc:ome. Wednesday, March 26 • 7 p.m., Lapna Bead! PlaJua.lD& Comml11lon, Council Chambers, SOS Forest Ave. , PoucE Loe Orange Cout DAILY PILOT IW~. W.Gfl 28. 11118 * AJt Auto Club scraps high-rise plan BJ TONY SAAVEDRA °' .............. lnumidated by the defeat Jut week ol a proposed 3l·story •:~t1, the Auto-mobile Club of Sou \Alifomia has withdrawn conceptual plan• for two 16- story towen on adjacent property in Costa Mesa. The ruckus over the city's .,.owtb continued to reverberate u homeowners felled two development ptQjecu with one stone. "The momentum ischanJjn.away from the radical hiab-rise, biah-den11ty mode to keepinp thin.as more compatible with \be rest o the c;ity .. said James Aynes, spokesman for the Mesa Action slow· arowth sroup. Ray Olson, Auto Oub real estate planner, suspcc1ed \be political climate wasn't ript when he fint approached cily officials with plans to expand the finn's prooessina center at 3333 Fairview Road. Ol10n's ft.an were confirmed March 17 when city residcnu spumed a proposal by another developer to build the tallest office tower ln Oranae County, a .,..nite-faced IU'UCtUre that would IOlr SOO f'eet ioto the skyline. ~ 'Two dar.s later, Olson wit~w the Auto Oub s lona·ranp plans to add two office towen and p&r1cina aaraaes to the three bu.ildinp already on the company's 29-ac:re site. The land is bordered oo two sides by the Home Ranch propef!Y, lima bean fields that developer CJ . Sqerstrom cl Sons plans to tum into a 98..acre business complex. The fint pbue, a pyramid· topped sky1Ct&per, was abandoned by t.be Sesentroms, who con<leded midway thro~ last Wt':ek's ~lie bearini that the OppC>SltlOD WU too hiat\. Olson followed suit by pulhna the Auto Oub project off Monday's Plannin1 Com· mis ion aaenda. ''It would bave j ust stirred up a hornet's nestt OllOn said ... Rather than act (city ofrlclalt) ln the same position they ~ last week, we just becked off.·· He continued: "'I could juat see us staodina there and, well, the Auto Oub is not a controversial orpoization." The company was considerina movina its headquarters from Los Aqelea, where i l has beeo for more tb.a.n 60 years, to Costa Mesa. Plans submined to Costa Mesa's plann~ depanment awed for an iocrease an buildina space from 740,0001quare feet to I. l miUioo square feet. · Olson said tbe ex.pansioo •ill oow bi ~tj)Oned indefinitely. The AutoO ub had not int.c:ndcd to build the towers f'oT at least anoabcr decade, however the firm wanted to tet MtM preliminary plans on the books. "We're outcrowioa our facilities and we were tryio1._ to do IOJ'Dc looa ,.. plannina.•· Olson explainod, adc.tint I.bat \,be company dido 't n:ally know If i1 would need two lktory towers. "Buically, we were aayina that if t.bc 'baby' srows enou&b, we wm add on a room," he said. "Now we'Jl wait until~ set a better idea of' bow mucb we will arow." Good idea, said Aynes, wam.ina tbal rnjdeou would continue .. fiabtina ''° ~e the subutbln flavor of COl\a A boat 70 clilldren dre 11ed in coetame and 9*fed a clown'• performance and. a pappet ahow to cele6rate tbe holiday of hnm at the Jewlah Com.manlty Center bl Lap.na ee.cb.. Zachary Anael, (left) 2, of lntne wore a foll hat &D4 a home-made beard d~ tbe fe.ti'ritl•. Pvlm com• from the BlbUcal Book of Betber, wllo thwarted a plot to ala-elater the Jewe of Penta In the 8tb Ceatmy, B.C. Unopposed candidates already winners By STEVEN STARK Dellr ..... C., I I I ..... U nopposcd candidates running for seats on the Laguna Niguel Community Council have been ccnificd as winners even before next month's council elf't'1 ion Council President James Krcmbas, who represents District 4, will serve another two-year term, as will District 10 incum- bent Candice Burroughs. James H. Welsh will t.a.lce over the District 2 scat vacated by Dick Mayfield, who resigned because bis job requires frequent travel. Mayfield served the coun· cil for more than six vears. Welsh, a five-year· Laguna Niguel resi- dent, said he hopes to affect a "logical progression" in the community's develop- ment. He is a civil engineer. Seeking re-election to the council are incumbents Joanne Gibson, Bruce Tunell and Bruce Rasner. The election will be held April 9-13. Winnen will be announced at the April 14 council meeting. There a.re 10 districts in Laguna Niguel, plus five at-large council members. Elec- tions for tbe even-number districts fall in even-numbeTcd ycan and members serve two-year tcnns. Two of the five distnct scats up for ~lection this year remain in contention, aJong Wlth three at-large positions. Adding a note of controversy to the election, council member Bob Hurst has resigned his chairmanship of the councifs election subcommittee to campai~ against some members of the council. Council member Linda Bayme has been chosen to succeed him. Hurii.t has decljned to name the can- didate or candidates he opposes. HistoricaJly, voter turnout bas been very low - in 1984 only 400 people voted. Marajns of victory have been as low as one vote: Hunt said. The following 1s a brief lisuna of candidates and incumbents in alphabetical order: •Joanne Gibson -runnina apinst incumbent Bruee Tunell and Olambcr of Commerce president Burt Mcyen for the District 6 scat and also for an at-largt scat, Gibson has served on the council the past 6 ycan. Nanene Lewcbel -a sclf-dC$Crlbcd "free-lance political consult.ant." Lcuschel seeks electton to the District 8 seat of incumbent Bruce Rasner. Her main J<?&1• if elected, would be to get more . etuzcns involved in community affairs. •Ingrid McQuire -• homemaker and council watcher. McQuire seek.selection to an at-large scat. An unsuccessful candidate· in last year's election, she bas served on the county water district committee. •Burt Meyers -president of the ·~amber of Commerce. Meyers is seeking election to the Dtstrict 6 seat or an at-larJC berth. While enjoying Laguna Niguel .. the way it is," Mcyen is not opposed to development and growth. •Bruce Rasner-District 8 incumbent. An anomcy, Rasner has served the council the past four years. •Luis Rodn$UCZ -an auomcy. Rodriguez is acuve m the Niguel Shores Homeowners Association. He is teeking election to an at~lar&c scat. •Bruce TuneU -an incumbcnt·from District 6, Tuncll bu served on the council the past three ycan. He said be will continue to work for reasonable ~wtb. mcluclina the oontroversial Stetn·Brief development, whose homeowners' appeal be favors. •Michael Ziegler -scclci ng \be District 8 scat or an at-large position. Ziegler said he is concerned about planned, orderly growth. An American Airlines supervisor, Ziegler and bis wife moved to Laauna Niguel 10 October I Q85 from Palos Verdes. Huntington to condemn land for development By STEVE MARBLE OfhO!lllr ......... The Hunungton Beach City Council has agreed to begin condemnation actions against one of the city's largest landowners an an effon to move forward with a downtown redevelopment plan. At wue is a four-acre piece of land that hes to the south of the muniClpal pier. It 1s now a parking lot. But the property as in the midst of an area targeted for a massive redevelopment project to include a hotel and entertain· mcnt center on one side of Pacific Coast Highway and a thicket ofrtstraurants and <ihQ.os on the other. The fo ur-acre property is owned by the Huntington Beach Co., one of the beach city's largest landholders. The landowner wants to be paid an estimated S3 malhon for the propeny but the city. so far. !las countered with only a $1 0,000 offer, according to city leaders. Douglas LaBelle, the city's deputy redevelopment dtrcctor, said the dispute over value of the property should not slow down building a theme shopping village adjacent to the pier. but may well lead to a court fight. He said the city can obtain a coun order to take immediate possession of the land 1f negouauons over the propeny's value drag on. Counctl members met behind closed doors Monday to discuss the ncgo11at1ons and later voted to st.art condemnation proceedings agamst the Huntington Beach Co. A spokesman for tbe Huntington Beach Co. could not be reached for comment. In a related move, counctl members Monday tentatively designated a Phconax- bascd hotel group as the firm that wi II bu aid and operate a 300-room high-rise hotel near the intersection of Pacific Coast Highway and Majn Street. Paragon Hotels has indicated It will operate on a franchise basts for a ma.ior hotel chain. A hst of potential candidatt"S include Hilton. Sheraton and Ernbassc}' Suites, wd LaBelle "It wtU be a first<lass. Irvine Marriott· quality hotel ... he saad Counc1I members also tentatavel) selected Bryant L Moms Development of Carlsbad as the compan) to spearheaded redevelopment efforts adjacent to the Cit) pier Bryant Moms prcviousl} was involved in such waterfront development pro1ectc; as Shorchne Vlllage m Long Beach and Seapon Village in San Otego. Vandals wreak $50,000 damage at Laguna school day afternoon at the Ralphs market, 19041 Beach Blvd. The loss was estimated at$ l 3S. • • • A Santa Ana resident reponcd that bis blue 1982 Toyota Celica was stolen Tueschy from a parking place on Beach Boulevard near Pacific Coast Hiahway. The loss was esti- mated at Sl0,000. ••• Two bicycles were rc_l?Ortcd stolen Tuesday. A black H uffy concou~ 10-spced bacyclr was reported stolen from Bunker Htll Tuesday about 6 45 p.m and a blue Schwtnn beach cruiser was stolen from Whatne)' 1us1 after noon. • • • 4. stereo wn reported stolen from " stolen from a business at 17000 Sky Park Boule,ard Tuesday mom1ng about am Coeta Mesa ..\ S600 "1deocasscttc recorder was reported stolen from a home m the 1.,00 block of Labrador between 7:40 a m and 4 p .m Monday . By LAUR.A MERlt Ofh0ellr"94""" Laauna Beach High School suf- fered about $50,000 in damages when vandals flooded the building by aiming water f'rom a aarden hose fUH force throuab a second-story window. Fancen fircfiahtcrs, includina some county fi rcfiahters, spent about five hours Mondaymoppana up about six inches of water and tryinJ to save computers, books and furnishings by coverina them with tarps. Seven water vaccums and a do1.cn squcqccs were needed lo dry the Ooors, said a Laguna Beach Fare Department 'pokes man. Newport Beach The man er of the Rocky Moun- tain Chocolate Co reported S I O,SOS '4'0r1h of chocolate m1ssana from the Atnum Court shop'$ 'torcroom. The sweets were believed to have been taken dunna a two.month penod last summer. • • • A bnef caK was stolen from a car parked an orona del Mar. The owner reponed a $40 los at\cr the theft on Poin~ttaa • • • A petty-then was rcponed at the 7- Eleven store an the 1900 block of West Balboa Boulevard. Two people took a 12 pack of beer and ran out the front The spokesman said the vandalism occutTcd late Saturday or Sunday evcninJ. when the bosc was poked through the window of the science department offices. Water seeocd tbrouab the ceiling and electrical fixtures into the library and cafeteria downstairs. said Mike Hall of the Laauna Beach PoUce Department. destroying hundreds of books and the new carpet. Some of the water passed throuab mimeo- graph paper, st.airuna the library carpet purple. said school board member Janet Vickers. Vandals also reportedly broke the window of another classroom on campus sometime Sunday niabt and door RantlnCton Beach A resident of the 6200 block of C'omell reported Tuesday that her home was buralanz.ed by someone who pned open a locked front window. The loss, estimated at SI ,87S, included tclv1s1on and com- puter equipment. • • • A female Juvenile was arrested Tuesday on su picion or ~hophftina at the Alpha Beta store at Warner Avenue and Golden West treet Recovered was rum valued at S 12 • • • A tc ident of' thr 6100 bloc~ of spread animal feces on desks and walls, staclc.cd beer cans throughout.. wrote derogatory remarks about some tcachen on the chalkboards and ripped apart books, said officer Mike Hall. Oyde Lovelady, district manaaer. said school officials do not believe the two incidents arc related. The Ooodina was discovered early Monday morning by the school custodian. The hose was still running full force when the Pichay entered the room, Lovelady said. Accordin& to Vickers. distnct in- surance sbouJd oover the damaacs. Dundtt reported Tuesday that a chrome and blue BMX OT din b1ke was stolen ftom Schroeder Park. The loss was estimated at St7S. • • • Someone stole (our tires and nms from a 1966 Volkwqcn "8a.Ja Bua. .. accordina to a rcpon from Terry's Auto, 18101 Redondo. The loss was estimated at $800. • • • U int bolt cutters.. tome<>ne broke 1 lock and buralaritcd a home prqe on tbe 8000 6lock of Constantine. The loss included a white and chrome BMX bicycle wonh $300. • • • A woman told poli~ her pu~ wa' stolen from her shopp1n1t an Tues• • • • A security offiorr at the Mervyn'!> store. 981 1 Adams A vc . told pohct Tuesday an 8-ycar-<'ld boy was ap- prehended whiJe tryin.a to steal tO}''i wonbS48. ••• A ~1dent of the 18300 block of Worchester reported Tuesday that someone stole ber puTSC, a curlin,a iron and S 1 S in cash from the blue 1980 Ford pickup truck parked 1 n her driveway. • • • A ttsident of the 21600 block of Brookhurst Street told police Tues- day that someone stole T ·tops worth Sl ,100 from his red 1981 Chevrolet Corvette and dad S400 worth of electncal damage IAC1m• Beacb Acar tett0andc.amp1naaca.rwcre stolen from a car parted: unday n•fht on H1U Uttl. the v1ctam told police early Monday. The value of the 101~ has yet to be detmnincd lntne A purtt was rtponcd tolen from the table or a mahtclub on the I 8000 block of MacArthur Boulevard Wednaday about 1 ··O a m • • • A Volkswaaen Bua ,..., rtponed \totcn from Morpn l u~' n1 ht 1ust befo?t m1dmf,h1 car on the 16000 block of Hale .<\venue Tuesda) aboul 4 45 p.m • • • Jewelry and ste~ equ1pmen1 wa\ reported stolen from the home on Golden tar Tuesday about 4 p m . . ~ home on the 14000 block of Sumac Avenue WIS broken into Tuesday afternoon and Jewelry and .i lock boit were reported mmmg • • • Two televis1ons and a stereo were taken from a locked vefticle at a car lot on Travel Land Way Tue~ay • • • Two rypcwntcrs we~ rtPon~ ••• <\ v. mdov. v. as broken tn a burgla~ attempt at an apartment at 1925 .\nahe1m ve between 6 a.m. and 6·101 m Monday • • • A\ $1 60 camera and $300 m calh were reported stolen from an apart· ment at 160 Wilson t. between 7:30 p m and 11·30 pm unday wh1le the resident was asl~o .... The hinges were kicked off the door to a boat parked m the 200 block of Fa1rwa' Place ht-tw~n 10 a.m. la~t Wcdnesda) and Q 45 a m Tuesday. Message to our subscribers: You probab1y noticed ~me 'i1m1lant1~ bctw~n )C\terda>. f);uly Pilot and Monday' home-dehvcrTd ("(ht1on \C"nl stones wt-rt repeated beau~ of a pm breakdown Wc apologitt The ed1t1on dehvettd to your home l uesda} af\crnoon was the one...,.~ pnnt f'or morn1na ~le~ en news racks and '\to~ That ed1tton cames the latest news from the prt' aou~ cHnina and local stonn \hat first appeared an the prev1ou~ da)'' afternoon edition Af\tr the i>ttU run. we remake the Pi.lot for our home--dc1n crv u~nbcn But Latc Monday, a pre btanna burned out Heroic efforts by the prcu Cf'CV>' ke9t the nc:""'Pflnt rolhna Ion cnouah to pnnt ne.,.q>apct"S for our morn1na and afternoon cu\tomcn Hawt\tT, Tuesday afternoon when we should have hccn pub\1'hin · a fresh edillon. lbc ..-oundcd pres' was idle h 's bttn rtpaired We'rt had. to normal and ~ thank your fOf )1)Ur pat~noe. Governor assalls Bradley's n on-position on Rose Bird LOS ANGELES (AP) -Mayor Tom Bradley refused to malcc public his position rcgardmg controversial Chief Jusuce Rose Bird, saying that a JUd1ctal election should not be in· Ouenced by parti$.an politics. Gov George DcukmeJ 1a n 1mmed1- ately heaped scorn on the an- nounctment by his Democratic op- ponent Tuesday. saying Bradley dem- onstrated political weakness and was trying to conceal from the public the type of Judges he would appoint 1f elected governor Bradley said he would neither oppose nor endorse Bird and fi ve other Justices based on the principle of keeping panisan politics out of the courts. He said he made the decision not to side with or against Bird despite his m1sg.av10gsabout her uniform opposi- tion to death penalty cases. "I will not join with political candidates w}lo arc so willing, even .. .. .ii,'· '' ........ ' ~ -I . , -t ~ ... aruuous, to mject partisan polaucs mto a non-partisan court election," Bradley said at a City Hall news conference. The mayor also said he was "not tak.ing an easy way. I'm taking the tough way out. I believe there ought to be a separation of our courts and partisan politics." The Bird issue has bedeviled Brad- ley's campaign for the Democratic gubernatorial nomination in the June 3 primary, and it has become a major theme in the Republican incumbent's re-election bid. "Mayor Bradley, You can run for governor but you can't hide," Dcu- kmejian s,aid at a later news con- ference. . Tbe mayor's "failure to act once again raises fundamental questions about his ability to make tough decisio ns and provide leadership," Dcukmejian said. ''The public will have no do ubt about the kind of .,, ,. I I \ Judges I will appoint." The mayor attacked Dcukmcjian for suggesting that other justices on the November ballot might get his supP<>rt if they affirmed some death penalty cases. "Justices should never be asked to offer up a human life as a way of purcbasin~ a governor's support," Bradley said. Dcukmej ian said he has never told justices how they should rule on a case. .. These arc honorable mdivid· uaJs," Dcukmejian said. "They arc going to carry out their duties without . regard to what my views are." Focus on the Bird issue intensified a month ago when BradJcy kick.ed off his campaign and said he would answer the Bird question within 60 days. The chief Justice has fallen under criticism for her liberal record, particularly her uniform votes to reverse death sentences. STARTS TOMORROW THREE DAYS ONLY SA\/E FI FI f PERL.Er JT .. A .0 AQPE • ~ • • i • 't ... ' J J ~ t J • • j ' . . • t I • .. Iv •• -1.; • f , 83 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH 759-1211 MON·FAI 10.9 SAT -6. SUN 12-5 c Newport Center Fashion Island is maki(lg shopping more convenient. Con~nient Hours "/ll 1pp1nJ! ht11Jr\ htJ\ 11 /H•f1fl l·~(Ji1nrJprJ int/ 11\f' r1• no..,., (lp1•n 'vt rmr/,n rh ru Fr/tJ,1\ If! ,1 m 11 p m '·''"' rl.i"f' llJ 1 m -f, 11 n> .1nrJ 'illf r/,J~ f2 ) fJ It) Con~1~nt, bsy P.utcing I tnrl 11nnh· (lilf~ tn~ n1 .. 1r \our t.1vurtr1• \fl /fl (/( 11•/ 0111 \ ,1/1'1 ,pf\ t( I ' /11r ,i/,.r/ .11 A tnum ( 11t1rt fl"'" \'''" r,tr tor "''"' I lif\f' yo11r ( M h 1nrl "''"h1•rl whtf P VOii ,hop' Conwni~nt Onf'oStop Shopping \, r 1r Ir\,,,,. f(,mch frlfmN\ \t,u ~ 1•f r1>r .tlf vr111r ~n11rml't .Jnd ,,,.,./.fv [l.rf>f l•fV nt•Pd' ~tor(' VO W ~"'' ''"f'' tn rh1•tr r 11nvPn1Pnl r ulf/ '''"•tMf' Im kf'r~ wh1IP yo11 ,,,,m ,mr/ Ii.wt• thl'fn valeted rn ~ "'" 1 .tr wh1 n vo11 ff' rl<JnP Hor h , •• "' ir ,., Ml' u 1mnl1mPntarv' ACLU raps LA County on rapist castration study By th A1aoelated Press LOS ANGELES-A study on bow to rehabilitate mentally disordered sex offenders, including an aDlivsis of the "mcd.icaJ. moral and leaal issues ofusina castration" as punishment bas been ordered by the lm Angefcs County Board of Supervisors. Supervisor Pete Schabarum sou'1tt the study, approv~ by a 4-0 vote Tuesday, but stopped short of endonma the use of castration u punishment. The American Civil Liberties Union immediately opposed such legislation on constitutional grounds. "There mi&ht be some constitu.tional questions," said Rosa MartinC2., a spokeswoman lot the ACLU. In ~cular, she cited the Bill of Rights' probibiuon against cruel and unusual pumshment. Woman •ue• over lottery •P1n sllp LA Mayor Bradley Deukmejian 's wai: chest $5.3 million LOS ANGELES -A woman who lost out on $3 million in the stale lotter)."s "Big Spin" drawing when the wheel of fonune's baU slipped from the $3 million slot to one for S 10,000 bas filed suit lo collect the big prize. In her Superior Court suit filed Tuesday, Doris Barnett seeks $3 million plus interest from the state lottery commission. Barnett con tench that on the Dec. 30, 1985, drawin&i the ball landed in the big winner's mark at the end of her push on the wheel. Jt was announced and broadcast that she was a millionaire, she said. The ball slipped, "for some unknown reason," robbing her of her prize, the suit says. Bulletll foand 1n boy'• Pepm bottle SACRAMENTO (AP) -With donations from big-name firms, Re· publican Gov. Geo'lc Dcukmejian raised $2.6 million 1n the first 2112 months of 1986, swelling his re- election fund to $5.3 million. His late-starting Democratic oppo- nent. Lm Angeles Mayor Tom Brad- ley, took in $1.07 million during the same period, an aide said Tuesday. RIAL TO -A woman said her 6-ycar-old son found five .22-aliber bullets in a bottle of Pepsi soft drink, prompting the Orange County bottler to announce that the bottle will be examined. Beverly KJochn, consumer affairs manager for Pepsj m Orange, said that until the company's quahty control inspectors can examine the bottle, the company cannot confirm the occurrence. ''Obviously, it's very unusual," K.loehn sa.id Tuesday. "It's hard to understand how anyth1ng like that could possibly happen." Rancho Seco revamplng ordered Since the start of 1985, Dcu- kmejian 's campaign committee has . raised $7.4 million and spent more than $2 million. It had $5.3 million in 41 banks on March 17; the last day covered by nis latest campaign report. Between Jan. 1 and March 17, Dcukmcjian took in $10,000 or more from 93 contributors, many from banks and oil companies. SACRAMENTO -Federal officials say they told managers of the Rancho Scco nuclear power plant to straighten out their operauon before trying to start the plant again. But the officials of the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission told a news conference Tuesday that they stopped short ofissuing a flat edict forSMU D officials to Lake certain steps before the plant is restarted. Instead, they said they expected vast improvement in the control system of the plant, and a more positive commitment of management. NRC officials met Tuesday with the management of the Sacramento Municipal Uuhty District at Rancho Seco, after asking for an "action plan" that would convince them that the management was capable of safely running the plant. ·Remains of six astronauts identified; families told By the A11oclated Pre11 The remains of six of the seven astronauts who died m the explosion of the space shuttle CtiallenJCr have been identified. and NASA has begun notifying the families, according to the relatives and published reports. Since the wreckage of Challenger's crew cabin was found I 00 feet under water off the Flonda coast earlier this month. NASA has refused comment on whether remams were recovered. AIDS vlrus may prompt cell 'sulclde' DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. -New research suggests that the AIDS virus may kill key immune system cells by making them commit suicide -an idea that could lead to ways to stave off the disease, a researcher says. Wor.ker .kllled 1n roc.ket fuel e%plo•lon EDISON. N.J. -A piece of sohd rocket fuel exploded as workers at a test site were attaching an electric blastmg cap to 1t Tuesday, k.illing one man and burning a second, authorities said. The accident occurred as workers were hooking up the blasting cap to a 2 b,Y 2-inch square piece of Arcadene in an isolated area at a seven-square-mile mdwtrial complex, said township police Sgt. Bruce Danscecs. "Apparently, this parucular propellant was unstable and exploded" while the two men were huddling over a S~Uon drum in which the test blast was to occur, said Middlcscx·County Prosecutor Alan Rockoff. Smokeless tobacco stlll can't be banned WASHINGTON -The Senate sponsor of a new law requiring health warrung labels on smokeless tobacco says a ban on snuff and chewing tobacco could not now be imposed. but he ho~ a landmark surgeo n general's rcpon detailing the products' cancer risk Wlll persuade people to avoid them. Sen. Orrin G. Hatch, R-Utah, praised a surgeon general's report released Tuesday as providing evidence that snuff and chewing tobacco arc not a safe alternative to cigarettes. The study, described as analogous to the famous 1964 surgeon general's report on smoking. declared snuff and cbewmg tobacco to be "a s1gn1ficant health n sk" that can lead to addjct1on. dependence. mouth disease and cancer. Convenient Purchilsing Shop with your Newport Cenrer Fashion Island charge card It's accepred at most stores througho ut the Center ' En1oy convenrt•nt gift-giving -give a Newport Center Fashion Island gift certificate -purchased with th<' Center's charRC card Convenient Pubae Check-In - Lots o f packages? Oro() by our Information Center for a compli- mentary shopping bag or let us check them for you while you continue your shopping. Netmdn MJ1tU\ Hobinw1H ThP 8rodd wen Rullr><h Wt/shire Buffum\ .tnd lrytne Hdnch Farmers Marlett 0'vN 1 1~ ftnP \ltlfl.'\ tn all /ust off Pdcd1c (n,;J\t I l11lhwav b(>twt>en MacA1thu1 and J.imbrm.>f' 8/vrl~ 1n Newpo1t Bt>acli 0 ---NEWPORT CENTER FASHION I LAND Balanced budget bid fails by one vote WASHINGTON (AP) -After coming up just one vote short. backers of a balanced-budget con- stitutional amendment say they missed a cructal opportunity to win Senate passa1c that may not come again for several years. "Unless we replace some of the members who voted against this, I don't sec any way we arc going to pass this in the next C.Ongress," Sen. Orrin G. Hatch, R-Utah, said Tuesday after the Senate voted to kill the proposaJ he helped sponsor. Senators voted 66-34 for the ca111endment, but supporters needed 67 votes-two-thirds of the Senate's I 00 voting members -to win passage. The proposal would have required Congress to spend no more each year than the government col- lects in revenues. "It's a blJ disappomtment," said Sen. Dcnms DcConcmi, [).Ariz, another sponsor. "It's going to be a long time before we get an opportuni- ty to pass it again." Both supponers and opponents said the Gramm-Rudman deficit reduction law, passed last December on a 61 -31 Senate vote, was a significant factor in the amendment's defeat. Rabbi looks to Congress after def eat on yarmulke W ASHlNGTON (AP) -Re- hgjous groups disappointed over a Supreme Court ruling upholding stnct military dress codes may turn to C.Ongress for help. ''I hope that Congress will sec fit to examine the issues," said Simcha Goldman, an Orthodo~ Jewish rabbi and former Air Force captain who lost a Supreme C.Ourt appeal over his riaht to wear a yarmulke while on active duty. Jn a 5-4 ruhng Tuesday, the court approved enforcement of military dress oodcs even when religious freedom is at stake. It said the Air Force did not violate Goldman's constitutional ri&hts by prohibitina him from wcarina a yannulkc1 the traditional Jewish skull cap, while in uniform. The military mu.st be given a free hand in settina dress codes to "foster instinctive obedience, unity, commit- ment and esprit de corps," Justice William H. Rehnquist said for the court. In another freedom-of-reli&ion de· etsion. the coun cleared the way for studentS in a Williamsport. Pa., public hi&h school to meet during school houn for prayer and religious wonh1p. But becau1e of proocdural reasons, the S-4 ru1io& tel no national prece- dent in thecontinuinadebeteoverthe role of reliJion In ~ublic schools. In a.notber dccl11on, the court made it easier for people to sue local aovemmenu over allqed violations of their riahts by aovemment em· etoyca. 1hc 6-l rulina allows a Cincinnati physician to sue Hamilton County for a 1977 inddent in wh.1ch police chopped down a door to his offices. The coun s&Jd even a linaJe ancidalt of mllCOoduct, 1( authoriud by policymaken, may be around• for a lawsuit apiMt a public aaency, s~uicide squads aimed at U.S. Ltb~'s official ~o caJJed today for Arab suicide squads to attack U.S. cm ~tcs and othc;r tnterests worldwtdc following armed clashes between U.S. and Libyan forecs lD the Gulf of Sidra The radio exhorted the "Arab ·------------- nauon" to be transformed "in its entirety into suicide squads and into human bombs_ missncs and aircraft to deter and resist terrorism and destroy 1t for good." The radto commentary was monitored by the British Broadcasting Corp. in Lon- don. The ubyan rad10 commentary said, "Ob heroes of our Arab n.auon let your missiles and su1ci<k ccU~ pursue American lC'rronst embassies and tn~resu wherever they may be." Earlier today, a rad1cal PaJestiman facuon, Abu N tdaJ's Fatah Rcvol- uuonary Counetl. s1m11Lary threaten- ed retaltauon for what 1t called the "abominable Amencan aggression." The council sa.td in a statement issued in Damascus. Syna, that "anythJng Amcncan has become from now on a target for our revolutionaries." U.S. officials say Amcncan forces destroyed two patrol boats and dam- aged a Libyan mJSs1le radar site Tuesday in the second day of confron- tation over Libyan leader Col. Moammar Khadafy's claim to the entire Gulf of Sidra up to 40 miles offshore. The United States says territorial waters end 12 miles offshore, the ~cnerally rccognu.ed tntcmational limit. U.S. officials say the clash ~ Monday wt th Libya firing su missiles at Amcncan warplanes on man- . euvers m the JUlf. The Uruted States rctahated agamst patrol boats and a missile sne on shore. U.S. officials said. There were no rq>on.s of ftgbtJng today. Associated Press photographer G1ul10 Broglio said Tnpoli was quiet, with no signs of military act1v11y. "Nothing is going on that you can sec. People arc going to school and to Possible attacks ondiplomatsled to confrontation NEW YORK (AP) -President Reapn's decision to risk conflict by seoain.J ships into the Gulf of Sidra was reinforced by reports that Libya was trying to .. pinpoint" American diplomats ovcnea.s for possiDle ter- ronst attacks, The New York Times reported today. "They WCtt zero~ng in on our people and we thought it was just a matter of time before thCTe was another major terrorist incident, .. said an unidentified Reagan adminis- tration official quoted by the Times. The reports of Libyan activity came from the Middle East and southern Europe, in the waJce of the American decision in January to sever economic ties with Libya after the terrorist attacks on airports in Rome and Vienna. The Times said maneuvers by the Sixth Fleet were approved on March 14 at a meeting of the National Security Policy Group. At that time, according to the report, the president was not only told that the maneuvers would result 10 a military confrontation, but also was told that the Libyans would react by shooting at American planes with Soviet-built SAM-5 missile$. That, according to U.S. officials, is exactly what happened. The administration knew the rockets could be outmaneuvered by American planes, the Times said, and tt was unlikely Libya would nsk its air force. work," he reported. The Reagan adm1n1strat1on tngton broke dtplomanc retauons charged that Abu Ntdal's faction. with the Nonh African country su backed by Khadafy, carried out years ago. terrorist attacks at Rome and Vienna Tuesday NBC News showed airports last Dec. 27 in which 20 Khadafy telling its correspondent, people died, including five Amcri· Bonnie Anderson, "ltisatimeofwar, cans. a time of confrontation. And we have Reagan banned U.S. economic decided the Gulf of Sirte (Sidra) is holes to Libya and ordered Americans ours. We have decided this by to leave the country. Americans have sacrifice, by blood. .. served as consultants an Libya's Asked about the Americans still 10 petroleum and construction indus-Libya, Khadafy said, "They arc our tnes. guests. We arc a civiliud people." A State Department spokesman, Foreign ambassadors summoned Michael Austnan, estimated that to the Foreign Ministry in Tripoli perhaps "a couple hundred" Amen-were told that Libya would confront cans remain tn Ltbya despite the ban. the U.S. actions "with all its means," { Famous name spott shirts comparable in quality at 26.50 999 ·Gf9at t:>Uv on sno1t saeew SPQff st1rtJ i'l fiOl&VCOl9 Coflot\ potyes18f Slwtpes ond P'c*Ss Sizes s-M-l-XL Arstqtdty Nattona11y odYerttsed jersevs comparable In quattty at S2A -. 1 ()99 . ShOft ~knit )8r1l8VS wtth p6eced, WOll18n trims Stand-up Of aegutor COior Easy COf9 ~ cotton Sluts 5-M-l-XL Arst Quclty Famous maker 1~ cotton twm pants comparable in Quattty at $38 1499 Comlof1 ond Quoli1y All cotton t'MI cosuots Wlttl sade etos1IC AsSOfted cobs. S1ZeS s-M-l·XL Rrst Quaity. Famous maker 1 ~ cotton shorts comparable in quality at $JO 1399 Belted. p6ec)f front SOOtts tn 1 oos. cotton twill ~ coloB. $iZ8$ 30 to 38. Rrst Quality Stock up on these ane. long sleel.<e dfess sNtts wtth bUfton.down cof. lors. Solds ond pottems in cotton/ ~-Sizes 141"l to 17 Rrst ,Quolty An Italian diplomat an Tnpoli. said the official Libyan news agency. Marco Tometta, reached by tele-JANA, in a dispatch monnored an phone from Rome, said no threats Rome. ALL STORES CLOSED EASTER SUNDAY, MARCH 30th. BRANO NAMES FOR LESS Over 236 stores nationwide • ~:IC CANOGA PARK FUU£ATON had been made against the rema1rung "We in Libya will consider any Americans or other foreigners in American target and the Amcncan Libya. and Mediterranean bases hostile ·~----+www••-o•--COSTA MESA GIWW>A HIUS CULVER CITY HUNTINGTON BEACH Wcst Euror.:n diplomats an targets which we will confront," the ·-.--occ1•ne1¥ .-. ~ T . . edth . . ..,..._ .............. _... .... npoh said t at several thousand agency quot c mmastry as sayinJ. n..c_..,...,..__..,__..,.,. _,, "-·-1:-~~ 11 1 JO ......__.."~ LAGUNA HIUS LA MIRADA PASADENA SAN BERNARDINO TUSTIN THOUSAND OAKS W. COVINA TORRANCE Libyans demonstrated outside the The threat clearly was aimed at U.S. nc _,_._. .....,_........., -"of .._. _,, • .-• __, • • .., ..,_.,., • __,_ r.._. Belgian Embassy, which has handled mihtary bases in Sicily and elsewhere ~~·.:~-=.,..., ....... 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""*-•, K'O· n. n.n2 f l hnM 110-'ml'I· ~YD\ZH\l(' .. a.I "04\e&• l.ACl\ "'" 'U 1111121-~ ~ -~--·"' n "''" C'AlffT'ltAI'«\ llWC'-.(~Nil"""'7 ·-_ .. " .... ,,., """'' \.)11 09'C•' ""'"''. l •Ill"" "a•tnr•. '\all i.-.qu1n I "'' "'•'"''. "'•'fllt• "'"'"''•I '""'-''"'' "~"' ol ..... ,,11 r ..... k ... ' ""~"~Ir""""~·. lo.A•" •II,.,'"'' ........ .., .. I •• ,,,,, '~""'' 1vv.1 ..... \R>I'• .. ""I "' ""' 1n~· k.nl . ..._ LaRouchians trying to dupe voting public What do the Queen of England, Henry KJssinger and Walter Mondale have in common? Not much, except in the mind of right-wing extremist Lyndon La Roucbe, who claims they ~re conspiring to spread communism. La Rouche's organization, the Democratic National Policy Committee, became a force in Orange County politics last week when it almost stole the Democratic Party's congressional nomination in the 40th District. La Rouchian Art Hoffmann, 29, a technical writer from Santa Ana, is the only candidate who filed for the Democratic primary nomination before the filing deadline expired. The Democrats, shocked and outraged at the prospect of being represented by a man whose real party espouses anathema like support oflaser defense systems and a plan to quarantine AIDS victims, regrouped quickly. They recognized that they were forced to find a write-in candidate to run against Hoffman for the nomination. After suggesting that he had a few people in mind -and apparently after having no success convincing any of them to run -county Democratic Chairman Bruce Sumner took up the gauntlet himself. Sumner is warmin$ to the task, but his prospects are grim. If he loses the pnmary, his party is tainted by its reluctant association with the La Rouchian. If he wins, he get the dubious honor of running against five-term incumbent Conwessman Robert Badham, who has been invincible in this heavily Republican district. By forcing the Democrats into an uncomfortable comer, Hoffmann also has forced them to spend money -which is in short enough supply fo r Democrats -on a race they had already written off as unwinnable. Insofar as that strategy has an impact upon the Democrats' ability to mount ·a campaign in races where the contests promise to be closer and the public interest can be expected to be high, what the La Rouchtan has done amounts to a dirty tnck. More disturbing is the current La Rouchian penchant for imitating Democrats. From the name of the founder's organization to actions like Hoffmann's, which are being repeated across the country, La Rouche and his followers are trying to reap the benefits of an imaginary alliance with the Democratic Pany. That is a moral fraud. It is a deliberate attempt to dupe the voters into voting for candidates who do not stand for the principles of the party they claim to represent. Certainly, La Rouch1ans have as much nght to run for office as any other Americans. But they should run on their own platform, not steal a label to hoodwink the voters. In a representative democracy hke ours, it is essential that the populace is represented by elected officials who can be trusted. By posing as Democrats, the La Rouchians ha ve exposed themselves as unworthy of the public trust. $6 niillion for call boxes a waste of taxpayer funds 1 o the Ld1tor Rdc:rcnce 1c, mJtlr· In \•rnr Iron! page report in ii rc:Cl'nt P1l"1 1n "'hit II ~ou ad,1se of the: lUrrent movc alC>ol to spend Vi m1ll1on to install 5110 telephom:s on \Orne 11 ~ mtle\ ol h1gh"'a' in <>rilngc < <•unt} This ligurc\ out tu ht· arountl $I .21JO per tl'lcph11nc which lt:ad\ nw to belie' c we art• .ihout to do h11\1nt\\ w11h the v.rong (11mpiln} f vu111 thl\ figure made ''1mc \Cn'><. the up ..... ard figure of halt m1ll1on or mqn· (k'r ,innum 10 rn,11nliltn the ph ont:\ 1<. 1nc1inu 1' ,1hk '-1>"' 1f wt· '"n"tkr the.: Jd'-1\:thiltt) •11 the phont·\ 1hnn'>Cl'e" Wl' get another qewp111111 -true the" dfl' a u1nven1en1t· d '"u ha, ca flat tire run out c1f ga.-. or c,ome other minor inconvcn1cnc1· If this happened nt'lH one of the phont"\ which perforce will be one mile apan. of rourse ont" would uo;c the phtine utherw1<;e Ir) to flag down some help and of cour'>e if .tn accident occurred and <.omcom were hurt. that wmeonc c;ure 1'1n't going to trudge a mile looking for a phont' Jg.11 n l1.1gg1 ng down wuu Id he thl nici<lt· Jncl would hl probably unnnC\\dr\ dn,wa.,, hnause ol thc innt1lc lo.1ndnl''i\ of some and curiosit y ut other\ If tht "'holr l'Xcrc1'>c anent emcrg- ' ""' .t'>Wilamc I'> 1nderd the oh1ect tht·n lhl' 1"''1 nth('r ~uluuonr, that I rnn think tJI would \Ult u<, h<'11cr and W\t mu< h k'>'> I )Oller ii ft'\.\.iml to ,111.,,onc \top- ping to a'>'>l'>t an>onc 1n ar1 cmcrgenq t'I() pc.·n.ent ot thO\t' c;o hdp1ng would 11111 put 1n for the reward anyway) or 2) I <,c the propmcd half million or more annual mainl('nancc cost to prnv1dr add1t1onal and permanentl y 3\\lgncd ( 11 P .\ hall mil would lCn0i1nl) give us wn\tant and rnmpletc tO\erage for a mere I ~O rrnle' and in ddd1t1on to the <,crv1cr to emergent) s11ua11.on'i would .11 thl ..amc time provide deterrent.{ to those v.ho chooo;c to d1soh<'' 1ht• IJw\ .ind othcrw1\C en- danger thl' '>life and \anc ;\I J\N L. BLUM BaJboa Cocaine's a dangerous habit To the Editor Jt seem~ that man) people arc huy1ng. and 1n1c~t1ng 1nw their bud· ice;, coc:une from wuth of the bordl·r I would rtm1nd them th<H thl''>c drugs arc not subject to Pure I ood 1rnd Drugs law,, They Mt' runn•nl/. ~hort ot ether to proccs~ their coke \u the) are using ben11ne 8cnnnc an lBU'IC' cancer Much of the coke marketed in th " country come~ 1n plastic bap. 1n th1 OR ANGf COAST Daily Pilat 'it om.it h\ of trtl\ clt:r'I and a hen~. known ·" muk\ I don't know how they Mc 'ICAlt·d or how they arc ex 1'8( ted or hr'"' dran the operation m.l)' hC' fhrr~· arc ccrta1nl)' no ~11ar.1nteec; When a h.1~ hur\t~ 1n the 'itom.1ch 1t one of the\(· people. they die. hut there" no Wfl) uf~now1n& how many 111\t lrak a little l han k shout that JIM ROl.OIN(1 < 0<113 Mesa K-Wllll!Mf ".t ,. '"'" t.fl M•u ~ •'l'\Q f 1•t• < hi,,.., c.•1 rc1110. Tem C*'lft ,__~'1·10< Cnl!tlMlf Spot1 c .,,,QI ltoMf! L Cllftlreff "''"'•.ot ''°'' MtnlQe< f WYylC .... C.tQ,;ltl"-"" M~ HewMllMl••'*Y '.C•t1Ulltl'IQ (')i1t(t0t ,...., ........ Ol•~f4d Olrec10< ·'The Reagan administration obviously ts determined not to under- estimate the Impact of economic conditions on this fall's voting. · · 'Diet ' isjusta4-letterword to meat-and-potatoes man Prefers protein to much -touted meal full of vegetables ----- One member of our hou~hold has a slight weight problem from time to ume. He's not convinced of this, hut the other members of the family. en- couraged by his doctor. outvote him each time the subJCCt comes up. In his opinion. "diet" 1s the most obscene four-letter word in the Eng· lish language. We try a more subtle approach to the problem. "If you would eat less red meat and more vegetables," I st.an off. ... Just the expression on his face stops me. Have you ever seen a child's face . when h1s 1ce cream cone 1s taken away befort he's finished 1t'' I try again. "Even lean red meat 1s loaded with calories plus a few other things you're already loaded w1th. You would be surpnsed how the pounds would melt away if you ate more chicken and fish and veg- etables." He has an answer for me." All the ANN WELLS big.. fat animals in the world eat nothing but vegetables. Look at the hippo and the rhino -all they cat 1s salad. And another vegetable eater is the elephant." Rebuttle to this is difficult; the best I can do 1s mumble something about not bringing politics into the dis- cussion. But he 's not through. "On the other hand," he continues. "look at all the lean, sleek animals in the world -the tiger, the lion, the cheetah. They are meat eaters -red meat eaters. You don't catch them eating chicken and fish and veg- etables." I dredge up some long-forgotten facts from my days as a docent at the Los Angeles Zoo. "True, but they have to hunt for their food. They roam 50 to 60 miles a day looking for food and when they spot 1t. they run at Lrcmendous speeds to catch 11. That bums off enough caloncs to com- pensate for the caJories in the meat. .. He points to our tiny dog. "Look at her. She doesn't have to hunt for food . We put it right under her nose -and it's mostly meat. She's not fat." Ha! He's given me an opening. "Yes, but she goes for a walk twice a day and in between she runs around the yard chasing butterflies and birds. And she follows me all day long every where I go. That's a lot of exercise. She moves fast. faster than you do when you move. He shru~s. "That's easy for her - she has twice as many legs as I do." I gJVe up on the calorics and begin on the other dreadful things fat docs to our bodies. This isn't an effective argument either. He just had a complete physical; bJS electrocardio- gram was good, and his cholostcrol count and blood pressure were better than the salad-eating members of the family. I try one more idea. knowing 1t is the weakest argument of all. ''Nearly everyone is cutting down on red meat these days-it's the "in" 1h1ng to do." He didn't buy 1t. He's buying red meat. ColaDJJJi1t .t.aD Well1 llve1 "1 LapuNl1•el Fed gives Reagan a boost by cutting discount rate Provides insurance that economy will remain buoyant through the election. SACRAMENTO Pollster Mervin Field, after a speech to the Sacramento Press Club earlier this year. was asked what he thought would be the single most important factor in the 1986 election campaigns. Although much of his talk had centered on possible poht1cal fallout from California Chief Justice Rose Bird's reconfirmation campaign, toxic sares and governmental cor· ruption, Field said none of them would have as much impact as something else. He warned his audience never to underestimate the pohucal impact of economic conditions. He underscored this admnn1t1on by declaring: ••lft could take only one measure (to determine an underlying political mood). I would take a measure of the sense of economic wclJ-being." The Reagan admm1strat1on ob- viously is detennmed not to under· estimate the impact of economic cond1t1ons on th is fall's votina, Much of the country - outside the Fann Belt and some bhahted 1ndustnal areas -feels that business cond1t1ons are generally on the mend. Administration officials want to do all they can to keep voters reasonably contented at least through the No- vember -whatever 1t talcts or bowcver inconsistent 1t is with Ronald Reaaan's rhetonc. The Re· liln presidency doesn't want to fall victim to the ailment that has affi1eted other two-term chief cx- ecutt ve5 -the six-year t1ch. The two- year itch was bad enouJh. A fcelina that the nat1on'scconomy is on the mend may not constitute the hia)\est ltvcl of public confidence po s1ble, but it's significantly better than the mood which prevailed m the J 982 mid·tcrm election,. Economic problems then were s.rvere enouJh to caute the election of cnouj.h add1t1onal Democrats to the House of Reprc~c ntat1ve to chm1nate the worltin.a majoruy for· med by a coalition of Rcpublie1ns and Boll·W~Vll Democrats. Despite a nominal Democrauc m•jonty m the House, this conservative bloc pve Prc51dcnt Rcapn much of the lqJsl1t1ve proa,ramc; ht wanted dur- mg his first two years in office A year ago a lot of polit1c1ans. Republicans as well as Democrats, were betting that the 1986 mid-term elections would be even more trau- matic for the adm1n1stration. This was because the sixth year many two- term adm1n1stration 1s a trad1t1 onal low point. h's a time when both an administration and the economy seem tired. Vice President George Bush recent- ly acknowledged the danger but boasted to a Republican audience that this administration would prove immune to It. "It's been said that usually 1n the second year of the second term the economy goes sour" he said. "It happened to Dick Nixon. ft happened to Ike, to Harry Truman, and 1t happened to F.D.R. (But) it's not gomg to happen to this president." Bush, who was Ronald Rea~n·s chief rival in the 1980 GOP pres1den· tial r.nmaries, once dismissed Rc- apn s economic program H "voodoo economics." He doesn't talJt that way now that he is the 1dm1nistrat1on's head cheerleader, but hjs words sbouldo't be dlsmincd as rah-rah chatter. He surely must have known of a closed~oor action which had JU St been taken by the Federal Reserve Board, althouah news ofit had not yet been leaked to the public when Bush spoke. Over the wishes of Chairman Paul Volcker, a board majority, formed by Reaaan's appointees, had voted to 'pur further economic growth by cutting the discount rate further Volckcr's top priorities arc economic. reflectin~ his determination not to reian1tc 10flationary fires. which he feared premature lowcnna of the rate mia)\t do. He also was concerned about the effect on the dollar. But the effect of the action taken by the board m1Jori1y was to buy a poltt1cal msuranct pohcy whi ch ha' been souaht by the administration. It has wanted more economic stamu· lat1on so that bu 10w conditions will rcmaan buoyant tbrouah the election campajan. At one time, R~n al\O had the fiaht 1p1nst 1nflar1on as his top pnonty. Morr than 10 years a&o. 10 a Sacramento intcrvtew, Rcaaan cntl· MARTY SMITH cized both Democratic Con~sscs and Republican presidents Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford for having given into political pressures and casing upon the fight against inflation in favor of economic rest1mulation. Asan example he cited Nixon's 1n1tial success in in 1969 in lowering the inflation rate to 2.3 pem:nt. "But," Reagan recalled in 1975, "the political pressure because of the recession. the economic d1slocat1on that must accompany the curing of inflation, the market place's method of curing it. was so politically un- popular that they set out to stimulate the economy. "And now what we reap is a bie&er rtccss1on -first h1ahcr inflation. double-digit 1nfla11on, and then a recession. Now what will the third time be?" The solution R~n then ad- vocated was havina a president couragcou5 enouah to tough 1t out in the battle aaainst inflation. "Without being quite aJ brutaJ, it's about like Winston Churchill in World War II sayina to the British people, 'I can only promise you blood. sweat and tean'. • said Rcqan. Now Reaaan's appointees to the Federal Reserve Board have acc:om· modated their President, whose cur· rent top priority is fiahtma Oemo- cnus, not figJtting inflation. So much for blood, sweat and tears. So much for courage. Rcqan 's chief hero amona his 20th century predecessors in the White House is Calvin Coohdae. The Farm Bch was hunina durint Coolidge's time, too, but be manaae<f to Jet out of Wa hinaton before the enurc econ· omaeroofcoUapscd on his presidency and the nation. He let\ the mess to Herben Hoover. George Bulh., so busy now in- a.rat1atina himself with Ronald and Nancy in hopes or beina Rcqan's succcuor1 mi&ht reflect on the Coolidac cpcy. c.1..W•I MkMtl Sm/g 11 ,.,Ill• ~•l #Jt.r for McClatcllr Ne"' .,.. ~lfYI. · Jae• AIDEISOI and DALE VAN ATJA Stealth isn't quick enough U.S. needs plane that can quickly get clear of mushroom cloud WASHJNGTON -CouJd Ameri- can taxpayers save biJhons of doUan if the Pentagon modified commercial jetliners instead of buying SteaJtb bombers? Analysis of a 1978 Air Force study suggests this is indeed possible. The chief virtue ofStealth. 1f it ever gets off the ground and does what It's sup~scd to do, is that it wtll be invisible to Soviet radar. As we have warned, however, the Stealth bomber will be detectable to old-fashioned radars, which tbc frugal Soviets still have deployed. Small cruise missiles wouJd be much more effective; they could .tip past Soviet radar fast as a flash. The radar would have more time to focus on the slower Stealth bomber. Cruise missiles are aJso less expensive. That's what makes the Air Force report so interesting. The secret. 8- year-old repon on "cru1~m1ssile­ carrying aircraft" reviewed a dozen different types of aircraft to find one that could get off the ground quickJy at the first wam1ng of mcommg Soviet missiles. The three top con- tenders were the B-1 bomber and modified versions of two commercial transpons, the Boeing 747 and Lock- heed's L-1011. The study recognized the devastat- ing destruction of high-speed miss- iles, so it focu!Cd on the speed wtth which a retaliatory missile-carrying airplane could get off the ground and make it to a safe distance -arbi- trarily set at 12 miles from ground zero. The still-secret study found that the B-1 was fastest of the three contcnden. -but not by much. From the tannac to the 12-mile safe point, the B-1 took 143 seconds. A souped-up 747 took 31 seconds longer, while the L-1011 was only eight seconds behind the Boeing. Where would the Stealth bomber have placed in this life-or-death competition? Dead last, according to ou r sources. It's 1mposs1ble to state exactl y bow much time it would take to get a Stealth bomber off the ground in a cns1s, for the simple reason that the plane is still on the drawing board. But SteaJth may be slower than the anltque B-52s that make up most of our existing bomber force. A B-52 takes 216 ~nds to reach the 12- mile point. What it boils down to is that Stealth would be Tail-End Charlie among these five possib1lit1es, whiJe the B~ I appears to be the most hkely to survive a Soviet attack and deliver a counterstrike (thus providing a crcdi· ble deterrent to any Kremlin dream~ of a first strike that wou ld leave the Soviet Union unscathed). Actually, though, the two com- merciaJjets, suitably modified, would have an edge over the B-1. That's because eacb one has room for a compartment where the crew can relax, sleep and be ready for action When the order came to talce off, they could be in the air many seconds before a B-1 crew could "scramble" from its quarters to the plane. What makes this few-seconds d1f· feren~ important is the Soviets' apparent intention to experiment wi th "depressed trajectory" missiles launched from submarines off the U.S. coast. As we reported in October 19831 this would decrease the time required to get a retaliatory force off the ground from around I S minutes (f~r a hi&h-trajcctory missile) to six minutes. So the U.S. second-stnke capab1ltty -and thus our credible deterrent - will depend on having a plane that can get clear of the nuclear mushroom cloud quicker than the Stealth bomber can UNDER THE DOME -Rep. Mike Synar. D-OkJa .. has accused Interior Secretary DonaJd Hodel of usina a double standard 1n h1\ personnel policies for biphots. Hodel fired Chrysler president Lee lacoca from the Statute of L1beny Ccnten· nial Comm1ss1on because of a su~ posed conflict of interest with lacoc- ca's chairmanship of the centennial'• fu nd-raisina committee. But Synar charies that Hodel bas allowed Rob- ert Burford, head of the Bureau of Land Manaacmcnt, to panic1pate in decisions ll'iat affect land Burford owns. Synar has asked Interior of- ficials to explain lhc lcp.ljust1ficat1on for f1eo«a·1 ftrina. t>ut so far they haven't provided ~ny v t I rvine council forums planned e erannewsman Thomas Self dead T .... cw11doiea·-... .... -... 11ec1-lhls 7:l0 ......... ~a .... onmac.,--..-.,. Funeral ICfVi<ln for Thomu M. "Y.ou wntc it up." he was told, aod publlcation ofatapman C.OJlele. week to acquaint voeen with tbe peoo&e ~for two tridac.~onun ti hie to memben otthc wmblJ. Self, 63. a jouma.li11 wbo wrote his wnte up be dJd in the paper his Mr. Sctra survtvon tnelude bis Irvine Chy C.OUOCU teats in the June l dectioa. Non-mean wiD be admitted f'or SS. Hon d'oeuYftl fint newt story at qe 12. were to be sranddld started in 1909. wife, Jane, and their five childen; Tbe lint forum will be bdd 117:30 fi.n;;,;?unda.J.: will be eerved, IDd 1 oo-hotl bw ii pla.naed. ~P~~P~u::'b::n~ chapel of ~0~f1.~<S!t"1;~~ ~v~~ ~dX:;ei!~(;'!~~~~sb!~~ ~~~est~~·~~~ ~J!o of Orpnizensaid an I I lrvioeCityCouacilc:1odidlte1 Mr. Self o~ned Bulinna Week's sity. Juan CApisttano; Bill Asher, San West-part Vill11t I, fotmetty CuJverdale, it free aod open bave been invited to participate iJl the fonum. fint wes1em office in Lot Anacles in Hi.a rant job after araduation was aemente; Dou&Jas. Laauna Beach, to t.be public:. Two teats an at &take June 3. One iftcumbellt. 19S0andforthencxt27yearueemed with Unit.Cd Press in San Franci1CO, and brothers Jack, Sacramento, and A second forum tw been ICbedWed Frida)' by the C.Ouncilwomao BattJe.n Wieoer, i1 not IOetioa re- tobeattheri&htplaceattheri&httime followed by a return to Southern Robert Foster Jr., San Pedro. Greater Irvine Republican Auembly, a local affiliate of election. Tbe leCOftd. Couotilman I.any AtJu, ii when the bia news broke. California to open Mc:Oraw· Hill's the California Republican Allembly. The event bcain1 at runnioa for hit third term. His work at Business Week took fint western news bureau for Busi· . him into aerospace reportin& for the nm Week. It was the fint weekly weekly and also to write for a sister news map.zinc to have a western publication, Aviation Week. This led bureau. to his joimna the Aviation Writers During latter 1976 and much of Association, and be wu its national 1977 he worked not onJy at Business president from 1964-66. Week but also as a oo-founder of When he was 12 ycan old, Mr. Self Executive mapzine, where he served saw snow fall in his native La Mesa, a as editor in its early years. then small San Di~o suburb. He ran Durina recent years Mr. Self was to his pandfather 1 wcekly1 the La consulting editor of Exectitive and Mesa Scout, to report the big event. editor of the Chapman Quanerly, a Jack Sayers, entertainment pub licist, dies in New port Jack. Sayers, a SO.year pioneer m the entertainment industry, died March 21 at Hoag Memorial HospitaJ in Newport Beach. He was 76. Mr. Sayers, born in Fairbanks, Alaska, in 1914, started his career in 1935 as usistant radio editor at the Los Angeles Times and moved to CBS-Hollywood in 1937 as assistant publicity director to the late HaJ Rorke. When the big bands were popular at the Los Angeles Palomar, Mr. Sayers took over as the club's publicity director and radio announcer. He worked for CBS during the days and introduced the bands to national radio audiences in the eveni03- Mr. Sayers was later appointed publicity director for Disneyland when it opened in 1955 and later became manager of the amusement park. He retired in 1974. Since retirement, he has been a volunteer for the International Ex· ccutive Corps. He served this or· ganization during 1982, and was sent to Brazil to help plan a new theme park in San Paulo. lo 1984, he was sent to Korea to plan a new amuse· ment park to be featured in conjunc- tion with the 1988 Olympic Games. He is survived by bis wife, Gwen: son John, living in Northern Cali- fornia; daughter Wendy, of Newpon Beach, and five grandchildren. Memorial services will be held at the Pacific View Memorial Park in Corona Del Mar today at 11 a.m. The family requests memorial donations to the American Cancer Society or to the charities of their choice. BALLIDAYS 8 750 TIE TRADE-IN ~Ml Hlla •.. PAJSUYI, STaJPU, POLLl·MTI, n..-us, PUIDS, DOCIIU. Bring any old tie by the Hallidays Tie Trade-In between M~rch 17 and M~rch 31 ... we'll give you a $7.50 trade-in credit for each new tie you purchase ... we want them all, even the ~ one Aunt Martha sent you last Christmas! 4'. ~· • •-~\. 17th & Irvine Avenue, Newport Beach, ~ CA 92660 Telephone (714) 645 -0792 ~~~ MEET tHE NEW ooctOR IN tOWNl Hi, I 'm Dr. Karl Swope, D .C. PROFESSIONAL QUALIFICATIONS Did you know that becoming certified as a chiropractor require• a minimum of six yea.rs of hiqhly specialized colleqe traininq? Today'• Doctor of Chiropractic must complete 4,485 hours of classroom instruction and pau a riqid chiropractic boa.rd examination before eaminq a licenM. In most states, continuinq educational seminars must be completed for annual license renewal. In addition, I have completed couraes ill work site illjuriea and nutrition. In 1985 I wu honored to be named Vice Prelident of the Clinic Intel'll9 Action A110Ciation. To further my continuinq education, I have received special trainiqn lillce colleqe ill Phymotherepy from Dr. Richard Ackerman and Orthopedica from Dr. Rory Pierce. I have alao visited a number of chiropractic clinic1 to study their methoda and procedures ill San Dieqo, Hacienda Heiqht1, El Toro and Co.ta Meaa, California. Additionally, I devote three day1 every month attendinq a nationwide 1eminar ill San Francieco or Loa Anqele1, to stay current on the latest chriopractic advances. Thi1 ia the kind of traininq and profe11ionali1m I offer you. If you have he1itated vi1itinq a chiropractor, per- hap1 you didn't know that chiropractors qo to 1uch great lenqth1 to continue their education and provide you with the latest technique1 and the moat qualified Mrvice. So, you Me, what you don't know, can't help you. Call me today and let me help you. Did you know that the aymptoms most commonly treated by chiropractor• are: Bac:k Pain Headache• Neck Pain Arthritia Stiffneee Bumtb N wnbn... Hip Pain Painful Jointa Shoulder Pain Arm/t..Q Pain Cold Handa/Feet To introduce you to the healinc;i world of chiropractic, pleaM accept my tpeoial offer: FREE SPINAL EXAMINATION FREE THIS MONTH ONLY FREE Thia examination normally coat• $35.00 or more. It will include an orthopedic test, a neuroloqical test, a blood pr .. ure teat, a 1plnal aliqnment check, an examination foy restricted or •~c.a motion in the 1pine, a muecle ltren;thneu test, and a private con.Wtation to diaou11 the r"u.lt1. (714) 432-1135 Dr. Karl Swope Swope Chiropractic Office 2850 NH& Verde Dr. E., Suite S C09ta M ... , CA 92626 Hourt 10-1 and 3-7 Mon-Fri For Accident• or Peno.n&J Injury Easter Day Dining ,_t ~ j ··~~ ~ EASTER SUNDAY In addition 10-our regular brunch ond dinner menu, Bubbles will be featuring ROAST LEG OF SPRING LAMB BRUNCH served 10AM-2PM DINNER served from SPM eeteleate eutee Swida, 9H lJalloa Sunday Brunch 9 AM to 3 PM Dinner • Regular Menu 3 PM to to PM Early Bird Dinners S7 .50 4 PM to 8 PM 0# 1H€ tl'OlllfSIJ(. A BALBOA I01E.8elboe 173-7721 "Salute e Buona Paaqua" Join Us For An Auth entic Italian Easter Dinner Off Our Special Menu served from 4:30 p.m. e\O'S ~otthem Italian Continental Cuisine 3520 Eaat Coaat Hwy., Corona del Mar 675-1922 . ~ Starring the Young American's Song and Dance Company Hop on in for our special holiday staging and champagne brunch from just $15.95. Enjoy entr6es like Eggs Benedict and Roast Beef and Hash. Songs trom Hello Dolly and Evita. Easter Brunch starts at 12·00. Reservations required. 4647 MacArthur Blvd. Newport Beach. (714) 756-0611 HOP TO IT JYJR HAPPY EASTER DINING • AT THE CllOWN HOUSE Sunday, March SO l · 111.aU ~Mow ror BRUNCH oa DINNB& SPECIAL BRUNCH MENU Choice of 16 Entrees Served 9:30 A.M. to 3:30 P.M. EASTER DINNER 4 to 11 Ent.ertainmeot le Dancing naos s. Pacific eo..t ~!1~ (At Crown v.ue, Pty.) SOUTH LAGUNA ~: 4ff.2'H 4~57'1S EASTER SUNDAY 9fund\ 9:00 • 2:00 • Dinner 4:00 • 9:00 Chompagne Harbor Ctvises Phone 675--5777 for Rnerwtions JOIN US ·FOR EASTER! We'll Be Serving Dinner and Featuring Special Favorites fo BREAKFAST Including EGGS BENEDICT · FRENCH lUAST PRIME RIB &: EGGS "BUILD YOUR OWN" OMELETTES COUNTRY FRIED SIRLOIN STEAK&: EGGS Champagne available by the Glass or Bottle ~ottg :ftpge" lRVINE (N~rt FW): at East Dyer Rd.} BALBOA ISLAND (Bttr cl Wine Service Only) LAKE FOREST ( JUJt off 1·5 at Lake Forest Ori~) 1727 East Oyer Road Open From SAM 203 Marine Avenue Open From 7 AM 22873 Lake Forest Dr. Open From 7AM ~ EASTER CHAMP AGNE BUFFET In the Skvliner Ballroom ADULTS $9.95 CHILDREN $6.50 Children Under 5 • o Charg~ 10:30 A.M. -2:30 P.M. ~~~~~~~~- <:CJJ ed i tetranearz. CRoom FULL SERVICE CHAMPAGNE BRUNCH 9:30 A.M. • 3 P.M. RESERVATIONS ca (7 14') 83J.2770 18700 M.c4rthur 8hd lrv1nC", <" '"(T(m from John V.1~ A1f1>0!1I ' • r ' U.S. copters help Honduras fight Nicaragua TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras (AP) -A U.S. offictal said Amencan military helicopters began fcrry1ng Honduran troops today to an area where more than l ,SOO Nicaraauan soldiers reportedly crossed into Hon- duras and were fighttna Nicaraguan rebels. "The helicopters are going to pick up Honduran troops at vanous points around the country and take them to tbe border area," said Rick Reibcling, a U.S. lnfonnatton Service spokes- man at Palmerola airbase. The base 1s near Comayagua. 100 m·iles from the Nicaraguan border. ~ He said the helicopters were flown b} American crews. "We ca nnot say where, exactly, the helicopters will drop off the Hon- duran s for obvious secunty reasons." Re1behng satd. "But we have started providing assistance at Honduras' request. .. i\ Honduran military source, who spoke on condiuon he not be ident- ified, said at least t1 S American helicopters were bcma used, includ- ing five larae troop-caff"Yina Hucys. Honduran military mtelligence sources indicated the Nicaraguan soldiers pursued U.S.-backcd Contra rebels into Honduras Saturday in hopes of destroying Contra camps there and were repulsed in 20 hours of fierce conflict. The sources said the Nicaraguan S91iders· were J.rying to fight their way out, but were meeting fierce resistance from the Contras. Nicaragua has denied its troops entered Honduras, and said the reP.Qrts were aimed at securing ad- ditional U.S. aid for the Contras. The accounts of fighting 1n southeast Honduras could not be independently verified. Honduran soldiers were ordered to keep journal- ists from entering the area, Honduran military sources said. In Washington, White House Chief of Staff Donald Regan said the U.S. helicopters ''will go nowhere near the location of the invasion" while trans- ponin.t tl!e Honduran troops. President Reagan bas approved $20 million in emergency aid to help Honduras cope with the reported invasion. But U.S. officials here and m Washington said no U.S. soldiers would be involved in combat. A spokesman for the U.S. Embassy told the Associated Press late Toe!* day: "The anti-Sandinistas per- formed efficiently ... and they con- tinue doing so after killing in combat more than I 00 soldiers of the regular Nicaraguan army, which is now receding." The spokesman. who spoke on condition of anonymity, sa1d be had no additional details. But the Hon- duran sources said Nicaragua's Sand- inista troops were facing about 3.000 members of the Nicaraguan Demo- cratic Force, the largept of the Conu:a groups seekinJ to overthrow the leftist Sandimsta government in Nicaragua. "The invading troops now want to return to Nicaraaua, but that situ- atjon is being impeded by the io- suraent forces, who continue mflict- ina large numbers of casualttes oo them," one source told the AP. President Jose Azcona Hoya of Honduras demanded Nicaragua re- move its troops, estimated by mili- tary sources to number about 1,600. Nicaragua bas claimed the reports its troops entered Honduras were aimed at influencing the Senate to approve Reagan's request for $100 million in aid to the Con~. The House rejected that request last week. Manuel Espinoza, a Nicaraguan presidential spokesman, ·called the claim "one more lie by the Reagan administration." State Department spokesman Charles Redman in Wasrungton said both Nicarapan resjstattoc and Hon- duran intelbJenoe sources indicated that reinforcina attacks by up to four Nicaraguan batallions were expected within the next l 4 hours. Ht' said the requested military material includes air defense weapons, conventional ordnance, spare parts and armament for heli- copters and essential trainin&. A statement from the Honduran president's office said Tuesday, "New 10cursions have been made by the Popular Sandinista Army in Hon- duran territory" tn the eastern border province of Olancho. It provided no other details. The main fighting occurred on Mount Capire, in the southeast section oftbe country about 12 miles from the border, where the Contras maintain ~ camps from which they ha ve launched strikes into northern Nicaragua, the Honduran military sources said. The sources said the 3,000 Hon- duran soldiers already along the border were not involved in-the fighting. 20010-60°/o OFF EVERY DAY Old guard criticizes Aquino 's takeover $ 4 2 COMPARfAT $64•$70 FAMOUS MAKER SPRING DRESSES The tatest looks for casoal, career and dress, in fresh-as.spring prints and solids. Choo~e polyesters, / rayon failles and crepes all for ~ sizes 4·16. l*BSAMMlS your fashion footing for tpl'lng with pretty pfeated stytlng in white, tan or red leather.Sizes S·10M. MANILA (AP) -Members of Ferdinand E. Marcos' former ruling party charged President Corazon Aquino today wtth betraying democ- racy by promulgating an interim constitution that gives her sole law- making powers. One of the critics, Marcos' Labor Minister Blas Opie, claimed in a news release that Aquino abolished the National Asscm bly .. because of pani---..... _."'"""'!~~~,_.~ · san resentments and for no other reason.·· Opie issued the news release after he and colleagues met with the newly appointed U.S. assistant secretary of state for Asian affairs, Gaston Sigur. The U.S. Embassy said S1gur, who arrived in Manila Monday. has been meeting with government officials and political, religious and business leaders to learn how the United States can best help its former colony solve its economic and insurgency prob- lems. Opie said in the release he told Sigur that Aquino's government was a "revolutionary dictatorship" that would "galvanize all the opposition forces into a powerful democratic movement" to oppose her Police slay 13 blacks in South Africa JOHANNESBURG (AP)-Police said today they shot and killed 13 blacks in four overnight clashes with rioters. and courts overturned ban- nin~ orders ~gain~t .three prominent anh-aparthe1d act1 vtsts. Among those whose banning or- ders were canceled was Rowley Arenstetn, a 68-year-old whtte com- munJSt from Durban who had been banned continuously since 1960. He also had been banned for two years in the 1950s. Arenstein was under virtual house arrest until recent years, when the order was relaxed slightly He was convicted in 1966 of furthering the aims of communism and served a four-year jail term. He now runs an insurance claims firm in Durban. Violence reported by poltce head- quarters an Prctona was one of the bloodiest outbreaks so far this year 10 South Afnca. In Kwazakele, a black township near the turbulent eastern Cape Province center of Port Elizabeth, police fired shotguns at a crowd of blacks attacking a liquor store with rocks and gasoline bombs, police said, Car bomb kills eight in Beirut BEIRUT (AP) -A car bomb exploded outside an office of Presi- dent Amin Gcmayel's Phalange Party in Christian East Beirut today, killing at least eight people and wounding 39, -----4 officials said. $ 60 -$12 0 COMPARE AT S8S-S200 SPORTCOAT COLLECTION You'll find lightweight poly/wool blends and pure wools in a sharp se lection of solids and patterns. A tremendous assortment including blazers. Moslem militias rocketed two Christian neighborhoods after the car !><>mb exp!oded. Rockets crashina into the rcs1denttal Ashrafiyeh neigh- borhood, where the car bomb ex- ploded, and the Dikwani area killed two people and wounded IS othen, the police re~rted. Beirut radio stations also reported that earlier today a bomb exploded in ~==========================::t a six-story apart~ent block housing a Phalanae center an another east Beirut DilCSS FOil LCSS ' neijhborhood, injuring six ~pie. Pobce reported seven people died and 30 were wounded in overnight battles between Christians and ~oslems 1n Beirut and the hills cast of the capitAJ London council to be disbanded LONOON (AP) -London is about to ~me. the only major Western capital without a city gov-emmenL Tbe OteateT London Council late-- ly a let\·wina crusader for py ~ahts black sro~ps. nuclear disarmament and ~~1st causes, will cease to exist at m.idniaht March 3 J. lt wu defeated in a bn1111na. three· year. banle for survival with Pnme Mirus~er Margaret Thal(hcr's Con- ICT'VltJve national ovemment. Difficult to diagnose ectopic pregnancy is on the rlse . By SUSAN MONAH.AN Olllf .... Ceui lfl & I Jill DouaJas bad been given a pelvic examination the previous day, so she didn't suspect that a prcanaocy was rcsponsibrc for the sudden, severe abdominal pain. "My doctor said that my uterus looked fine," said the 28ycar..old Long Beach woman. Thjs isn't really too surprisina, because Dou&las bad an ectopic pregnancy. The fetus was growing in her fallopian tube, not in her uterus. According to a physician who was an investigator in a study of the condition, ectopic pregnancy can be difficult todia&nosc. "lt's not uncom- mon for a woman to go to her doctor or the emergency room two or three times before a diagnosis is reached," said Dr. Louis Weckstcio, who has an obstetrics/gynecology practice in Westminster. Jo an ectopic pregnancy, the egg is fertiliz.cd but docs not make it all the way to the uterus. In the majority of cases, the fetus will develop in a fallopian tube, but an ectopic preg- nancy can also occur in the abdomen, on the cervix, on an ovary or in the horn of the uterus. Wcckstcin says that an estimated one percent of alt pregnancies in the U.S. are ectopic, and that the con- dition bas become far more common in the last few years. "A main reason for this increase is that pelvic inflam- matory disease 1s definitely becoming more prevaJent," he said. Pelvic inflammatory disease (P.1.0.) can affect the fallopian tubes, and tubal infections arc the leading cause of ectopic pregnancies. "Infec- tion can damage the tubes and afTec1 the ability of the cu to travel through them," he explained. It is also believed that ectopic pre~ancy can occur when the egg is fertJliu:d in one tube but for some reason migrates to the opposite tube. "Because of the time this taket, the CU doesn't make it all the way lO the uterus," Weckstein &aid. Altbou&h women who use an IUD have a lower overall rate of prq· nan9', Weckslein says that they have a sbJhtly higher rate of ectopic pregnancy. In such cases, the IUD succeeds IQ prevent.in& implantation of the fenilized ea in the uterus, but fails to prevent it from implanting in a rube. , A theotetically permanent fonn of birth control, tubal ligation, can also lead to ectopic preanancy, said Weckstein. While the cauterized tues should prevent conception, ''there might be a tiny hole, which enables the sperm to fertilize the ca. but not large enough for the egg to get to the uterus," he CX{>lained. Ironically, IQ vitro fcnilization, which · is often used to enable a woman with damaged fallopian tubes to become pregnant., has itself been associated with a hiaber rate of tubal pregnancies, said Weckstein. The implanted egg may be expelled from the uterus and lodge in a tube, he added. Some women arc born with an abnormality of the fallopian tubes which ma kes them more susceptible to an ecto pic pregn ancy. Hardest part of a run is putting on shoes It was Sunday afternoon, and I had not done it in severaJ days, and I did not feel like doing it then either. But I changed into m y running clothes and headed to the beach for 40 minutes of huffin~ and puffing.. It was a beautiful day, the sun was brig.ht and the ~r crisp. I started .o.ut witn a slow )<>a. and my spmts immediately hf\ed . As I began to warm up, my mind became more active, and productive. In the first five minutes. 1 solved two problems that had been bugging me for about a week. and wondered why I had not fo und the soluuon earlier. I gradually got up to m y cruising speed and marveled at bow diffet'Cot I fClt compared to only minutes ago. More solutions came to minor problems and more imponaotly, ideas on how to improve my work or personal life began to flow. For y~. I have known tbat the most creauve time for me was while jogging. I finished my run, cooled down a bit and thoroughly enjoyed the ride back. For the rest of the day, my mood was up. concentration keen. and I felt relaxed. I felt great and l even "new why. Physical activity increases a substance called B-endorphin an the brain. The 8-endorphins arc the most powerful of all mental stimulants and when they arc increased. life becomes more pleasant. It is the B-endorphin system that is stimulated by Demerol, morphine. and other narcotics known to relieve pain and create a sense of well being. Walter M. Bonz II. M.D., from Stanford University School of Medi- cine, measured the B-endorphm levels 10 well-trained athletes before and during a race. The resting level was mucb higher than average and the racing level was off the chan. Runners never suffer from de- pression but the sedentary of\en do. One study of 167 college professors fo und that 16 percent measured in the depressed range on a standard mood evaJuation form. AH participated in an aerobic conditioning program three times per week, and you guessed it, the depression was chminatcd in those that were depressed and every- body j ust felt better. Diethylstilbestrol, better known as DES, bas been associated witb such con1enital abnormalities, said Wtcbtein. The hormone, which was once given to prevent mi9Cal'riqes, gained notoriety when it wu dis- covered that females exposed to it in utcro bad a higher rate of vaginal and cervical canocn. the fetus continues to srow, however, the tube can rupture and cause musive bermorrbqioa. "When the tube ruptures, 1t can pose a sipificant danacr lo a woman's life," said Weck.stein. "Even without a rupture, she can bleed enough to be in danacr. Ectopic pregnancy is a leadina cause of An eetlm a ted 1 percent of all pr~clee In the v.s. are ectopic, and that condldon ha• become mote common In the lut few yeara. In addition, "Women who were exoosed to DES in uteio ... bavc a tubal prqnan~ rate four to five times above normal.' said Weckst.ein. lt may also be possible, said Wcckstcio, for an ectopic prqnancy lo be caused by an abnonoaJ or damaged embryo. "But a certain number of women have none of these pt:oblems and still have an ectopic pregnancy," be said. "A lot of times, we don't know what causes it." An ectopic pregnancy can resolve by itself. The fetus might be expelled, "and we'd never know that the woman had an ectopic pregnancy." When the abdomen is the site of an ectopic prqnancy, 1t is possible to give binh to a live child. If a tubal pregnancy is discovered early enough, the fetus can be surgically removed, and the tube left intact. If maternal mortality." Douglas' left tube did ru~ure and was surgicaJJy removed. ••llley said that I was ei&bt weeks preanant.," she said. (Wcckstein says that a tubal pregnancy usually tmninate5 ~ tween the sixth and ninth week.) Unlike Dou~ who says she bad no early wa.rruna discomfort, most women with an ectopic ~cy will experience abdommal pain which grows p~ivcly worse, said Weckstein. "There may also be some irregular blecdin& or sponin&, and may6c ·a missed period," be added. Douglas says that she did notice some spotting. but thought that stress was causing the menstrual inqulari· ty. And all but the last of the pregnancy tests she was given at the hospital were negative, sbe said. A standard urine pregnancy test will only be positive at a certain level or a hormone tDowa 11 HCG it pmcnt, aid Wecklteia ... Anda tubal prepancy usually does 001 produce that hiah a level.'' More tenlitive urine t.esta are now available, be added, and a blood test may_ be positive with lower levels of HOO. Between 191 l and 1983, while be was a mjdeot at the Univenity of California Irvine Medical Center, Wecb1ein WU OOC of tbe in· vcstipton in a study desiped 10 6od an accurale diaanottic test for ectoP.c pregoaocy. Sixty women with suspected CClOPic prepancy were Ji vcn four tesu: a . blood terum prcsnancy test, a unne prqnancy ~ culdooenbesi.s (a test to detect blOod in the pelvic cavity) and pelvic ultrasound. The study resulu, which were ~ted in several medical journals. indicated that only the uJiruouod and ten1JJl prepancy lelt oorTectly identified the 26 women wbo actually bad ectopic pregnancies. Many of the women were ooasequcotJy treated before a tub&! rupture occurred. · "Ultrasound is good at identifying a prqna.ocy in the uterus, but it's not good at identifyina an ectopic prq· nancy," said Wcckstein. "But 1f ultrasound doesn't show a prqnancy in the uterus, and you have a positive pregnancy test, then it's a good bet the pregnaocy is ectopic." lo fact, it was ultrasound and the final positive pregnancy test that convinced doctors that Douglas bad an ectopic pregnancy. Weckstcin said that before the ua study, cuJ. docentiesil was more likely to be the testofchoioe. The prooedurcjovolvcs inserting a needle through tho vagina and under the cervix. and it as every bit u painful as it sounds. .. A woman who bas bad thjs test once will never let you give her another one," Wcckstcin said. And a woman who bas bad an ectopic pregnancy is at hiaber risk of another one, becaute cblnca are the condition that camcd the first ectOpic preanancy is still praent JULIAN WHITAKER Restructured families are as American as apple pie I have prescribed exercise for years as a treatment tool for heart disease, diabetes and high blood pressure because it works to improve these maladies. However, most people start and maintain an exercise program simP.lY because they feel better. After a while, they get hooked on the good feelings caused by the increa.sed 8-endorphins and for some. exercise becomes a "positive addiction." Regular ex- ercisers will tell you that iftbey stop, it doesn't take long before they stan to feel sl~ and tired. With moder- ate activtty, expending energy begets energy. However, like most benefits of life, cff on is required. As every runner will tell you.. the .hardest pan at><;>ut ruomng 1s pumng on your runn10g shoes. Jallu ~taker, M.D., lt '1rec:tor of tle Natioul Hean ud Diabetes Treatmeat lllltitate bl Bndagtoa Beaclt. Plea1e write to Dr. Wkltaker c/o Dally Pilot, P.O. Box lHO, Co1ta MentHH. Once upon a time there was a mama bear, a papa bear-and a baby bear from a previous marriage. And the Bear family has a less cojf:licated life than their next door nci bon, Mr. and Mrs. Pig, who live wit their three little ones; bis, hen and the newest addition -thein. Restructured families have become as American as apple pie. ln fact, by the year 2000, it's ~cted that more than half of the children in the United St.ates (age 18 and under) will live some pan of their early years in households beaded by something other than their natural mother in union with their natural father. Fairy tales influence our thinking just as our thinking aives way to fairy tales. Poor Cinderella did indeed have a wicked stepmother-but docs that mean that all stepmothers arc mean? Of course not -in spite of that still common, if not somewhat un· conscious notion )cf\ over from less complicated times. Glenn Clingcmficl, assistant professor of psychology at Temple University, says that the bias which exists bolds that nuclear families (natural Mom, Dad. and their chil· drco) arc good/nonnal/hcaltby, while step.famil ies arc bad/deviant/sick. Impossible, he thougbt, and is conducting a study to prove that this thinking was er· roncous. So far his bunches have proved comict -some children not only thrive in their new families, but benefit from the intimate exposure coming from new ~nt and grand- parent fiaures. lfxou nave children in a rc--married fa.nuly situation, surely you are interested in what Dr. Oinlemfiel calls "good child outcomes." If you're the natural parent: •Make sure your cbildml know that loving your new spome doesn't take away from loving them. Let them uodentand -through words and ptures -that your ~ntaJ love for them is unconditional. •Don't be afraid to talk a.bout the difficulties of combining households and different ways of doing thinp. •And talk lots about the potential advantages of having new relations, l.1111 ALwa new celebrations and new opportuni- ty for growth and learn.ing. If you're the steJ>-parent -watch out -uys Dr. ~mtiel: •Find new activiues to bring 10 the family experience. If you're the s~ dad. and the natural father takes bis kidt fishin& and buntina, you cxeose t.bcm instead to ski.ina &Dd/or surfing. .. AQllMDt, don't supplant .. the doc- tor JUgeSts. •Be a friend, at tint. and prooccd slowly at best. lt takes time to build any new relationship. •lfyou'reastep-mom who islivina with your husband and his children. you are in an especially difficult position. And if the children happen to be female. it's even worse. It's lirls (Pleue eee ALGAZI/82) Two day CHOC fund-raiser attracts thousands to help By CAROL HUMPHREYS 0.., '9et C. I I IJ I ntdeot A tw<>-<lay fund-ra1S1ng event for 2, 700 women would be a difficult task for even the most professional or- ganizers. But the talented all gujld crew ofChildrens Hospital of Orange County pulled it off. They even made it look casy ... amazing)y organized! ''In the past our one.day event was always sold out. By making this a two- day event we could accommodate more people," said r.;neral chairman Pltyllil Clemmer. 'With the great opportunity prizes offered today, we hope to raise $1 00,000 (althoufb still counting, it appears they did).' "We bad some hectic moments. Dlana ltnaley II The most d ifficult task was reser- vations and t.ablc-scatJng," said lu Ra11eU, fashion show chairman from Newport's Cinderella G uild. Following no-host cocktails CHOC members and their guests were seated among their own guild membership for lunch. There are 14 CHOC guilds in Orange County. One half attended the fashion event at the Anaheim Marriott on Wednesday and the other haJfattended on Thursday. The fashion show benefiting the out·paticnt clinic ofChildrens Hospi- tal featured the fashion collections of Saks Fifth A venue coordinated by BUl•r Walleric~ Io keeping with the "Magic of Spring" them e oflhe day. Carl Soaley Biltur used a little magic of her own. The show was entertaining and the fashions outstanding. Most agreed it was the best CHOC show yet. Hospital board president Cbrley Httler was on hand to thank all for SUJ?poning CHOC and for the $4.5 million the guilds have raised to date. Charley was one of the nice people to sponsor the day's event. Other spon- sors were Fieldstone Construction of Newpon Beach. Luclcy Stores, Al- lergan of Irvine, and Mn. &Dd Mn. James Andreoli. Almost $85,000 was raised in patron donations. The quality of opportunity draw· mgs was exceptional. Everyone was (Pleue eee CBOC/82) Fran Paal80n, Be•erly Stncer and Andrea Nortbcote. A real Pair o' Dice for Philharmonic Spyglass Philharmonic Committee turns yacht club i!_lto tropical casin_o __ By CAROL HUMPHREYS Dlly,...C., .,, ••nl Tbe invitation stated .. lon11ng for the excitement of Vegas ... a night in Pair o' Dice? The 100 attendinJ the Spyglass Philharmonic Committee fund-nuscr aot thetr wiJh. The Bahia Corinthta.n Yacht O ub was transformed tnto a most elepnt and exotic waterfront casmo. "I wanted cveryt.htna to look hke a trop1cal p('den," said event chairman and prcz Marie Dettmld. .. Actually the name (Pair o' Dice) for tont&ht's benefit came from Vida Dean. She used 1t 1n her story about our event a.11 year. We hked it!" "Such pttSSure .. my Job is to make sure the cockatoos don't catch cokl. They can't be 1n a draft," JOked. Pat JOHt. CRuoo's had donated tht valuable birds to enhance the tropical decor.) The bird of paradise table decor· at1ons were the work of J .. y Reee, who bad also arttully pttscnted the pmblina pnzt$ offered to the ID· timatc group. Chairman Marie planned to use all her llJllbhn& W\Dntf\&S on the draw· 1111 for a hmo nde to the WcstwOOd Marqw Hotel for lunch. "However, the pand pnu is a O.y of Paradise.." ~id Marie The day of parad1~ includes flowers. a his and her day ofbeauty. a daytime ensemble from Soi&oee. a hmo nde to Five Crowns for dinner and a champqne weekend at the Newi>O" Mamon . And the wmner ..,. .. a luck~ K.ay Ttml and hubby Joe.. (Pl-... eee PAIR/'82) . . . • 0rMge CoMt DAILY PILOT I Wedneedey, Matd\ 28, 198e I FACES -- Grant. Van de Bolart honored Cotta Mca Mayor Norma Hertzot was ~uest ~er earlier this month when 14-year-old On.nt Van de Boprt was mstalled in the Eqle Court of Honor. On.nt's puents report that be bu earned 30 merit bldaes durina bis three and a half yean of tCOutina. Grant, from Huntinaton Beaeh, is a member of t:>& 106 in Costa Mesa. He attends Edison Hiah School and is in the nhipCorps. Coeta Mesa man win• Cacllliac· Richard B. Michener has won a new Cadillac in the Alpha Beta Bingo .. ... Local clancera eelected for rideo Heather DelJ.iqer, 12, and Otristy Doody, l S, have been eeJected by the Capistrano Ballet ~ntre director, Lawrence Roeenbera, to appear in the inatructional dance video .. The Dance EJtperience:· The video, to be released by Tremaine Productions, is similar to the Jane Fonda WotkouL The two airls were chosen from among several who auditioned before Rosen~ "Our students have been accepted by many of the leadina t.llet company tra.inina Pl"OIJ'JDS in the country, so we feel confident and proud that they can handle any j)l'Ofesaional experience pretented to them," RoseoberJ aaid. "The Dance Experience Video" employs many of HoUywooc:t's most current techniques and ii directed by television's well known 'Solid Gold' cboreosrapber, Kevin Carlisle. pm~Jpha Beta Bingo is played in 251 Alpha Beta and Skaggs stores in California. Grant Van de Bofart Capistrano Ballet Cent.re uses video equipment regularly in its workabop programs. Beatber Delltn••r Clarl8ty Doody PAIR •.• From El Seen dining, gambling and dancing to Fred GWette'1 band were artist Emy and George Lane, Bob Baker (wearing his lucky battery blinking bow tie), Dlau and Carl ED1ley, Carol Wlltea, Cody Smltb, Mary and Bob Sbacldeton, Irv Meyers, Eileen and Harold Gralaam and Barbara Sandenon. All proceeds from the eve- ning will go the OCPS which provides music programs to all Orange County students. Paparuli la edited by Dally Pat Jonee, llarle Derem••b and Barbara Sandenon ln patr-PUot Style editor Vida Dean. o' cllce. IT'S TIME TO GET Ill SHAPE * ProfeMloNUC.Wtlfled Staff • Fltneee 6 l.eeMM for All Agee (81rth thru ...... , * • .,.._" Pre 6 Poet ...._. Fltneu • "NeW" M11w1 8wtm Twn • .. ...... T'hlftkln' Thin Aetoblc9 ,,,.,. a••...,"'" . .,.,, ..... ... 842-1110 • WE TEACH A SPECIAL TECHNIQUE FOR STRETCHWG, SHAPWG ANO TONWG THE BOOY •DRAMATIC PHYSICAL RESULTS • RESHAPES LEGS • MPROVES POSTURE • INCREASES FLEXIBILITY • ADOS A BEAUTIFUL NEW LOOI( CWSICAl IAWT TllHCI Nim CllUIO-mn-Allln 2632 Santa Ana Awe11e, Costa lesa-646-7644 DO YOU HAVE DIABETES MELLITUS? . We are Investigating the newest oral agent In the treatment of Type II, Non-Insulin Dependent Diabetes. Participation In this study Is FREE and Includes M.D. Supervision, Lab Testing and medication. • FOR MORE INFOJJ_MA TION CALL 640.;7412 BUeen Orabam am ad.tee from laaaband lfarold (left1 and In lleyen at Pair o Dice fand-raleer. 2435 E. Coast Hwy. Corona del Mar # 10 (Nnt door IO ........... ayt) 675-6720 ,_.,,. *fip al I Aa A ...... f-.. & T1wvo. Circle March 27 On Your Calendar The HeaJth Lecture Smu presented free to the community by Costa Mesa Medical Center HospiUll continues this Thursday. Find out what your nutritional needs are a nd how you can meet them -even on a budget, from 2:30 to 4 :30 p.m. NutrltJon: Eating for Optimum Health presented by Diane Carlson, regt.stere.d dietitian. • •••••••••••••••••••••••••• Con.ldertng Plastic Surgery? You'll want to know about recent advances In the field. Join us from 7:00 to 9 :00 p.m. for: Pla1tlc Surgery: the State-of·the·Art presented by Ira Levine, M.D .• plastic surgeon. Seating Is limited, so please call 650-2400 to reMrW your apace. .Cotta Mesa Medical Center Hoepltal · 301 Victoria Street Costa Mesa, CA • I CLUCA8-VAROD8B Mr. and Mn. Richard H. Oucu of Newpon Beach have announced the cnpaement of their dauahter. Vie> toria Oucu, to Thomas Var&hc1e of San FranciSQO. A resident of Berkeley, the bride- elect i1 a &raduate of Newport Harbor liiah Scfiool and UC Berkeley. Her fiance redeved his master's dearee in enaincerin1 from UC Berkeley. He i1 the son of Mr. and Mn. Panick.u~riJ VIJ'Jhese of San Francisco. They will be married on May 3 in the chapel' at Mills College in Oak- land. OL80Jlf-llA1'ZEL Constance Lea Olson of Fountain Valley and Oreaory Richard Hanzel ofTemple City have announced their plans t.> marry in June. She is the dauahter of Mr. and Mn. Dennis L. Olson of Fountain Valley and be is the aon of Frank Hanzel of Temple City and Mary Ann Hanz~! ot Hawthorne, The bride-elect is a araduate of Fountain Valley Hi&h School and UCLA with a bachelor's degree in dance. She is now enrolled in the UCLA master's dance program. Her future husband is a Temple City High School graduate and re- cieved a bachelor's dCIJ'CC in geogra- phy from UCLA. He is a Jr8du&te student at Cal State Nortbridge. They will be married June 28 in Community United Methodist Church in Huntington Beach. BREDION-BLACKIE The Poway home of Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Breamon will be the setting for the June 7 wedding of their dal.llhter, Laura Ann Bre1mon, and Jeffrey Alan Blackie of Costa Mesa. The future bride is a graduate of Mount Carmel and UC Berkeley, whereper fiancc also graduated. He 1s an alumnus of Estancia High School. Victoria Claeaaand Tlaomu V&J1beM Conatance Lea Ol•on, Grecory Hansel Costa Mesa. His parents arc Mr. and Mrs. Edward Price of Orange and the late Mr. Richard Blaclcie. JARVIS..HE!fZE Betsy Lynn Jarvis of Costa Mesa and John Collins Henze of Danville arc planning to marry Oct 18 in St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church. New- port Beach. Their parents are Mrs. Daniel L You 're Invited to Our First Ever To introduce these unusual (many one of a kind) designs we are offering special discounts during Italian Week only. Don't miss this European experience. At our Newport store only. va~merl !/Dteriaa COSTA MESA 1595 Newport BNd (714) &42-2050 {;;JC LAGUNA BEACH 345 N Cost Hwy (714) -i94-6551 WHEN: Al stores open Monday tnru Satllday 9 am-5.30 pm Clty of Coeta M ... Lelnre lerricee Department pnMatll 1986 EASTER EGG-CITEMENT latvday, Much 29, 1986 1:30 a.m. · 12 Noon WHERE: Estancia Adobe Park, 1900 Ad&JU Ave. 9:30 a.m. ReQJstration for the Easter Bonnet Contest Guell the number of jellybeans in the jar Craft table opens Egg-citing action games! 10:00 a .m. Bonnet judging begins! 10: IS a .m. Eoo-citino Gumdrops the Clown &nd his Euter magic! 11 :00 a.m. Euter bunny arrives! Our bunny will be available for pictures during and alter the program. so bring your cameras. 11 :00 a.m . OlANT EASTER EOO BVNTI The Easter Bonnet 1udges will base their decasaons on the use of homemade matenals! "f"REE" 8oM e1 c:ate;ones Hu;e bonnet Most onqlf\&I hit c:rat\lmanah1p ~I eoo hunt areas wall be diVlded rnto age groups 2 · 3 years o ld 4 · 5 years old 6 · 8 years o ld 9 -10 years old For ad ditional 1nformat1on. please c all MS-8551 or 754-5300 If Worthinaton of Costa Mesa and Mr. and Mn. Thomas Henze of Danville. Tbe bride-to-be is a &nlduate of Estaocia Hilb Schoo~ Co.ta Mesa, and UCLA. Her fiance graduated from San Ramon ffiab School in Danville and UCLA. BA YltR-BULSS Terri M. Bayer, dauabter of Mr. and Mrs. William C. Bayer of Costa Mesa, and Gary R. Hul1e of Phoenu are plannin1 nuptial ceremonies in the Princess Lowse Weddina Chapel, San Pedro, on May 17. The bride-elect is a &raduate of Estancia High Schoo~ Costa Mesa, and UC Davis, and will graduate in May with an M.B.A. dearee from the Uruvmity of Southern California. Her fiance is the son of Mr. and Mn. Clarence Hulae of Lu Yeps. H~ pduated from Oarlc Hiah School and Bri&ham Young University and received a law degree from the University of So11thcrn California. · . IRYft-BOUCBlt!f Mr. and Mrs. David Meyer of Huntington Harbour announced the engagement of their dau&}lter, Pamela Ann Meyer, to Donald Charles Houchen Jr. durina a brunch at Peter's Landing in Huntinaton Harbour. Mr. and Mrs. Donald Charles Houchen Sr. of Randallsville, Md., are the parents of the future bride- groom, who is a graduate of the University of Maryland. His bride- to-be attended Cal State University in Lona Beach. They will be married in October. FOR8YTB-JOJUf80Jlf Joan and Russell Forsyth of Costa Mesa have announced the engage- ment of their daughter, Kimberly A. Forsyth, to Robert L. Johnson of Anaheim. The bride-elect. a graduate of Estancia Hiah School, attended Or-an~ Coast Collese, UCLA and UC lrvtne. The future bridtaroom i1 the aon of Leland and Ethel Johnson of Mich· ipn. He pduated Crom Ha.ah.land Park HWi School and studied at Wayne tfniversJty and the University of Hcidelbef'&. The betrothed couple are plannina to marry June 29 la the Wayfarer's Chapel, Ranoo Palos Verdes. BIR!fm-BOCK Balboa lsland residents Diane Birnie. daugbtcr of Mr. and Mrs. William H. Birney, and Lawrence Bock wiU be married in St James Episcopal Church in Newport Beach on June 21. The bride~lect is a araduate of Wamn Hiah School and the Univer- sity of Southern California. Her future husband is the son of Richard Bock of Los Anaclcs and Uli Bock of Encino. He is a gntduate of Horace Greeley Hi&h School in Cha(>89~ N.Y., and Bowdoin Col- lege an Maine. He is also a graduate of the UCLA graduate 5¢hool of man- agement. AKDE RSON-DELA!fltY The engagement of Kerry Eloise Anderson of Laauna Beach and Shawn Patrick Dclane¥ of Costa Mesa was announced dunng a brunch at the Irvine Cove home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert WiJ- liam Anderson. A 1984 Children's Home Society debutante, the bride~lect is a gradu- ate of Corona del Mar Hiah School and attended UCLA. Her fiancc, son of Mr. and Mrs. James Jay Delaney of Costa Mesa, isa graduate of Mater Dci High School and Oran~ Coast College. They will be married in a June 7 ceremony in Laguna Beach Presby- terian Church. You • r Orange Cout DAILY PILOT /Wednleday, Metdt a. 19M - LJD.D Aml llober&. Daftd J'rank Redden llOBltRO-UDDEN Nonna and Robert Mobera of T~stin have announced the enPae· ment of their daughter, Lynn Ann Moberg, to David Frank Redden. son of Karen Szypcnki of Costa Mesa. They are planning to marry Aua. 30 in the Aldersgate Methodist Church in Tustin. The bride-elect is a graduate of Tustin Hi.ah School and Oraoae Coast College, Costa Mesa. Her OSB-DAnAJlT nn-oss A summer weddina it beSil planned by the da~ter of Dr. ucl Mn. Allen Gee of Newport~ and another by lbeit toO, Evereu M Gee. Beverly E. Gee of Newport 8elcb and Manu Daftary, Puadeaa, will be married· in July. The bride-to-be is a"&nlduate of Newport Harbor Hi&b School aod UC Irvine where she affiliated wilt( Delta Gamma sorority. The future bric:Scaroom is the aoo of Mr. and Mrs. PrafuU Daftaty of Banplorc, India. He ii a padua1e of Elphinstone Collqie, Bomb9y, and ca.med his M.B.A. at Caf State Lo111 Beach. Everen Gee and Donna Nett; dauabtcr of Mr. and Mrs. Saepben Neff of ffacjcnda Hciabts, ue ~ nina a June wcddin&. She ii a ~uate of Wilton Hilb School, attended UCLA, received her bachelor's dcaree from c.ai State Fullerton and lier D.M.D. from Tufts Dental School Her fiance is a araduate ofN~ Harbor High Scfiool, UC San Diqo and received an M.D. from Tufts Medical School. Submit your wedding news The Daily Pilot wants your weddina and engagement news, and our forms ma.Ice it easy for you to submit your news. Pick them upinourlobbyat330W. Bay St or send a self-addressed stamped envelope to Wedding Department, Daily Pilot, P.O. Box I S60, Costa Mesa 92626. Engagement news must be submitted at lea.st seven wcek.s prior to the wedding. Include a picture of the bride-elect or the couple with the form, if you wish. Weddinas will be published after the wcddi!lJdale. Quality photos oft.be bride or the bridal couple are welcome. Black/white photos are preferred to ·2 color. Please put y~ur name on the back.. se ! Let Us Help You Shed Those Unwanted Pounds When you lose, everyone wins! Your famJly, friends and mo.5t importantly you. It's a medical fact that people who are overweight are at greater risk of developing cardiovascular disease, diabetes, hypertension, arthritis and cancer, as well as a variety of psychological problems associated with being overweight. VVe at Fountain \.alley Region al Hospital and Medical Center are here to help you win your battJe of the bulge. VVe have four specially designed weight lo~ progra ms, one of which is right for you. Medically Supervised Weight Loss Programs •Nutrition Counseling• (for Individuals 20 lbs. or more overweight) In our Recommended Diets IR.D.I Program, a regi.5tered dieUuan wlll work with you on an individual basis to put together a well balanced meal plan that will help you lose welghl while maJntainlng good nutritional status. 'ibu'll leam aboul your personal body requirements and how to successfully lose !hose unwanted pounds and keep them off. •Optifast• (for lnd/Vidua1s 30 lbs. or more o'lerweighll A medlcally supervised program in which a protein / carbohydrate food supplement promotes more rapid wei)l.ht loss. '!bu will receive a body composition analysis, nucrf 11onal counseling, behavior modification, stress mana)l.ement and exercise prescriptions; each developed spedfl1..ally for vou by our team of weight loss specialists. After you rea(h ynur goal weight, our one year welghl maJntenan(e pro~am W111 help you maintain your weight loss. Fountain Vall ey Regional Hospital and Medical Center 17100 Euclid at Wa rner, Fountain Va lley, CA 02708 •Gastric Bubble• (for lndMdiuls 80 lbs. or more overweight) nus painles.s non surgical procedure Involves inserting a deflaled balloon into the stomach via che mouth. Once inflated, the balloon 1..auses a full feeling, as well as restnctm~ the amount of food you can eat. The balloon is removed once the desired weight loss Is achieved. Nutritional counseling. behavior modification, support groups and exercise consultations are included as part of this comprehensive program. •Gastric Reduction• (for lndlvidual'i 100 lbs. or more over.ve~h/J If you have tried unsuccessfully lo lo.w weight, this surgical pro cedure may be right for you. Gasmc reducdon Involves partitioning a portion of lhe slomach so tha1 only a small amount of food will cause a full feeling, as well as llmitlnR che amount of food the stomach can hold. A team or doctors, dietitian$, nu~ and physlo therapists will work with you to ensure maximum benefits from thl'i procedure. For more lnform atlon about any of these treatments, please caU our special V'kight Loss Hotline : (714) 567· 4764 c Founl.tln \\II<'\' R 17.!onal 110!.pital and MPdlc.I Ctnttr. lQAo M OrlnQl9 COMll OAJLY PILOT I Wedneldey, w.td\ 29, 1Me , TV Lis JINGS • SCR, Gem lower curtains as no new shows opening -UO-MOTHEM :1.=0H -uo- <W.ATEIT AMENCANHEAO ~~llAOll. 1lf&'I <X1tl/PNtt JOQJrl WILD Dff'AENT l'TQ,U TfW'P8I JOHN. IU> ._. fl90AT N IMGAZllE CC) MOVIE ~ -1:30-'OtUNllf:N u 'Oii Goc11 Book If' (19801 -10:10- Cl8 NEWS 12 ON THE TOWN HONl'NOONEM Geotge Bumi Suz.lnne Plllhltte MC HEWS 0 PNC£• flQHT mN11f 10; 1$-.CHEWS WHAN~ CHML.EIOtAMP\JN OH THE ID ~~ It's a rare week wben no new stage ( ~T / HOT\JfE m ON LA. fUI 8CENl productions att openina in Orange ..,.,,'"' tt -.ooo ""-'&""""'""'A _._ ;-.!O'.JO.-Coun"', but that seems to be lhe case ••• She woie A Yllaow Ribbon ' , _..:::' ~""" .......-DALE EV-., ... ,.., ~·-e IT\ MOVIE INDEP9CIEKT NEWS this week. with nary a new arrival and tt949JJolWIWW'(M JoM..,,.. I NEWS ''Sin. ~ ..........__ •• 1Pf-.al .... rrsSHOWTM two, lheaten approachlna the final (fl>MOVIE M'A'8'H ..,. ............... I ...,,_. ..... f th . . . •• 'Cannone>all Run 119811 !Mt NE'Wl.VWB>l'laur 1~(:MOYIE·~a~Stone MOYIE days o cir respcctJve produellons. -OomOeL ......_ 19.,,..,..... •• Alvin RIOel A9llfl 1197•1 Heading into the homestretch att · i~WEi.oouua:' JEL.L YBEAH ~ONE ON Glaeme B1unOe1 Alan FIMI)' Shakespeare's" Aa Y" Lib It" on the -t:30-ONE *'L ,.0 _ ,19701 , _ V""" _11:00-main stage of~~th-~_Repcrtorv G NBC NEWS (I) S.O. ATLAAOE " ...,quero ' .__ •• and the English unuua • •-DraterJ. •TOOClOSEFORCOMFOA'T g P£0fll.£'100URT Olel,wwrenO.tes l~Uv~ at the Gem Theater. eS'9Aflt)Y Q)BJINVf 1:THELOAO llAANEYta.L.EA "As You Like It" gives its closing • w.aEL ll.E>iREA • RACltG ROit 8AHTA NITA ... "The B<eakl~I Club" 119641 THIS DAY performances toni&ht through Friday NEWSHOtr.\ -8:00-Emilio &tt¥tL ~ AlnQwlld J/iCI( KAYFOAD at 8 p.m., Saturday at 2:30 and 8, and all NEWUTEAACY.AH 1(1) FASTTMO MOYIE ..otfTOALLERY Sunday at2:30aod 7:30io the Fourth INmOOUCTIONTOCOMP\ll'EM 8HIOHWAYTOHEAV£H *** 'Mdtl & Maude (19641 Dud-WHOOPtOOU>llERGDIAECT Step Theater, 6S5 Town C.cnter 9 NEWS e MOYIE iMoote, ... _ ,"""" FAOM fJ/WJMl#AY Ori Co .... n u· BENSON ••• "~an" 119681 Rlc:Nrd STAATB ...... .(I)MOY£ vc, sta ,,..esa. ~cscrva oos are aD LANO OF THE Bl8lE WldnWll Henry Fonda. MOVIE • ·~ ··Raw T llenl 119841 Usa De-taken at 9s1-40 33. m BOU> ONES • O MACOYVEA u * "AKplane4 1 l980J Rober1 Leeuw Jetry &rtltr Oosing performances .of "The ... CBS=-7:00-I !.!'.eOOO PYRAMID ~~ Hagetty START OF SOMETMING BIG Dresser'' will be given tonight -" ~"11 CZJ ...,·~ MOYIE through Siturday at 8 p.m. b'y the D IRl ERTAJM.100 TOfOfT •MOW • u "The Pwp1e Rote OI c.o '*'' "Teno111 CouSll\IS I 19831 Grove Theater Company at the Oem, e TAXI ** • ·Pa1n1 Blri 119671 L• Met· 11985) Mia Fetrow Jef1 Oantels Thierry Tevwv AnJI Shute 12852 Main St., Garden Grove. 8 A8CNEWSQ m .Angie 01c1unton -t-.30-_11:30_ Ticket information is available at G LOVE COHNECTIOH • ID LNE FAOM THE MET (J) MOVIE i (I) TT ;L.,~ 636-72 13. • THREE'S COMPAKY 8D PRAISE THE LON:> • • •i, The Benny Goodmln StOtY'' Q) ...-.n• Meanwhile, these other shows =~~~ !=GUN, WU TRAVEL (19551S11'1tA1en,OonnaReed OOOCOUPLE linger 1n the midst of their eogage- rJ) P.M. MAGAZIHE • • • Who'U St()f,I The Ratnr -1~-111 NIGHTLINE men ts: EID PRAISE THE LOAD 119781 No Holle Tuesday Weld D OJ BLAQ(FS MAOC I DYNASTY •"Un1aitable for Adaita" on the L MOVIE IB)THETAL.EOFTHEBUHHY 1·NEWS KAWAIRY'E-4 Second Stage of South Coast Reper- .. 1(1nq Oav.o 11985 Rctlatd PO« ~8A8KET8All PMISETHELOAO tory. 655 Town Center Drive, Costa Gett! Ec!watd Woo<Mtd C!J BAAHEY Miu.ER m NIGHT GALLERY Mesa (957-4033). Tuesdays through ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~M8:~~~~~M3~d * CLASSIC Men's leather White •••· IALI s4900 133•0 CHARISMA s45oo •31so Women's Leather Workout . f / JI I I/ j/ // I f aaA1 lfOt tO K &l f: -~1 VISA' "Serving The Newport Beach A rea For 8 Years!" ~-- 8:30, Sun~~ at 3 and 8 p.m. until April 6. •"Mllrder Amo•& Frtencb" at the Newport Theater Arts Center, 2501 Cliff Drive, Newport Beach (631-0288). Fri~ys and ~turdays at 8 p.m. through April 19. •"Georse Wa1~sto• Slept Here" at the Westminster Community Theater, 7272 Maple St., West- Toi Trrus minster (99S-41 l )), Frida~s and Sat- urdays at 8:30 throu&b April 12 with a 2 p.m. matinee Apn1 6. •"PaJaaaa Tops" at the Hunt- inaton lieacb Playhouse, Main Street at Yorktown Avenue in the SeaclifT , Village sboppi.na center (832-1405), Fridays and Saturdays at 8:30 throuab April s . •"Aloee Totedler" at the Harle- quin Dinner Playhouse, 3503 S. Harbor Blvd., Santa Ana (979-5511 ). nightly except Moo~ys at varyrng curtain times through March 30. •"TM JUD& ud I" at the Curtam Call Dinner ihcater, 690 El Camjno Real, Tustin (83S-l 540), nightly ex- cept Mondays at varying cunam times through May 25. •"Hello, Dolly" at Sebastian's West Dinner Playhouse, 140 Ave. Cabrillo, Sao Oemeote (492-9950), Wednesdays through Saturdays at 8 p.m.,Sundaysat I and 7 p.m. through April 6. •"I Do, I Do .. at the G rand Dinner Theater, I Hotel Way, Anaheim (772-77 10), nightly except Mondays at varying curt.am ti mes through April 6. CALLBOARD -The Laguna Moulton Playb_o~~ will ho~~ a~i· tions for tbe Bnt1sh comedy Noises Off' Apnl 6 at 7 p.m. at the theater, 606 Laguna Canyo~ R~, ~na Beach .... Crai~ Aemma 1s d1rcctina the show, which calls for five men and four women from the 20s to the 60s .... 1be show o pens May 29 for four weeks.... Cb .. , Aud1t1oos for Agatha n_slle s mystery play "Ten Little Indians" will be held March 31 and April 1-2 ~y the Brea Theater League at 1 f,.m. m the Brea C1v1c C u tural Ccotcr .... scven men a~d three women arc required, Wlth more infonnauon available at 996-0685 .... BACKSTAGE -Yem Spitaleri bas been elected presideht of the operat- ing board for the Laguna Moulton Playhouse .... a rcured cdito~ an~ pub- lisher. Spitaleri currently. 1s director of Opera Pacific and president .of ~e NauonaJ Newspaper Foun~t100 ID Washington .... A single p erformance of Shakespeare's "As You Like It" will be presented by the Actmg Company, a tounng troupe, at the La Mira~ Civic Theater April 2 at 8 p.m ..... ticket information may be obtamed by cal hog 994-6310 .... South Coast Repertory Wlll mount the West Coast premiere. of "Vir- gi nia" by Bntain's Edna O'Brien. as the fifth play of its Second Stage scason .... the drama chronicles the life and career of author Virginia Woolf and will be presented April 2S tbroulh May 18 at the SC R theater, 655 i own Center Drive, Costa Mesa. DOUG KEMP. HONORARY COP BOWL VIII CAPTAIN WITH COSTA MESA POLICE SERGEANT BILL BECHTEL I 000 Bristol St. North No. 5 Newport Beach STORE HOURS: M-F 10-9, SAT 10-6, SUN 12-5 955 0 165 See local pollce officers compete In this annual football game to raise money for high school athletlc programs and charities. *Good to Sunday, March 30th-OPEN EASTER • ' Start 1fclining Nc7.1' Get Spring And Sumne Dues Free. ~um mer\ rnrmng up fa'\t. And ouc rhere on 1 h1.· hl'.1l h, rhr cnrnpemion5 gonna ht! rougher rh.1n l'\:l'r. Wh.ir \nur hoJ~ neeJ, ,·'><>me spring rrainmg ,H Hnl1<l<iy Sr.1 Health Cluh. Wirh chc kind of ~oph1'lrtL·areJ c4uipmcnt :mJ facil ities you \\1111°1 tinJ .rn\ \\here d,t:. Swimming. Joggi ng. I 1ln \l ling.' And rh,H', JU~C the beginning. I I \ 11u J• 11n r u >W, vuu'll get frum che Jay you JL>i n 1111 ii "l ph:mhcr 21 JdJed frel' fll rhe end of a one \1.•r 1111·rnlwhlirp. I l11llll.1\ '>JM He.11th Cluh. Call o r come by any duh tuday fo r a free guest tour. See what we ca n I,• t. •r \11ur hoJ). AnJ for your ... um mer. --\,,11l.1hl1 .11 pJmuparin~ duh,. Nor dll facil1rtes ac 111 l"l .11111n,. •1ri Holiday Spa Healtli Club ~~ ' ' A"'A HI IM \IO\o Mil~Mh4 I hl11<k \o nl I 1m oln. (714) 9~2-~101 C I tUU IOSll AK PWOOD I IRRI l)t·I Amo Bini ~t P1un~t·r. \ hloc k\ l rn or M' h11·w.1v ( .?n) 924 -1~14 c O\fA l\1f5A J \1)(1 Harhor AhJ Ut'h1nil fhrihy 1.>ruio ( 14) ~9-~'68 It l ' I I "JC, TON REACll 170lJI 8<-1c h Alvd .tt Warnrr 1n th~ t'hmrr Crnt rt, ("'14) 84'4· 1919 \11~1\ION Vlf·JO ~'110l Ahrn Pkw'V •• c;,,,n l>ttj!t1 h1•rw~y. (7141 770-0822 OKA"IJ{,f· c.u r. .. ,, K.itoll.1 AH· Wr,t nl 111\111\ A .. r ( 14) 6\9· 441 Our M l\\tnn V1t111 < luf. "<•nly I<· m1n111t•\ lr"m ~.in C 11 m ntr ·- COSTA MESA & HUNTINGTON BEACH POLICE DEPTS. · YI GARDEN GROVE, BUENA PARK & FULLERTON POLICE DEPTS. FRIDAY NIGHT, APRIL 11 , 7:30 P.M. at ORANGE COAST COLLEGE'S LABARO ST AOIUM. ORANGE COUNTY COP BOWL TICKETS· FAMILY PLAN (Admission for 5)-$15 · ADUL TS -$5 CHILDREN-$3 Anyone Can Remind You Of Important Dates ••• But Do They? Jimmy's Angels will' That 's-0Ur job. W e'll remind you of any important dates you have to remember. Call now for inf orrnation. ~ c:::::::> Jimmy~ngeb Call 1-800-422 -H ALO 714-240-1757 Orange CoMt OAJL Y PflOT IW~. Maret. 2t, 1tee • COMPLETE NYSE COMPOSITE TRANIACTIONa, 81 CRf Olf L IN[ Business faces mediocrity crisis UN'ELEY Officers named ili Laguna Hills . Scott McN•tt has been named director of taxes at Laguna Naguel-~scd Bll1dler. McNutt comes to Birtcher from Coopen 6 Lyb~ 10 Los Anaeles. A Laguna Hills resident, be is a certified public accountant. • • • Cbrlea E. lleaeley has been appointed president and chief ex~tive officer of ~e Lapaa Bok. Keneley is a Laauna Hills reStdent whose banking career spaos IS years. He was previously president and chief executive officer of Flnt Anoyo Bu.It based in Pasadena. • • • Walt Carter has been appointed vice president of the Barnes MuaJemut Co., a!> ~uto raCJ!li marketing finn in Irvine. Caner is an US0C1ate and administrator an the motorspon.s field. He is former national manaaer of motorsports for NIHaa USA and has served as vice-president and general manager of the Riverside laterudoul Raceway. • • • Jou D. R•tled1e Jr. has been promoted to senior vice president and chief financial officer at Newport Beach-based~ Claue, lJvlaptoa 6 Co. and Suu L Yul has been apt><>intcd financial ma.nagcTforthe finn. Rutledge has been with CClsmcc I 97S. Yusi is fo.rmer assistant to the chairman of Irater, CraJ&fDIX in Century City. • • • MJcuel (Tim ) EllJon has been promoted to senior member service manager of the Amutc:u Electroll.ict Auodadoa'1 Southern California operations in Irvine. He is responsible for activities and services in Orange County, Los Angeles, Sao Diego and Santa Barbara councils, representing more than 650 electronics and infonnation technology companies. Elliott bas been with the associauon since 1984. • • • Kay L. Baet.1 bas joined B.J. Job10D & .Aasoclates of Costa Mesa as confe~nce manager for Invitational Computer Conferences in the United States and Europe. · • • • lrvlae Co. Pretldeat noma1 Nlelta has been re-elected chairman of the board of the Eeo.omJc Developmeat Corporation of Oru1e Couty and bead of the 13-member executive committee. Among newly elected members of the executive committee arc supervisors Harriett Wieder and Reser Stutoa; nomu WUct of nomu WUct AalOdatet; Job MUtaer of UC Irvt.e and Roea.ld Blrtdter ofBlricller, vice cha1nnen of the committee. • • • Corona del Mar restdent Mark Wroutl bas joined Jauu .AalOdatee lac. of Santa Ana as art director. Previously, be was an director for Dalley 6 .AaMdates in Los Angeles. ~1.rr-1 ~~rd·'¢ $ McLNn Wf 4 NaYtlr . w1A i TowleMfv N1vlsl•r Idell Belle N1vstr ofO A•tllandOll -l•Dlilii'iii''illll------- All managers should choose and develop suitable replacement By LINDSEY TANNER • rt a a,,_...., CHICAGO -Mediocrity is lO· filtrating American busioeu m~ mentJ and U.S. comeanies will lose worlawide compctihveness unless corporations put more priority on employee training and development. a management expen contends. · In recent years., severe cost<Utting and staff-slashing. a surge in merp:rs and acquisitions. and the "T"CvoJ- utioo" in computcn and data pro- ctssina have contributed to the com· ing crisis in management, said David Merrell. a management consultant at Rohrer. Hibler & Replogle Inc. "If we do nothing new, the conse- quence will be a cadre of poorly trained. narrowly experienced and hopelessly short"'$ightcd managers," said Merrell, whose Chicago-based ftnn provides psychological consult- ing services to industry. In the latest issue of the corpor- ation's newsletter, MerrelJ warns that by the end of the decade, there will be a shortage of gooc:l. experienced general managers "because they are not now being trained." Budgct-ti~tening in the recession- plagued m1d-1970s forced "most manufacturing and many other in· dustries to cut baclc anywhere from 20 to 40 percent in the last five years," Merrell said in an interview. In addition, the growing trend of mergen and acquisitions over the past several years threatens to breed mediocrity, he said. "Ev~ time you get a merger or acquisition, many top jobs are lost. That cuts back on the number of positions you can move managers mto." Merrell said. Many of those positions also have been elim inated by "tbe data-pro- cessing and computer revolution," be said, resultina in less transferring and fewer growth opportunaues for em- ployees. "Without people getting a broad- ening of experience. they're not going to have the backround. the ability. to do strategic, long-range thinking," Merrell said . .. That means that business could do a poor job of new product development ... and could lose world- I~ -~ -1 ~ -lV> ~y, -1;u l~ -5-16 ~ -1 -'"' -'lo 'h -1 '41/4 -'h 1~ -1~ ~ -.,. WI -~ 7\.\ -~ ~~ = = -"" '.4 -21/.• II) -3,4 21h -I.Jo 10 -1 Pierce Brother~ Bell Br0adway Mortuary T :t l! ~t: . -ltO BrO::!Y 642.-91SQ ~ ~i ~ ...._._...R ...... U---FFE---LL-'S- .• tJ>HOLSTERY INC . AMERICAN AIRPORT TRANSPORTATION & LIMOUSINE SERVICE. INC. IUMl/Mlnlbut/llm<>Y$1MI Statloc iwogona/Vomt rN s Ooof lo ()oof S.Nic• ~ ChoMfs ond T~ra I ·800-524· l 300 u..wtt.-.Art ••mo•• • ......,_,~0....­ ... ~C...-· lD ~ ",.,.,._ ... ~~_..._ .... flUPlllCI R&WPOH (714) 720-9191 ••-..-c-o. ,.__.....,_., ... wtde com.P!!ttuvenes,s. .. be said. '"They mutt do a much better job of .. jd. To avo1~ the thtut of ~ediocrity, assessin& evaluatina. pickinJ out~ All m.anaten lhouJd be siveii tbt1 MerrelJ l!Atd, th~ ~mp&nact should people who have ,., most potent11J respon.libilty of findina a.od devdop- re-estabtisb their internal manqe-and then set up specific devdopmen-inf a suitable replacement. Merrell ment programs. tal pl.ans'• and ua.i.11i.na prosrams, be S&ld. MuruAt f uNos NOW OPEN Come to the "t)~ ~I I ~ ~ J] • 180 brand nev.· guest rooms , ~~~ ~ w /traditional country chaml Gk~ FINE DINING • Le Chateau full serviCt' res ti want +Pool, pa. & exercise room • ... omplimentllj' airport limo • Host~d evening cocktilil (Y-lCt)' •Daily papn-. coffee, :and dani h o h m mJng • ~lQa,ll' « dm.llJl' °'c"pa""' APf!O~• '" •Qnllard ,_.. -••· <'" • ~f' • lllll•w ....,., llu: l!ddlt l'tf\&I e .· NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTION ; WEDNE8DAY'811 A.M. (PST) PRICE8 . Blue chips rally market NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market rebounded from Tuesday's modest decline today with a rally led by blue chips. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials, down 4.43 on T uesday, climbed 21.55 to l,800.0S by 2 p.m. on Wall Street. Gainers outnumbered loscn by about 3 to 2 among New York Stock Exchange-listed issues. Long·tenn intel'C$t rates declined in the crcdll markets today. Prices of long-term government bonds, which move in the opposite direction from interest rates, rose about$5forevery S1,000 in face value. Ashland OiJ rose 23/a to 54¥.. The Bel:zbera family of Canada, which bas bought a stake io Ashland, said it bad made an offer of at least $60 a share for all the remaining stock. The NYSE's comeositc index gained 1.0 I to 136.23. At the Arnencan Stock Eitchange. the market value index was up .87 at 267 39. Volume on the Big Board came to 113.64 million shares with two hours to go. WHAT AMEX Orn WHAT NYSE Orn NEW YORK. <AP) Mer. 2S AMEX LEADERS GoLo QuorE s META LS QuoTE S NEW YORK (AP) Mir, 25 Todi Prnl. Adv~!Qd ~~ 1 ~= ~:,~s f¥ f3 NYSE LEADERS Dow JoNES AVERAGES NASDAQ SUMMARY qu\l4 ~91bly thi przrr<tei J'Ck¢t. o l::>&~ic m aMliy mon~ "Wordrobz. sort, rem rtz~ l l¢n t, e ll cott.or\ shciU with l ight;'M?.19ht.. t.ert.em hnm9, '11¢ n t.<zd beck . kmu.ad cu~ and boU.orn , thcz. most.~lor 'Wtnd~kar aMZr t.cn. novy, nzd om bnt..1sh ton or.wpgrt bzot.h 'ti! a,d'l1an ~lord., '11V&t<t ''070 ~Y\\~ l00t ~bt'4 ,2\~~3l7~ poeodii,..., ~~~thla1'4~.8l81~ 9m mon t.tirufh 10t.o9. !Wll.ut~ IO tQCO C. eurdo)' noon to~ .. ..... .... ,.Mamn AIUES (Marth 21-A_pril 19): Much that bad been bidden will now be vealed. Emphasis on finan~l status or others, possibility of dividends ~~ lona-fora<?tten stoc~ or aovestment. Accent ori&inality, innovation, lmancu to p1oneer proJCCI. TAUl\US (April 20.May 20)~ Love relationship strona but "com- 'cated." You are drawn in two directions-one is toward commJtment, the her is away from lepl ties, obliptions. Decisions will be reached within two eeks. GEM~ (May 21.June 20): What appears to be a setback is due to merana tn your favor. Focus on ------------ploytncnt, dependents, pets, aeneral ealth. Attend to basic tasks, don't pt de~ay a~ defcaL You are aoina to erge vactonous. CANCER (June 21-July 22): Be 'lling to review, revise, to dismantle roject for purpose of rebuildillJ. ~n re suitable base. 'Scenario aJ90 lligb- abts intensified relationships. physical uraction, luck in matters ofspeculation. SYDNEY 0101 ~ (July 23-Aug. 22): Dialogue with business associate is necessary. ttcotJon centers around Ian~ rcaJ estate, long-range prospcct.s rqardiog vestments. Member of o ppos1te sex plays key role, can be valuable ally. •. VIRGO (A~g. 2.3-ScJ>t. 22): Focus .on do~c ~aners, relatives. trips, mts, ?>~mumcauon rcgardlnJ special matenal. V•gor returns, you'll be nthu~tasuc about proposed project. You'll get funding if diplomauc. Don't roe lSSUeS. LIBRA (Sept. 23-9c't. 22): Cycle h.igb, being alone is not necessarily same s being lonely. Spqtµ~t on payments. collections, ability to locate artkle t had been lost, rruss1ng or stolen. SCO~PIO (qtt. 23-Nov. 21 ): Moon ~n your sign hi&hli&hts charisma, rsonality. physical appearance, dynamic approach, eicclfent j\Jda,ment, ntuition and timiJl8'. Y,ou 'll meet deadline, prestige soan u result. SA Gm ARIUS (Nov. 22-Dcc. 21 ): You strike chord of universal appeal. mportant information is located behind scenes. You'll reach beyond vious limitations. You gain added recognition and might be asked to appear before the media. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Focus on outstandin§ pcrfonnancc, friends, powers of persuasion, speculation and romance. You ll get to heart of matters, you could also win valuable prize. Leo, Aquarius natives will figure in dynamic scenario. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20.f eb. 18): Intuition rings true -tint impressions arc on target. Lunar position hiabhgbts business, career. dealings with people who pack wallop of authority. Vou arc going to win, law is on your side and you'll get the money. P~ (Feb. 19-Marcb 20): Define terms, avoid scaneriog forces, look behind scenes for answers to basic queries. Romance in store tonight, alona wi~ gourme~ dining. Long-distance communication relates to prestigious social event, JOumcy. IF MARCH n IS YOUR BIRTHDAY love will not be a stranger for you this r,ear. Emotional fulfillment is featured, along with career advancement. You II reach beyond previous limitations, many persons will be drawn to you, you could be considered "big box office." You will be "flirti~ with fame." Aries, Libra play import.ant roles in your life. You can survive with little food or water, but you cannot Uve without love. You'll be on more soUd financial-emotional ground in April. August will be memorable for you in 1986. Shark can accomplish stomach-turning feat The shark every so often retracts its teeth safely into its gums., and turns one of its two stomachs inside out of 1t1 mouth, rinses off said stomach in the open sea. then puts it back where 1t belongs. Not a preny sight, f'll warrant. In Iceland. it's not JUSt proper but Qlicial to call a man by his fi rst name cj)ly. To that lengthening list of things that never come out of even, add '8uccpans and lids. This comes to mind because a lady client contends covens of saucepans secretly multiply in comer cabinets, murder their hds. and hide the remains. Nine out of JO of those fish eggs called caviar come from the Soviet Union. That will change, our Chief Propiosticator believes. China could ,et mto that market. Q. Jn chess. what's a vmer" A. The ~wer piece in India. Hereabouts tt's called the queen. Our Language man notes the word "naughty" used to mean "worthless" ,rom "havi ng naught." According to the brewers. it takes an expert to pick the best hops. The quality. they say. is determined solely by touch. LM. Bo YD When a woman in lhc company of others sits at a table or desk or in an arm chair, that place on her clothing most apparent to those others is her neckline. For this reason,· say the fashion cxpcns. the neckline is prob- ably lhe most important feature of her costume, and she should consider it carefully when getting dressed for some occasion. Scrawled on an English classroom blackboard: "You don't have to know how to spell "coocupisccocc' to be a great lover." Had to look it up. Means strong sexual desire. Q. What's a "biathlon'"? A. An athletic contest of cross- country snow skiing plus rifle marks- manship. Ski, aim, fire, ski. It may be a burglary elsewhere, but under Kentucky law, it's not a burglary unless it's committed at night L.M. Boyd I• • •yadlc•ted col•llYl•I. We can only take our own needling You can say the most unflattcrina' thi.np about your own .,-oup, within your own aroup, and they will customarily not take offense. Ot\en, they will lauah with you about the peroeivcd cSerccts or excesses of the aroup. But uy aayinJ some of these same thiop to people outside the aroup. and you are very likely to be castipted, condemood, or even boycotttd and picketed u an .. anti. .. I witnessed an example of this not Iona IJO• attcndina an all-black dramatic presentatio~ which was a coane burlesque of black habits and mannen in a Northern American city. The audience, which was mostly black. seemed to enjoy this caricature of a certain type oflifestyle. Y ct I am sure that if the same pl'C9Cntation had been put on by a white company, to largely white audiences, 1t would promptly have been denounced as a cheap travesty, and just as promptly labeled ·~st," for ita selectively slanted portrayal of the black community. This is a nearly universal t:raic We resent it when outsiders say about us what we may sometimes pn vatcly say about ourselves -because we feel that they arc sayina it out of ignorant malice, while our observations are tempered with sympathy and a degree of understanding. The Irish feel free to mock some of their own cultural traits; so do the Jews or the Hispanics -but oo one else may dare to make the same sardonic comment without being accused ofbeing a snob or a bigot, and beina called to apologize for such a S111n H111as slander. • Americans are 1n· much the wne position when they visit Europe, or· oth~r pans of the globe. At home, they may criticize many of o ur attitudes and insensitivities toward the rest of the world. But we cannot help ~~~DJ when . we hear fo~iP.ers cnucmng Amencan commercialism, our overbearing manner, or our provincial prejudices. We spring to the defense of our country's ways much more 9uickly and ardently than we arc incbncd to do within our own borders. Somehow we assume as a "right" what in outsiders we regard as an im- pcrtinenoc or an insult, a flagrant display of "anti-Americanism." A great part of 'etting along with other people consuta in the recog- nition and acceptance of this "'double slandard" that is implicitly held by all groups. It is the source and direction from which the criticism comes that is resisted and rebuffed more than the comment itself. I can say about me what you arc not permitted to, and the louder you keep saying it, the more I will deny that there is any truth in what you say. Don't pull an erotic surprise in this state DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am writing in response to your advice to "On the Verge in Aorida." She was the would-be exhibitionist who had a w:ild urge to confront the postman. mCSSCDfer, or meter reader scantily clad or LD the nude. You re\)Ued, "As long as you remain inside your home, you arc out of the reach of the law." This may hold true in Aorida, but it won't work in California. Section 314.1 of the California Penal Code says, "Every person who willfully and lewdly exposes bis person, or private pans thereof, in any public place, or in any place where the~ arc present other persons to be ot1tnded or annoyed thereby is guilty of indecent ex- posure.'' California also bas an offense titled Lewd and Disorderly Conduct, which must occur in a pubhc place, while the offense of indeoeot exposure may occur in less than a public place. Therefore, people who expose them- selves withtn their homes to people passing by run the risk of violatmg this statute. -MICHAEL A.N .. ATTORNEY AT LA S (SUNNYVALE, CA.). DEAR SUNNY: R!Pt yoe are. Tiie OH la tH dace cap 11 me. Muy ot.Hr Callforma atwraey1 wrote, IMlt yov letter came ill ftnt. n.aatt a laeap. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: Will you please use your clout to remove the supna of dioinJ alone? I am sick of bemg made to feel like a social reject whenever I enter a restaurant by myself. Just last night it happened again in the dining room of a fine hotel. The hostess asked, "Is there· just one of you?" I replied briskly. "Yes -there is just one of me." She Prve me a look of pity as if to say, 'Poor thing. she doesn't even have one friend who will have dinner with her." I enjoy eating out at least once a week. Often I don't have the inclina- tion or the time to make prior arrangements for companionship. I take along a mag.a.zinc or newspaper 1111 lMms clipptop that 1 b.avco't b.ad time to read and I enjoy m~ a great deal more than some couples around me who don't say so much as one word to each other. Please, dear Ano, print this. There must be millions of solo diners who will appreciate seeing this letter in print. -JUST ONE OF ME. DEAR JUST: Here'• yoar letter ud my ~ for lettlll1 tk world bow tbt some soU&ary d.lllen em.joy It tbt way-espectally folb wllo are 1arrouded by people aJJ day. To diem 1Ue11ee 11 tnly 1olden. l • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: I wonder how many teachers realize what a glorious privilege it is to have the opportunity to shape so many young lives. Please print the following for the benefit of others in m y profession who may not realize what a difference they can make. G .L.. C LEVELAND. "I've come to a fnghtenina con- clusion that I am thedec1s1veelemcnt m the classroom. It's my personal approach that creates the climate. It's my daily mood that makes the weather. As a teacher, I possess a tremendous power to make a child's life miserable or joyous. I can be a tool of torture or an instrument of inspira- tion. 1 can humiliate or humor. hurt or heal. In all situations. it 1s my response that decides whether a cnStS will be escalated or deescalated and a child humanized o r de-humanized." -Haim Ginott. DEAR CLEVELAND: 'nuk1 for tllat 1em. Tiie me11a1e 11 clear ud beHtlfally expreate4. I appreciate yo.r 11LarlD1 It wttla ••· Here'sEdMcMahonon WalkofFame By tlae AHOClacd Prest LOS ANGELES -Actor E4 McM.-, the cbucklina tele- vision sidekick on loltaay Canola'• "T onigl'lt Show" and ~ host. of "TV Bloopcn &. Practical Jokes," has been honored with a star in the Hollywood Walk of Fame. The McMahon star, next to one de<licated to W.C. Flel4l1, was the J ,824th implanted at Hollywood Boulevard and Vine Street. McMahon amved for the cer- emony in a waaon drawn by the Oydcsdale hones that are a trademark o f Budweiser. McMahon bas been the becT compeny's official spokesman for 21 yean. and had asked for the spot alonpidc Field Wectdtnc bell• INDIO -ABC·TV anchor l.atlalff8 S.UIYU and architect RaJ .. M&cMeJ Uler, ion of fonncr baseball pat llalf' IJHr. have taken oul a ~ license in the R.avcrs1dc Coun1y Bctllo~ anchon ~ut1J Ne~ Saturday" for A from Wa.shiniton-K.intt is a Palm Deten architect. StanlnTezu AUSTIN. Te:xas -WlWt ~~1 f'~.SAMJ o.a.. Tommy 'hM. GtM clerk's o ffice. Kiner and Sullivan. both J2. a.wlied for the licenx Mooday. The wcdd.ina 11 .et fOf Apnl 13 1n u Quinta and will be lbc first for both ulhvan co-anchon "'World News This Mom•na" and .,,. A1cry, "'1Uda Ayen-AIJa and Vu CUIMln arc on the aucst list wh.en lbe Tew Sesquaccntennial hits the nationaJ airwaves. The stars have been invited to take pen in a two-hour show to be broadcast on ABC-TV pril 28, said Capitol Committee Inc. ex- ecutive director ~rac Brisol, who called It "the laraest aalber- ing of Texa~ superst.trs c~er" Weighty luue NEW YORK -ElbaMtla Taylor, who has fou&ht the benlc of the bulac over the years wtth varyina dqittS of sUCClCU. says she ptans to wntc • book about pin1na and lo 1n1 wc1&hL The book will deal with Ta~· 1or·s "l>Cf"I01l&I view o( women s atutudcs toward wciaht. towaril ~t puund I and the ways tn whach lbey atfect • woman's t~ and self-esteem... O.P. Putnam's Sons said. It will bt wnncn by Taylor and a>-Mltcr ho has yet to be cboem. OrMg9 Coul DAILY PILOT /W9dneed.-y, Mltd\ 2$, 1Me rt , r PUT Youa RUMPS TO GOOD USE Both vulnerable. South deal11. WEST +Q974 Q 74 OKJ88 •Q5 3 NORTH •. x Q AQ 10883 ¢53 •9874 . EA.8T •88532 Q ICJt& 0 7 .. 2 •z SOUTH • AJ 10 Q z <>A Q 1• t •A KJ 1oe The bidding South Weat Nortla But I• Pu• l Q Pu• 2 <> Pue 3 Q Pua 3 NT Pua 4 • Pua &• Pu• Pu• PaH Opening lead: Four of • When you are playmg a cross· ruff, don't send a boy to do a man's job. Trump as high as you can safe- ly afford. North-South bid well to reach a good club s lam When North showed a distributional hand by removing three no trump to four clubs, South felt his prime controls merited a jump to slam West led a spade, and declarer took time out to consider his lines of play. He had available finesses in both red suits and a choice of plays in the trump suit. Despite the fact he had only four wmners tn the side suits. declarer decided he would spurn all finesses and, in· stead, try to score eight trump tricks on a cross-ruff. He won the opening lead tn dummy, crossed to the ace of dia· moods and discarded a diamond on the ace or spades. A diamond was ruffed low in dummy, the ace of hearts was cashed and a heart was ruffed low in the closed hand. Ex· cept for the queen, all or declarer's trumps were now high. CHAil£$ Go1E1 01u S11111FF Declarer ruffed a diamond on the table, and the crucial moment had arrtved Had declarer continued with a heart and ruffed with the ten, West would have overruffed and returned a trump, and declarer would have been a trick s hort. But declarer took care to ruff the heart with the king of trumps, and it made no differe nce what West d is- carded A spade was ruffed on the board, declarer returned to ha.nd by ruffin~ a heart with the ace of trumps and h~ could claim his con- tract. Declarer' last three cards were a diamond and the jack-ten of trumps. Dummy held the nine of trumps and two hearts. Declattr simply led has diamond and ruffed, and the defender could score no more than the queen of trumps. Have you been runninl bat.o doublf' trouble? Let Cbarle. Goren help yoa tlnd fOti' way tbroup the mue of DOUBLES for penaltlH and tor takeoet. For a copy ot hie "DOUBLES" booklet, Hnd 11.85 to "Goren·Doublee," care of tJaa. newepaper, P.O. Box 4421 Orlan- do, Fla. 32802-4426. Make cllttb payable to "Newepaperboou:• -::= ~~lA-,~~s· = ....... o..--.._ ...... . ............... ., .. -'=~ ...... --~' I 0 I c 0.., [ I ' r I' I I I l T"llS I r I I I r_ I I C AP([ I I r r I ·~ --·--. - -~ :c-..: .. '.-::::;:.:..:, I llA,1(1 1•- 1 r 1 1 r !.::5;-:.~:= • i.· •• -·r r r I' r I' r r r 1 I -?;>;-' "1 I I I I I I I I I TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 1 Fumble 6 Craving 10 Caresses 14~1 15 Rain hard 16 Upoo 17 Roads of old 18 Th«mic feYel' 20 Slave driven 22 Modernize 23 Marble 24 Fabrics 25 Throughoot 28 SeaaonlOQ 29 Cerlaln school garb 30 Abhorrent 35 8-nder 36 Decoyed 37 -populi 38 Reduced 41 Shore up 43 E of OED 44 Wrecked 45 Tooth 48 Flinty 50 Ready to MrV9 51 MoS1 robu.st 55 Farm tool part 57 -Otnsmore 58 Sea. swallow 59 Approve 58 e1 60 Annuity Fr 61 Hoty women abbr 62 Churctt seats 63 Racehorse DOWN 1 Very MrlOUS 2 Pro - 3 Higher 4 Relate 5 Junior officers 6 Bewilder 7 Circuit 8 Stena, e.g 9 Hesitation syllables 10 Mom and Pop 11 Compensate 12 Bus fare 13 Disgorges 19 Resound vibrantly 21 Pester 24 Eulogize 25 Jr lNguet'S 26 Nevada's neighbor 27 Turning P<8f 28 Whtz:zed PREVlOUS PUZZLE a« VED 30 Pygmy 3 1 Sooner thal' 32 Russian name 33 Sotlo - 34 Crossed oot 36 Plumbum 39 Hoclcs &gain 40 Expeditions 4 1 Stove par1s 42 Small circle 44 Old auto 45 Egyptian Christians 46 Not rented 4 7 Inventory 48 Stood colOf 49 Cards S1 Purpcse 52 A~S vassal 53 loc.hty 54 -off displeased 56 School prom 3 THE FAMILY CIRCUS by Bii Keane "Why didn't Chicken little check her news sources?" MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson BIO GEORGE by Vlrgll Partch (VIP) I yfp 11What happened to the little points on your football?" DENNIS THE MENACE by Hank Ketcham BLOOM COUNTY MOON MULLINS ·-, .................. .. __ ~ FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE "I stiff have possession of the chair!" 5cMETIMES JOEY CRACKS HIMSELF UP.' PEANUTS ..-0 .. -µ .. Lt:'"' -::-;c~oc:­-.. = CHJ .. 0 _47E .... 111P .'.:OOK1E5 :'IDl'fT '(QV? NOW THE QVE 5-JN 5 DO WE EAT THEM BETWEEN SETS. OR 00 WE EAT TuEM BETWEEN GAMES? ~·:;--:-..~ .. ~ )-- -,-::.~ . - GARFIELD 3 llo TUMBLEWEEDS DRABBLE ~w()-{l DIOt-.1 i ~OU (:J:) 00 I Wli~ £.RIC. LA~T ~16i.li ? ROSE IS ROSE l THINK I KNOW MOW 0 '71( 5TAY'S 50 5LIM !/ID {O'J Pui 01.rr rt '( EASTER MESSAGE? I Wt~~ I CJ)JW lf.NlH 10 PVr Mf1l£ ~N ANP ~~A>JEJTV INTO lA~ / ()4, (I.JU ... ™Elf'S AA (XQ ~"40.-•wHEN TlE. ~16~.~ ~ER CA.WU.. />IPElll. .',, ~( 0 •o ' .. ~ by Tom K. Ryan JUDG-E FRUMP'S COURT by Kevin Fagan by Pat Brady MMMM - (t:x)t<.IE8 ~ SHOE DOONESBURY t f3af ~E L.ASf llME 1 DID, l BROICE rw.J &..E.6 ! ! WHAL_ IF 1HAI HAPP~ A6AIN !~ by Berke Breathed by Ferd & Tom Johnson by Lynn Johnston WHAT IF A f elAJ GET '? )~~- by Jeff MacNally by Gary Trudeau 1 .. Easter, spring's mos t exci ting holiday, is filled wi th fascinating legends, customs and fo lklore. One such notable contribu tion during this holiday is the Easter rabbit, a custom introduced by the Pennsylvania Dutch in the late l 700's. As legend has it, if the children were good, the Eas ter rabbit would lay a col- orful nest of eggs for them on Easter eve. Being that the Easter rabbit was so shy, he would build the nests in the most secluded pl aces. To help the Easter rabbit, the children woul d hide their caps or bonnets and later find th em filled with beautifully colored eggs. From . the caps and fancy paper baskets to today's el aborate baskets, th is legend has grown to become one or the most festi ve traditions of the Easter holiday. During this fes tive occasion, get your famil y in- vol ved by creating your own edible Eas ter basket fill ed wi th special holiday treats. The Easter basket is sim ply a basic cookie dough mix ed with crunchy multi-col ored plain chocol ate candies . The cookie dough is baked in rings and stacked to fo rm the ''tasty" basket. Adding color to the basket are the ( it ion Pastel Meringue Eggs made with the delicious addi- tion of those popular "M&M' " Pl ai n Chocolate Candies. An other delightful Easter basket treat 1. the Bunny Cookie Cut-Outs that s urpr isi ngl y enough are made wit h ve ry little effort. They are the perfect cookies for children to make because they ca n express.._. their creativity by making the cut-out and decorat.i)g with colorful chocolate candies . Sur- round the basket with artificial green gras and plen- ty of multi-colored peanut chocolate ca ndies which look like miniature Eas ter eggs! Treat your family to a traditional Ea ter menu fea- turing a juicy glazed ham wit h all the fixings and a a luscious bonus fo r the meal , serve the Colorful Fruit Cups. Light and refreshing, the fru it cups are a com- bi nation of orange sections, grapes, liced trawber- ries and a dollop of your favorite yo gurt. And re- member to leave room to am pl e yo ur Ea ter ba ket goodies ! WEDNESDAY. MAACH 26, 1988 ltert 8 MW IEMter tr8dftlon with dudraltl-CI Center holkl•J t•ble with •n edlble b•1lcet.C2 2 eu wbJtes, room tempenture 1/8 teaspoon cream of tanu l /2 cup sucar Food color · 1 .. t /4 cups chopped .. MAM1s''-Plah1 Chocolate Candles Beat CJ& whites at low s.pced until foamy.• Add cream ~f tartar and beat at medium speed until soft peaks form. Gradually add sugar, I tablespoon at a time, beating well after each addition. Increase speed to high and beat 5 minutes or unlil sugar is com- pletely dissolved and stiff peaks form. Add food color as de- sired (mixture can be divided for several colors). Fold in I cup candies. · Shape heaping tablespoons of mixture into egg-shaped ovals, about 2-1 /2-inches long on foil-lined cookie sheets. Sprinkle with remaining ca ndies. "Bake at 225°F. for I hour or until eggs"" lift easily off foil. Turn off oven and with door ajar, let rest until cool. Store in air-tight container. Makes about J} eggs. •Note: Be sure to use a clean deep bowl , free from any grease, to ensure the greatest volume from beaten egg whites. 3 cups Hour I cup butter or maraarine I cup sugar 1-1/2 teaspoons vanilla 1/2 teaspoon baking powder I I 4 teaspoon s .. Jt I egg I teaspoon grated lemon peel 1 teaspoon lemon juice "M&M's" Plain Chocolate Candies Beat all ingredients excep1 candies in mixer bowl until dough forms. Divi de dough into thirds: wrap and chill at least 2 hours. Working with one-third of dough at a time, roll dough 1/8-inch thick on lightly floured board. Cut into desired shapes with 2- inch cookie cutter. Deco ra te as desired with candies. Bake at 350°F. fo r 10 minutes or until JUSt golden around edges. Cool about 3 minutes Remove to wire rack to cool completely. Make'i ahour 3 do:en cookies 2 oranges, sectioned• 2 cups 11reen grapes• 2 cups sliced strawberries• I I 4 cup orange juice 1/4 teaspoon ground cinnamon, if desired I cup vanilla or lemon yogurt•• Combine oranges, grapes, strawberrie , orange JU1ce and cin - namon in large bowl. Spoon in to glas es. Jus t before serving, top with dollop of yogurt Make abour s1 "< Ill-cup servings • .'l/nte· Six cup of any combination of fruit may be used. Fru11 can also be layered in gla ses. ••.'vole Submtutc I cu p sour cream blended with 2 table- '>poon-. brov.n ... ugar £Mer rfia~'>l\t;t r!Joo~~ (t!entf 711err 1-1/4 cups blanched almonds or• al nuts 1-1 /2 cups butter or margarine. soft ened 2-1 /2 cups confectioners ~ugar l tea poem almond ntract or 2 teaspoon' vanilla 2 tg(tS 3-3/ 4 cups ftour 1/4 teaspoon salt 1-1/2 cupH hopped "M&M''" Plain Chocolate Candies Decorating Glaze• Tna,1 nut... dt 350 r fo r 10 minutes Prexes') 1n blender or food prixe ...... or until ground. et aside Beat butter and ugar until fluff\. heal in C\lrdct dnd eggs Stir in flour. salt. Jnd nuts. mix- ing well 10 form dough Sti r in chopped cand1e' Form l/ 2 cup dough into .i '\-inch solid ci rcle. l/2-1nc h th ick. on greased cooli.1e sheet to lorm the bottom of ba ket Roll -.mall handful of dough into 1-inch rope , form ring, 6 inches in diameter, on ~reased cookie ~heet Repeat W1th remaining dough forming four ctdd111onal rings. 7. 8. 9 .ind 10 inches in diameter Pat e.ach nng 112-inch high. 3/ 4-inch wide Bake a1 350°f ror 20 10 25 minut~ or until edge~ ure light golden Carefully remove to v.1re rack<> 10 1..001 To ct')'"iemble. pl.ice 'ol1d 1:1rcle on 12 -inch 'erving plate. drizzle gl.ue Jround edge ot cm.le Place malle...t nng on cir-cle. dnule v.11h glJ1e Top w11h ne'<I large t nng. glaze Continue w11h re- maining ring' Jnd gla1e Decorate. 1f desired. with add111onal cand1e-. \-faA e' one cenrerp1rt t • fh ora1111)( (1 /a:1• Gradu~} 1..ombinc I -112 cups con fee· !loner-. ... ugar with Jbout 2 tablespoon~ ~11rm water. m1~mg until '>mooth and of desired con 1s1en1..) CS Orange COU1 DAILY PILOT/ Wedneedey, March 28. 198e ~tart a new tradition with delicious duckling . New breeding process yields more nutritious meat, less fat With the Easteraeasonjust around the corner, many families are plannina their traditional holiday meals. This year, wby not bc&in a new family tradition by serving delicious duckling as the main course. Tb is versatile en tree can be served with Grandma's llomecooked vegetables or Wlth a variety of glazes and ~itotic casseroles. Whichever method is more suited to )'our taste, you can be assured you arc serving your family a nutritional meal. A genetic breeding process over the past 26 years .has produced a duckling with more meat and less fat, mean mg more meat yield. Thi:; more meat duckling as a source of high quality protein and is very low in cholesterol, sodium, fat and calones when compared to steaks, roastand other red meats. Addtt1onally, ducklingcontams impon.ant amounts of1ron and thiamine. For a free cookbook on bow to prepare duckling, enclose S 1 for postage and bandhng. your return address and mail to Concord Farms, Rt. 8, Box 42, Concord, NC 28025. AJlow four weeks for deli very. Btnts ForTbeFlnt·Tlme User Estimated serving amounts: A 4-Sl/2 pound duckllna wiJl serve 2-3: a S'h-6"'1 pound ducklina will serve 3-4. Defrosting: A completely frozen duck.Jing is best when allowed to thaw for 24 hours in a refrigerator. For quick thawing duck.Jing may be placed in a pan of cold water. Always defrost duckling in onginal packaging. Portion or Carve? Portioning is reoommended for duckling weighing up to S pounds. Carving is recommended for duckling weighing over S pounds. Using a sharp knife or pouliry shean, cut along breast from top to bottom separating duckling into halves. Then cut each half between leg and breast pomon to complete quarterina. h's easy to roast a duckling: If duckling is frozen, thaw 24.hours in original pack.age, inside refrigerator. For quick thawing, place pacQged duckling into a pan 'Of cold .water. After duck.ling is completely thawed, remove from pack.age, take giblets and neck from inside ducklmg. Rinse with fresh tap water inside and out; drain and dry with a paper towel. firmly scratch a fork over the skin of the duck.tins gently pricking the skin so duckling will self-baste. Be careful not to prick Lhe skin into the meat as it will cause the ducklina to I<* natural juices and become dry. Sprinkle body and neck cavities evenly with salt. DUCKUNO WITH RAJ.SIN-LEMON STUFFING ! dockltac abo•t. ponds ean) Sau ud pepper t. tute ! aUc:et wMte .... {daJ•N er stale) • .Ucet touted raialD ltreael l cap diced celery l ta'bletpooa crated lemoa rbMI (abotlt l small lem•) "' tea1pooa lf'Otllld duamoa Sallee Fred partley or watel'ttffl 1prtp m &em• llkea {opdoul) Wash ducklinas and pat dry with paper towels. Rub bird with salt and pepper inside and out Use fork to prick skin all over. Set uJde. In 1ar&e bowl, tear white and raisin b~s i~to about I-inch pieces. Add celery, lemon nnd, can- namopn, ult and pepper. M~ Well. Spoon ~ of mixture into each bird. Truss Wtth skewers or stnna. Place ducklinp on rack i.n routina pan. Rout uncovered at 325 dearces abo~t 2 b!>urt or until tender and juices run clear. Baste with drippinp about every 30 minutes. Meanwhile, prepare sauce and set aside. fi drl • Wben birds arc tender, remove fat rom ppmp io pui.. Add drippiop to sauce. Heat ~uce over medium hiab heat until hot. Pour over duck11na before tefVina. If desired, pmisb with parsley or watetcteu aprias and lemon .ahces. Carve or present a! table and take beck to kitchen to carve. Makes 4 servings . Sa.ct: I &abletpNlll Weteettenlllre u•ce 1 tabkllf 1 la NJ IAllCe Jalee .. 1 tars• lemOll I tabletfll•..,... . ' . In small saucepan, combine all angredien~s. Cook. at.irrin& ooca.sionally, over low heat until supr dissolves, about 3 minutes. Remove from heat. . ~Find a varie.tythat ·suits you to a tea Collection celebrates our ethnic cookery -... . . -... . ... .. .. . . -.. . .. ~ . . . . . Few treats lift the spirits hke a good cup of tea. But with so many varieties available, how do you know which ones to buy? By understanding the origi ns and processing methods for tea. you'll have a better chance of selecting the varieties best suited to your taste. Here's a briefintroducuon to tea and some of the types available. according to Country Home magazine. More than 3,000 varieties of tea are grown around the world, but all tea comes from the leafofthe Camellia sanensis plant. The fla vor of the leaves depends on the locauon, the time of packing, and the processing. l tis the processing, however. that produces the three basic types of tea: black, oolong. and green. Black and oolong tealeaves are dned after p1clung, cru!>hed to release their Juices. and left to ferment. A final heat- drymg stops the fermentation. Black teas are fermented the longest, gi vmg them the nchest color and most pungent f'lavor, oolong teas are partially fermented. Unlike black an<l oolong teas, green tea<; are not fermented. G reen teas taste most lake the fresh leaves. Tea varletiee • Assam as an unblended black tea from India. It has a strong fla vor. Ceylon 1s any of the many black teas grown an Sn Lanka. formerly known as Ceylon. In general, they are pungent and intense m fla vor · Darjeeling 1s a black tea grown in the Himalayan foothills and 1s delicately flavored. Earl Grer. as actually a blend of teas with a catrus-hkc aroma due to the add1t1on of 011 of bergamot. English Breakfast 1s a blend of Indian and Ceylon teas that makes a rich strong brew. flavored teas are black tea wath added natural or anafic1al flavonng~. <;uch as orange, strawberry. or cinnamon. Formosa Oolong. considered one of the world's best teas. as am ber colored. Gunpowder tea refers to green tea leaves that have been rolled into tiny pellets dunng processing. Herb tea can be made from any PC}rt -root. bark. flower seed -of a vanety of plants. such as peppermint. sage, and chamomile. t mh tea 1\ a blend of one part Ceylon tea to two parts Assam tea. Jasmine tea 1s a Chane<;e green tea scented with Jasmine blossoms Keemun, one of 1hc best Chmese black teas. ha<, a d1-;1inct1 ve aroma and nch taste Enter Now And Be Eligihle to Win $ 20000 of Home Deeor1tl19 Suppliet f ro111 CATEGORIES Best use of water in house or garden-do you hove ceramic mermaids 1n your spa ? Or do you hove a ~01 pond 1n your garden or fountains tn your foyer? Enter your display today. Best children's play area-Hos your chtld's sand box gone chic 2 M om & Dad, th rs coregory is for you to show us how creative you hove become to amuse your child. Best use of art in decorating-Ari lakes many forms, but we'll be the 1udge of that . Enter your besl use of art 1n decorating today Best overall kitchen-ls your kit chen country? Or 1s 11 on 80's" gourmet type. This catego ry is wide open or space soving11 if lhol's your type. CONTEST RULES '•\ ~-·•~t~erl''.1'...-••@•\6t..wt.e1 h'lf""lrtrf~·JC.JfJ' • ~' r,.y :tl-"7"""'fW' ~..it ,., .... ,, •-abt'.'otJ ~..,. "•o O'M'eft..,..,,,.., •t lo..,.~., """"'"'• '"• ~,, 10'"' """ l""t!!"• •ti.'"' :.l'~d"'-ltM'f ft--4 ... ff"'v\fbt Of'l'f"""PO".ed b'fDde\lt•J•hf,. yfl~ .... ~,., fr_, o;•c.•<q••V>t """'""• P''-'i*'V ~ rt.. Oo"v P~/H.irlt"'Of'"" &.txh Ind_.,..,, """ ron11<:•• bt ••• .. •o.1 ! .,., •• ""'" be "°''._,.,, b't W-y //\pl' 2 1986 o d!ol""'"° 1t1 llwt 0oJ1 ,._,. H ....... ~!>' e..oc• • .,_..,... < 0 l"''"G Soar .. ,_ ... 3JO w ao. '.>!• ... Cot•a """"' C,, 'n616 t., ~00 ""' I .... ~ ~Al 1986 W-t .,4 be 1-..,~"' VUf ... &\Cl '"O'"O' "' t • ·~ l••"'9 'icioc .. ' -''°" oo be~,......, Av• 11, 1'186 Doily ,olol/H<All•"Q!M ~t 1 .. 1•c'""".I""' ~-ore oOI elg.i... f,,.,.,..., """1 be 18 -· olol QI ow• ON!_,, ••><le ft •• Cio.t, ' ' -"'OfO" 8eorl> ~ C<tC...,...,., ,,, ... o...I; '«JiJtivM...qfJ'I &.c>r~ ... ~ ,_. "'"' 'r;q'~\ -· P'W>'OV',_ .... -~ """"" kJr-~·~ ... ..,. >I\ ~46 t. 'lllQ 11 H lfl>' '!.J"'I rtl"'~ .. ~OM\ """Y ..,..., "'°'• fhp Ql"e t.oteoor-v ~ ,,... (1l'WI ~'• P*' , .. ~.," .,,,, It ...... (/lftU)8retJ 0.,. ""'"""* P9' totepy -·be C-hOM"I LIVING SPACES ENTRY FORM I NTRANT'S NAMlt ADDllSS: DAY 'HONI NUMIH: IVINING ltHONI NUMIU: CATIGOIY: SEND INTlllS TO LIVING SPACE CONTEST c/ o DAil Y PILOT I HUNTINGTON BEACH INDEPENDENT 330 W. BAY ST. COST A MESA, CA 92626 J .._ ________________________________________________ __. ,. Make an edible basket For many of us, an Easter basket 17-inch vanilla layer cakes avail- . filled with chocolate bunnies, jelly able io the frozen food cabinet of beans and hand--Oecorated eggs is your local supermarket. The cakes 1nextncably entwined in our arc placed end-to-end and cut into a memones with the celebration of basic basket shape as outlined Easter. below. In ch aid hood. the day wasn't The details of the basket are complete until all had participated brought out with chocolate frosting I 1n the hunt fo r co lorfull y decorated piped through a pasy::y. j.Ll.J:>e, eggs hidden about the house and shredded coconut and -pecan }'ard. halves. Then the basket is filled W1th a bit of cuhnaf) magic. you waht a collection of jelly beans, can turn the traditional Easter nonpareils and a small chocolate frosting ba\ket into a luscious cake so that Easter bunny. l cu u•~ ouces) cltocolate 0 Ca h Ea t b k t As is evident from the simple fro1tl.Dg y u n a ve your s er as e Sw-t--..a ibr-..aded l"Al>ADat and eat 1t, too. recipe, this cake is easy enough to ~~ ..... llC'U llC'U '"""'" Consadcnng all the tame-con-do the day before and hide in the Peca.a blves sum mg prep? <lllo ns for the famil y refngerator until lime for the Easter Euler candy -jelly beans, Easter dmn r, few holiday cooks egg hunt to begin. cbocolate bD.DD.lea, cbocolate would want to add the chore of EASTER BASKET CAKE DODpareUs, etc. baking a cake. Not to worry. This % (17 ounce) vuUla layer cakes Pl.Dk rlbboD bow for decoratloD fabulou~ cake as created from two 1 can (lt"' ouces) vanilla Place cakes end-to-end on a 1----------------------------. serving plate and cut around outside edges to form a basket and handle as shown in illustration. Frost cut edges with vanilla frosting and sprinkle bottom part ofbaslcet with coconut. Pipe chocolate frosting across ...-------------------------· center seam where two calces meet, around handle, including where I I I PICK TREESWEET AND SAVE. Pi1:i.. u hu~h1.:I ol rrcc~\\ 1..'l'.t ' lluvor. :incl 'd' I.' 50( "hl..'n Hill hu\ Jm I \\ill ( 2 l H 01 lll' o4 Ol glu~~ hu1 tk.., lll f n:t:~wccr OrallJ.!l' lu1u .. <.1rdpdn11t luh.I..'. Pin!.. (1r,1p\'frui1 fll Kl' Ccx!..wil or Citru!I Combo luicc Cocktail. Whcn vou ~cc the TreeSwcct nmm:. }ou know you get that tn:~ WJ.:\:.l ta~tc. Clip thl' 1.:oupon now anu ~ave J hundh: on the: name and Hl~lc' that an.· truly fn.:~~Wl..'C.I ------------- 1 handle meets plate and around bottom of basket Fill basket with Easter candy and add bow to handle. Decorate with pecans. By CECILY BROWNSTONE .,,... .... Ellis Island. It has, of course, played an extraordinary part in American history. During its life as a U.S. immigration station (chiefly from 1892 to 1924) more than 12 million people passed through its Great Hall a.nd bega\D a new life in America. Ellis Island was abandoned until, in l 96S, it was designated as a National Monument and became part of the National Park Service. Recently a campaign was launched to ensure its p~ation. One of the projects whose proceeds arc devoted to help ac; complish this is a fascinating cookbook, "Tastes of Liberty: A Celebration of Our Great Ethnic Cooking." Chateau Ste. Michele, Washington State's pioneer wine producer, published the cookbook as a founding sponsor of The Statue oflibcny-Ellis Island Foundation. Stunning color illustrauons, binding, paper and type make this volume worthy of the finest cookbook collections. The recipes are well-chosen and clearly written. Chaplers, each with a worthwhile introduction, arc de- voted to recipes from Italy, Ger- many, Greece, Great Britain, East- ern Europe, Iberia. Scandinavia, France and Jewish cookery. From the chapter on Iberia, we chose to try Gambas al Ajillo (Garlic Shrimp) and found it de- licious -especially when served with crusty bread and white wine. "Tastes of Liberty" is available for a minimum $20 contribution to Tastes of Liberty Cookbook., Liber- ty Centennial Fund, P.O. Box 411 S, New York, NY, 10 163 . GARLIC SHRIMP (Gamba1 al AJUlo) % to 4 cloves garlic, peeled ud tltlaly sliced · ~ teaspoon dried red pepper flakes l bay leaf ~ cup olive oll '4 poand 1maU to medlom 1brlmp, 1belled ud develDed % tablespoons fresb lemoa jalce l to ! tablespoons cbopped f retll panley C~k ~~ic with pepper and bay leaf m 011 m large shallow skillet ?ver medium-high heat until garlic 1s golden, 3 to 4 minutes. Add shrimp and cook just until they tum pink, 2 to 4 minutes. Do not overcook. Remove bay leaf. Transfer to serving dish, sprinkle with lemon j uice and parsley and serve immediately. Crown Easter menu with lainb Whatever the weather. a special GOLDEN BA.KEO PEAS In W&e skillet, aautc onions in S eMlve, cerM ... ....,. ... meal that looks as sumptuous u it · WlTB ONIONS butter until aotden, •tinina oft.en. lamallfllaelleMebry,..,.._. wtes -aoc:essoriud with your t mMi .. ..._., aliee41 Blend in aoup, milk and peas. Pour .. ~ best table settinp -will lift ,,., eep Mtter er marp.rtae into individual ramekin• or but· l e9f Jarllber1 cMele cwt • everyone's spirits, includina the 1 cu (11'4 oaca) c.••..... tcred 2.qua.n ahallow bUina dish. ..,..,. cook's. tteam ef ~-'"P Top witJl all except 'h cup of the ,,., etap olive •ii This menu stars a perennial pany 1 c•p milk chceae. a au...,._. Ballamk or ,... favorite, crown roast of lamb, that t pacllqn (lt OUffl eadl) Bake at 3SO dq:rces for 30 wlM TtMpr would be perfect for Easter or, in fro1n peas minutes. Toss toaether K.avli 1,,., &ealfHU alppe• .all .,. fact, any other occasion when you •1. tea1pooe 1roud black pepper crumbs and melted butter. Sprinkle 14 aea,.. ~. ~ want to pamper family and close 14 tea1poo11 _.yme, cn.w over onion mixture. Bake S ,,., ceu,... l&ll friends. '4 poa4 Jarhbert dteeff, minutes lonaer, or until topping is '4 aeu,... pofPer All three recipes -which are 1uedded aolden. Makes 8 servings. t tablnpoou dtepped penley easier to prepare than you might 1t 1Ucn Weis Kavlt crlapbread Arrange arccns and cheese on think -are enhanced with a coaneJy cru1bled JARLSBERG ENDIVE SALAD servi~ platter. Blend remaining "surprise" inarcdient: luscious yet 14 np melted b•tter or marpr· ! Madt rad.lcelo, cored ... ingredients. Pour over salad. delicate Norwegian Jarlsberg IDe aeparated Makes 8 servinp. cheese. ,_._~._.___..._._._._._._~._--.._._._._._._._._._._._._._._._--._._._._._._._._._._._ ____ ._ ____ ._ __ ~--._~----._~ The savory stuffing in Scandina· vian Crown Roast, for example, is accented with mushrooms, almonds and the golden goodness of this excellent melting cheese. Simply blend filling, stuff cavity in roast and bake to desired doneness. Lamb should, ideally, be light pink m bue. An elegant side dish that's deccp. tivcly si mple to put together, Gold- en Baked Peas With Onions uses the shortcut of condensed soup and frozen peas. Combine ingredients in a slc..illet, pour into oven·proof dishes and bake. Jarlsberg har- monizes the subtle flavor of the vegetables and provides extra rich- ness. K.avli morsels make an at- tractive, crunchy topping. To complete the main course in style, the colorful, rather sophisti· cated JarlsbelJ Endive Salad gives a delightful, shg.htly tart counter- point -and can be assembled quickly. Jarlsberg mellows the flavor and, since it's comparatively low in both calorics and cholesterol, marries well with this healthful mix. SCANDlNA VIAN CROWN ROA.ST 1 crown roast of lamb (11 rlb1 ) Salt and pepper 1 pound ground lamb 1 cap 1Uced§ onions 1 YI cups ill ashroom1 Z tableapoona o 1 cup 1bredded carrot 1 1mall clove garlic, minced 'I• teaspoon crashed bay leaf 11• teaspoon cra1Jled marjoram 1 teaapoon 18lt 'I• te11poon coanely ground pepper % cups cooked rice 1 Y. cups shredded Jarlsberg chtt1e Y. cup toasted sliced almonds Z tablespoon• sherry Cover top of ribs with foil to prevent burning. Place roast on rack in shallow roasting pan. Season with salt and pepper. In slc..illet, brown ground lamb in oil, stirring to break into bits. Add mushrooms, onions and garlic. Cook several minutes, stirring often . Remove from heat. Blend in I cup Jarlsberg and remaining ingredients. Bake at 325 degrees for I hour, or until desired doneness. Top with remaining cheese. Return to oven to melt cheese. If desired, garnish with frosted grapes and gree n onion slivers. Makes 8 servings. Tasty sauce adds zest to seafood By CECILY BROWNSTONE ,.,, ......... If there's one Chinese dish that Amencans ha ve favored over the years it's shrimp or a whole fish served with a sweet and sour sauce. Should you be moved to try malc..ing Sweet and Sour Shrimp at home. I've found a splendid recipe for you . It comes from "Chinese Seafood Cooking" by Stella Lau Fessler (NA L·Plume). Although the author is at present li ving in China, during the years she worked on "Chinese Seafood Cook- ing" she divided her time between lecturing in Chinese at Cornell University and conducting classes in Chinese coolc..ing in her home. It's easy to tell, from her book. why her cooking classes became famous around Ithaca because her recipes sound particularly delicious and her directions arc extremely clear. SWEET AND SOUR SHRIMP 8·ounce caD anaweeteaed plaeapple 1Uce1 Sweet.-So•r Mlxtue, sff recipe 1 poud medlam 1brtmp (U to H) YI cap conatarcb 1 tablespoon medlam 1lllerry 1 tablnpooD aoy sauce 1-oace srea pepper knee red pepper vecetable oll Drain pineapple, saving juice ('h cup) for Sweet-Sour Mixture. Cut pineapple slices into small wedges. Reserve juice and wedges. Make up Sweet-Sour mixture and reserve. Shell and dcvcin hnmp. In a medium howl stir together com· starch, sherry and M>Y ~ucc unul smooth: add shnmp and mix well (Pleue ... 8JIRDIP /CA) PepSi 6-packs Wlth th• Ralph& lon\1.1 Coupon and th• P•P&l Coupon a.ailable at Ralphl. Fanner John Smoked Hain 10 lb.bag Russet Potatoes • U.S. No. l Brpwn 'n Serve Rolls 49 ==or l2C1.~ • •12 Gallon Tropicana Orange I 33 Juice 100% Pw•· • Cbw.d .,,, OQl c:tn. • 16oa. bag e · rices! 1460 ~~1: AA 50 OFF ~O!on • ~ umtt On• Item and One CO\IPOD .. cu.tom.I Coupon ElfectlTe Malcll 27lluu April 2.1916 Fresh Celery ~---.29 Ralphs Frozen ~s:~59 . ~· . < • • CUm.berland Cookware 1;..-o;:J 99 Saucepan tr1111 'aoo pwc1M1N onty I Prices effective March 27 thru April 2, 1986 c-...... ,...... -.. , c........., .......... ...__ ··f~.f· ""'' .... ~ ................. ~ .................. ...... .,......(_. __ -. ...... -,._ ... -.. -.. .... .,.... c_,,,..," ... ..._ .......... "-· It._ .. ,...,, -°"" -----~ Ralphs Orange Juice a...u.ct 100 ... rw.. \o\ 9QSJOOcta .so ~ __ ......... _ .. __ ~~~...:'~~:..:.:....:~............. .... . .......... ~.--~ .............. ~ ........................ .... ... ~.,.._ ... ,.,., ..................... -...... .._ ... ...,...,. __ ..,.. __ OrMge CoMt DAILY PILOT/ Wedneed-.y, Mwch H. 1988 .· Sweeten nutrition wit h bonbons Chocolate coated fruit a healthful candy substitute When the Easter bunny comes to call at your house on Easter Sunday, will his basket be filled with candy caas? While children delight in these sweets, parents, concerned about nutrition, might secretly wish he'd bring something else -carrot sticks, maybe; or whole wheat bread. BOlllUSS CHUCK ROAST ,,.,......___..._ ............. Smoe candy is the anticipated &ift. it's not likely that we can talk the Easter bunny out of brinaina them this year. But we miJht put in an order for Easter Sugar Plum Bon Sons this time. The secret ingredient to the Easter egg.shaped boo bon is a moist and tangy pitted dried plum -a prune! It's stuffed with a choice of delicious fillings, then simply dipped in white or dark chocolate. The bon boos arc appealingly decorated wiy.h rainbow-colored jelly beans, candied violets, choc- olate sprinkles and silver dragecs - as one's creativity inspires. Chocolate and prunes arc a classic combination. The deep, rich chocolate taste and t.anay fruit sweetness of prunes offer cxc1tina flavor contrasts, sophisticated enou'h for adults, yet equally pleasing to a child's sweet topth. SWISS SUGAR PLUM BONBONS I ouca 1eml1weet, milk or wlalte claocolate, coarsely cbopped l cup (about I ounces) pitted pruet Topptn11: Your cbolce of walnat piece., 1Uver1 of candJed oruge peel or staaer, cud.led violets, small Jelly beaa1 or silver dn1ee1 Melt chocolate in bowl set in pan of hot (not boiling) water over low heat. Stir occasionally until com· plctely melted and smooth. Re-- move from beat. (Chocolate should be quite fluid and barely warm.) Linc a baking sheet with foil. Holding I prune at a time on fork, swirl in chocolate, drain excess and remove to foil. Swirl tops with tip of fork, or decorate with toppings. Refrigerate briefly until set. Makes 12 to 24 bon bons depending on sizes o f prunes. c AllMOUR BOlllLISS TURKIY HORMIL BOlllLISS HAM FRISHSIA llASSFILLl'IS BEEF L& 1.39 FRESH OR FROZEN L& 1.69 CURE 81 O R CURE.MASTER L& 2.99 BAKE BROIL OR FRY L& 3.69 Hot or M ild Bake. Broil or Fry HUGHES ITALIAN SAUSAGE .. LS 1.99 FRISH MOllKFISH PILLl'IS ............... . 3; GREEN GIANT I lB PKG QUARTER STICKS 2.29 11 Oz Seasoned or Corn Breod MRS. CUBBISON'S DRESSINGS .99 NIBLETS .CORN M&M CANDY PLAIN OR 89 PEANUT I 160Z PKG • 20 O z. In Syrup Ass• DOLE PINEAPPLES .67 c • KllAn SALAD DalSSlllOS . __, 16·0z. Corton a.oz ASSORTED VARIETIES HUGHES SOUR CREAM .89 LARGE ,NAVEL ORANGES ~~·) c elXTRA LAll9I •IPI Pit Im OLIYIS SAN FERNANDO 99 b-OZ CAN • Fannings. 14·02. Jor BREAD & eunER PICKLES.... .. .. .. . . .69 HOH Coliforn10 Ctrl 6·0z Jar 8 Oz Pkg LARGE AVOCADOS EA .59 ARTICHOKE HEARTS EA .89 FRESH CARROT STICKS U.S No. I Potatoes EA A9 BAKING RUSSETS .. l B .19 IASTlll "'°" UICIALS ( ..... • wm •• n ) ~'J~~6\ COLOR 9 c Sock " c...._ .... TBAn) ~ ':9:. 92 92 i-lli ··-y //~''' PRINTS I ACM ~ All ,.INTS .. AT TIMI Of OtVILOt' & l'atNT l'WS f ~- 25-L& llAG CAL ROSI BOTAll RICI. SAS ,,, :.-:~ ................. 88 . f'll llGUlAI OtVILOf'INO CHAltOIS • C-41 l'tlOCISS ~ 110. 11• IJS, OISCS fllMS ONLY • ASA t00 & ..; 1000 SPUD FILMS 2S'. HIGHH ON OtVfl.Ot'tNG 17 Oz Package MARUCHAN YAKI SOSA A11nomoto. 1 29-0z. Bottle KATSUO HON OASHI 1.09 ... I lb Corton PRECIOUS RICOTIA CHEESE ........ 1.29 3·lb Pkg. LOOKIN LEAN OAK HAM ........................... 8.ff CHAllOI • ONI OAY 04t wt l'AY l'tl004tAM NOT IN l'llOCISSINO IY fJFICl DUalNO l'ltOMOTIONAl l'HIOO MAa. 21 '°90¥Af LA.S fHllU A .... 7, 1"4. ................... COOK'S CHAM•AeNI 750·Ml BRUT OR .....,;,,; EXTRA DRY 2.89 Smith & Hook 750 Ml PREMIUM CABERNET .... 7.M II ' 11 nna ~--..- 750Ml BOTTLE 3A9 .. ................. .. ...... TUI.IN 61NCH FOIL WRAPPED 6 lr\Ch Foti WropP9<f FRAGRANT FREESIAS 6-lr\Ch Foil WropP9<f HYDRANGEAS •INCH POT 3.99 .5.ff ..... NKU "'1C'ftvt t A.M. 1"HU9:l. MAK>t 17 ™9U wtD. AN l 1 .... UMlf ltCHfTI ..UWto.. MO IAIAI to DIALftS 04t WHOUSAUlll. NO CAM Of'ICOUNll ON AOVlllTlllD INOAU. d Na. •HC'lllf'I Af ""°9 -. ..,.._ (•••••••• '"a •1•) ./•···-··-. ••C11 •u.n ., .J'~· OPEN 6.99 White Ro.n 19 01 Condition« °' $HAMPOO 8 Oi . Howcuon Tropic DARK TANNING Oil 1.2• s.s• WI TAKI IGG COUPONS FROM ALL OfHER SUPERMARKETS* PWS. •• DOUBLE, TRIPLE AND PRODUCT COUPONS <>H.r ~·'-only to foot! ~rMOrt.ett In Lo. A,..tea. V.ntvnt & Onlnp Countle-. I (ovpo11 tombinotlOtl• ..... l(tl ~<Md h woil'9 (II .... ilMI Nit «<.,.... , bpi,.., C~· •• not ~ > C-""'ily .,,_._, ...... gnK.,., ""''"°" ~ -~ ..... °"~ ~ lOUflO" ~ ... .., ... 6 ~ "' .... ...... , Of' ,_,,.,., C»YPQI' ~ i., -..._.. ,roe• 7 It -do Nit •lo<lt the ,...,. ._.c1lt.c1 Of' ,_...,., c~ - wilt \ubtlllvt• ""'I , ..... o4 ~Mii-"!Jlve I liq.,ot IObo<co a dolry pl1lductt •..civet.cl 9 Mj«t IO IH'ftil\ lfflpt>Mld Of' eoth <Qv90ll IO Off.. gllOlf Maret\ 11 !Nv April , ,... II UnlH'l\1r9d Dovel• ~ Off.,.. l'IOI ett.,,.... 17 OH.. .,.,._. only IO l'f'W<llondo .. c~ ..... 1Am "" .. C ...... MAY U -~-'f'9 IAm LA CIM'ftl ....... KAAFT 8·0Z ·" 16-0z. lean, Corn Of Ml,..d ~ WEST· PAC VEGETABLES. . ...... .69 6-0i. ChMM 0t All lu"- SARA LEI CROISSANTS ....... 1.M Aut hor's de sserts fabulous Marlene Sorosky, who lives in California and teaches classes all over the country, also writes cook.books. Her recipes are never far out, yet they are new and interesting. Her latest effon is .. The Dessert Lover's Cook.book," a handsome volume illustrated with color photographs showing both step-by- step teehniqucs and the finished dishes. Herc is one of her specialites. IRISH CREAM MOUSSE % caps lrilll Cream Uqaear 1 eavelope aaflavored gelatla 14 cap cold water 3 larce eu•. aeparated ud at room temperat.re •;,cap aagar 1 cap plat I &ablespoon1 wlaJp- plng cream Make Irish Cream Liqueur at least one day in advance. Lightly oil a S· to kup decorat- 1 ve mold. Stir gelatin into cold water; set aside to soften, S minutes. Whisk egg yolks in top of double boiler off heat until blended. Whisk in I cup Irish Cream Liqueur. Place over sim· mering water and cook, stirring constantJy, with a wooden spoon until mixture feels hot to the touch and is thick enough to leave a pattern when you run your finger along the wooden spoon, about 8 to 10 minutes. Do not boil. Remove from heat and immedi- ately add softened gelatin, stirring until dissolved. Transfer mixture to medium-size bowl and place in larger bowl of ice water. Stir occasionally until mixture thickens to consistency of mayonnaise and begins to set. Remove from ice water. Meanwhile beat egg whites in large mixing bowl with electric mixer on low speed until foamy. Gradually beat in sugar, I table· spoon at a time, until stiffbut moist peaks form. Gently spoon whites over top ofliqueur mixture; do not mix. Beat I cup of the whipping cream in the empty bowl with electric mixer on low speed until thickened. Beat on medium speed until soft peaks form; do not beat stiff. Fold whites and liqueur mixture into whipped cream until blended. Pour into mold. Cover with plastic wrap and refrigerate until set. Tomakcsaucestirtogether I cup Irish Cream Liqueur and 6 table- spoons whipping cream. Mousse and sauce may be refrigerated, covered, overnight. Before serving, run knife around edges of mousse and dip mold briefly in warm water. Unmold onto serving plate, slice and top with sauce. Serves 6 to 8. SHRIMP ... Prom CS to coat; reserve. Seed and derib green and red pepper; cut into about l/..-inch squares. ln a I 0-inch skillet., over medium heat., beat one tablespoon oil. Add peppers and stir-fry for a minute or two. With a slotted spoon remove ~ppera and reserve. Wipe skillet with a paper towel and set aside for later use. In a wok, heat two cups oil to 375 degrees. Add half the reserved shrimp, one at a time, and fry until &olden brown and crisp -a few minutes. Remove shrimp to peper towels to drain. Repeat with re- mainina shrimp~ reserve. Into the 10-inch skilJet over medium heat pour the reserved Sweet-Sour Mixture and, stirrina constantly, cook until clear. thickened and boilina. Add n> served pineapple wedaes. peppers and shnmp. Miit and reheat briefly. Serve hot with rice. Makes 4 main- disb scrvina,s. SWEET-SOUR MIXTURE: Jn a small bowl stir toaether one table- spoon comsta.n:b and 3 table· 1poon11upr. OT.dually whitlc io v, cup pineapple juice (reterved ftom pincapl)le slioes), "4 cup cider vinepr, V• cup ketchup and l v, tcu~ns soy •uce until smooth. Stiran 16.nelychoppedprlicclovc. .. I I I Orenge CoMt DAILY PILOT/Wedneeday, M81'c::h 29, 1Ne SALE TODAY THAU SATURDAY. MARCH 29th OUANTITV AlOHTS RCSERllED ~.......,. Av....,._ At All llotea . Today's Neighborhood ·Drugstore •Shampoo or Finishing Rinse, 12 ounce •Body Glaze or Style Fix 8 ounce •Mousse, 6 ounce •Styling or Sculpting Gel 4 ounce Neutrogena Soap Regular, Oily, For Ory Skin, Unscented or Unscented Ory 3.5 ounce Bar 111 Our Regular 1.87 Scope Mouthwash 333 Our Regular 4.49 No Nonsense Fashion Color Panty Hose Sheer To Waist Assorted Colors & Sizes 149 Our Regular 2.49 Intrigue Mini Turbo Hair Dryer 1250 Watts Modef #PV95C 599 Our Regular 9.99 llll P'r111 f.a. ...... .......... YOUR ANAL COST Afrln Nasal Spray · Regular or Menthol 0.5 ounce 211 Our Regular 3 39 10 count 219 Our R~ul1r 3 39 3.69-3.77 1.99 -1.50 .49 .. *Cadbury's Mini Eggs Solid Milk Chocolate With A Sugar Shell 6 ounce Bag 69 *Chuckles Jelly or Ju Ju RabbHs 11 ounce Bag YOUR CHOICE *Palmer Peanut Buddy 6 ounce Bag ~· -----129 ·sony, No Aa1nc:hecila llvea llolaturl:ilng l.allan For Skin Care 10ounce 189 Our Regular 2.89 TlllllS AllllM:ld T1llleta A11<>'1ed Flavors or Peppermint 75 count 133 Our Regular 1 99 Flfttaltlll Spray Cleaft8r 32 ounce 99¢ Our Regular 1 69 Scott hbyfresll ...... Scented or Unscented 80 count 219 Our Regular 3 19 ---------- *Palmer Easter Eggs Double Crisp or Solid Milk Chocolate 8 ounce Bag YOUR CHOICE 149 *Cadbury's Miik Tray Assorted Chocolates 1 Pound Box 9 Our Regular 5 99 *Marshmallow Bunnies By Rodda 12 Pack. 3-318 ounce 79 *Plush Pals & Pets 100 Assorted Colors & Sizes SPRING COLOR SPREE ! Revlon Mascara 5 Shades & 6 Types 299 Our Regular 4.35-4. 75 Cover Girl Pro Eye Shadow Assorted Shades 98¢ Our Regular 1 59 l'Oreal Upstlck Perle or Creme 299 Our Regular 4.85 ~ • 1 , al Orange Coat DAILY PILOT I Wedneeday, March 26, 1986 Elegant Peach Cream Roll a fabulous finale for Easter Put aside the 1elly beans and chocolate rabbits and add these festive, spring-like recipes to your basket of Easter goodies. When it comes to Easter Sunday dinne(, there are several schools of thought: some prefer a nice 'glazed ham; others wouldn't dream of celebrating the holiday with any- t.hing but a roast leg oflamb. For those in the latter category, here's a savory rcipe for lamb that'~ a perky takeoff on the traditional method of preparing lamb with coffee . Instead of coffee, coffee liqueur is used for basting, adding an enticing and elegant new dimension to the lamb. The Easter Ca.Ice is a traditio nal part of the holiday feast in many countries. Great Britain has its simmel cake, made with butter and fruit and decorated with almond icing. Russia has its spectacular pashka, a pyramidal cake decorated with fresh spring flowers, glaceed fruits and colored Easter eggs at the base. And the custom of eating hot cross buns is said to stem from the small wheat cakes eaten at ancient spring festivals in honor of Astarte, the Phoenician fertility goddess. CHAO'S DINESTY Herc's a cake recipe that's a perfect way to celebrate Easter and herald the new spring season: Peach Cream Roll. This luscious de. ~'!rt starts with angel food cake, into which is rolled a cream filling with the delightful taste of fresh peaches that comes from the addition of peachtrce schnapps. The cream filling is also spread over the outside of the jelly roll and sprinkled with coconut to create a truly tempting Easter treat. Add the finishing touches; pastel linens and bunches of dafTodis, jonquils or hyacinths for a picture- perfect Easter spread. COFFEE ROASTED . LEG OF LAMB 5 to I poud I~ of lamb, trimmed of fat ~ teaspoon H it 14 teaspoon pepper ~ cap coffee Uquear 1 ~caps water, clJvided 1 ~ teaspoons corn1tarcb Sprinkle lamb with salt and pepper. Place lamb, fat-side-up, in shallow. metal roasting pan. Roast in a preheated 325-0egree oven 45 minutes. Roast 45 minutes longer, basting several times with coffee liqueur. Add Yi cup water to roasting pan to prevent drippings from burning. Remove meat to serving platter. Allow to "rest'i J 0 minutes before carving. Pour remaining I cup water into roasting pan. Heat on top of stove. scraping up bits from bottom of pan. Combine cornstarch with I tablespoon water; stir into pan. Cook, stirring constantly, un til mixture boils; boil 1 minute longer. Serve gravy witJl sliced lamb. Yield: 8 servings. PEACH CREAM ROLL l packa1e (U w 11 OUCH) an1el food cake mill Conf ectioner1' su1ar l lar1e ea 1 eu yolk ~ cap but1er or mar1arlae ~cup 1a1ar 6 tablespoons peacb tree sclmapps, clJvided l cup beavy cream :v. cap flaked coconut, H1btly toasted Prepare cake mix according to package directions. Line a 10 x J 5- inchjelly roll pan with waxed paper or aluminum foil. Spread cake batter in pan. Bake in a preheated 350-degrec oven 30 minutes or until cake springs back when lightly pressed with finger tips. Immediately tum cake out onto a towel dusted with confectioners' sugar; remove waxed paper. Start- ing at short end, roll up cake loosely in towel. Place on rack: cool completely. Lightly beat together egg and egg yolk. In medium saucepan melt butter over low heat. Remove from heat. Stir in sugar and beaten eggs. Return to heat. Beat with wire whisk until mixture boils and thickens. Place saucepan in bowl with ice; chill, stirring often. Stir in 2 tablespoons schnapps. Remove from ice. ln small mixer bowl, whip cream with remaining4 tablespoon schnapps until stiff peaks fonn. Gently fold cream into egg mixture. Unroll jelly roll; trim edges. Spr~d with two-thirds of the cream filhng; roll up. Place on serving plate, seam side down: spread remaining fi ll ing ·over outside of jelly roll. Sprinkle with coconut. Garnish with straw- berries and mint, if desired . Chill 2 to 3 hours before serving. Yield: 8 to 10 servings. Young family winery winning its share of awards Gene Hallock has a perpetual twinkle in his eye. So does his wife Rosalie. for that matter. The reason? Their Ballard Canyon Winery has come a long way m nine years. and the awards keep rolling tn. Cons1dcnng that the) only made 1.200 cases 1n I 978. and are at current production of 20.000 cases, the 90-plus ma~or awards garnered have a special significance. This 1s a small family wrnery competing with the big suys. and grabbing some of their glory. Gene Hallock still refers to himself as a farm boy from Wyom· mg. Well. he's not. although after the first meeting you may consider him one of your new best friends. He went to dental school. moved from the cold Northwest (where he casuall) became mterested in grape growing because a fnend was in the business) to settle his family in Santa Barbara and opened a prac· t1ce. Hobbies are nothing more than che subconscious telling us what really makes us happy tn life Gene's former interest in grape growing turned into a hobby and he began to invest 1n vi neyards. Both he and his wife decided to look for a place to plant some vines, with the idea of selling all the grapes near their Santa Barbara home. Fifty acres were found north of Solvang. The twist tn the story came when the first harvest turned out to be such good grapes that Gene couldn't bear to sell them. He took destiny in his hands and made his own wine -while still running a thriving dental practice. The wines. in short supply, were qu1ckl} sold out. and they decided to move from the city to the vrneyard property. For four years, Gene commuted to his dental practice, while he also ran the winery with Rosalie. In 1982. the practice was sold. the 1981 Chardonnay took a gold medal at the prestigious Orange County Fair, and a new day was dawning for the Hallocks. A wine- maker was hired and Gene began to spend more ttme on the road talking with restaurateurs. wine ~nters. and the public. Several people recently got together to ti) the wines currently available. We tned them dunng a dinner: however, we also tasted each one alone to find out how well they stood up by themselves. Here are notes on what to expect from each of the "'ines. All wines arc 100 percent 'anetals We began wnh the 1984 Fume Blanc. Two-thirds of this wine was aged and fermented 1n French oak barrels. one-third in stainless steel, resulting in a well-rounded wine that is full of fruity character. Well balanced now but with the poss1- b1ht) of furtherde,elopment w1th a couple of years of cellanng. A natural for fish. chicken or non- sp1cy appetizers. $8 retail. In sticking 10 the philosophy of not malOng wines beyond the palate of the consumer, the 1984 Chardon· nay may long be remembered after the pnce 1s forgotten At S 12 a bottle. 11 1s nch. but not over- powenng. with butte!) undertones and hints of oak. It will retain some of the varietal fruit character even when cellared due to the stain· less/oak fermentation blend. Dr. Hall ock·., personality and conv1v1al nature comes through in ht~ 198~ Dr's run Baby Chardon- nay. This reall) reflects the bemes EVERYBO MAKE SURE HONEYBAKED BRAND HAM IS THERE. ORDER YOUR EASTER HAM TODAY! FtFI CHAO from which it came, and although it has a lot ofbody, it was fermented at colder temperatures to produce a wine quite suitable for casual drink- ing or with lighter first courses of a meal. It retailed for $8.95 and was a big seller, so some should still be available in the better wine shops. Blush wines have become very popular and the 1985 White Cabernet has luscious pinkish color. is ofT-Ory with fruit and spice flavo rs in the mouth. It retails for $5.15. G I Half or Whole Honey Baked brand hams he~ hM! 111mntlld IOI llO '"' l!lln ....... Ml..., ..... IOI euy ~ I • Party naya • Gtft Certificates • Fully Cooked Berbecued Rlbe • FrHh Oven Roeated and Smoked Turkeya • Nationwide Shipping Yo111 •111111 Holllyltktll tlOlf is MAHflM Tht V1U1;1 C1nter 1222 So 81oothurst 92804 (II 8111 Ro1d) Phone (714) 8~ 2461 COHH DlL MAI 3700 E Cotst Hwy 92625 Phone (714) 673·9000 UTORO ?4601 Raymond Way l'J (Bell lower Pim North 11 El loro Road) 92630 Pllone ( 714) 837 382? HUNTINGTON IEACM 1CI069 Bear.II Blvd 92848 (Neal 10 R11~ M1t~e1 11 Gart11!ld) Phone (714) 848 8575 f I ORANlll 1419 H Tustin (at ICltellt) 92667 Phone (714) 991-9960 RANCHO MIRAll 71 6'34 Hwy 111 92270 Phone (619) 346·3894 lllVHSIDI ~? 76 AlhllQIOn Ave (H•rdman Cen1e1) 92504 Phone 1714) 688 9681 HON EYBAK ED TM ,.o.,rv11 .. ro .~.,,.. .... olftvl-~fO oeo .,. ,. ... ,. t •t •t flllie HIH'Y J HMft.ei .. , r.v•- The '85 Johannisberg Riesling made a big hit with everyone. Its long finish and balanced flavors, intense fruitiness and smooth tex- ture enhanced our shellfish casserole with a creamy herb sauce. It has a remarkably low suggested retail of only $7.50. The 1982 Cabernet is about to be released. It has a lot of. body and rich. varietal character. The tannfos are still somewhat forward suggest- ing that some cellaring will produce a smooth, elegant wine in 5 to I 0 years. Retail is $9. A natural for red meat and game. Both the '83 and "84 (to be released about July I) Muscat Canneli are very distinctive wi nes. They are holding aromas of jasmine and light citrus. and the '84 has j ust a hint of spice. With 3.2 percent residual sugar. this wine goes well TOMATO SALAD Peel and slice two fi ne tomatoes. Put them into a salad bowl and add a hberal quantity of grated Parmesan cheese, a tablespoonful of oil. two tablespoons of a dry white wine and salt and pepper. Toss and serve. (This salad was served at the tum of the century at Astor House, New York's first great hotel.) with dessert, but also should not be overlooked as an aperitif. The 1983 won a gold medal. Suggested retail is $8. The 1982 Zinfandel is in current release and holds a lot of aging potential. Deep color, full body. nuances of oak and raspberry aromas combine to give it a rich character. Keep it I 0 years for a real surprise. $8 pnce. Shouldn't you always save the best for last? Just wait till you taste the '84 Johannisberg Riesling Re- serve and the 1982 Cabernet Re- serve! Reserve wines. of course, always denote one that the wine- maker deems exceptional. Well, the Reserve Riesling is $9 a bottle, has 4 perce nt residual sugar, comes from a line of gold medal winners and is an elegant, refined dessert wine. If you love fruit and honey, wait till you taste this one. As for the '82 Cabernet Reserve. only 900 cases were made. it is released penodicaJly to maintain even su pply and it was aged a long time in oak to give 1t depth and character. It has a lighter body. more 1n the French Claret style, cherry, choc- olate and coffee aromas and, though a smooth and supple wine now, I'm hiding my few bottles for about 7 to I 0 years. It cost me about $12 a bottle. and that is probably going to tum out to be quite a bargain. The winery is at 1825 Ballard Canyon Road, Solvang, and they encourage you to come and have a tour and lunch on their patio. For more information , phone 805-688-7585. Salmon Mousse cool buffet en tree Ata warm weather buffet party, serve a cooling smoked salmon mousse. Its pastel pink color contrasts nicely against rounds of cucumber and lemon. Small roulades of salmon are served alongside as edible garnishes to denote their use in the mousse. Watercress spngs complete a bright green finish in the center of the ring mold. Cold, savory mouses are smooth in texture and do not necessarily contain egg. The smoked salmon is either minced or processed and bound with either butter, becbamel (white sauce) or mayonnaise. This lower-calorie version contains ricotta cheese and plain yogurt. Since the mixture is robe molded, the mousse is set wi th a very small quantity oh.elatin. SPRINGTIME SALMON MOUSSE Z eggs, bard-cooked t ouncea (3 package~. 3 ounces eacb) smoked salmon 1 cup eacb rtcoua cbeeae and plain yogurt 11• cup cbJcken1tock 1 pacb1e1elad.D (anflavored) ~ cup wlllpplag cream Garnish: SIJced cacamber, balved cbelT)' toma toes, w1tercre11, 1Uced bard-cooked egs (! eacb) Hard-cook the eggs. Meanwhile, processor puree the salmon nccota and plain yogurt. Add 2 hard-cooked eggs and process until smooth. Soak gelatin in chicken stock, dissolve it over gentle heat and mix into the salmon muturc. Whipcreamandfoldinto mousse. Tum into 1 'h pint ring mold. Refrigerate until set. Tum out onto serving dish. Garnish with cucumberandcherry tomatoes. Placcwatercresssprigsincenterofmousse. Top with hard- cooked egg slices. Makes 8 to 12 servings. --------- 5 C ! I E' ~• I I I I I TNll'Ol,ODCOflllla OO I 054980 25500 75140 I '-'----'• -------------------------- r Slicing through confusibn over best bread buys Thompson Seedless ~a., S.-Cend Crunchy lb Large Navel Oranges S--.Jiitcy Ripe Hass A vocados S... Fe--c.Mon.. c:;.o.,.., Fresh Green Beans Frnl\..._Uo./8 Fresh Spinach """"'Ol4lt I ~ 2.99 Fresh Jicama a.wt "" Snldle Mcintosh Apples U.1.MplW~,...... ..... .119 Large Cantaloupe ......... F...-. White Rose Potatoes ~ F--Bolit Bell OI fry <.• ••,,..,a ... .-."'.....,,__..,.,...,.~ .... ,..... .... .. --.. -·-,~-· ............ ,, .. _,_, .. -n. ...... -.. °"""'-loo .... --,_..,~..-................ .._. ............. ,.,_., ............ __.. ......... __._ Princella Cut Yams .89 2')-0uraC.._ laura Scudder's Potato Olps79 T-Pltk-7~ Big, IJmt 2 lier 0-.... e Martinelli Sparkling Oder ~A~Boalt Folgers Flaked Coffee 11u1Dll1'4> .. ~111.--ll~C.. Heinz Sweet Pickles 22~.Jet French Fried Onions ~U-OunctC.. Vons Mixed Nuts 11~C.. Del Monte Fruit Cocktail 170..-C.C:.. French's Salad Mustard &nu.1'9t'•-~Jat Miniature Marshmallows Vot'9-I 60ure't &g Heinz White Vinegar )2(N-n8ofdf Kell~gs Com Flakes '~. Carnation Coffeemate l~&o<• Vons Pitted Olives ..... -.-60un<T c:.. Cranberry Sauce 0.-. Sp.y-~ 16-<Na c.. Strawberry Preserves TfOPbf-lao.-. JIN Stouffer's Entrees 6 ~ ........... -~.7to12-0a.lb Vons Cut Green Beans ..,. .. ,.~c ..... .-a..200L a. 119 269 139 .79 199 .75 .85 .59 .69 144 199 .89 .69 149 .99 .79 Jerseymaid Ice Cream 2~ 300 0..--Hi# Golor'I C.-. 7 ..,_,_ II Citrus Hill Orange Juice 110.-tC.,. Aunt Jemima Waffles ,.,..~twlll;t ........... I~&> Chef Pierre Cherry Pie Mlirrowe¥P ll<~ eo~ Bridgford 'White Bread n.,'G"-41Klo IN? ,.. Swanson Fried Chicken ~ ,_ 100uncT !loot Old Chicago DeJuxe Pizza ~C')lltl 7)()o E .-.O-~ .99 .79 249 125 359 149 All. STORES OPEN EASTER SONDAY, MARCH 30 Fanner J ohn Hams SmcMd. Fully CooMd ~OIBull~ ' umt One Pw CUii. Lb. Dubuque Boneless Ham Ao,9~-~~s...uo Pillsbury Crescent Rolls ~~ 7 8 99 .89 Philadelphia Cream Cheese 89 !(..ti 8-d~........ . ~~~~r Pickles 129 Vons Potato Salad 89 I~ C.0.-(l"«wonl 01 0. Si9w 14°'-1519) e Duly Flan, Caramel Flavor 119 Of v.1111 ,..,. __ 88-0unco ~ Delicieux Cheese Sp~ W\ltia.tc-~~~~ .99 Imo Flavored Dips 79 Fo.1t """--l~C..... e Gallo Chablis B&anc 1s-~ 349 "'-...., "-.. "-Y~ ~ ec... Beringer White Zinf andel 319 7»,.. .. 8ottlr ~c'!£~~~~~ 198 Mondavi Table Wine 419 --Of Awd-1~ 9a41IC J f, B Scotch Whisky 969 7'0--... lloltlo 1 !h-Lb. Lonf Egg Bread --Send...m Of 5-rlf Hot Cross Buns Old Fashioned Donuts ~-"'""'•0-..UW.. Easter Glory Cake Vtww-2U"9' Aaua Frati T oothpate 4~T.- Usterine Mouthwash llMllll*-»~ ..... White Rain Shampoo -~ lao.tt.._......._ .89 125 109 339 1'' 299 111 ~\8~M. -·;TO !5 P.M. ii ... ~· .... -- . ... The •ore Store. Vons Large Grade AA ~~ Umltl~ Pw Cl.Ill. (WI~) Who~ Briskets s..tU~ ~ 9""' Beef Rib Roasts lJ> 169 Boneless Rib Eye Steaks 329 S... USO A 0..,. llMf Lb Fresh Roasting Chicken 89 Ptl • ""6t lb • Hormel Cure 81 Hams 298 -... -lb Wilson·s Boneless Hams 239 mFetF--Wl-°"8 01HoneyC.....S lb Leg of Lamb f'1( .. 149 F~Z-\ Lb Table King SUced Bacon IMNn"'°'"""' Fresh Rainbow Trout Fresh Red Snapper ,,..._,.. 149 Lb 169 ..... 229 ~s.£!~~1ystone C'8m! .99 -- Imperial Margarine I ........., """-4 C.- Jersevmaid Sour Cream ·~(..,., Vons Butter ,......,..~-·c.- Jersevmaid Topping ,~~c... .59 .89 179 .79 Minute Maid Orange Juke 159 ...... "'(""""' ,.,.._..... Cilllfl c..- • ( ' . OrMQe ~DAILY ptLOT/ w.ctMeday, March 2e, 1Ne CouPoN CuPPER Refund, promotion con!Jlct . . sumer promotions for their brands Dar Jue -1 n:ioently sent for a s1t~t1on. A tc~ weeks later, I that they foraet the possibility that manufacturer's offer of a free 32-received a ni~e letter frC?m some of their offers may overlap. ounce jar of Prego spaahettj sauce. Campbell's thanking me for calhng These things happen, and when As I was puttina the two Prego the coupon problem to their ancn-JANE the aware consumer finds ltimself labels in the envelope, l notiocd that tion. . . or herself caught in the middle, tbe there were 2Ckent Prego coupons They sai~ a mark~tma. manager thing to do is to pick up a pen and printed on the backs of each label. would look into the snuat1on. They f ULLER write to the manufacturer. Your Much as I wanted those coupons. aJso enclosed four 50-«nt coupons. letter shows that it is well worth the l decided not to cut them out, I was certainly pleased wtth their time and effort. because I did not want to take a response. I was even more please<,t Dear Jue -I asked my 12-year- chance of having my request for a when I was able to d~uble . ~e coupon situation is an example of old son Greg to &'? through my free jar rejected. coupons at my local Wmn-Dix1e. the multi-offer confusion that coupon file and discard aU the But J did decide to write to -Mn. A.T. 1D1bam, Ft. Pierce, seems to be a growing problem for coupons that had expired. In re- Campbell's makers of Prego, and Fla. marketing executives. tum, J promised to give him the tell them I was unhappy with this Dear Mra. IDgbam -The Prego They jll'e so busy planning con-coupon money I saved on my r,tcxt ge assortment of Canctf, Besl<ets.· Grass. -Eaa Deooratlng Klt9. Cards and-many other Easter Items, for you~shopplng convenlenoe. ~ BEEF LARGE END Rib ALL PURPOSE Gold Medal Flour AU """'°" JUM _, ....... - 5-LB. trip to the supermarket. My savings arc usually$3or$4. Gregjumpcd at the opportunsty and did a wonder- ful job. The following weekend, he de- cided to tag along and help me do my g.roccry shopping. When we got to the supermarket, we were both surprised to see that it was Double Coupon Day! . Using my coupon file as a guide, Greg and I w~lked up and ~own the aisles, searching for bargains. You can imagine his excitement as the .coupons were totaled and doubled. They added up to $20.17 in savings. Perhaps other readers can use this idea to ease the chore of updating their coupon files. - Diana Tlddle, Diamond Bar · Dear Diane -Good idea. You are also training a smart shopper of the future. Keep it up!Herc is this week's list of refund offers. Start looking for the required refund fonns, which you can obtain at the supermarket. in newspaper and magazine advertisements and from trading with friends. Meanwhile, start collecting the needed proofs of purchase as de- tailed below. Remember, some offers are not available m all areas of the country. Toda7's refund offers have a vaJue o $7.27. These offers require refund forms: BAN $1.59 Refund Offer. Send the required refund form and the entire carton back panel from one Ball Roll-On 1.5-<>unce, along with the cash-register receipt with the purchase price circled. This offer has no exfiration date. FACT 2 Refund Offer. Send the required refund form and the UniversaJ Product Code number from the bottom of your Fact Pregnancy Test. along with the Cash-register pnce circled. Expires April 30, 1986. FLUORIGARD . S 1.50 Refund Offer. Send the required refund form and two front labels of either 12-ounce or 18-ounce Fluorigard. Expires April 30, 1986. GOOD NEWS! Refund Offer. ·Send the required refund form and the cut-out proof-of-purchase seals from the back of a Good News! or Pivot packa$e (five or more razors). Expires Apnl 30, 1986. LISTERMINT Free Offer. Re- ceive a coupon for a free 18-ounce bottle of Listermint with Fluoride. Send the required refund fonn and two labels with Universal Product Codes from 18-ounce or larger Listennint with Fluoride. Expires April 30, 1986. Meat Dept. Savings Frozen Food Favorites Garden Fresh Produce Authority to examine food technology Canned Ham .·:"·" Turkey·Breast ·~·.,:· Sl iced Bacon ... Fresh Ducks Shrim p ···· Ground Beef Lunch Meats Corn Dogs Broccoli Spears 9,~0SETE Birdseye Peas ~~~~~E Vegetables i~~~~:?· Mixed Vegetables glJJHf Big Ear Corn H,q~l·' White Rolls BR•[MORO White Bread BR· K.•ORO Orange Juice ~~~~~:t uoz gac l849C fACH 7~ LB 1~ Compare these Low Prices Grocery Specials IN SYRUP CHIJt-u<S GRUSHEO OR sur::rn Dole Pineapple 6fr.07 Cranberry Sauce ~·.~~~~=°" Pitted 01 ives ..:::~ Heinz Sweet Pickles French 's Mustard Rice Krispies ·, ~ · Jiffy Baking Mix Sun-Maid Raisins J~~.wN Jell-Q ro•ui···•·•nu ·~z sa.49 lAD< sa.59 White Plates ~~~!N°• .~, S2.19 Planters ' Peanuts ~:tfa:·;,:z s1.69 Uncle Bens Rice ~~OllAIN t.Ol s1.19 Chai lenge Butter s~iFlttio.. 18Ql 51 .99 Parkay Margarine w.rir., •6-01 SSC .. "" 55c Cream Cheese ~~~:,U,...,4 ~Ol age ggc Stater Bros. Chees~:~i'lE~rs1 .29 s1.09 Pepsi Cola ~~~if~~:f(l()ll~l ' .. uoz s1 .49 Reynolds Foi I IOOSO n Sutter Home :z~~f•NOfl Riesling Wine lf:~~*m& Inglenook :~:1L~~(S Scoresby Scotch I & lntll S2.99 ''lll•ll" s10.99 Michelob Beer REGULAR OR LIGHT DOTI LES '""°' s4. 79 80 PROOF CANADIAN Lord Vodka Calvert fllll/ .99 99.99 1 JS.LITER 1.75-LITEA Kamchatka . , 57c s1.49 ..,ca uncnn 1 ft1LL DA r• ADVERT1SED rTEM .. 0/ age ·~C)/ ggc •Ol sac --~ .... _ ..... ____ ~ -----.,,,--~ _,..___ I , ___ ..... ..,....,._____ ~ r• -- ... .... y.,. ... n.r ... .. .... 2' • 29 .... 30 3I • 2 WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT OR REFUSE S.TO COMMERCIAL DEALERS OR WHOL.ESALEAS. GUARANTEE We atlM to ,_... on Nnd IUfllCllnl lll)Ck OI ICMll1._, ~ It, dut to oondlOont ~ our OOl'lllOI. -Nfl ouC of en .,,,.,.., "**1, a RAIN CHE.()( wtl bl_. elWlllnQ ~ IO~ fie._,, .. lf'9 ~pi-. M IOon -" ~ l\lalllbll 111 wlUltrl S) Olyl ..--. -----------.... ~ ~·.· .. ·.) 50 Golden Year ~) .. Ar~_!'rnr~r1r,:H1 Tr;irJ1t1r;~1 ~J!J (J 11lrJ1·r1 '(•,r1t', /,r1 hr111~11<.d11 lr,itllt1(>f1 ( ... )·~ J "New Food Technologies: Con- sumer, Regulatory and Scientific Concerns" will be examined by a University of Minnesota food sci- ence professor at the next lecture 1n the Chapman College food science and nutrition scnes. Theodore P. Labuz.a will talk at 7 p.m. April 3 in Hashinger Auditorium on the Orange campus. His major research focuses on the physical chemistry of foods with emphasis on kinetics and water activity. He also 1s concerned with the impact of food laws and ~ulations on research, as well as with shelf life testing. for information on the senes, caJI 997-6649. ••• Cooking for Couples will be presented at 6 p.m. April 4 at Piret's Perfect Pan School of Cooking in South Coast Plaza. Instructors will be Dee Biller and John Harrington; cost is $35. For information, call 556-6424. • • • Do-ahead Phyllo Entree will be demonstrated by Kay Pastorius at 6:30 p.m. April 3 at My Favorite Things Cooking School. J 4370 Culver Drive, Irvine. Fee is $30. For infonnation. call 552--0221 . • • • Cathy Thomas and Sue Young of the TasHna Spoon will present fHt international hors d'oeurves at Brock-Moore, Laguna Niguel at 10:30a.m. and 6:30p.m. on April 3. Cost is $25. For information, call 495--0445 . • • • Sowa Hitomi wiH perform a traditional Japanese tea ceremony at 2 p.m. April 6 in the Rendezvous Lounae of the new Otani Hotel and Garden, Los Angeles. Sowa will explain the etiquette ol the omote scnke ceremony that date back to the 16th century. Sht will also demonstrate how guest~ should accept their tea to show thci 1 appreciation to the ho t The hotel is located at 120 S. Los Angeles St. phonc{213)629-1200 Worthy sparks Lake.rs DENVER (AP) -Jamn Worthy scored 11 of bis 30 points in the finaJ seven minutes Tuesday night as the Los Angeles Lakers defeated Denver, 121-115, to end the Nuggets' threc- pme winning strcalc over the defend- ing NBA champions. The Lakers have won 13 or their last 14 games in improY'ing their record to 56-17, second only to Bostorf's 58-13. Denver fell I 'h games behind idle Houston in the bartle for the Midwest Divison lead. '"Ale Nuggets won the scuon series from the Lakcrs, 3-2, the only team besides Boston to claim that distin~ ti on. Los Angeles led the entire final three quarters, building its advantage to 81-66 early in the third period following a 12-0 run. Denver put together an 8-0 streak early in the fourth period to close within 102-96 and tnuled 111 -108 with 4:02 remain- ing. - But Magic Johnson, who bad 19 assists. scored on a drive and the Lakers were able to stave off the Nuggets' charge. "I thought we played as bard as we could," Laker Coach Pat Riley said. "With all the elements -the travel, the crowd - it was evident we wanted this one toni&ht. The key, if you look at the num1>crs is that we dominated the statistics. "We shot well and we tried to minimize the forced passes. Ifwc get good shots, we'll shoot a good percentage. We needed this one for our confidcnc.c." "I can't believe they can play much better than that," Denver Coach Doug Moc said. "We just couldn't get the ball to drop for us. But I was very happy with the way our guys played. As long as we play hke we did tonight.. I'll take our chances the rest of the way." Jame. Worthy of the ·Laken take. aim at the basket u Piaget. Bill B•na:lllr and WEDNESDAY, MARCH 29, 1986 lrvlne wins, Woodbridge tlH In prep N••b•ll .....,_.DI. Report .. ,. Rllvellng to be next uac baketblil cwll. IM. _,Ui pl, .. o.::i. 8chayes attempt to defend darinC Tu y nJcht'• NBA mat.chap ln Den•er. Freshmen lead Coast Backed by 21 runs. Dishon, Rtshovd hurl OCC to two victories By CHBlS MONAHAN .., .... c.. 41 •••• Ahhougb Orange Coast Colleae's bueball team scored 21 runs to o'lercome its two opponents on the first day of tbc OCC Invitational, it was two freshman pitchers who were the main story. Newport Harbor High product John Dishon, who strugJed early in the year, threw his best effort of the year at Kings River College of Reedley as the Pirates advanced into the championship 1inal. Dishon pitched a comple~e six-hiner, striking out l2 T11en, as OCC triumphed, 9-5. Dishon's effort followed Mike Rishovd's 4'1> innings of hitless relief in the early pmc to keep the Pirates in the game as they rallied from a 9-2 deficit to defeat Southwestern CoUege of Chula Vista. 12-10. The Pirates. who have now won nine straight. will take on the winner of this momina's Southwcstern- Kings River matchup at 2:30 in the thTU--team, double elimination tour- nament. If they win, they will becbampions; if not. the same two teams will play for the trophy Thursday afternoon. OCC Coach Mike Mayne pointed out that the players are on spring vacation as well as the fact that the Pirates arc comina off Saturday's big win over defending state ch.amp Cerritos. "You can get bored with winning. .. said Mayne. "We didn't play with the same enthusiasm as we have been in conference, but I can't fault them. The win over Cerriio. was tbe bil9Cll of the year. But situations like um (the tournament) can fonn bed habits." Mayne said be is not overly concerned with the incoDlistmt d'- fo11 ftom bu biners becau.-e thaa iu't where he ~pectS a South C.O.. Conference title to come from. "You can't count OD hittina." be said. '•If you ,et it, that's pat. but pjtchina and defense win btil pma. That's why this tournament is ao imponant. so we can see wbo (a.rnooa the pitcben~ is goina to do well down the stretch.' With Looao Garcia ~t~~ ud Sam August (S-0) altady ro · it makes Mayne all the more p&eased to lflC performances like Dishon'• a.nd Rishovd's as the Piratnbead into tbc rest of the sec schedule, &budy with a 1 'h pme lead. "Rishovd bas been doing that kind of pitchin& all year. When tie pinto liJbt situations, he throws stri.ka. He is very poised," said Mayne ... He bas been our short man. in the ~nth, eighth and ninth inning$. but the way Sam and Longo have been pitchina. be hasn't worked for a while." The laY-~~c:eTtainly hasn't hurt lhe Tustin High .PfOdu.ct. He came in with occ trailing ~s apiost South- western and set down the first five batters be faced. He did give up a run in the seventh. but that was due to two erron. Rishovd closed the game with two strikeouts and earned his second wi» against no losses. Perhaps inspired by the per- formance, the l>'i.ra~ soored three runs in the fifth. and two each in the sixth and seventh to win. Left 6eldcr Joey James hit his ninth home hlll of (Pleue ... COAST/OS) Nicholson's loyalty toLakers only goes so far Anteaters Actor took an evening off from watching •LSUplus5'h ~in.tsmigbtbea NewEnglan~Patriotshave~oppcd 1 ed 1 ead wager worth consadenng for Satur-the drug tesl1ngagrccmcnt wttb the basketball to attend Academy Awards da~'t~~~:.~r~~ri~rromtbc ~~J'e~&:i~x~sborttyafter S}ip a Way Raiders to become ao actorwhich BUD •Well, there is one more athlete Nobody came an on the noon tickets, there would be no more shows some smarts ... Alzado would who takes more steps than a basket- balloon from Saskatoon and asked college football. not bavc made the Raiders' team this TUCIEI ball player on a layup or dunk ... me, but. . . •I would still have enjoyed seeing year. Besides the pole vaulter, there is also •JackNicholsonsbowed what Nevada~Las Vegas in the Final Four •A.IZ.adoanactorand Washing-the marathon runner. Loyola outlasts kind ofa Lalcerfan he is when he went in Dallas. ton'sJohn Riginshas been cut ... •TheAngels' Reggie Jackson LS to the Academy A wards ceremonies •Don .. Big Daddy" Garlits drove You envision the ceremony when apparently an art lover ... A studio in UC Irvine, TU-7 : instead of a Lalcers~San Antonio his drag racer better than 270 mpb . . . Alz.ado wins bis first Oscar ... He will ScottsdaJe, Ariz. claims Rcagje or- game at the Forum Monday night . . . Geez, they don't go that fast on the be on staee ripP.ing tbe pTCSCntor's lips Buzzie Bavasi the other day de-dercd $30,000 wo rth of items-had SCC tops La Verne He could have sent a stand-in to the Santa Ana Freeway. and Rigginswtllbepassedout under a velopcdan ulcer. them engraved with "44" ~and then Oscar thing-Dancing Barry. •Theygothatfa.st into the Santa table. •In bcrdivorcecaseagainst Robert stiffed the sellers with a check which Both UC lrvine and Southern California C.OlJeae built sccminaJ}' comfortable leads in the early stqes of their bueball games Tuc!day. &ut onl y sec could bold on to win. •Please ... somebody explain the Anita parking lot ... but not out. •A reader called to ask why they Irsay, Harriett lrsay asked that the was not honored. sudden rash of complaints from high-•George Brett will not be the body call An$els Manager Gene Mauch Indianapolis Colts be part of the •If all old and former boxing salaried ballplayers that they are in the Kansas City Royals team "The Little General." ... That is a settJemeot ... Harriett said she could champions were buried in the same "unappreciated." picture ... He was ill on picture day good question. do a better job of running the team . . cemetery ... What a classic super Here's how it went: •The University ofTcxas is the and the son of the equipment man. •Do not waste a tear on Cleveland . Even Robert's lawyers did not argue spin. latest school to investigate its football Matt Zych, sat in and Brett's face wlll Indians Manager Pat Corrales ... He that point and used strictly legal •Duke basketball star Johnny Loyola-Marymoua lt, UC lrviH 7: players selling tickets ... If they fired be superimposed ... Great way to wiU be gone soon. weapons. Dawkins has 14 sports jackets. 30 everv football player who scalps Zych out the people. •After all tl\osc years in baseball, •Dept. offitting the pattern: The (Pleue eee T1JCDR/D3) The Anteaters built leads of 5-0 and 7-3 over the nation's seventh-ranked team. Miller's time may be now Angels' backup catcher continues impressive spring From AP dilpatcbe1 PALM SPRINGS -Spnng has been kind to the Angels. Wally Joyner, the first baseman who has yet to play an inning in the majors. as hitting .396. Don Sutton, who has put in 21 years, has a 1.53 earned run average. And Rick Burleson seems capable of resuming a career halted fi~ur ears ago by severe shoulder injuri . But when anager Gene Mauch speaks of the most pleasant develo~ ment of the spring. he's taJking about Darrell Maller, who's flowering as a catcher. Miller, 27, caught only three in- ninis last season while batting .375 as a uulity outfielder. He has become the Aogels' long-sought backup to vet- eran Bob Boone after attempts to trade for a No. 2 catcher failed. A catcher in college and early in bis professional career, Miller bas open- ed eyes with his catching skills, which have been refined with tutoring from Boone. "from what everyone says, I gath~r they're pleased.'' said Miller. whose return to catching bepn with a winter league stint in Venezuela. "Boone says I look &ood. so I must be striding an the right direction." "Everyone's amaued," said Mauch. "Not me. I'm never amucd when a quality athlete docs something good. But it really has been impressive. He's made remarkable prosrcss at the most difficult position to learn." A catcher 10 bas senior season at C.I Poly Pomona, Miller was converted into an outfielder durina his minor leaauc apprenttcesh1{1. lt was an attempt to better utilize has talents, partacularly nis above-aVeTilJC speed. "l was w1lhng to let them decide what positron was best for me," Maller said "But my colleae coach Danell r,wter (John Scolinos) always told me I'd be a big league catcher some day. "That lays in the back of your mind and you stan temng yourxlf, maybe I shouJd be catching. And it's turning out that way." Athletic talent runs deep in the Miller family, which has featured Reggie and Cheryl basketball head- lincn at UCLA and the University of Southern California, respectively. Darrell Miller, who had only 48 at· bats last season, has continued to swing well in exhibition play, bettfag .4l7 (IS-for-36) through 15 Cactus Leaaue pmes. Mauch is convinced Miller's future is set. "You bet he'll be a starting catcher In the big leagues. Though Boone will probably make him wait a while," Mauch said. An6~l• alp Glant., 6-5 PALM SPRINGS -Jack Howell sin-1ed with one out in the ninth inning to score Rufino Unarcs from second base and Jive the Anach a ~S victo~overtbeSan Franci9COGiants U\ exhibition baseball Tuesday. Linares taacd left-hander Mark Davis for a lead-off sinaJc and took second on a sacnfs~ bunt by Rqaje Jackson. Doua Corbett blanked the Giants lo the ninth innina to cam lhe victory for the Angels, 10.8 San Fra.nciaco is 9-7. Madlock has new1lttitude Now that he's with a winner, personal goals are secondary From AP cl11patcbet VERO BEACH -BilJ Madlock. winner of four National League battjng championships, agrees it would be something special to make it fi ve this year. However, he says there arc more important things he'd like to accomplish. "I've won all the individual honors I can." Madlock said at the Dodgers' spring training complex. "The only thing left is team loals. My personal goal is to stay healthy, healthy enough to be out there 1 50 games. "It's not a personal thing )¥hen you're on a good team. You hit behind the runner. you bunt. You do what's necessary to wtn." Madlock. 35. came to the Dodgers last Aug. 31 in a trade with the Pmsburgh Pirates. After hitting only .25 I in 11 O games with Pittsburgh, the stocky third baseman batted .360 in 34 games with Los Angeles. Theo in the NL playoffs, he batted .333, hitting three home runs and driving ID seven runs. Despite his efforts. the Dodgers lost to the St Louis Cardinals in six games. "I'd like to play another three, four years and be happy," Madlock wd. "The last three or four years have been tough. I think that's what anybody wants after they've been around, to win and be happy. I don't care about people rchrillJ me in glory." As Madlock satd, the last thn:c or four years have been tough. He was traded to the Pirates by the San Francisco Giants in 1979 and hit .375 in the World Series that fall to help Pittsburgh beat the Baltimore Orioles. He won battjng titles with the Pirates in l 981 and 1983, but bis 1984 season was cut short by the need for the removal of a bone spur in has right elbow an mad-August. He hit only .253 before undergoing bis operation. And last year, he was at .25 I before being traded. Not only that. the Pirates have been less than competitive in recent years. "When you go trom a last-place team to a first-place team, it makes it fun again." be said. ••tt helps mentall} when you go to the ballpark and you Stt 46.000 rather than 6,000. "If you don't have pride, you might as well not even bother to step on the field. but there 1s more mou vat1on to wm because it's a good team here." Madlock. who has 1,800 lifetime hits and a b1g- lcaguc career batting average of .309. left Pittsburgh shortly before the highly publicized cocaine trafficking trial oflast September. His name was brought up dunng the tnal. but Baseball Comm1ss1oner Peter Ueberrolh, who penahzed other players who had been ment1oned, pubhcly exonerated Madlock. Error IJ~lJM Dodgen rip Pb.UHe., 8 -2 CLEARWATER, Fla. -An error by PhLladclphaa first baseman Von Hayes paved the way for four unearned runs in the first 1nmng,. and the Los Angeles Dodgen parlayed them into an 8-2 cxb1b1lion baseball victory Tuesday over the Ph1lhes. With one out, the ball popped out of Ha~s· glove. Ken Landreaux followed with a single. After a wild pitch. Mike Marshall singled. and Greg Brock and Mike SciOSCLl doubled But the visiting Lions rallied for ~ runs in the eighth to tic at at seven and won it in the I 0th on a three-run homer by sophomore third baseman Chris Donnels. Donncls belted his sixth homer of the season in the 10th over the center field fen~ to lift the Lions (21-6) to their fourth straight win. The Anteaters ( 1 ~~2) were held to JUSt one hit in three scoreless mni!l45 of relief by winning pitcher Eric Reinholtz., a fonnerOcean View High standout. UCl second baseman Ed Clark was the hitting star for the hosts, gomg th~ for six with two runs SICOred Irvine's Make Sugar had three RBI. Th' Anteaters will open PCAA conference play Thursday, hosting UC Santa Barbara for a lhree-pme series. Tbursday'sand Friday's games start at 2:30 with the series finale on Saturday set for 1. So•t•en1 Cal ColleJe 11, t. VerH 7: The Vanguards JUmpcd on La Verne pitchers early and often. belt- ing 17 hits. mcludina two home runs and a double by junior destSDated hitter Steve Overecm. Overcem capped a thn:c-run first mrung with two-run shot for has fourth homer of the year and added has fifth an the seventh, also with a man aboard. He finished the day 3 for 4 wtth four RBI. Senior left-hander Brian Sullivan gave up JUSt thm: hits into the seventh mmng before tiring to pin his fourth win ofthe year qainst one loss.. High-fiving, hand-slapping not Duke's style DURHAM. N C. (AP) -Even though Duke players avoid a lot of emotional displays of fist- waving and hand-sJapping. Blue Devil Coach Mike Knyzewski doesn't avcc with descnptaons of has team as robots who wtn 1n a wooden fashion. "J don't thank (people who say that) have been around our team," Krzyzcwtk1 said. "I do thank we're a clote-knit ifOUp. This 1s a special team. (But) when commentators don't sec hi&h-fives. they don't think you're having fun. 'Somenmcs just 119bb1n1 a auy's hand and looking an his eyes is morecmouonal th1nJump1na around," Kf'7}'1ewski s&id. Kf'7Y1CWSlo says the key to wmmna -which the Blue Devils have done 36 tJmes this season - 11 concentration. Dulce's ao-called "pme face" 1s a manifestation of that concentration. "lf you act too emotional, espcclAlly durina a pmc., it (blocks) yourabilit)' to th10k," Knyzewski sa1d. "You ute up cnefl)' W'lth that emotion We really like each other. Wt think 1 lot of each other If we won down there (an Dallas), I think we'll be emouonal.'' • Duke wtll have to get past K.ansa a team the Blue Devils defeated foT the NIT Baa pple champ1onstup 1n early December. to set to <he NC AA cbamp1onsh1p pmc. A victory 10 Satur- day's semifinals would iive the Blue Otvals a chance to meet tfie wanner of the Lou1w1llc-l.SU game for tbe nat1onal ehamp1onsb1p. Duke senior forward David Henderson said the Blue DeVll's ubdued demeanor may be the result of '°me early disappointments He says the senior class remcmbtn whCTt thC) came from - an 11-17 season an 1983. "We wett once the team that wu lauihed a1 - now wt'tt highly rqar<kd," Hendenon 111d "We are the team that's hunted now. But btc:au5e wt were bt&hJy rcprded as freshmen. peooplc expected 1 lot nJht away. It doesn't work that way in tbe (Atlantic Cout C'onf~~) .. "I defin1tel) think 1l's 1ro01c ... said ~nior guard Johnny Dawkins .. W e accomplished every JOll we set out to accomph\h 1n one season. Maybe It hasn't sunk tn When 1t'\ O\.Cr, wc'U set t<>aetbcr and have a part}'." Kny7t~lc1 said each pme 1 a coachana challenge because team~ hclacve they can beat Duke. But Knyzewslc1 acknowledges th8' he docsn 't view the 1986 Duke team as a creat team. "When 1 think of a gniat team. l think of 1nv1ncibte," Knyzewski uad. "People loo\. at us and say, 'We couJd beat them this way or that wa~ ' "The best team I've ever seen 1 the t 9"1 ~ lnd1an1 team. Wbcn the) warmed up. you were afraid of them, and when you played them. you were afraid of them -and when tht pane was over. rou knew you had • nsht to bt afnld of them,' Kn)'1'cwskt said ''We don't have the dommaunacenter -1'\e heard that a team cannot win 1 nauonal cbamP"onsh1p without• \l\IC wnnncr," Hc-ncknon (PS---DOD{D2) r Reasoning by ABC la that two ls better than three in booth p,... AP 11.,.tctan [i] NEW YORK-ABC's removal or Joe Namath and 0 .J. Simpson from Monday Ni&ht Football stemmed in pan from a desire to return the network·s pnme spons attnction to the traditional two men in-the-booth, sources sajd Tuesday. ABC itself remained officially silent on ihc cb.an&es, although network sources confirmed again that Al Michaels would be the play-by-play man on 1hc NFL's Monday night game next seaJ<>n and Frank Gifford might move from play-by-play duties to analys1. That would leave Simpson and Namath out. S1mP50n has been offered the job as college football analyst lcf\ vacant by the dismissal of Frank Broyles, another victim of the shakeup, But Namath has been released, with ABC swalJowing ._. the second year of a contract estimated at $850,000 a year. None of the pnncipaJs was available Tuesday despite repeated attempts to reach them and the network said any announcement would be "premature.•• Sources said the delay was due in part to convincing Simpson and Gifford to accept their new assignments. While Monday Night Football's 19.6 rating led its time period last faU and represented a 16 percent increase over 1984, the network lost an estimated S 15 million on the show be<:ause of declining advertising revenues. However, one source close to the si1ua11on suuested that the buyout of Namath's contract indicated that money was not the pnmary reason for the changes made by ABC's new management. CapnaJ Cities. "They decided the three man in the booth concept was outmoded and that they'd be better off goang with two," this source said. "Once they decided that. they asked themselves, 'who are our two best men to do the sbow?' They've decided the two best people are Al and Frank. What they're trying to do now 1s work it out with Frank." Quote of the day Tom Paciorek, veteran designated hatter who 1s now with the Texas Rangers, after rookie Pete lncaviglia knocked a chunk out of the fence in lcf\<enter field dunng battang practice at the Rangers' spring training base: "The last ume I saw a guy that stron_g. he was hangmg onto the Empire State Building with Fay Wray in his arms." NBC tab: $300 million NEW YORK. -NBC and the Seoul • Olympic Organizing Commmec today ... ~ • signed a $300 mill ion oontract for ex cl us1 ve U.S. television rights to the 1988 Summer Olympics, the network and officials of the organ121ng committee announced. It was announced last Oct. 3 that the network had been awarded the TV rights. The Seoul commmee had onginally hoped to get about $600 million for its 1elev1sion rights, based on bids for previous Olympic pmes. But the three maJOr television networks made bids far lower than expected. The 14-hour lime difference between Seoul and the U.S. Eastern timezonemeansmanyevents may have to be shown on tape rather than hve. Also, networks were concerned that the late starungdate of the Games. Sept 17, would cul an to other lucrauvc sports offenngs such as the baseball playoffs and college and pro football. The Games will conclude on Oct 2, 1988. Tyson delays fight with Tillis GLENS FALLS. N.Y. -Saturday's m heavyweight fight between James "Quick" Tilhs and Mike Tyson has been postponed until May 3 because Tyson 1s 111. Tywn's promoters said. "Mike has a badJ) anfected nght ear," saJd Bob Maller. husband of the fight"s promoter Lorrame Maller "It has been lanced and drained twice and he hasn't responded to treatment It has ~Otten wo~." Maller said Tyson is receiving treatment for the infected car at an unidenttfied New York Cify hospital. Salurday's fight at the Glens FaJls Civic Center was a sellout, and it was scheduled to have been telecast hvc nationally by ABC-TV Tue9day nl&bt Kln&• win .. aln dilh:ae1n°~.~sul0d~·c.~: 1n Talent is in the Cards defeated Portland.. 116-99, for tbe KJQ&J' ~ 11th conJOCulive Tuctday n•aht bom~ . court triumph. Theus' auuts were the moo io a tinaJc Lo=----1--1..,,..11=--,-=F,,......1-___,,..-=F=----t-----_,,.-...,,k--real F about our chanocs. p.me for the Kinas in their past I J National ButetbllU U SV e S ll OUr Cam may ac "I ve said 1ll 1tUOn lba~~ l.e&m Auocialion ICaSOot ••• la other NBA ~ Crall h t b t t i it • 80 d reminds me of the 1980 sq · • RMc"tc<>red24pointsaodSMMJM..nefadded22 C arac CfS, U DO a yo SQUa Onethi.nathetwoteamsdobave1n 10 lead Milwauk.ee to itJ fifth consecutive tri"°'pb a com.moo IS youth. Cnam started three 118· 1 OS victory over New Jcney ... Or ..... w.......;. LOUISVILLE (AP)-LoWlville•1 warded Crwn with bis .Uth Fin.al sophomo~ a freshman and a senior scored 22 points, a.. Bub added 20 and Mk:Mel 1980 mquad that won Coech Denny Four appearance in just 15 eeasoos in I ~80. -ryus year1 freshman center Jorda.a bad 19, Jeadina QUcqo to a 111-98 victory over Cnun bis fint 111.tional champion.ship lacb that kind of piaazz. but Crum Pervta Ellison ana sophomore for- New York that snapped \he Bulls' five-same lolina wu a collect.ion of cbaractcn, from bas the aame fcetil\I about their ward Herbert Crook ha~e ~~a key at.reak . Tbe triumph lifted the Bulls into a tie with idle Wiley Brown losio& his artificial bukett.11 ability 11 be did about tbe to seventh-ranked Lou11vtlle s suc- lodiana, I Yr_pmes behind Oevelaf\d in fhe race for the thumb to Poncho Wriabt and bis championlhlp squad. cess io the tournament. . ·final playoff J>ertb in the Eastern Conference . . . poetry to the star quality of Oart'cll "We don't have any clwacters like That youth also has Crum wol'r?ed Doml1l141ae 'fllkiu scored 34 of bis 36 points in the first Griffith. that. but J couldn't be more positive about how ~e hoopla surroundi~ three quarters as Atlanta defeated Oeveland, 97-91 . . . This year's ~u11ct that has re-about this team, .. Oum said .... feel this ).'ear's F1naJ Four will affect his Joe Barry Carroll scored 24 poi nn and Terry Teqle 23 Cardi~. to lead Golden State to a 125-121 victory over DeuoiL Lows ville, 30-1 . and the . ~HI ReajonaJ champs. wtll face Louisiana Sam1»9on to ml .. two 1amea Lame-duck Miller =:seio:!i~ .h~=e~r:~:o~~; INOlANAPOLIS -Houston center m I • I I 26-11, at 12:~2 Saturday in Dallas ID Ralph Sampson injured in a frightentng ki g N.lT ~ the first semifinal pme. fall at Boston Garden, suffered a severe see n c~ •o W:D So for the first time in a Final f~ur bruise to his back and is not expected to .& ~ situation, Crum has cl~sed practices play the next two games. a spokesman for tlfe NBA • · . to ~rters and fotb1a~en player team said Tuesday. Ohi St t W • be a different ahow on Wednesday. interviews. Ho~ver, seruor auards The 7-4 Sam~n was carried from the floor on a 0 a e. yomang We will have to do IOme shooting· Jeff Hall and Milt Wagner appeared stretcher after falhng late in the firsl half while.he was meet In coach. s last from the perimeter. It will be impon -before reporters Tuesday. going for a rebound against the Celtics Monday night. ant to keep Sellen away from the "My experience over the Last four Ca pa take over lead in Patrick game with Buckeyes ~:~~=Yo:~': ~r;: ~~~~ ~s ': fir :e~ \~I: t: ~:i~~:os:->r~sr t~~ defense." p'-yers than me," Crum said. "I can NEW YORK(AP)-Eldon Miller, ui Bel2gt GHtafuoa and Bob Gollld recruiting for Northern Iowa by Miller aarecd that the pme will be control who 1 sec. scored goaJs 12 seconds a~ late ID the telephone while coaching Ohio State ~ssjvefy played, but be said the "Everywhere they walk on campus. third period to lead Washmgton to a 6-3 to thechampionshjpgameofthe49th Big Ten's reputation for touahness is everyone wants a piece of them. NationaJ Hockey league victory Tuesday NationaJ lnvitation Tournament. overblown. Everywhere they go, fans want to talk., night over Boston, propelling the Capitals into the says that beating Wyoming in to-"The Big Ten ii not u pbys.icaJ a to inflate their ego. rve been throu6h Patrick Division lead. The Caps1 who won after blowing night's fi naJ "would be 1 areat way to conference u everyone believes," it so much, J know how to handJe tt. a two-goaJ lead for the third straJght game, are one point end my career as a Buckeye... Miller said. "Don't let Jim fool you. The biggest problem is kecpina the ahead of Phjladetfihia with six games rcmaini!f . . . "Winning your last game of 8 He's aoing to take the bell inside. playen on an even keel." Elsewhere in the HL, St. Louis ~ot a first-pcri goal season is a great feelin&," said Miller, He'll only shoot outtide if be has to." Despite his optimism, Crum has from Rick Meaglaer and o utstanding goaJtending from who was fired on Feb. 3, effective at Dembo, who bas a sister named come to look on the FinaJ Four as just Greg Millen to beat the New York Islanders. 7-0, to the end of \he season, and already Feoise and said he was often called another day at the office. He also took move back mto a first-place tic with Chicago in the been replaced by Gary WiUJiams. The Dennis Fembo while growing up, teams this far in 1972, bis first year at Norris Division ... Jlm Wiemer, recalJed from the end of the season bas been extended continued a postaeason hot strcalt Lo . ·u d . 197< •82 d •83 minors earlier in the day, scored his first goal of the with his bi& game apinst Florida. uasVl e, an m .;1, •an · season on a 40-foot shot with 3:33 to play to give the by five games with four NIT victories. While averaaina J 6. 7 points for the "To me, it's still my job," Crum playoff· hopeful New York Rangers a 5-4 victory over He already has been hired by North· season, Dembo has scored 22 points said. "It feels good to see thatthe team New Jersey. The victory snapped the Ranger$' three· em Iowa. in seven postaeason pmes..t. includfog bas progressed enough to make it this game losang streak and moved them to within one point "Chan&in~obs is really not that big the Western Athletic \,Onferencc far, but l feel more of the pressure · · · of Pittsburgh for the fourth and final p~yoffbertb m the a deal; at appens every day in tournament He is bHting 60.2 per-that others like fans don't" Patnck Division ... Mark Meuler scored short-handed America," Miller said Tuesday. 'TU cent of his shots over the same span Crum said the only changes be wiJI goals 30 seconds apart an the second period to soap a 2-2 aJways love Ohio State. I'm a Buck-and had 16 rebounds in an NIT make after all that experience is bis uc and lift Edmonton to a 7-2 vactorv over Detroit. eye, but going to Northern Iowa is victorv over Oemson. unpopular decision to shield his • J what I want to do and Ohio State is • J doing what it wants to do. Some "Dembo sprained bis ankle in players from the media Navy's Evans new Pitt coach PITTSBURGH -Paul Evans, m couned by a number of schools while stecnng Navy to the best season an its history. was named the University of Pittsburgh's basketball coach today. Pitt Athletic Director Edward Bozik announced at a morning news conference that Evans. 41 , has agreed to a four-year contract in Pittsburgh after coaching Navy to a 3()..S record and the NCAA East Regional finals. The dcaJ 1s worth a reported $800.000, about four limes what Evans earned at the U.S. NavaJ Academy at Annapoli'i, Md. Boston College picks O'Brien NEWTON. Mass. -Boston College m has called a news conference today to announce a new head basketball coach amid speculation that the position will be gi ven to former Eagles star J im O'Brien. now coach at St. Bonaventure. "I'm aware that Jimmy has gotten the JOb and I'm very pleased." said Bob Cousy, former Holy Cross and Boston Celtic hoop star. who coached O"Bncn at Boston College. Television, radio TELEVISION I 0 p.m. -COLLEGE BASKETBALL: Champ1onsh1p game of National Invitation Tournament. from New York (delayed). Channel 9. RADIO 7 30 p.m. -PRO BASKETBALL: San Antonio at Clippers. KMPC (7 10) 7· 30 p.m. -PRO HOCKEY: Calgary at Kmgs. Kl.AC (570). THURSDAY'S RADIO 10.30 a.m. -BASEBAU.. M1Dnesota vs. Dodgers. from Vero Beach. Fla., KABC (790). I p.m. -BASEBALL. Oakland vs. Angels from Palm Springs, KMPC (7 10). · · people may feel I'm taking 1 step November and didn't play well in "You have to resist an urge to backward an my career, but be assured December," Brandenburg said. change things this time of year," he that 1 do not fet'I that way." Dembo has led Wyoming to a 2~ said. "The only change I wiU make is Oh s I 8 14 d w · record after a 4-S start. A victory over the one we've discussed for haJf an 2AI 1 10h tale, -1• an thyom!n&. Ohio State wouJd give the Cowboys hour. about my plar,crs. We'IJ sec how ... • ave met on y one o er time their first 25-win season since 1952. that change works .• in basketbaJI -on January S, 1945, with the Buckeyes winning. 42-36. In Monday night's semifinals at Madison Square Garden. both teams took advantage of smaller opponents to reach the championship game. Ohio State whipped Louisiana Tech, 79-66, and Wyoming defeated Florida. 67-58. Seven-foot Brad Sellers had 23 points, 13 rebounds and nane blocked shots for Ohio State, whlle broad: shouldered sophomore guard Fcnnis Dembo bad 23 points on J()..for-15 shooting for Wyoming. Six-11 center Enc l...eckncr added 19 points and 12 rebounds against Florida, which bad no player taller than 6-7, alldwing the Cowboys to score most of their points inside. Wyoming Coach Jim Brandenburg called Ohio State ·•a typical Big 10 team -big. strong and aggressive. Ohio State will present many dif- ferent problems from Florida. It will DUKE ••• FromDl said. "But we have a bunch of winners on our ball club. You give it every- thing you've got for two days and ii can all be yours." While the unit mlght not be considered great, Krzyuwski has a different feeling about the individual parts. "On the plane ... coming back, I was thinking about aJI these things that they've done," Knyzewski said. "What we arc is really neat. J know what we are. J think what this team has accomplished is great." Kansas has some extra incentive against Duke LAWRENCE. Kan. (AP) -Kan- sas University (orward Ron K.cUogg is looking for a little bit of revenge Saturday when the No. 2 Jayhawks meet top-ranked Duke at OaJlas in a semifinaJ game of the NCAA tour- nament. Duke's 92-86 victory over Kansas in the final of the Big Apple NIT Tournament in New York at the stan of the season is like a bad dream the 6-5 senior from Omaha can't forget. "Coach (Larry) Brown won't let me. He reminds me all the time, .. said KeUogg, who scored 20 points in the loss. "My man -(David) Henderson -scored 30 on me. That's the most anybody's ever scored on me." Hcn- derson1 who was malcing his first start. hit 12of1 4 field goaJ attempts in the game. .. It.'s lcind oflike revenge," be said of the Final Four rematch Saturday. "They beat us the first time and we remember tbaL They do have a great team. They're quick and have excel~ lent shooters," Kellogg said. ~ baa been somewhat ham by a sore foot throughout the NCAA tournament but scored 12 points Sunday in Kansas' victory over North Carolina State in the NCAA Midwest Regional cham- pionship game in Kansas City. "It's not 100 percent, but it's UK." he said of the foot. I just do the best I can When rm out there ... Greg Dreiling. KU's 7-1 senior center. also has unhappy memories of the first meeting with Duke. "The first time we played them, it wasn't a good game for me," s.aitt Oreilin~ who scored just eight poants 1n 16 minutes before fouling out. "It was early in the year. I re- member (Mark) Alaric being a grc.at player. (Jay) Bilas, the curTCnt stan- mg center, didn't play against us. He has arms like a lineman and he's back.·· Dreiling said of Bilas, who missed the Big Apple game because of tendinitis. "I think it'll be a good game. You don't see too many blowouts in the FinaJ Four," he said. The winner will go on 10 play the winner of the LSU-Louisville game for the NCAA champ1onsb1p. Point guard Cedric Hunter said he is aware of the chaJlenge posed by Johnny Dawk.jns. Duke's All·Amcn- can guard. "He's a good player, but I don't sec any weaknesses on their team." "We're going to have to play great defense, cut and penetrate on offense. If we do that, we'll be all right," Hunter said. SURGE 0 N G E N E A A L. S WA A.N I N G : S m o k 1 n g By Pregnant Women Ma y Re sult 1n Fetal Injury. Premature Birth , And Low Btn h Weight. Bai Di 100's 8oJ Menthm! lass thin 0.5 mu. "&If. 0.05 1J19. ni1:ma Soft Piii. Mntlal nl 100'1 b 1119- ·tl(', 01 mg. rt1C1111n1; rtlO'a Soft Pict end lOO's Menthol. 5 mg. .. lit". 0.4 mg. nan; 120's· 7 mo. • .., ... 0.8 n19- nicottnt IV Plf Clglfltll, FTC Ripon Jen. '85. Slltn'1 e mg. ...... Q.6 mg. na11N flt."" Ctglflllt by FTC IMlhod !----~ ....... ~-~~~------------- . Orange Coal DAILY PILOT/W~, Mwahat, 1-* 08 • _ Speedway· Irvine outscores Santa Ana, l 0-8 opener ~ Hameltn keys tourney win· Ued It 6-6, Irvi.at parlayed f'our walks. an tm>r toearnade.d.lock with the San Fra.DCdCOteam resume Sea View Lcaauecompeuon at Saddle-set Frida~ ;-;-;-~;;---:--:--.:..-"".'"":""=-----:~---=-..::...':... and Hamelin'• Rll ainale into f'our runs to take in the thJ.rd..-place pmc of tht Anaheim Lions back Wednetday. W oodbrtd e settles for tJe a 1~6 lead. Hamelin'a bit was the only one of Oub Tournament at Olover Stadium. pecctMy racilll bqi.m ita a the lnni~ u the tut three runa came in on The ~c ~ .~ed after six inninas o..,._ Gr.ft i , S•• .. •s •: The COMeeutive teaaoa at the IJ"Vlne and WoodbriA ... eni:h-..i fu;"'-bases-loa ed ~· . . because ofa time limit an the tournament. Roadrunnm failed to execute two 1eparate County Fa.i.rp'ounda Fridav nilbt. ...... ...., ~ ..,... Hamelin unproved bis b1utm1 averaae to . double play chances, which Jed to (our . ii. the r . vition f ri ductive otrenaive outpuu in bi IC ool .SI 2 with bls bia afternoon. Wood,bric;lle led 7-2 ~ntenna the bottom~( unearned Araonaut runs, helpiq the visitors ,TQPPtnl . listofDi bateball tournament acuon Tuetday after-The Vaqueros bad to b!DJ on in the the fourth mruna when Riordan eru_pted for sax collect the win in the sevcnth-placepme of the 'Wlll '?e. nataonaJ. champion . n~n. but ~oJy the V&9utr0t could collect a bottomoftheaeventhwhentheSaintsmountcd runs .to aa,sume .an , 8-7 lead. Then Paul Santa Ana Elks Tournament. CJtristianof'H~tanooa ~ , victory, while the Wamors tetlled for a tie. a comeback attempt qainst reliever Rick ~odri~ 11~cd '"bta seco~d ru.n of the P.me Saddlcback'1 junior aborutop Danny On· Costa M~.11 ~ Alan Here's what took place: Smetanb. Three hau and a tw<>-run double an the atxt~ to rina Woodbnd&e a~to the u~. tiveros blasted a solo homer and a trip&c and homt track, u1d 2!cdw~yi: lnbte l018uta Au 8: Bobby Hamelin had three bits, walked twice, tc0red three times and drove in four runs to lead the Vaqueros to victory in the third-place pme of the Santa Ana Elks Tournament at Rancho Saotiqo College. Hamelin tripled in a run in the first and singled in two more durinJ a f'our-ruo second inmna when the Vaqueros Jumped to a 6-l lead. ti&htened the pme to two runs, but that was as Rodriluez .also bad a do~blc tn the third Victor Rossano added two hits and three RBI promoter Harry cn.ley, '° we,... close u the Saints would come when tbe 9iamon scored twice to take a )..2 (i h R d (S S) look.inc f'or our new No. 1 rider 10 pu Irvine d~ilnated hitter Nick Nikolcnko le.kt. Hichliahtina W<?OObrid&e's f'our-run or t e oa runners • . oo .bia ,!YPically ipcicta.eulat itiabt ~ was 3 for 3 an~red twice fourth wu a tw<>-run tnlle ~""Brian Betten-Servt&e t. Mater Del !: The Monarchs f'IC!na. The Vaqueros (8-S-I>° play a twi-niaht counandCam MeNcc's BI ouble. yieldedsixunearocd ruos.includiaaf'ourinthe Cbriatia.n .will . J<?Ul other ~ doubleheader apinst Savanna Tbunday eve-"We didn't fool any or their bitters, but fourth innill\• a"'-two were OU' to d-thctr Southern Cabforrua ndcrs to start~ · • ._... Par ... l"" ., ·-~ teUOo wath a 16-race ~ nma. S o clock. at 8t001LDurst k. neither did they f'oof any of our hit ten.·· said third AnceluJ Leuue pme in four outinp. featu.rina eiaht ICTl\Cb e"e&I aDdl Woodbrid&e Coach Dave Cowen. Mater Dci CS:.. overall) led 1-0 aod 2-1 ei&bt handicap Ctaturu. Then. in the 1eventb mnin& with the 1COrc WoeArNce 8, IUordu 8: The Warriors The Warriors., now S-S-2 overall, won't be before the Fnars took control. The also indDdes flCi pushed over a run in the top of the sixth inning-in action apin until next week when they · Servitc improved to 4--0 in lcque play. amona ~ Division 2 and '1 nders. as well as a featured match~ between Bobby Schwartz. and 8ra4 Oxley. Rustlers top Barbor, 5-4 WlLMrNGTON -Golden West College manufactured a five-run lead after 61'2 inninas Tuesday and needed every run in holding off LA Harbor, S-41 an a non-conference community cot1egc baseball aame on the Sca- hawlcs' field. Sluggers stay on sizzling pace Sbonly after the season opener at Costa Mesa, the four other Southeta California tracks will bc&in their 1986 seasons. Ventura shows off ii.I oew tndl Tuesday, then the riders bead form. first race at San Bernardi.no ncx( Wednesday. The next niaht, the: com~tition switches to Ascot. Vic-I torv1lle's season opener is Saturday April S. · The Rustlers, 8-9, jumped out to a quick 2-0 lead when Keith Kaub walked and trotted home when Eric Shirley cracked bis third homer of the season. Golden West added an unearned run in the third and Chip Oamato's sacrifice fly in the fourth made it 4-0. The eventual winnina run came in the top of the seventh when Todd Nash doubled, took third on Gary Renko's single and scored on Kaub's sacri flee fly. Rustler start1ng pitcher Larry Salacts was cruising along until the bottom of the seventh when Harbor broke tbro~ for a run. then chased him in the eighth with a walk and two singles. Shawn Tackanen yielded a double before giving way to Greg Martin. Martin allowed a two-run single to help the Scabawlcs close the gap to 5-4, then settled down to retire the last five batters to earn the save. The two teams were to close out their two-game series today with a noon matchup at Golden West. Lazers ripped by Stars, 9-2 INGLEWOOD (AP) -Steve Zunaul. the MISL's leadmg scorer, scored five goals to ruch the SO-joal plateau and added three assists Tues- day night in leading the Tacoma Stars to a 9-'l victory over the Los Angeles l..a.zers at the Forum. The St.a.rs scored four straight in the second quarter to open a 4-0 halftime lead and the La.zers never recovered. The eif.bt-point ni&ht for Zungul pushed btm past the f ~point mark for the season giving him SO goals and S7 assists for 107 points. Prek.i scored two goals and Roy Wegcrle and David Norman each had one goal for Tacoma, which im- proved its record to 21 -24 and clinched a Western Division playoff berth. Spring sensations Laga, IncavigUa use long ball to help teams register victories From AP d.Jlpatclles Detroit's MU'.e Laga and Texas' Pete Incaviglia, the sluaging sen- sations of spring trainina. continued to provide the long ball Tuesday. fncavig)ia, who will makethejump directly from the coll~ ranks to the majors as the Rangers starting rif.bt fielder, hit bis fourth and fifth spnng homers and l.a!1)' Parrish capped a seven-run fourth umina apinst Cin- cinnati ace Mario Soto wtth a threc- run homer as the Ra~crs pounded the Reds, l~S. Curtis Wilkerson also homered for Texas. It wasn't all good news for the Rangers when Charlie Hough, who had been scheduled to be the opening- game pitcher, suffered a broken little finger on his right band. Manager Bobby Valentine said Hough was injured while shaking hands with a fnend and will be out for three weeks. Valentine named rookie ri~t-hander Jose Guzman as Hough s replace-ment. Laga. meanwhile, hit his seventh exhibition homer and then tripled home Darnell Coles with the winning run in the eighth inning as the Tigers downed the St. Louis Cardinals, 9-8. Frank Tanana gave up 13 hits and all eight St. Louis runs in the first su innings. Chet Lemon hit a three-run homer for Detroit. Elsewhere: Mets f, Orioles Z: Tim Teufel's tie- break.ing two-run homer 10 the seventh inning lifted the Mets. Teufel connected off Brad Havens. who replaced Baltimore starter Scott McGregor to open the bottom of the seventh. Teufel's second spring homer followed a one-out single by rookie Stan Jefferson, who had four hits and raised his average to .SOO ( 13 for 26). Mets starter Ron Darling blanked the Orioles on three tlits over the first five innings. DarlinJ has pitched 19 consecutive shutout innings and has a spring ERA of0.90. Braves 7, Expos !: Dale Murphy had two key hits and Ted Simmons, Brad Komminsk and ctaudetl Wash- ington drove in two runs apiece for Atlanta. which broke a 1-1 tie in the sixth on Murphy's RBI single and Simmons' double. Ptrata I, Red Sox 5: Sixto Lczcano's pinch-hit. two-out, bases.- loaded tingle in the bottom of the ninth won the game. The Pirates trailed S-4 entering the innina but tied it on Mike Brown's two-out RBI single off Joe Sambito. Dwight Evans bad three hits as Boston scored five times in the first four innings ofTLce Tunnell. Red Sox ace right-bander Dennis "Oil Can" Boyd, who was sidelined earlier in spring training with a viral infection which caused a weight loss, went five innings, allowing seven bhs and two earned runs. Blae Jays 7, Twtaa 1: After Frank Viola limited the Blue Jays to two hits 1n tbe first six innings, Toronto erupted for all seven runs in the eighth off Roy Smith, Pete Filson and Ron Davis. Rick Leach doubled home the g<>- ahead run and Willie Upshaw hit a two-run homer. The Twins scored in the fifth on Mark Davidson's sacrifice fly off Toronto starter Jimmy Key. wbo had pitched 12 consecutive scoreless innings. Muiaen lt~c.bs t: Barry Bonnell bit a three-run homer and drove in another run with a sacrifice fly. Bonnell's homer cappe:<t a five-run third inning and highhghted Seattle's IS-hit attack. Mark Langston pitched the first six innings for the Mariners, allowing JUSt one hit. He struck out seven of the first nine batten be faced and finished with eight strikeouu and two walks. He bas pitched 16 innings this spring without allowing an earned run. Tbe Mariners took a 2-0 lead off loser Roy Fontenot on a walk to Gonnan Thomas, a double by Jim Presley and a two-out, two-run sangle by Bob Kearney. In the third, a walk Woodbridge girls win consolation title After suffenng an opening round defeat 10 its own tournament Mon- day, the Woodbndge High '1.rls softball team bounced back with three straight victories -two on Tuesday -to cla1m the consolation champ1onsh1p. Herc's how it went: Wooclbrtcl1e !, S.vuuaa I; Wood· briclJe 5, El Toro 0: Jenny Allard and PattJ Russell pitched the Warriors to baclt·to-back wins to help the War- riors claim consolation honors. Allard went eiJ.!!t innings in the first game, with Tiffany Boyd scoring the game-winner. Allard then provided the sock for .. Russelrs one-batter in the consola- tJon final. going 3 for 3 with a single. double and home run. Both Allard and Boyd were named to the all-tournament team. In the championsttip game, El Dorado scored a 7-0 victory over La Quinta. Meanwhile, Fountain Valley won twice, ~I over Santa Ana and Visittng St. Paul broke the scoreless ue with a run in the eighth to cam the decision at Memorial Park. St Paul's Keri Kropke struck out I 0 and limited the Monarchs to just three hits. Beth Lomeli went the distance for Mater Dci. dropping her first game in sax decisions. J.1 over Pacifica, to win fifth place in .---------------_, the tournament. Cindy Rice and Patti Taylor were named to the all-tournament team from Fountain Valley. El Dorado's Suzie Bradach was the MVP. In an Angelus League matchup: St. Pnl l, Mater Del 0 (I lu.lllga): TRI TECH MARINE DYNO TUNES Your Johnson. [vmrude, or Yamaha Cruse N• Carl'}. call 714-646-ti918 with Judy i Restaurant Review with Judy Chamberlain Thursdays 6:00·6:15 Brought to you by BAKER PARTY RENTALS KDCM1DB.1 to Alvin Davis and consecutive doubles by Thomas and Presley made it 4-0, and after David Henderson singled, Bonnell homel"Cd. . A'• i, BNWen I: Steve Hen- derson's one-out ninth-innina triple scored Tony Phillips from first base. Veteran Riek Langford, trying to make a comeback from arm trouble, struck out seven batters in three inninas and finished with eight in six shutout inninp for Oakland. Astr0t S, Wklte Sox !: Cnug Reynolds drove in the wanrung run with a sevcnth-innina smgle. Reynolds' single followed a double by Billy Hatcher and pve the Astros their first two-game wanning streak of the spriQf. The VJCtory boosted the Astros' spring record to S-12. The Astros, S-12, took a 2-0 lead on Jose Cruz's run-scoring sinale in the first inninJ and Denny Walling's sccond-innmg sacrifice fly. The White Sox. I 0-9, tied the score in the sixth on a run-scoring double by Wayne Tolleson and a run- producing single by Tim Hulen. 1Dcl1aa1 1%, Padres t: Brook Jacoby hit a three-run homer and drove in five runs for Cleveland. Jacoby, who had three hats, home- red off&! Wojna during the Indians' five-run first inning.. The Padres got two-run homers from Kevan McReynolds and Oraig Nettles. Brett Butler also had three hits for the Indians, 11-9. Corey Snyder contributed a triple. a single. and three RBI to Qeveland's attack. Gary Templeton went 3-for-4 with an RBI for San Diego, 9· 11. Uatvenlty of Arlzou 7, bcllus 5: NcaJ Heaton, slated for a spot in Cleveland's starting rotation, pive up four runs on eight hits in five mnifliS. Arizona snapped a S-S tic in the eighth on a sacrifice fly off Bryan OeUcers by Taylor, who also had a sacrifice fly off Don Schulze 10 the sixth. Schulze gave up one unearned run in two innings, and Oelkers sur- rendered two runs an two innings. Pnr.es for adulu and childmC rcmafo the same as last year fi Friday niF.t's program. Adult minion will be $6, children S-12 old $2 and children under S arc lrcc. There is also no charge for parki and programs.. . Gates will open at 6:30 p.m. wi the first nee bqinning at 8. COAST WINS TWICE •.• .a homDl the sea.son and wath has four RBI, the freshman from Newport Harbor High. bas 44 for the year. • ·•1t is so unusual for a freshman to be this bot so early,., said Mayne of James. "He is such a disciplined hitter. Joey makes the pitcher throw good strikes because be controls the strike zone ... In the game against Kings River, the Pirates were tied 3-3 after five inniJllS, but Dishon struck out the side and the Pirates erupted for four runs. which· turned out to be the game-wi nncrs. "Dishon pitched real well today, JUSt like be did La.st week against Mt San Antonio:· said Mayne. "We knew he was a good pitcher, be JUSt struggled early on. He really isn't a strikeout pitcher. but be mixed bis pitches well and threw his off.speed for strikes.·· The key blows m the winnln.a sixth I came from James (an RBI si.ngfc) and dcsiariatcd bitter Dave Staton (a two( run double). Not surprisin&Jy it wq those rwo who were the offensi~ leaden in OCCs two wins. Staton was 6 for 9 with two doubld and t~ ~I. while James.went• fot 6, drivana an (our runs, while sco~ six. The Pirates also aot a lot of fi game help from sophomore catc Paul Ellison (3 for 3, two doubles; three runs SGOred). TUCKER ••• homDl sweaters, 60 pairs of slacks and 2S pain of street shoes ... and a scholarship? •Basketball fans find the time 1s • near. For the college game to end.iu year, But they are thankful for some other trends. . . , Like the NBA season never ends. ~ Now you can indulge your taste for flavorful fish and seafood without going overtx>ardf Try our Shrimp & Fish Dinner and enjoy 3 golden shrimp. a crispy fish fillet, fryes, fresh coleslaw and 2 hushpuppies. LONG]OHN StLVEl{S 3095 Harbor Blvd Costa Mesa (Across from Fedco) NaA WllTSRN COMFIRl..C:I ,edllc~ W l. .-ct. G• IY·LA. lAken 9' 17 1'7 Ponlolnd l6 ll -'°~ PNM11h1 JI a 400 U \'J *'"' 11 ~ .ns ,..,.. L. A cncioen u .. ~ 1 2'\.IJ GOICleft Stert U 41 H6 )0 Mlclw.UDM'6efl a·Housron .,. 1t 611 x·Oenver '3 )0 519 1'~ o.... ,. ,, .Sff 4~ Ult " )1 36 501 1\'i Secramtfllo ·32 41 .4.11 1'Vt Sen Anlonlo l2 42 . .an 13 EASTWRN COHFI RINCI Alllnlk OM.-. v Boston a· Pttlladelonle K·New _,.,._., w u nlnoron Ntw Yorll 51 13 .. , ,, JS 31 34 31 l2 SI c:.Mr1ll OMtlM a •MflwaukH 50 2'J • ·Alltnla 4S 21 x·Oetrolt 41 3'1 c i.vtlend 2/1 .. C"letllO 1S .. lndlane 25 41 11.--dlnclltCI Pievott tiert" '11 "" 479 472 lOI 12 24 ,.,,,., 37 v-<tlncr.ed dlvl'lon lllle t NI PltYotl 1>errn 1-('lf""'41a conftrenGe Ihle T 11Mda'('1 Sc9r'ft L.alrtn 121, Denver .llS Atlanta 97, Clevtltod 91 CMago 111, Ntw York 91 MllwtukH 111. Naw Jer._v I~ C.OIOtn Stera 12S. O.lroll 111 s.cra....,,to 116, Ponleno " TMllM'1GMIM Sen Antonio et Cllppen MllwaukH al Boston Clevtlaod at New Jer._Y Atlanra et P1'111110tll>l11a 0 11111, e t wnnfnQton Hou"on et Indiana 0.nver at Uleh s.a111e at Ptioenlx TlwndllY's Gam.s Della's et New Yori< San Antonio ar Golden Srate S.cramento II Seattle Lallen 121, Nu..-n HS LAICEAS I 1211 -RamOls 5·6 O·O 10 worrny 12·21 6·7 30, AOdul·Jel>ber 9·11 6· 10 24, Scou 9· 14 o-o 19, Jonnson S-9 4·4 14, GrH n 2·3 1-3 S. M. Cooe>« J·S l ·I I , Luci\ J-e O·O 6, McGH 2·3 2·3 6 Tolel\ S0-16 20-2' 121 DENVElll I 11$1 -Eng1l'11 11·25 1·1 19 Natr 1-12 •·• n. w COOP« •·14 l·I 11. Lever 2· 10 0·0 4, Dunn 2· S 0-0 4, Sc.hay~ S·7 S-8 lS. Han1tlk 4·12 4·6 13. Evens 3·9 2·2 a. Turner 1·2 I· t l Tore1,. 43·96 2'·3J 115 Sc .... llY 0var11tn L11<er1 34 2t 31 26---121 Denver lJ 2S 2S 32-115 Thrff·POfnt ll04lls-M Coooe<, Hanzlik Fovlt<I out-None Ret>ound•~Lal\tn 60 IWorlhv 10), Oenve< 42 (W c-9) Anlsts-Lektrs lO IJonnwn 19), Denver 26 Claver IOI Tore1 IOUls-Le~en 21 0...ver 24 Atrenoenc-17,022 NBA pteyofl r•ces Tile PltYoH race In lht Nellonel Besll.tr· ball Association lelilfll reams from eactt conference avallfv fa< lht Plevoffsl WESTERN C°"FEAl!NCE W l. P<1 zv Lalrtn S6 17 767 • HOU\ton 44 2' 611 ~·Denver 43 lO .S89 Oa llaa 39 31 S49 Utefl 37 34 507 Por lle114 34 l8 "6 Se cre,,,.nro l1 41 431 Sen Anlonio l1 42 431 PTl<>enl• 2' 42 400 Sealltt 11 ,5 lH Cl'-1 11> "' 361 Gol<lefl St•te 16 41 lS6 REMAINING GAMES DALLAS I 11) -H-131 Aofll I Pnoenb Aorll l Denver. Ae>rll S Sterri. Awev Ill Maren 26 al Weshl"9ton, Marcil 27 et New Yortt, Marett JO al P'111aOttPllla. April 1 •• S.cramento, April a at Golden Stare, APl'll 10 el Seetti., Aprfl 12 a t CllPOe,., Aor1t 1l e r Lakers UT AH Ill -Home W Mere.ti 26 Denver, APl'll I Clle>e>en Ae>rll S Porla.nd April 9 Sacre men10 Awev (41 Maren JI 11 Denver. Mare" 29 el Sen Antonio, April 10 al Sacramento, Aprlt 12 al o.nver POftTLAND m -HO<N m April I Denver April 8 Laktrs. Aorll 10 CUPOers Away (51 Me rell 19 al COiden Slate AO<N 1 •I Su llle APr1I s al Ule '1, Ae>r• 11 a l GolOtn Slelt, AIM'll 1l al San Antonio SAN ANTONIO (I) -Home ISl Merell ?9 Uren, April I Sacremenlo, APl"ll 3 Hov11on, April 6 Denver. Ae>rll 13 Portla nd Away (l ) April 26 a l CllPC>e<I Mercl'I 21 " C.otclen Sltlt APl'll 9 er Pllotn .. SACRAMENTO 191 -Home 1SI Merell 19 CllPOen. Aorlt S Porllend, Apr il 1 Oellu , APrll 10 Uta n. APrll 17 Letters Away 141 Marci\ 21 al Saa111e. AP•li 1 a r Sen Anronlo Aprll 3 el Lakers APrll 9 a l Ula h PHOU~IX 121 -Home 171 March 1' ~alllt March 2' Cll~. April 1 Gol<left S•a tt Apr 1 ' Houllon April 1 Denver AP<• 9 Se~ Antor110, APl'll 13 Cllppen Aw•v 151 Merer. lO al Stetllt, Aprll I II 011111, ""' S at Sac.ramenlo. APrll 10 el Denver, APrl 11 at Hov\lon SEATTLE C 101 -Home 161 Maren 17 '>acra,.,eeio Marer 29 Lak.,1 Maren lO Pnc.t", AP< , Por•lell4. AOf' 10 Dallas Ao• 1 GOiden Stare A.,.,a., 41 Maren 26 a' Pnoen • Ao• 1 I a1 Lall.en. Ao"I S at Dallas Aor11 8 a t Hovsron CLIPPERS 1101 -Home ISi Maren 16 Ser An•onoo Aorn 1 Utell April S GolOtn Sie•• Ao• 9 0,.,.,, Apr" 17 Oall1u Awav IS Marc" 19 a• P~·1 Maren ~ er s.. rel"'erro •or I at U•an Apr 10 at Portoand •o• 13 a• Pnoen11 GOLDEN H ATE 191 -Home ISl Marr.II 11 San Anlon10 Merc.n 19 Porltand, •orll I Go d~n \1a1~ April 8 Dalla\ Aon II Por•·a"d """' 4 Apr I I a l Lal<er\ Aorol 1 a• Pnot~.,. too• S al Ct>o~n Aor• 12 at ~&lfle IAIT91tN CC*fl& .. •NCa w " ftci. v• lotlOll 5t I) t17 • •MllweullM .50 22 6'4 ··~lltcMlofllt ., b .... a· Alltnte •.S 2t 616 a:·Ottrott •t 32 562 New WMY U • 419 w e1N1111on ,. • •n Cltvtland 26 .. .'61 CllteeOO 25 4 _,.2 lndlefle " • ,,., N-York n SI .301 RllMAIMtMG OAM9S Naw J•as•v m -Home m. Mardi 2' Clt~"4. Ma«:tl 2t Clllcno; AcwW , Wa"'ll\Oton, APfll s N-Yortt. Aprll ' 8ollon Awn (0 : Mardi 30 et &ottOll; Aorll 1 et N-York, Aorll 10 •t "1 .. nte , "'"'II 13 e l Botton. CLIV•LAND (tO) -Home m · Aorll 1 &01ton, Aorll 10 MJIWaull .. ; AMII IJ Chk»Oo. Awav (1) Merel\ 26 et New JtrMY, Merell 2t er Allenta, Aorll l et MltwaullM; Aorll • et Pttllede!Pllla, All'fl 6 •• WHnlnQlon; Ai>rll 1 el O.lroll, Aprll 11 al &o-aton. WASHINOTOH 110) -Home (6) Maret\ ?6 Dati.1. Mardi 29 Houston; AMII 4 Atl•nle, Acwll 6 Cltveland. Aorl I lndlena, April 13 Pttlltdt!Pllla Awn 14). Marett 21 II 8oslOl'I, AprU 1 ,, Allente, April 3 ., NW Jersey; "Pl'll 11 t i Chtcevo INDIANA It) -Home 14): Marc" 26 Ho.nlon, Mef'ctl 21 AU•nl•. Aprll 3 Chi· c:evo • .4.IN'll S O.trott Awav IS)· Aoril l el o.troll, APfll 7 .. New Yori!; APfU •• , We.nlnelon, Aorll 11 er Pfllledtllltlle , Aorlt 12 et Allenre. CHICAGO (t) -Home 131. Aprll S Attente, Aptll 7 Mltw11,ukH, APl'll l I Wash lnoton. Awev i.>· Merell 21 el New Jersev. Aorll I e t MllweukH, Aorll 3 •• lndla na. Aorll • ar Atlente, Aorll 13 et Cltvelend NEW YOltlC (91 -Home (S)· Merell 21 Delles; Mardi 29 Chletvo; Aorll I New JerMY. Aorll 1 lndl1ne; Aorll 11 Detroll Awn (4) Aorll 2 1t Pl'lllede+Pllla, AMII 4 el 8411on, APl'll s •I New WMY; Aorlt " •• Mllwtukff a-cllnclltel PlaYoff beflll v-clll\CMd dM1ton 1111• •ft<I P'evott 1>ert,, r--<lln<'l'lt<I conference llrle NCAA TOUttNAM&NT 'lnll F.ur eddS SAT\MDAY'S GAMES (1t DW•I Ovllt 1 over Ka11M1 l,.ovlsv1119 S•tt over LSU (FNllTI Htrrtfl'I ·-5"1'11 helrl NIT (et...._ Ye1111 TONIGHT'S CH~NSHlfl WvomlnQ (24· lll vs. C>nlo Stele 11•· l•I 'it' t I • • Hltltl lcMlt Mfllbltl WOOONIOGE TOURNAMENT (~tleft s.tnNIMtll w.....,.. t. ,.,,_ 1 Woo<lbrlck>t 000 001 01-2 9 0 Sevenne 000 001 00-1 1 0 Alla rd end Pevton; Ditto •n<I Sht1>ard 2B-Alla rd (Wl 3B-Pllfron (W I HR-Ferr•"" ($1 ICeMt&ltleft FINI) W~S,EIT.,..O El Toro 000 000 ~ I I Woo<lbf'ldoe 220 010 x-S 6 I Olc.,.tvnd •114 Hoffldev, RU\Mll •114 Peyton 2~Anard (WI HR-Allard IWI OTHER SCOltES ~tttilp El Da<e<IO 1, L• Qulnle 0 ChamtlMnltllll Sem111M11 La Qvlnre 4, Le Mlrade 1 Ttllrd """ Le Mlreda 3. Crncenre Vetlev 2 Ftf'ltl '"'8C. 5emHIMls Paclf•C• 2, Trelluc:O HIKs 1 Fountain V•tiev 4 Sanle Ana I ~-l"'IK9 Founreln Velltv 3, Pec:lfka 1 U ·Toumament Ttam MVP Suzie Breelac" IEI Oor•OOI Cr.rlstv Brown IPaclflcal. Shannon Rl'4oy Pecll1ca1 C1ndv 'Rtee !Fountain va1i.v1 Pell· TevM>< IFounte n Veltlv l. Oewn Rot>· ertson IEI Toro), Jenny Allerd (WOOO· Of'l<19tl, T1Hanv 84vd (WOOOt><l<IOtl. Let\<la Temple CCrt\Genle Vellev), HtalMr Und11rom (CrflGenra VeltlYI. Heatri.r 0. Luc.a CL• Mirada), HolleY 0.Luca Il a Ml,.081. Cl\f!SIY Van Patten (LI Qull'lla). Cntmalnt Ramlrtl (lA Ov1nre1 JIH Ma!Yuch (El OoradOI, Cnrl1llnt C.IOinllO\k• (El Ooredol ANGILUS LaAGUE St. P'aUI 1, MeMf' Otl 0 SI Paul 000 000 01-1 6 2 Mater Ott 000 000 ~ 3 o Kroot<t ano Mor-. Lomtll aod Rlet Men's Mmament (•t Olkeeel First Ill-"' S1ntMs Tim Mevotte (U S.) def Bred Giibert us I 7·6. 6·7, 6·), Boris !Mcker (WHI Garmany) def Mllte LH Ch (US.), 6-l, 6· I, Jonn Sadri <U.S.l <lef. Rlcerdo Acvne CChti.>. 7·6, 6·3, Sammy Glemmatve (US l Oc! Buel Scflulll (U.S I, 6·3, 6·3, Sco11 Oevl1 US I def Ptrer Fl9'Tllllll IU S l, 6-3, 6·4 Hltltl scMd tennis NON·LEAGUE ,.,,. .... Otl t. WVltll ' (Matar 0.. Wlm WI ..,_., '5·90) Slnlln Jenklnl IMO> IOSt 10 Kresuckl, 4·6 <ltl Vamualll 7·6 loll to J 8'4IOll 4·6 Pettr'°" (MDI won. 6·3 1·6, 6·3. Rt<le •MO) IO•t, • 6, l -6, 2·6 ~ 0 Currt11· TllC>me !MDI IOSI lo C: BtlloO·Cnu"9, 3·6, def Altkan·Cl'la1>11, 6· I Clef Gultrerai·C.Otllerd, 6· I Pave-Hernett IMO! '°"· 6·7, won, 6--0, 6·1, I( Curren· Jonnson IMO) 1o11. 0-6. 3·6, won, 6·4 ~ • • . . • • .~ ......... AMIRICAN LIAGUa '# L ~ Otll'Olt 1) ' 614 Mllweuio.M 10 6 '2S New ¥or• 10 • US T•.1111 ' 6 '°° Toronto 9 1 Ml Cleveland 10 t .SS6 Otklen<I 10 e SS6 ....... ' I .S29 Ml~•· • • .S19 C"letOO 10 t .SM KenMs CllY 6 e 429 Shiite 7 10 .412 Belllmor• 6 11 .3S3 l oslOll S 11 294 NA TIC»fAL La AGUE Ati.n11 11 S 611 New Yori< 10 ' '2S PlllltOtll>lll• ' 1 Ml San Frencl\Go 9 7 5'3 Cincinnati 9 • .S19 St.Louis • • .500 Plllwuroh 1 I 4'7 S.n oi.oo t 11 450 ~ 1 10 412 Chletoo 1 13 350 MonlrHI S 10 ,JlJ HOUlton • S 12 194 No•• SoUl·•oved c11rne' count In 11an<1· 1no\. t"'' <lo not TUHdtY'• Sctt't't Afl9lh 6, San Franc11co S ~ t , Pnllt<lelP'lle 2 PllllburOll 6, Bo1lon S Detroit 9, SI LOUii I Ttall 14, ClnclnNll S Toronto 1. Mfnn411ote I Allenra 7. Montrtal 2 Unlv•nltv of Arizona 1, Clevtlan<I (HI S Oaltlaod 2. Mllwtuk" I SH11'41 12, Cllletgo CullS 2 Clenland (u ) 12, San DltllO 9 KenMI CllV VI. Ntw Yorll Ye nlt.Ht •• Fort Lavoeroere. Fie . PC><I .• rain Housron 3. 01000 Whitt SOK 2 New Yortt Mets 4, Balllmor• 2 TNIY'tG- Clev ... O<I "'· A"91ft •I Palm SP"lno' MonlrH I (U ) YI, Oodlolr'I •• Vero Beech Minnesota (IS) vs Clnclf1Nll al Tampa Toronto VI New York Meli •I SI Pelerlt>u,.O Tues YS. Allanl• a l WtSI Pelm 8e•Ch Belllmor• "''· Kensas Cllv et Forr MYert Chlcaoo Wnlle So• (u ) "'° Pl1111>uro11 •' Bra<141nlon 8o\ton vs Cnlcago W"llt $OJI hU, al Saresore MUwtvtlM vs S..Hle at TotmP9 ()all.lend vs ClllcHo Culls a t Mast San Francisco vs S.n 0'-oo t i Yuma PT!lle<ltle>hl• vi Dtlroll er Lell.tlen<I, n MonlrH I (U ) VI New Yori! Venltffl at Forr Lavoerdai.. n Ml,,,,.sote (n l v' Hou1t0<1 11 Klulm· ,,_, n Thuncl9V's Gamet Oakland n Allells e t Pelm Sprfno' Mlnnesol• Yt. Dedew1 e r Vero Beacn Pllltburon vs 8o1ton at Winier Haven Detroit v1. Cincinnati 11 Tempe Toronto vs Sr Lou\\ ti St Pt!er\burg "°""on v\ Montrn l ar Wttl Pelm BMCl'I Clncll\Mll (I\) VI Pflla.OtlPllla el C1t1rwe1er Ntw York Yanktft "' Texu 81 Pom· peno Atlenra v1 Belllmort •• Miami Cruceoo Cvt>s vt Ci.veta114 et Tucson MllwevkM vs San Francl\CO al Scot· ,,,, ... Seellle vs S.n OltllO e r Yuma, n Aneel11 ,, c;.,.nts S (et flelm SOr'"9s I San Fra nc11eo 041 000 OOl>-5 IJ A""'' 300 002 001-6 14 0 Garrtlh. Wlllllem\ 161. Wei" (61. Dav s (9) end Ciulaen, Romanlctt, Wllllt (71, Corbell (9) i nd Narron, Ll<IOlt (71 w-<orl>ell, 1·0 L-Oevlt , 0· 1 HR-A~s. JonH (I) Dodgers •• PNl"'5 2 lat Oetrwater, All.) Oo<loar' 410 021 oocr-t 1 l 1 PtlllaOtlOftla ?00 000 Ol»-7 s 7 Honevcutt, Diet 16), Nlt<lltflfuer Ill and Scloacl• Trevino (1), Brown (ti, Ma<l<l\ill, Sttwerr 161. Ltrell (II. Carmen C9I 1no Ru1..U W-Hot>evcull 1·0 L-Mad<lva 0-1 Cole9' bit Mblll NON·CONl'•RENCE Ln• Marvmeunt 10, UC lfVWI 7 Loyola 001 110 llO )-10 14 1 UC lrvlnt 130 110 000 ~ 1 14 I Peruu 1, Busl'I (21, Huenen 161. Re tnll()jtt (IJ 1n<I C.rafllll MCAnanv (8), JOllnlOll. RodrlOuer (S), 1(9111 (1), Llnlon (el, Meetelleh I 101 I nd Klint, Nk:l'IOlson Ill 2B-<larll II), Shock.lev (t), Balne (I), McAnenv (L) O.Jtrdln CLI HR-Donnel> ILi NOM·COHF•RENCE s.c.at C ..... II, L.11 VW!le 1 SoCa l Colle9t 301 041 200-11 17 3 L• Verne 100 000 231-1 10 3 SuMlvt n, Cl'lavtt (9) •nd Nelson, Abe!, Marllntr ISi. Meyab 161. w~ 171. Witll <II •n<I SPlnot«, Savoy 17), MacMasters (91 28---0ver_.,, (SCCl. NtlM>n l!>CC) 3B-+iarvev (SCC), HR-OVtrreem ISCCI , C~c ..... baMtlel OlltANGE COAST INVITATIONAL OrMet C..11 11. Soutt!wntem 10 Sovrnwe11ern •22 100 100-10 9 OrenQt Coasr 023 Ol1 20x-12 13 ~ Rico, Ramlrtl ISi, SchOOnboom 161. Mclnettv (6), Kent 11) end Baater, Guyton II), Foltv. Walsn 121. RlshOvd ISi Ind EllllOll W-Rlsllovd, 2·0 L-Mctnenv 2B-Devls IS), Plnntll ISi. EMlson COCCI 2. Sl•ton HR-Burer ISi Jamfl IOCCI Or•-Ctesl t , Klnel Atvw S K.11>111 River 000 JOO 02<>-S 6 l Dfll!Ot Coas1 000 304 02x-9 13 1 Cartm, Pulldo 16) •no Gtrll!9«, 011non a nd En1son w -01.non. 2-2 L-<•••m 28-C.erl,_, llCRI 2 Peltn (OCC> Slaton IOCCI, HAPPY BIRTHDAY USC to pick Raveling? Mlch•I• Abela Chad Lan• Chrl1 Jabobs Erin Sating Su1on Holmberg Best Wishes from: Dr w Ronald Redmonda & Staff Orthodontics Janice Hunsaker Sheri Pascual Michelle Farria Adam Metchikoff Jimmy Mclean Kent Kreutzer Dave Hallan Tasha Wa1hlngton Susan Sybeama ,' Shane Paley 30111 Niguel Road • Laguna N1gul!I (714) 495-0800 LOS ANGELES (AP) -Coach George Raveling of Iowa has been offered the position as head basket- ball coach at use and is seriously cons1dcnng accepting the Joh. a newspaper said today. There is a possiblhty that Raveling will be named the Trojan coach Thursday, according to the Los Angeles Times. 181 Aventda Vaquero • San Clemente (714) 412·2141 The position has been vacant since Stan Morrison rcsi~ed to assume an ------------------------------1 adm1n1stra1ivc position at the univcr- s1 ty two weeks aao. THE Ravclin~ has received a "very ~ attractive' offer from use. the report R E A K F A S T ~J 5818sc Athletic D1rtc to r Mike J McGee could not be reached for CLUB The hit movie :=thout teenage lite 1n the 80s comment , I The r~port comes le's than a wc:ck l after four USC freshman ploy_crs - f Tom LcMs. Rich Grande. Bo Kimble ; and Hank Gathers -met with J i McGee and asked that he hire a local coach. Each member of the group, which • has been called one of the top TIDAY 1 rccruitina classes of 1985. sa1d he ME would C'Qnsidered transferina tf H. McGee did not meet the demand. • f Ravclina was in Houston Tuesday , to be interviewed for the University w of Houston coachina JOb vacated by M04.&.Y .. IHOWA.l.O • EMIUO ~STmVl!Z • .IUOO flf•LAOH A.UY &H •DY • A1'#T't+OHY MJOHALL HAU Wed. March 21, 9 P .M. (cc;I .A Guy Lewis, wbo reured at lhc end of 8 the season Ravelina rq>e>rtcdly tum· J ed down Hou11on's offer. J Jn h11 th~ years at Iowa, RavcUna amassed a S4-38 ruord and took tbc Copley /Coaonr Cabtevl1lon 549-3500 f Hawkeyes 10 \M NCAA oost-ieUOn -----------------------------~• tournament twtoc NON·CC*flllll•Nee 0....... W.t " I.A ........ GOiden WMI Gi\ I• IGO--i 9 I L.A Herbor 000 000 I.... 1 i S.IMI•, Tedo,111911 (I), IMnln (I) llld Slllrtev. H~. Alexender (5) and Ootntr W-S.IMI,. 2·2 L.~. 2&-Shlr19Y (GW), Nun IGW), Gomet (HI. HR-$hlf'ltY IGWI, AlbtlOht (HI. Seuth CNsf C. .... •icot W L O• OrtflO!t Coear 1 0 Re""'° S.nUe90 6 J IV'I Ctrrlto1 s , 2\'J CYPfMt S 3 21'1 Fullwton 4 4 31'1 St<l<llebecl< 3 4 4 Golden Wnt l 5 4\IJ Mt. San AntonlO 2 6 5\l'J CGmPIOl'I 0 I 7\l'J Mll*Y'• GMw (!:») ~ al Ortnoe Cotti T-*iY'1 G.-(2:ll) GOl<lert Wnl e t R encno Senrlago St<l<lleblldl at Comptort Fullerton et Mt San Antonio ClfPl'tsl al c ... rllos Hllh scMet be ...... WHT ANAHllM TOUltNAMllNT w11111-.1,_,.,.,.• (Slx ......... time lmltl Wood"'l<IOe 012 401-t I 3 Rlorden 200 600-t 12 3 Goodmtn. Fow119 (4), Allen tsl and SM-. McN" 161; c.Mllo. Pedlle W , HIM (S) end Hin 2B-Fllla (WI, tllo<lrl9uez (W), C•tvlllo (Rl 38-&tlltneourt (W), Pedlttt CR), SANTA ANA IL.KS TOURNAMllNT l'"""9 10, Sel'ltll AM e lrvlne 240 000 ~10 16 s Sanl• Ant un 012 J-• t 1 Siewert. Smetenlta (6) end Htl>trm.N, Arvlre, Lo.,.z (2), Berrios (61 and OllYtrH. W-Smel•nlta, 2·3. L-8arr'°'· 28-f'lortts (SAi, Stertlno (SA) 38-Ha"'911n 111 G•"°"' Gm. S, ,._..cir • Garelefl Grove 003 002 l>-S a I Sa<IOtel>aCk 110 100 l_. I ? C"avez, Kieler (7) end W9btr; S.ldena, Brtotir <ti, Rowa (61 •n41 Sltve, Toi~ (6>. 28-Muns IGG) 38-()nllveros (Sl HR-<>nllvaros (S) ANGELUS LEAGUE s.i-vtte t. Mater Del , Servile 001 4?2 o-t 9 0 Meler 0.1 011 ODO 0-2 9 3 Barklev, Ferouson 151 end llotllh, Hun I· lneton, Mtlvln ts>. Fi.mine 171 end ICtlfY 7B-Rot>t<1son (S), Ulmer ISi HIGH 5CHOOL STANDINGS S41met L .. we Fountain v111ev W911m1ns1er Ocean View Edison W L. T G• 2 0 I 2 I 0 ..., I I I I Hvnll1>11•on Beach Merine l 1 0 1·~ I 1 0 11.? I 1 0 l'tt TundeY'I GMM EdllOll vs Founle ln Vt llev a t Mlle Square Perk (7 p m I w.-...y,A,_.J Wtsrmln11er er Marina (3 IS p m I Ocea n View vt Hunllnolon Beach al Miit Souere Par" 17 P.tn.I s.. VJew u.we W LT GI Corone ~ Mar I 1 0 Colle~ l I 0 Estancia I l O lAouna Beech I l 0 Newoort Ha rt>or I I 0 Se<1<11eOtcX I I 0 Unlvtnlty I I O Wood"'l<lcl9 I I 0 W"""411Y, APfl 2 (>:IS jU'I\. > Est1ncle at Ca<ona dll Mar Laouna 8eecl\ e1 Co11a Maw Unlven.ltv al NewPOrl Hert>or Wood"'lctot el SaO<lltt>Kk South Coeat u.we W LT GI lrvlnt 2 0 0 Dent Hiiis 1 D O "'> El Toro 1 I 0 I Min ion Vleio I I 0 I Ceolstreno Valley I I O I l..aovna Hiils 0 I 0 1 San C*"tnlt 0 1 0 2 W"""4eY, Allf'I 2 (l DJn.) lrvlna al Sen Ctemenlt Ca1>111ra no VelleY et Dana Hiits El Toro •I Leovne HI•• Hl(;H SCHOOL VOLLEYBALL SunMt LMilW LMtut W L Edison 3 O Founta in Val141v 2 l Marina 2 I L.a Quinta 2 I Octan View 2 1 Hvntl1>11t0<1 8eecn 1 l wesrmtnster O • Wedllndey,Allfil) Founreln Vallev et Edlwn Marina a r WHlmfn\ler La Quin•• at Hunllneton lhacll Newporl Herl>O<' WOOOt>rldoe C0tone ael Mar Etle ncle Leouna 8eecn Cost• Me14 Unlvtrallv L-.W WL s 0 ) ) 3 2 2 , , 2 0 4 0 4 TvndmV'• Mltdln Woo<lbrl<IM •I Ellt ncle N-POrt Hert>or et Coste ~ u.o.-8eecll el University <Nw .. W L s I ' 1 4 J 3 I 4 1 I 1 0 7 Ovwral WL • 0 4 2 5 3 J s 3 2 2 s 0 ' NHL CAMl'e•L'-CON'IRl..C:I """""~ Y • E OfT\Ol'lton •·C.ioerv Wlnntpeo ~ Vancouver W L T S3 1S ' ,. 29 ' 2S 45 ' tt '5 ' " ., " ....... ~ ~ Of'GA 112 ,,. .. •1 322 lit S6 m >54 $1 2 ... >6S 51 U3 304 x·ClllcaeO x·SI. Loul• •·Mlnnttolt 11· TorortlO 0.troH l6 29 • eo ns m " JI • '° 2'1 176 Mil' n3031tf ~ ... 6 S2~3~ " 52 6 31 249 - WAL.IS CONP•IHNCI ..-atl'tC* DMtilell x·WetlllMIOl'I .. 21 S 101 290 241 •• PtllledelPhle • 22 • 100 J 11 m NY lalt'*" M 27 11 I) 296 ?61 Plll~roti 33 33 I 74 294 213 NY ltel'lff!'a 3' JS S 13 2S5 25-t N•w Jt<..v ,, 47 3 SI 2IO 3"' A ..... DMl*I Quebec 41 ,, s Montreal 37 31 • 8o•lon 3' 30 10 Buffalo SS 33 6 Harttord 36 3.5. 3 a-<tlnchtl:I Plevoff berth v-cllnclltd dMalon title TWMllY'• larw Welhlnolon 6, Boston l 17 '°' ~ 311 11 m 76 282 ]$ 305 New YMlt Reneen s. N-,,., ..... 4 E<lmonlon 7, Ottroll 2 St. LOUii 2, New Yorll lllendln 0 TMllM'IO- Ca!oerv et K-. Montr .. I al Hartford Edmonton et PlttlMoh MlllnftOte et Toronto o.1ro11 et C"1ceoo OulbtC et V•ncouvtr TllundlY'• ~ Monlrtal •I loston Bufftlo •• ~ .. SC. Louis et N.w J«..v NHL •veW races 271 262 2n m ns The Plevoff rtCft In lhe Natloner Hoclln L .. Out (loo tour IH ml In •Kii dlYl\lon quellfy for PillYofts). Nole: AN four Plavott tPOh In lhe Norris Division ,,.,,. been dlnchtd. CAMl"SEU. CONF•RENCE SmVW. DMIMfl W L. T P'ta GI" GA v·Edmonton S3 IS 6 112 391 214 •·C.IOtrY 36 29 ' 11 Jn 2ff WIMIP90 2S 4S 6 S6 279 35.C I<-. 22 45 7 SI 264 365 Venco.s,,., 1' 41 13 SI 2Sl 304 REMAINING GAMIES WIHNlt"IG 14) -Horne (I): AP"ll ' Celoarv. Awev 13). Merefl 2t er C.IOtrv. Mertl'I 31 e l Klncn: APl'll 2 et IClnos. ICIMGS (6) -Home !•l: Mardi 26 Ce!Otrv; Mardi 31 WlnnlP90; Aorll 2 Wlnnl1199, Ae>rll S Vancouver. Away (2) Mardi 21 ar Vancouver, Mardi 29 e r QueciK. VANCOUVIR (7) -Horne (4): March 26 Quebec; Marc" 11 IClnos; Mere" 30 CalOtrv, AMII 6 Edmonron. Awn 131. APl'll I ., C•loarv. Aorll 2 a t Edmonlon: AMII s 11 Kl1>111 WALES COHFaREHCE. P'ell1c:lr DMtlefl W L T ..,. Gf GA x·WHlllnQIOtl .. 21 S 101 290 241 •·Pttll•ottl>llte • n • 100 J 11 m NY lllend•n 36 27 11 13 296 261 F'1ttlbllroh l3 l3 • 7• 29• 2n NY Renotrl l3 J5 S 71 250 250 New Jer-sey 24 f7 3 Sl 2IO l44 ltaMAJNIHG GAMllS Naw YORK ISLANOIH (6) -Home <2): Mere" 2' E<lmonlon; April S New JtrseY. Awev If): Merctl 21 at Wasnlnoton. AorM I el PtllledMc>hlt. AorM 2 et Pit· t11>uron, AO<'ll 6, t i N-WM'Y. P'ITTS•UlllGH 161 -Home (31· Mercn 26 E<lmOnlort, APl'h 2 N-Yortt Islanders, Aprll S Pttlledtll>llle. Awev (3): Mardi 29 at MonlrMI; APl'll I ., WtlhlnQlon; Ae>rll 6 ., New York Renotr1. NEW YOltlC RANGERS 161 -Horne 141 Merell 21 Edmonton, Mardi 3 I New Jersey, AP"h 1 Pttlla<lelOllla, Aorll 6 Pit· rsburgn Awev (21: March 29 ar PnlleOtl· Piiia, Aprll S et Wnhlnvton Quebec Mon I rte I 8osron Buff a lo Hertford Adllms OM.- W L T ll"tl GF GA 41 29 s 17 JOI 2?1 37 JI 6 IO 311 262 34 30 10 11 m m 3S l3 6 76 212 273 u 35 3 75 ~ 215 ltEMAINIHG GAMH OU•BaC (S) -Home (2)· APl'll I O.troll, Aprh 5 Boston. Awn (3)· Mardi 26 et Vancouver, Mardi 29 e1 Kings, AorM 1 e t Naw Jtr.-v. MONTRIAL (') -HOme Il l' Maren 2t Plltsbur11ll; As>rll 2 Ottroll; APl'll S Buffeto. Away (3)· Mere" 26 et Hartford; Merell 27 •• 8osron, Aorll • at Buffalo. 90STOH 161 -Home !•I: Merell 27 MolltrH I, Mardi 2t lklftaio. AO<'ll J Tor· onto, Aorff 6 Hanford. Away 121. Merell 30 el Buffeto, AO<"ll 5 e l QueclK. •UFFAl.0 (6) -Home 121: Merefl 30 Boston; Aorll 4 Montrul. Awtv <•>· Merell 27 e t F't!lledell>hle; Mardi '9 et &oiton. AP"ll l el HartfOl'd; April S el MonlrHI HARTFOlltD (6) -Horne <•I: Merefl " Montrtal, Merell 29 W..ntllllton, AMII I Buff•lo; Aorll S Toronto. Away (21. April J .. Washll'Qlon; April 6 ., Botton ll--<llncn.d Playoff bllfth v-dlnc:N<I division lltlt o... ......... OAV•Y'S LDaCIR (....._, ... di, -96 enoi.r1. 36 rodl n1tr, 1 M llbut, 1•9 cellco beu. 10 .. nc1 beu , 1e1 meckowet, 379 DtUI _.Ch, N•WPOttT LANO.NG -40 anoters )5 Ku!Pln, 20 send beu, s rodt nM'I, 2 Mllbu•. t3 mec:k.erel. L .. AJemllln TU•SOAY'S RHULTI ( ltll tlf SS·..._. llenleM "'""""91 lllRST RACa. One mite NCe. Gem«lle (Hiii) ff,00 1UO 7.JO Oul Oul Mecltmt (SMIPI) 5.00 lAO Cet>emtl ( T o<1<1 II) UO Time. 2;04. ,, U CACTA (f-2) oal<I un.eo saCOND u ca. One m11e 1ro1 Andr-s Ster (WlmS) 26 20 11 00 UO Seturoav D•n le.tr> 10 60 10 IO Pffdl Jemb (Beker I S 60 Time: 2:03 21 S n •XACTA <•·SI oalO s lSf 60 TM•D lllACE. One mlle p.c- Maooe ll(~) 4 60 3 20 2 40 TIDls (Slfftll) 3.60 U0 Nellve Fox (Plercel >.60 Time. ?:«>, " IXACTA (3·41 Ptl<I $IO 00. FOURTH RACI. One mllt trot SM WlllU*' (Aubin) S 20 4 DO UO ~ ... UCOUP CVlnOllflm) 7 IO l 60 $mOll y ltMf (I( UIC>llf I . , '° nme: 2:03 '' S Fl,.,... RACE. OM milt pace . Cl\trles Nevmed (Parker> • 00 3.00 t.40 ~IGIY Trouble (Grun<IY) '-20 U0 Wll<I And Cruv Gulf (Cra#fordl l eo Time 2.-01 2/S. Sl EXACTA 11-21 Ptld noo SIXTH RACE. OM mti. pace Benro<l<len ( Lonoo I 1 80 4 00 3.40 Pllmsoll (Parlo.erl 4.00 3 00 Kiwi Son (Medland I 4 00 Time. 151 4/S sJ IXACTA IHI paid $36.00 S•VINT H AACI. One mli. pace. Hev To SPM<I (Pierce) S 20 J.60 3.00 Celflvs Blvn <O.somerl 120 5.00 F1411hle New Year IMcCe r1YI SIO Time 2'03 l /S Sl aXACTA <S·6l oald '57.60 alGHTH RACI. Ont mile o•C•. SOnnvt Counlrv (Mueller I 10 40 3.20 2.IO Jotlv Monterev (V•llendlnetram) 2 40 uo Winsome Lowsome (Scnanks) 3 00 Time. !'.SI l /S Sl l!XACTA ('·SI paid 13HO NINTH RACE. OM mlle pace Revel\M Fros• I Pierce I 13.60 S 00 4.40 8ooot. Bluet (Rull) 360 1 IO Nuevo Maoole (All<ltrton) 1 40 Time 2-00 11 S. Sl l!XACTA (2·3) paid S6HO U l"KK SIX (S· 1· l·S+11 paid '3S3 40 ro 43 wlnnlno tk:k•h Inv• 11or .. s) Cerrvover POOi. 127,9'1.73 TENTH RACE. One mile oece Wind Orloren (Anclersonl 1 40 J IO J.AO Ml<lnlOhl Mint (VellandlnoMm) ).20 2 60 Gentle Ski-(Parker I 'IO Time: I 51 31 S 12 IXACTA (t·S) paid '27.00 aLEV•NTH RACa . One mlle PKa Brien e..c" I Baker) _JO 60 11 eo 12 40 Gal<ltanes O.ncer lPerto.t'JY t IO 4 40 FalM R19el (Anderson I ) 20 Time 2-00.2 U IXACTA (9·•> Paid '219.20 AllenGence· 3.S62 Totel M<.tluel Handle 1733,644 TUeld!IY's .,.....C1tenJ •AH•AL.L ~'--­MILWAUKEE IAEWERS.-Sent BJ s..rnoH. cateher, tn<I MIU Blr1tbeck. Pllell· er. lo their minor IHOUI Ctmi> NEW YORK YANKEE$-Oe>tloM<I Pt\11 L.omt>er<ll, Cltehtr, end 'Ille Male, OUI· flel<ltr, to Cotumt>u1 of tht lntarnetlonel LHOut Reaulg"9<1 Brtd Arn$berO and Alfonso Pulloo, o11cner-1. to lhelr minor !Moue Cll?IP. SEATTLE MARINERS.--Welva<I Al Cnamt>trs, oulflel4er NetleNIL.Mwe HOUSTON ASTAOS-Asslonecl ROC>l>1t Wine. cetcntr, •n<I Louie Me•doWl. our· Rtl<ltr. to Tuscon o4 ,,.,. P1clflc Coe•t LeaoUI and Troy Aftrllr, c:atc:r-, a nd Jose V•ro1n end Mitt• Frle<ltrld'I. 1>11~1. ro Cotumt>vs of Iha Soulhern LHOUI PITTSBURGH PIRATEs.-Nemt<I Or Wtrren SIPO Alrenoth and condlllonlno coech •ASKETaALL NetMMI .... etllel ASMdeften CLEVELAND CAVALIE RS.-Sloneo fortnef UC Irvine oltlyer Blfl McDonald, forward, 10 a contrK1 for rne remalll<ltr oi the'"'°"' FOOTaALl ........ F ....... L..ae9U8 NEW YORK JEn-slOnec Jonn Misko And Joe Proluic>, PUnler1. Cedric Mlnlow. rvnnlno. t>aGk, Boris Prtl'<ltroreu, Nlctt Bruckner end Tony Stnltll, wide rec91vers, George Achlet, <leftrtllYt leckle, Frank Sutton •O<I JOhn KllOO. offen11ve ouerdt , Eric SIOltts, center. De vld Dunnam, of· fentlve recttlt, eno Mall Cournrev, cor"9t' l>aek '-llM ,...., I.Mew EO~TON ESKIMOS--Slo"9<1 Rudy Pl'lltrfo•. offenllv• lineman HAMILTON TIGER·CA H -Slontd Mark Casele, -rterbecll, end Tommy AleKtn<ltr, o.fen1lvt lineman MOCKaY ........ ~.., l..ae9U8 NEW YORK RANGElls-Aecan.d Jim Welmow. cltlenseman, "°"' New Haven of the Amerletn Hoc.key Lffout GOLi' CANADIAN PGA-Ntmed Dave Cotllno executive dl,.ecror·IO\ll'ne....,,r dirte.tM Mayotte upsets Gilbert in Chicago tourney CHICAGO(AP)-Unseeded Tim Mayotte parlayed a series of deft drop shots and well-placed passing shots Tuesday night to upset fourth-seeded Brad Gilbert, 7-6, 6-7, 6-3. in the opening round of a men's tennis toun1afnent. Repeatedly criticinng the calls of linesmen, Gilbert bad rallied to square the match at one set each in a second tic-breaker. But in the the final set beina contested at the Illinois-Chicago Pavilion, Mayotte, ranked J 7th in the world, broke Gilbert's service in the seventh .-me, scoring twice wilh great passing shots. In the final singles match, third· seeded .Boris Becker of West Ger- MUC ll)TlC( many took advantage of several unforced errors to score a 6-3 6-1 victory over Mike Leach. · Leach, ranked 56th in the world lost his service break in the seventh game of lhe opening set, double faulting three strai&ht times. Then while serving out the ninth game: Becker scored three times with wcU- placcd passina shots. Ml.IC ll)TIC( DI Pollack ta~tful on 'Purple' shutout By RICHARD DE A'n.EY ,.. ,,,~ .... LOS ANGELES-"Out of Afnca" was the bta winner at the Academy ~wards. but producer-director Syd, ney Pollack knew it was a no-win s1tuauon to discuss why "The Color Purple" was shut out dC$1>ite l l nommauons.. Pollack adnutted to some swpn~ about the shutout of "The Color Purple," and dcd1ned to a.na.l)'!e its failure. "You put me ID a difficult mcmbend bow casual tt aU was I.be 6m umc, tn 1927 ... It at I.be R003evelt Hoed We'd JUSl finished 'Winp.' and we ~ tokl. (Gary) Cooper and Clan Bow a.ad Dd Arlen and mysd( that •'e were lD t.br outstand.in& l>ictu.re. oome to.a lunch- eon at the Hollywood R~vch. .. We did So to the lu.nc.beon.. and •-oe rcc:cived little cards or t01J>C1.hin&. I don't remember. because we dldn't keep them, I don't thmk it was even covered on radio." spot. because I can't wtn no matter .--------------- bow l answcr that question,.. he l••lllllilllll!llll!l.-111111• .. said." .i\nd I would ltke not to put a damper OD the evenma by trying IO speculate on an undlpJomauc: q~ oon Wlth an undaplomauc answer." "Out of Afnca" excepted. the awards show followed no pattern, wi th tbe four acung awards each aoing to a different film. Geraldine f>aae , nominated seven omes before, was deltghted after w1001ng be$t actress for her role as an aged woman aearduna for her past ID "The Trip to Bountiful." "I bad a suspicion," she satd."My husband (actor Rip Tom). told me 1 was 10 grave danger this time of actually getting it ... "Vay for the genalrics. yay!" she shouted 10 referenc:c to the late-areer awards for her and Don Amecbc. best supporting actor in "Cocoon ... "It's ruce, even if it 1s a tribute to me .. having been around for as long as I have." said Am«he. The 77-yea.r-old actor said he basn 't been asked to do another role since be finished "Co- coon" 17 months ago. Hun. wbo won best actor for tus role as the impnsoned homosexual. tn "KJss of the Spider Woman," said he didn't think about winning an award. "My honor 1s the work." be said. "l bad the work.. There arc really no honors greater than that. .. Buddy Rogers, winner of the Jean Hersholt Human1tanan Award. re- ~ ' "."., •• ~!:' 9 , _.._ ............... ...__ .... STAIJlll Dl-11 '35-l770 mi llWllmA m..sm .... ,.. I.IA llM:S I 952..utJ ..,, ... EDWMDSHMml ""' '3 l ..J5t l ILTm mwMDS SMIDUIACI Sll·SllO ... , .... EDWMDS CHMTB CDml ac1.ono ... EDWMDS lll'OSITl 154s&111 LI 11111& MIC FASID SQUM£ (21J) Ql-OUJ u ... ,~CAmm snm1 Lllm& ... mwMDS SO. COAST l.Mllll 4'7 • l 711 -~ 6J4.2SSJ UIT& Ill mwamsmsrrt 540-7444 ITMITll £DWMDS Vl.l.Mil CDml 191-57 IUIWta PACR: lllAT J9 111-11 191·3"·3 ~ -~--- ....... -·-... --·---.. _ ------··-. ... _ -·-· ~ .. ·----·-... --·------· :.~- -~ ... GUIG • TRECOKEDY W1THOUI' llaAIU'.s. NOW PLAYING • 1111,A -........ ~UJI U1L1M 11A01 WU1Wii8 --c..i f-C--.,, 1•u ., .. cml•-·~...u ... '°'~'~ .... ~ '"''' \.4'N ..... Cllll•~ _ .. 10--,_._.... -llllJD ....... ,,_ __ ·--~ .,.,,. __ _ , ........ c.......r--... ,.~ 0.-00 ~ . ... ~.,, _..,.. -CINl:·FI QONl:- SNAKl:RS ARI: BACK STADIUm [] '12 1111 •ur!lt !tr St1f••"' "°"'" ACAMMV Ill s ,..., MU• .... Y'S •OMANC& CPG-• J) 1.00 3·20 5 :40. 00 .. 10. ts CAJtlE -.-u II (S) 1 25 3:25 5:25 Crou-roads (A) 7 ·25 It t :35 S•P•,.t• Admls"on Aeq. Plu1 Pee Wee•s 819 Adwenh.tr• (f'C) S&i:EftN8 8EAUTY te) Plus Tiie Jou'"•Y of Nally Gann (~) CEnTURY ClnEDOmE r:J U4 2!1~] Cll1tman & Sailu ,.,., f...., TIC MOtlEY PfT IN) SHOWS AT I ,SS j :SS 5:S5 7 :55 & t :55 0""8 MO ....... SHOWS AT I :00 3:20 S:4 0 1:00 It 10·15 DOW91~0UTNI ~LY"'LUfa) Plus Splalt\ (~) DOW9I AIM> OUT ... 9CVS•LY "'U.S C•l SHOWS AT I: 10 3:2S ---------t--------i Audemy Nomtnff THE COLD• "'•"--( P1u1 Mad Ma•. aeyond S:U 7:SO It 10:00 flOUU ACADEMY Ill (N) I 141 2 :41 I 141 7:45 & t :41 .... rrTY ... .... K ..... 1Jl 1:00 3:10 S:20 7·30 & t~ Tllunderdom. (fll0· 13) 0111\ll t•I o, .. l :JI WU1y1ll:H Whdt.IU••t1 U fret Uel1t1 ••o• - Guess whds going to be the life of the party? /IPRll fOOl'f DAY c.t••» , .... r-c.o.. ftOO l\191 ,_.s-. Mt ~ ... A cut aboYe the rest. ..... ,....,..,__., ... ,, "'--_.._..\ "" ''" - _,_m.., ..... ---.nm .-mm a-m• ...... aao • ----·-..... -... ---... --'" u--... f'MISU-1 -m.-•--.i _ .... NCR_ .. -....i aanc.- .-. • -~ caa •a-87 .....,,_ ----... NOt ...... ~a.u ... b..,. .....,_ -.&T II I U """ .......... ltllllu .. ,__,.. ti~ I HGM ............... 1MI COi.Oii PUml\I ~-• • ...... Jdt ... lltJlt]jl "" ,_, ..... ·- ti ~ r a t 11a1• ._.. ......... OUT Of AllllCA 1Nt • .... ,.1dl ... .......... _ DOWN Ne OUT W llWBY-.U .. ,_.. ...... ,.. ..... ...,"'8_ JUST llTWllN ........... ~­----..,._MOI ... •• n..1111 .... ... IOUY-· .MQ&l, ___ """ ........ ~ .................. UU91 "0 fft'410 CllOllllOADI " .............. ,... ............. _ DOWN Ne OUT IN llva&.Y .. W tllt .......... ""*" ...,....., ..... ~ .......... ............ -...... - ' ' lllCMl8llf OUT Of ANICA N . ..... ~- flOUCI ACADIMY i, UoCX .. ,. .... .... ... .. ... ...... IUI Ml ... •l;.1,;;; ... ;;;-.-i.._ _______ ...;;., __ ...,, ANA EIM U1'111t !HJLer um ,..., c:i..11 ....... .,..... IA.DINI SIXTllH CAHDUS tfllt 1. MOUll1111 2. NAICID CMM lll i . ....m Of'"' cm 111 1. ICllllN tUT 1111 2. Dll TA POllCI Ill J. ,,.. .. ORANGE (??4) IM-nll/U ""' a C....,.. .......... "°" OUNG NOt "'''l ftADtNG PUCU 111 .,,~ .._ ........ ~. .,..... .-A .... ..., ~,.,. ..... .... NICll~­DOWN AND OUT IN UVU1 y HtW Ill lllVDL Y HtLU COP ~ .. ..,_..,.. SUIPtNG NAUTY 11t TMI JOUmNIY Of NAnY O.V-. IN! LaHABRA ......... ~ ~ L • llAOCNI SIXlllN CNef.U 1Nt MOUT---~ P1t11'TY IN,._.,..., .. JUST OHi Of THI OUYS ,,., .. 1. KttllN lllT 1111 2. HOUll 1111 J. NM1D CMM 111 EY .f!~ 5 2.00 ••mlW"l .........,...., LUlUlUI .. ,_ •• , -~ -.i1 ... iilll1 ... 111tJl•r-• sW" J .::=\--..':.Tm;.,., LtA. NL ~lt -IA .. U\!.!.Ja:JI -.--•NW,_ .._ ... sas--r1--1r-C'P'-U) ~ll\Ul.H'-M •smw.- ~• .... CPC-U) ll'I\ l:l\ 4 15 1!1\ H\ IHS -edwards BRISTOL >40-7u.a ... !.,... '~ , .......... . " ... ,. ...... ... ,; j', " ....... '"Tm T9TI llSSll• .. (PCj I IS. l:2I. 5:.a. NI. •.JI ll,llJWllW edward1 _ ,,..F MA "'E,. ~". '" •' . .. ~ • t ... , .. .. ... .. . ' ....... ~.4WCl ..... Sall ...... "Cm Ir (K-ll) 11:4\ -ti\ 1 .. "' u•ma•• ..... ... mYIUrtl) edwerd1 WOODBRIDGE SS I 06S'i • .......... -.. t • ~ • • .. .. ... illllt • I f' ' ) "CNITS" (C) lUI ....... nll..S .. ... .., '"" (PC) ltU. t1S.~U ll\ kl\ It.IS u•••• 'Ull._r(C) 11.ll, l;l\~ ~·l' p•DiiiM .,~ "SUlNC _,,.. (C) lttllAW 6.AtAt:tl •--.--.. -.-...... --...... StOl•NW "HlJC( ICM(llf , .. (PC) ll:tl. 2:11, ... " ....... l .• I edwards CINE MA C ENTE R 979-4141 "•••o,. Sl .,c a .t.O AM' Mfta wfltOl .:ttrc 'I• _0STA ME'A ....... ...... , H•ll('" LM.M.IU" "tlf • ..,.. "' Jill -=-i. .Unit UIJ'll -.cOIO ~ W' (K.U) ''CltSSltUS" (I) 11\ ~JI. HO. tlS. ltll 1• l'tl S• 1-. t.9 ....... . ...... "MWI I WT • t ruca OCU'f SnJIO moo IW" "' """~~C:u, ""Ct-.. TS" (C) 1 11 l ll HS HI. ltlS IHI. l~ --------•if M fWI M !Pl sue TIES a IH ...... 1 MT • "UI" (PC) mnu .u· (I) I .... l•. 1• 1 ll, l-4S. , .. US l:ll,t-tl lf'IS 11.MJWIAW M l ..,-S "SUENC tum" (C) 11 ll, I:• n1 tJI. 7,JI. t:ll··· a.•nuaw STlllWfNW '?IUC( lalllY J" 12-ll. Z'.ll, 4 JI 6 JI, tJI ll:IS (PC\ • .......... TOii_, "111 _, ftT' (PC) lttl.,.... •• ....... , .. •"°·-fiUiiiliiR "JIST lmlUI F911S"(K.1J) I JI, 411111 •ll i:Mull &ill ._,IJ'SMMC('' ll I\• I\ I IS lfl.U) "C1tS••r fl> nt.!J\ltlS •tW•PllCf 11111.-s "Tll _, Pfi (PC) litl,?l\, 4 ll , ..... ,u. U .MDUlnl .,., II.LOI .......... ISISTHS" It-• HI, 441 {N-IJ) ~''*'-II:~ ·-.-'WT .... "fNl IUI, UI. UI. t JI .• ...... •lMCI sat "..-m • ,_.. IN·U) ltA.HI.•• u ......... ...• ,_ • ftllal "-' "Clll ... fN.U) IJl.He.\• Ut.lt8 •smm,. 4mD ... aa. --. .. . ..._ rt"-IJJ 11\. la ML ttt. ltJS ... , ... "a.._r1e> waii•ror ... ...... "~ ... ,. ed w ard s ~.._ .... ftl\j(, T :_'llj I ~ ."181' •t I .. .. t. "-l -........ , .... •smm,_ ... ..... tst.HS ............ ,.., ••er ,,,., ,.. ,tB u•••• mtrt'8.-• "ml l(TEI W " t'C-U) t.Ja.t•J-l M edwerd1 -v1L 1.. AGE CINEMAS 89' 0St-' It • -I • • • "" .. - • I .. t ._ H • ~ • • ... ...... ~,-,, .. ,_. ..... ,., lli\ li1 *!S US. t i\ ltlS R:fd&r ... tf&-UI 1H1. tu. •..a ,._tu •sm·.- ..,Sftlll "Nm • ,_.. C'P'-U) l•lll S: .. l: ..... c•n rs· (I) U1. UL tJI. lta . .,, ... ......... T" U.lO .I. \t edwards Nf S"TBROI°'• _\l '2'l' ., ... ... ..... .. . . . •• • ..... ' ...... t ... • • 11M••-"llCIY r CNJ z:a.ue.1 ... ..nnwlllar U:a.til. .. ,., p•IWll• ~(I) IN\4'41.~ "UCITIMFITm" l"-ll 'll. ltll lfCl R.9JWl&W "Clll IUIS r (C) w Sll, 1.JI. •.JI U.Mlllllnl srrw lmuaMi "NUCl KAKIY J" (PC) ll l.\l l It uarm1m •t ..-n "sutNC IUm'' (C) llllt•J• ~-1 ll tll u•ma•• ....... TS"(C) ~(I) l l edwuds M ISSION VIE JO MAL l 49r, t>:Jl' 'II l '• • • ... & I ....... '1'1rnl ...... I ti. l.• ~-,..IS) HI. .... . ...... ......... W'r111 • edw ards .., w r.~ , '•A '-,' L A ., l\o A I< • " lo A I '• a • lo •smw,.. __ .. _ ....... ,..lll ...... t1',IUI . ... , . ..,.._., ,..,., \.tAlM.t.• ••M. lt.8 . • - • . . . . . . . . • . . • . . . . • , # # • , , # , , , ' , I I , , . ~ . . I OrMg9 Comt DAILY PtLOT/ Wednelday, Maten M, 1988 CALL 842-5878 IT'S llMt TO mnE LR WAI Ollel SO NIMY lllTI I FOii• IY Hlf.ll IOlll MT IY LOOlllll 11 Tiii DM. Y PIOT'S OUSSllDS. You can now call the D•llY Piiot Cl•••lflec:I Dept. on Saturday morning from 8:00to11:30·•.m. to piece your Sund•J •nd Mond•Y •d• • •MUTAR ...... .._., 111S ......... '''° MISC. llNTALI .-••••1a111MT• """'~ *' ....... ,_IAU ~Yll.C.-IJU '""""-""""' ,. .. c.....11.----1102 AMl944*4 le ----eOU ... Cl .. Y -· .. -l)U -c--,. .. 0..,.-. 1~ i..t&'-. ,.,. "'-'-' °'-.atf HOUIH/CONDOI i..t.. .. 1400 -~ ,. .. -''°' ~ JOOJ ~-eoeo a-..., • ..., CM Of C:. ,,..., •n• I-l ltO ............... ,, .. ,..,__...._ .. ,......o... ~ 0.-el ICICD °"' Of .... ";;::. IUO v ............... vn W..&.__ )012 fV_,.._, eOIO ..... ,.,,... ...__ 100. _ _.._,,__, ISU APAITMINTI .-1 ....... Jn• I ..... IOI• ...__ ICXl1 _.._., "'° ...-w ...... t ne o.wc.. )Ott ~-1011 f ........ UfO c-.. -ICln .. :::r 1.00 c--107• •t. * •tU 11-9-10'1t f11-IOH 111111'AL• -v-., IQM ................. 1040 HOU SIS/CONDOS ........... -ICW1 "-1044 °""9t9I JIOJ ~-IM ............. tlOt .._ ..... I°'° ..... -1101 '-~ •on e.,.,..--2111 i.i.'-IQH c..-.. -21n _..,. IQtl c--212• ,_...._ IC»f _,_ 111• a.a.-.. 107t 61-,.,, ._,_.c..,.._ 10'71 ,.--..11...., ,.~ ..... ._ IOIO ........... -2140 ..... -....... 10"6 """""""' -,.., s....c--IOlt -,. .. '--'-'* .._-JUI I-IOfO ..__ JI)() .._ ....... 21'2 MllC. I.I. &-. ..... JU) _... ...... ,,., .,...._ 1100 ......_. ...... ,. .. .._ 111S ... a...... 211• ..... ,c-.-. IUO --c..--1111 CLASSIFIED INDEX 642-5878 °"'"""' 1t01 0...,.. ... 77f0 '*-' )011 ..... .._ tea. ,,., .............. 20 c.---, ... ~ 11*1 UIMOY...., c.-.. _ i.n COMM•CIAL I ....... ~ c--,.,. ~ ......... , . .......,._ JIOO -...... ,.,. •.I. •AU/111111 .....,, .,°' lll-,~, ~/OH><. MOO , .... v..., ,~ "-77JO l ... •/1-"°' .-......-t..O -=w. ,,., -»IO ,__ __ ,.., ..,_, ·-11 .. (Moo/......._ U:IO -,.., ~,_., 1nl o..-.1 »JO 1--, ... °""""'""'~ 1116 f....,_W--4 uas 1--JtJO ........w ,,.. l_......, ,.,,, .,._.._., l 190 MDGIA .... I \ ......... ,.,,, -v.,. , .. , --··· ........ ......,.., ...... , ... ~..:::.-s..a--,.,. MIAllCIAL --c.--1•1' ----1tl0 ...._,.. .... 7tOO -.................. , ... -o.--,_ '-''--c--,... ...._w-*"' JfOt c_.... -l-, .. ==-"°' ,_la, ... ,.,_ 2tf0 ,.., _,,,,..,,,,,,.., _..,1.i- "-""-*"' -...,10·. DEADLINE I PUBLICATION DEADLINE Monday ........... Sat. 11:30 AM Tuesday ........... Mon. 5:30 PM Wednelday ..... Tuee. 5:30 PM Thurlday ......... Wed. 5:30 PM ,.,. ........ _..... ,.,. _.._., ,. .. Ollb, ........... ' ,.,.._.. THE DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS Telephone Service Monday-Friday 8:00 AM-5:30 PM Sl1urdey 8·00AM·11·30 AM Bullne,e Counter Mond1y-Fr1day IOIO '°" IOl2 .ell• tOIS tOI• IOll .on eOU ~ . _, *1 IOATI °"'"""' •IOJ o.-.i ............ . tlOt ..... ,...... 11117 ..... c-.. _ .,,, ... .,,_, ... c--•U• _,..... .,,. ........ ........ , ...... ,~ ,__v., •1M• M,1/0ecb/..._ ...-..--•1.0 ~-t l•2 -•l.i MISC. 1--tUI ~ 1--... ti JO ~/1¥/l .... .._......, .,,, ~,,._ ~11\oie ettl ......_. ...... .I .. AUTOMOTIYI ........ .. ., ........ ......,... .,., -i-. _....._,_ A-W-*"' • Wloeol o.t...1-.. 1....- -VICI v-........,~ ... Cl .. Y u......i-.-. ......... •-Oo-"t ,....., ............... ., /Nol. - FROM NORTH ORANGE COUNTY FROM IOUTH ORANGE COUNTY 540-1220 •llOO Friday ............. Thura. 5:30 PM Saturday ............. Fri. 5:30 PM Sunday ............ Sat. 11:30 AM 8:00 AM-5:00 PM 842-5178 CHECK YOUR AD THE FIRST DAY The Dally Piiot 1trlve9 f<>f efficiency and accurecy. HOW9119r, occutOf'lally error• do occur. Pteue listen wher\ Yollr ad la rMd beck and cMc:k your ad dally. Repof't error. lmrnedlatety to CM2-5e78. The Dally Pltot ecoept1 no llablllty for any error In an advert!Mment for wNch It may be reapc>Mlt>te except for the coat of the epac. actually ocx:upted by the error. Credit can only be allowed for the first lnaertlon . 1'011 1012 101• 101t 1011 1Cno '°" 9010 I014 '°" .010 tOI> -'°"° fO)j tO.o tOoU '°'° tlOO •JOO ·~ .... ...... '"Salt ltwal lltl ltanal 1002 • ..,.rt ltacla lOlt c .. ttery Ltt1 C.1ta .... 1114 '!""'' ...... 2ltl c..ta .... -2124 C..ta .... 1124 •niert ...... •• **HINIL** Crnt• 1225 Exec2Stry•Br3Ba.POOI, Lldofurn2Br.den,2'Aba. ~Br 18&. CIMn 2Br 1Ba. LRG 1 BDRM. teundry, 118Rl/BX. CIMil. I& . ...... ,c.u.. IAOI UT mm UYI 11 IWPT IOI HLT 1111.100 i Lota In P9Citk view. Sold •P•· 2 car gar. Nice arH. pool/1pa/1ennl1. S2400. garage. w/d hkup1 $850 pool, no pet• S526/mo + rw baytronl unit. vt.w. 4 bdrm, 3 beth executl~ fll HHI 1111,000 EXCELLENT VA[UE. Lrg eep or all. Gd lnvettmenl. LOOMIS PROPERTIES Ray 261--625-4 875-0475 VIiia Rentai. 875-4912 $300 dep. 642-1401 1825 Incl u111. 873-1a48. ..... 1112 home..: ... e..,utlfulty dlandk Hu ev«ythlng you wantl muterbdrm dlnlnnrm+ Term1S600eas.43-5798 8kr,Llbby835-78129-6. WESTCLIFfCONOO 2br 1ba. upetaln 712Newtrn1BRwtthdln'-I 2BDRM & 2BA '700/mo. ecap.... w wood ec: Fireplace In mat• eulta • ... 2B ' • • "'V _,_ dlhwttlf 11 11T Tm lffllllU around apa. New kltC'Mn air cond walk 10 bMch 2 frple. N9WP(>rt at an al-laacMt p11111 Lge 3Br • 2 atory 2 bedroom, 2 bath, pool. Shallmar-C, 3 ~ople deck. pool, carport•. ·-..... • ov. V h 1 "B Id appllancH rallnlehad bdrme '2 bathe d~ fordable prlcel Call l/J-' lS?S Condo Yard, geraga. $850/mo, 780-964-0. max. Betty, 54S-.151. Newport Hatghl.9. Ind. No Pet.I ~5 ery coca aye a * blneUandwetbar • • · PATRICK TENORE witftl S1100 VIiia Aen1111 288 E. 18th St 1825/mo. I ... CoYe" End UnltTwnhma ca .. _ i •~ot Showe Ilka 1 model. 631•1286 HORSE PROPERTY 67s-4912 Simply marvelou1 3 + Br 2BA DUPLEX. Greet ar•. Curt 1183;_1288 •1 IDll I * a 1 w a t e r 1 a d g e hlghllQht 1 ... amen t-Good ueumabta flnanc-pool home not lar to New carpet, pelnt, drapea, Aetrlg dlehwuher & 11°"9 "Bayfront" w/full view. thle fine home. Alklng Ing. •111.000. I ·~i~~; R ~~CC~ V,;'LLEY. Cu~e M.V Exec. hm. 4BR 3ba, ocean S950 detallt garage '850. 559-5001 FIREPLACE-POOL-PATIO Incl. NO PETS 545-i&S6 An elegant & dlttlnctlve $235,000. MAAIABERCOVITZ ,!!_':_,..~· n.! ga~ ~=-r~o~~ famrm,redwdapa,,,jdnr 539-6191Agtcotl ***716 2Bdrm 1Ba X-Lg1Br'585&2Brsea5. 2B 28-S8ao Avt 414 Adult home $853,400. LINDA TAGUANETTI '!!, fence, oiher out bldge. Incl $1400/mo 548-50 new crptl , peini. R9fS Eutal<M 557-2841 S~ye 'n 111 Mo 1'9nl tof ·~. ... Traditional *OUFfUYD• 819/364-2401 385-0465 PLUSH CONDOS w/lalla ...... C111t •2·.·:: req'd. No peta. 3007 Jet-•E'Sm LI-· quiet( rnov.ln 780-0954 M0-5580 ANYTIME! R It LI.•-•-ttream1. Gar w/opnr .. Irey Dr. Agt 5&M221 G lo ulet ea Y Nwpt Ht• big R-2 lot. adWft lvwv w/d hkup new deoor Avt ar., pat • q •no ~. • ..... 2 UTI* *-SB.Liff• 631 7370 S209K w/free 3Br older 8506 Sq~ Ft CUiiom vr;:; now 2tH 2ba S960imo •1111111• **EMt81de 1Bdnn, 1Ba. M1trbr 12x20.S&75/mo. St tobeacht1350Y .... NLY .,. ·-'*" llT -home, f/p, hrdwd tire ~ .. ldenoe In gorgeous 1br S760 11t mo + s50ci 28r, 1BaCoodo,carport, Old quaint. 1525/mo. 271Cabrlllo.842-0461 .. ef4 w-nH Sharp 3 bdrm, 2 beth, 2 ,_ .. ___ ··-Owner/Ag! 842-9666 Palm Springe. For Sale or aec 549-2447 pool, •P• s725 882-1700 Call Larry 64$-588() llUP 1 ILUI 1--'------- 1tory condo 1 blOck from .... PllOI" •IOUIHllT* Wiii conelder trade lor Tidy •BR 1'i+ba POOi Aertatat1 *E-elde lg 1Br 1Ba w/gar. E/llde 1BR 18A w/new •W IUlD* S. C. Plaza. POOi, epa • •er huge lam rm prime New?or1 Baach home. 51050 dllCOUnl Re1pon per1on only crpt1, dehwr In eml com-Etftclancy +beth, cerport, carport. Only $93,900. 3Bdrm. 2Ba. 1400 + SF loC Long term t8nd IM (619)320-9567 557"3t 16 lalllM 1550/mo. Cradll ...,. plalll. $625. pool. Hurry S300. F-. ;>1';:r!.bds~~928::1 ~~r·~:::~~ oWner S695K 875-3850 ....... Unique Ill E-•lde pad ...... UM req'd. No~ 831-2242 381 Hamilton. Me-9794 mom llMlll w. Sunflower. Call Sue taurant1 & tran19. Now ·-·---en IAYFlllT newer apple crpt1 lhru-Gg 2BR +a;; 18X lrg klt •DllUllT Fiii* IPAlllll NEWPORT MAAINA APTS ftl'd 631-1288 only S120K. Ruth Laurie. PllllllLA 8 . •BA 3~b IHHl/C1a•11 out *450 others avail & llvlng ., .. '110So/mo 2 + 1 +carport. Ealtal<M. 1895/mo. 3BA 2BA *Bay View -2Br 28a + SC RAii LETS Ill HOROSCOPES lllEMW LIOITEI llTIE FUI ADVICE Ill ES PlliE Rltr 648-4380 llUlflllT ir:'';4;'0oe1t hom:7~ 539--6191 Agl C091 Clll 873_7288 · Hurry $475. Fee townhouH, encl gar, Den, 1800 Sq. Ft. slf lot 59' frontage lor Gtanal 2102 Dua..... l cer ...... LI DH TILDllT 111-.... lndry7~' ~~·st Wthf/dryr hkusi-. mlcto, f&llH• Authentt·~ ocean-large boat. RemodeMd 1230 bungalow none for CONOOOCEANVIEW •FREECABLETV.Lg18r TSL MGMT . 642-11!03 ::,,,-:!t~~ YllW '64. Ab90lutely mutt Mii leul Pvt kit won't lull 2Br 2Ba w/d atad lBR w/balc. walkln cloaet. & 2Br Grdn Apt1. POOi S2 195/mo. ALSO • Gallery t hall and f front. Llvabla. tpeelou1 5 Ihle month. Need fut 539-6l90 Belt Alty lee comm tennis a~ 14>a new crpt, ref1. S750. $525-1825. 710 W 18th SUPER CLEAN 1 BA FRONT BAY BMuUtul 11y r~ ryeeperate ~ ~!!~! i~r::,n:"~ ~:~~~ S~~;·CX::;.~~ NB-2BR tBA hN t blk to no pete, S900.'240-380i 631•5092 or M0-2096 2Br 1Ba up1tr1. 571 c:~~::~~r~ •. d~~;;: 1Br. 1100Sq. Ft., w1.a of bedroom• from the llvlng eunaet view. Excellent 10-Fee Owner 846_8381 bch, fncd yd 2 car pkng, Baat hula 2140 2Br 1be, front apt, 1825. Joann. Max 2 people. No 845-6577 the above amenlt ... area. Four bdrm1, 3 cation . Super B""· ...,. ..,.. d 675-2320 a all now ,.,,;IV\/mo r1y · • yrly, trplc, D/W. 433 lrlt. pete $535 Agl 550-1015 •1195. Sorry, no petia. baths, formal dining _, wtc ... , .... .,n 1 A~SO 2eR2eA, j~ 4BR, 1o:;;i;: Old §panjifi See SAT. ONLY. 10·1 PM *UNIOUE COMPLEX* 780-0919 Btwn 8-5 room. 3 car garage, 8"-IOIO IATFIKT LMIUTlll unit 1 hN off bMch style. lg lot, detach get.. 3BD. 2BA, prv, furn, laund, 1BDRM w/'~ dbl get S640 newly redone kitchen. Mutt SACRlf:ICE thle • $850/mo yrty . S1100.+aec:. 962-7887 •&WU. APT• 1~r ~at~, CIMn-1950 2BR 1Ba w/frplc, gar S175 •l'llPI Tl 1111• G0<gaou1 vtewe from the weekl Prl 4 bd • • 3 + garage. new crptt, up to ate. ·~.-.r. • QUIET patlO pool,~ 1 + 1, new dee«, carport living aree. muter bdrm c.n ....... , lOU hOUM WI r;:,. vWw rm ON .IAOIU IUL n lniat 1'4 refr1g, utll• Incl $850 644-7211, .gt. NO PETS • 6'9-24.41 & utllt Incl 1550. F-. end large protected Bayetde Drive w/45, boll PllP ll&IAIEIEIT sPXcioO§ 2Br 28a. 2 car Other• avellabta. Fee TIUlllT lll-lllG patio. Reduced to t•rTlllll etlp. PRICE SLASHED 114/lll-tlll garaga.lrplc,vaultedcell-TILEUIT Ill-IMO We!it:field Wllfflll-SBd 2a. S525,000. Two 2Br trlplu.• ll<le by S600K lrom eppra.laal Ing•. pool & JecuzzJ. Want a Mlectlon of greet rm, • new crpt. aide on 3 tote fMtur1ng L d OK Thi I . lalL--Unlvertlty TownhouM 3/bd, 2/ba, gar, w/d, new . IMng? We can of* any-c:r & frplc. Stepe to frplca, lndry rm1. gar-G~Ul~n 000;t ml 1 1~ -. 510251mo 733-1869 decor, lhutter1. ciQn, FAm.T APUlmTI thing from a ema11 apt to . Yw'ly S 1100/mo. -oee. $735,000 w/lerm1. For address & lnfo .. call Ptaua11la 2107 · 714~ Orchid, n-~t1, S~Hng dMr'l large aptt a 4 bdrm houte. 11 loc*-VIiia Ren!Wt 87M912 J. Howe Bkr 87S-7896 p AT RICK TENO A E FantaetJC ftnd 26f fim •tYte WOODBRIDGE CONDO S 1200, 5-48-2525. or lamlllee With 1 or 2 Ing In CM, NB, or HB 3BR 2BA CLOSE TO .1-1 PllOI .... , 1266 l·hk If Bilbo FOR RENT 2/bd, 2/be, 3BA 2BA w/llraplace chlldren. NMr park. HNI think or ue nr11 lor that BEACH S ncMctt & _.5 "" -upe gar 0 e end-unit oov.red cerprt • paid No petl choice of ldMf lfvtng • u D~p~~.1:2a~eJ'o. .-•!@!fy.fa :~~~ ~98/!gt~~n't laet S850/mo, 720-0876_. _· ~~~~~· ln~~i: ,c;~ ~-:: ~~~ ~== . =~:z TSL MOMT 842-1803 g=H~~~~: & MORE 521 c.rnatlon. By owner -~ Le ualtacla 2lfl 11375/mo.etMSee 398W.Wllton 831-5583Weetlilda$8502Br1'A8a. Varyntoe.hlbeenlt,Mgtlt 873-0241 or873-15"41 Ctrtaa ••l •ar 2122 .. ;,38& F/p I VinaQ;N CMta •eu D24 1636/mo 2BA 2BA frplc 1200 ell. patto. No'*'· alry&prvt2BAl1~belg ta • 10 IUl9lllT llft.D 28r 1Ba, F/P, hdWOOd Hn. blk·bch • Avt. ~ty/&lt• 11-lff encl gar all bnni ~ Avail 4/1. 548-450e apt. Garege.1torage& . 111 3BR 2ba/2BR 2be. Gar-S900/mo. 703 Jumlne. wt1 or ~o-mo S1600 mo -lhoPPlog center ' Dau Pttat llB moreN95/moyr1ylnd BRIGHT UPSTAIRS 2BR age, frplc, vaulted cell•. Appt. only. 644-2065 837_9311 Of 921_1528 · MOVE IN COST 810 Cent• utll.&4S-1771,calt Pentrldga Cove unit ov•· Nlcely furn clean W/D Lga Cot1aga Type. 2BA TSL •IT ••• 1111 1/BD, 1/BA. all utll pd, lHI0-5844/mtg 01*1 look• pool, upg~adH. refrtg 3703 Seuhore 3BR 2ba cottage In Olde QUAINT 4BR 2BA, ocean iBA, pvt patio, w/d hkup, -· cloH 10 bch. ••75, Sat/Sun 3/29-30. Mul1Se41.Undermarke1 se2o.Ooo · CdM. Tiie, hardwood view, gar. S1200/mo. gar.NOP91•1875/mo. 661--6142. 11AM-1PM,5403RIY9t at s 114 500 831-2988 F . s-• I .. noors, dbl gar. 703 lr11. ~ f2 Of 643-25-41 TSL MGMT 842-1803 ,..._ t:fiield 2BA l den 2 c:er ,,_ utll-AY9, and of 11rMt. · · tr .. e r Hr S1550/mo. 67S-9797 W..:9 · .-• Fifi Ill fYILllTM 213/49a;.3388 1 INTI FIR lllT lty rm, din area. 11n8A. Clttfhaven 2BR 1BA. patio. Of YOUR propertl•. NO BEAUTIFUL 3 Br & den/lg LatHI 1~1 2152 1525/mo 1BA lBA all IPAl'fmll $850. 494-2283 IVe mtg Ideal for r9tlrad pertOM. obllgetton by TOP IELOHITOISTll ~~;~/ou':82~ Vu. Lrg 38R duPiU. m yd, bulh Int, lndry rm, nr Llkebrandnew!Altutffltlee ......... ~ IMi No peta. 644-5306 p Ro Du c ER . c e 11 LIT mo. a/c, lrplo, country beach & lhop1. paid. POOi, get. no peta. CLN Pvt home. 2 rrna & ba (114) 673-4400 p AT R 1 c K TEN o Re Unique corner location. COZV bch cottage, So of kitchen, dbl gar. Agt 735-741 w. 18th St. 28drm 1Ba $805 2 -.-1 Tl IUll upetan Pvt ent kl1Ctl 631-1288 Newonmarket.Pr\oedto Hwy,2BR,lrpl Nopet1or 788-7104or66t-3437 TSLMGMT 642-1803 301Avocado 842·9&50 Datlghtful oceen braaea. trp1c. uPc>er a.di Bay'. •·~~w" . Mii $329,000. Call Ron 1mkre.s1000 838-7082 I ...... 2111 1Bdrm Apt w/baleony, lllllUIAPTI Spaclou1 1Bd, plu1h ~lnclutll.84M300 let Us lltlp Y" Sell Y ,., Propertrl C1ll C1111ifll4, 642-5678 for information & surprisingly low cost. •• r I: FeltOt 78Q..5000. OCEANFRONT Furnllhed """ r pool. No '*' $495/mo. 1Br & 2Br. fl1g. range. ::!t.' ~·.,~·.: DupMx Apt. Unfum. 1/2 H . .£-REAM~ I apacioue1BRendden12 ~t.2~8&.w/dln 848-3818 laundry,pool,cwport.No Lnd tacpe.itlfully blktobellch.12225thSt. nf be, bltln kllctt, vlewt kltctt.~ LR, patio, 2 car 18r 4-Plx, bhn1, nu paint. pe11. $550 & 1860/mo. ~~ eeo-&31 S775/mo yr round . *llWWTllll* galore. Avail April 7. gars /mo842-3327 No pet• 1515 + dep 93tW 10thSt 548-0492 2131807-1505 2Br 2Ba Condo. 11t Tru11 ~t:\(.'i )."j' l~f \ 11 Sl200/mo. 673-5595 * 1BA VERSAILLES* 716D Shalimar 852-soM . . 2Br 2Ba, crpte. drpe, EASTBLUFF Delux.e Apt Deed approx 8 875% . Sac pool S725 752-8011 . UU•• patio, Q#, d/W, *· ooln 2er 1 ,._ ' Fixed Owner W1i1 pay ILIFFI Cnta •eu 2124 Biii Thomu ~25 Lg E-elda 1Br w/1ot1 or net ALL UTIL TIES PAID lndry 1726. Me-6451 2 ~.... oomptetely wood Oulet Complu Compare bafor• you rant renovated. Dbl gar buyer cloelng co111. 3Br 2Ba. COMPAREI 1Bdrm. 11ow, rafrlg, encl $400'• bac:h pad blk• 10 1535 No P9tl 990-2970 Newty dec«ated custom LARGE 2Br 28a. Ctoee to w/operw. Pool & rec STEAL II 1123.600. COMPARE! $189000 garage S475w1ter&gu wave• bulo decor d I f t I bch.Patlo.Oar•750No WM.Nopettlt711 +MC 640~120/875-4912 Bkr lee. The Property Mart. pd. No pete 5-48-Mao 539--6 191 A,,.,..t coet 2Bdrm 1Ba "Cottage", pvt bebql gn ~d uree ~oo • pet• eeo.-4283/857-1778 dep. 875-00M/830-3229 640 901g ·~· yard 1prlng lr•h $850 • covr garege, IUr· 11 you're Juit itertlng your -2Br Duplex, garage, w/d 4Br 3Be. Dock. Beytront. NO PETS 990.2970 rounded With plulh land-**Super lg 2Br 2Ba MP-La 2.BA/dln rm. Newport own bu1IM11. clUllllecfu FIR llT EYILIATlll hkup1. 21789 Placentia. 12200 AVI now 64&-7171 ecaplng. No pets. arata Unit 1795 Patio, gar Hta. Frplc all new cpt1 grMtpleoetobuyotlloe Of YOUR ,..,....,..,.,.. NO 1635 No pe11545-7963 All< lor Chudc 'or Liz 1Br upetre w/garage. Ref• 1Bdrm& 2Bdnn Fumlehed eeo.-4293 or 857-1ne etc. 18051~. 848-9001 • equipment ,. • .,........ • req'd. No pet1 $495/mo 385 WEST WILSON .------------------------obl~alfon by TOP •1Umn&. MIU• SBA. min & dty light• vu. 352 Victoria 845-8181 M2 111 111.111211211 NR Beech l Lido Shop9 PR DUCE R · C0 111 4Bdrm 2Ba, 2 car gar, lnod Phue 111 Harbor Vu Hma. Avall A¢1 11t. • 1 Ml bctl, frplc, dlhMhf, 3/BR.2 bth ~ d~ IT'I AS EASY AS PIE TO ADVERTISE IN THE DAILY PILOT'S CLA881FJED PAGES PRIVATE PARTY RATE (No CancelllllOO) 3 h , 5 f~ minimum s 60 f»' /IN Ex•fl'IPM 3 Mets, 5 days 19 00 • ThltH ,.tn ofl/y apply to lt«M •dv9rttt.d '"' • pric. ol.S 1000 00"' ~ • Pre. must bfl ~ In •d. , • Rat• oo. oot ~to Oornm«c#el •c:counts or Real Est•t• • NO CANCELLA rlONS OR CHANGES ~ ,,.,. ad Nt rlJfl Cutom.r it '~'* "" ,,,. fU# llfflOU('lt FOR MORE DETAILS CALLIG-1171 Daily Pilat p AT RI£ ~-12~ N RE TlyrUd. IHEulTrry 19001. ~-.... s 1975/mo. Agt M0-51&4 2BD. 1BA. 2271 Pomona .... 11• ~ and ger. Bltlnl, Water pd 5~:~~ ~t1::a I .-BAYSHORES patio carport, quiet 2BR 11ABA, dthwr, frpto, $700 Aft 5:30 eeo-.e14 I =,· ~I~{;'. 1rSHARP W•telda 2Br 3/bdr, 3/ba, 80 ft to bQh, natghborhood. $625/mo. yard, g.arage. t775 MT IUll'l ..aT Waterfront Apt. Fum. 28A M*IM-1Ba Ouptax Tlla noort 8-9 mo rental. •1eoo1mo, No~ 1146-6805. 2340 Santa AM Ave. QUIET AESORT LIVING 2ba, s12001mo yrly. : • crpta, d;g& w/d hkup: 54-7415. 2/80.1/BA w/garg, avail Mgr on premlM 548-6428 ...,~Meted pool 633-9181 °" 538-8524 FVTUAE W9terlront con· g~. +MC. Mutt BLUFFS CONDO. 3BA 4-1-M. $800/mo, open Eaatllde 1Br 18a. Old & ...-eoun yerd VleW dining I ..... ... doe on Lido It. Fabutou.. 11 credit ...,. . No pete. 2Ba patio. garege. pool & houM Fr1 4-epm, charming '525/mo •. Cell ..... VlgMtM 880 .,... ly prlcedl Ownr 873•931g 770-5129. grHnbel( IHI Incl. 518 Vlete>M. 835-5445. Larry @ 541 MIO ...,TwlgM dine In COIMt yrd •llPDIPAlllll* s14sotmo. 764-1561 2 Bedroom. 1 Bath. ,. ••• ~ ~eApertmenta 1 ra~ ~ t~ go Exec type Condo, 2 matr Deluxe fully fl.Im, oceen carpott. Latga yard. No S450/mo. + 11t, fut. ,.....You're own~ petlo or I d kw•,:'; bdrmt, loft model, gar, vt9w condo, 2BR 2BA. All ~ M78/Month. 2e2S Patio, WIMr & OM peld. ...,..OounMt kltdlen ~~~ ~ t~edeocup A! pool $825/mo 882·1100 amenltleeS1395/mo~ Elden. Apt IF e.M518 c.11141 A.30 ...,..,.._~tan~ Feleot 790--5000. S&751mo. CUta 2BR, grey 842-oaeo. eYM 831 1 2BR 2be tll\M. WlndOW •LARGE AEDEC. 28A* :::a:=,~~ I wtllte w/lhut19'1, hdwd HUGE dOWnttaln OCMn golfer• vu. Pvt patio. Gat199, petlo, qu191, In ..,~ ... nra, garden/yd No pet1. view 3 Bdrm1 2 be With Of'prt, pantry, lndty faoll, duplx bldg, no peta M&O. With "°"• 2218 Plaoentla. 646-2588 flrer,iaoe. • 1800/mo. nu drpeJopt tee& em1 pet sea w. e.y, &42-o.te1 ALL ur11.mea INCLUDED Ava I now 508 E. Ocean-ott 950-3873 549-0433 CHECK THESE front. Balboa PanlnMM. • . ..,. • .. 1 a 2 leckOom Frplc enhaneee 5 rm '* Cell Oanlte 2 BR, 2 BA Towntioma S825/mo. E/alda 28R FurnlaNnge Avtllebte ftlUl.UMl... b1t1na provtdeda1oopvt fncd .. 951.1184 Catpon, pvt P9t10. pentry 1BA, patio. pool, lndfY Sorry. Ho~ ,.~... Od ....__ .. ~ yrd around can rm. lndry tac. MM/mo room etoee to .. lBr ........ o. ..._.... ,_. •NM1H• 1111/PITI M 5M Joann St e&o-3eT3 . 148 E. e.y. LA QUINTA HERMOSA ~· ~,;,~91:.si:ro· M..a V•CS.ftat cheap 3br 38R luxury lluffl oondo or 548-0433 TSL MOMT '42-UI03 19211 Patklldt Ln, H9 213/887-3292/387-5900 2be gourmet kit pool & view 11'50 720-1860 Ml·W.1 mora $850 kid• 539-8190 Cetta .... 2114 C..ta lleA 1114 ------- ftl'W • 111.... Beet Alty,.. Tll lllllft 11 -------IU-YI Ull Har1)or vi.w Hmt PMM 111 ~ E-elde houae dean GATED VILLAOI! COM· WOOD .. a MA YILLAGI 1 & 21r ~ "P'8 1n 1• SAVE 11/I (11 $2000 * • .. 12 ............ save.,,. .. on I llOflth lt11n. • Month·to·month 1lso tvt1l1blt • Fumishtd/ unfurnished • Fttntn centers. tennis. Swtmming Modtls open da1~ 9 f Sorry. no peu Ramodalad ancloHd 5 rm cteoor ...... , t\M a MUNITY 28dnn. 2 ·~a.. =-----........ Plane. Poola, tennle, S ..,.. .-1800 eq. ft. of PURE ,.-....... --..1 O.. tor Portonno. 4BR 3'4ba, ~argend t !.!_5 at 539-8191 LUXURY. o.r-. SPA 1n a•a•fMllftl n -·--. ..--Newport Beach No 1pa, ••99,000 Agt ,. ,_ ..,,... 0 P' oooktna 6 he9tlng oatct. -1 A 1<«91\Mr 769-1195 m11ter 1ull••· lnlng From 8an Diego ~twy. -rv1ne venue BJUIT... room. woodbufnlng flt• north on Beach to let 161111 ft.U UL.Ill 2 Bdn'n 1 Den, 2 Ba, pool. ~ .. ~~~~ Mo,adden, wHt on .... ,.. 8Y ownt -Luxurlou9. bMU1 epa. Rent t 1050/mo. UVINo o;;iy '15 mlnUtee MdFaddln. 16565 Hunt-Newport Buch So tBA condo t121.ooo 8*-e291pm· toSoCo.Ptua.)Uettut lngton~Ln. 17001tthS1re1t 71.i.948-7193 E/alde large 3BR 18A. of Nepwort BM! & eouth 111-11• flt Oq,,er) trplc. dining. lndty. ang1 of San Dteao frMw9Y t I• I I I. =~ 'M..a• 142.sftJ ltMJt .... gar StSOlmo Or!ve by 2473 OAA~E AVE 9"W f• lalt I HI 2519 °'~;it:~ 83 t-&43t ty appt only .,,. : bd\. ~~~ /fL L. .~ WP6Ull2&4bmifi ··~·~·· Lldo1a1e•&A38A.twnrm. 411a .. 78.494*4 ~ clMn CM pat1c wlpool. • r dlfl rm. 2 pa11oe. red«. Wl\yNnaloiwi.towntlMn j\partmerws -~~~ • ~~&~-,~:;;;;;~==~~~~~m~~~~~;~;~~~~~~~,b~™~~~;·~=~~·~~ R.Ltiurle. &kr 946-4380 ! · S2000/mo 8.t&-&437 1! an eutoln ct 1 'Oacn • ; ' Or.,_ C09M DAILY PILOTIW~. Mircft 2t"1Ne In $ $ SALES MANAGEMENT OPPORTUNITY Crew Supervisors are needed to wort< in a fessk>nal management ttlon. now pro- pos- We now have openings for mature adults to supervise newspaper sales crews. Responslbllltles wtlt lndude 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 SS00-700 per wk, Call TC A1k tor Aon 842-4333 If , .. .,. ........... -....... ..,. ....... . WEWAITYOU1 ..................... , ... .. ..... ,.. ............... , ... . ........................ ..•• , ............... . Cel T.-,1 M lw T.C. (7 t4) 642-4111 ••• ~ ~ ... =-~'='~!..J~l'-l=.J~'9!~""!1-2! a..&.• !&II&&; ~~led,.!__. 11111&1 •II MBZ 72 llOll. I tape. • '11 MOTIOITO •••ICM Manne Hardware d.-lf.I N7~1N .,.._, -Ill -of '11 "°'* 7IO aa. a 122t< mi. 114,fOOK/obo. b:lf c:N lftfout.. 11 ..,_ o•rwc. fcrrAaOM~i.._ ~ N.8,. C.M.-, drewere, HOO obo. wlblll Wrtnae. 15KIN 71......_7471, UtOO/obo.et~-11• IUUtftA II • fiOTIQUO:;;o;J; mi.-~ Wies CA. lie. ~11~-.v:,= ~~:.:.~ SIOOtbon~.., ...... MEM:IDU ... 8tedon •11t1U...a ~o11:C::.dat ---· '~r ~=CA~=D~OT8, W• Mame PfoduG.t9 '450 Singer ... Medi •---L ·el 1111 W800" HO TE. Dill I IP U8ED CAM & TAUCKa Coda. ltce. 1101-1101 YOU AM IN DOAU'-T HoClae le .,_. to IHC.. • ~ ~ CellJoMOly.t4~tT11 ~ .-ct. tfltq.; f\JA!**et.broedtallwttll --I.... foe blue, H,000 ml: COMllM°"CM.L'OA U.C.C. UNOlft A DllDOPTMMrT oredllon of 1"9 wltllln atloni..JOYCI ANN ••1mt..a cab. S75. 87'3--1771 rNnk oo19r, I**. ... 8eck9' ttereo, •ttM. -..... •@&! (a) A lull Tr.,.,. as DATID HOVIMIUI 1. nerned trtNliltOf( .. lt'llll a ICHW"N; PAUt. M. ~ .. 10 IN••'*'·.,._ MUet-tec)..Uetpe> r-.-..... Moultobemede. 1t7t. UNl..08 YOU TAICI ldcttenlfetllebCMtolle TU: 9nd DOU 1·20, ~ And COi.inter ~ Ice OE Top of the Line. AbcM cio.t1 ooet SH. A19 troM ' oeul.LO (bt Thi 1WN1 lftd bUl6o-ACTION TO PAOTICT 1'1*91 on pW90MI property cMMI. ~~~~boll~=~ :'~1~~ M=~2~,:. 182 ~VD. =-=I~-,=.~~·~-,:~~ • .:~~~~== lllllL Aeconcf ~...,_.. KING.._ bed wH1' !Mt• w-M3-1440 ti..640-2tH. H~NOTOHll!ACH 1173 1M1'9 ltVO. Coeta IA.LI. lf'VOU NUDAH 0.. addr11111 or the lntendad deme11d111do MILLE ... n..-11• • ~ Ml -l I• 1 .. 1 .._c.lfomlatata7. 'LANATIOH 0' THE transferors are: LAI 8U8H& ,aPAlfY· Very tt1rectl¥e tophia11-..,, ,_ • " to "' 1....., t,_. ..,_ Trude tire 125. -.-I ----The MIMI and .....,_ N AT U A I 0 , T H I IAAIAI, 1toH H1tt>or HEMHIPI eai.d ,.,,,.. to woni a 8~. CM IS1-3197 Baby "O.ry" carrier CH .. YS' ., ...... , __ lddt11111 of tM Ti• .. • '"OCHDING AOAINIT IMS .. f'ol#ltaln Vflwt, CA Y•....., • CA.LlllDMl fww hQur9 a W.-Mue1 Wf/f/IN & ~ i1..a -. 110. 141 416$. c·a•cx " ~ .... ......,,...,., we: YOON 800N CHANG YOU, YOU IHOUU> OOt6-t270I. DAYa ... ._ ,,. ~a,._,. Y01Ce. Gl'Mt S t n.a' 4 dOOr, lo-*f, lllntooncl, AHO 800 HYUN CHANG, TACT A LAWY£A. The IOcedon In Ctllfomla ....... • ,_ .... a _..... tove 1 5 . O/wahr N.8 TENNIS CLUB FULL .. ,._. • ..,.N '5800 eel 867-1290 H"•••un ANO_,.. 2521 0 n , r Id av A~I I ... tM otlllf ~ oflloe :u:• ...... N 121r• ail pey, pteuanl condttlona. 1100.14&-6&44 FAMILY MEMBEASHIP ••~ _.... ....,..., '" V' r Send ~ to· Ad 200 11.u. ........ 7 ........ WI •UT-Ctlendtef A~. Santa 111h., 1NI, .. 11:00 o· °' pMolpel bualneM ofllce ..... Dally Piiot, PO Box 1530: Whirlpool Mhr/elec (i;yr ""/vvv. 22._..., PORSCHE ,.... Ana. CellfotM t21V4. 'A.M. POMONA FlNA.NCfAl of the Intended tflMfei'« II: A ...... •,._. ..... Col1aM .... CA92e2e. 1250. Elec ty~rlter Nwpott divorce foroee AUDI ..... __ AllOW.bualneMnatnel S!AVIOH. IHO .. Al aame•tt>oYe· ............. ,...,,.. $125. Viking ... meet! .... of ~ quellty p_. Mo .+ Tu CHEVROLET 8"Venodo9a.ntol 11"4 tddl111111.ect bV the T"=underand~ NA ottlW bueinMlr'*Y* ...... "'•··· ........ M 0 T"E L MA I 0 Ex· U /80 14!5. Pentex Frenc:ih entlquet. Reel. eo l .... =t• H .. hut QHll111 Tran•·onrtthlll lt!Ne~ '° (Ill Truet d9ted Ho-lftd ~ u.ed bV the lft:: ..... ..,,.. • ,_ perMotletlCedtl, 302.,. S..W•t&P_!~~ 1100. Lv Meg 941-9931 FOf' Info 873-1771 ,. .... Colt 2,210 S.ln a S.rvk• IMt PMI IO W • kllOWn to V9mW 1, 1979...outed bV lnt4ncted ttaneterol' Within ... ..t .. ._,_, ., _,,,.. ...._ tN lninefll• arwc HONE.. CAM. J. A8NMN, AH lM-1t1Ne ye&r9 111t ~ lalt ..., CoHt Hwy, Newport WHIRPOOl WASHER l f!ttn I CtlP Red .... I02 CHICM ~lllY'8 8HOe MPAlft MAMIE> MAN, lftd ,.. PMI eo fflf 11 known to ttie • ,... • ,... .. ,.. 8Mcl'I OAS ORY ER HOH. _ ~ 119.188 f•'E•'.,nN (c) The 1oCMtOn and OM-oonted ~ 13, 111t, Int~ 1ran1fefM are: 1 ''' 1• • ...... ,....., 144-8198 Apple oomp Frnln Incl Total Peymetttl of .. ' ~ ... dw:w"':I'.:.~ IOOK 13*, ,AGE M1 none. ... ........... ,.. PUT •mil n• --· 14 m 0 n ', 0 r . 1 /war.. 119,071.80 «5 f. C...t tiwv 9'1Y '° be --= Offtc'al Aeoordle of Orange The NIM(I) and ~ ...... _, .... ,,.... Lloyd P•t Control needs 1 uutvt IHO/obo, H2-502e. OAC CEl N.-port BeK.. 1m IAVINE l&.VO. COSTA County, c.llforn6e ..... at ~ of Iha Int~ =-.., '9 -*• ........ route technlcan. we train, Im .... ~ lllTlll J-•-j •-' S~f 13M02 675-1911 FORD ·es MUSTANG 218 MESA, CALIFORNIA 921a7. putilc "'°"°"to-the hlot*' tranlflli••tare: FREEDOM ..... .....,. ._ .__, .... II 110E all:'l JooM~ (cftTha'*°9,lftddMeon blddwtoroelflcwequMl6ent FINANCIAL THRIFT a .wt. mul1 have good drMng LES """'7-•133 .... .. • """ O' '"" ....... "* (Ill CMtl (CIMHer'I cf** LOAN, 23131 LM• c.nw n.r.. ........... ... record.c.11 Mr Taylor am "'" ..... --good H9oo. n 511 T,.,.,., ... be OOnlUm-onlY),_..,.. .. """of .... Or. IH. El Toto, CA 92$30 ............ y .. ..., ... only979-e021. Ill.Ml.. LedY'lgoldm&;n: $199.98 PORSOHE7H12E,5Kml FOA0'78Plnto,*>112300 inatedwecPAl'IKIESClllOW. lnlliwtulmoneyoftMUnlted That tM PfOl*tY pertl-lo ....... ....._, ..... p IT fer llltr. a-1..1• lllllm •lllll onct2...,,. tec9 .. ~ = :J:O on rMtt eng, gtaat cond, eng, 4-<apd, new bttc1 & 27N w. Unooln A¥tnUe, 8tatea, at the Front ~ nent hlrwto le daacrlbed In ...,. a,_ de ...e ...._ --. ~... Per Mo.+ Tu air. $12,500. 557-3884 t1r111700 obo 759-3157 8fie. 0 , Anaheim, o.lltornla trance to tM City Hall,~ 9•neral ea: Ae111urant -~__, ... . 8 hr Wit. Bl(kpg, typing, 7' Ea. Mauve, greens, 90 L .... Payments 831-7838 e73-2-837 12801 on Of efter APf11 11, Wa9t CommorN..itn. FUii>-~t. tauttold Im-....,_, ........ ., errands. 497-7085 ~ camel print. Deeperatel Plutt I Ortua cap Colt $23,eeo • FOROCul1qm 500172. ale 1918. erton. ~ 111 right. Pfowmlntl, mleo. bullntll •...., eN ..._,.....,Ill -in •. lllRlf ' S~aea r,1nc.75!:1_5002"Ea2 oEsv.o,. .lllt Cap Red. $7,257 RABBIT '82 Conv. red, low PS/PB. 4 dr, Exe oond (•) CIMN "-be ftlad llttl and lnl...C oon~ equipment and ....... ,,d" .._. ... Miik). n wn ., .. --Aealdual l 13,5H.eo ml, red/bl! im.tor, tac-1100/o«>o, 831-etl34. wttti the oftlcutlOWl'l libOft. to and now hekt by It under loceted at: 1eoee Harbof o..,.. • .... M- Oonllno'1 Ptz:z.11. Gd drtl/· ' -4534 Sally BALDWIN Mahog 8i** Total Payments of toty air, 11..o, loaded. (f) The lamt dlile tor ftlrlQ Mid Deecl In the Pl'Ol*tY BIVd .. Fountain V*'t. CA .....-.... ....._ ..... Ing record. Wage + ltpl · • Plano -matching stool. 1,2, 111.eo Beautiful '*· "2-9707 dllml II April 10, tMI. tl1uated In tM COunty or Or-12708. ..... ..eld 1llM • ,.... Up10 $8/Hr. 16561 Bolaa AMERICAN Orew five S900 ALSO OAC CEl . (O) Thia IUlll Tr9nMr la anga,a.teofC.Womla.ct. The.,.._. name Ulld .. •IMM CM.IM>AlllOt Chica. apply 2-5 dally. piece Walnut dining room FRUITWOOO entertain-Slkl UM17e IUiiject to 8eotton e1oe of ICl'lbed ea: by Mid traneferora It Mid ,.r. praautar Ha Mt Ilk• new. hu two~ ment cent« 8'by2' 1t..o Ill .41A.41A tM Comi'*dlt Code. LOT 51, Of TAACl '395. locatlon II' lA8 BRASAS. n1,u11" ...,.. • ..-. PfT PICKER PACKER taln and two regular cane rCOf'd player, lg ecm b/w ......., YOOll eOOM CHAM, Al SHOWN ON THE MAP fhet Mid bulk tr.,,.._ la ....... _.. .... ..-. S8 75/ht, 16-40/hra, Mon-back chairs. Asking TV 12$0, ~75 Mk For Jim, Jr. IOO HYUN CMAllO AECOADED IN BOOK 154, lnt9nded to be coneum-UM_..• -..... Fri, tome hea"Y fitting, 1700. 982-8042. Publltled Orange eo.t PAOIES 15 ANO 3t Of MIS-meted at Ole ofllce Of' F,_. l1l1fllt11 M le ..... 548--3975, epm..9pm BABY'S ,_.. ............. Ta ........ lprti91 .... ... ...... Drift/ J~ -Dlily Plot Match 2$, 19'8 OELLANEOU8 MAPS. RE· Oom FlMnol9I TIWtft I Loan. ,., .. rrh I; .. I ...... .. -·-._,..... .,.. -1131 w~ CORDS OF ORANGE 23131 Lake c.nt .. Or. IH, --. ............. .. RESPONSIBLE WOMAN very sturdy, CUiiom built 118 UiWfU IM --------COUNTY. CALIFORNIA. EJ Toro, Cellfomll 92830 on ouMrllr oen IH fer- fOf olc help & salel. 3 ..... 3' wide x 2' deep x 42" 942~ 176 Ford F350 1ton4 Wd OLDSMOBILE 1981 C4Jt rtaJC ll)TIC[ The 1traet addrell and O'aft•Aorll 14, 198&. •til dadu l•1alu days/wk, 845-6460. high. Ptua thelvet IOf' • auto, ale, p/1, p/b, extt. Supreme Bnn, 2 dr, 48K K _,. other oommon ~. Thll bllik trwr.r II eub-., ap'I Cu If .....,-..,.. PACIFIC PIANO RENTAL storage $40. 964-e753 lu1ft laltl '5500 obo. 5-40-H82 ml, allpwr, c/c, lift, nu tra, PICTmOUe IMWH If t1fY of the rM1 PfOl*tY Ject to caNfomi. Uniform ... la OCIN __.. • SEWING MACHINE Bea t k k t 15250 875-5519 NAm ITA~ described above 11 Commercial Code Section oaeo. OPERATORS ~ ·w,O:dr.::2.....", _._w~.! C..ta.... 1114 ..... .., ' ·' purpor1ed to be: 11es 8108. 81 __,,.. ,,_. • """ v ...... .... """'+ M"l"I• vw Bug ·ea. strong run-The followlng per90nt.,. PIUlattnO Ave., eoeta Meae, The name and addr ... or n11111r11ta •......,,.... Comm«ciaJ exp l Englllh en.at. Coat over S 1300 BIO SAMPLE SALE ••• ner, 1eoo motOf', good doing bullne11 a1: PH CA 92$2$. n. uudillllgned the person with •hom ,.,_el..._ r le,...... speaking, e31-2931, CM Sell se50 848-5192 Brand namee et ~ All NEW FROM JEEP wOt'k car $550. 751_~137 FINAltCtAL. 2082 1u11n911 Tl'\IMe dledatnll tlf'/ llab-dalme may be flled II FREE-..... • ...... • ._. Student• l Houaewlvet Country Frenctl Dining rm sale. AC11ve/dancewear. II 49071 Bob. =-12~' lnllne, Cel-lllty tor eny lilOOINCI,,... of DOM ANANCIAL THRIFT I r etraa OMH de ltll PfT FfT ... ,H lu Barely Legal Moving 9.9'% A.P.R. Flnanctng the..,... ~and other LOAN, 23131 Llk• c.ntar ,roJ•• •• • -..... ... °' -r P •· Mt OecMated by an--Coml .. ..:..£.~ 2 78 Up To 48 Monthl .. _.,. wn¥C PonderoM Home• of common ..__IM!on, 11 -.. Or., •H. EJ Toto, CA 92930 -.::c-•le..,.., Must have own tranapor-nell/Chatftn. Oln tbl, but-Ot1 • ......,rr-· 4 ..... r-~ ""'""' Southam Cllfomla. a Cell-lhowr\ ~ _,, Ind the laat day for Miio ;.;; req1diStw tatlon.Cal1722-9594 let. hutch Oriental =~1~~~·eSat HUNTINGTON BEACH KZ911 1°""9 oorporallon, 2082 Sa6d .... wllba(Mdebut dalmtbytlf'/credltorlMI ........ ,...-.. ..eld T ...• ...£. tf p carP« All exel concl. • AMC/JEEP RENAULT TOP SSS PAii l'tCTfnOUS .,..... Bu1lnN1 Center Drive. wlttlout oonYenenf or w -ba April 13, 198&, wtll<:tl la ..,...._•Ult ...... t .... Ill tnt• Orig COit 110,000. Wiil MOVING SALE. Skll, boat ~ ITA..,....,,. lnllne, CA 92716 =ellfJfWO'..,..,,,._ the bue1nwa day before thl lirn icta ...... -.81,..._,. to Mt appointments on aell for 15000. Evn aoceeeonea, baby furn. 1e751 ~~·H.B. FCK Pampered The tollowlng per90nl.,. ... :!:!'!!. ~.,,,... '•, ...... con-a-tttte. pc11111'Do1, °' conaimmatlon date IC)ad.-ooe • wi 111111C1, .,_. Phone. No Mlllng Salary e75-87e tidy 994-0500 aottlet and more. SAT. Meroedee Benz doing buelnWI ea: THE 3M ............ "7· • COfPOI'• ""'' encum lnCee, to pey the fled atxwe. ......, • .. aerwWe • ,.._ S5 hr ~ bonuaea. Flex 595 Sturgeon Dr Nr .. 'II.... -Tl Ull GROUP INC 334ff[)aj0b-Pondaroaa HomH of ~ pitnolpll sum of Otted: Mardi 21. 198& .,_. • 111111•11 o e ~~!;95;.1\~r Palmer D~rt~.s4ETc:ha1~~.'=~ !au1ar1no1Br11101. ~ . -•D TopMerc:adelPrtoatPald ~9= ~~=:::~ =~~ ~"'~~~ ~= ..::,1ar,.,.:::::"· 1"-E:_~CS::.:=a ::f: laJl.,.tat Waat·..a 1$H~.~7~~~m. cleaner, lut. INtk llfl It comw with buckeueat1 ~:.ETE.R °'•RAITYI poratlon Thia stat 1 mad thereon, M PfOYlded In Mid Pul>llltled Ofange Cout o). n -,......., and redial llret. Yours for -Stewn R. McCoy Otrec-with the Courlen:' C: ol Or notl(1t. adYaooaa, " 1ny Delly PllOt M'1ctl 2$, 198& e... Mo.. A tml 5535 King Mattraaa/box aprga llllU 1 • ..,..1 Immediate delivery. ..., ..... tor. Preti dent' ind ange Courlty on F~ undertMter!NofMldOaed W-355 The neme Ind eddr ... of •c ""'·-··-.. c---,-""A""ld-S t50 Excel cond 95115 (Slkl 27e1)(8«# 2948) 2130t714 .. "'7-2333 Treaurer. 33495 [)aj Ob-21 1"'... or TNl1 ...... CMroaa and ttie c:oun II: (EJ nomt>re '1 "·"' ompan on e. • . • ••• •m .... llpo &Jlte 12e Dana Point • ...... --llllpenlaa of the T"*" end "8.tC NOTICE dlreoclon cs. II cone W)' looklng tor five-In PQ9--675-1981,875-5806 1W ..... ~1 CA92629 · • ~--(llfthet"*9~ed byMkl NOf1h 0ranee Courlty ~ ttlon, wilt c.re lor you In Mul1 Sacttflc&.only 6-12 More Uted, Handcrafted ORANGE COAST Sandri L McCoy, \Ilea ~~M °':T. 1~ Deed of TIVll. ACTITIOUI IU81NIH nlclpal Court. 1216 H yovr home 722-7812 mo·a oldl Beaut oak bdrm &tld New MerchandlM. Jeep/Renault Praaldent end Secretary. 2i"~9M ., • • • The total wnount of the ~ ITA,......,. Bertlaley A-..nue, fi.lllerton, 00 YOU NEED A PfT 1400; unused aofabed Sal./Sun. GoldenwHt 2524 Hert>or Cotta M... 33495 Dal ObllpO S4Jlte , W--329 unpe6d ~ of the obi-The lollowtng pereona.,. CA 9~7. PERS. ASST tOFC MGR? $350, bar 11ools $75; Coltege. Edinger and a.1412J 128 Dana Point. CA.92e29 eetlon secured bV !tie Pfop-doing ~ 11; The name. lddrew, and l 1m lookJnnforaNewA,.. a of1 /loveaeat $500; Gotdenwalt.S5perapaoe T-•b S Thia bualnei. 11 con-rtaJCM)TIC[ wtytolleeoldandiwn.-T~E CRAFTMENAGERIE. t•phonenumblrof~ .... ,,,_ .,..,,. Sunday -i.. 893-2389 ·-ducted by: a .......,,.,..,.atlon ably eetlmated ooeca, ax-Hoe Oehu Ptaoe. eo.ta tiff'• attorney, or plalntlft employer. Typing/word oak/glue: wall unit~: "'"7• *""" ~ 11 IU* The 3M Or~p. Inc., flCTTTIOOa llUWH S*lMI and adYanoea at the Meaa. CA 9282e without en attorney. i.: (El proc • 80 wpm; Comput91' oof tbl Mt $450; eleg. Fr. 'll LIY "... Blue/blue, fully equip., s t-R McCoy DlractOf MAim •TA.,....,,. time of the lntttal publication Anne Zimmer Bradi.y, nombre, .. ~ y .. nu- e•p . xlnt commun.lwrlt-Prov. din rm. ucr. $1350; l!!prt leack I Camper shell, am/fm eunrf., xlnt. cond .. only Preatdent: Tr-.., ' The lollowlng per.ona at• of the Hotloe of S... II 1108 Oahu Plaoe, Cotta maro de telalono del Ing 91<1111: great w/people. All xlnt. P.P. 543-4705 ~ •tereo caaa, red. xlnt 14K ml. (161834) Thi• ltaternent wu fllad doing bu94naee ea: 170,987.03. Mee&, CA 92e2e 1bogldo dtl demandante, o Want to utlllze nurtur1ng/ RATTAN lrultwood color B RNFTURE. lJMd 9t'lape, 12750. Mk for •11 nl with the County Clark of Or-CRYSTAL WINTER 1300 Thebanaflctaryunderaald Marci Ran .. RMI. 15956 cs.I demandante que no suppar1 skllls by oay white w/ leas· Col tbl set $450· brk:lt. small motorcycle, Guy 261-7e53 • ' ange County on Febfuary Adema 2&-0 Cotti 'Meta. Deecl, by r-...on of the Maune Ct .. Fountain \/allay, tllnce abogado, aa): lott attending Acupuncture ~I . I S275· di t small hutch, luggage, Or Reeaonable Offer I 20 198& CA 92828 . breecfl of d9fault In the obll-CA 92708 Rubin. Mitter. &dh I Min. College by nlgnt Lets w .un t • n. M misc. 2417 BambOo St. G M C · 7 9 SIERRA M lt.111111 · ,.,. AulMlt Edward GllMI 91ttona wcurecs heretofore Thia bu1lne11 11 con-nott.. 110 E. Wlletllre, Ste lllkl Unda 651--0291 S500. cotton print aofal (E/Blulf). 6 .... -8098. CLASSIC 1!>-V8D. ptw, ••m Publllhed Orange eo.t 1300 Adema 2$-0 eo.t8 eMCUted and ~ to ducted by. co-partner• 210, Fullerton. CA 92832 --------loVS1 $550, xlnt 5-43-4705 Sat/Sun 9am to? p /1. p/dll. t/w, · 1/r/w, Dally Pilot Mardi 5. 12 19 Meta. OA 92e21 ' the undela6911ed, • written Anne Z.. Btldley 7141992-0800. Pllf OUIFFHll Iii ll .tAJS new tra. am/fm, 50K ml. 100! Ou8'I St., N.B. 2e l986 • • • Thia bualneee 11 eon-dec:llara1ton of d9fault and Thi• lt•ternent wu filed DATE: (Fec:he) NO\I 18 Ambit~ conaclentloua lC! ..... , .. T11atpr!ltiea xlt cond, $3700/obo, 833-9300 · W-32e duc1ed by: an lndMdull demand for ..... and wrttten with the County Clet1I of Or-1HS exp aeek'lngemployment 4x8 Slate Pool Table. 644-88N. VOLVO .81 Ol eoK ml. AU....o11nw notloaofbt.ctlandofelee> ange County on Match 8. ~ ll-. ~ i., wfeo<p °'pvt Individual $300 14x28 Above Xlnt cond. $9500. Wort! rtaJC ll)TJC[ Thll ltatement ... fled Uon to ~ the under-1988 K~9ollen,De1MJ wnooeservesthebest Ground Pool, S250. hah lntral 7111 Yua 497·1810e19/742·1137 wtththaCountyClet1'olOf-llgnectto ... Mldproperty ,_ Pubfttl)ed °'~ Cout PJeasecaJIGllles633-1010 962-1847 / 12 Ft &ame Fi& wfgu OOOGE ·71 SPORTSMAN vw .74 Karman ()tlla ~81Da = Courlty on Match 25. :C,~on~':: ~~ ~_:19~ r,'l8~"ch .ApU Mtrc~•••iae ADLER pool table. 4'h by e ng lne/gHr $450 . 300. s~ooun,'o gr9!! (~9"' Conv. No rv9t, xhn cond. Nottcalaheret>yglventhat ,... 9, 1., tM unde1'91gfiacl Aprtl 2. 9, 19M W-381 9. ex<All cond. all extras. 631--0287. van) bo, ...,1.., .-$8000 OBO 858-1264 the Board of Trultew of the Publlahed Orange CClllC C*IMdMldootloeofbraach W-3+4 S900/bo, 640-507 4 p IN 701 Aati .. n Coast Community College Dally Piiot March 2~. Aprtl 2 ol alac11on to lie rec«ded u 1--.. ---11'-..,,.-TM'-t --Aatis•H &010 B bu k bed 1200 red '"' b ' vw bug '75. runs grMt, 0t1tr1<:1 o1 Ofenge County. 9 18 19ee · · tnltl'Ufnent 115-493482. or-rtaJC NOTICE r-~ """'~ ..... ,,£ g~ n c I ~' & 26' sEXRXY Must ;;111 Cludca IMS very dependable, low Calffomla. w4M racelYe ..... . ' W-359 flclal Aecorda ol Ofange I( mn -11 a sun ampef Low Houis Extru cXoi(txcs;;;i1e'U lalt mllea. orto owner. never ed bl01'up to but no i.ter Courlty,Cellfomla. ACTITIOUlllU8Mal ITAWCW EllUll IU Moped/Ofter 644-2110 $18,000 OBO 9ea-1409 of t>eautlful converitble, In accident S2 ,000. than , 1~ a.m., Thurtday, P'la.IC NOTICE OAfED: Mardi 13th, 1tee MAim ITATI....,. AIAINDOlm'NT °" IUW LUf T&IU CHEST of Or1wara (3 UMI no oll SM at· 891-34M. Aprll 10, 1988 at the 'OMONA "MANCIAL Ibe folbwlng per90nl are UU CW PllCTn'tOUa $325 &42-29S. drawera). desk. radio °2i~~~Un~mar:: 508 3111 si., N.B. 'trw). vw Thing '74. New eng, ~ ~·=-~ ~A~N ~S:.. ~~ ': ~ bualrlW ea: ...,_.. MAm BAVARIAN China Amber ~= ltr= 11P= oppor1un1.Y (Corparate '2500 OBO. 875-7198 trans, tires. windows, 11 1370 Adams Avenue. The followlng penona .,. llwd., leoerd ,. .. ,, c!t~~2~ ~:~~ The~ tt!•''°';; camb 10 1 · too) For con1u1tatlon a 8 ... la= clutdl/mectt P«f. body Cotta Maaa. Calfomla at dolf'Obuelnwa•~ ,........ C•• • t1'M. CA92&40 ti.YI uee r ge g aasware, lfOf'age chest. kitchen 760-·712,. M St _ • AA $3500/obo 931_2974 wtllctl time Mid bldt .. be Int--Fiim .,__,,.,, ......., Til•Jklw ~1 ,.,__., .... the Flctlt1ou1 Bu1lnan Crystal stemware. all table drop4etf and more '" r ,,..,, I -.,.. • ........ .,..._, ... .,.,., ., ~ 0...-• 1 • ...-.. -J.Murphy, 11 .... 1 Name· ANY OLOTIME circa 1930 963-53 ts 848-9771 · •-u INb 7114 A~ 7!. but ·~ns.,: vw Vanagon ·a... Lo ml, 1:-bllcly opened and reed w. a.tboa Suite 111• New-.... ..., • 111••• ~ l.Mle. Garden Grow, OONvTS. t 113 o Blk• .. I ""' ' excel $300fT 0 Pymt1 port &Mdl, CA 92M3 ~ Or eo.t CA t2&4o Street Cotta M-. CL Newpon divorce lorcet COMPLETE Obi bed $50. 2 1 foot AquaitU1 Mllt>Oet $450/obo, e73-0832. 549--0581 wk....:. ·,, ~· PRINT & BIND SUMMER Wayne ~ Ouanltllf. Inge This bualn•H ,, con-92626. sale ol elegant quality 1e 5 Truell tire S25. Baby with t alter outboard 3 "'T• a ...,. .. t9M COMMUNITY SER· 20341 8luffllda Cir. 1107, Oeilly Plot March 19. H . ducted by:.,, lndlvtdual The Actltloua Buel,_. French antiques Reu Gerry carrier. llke new Miia r rMt on ~I =-VICES BR 0 CHU RE; H.B .. CA t294e Aptil 2, 191e W-345 cannela J. MllfPfly Name referred to at>ove wu lnlo 673-1771 $10 848-4853 rtveriltakeas.4995 Cati 11 .. mw -SOUTlfCOUNTY gg~~J~~E COMMUNITY Thia bualn ... 11 con-Thia at9tement """'flied tlledon8-1M21n 1heCoun-, · 111 duc1ed by: 111 lndlvldual with the County Clerlc of Of-ty of Ofange Original Fiie •---------------· 53&-2156. VOLKSWAGEN All bid• are to ba In ac-Wayne Guenther rtaJC ll>TICE ange County on Maten 26, N F-195721' ,...,,...,,.....,,,...........,..-----SIMPLY THE BEST & COf'd81\0a wltll the Bid OoQu-Thie 1tatement was ftlecl 1988 o. HOBIE 18 wttr1r. owner Sale&· Service -LMll~ ment1 wtilch are now In fNe with the County C1et11 of Of-OIWtCll COUNTY -...... ...... ~~!'!.!_ ~~..:-1F~1 mu.t ..it. xtnt cond. xtra IS UZU ··--c--r-~~•n .--....-clean. race reedy, S1300 EUROPEAN DELIVER and may ba MQlfed In the anga County on Mwcn 18, ..._.,_. .,_., Publllfled Ofanoe Cout ert Ce. 92933 ' MOTOR ROUTE OBO. Brad, 722-9740/E 1540 JAMBOREE RO. offtca of the Olrec:tor of 1He 7IO CMo C..... Dally Piiot March 2~. Aorll 2. ~ Sooll Kim Mme Available in Irvine area. NEWPORT BEACH ::=-nv o1 Mid co11ege ~ ::,;..-::.. 9• 18· 198& Thi• ~· -con-Santana 30/30 "Snafu" Adjacent to FUhlon llland Eadl. bidder must submit ~~ M°':19eo: CA. 11111 W-356 ducted by lndM4'*-(Hl.le-$300 to $600. No collect-Gr&tld Prix, IOaded-full ()pen 7 ~a Weelc with 1119 bid a caaNef'• A;t 2 9 1He • • p • t ' I ' 0 n • r . band and Wlte). d M race. Oya 752-92n 640-6444 cl'led!, certified chadl, or . • W-360 CHRISTOPHER o. 018 · PlllJC 11)11C[ Thie ltatament -fllad Ing. 3-4 hours a ay. on. 1,.../lti IN bldd«'•bondmedePIY9bta BONEY wttti1t1eeoun1yc1er11ot0r- thru Friday afternoon. Sat. h 7111 ~wne~ENT to the Ofder of the Coaat rtaJC NOTlC( A•POOdent.ANHB 018-ACTmOUa ...... "'11' County on Match 6. Community Co1teoe D1att1c1 BONEY ~ ITAT'lmWT 1He & Sun. morning. Call 151frtRulicntrconlOie90 McLAREN'S BMW ao.d ot Truatew 1n.,, 1tnno C..No.0242t32 Thlfollowtngpel'90nl.,. Publllhed °'"'11' eo.t 642-4333, a.sk for Kirk. hp Evin. wflrlr, fuH canvat emount not ,... than five PK:nnou• ..-u llWC*t dolnO bullrlw -Delly Pltot Maren 12. 19, 2$, I de al S4900 M-F till 9, S-S tlll 6 percent (5%) of the sum bid MAm ITAT'lmNT NOTICIJ Y• lwfe ....._ BOYTIQUE. 4912 SH Apr112. 1988 ORANGE COAST w II curt na · 82eS. Euclid St Ma guwant" that the bid-The to4towlng penon1.,. eued. TM_._, .... Pine Circle, Huntington W-34t E1720-99• 1 D/834-1900 FUiierton, CA der wlll enter Into thl dolnQ bU11nMa u : CALI-....... ,_ wllMYt ,_ Beach. CA 92&49 il .... ,.. 711 714-680&300 lprop<>Md Contract II the FORNlA SONNY'S STEAK ._.... ..... ...._,_,.. Catla AM Brannan, '4912 P\RIC NOTICE D ••. ,, ,,.,at 213-&91-e701 l&ml " •Wiided to him. In SANDWICH COMPANY, ..................... Sea Pine Circle. Huntington • WHOBlE CAT. Fully the even1 of fllllure to enter 22134 Mela way. a Toro. "'-Ww 111111 IMMr. &Mdl, CA 92849 K-a.. rigged, race r eady. Into such contract. the Ca11fom1e 92630 If you wllfl to._. the ad-C11hy Anna Brennan, ACTTTIOUa .,... .. 330 W. Bay St. S4500tobo.857·5422 LARGE SELECTION OF ~1otlhec:heckwlllbe Cellfomla Sunny s1ea11viceot1n ettomey In tNa 5035 Hampton. Anlhelm, M.Aa91TAT'lmWT Costa Mesa, CA It--'·• ·-,,. .. , NLlllEW & ~~-~ B ... MW'SI led, Of In the caee of• Sandw'ch Company. Inc. matter. you lhoUld do '° CA 92802 The followtng per90nl ... ~ <..-.iu 'L---bond, the fUll eum tl'ler9of Ca llfornla corporation, promptly ao that YfA" writ• Thia buelneee I• con-d<*'O buelneaa ea: •---------------.. 1 laR1UH 7nv VOLUME SALES .... be forwted to aald ~ 23372 Madero, Suite "C", ten reapcnee, "lny, mey ba ducted by: • een«al 1*1· (1) IMPACl, (2) IMPACT Tua.., YOO tagl dl9trlc1. Mleelon Viejo. Callfomla ftlad on time. ner'lhlp LOSS CONTROL ANO ,. ee e ........ e. •eeeeee ••••t Petf9ct CK EnMNC11 race. SERVICE & LEASING nnnn Ho ~ may wtthdr .. 92991 AvteCM u.ted Ila tldo 0. Cll1I ~ CLAIMS MANAGEMENT • DELIVERY DRIVER 50' aallboet VetY good BEACH # flw (45) days aft• the date ducted by: 1 corporation deddlr oontr1 Ud. lin .,_ with the COunty C1et1' of Of-Stre«, Suite 240, Santa I• • cond. S500 M . 432-1e8e {No. Cherry exlt-405) ... tor the opening thereof. Celffomla Sunny StMk dlendl 1 menoe que Ud. ,.. "'11' County on Match 25. Ana. CA 927oe • (114\aH llM The Board o1 r"* ... r• SandWlch Comparry, Inc .. IJ)Ond• dentro de 30 "*· 1988 Robert .,.,,,.. German, 3 Jibs. 1 malnaall lor 44 to 3670 N. Cherry Ave. LONG FOR2US hll bid for a paftod tor tony· Thl9 buillneH 11 con-rnandedo. a tr1bunal Pllede Thia 1t1tament wu flied SERVICES. 21 t2 N. Mein • Dally Pt' lot motor route •' u,./Dec •/ "'~· ,. ft MfYltlhe~ofrejeot-Mane L. Jaime., Prwlc*lt L•I la lnformec»on que ,.... 2328 McHtll Clrcle, Corona. I• • 7122 Trac».ln1 Welcome Ing eny Ind ell bldl or 10 Thia etitement .,.. filed llgue. Publllhed Orange Cout CA 91720 •• available In Huntington =· 23•)<!lumbla-""1_..,.,_ OPENSEVEND.AYS wlMlanylrr99U1arttfalC)(Jn-wlththeCourltyClef1'0fOf-81UtteddWaeeollclftMal DallyPllotMarctt2e,Aprll2. Thll bu1Jnn1 II con· 2 h ...,..,. .., .. """ """"' torm .. Jllee In any bid or In enge County Of! FetNuary conaejo de un at>ogado en 9, 1e. 19&e ducted by: an Incl~ I• Harbor area. 1-ours : 1ng. x1n1 1oc. s12.ooo. U theblddlng. 20,198& ••aaumo.cleberla11aoer1o w-358 Robar1J.o.man • ft e 613-8755 eva/Wkndl IN .$.A. DAVI 8ROWIULL, nt1412 lnmedlatamente. de Mta Thie ltltament wae ftlad : per 8 ernOOn. •• gay llln AfHL ClleMe•or, c .... C-.. Publlahed Orang1 eo.t mana ra , tu rH puHll P\llJC 11)11C£ with the County Clef1' of Or-Cafl 642-4333; Monday -• .. Alt> TRYING HARD£R ....., C••r~ertM O.ity Plot Merdl 6, t2, 19, wa1tl, II teey llguna. puede Inge County on Marofl 6 • • • • 0. Anu 8aY9lde Vlttage TO 8( :: l Pubilehed Coelt 2e. 1He -reQlltr.0. I tternpo. ACTmOUa .,..... 1988 • Friday 10-5 P.M. Ask for • 300E.CoaetHwy.N.B. IMD •VII? . SALE& =~Man:tl ,Aprt1 2, w-328 ni:;r~RE.S.:*.:r· .W.ITATIW P\Mahed 0r ,_ • Art • 873-1331 Mon -Fn. Mpm ., • SERVICE W-364 NlJC NOTICE petition ooncerntno YO\l~ ~=:::.one.,. o.itv Plot ~19C::. e : Need pvt Dode °' Slip fOf' 1111•1 • PARTS •-II' Wtnrc marrlaQa. ">°°" fal lo ft9a a THE CABBAGE ROSE AQlil 2, 9. 1NI •-Orange Coatt 41· Sa111>o1t, 1n Hwpt • LEASING ,---..... ""'~ "_,, l'9lil)Onle """*' 30 ~of 418 7th st,. Hunttno•~ ~7 : : area. Evae 493-0456 ~ a t.WMndoul K-mlr rtC..rJ.~A=• :-.:: ::" ~~~ 8alctl81..,:. ClA ~L ' • Dally Piiot • ON SHORE mooring avail. @!lflctb1 of .,.... ~ 'ARCrs1 INVENTORY PIC'TmOUI .,.... The k>l'Owlng pereone _ nwy 1>a amerwd and tM _, ynn ymen, 4117th NlJC NOTlC( • 330 w Bay Drive • Nr Balt>oe Ptvlllon. catefulty prepered IH£ wcsr cOAst um ITATt.mNT dolnQ buelnwa• "EOHtLL ooun mey enter a Judgment ~~~ Hunttnoton BMoll, • • • e73-4928 evee pr90Ml9d 8MW't la (VEJY MOOU 'COlOI The follow4nO l*90fW.,.. STAflONEAS, 14571 Red con111n1n3 Injunctive or Thi• builneu 1, oon-un AND ACCIDbrT AND .,· Coat• M•••, CA •• O"'SHO"E&OFFSHOAE "'ode. c··· TODAY dolngbuelnwa-.:. ... T NO Hiii Awnua, Tuatln, Call-other or.,. ~ ctuc:tedl)y anlndMdurl HRALTit IYMO, ... 0, ....-n '" .....,. SAN JUAN CA.-..., AA fomll 92MO ~of property, Staol L l THI ANNUAL ITA.,....,. • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • ... moorings. In Npt Hrbr. tt c:to.. ~ • ... CLEANERS, 31962 Dal Ob-AMJAA. INC ... Callfomle euppon. oNld ouetody, oNld . Thie 1tatemin1vm.: flled -ftAlll IMDID o.cm. IR 752-5134 or 838-7457 •ence ---~ 11po, I 130. San Juan oorporatton 14571 Red HM IUPOf1, ltt~--. coeq, wttll the County bertl of Or 11, ,.. °' l'llOYIDIWT s H 0 RE M 0 0 R I NG ----· ' Ceiplltfano. CA mn A¥Mul T. CalHomla and IUClfl °"* ,...., • ~ anga County on Mardi 2S MUTUAL Lft -•AMC• J>Uf""-,_ · Hwo ft l.oellr, 119 !. t2tlO ' ' lie granted by tM OCM1. The tNI • CO.ANY CW PHI .a&· Openings Now Available CA 91140 dUcted by: a~ or moN¥ cw Pl'Ol*1Y °' Pvtl4llNcl Orange Co.I ITMTI.t. ~ r:t.~!~D c:,~ g::~~~ ~ ~ 8trelC, Qllndora, Tl'lll buelneee .. con.-~rnW'ofMM of ...... tak-,.... '"'A· 1Ht MAIUCIT 811-502--0220. 1'tlla ~ It con-AMJAlt INC By. A &..-ot er court autfeortled Delly Pll04 tctl 21. ~YW ._ CAR Rou TES SLIPS AVAIL 25,30.35'40' 1!M1JI• 1111 a. ... •••lltlt •• ~by: anlndhlldum NnCe Tabot. '*-. . piccu dl,..INY.-0,..,... 9. 1e 1MIMtttctl Aiw1 2• Total ediftltted ...... 3333 COAST UtuV .... i t4ataO ft ZOllW T'llll "tteme11t .. tied JAH 14 1.. ' ' 12.4 13.118, 194; TOlll W. ""'·~ W.-..ltAIAlli CHEVt;11t; If, 4dr, e/c, Ttill euternent ._fleet wtthU.OountyOlenOf()r.. a.-A. ....... ~ltr: ¥'1-357 lltbllltlee 2.2H,4UHO: 642~9~5Moo-Fr1 ouplUlelMY8 551( ml, llkl new. wtttltMCOuntya.rtaorOr-anot County on F*'-Y O.A.""9..,...,Ctd ClottllpeldupNone;~ Earn Extra Ca•h For Delivery Of Thi• Paper HUNTINGTON BEACH FOUNTAIN VALLEY INDEPENDENT Dehver 1 day a week No collec ting no soliciting. Must have dependable car, truck or station wagon and insurance CALL 842 -1444 Ask for JoAnne Craney '"1 tlH -11995/080. 831-8834 anot eounty on M.cti 11, a7. 1eee a.re Mlbum, Anonwy at pelcl In and oontrtbvted M . flat I BMW 531 UNM low ~ BUICK •73 • ....-... V8 1MI ,_ Llw. 27802 C:... Al'rOt/O, rtaJC ll)TIC[ 1urptu1 Nona~ 8peo111 • • ..._.....,, • ,... Pl.it>llaMd 0ranga eo.t 8*' Juen Oeptacreno. CA aurptue Fundt 1a7 71t,82.4· Cua MH loeded with txtrat. WM• auto, p/1, p/b, air, new Pvbllehed Ofange eo.t Delly Plk>t M irdl 1l. 19 2t m 78 ' K.,. Un•MI"'* fUndl '<aurp!Uli J!!I w/tan lntetlof A.eeume tlr• l800 751-1419 Dally P1104 Mardi 19. 21 Apt-ti 2 1eee11 • ' ' Pubt1efteCt Orange eo.t 8TAW Of' None: Oa1n (loee) ffom bp- jjl k.-hl ti'ir Ml# oont. monthly ...... no CMtl BUICK ...aabre '62 401 Apftl 2, 9, 1tel • • W-MO Dlily "°' M.rrdl 19, 2e, AIVIDCJIK~~ ..... i0n. 1,0f1.M1; lnorw '2000 obo. 529-5208 CIOwn. Hm 831-3907 Wk auto trw. '45o W-34t Aprtl 2. t , Ultt U. CW ..cnnuu. (Oacnetl) 1n Ctpltal Ind .21871 NewtMd #13, HB. 9S&-1857 M:2137 Bob · W-348 .,.. .. um 8urplu1 during 1HI .... AM •813-. ,.,.., TM f04towtnO per1on1 ( 121.otl); lnaur.,,ce In ... nt ... / -" ""'• t ownr. ~ CAD 78 S.Vllt. 8MuttfUI Pm.IC MJTIC( l'leW ltbendoned the Ull of , or o e : H 1 t Ion w Id• lcll .. ll Mll ml.,auto,IM,tter.o.alr, cond In/out, meny ~ P'tCllUOU..UH•• Ptennout• ..... th• Flc11uou1 lu11""1 1Ut1,0M,141; AcQdeni a 110,000. 72().035.4 UoN $4500 Ev 53&-1t25 ~W lllMm ITATW P'tCflhOUI Mill... NatM: CalltomJa lonny He 1 t th pre rn I um 1 1MO Honcfe 750 BUICK '70 e.c ful pwr ._..,. ,_.,,. .,.. Tlle ~ peraona -MAim ITATCrY (KlnQ) ..._ ~ Co., 1 tl,114 SM· "-'lnOI In 1 1595 Many EJctrH 2tt< ml rebft 456 _,· CA0 '81 Ekto8Wtti.IW¥Y =..~ •· CountlY dolnO..,_..• 1'ha'°'°"'"91*90na .. 22954 Meae w-. fl Toro. troroe: 11~i.1.'3,02t: NJt1.. 6404019 -.... bll'9 w/twe IMttl Int, Ottg ...... -,Ion•. 17372 IEA ~ 1eeo1 doing ...._ • ~ Celfotnla t2'30 dMt 1na '*'"" ~ _ ------.-..,......,.----1 11000, 142-6513. ownt, lo ml, llldt, tv1ty ~Fountain Vflwt, CA Cllet~lll~.1.6.~11n1tn9ton wellonConaubntCo.,'412 The ~ 8uiMnew Olrec:1 Cllfom6e tk--. 1"° H eiq,r .... rune FIAT '10 8pydr 8pr1 124 eqUilp 110300. 720-t09~ ...... CA trn4ll ..... H.I , Clll. t2t47 Htmer...,...tolbOft ... Peoe 11,431.225 gr .. t & ,...... 1150 Of ~ rt1ft I l ' ' Diane Durtlltn, 17312 Marc L.Cocq, 1H01 Olllwl JoM NdwdlOH, flled In Oflf!OI County on W.~owtlf>t~the ti.et °'* · °'** " °"'' 1W11• 432~5&~ ~IO NABERS o.k. l'ountltln v.-,, CA criar~tt~.1.6 .Huntington 9472 "*!'!!'z Humtngton Oc:tow 28, 1911 F 2f0e07 ~ ....,._ .,. In llO• M8-7513 AklMrd. t210I ~.CA 8"9 1eect1. CA ..._...1 Mine L Jelme. 22134 OOfdanol wfth tht AMiii! 1980 Honda OL600 ltMdl HONDA '75CMc Hatcttbk, CADl.l.AC T'llll bullne.a hi oon-Tl'lll ~ 1' con-TNt .,.,..,._ 11 oon= ..... :& E Toro, cal-l tatet!MlftJ tot the J::' drtw.~si--!,~;mc9:=w5~ ~-~IMMdual dldad~=-~~"="" ~ "'*"-... ~ =to°::'"'~C: feet.mult .... 1Grea1delll v:: ••II. 193-7130 l.AAOEST8EL£CTIOH T'llll.....,..,,. .. lied T'llll ~ ... fled Tilll ... ....,.,, -.... dU«MdbyUD0°11 Ill I .. of ltle ltMe Of at MOO M 1.cM25 d9Y9 aft ...,,,, ot ..,. modal. low m1eege """ IM County a.-o1 Or-""" ._County an of Or· _..,.County an ot Or-Thill ........... -fleet ea.omi.. JIU"M*lt ro ._ __,,,...,..,..,,,...,..,,~.,.,,--·-..,,... CacMect In Or-.. .,.. County orl Merdl 11. .. County °" F*'*Y ... County Ofl ltlerdl , ... """'tftlt County C4ette of Or· L.elltlr "'°"° ............ '80 HOHDA CM200T .IAGUAA "7'3XJ8runa.... count;ls..-loc:Myt 1NI lt, 1tM 1NI _...County Of' IJ*'*Y '•Midi It'*"-,....,... =r~~.':!.: =200dywtt.WOO, ...... 1.. ~ 0r-..": Nlllfled ~ 11'\MNd ana.": 20~ Or9"0I Coell ~~ eo.c dt'fllte A, U-1<>& ...... "~'ralook""'lor •l'Offte. 2tOOH.WIMS =2"':°'.:;rc" 11. H. Olly""'°' Mwct! 1t, H.DllJ ""'°'...,. tt. 2'. ~fllotw.dl l,.12.19,Dalfl"lotMardla.:it,11, ~ '435 Mt 00M d Mllll.,.. .. ,.:.'!.,_._ C08TA MESA ' '1 Aprt 2• t. 1... ~ 2. t, ,... 2', tNI a Ill. 1911 __ ... _,,_, __ ,.,. W-MJ _ #44 W-Ma #427 T-112 " - -- WARM · POMCUTaONAI ·-- - -- . . WEDNESDAY, MARCH 26, 1986 U.S. ·opens fire again Two Libyan boats destroyed, radar site damaged by U.S. in 2nd confrontation WASHINGTON (AP) -U.S. jets and warships destroyed two Libyan patrol boats 1tnd damaaed ·a radar missile site TueSday, and the Pen •. tagon declared the renewed American action a defense against "hostile Libyan intentions," even lhouah no hostile fire provoked it. -Easter recipes Orea• up traditional tea.ta for ltaater, or 8tart your own tra4ldon with newldeu.Cl Coast The~uto Club has put the brakes on Its plans for two skyscrapers In Costa Mesa./A3 Nation The Senate votes down the balanced-budget amendment./ Al World Reagan gives $20 mllllon In aid to Honduras to fend off a reportedly major Incursion by Nicaraguan troops.JM Sports Orange Coast sweeps a pair of games to move Into the final round of Its own tournament./01 Angel back-up catcher Darrell Miiier has beer:t a pleasant surprise this sprlng./0 1 INDEX Advice and Games Bulletin Board Business Classified Comics Death Notices Entertainment Food Mind and Body Opinion Paparazzi Police Log Public Notices Sports Televlalon Weather B7 A3 85-6 06-8 B8 04 B4,05 C1-8 81 A6 B1-2 A3 04 01-4 B4 A2 For a second straiaht day, the Navyj 6th Aeet opened fire on Col Moammar K.hadafy•s forces in the dispute over Libya•s claim to sov- ereignty over the Gulf of Sidra. At fint. on Tuesday morninJ? the Pentagon•s chiefspokesman wd the renewed attacks came in retaliation Injuries in lion mauling • serious By PAUL ARCHIPLEY OfhlWIJ ......... .' ~ S-ycar-old girl who was severely l~Jurcd when attacked by a mountain b~n Sunday continued to improve this .week. but. she is suffcrinJ some part!~ paralySJs on her right side and her right e~ was badly damaged. Meanwhile, aulhonties examining the animal's carcass have so far found no reason why the appar~ntly healthy cat would have attacked the girl. Laura Michelle Small . was de-scri~ ~ Serious but .stable Tuesday at M1ss1on Commu01ty Hospital in Mission Viejo. The E1 Toro girl had undergone several hours of surgery late Sunday and early Monday to repair the ~mage m.flicted by the mountain ~100 when It pbbcd her head in us JIWS and earned her offinto the brush at a wilderness park in South Orange County. Gregory. ".'sais of Mission Viejo, who was hiking nearby, saved Laura by swinging a stick at the cat until it released her. Surgeons cleaned out and stitched up puncture wounds. and perfonned some plastic surgery and other re- pairs, said hospital spokeswoman Jan (Pleue eee llAULED/A.2) No conflict found in Voss probe By ROBERT HYNDMAN Of._ IWIJ .... IWI The Orange County district at- torney's office has cleared Fountain Valley Mayor Fred Voss of any criminal WTongdoing following its investigation into his business deal- in..,. "There was insufficient evidence to find any violation of criminal law with regard to the alleged conflict of mtcrest, •• Deputy District Anomey Maury Evans said Tuesday. The district attorney's office in- vestigated Voss' relationship with a development firm seeking to build a condominium complex in Fountain Valley and whether there might have been a conflict of interest that would prevent the city councilman from voting. The investigation, which began in February, concluded late last week. But Evans withheld comment until (Pleue Me D.A./ A2) Trouble at home b rings teen -agers t o Laguna shelter When patiences wear thin and emotions run hiJh1 sometimes famil- ies just need a htue time apart, says Barbara Dykes, director of the South Orange County Youth Shelter. r Teen-agers are goina through a lot of chanaes, said Dykes. But when there Is no place to retrut, they often hit the streets. To prevent family clashes from reach1n1 warlike proponions, the youth shelter offers teen-qen a place to calm down while the family works toSCther in CO\lnselioa, said Dykes. The three-bedroom, beach-style home in Lquna Beach la run by Community Service Propams, a non-profit orpnization foundtd by UC lrvmc professor Dr. Arnold Binder as a divenion Pf'Oll"ltn for JUVentlcs. Althou&h underaoina considerable reoovauon to meet fire standards. the houtc has a homey atmosphere and 1s comfortable and safe for the teen· aacn who visit, usually for no more than two weeks ) LAuu MEii FOCUS ON THE NEWS "We set a lot of fint-time dis- closures of child abuse," wd Dykes. notina some of the chanaes that come about in teen..qen' behavion durina their stay. Everr.one shares household mpolll1bilitet and foUows strict house rules to help the house nin u a family mi&hl Adoletccnts aaes 11-1 7 stay at the 'bome wbtle atteodiq,lhctr rcaular tchool. CbiJdttn n:cc1vc 1nd1- vidual and aroup ooun~hna and, (Pl ....... 811&LT&a/ h-2) against Libyan missile attacks aJmed unsuccessfully at U.S. planes. Later the administration wd there bad been no new fire from the Libyans. One of the patrol boats was sunk by . the a:uiscr Yorktow~, marking the first tune a Navy sh1p had used its surface-to-surface missiles against a Libyan vessel. U.S. offietaJs said the attacks which occurred durin' the pre-daw~ hours Tuesday, T ripoli time -orlate Monday night Eastern Standard Tlme -were justified to protect Amencan sailors and ships from attack by a country that had already demonstrated "hostile intentions." The attacks came even thou.ah the Libyan boats and missile installation did not fire on American forces. But U.S. officials said the battle force bad s~nding orders that declared any L1byail plane or. boat approaching them to have hostile iotenuons. "We have been given ample (Pleue eee U.8./A2) Bones no help in Bradbury mystery Fragments too few to determine identity of chtld, expert says BJ STEVE MABBLE Of .. 0.-. ........ A track~ a motlaer ud _.., '11P9 .,.. at free••J eDtnw. Booe frqmenu fou.od by hi.ken in Joshua Tree National Monument 1ut weekend near the spot where then-l- ycar-<>ld Laura Bndbury diaappcared m 198-4 will not be cnouJb to l"elOlve the question of the H u.ntJ.nsion Beach girl's fate. Babylnlnfant seat unhurt as truck fllps An infant seat helped save an &-month-<>ld baby from harm when a truck she wu rid.Ina in flipped over on Newpon Boulevard at the entrance of"'the C(>sla Mesa Freeway Tuaday, police uid. •"fbe kid wun 't even cryioa." aid Coaa Mesa police Officer Dale Birney said. 1baaa Cromwell, 26, WIS drivina nonh- bouJld in ber pickup truck with her dauatuer Amber 1tram>ed lnto a baby seat beside ber when the ac:cfcfent occumd al f I :20 a.m... said Birney. CronlweU, who alto WU weanJll bet leltbelt, unstrapped her daqhter and crawled out of the cab '"11Cntched. A witness said Cromwell was in the riaht·band lane when a verucle in the middle lane pulled in front of her. Cromwell veered right into the p'aVel and puddJC><X>vered shoulder and lost control of her truck. Birney said. She tried to pull back onto the roadway ovcr- corrected and careened across alJ three nonhbOund lanes, be said. The truck was slciddina sideways and struck a auardrail. causing it to flip over. It came to a stop against a telephone pole. restina on the roof of the cab. A portion of a human atul1 and other bone frqmenu were studied Tuesday by a Cal Sta1e Fullerton anthropolosist, who confirmed that some of the remains bdon& to a youaa child. But Dr. Judy Sucbey said the frapnenu are not cnouab to learn tbe answer to other questions, includina wbetbcr the child was male or femak, said Sao Bernardino Deputy OJroner Phil Aleunder. .. All we can say i1 lhat most oftbele are bones are &om a child between the IFS o( 2 and S." said Aleunder. "There'• nothina more we11 be able to learn by studyina than." He said a few of the bone frqments beJonpd to animals A two-day te&IQ in the roupi terrain in Joshua T rec was baited laae Monday with aberifrs deputies un- able to find any other bone frqments, said Capt. Gene Bowlin. .. At this point t.bere•s really nothina else we can do," said Bowlin. Ila· tioncd in Moronao Basin near the desert campground where the bones were found. The slcull cap and other frqments were located on top of the sand in an open Oat near a wash and a W)e (Pl-..e ... 801'U/A2) Newport Council blasts survey as s ham By SUSAN HOWLETT Of IN Dellr ..... ltelf Members of a local political action committee who presented a home- owner survey to the Newport Beach City Council Monday we re blasted by council members. who called the quest1onaire. "a sham" used to dis- •: guise a fund-raising effort. The survey was conducted by Newport 2000 last year. It was sent to 12,019 randomly chosen Newport Beach homes, and 12.2 percent of the people sampled responded. The survey asked questions on issues dealing with John Wayne Airport, bay polluuon. traffic, de- velopment and other city concerns, but council members termed 1t an ··unfair" and "slanted'. way to get answers. Newport 2000 balls itself o n the survey as "an orgamzataon of long- term residents of Newport Beach who are concerned with the deteriorating quality oflife in our area. "The purpose of this survey 1s to get your opinions on the things that are bothenng you and to determine 1fyou will help u.s support the right kind of candidates for the November 1986 clectJon. .. the questionnaire satd. 0.-. .......... .., °'"""' .......... Chanel Deecbam,., US, &eta a bGC fiom Lorie Reim. a boue nperYleor and aapport COGDM.lor at the ahelter. But Councilman John Cox said he was shocked by the survey, which he said violated all the rules of a fair markeuog questioona1TC designed to ehcit fair answers. Councilman Bui Agee agreed with Cox. saymg the questionnaire was designed to generate contributions and political power for Newport 2000 instead of truthful answers about the concerns ofNewport Beach residents. "I thtnk it's deceitful," Agee said. "The thing that offends me about this 1s they are not honest. What they•re doing here 1s playin3 with words; they arc trying to get people fri&htencd. and arc us1na that fear to get the answen they want." The survey. which was mailed to homcowncn. included a cover letter that outhoed the group•s political coooerns. "The letter basically says, 'the council 1s lousy, and let's get rid of them.' " Agee said. The 31-qucstion survey also coo- ta10ed a portion asking for a $200, $100 or $SO contribution d.im:ted to Newport 2000 treasurer Roger Van- d 'ft. ~wport 2000 spokesman U>uis (Pleue -DWPORT/A2) Write-in c&lnpaign against LaRouche supporter launched County Democratic chairman leadtn battle for n·omtnatton By TONY SAAVEDRA Of .. 0.-. ........ Rather than tum over the Demo- erabc nom1nahon to a Lyndon L&Rouchc d1sc1plerunn1nt_ un- contested on the ballot, c.>nnat County party cha1anan Bruce umner is entmna Nrwport Beach's COOIJ"CSSiOnaJ pnmary a, a wnte-1n candidate. Sumner. a former state as- semblyman and retired Judsc. an- nounced Tuoday that he Wlll attempt to prevent L&Rouchc advocate Art Hoffin&nn trom bccomma lhe Demo- crats' standard bearer m lhe 40th Congrns1onal D11tnct iwic. Hoffmann became the e>nly name on the Dcmocrattc ~llot ancr the party failed to field a candidate for the \Cat held b> four-term GOP 1ncum- bent Rep. Rohen E. Badbam. nubbma Hoffmann. Sumner. 60. challenaed LaRouche him1elf to a debate. labeling the philosophies espoused by the ultra-conlef'Vative New Yorker u ·•spoolcy" and havin& no plaoc ID the Democratic Patty. Amona L&Roucbc's prooosals is a balJot measutt allowina beaJtb of- ficials to quarantine victims of llC- qwred immune defia ency syndrome and a sp.aoc defentc system usiftl Wen .. When you look at tbc millions of dollan behlDd the LaRouchc move- ment. I think it's tlmc we take them on," said Sumner1 rcferrina in pan lo the Ilhnoia victoncs last week of two LaRouche folio~ re<leivin& tbe Democrauc nomination for lieut.e&- ant aovernor and leCl"tW"y of 1ta Sumner's return to \he pohtica.I TI1lfcamedunna• aewaoonltrnoeat party bQdq~ iD Santa Ana. He last bdd \eaillltive office u a nate lawmaker rt:pft:llCJ\tlQI tbe Lquna heh an:a trom I 9S6 to ~ .. IUllJlfaa/ Al) ._ ....................... ____________________________________ ~~~~~~~~~~-- ........ --... • ..,. ....... 14 U.S. DESTROYS 2 MORE LiBY AN BOATS ••• Prom Al c-vidcnce of tl0ttile Ubyan int.cnoons ... and we will defend ourselves," declared PeotifOO spokesman Rob- ert Sims, rcferrina to Libya's launch of around-to-air mt iJes apjnst U.S. planes on Monday. Tbet'C were oonflktang reJ)<?rtS, f). meantime, u to whether the United States miaht end it.I maneuvers below Libya's so-called "lfoe of death" before the scheduled de8dhoc of Apnl I. Sccrewy of St.ate George Shulu said tbe Mediterranean eiercisc, which began Saturday ni&ht1 would continue as planned. But Weinberger and Sims both sugaested that the commander of the 6th t-teet. V1co Adm. Frank KtlsoJ could decide to end the excrase be1orc April I. The Umted St.a&es has tbrtt aircraft carriers and 27 other combet ships operatina in the r~on. Three surface ships remained ms1dc the gulf, but the carriers remained outside it to the nonh. In other developments; -Khadafy was shown on NBC News on Tuesday at a Tripoli trade fair, with a crowd shouting anti· American sloaans. "It is a time of war, a time of confrontation. And we have decided the G ulf of Sane (S1dra) is ours. We have decided this by s.acnfice, by blood,·· the Libyan leader declared. But he also described Ameneans hvina in ubya u "auests," sayina: "We are a CIVlllzed people." -While House officials said the plan to en~gc Ljbyan forces in the Oulf of Stdra was approved after intelliacn~ reports disclosed that Libya was "zcroana in" o n American diplomats as potential terrorist targets, The New York Times re· ported in Wednelday•s editions. It did not id~ntify the officials. Alla.. give U.S. quallfled aupport. SM A4. BONES ALONE WON,T SOL VE MYSTERY •.. From Al outcropping of rock, said Bowlm. "It seems pretty obvious that thcr, \Vere carried out there by an animal, • said Bowlin. "Posri.ibly a coyote." According to San Bernardino pathol<>siit Dh lrvma Root,-it ap- pears the bone fragments belong to a child who bad not been dead for more than two years. Root said the frag- ments have been exposed to sunlight for less than six months. • Tbe find, made by a Twentynine Palms couple hiking in the area, occumd about two males northwest of the Indian Cove campsite where Laura disappeared Oct. 18, 1984. Though the area was searched repeatedly after the girl vanished, Bowlin said it would have been easy for searchers to overlook somethmg an the boulder-strewn landscape. "I've always thought there was a possibdaty that so01et.hing freakish might have happened, like she go t wedged between some rocks or some- thing of that nature." said Bowlin Michael and Pa~ Bradbury, parents of the missing child, arc on vacation an Northern California and could not be reached for com men l. But a family friend said there is no .reason to give "P hope for Laura's safety. 1'Thett's cena1nJy no conclusive proof that there's any connection between these fragments and Laura," said Lauri Flash, a volunteer at the Laura unter in Huntington Beach. "We're not looking at anything any differently and lherc's no reason for us to believe that this is Laura.," said Flash. who takes anonym ous lips and distributes information on missing children at the Huntington Beach center. But Bowlan said that. except for Laura, no children bave been re- poned ma ssing in the Joshua Tree area. "But I'm not going to draw any conclusions," he added. Laura disappeared after going with her older brother to an outdoor toilet about 50 yards fr<UD her ~rents' campsite, accordiog to shenfJ's in- vestigators. The gut's brother, Travis, said that when he en;ic'led f!om the outdoor restroom, his ~1stcr was-gone. After an extensive search, -shentl's mvestigators concluded tbc g.irl had probably been k.Jdnapped. A composHe sketch of a man seen in the area at the time was released. It showed a burly, bearded man with a potbelly who was believed to be traveling 10 a blue van. No arrests have been made an the . case though a Pasadena woman was detained at one point because her own daughter closely resembled photographs of Laura. The search for Laura Bradbury has been one of the most intense and well- publicized hunts in the nation. Her likeness has been embossed on milk canons and grocery . bags and her disappearance has been recounted on nauonal lelev1s1on HOME OFFERS TEENS A SHELTER •.. From Al three times a week. parents and kids meet for family counseling. The teens' stay at lhe shelter. said Dykes, "allows the family a coohng- oft period." Dykes said the shelter doesn't expect miracles in only two weeks "We help them 10 1denufy problems they can work on," she said. seated 1n her small. crowded office. ··Most of the families we know will not solve all their problems in two weeks," she said. adding that many of the families are referred to other agenCJcs for foture counseling. If fam1hcs are su ll under too much tension to reunite after the c hild's two-week stay at the shelter. Dykes arranges a temporary foster ho me "Some arc Just normal growing-up problems, while some parents are JUSt really overrestnct1ve," said Dykes. ··1t'sJUSI a matter of getting the family work.Jn& together," said Dykes, cx- plammg that basic communication skills arc what is usually lacking 10 the family Communication 1s exactl} what is missing in 14-ycar-old Bob's rela- tJonship wuh 'Pus fat.her. "I have family problems ... with m y dad." h<' summarized. He is soft-spoke n, articulate and polite, but he seems somewhat afraid. It's onl y his second night at the shelter. "There's been 100 many divorces and too much moving around," said Bob, who has m oved to 10 different homes in Orange County since he was born. "It's hard. You have 10 make fnends real quack," he explained. School has not been difficult for him because "I like going tO school because of the people. I like getting awav." As the oldest child in the family. 8obsa1d has goal is to "change the way my dad acts and treats my brothers and sisters. I'd like to know why parents do they stuff they do " His first night of family counseling 1s only hours away ·T m scared. because I haven't talked to my dad 1n a week," he said an almost a whisper. But bemg at the shelter for JUSt one day bas helped him, he said. "Before, I was scared to even talk about it. But now it is easy to talk because everybody's got a lot of problems here." he said. About one-third of the youngsters who v1s1t the shelter are status ofTend<'rs, violating curfew and truan- cy laws. and arc referred by policc departments. School counselors make a number of the referrals. The shelter ~rves over JOO famtl- 1es a year m short-term counseling and cnsis 10tervention. Fees arc calculated on a <1liding scale with the highest fee set at $196 a week. The staff consists of and college graduates or "house supervisors," who work around the clock either runnmg the house, malong lunches or chcck1pg beds on the ho!lr. ··it 1s a wonderful training ground because it 1s cns1s intervention and everything peaks here. In some ways we funcuon asa famtly;· said Dyk~. D.A. PROBE CLEARS VOSS OF CONFLICT .•. From Al after he talked to Voss Tuesday afternoon 'Tm obviously glad the 1nvest1ga- 11on has been concluded and evcry- thmg ts now cleared," Voss said "It was really only a matter of tame· Earlier this month. Voss wrote tc> Orange ( ounty DlStnct Attorney Cecil Hicks. complainmg of delay\ and demanding that the invest1gat1on be concluded Having enclosed clips of local news stones. Voc;s wrote "A-; you can ~e I conunue to be crucified in the local press while the 1nvesttgat1on seem'> to go on fore.,, er." Voss accused the proscLutor's of· fi ce of "part1c1pat1n~ tn a politically motivated smear campaign by those opposed to my re-election." fnan 10terv1ew Tuesday. Voss also ~id he expected a more complete response from the district attorney's office. 10clud1nga letter and details on how and why the anvcsugat1on was 1n1t1ated. Voss said he believes the 1nvestiga- t1on was motivated by political opponents and intends to issue a ~tatement conccrnmg the issue at the \11y Council's next meeting. Apnl I According to Evans. the d1'itnc1 attorney's mvesugauon was prompt· ed after the matter ··came to the attention of our office .. Evans would not specify who alened the d 1stnct attorney's office. The invest1gat1on focused on a proposal considered by the City Council that might ha'e saved l.S. Properties of Irvine more than S200.000 an fees. Voss voted for the proposal when 1t appeared on the council's Feb. 19 agenda and dented he had a business relat1onsh1p with the firm. However. Voss acknowledged that, unul last fall. he was a partner an another firm with l.S. Properties pnnc1pals David lsraelsky and ex- Fountain Valley Mayor Bernie Svalstad MAULED GIRL SUFFERS PARALYSIS ... From Al Temperatures to climb on Coast Felt lttlee wt11 oonttnue to gr.ce the Or11ngt Cout today, with werm, eunny weether predicted through Thurtdey, tti. Nttion.I WMther a.rvtce Mid. Summer..flk• temperature. Wiii Mnd the rTMiroury to high• ot ee at the bMOhel and t.t Inland. Lowt tonight WIN dl'OP to the ~. 80fM fog and loW ck>009 Wiii conllnue to hoV'9f' &tong the cout during ntght and morntng hour~ bef0t• burning awey to hay eun9t\lne. Along the Inner coutal wattrt. tight vwlabte wind• wlll become weet to .outhwelt 8 to 15 knot• thl• aft.moon and eV«'!lng over a weeterty .well of 1 to 2 fwt. A amall ctaft lldvtaoty It In effect b4rtween Pt. ConceptlOn and Santa ROM ltaend due to notthweiet Wind• of ,. to 25 knota, With combined .... 8 to 12 fMt today. 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" .. 68 81 51 71 .. eo •• 82 57 81 52 70 44 tO ,, 71 ... 72 .. 74 50 71 42 eo 47 12 50 .. 61 71 61 73 ... 75 53 .. 47 .. 45 75 '6 63 56 Tides 00 u 00 58 ~3 ••• 0.6 u "'" ..... toNy • 6" .. ,.. .,,. -tQelfl 91 e'Ot P m "'°°" ..... loele\l •I 7 0t P m aM -~9'··14 am Surf Report SUMNER ANNOUNCES CAMPAIGN ..• From Al 1964. Sumner retired from the Su- penor Court bench in 1984 after 18 years ai a judge and now practices 1n Newpon Beach. He capitalized on the fighting this week between U.S. and Libyan mili· t.ary forces in the Gulf of Sidra to point out the "absurdity" of LaRouche's (>Ohl1cal theoncs. Democratic aides distributed photocopies of articles from a LaRouche-oricnted magazine that clai med Israeli companies were bankrolling Libya's terrorist regime. "How you can say that, knowing the facts, 1s part of the mind-~ing aspects of tbe LaRouche position," Sumner said. Libya is one of Israel's most strident opponents. Sumner reported that his campaign would center on spreading the word to the district's 97,713 Democrats that Hoffmann was a ri'11List hawk hiding in elephant's clothing. "It's not so much a question of selling (my candidacy),'' he said. ··The process is to tell people he's a LaRouchc follower and that's enough (in it.self)." ·Ho ffmann, 29. a technicaJ wnter from Santa Ana, said county Demo- crats were "shootin$ themselves in the foot" and risking the party's stature by pitting their chief in a wnte- an cam"paign. Sumner has conceded such efforts arc extremely expen sive and difficult to win. Hoffmann was also infuriated that Sumner's invitation to debate went to activist LaRouche instead of him. "I consider that the attitude o f a person m Disneyland nding on a very dark nde. He's refusin§ to face reality," Hoffmann said. 'He's run- ning against me: I'm the one who's on the ballot." Hoffmann wasn't familiar with the LaRouche-attributed article linlong Israeli oil operations with Libya, but said: "ff(LaRouche) says 1t, then rm confident (the link) is there." Sumner's success io the June 3 primary depends on how well his supporters can instruct Democrats on tbe write-in process, a two-pronged method in which voters must first print the candidate's name in a selected area and then punch out the correspondin$ hole. His campaign wiU lean heavily on the media, Sumner said, adding that advert1smg and dtrect mailings will also be used, along with some networkfog among party organiza- tions.. Sumner estimated his campaign would cost about $50,000 or "what- ever it takes." After Tuesday's news conference, he was scheduled to meet with top party supporters to discuss campaign fund-raising. ··we're going to try to come up with a few bucks," said restaurateur Rich- ard O'Neill, a Democratic financier who had amvcd for the meeting.. "Campaj~s hke this take a lot of work." 0 Neill said. Write-in campaigns may also drai.n some funds from other Democrallc races in the county, political ob- servers said. Sumner admitted the party was learning an expensive lesson against the pitfalls of faiJing to run a candidate in every ~1san race. He said two rtent1al Democratic hopefuls ha dcaded at the last minute not to run for the coo- iressional seat, allowing Hoffmann to .. shp an" unopposed on the party ballot. Looking toward the November general elccu on, Sumner said be would be a credible candidate to break the Republican hold on a district where Democrats arc out- numbered 57 perccnt to 31 percent. NEWPORT SURVEY BLASTED AS A SHAM •.• From.Al Scott introduced the survey as an t1ve1y unbiased." He added that who wilJ be more sens1lJve to the honest o ne based on his several years although the questionnaire was de-needs of residents, and less concerned in the advertising business. signed to be fair it may have with the interests of the big de- 'Tm shocked be (Scott) would lead rcpl'C$Cnted some o/ the views of the velopers?" his name to such a sham," Cox said. political action committee. Nmety-two of the surveyed resi- He added that the council should not "We're not the ultimate unbiased, dents answered yes. and 8 percent allow isclf to be duped by a political political pollsters in the world," answered no to the q!Jestion. action committee trying to collect RyckofT said. Ncwpon 2000 officials said they funds One of the questions on the survey planned to file a traffic management Walker Don and '>usan ')mall. Laura\ parents. mamta1ncd an around-the clock vigil at the hospital a.-. hundred'> of wcll-w1'>her'> called and wrote encouragement to the famil) permanent, but doctor. told the Smalls that Laura will have 1mpa1rcd vmon in her nght eye at best "Cox 1s malong an emotional that council members wd wu a initiative Tuesday with lbe Newpon statement," said Newpon 2000 mem-question that dealt with the C ity Beach City Oerk in an effort to ease bcr Paul RyckofT. "That's up to ham ." Council's relationship with local de-congestion on c1ty streets. Tuesday RyckofT is also a former mayor of velopers. afternoon, City Clerk Wanda Raggio Ix-tween 2 and J vear.-. old Newport Beach. "Should we try to elect new council said the intiat1ve had not yet been Pathologists 1 n L os Angeles Cou n 1 y -;:;=R=yc=k=o=ff=w=·=d=t=h=e=s;;u;;rv;;e:y:wa:::s=":re:la:·=~m;;e:m::be:rs:::a:n:d::co::u:n:ty=:su:pe::rv=iso=rs=:fi:1l:ed::W1:. t.h::h:e:r:o:;;ffi::cc:.=:::::::::=::;; Don <;mall, an optical cng.rneer at Perkm-F.lmer 1n Garden Grove, '><ltd ht'> wife wcnl home Tues.day after- noon for the fir\t time to try to &<'t some sleep Small said h1\ daughter wa\ awake and aware of her <>urround1 ngs ... All the sign s are good '>he hasn't had a temperature for ov('r 16 hours." he said He praised those who had cared for his daughter. from the park range~ to the medical staff at M1ss1on Com- munity The family al~ was grateful for the concern and prayers being expre\~d by fnendo; and stranger!> ahke "The r~pon~ has been over- whelming." Don Small said. "People we've never heard of have beer. sending gif\s to Laura " Although insurance is expected tc1 cover her hosp1tal care, a trust fund has been set up fo r the extcnc;1v<' rehab1ht.at10n i he face, It's too ,oon to 1ell 1fthc paralym 1s MAIN OFFICE l Y.i N...,t • 1111 r I • 111 U..-.u A M•" •<11·•~\ A • W ·• .,_ • ~,.~,, ..., • .,. a.' "6'8 "'--6 "'3>10'• ~., .. , "So far there·~ been no 1nfect1on an the eye, but the doctor told me she won't have normal v1~1on.'' Small ~Id. The eye has a tear 1n 11 about one ccnumcter long. he said ' "We'~ trying to save the eye Anything afterthat 1sa bonu.-.." ~mall I.aid. A preliminary autopsy of the cat that attacked the child at Ronald W Casperc; Regional Park revealed nothing to 1nd1cate a reason for 1t<, bizarre behavior, said Dr Nila Kelly of the county Health Care Agency. Authont1e!> said the attack was virtually unprecedented. Mountain hons are wary of humans and avoid rather than attack them. Kelly said the animal was not rabid and. contrary to reports that at wac, malnourished. the preliminary autopsy showed a relatively heaJthy animal "TherT wa' no Citcess fat OUt!>ldc. but he was nomual 1ns1dc for a young mal<' hon." Kelly ~1d "H1~ tet'lh were m excellent \hape." The autop'>y revealed the Utt wu\ were <oeheduled to study tissue sam-:1 pies under the microscope, lookmg for endocnne imbalances. tumors. cancer. nervou~ ~ystem disorders, "anything that could cause c;trange behavior." Kelly c,a1d A theory that the cat may have been dome'it1c and released into the < levc:land Nauonal Forest 1s vir- tually 1mposs1blc to prove, ~1d a spokc'>man for the state DeP.artmcnt of Fish and Game · "The capuv1ty thing 1s an anracuve assumption, but unless we have something 10 go on there's no reason to believe that," said Carl W1 lc-0it. HC' \81d an e11am1nat1on of the mountain hon revealed no evidence of capt1v1ty ~uth as dcclawmg or collar mark!. .. We have no 1nd1ca11on other than ltS behavior," Wilcox &aid. "It's le.ind of a mystery " Per10ns 10tercsted in contnbut1ng to the mall Tru'it Fund should ~nd contnbut10n!> to Mercury Savings. 23021 lake <enter Dnve, El Toro. (A 92610. Detty Piiot Deftyery 11 OuarMteed C«-•''11'' •!lftl ,_,..~, ••• P •o>-V>fl? C.-i • r •1 ~ ••i;,rft .._,.,,.,~ ...,.tnw• "'•··~ or •. ,...., • ..,. I Justcall642-6086 •A.-.ncl.ty ''oel.t)' II ~ 00 'lC. I ...... f°"' .,.,_. tly !>JOC.,.. 1><ot111tTP"' •!Id ,,,., '~ ... bt _., "°"""" •""""' mey °" ~"l)r>Jll:~ ,,.,.<-• • • ..,. • -.. ,.,~ l rf,,,'f''fl"• ow...., ' What do you ltke about the Da1Jy Pilot" What don't you like" C~ll the number above: and your message wtll be recorded, transcribed and d<'· hvercJ to the appropnate editor. The same 24-hour answenna scrvttt may be used to rtCOrd lettas to the editor on any topic Contnbuton to our Lctten column mu'it 1nclud<' their name and telephone: number for venficatton Tells us what's on your mind • i.. .... .,.y -s..no.,, ti ,,,.. "" M1 ·~ '°"' COC'ly Oy 7 a "' e.t ~o<t 10 1 m •I'd yr:o11 t oetr wll CM-1111 Clrculatton Te .. ~ KARATS AND QOLD wh•t th• marJdng• m .. n What' It 14-ka.rat gold? It 11 an alloy of gold with other metall, In whleh the amount of pure gold equaJt 14 parta, mixed with 10 parts of the other metals. Gotd 11 alloyed becauM pot• gold (24 keret gotd 11 the only gotd that cen legefty be catted pure gold) II too soft to be pr9Ctlcalty mect'ltned end UMd In jewelry. Somettme., In thlt country, you wtll -*> ... 10..karat and 18- karat gotd. Again, thlt •mpty deelg· nat .. the formule of gold In relatton to 10 pent of other met8'a. The high« the karet ratl~. the higher the peroentaio-of gotO In an object. 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