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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1986-04-14 - Orange Coast Pilot.. , l TOllGMOW., L I : RAIN * MONDAY, APRIL 14, 1986 Pilot's blOod shows booze, colte Investigator of fatal plane crash seeks Newport bar flier may have frequented BJ STEVE MARBLE Of .. ..., ...... Cocaine and alcohol have been detected in the blood of a student pilot who died &Jona with two othen tn an airplane crub oft" the coast of Newport Beach last month. Barry Kina. 32, had a blood-alcohol readina of 0.11 or aliabllv above the ~ Bluta Reagan DaYicl Stockman •1'8 Premdent R~an la llY· m. in a .. dreiiemland," boldln& America boe- taae to a reckl_. n.cat policy tbat threateu to MD4 lD.tlatlon 8oarlnC ap.ln.A4 World The pope makes an his- toric visit to a Rome synagogue./ A5 Entertalnlllent Pugnacious Mr. T started NBC on Its cllmb from worst to first.I Al INDEX Advice and Games Births Bulletin Board Buaineaa Classlfled Comics Death Notices Entertainment Opinion Paparazzi Police log Public Notices Sports Television Weather A10 A6 A3 A7-8 86-8 A 11 88 A9 A12 A6 A3 85,88 81-5 A9 A2 level at which a penon ii ~med too drunk to drive a car, wd Deputy Coroner Richard Slauabter today. An investiptor uaipled to the cruh said be looki~ into the poui- bility th.at Kina wu buzzing" a bar near the Newport Pier when the plane cruhed into the ocean. "We know that be was drinkina, and we'd like to find out where." said Caspers Park Younggtrl bitten by lion faces more fact al operations By PAUL Al\CBIPLEY Of .............. An El Toro girl 1s slowly recovering from massive injuries inflicted by a mountain lion, while the Oranae County wilderness park where the S- ycar-old was attacked opened to the public today for the first time in three weeks. laura Michelle Small remains in Mission Community Hospital, where she was rushed by helicopter follow- ing the March 23 attack by a 2 to 3- ycar-old mount.am hon in Ronald W. Caspers Re&ional Park. The park is located in the Santa Ana Mountains cast of San Juan Capistrano. Don and Susan Small take turns standing watch over their dau&hter about 16 houn a day at the Mission VieJo hospital. He has been worlcina half days at Pcrlcin-Elmer in Garden Grove, where he is an optical en&i- necr. laura already has undergone ex- tensive plastic and neurosurgery for the lacerations and puncture wounds the lion inflicted when it arabbcd her head with iu jaws. But she faces at least two more operations to repair the injuries that caused pa.rtiaJ paralysis on her ri&ht side and severe damaae to her ri&ht eye. Don Small said doctors are op- timistic they can save his da~ter's ere .• bu~ ~e won't have much, if any. VISlOD ID It. "She has repined some movement on her n&ht side and her speech is better," S"mall said Sunday. "There was lots of damage to her brain and it (Pleue 11ee PA.RI/ A.2) Postal workers brace for a nual_tax surge Don Uotcote, a National Transpor- tation Safety Boatd investiptor ... lo this cue, the answer to that question mi&bt be imporUJlt" Domite said he bu information that KiD.J frequented a tavern near the city pier. He did not name the bar. The invcstiptor cautioned that the blood-a1eobof "*1iq may not be pinp0int ICCW'ate becaute the human body occuionaJly 1Wodueet lo-. levels of ak.obol in death. Uorente la.id that phenomenon mi&ht explain why, a very small amount of alcohol -rou&hly 0.02- was found in blood of instructor Phillip PefDey, 20. No trace of alcohol wu found in the body of Beo.ipo Villa., the third penon who died in tbt crash. Tboup ll'l()CI of cocaine were found in K.ina's blood, Sla\lahter said there is no way to determine if be wu under the drua's iDOuence. The four-teat Piper ArcbcT went down in S8 feet of water about one third of a mi&e oft" the Newport cout OD March 2, but it took a safvqe ~ four days to locate the futelap and bodies. Witne11e1 to the lat.Hliabt crub uid the plane wu ftY'iDa low over the water ud went doWn alnpdy Mille beokiQa to the riaht Uorenie ltid be it certain all three men died immedi- ately. IJorente said the airDlane WU in aood wottina order ud mechanical 1Wobkms have been ruled out u a contri~nt fact« to the eccidmt The a.i.rplaoe was owned by a Corona del Mat man and lealed by Aero flite C.enter, a fliabt tcbool hued at John Wayne~ Peftley WU employed U a Oiaht LD.ltrucior. Mesa drug firm told to correct product claims Hadn'twarnedof side effects from kids' medication BJ PBD.. SNEIDEl\MAN Of .. ..., ........ A Cost.a Mesa drua manufacturer that allegedly made euaerated claims in press releucs to promo\e a new product said today it will oom~y with a f~ Food and Drua Admin- istration order to recall the promo- tional materials. The FDA 'a order to ICN Pbarm.a- oeuticals was only the !leCOnd time in the agency's b.iJtory it bu din:cted a drua maker to comet a prea re&eue and redistribute it to all oriaina1 recipients, an FDA spokesman said. ..The company has always wanted to be in accordance with FDA rqulations," Dubruk.a Pineda, a spokeswoman for ICN Pharma- ceuticals, said today. "We will comp- ly with cverythjna they bAve asked the company to do ... At issue are l>romotionaJ materials for JCN's Viruolc, the trllde name for a drua called ribavirin. The drua won FDA approval Jan. 2 for ueauneat of a deadly children's respiratory ~ tion. It also is bcina 1atcd in the United States and Europe u a potential treatment for AIDS. FDA spokesman William Orig said his .,ency bu approved the me of Viruole only for treatment of infnu sutferioa from respiratory syncytiaJ virus or RSV. But Gria uid ICN'1 materials for the preas and invcston indicaled tbt dru& could be Uled in all cues of RSV without daqerous side effects. The FDA spokesman said bis qmcy'a approval was only for serious in.fut cases of RSV. '1De primary eugeration WU to SUIJCI\ that the product bad DO senous side cfl'ec:ts." Oria laid. "That is not well establisbecfbccause we do -have cues of breathin& impairment and death in in&.nu who had this drua." The FDA spokaman said it could not be determined whether the ~ ... CJDL1m&Jll'8/A2) Dead man found in pond had a long record of arrests By ROBERT BAUER Of ............ A man whose wei&hted body wu found in a Huntiniton Beach pond April 6 bad an extensive arrest record throughout California, police spokeswoman Jo Anne Berptrom disclosed today. But Bergstrom wd polioe stiU don't know the man's real idenuty. The man's body, sea.led in a arcen plastJc bag with a chain around bu neck, was found ID the abandoned quarry by fisbennen. · Bergstrom said the FBI found a match for the man's finaerprints but a computer check came up with seven different names, or aliues. and sevcn different birtbdates. Polioe declined to discloec the seven names out of fear they miaht lead relatives into believing that the wrona man had been killed. Bcrutrom said. She said the man apparently had been in trouble with the law most of his life. His strinj of arrcsu runs from Southern California to Northern California. The arrests included dru& V10lations, Berptrom said. Polioe said they will look into records of the dead man's acrape1 with the law as a boy when the correct names of his parcnu may have been (Pl_.. eee llSCORD/ A.2) BJ LAURA MER& Of .. ..., ...... It's that time api . Americans arc rushing to fiJe their i come tax papers before Uncle Sam can shake a finger at them or, wonc, slap them with a fine. filmJ. the IRS has a toll-free number to dial, 8()().424-1040. And for those who discover the forms they have arc not the forms they need, libraries, post offices, federal buildings and some banks have additional papers avatlable, an IRS spokesman said. Sheriff candidate appeals to high court Doomsday hiu Tuelday at the stroke Qf midniP.t. Anyone faiJinJ to drop by the m&Jlbox by the that tune will be late in the eyes of the Internal Revenue Service. A number of U.S. post offices around the c-0uoty will be open until midnisht. And several offices will be emptytn& drop boxes until the dead- line. By LISA MAHONEY °' ............... The United States Supreme Court W111 hear arauments Tuesday on whether Oranae County voters' pamphlets containma the edited statement of sheriff's candidate Linda Lea Callipn should be held until the coostituuonality of censorina the document is resolved. But there's hope and some help. For last-minute filen, there is assistance available if troubles ari1e. For questions about the forms or "Everythina we get before mid- ni&ht. they will cancel April IS," said Ow~ Baker. information clerk at the Saf}ta Ana main office. Postal (Pl-.-... POST I A.2) Frustrated by a 4th District Court Coast students score high, but progress reports varied Nurnbcn may not he, but neithcr do they always tell you everythina you want to know. G . .IEANEm AVENT Focus ON IHf NH'fS School district.a have rec:elved their annual repon cards from the state -the results of 1en1or scores on California A11e11ment Pro- aram teau -but administraton caution that the test ttsulta by themldvet tell pettnu little about how their childnn't particular tchools mat.ch up to other IChooli. However, adminJstraton say the IOOres can show whether a district's PfOl"lml •~ ahowi.na .improvement or decline over a number of yean. And d11tnct1 can match their performance apinst district.a with 1tudent1 from similar IOciCH!COnomic blcqrounda. educa1on say. Student.a in Oranac Coast 1ehoof1 ecored above state averqes. but their peffonnanoc when comp&red ap1Dst Watching TV llnked to tHt ecorH. A3 put IC-Oret varied. Under a lesislatin mandate. the state Department of Education bepn admirustcrina the test ID 1973 to thJrd. sixth, eiahth and 12th padcs in readins. written exprcuion, spellina and math ID an effort to measure bow districts were oerformina. "Before there wu no one tes1," satd Patnck McCabe. CAP statistician. "Someteiu were easier, some were harder." TbeCAPt.ett is bued on the state's model C\lmculum standatds-a statr f'ramewotk that tells 1ehools what they should have in their cwricu.Jwn, McCabt wd. To eocou,. pater pa.nicipatton 1n CAP testtna. the state created an PfOITl.lll lut year calJed the Education Improvement lncmtivc Propam. To ~ualify for the p~m a blab 1ehool must teat •t kut 93 percent of 1u 1en1on. Tbe ICbool also muat equal or n<lCCCS the overall pin made by 1tudent1 statewide on the test to mceive a cash award. ~ ... 8TVDS'"11' / A.2) t of Appeal decision Fnday that pre· vents publication of her full state- ment in the voten' pamphlet while delayina a bearina on whether such prior restraint violates her free speech r\ahts, Callipn's attorneys petiuoned both the state and the U.S. supreme courts to resdfve the matter. "It is unfortunate that the 4th District Court of Appeal fint stated free speech should have pnority .. and then did exactly the opposite.'' C alliaan attorney, Will iam Yacobozzi, said this momi111- y acobo7.zi said be filed a new lawsuit with the U.S. Supreme Court against Oranae County Reaist.rar of Voters Al Olson and incumbent Sheriff-Coroner Brad Oates, seeking an inJunction to block distribution of the voter infonnation until after a hcarina on the First Amendment Hlgh school scores 1t11a. ..... 17.0 ~ 11.1 ......... ...... 1 .. •• •. 1 •.M7.2 ..... 1 ... •1 17.1 .. .1 ...... 10.4 ... 10.A ., ..... . .... .,... ••• 71.1 •1-11.0 10.~n.a •• .,, .. tu.:7U •A-11.1 19.7 71.I .... n., ?t .... 11.4 ., .. 11.1-79.I •+-71.1 .. 19A 17.WU .....,. .. ') .. .. ., 11...a •1-nu question. He said be also filed a petition Yt'lth the state Supreme Court a.akin& the Justices to order the appellate court to heart.be constitutton&f issue immedi- ately and place a hold on distribution of the edited voters' pamphlets. Oates, runn1na for a fourth term in the post be has held 12 years. touched off a judiclaJ pinapona pme March (PleueeeeOATU'/A.2) ... RI .... 71.1 n .• 11 ... 12..s 71.1-71.4 11.1 72.0 10.6-12.4 10 .... n..1 11.4 72.4 n..1-11.1 73.6-71..0 n .1 14.I 11 ... 11.1 n.o.n..1 11.1 7LI ,.,..11;1 11.1-11..3 11.1 11.J n.~14.t 11..0-11.1 n.o 1U 11.0oeJ&e 71A-?l.I , ... n.1 n....1u 11. .. 11 .. 1U n .• 11.1-11.1 1'.1·1U ft.I 71.4 1U.:11.1 1'.~N.1 ' '" . r Orllft09 eo.t DAJlY PILOT/ Monday, April 14, 1988 Police round up 'dead heads' for drug use at Irvine concert BJ tM A.Mda\tlll Preu that turbulent ckadc. taken to UC lrvane MedjcaJ C.enter for obtervation of a possible drug ~ctioo. sa1d Lt. Tom Hume. A pll1J' of conceru by the lona·ll ved Grateful Dead rock band brouaht more l 960I memories to hfc than may have been expected. u more than 60 fans were arrested, maoy for alleacdlY . LSD. "With C::::tc it's like the '609 all over ap.in," $st. Gary Shull said of crowds that flocked to tbe Irvine Meadows Amphitheater Saturday and Sunday to bear the band that ti,.v,.lnf'Mi 11 f"nrl'" ()flnvaJ followers in Ahhouah no official taJly of urcsu was available, S,t. Mike Osden said a imlimina.ry check of police lop showed 63 (>eOple arrested. all but I handful on d.ru& cbarJet.. No violenc~ wu reponed amona crowds at the 14,000-IC&t amphitheater, he said. Thouah the band, known for such country·tinoNt rock numben as .. Truckio' ·";i,d "Catey Jones.'' bas eajoyed a revival of aoru with the younaer set, Qaden said most fans at the Dead's concen appcarc:d to be in their late 20s and eatly 30s. .. The mitjonty of it was LSD," Oa<fen said of the mixture of misde- meanor and felony arrests. .. There was a healthy mpling of older ~pie who haven't outvown them: he ~1d. One rruin who climbed a barbed wire fenet into a restricted area was Crash injures four teens By ROBERT HYNDMAN Of .. .,., ......... Four teen-agers rcmAin hosp1tal- u.ed today following a Mission Viejo traffic accident m which six people were uuured, includmg a man su.spectod of drunken driving. when be ran a red J1&ht at Margucnte and collided Wlth the car driven by 17-ycar-old Harry Sklar of M1ss1on Viejo. Dercsa. who suffered minor in- juries Jnd bums, 1s being treated at the Mission VieJO hospitaJ. H 1s four passengers also were ta.ken to M1ss1on Community fot treat- ment. CHP investigators believe Deresa may have been racing another car when he ran through the intersection. Mehssa Pehco, 15, of Ontario, remains an serious condition today in the mten~1vc-care unit. Erik Dcresa, 18, of Ontario was arrested on suspicion of dnving under the influence of alcohol follow- ing the accident early Saturday at Crown Valley and Marguerite parkways. Deresa's Volk!wagen exploded m flames on impact and he and bas passengers were pulled from the car by Wltnesscs, said CHP spokesman Jim Smith. . Valene Kauler, IS, of Mission Viejo, as being treated for a complex fracture near her left eye. According to the Cahfom1a High- way Patrol. Deres.a was dnv1ng east on Crown Valley Wlth four passengers Sklar, who was alone 1n his car, was treated for minor inJunes at Mission Community Hospital following the I: 15 a.m. accident and was later released. Terri Wright.stone, IS, of El Toro. 1!! fC(overi~ from a fractured femur. Jason Btsbal, IS. of Mi~sion VieJo. suffered only minor mJunes and was tr~tcd and released. CHILDREN'S MEDICINE .•. RECORD •.. FtomAl listed. From Al Pohce, who view the death as a hom1c1de, say they have no motive for the death, no weapons and don't know how long the body had been in water, Bergstrom said. Pohcc have not announced a cause of death. brealhUl£.problems and deaths were caused by the disease or the drug. But he added. "The drug cannot be Oatly said to have no side effects " regulate ..promotion.al matenals for the drug. l\e saJd. Gn&g said this was only the second l1J11e in fDA history that a drug company has been ordered to correct a widely distributed press release. The first time concerned a release that Eli Lilly & C o d1stnbuted for 1hc drug Ora flex. Last week police released a com- posite drawing of the victim who had an unusual series of tanoos. He was descnbed as a Hispanic in ht5 middle to late 20s. Gnsg also said the ICN press matenals also stated that the drug has proved efTcct1ve m treaung other diseases such as flu. measles, chicken pox and herpes. Pohc:c arc urging anyone Wlth information to call detccuves Rich- ard Hooper or Mike Relic at 536-5970 or 536-5947 He said the FDA has only approved the drug for use an scnous ca~\ of RSV Although the federaJ agency cannot stop phys1c1,ans from pre sen b- ing the drug for other purpose\, 11 can FDA officials said that 1f ICN failed to comply with the order, its product could be seued on the grounds Qf mislabeling. GATES' FOE APPEALS AGAIN ..• From Al 24 when he challcnfed ponaons of Calligan'<; candidates statement an Orange County Supenor Coun. are true. but contends her nght to reversed itself and allowed the state· pnnt them 1s protected by the U.S. mentto be edited butstood finn on its Consutuuon even if they arc not. original June hearing date. Under a 3-year-old st.ate Elecuons C ode statute, anyone may challenge the contents of the statements. which are wntten by candidates for public offi ce and <;ent along with sample ballots to all the county's registered vote~/ After Supenor Cour1 Judge Judith And on Fnday, as the presses were Ryan ruled in Gates' favor Apnl 3, beginning to roll Wlth the tnmmcd (alhpn appealed and 1n1ually won "ers1on of her ~uucment, the appeals the nght to have her full statement coun turned down a pet1t10n from pnnted The coun of appeal put ofT Calllgan's attorneys ukmg the June ruling on the consutuuonal issue, hcanng be moved forward. Gates called c:crtam allegauons m Callrgan's statement false and mis- leading and asked that they be removed. however, until after the pnmary, an Yacobo111 ..aid he su~pel"h that action which prompted Gates' at-politics 1s responsible for thc un- tomeys to seek relief from the state favorablr court rulings Supreme Cour1 .,,, Attorneys for Gates wen.· in con-. Calligan mainwns the allegations The Supreme Court returned the fcrcnce this mommgand could not be case to the appeals coun. The coun reached for comment. STUDENTS' PROGRESS REPORTS VARY ... From Al CAP has two scales, said Mc< abc The absolute 'leak tcll'i where a school d1stnct stands when the d1stncts art• ranked from one through 99 The com pan son 'iCOre show' how a d1stnct did compared with s1m1lar schools "Background factors arc used to detennmc what schools arc similar. The CAP test asks each student what I'> the highest educauonal level achieved by either parent," said McC"8be. The background summary also anaJyrcs data on ethntCJty. length of tame students have been in the d1stnct st.ate and country; number of semec;tcrs since the ninth grade an vanous subJech, extra cum cular ac11v111es. percent.age of households ~mng welfare, and the percent.age of students with hmllcd Enghsh-e;pcakmg ab1hues. If a school a performing above cxpectat1on'>, hut sconng low when compared to schools throughout the state. 11 may mean the school has a large percentage ot non native English speakers, he said By the same token. d1stncts that are doing well m companson to their peers .. shouldn't rest on their laurels cuher We hope they don't stop working harder be(;ause of their scores " Scores from Orange Coast school~ arc: Hutlagton Buell Union Hip Scbool Olltrlct The d1stnct includes Edison, Fountain Valley. ttuntington Beach. Manna. Ocean View We~tmin'iter. Evening and W1ntersburg ha&h schools The number ofhm1ted £ngJ1sh-spcalung studcnt'i in the distnct 1s up 2 percent, said Cathenne McC1ough, d1stnct spokeswoman. Yet, "in all areas assessed. ~tudcnts dastnct wide scored fTom I to I 4 percent more wrrect answers than they scored in 1984-85 'Tm lund of proud of that." she said Ac.cording to the CAP repon, the d1stnct reading score rose from 65.6 to 67 percent from last year, wnuen expression increased from 66 7 to 67 7l spelling Jumped from 71 7 to 73 I a.J)d math increa.~ rrom 72 0 to 73 4 perc:cnt The maJonty of the schools 1n the d1stnct tested at least 93 percent of their high 5Chool students this year, said McGough. For their pan1c1pauon in the C a'ih for C AP/rogram, Manna and Westminster high c;chools rcc.e1ve $28.97R and $I S,083 respectively for a d1'ilnct total of $44,070, said Mc<.iough. "l woufdn't put a lot of emphasis on anythmg measured by a number," ~ad Dorothy Krutcher. dastnct director of guidance. When people arc trying to decide where to buy a house, ''they tend to want to look at test 1COre1 That docs~ bother us, because we have good test scores We arc try1n1 to make parents aware of cumculum and how 1t meets student needs. Scores arc interestma. but there are a lot ofother th1np," she said. Such houae.hunt1naperents should also look at what courses are offered and what the g.r;adu1t1on standards are, uid Krutchcr. Ne1t'fO~Mese Ualflecl Scflaool Dt1trtct The d11tnct includes Corona del Mar, Cosu Mesa. Estancia, Back Bay and Newpon Harbor hi&h schools The district's ten.1or test toores dropped 1n 1\11 four areas. wtuch lei\ dttt.rict offiaals a bit pu12led. "We know our instruction program didn't change, we lave the same tuchen. We want to watch it for another year to~ what happens. When a ICOre 11 lo~ it doesn't automatically mean blod teechina," said Otte L Woolley, d1r«1.0r o( rescarcb and student serv1ces. He said ICOret need to be analyted ova a num~r of yea rt to see tfa trend emerae• Accord1na to the repon. rudina ~om d«hncd from ( 68 6 10 66 l.J percent, wntten cxpre~1on dec.rc:a~d from 7fJ 4 to 68 I. spellmg fell from 72 5 to 71 4 and math ~ores decreased from 74.2 to 72 4 percent Woolley said the dastnct tested 91 pertt'nl of its \tudents, 6 percent more than last year By 1ntrca~ing the number of students tested, a d1stnct 1s also incrca~mg the number of students who arc less motivated. he ~1d In the past, some students did not takr the test betause they do not receive 1nd1v1dual ~ore\ on the< AP te\l he said Although the (ash for CA P pr~m has 1ncrea~d par11c1pat1on statewide, Woolley said, 'We're not 1n agreement with 11. It puts too much empha')I~ on te<>llng. We purposely did not enter" lrvlllt' Unified School D11trlct Thcd1s1nct 1ncludesAllemat1ve. lrv1nc Woodhndge and Un1vcrs1ty high schools. "We can't complam at all" ahout th1<. yc:"csr·,. (AP ~ore\, \aid Bruce G1vner. deputy 'iUpcnntendcnt However, "this is such a small snapshot 1n time ... It needs to be-compared to other data. G1vner ..aid the d1stnct 1s waiting for a funhcr breakdown of thr tl'\l data 1n the skill~ repon 10 determine the strength\ and need" of the distnct Scores change from year 10 year, and he prefer\ 10 plot them on a graph, said G1vner "Some years '>tudcnt'i arc sharper than othen .. G1vner said 1t 1s not really beneficial to compare scores to other d1stncts throughout the 'ltate "It lo\Cs 1t<. meaning 1f you do too many com pan sons" According to the test report, distnct reading .-.core~ rose from 69.6 to 69.8; wntten expression increa~d from 7 J.0 to 71.5; \pelting declined from 76.1 to 75 5 and math increased from 77.3 to 78 6 G1vner \aid the dastnct tested about 95 percent of HS seniors for both years, qualifying the d1stnct for S6 7. 708 in ("AP funds Irvine H1&h School seniors earned the ~hool $46, 132. Woodbndge qualified for $21.253 and l 'nivcr- sny High received $323. , Saddleback VaUey Unified Sclllool Dl1trlct The d1s1nct includes El Toro. S1lverado. Laguna Hill~ and M"saon Viejo ht&h schools. "The d1stnct improved for the third 'trtuJht year " said Jeff Herdman. director of tcttrn1 research Accord1n1 to the tctt repon. reading score' increased from 68.9 10 69 S percent: wntten expression improved from 69. 7 to 70.4, spelhna rose from 74.2 to 74.8. and math Jumped from 7S.4 to 76.9 percent correct. Under the Cash for CAP prosram the d1stnct ~i ved $181, I 38. the hiahest award in the county, wd Herdman. All of the district's hiah tehools q~hfied. he said. La .... Beadl Ualtle4 Scltool Ot1trlct Distnct studenta a~nd La1un1 Beach HIJ)l School. It tested 94 percent of 1lt seniors lut year and 97 percent this year. Their CAP award came to SS.-423. Accord ana to the test repon, rc:ad1na iocreucd to 70. 7 from 66. 7 percent: written expreuioo rose from 68.6 to 71 S percent: spellina declined from 7-4.8 to 72 pcrcen~ and mnh scores rose •ltahtly from 73. I percent to 13.i percent correct over the pttvious ~r Tb11 year. Laauna Beach Httb School went down on the spclhna test but am~oved 11sn1ficantJy 1n n:aJana and wnttcn eicPfe"iOn, wd Ltdeane Bnslcn, 1ctJn1 super- intendent It's hard to aplaJn the decline in spclhna. because the charactenstia of lludentJ attcndina "haven't chanae<S very much over lbe yat1," ahe 111d. "I'm rr~Jr excited about the unprovements 1n read1n1 and wntten e~pren1on," the said "The wnuna component m the I Ith and 12th arade1 has increased.~ Clouds forming; storm looming Two storm• -the ftm mfld, the ll9COnd a llttte t1ronger - ""• Ma~ lor Soutt.n Callfoml• todey, POrtendlng lncr...,ng ol0udlnee1tonight8l'<f1 chanoe of rlln Tueeday. T odey•1 vvtat>te hlQh ctoudlneee Wiii thlctctt'I to contlderabty cloudy weether lat• today and Tu.day u a mMd PacHlc atOfm pqeee through, llCOOrdlna to tN National W•ther Servtce. A MCOnd, stronger 11orm wlfi aweep south from IN Gulf of Aluka l•t• Tu.day and Wedneeday. btlnglng • ohenot Of rtln IQ'OM the rtg6on. AIOng tN Orenge Cout It will be mo.tty cloUdy tontght With • CtlanOe of~ lett Tueeday. Lowa tonight In the mld-40a to mld-509. Cooler Tu.day wtth htgn1 In IN mkMIOt to mki-70.. From Point Conception to the Mexican Bofdtf -'"'* w1tet1: Light wind• nJght and morning hoU,. becOmlng eouth to aouthweet 8 to 18 k"°'a Tu.day afternoon W•tetty awell 2 lo <4 feet. Mostly cioody tonight Ind Tu.day wtth a ctienCe of eh~ late Tu.day. Extended Tides TOOAY 1120pm TWIOAY 807am 4$ or 8'NI Mlt IOCley 91 8 23 P m , -r._oey 111 & n • m end .... , llOel'I et 112•pm Mocw>eetttodeyitl 11&1pm.- f.-»y .it 23 e.m Artukovic trial begins By tbe A11oclated Preu ZAGRLB. Yugoslavia -Surfside Colony n:s1dent Andnja Anukovic. who wa~ extradited fTom the United State'>. went on tnal today tn a bulletproof defendant'~ box on charges that he ordered mass killings of c1v1laans and ant1-Nu1 pan1san~ dunng World War II Yugo~lav media have:" labeled the 86-)'car-old Anukov1c "the butcher of the Balkans," but he has \81d he 1s innocent of the war cnmes ae<:usa- t1ons. which stem from his role as interior m1n1stcr of the Na11 puppet state of Croatia If convicted , Anukov1c could be executed by finng squad Weanng a dark suit Jacket and a shin without a tie. Artukov1c today haltingl y entered Zagreb distnct coun nanked by two pohcemen. The officers hel~d him to sit and to nsc and 1dcnt1fy himself to the tnbune of fiv e Judges who are prc<ading over the non-Jury tnal, which 1~ expected to end Apnl 30. Artukovac ~t m a three-sided defendant's box of bulletproof glass. Special quarters furnished w11h medi- cal equipment were set up for him in the coun building, where he wa~ moved from a pnson hospital after being flown to Zagreb from the United States on Feb. 12 As the tnal got under way. Defense attome)' Zelko OIUJIC moved tor a po~tponement of eight days, sAyi°' he had not hcen allowed enough tame with Anukov1c to go over the indict- ment. The defendant 1s practically bliod and unable to read the 32-page document for himself, O luj1c argued Anukov1c's lawye~ have also argued that he 1s senile But Chief Judge M1lko G~slu said the mouon for postponement was denied because defense lawyers had been able to speak to Artukovic, Ar1ukov1c, who had successfully avoided extradition for tnal for nearly 35 years. appeared fra1l during h1'i coun ap~rance. PO~T OFFICES BRACE FORT AX -CRUSH ... From Al workers will be canceling the mail 11\10 thl· we< hours of Wednesday morning because of the volume of la<>t-manutc returns o\nd Baker anticipates the crowds to roll in )U~t as thcv have every year. .. Practically (all the postal workers) will work Last week was busy," hl'Causc property taxes were due on Apnl 10 "And 11 looks lilcc we'll be "ery busy today," she said At several offices around the coun- ty, ~stal workers will be stand outside with bins so people can drive hy and drop off their returns But look out. .. There arc rows and rows of cars." Baker said Police officers will be on hand to help direct traffic And remember, at m1dn1ght every- one packs up and turns in. she said. Bob Pineda, manager of mail processing in Costa Mesa. said all drop boxes m front of the 1590 Adams Ave. office will be cleared before midnight and everything will be po~tmarked for the 15th At the Hunt1ng1on Beach office. 6771 Warner Ave., postal workers will be manning huge bins outside until midnight. Postmaster Jim Don •t neglect postage, return address J~ Rreckenndge. spokesman for the U.S Po~tal Service, 1s advmng people: who will be fihng last-minute tall returns to make \Ure there IS adequate po~tage and a return address on the envelope. "Some people. 1n the last moments, forget the ohv1ous," Rreckenndae said If there 1s not enouah postage on the envelope, "the IRI) will ~nd 1t back and you could be stuck with a late penalty," he \aid Scales for weighing mail and post.age machine'\~ ill be ava1lahlc in the post o ffices that will be open late AJ?.nl IS. "There i<> no reason to wa1t 1n line. there are scales 1n the self-service offices," he said He also said that everyone 'ihould remember 10 include their return address in case. "there is some problem and we need w rnntact the person," he said. Postal workers are not allowed to open fir~t da\\ mail to detcnnanc who the sender 1s. he said . O'Hare said. A hst of other post office~ that wall have bins and postal worker\ avail able until midnight arc: •The Laguna Beach main office at 2991 1 Niguel Road. Laguna Niguel •The Playa station an Laguna Beach at 350 Forest Ave •The South Laguna branch at 31677 Virginia Way •The Laguna Hills office at 24001 Calle dcl la Magdclcna. •In C)anta Ana. the Nonh Grand \talion at 2201 North G rand. •Th<-Santa Ana general mall fat1lltyat 'IOI WestSunnowcr • fhc Ncwpon Beach main office at I IOI ( amclback • fhc Balboa ~talion at 204 Mum \t •The Bal boa l~land station at 206 Manne Ave •The R1vcrs1de station at 191 R1 ver'ilde Ave. an Newport Beach. PARK REOPENS AFTER LION ATTACK •.• From Al will have to reroute some of those :1rcu1ts." Laura Small will soon undergo ~urgery for her scalp. and she faces lnothcr operation later lo repair a hole an her skull, Small said Dcspne her injuries. Small said Laura 1s fcchng better daily. .. he's more cheerful She iets frustrated with her speech difficulties and lack of movement on her riaht 'l1de." he said. "The doctON think ficr movement will get better " Small dadn 't know when has c:buah- ter would be released from the hospital. She also Wlll face extensive rchab1ht1t1on therapy after her re- lease. MAIN OfflCI U1> """' e., 51 C:0.1t ..._ C• Although the family', 1n,urance " covenng most of her hospital care, they wall have to pay fo r her rehab1h- t.at1on. A trust fund was C5tablished at Mercury Savmp in El Toro, and Small said donation~ have been coming mat the rate ofa few hundred dollars a day. He declined to say how much is m the fund. Caspers Park wu closed immedi- ately after the attackj and hunten tracked down and k1I cd the moun- tain hon. An autopsy f•ilcd to reveal a reawn for the unusual attack. Authon11es said 1t was the first known mountain hon attack on a human m 77 yean 1n Cahfomaa. Wh ile the park was dosed. park ran,er'> rnmbed the wilderness look- ing for ,1gn' of otht'r mountain li ons that might have migrated from the hill' to the park. fon) (11mbrone, county parks dl\trict \uper v1sor, orag1oall.r. planned to keep the park closed until •\pnl 1S "I don't want to throw the ptes open until I'm sure it's safe," Oim- hrone '31d al tht' time "I just want to ~ 'urt> we don't have another cat in there that'\ not afraid of humans." Althou&}l ran,en found fresh lton pnn\\ 1n the park last week. they decided the danger to humans was m1n1rn1I o.u, fttloi DeflY91) le Ouarenteed Iola~·--lkl• 1"\60 eo.it-..... C• t'6le ~~ W-6479 ~ & editor•' 142-432• ~'O"' 1ot.' 0.11n9t Coe,1 ~ ~"1 No -llCJf.. ..., •• , __ .,, ... ..,.." .. ()I -.,,._ Justcall 642-8086 ..... .,..,,,.,.,"'(Al"" '>I .,. .. '"'" ~ "" • Yl1 ... , •• ,,.. ..... ,0 ... l "'l f1U C~ ••• ~ lei .,.,.., ........ '-""',,..,lie''°'~ .,,l'IQll -Ott ..,_,,,, l>I tOj)r'(ll'I - O"., .. _.. ,, • ., .. l;(,4•• ~ c.~1.,.,,.. U~I U t()I} !Ntitc•<'V'~ .,,.,,~2~"""'"'°V D'f'"' f'l '>t>~ VOL 71, NO. 104 What do you hke about the Daily Pilot" What don't you hkc" C-111 the number 1bovr and ynur metsaac Wlll be recorded, tranacribtd and dc- bvcT'Cd to the appropnate ednor The same 24-hour anawenns wrvic;c may ~ ulCd to rec,ord letters to tht editor on any 1op1(; Cootnbuton to our ~tters column mu•t 1ndudt thC1r name and tekphone numlxr for vrnncauon Tell• us whafa on your mind I J.J'f ltf eM y ti ,,. 1 ~ -~ '°"' ('Jty ll, • ..,, ··~~. 0 ..... .,, •Ill" C<IPy .. r.iii ... . Circulation T~onee ,. Co~:fie day set at I ne Valley Repretcntativcs from coUcps and un.iveraitiet throuahout Callfon>ia will be at Irvine Valley Collele Wedoetday frC?m 10 ··~· to I p.m~ in the courtyard to P!'Ovtdc tnformatJoo on admuaion1, ~pen1e1, bOUll.DI. loans, 1ebolanbipt. application dates and other questions. • Unlvenit)' of California branches repsuented wiU .be Irvine, 1f>1 An&elct, Riverside, Berkeley, Davt~. San fr&OCl.ICO ana Santa Cruz. State collq.e1 ati.enaina will Include Bakenfield. Chico Domi· l\IUCZ K'illa, Fresno, FUUerton, Humboldt. Lona Beacb, Pomona. Sacramento1 San Bernardino San Dicao. San Jose and Stanislaus. • In addition, more than 25 independent colleaeJ and univcnitics will be represented. The event is ftee.aiid open to the public, with further information available at 559-9300. Accountant. to convene . The Orange County chapter of the American Society of Women Accountants will hold itl monthly meeting Thursday at the Sheraton New- port, 4S4S MacArthur Blvd., Newport Beach. ~ttomcy Dan Broderic~ will speak on estate planning at the 6:30p.m. session. Guests arc invited the the c,ost is S20. CaU Ruth Urban at 553--0440 for re1CtVaUons. Breath lecture •lated ~ysical therapist Rebecca Holman will explain techniques to reduce shortncis of breath at Thursday's i:nceting of the Better Breathers. a club for people with breathing disorders . . Th~ proaram is scheduled for 4:30 p.m. in the auditonum of South Coast Medical C.Cntcr 31872 Cout Highw~~· South Laguna. Call 499-f3'11. ext. 2188, for add1nonal information. Capo •tory on film . "The Capistrano Story," a documentary ftlm, wlll be shown at Thursday's dinner meeting of the South Coast Chapter of the Retired Military Officcn' AasociAtion at the San Oemente Elles Lod&c, 1505 N. El Camino Real, San Oemcnte. Pamela Gibson, a four-generation San Juan Capistrano resident, will condut the 6:30 p.m. program. Call Lt. Col. Dick Adams at (619) 728-6448 for dinner reservations. Spring boatlqae la Meu Gift and craft it.ems for Mother's Day, Father's Day. wcddtn~ and graduations will be available at a spnng boutique to be held Thursday through Sunday at the Orange County Fairgrounds in Cost.a Mesa. 1 , 000 get free tests at Irvine health fair Upwards of 1,000 pcopl~ turned out Saturday for Irvine•s third annual Health Fair Expo; which featured free medical examin- ations and health screenings at the Irvine Home and Garden Center. Sponsored by PICH (People for an Irvine Community Hospital), th~ AMI/Irvine Medical C.entcr and Irvine Valley College, the event was held to help detect potential disease in its early tages and to promote healfuJ lifestyles, self-assessment and heath educa- tion. In the photos, above left, visitors view the fair's various exhibits while (above right) Fred Maas of Irvine takes a deep breath for the lung capacity test. At left, Donna Krebs of Irvine has her height and weight measured by Dianna Snachez. Thirty different stations were featured in the health fair, which offered a special children'• pro- gram for the first time. Interest was so great that the number of volunteers was expanded to 200 to provide comprehensive service to all, according to Carol Muench, coordinator of the event. The event will be conducted from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Thursday and Friday and 9 to 4 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. Admission and parking arc free. Call Phyllis Morrow at 990-8197 for more information. French lecture slated TV watching linked to low scores From 1talf ud wlre reportl reading. Dr. Albert Dclaunay will present a lecture entitled "Science: Our Master" at Fnday's meeting of the Alliance Francaise of Orange County in the Bri~ Hall of the CongregationaJ Church. 340 St. Ann s Drive, Laguna Beach. The program wiU begin at 8 p.m. and the lecture wiU be in French. A social hour will follow and the cost is $3 for guests and SI for students under 25 CALENDAR Student& who watched more television scored lower on the California Assessment Program test, according to Department of Education report released by the As- SOCJated Press. Students who watched more than five hours of telcv1s1on each day averaged 61 percent in math and S7 percent in reading and written expression. Those who watch- ed less than a half hour a day averaged nearly 75 percent 1n math, 69 percent m written expression and 68 percent in The information was part of a com- prehensive teat for hlgb school senjors which includes quest1on1 in reading. wnttcn expression.I spellina and math. More than half or the state's 830 high schools improved reading scores and tw<>- th1rds improved their math scores, said St.ate School Superintendent Bill Honig when he released the scores. creased from 63.2 percent to 63.4 pcrocnt. Spelling rose from 69. 7 percent to 70.1 percent. Reading scores declined .2 per- cent to 62. 7 percent Horua said the scores arc meeting the goals set two years qo ... We rccognizc that there's plenty of room for improvement. but we are on the move.•• Honig noted there arc still schools with declinin• scores. Those schools wil be notified in the next few months and.state education officials wiJJ be "offering as- sist.ance, 1nvcstiptina wmt 1s wrona and work.JO& with them to uPIS"lde their perf ormaooc, be said. Ni~-fivc pcroent or ~121894 of the state's hi&h school sen.ion lQOlt the tat in December. The state's national rankin& alto im- proved tomewbat, aa::ordiQa to the siai.e Dcparunent of Education. California stu.- dcnts rank in the 48th percentile in mathematics, up from the 4Stb percentile two years qo. Written expraaion "* from the 30th to the 36th pen:ieotile, and reading ICOtel increucd from the 39tb to the 41 st percentile in two years. Monday, April 14 The average score in math was 68. 7 percent correct. up from 68.3 percent last year. Scores 10 written expression in- • 6:30 p.m .. Costa Mesa Pluala1 CommJ11loa • City Council Chamben, 77 F11r Drive. • 7:30p.m., lrvtae Trau,ortad• CommJnlOD , City Council Chambers. 17200 Jambom: Bl.lid. • 7:30 p.m .. Lapa Buell Arla CommflalOD, City Council Chambers, SOS Forest Ave. Olympic-type traffic truce viewed as unlikely • 7:30 p.m .. Lapa Baell DoW11toW11 Specific Plu Committee, City Council Chambers. 50S Forest Ave. By tlle AllOClated Pres• "Remember the Olympics," urges a campaign recan1na the days when freewa y traffic flowed despite dare predictions of gndlock. But one researcher says the facts don't support the claim th.at if people would j ust return to dnving the way they did during those 16 golden days in 1984. rush hour rcaJly would ito by with a rush. During the Olympics, says Genevieve Giuliano of UC Irvine, people stayed home from worlc. or stageT'ed their st.artinJ hours. or simply canceled busmcss and pnvatc engagements downtown. T uesday, Aprll 15 • 6 p.m., Lapa Beacll City Couctl Meett.a1. City Council Chambers, SOS Forest Ave. Freeway off-ra1nps to close for survey work "We aU have to get to wort." she uid. ''Now maybe an the Iona term we miabt translate that into four-day wort weeb or more flexible wortcing houn for em- J11oyccs, but other lhinp like d.itc:Mionary travel can't be transfered." Giuliano's findinp are disputed by some in the Southern California Auocia- t1on of Governments, which has been pressing a sensible-drivina campaian called "The Olymp1c Lepcy: Lets Keep n Ahve." • 7 p.m .. Oceu View ScMol Dt1trtct, District Board Room, 16940 B St., HuntJflllon Beach. To cure a traffic jam. Costa Mesa officials will have 10 cause a few next week. Mesa. Developer fees will be used to pay . tned to select the best umes to allow us to for the work. administered by developer do the work as quickly as possible while C.J. Scgerstrom & Sons. inconven1enc10g the fewest number of people.'' • 7 p. m .• Batiqtolt Buell eti, Scllool Dhtrtct • District Hcadquarten, 204S I Cralmcr Lane. • 7 p.m., Battartoa Beac:ll Pla.u.lq Com- mJ11loa. City Council chambers. 2000 Main St. • 7:30 p.m., ln1De Ulllfled ScMol Dt1h1ct Board of Ed11eattoa, District Adminstration Center. SOSO Barranca Parkway. The Harbor Bouleva.rd and Fairview Road off-ramps from the San Diego Freeway will be closed one day apiece for survey work, the first step toward widen- ing the in terchanaes. The $500.000 · w1den1ng pro1cct is in- tended to case traffic congestion along the oortion of the freeway tra~ersmg Costa Wednesday the Fairview ramp will be closed from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. The Harbor ramp will be shut down from 6 a.m. to 3 p.m. next Saturday. "It's really difficult to find a time when no one 1s inconvenienced," said Public 5crviccs Director Bruce Mattern "We Details from the enainccnng survey will be used to prepare designs for the ofTramps. Construction is expected in June One lane will be added to the Harbor northbound ramp, while two will be added to the Fairview northbound ramp "Traffic moved freely," says David D. Grayson, dtreetor of En11necrina and Technical Services for the Auto Oub of Southern California and one involved in the new campaign. CHP collars five drivers at Toro drunk checkpoint An El 'Toro sobriety checkpoint snared five motorists suspected of dnv1ng under the influence of al- cohol, the Hi&)iway Patrol reported today. The checlcpomt was set up. without prior public announcement. Friday nia)lt on El Toro Road between Jeronimo Road and Second Street. Officers manned the checkpoint from 10 p.m. fnday to 2 a.m. Foantaln VallflJ Someone broke into a contractor's 1984 Chevrolet van parked on the I 0500 block of Bechler. damqed the interior. spread a flammable liquid, then tel the vehicle on fire. The flames abo damqcd a brown Chev- rolet Camaro parked nut to the van Damaae was estimated at S26,000. • • • Over the weekend, someone stole a wheelbarrow and a tool box from a white Ford pickup truck parked alona Euclid Street north of Slater Avenue. The loss was estimated at S2SO. • • • Someone pned open a windwina to buralariu a black 1984 Volkswagen Rabbit parked Saturday on the 9100 block of La Coloma. The buralar did $300 damaat to the d.tahboa.rd and window, then lOOk •tereo equipment also valued at S.300 • • • Possibly entcnna throuah an un- locked •hdina aJas• door . .omeone Saturday, a CHP spokc•man sa1ci While five motorists were arrested. the CHP had no figures available this morning on how many drivers puscd through the checkoo1nt. The Highway Patrol penod1cally sets up sobriety checkpoints in south Orange County. Traffic is directed through a roadblock where motorists arc stopped and interviewed briefly by offiocn to determine 1f they arc burgJanzed a home early Sunday on the I S900 block of Lopn Court. The intruder took $400 from a sleepina rcsident'~.wallet, then fled. • • • A student from Masuda M1ddJe School reported Sunday that some- one stole bis oran,e and yellow 20- mch skateboard from the front porch of his home on the I 0300 block of Rainbow Circle. The loss wu cst1- matcd at $92. • • • A resident of the I I I 00 block of Bellflower reported Saturday that tomconc broke a window and bur· &lam-Cd his home The loss included a vtdco recorder. a vtdco camet11, ca•h and Jewelry. LapnaS-cb Jewelry and stereo equipment valued at about $4,000 were 'tolcn from a La Mirada trctt addre , th~ vtC\Jm told poht% unday • • • dn' mg under tht 1nOucnc.e of alcohol or drugs. In addition to its own program. the CH P assists P?hce department, m local cities Wlth their own sobnety checkpomts Laguna ~ach was the first city along the Orange Coast to 1nat1ate such a program. The first night of operation. March 7, offi~rs stopped more than 500 motonsts and arrested eaa)lt drunken--dn ving susp«ts A La&un• Canyon Road resident re~rtcd a vehicle burglary Sunda} with a loss estimated at about S 700 • • • Pohc.c 1trrcs1ed two motonsts Sun- day on suspicion of dnvina under the influence of alcohol Marlin Philip Hartin, 25. of Lquna Beach wu arrested at '4·30 a.m. along the 200 block of01fl'Dnve. Robert Oannon Breen, 39, of Woodland Hills wH arrested at 1:10 a.m. alona the 1200 bloclc of South Co.ut Hia)lway. Newport 8-cb A stereo unit worth nc.arty $600 wa ,folen ftom a Volkswqcn Rabbit parked near the NcwooT1 Pier. .. ~ o\bout S 1.600 worth of valuables were ~tolen a 1he carport on 29th Street A ,mall was amount the 11em~ stolrn • • • A Volbwaaen Rahh1t was ,tolen from f ashion hland • • • A sleeping bag and a backpack were reported stolen near a restaurant on West Coast Highway The owner said he set the items down on the sidewalk while ma.le.mg a telephone call. CoetaMeea A I 5-year-old Anaheim girl wa'i arrested Saturday afternoon at a South Coast Plaza stol'C on suspicion of shoplifting.. The Jirl allegedly was trying to steal th~ ladies' shirts. but was caught by a store employee • • • A Santa Ana Avenue resident reported that Chevrolet beauty nni.~ were stolen from his car's wheel~. The rinp arc valued at $200. the told police Saturday • • • Police arrested two motonst.s Sun- day on susp1c1on of dnvi.ng under the in fluence of alcohol. Edward Aem-ma. 36, of Corona dcl Mar. was arrested at 12:25 a.m. on Newport Boulevard at 16th Street. James Moraan Donovan, 27. wat arrested at I 40 a.m. on Fair Dnve lntoe 5omt' tools and. clothina were reported stolen from an apartment on Knollglen Monday momina about 2.18 a.m. • • • A I 977 brown i oyota Corolla was reported stolen from the S400 block of Walnut Aven ue Sunday about 8 pm • • • A 1977 Ford Courier and shc11 wett reported ~tolcn from the 17000 block of Jamboree Boulevard Sunday about 2p.m. • • • A telcv1S1on camct11 and some cash were reported ,tolrn Sunday about I 0 4 S from a home on P1n~nc . . . ' o\ rtd I (). '()l't'(1 hi C"VC' I e W8' rc- "It was not a matter of people leaving town It was not a matter of people staytna home (_)Ortcd stolen Saturday about 2 p m from Liberty • • • l\ blue. girls Murray cruiser was reported stolen Saturday about 2 pm. from the garage of a home on Sunset Ri ver • • • About 8 a.m Fnday a stereo was reported stolen from the duh of a Toyota • • • l\ thief reported reached throuah the wind wing of a car parked on tfie 14000 block of Laurel Grove Circle Fnday morning and stoic the stereo. • • • A Volkswagen GTI parked on the I '00 block of Reynolds A venue was broken into Fnday morning about 10 a m a radio was reported stolen. • • • -"\ tclcvt~1on and video C&Slette rC'C'order were reported ~tolen from • car parked on the 200 block of 5tanford Fnday about 10 p.m. Hantinftoa Beach Two su,pcctS were taken into cu,tod~ 1n Huntmaton Beach 10 connC<11on with • strong ... rm purx ~natch1na at Westminster Mall The ,usp«ts. dnv1na a 1979 Datsun. had stolen the pul"S( contamma S330 cash before betna apparently pursued and apprchendcd • • • Thieve\ pncd o~n a locked door to a I 9116 white uzulu 10 the 8000 block of lnd1anapohs and !tole cam- et11 f'Qu1pment valued at $6.000 • • • Someone ,tole a head5et valued at SI 00 and cas~ttes valued at S 'lOO from a vehicle parked at the rear of the Broadway department ~ore at Hunt1n11on Center. 7777 Edinger Avt • • • R"1denu 1n tht' 17000 hlodt of Lutrt t wd the\ heard a PIT-dawn scuffling noise 1n their houte. The husband checked but found nothing amiss. When they awoke tn the momma. they found the contents of a wallet on the fl oor and S 12 miss1ni. • • • Four ures and nms were reported stolen Thursday from a black 1984 BMW parked on the 8200 block of Kingfisher • •• A resident of .iht 2000 block of Aonda reported Thursday that someone burgJanzcd his gold 1983 Mazda. The loss included stereo equipment worth S500. • • • Two women reportedly backed a be1sc Toyota up 10 the rear of tht' Oothcs Emponum store. 1856 1 Beach Blvd.. broke a wmdow and stole clothing worth S2,400 • • • A brown Huffy boys I 0-specd b1cylc valued 11 S9Q was stolen from the City Gym on Palm. Mesanshot by a ccid ent A Costa Mesa man was "'°°venna from tea and pnde wounds today aAcr 1CC1dcntally shoouna h1msclf Andrtw How"1n. 29. was taktna his pistol out of h11 dl'CSICT drawer to clca.n 1t ,,.,hC'o 1t d.dcbaracd at about •· I 0 p m • SI.Id a Costa 'Mesa polloc spokcsnan The bulJet paned lhroqh h111~ leavina what the apolcnman caUed ·a clean wound." Howtain told officers he k:DC"W th< ~m1-eutomahc emol was l<*kd. but didn't ruhrc It -.s cocked He was taken to Costa Mesa Hospital for tre.atmtnt • ) •• .,. Nakasone ready to alter Japan's export emphasis WASHINGTON (AP)-U.S. and Japanese officials say President Re· q.an has a finn promise from Pnmc Minuttr Yasuharo Nakasone that the Japanese leader will 1nstJtute a pro- ' ram designed to restructure apanese SOCJety to satasfy his coun· try's Western trading partners And a Japenese officuJ who, like the Amcric.an, described the talks on condition he not be identified. said Reapn spoke of "mouotin& frus- trauon in the United States" over lbe inabihty of U S. firms to compete wath Japanese products to either country. The two Icade~. after talk~ oo Sunday. meet bneOy again today and excb.aoae public remarks before the prime mimner returns to Japan to prepare for an economic summit of the seven major industnaltted <k· mocrac1es next month 1 he United States has about a SSO blllton trade deficit with Japan "The pnme minister said he re-. allied Japan can'l continue as as." the offi cial said "It is high time for the Japanese economy to chan&e its own \tructurc." Nakasone. the offiCJaJ s )81d 1' determined to nd Japan of 1ts long coveted trade surplus and convert 11\ people into more leisurely, higher living and 1mpon-hungry con,umers That was the conclusion drawn Sunday by offtc1als from both 1dc' following a casual, m1dcby meeting between the two leaders al the president's Camp David retreat 1n the Maryland mountatn'I After years of concentrating ncarl} all their commercial effort!> on de- veloping an economy built on ex· ports. the Japanese now realue that policy "ts hav1n& a scnou~ and adverse impact on relattons with th1!> country and others tn the world." said one U.S. official bnefi ng reporters after the meetmg. An Amencan offiClal who attended the talks said Nakasone assured Reagan he is "determined to effect an h1\10m ~hange" in Japanese ltfcstyle and culture to accommodate Western markets and 1ntert$ts. Reagan. he <,.-i1d. was "impressed by the com~it­ mcnt and determination of the pnme mm1\tcr" 10 cltm1nate the huge trade 1mhal.inlc hctwecn Japan and the Wl'\t r hl' pnmc minister also expressed '' mpath> to Reagan for the most rcu·nt 1crronst attack 1n Bcrltn 1n wh tth .in ".mcncan ~oldter was killed and more than 200 people. tnduding ti' l J S m1htary personnel, were wountkd. the official said Fake MIA remains traded By tile Auoclatcd Pre11 A black market 1n MIA remains appears to anhtbtt effons to recover the bodies of U.S. servicemen m1s\- mg an acuon in Indochina. a new!.- papcr reponed 1n 11s Monda.,, ed1ttons. usw < hrontde. 1n quotmg a classt· tied rcpon that the newc;paper said had Ix-en prepared for Sen William Arrr\,ttong. R-Colo . by Wilham L. < a\\ld), a consulting 1nvest1galor lo the Senate and a specialist 1n 'ioulheast .o\s1an affairs "Underground trafficking 1n genu- ine, fraudulent and mdetcrm1natc skeletal remains and-or personal ef- fects of deceased Amencan military personnel Oounshes tn Thailand and Southern Laos," said The San Fran- ( iovernmcnt 011ic1als 'lay the re- ma1m arc bemg \old to relative" of mt'>stng servicemen and to sold1cl"'i of fortune who v1~1t Southeast Asta, trying 10 call a11cn1ton to the POW - MIA issue. ooctOR IN tOWNl M6ttHE NEW Hi, I'm Dr. Karl Svvope, D.C. PROFESSIONAL QUALIFICATIONS Did you know that becoming certified as a chiropractor requires a m1n1mum of six years of highly specialized college training? Today's Doctor of Chiroprachc must complete 4,485 hours of classroom instruction and pass a riqid chi1opractic board examination before earning a licenae. In most states, continuing educational seminars must be completed for annual license renewal. In addition, I have completed courses in work site injuries and nutrition In 1985 I was honored to be named Vice President of the Chnic Interns Action AHociation To further my conhnu1ng education, I have received special tra101nq since college in Physiotherapy from Dr. Richard Ackerman and Orthopecis from Dr. Rory Pierce I have also visited a number of chiropractic chnics to study their methods and procedures in San Dieqo, Hacienda Heights, El Toro and Costa Mesa, California Additionally, I devote th ree days every month attending a nationwide seminar an San Francisco or Los Anqeles, to t1ay current on the latest chiropractic advances. Th11 1s the lond of tra101ng and profeHionalism I offer you. If you have hesitated v1s1hng a c hiropractor, per- haps you didn't know that c hiropractors go to such qreat lenqths to continue their education and provide you with the latest techniques and the most qualified service. So, you see, what you don't know, can't help you. Call me today and let me help you. Did you know that the symptoms most commonly tTeated by chiropractors are Back Pain Headache. ~Neck Pain Arthritis Stiffneu Bur•itia Numbneu Hip Pain Painful Join ta Shoulder Pain Arm/LecJ Pain Cold Randa/Feet To introduce you to the healtnq world of chiropractic, pleaae accept my special offer FREE SPINAL EXAMINATION FREE THIS MONTH ONLY FREE Tlu1 e.zam1nahon normally cott1 $35 00 or more It will include an orthopedic teat, a neuroloqical teat, a blood pre•ure tett, a 1pinal aliqnment c heck, ftn e:uminaUon for rettricied or e:1ce11 mohon in the 1p1ne, a muacle 1trenqthne11 test, and a private con1ultahon to diecu11 the rHuJta. (714) 432-1135 Dr. Kar 1 Swope Swope C hiropractic Office 2850 MHa Verde Dr E., Suite S Coeta Meta, CA 92626 Hour• 10-1 a.nd 3-7 Mon-Fri fo1 Acoidenl1 or Personal Infury • • Allee Beecham. mother of Army Sft. Kenneth Ford, bold.a nae from b.la coffin at menicea Saturday ln Detroit. U.S. soldier killed by terrorist bomb praised DETROIT (AP) -Army Sgt Kenneth T. Ford. killed an the terronst bombing of a Berlin dis- cotheque just a week before he was scheduled to come home for a v1s1t. was remembered at his funeral as a happy person who liked basketball and pul others before himself. "~u never saw him angry. He kept things wnhin himself," sa1d Daniel Moore, who like Ford was a deacon at flowery Mount Baptist Church in Detroit Ford, 21, died an the April S explosion at the La Belle nightclub a week before he was scheduled lo return to Detroll and sec his family for the fir'it time in 21/J years. More than 250 people packed the tiny chapel for Ford'~ funeral Saturday while another 100 mourner!> stood outside Robin Beecham. Ford'<; younger CALIFORNIA brother, stared without emotion while has mother, Alice Beecham, fought back tears as the conaregat1on sang .. Amazing Grace" to end the service. "He'll be a brother sometimes, but he was lake a father also," Beecham, a U.S. Anny pnvate stationed an frankfun, West Germany, said af\er- ·ward. "When he secs you make a mistake or he knows a way that you can do things better, he kind of pulled away from the brother side and would sat you down and tell you how to go about doing it." The Rev. Floyd Moore, the church's pastor. cnucized President Reagan for not callinJ the family by Saturday to express his condolences. ''Servicemen are going over to a land trying to protect our country. and the head of this nation doesn't care enough when they die," Moore told the co ngregation Police renew war against street gangs, arrest 28 By the A11odatcd Presa LOS ANGELES -The Police Dcpanment's renewed war against street gangs got offto a strong stan dunng the weekend wnh at least 28 people arrested for weapons v1ola t1ons, burglary and parole infractions. "Everythang and anything we can arreM them for. we did. It 's aJI quiet out there now," \Bid Sgt Thoma!. Jones late Sunday. Police began a planned five-year war on what they call "urban ierronsts" Saturday night It.allan wlne scandal may help Callfornla SAN FRAN( IS( 0 -The Caltfornta wane industry may get a boost as consumers stay away from wanes imported from Italy. where 20 people have dted from dnnkmg methanol-laced wane. "Everyone has been losing their shins 1n the Ca ltfom1a wine industry," said Jon Frednckson, president of <iomberg. Frednckson & Associates. a consulting firm "The ltahan problem will benefit this state·~ producers. tt JUSt depends how long tt drags on." 011 prlces fall 14th stralght week LOS ANGELES -Gasoltne pnces have fallen for 14 consecuti ve weeks. llut the future d1rect1on of pnccs 1s clouded wath uncertaanty despite the downward momentum. a petroleum mdustry analyst said. "Nobody should dare try 10 proJeCt where the pncc will go." analyst Dan Lundberg said Sundar. "Everylmdy thought 1ha1 the pnce was kveltng off three weeks ago. and 1t s falling agaan " Defense fund started for vlct1m 's father SAN FRANCISCO -A defense fund has been established for Jack Spiegelman, charged with pulling a gun 1n a counroom and shooting a man accused ofk1lltng his daughter. 'I've had at least 30 or 40calls from Los Angeles alone." said Spiegel man's mother. Anne. of San Leandro The offers have been referred to the Fund for Jack Spiegelman in Mill Valley. Early Bird Dinners •7 .SO Featuring Prime Rib or Fresh Fish Complete dinner with choice of Soup or Salad and Dessert Invited Candidate1 Unit.cl Stat" S.nat• Biii A11-n Bruce HertchonlOl'ln ~Ike Antonovich Ari Leff« 4 to 6 PM 7 D~ys a Wuk 801 E. Balboa 673-7726 - Stockman: Reagan living in ; dreamland' W ASHINOTON (AP)-David A. S&oelm1.1n says Prnident Reapn_ as livina in a "dttamland1" boldina America hoataae to a reckless fiecal poltcy that thrutens to send inflation SOI.Jina a.pin. The former budJet director rakes Reqan and his inner circle over the coals in bis oew $2.4 million book. .. The Triumph of Politics: Why the Rcqan RevolutJon Fat led." Stockman says the Reqan revol· ut1on never had a chancc because Reapn lacked the stomach to make a direct attack on "the American wcl· fa_re state" and was ill-served by aides such as Michael Deaver and F.dwin Meese who "never read anythtf\i. They lived off the tube." Newsweek as pubhsh1n• cxcerpl! from the book an the issues on new"tands today and next ~onday. By 1984, Stockman wntes, the White House "had become a dreamland. It was holding the Amen- can economy hostage to a reek.less, unstable fiscal poltcy based on the poht1cs of high spending and the doctrine oflow taxes." Stockman, who quit the Cabu)Ct to JOtn the WaJI Street mvesunenl fmn of Salomon Bros. last summer, said that instead of facina up to 1t1gerio1 $200 billion-a-year deficits. .. the White Houae proclaimed a roarina economic aucccu. "h t>raa&ed that itJ policies had worked as never before when, in fact, they had produced AscaJ excesses that have never bcfo're been 1mqjned ... Stockman docs not absolve b1m1tlf of blame for doublina the national debt to S2 trillion on Rcaaan'a watch. He did not "apprcciAtc the vast web of confusion and self-<ielusion I WU creating" durina the beady days in 1981 when he concocted the tax and budget cuts Reagan pushed throu&h Cona.rcss Stockman says he and has fellow supply-side revolutionaries "made our own bed of politacal misery'' by highlighting "the easy part -the giant tax cut." Stockman eApreued frustration at Reagan's inability or unwallinancss to grasp the sttuat1on. Car bomb klll• reputed mobster By tile Associated Pre11 NEW YORK-A reputed mobster believed to have endorsed ~e slaying of the alleged head of the Gambino organ~ cnm~ family was uµed by a bomb that shattered a parked c.ar, authonttes ~1d. F~nk pecacco, 5~. identified by officers as the No. 2 man in the Gambino family, died Sunday 1n the blast. which also critically inJurcd another man, beheved to be a member of the Lucchese cnme fama.l y, police said. Pentagon secrecy jeopardlzes support WASHINGTON -The growing number of Pentagon projects whose budgets -and in some ~scs very existence -arc closely held secrets could erode pubLic and Congressional suppon for new weapons.. two congressmen say. "We are concerned over the aro.wana volume of defense ~r°'"'!"' that no~ fall under the Special Access Req.u1_red (S-'.'R). or 5()-0llled blac~ umbrel':a. Reps. Les Aspin, D-W1s., and Wilham Dickmson. R-Ala .. said in~!' Apnl 9 letter to Defense Secretary Caspar W Weinberger released Sunday. Car rams fest1val crowd, kllls one PONCHATOULA, La. -A car that plowed into a crowd offa1rgoers and mowed down people for a block, k1lhng a man and injuring 24 others, sounded hke repeating fireworks as 1t hit them, a watness said. Teacher Kim Zabbta, who was in her front yard nearby when she heard what happened, said "It sounded hke fireworks -pop, pop, pop. People were yelling. telling people to get out ~f the way." The car. dnven by an SJ.year old woman who apparently became Ill at the wheel. smashed into a crowd of people Sunday at the Strawberry Fesuval. Five water quality control board seats linked to polluters SACRAMENTO CAP) -Five appointees of Gov. George Dcu- kmeJtan on a regional water quality control board have had tics to sewer d1stncts or companies that have been ctted or admonished for polluting water, the Sacramento Bee says. The orders to stop polluting were issued or recommended by Roy Hampson, who was fired Friday from his JOb as executive director of the eight-member Lahontan Regional Water Quality Control Board, the newspaper said Sunday. Board members said Hampson was fired because he repeatedly resisted their d1rcct1vcr., the Bee said. They said there were no political reasons involved 1n the dismissal, a motive Hampson's supporters suaaest. The board's duties involve monitoring, protecting and enforcing water quality standards 1n an area that stretches along the eastern slope of the Sierra Neva~ from Oregon to the descn and mountains of Southern Caltfornta. The board's chairman. Dale Sare. a South Lake Tahoe attorney, rep- resents an aircraft service company~ that was ctled by the board's staff earlier this year for pollutma the upper Truckee River. accordm& to the Bee. Sare says he dtd not represent the company, Jimsair Inc., on that mat· tcr. but the state attorney &encral's office raised a conflict-of-interest concern last week over Sarc's connec- tion to J1msa1r. Another board member, Pcagy Sartor. a Y1ctorv1lle cuy coun- e1lwoman and the water'board's Vl~ chairwoman. testified against the board's efforts 1n 1976 to impose a ban on sewer connections at the Victorv1llc Sanitary District's sewage treatment plant, accordmg to the Bee. The plant was manaaed by Sartor's husband, Peter Sartor, at the ttme and had been repeated cited for dascharg· ing poorly treated sew• into the groundwater in the Mojave River hed, the Bee s~ud. The ban was eventually hf\ed and the plant re· placed. 23 boolcmalclng suspect., alien• relned In LANCASTER (AP)-A day at the races ended 1n a bout with the law for more than 200 people rounded up by authont1cs at an unhe-enscd horse race on a ranch hCTC Shenffs deputies and imm1arat1on agents reined in a crowd gathered to watch -and and alleacdly bet -on a ~nes of 600-yard spnnl! featunng dozens of horses Sunday afternoon, !latd Los Angeles County Sheriffs Deputy Sam Jones. Twenty-three men and a teen-age boy were booked for 1nvest1'8t1on of bookmaktna, a misdemeanor, and 127 people were aivcn c1tat1ons, s1m1lar to traffic tickets1 for beina present at the scene of gambling. Jones said. Agent~ of the Immigration and Naturalization Service detained 8S people beheved to be 1llcpl aliens, he said. The races, which authontJcs have been 1nvest1pttn& for sax months wcrt sophisticated enou&h to make use of ,tart1n1 ptcs and videotape equipment, Jones said. Each event matched two or three horses. 3 Malibu blazes hint of Manson Eklrldge CIM~ Robet'I Neylof Ed O.vt• John Spr1no Bobt>l Fledlet Ed z.ctieu Lt. Gov•n• NewPort Harbor Aepubllcen Women Irvine Coast Republican Women· and MALIBU (AP) -81urrc anffi11. 1nclud1na 11 swastika and the phrase "Manson Laves," was found at the accnea of three fires and a buralary that resulted 1n more than $200.000 an dama&e. authontacs t11d. Mike Curb H L Alef\ardeon S.aetory ef Stote Bruoe Neelend• Aalph Winkler The Greater lrvlne Bualn ... & Profeealonal Republican Women Invite you to attend• Cor1tr.U. w1111.,,, Campbell Don Seb••tl•nl CANDIDATES' NIGHT A sailboat on a trailer in a vacant lot 11 Pac1fl c C'oast Hi&hway and HeathcrchfT R<>ad, was discovered ablvc at 11 :30 p.m Satun:Say a Los An,eles C 'ounty 'hcnffs deputy said Sunday. Men Qarcta 0911 StentQfd Att•ney Gen•ol eruoe Ql...on Duncan JatMe Lawr9"1C41 Strew leanl .t lquoUu...., Erne9t Oronenbu<g 40th c..n,,_6-MI 019trkt Aooet1 Bedhtlm Na1nan RoeenbetO 70th ..,..mW., Oktrkt OH Fwoueon Thuradoy, Aprll 17, 1916 The Newport Beach Marriott Hotel Moderator: The Honorable JACKIE HEA THEA 6:30 pm Reception with the CandldatM No-Host Cocktat11-Hor1 d'o.uvr .. 7:30 pm CANDIDATES' FORUM S12 per peraon Guettt welcome ~tton. Marilyn Ottman M&-3.-eG 0t Donna H•mmond 87~3a.. t An offi~ bu1ld1n1 on Heathcrtltff Road was tound al'>lau an hour later, and damair there totaled more than $200.000. The boat, which 1u1ta.1ned SSOO damqc, had "Ritt" •l>flY·?.Untcd 1n black on Its ttde and a rwaatak.a on one hatch. "Man1e>n Ltvci" was painted on the wall of the office complu Dunna two n11hu of vaolcnoe 111 Au1uu 1969; rncmbersofthc C"harlea M1n1e>n "11m1ly" killed lctttU Sharon T1tc and till other people. • ... .__ ________________________________________________ ~~------~~------~~~ ) . - U.S. pPessures Europe for anti-Libya support WASHINOTON (AP) -The United States preued ita diplomatic campai&n for European support of some action qainst Libyan leader Moammar K.hadafy today u a kid· ioa R.epubUcan senator wu called to the White House for consultations with P?cs1dent Reapn on the latest developments. U.S. Ambassador Vernon WaJtera, a key Reapn diplomatic trouble- shooter. was in Paris for meetinaa with President Francois Mitterrand and Premier Jacques Chirac, said to be leadina the opponents of military action apinst Xhadafy's renegade regime. Walters was to be 1n Rome la ter in the day. Meantime, West German Foreign Minister Hans-Dietrich Genscher, delayed by an urgent session of European Community officials in The Hague, 1s hurrying to Washina- ton for talks with Reagan and Sec- retary of State George P. Shultz Tuesday. At the White House, SPokesman Larry Speakes sou&)tt to maintain his no-comment stance on U.S. Policy toward Libya. Under persistent questioning, how- ever. he denied that Reagan was scheduled to meet with Sen. Richard Lugar and top foreign policy adv1sers to plot the admintstrataon's next step. Libya seizes church officials TRIPOLI, Libya (AP) -An Italian diplomat u1d today that the hi~ett· rank.in' Roman catholic prelate in Llbya w~ bein& beld by a Libyan revoluttonary committee. The envoy said Bishop Giovanni Martinelli wu bein1 treated well, and ell.pressed optimism that the prelate, three other priests and a nun would soon be set free. The five repQrtedly have been held 11nce Thursday. The diplomat, who spoke on cond1t1on of anonymity. satd he was told by Libyan officials that Maninelh was be1n1 questioned at a villa in the coastal ci ty of Ben&}taz.i by members of a revolutionary committee, a aemi- autonomous iroup of local officials aod rnHiua. (Reports said armed men took the b11bop, the three priests and a nun into custody. A source close to the b11hor> w d the armed men ente~ the house in Bcn&hazi Thuflday niaht and seized the five Catholics. The source •Poke on condition of anonymity ) The 44-year-old bishop; as apQstohc vicar of TnPolic and postohc administrator of Benahaz1, 1s the hiahcst-ranked Roman Catholic m predominantly Moslem Libya. The Italian diplomat sa1d he undentands that Libyan government offi cials in TriPoli were interceding with the revolutionary committee members who arc holding the bishop and the others. Lugar's office and another U.S. official, however, said the Indiana Republican, who 1s chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and had complained he was not being ltept informed by adm1nistrat1on, probably woul~ meet with Reagan ~award the end of the day. . Libya dei;i.ieS terrorism: charges, warns ofreprisals if U.S . attacks TR IPOLI. Libya (AP) -The go~ernment has denied US. c~es that it has a hand in worldwide political violence and said Amenca itself was "the pQwer . of offici al terronsm .. attacks against Amencan targets w1th1n German temtory earned out by Germans in conformity with their hostile stand to Amencan presence on their land " can interests around the world," the agency said.) Sunday a statement released by a Libyan Information Department of- ficial, who refused to be identified, said: .. Foreign workers have been forced to live 1n them (oil fields), taking into account that the maJority are Amencans." Libya also warned that any attack on 11 would be met by a Potent re'iponsc abroad. fhe Libyan People's Foreign Bu- reau. or foreign ministry, said today an a statement ~laycd by the official JANA news agency th at the North African nation as against ''all ter- roristic operations. hijacking a.r- planc'i and the murder of innocents .. Libya, th e statement said. "does not desire awession . and IS indeed interested in making the Mediter- ranean a lake of peace and coooer· at1on." The statement al<10 said: "The m1htary camps have been handed over to foreigners to repair them and to use them to hve there. Foreign workers have been moved to army lamp\ Today's Libyan statement said, "The attack on American ta rgets in ucrman) as not new. for there were · (JANA, in a dispatch monitored in Cyprus. said Libya's People's Con- gressessa1d today that "su1c1dc units" worldwide were ready to retaliate against any U .S attack. The con- gresses. local groupings of tradt unions and other associations. al so warned that the response to an attack would be "severe against all Amen- "Libya has JOI 1nformat1on that Amcnca 1~ going to attack several arm) camps and 011 fields and pctr<x:hem1cal rnmpan1cs." 1t said. CIA funds said funneled to Contras By tbt A11oclated Prt11 WASHINGTON -The Ce ntral Intelligence Agency, barred by Congress from gmng military aid to Nicaraguan rebclo;. secretly paid several million dollars fo r the Contras' poht1cal projects over the past year. U S. government officials say. The ofli c1als, who insisted on anonymity. said the money went to the rebels' Poht1caJ umbrella group, the United Nicaraguan OppQs1rion (U NO) to pay rebel officials and suppQrters, open offices an Europe anct_Latm America and take tnps to ~k foreign suppon ~. 'Cir cause The money came out of the CtA-'s bucf'.~Wver which President Reagan and CIA DJtccto;r W1lllam J. (ascyhavew1ded1scret1on. . '.' \ Marcos alllefblirtle police MANILA -SuppQrters of deJ>Qsed President Ferdinand E. Marcos clashed with Police today in a frar. that 1nJured 60 people, and Marcos loyalists called for clVll d1wbed1cnce at a rump !ICSS1on of the abolished Nauonal Assembly. Anti-not troops tangled Wtth Ma rcos f!>llowers an a me lee ofrock-throwing ancf gunfire. The loyalists were protesting the ouster of former Mayor Joseph Estrada. who served under Marcos, in the Manila suburb of San Juan. Gear blamed for Mexlco crash NEW YO RK -lnvest1ptors nave found evidence that last month's Meiucana Airlines crash an which 166 people died was caused by a mechanical problem rather than b> a tcrronst bomb. the New York Times rePorted today lnd1cat1ons arc that an explosion an a wheel well for the Ian ding gea r led to the crash March 31 , the newspaper said. It cited sources close to the invesllgat1on as saying that none of 1he normal 51gm of sabotage. such as explosives residue or telltale patterns of structural rupture, have been detected an the wreckage of the Boc1nR 727. . 46 trampled to death ln lndla NEW DELHI. fnd1a -At least 46 people were trampled to death early today an a stampede by Hind u p1lgnms scekmg to bathe m the holy waters of the Ganges River. a news age ncy rcpQrted. fhe stampede rcpQrtedly occurred early this mommg as millions thronged the city ofHardwar on the banks of the Ganges on the chm ax of the Khumbh Mela. a religious festival held once every 12 years. The United News of India said 32 of the dead were women and two were children Slmone de Beauvolr dles PARI S -French author Simone de Beauvoir. who wrote the international best seller "The Second Sex," died today al a Pans hospital. public health officials said. She was 78 As France's mo'Jt p~sugious author of her generation. De Beauvoir was a fundamental philosopher of women's hberat1on and the lifelong companion o n even more renowned philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre ~~~~~~~~~ IF THE WAY YOUR ADOLESCENT EATS IS EATING AT voa . THEN THEY NEED ~y~{iE t!Oi)YWOfv Jt: i - Presenting a program designed just for junior an d senior high students to prevent and treat eating disorders such as obesity, anorexia and bulimia. You will be confident in the dynamic and unique program we have ~eveloped as a result of years of experience in eoting disorders. We will work with 12· to 18-years-old on an outpatient program. Write or call now (714) 842-0886 ' I , The staff incl udes a doctor in psychology. a doctor in nutrition and a certi fied athletic trainer. We are not a health club or fitness center. but a non-profit agency with affordable fees. SAN I VITA FOt INOATJON . IN C. lhl 1.! Bt•11c Ii lll\'d . ~1 1111• lttO l.,1,1 I lunllt1)(l1111 ll••111 h < .t\ lf[h4 ,· Orange Coat DAILY PILOT /Monday, Apttt 14, 1"8 * Al ' 3500 East Coast Hwy. Corona del Mar "Serving You For Over 25 Years " "TAKE IT ID THE MAX!" n., 'IOI' tiodv antJ 'IOI• rf'!a/Ay war~ to makll tt1f' nl(J'il d ~ Th."1 meens kwng -int vd QP111rv,i on '1'13(J0 ~l~ •119 tr-r tlnO'f ~ thP Wf?Jo( IO l!tr....-;.<; n rno1>1ns (.("'''"" nq .,o.ol"<,ljl IO ~df'IQ f"-.., ~ n V1 l'\Oul 1tu6f' ,.,...._" _... n "" ""'~ ""' p111qr,1m ftlat <4 ptfYTI....,. ff"AJ"!. l\n!l ngtrt ro1o11111(1 lo(' rr1.Ylfl ml'!Tlt.,.•«t 1p f'<: 1hr"Jlv attonlllble itt thP '-1'1.l tti.:11 hi\'-•I lilt 11 •J• K ~ng '"'1o~i..,.y ....,,,."'11'l8C1 wnrw~ ,, 1)fo•J'· u.,~ r~ llrtranal Quldl\r< *' 'tip '"'11!4 r N.t<itlit.r: t• •I •·m< s-••Qu•(YTIP''il ltl"ld m>.JCf nor1• ·Lff.c"fCU •NMIT!Wt ·~ · STEAM • IMJNA ·~ TWO-YEAR MEMBERSHIP • NOW, ONLY •.. s 91 • NUTNT10N 9"" • MOM, MUCH MOM PER MONTH! ooeta_ ....... AM-~ 83'118 .. aam.w-......,.. 8311 AoMno9 - ...... MOWll-...... 12921 Hll1IOI Btlld FOR 24 MONTHS WITH JUST 125. DOWN • NOM-AENEWAlll.E-ARST VISIT INCENTIVE 11~4 .............. .... .... ...._.. .... --·--- LOele ~--.cn...a "9C88,.. •aa .u1 .._.,... ~ 47&e ~eo... Hwy ... ~ R9T uaDSN P'UU.MT091-8'ft491~ ~ 2.ee~-. ... , Ill , ... _ ...... 1 12512 ~ "-si ... ... Gnl0091a ...,._ ....... 566191h~.· I Ae Orenge CoMt DAILY PILOT/ Monday, Aptll 14, 1988 PAPARAZZI ----------~ LB Chamber Music Society party ends concert season on high note James and Mary lteyet' Emerald Bay home wu tbe settina for a cocktail buffet reception prior to the Philip Jones Brass Ensemble ooncert. .. the closina concert of Laguna Beach Chamber Musk Society's 26th season. Recepuon aucsts included Soc.,:ty patrons, ticket subscribers. donors and sponson for next season's con- cert along with local and county cultural leaders. conoert party. Eajoyioa her efforu were Sol Wlelter (husband of the president and yes, he'a been told numerous times that he looks like Lee Marvin), Wtwam Belmea (UCI professor) Aleua4ra and Robert Bron, o~;, and Neil Ftt1r,trldl (he's on LB City Council , Au Bebtey, BecSy and Joie JOMS, Obi.ale and Bob J......,_, Bed! and Job Lewh, Bobble M.taia (former mayor now LB council) and I.Ad v...-.. P.,..,.ul u e4JN4 •r DtUJr P1H1 Slyle e4Jtw Via Dea. P'IT8CIDtN·l'L Tim Mr. and Mn. Jerry Fitschen of Ora.nae have announced the enaaiement • of their dauahtcr, Joy" .to Michael A ynn, son of Mr. and Mn. Thomas Aynn of Irvine. The couple will be married in June in St. John's Lutheran Church in Orange and their reception will be in Sherman Ga~ dens in Corona del Mar. The bride~lcct is mar- keting director of the Whi_te House Restaurant 1n Anaheim. She is a araduate of Lutheran Hiah School of Orange County and the University of Southern California. Talk centered around aoals of the aroup, which hopes to broaden its support of subscnbers with.in ~e area. Already the group attracts music lovers from Long Beach, Pomona and La Jolla. Her future bridegroom is the owner of Flynn V 1dco Productions in Irvine. He is a araduate of Magnotta High School and Cal State, Long Beach. Michael Flynn, Joy Ftt8chen Partygocrs learned that the 86-87 season will include five concerts mstead of the usual four. The sched- ule calls for the Borodin Trio on SepL 21: Sequoia Stnng Quartet. Nov. 5; Emerson Stnng quartet. Jan. 19; Seth Kcmmelman, pianist, Feb. 19, and Ridge String quartet with Jeffrey Kahane at the piano on Mat{;h 17. ..., ......................... HUMANA BOSPIT AL HUNTINGTON BEACH Marc• 11 Mr. and Mrs. T1mothey Reagan, Hunt· mgton Beach. boy Mar~ Z5 As the Society builds on its histori- cal roots to achieve a higher visibility and public image through-Out Southern California. there is one definite goal. "We hope to be among the groups selected to stage concerts in the I ,000-scat second on Offen lD a cbat wltla Carol and Ro1er McWIJllama. Sol Wiener bu tile attendon of wife Manha, Bobby lllnkln and Leah Vuques. Mr. and Mrs. Greg Buschhauscn, Hunt· ington Beach, boy Marc• Z7 Janet and Paul Duquette. Huntington Beach, girl theater to be built at the Orange County Performing Arts Center," said Martha Wleau, president of the Society. "WUllam Otton, Laguna Art Mu- seum director. 1s one of our new subscribers and he told me he's very excited about our plans and hopes the Society and museum can do some- thina together "All of our concerts arc held an the Laguna Beach H 1gh School auditorium and we have a k.aleidcscope of personality types attending attired in everything from dressy clothes to students in blue jeans." Jean Beek, hospitality chairman for the society, coordinated the pre- YOtionl to save at I \I " "'Ill '11111 '111110111111 t• .,-·. u u7 ·· ~ ... ~ o.o • '" 11 Ill \ .. id t 1111 ' Ill M '" Iron )llll ncl.!<l And the widcM va1 tl't~ ol IR A 1nvc-.1ment option~. L1i..c thl'> 11m: year. h1gh-ra1c CD .• we've JcvclopcJ I"'' lor IRA' r ~ 'I Start with a\ lt11lc J\ i 100 .r. ~J_;.::_ and . ti you w1 .... h. al.Id more __ , \· - I I ~.~- throughout the year. It\ not too early 10 thinl. ahout opening you r 1986 IRA either. The ..,ooner you open ti. the more money you'JI mal.c Thl' IRA S1orc will he open )Car round to help you <,tart or atltl Lo your IRA . Special late IRA hours. Tc> open your Cirl.!at , /\rrn:m:an IRA or · \·-..., ___ ...:'.~ lor more 1nformat11111 CIRCLE CITY HOSP IT AL Marc•U Suz.a..n_and Mark Grasso. CoS1A Mesa. &lrl HOAG MEMORIAL HOS PIT AL Febl'UI)' U Mr. and Mrs. Enc Gundel· Th1erfeldt, Cost.a Mesa. boy February U Mr and Mrs. Terry Hunt. Newport Beach. girl Mare• 3 Mr. and Mrs James Heckman. Lake Elsmore, girl Mardi II Mr. and Mrs Michael Munz. ( orona del Mar. boy Mr. and Mrs Gary Powers, Huntington Beach, twins, boy and girl Mr. and Mrs Kenneth Warren. ( <1sta Mesa. boy Marcb It Mr. and Mrs Wilham \ro~llc II \o~u Mesa. boy Mr. and Mrs. Chns Paul, Mission V1e10. girl ahout all the IRA .... av:ulahlt: at The IRA Storc:l.tll our toll free F111ancial Linc. I XCXl-42J BANK rhl' hn.mual Lim; v. 111heopen111110 rm cm Arni 4 IO II and 14. 1ill 111H.lmght nn April 15 . I! Great American Your advantage bank: Established 1885 • Assets Over S8 Billion C !,)!\~ CJBh.""Wcl'.&." l \ Ht '-rl"' .TCI' H~M II •11 ..,,i..m., A>< <Ill} !44h • .... i V.1'011 1 HI \I II <( ••!"•"'< l\u" t>l-t IKM\ • liAI 60.\ 1\1 "'I> VH l.1.&11nt A>t 1\1\ Ill~• HAI Ill I.\ Pf-'11'\I IA Nil t ~ lllv,J t.1 I 111~ • FSLIC IAl,\ '" Bh~ II !HH •r..nA•t J,.l 7"41•'1.1<•'All( ll HA' 1 114,.,.n~!I.) P\.u.t4~121~·( Al'l\lllA"'•H~.AC' II "'·'"I•"''" f'•tl lW 4'1!>lr~H ·\""' 11 Ml..,11-Hit ' IH 11'"'"'Rr..J 4<n lrl'''°""(IJ-Mf-'Tl:.iAVf'IJ~ 11' 11 1<11 l\>m!& p .. ,. •• 111 ,,, _,. l .... ~ '1.H.!t!.• .. ~i.IJ\.1'l) \ .... \1111\11111 l.\ ,,.,., ~ ...... c ........ R· Wll'>~\I • c illA"' .1. l c \II'"' HI,,, :\\\ .... ..,,, IU>llll A•t Wlj ~·I· HJI "'"'" v ... 11 1 y U '\ \I.la ..... ""''4lft • wnonRllll iC ,, J\:!llR.rr.,,.•f'\..,, \~•_,.,. •• Aloi 'AHlll \:•VII I"•<• Jt\.icn. .. \lln \W¥1•l I 101111 !WU.I I•• fl,f >Vt':"• \ll"~"\dlJIJ '\ll'C ""'" Jc.J ''Htt~·IA(,l ~A "IC1l II ~•llH n .. nV..tln ~ .. ~ 4'1'1'>!111•\A"JI -'" I ""''""'''" t P2.!: 1 .. ·n101d .. ,.. .. u .. no M l »c'-1 ''''"'""' \4n lite~" \..>1njl' ·I •11uru "'"n~' • \,,r 1 .... 4u111 I '"' \.o"n'' • Pt"f'k "'"".-'·I 1r,1 "'""¥' k.rnl "1 "'"''h "•"'•I•·"-'· ll!\tr\kl< "'""'' • ... , .. t•h '4""' · """''"" c '"'"'I "'""JI' ..ir th: .. •" 11t•U1 H I h1 ~ '*' t • , ••• ft~•··· n• 1• ''"'' t11i ·• ,un1n.,1t11lfU1n ·f"t , ... 1.n11 ''hft1.J1n .. 1,1'r••"11t' , .. "'·'' h11 "'''' ''"'('l't4Jf1lh1ln1o•11thhort;a \f,\ lt,.,h., 1 11.c. u• •11111..1 ('h.th\ .1fllll•.._,,,ff.1• "'"''''' 1.111 t ltt.tl 11 11 I• 11111 Ul.tt 1 • •ri11h t~'4f.t11(.-1 \n .. 1 .. "1-. .. 1\.,, n, .. u .. ,~ H)Q 17 ~ l 'df ',"I 'I'll rtl('lllne l1Qhl lQQ'• 11 ml) "ta• n .'J rTI'l 1111.Qllne. ¥ n~ I/ ·no 11• 1,1 "'l r11c ri1111P MPr•lhQI King• 18 mq 1~r 1.7 fT'I~ n1lOllflP, Marcil JJ Mr. and Mrs Matthew Foster. Costa Mesa, girl Mardi 14 Mr and Mrs. Michael Thamer, Newpon Beach, boy Mr and Mrs. Mehrdad Mirdamadi Tehrani. Huntington Bca.ch, garl Mr. and Mrs. Lionel Jacobs, Huntington Beach, boy Marcb 11 Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Kimball. Huot· ington Beach. girl Marc• 17 Mr and Mrs. Steven AC'Kerson. Fountain Valley, girl Marcil 11 Mr and Mrs Gerald MoSCOVltch, Hunt- ington Beach. boy Mr and Mrs. David Primrose, lrv10e, &HI Mr and Mrs. Edwin Dizon. Costa Mesa, girl Matt•U Mr and Mrs Robert Snyder. Cost.a Mesa. girl \.fr and Mrs Bryan Cyr. Ncwpon Beach, girl MaJU ti Mr and Mrs Richard Middleton. Irvine. girl Mr and Mrs David McWheru:r, lrvtne, boy Mr and Mrs. Daniel Moms. Cost.a Mesa. girl Marc• U Mr and Mrs. Roben Carroll, lrvme, girl Mr. and Mrs. Michael Barnes, Irvine, girl Marc• U Mr. and Mrs. Ignacio Ochoa. Hunllngton Beach. girl Marcil U Mr and Mrs. Glenn Tyler, Laguna Niguel. girl Marc• ZS Mr and Mrs Joseph Corc-0ran, Laguna Hills. girl Mr and Mrs. Joe Swift. Balboa. boy Marcil u Mr and Mrs Douglas Culllos. lrvme. garl Mr and Mrs David Oail. Cost.a Mesa, prl Mr and Mrs Kent Pearce, Laguna Beach, boy Mr and Mrs Eugene Lonpbard1, Irvine, prl Marc•n Mr and Mrs Wilham Moolgomery. Huntington Beach. boy Mr and Mrs. Raymond Melissa. Newport Beach, boy Marc• U Mr and Mrs Stephen Arnold. Newport Beach.boy Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Brose. lrvme, girl Mr. and Mn . Gerald Sigala. Laguna Hills. boy '"Mr. and Mrs. Donald Sheeu. Newport Reach, boy Marcb U Mr. and Mrs. Dean Gam:tt, Irvine, boy Mr. and Mrs. Roben Wright, Irvine. boy Marc• JI ( hnsty Corcovelo' and Manuel Adame Laguna Niguel, boy Mareb JI Mr and Mrs. Steven Ung, Irvine. prt Mr and Mn Lawrence KelJy, Irvine, JJrl Mr and Mrs. Michael McDan1els. Cosu Mesa, &1rl ln•ex•pen•alve• ·11n lk spen sivl not h19h 1n P"ce, reasonable ctass1hed .... ...., advertising -1 ~ C1ass1hed Advert1s1ng ~2-5678 t 1t1 Y1rir; 1Q ... q • 1, .~ nq M.O\•nP a• per c11arenp 01 rTC methnrl SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING : Sm oking By Pregnant Wom en May Re sul t in Fetal Injury, Prem ature Birth. And Low Birth Weight. r ,...,,, • ' l ' J# Westec Security honors top pair Costa Mesa resident Doll &Jemeat has beco named Orange County Secunty ConsuJtantofthe Year and T .. yWeM»erorNewport Beach has been named Rookie of the Year Security ConsuJtant for 198.S by Westec Secvlty, lac. of Irvine. Klement and Webber both wo~k in Westcc's [~inc. office. ~emeot, w~o earned his title by scllina the most res!dentiaJ aecunty systems in t 985, y.-on a trip to Ja~ for sales totaling over S.SOO,Q09, plus membcnhip in the Half M1U1on Dollar Club. He bu been with Westcc since 1981. Webber sold more residential security systems than any other first-year salesman -with sales totaling over $250,000. • • • MJcfaael E. Abee has joined Pol71oa Commercial Developmeat, a Costa Mesa-based real estate development company as vice president and chief financial officer. He previously held the same position with Homes by PolJJOll, a rcsidcntiaJ development firm associated with the commcTCia.J development firm. • • • CecU B. SMrar of Newport Beach, former co-owner of lllaet Wboleaale NarMrtes, ha! joined Wetley N. Taylor€«»., ReaUon,as a commercial and industnal specialist. Shira.r's involvement in real estate dates back to 1946, and he has returned to bis first love after sdlina Hines Nurseries. He will work out of Wesley N. Taylor's Newport Beach office. His community associations include the Boas Hospital 551 Clab, Newpor1 Harbor <.'Umber of Commertt Commoclon'• Clab, Bakla Corilltl.lu Clab, and Oru1e Couty Coucil Boy Scoatt of America. • • • lu R. Waddell has been appointed director of parking structures of lrvinc-based Saffell It McAdam, be.'1 new parking structure division. A Huntington Beach resident, Waddell is founder and former i;>resident of Waddell ud Altoclates, an engineering and contracting company ID Vancouver, British Columbia. • • • WUUam Ellermeyer, president oflrvinc's Career Mua1emeat Service., has been ele-ctcd lo the board of directors of the AHoclatJoa of O.tplacemeat CoD••ltlD1Ftrm1,1Dc . Ellcrmcyer launched Career Management Services in 1979. • • • Robert E. Sellards has joined Career Mua1emeat Services of Irvine. He bas worked with corporate clients across the country ID manufacturing, health care, transportation, banking and energy organizations. and is a former regional president of the Amertcu Society for Tra.lallll ud Developmot. ' f , ' OransPt Cout OAJLY P1LOT/Mond8y. Apt'll 14, 1NI A7 Two rival s t ock markets feud over California rules By TED REED llllCttl t' ..... ..,,,... SACRAMENTO -The sharp rivalry between two stock marketa -the American Stock Exchansc and the national over-the-<:0unter system -surfaced W edncsday as the two clashed over C'.alifomia's regulation of over- t.he-<:<>unter stocks At issue was ll&tc Sen.ate Bill 21S1 by state Sen. Robert Beverly, R-Manhattan Beach, that would exempt the top 2,200 over-the-<:0untcT stocks from a rcquu-ement that ~y be a~roved by the state's corpoBtJons commissioner before they can be traded 10 Ca.ltfoma. Tbe result was inconclusive. The state Senate Bankina and Commerce Comnuttcc approved the bill S-0, but only after attaching an amendment that observers a&nlCd would have difficulty attracting approval from all tfie firms. The amendment requires that the NationaJ Assoc1a- tion of Securities Dealers or NASO, which prcsjdcs over the fast-growing over-the..counter market, ask the Securities and Exchange Commission to issue stricter sclf- regulatory standards for the association's members. Both the New York Stock Exchange and the Amex have such standards, which offer protection to investors, and both arc exempt from Department of Corporations oversight. Among the standards are a regulation that generally prohibits issuance of non-voting common st~k. and a requirement for shareholder approval before c6mpanics increase their stoc1' issuance by more than 20 percent. Under the commiUl»approvcd amendment, thete and six other standards would have to be ai:>provcd by the federal Secunuca and Exchanae Comrrua&Jon before Beverly's bill would take effect "The real issue is th.at the Amcx wanll (over-t~ counter) rules similar to theirs," wd an 09ponent of the bill who asked not to be identified. .. ~rwue. they waU compete to act listinas on the buia of wh<> bu the most lu standards." The amendment was &pP!'OVed after teSUmOf!Y from an Amex contin~nt that tocluded two former Depart- ment of Corporabons commiuiooen. EJc-<:0m1ni1S10ne:r Willie Barnes aid that .. NASO ia teelOns replatory approval with the NYSE and the Amex, (but} they mUIC to adopt and implement the same kind of regulatory standards." Ex-<:e>mmtssioner Bnan Van Camp said the NYSE was exempted in 1968, and that dunaa his adminis- tration, 1971 to 1974, the Amcx and NASO sought the same privilq.c. "Only the Amcx was willing to raise their standards to meet the standards we bad in mind." he said. John Knox, a lobbyist who represented NASO, aaad in an interview that NASO's standards generally arc sufficient, but the paperwork involved in gen.ins Department of Corporations approval prevc~ts some companies from selling stock in California. He said that when Reuters, an international news service, went public a few years ago, 1t elected to stay out of California to avoid the paperwork and attorneys' fees. - Pre-ecreened Amembler at Jolua Dea:e plant ID BoricoD. Wla •• peen ~-=~eoftr Investigate tax shelters carefully Many taxpayers feel that tax shelters were set up for the rich. The truth is that most wpayers take advantage of o ne tax shelter or another. You're probably doing so nght now even 1fyou don't think so. If you arc buying a home, investing m property, or putting money into an lnd1v1dual Retirement Acc-0unt, you arc using tax shelters. The term tax shelter is viewed by many to mean some elaborate scheme to avoid huge amounts of taxes Tax shelter simply means that you're defcmng the tax to a later time, reducing the tax by converting ord1· .. RALPH Scorr nary mcome to the preferred capital gains. or investing m certain bonds. the income from which 1s not taxable. Your first concern ID an 1Dvcst- mcnt should be its economic mcnt. The tax aspects arc going to be oflitllc importance to you 1f you're never go10g to get yo ur ong.mal 10vcsuncnt back. Thts means that you have to take 1t upon yourself or get the ad vtcc of some independent adviser before you invest in any program. Do not rely solely on the ad vice of the person selling a particular investment. Some of the more exotic la.JI shelters involving limited pa.nner- ships, real est.ate, oil and gas. etc. should be looked at closely. The legitii:nate ~mpanies ~II appreciate your mvestJgatJve questions. The more exotic the tax shelter, the more opportunjty for you to be boondoggled by those who arc high on salesmanship and low on per- fonnance. As a first step, check WJth your state securities departmcpt. Most invest- ments are required to rqi.aler with your state securities office before they can scU wittun your atatc.. Sue& rccist.ration, however, is oot an in· dication that the investment is coon- omfoally sound. There's no substitute for investina in those items which you know best. In the absence of 6.rst-hand in!or· mation. use an adviser who does not stand to profit if you buy the mvcstmcot. Ral_. Seen la a cmlfle4 ,-UC accoatut wlD offlcn la Newpwt ~- _,,1111mm~-------------- NEW YORK CAP) -The following llst I MIQws the Over -the -Counter l alodcs end werrents lhet tlevt oone uo the mo11 •~dOw~the ~st t>eMd on percent of •"9e Frldev l No MOOrll 1 tr.o ng below u or tooo 14 sherts ere Uded. IJ N.. end rs.,,t999 CMnGeS ere the dlffw~ be ween the orevloua doslno prfet 1nd Frl1 v'a ~ or bid prfCt. ~ j PelN•~, s 11: + 1 ~!W., UPPclj,l.4 Frn~~On 2 l-16 l':u UP 7.~ I ~~~t un ~ lltt 8: :~ ~ ~~r~" wt ~~ ~ 8~ 4.~ l Attv le un 14 ,.. I s 1 14 z~mosc I~ !77·~~ e I ~ '"1 Lb •'4 '41 y Of' ntl 7 I Fl~me1ric m l~ ~~~to:r v. l :2 IOlloO 'h l en~dlnc 'ml· '~ Uld teh • fl! " unv olt un 114 Querex' J 7· 16 7-16 ~ .. der0.11 I 1 omPUtAut 2"" ''• onaorT omit. ' 34 • DOWNS Nem4t Last Cho ICP l -Jft• UP Uo UP Uo UP UP UP UP Up UP Up Uo Uo UP Up Up I.Jo Pct Off 4U -m1111mn~-------,_:.;__;;.._....::~------ IRISB P B OPE FOR LL CH & DI FR Monrl"Y thru Fndav 11 ~M to Q PM RUFFELL 'S lJ>HOl.STERY INC . .... ,.D*C.....Mllltl ltl2 -kWO~ COSTA ~11511 AMERICAN AIRPORT TRANSPORTATION It LIMOUSINE SERVICE. INC. lu .. 1 { Mlnlbut/ llmoull"-' S~1/Vona/rN1 Door to Door s.Mc• Prtvot. Chortefl and tours I ·800·524-1300 • .....ur-'C.. ...... °"""'- • 1-IC..--O•lD ~· . ,.,...._-. ~i.-.&W_..._ ..... QUPBICI •I WPOllT (7U) 720~9191 ht .. .._.. C'-• 0. l!I__. ..._.. C• ,_ ' ~~~~~~------------.-.............................................. ______________ ..,.. ______ ..-.. ...... _.. ........ -....~--..... --- A•** °"9ngil Coat DAILY PILOT/ Mondny, Aprll 14, 1988 I f \ OIY ........ L.e•I C ... ~,, :n ' I I I I u' H'l -. "". l \') Ollw.11' ....... L.ett CM lllllY'I DLlllll P.111011 Quiet day for trading NE~ YORK (AP) -The stock marlc1 pushed ahead 1n rel au vely quiet trading toda> on the streng1h of hopes for continuing declines in interest rates WHAT NYSE Orn NEW VORK (APl APf'. 14 Prev Prev Advonce<I T'Odo}9 .. ~ Adv~nced Toc:l\l9 l Declined i41 Deel ned in ¥nchanoe<I ¥nchanoed otal lisun 51 Olaf it;Uil' 16r New h ohs 61 New h h5 New lows New tows 6 AMEX LEADERS NYSE LEADERS NEW YORK (AP) -Sales, 4 P.m price end net chanoe of IM 1en most active American Stc>Gk Exchange Issues, trading n11llona11v at more NEW YORK (AP) -Sates, 4 Pm price end net chanoe of the fifteen most active New York Stock EJCche~ luue\, tradlno ne llonallv at mc>l't then s 1 N•me FedNol MIO than SI Name Wlcku TurnrBoc~t of BAT Ind Resrllnt A WanolabB DomePtrl AMlnll LorlmarTel n PallCPs PhllLo Dis ¥· l:~~: ~: I 2~ 1 Coto QuorEs ~st Ctl9. 6 1. 8'-'e -'"' 6 9·16 U'h 19· 16 1lt 27~ 42~ .. ,. -117 -'lo i ~ ·~ -~ Nevlst'r WlkrH '10 Amtr &T NL lndust Textco In< NatGve>svm ~ IBM ~SSIHI en\ter o ha~Menn i dnP~IC \ ~v oro y "' lre\itr' ?.,. I, . '· . 1. . l': I 1:1 ·ll!· '9'f7' ur 714, 763, 673, Dow JoNES AVERAGES NEW YORK (AP) -Final Oow-JOMS ~rages for April 1~. kl Ooen Hltfl Low ao.. ate nd 1791.42 1111 ~,,moo ,1.~1 i13 I II I 1 . • 1 . f~d~: 6 7 06 6 c 1 I . 4. METALS QuorEs ?OTrn ,H·U ,H , U ~ !f'ran 3~, Utll\ 1 65 Stk 16'. S , NASDAQ SUMMARY Toloott t from Lhl Roh11 L 1oll:ci.t.w~1gn ~tu.cl \0 in O"ll tflQ \ \/0 l Uzy tl IQ WOT ld ~ flna.st.. l ~r ideclwn l,1~ alway' U112 pzt~t.g1fi ond r.ilways Un ~tga~r ~ la.c l.l()fi . or.wport. bru!lch 4+'1 fO!lhlOn ~ltird, 11't/6't't 5070 \MJe(,~ V1\1o9&-100I ~ bl\d 1 21.Y~ ~7 p!'eodiz.NI 52~~th loN20"4 ,018/ ~ 9~}~ mon t.h l'\J fh 10 l09. ~t.urdl!y IO to6 l ~r doy nwn to~ ' • i ----------------- ..... -11=-- l&L 1QOCUJI MOYIE • ''99 And '4 I 100 Ptro.rt o.d" ( 197 ') Rlctlerd H-llt c..__ .. 0'8'1en (' . '"""'''"" -12:30- ~NIOHTWfTH DAYI> I~ .. ''Thi~ Thi Ptrtlct ~ fT..;:~- ~r INmoDUCTION TO COMPUTEN 0 MOAE Rf.Al P£OPt.E GD PfWIE THE LON> -12:40- • (I) MOVIE * *'~ "Thi Spirll Stllre11t" (187S) Jacquellnt 811 .. 1. Chrlttopfltr Plummer. (.l)MOW U \.\ "Pollot ~· (1884) SIM Gu11tnbtrg, Kim Cenr111. 'Ttime' started ball rolling for NBC EDITOR'S NOTE. NBC 1s the network of "Hill Street Blues," "Cheers" and "The Cosby Show" - all Emmy award winners. But the first big hit in the reJJmc of Chairman Grant Tinker and Entertainm ent President Btandon Tart1koff was "The A· Team.·· It won no Emmy awards: 1t1ust picked up viewers. Tbc 5'!Cond story m the five-part senes "NBC m the '80s: From Worst to First." looks ar "The A-Team" and its creator. Stephen J Cannell. By J ERRY BUCJt ..,,~.,,.., LOS ANGELES -In 1983. with aJI else failing, NBC needed a com- mando assault in prime time. The network called in "The A-Team." "Riptide." "ll went in behind 'The A- Tcam' and basically won that time ~riod untJI ABC came up with Moonlighting,'·· Cannell said. "It was a show designed to cash in on 'The A-Team.' ... In our minds it was like the old Warner Bros. private eye shows, like 'Surfside Six' and 'Hawaiian Eye.' Just a bunch of carefree auys. " 'Riptide' has more female appeal than 'The A-Team.' And 'Remington Steele,' which moved back to I 0 o'clock, has tremendous female ap- peal. So, we were able to feed the ·A- Team' audience through the night and pick up more women viewers with each show." NBC recently moved "Riptide" to Fridays and "Remington Steele" to Saturdays. The current Tuesday night lineul? is "The A-Team," "Hunter" and • Stingray," all Cannell shows. or two. "Tuesday was the ni&ht that got us gomg as a network," f anakofT said. ''There were other shows before at that went on to become cornerstones of our schedule. But 'The A-Team' was the one that proved to us we could be a winner .... Now four years later. we're look.jog at rebuilding the Tuesday ni&ht hncup. It seems ironic t~at we began by winning Tuesday night and now we're rebuilding it" Cannelrs SJX shows, including ABC's "Hardcastle & McCormick, .. make him television's reigning producer. But Cannell downpla~1s that. "The A-Team," about a lunatic gang of outlaw mercenaries. struck in January and scored an 1mmed1ate hit - the first under the new leadership of NBC's button-down Mr. T's. Chairman Grant Tinker and Enter· tainment President Brandon Tartikoff. "Thmgs can change overnight," he said. "Once a few years ago I went to Europe with four shows on the alT. 1 got a call in Pans. One show was canceled. 1 got a call in Rome Another was canceled. By the time I got back the o nly show I had on the air was 'The Rockford Files."' The once mighty "A-Team" has ~ L•1111"*• fallen in the ratings, ranking about Stephen Cannell and friend. 30th out of more than 80 series for l 98S-86. The show has been on four Amencan Hero," "Baa Baa Black seasons and viewers may be tiring of ~~:~~hO:~~ "Teo Speed and its sample solutions and "Road-NEXT: An angel named Michael But more people know the real Mr T, the tough-talking bully with the soft spot inside, who for four seasons has been the focal point of "The A- Team." runner"-typc violence. Cannell said Landon savC's N BC on Wednesday Cannell as more than JUSt a he thinks n wiU go on for another year nights producer. he's also a prolific wnter •]i;;;;;:;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;:;!!!!~;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:::.:================--iii Pnme tame had never seen a rcal- hfe character like Mr T before. A former bodyguard for Muhammad A1J and Michael Jackson, he first gained attention as tbe belligerent O ubber Lane in "Rocky Ill." In weekJy TV exposure as B.A. (Bad Attitude) Baracus. Mr. T be- came a national sensation, sponing S2SO,OOO worth of gold chains and a Mandingo warrior hair style. Before long. he had a morning cartoon show and a breakfast cereal. Has production company signature. If shown at the end of his shows, has the bearded CanoeU at his typcwnter, a sheet of paper fl ying out. Cannell. Frank Lupo, who as co- executive producer of "The A- Team ," and writers BabsGrcyhousky and Patrick Hasburgh wrote all "The A·Team" scripts the first year. Can- nell continues to write. working early in the morning on scripts before putting on his executive producer's hat 10 the afternoon. 44Bob Bums: Still I Greek Night J Great ... " Is BackJ lknrly Bu11h Smith G k N . h O•ily Pilot flt&arh-t• ree 1g ts ~...,. ..... APRIL 3 , 10, 17 & 24 Complete Greek Menu • Belly Dancer • Greek Music From 6:30 p.m. · Regular Menu also Available RESE RVATIONS PLEASE 37 Fashion Island 644-2030 His explosive presence was no small pan of the success of "The A- T cam." But others contributed: George Peppard as Hann1baJ Smith. the leader and a man who thnved on danger. Dirk Benedict as Face, a handsome con man. and Dwight Schulu as Howling Mad Murdock. the loony pilot. "The A-Team" didn't wtn any Emmys, but it got people to start looking at NBC again, and many stayed to watch such award-winnin2 L!:=====~~~~~~~;;~~~~;::=::======~~ shows as "SL Elsewhere," "Checrs,r. r Newporl Beach "The A-Team" often was chided for excessive violence But, an fact, it was canoon violence: bullets blued but never landed; people walked away from spectacular car crashes. "The A-Team" was more likely to dispatch its foes with watcnnelons than real born bs. In the early I 980s. Cannell had been doing business with ABC, but TartikofTlured ham to NBC with the idea for a show that would be like "Mission: lmpn''i1blc," "Magnificent Seven" and t he Deny Dozen" rolled into one. Mr.Thad to be part of 1t, othetw1sc 11 was ( anncll's show 10 put together. "They were open to ideas and wtllin.g to try everything," O mnell said of NBC "'The A-Team' was a mold-breaking. bizarre, act1on- adventure comedy There's never been anything hkc 11 before It was a show about a bunch of misfits, lunatics. who were held together by this colonel. I think 1t was the first adult adventure fantasy." After "The A-Team," Cannell gave NBC "R1pt1de" and "Hunter" and, for the current season, "Stingray" and "The Last Precinct." OthC'r network shows he's done included "The Rockford File!.," "The Greatest "Remington Steele" and "Hill Street Blues." In 1984. Cannell came up with F•oM TM1 MA••• 0 P "M I A M I V I C .: BftnD OP THI Hft nD i f'Ul... -DI~ l'M I ,,_.,..,. .. ,, .. ~~.__ .. , .... "'-"""'""Alt ........... ••o .. COi ...... . . . .. -1\-, ....... '--....... . -,!Ml. , .... ,., I ••t , " ., II ,,.,._,. • • .. 1't y ' •u........, ..... ... •U -........ J' • ·- .... -11. ..... ...,.. c:mm ..... -,tt ... 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UATOR "CUIC 10" (PC·ll) l :IS, I JO, 10 JO 11e1 a n: "towl&OITll muu IW" <•> MS. tJO edward1 CINEMA CENTER 979-4141 NAll•Oll •l 110 • &Ou n MfS& 11(1101 CUtllll COIT.II MES& ·r ( 6-00,1.H "Arlll FOOL'S Hr' (I) 10 I~ "U•• or UE NHD'' (I ) 5 U. UO IOlO SmlalTlomK "rOUCl ACME•Y 3" 1 JO. ,. JO "' 1l) CIMfMD "l»W" (PC·ll) l'tl. .... ltot .. llJICU "Orf IUT' (PC) , .. "' TOlll IWllS Slfll!TLOlllO "Tl( IOIO PIT" (PC) Ht.l•.IHI f!JI .... , Slf'UIT I Clll "Tll llln PfT" (PC) ....... 11. .. , .•. 1.: Tl( lSCAP(" (I) UI "Anll ftll'S NY" (I) U~HIS TOlll IWSS "1.1.ll lm "Tll 8'l(Y PIT" (PC} 6 IS. I JS ltU CIM1 HD "LICAS" CK· ll) •••••• 1 .. 21 ....... "Off IUT" Cl) .. lllZJL" (I ) 7JI IHI SltW QITTOEMi "POUCE ACAlmT 3" (PC) •••• 1011 UClUSM~l "l'f IUITirll lAllHmt" (I ) 700 , ... 4 tuc:I OClJ't SttJlO ..awl WTOll "CUC IO" (PC-13) H$ H O, IOIS ....... "lll l[Y£1LY Ill.LS" (I) "Ulll FOOL'S Nf' fll ACMJDl'f AWMl)..a Et r_.ru "TIE OfflClll STOlr MS.•• mt,_, "PllTTY•P'lll" (K-13) ...... 1 ... ... ltm'S llUIC(" I IS IN-Ill ··uca Tl Tll flTIF ..... l .. H (PC) t!JllWSS MUnl• "TIE MIO m'' (PC) ... t•.1•21 ..iWTOll '..C•"<N-Ut I Jl >•a• l1' • lUCI DCU'T STEIDi .,. .. ...u" 7.JI, lt:JS (P'S.U) 4 tlACI DCUY Sl'DDI mwlWTOlf "CWC W (PC-U) S'9S, ... 11:15 ........ "Off IUT" (PC) •.u.1:n.1ue 'WT If llllCA" (PC) 7:4S ... __ .. , ... ,s...,_.. ~lU{!!:U) MWwtlCW "HOC( ACIKl'f r <PC> HI ttl. l .. 4 tue:l llCUT SlDID "lMW" CPC-U} ••.•·•.1•.21 y ~.:,.. [SCll'[" • Ut (I) ....... FIOl'S tar (I) 6-4$. ltJ=.,;t;,._ __ _ "llSS Of Tll SNO .. _.. (I)•• It~ "'lftTIUS" (I) 1:15 edwards SADDLEBACt< S81-5HO '' ,. oan •o & ' •oc •Hf L o fl TOllO QM.a MDI "lJW" (K-ll) & I~ US IHS "ton & OUT• tmll Y INW" (I) ,,. I JI, JUI "IUI OF TIE Ult" (I) 11'-t-JO "Dil FMl'S tar (I) ',. ltlO "r.t .I .: fl( lSCAn" ... (l) $1"0( QIT1u.Jli "POLICE ACAMl'f 3" (PC) Ut ltO IHO • .. 1 DIS1IT"S "SlllPllC WITT' (C) ~·~.1 •. ,. edwerda MISSION VIEJO M ALL "\i'1 J k, .'•1 so •w• 'f• 1 •o wfriil .... ,,, .. 1 ACAOOl'I &...S "OUT If IFllCA" (PC) 1• 400 7 ... IHI llCMllll Wllll "CllC .... (PC·ll) llS.lll,HS ... ltlS ... ...., ""' wr '"> 1..i. ~kJI 711 t.JI ... llUOI ........... SISTUS" (N.lSt ~tal .. f I A.10 ~ Coelt DAILY PILOT/ Mond8)', April 1'4, 1988 ,...,.,, AJwU 15 A.JUa" {Ma.rd> 2 1-April 19): Future prospects command attenuon. Spotl~t oo lifestyle, resideoce, loog-cerm qreemen1'. Focus also oo inteD.Slfied relationships. opponunities for career, business advancement Key u to aoccpt challense. TAURUS (April 20..May 20): Focus on affairs of heart. reunions, trips, visits, special communications in connect.ion with brothers, sisters. Ideas can now be uansfonned ioto viable concepts. All stops arc out, you're ready for biaaef audience. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Emphasis on mdependenoe, creativity, style, design, greater appreoallon of talent and product. You'll cam more, you'll c.orrcct past mistakes, member of r:.~ILC llCX will confide "true feel-SYDNEY CANCER (June 21.July 22): Cycle high, intujtion rings true, former 0MARR teacher returns and you'll be more secure as result. Financial picture •••••••Iii••••• brighter than originally anuc1pated Family reunjon could be part of exciti~ scenario. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Look behind scenes for special information. Romanc.c figures prominently, you'll be invited to dine in "out-of-way" plac.c. Popularity increases. scenario highlights humor., versatility, contacts with fascmating people. • -- VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): You ge1 what you want by maintaining steady pace. Ec.ccntnc individual may attempt to chide you mto premature action. Protect self 1n clmcbes. realize that many of your hopes, wishes are soon to become rcaliues. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cL 22): Be analytical, take notes. get ideas on paeer. realize that a "top person" 1s on your side. Focus on career, business, presllgc, participation in charitable or pohucaJ project. Sag:ittarian plays k.ey role. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): Major domestic adjustment takes place - could unify family. could result 10 be,autifymg surroundings. Emphasis also on education, communication. plans for JO~mey. Taurus, Libra individuals play roles. SAGITTARIUS {Nov. !2-Dec. 21 ): Sccnano features glamor, intrigue, mystery and what could become a "serious flirtation." Don•t play games where emotions are concerned. You'IJ learn plenty about finanC1al status of others, could receive special nouc.e. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Emphasis on responsibility, deadlines, pressure. intensified love relationship. Lunar position highlights partnership, cooperative efforts. clash of ideas, excitement of djscovery. AQUARIUS {Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Employment picture due for trans- formation. Work procedures change, you'll be called in for "conference." Accent moderation, be receptive. but also maintain self~tccm . Keep resolution regarding diet, nutntion, health. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Emphasis on romance, gening to heart of maners, new and excitin~ expenences. Focus on change, travel, variety, charisma. physical attraction.• You'll gain greater self-assurance. Leo figures prominently. IF APRIL IS IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you have unusual speakmg or s10g10g voice, you aJso have ability 10 teach. to moderate disputes, your sense of drama is tugbly developc<l you are fascinating, intriguins. sensual, and you can be self-mdulgent. Taurus. Libra, Scorpio persons play important roles to your life . Yo u'll have chance to develop techniques, to define terms, to answer many metaphysical questions. including "Why am I here?" October could be your most productive month of I 986 Columbus' hookers heaviest and ugliest Where are the nation's fattest ugliest prosututes? Columbus, Ohio. maybe. The Columbus C1t12en- Joumal sometime back opined ed1- tonally, " ... Pound for pound, we must have some of the heaviest and homeliest hookers to the country." The Swtss are building under- ground shelters, including hospitals. Specificall)', about 200.000 self-con- tained units a year. They're senous. Within their m o unt.ams, by the year 2000, they expect to protect their entire population from whatever the ominous Sk) gives down. T he n ght whale has eyebrow\, mustache. beard and s1debum<; Q. Can )'OU milk a fla mtogo'> A. Presuma bl}' The mother fla m - ingo makes milk. In he r crop And feeds it to her ofTspnng from her beak. Do readers of romance novels make love more often than people who don't read such hterature'>That's what the psychologi sts wanted to know. so they asked aro!Jnd , o;urvey- ing scientifically. Yes. they now say The follower<; of such fictio n are cons1derahh more active <) What was the lirst nem rou- tmd) sold out of fast food 101nts" A. Fish and chips. maybe. English peddlers at the outset oft he lndustn al L.M. Bo YD Revolution dispensed same, wrapped in newspapers, near factory doors. Beheve the German sausage stands opened up about then, too. Can you come up with an earlier fast food1 Nowhere in the world was the ord inary chair a common article of fum1tu~ until about 300 years ago. Thrones, yes. Benches. yes. Stools, yes. Chairs, no. Those North Afncan monkeys known as the Barbary macaques will do Just about anything to stay out of fights. evidently. If a mom monkey is approached by some sort of ag- gressive character. she'll hand over one of her babies as a peace offering. T he human bram usually is said to work at about 15 percent of capacity. Yes. sir, that high. In what's now Australia once lived a carnivorous kangaroo. L.M. Boyd Is • syadlt:•led colamal11. How do you rate at motherhood? lt seem.s as if the whole world 1s crammina for tests these days. Ath- letes are sweating out urine tests, citizens accused of a crime a.re up- tight over lie-detector teSts, and teachers are burning the midnight 011 over competence tests. Drivers are having anxiety attacks over sobriety tests. and etvil em- ployees arc angered over blood tests. It's just a mancr of time before someone comes up with a test to measure the proficiency of a woman who wishes to become a mother. If you're a potential mother, it could be very revealing. If you're an old mother, it's an explanation as to how you got old. TRUE OR FALSE: -A new mother outgrows her need for sleep. -Running out of disposable diapers takes away from your will to live. -An innocent-looking 2-year-old with the face of an 3ngel could start a revolution in Disneyland. usmg weapons and mercenaries from Dis- ney World. -The term "an active child" is redundant. -By the time you tell your chil- dren about sex they feel sorry for you that you bad to learn about 1t so late 1 n life. -After the age of six weeks. a child will no longer assume the guilt for your stretch marks. MULTIPLE CHOICE: -The most effective form of punishment for a child taking money from your purse: a) "You're too old for that!" ERMA 'BOllECI b) "What would Grandma say if she knew?" c) CaU the pohcc. -Parents struggle desperately for lonievity to: a) See their children married and successful. b) Enjoy grandchildren. c) Be a burden. -If a child announces he/she is wriung a book: a) Put him/her back in the will. b) Hold out for casting approval and have Helen Hayes play you at the age of22. ESSAY: -Describe the way you would feel if you received a small tool for making radishes into rosettes for Mothers' Day and a girl your son met in a line for "Star Wars" received a cashmere sweater toom him for her birthday. -Record your emotio ns 1 ~a social situation if a child wer~ a~ if his mother worked and he rer.Lied, "She doesn't have a REAL job.' This is by no means meant to cover all the si~uations of parenting. Ifs just a sampling of what you could expltct. I personally do not want to go into 11 any further. I'm not sure. but I thmk I just flunked my "stress test." A drinker's 'uide: Know your limits DEAR READERS: Smc,e Candy Lightner started MADD (Mothers Against Drunk Driving) in 1980, nationwide attention has been focused on this horrendous problem. The results have been rewarding. Thanks to tougher state laws, the death rate has declined. I have always maintained that drunk drivers arc murderers and should be treated as such. For too long we have been too soft on these killers. Herc are exc.crpts from "Getting Tough on Gateway Drugs: A Guide for t6e Family" by Robert L. DuPont, M.D. These SU$$CStions sho uld provide helpful guidelines for every- oni: who has a driver's license. I recommend this bOOk hi'ghly. FOUR DEFINITE "DON'TS" I. Don't drink if you're underage. It's illegal and can be hazardous. 2. Don't dnnk 1fyou have a history of excessive or problem drink.mg or a.nY kind of drug dependence. It's nsky. 3. Don't drink 1f you are pregnant or a nursing mother. It can be damaging to an unborn or nursmg child. 4. Don't dnnk 1f you are using any drug that may reduce alertness. This includes pam killers, sleeping pills, antihistamines, prescription tran- quilizers, or illegal substances. FOUR PROTECTIVE BOUND- ARIES IF YOU C HOOSE TO DRINK I. Drinking more than two or three drinks dunng any 24-hour penod is potentially dangerous. O ne d n nk equals 12 ounces of beer or five ounc,es of wine or I 1h ounces of distilJed spirits. 2. Daily drinking is dangerous. Do not drink more often than four days per week. Drinking more frequently than that is potentially habit-forming. 3. Any drinking wnhm six ho urs pnor to dnv1ng a motor vehicle or going to work 1s dangerous. This "boundary" applies likewise to oper- ANN LANDERS attng any other complex pu~ce of machinery and to other ac11v1ties requinng mental alertness. 4. If you choose to dnnk, find yourself an "alcohol morutor." Ident- ify a person who knows you well and who either does not drink at all or drinks a great deal less than you. Ask this person to observe the amounts of alcohol you drink as well as your dnnking-related behavior. lfheorshe says you have a problem. make a pledge to stop. If you can't stop. get into a program. You're addicted. This book can be obtained by writing to the Amcncan Council for Drug Education, Dept. G.. 5820 Hubbard Dnve. Rockville. MD 20852. The pnce is $8.95 tocl uding postage. ••• DEAR ANN LANDERS: Am I nuts? lfso, please don't hesitate to tell me. I get furious when 1 receive, along with my monthly bills, advertising fl yers for stationery, perfume, hand- bags, gloves, lingerie, sweaters, gourmet foods and whatever else the store or manufacturer happens to be pushing. Sometimes I have a d1fficult time fLnding the statement because there is so much debris in the envelope. I feel as if I'm a captive of the store, and I hate it. What can be do ne about this sort of thing? -STEAMED IN DENVER. DEAR STEAMED: Write to tile pretldent of tlae 1tore ud complaiD. ln fact, I'm gola1 to do ja1t tlaat. I've been Irked by thl1 practice for a long time. Tbanb for tile nudge I needed. 'Sportaid' runners jog for Africans .... By tbe A11oclated Press UNITED NATIONS -Rock star Bob Geldof has announced his Afncan aid group will sponsor "Sporta1d" next month. designed to be "the biggest mass -;port~ part1c1pation in the history of the wo rld" in an effort to ra1<;e fu nds for African relief Geldof sa1d runners in Eth1op1a and the Sudan will stan Ma) 17 and other runners are expected to reach New York May 25 where they will light a torch at the United Nations May 25. At that moment, "the world will begin running," the Irish mus1c1M said Races have been organlled all over the world under the sl ogan "The Race Against Time," he said. Each runner will pay SI 0 for a T-sbir1 which WJll be the entry fee and the chief mea n~ of fund- raising. Woody cheered HANOVER. Ind. -When Woody HarrelJCMI araduatcd from Hanover Collqe in 1983 and moved to New York to launch his acting career, nobody knew his name. But now he's Woody the b&mnder on NBCs comedy hit .. Cheen." the sap of a Boston ber "where everybody knows your name." r Harrelson, 24, returned unan- nounced to the southern Indiana campug of his alma mater this week and found that everybody knows his name there, too. Harrelson's cb.aract.cT, Woody Boyd. is a n&1ve lad from I ndjana. ' JeeelcaL&qe ··rm a hick on the show. O bvious-. ly, rm a lot more soph1stJcatcd t.hAn that, .. he said Stan .elllna SANTA FE. N.M. -Film stars J1911ka Lu .. and Sam .,_,.. are selling their home southeast of here, accordina to a real estate guide. The Multiple Listing Service guide lists the 3,~square-foot log cabin on five acres in Arroyo Hondo at a price of $450,000. Lange is listed as the owner. The couple have lived in Santa Fe several year&. Their daughter was born in the city in January. Lange also bas a daUJ.hter by dancer Mikhail 8aryshn1kov. Rock remembered PHU.ADELPHIA -The ~st of"Dyna.sty" remembers the late actor lloek &114... "laborina under strenuous condillon1 with professionalism a~~ pride" while he wa.~ dyina of AIDS. accordina to a published repon. Hudson died Oct. 2 of acquired immune deficiency syndrome. Earlier last year, he was hired for a limited role on the ABC Pf'Olt'lm "Dynasty." Accord1oa to TV Ou1de, "Dynasty" star Job Fonyttie described Hudt0n as b1vin1 a self-<tepnxatory sense of humor in spite of his illness. "He wanted to make sure that every actor. no mattef how nttVous or ioexperi· enced. had his moment..•• For- sythe saici ANSWERS TO WEEKLY BRIDGE QUIZ Q.1-Both vulnerable. a.'l South you hold •AQM3 93 ¢3 +AX8762 The b1ddintt has procct·dcd· North Eaat South West l \/ Pus 2 • PaH 2 'V Pus 2 + Paas 2 NT Pus 3 • Pass 3 NT Pus ? PaH What do yo11 !)Id no w') A.-So fa r you have shown a good hand with a l least six dubs and (ive spades. Despite that. partner has ins1st<'d on playing in thret-no trump nit ht.>r than choosing on(' of your suits Sinre hf' know" mor e about your hand t tia n you do about his, 11 would bP foll y to ovt>rrule him l'asi. Q.2-l\Pithc•t vulnt>rahlt• a~ Sout h you hold +J8 QAKJ63 n 2 +AKJ6 The bidd ing has proceeded South West North East 1 'V Pass 1 + Pass 2 • Pas!I 2 \. Pass ? What <lo you bid now" A.-Jui.t bet'ause you havt• a l(o<>d hand do<"m'1 mran you h a\'l' tu l'Ommll your side to a minus pos1 t ion. On I his auction. partnl'r l'ould have a very weak hand with only a doubleton heart. Still, you t•an't pa<is The only sensible al't mn 1s to in\'llf> game w ith a bid of three heart!> ..,,.,-,,t·11 1k. \ ulnerable, as 1"outh you hold· +Q76 •:'J3 OKQ762 +J 102 The bidding has proceeded North East South West 1 • Pass 1 0 Pus I + Pass 2 + Pass 2 . Pass ? What at u on do you take" A.-Wh1h• 1'\orth should havr a ht>ttrr than minimum hand 1t 1"i un· li kely tha1 your o;ide ha~ enough for gaml' <">pt>C'lally in a minor !>lilt ThNt•fnn· the prud<>nt ('Our~<· 1s lo pa-;., llowevt•r. 1 f you fr<•I you must bid a~ain, l wn s padt'S or thr<>e d1amcJ1HI" an• the ot,>yious ('hOlc<'~ We hav1• a o.,hgh t prdt•r<>nc-1' for tht• formt•r Q.4-.'\o., S11111h '11lnl'rablr. you hold +AKJ98 , K6 . 7632 +92 Tiii' b1ddin~ h as procet'di.'CI. West North East South l · Pass 2 ~ Pas,. Pass 2 Pass ? CHARLES GOREN OMAR SHARIFF What attwn dt> ynu take'' A.-Ym1 have a good hand, but partnl'r has alread y takC'n that into account with his balancing bid Had hP h<'ld a rra,.onable hand, he would haH reopened with :\ dou- hlP Oon't puni"th l11m for rt>fusmg to let thr opµmwrll 'i buy 1 ht> hand at ont• no 1 rump l'ass Q.5-A:-1 Soul h. vulnnablt'. you hold +J 10762 ... KQ v AQ753 +7 The b1dd1n" ha" prort•f'dt·d South West North East l + OblP Rdble 2 + ? What al't IOn do you lakl·" A.-Partnt•r .., redouble is a re- queo;t that you allow him the op- portunity for a low-((•\ l'l p<-nally double lkn•, howt•vt•r, you do nnt rrally want to dl'fcnd two d u bs doubled your hand is mon • suited to offf>nsl' than defrnse Y 011 can "t't I h1"t me"t<oa)(e across to partnt>r by pa"''"~ no" mtend1n~ to pull a doublt• to two diamond" to .,huw a w1•ak d10.,tnh11l1onal hand Q.6-:\1'1thn vulnerabll', a,.., South you hold +Q1076 : AJ962 'A9 +KlO Tht> b1ddm~ hru. pro<'eeded South West North East I Pass 2 -: Pa11s ? What do you bid now'' A.-Obvmuc;ly. it is a choice be l ween a rebid of two heart~ and two no trump Your h and is slight ly off'lhape for no trump a nd your primt> n•nlrob also suggest a suit l'O nt ract Bid two hearts to see whal rartnC'r inlends domg next In an <Hl('tion where partne r has stolen your bidding space, a rebid of your m&Jor suit doesn 't p rom1St" more than .1 weak fivt.>-card c;un TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE AClltOH 1 Auto part 5 Overwhelm 10 Note 1-4 Vocalist 15 StevedOfe 16 Running track 17 Flyspeck 18 Mlb 19 Fashion anew 20 Beelde: pref. 21 Plant part 22 Room ar• 24 Kitchen formulas 26 Invoice 27 Chew of tobacco 28 Bank deels 31 Oblige 3" Beat-up auto 35 -Jones 36 Atop 37 Picnics 38 Wheys 39 Honey -40 Sharp teeth 4 1 Inner circle 42 Pull• out -4-4 Small coin 45 Rich king -46 Marketed 81 50 Smart 52 Pirouette 53 El Doredo output 5-4 Propof11on 55 Arctic, e.g. 57 Drop heavily 58 Superior to 59 Meantime 60 Marquis de 61 Feuds 62 Entomb 63 St•l'Md up DOWN 1 Crap• pla~ 2 Abscond 3 Upper room o4 Egga 5 Scheduled 6 Emotuments 7 Oflglnal tin 8 Affronted 9 Command• 10 Chair type 11 Dusky times 12 CauMd to be 13 Swan genua 21 lnoentlw 23 Reed 25 Sacred Image 26 AgrMn*'ltt 28 Tugs 29 TorMdOf't antegonlat 30 Reei.d 31 Vepor 32 Culmlnatlon 33 Current meuurer 3" Small change 37 Starchy food 38 M..i courM -40 Langulth 41 Wetoome gift 43 Rk:helleu and Raritan -4-4 Sllwry~ 46 ExpanM -47 Opposite -48 Rub ott 49 Figured out 50 Bout 51 Scorta 52 Electrlfled 56 Jallblrd 5 7 Greek letter 3 ' I by Bii Keane "Those are all lhe snails I collected at recess last Friday." MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson "Here he comes ... remember, you whine and I'll cryl" PEANUTS MERE'S ™E WORLD FAMOUS SER6EAITT 01= nlE F~El6N LEGION LEADIN6 HIS TROOP5 ID::=~~ -~~~x ., ,. GARFIELD QUICKLY ~El( MOVE THE CANNON INTO POSITION ... MEY, GARF'IELP, GUE66 WMAT? Wf ARE GOfNU TO Vl'I>IT OAP ANOMOMOHTME fAAM AGAIN! TUMBLEWEEDS DRABBLE 4 ·1~ ROSE IS ROSE I 1r·5 !>OMf.ONE IAXi~ ._ \..OT O~ CLOJT, la.MO MA~!>nU~ ~ , ' Orange eo.t DAILY PILOT/MoncMy, Aptl 14, 1111 All BIO OltOROlt by Vlrgll Partch (VIP) 611'• •r •• BLOOll COU1'TY U.S. ACRE8 • ANC> THE. BIC"AOOLY M~T£R c.RfPT OP ..• 1f) llt1iM ~ 11/#IWI. C.d.P.. l l..llllllm~ -OH IT~ UH606PE.C.TINC> I P9't'tl ANP MIP •••• "Six feet ten -not • bad Jump for • c•c· tua." DENNIS THE llE1'ACE by Hank Ketcham •1 wNT NEEU Atrf NEW FRIENOS. l STILL AAVE PLENTY OF Olt> ~ES l 1'4AVEN'T USE1) UP '(ET. • ....... -------....-. by Charles M. Schulz TME'< DECIDE IT LOOKS PRETT'r' 6000 RJ6ITT WMERE IT 15 ... by Jim Davis l W~ JO!>T l.l.t'INC, HER[ TMINKINO rT WA~ 11M£ TO M.!>TOC9' TME 8<.IRR!) IN'*" F'OR by Tom K. Ryan by Kevin Fagan a..AL~ ~f.~ ~E.. JOG6~ by Pat Brady I FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE SHOE JUDGE PARKER Go1N G TO 'THE APAPCTMeNT ~ED ev OARU!...e. \tel.MA TRYING lO EXTORT . t 30.000 FROM M Y CLIENT IS A FELONY •.. B UT YOU KNOW THAT, DON'T YOU? ANO \..AR.RY, SAM i..;;;;;;;=:-r---.. DRIVER CONFRONTS THe EXT'QRTIONISTS. Tel.LING ntEM "T'HAT HE IS A LAWY ER "'!!PRESENTING t-10RKE PRID E ! 1r.!....Oi~ 111v:.~.,,' FUNKY WINKERBEAN WArf A Ml~ I AARRt; ! AAJ;; QO() ~ 400R BA~ ME/t\BER.5 ARE QOALIFIE01D 6EU. USED C.ARS ~ ' ~ BEi ! WE 5ENf iMEM 1"0 A 5PEC.1Al 1Ml~I~ ~FOR.II ! ~1 I J .. ".,., ....._ __ La..J DOONESBURY U7lE ~CAtffR5. µ'( PllO- aJCER. ~ANO I MJliE JlJST TAl.J(JN6 AIJ<XJT 7HC LATE51" J /OfN6TRAT0/ 5CMJl4L. 1Hl5 CH; MO.¥/!¥; CJV!l /l.16HT5 : OflEF aNENa PfJaeT'()N. I ~J)'!!!S / . I by Jim Davts by Lynn Johnston by Jeff MacNally by Harold Le Doux by Tom Batluk DE.ALER PREP ! by Gary Trudeau 5llA1CH 105- SEGM> [BAYI I \ .. ... " • I AU °"'91 COMt DAtl Y Pn.OT/ ~. Apttt 14. 19H Schools aim lottery funds at class size Only a handf\11 of ~ple have beco!D~ millionaires by playing ~e Calif<?rrua Lottery, but milhons of people are bcnefituig from 1t. Along the Orange Coast, eac_h ~f six school ~~tric_ts will have received between $1 million and $2 million ID additional funcling for educ.ation directly from lottery proceeds. In the Newport-Mesa Unified School Dislri~ part of the estimated $1.2 million in lottery revenu~ will subsidize salary increases for employees, pan will be used to purchase educ.ationaJ eqwpment and part will pay for 13 extra teachers who will help reduce crowcling to classrooms. In Fountain Valley, lottery money will fund cliscretionary programs like the reacting assi~tan~ program. And it will try to reduce the crowding ID classrooms. In Irvine, school officials have determined they will use lottery money to preserve counselors and ~n element,flry fine arts program and to purchase equ1p- crient, supplies and services. And to try 10 reduce crowding in tl)e,qassrooms. And so 1t goes. Across the board,_ when sch<><?I clistricts get the opportwt_\,ty to l_ook senously ~t ~e1r most pressing problems, the pupil-to-teacher ratto 1s at or near the top of the list. Although many school districts have _been .ex- periencing declining enrollments -and closmg. build- ings as a result -California has the largest class size a~d ranks 27th nationally in expenditures per pupil, according to Newport-Mesa Superintendent John W. Nicholl. The essence of education is the relationship between the teacher and the pupil. That relationship can be enhanced with technical assistance, but it cannot be replaced by it. The lottery promises to be a boon to pu~lic educatjon if the money is clirected at the problems. Right now it seems that districts should declicate every available penny to increasing the educational staff, lowering the number of pupils with who~ each teach~r must cope and reaping the benefits of an investment m good education. Opinions exprMMd In this space are those ol the Dally Piiot. 01.h« views expressed on this P808 are those ol their authors and artists. Read« comment Is Invited The Cally Piiot. PO Box 1560, Costa Mesa, 92626. Phone 6'2-6086. Those who visit Newport ought to help insure city T<>-.tbe Editor. Why'should Newport Beach resi- dents insure people coming from all parts of Orange County" Thirty thousand to 60.000 people came to our Newport beaches dunng the Easter vacation depending on the amount of daily sunshine: .. while up to 70.000 people come to our local beaches daily dunng the summer While it helps local merchants, 1t 1s up to beach c1t1es to clean the piles of rubbish left behind. Newport Beach has become un- insurable due to a "deep-pocket" lawsuit tcchnic-ahty, as 1t didn't have "warning s1gm:· about the dange~ of diving into the surf -signs m ost people would ignore anyway. What will happen to our beaches now that our city is unmsurable and how can we avoid dt'vclopmg an antHounst attitude? That would be counterproductive and could destroy the goodWlll and welcome we have always extended to neighbors from all over our county and e[o;ewhere. I. Should police permit only beach goers who can prove they are msured to enter the water" 2 <;hould we put up o;1gno; that all people enter the water at their own n!>k" 3. Should Newport Beach sell insurance to each pcson before he or she can enter the water? 4. Should all beach charges from meters for parking be raised many- fold for out-of-town fnends to raise sufficient revenue to pa) for the high insuranct costs'1 5. Should we declare our beaches off-limits for all 'ISi tors and local residents, which include surfers, to eliminate more deep-pocket lawsuits to protect the u111ens of Newpon Beach" 6 Or .. wh}' shouldn't all residents of Orange Count}' who share our beaches with us AL.SO help wt th the insurance costs of our beacheo; lo make It more equitable for all tho~ enjoymg our beaches? Newport Beach residents can no longer carry the full burden to protect beachgoers from all over Orange County from the expensive whims and gamesmanship of lawyers who use techn1caht1cs to win deeJ>'pockct lawsuits without any concern for rcsponsib1hty to their City and county neighbors. Do you have any better ideas? ROBERT J MrNERNfY Newport Beach Young people today are klnd To the Editor· Many young people are fine. kmd and understanding -I've cx- penenccd their kindness oflcn hut the most recent .. proof of the pud· ding" occurred on April 5 at Plain\ Hardware Store in Costa Mesa. I'd purchased a large, bulky boxed 11em and when I asked the cashier 1f 11 would be all nght for me to luve thr box on the floor and push ll along with my foot (ye olde anhntis Jives wtth me!), the cashier offered to take 1t to my car for me However, the cashier wa' so bu'iy I pTCferrcd not to be an extra burden to her. Suddenly a young man (I 1magme he's 12-1 4 years of age) a\kcd. "Can I carry that to your car for you"" H1'i smile showed he would cn)OY doing so and after he put the box 1n my c.ar. ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat 1 shook his hand 1n thanks and asked 1fr could g.i ve him some change for his help. H 1s answer was. "Oh no, 11 Lice to do things to help people" ... J then to ld him f'd have hugged him but was afraid he'd feel embarrassed ... and he replied "No. that wouldn't happen:· I gave htm a big hug and I'm sure I enjoyed 11 a lot more than he did. To whichever mother's son I shared for a few mioutes I say. "Thank you both -keep livma like that and you'll make many people happy and set an eitample that wtll. hopefully, "rub ofT on others " Thanks. young man, for helpmg other h ves to b( bnghter -keep on m that way. DOROTHY H M( AVAY Costa Mesa ,,.,.Dnl Editor T_T_.. Mt~[dltOf o..,....., City Editor ,_c._... ~EdltOI Cftlllt .... ~Edl!Of .._..,., c..._.__ ContrOI* ........ L.C-ftl Prl)()<¢11Qt1 Manegei T.nyK ... Cwcut~l!Otl ~•lleO'f ................ , M IM'\'etlnQ Olr9C1or C::,'::'or ''Therewt11neverbeamachlnethatcandupllcatethefeellngofholdlag a warm. fuzzy puppy Jn your lap." catl ...... ~. 9ifMc. ... 1- Machines can do wonders but some things, never But they certainly ~~ ~~ can do havoc to choice of careers It's an absolutely unavoidable fact that we hve m the age of technology. Nobody who is reasonably alert can take even the most cursory glance around and deny that fact. ;\nd the age of technology affects us all. sometimes for the better, some- times not. We have at our house. for example, a magic thermostat. What It docs 1s tum it.self down from 72 or so degrees to 62 degrees each day at I 0 a.m .• then turns 1tselfback up to 72 at 4:30 p.m. It goes through the whole thing agarn at I 0 pm. and 5· 30 a.m What that means to us 1s that the house 1s warm when we're m it, but not when we're not. We've always turned the thermostat down when we go to bed, but now nobody has to gnt teeth and make a mad dash out there to tum the thing up in the morning. race back to bed and place frozen feet against whichever inhabitant of the bed was lucky enough to have remained under the comforter. It saves gas, too On the other hand, many years ago I knew a man who spent three years learning how to repair watches. He had JUSt established himself as a watch repairman when SI S dollar watches flooded the market Not that there weren't $15 wa tches before that. but these actually worked Instead of ha\lng broken watches repaired. people began to throw them away My friend looked around and decided that 1fhe was going to eat on a BILL HARVEY regular basis, he'd have to find another hne of work. He decided to repair addmg machines and calcu- lators. I haven•t seen him in years, but every time 1 sec a credit card-sized calculator on sale for SJ. l wonder what line of work he's in now. If you're young and JUSt starting out, it's got to be incredibly bard to come to a decision as far as making a livinggocs. Most of the jobs that have gone by the boards -done in by technology -have been lower- paying jobs. like elevator operator, newsstand o perators and typesetters. There are still a few of either, and 1f )OU want to sec a genume elevator operator. all you've got to do is take a trip to Washington. D.C. It seems our federal government pays people to stand in elevators and push the buttons for you. Technology 1s. however, malong mroads into JOb areas that were considered safe, because it was be- lieved those jobs were so complex machines would never be soph1stJ- catcd enou$}1 10 replace the men doing those JObs. In the case of manufacturing. new techniques that are readily handled by a robot have been developed. and men have beco laid off. There arc automobile manufacturing plants that tum out cars at an astounding rate, with almost no humans m attendance . Even doctors a nd lawyers aren't safe. These arc men who deal m knowl- edge. Doctors spend years learning how to determine what's wrong with us by reading symptoms. There are computers now that, when fed the symptoms displayed by a person, arc extremely accurate in diagnosing the illness. Lawyers deaJ an awful lot with .. precedent." Precedent is, in it's simplest form. the history oflhe law. If someone docs something wrong to someone else, lawyers look up case histories of similar incidents to sec what was done m the past to the evildoer. and present the case to a court. Looking thin~ up 1s duck soup to a c.omputer. I wnte this column on a computer, and with the touch ofa few buttons, I can look up anything I've ever written. And that's oot all. It'll type the story out for me, check the spelling and, if I'm stuck for a word. present me with a list of synonyms and antonyms from which to choose. I firmly believe, however, that there arc things machines will never be able to do. I don't care how many vibrators and infrared generators arc involved, a machine will never be able to replace the hands of a loved one who is rubbing your shoulders. A machine wiJI never write.a love poem, at least not one with depth and feeling. The very best television in the world will never replace watching a dynamic sunset in person. There will never be a machine that can duplicate the feeling of holdmg a warm, fuzzy puppy 1n your lap. And there will never be a machine that can make a decent scrambled egg. Col•m•l•t BUJ Harvey 11.-H bl Hua.,,toa Bud. Development has become deciding factor in elections SACRAM ENlO -The media hoopla over his mo\ 1e star image nolwithstanding, actor ( lmt East- wood'c; campa1in for mayor of Carmel was md1cat1vc ofa s1gn1ficant trend in local ( alifom1a poll tic~ Increasingly, local campa1gm for mayor. clty council member, county supervisor and ballot measures hinge on develo pment issue~. Californians are becoming increas- ingly concerned about the ambience of their communities and arc ustng the ballot box to express themselves In Carmel -although the media coverage only rarely reflected 1t - there 1s a conflict between the desire to retain the flavor or the an1st\' colony that 1t was created to be and the de~irc to cash 1n on the tounsts who keep the shops and cafe~ of the town prosperous It's not a new conflicl A half- century aao, ll wassenously proposed that a wall be erected around Carmel to close ofT the oulside world. It simply has become more intense. The incumbent mayor. Charlotte Townsend, reprcscnled what Ea'it· wood and his backe~ u1d wss an elitist, d1!idainful attitude tO"''Clrd to unsts. Townsend was once quoted a!> saym1 that •• we don't welcome people whont 1cccrcam cones or buy film and scatter thctr debns behind them . " Eastwood, who has lived 1n < annel for years and owns 1 p<>pular rt$o taut1nl. ran against Townsend after beina dented city permission to expand his complex He said that c~rmel should be more amenable to tourists and could do '° wtthout destroyina it atmosphere It seems unlikely.ma town wi ~mall ind wealthy, that Eastwood's fame was a political asset. It may have oeen. m fact. a liability, g.iven the fact that he drew hordes of reporters and television cTCws to Carmel from around the world. His landslide victory -nearly 3-1 -over Townsend must. therefore. have reflected a collcctJ ve decision by Carmel's midents that the)' do want more econo mic and social inter- course with the outside world. Maybe m fact, Carmel will some- body p'rov1de more than one public toilet for its visitors. If Carmelltes said "yes" to more development, residents of several San Francisco Bay area suburban com- munities tned to say "no" la.st week. The rush of people and JObs to the suburbs in recent ycan has created a backlash among the earlier suburban settlers. Such development, they compla.10, 1s producina the very problems they soufht to e~pe: noise. traffic, congestJon and cnme. In recent ycan, therefore, local elections tn Contra Costa, Ma.rin1 San Mateo and Sonoma counucs nave hin&ed on development matters. DAN WALTERS "Moratorium fever bas Just gone l!P a couple of dCVCC$," Marin County Supervisor AJ Aramburo observed. "It's hlce a dinosaur. You can kick it in the butt but the message takes a long time to get to the brain. Aramburo believes that more pol- itical battles over develo\)ment issues arc comina -and he's fi&ht, In June, residents of another de- velopment-pressured Contra Costa County community, Pleasant Hill, will decide still another arowth- control measure and similar in- itiatives ~ being planned wherever residents believe their communities' ambience is beina Uuutened. There is. however, another 11de to the issue. Althouah they are labeled as pro-environment camp11gns, arowth-<:e>ntrol drives have an ele- La.st year. anti-traffic andor anti-· ment of elitism and ethnic cxclu1ivi· development mitiativcs WCTC pe.ssed ty. an two suburban commun1L1ct, Sianifkantly, it 1s almost always a Walnut Creek and Corte MadcTa. and community ofaflluent commutef'1 - even though another was defeated tn wh<>te f'CS!dent.s earn their Jivinp Concord. anti-development fever somewhc~ else -that sceb to clotc still is strona m the suburbs. the door to JObs and hou ana that Tuesday, vottn 1n the wealthy milht att~ct what rciideots ~rd u Contra Costa commun~ry o_f Moraaa • unatsireable elements. pas~ an ~pen sci-cc imtJallvc, while ft i• no acddent, for eumple, that those tn T1buro~. another enclave of low·paYJn& servioe iobs in wealthy affluence 1n Mann County, enacted• Mann County ue filled tarstly by two-year ban on new cooSV\lct1on those who commute anto the count)' and ousted three city cou0C1I mcm-from leu.ffiuent oommunitaea bera perceived as beina pro-develop-o.. "aJUn & • ,TM.k•IH mcnL ~t. • 8.ILLBAllVft 001-••W JACK AIDEISOI and DAU VA N A TT A African official nabbed for drugs Suriname military leader busted for off ertng protection w ASHrNGTON -We repor1ed last December evidence that the Marxist government of Suriname, the former Dutch oolony~tt tbenon:beut coast of South America. was enpged in drug trafficking. Cocaine prooeucd in a jungle factory auarded by Surinamese troops was being shipped to Amsterdam in diplomatic pouches, according to Dutch in- telligence sources. Now the Drug Enforcement Ad- ministration has produced dramatic confirmation of our report. On March 24, federal agents ar- rested three Surinamese citizens in Miami. DEA agents, posing as smua- glcrs. had approached the three suspects who agreed to provide a safe place to refuel drug-a.rryiog aircnft en route from Colombia to the Uruted States. The price wu to be SI million per plane. The case has created an inter- national scandal thanks to the ident- ity of one of those arrested: Etienne Boercnveen, a mem ber of the five- man military junta that has ruled Suriname since Desi Boutcrse sei.ud power in a J 980 coup. The Nether- lands government is particularly em~ barrasscd because it hadjust offered secretl)'. to resume aid to Suriname - $15 m1Uion worth -in excha.op for a pledge to restore democracy in the country o f some 400t000. Dutch and American aid was aoruptly stopped when Bouterse executed l S oppos:i- tion leaders in 1982. Bocrenvcen, a graduate of the Dutch military academy, braaged to the undercover agent that be was the No. 2 man in the Bouterse regime. He entered the United States on a d1plomatJc passport and has tried to claim diplomatjc immunity. Before hjs arrest. "Bocrenvcen o ffered protection to ether and co- caine transshipment, .. court records state. "(He) would provide small boats and trucks to transport ether" from freighters to Surinamese re- fineries and back. He told the DEA agents that he "controlled the ~lice. the military, the ports and secunty of all airfields" m Suriname, accordin& to the court rcwrds. The Surinamese government is concerned about BocTCovcen'sarrest. Sunnamcse officials have threatened to break off already tenuo us diplomatic ties with the United States if his diplomatic status is not re- cognized. As we reponed. Suriname has become a refuge for Colombian drua lords forced out by President BcHsario Betancur in recent years. Sources told our associate Donald Goldberg the Bou terse rqime invited the drug bosses into Suriname be- cause of its desperate aced for hard currency after the cutoff of Dutch and U.S. aid. BOutcrse's situation IJ"CW even worse in 1983. His role model and mentor had been Maurice Bishop, the Marxist leader of Grenada who wu deposed and mu~ by Cuban- backed rivals, lca.dioa to the invasion by U .S. troops. Fearful that Suriname might be next on the Rcapn adminis- tration's bit list. Bouterse abruptly expelled his Cuban miHtary ldviten -and welcomed the Colombian cocaine lords into hia oountry. Four days after Boercnvceo'a ar- rest. the Surinamese foreip ministry issued a statement accusina the United States of"aettin& up" BOeren· veen because of Suriname's incrcu- inaJy close ties to Libya. And ~ne Dutch source sugest.ed there. miaht be some truth to the charses. Our tntelliaencc.sourccs say Libyan dictator Muammar Khadafy bu 1eot more than 200 advisers to Swiname; an return, he baa asked for S\lrina_mete passport& for his inter- national assusination 1Quads. Uoerenveen's arrest may have been a coiocid.eooe in ti.m.ina. or it may have been lin.ked to the Reepn adm.anilualioo'1 uodeclamt war o n Khadafy. Acoordloa to Outcb sowus. the St11e Department quietly warned Suriname in late Jan= cool its ardent embtloe of . Four week.I later, federal ~" 1belr first contact with the Sunnamac IUlptCU and set up tho stina opentJon that netted Bocm>- vocn. ....__..._.. _________________________ _ MONDAY, APRIL 14. 198& C'8t• M••'• Cr•lg Comen la rldlnj • ..-w..,.of ....... R Corone del 1181'1 Mlchelle Wlllerd Mm•d to Al-elf te1m. K James a bighitatOrangeCoast Fres man c ostng In on h ome run, RBI records Harbor last year. Both wd they attended Cout for the aame reuons: (I) close P-ro1inuty; (2) a aood bueball propam; and (3) no one else really wanted them. helped me. "I've been cauaht by 1urprite (by the 1ucc.ess). l haven't been thlnkinaabout why I'm doina well, becauae if you Ill.It thiJlkina about it, it will meas up your concentration." younaer. I aurted hittinahome nmslut yt.ar," be 11ys. "I've learned to hit the ball wbete it'• P.itched. I never twina for 1.be fencea. They'll JO ifl hit it well. I don't worry about that J*1. BJ CHRIS MONAHAN Dlllr""Cw• ' ' 1 It was at OCC that Qwsenbeny beoo to abow the 1tulf that tw made him buebalr1 best relief pitcher. Now James is alao revcalina bis talent. lo addition to bit atreDllh. CX::C C:O.Cb Mike Mayne aays it bat been ditcipliae tbat bu led to James' 1ucce11. Joey James and Dan Quisenberry have a lot in common. Throu&h bis first 28 aames of lbe ac:aaon, James is hittina over .470 and hu already stroked 13 home runs and driven home 64 runs. Another tb:in&James says be un't thlnkina about i1 the &ct he i1 rapidl)'.. closina on Gene Roumimpet'a tehool records for home runa and RBI ICt lut year. Roumimper, now with UC Irvine, hit 14 roundtrippen and drove home 68 NM, but that was as a sophomore. · "He ii IO diltjplined ~ it 10 &ood mentally," llid Mayne ... It'• touch for piu:ben to set him out becaute be cont.rob the 1trikc zoneaowell James. Oranae Coast Collqe's freshman left fielder does not resemble Qwsenbcrry, the Kanw Oty Royals' atar relief pitcher, who l(>Cnt \WO years playing at OCC. Nor is James a pitcher. He is a major reason why the Pirates have won 18 in a row and are undefeated in the South Coast Conference ( 13-0) so far this aeaaon. .. rm not tbinkina about the marb, but I became aware of them when I aaw them talked about in the paper," be says. James bas only recently become a power hit~~ _in totals of nme. home runa and 38 KJSI his 1eruor year. He attnbutes hit added stren&th to lift.in& weiahu in hiah tchool under offensive line coach lay Johnson and continu- ioa to lift three times a week now. "The buic dilcipline WU there 11 evidenced by Joey pla~ three aporu in hi&b school. lo terms of applya.na it to baseball and hittin& in puticu.lar, we have belped him a little. But the way the James success story is devetopina at Cout. be is moving on the wne lines 11 Quisenberry. What ia the reason for be sudden burst of success? James says it is concentration on just baseball. Neither was .elected in the major leaaue draft out of~ tcbool -Quiz araduated frOm Costa Mesa in 1973, James from Newpon .. lo hi.ah school, I would 6nilh with basketball and came out riaht into (baseball) pmes," he explained. "Here it's been just baseball. The wmter league we played in really "I hit a lot more line drives when I wu "Hittina is touah; you have to be aelecti~ ly agn:Uive. Joey iu very •eaive hitter and be bu learned to be 1electivelr aumsive. Over the put I S-17 pmea, be a had complete comm.and of what he'1 doina at the plate.• (Pleue ... JAlllt8fU) Joey Jamee Fathers knOw hest,-hut-SODS drive faster Michael Andrettl gets LB Grand Prix win; Al Unser Jr. second BJ JOSEPH DUDEVOIR Dlllr .... c... ' 3 1 LONG BEACH -The Youth Movement was off to the races Sunday, roaring ahead at full speed. And while it didn't stop, it slowed enough to let one and all ICC the passing of the mantle. For the third strai&bt year there was a Mr. M. Andretti noisting the fant place trophy in the winner's circle. This time, however, it was son Michael collecting the spoils instead of bis two-time defending champion father Mario. .. A changin.J of the guard has happened," satd another youth. 23- year-old Al Unser Jr., who proered second after qualifying in the No. 2 spot. childhood friend AJ Jr. in the Dom- ino's Pizza Lola an front of more tbao 77,000 fans. "Tbinp are goma to be different at home now," said the 23year-old Michael "And I'm sure it'1 aoinl to be a Iona flight home for dad."' And what did father have to say to son after the raoe? "We didn't talk," said Michael "He smiled a little and ahook my band.'' The Andrett:ls now have five wins at Lona Beach. Mtchul bu two with bis 1983 Super Vee victory and Mario bas two Indy Car victories to So with his Formula One win in 1976. ThlS ume Dear or o.d., 46, finished an the fifth s~t. Tom Sncva took fourth and Geoff Brabham was third. "The young JUYS arc comina on," said Brabham, .. But there's still a few old suys who can ao pretty fut." But no one could take Sunday away from the two younptert who arc steppina out of the imposina shadows cast by their fathers. ur Al and Michael put on a show that would rival their old snowmobile f'J(leS the two bad as aeven-year-Olds. llicbael Anclretd leacla Al Umer Jr. aroand tarn Pfo. 9 Sanday at tbe Lone Beacb Grand Prb for Indy can. It was after several near-misses that Michael, who SWtcd in the seventh spot, collected his first-ever win on the CART /PPG circuit. He drove his Kraco-STP Lean Machine Maleh to a tight win (.38 1CCOnds) over bis (Pleue ... AlmJISTTl/112) 'Cadillac' Nicklaus can 't hold back tears carries Lakersturn attention to playoffs Dodgers Stubbs' home run beats Giants, 3-2: LA faces Padres LOS ANGELf.S (AP) -The 'lbaseball adage made famous by the Hall of Farner Ralph Kiner that says, "Home run bitten drive Cadillacs," bas cauP.tt on with Los Anaeles Dodgen left fielder Franklin Stubbs. Manqer Tom Lasorda was calling the him "Cadillac" Stubbs Sunday after the left-banded hitter clubbed bis third born er of the season to lead the Dod&ers to a 3-2 victory Sunday over the San Francisco Giants. In spite of the loss, the Giants, who won only seven pmes in April last season, brint a 4-2 record and a slim early lead in the Western Division race into their 1986 home opener today. Vida Blue is slated to pitch ap.inst the Astros with a sellout crowd expecu!d at Candlestick park. Stubbs drilled a tW<>run. seventh- To1JJ61J t '• 1ame Doc11en (Welch 1-0) at San Diego (Thurmond 1-0). Time: 7:0S p.m. TV: Channel 11. ( Radio: KA8C (790). .Tuesday's pme: Dodgers at San Dieao. 7:05 p.m. innina blast off Giants starter Scott Oanelts to help riaht-bander Orel Hershiser notch hi1 tint victory of 1986. "Fraolc.Jin 1s a pleasant surprise," Henhiser said. "Here's a SUY who PLC>bably wouldn't have played a lot if \Pedro) Guererro hadn't been in- Jured.' Stubbs, whose place on the Dodaen' 24-man roster was never secure in sprina tra.inina, suddenly became oo~balf of Laaorda's left field platoon after Guerrero iajured his bis left knee in the final week of the prelCISOD. .. Sometimes, that's the way It happens," Stubbs said in reference to bi1 bia bruk. ··eut when you set the opponunity, you ha~e to make the best of it and see what happens." Althouah he hu homered in three consecutive PJ!lCI, the Dodaen aren't expeciint Stubbs to match the 33 home runs Guerrero hit last year. ··They don't want to put preuutt on me to hit home runs." Stubbs said. "I JU~t try to IO OUt there, be patient, (Pl ....... 8TUB89/m) Old hero, spurred on by fans, wins Masters By BAL BOCK ., ..... .,_ AUGUST A, Ga. (AP) -Jack Nicklaus walked down the middle of the 18th fatrway at historic Augusta National, striding purposefully and powerfully, like a man on a mission. You would never know there was a tear m his eye. Nicklaus had made this trip many times before, but never with more emouon. At 46, in the twilight of one of the greatest careers in golf history, he ~ reachma back for one more sunrise. one more Masten chamt>ionship. On each side of the ropes, bis fans were packed as far as the eye could see, fans who had seen him win the coveted areen jacket a record five times, fans who wanted him to take home one more for what it would represent, the triumph of will by an American hero. Their cheers thundered around him and be walked proudly tbrou&h the canyon of sound cascadina down around him. It was a noisy tribute to what be bas accomplished since be started comina here 27 years ago, and to what he was a<:complisbing on this brilliant spring afternoon. Losic tells us that 46-year-old players don't will as demandi~ a a<>lf tournament IS the Masten. Bven Nicklaus acknowlcdaed that. But JQ&ic took a day .off Sunday and in its plaoe was a neat little fairy tale, a story of an old hero, spurred on by his fans and bis sons to a spectacular, unlikely victory. He beaan this day in the bunt. but only barely. He was four shots behind, tied with ~ix other players, locked behind ei&ht other names on the leader board when be awoke to a phone call from one of bis sons, Steve Nicklaus recalled the conversation. "He said, 'Well, Pops, what do you thank 1t will take?' "I said1 '66 to tic, 65 to win.· "He wd. 'Those wen: the numbcn J had an mind. Now, go to it."' Nicklaus pretty much wasted the tint eight holes, makina no progress on the lead. Then, bent over a birdie putt at No. 9, he pulled up, stopped by the roar of the gallery at the eighth hole where Seve Ballesteros and Tom Kite bad both scored eagles. When be went back to the ball, 1t was as ifa fire bad been lit within him. He made that bi.rdie and two .more oo the next two boles. Suddenly, his name appeared on the leader board and the word spread around the course: .. Nicklaus 1s charging." On each hole, he consulted with b.is caddy son, Jaclc.1c. on the shots. Once, after a good drive, be asked Jackie if the ball had reached the green. .. I'm massinJ the pleasure of seeing my golf ball finish," N1clc.Jaus said. "l can't see that far anymore." Hole-by-hole. he closed the gap, passing other golfers. gathering momentum and galtery. As each bmlte -1n the case of No. 15. an eagle -dropped. the fans roared. "The sound1 green to tee, was deafening. unbelievable,· said the man who has heard a few cheers before. "I had no clue what I was shooting.just that I was getting birdies and I'd better keep doing it." By the time he reached No. 18, he had the lead bya stroke. The tournament was there for the taking and be le.new it. "Several times, I had tears in my eyes," he said. "I ~t pretty emotional. I sort of well up." He massed another birdie by no more than four inches on that hole and with Orea Norman slaJinJ a late charge of his own. the VlCtory was m doubt. Nevertheless, be bugged his caddy son in a po1anant scene. It got even better a few minutes later when Norman's last-hole botcy clinched the tour- nament for Nicklaus. I.Jc bad reached for that sunnsc and grasped at proudly. What made it so sweet for him and his fans 1s that they know the whispen are true. He 1s past his pnme and there won't be many more wms."l'm not as good as I oooc was," he satd "But OCC'as1onally, I want to be. Today, I was.·· ,,, Las pf 111 Jack Nlcklau Ilk• what be Nee OD 17tb '1"D 8a.DdaJ. rNGLEWOOD (AP) -With the formality of the final pme of the recuJar season out of the way, as both the Los Angeles Laken and the Dallas Mavericks immediately turned their attention to the upcom1na playoffs. The Mavericks defeated the Lalcers 124-107 ID their NBA rqular-seuon finale Sunday, but Laker Coach Pat Riley hardly nouccd. "We arc all staruna at the starting gate," Riley said. "We know what we've done this season and we're proud of our record. We've ac- complished all of our aoaJs, except of maybe to have the best overall rccont. "We art all healthy. We have no injuries that will keep anyone out of the lineup." Dallas Coach Dick Mona also turned his attention to his team's upcomiDf. playoff series. "We wtll look at films on Utah, but basically. we have to defense Adrian DantJey and isolate Mark Eaton.'' Motta said. "We've got to atop tbetr fast break and kcq> Ricley Green's penetration to a mmimum. We art healthy. If we lose. I'll have to find another reason" As far as Sunday niaht's pme was concerned, Jay Vincent scored 19 points and Sam Perle.ms came off the bench to add 18 for the Mavericks. who wound up the season with a 44-38 mark. the same record they had a year q o. Los Angles finished the aeaaon 62-20. the same rttord as last season, tyina the second-best record m club history Dallas outrebounded Los An&eles · SJ -38 as the Lalcers played without Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Earvin "MqJc" John\On and Kurt Ramb1s -60 pc~nt of the La.ken' Startln& hneup. Angels hoping they can keep run production up Despite losina to Oalc.Jand. 11-7, Sunday, the Anacls went into thetr Anaheim Stadium sea10n opener today ap1n1t the ~ttle Mariners, with six-pme totab includina 11 home run1 and 41 runs, an averaae of 6. 9 per pme. But they were outscored ID three of the road pmes. .. , don't look for encou~ na lllJ'IS," catcher Bob Boone 11Jd of the team s carl)'·tc&SOn run output. "I look forwina, and we didn't win this one.•· H6men by 8ooM and RCUJc Jacklon helped the Anaels win 9.3 Saturday. ruin1na the Amencan Leque pitch1na debut of the A's Jo.quin Andujar There werc no homers an TaeMfa7'• 1ame Seattle (Youna 1..0) at Aqel1 (Sutton (}.I). Tame: 7:35 p.m TV: none. Radio: KMPC (710). Sunday'a 12-hitattack led by Rob Wilfonaand Wally Joyner. with two bits and two RBI apiece. The A's. with a 2""' rt()()rd, have onl)' two homcl'1 '° far. both by J<* Can1CCO. The powerfully built, 21-yc•r-old outfielder h1t a 40().foot shot off Mike Watt 1n the fifth innina Sunday to Jive the A ·s and pitcher Cbns Codiroh an 1-2 lead. "I wu on fint baJt and l said to (coach) Dave McKay, 'It would sure be mcc to see Jose crush the ball now.' He did on the next pitch." Camey Lansford said ... It's SOOd to set him aoma before the road tnp." The A's Dave Kinsman once tent a pop Oy throu&h a hole in the roof of the Metrodome for a around rule double, and he hlt three homers 1n a pme on bis fint visit to Seank's uperdome. tcCOnd stop on the A's lnp When asked 1f C•nlCCO 11 ca~ble of such indoor feats. Lansford rq>lied: "Oefimtely!" C.tnKCO was with the A's last September. h1ttm1 five bia leque homen to tto wt th the 36 he totaled dunng the minor lequc ~n He'll be playtn& 1ns1<k for the fim lime ton-aht. He said. ..I'm not ~ma to let the reputations ofthose parks mnuence me in anx WI)' I JUSt want to do what comes na1unlly The A ·s bwlt a S-2 lead Sunday with t.ht ~Ip of only four hits, 1ncludu\I an RBI. cb«nd· swtna sanate by Tony PtulUes and a bunt 1tQlk by Alftccfo Griffin. befott Canteeo homered. A foUMUn ~Uy tn the third staned ~ Gnffin truck out but went to leCOnd as the ball. a wdd pitch an tht dart. went past Boooe. .., \hould have been a httk quieter and blocked the ball J tbo~t I thre-w tum out at ~nd. too .. Boo~ iaid •• 81 * OrM09CoMt DAILY PILOT/ Monday, Aprlt 14, 1988 'Baseball fan gets burned up abOut DO-SIDOlilng law r....AP...,_tdel HOUSTON -A bueball fan who iii ipo~ a new ordinance prohibitna smok- i~ at indoor aportina events nearly lost his shirt u a result. John Cirka, a aection supervisor at the Astrodome, laid the incident bepn laat week durin$ a same between the Houston Astros and the San Francisco Giants when an elderly woman complained to him about a perstStent smoker. When Cirb questioned the man. he wd he had not been sm oking. "I've had several people mention you were," Ctrka said. while people 10 the ,row behind nodded m aarcement. A.pin, a denial from the man. Cirb then launched into a short lecture about the new city ordinance. "He said. 'OK, OK. you've made your point,"' Cirk.a said. "And suddenly l saw the smoke. His shirt was on fire." "It wasn't real big. but 1t was smoltinga lot. He was beating his chest." The fan, cau&ht like a schoolboy smok10g an the bathroom, bad shoved has c1prcnc under has shirt when he saw Cirk.a approaching. The fire was ext1n,u1shed. no one was IDJurcd and the fan said he wouldn t do at again. Quote of the day New York Yankees' catcher Bakla Wyne1ar on Baseball Commissioner Peter Ueberrocth's letter to major league players. detailing has drug plan: "I oon't want to say too much. just that It stinks and it's a Joke." Norris scratched from start SAN JOSE-Mike Noms. the fonncr Oakland A's patcher hoping to return to big league baseball. was scratched from his scheduled Sunday starting assignment with the minor league San Jose Bees because he missed Saturday night's game. No m s, who has no dnver's license, told the club by telephone Saturday afternoon that he had transpor- tation problems. a team offietal said. Noms. 3 I. 1s one of several fonner big leaguers wnh the Class A California League team. Former Los Angeles Dodger reliever Steve Howe won the season- openm~ game Fnday night, shutting out Sahnas on three hns over fi ve innings an a 4-1 Bees' victory. Noms won 22 games walh the A's an 1980. but his career has gone downhill as he battled 1n1unes and drug and alcohol problems. 47,600 see Mexico win LOS ANGELES -Javier Aguirre scored early in the first half and Mexico made the goal stand up by reg.istenng a 1-0 victory over Urugua} an an 1ntemauonal exh1b1t1on soccer match Sunday at the Mcmonal Coliseum. Mexico's Tomas Boy ~thered up the ball at midfield and angled to the nght point of the penalty box, where he centered a pass which Lu as Flores tipped to Aguirre near the niJlt side of the Uruguay goal Aguirre kicked lhc ball mto the net from 12 yards out. The exh1b1t1on between the two national teams scheduled to compete 1n this year's World Cup soc~r tournament was played before an estimated 47,600. fl was the largest crowd to attend an cxh1b1uon played at the Coliseum by the Mexican team. which wtll meet the national team of England on May I 7 Sheehan wins Inamori Classic SAN DIEGO -Patty Sheehan sank a !I birdie putt on the final hole Sunday to hold off Pat Bradley by one stroke and capture the Kyocera lnamon Classic women's professional golf tournament. Sheehan held a three-stroke lead after nine holes. but Bradley pulled an to a tie when the leader made her second bogey of the day by three-putting at the par-4 15th. The two matched pa~ on the 16th and I 7th holes before Sheehan ~nk an 18-foot putt for a three on the par-4 18th for the victory at the 6.391-yard Bernardo Heights Country Club course. Sheehan carded a 2-undcr-par 70 Sunday to finish the 72·ho le tournament at 278, I 0 strokes under par. Bradley, bidding for back-to-back victones after w1nnmg last week's Nabisco Dlnah Shore tournament. shot a final-round 68 for a 279 total. BoATINC ~~~~-- England city blda for Oamee LONDON -Birminpam. Enalaod'1 II recond·la~t city, made at1 formal bid for the 1992 Olympics today with a royal endorsement and a Plcdae to .. Jive the Games b&ck to lhe athleta" Tbc officlAI propoeat to tbe lntematioul Olympic Committee wu contained in a 14-pound 1e1 of' three volumes, containina maps. 1t1Phica and other docu- ments. It also carried letters &om Priooess Anne; Kenneth Baker, the secrewy of state for the environment; Frank Carter, lord mayor of Birminabam. and Oenil Howell. a former member of Parliament and now president of the Birminaham Olympic Committee. Princess Anne, preaident of the BritiJh Olympic Association and an Olympic competitor in cqueatnan in 1976 at Montreal, said ahe was "impreuod by the quality of the Birmin&bam bid." She pointed to pfans to s• l 0 sports in a 1111f.1c bwldmg, the National Exhibiuon c.enter, and build new stadium• and athlete housina in the ume vicinity. Birminaham'• Olympic bidden are st.reuina the fact that, with two or three exccptio~~e events of the '92 Games could be betd there wi · a very smaU radius, makinJ transportation and aecuritl_ easter. "It fits in well with Birminaham a theme of returning the Olympic Games to the athletes;· the princess, patron president of city's Olympic Council, said. Birmingham has a population of more than one million in the city itself and 2.S million io the metropolitan area. It is located about 80 miles northwest of London, has its own international ~rt and is linked to the rest of England and Scotland by a network of railroads and au per bi&hways. Clippers loee finale, 118-99 PHOENlX -It was a National m Basketball Association season both the Phoenix Suns and the Loa Anaelcs Oippera would rather folJel. Sunday night, it finally ended as Larry Nance scored 21 pomts and Bernard Thompson bad aU I 0 of his during a dcetsive sccond-quaner rally in leading Phoeniit to a I I 8-99 win over tbe 0~. Los Angeles wound up 32-SO with six loues in the last 12 games. The Suns, also 32-SO, failed to qualify for the NBA playoffs for the fi.nt tim~ in nine years and suffered their first back-to-back losing records sinc.e the 1973-74 and l 974-7S seasons. Both teams can now look forward to the May 11 lottery with a shot at the No. 1 pick in the June I 7 draft. "h's been a longJear," said Phoenix Coach John MacLeod. "We've ha a lot of problems. We've had so darn many mJuries the past two years, it's hard to get any consistency." Free leads Cava past Chicago World B. Free scored 31 points and m Dirk MbuaJefleld collected 10 of his 20 points in the fourth quarter Sunday u Cleveland closed its NBA season with a 104-97 victory over Chicago ... In other NBA games, Boston broke loose for 46 third-<iuarter points, including 16 by Larry Bini, and rolled to a 135-107 victory over New Jersey that gave the Celtics the best single-season home record and the fourth-best overall mark in NBA history ... Dura Daye sank a j umper with two seconds remaining to Jive Washington a 98-97 victory over Philadelphia in a preview match-up of the first round of the playoffs ... Forward Mtb MUclleU ~ored 40 points, mcludmg I 0 in the last eight minuites of the game. to lead San Antono to a 123-118 scason- endang victory over Portland. Flyers avoid elimination, 7 -1 Peter Znel had three goals and an Ei.1 assist. and Tim Kerr scored twice and ' added an assist as Ph1ladelph1a avoide-d ehmanat1on from the NHL playoffs with a 7-1 victory Sunday night over the New York Rangers The victory ued the best-of-five Patrick Dav1s1on semifinal at 2-2. and sent the senes back to Philadelphia for the decidmg game Tuesday night ... In the other NHL playoff game, Brtu Bellows and Ne.I Broten scored two goals apiece as Minnesota staved off chmmation with a 7-4 victory over St. Louis. The North Stars' triumph forces a fifth game at Minnesota on Tuesday ni&ht to decide the best-of.five Norris D1v1s1on semifinal series. The winner will play the Toronto Maple Leafs in the best-of-seven d1 v1s1on final Television, r adio TELEVISION 7 p.m. -BASEBALL: Dodgers at San Diego. Channel 11 . RADIO 2 p.m. -BASEBALL: Seattle at Angels. KMPC(710). 7 p.m. -BASEBALL: Dodgers at San Diego, KABC (790). STUBBS ••• From Bl San Diego yacht captures Inslee and play like Franklin Stubbs can play. As I play more, I'll get more disciplined, but now I'm aggressive. I'm comfort.able and having a lot o( fun." Hentuser retired I 2 batters m a row from the fifth to the ninth. But he labo~ the rest of the way after poppina a water blister on the middle finger of his riaht hand. The top layer of skin broke u he was pitching to leadoff batter Candy Maldonado. who singled and scored the final run. Trophy given for Star Class event in NHYC regatta By ALMON LOCKABEY o.119 ............... Lee Kellerhouse of San Diego Yacht Club outscored a dozen n vals Saturday and Sunday to wm the lnslec Trophy in a special race for the Star Class. The event was part of Newport Harbor Yacht Club's Spnng Gold Cup Replta which drew 48 boats an five classes. The large\t class wa'i the Etchell~22 wtth 14 entne\ The winner was Bushwhacker, slcJppered by Kim McRae and O.,ton Ortiz of BaJboa Yacht Oub Ten boats turned out for the New York-36 Qass and the winner was Pohah Princess, akJppered by Jack Benz of the South Shore Yacht Qub. Summary of results: STAR (lnslec Tropby}-1. L« Kellerhouse, San D1cao YC~ 2. RaJph W1ntrode. Balboa YC; J. Chuck Lewsadder Newpon Harbor YC. ETCHELLS-22-Buahwbacker. KJm McRae-Outon Ortiz. BYC1 2. hy. Don Bever, NHYC, l Auspice, Acct White NHYC NEW YORK-36-1 Poh•h Pnn- lCU, Jack Benz. South Short YC. 2 Joy E.ux, Jo hn Gonnerman, SDYC; 3. Rounder, Bill Brandt, Cahfom1a YC. SABOT-Craig Bentley, Dana Point YC. DEFENDER-12-David Howard. Pacific Manners YC. Encore Nll• to victory Joe Hoffman's Encore from the host club was the Class A winner Saturday an the second race of Bahia Connth1an Yacht Club's Anaclman Senes for Performance Handicap Racing Fleet ratings. Class B wanner was Compulsion, sluppered by Rod Rodhe1m of the BCYC, and O ass C was won by Electnc Pumpkin. co-skippered by Skip Elliott of Newport Harbor Yacht Cl ub, and Enc Kmgaard of Bahia Corinthian YC Summary of results. CLASS A-1 Encore. Joe Hoff'· man, Bahta Connth1an Yacht Club; 2. Desert Hawk, Norm Nauoth, South Sho rt Yacht Clu~ 3. Ren- cpde, Robert Koll. Ud Sailing Auoc1attonn. C LASS B-CofT1puls1on. Rod Rodhe1m, BCYC Z. Bullet, Dick Brown. BCYC;}· L1ckety Split. Dick Hayden. BCYL . CLASSC-Electnc Pumpktn, Sklp Elliott. NHYC·Eric K1naaard, BCYC. 2. Obseu1onb Bill Apps. Voyagen YC. Tret ordo, Dave Price. Bel'\ Tbe complete game was vital to the Dodaen. who had overextended their relief pitchina in consecutive extra- 1nnin1 defeats. "This was a big ballpme for us because of the way we lost the last two," Lasorda said. "We needed to 11vc that bullpen a day or two rest." "I wanted to 10 out there. whether the bullpen was healthy or depleted," said Hersh1scr. who allowed seven hits, struck out seven and walked three. "When you're ahead and you have that competitive spirit, you want to 10 out there and finish the aamc .. The G iants took a 1-0 lead W1th an unearned run 1n the fourth. Ch1h Davis led off W1th a s1nale and Jeff Leonard followed with a aouble over the head of Stubbs. Davia tried to score, but wu out in a violent colhaion wtth catcher Mike Scioc1a. who took a pcrfcict relay throw from shortstop Mariano Duncan. The play waa similar to a coli1ion last season here between Sciotcia and the Cardinals' Jack Clark. Unlike that one. however. no stretcher was needed for Sciotcia "I've watched him for four years." aa1d Davta, who left the pmc with a sprained left shoulder. "If he didn't 11ve 1n to Jack Clark, he won't 11ve in to anyone else " lllcbael Andretti ralMe bia tropby wblle third-place ttm.her ~ff Brabham (left) .............. " ............. and Al Uuer Jr., wbo ftntebed MCOD~ ah.are wlnner'e 8ta.Dd ID Lone S-c.b. ANDRETTI WINS LB GRAND.PRIX ••• From B l "We used to race Go Carts when we were younger," said Andrettl. ··1 remember when our dads used to be on the same race team (both raced Viceroy cars)." Unser remembers those days, too, saying "Yeah. I used to go over his house in Pocono and get an Lrouble with him." "He was getllng me an trouble." said Andrtlll. "He was a very bad influence on me " The pair of them were the hell raisers on Sunday. Unser J Ot the jump on pole sitter Danny Sullivan and took the early lead. On lap 34 of the 95-lap race (up from last year's 90), Michael took the lead. Then he pined and surrendered the lead to Al Jr. on the S6th lap, who in turn gave it up to Sneva on the 69th. But by the time the 72nd uip around the streets of Shoreline Village was completed, Andretti had the lead back for keeps. The wm was worth $94,546 to the Nazareth. PA., native, along with 21 points which moved Andretti into second place on the circuit with his 22-point total after two races (with 15 to go). Sneva is the leader w1th 28 points. Unser pocketed $74.3 16 for second and has 17 points. Andreltl averaged 88.968 miles per hour over the I 58.6S mile course in his Cosworth-powered racer. which ran like a March hare all day. Andretti'scarsecmed to have more horsepower as be would pull Unser on the straights. But Unser's superior braking power evened things up as his car wu better in the comers. "We were pretty even," said Unser. "He got me in the straights and I got ham on the turns. We just couldn't pull each other, and I had my (turbo) boost up all the way. The only thing t could hope for was for him to make a mistake 10 traffic, but he didn't." Andretti showed some of the savvy that seems to run in the family with his work in Lraffic. He was at his best when it came to dicing it up. "'I love the streets we race on here. After Indy, (Long Beach) is mr next chotcc for a place to win,' said Andrett1. And that's not too surpris- ing. considenng the Indy SOO 1s the only race ncher than the $700,000 Long Beach event, which has now featured Indy Cars for the third straight year of the 12-year-old event. "everything went according to plan today," Andretti said. "It was very smooth going." There were a few terse moments, though "I knew 1fl sneezed a little bat. Lil' Al would get by me," said Michael. "We saved enough tire, though, to hold him off." Andrctti said the tensest moment came on lap 80, when they both lapped Roberto Moreno on Tum 9. There was a near-collision and it appeared that the two can touched, but Michael and Al Jr. said there was no contact. Out of the 24 can which qualified for the event. only I 0 were runnina at the end. Some of the casuJties read as follows: Danny Sullivan, (ignition), Rick Mears (no oil pressure), Emerson F1ttipaldi (broken waste gate) and Roberto Moreno (blown engine). But there were no serious acci- dents, JUSt a few fender (or Mng) benders. There was one moment for the sentimentalists, one that the younger Andrctti hopes to see apin. From lap 38 to SS, the Andrettis occupied the first and acoond pos.- 1t1ons. with Michael leadiDJ the way. "That was a neat situatton," wd Michael. "I hope we can do it some more." Dad probably would, too. But maybe an a different order. lllcbael Andretti head.e down tlae coa.ne'• atra.taJataway between tarn• 9 and 10. Brazilian wins race in Spain JEREZ DE LA FRONTERA. Spam (AP) - Braz1han Ayrton Senna won Sunday's Spanish Grand Prix by the tiP!test margin in modem Grand Prix racing. edaina Britain's Nigel Mansell in a dramatic wheel-to- wbccl duel. . The victory p ve Senna the points lead in the 1986 world champ1o n1h1p after two of 16 scheduled races. Senna's Lotut-Renault crossed the finish lane 0014 seconds ahead or Manscll's Williams-Honda -about three feet. according to t1mm1 enJinccra. "Another five or 10 meters and N11el would have won." Senna Slid. "My urcs were aone and l couldn't hold ham" "l thouaht I bad won," Mansell said. "I won't believe I didn't unu1 J see it on tclev111on." He drove brilliantly back from third place after a t11-c chanae, lyina 20 seconds behmd Senna with only nine laps to ao. In his late charae. Mansell set a lap record or I minute. 27 176 ~nds. an averqt speed of 108.237 mph, for the new S 12 m1lhon Jerez Speedwal He paucd world champion Alain Prost s Mcl..attn- T AO-Ponche. and 'tarted the final lap two seconds behind Senna. "On the la't lap, I saw him comma very qu1clcly," Senna u1d "I knew he had frtsh tares. and m y car wu sliding. h was very dangerous." Out of the final tum, Mansell jerked sideways for a clear run at Senna. The cars crossed the finish line virtually side by side, but Senna said he knew he bad won. U.S. tops Poland in hock ey MOSCOW (AP) -The United Stat.et defeated Poland 7-2 and the underd<>s W~t Oerm.01 handed another 11unnin1 u~t to a 1lump1na world chamPion Czech team Su.nday. m the second day of tbe Wortd Hockey Champ1on1h1ps. .Also ~n Sunday, Swed~n upset Canada 4-1 and the Soviet Union showed that n deterved its pos1uon u the ove(\Vhelmina favorite by muterina Finland by the same mal'&Jn. The Soviets are in fint plloe after two aamea with four points. All lbe other t.eam1 have two pofnta eath for one win, except for CzecbOllovakta with no polnta. ,,.. Bryan Erickson ICOf'ed three aoal• for the U.S., while Aaron Broten usi1tod on three and acored a &Oa1 Tbe remainina &Olla In t.bc match apinat Poland~ · red by Mark JOhnaon. B~tt Howe and Oark Donald!~ World champion ClccholJovakia, havina Iott i-1 to Poland on Saturday, went throuah another shocker on Sunday by lo11n1 4-3 to We11 Oerinany. I • .. ._ __________________ ......................................... ._ _____________ ~--~~~~~~~------- 0ninoe eo-1 OAJLY PILOT/fl'cMlday, Aptl 14, 18M * • ConJen riding neur ura ve of pro surfers Mesan trytn to rown out Image of 60s beach bum ly JOSEPH DUDEVOIR ...... C..1 S At I lt'1 twd to asaociatc a sport like sutflna with bit business 111d corpor· ate America. And what, with the Bohemian lifestyle which was em- bodied in the 1port itself in the 60t and 70., surfma eajoyed less than a warm 1pot in the hearts of thote who ran bi& bu1incis and corporate America. 1 u1t think bow many execs dreaded the idea of their dauahtcrs climbina into a Woody with some sun-baked beach bum Wlth his nose covered with zinc oxide. .. Surfi.na hasn't always had the best reputation," says Craia Comen. "And it still hu a way to JO, but the sport bas come a Iona way since thOK early days. It's almost respectable now." Comen is one of'loday's new wave of surf en. He (&et this) likes to workj feels a responli"6ility towards kids ana the image of his sport. And, horTor of horrors, hopes one day to join those once~nemy corporate types. Why, it's enough to make Corky Carroll drop dead riaht off his stick. "With the arowing sponsonhiP, from some of the bi& companies, • says Com en, "You have to take tbinas seriously if you plan on being a pro. .. And this can add a lot of stress. CraJcComen Your lifestyle has to change. There's still some of the benefits that go along with a sport like this: airls, beautiful beaches and of course beina out in the sun. But it's not the alamorou~ life people think it is or used to be," says Comen, a Costa Mesa resident. Bia money has not only rewarded bardworkina pros like Comen, jt has also given surfing the incentive to clean up its act. Padres win on Wynne's two homers Pinch hitter leads San Diego to 7 -6 victory over Reds From AP cU1paecltet SAN DIEGO -The San Otego Padres, who went nearly four games into the 1986 season without an extra-base hit. smashed four home runs -includjng two by Marvell Wynne -to come from behind apinst the Cincinnati Reds. Wynne's f111t trip to the plate as a pinch hitter in the seventh inning Sunday ignited the Padres to their first lead of the pme, 6-5, and his solo homer in the bottom of the ninth made San Diego a 7~ winner. "rve made some adjustments at the plate. J hold the bat straighter up now. It gives me more bat speed and more power." Wynne said. "Home runs usually come up on mistakes. Both came on futballs inside." Over the last th.rec seasons, Wynne bu had only nine home runs. But San Diego Manager Steve Boros said the results off Wynne's bat weren't all that surprising. Boros, who had picked Wynne up at the motel where the outfielder as staying and drove him to the ballpar"1 said they talked about power h1ttin• on the way to the game. During batllng practice Saturday, Boros said Wynne htt sax or seven balls into the teats.. "I asked him bow many home runs he bad in the Dominican Leque, and be told me six. which is a good number for those huge parks." Boros said. One manaaer was surprised. how- ever. "J didn't know Marvell Wynne could hit a ball that far," Reds' skipper Pete Rose said. * OMCJMNATI SAN ot•OO 8IHlllll Mt!Mrcf 4) 2 0 D•nltlllf Sl22 Pwllerrl .,,, EO.YIH1 0 0 0 0 E .. tllv lb ) o 1 0 Frenc:o o O 0 O O V-blPn I 0 1 0 Prkleo 0000 10181 c • 0 0 1 Cnaac11 :it> 4 o 0 1 Stttwt H 4 0 1 0 Cell« 2t> • 0 0 0 arownne o l o 1 o Flellllf'Y 2t> Gwvnnrl Mcltv"'cf c;.,,,..., lb Mar!lllJ" Gol .... o TmP!tn '' ROY\19' )I) 8od!Vc Hewlllnt o Wet..,o W~cf •r11111 4 0 I I 4 l l I 4 I 2 3 • 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 0000 4 0 I 0 • 0 ' 0 4 I I 0 I 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 , , , , Pwtl lb 1 0 I 0 T.-. 11 6 II 6 T..... .M 7 II 7 Ho out• -~~.:::,,_KIO'*'- CJRdl!IWtl m i• .. , _, SMC*ee * .. •l-7 Geme WIMl"9 Rll -W'fM!t Ill L09-<lncln118tl 10, S8n 01"0 S ,.,_ Miiner, Fl8nn.t'Y, O.nlltt, lodl'f, lltovat«, EMtllY H11t-OWYM m. ,..,.., m. wv-2 m. Mettrmo6ch (1), 08111111 Ill Sl-Mllllet (I), 0811Mt\ (2), O#Yllll (11, V-'lle (1). • "11te11t H SO (llldl!Mtl arow!llno Frerico Ptkle L,0-1 •I l t 12 3 I 0 I , 3 0 , 0 0 S-1*98 Hewllltl• '1-l s S S • I Weller J , > I 0 0 I 1 Gota-..W.I 0 2 ' I I 0 > Price D41tNCI 10 1 Deiter In IN flt\ Hl~•Hh Irr HeWlllllL WP--erownlne UmW'n-Home. It~. Finl, Mont\Que, second. lrodlieftW. Third. w.ver T-n7 A-1',546 Plrate. 8, CulMO PITTSBURGH -Mike Brown drove in four runs. includma a three- rvn homer after • botched Chicqo double play, 111d Pituburah blanked the Cubt 8-0 behind the four-hit pit.china of Rack Rcu1Chel and two relievers. Johnny Ray. who brou&bt a .SOO ave~ into the pme, conunued h11 hot h11tll\S Mth two doubles and a suiate and drove in three or the ftnt (our runs 11 the P\ratcs won thetr second 10 a row and handed the Cubs their fourth setback in five games. Reuschel, I· I, allowed three ht ts in beating his former team for the third ume in four decisions since signing with the P1ratC1 as a frtt agent last season. He struck out three and walked one. Bob Walk and Jim Winn each pitched one inning. CHtcAGO ()«',,.ct Trlllo lO Frerlef o Sndof11 2b Durrwn ID Mofelnd rf MuOll,.,,11 JDn lt c °""''°"" Sutdlffe 0 M8ll'l••Oll Ruthven o ICKlevOll ~lb ,. .... * .. ., "bl • 0 0 0 • 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 • 0 0 0 J 0 0 0 • 0 0 0 l 0 0 0 J 0 I 0 J 0 2 0 1 0 1 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ll'fTTlaUllGH RRevkh If OrwlU cf Rn2b Kl\8111• u M8ulttllb MBrown rf TPen•c Monlsn lO Be41lero u Reuacl'lel o K-Ol'I W•lllo W111110 )I 0 4 0 T ..... kw.bY""** MHlllll 4 I 2 0 l 4 I 0 s 0 l 3 0 0 0 0 1 1 I I S I 2 4 • 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 S I 2 0 2 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 CNcaee 000 000 --· f'lttllM'tfl ., ---· Geme Wlnnlno RBI -Rn (2) E--Oun$lotl OP-<hlc.eoo I LO&-<hlc.eoo S, Ptllltlurllh 12 2&-4tlY 2. Sutcllft9, Onul8k Oumlot1 HR-M Brown Ill SB-fit Rl"fnolcta (I). M8ulMI (I) S-RNKl\el CNcaee Sutdlfte L,l>-2 lluthven Frulef ~ ReuteMI W. I· I Welk Winn HBP-M.«rl_, Welk I,. H It •R II SO • ] 1 S S S I 3 3 0 ) 2 I I 0 0 I 0 I l I I 1 0 by Frulef 0 0 I 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 I WP-Suld"-. Umolrn-HOtM, Pallone, Flrtt, EnQel, *- ond, Quick. Third, llllnDI T-2.36 A-9,)37 Phlllln 4, Mets2 PHILADELPHIA Darren Daulton cracked a two--run homer and Gary Redus hit a solo shot to back Shane Rawley's I O-h1t pitching as Ph1ladelph1a defeated the New York Mets. Rawley, 1-0, walked one and struck out one in a pme played in a steady dnule. He lost his shutout bid 1n the eighth on two-out doubles by Keith Hernandez and Gary Carter. Ray Knight hit has second home run an as many games in the ninth for the Mets' second run. * N•W YC>alt ~MIL.A Ovu1r1 cf Teuf912t> Hmndr ID Certer c Strwt>rv r1 Foti .. If l(fllelfll Jb S.nt•,,. n Atuller• o Mll<:NI Oii <*dlP ectimn Oii T ..... M>rllllt 4 0 I 0 4 0 1 0 J 1 l 0 4 0 I I 4 0 I 0 4 0 I 0 4 I 2 I • 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 llt8d\it" MTllmocf Hevn lb SCl'wndl lb GWllM>n r1 Deul!Ofl c AOU8YO~ J .. ta .. Rewll"f o 1S '" 2 , ..... scwe-....._ .. , ..... J I 1 I • 0 0 0 l I I 0 • 0 1 0 ) I I I J 1 I 1 l 0 0 0 ) 0 I 0 , 0 0 0 • 4' 4 NewYtn -.. tll-2 ,.,........ ., ., ..,._. Ceme Wl1111lno lltll -lltedul 111 o~ York I, ~le I LO&-N- York 7, Pftl~le 4. ,.,_ G WhtOll. HMl\llnotl, Certtr HR-4ttdUt (1), OalJllOll Ul. Knlehl 121 So-ltewlev • "•1• USO NewY8f11 Atulltrl L,0-I 4 4 4 4 1 6 Oledll , 20010 ........... llteWltv W, I 0 f 10 2 2 I I u~. Klbler, Flot Fr-.mlf'll. Second, M8t"UI, Third, Otvlcholl T-214 A-21 ... 1 Bnv~B, Mtra.7 HOUSTON -Billy Sample had thru hats. ancludina a controven1aJ three·run homer 10 the fourth 1nnan.a. Ken Oberkfell drove in four runs and Gene Garber pitched out of a nanth- inn1na jam to lead Atlanta to v1ctory over Houston Despite a heated protest ~ Hou&- ton Manaaer Hal Lanier. th1rd·base umP1re John McShcny ruled that "If we want to be considered profWio. • nal~ we have to llCt like pros," uys Comeo. "You tee a lot more clea.n-Qlt "1ys now. We have suys with a uttle 1ntelli,e0Qe wbo ca.o speak. There's not the drua problem there uled to be either. We have to take an of ounel vee. •• Comen, 25, is a company repreten· tativc for Off' Sbore clothina and Aleeda wet au.its. He alto bu secured sponsorship from both companies. "It aurc belpa to have h~ from th0tc (comparues)," he says. And I try to ~ve somcthina. back., too. 1 work Wlth 12.ycar-old kids (be started surfl~ at ase 11) as the surfina team coordinator." He also ,ets his boards free from Stindrift in Santa Barbara. With the Auocation of Surfina Professionals kickioi off its season in May, Comen is JC!nn& UI> for a full- season run. He 1s fresh off a sccond- place finish in the ()ff Shore Pro-Am 10 Texas, worth Sl,500, a fraction of what it will take to embark on the ASP tour. The 1985 champion. Tom Curren, was the f111t-cver Amencan to secure the world ti tic. "I figure it will take more than $20,000 to do it, .. he says. "I'll start out with the first event an Japan and take at from there. I'd like to pay my own way with what I win. lfl start out well, I'll just keep going as Iona as I can ... So far, Comen has gone to Austraf- ta. France and England dunng his first two years as a pro. Before he hit the tour, Comen was part oftbe U.S. lil.arft1l Wynne ripe homer. Sample's home run was just inside the lef\-field foul pole. * ATLANTA HOUSTON Mo<eno ct R•mlrr u MurPnv rl s1mmon1c At11mchr o o.dmono Horner ID Sutter o Gerl*" o Cllml>lt lb Sutter o S•mple If '"*klllb Hut>Ord 11> JOJl'lntn O McN\rlrY 0 Vlr11U c Tetllh 81Hlllll • 0 1 0 Doren lb S 0 0 0 Bullock " 4 I 0 o G•rner lb 4 2 2 0 W1tlf119 lb 0 0 0 0 PnllOYlll If 0 0 0 0 GD1vl$ ID 0000 leuct 0 0 0 0 Tllonu 0 0 0 0 &.llev c 4 ) ) 0 H81C~ r1 0000 ~p S I 3 3 Aahtlv Pn • I 3 4 Monl•lv o 4 0 0 0 DIPlno o 2 0 1 0 Mlrrd>. !>fl o o o O Scoll o 1000 CRnldaJb l1 a IJ 7 T ..... k.-bYllllllNll "'"Ill • • ) 0 l 0 0 I 2 0,. 1 0 I 0 I 0 I 0 S 0 0 I • 0 0 0 • 0 0 0 4 I I 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 2 2 I 0 :M 7 ' ' .... ,... .,, .. 1 1'1-1 H.-".... .. 11'2 »'2-7 G•me Wlnnlne RBI -C>oer'kfeW ( 11 E-Tl'lon, Doren, HuOl>lrd DP-Atl8nl• I L08-At'8111t I, HOUtlO<I 6 2&-0onn l~erner. Mo<eno HR-S.mole {I> S&-Slmmom rn Horner 111 S-Jo ~ SF~llle4! All8"'9 JoJOllmn w, I 0 McMurtry A$Sllmtf\r ~ Sutter GtrW"S,I Hwa,., If' " ..... so S I ·l t J 1 I l Ill I 2 1 I 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 11-3 0 0 0 I ? l·l , 2 1 I 0 2l I 0 0 0 0 ScottL,l>-2 6 S I 3 ~ I I I 0 Molltetvo I I 1 0 OIPlno 0 0 0 0 Scott oltcl'led lo 1 1>1ttert In tile 6th. A•Mnm8dler ollcned to I Detter In ,,,. 1th. Montelvo oltcned to 1 btllert In IM 9th P&-Slmmotta 1 Umc>lr...-Home, Pull, First, Wnl, s.cono 9 Wllll•ms, Third, McSherrv T-2:5' A-4,m . Expos3, Cardlnals2 ST. LOUIS -Mitch Webster and Herm Winnanaham hit solo home runs and Bryn '"Smith scattered three hits in six inninas: leading Montreal to a triumph that halted previously undefeated St Louis' wtllflina strtak at four games. \- ttelNt If L•w?b W.0.t« rl JTllOtll lb ~:It> BtOOll• n l<rndlc lb RMrdOll P WlllfM'I ct lltrOttoc ISlnml o Whlfrd.,.. lltllltvo 8urit•o ().-rre lb T ... * Mrlllll • 0 0 0 ) 0 I I C I I I l 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 • 0 1 0 4 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 4 I I I • 1 I 0 I 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 STLOUIS c Oltf'lell If Mee.. ct H_,, ?b JCl8rll lb V811Sl\tll M ""°"")ti Lvtlrt c Lndrm !Ml l 8h!IP WNtepfl ~· C>Smlltlu 1<eot11ir. o HM'9\C ,, J' J , .... ._.. ......... Mrllllf • 0 1 I 5 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 • 0 0 0 l 0 I 0 C 0 I 0 I 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 • I I 0 1 0 0 0 I 0 0 °0 JI t S 1 MMlr'Mll ... •11 --' St\.... • ... , ..... Ckmt Wlnnl11e Rll -W«>tttr n1 l_._,.a, & Smtltl D,._.ILOU!a I L09--Morllf'MI 7. 111.9\llt t 29-<~11 troollt Hllt--W...1« (I), W"nwd41fNm (1) ~-.., (1) v~e t m 5--«9"11tf• ~ ISmltf'IW H ttllw lurk• liteerdOll S , I "'--"' K~tre L.0-1 Lel'ltl ,...,ry HI ~l.. .... Vf'I lt'°"""9 • MR•llHIO • J I 3 0 2·) 1 , I I 1 l 4 I 1 1 0 0 0 0 ' 0 0 I J s J J • • I 0 0 0 1 I 0 0 0 I 0 b't' • ...., llC t ~Ill Ul'llOif'tt-Horne. W8'1011tledl. tl'W\I Secollo. Cr•w111rd, Third cw~ f -25' A-JUM amateur team which defeated the Austrahans for the world title in 1984. "I think the biucst rivalry 10 surfing is between Australia and America," be says ... It's very heated, but there's no bad blood. I have some very close friends in Australia." . Things aren't always so friendly among tbe U.S. surf en. "There's a lot of egos," says Comen. "You have some talking behind backs. personality conflicts and jealousy trips, but that's just something you have to deaJ with. Most of the &uys arc all n&bL" Comcn, who has resided in Costa Mesa for a year, baa been livina with some other pro surfcn since he moved south from Cambri:i. north of San Luu Obispo. He 1s no stranatr to the Southland, however. as be was born in Santa Moruca "I plan on surfing as a pro for maybe five more ycan,'' he says. "Then I'd like to take a job 1n the industry and move away from the rat race. 'TU probably move back up to Cambria. Tbc country is jut1 beautt- fuJ up there. The t.rcet, the quiet; that's where a free man belon.,.' Thett, th.at JUSt fOCS to show you. Just when you bqln to believe Comcn has been domesticated, riabt when you think he's ready to trade his wet suit for a silk suit and bu 1urlboard for board meetinaa, be feeds you a line about being free. "Well, like J said earlier, we still have a way to go " Yanks sweep, 3-2 They're off to 5-1 -----~ start which means pressure OITPtnella From AP dl1paicllae1 NEW YORK -Ron Guidry won his second stan of 1986. aided by a two--ruo sina.le from Don Matttngly. as the New York Yankees ended their season-opening homestand Sunday with a 3-2 victory over the Mtlwaukcc Brewers. It gave the Yankees a three.game sweep over Milwaukee. four con- secutive vactones and a 5-1 record, equalling their best start in 11 seasons. They aJso started out ~I in 1976. The left-handed Guidry, who beat the Kansas City Royals on opening day, when a strained calf muscle limited him to a five-mnLOJ outing. went seven innings against the Brewers. He yielded one run on eight of Milwaukee's 11 bits. struck out three and did not walk a batter. Guidry allowed a second-inning run on Billy Jo Rob1doux's RBI single and pitched out of mtld trouble m the founh and fifth mnmgs Wlth the help of two of the Yanks' three double plays. Bob Shirley ~ve up Robin Yount's leadofThomer m the ntnth, then Dave R1ghett1 took over and recorded his third save, stnkine out the side. G uidry 1s 9-7 hfettme against the Brewers but has not lost to them at Yankee Stadium since July 23. 1984. "A good start means everybody else 1s playing catch-up," Yankees third baseman Mike Pagharulo \llrd. "That's what we had to do la'it year" The Yankees' good start means the pressure 1s off Lou Prniella. thetr rook.Jc manager -for now. anyway A year ago, Yoga Berra was drs· missed af\er 16 games. "We all want to do good for Lou." catcher Butch Wyncgar satd "Rut we also want to do good for oul"'iClves We all love Lou and respect htm." "We're doing just enough now to win," said Pm1clla, who played 11 seasons for the Yankees before be- coming a coach m 1985. "We're winning those close games. and good clubs win the close ones " * MILWAUK•a NaW YOtllC F.ider cf RMdV2b Molltor 3b YOUlll dll HMflldr If 0Nrr1 llObk:lir ID JCHllMu C~•c T ..... llHlttM 4 0 2 0 RHndn d 4 0 0 0 RndlOl'I 2b f 0 I 0 MlllQIY It> 4 1 2 I Wl~r1 4 0 I 0 Ee"9r dll 4 0 I 0 Grlfl•Y If • O 2 l Polrulo lb J o 1 o w v...eer c lOIO ~u )4 ,111 T ..... kiet'IW ......... 114>rllbl 2 I 0 0 • I 1 1 4 0 7 7 ) 0 0 0 • 0 0 c , 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 ) 0 0 0 I l 0 0 JS J , ) MIWallt!M 010 000 Oll-2 .._Yen -., 000 --J Geme Wlnnl"9 R81 -Mattlnolv Ill E-J CeSllllO OP-Mllweul!Ml,..... Yor~ l LOl-Mllwtul!M 5. H•w Yor'k 1 1.._.•llCkllOft ROOIOou~ Hit-Yount Ill SB R ~'°"Ill F..otr(2) ,,. " ••••• so NWw•"*" Cocano-1. O I l l l t 4 ,,..,.. 0 0 0 0 0 ..... y .. GulOrYW.70 7 t 1 t o l Sc:urrv o 10000 Shl,_v I 2110 1 lt~tt S.l I 0 0 0 0 J Scur,.,, OH~ to I beft91" In Ille llfl Coe.no-el~ to 1 Deller 11'1 the 1111 \l'llfi.v 01tc11ec1 10 I 0.11 .. in t!M "" wP-<oc•no-UmPlfn-Home, ICOK F'lrtl ltMd S«ond Ford Tl'llrd Gercl8 T-t 41 A-ll.079 Red So% 12, WhlteSo.z 2 CHIC'AGO -Wade Bou,s htt thf't'C 1miJe' and drove 1n four nins as Bo1ton pounded 16 htt, and buned Ch1cqo Jim Raet added thrtt run5 batted 10, two on 1 home run. and Btll Buckner and Dwtaht Evans each had two RBl Bo,ton naner T1m Lollar allowed two hit~ and ont run 1n ,,'.\ 1nninp, but ts\ued w-vcn walk\ Joe ( owley wa' knocked ou1 an thr third inning. whc t~ Red Sox sent 10 men to the plate and scored five runs. He gave up a single to Marty Barrett and issued consecutive walb to Ed Romero and Evans. 8oaJ sin&led to left to score two runs an~ill Buckner grounded to second to send Evans home. Then Rice chased Cowley by hatting a 3-2 pitch into the left field stands for his second homer. IOSTON DwEvnt rf ~lb Buell.l'W" lb Steoltn ID Ric.ell LYOftl cf e.v1or Cll'I Armes ct O«lman c h rrett ?b Romef"OU ,. ..... * Mrlllll s)) 2 S I 3 4 4 0 I 2 0 0 0 0 S I 2 3 0 0 0 0 s 0 0 0 s 0 2 0 • 1 0 0 4 ) , 0 4 l 3 I CHICAGO '-"""ct TOl!esn lb Nichols rf BBonl~ rt Fltl!M Kiltie dfl HIMfl 211 GW••r lb Slllnn8' c H•lntn on 0.ulllnu Ulll•u 41 ll1'1l T ..... ,_....,., ....... •rlli.I , 0 0 0 ) 0 I 2 ) 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 • 0 0 0 , 0 1 0 l 0 0 0 l 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 I 0 1 0 3, 2 0 1 0 0 0 • 2 s 2 ... ..., -,.. •1-11 OlkMe •1 -Ill-2 G•me Wlnnlne RBI -~(I) OP-eotlon 1 LO&-&olton I. CNceeo f 7&-tellllt l&-Gulllefl Hlt-«lol (2) S&-hrren (I} C•""'°" 2 .. ,. T*ton t (2) Gulllen (I) SF-Buclln8'. T~ I,. H R•RHSO ... ..., LOiier W, 1·0 Gerdner Crewfor'd • 1 I I 7 1 I I 0 1 s ...... ., I I 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 CNca .. Cowtev L.C>-I 1 l·l ) ~ Allen 2 I ' Helson 12·J 2 0 Jemn I 1 0 AllQ\10 I 2 I s ) 2 4 I I 0 0 l 0 0 0 I I 0 WP-LOll•r, AIMln BK-Loll•r Umolr.-+ic>me, ci.~11. First. Shulock. * ond Morrl_,, Third, McKMn T-3-00 A-25,15) Marlnen4, Twlns2 MINNEAPOLIS Danny Tartabull snapped an eaghth·tnning tie with a two-run homer. has third extra-base hlt of the game, to ltft \cattle to victory over Mtnnesota Mike Moore. 1-0, hm1ted the Twins 10 four hats over the final eight innings. finishing with a s1x-h1tter, five stnkeouts and one walk Mike 'im1thson, 1-1, went the distance for the Twins and took the loss despite lying his career high with nine strikeouts Ken Phelp<;. batting for teve Yeager in the eighth inning for 'ieattlc. walked and Tarubull, who also had two doubles. hat his second home run oftht season. HATTLI. Trt•D+I 2t> Br•dl•v H Celdlrn cl C. fl'lms dll AO••lt ID Co•..,, r1 0Htdt" rt PrHtevJo YHOf' C PN!ot ofl ......... c Ow•ll U T~ * .. , ..... 4 , 3 J • 0 0 0 ~ 0 0 I • 0 1 0 4 0 0 0 • 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ) 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 1 I 2 0 MINNl.toTA PllCkell ct Bull'llf Hrllell lb ltWal'llnor lrnmh r1 S.18t C Smell'f °" 0 Mllllb Plltaro ~ (i.fffll u JI 4 6 4 T ..... sc.-.w ........ lltlrllllt • I , 0 3 I 1 1 f 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 • 0 1 0 4 0 0 0 l 0 1 0 3 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 ) 0 0 0 JI , • J S..ttle ,. •1 d-4 ~ ____ , G1"'9 W1ntt1ft9 Rll -TarteOul 1'1 OP--~•ttte I Ml-•• I LO S..lllt 1 Mlnnewte l 1B-Tert.i>ull 2 Sme,_,, """1i.i1 Htll -9usl'I II) Terl8boll (n ~ It' H•••Hto IMttle MMoort W I 0 • 2 , ....... \mllhlOft L I I t 6 C C I t Umc>l•n-Home McCoy F lrtl Vo!l-IO. S«ond Wtlllt flllrd Pt\11111>1 T 2 11 A-II m Indlan•B, Tigen2 CLEVCLAND-Scou 8111<',PICk- ed up h1~ fint m11or-lequc victory Wlth 51'• scoreleu inn1nas of tw()-h1t rt'hcf and Andrt' Thornton's homer h1ahlt&h1ed a fivc-f\ln fint annana A\ (1evefand battered Detroit p1tchma for 19 hit~ '" the VIC'\Ory Bailes yielded ,1n&Jes b> Kuk C"i1M<>n an the 1everun mnang and l~rry Herndon 10 the ellhth 1n rthd of starter Oon Schulze rhe 24-year old lef\-hander ''ruck out four and walked three 1n has third m"or-lcqut ap~aranet Frank Tanana man-itd to Jet only ont' out before bc1f\4 ch~ m thr houom of the fi"' 1nn1n1 * CL•VSUNO arlllll , 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 s 0 0 0 • 0 1 0 I 0 0 0 4 0 I 0 • 2 2 0 l 0 2 0 • 0 0 0 ) 0 1 0 • 0 1, ., ..... COlll'" dh LNflllnn Cll'I Colft lb Wtlltekl 2t> l rot.M Oii Glbtofl r1 O•EYnt lb "9r1'd0!11f E,.._c L-cf Tr•mmlo ,. ... &viler cf FrMCOM CM1WW Thrftlfl Cll'I Jec:clOY Jb T"'91" lb CC:...tllrf Nixon If lemud211 A"8nlollc M 1 ft T ..... klwellV .... 4 I 2 0 .S 2 2 I S I 2 I 4 I I , S, I 0 S 0 2 I 4 0 2 I 0 I I I • 0 J • 4 0 J I .. ... 7 o.er.. tit .... __ , ~ ., .... _, G-Wlnnill9 RBI -Frenm (I) E--OHMI OP--Oetrol1 2 L.~t lO. CleY•nd 10 2&--<.. CMtlllo, T,_,,.., TMIW. 38-eutlet" Hllt-ThornlOll (1) S.-~ (I), • N ••Ill la IO 0..... h-L.CH L.8Polftl OtMel Cwv a..... 1-3 ' .,., . , ' I 0 kftth• >1·) ..... W.H SM W,._T_, ...... s s , 2 I 1 0 0 2 t 0 0 Umolrft llon•. c--t, Finl, S«olld, Ket-. Third, &ftnllrne" T-US. A-10,4'.l Royal• 7, BlueJap4 0 0 1 2 1 2 0 1 0 , J • KANSAS CITY. Mo. -Frank White and Hal McRae Jumped on rcltef pitcher Dennis Lamp with run- scori.ng sinaJes an the fifth inning that carried Kansas City to victory over Toronto. Willie Wilson and Georae Bren hit consecutive home runs 10 the third mningand Steve Balboni homered m the fourth. all of them off Dave Stieb and all with the bases empty, a.s the Royals took two of three gamei; 1n the week.end rematch of last year's Amcncan League d1v151on cham- pions. * KANSAS CITY MoMIC>Y ct Fernndr n Belt II &.""411d r1 U""8w ID Jo!lnsn Cll'I Gercl• 11> IOl'll Jb LMChPl'I Wf'lll! c BMartn1 c Mullnltt 3b T ..... Mrllllf • 0 0 0 • 0 1 0 4 I I I 4 I I 0 4 I 1 I • I 2 I • 0 0 0 2 0 I I I 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 I 0 I 0 0 0 L•w " Wiiton cf 8r•tt 3b MclltNdl'I WN1t11> l•lbonl ID Mottev r1 SundOrllC ASal81r n ,. 4' 4 ,. .... kwelt'I ...... .. ," .. 4 I I 0 ' , , 2 ) 2 I I 4 0 I 1 4 1 1 I 4 1 1 I 4 0 1 0 • 0 1 1 ) 0 0 0 )41111 T8"1M .. Jlt --· ~·atv 012 , .... _, Ge,.,,. Wlnnlnt lltBI -Wiison Cll E-Fernandtr DP-t<e~• Cllv 2 LO&-TorOlllo l. Ket1tet Cltv 4 18-JoMton 2 I Mar1l~1. lerllel<I, L.8w Hiit-W11ton (1) Brett < 3 l e ••Don 1 111. B.-m S&--Wlltofl rn If' HalRHSO ,.,....... Sll8CI L,0 2 L.8mt> IC-tClt't /. 0 1 Bia<:• W. I I S • t • 0 l J:•rr S I t I 0 0 0 1 StleO oltclled IO 1 btll.-t 11'1 Ille Sin Bia<:" 10 I Detter In t!M "" Umt>frft-Hor... 9rtm198n, Flrtt lltoe Second, Hlr-.cl10eck, Third, B•rnett T-t 77 A-16 "4 Oriole. S, Ran1en2 ARLINGTON. lcu~ Cal R1pken hat a two.run smak m tht ea.&hth inning 10 catapult Bah1more to victory over Tua' IAL~f WIOOlllt 1b l..atY rf Jllol\11110 ltlo4<8'1 .. Mun ey lb LYnn Cl 0 WY9" dfl S!MlbY If Sl...,.OC IN>. y flt Pll ~Y C Guti.r1 lb sn.ts rf T ..... * .. , ..... l 1 I 0 t I I 0 0000 f 0 I t l 1 0 0 • 0 , 0 • 0 ' ' 4 • 0 0 , 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 ' 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 ,._JlAS Mc0wt4c• Fi.t<flr ~ Olr..,. lb 11'1CV9'18 r1 Wwd M LAPf\il ctn ~·( • UflCf'lle "' ~ ...... Wl•l"VI u f'Mltr Pl\ » J 1 J T ..... kw-.llot..._ ....... 4 0 0 c • 0 0 0 4 1 , ( 4 0 I ( l 0 I I 4 1 1 0 • 0 2 0 l 0. 0 1 0 0 0 ' 0 I I 1 0 0. . , . , .......... - -1•-J TRH llt •I __ , G.,,.,. W'""-1ta1 -lltloil8'1 t I) E-<>tr• ~' O~Ten' 2 L 11"'-t J Te.... , J&-()tt...-1 lf'C••IOfla 0w,.., ~·-~ m w...o m I.KV II "' MRl•MIO Mc()r ... W I 0 7 1 ) I ' 1 0 2 ,_. .. \I II) 0 I I I ) To•' <#ull'NI" L I I I I l 6 ) J J • •Wf!Of\I I 1 ) I I I I 1 u,,...,"-~ ~·"-""1· ~ ~~ co.""' 'tl'lira r~-' J 1' •-10 C 4 ~ . ' . . '" MAJOllt L.9AOU• STANDINGS AIMftc:an u. .... S..ttlt ..,.... KenMt CHv Ml~aote Tutt O.lllend Clllcaeo ~wVOfk l eltlrnor• Botton Clevtiend O.troll MnwallllM TorOlllO W•ST onmaoM W L • 1 , 3 3 3 3 3 l ' t • 1 s •AST OIVI"'°" $ I 3 ;) 3 ;) l J i J , 3 3 3 ~.,,.~ Oeklencl "· ~ 1 Ntw Yorio. 3. Mllweullft 2 C...,elencl I, Detroit 2 S..ttle 4 Mlnnet0t1 1 lot ton 12. Cl\lc990 2 Kensu Cllv 1 Toronto 4 Belllmor• 3, TtkH 2 TtdeV's~ """ .., soo .soo .soo .SOI) .333 IS. .113 .soo 500 SOI) SOI) SOI) SOI) Ga 1 I I I , l 2 , 2 , , , S..ttle IL•noa•on O l> •' ......, (Sleton 1-0) K1nsu Cllv (Lllt>r•ndl 0·0) II Botton IBovd 0-0l Balllmort (BocldlCktr 0 O> •• TOfO<llO IAlexanoer 1 Ol Tuu CCorr.. 0 11 et Mllwau"'" (Learv I 01 Detroit !Ptlrv O· II et Chlceoo IOotson O· ll n Oak lend I ltOo 0·0) ti Mlnntsole IBulc ... r 0 I) II TUt MMY'l G-1 Sealli. cYouno Hll' at 4"991• (Sutton 0 1) 11 Ntw York I Nltkro O·O> e t Clevetan<l !Cendlonl O·O) n Oe1ro11 I Ttrrtlt 1 01 01· Cnlceoo IOav11 0·0), n Oakland IH•u I 01 ~' Mtnnesote ILatrlam O·O> n N1ttonal L .. eue WEST DIVISION Sen Fr nc11co Sen OltllO Hou"on 0.0-S Alle nte C1nc1nna r 'W I. ' 1 • 3 l ) 3 1 '1 EAST OtVISION SI Lou" PhlledelDh·t Ntw Yor~ PllllOurO" Monlr .. I Cnocego 4 I l 2 2 1 2 2 2 J ' ' Sunde V' l Scont Oed9er1 l Sen Frenc;isco 1 PlltlburgPi I ClllC•oo 0 Montreat l St Louil 1 Prtlledt!le>nie 4 New Yoo 2 Atle"11 I . HOUllOfl 1 Sen Oleoo 7, Cincinnati 6 TedllV'l G-emtt 800 600 500 500 A()() 700 Ge I 1 "> I t ) t , I 1 2 ) o..,..n (WtlCll 1·01 at Sen 01eQC> <Tnurmond 1·01 n SI Lou" !Horton 0·01 e t New York (GOOdtn I 0) F'lltsourgh fBlah!ckl O·Ol et P111iedalo11la <Grou O· ll. n Tundtv'l Otmtt Docteen (Honevcutt 0· 1) e t San OltQo ( Sl>Ow O· ll n cnocago IEcller11-. O· I 1 e1 Montreal ( TIOO' I O> Houston IKneooer I 0) e t S•n Fraricl\CO l81ut 0· 11 P111,0ur11n fK.poer O O or P~11eoe1on1e IHudlon l·Ol n Clnc1nnet1 tGulllc1<1on 0 O ar .-.ttenta 1Sm1t11 O·O ,, AMERICAN LEAGUE A's 11, Aneets 7 CALIFORNIA OAKLAlll D Pettis ci Wiifong '1b Jovner lb RJcktn dl'I Oowntno ti RJone' rt O.Cno 30 Burleln u Boone c •b, h Ill 1 t t I ' 0 2 7 • 0 11 • 0 0 0 S I I 0 • 2 ' 0 4 ' 1 ' ' 0 I t 2 I I 0 J 1 I 0 Pn1111os 10 Boe"'' 10 Mur<>'lt ci K'lOmn Cl" M08¥ll rl Ll\lfrd 3B Canloteo II Grttf•n u Ttttleton c ab r II Ill ' 0 I I S I 0 I l 1 0 0 s 1, 0 ' 1 2 t l I 2 1 S I 1 S S 2 I 0 I 1 I 0 Narron c Tttah l4 7 11 7 Tttah Sc-llv lmin9I )5 11 II 10 ~ 000 112 OJI-1 Otlrlend 004 '" 0011-11 Ge,.,,. Winning RBI -Phllllos 111 E-Wlliono Boehle OP-<etffornla 2 0.ktend I LOB-C1llfornle 11, Oa-tan<l 9 2e-oo ... n1no. Wllfon11 HR-<:e,,Hco 121 SB-M 0e¥1s 121, T1111eion !1). R JonH ')) S.-Wlllon11 SF-M 0aYI$, Petits '"' H R ER 8 8 SO Celltarnl• MWlll L.0·1 Brvdt!n Corbett 0.llland A I ·l I I 2 l f 2 0 a l 0 s l 0 3 I I 2 CO<llrotl w, t S ~ t Atherton 1·J O O Ontiveros 1 I l 1 0 JHowttt I 2 I o n o CodlrDll pllclltt<I 10 2 oette" 1n '"' 611'1 WP-<oolrotl, M Will Umpires-Horne Relllv "'"' Coble Second McC .. lle nd. Tt11rd Oen>11n~r T-lJI A-11.677 NATIONAL LEAGUE Ood09n J, Gl•rm 2 SAN FR.AHCISCO LOS AHGELES Gltd<len ct WClark lb COev1s rf MldndO rt Leonaro II Brentv lb Metv1n c RTnotn 7b Y1111bld on U•lbt u Gulden 011 Gerrtllt o Otleun 011 MOevls D Totab tbrlllll '0 1 0 4 0 0 0 1 0 ' 0 2 1 ' 0 l t I 0 , 0 0 0 ) 0 0 I 3 0 t 0 I 0 I 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 t 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Ounc.tn \\ Lenar •cf S•uoos • Cedtonc:. 11 Mer,nat r• Broe• ID Sc1osc1a Se, 1b Ane1t1r lb Her\~•sr p ll 2 1 I Tltfllts Score bv tnnll!O' tb t It Ill A I 0 0 • 0 J 0 I I t 1 0 0 0 0 A 1 I l A 0 I 0 ) 0 i 0 • 0 , 0 J 0 0 0 ) 0 0 0 37 l ' 3 Sen FrtnchCll 000 100 00 I -> LO\ Anoelet 000 100 701 - ) Game Wlnnln11 RBI -StuOO\ I I 1 E-MeMn, SCiO\Cla 1 Urlbt' OP San Frencllco l LOB-~an F'r11nc1sco 6 L , Anoeles 8 18-Lton&rd HR Martna11 1 Stubbs Il l SB Landrteu• 12 Brtnlv I S.• 1 l). Duncan 14) SF Melvin IP H A ER 118 SO Sen Franda<e Garrell' L I I o 1 J M08¥1l 0 0 0 0 LesA ...... t HP"l'llttr W I 7 BK-Garrt111 UMDtrf"\ Home Herv•, F ,,, ~, .. •o S.Co'ld Grt00 Tnird Oav·' T-2S7 A •S•lO c ..... PCAA UC lrvlM 9, cal S ta91 F Ulle<'t9n S IJC 1r .. 1ne 031 073 000--9 10 c~ FullerlOI\ •00 110 It» s 11 , RO<lrlQUtl L lnton f SI 1no Nl<t>ol\nn Helltv. Bu<lttll l l 'l'e mnMe (6) nno Ham W-Linton l S L -t-1a1i.v S J 78-Balne IUCll ) Sten~tlWICl ICSF J8-81tne IUCll HR-Gali.Go UCll MOIA CCSFI "'eclftc· 10 UCLA 12 USC 10 (UCLA \ II S 1r1 Pac 10 ot11v 16· IS overall u'c , • 11 '" Pee 10 19 ?O Q¥e••ill HIGH ICHOOL ITA.NCMHOS ~L"""' W LT Ga S I 1 t ) 0 IV. ) ) I 1 , • 0 ,~ , ' 0 ,~ 1 s 0 ,~ ~V'·~ Edison vs. HuntlntlOll '"'" et Mllit SW.rt Petit 171 w"tmlnstw at Founttln v•v (J '~' OC..11 vi.-11 Mtl'ln.t ()·IS> ftriMy'10- HU11tlnuton 8MCfl •I OcMn View (l.IS) Founltlll Vt lltv "'' EdlMWI ., Mlle Scluer• Parto. (7) ltlllnlaV'I Gel'M Merine V\. Westmlnater el Mlle SOuare Perk m SN V..w LNtue W L T Ga E'1encla • 2 0 Unl.,.tnllv • 2 O SeOctlebeclo. • , 0 Cerone def Mer 3 J o 1 WOO<lbrldo9 J ;) 0 I COii• Mete 2 • 0 2 LltOUN 8ffcil 2 4 0 2 NtwPON Herbor 2 t 0 2 WMlleMflly'1 GetftM Corone def Mer •• ~ ()·IS) NtwllOn Herbor ,., Co... MeM ti Or•noe Cout COlllOt ll IS) WoodbtlOM ..,. Etlt l'Clt et T•Wlnf.le Pari. 17) LellUN hecll •I Unl¥trsltv (3 IS) lf'nc19V's c.- ~k at Unlveolly (3 IS) Corene oet Mer at Le11une 8Mcll (l lSJ E"•ncl• ., Coll• ~ ., TtWll\llle P•rk (7) l'ttwoort titrbor et Woodbrl<IOt 171 Seu1h CoHt LNtiUe W LT oa lrvlnt S 0 0 Min ion Vlelo • 0 0 ltJ Caolttreno Vallev 3 l 0 2V. Oana Hiii' 1 2 0 2\l'J Laguna Hiii' 2 l O J El Toro I 4 0 4 Sen Clemtnte 0 S 0 S WtdrleMMY't G-Ul Irvine et Minion VltlO La11une Hilb al Oena HIMl Sen C1erne<111 et El T0to FrtdtV'I Ga!Nl (l) Laguna Hllll et ,,,.,..,. Caohtreno Valltv •' Et l oro Sen Clement• ., MJUIO,, VltlO Santi Anita SU NOA Y'S RESULTS (13rd .. ff·dH ttlorWtNw..:t met'flllo> FIRST RACE O"t mile Iron Evt's !Kaenell ISIO Ack Ack Heir tP1ntev Jr 1nneren1 Kai tOelal'IOunavtl Time 1 31 7 Al'o Ren Oevill Bri11e<1e Aioma ' Tobin. Seanamer Bflan \ F ¥•1111 Revet, 80111ro Scralcl'lt d None '2 EXACTA t I •1 oe10 U S 10 SECOND RAt:E. 6 lur1on11' Boid Too,i<lt• IOrttQel 74 ?O Powerful EVt'\ (McCarronl Mor\t' Code t01tvere,1 ., .. m. 1 10 3 900 S10 00 360 7 00 Al\O Ran Olemona Curter !'or Jevo1rd Cordon 01,tant F•ee• R1c11ar<1 ' Gotcl\a Cnur 1•"11 E aole TP!t' Outo,f OI Oudlev Btt'"'• Nooie Scratched No~• nflAO RACE t 1 •urit1n11, Pes~anell ($ot•ll )) 00 1100 6 80 cou .. 1 Gt'·Qe• P111<av Jf s 00 l '° l.t' R•ce n Va enzut!lal 3 tO T me I 16 • Al\~ Ra~ le ll1celr Vu•<>"\ Srer. Bold Ba"t' VD Marv n C'l<llt>rtelt' Cerrtuo Ca aOoova SDft<lv vuc..,ran Tne B•ll O<lt' Scrarcr>ed Nonf S2 DAIL y OOUI LE '·O 0•1d uoe '10 00 D•,Dutl•'·td •"d o aced Sc• FOURTH RACE 6 1 ' .. •:or>IJ\ Smori loft' Slt'¥l'"l ) 60 ) 00 140 1\1\ert •n \ Denet'• I~ &ef>tl S 00 3 60 Northern Va1or V& t'nzue•a 1 3 00 T •mt 1 16) Al\O Ran S1e'"''*'O Out' uo 101e T ' f fnaC•OU\ !><•atcnea A,orea• FIFTH RACE 1 r.,riong, De~czone fP1nro. 1400 B lt'OO• I )Oilll L •a Panct'IO '(itlnt'I•• •\\Ott• T•l'T'e 1n1 6 JO S 70 '80 •OO sao Al\O Aan ramilv rol Out.if.Ii T ,,,,i'dO Genera1ua11on M1iJri•v ~1,ct1 Mur,,llu Cara1as ScralChl'd Nonp ~ EXACT A S I oa1d \I II 00 SIXTH ltACE I t 16 mil'\ F'vno l'ro""" McCorrc.nl ISO ~ &C ts Of L t,.. ~nnia.-r. :t• ,., 1 A\01ra1ti rp l"lflh• 'I'm~ 1 ~s, 460 •OO ~00 •10 s 20 A V Ran l•a<I "• l ou Run ROVt llv f ven1n11 Boll My 4 O nr Tw1l•O"I CfOwll Jl>t"" E er'-v ,,,.1;_,.,,_,.,v Dew,, <itt~' fttt11 N ,. SEVENTH RACE AH,,,,.,.,,.c.e S•tve"~ Ba dorv \.~t(4"" r • ~ t\ on t.irf •080 12 80 700 460 360 • 60 s .. ~t'' Croo 0P•4"<JL.\\O~• T,...,~ 1•4 2 A' Ren ""H"• r •au A 1 '" M11 ~f'l L~\ Oar-~,., o S• r.st "~d Norip IS EXACT A 6 s oa 0 unoo EIGHTH RACE I , m1 P\ p,p,.. ,, N'c{a .. ,nl a 60 .... ,,,.. . .,, ,.. P" av Jt f-f"tf f'" ;i" 8fU1p ,. r I '1 l A.,., Qa,, IM'\a"'orato .,, a~( ,.•@fl Prole<-t four\eH \S EXACT•• I •1 oaia l llOO 210 OUT 110 OUT OUT NllllTH RACE. 1 , rn1le\ on lurl Pe~1anrt> 1Mt1a) tJ 70 s •O • io Mor•v I (llamo IV1lenrue111 t A 80 l 80 I ,, "II r.~ne !Marioni a 40 ~ • 7 01 I '"'0 Ran Ra111u n. lnduil India n Sign N<> 0111 B•oou10, Fabulou' Memory Rem [>(< .. •11t• hed uonnv • Hello Bill Rusnad A()()llO ~l.gnt u EXACT A ta ,, C>e•O slOS so u PICK SIX 'I S..J 6 I •> oe1d Sll 436 60 ro 6 w1n111no 11c•ers 16 nofleU \_M\Olat•on P•ck S·• DOid SS9'l 40 to 338 .. IM•f10 't•~ll S 110•,t'\l \I PICK NINE 1 4 ' I S 8 6 I 81 oatd 12 94110 I 10 wonning r.(i.f'l\ 17 ll()r~sl r o"vn .. • ,95 266 •S A.,,., 11an< t SI 001 HIGH SCHOOL VOLLEYBALL Sunset LM9'1t LMllUI W L Ed11on 6 O Fountain Velltv 6 1 Le Quinta S J Ocean "''w • 4 Marlntt ) 4 OWr-11 W L • 1 9 2 6 , Hu1111n111on Beech 1 6 COMMUNITY COLLEGE Weitmlnlter O t ' . s ' 1 10 0 11 Sou"1 CoHt Confe4'enu wec1ntsdlV'• Me~1 111 Orenoe Co.st Ae nch<> S.,,11•(14) Cyl>f'eU Golden Wt\I Cerrito• Fulletton S.ddltlleck Mt S.n Antonio w L Ga Hun11no1on Bffch et Ecdlson 13 O Merine et Oceen View 9 L• Oulnre 11 w~11rnlnt11r a ''*"'' Me~s 111 I Edison '' Fou,,teln Valley l HuntlnolOll Beech t t l • Oulnlt ·-•iM:Z1-.t:"-IF•W'~,,,_~...,., Merine ComP!ol1 0 SM View LMoue L-.ue W l Tu.MeV'l ~ (2:.JOI Comoton et Oranve Coest Goldtn W11 I t I F ullef' IOI\ Rt nchO '-nllaOO ti CVIH't\• Mt S.11 MlonlO el c.trho. ,,.,...,.. o.n-(?:JO) Newoor1 Haroor t O L•oun11 Bf'• tt 1 2 WC>Odbt' ldOt S ) l:1tancte S • Cor01111 dtt ....._, 3 ' U111 .. ett1tv I 1 <..osta Me1.li O I OWrlll WI. 12 0 . , ' . . ' • 1 I 7 s ' Or•l'IOI Co.11 •' Mt Sen Anton'<> ~·t~Wttl Fu!Wlon et ,_,1'(flo ~tleoo C vPf•U 11 Comolon k""9Y'• 0,...,..,. ,_) Ctrrlto. et Or•~ Coesl -·ll(.llO ~lll90 el~ C-tori al FtAerton T u.Me'I'• MtftMI un1vers11v •I Corona Oii Mer () JS) Woodbrldll<t ti C0\11 ~ (J ISi E\llMlt ti H....,_., Herbor 171 Mt S.n Antonio et Cvwn• l . ,,...V', MatcMt 17) (OfON <!el Mer et WOOdOflcloe l.a9u111 &fKll e l l atancle Unlvtr\llY et Cotta Meta Angel, Dodger schedules Aniel8 on radlo J>odCen on racllo DI.PC (710) KABC(790) TueedaJ 15 Cb.aDDel 6 Cbannel 11 Anaelaon TV J>odlenon TV •Denotee TV lfame Friday 11 17 Saturday 11 18 Aprll 14 Seattle 11 ..... 2·05 ....... 11 Ptctra. 7·05 Se.title It ...... 7:3$ ....... al Padres, 7:0S Se.title I I Alie*. 7·35 -CWStn 11 Pldres. 7:0S lwtns II .... 7.35 .....,.. et &<am, 4:40 Twms•t ..-..1 ~ at Braves. 10:20 20 21 22 24 25 Twtns al ..... 12 07 "°9d11r1 11 Bram. 1110 A's at ..... 135 ~ at-Glints, 1 35 A's 11 -..... 735 ~ 11 Glints. 7:35 A's al ..... I.JS OMl«'I at Glints. 12 OS Bum at OMl«'I. 1.35 ..,. 11 Tw111s, 5.35 Braves 11 Dlclrtn. 1 35 •Ml• 11 Twu1s, 5:35 Bram at ~. 7:05 21 30 2 • .._. at lwtM, 11 IS Bt1¥tS 11 0Miws. I 05 Pwata at ~ 7 35 Ml• at TOfonto, 4 35 Ptr1tn at OMiws. 7 3~ A.&• 1t Toronto. 4 35 Cubs al DMrtn. 1 35 Mey 1 ..,. at Toronto. US CubS at Dlclrtn. 135 •-.. 11 Brewen. S·JS Catcts 1t 0Mrtrt. 1.3S a .._. at BrtwttS. I 0'20 Cards It l>Mrft, J OS 4 5 7 8 10 •Ml* II Btewtts. 11~ Cltds II Dlclrtn. 12. 05 .... at Red Soi. 4 JS e ~· at Red Soi, I 0 OS Dlclrtn at <Albs. 11 20 TofOll(O 11 Aftl• 1 JS Dodrtn al Cubs, 11 20 Toronto 11 ~ 1 35 DMl"1 at Cubs 11 20 Btewm at ..... 7 35 0Mrtn at uPoS. 12 35 llttwm al .,... 7"05 0iMrws 1t [Jpos, 10:3S w..mn \at Au11111ta. Ga.1 ,,, Jeck Nlcklau• s 14',000 74· 71 ·69·§} llO Gr99 Normen '70,400 70-72·'8·70 Tom Kite '70.tOO 10· 74·61·68 191 S.¥1 Belle'1erol '31,400 71·61· 12· 10 m Nici.. Price '32,000 79·69·"3 11 J n Hen 127,900 Tom Welton '27,800 ll4 Tommy Nakallm S?l 200 Pevne Stewart s13.?00 Boo Twev S73 200 1IS Mer~ McCumt>er S16,t60 Cor1v Pe¥1n s 16 ~ CeMn Peett s 16,t60 SendY LYie 516,960 Donnie Hammnd S 16.960 -Ber,,llerd Lan11~ i 17.000 Bl'n c.~,naw '12,000 Lerrv Mue l 11 000 Oave Barrs 12 000 Garv Koch S 12,000 111 Funv Zoeller S9.300 Curto' Stranoe ,9,300 2la T c c "'" sa,ooo Roger Maltole Sl,000 m Scon Simoson S6.533 Peter Jacob"'n S6.S3l Biii Glan on S6.533 1'0 Oavld Granam SS,661 Oennv Edwerd' SS,667 Jonnnv Miiier S5,667 ?ti Lannv Wad~ins SA 875 Oen Pol11 SA.175 F'reo Couoiet M,U S Bruce Llelll•t M,175 m Wavne Levi M,300 :m Hubert Green '3 tSO Rick Fehr SJ.ISO Lar•v Nelson '3 ISO e Sam RendOIPfl T onv Sllh '3 ISO Oon Poo~" Sl 400 7'S JOM Ma1>attt¥ '3 200 B•ll Kretrtrt '3 100 t< •n Green '3 000 Jim Tnoroe S2 .100 PM Blackmer S? 700 m L ~ T rt¥onO t7 S00 JOI M&rk O'Meero ,1,300 76·69·11·67 70-7•·cia·71 70-71-71-72 7S·11·69·69 10-13·11-10 16·61·11·11 11·n·11·11 15·11·'9·10 16·70-61·71 73·71·67·7• /4·6'·69· 1S 71-71-74·70 7S·7•·72·6S 10·n·11·6' 69·7•·71·72 73·7l·69-72 7l·H·68·12 69-n·1S·71 7HS·69·73 76·72·67 ,. 7S·7J-61·73 n ,, n 11 1'·12·1•-68 11 ·71·12·76 1'·10-71·69 78-11-73·69 16·10·12·13 12·17·10·12 11·70·6'·7S 73·7'.-67·76 71·7S·73·1• 1S·1•·69-1S 73-73· 11·16 /S·73·72·73 76 73·73·71 71·12·73·12 79-69·12·7S 61·72·76·79 68· 11-74· 76 14·1•·13·11 76·73·1)-76 76·73· 73 17 74·1J·81 13 Jeck Nlckfaus' melon A 11" of J11c1< Nlcllteus' vlctorl" tn oroten1one1 oolf'' melor tournemtnts, with vea r\ won Ma"ers 1963 19.S, 1966 1972 1975, 1986 U S Ooen 1962 1967 1912. 1980 8rlt"h Ooen 1966 1970, 1978 PGA 1963, 1971 1973 1975. 19'0 PGA tournament Cat Hamnburo, 1\111\~) 263 Oen Halldor\On '36,000 ~-67 66 66 us Pou1 A11n11er Ul.600 !>4·69·66·'6 161 Sco11 Hoen '13 600 VO John Adams S9.600 171 Veno Heefner s7 O?S Edue rdo Romero S1 015 ROii Streck S7 O?S Tom B¥rum. 17 O?S 172 GIObv Gll~I SS,000 Garv Marrin. SS,000 R1c11erd Zokot, ss 000 Antonio Ceraa. sS,000 Rocco Mediate. S5.000 173 Brute Flellhtr. SJ.JOO Andv OIHerd, '3,300 Mllo.t West, '3,300 Steve Bowmen, U ,300 Frtnk Conner. S3 • .l00 Brla11 Cleer. '3.300 274 BobbY Cote, S2 • ll Mlkt Donald S2,•ll Tom Ptrnlct , $1,AI' VS Peter Oollerl1uls. S l ,1'l0 Victor R111aledo, l l.730 Ruu cocnren s 1,730 Merk Brool\,, Sl.730 Oannv 8rlQOs, Sl,130 Mlkt Ml .. s. st.no 116 Grto TWlllOl Sl.360 Tom G'"ton st 3'0 Mli..e McCulloullh. SI )60 217 Kermit Zarlev SI 113 DeWitt Weaver, tl,113 AllO*U F'orsornd, s I, laJ ,,. Adrien Slllts Sl,090 INmorl O.ulc I •t Seti Oie90) 271 P11trv S1>et1>an U0.000 27t P411 B•adl•v s 18 500 ,., JoAnn., c .,,,., s 12,000 J11n Steollenson '12 .000 ,.. M Figueras 00111, 16,650 J111111 C.MO..s U 6SO Vttl SklnMr. '6,6SO Otb 1>1c111r<1 l6 6SO ,.. Piii Mtvtr\ U 0$.4 L '""' II 1n~er S4 OS4 Al\Ul<O Hlk.e~. M,OSJ Ave~ o Ot\amo10 M,~ . ., l or• C#er1>au.''3. 107 lull Ink 'ter J) 107 ~Obin Walton Sl. 107 ,.. Ros•• Jent\ s2 t07 Cetnv Mor .. i7 647 Ceroll11tGowtn U 607 ,... Dt" E Ollt4•no '2 .l07 l•hv Klno S2.l07 MlndY Moore $7 .l07 1'° SttDflenle Ferwt0 Sl,9'0 ISKlo.Y PHrson " "° Ketllv Pottttw111, 11 .... Mou lt Mc0-11e SI 9" ~I ARIMWI Fln11tv, t i 7'J7 Oii HteKu tl.'37 Sh9frl Tur,,.,, 11,7l7 5.tndr• ~llCll," 7JP 67 69·65-67 66·69·71-6' t.1 69·70·6S 66·70-61·67 66·69·67·69 6'·65-70-61 6'-68·71·6' 67·1•·66·6S 6'·71-71·66 67·67·69·69 65·66·70-71 69·69·61·67 66· 73·66-6' 70·69·6S·69 61-70-6'·68 66· 70·69·61 68·61-67-70 67 • 72-61·67 69·61·66·7 I 67·69·68·70 ~-7•·61·69 71·61·72·6' 6'·67·61·71 7S-67·6S·61 66·70-69·70 61·66·71·69 69·70-69-61 70·61·61·70 '1(,·77·67·66 70·61·61·11 11-69·66·71 •7·'9·72·69 6'·70-71·61 69 71 61 70 .... " 61 n -10-11-10 71 72·69·71 't 12·74·68 13 71·71·69 69·7S n 69 70 71-71-71 ,. 10 11·11 69 70 74•13 •• 7)-70 ,. 72 10 6' IS 71·76·70·'9 nn1111 10 n n 11 71·74·74·69 n ·n 10n 7l·7•·66·1S lt·T0-76 .. 11 n n 1• " 73 ,. 7• 72·1• 1• 70 72137S70 n n 14 11 n n n n r.HS 1'·6' 7l717671 7l Tl n -n 71-7S·n ·7> 1'1 Suoe McAlll•ttr s I.SOS Bonnie L•uer s I.SOS Jan•I Andtf\On, S 1, SO. Su1le 8trnlno. s I. SO• ,,, Merltne f'IOYd Sl,252 Jentt Cote,, s 1,2S2 Sendra Palmer, S1,2S2 8er;er• Moxnen, S 1,257 Ann ·Merle Palll. s l.2S7 Pen v Hemmel. Sl.2S7 ,.. 0 Mel'1trlln 'I ,010 C J Ce lll,on, SI ,O 10 Barb TllOmes, Sl,009 Sntriev F'ur1on11 ll.009 1') Holli' Stacv '487 _/ / 1<1msn~ .e•r ~-"" n• r>ewn Coe S644 LeAnn Cauedev ~ Lenort Muraolla S6A4 Linde Hunt "4S Oebt>tt Mane .. '~s Clndv Rarick '64S Leure BeUIJ/I. "4S Ketnv Wllltworth. "45 Nancv Scre11ton ~S JO<lv llosentllel "4S Cetnv Kr•lltft "4S 197 Beth Solomon, '371 Oeot>le Aul11n, '311 S Stelnneuer. '371 MB Zlrnmermen. '371 Nencv Ltdbetter. '371 SM!lev Hamlin. '371 Petti Rlu o, '371 Leurl Peterson '311 m Offdff Lesker. '276 Jerllvn Brill. 1776 Clndv Mecktv, 1776 Cindy Hiii, S276 Katnrvn Youn11, s176 )00 M..J Smlln. s7'6 )QI Oeooren Skinner. Ul I Sharon Berrett, S23 I )OJ Krlllt Arrlt10ton. l121 8eth0enltl Jt fle Lock Lauren Howe Jo Ann Wesllem M S-.Cer·Oe¥11n Nt ncv Rubi,, Su .. n T onllln -(_ > . NBA 11·10-H·11 76·72·72 12 77·7•-73·73 n-n·n·H 7S·72·7S·71 72·73·7S·73 71 ·76·72·7• 7S-67·76·7S 74·72·70·77 10·10-15·1' 74·73·73·74 1'1· 14· 73· 7S 75-72·71·76 11·1•·10·19 69·77·76·73 73·7H6·7S 73·7•-76-73 1•·1•·1•·1' 7S·72·7S·7• 72·7•·76·74 72·73:77·7• 73·7S·73·7S 73·73·7HS 71-75·73·77 75-70-74·77 70·7'·73·79 74·7o-72·IO 72·7S·77·73 71:74.71.74 16·72·73·76 16·11·1•·76 73·7•·74·76 7HS·7S·76 70·71·72·77 n -72·76·77 7HS·79·73 7•·73·7S·76 76·72·73·77 71.77.73.77 70-75· 16· 77 10· 16· 11· 77 75-73-11·12 73·1'·77·77 7S·71·/S·ll 76·7'1-WO 76·7'1-WO 77·77-WO 77-77-WO 71·,._WO WO WO (l'lNI) WESTUtN CONF'ERENCE "'•c"'< DMUell W L I l..alten 62 20 w Porllana tO •2 Cllppei-t 32 SO Phoe11lx 32 so Seelllt 31 S1 Golden S1111t lO 52 Mlcrwest OIY1Uell Pct. 1S6 GI "' n 390 lO 390 JO 378 31 366 3? v HOullO,, Sl JI 6n x·Oenver •7 3S S73 • •·Dalles 4t 31 Sl7 I > Uten 41 tO Sl2 9 ~·S1cramen10 31 •5 451 14 • ·Sen An1onlo JS •7 '27 16 EASTERN CONFERENCE A .. nllc: DM1*I I BO\lon • Pllhaoelphla ~ Walnlnoton a New Jtrsev Ntw Yo<'• 67 IS s.. ,. l9 '3 39 '3 23 S9 Cenlrll DMlMill V MllweUk.H 57 2S ll Allenta SO 32 x ·Oetroll '6 36 •·Cnke110 30 S1 Cleveland 29 SJ 1ne11ene 76 S6 x·cllncMcl OlevOH birth 117 659 13 476 ,. •76 ,. *" 69S 610 1 S61 " 366 27 .354 ,. 317 31 v·ctlncM<I dl111,1on title end Plevoff o.rth 1 ·cllnchtd conftftnet 111oe ~.,,. Sctt'fl Oallu 127. Laliltn lat Phoenix 111. ~ 99 Bosio,, 13S, New Jer~v 107 Wuhlno1on te. P111tedt4Plll1 '1 Clevtland IOt, Cnlcego 91 Sen Antonio 123, Portland 111 W..vertdl• 127, LAlren 104 DALLAS (121) -A11ulrrt 3·7 S·6 II, Wenr\IMton 1· 11 1· l IS, Ooneldton 1·2 2·2 t , EQlt 6 12 0·0 13. Har11tr 7-13 0-0 IS, Vincent I· 13 3 6 19, Blackmen 4·6 4·6 11. Devil l·t 0-0 2, Perlo.lns 6· 12 S·S II, S<:hremof S·7 2·3 12. Ble b 2·3 1-2 s. KMllno O· I l ·2 1 Tot•I• S0-91 1•·;)3 127 LAKIERS (104) -LUUl 3·6 1·2 I, Worthv 6·12 3·3 IS. Gudmooel\ton 6·11 3·4 IS, c-3·14 1-2 7, Scott 10-16 l·S 2•, Grttn 3·9 0-0 6, Kuocne1o, J-7 0-0 6, SP"loos 6· IS 2·1 It, Mcc;e. t· 10 O·O t Totals 4'· 101 ••· 1' 10. 5cM9 llv Ov•"'9n Ottlu n JO 41 U-127 l.Akerl 77 24 JO 2)-lOt fhrff•OOlnl QOt ll-Elll•. Ht re>er. Perk!"•· Scott, McGft Foutec:t out-..ont Ret>ounclt-O•tltS '° (Wtnnlnoton IOI. L A 1...aken SI <Gr"" IOI Ant1ts-Oeles l4 !Har.,., 12) L.A Lakerl 2' (COOC>ef' 10) fote l fouts-Ot tles ??, LA Lektrt 27 TtcMlce~.,- Alttndenct 11,SOS ~ 111, aoo.r. " CL~••s '"' -Ceoe ,.,. 3·7 1$, Muwtll •· 11 10-12 II, Nlml)hlul 2·• 0-0 •. JOhnaon 7· 11 • 7 11, Nixon 10-17 1-f 2'. Crou l·t 0-0 2, Whit• 3·6 •·• 10, ECl'#t rdt 0-2 0-0 0, Gordon 0-3 0-0 0, J-1 0-0 0-0 0, V•ltllllnt 1-6 0·0 4 Tolt ll lS·IS 1'·l9 9' ""O•NIX (lit) -GIO\ldlllov ,., 0-2 '· Nenee t· 12 3·• 21, Ade m1 •-• I· I 9, Devis 1 11 M 17, Huml>flrlft 7· 11 2·7 16, Senders S-110·010, Pinckney 6·7 3·6 IS, TOMV 1·4 1-7 3. Veno1 4·9 0-0 •. Tllomll\Oll 4·7 2·2 10. J>lttmen 2•t T·2 S.Totali 51·90 lS-13 Ill S<M't .,., ciu.,,... (llpptrs U 1• 26 JO-" Photnl• ,, • 11 27-111 ThrN·POlnl 1J01tl-Davls. Fouled out-NOM Rtbouncll-1.. A Cll09t'\ SI (Mex well t•I. Photftl• S. (Nen«, Venot 101 .Anl1ts-L A Cll-\ I• (Maxw9". JOfln· ton, NlaOll l >. ~la 37 !Devil 7) Toltl k>uls-t.. A CllPMl'S 21 Ptloenf) '' AlltndellC't 10,117 ~Y9'h ~-ST •OUNO , .......... ,.,., TW'NIY S.11 AllfOlllo et utera Cll~ II lollOll O.•roo •' Alte111e S.Ut rn.nlo et HOVSIOll 'riclt' Wtth•llOlon at Plll~I• Ulall et Dt llt1 New .JerM'I t i Mt1w11uto." l'orll•lld 11 Denver iarwev kll A11tonlo et L.etrtft Detroit et Ati.ntt ~tm.1110 et HO\ltlon hMI• Chicago t i 8 0\lon WHMfljlfon at Phlleclt4onla Portland et Otnvtr Ntw Jt r\tY ti Mllweui..M Uleh ti Oetlu '"" 22 Mllwt UkM ., Ntw Jer .. v Atlenta •I Detroit PlllledelP111• et Wesnlnoton Boston at Clllctoo Denver et Portlend Houston et Stcremtnto AIWI ll Laliltn at Sen AntOlllo Dalles al Utell APl'I 14 (Al temes H -Mtf"V) • ·Pnlledek>flte e l Wuhln11to11 Housion et Sec.ramenlo Denver •I Porllend Aid 2S (Al eemes H -wry) Lalltn t i Sen Antonio x·Phlteoetllfll• at wu111not011 Boston at Cnlce110 Mllwt ukM ti Nt'.., Jerwv Atlante e l Detroit Dallas al Utal'I AP'W 1' (Al tltamft M nteftMrYI S.Cramento at Houston Portlend tt Denver. TBA APl'I 27 (Al N !Ni If lltCtSMrY) Cnlcego a t Bolton San Antoni<> at L.alrtn Ntw JerHv el Mllweukft Wtsnlngton '' Phlladelon1a Detroit al Alltnta IJltll et Ot Mu Lone Bffctt Grand Prix • 1 Mtcnee• Andr•lll. Mercn 16C·Col worlt>, 95, 80 96S. S94,S46 2. Al Unltr Jr Lota T l600·COlworth 9S S74,ll6 l Geoff 8rabllem. Au'1r•ll• Lott T ·l600·Co1worlh 9S SSS 236 4 Tom Sneva Maren l6C Co,worth. t•, 142.Slt S Meno Andrettl Lo<a T ·l600·Cos· worth, 94 MI 976 6 Rooer10 Moreno B•a11 Lo<• T·l600 Cosworth. 93. Ul SJll 1 Jowte Gua, Mea1co Mercn ISC Cosworth, 93. Sll,736 • Jacoues Vllleneu¥e Canecle, Merell '6C·Cosworth. 90 S2S.2ft 9 Johnny Rutl'lerlord Mercn UC Cos worth "· S2• m 10 ltendv Ltwll. Lot• l 8600 Co\worlr> Ill, $24,112 11 Oannv Sutli¥tn Marci\ 86C Col· worth, 16. S?l,760 12 Oomlnk DObton. Merell ISC co, worth, U , S13,936 13 llendv Lenl•r. March kC Cosworth 75, S22.936 1' Jan Lammers, Ho<lend. Ea111e GC86 Co1wor1n, n , s20,976 IS. Arie Luvtndvll., Holl1n<1, LOI• T ·8600-Coswortn. 61. S21,l76. 16. Emerton Flllli>eldl, 8re111, M3rcll 86C ·Coswortn. 39, Sl9,816 11 Kevin Cooan, March l6C Coswortn 32. Sl7.7'6 11. Bobby Rahal, Maren 16C·Coswortll 27, S17.716 . 19 Reul Boes.i. Brull, Lota T ·8600· Cosworth. 2•. Sl7,716 20 !tick Mtefl, Ptnlke PC IS·Cn.vre>MI lllmor. 22 S 17,786 21. Rici. M1M1<1ewlu Maren ISC ·Co1· worth, 14, S9, 110 22 Ed Plmm, March l6C ·Cos worth IJ st 110 DMP'" llsNne DAVEY'S LOCt<IR C...__, ... di) -1'3 anglef's. 5 berrtcudt, SJ bonito, 2 vttlOwtell, .a rocknsn, 2 nallbut. Jl9 cellco be n , 1 lend ben, 2SO meckeret, 21 lllut oercn, 12 whltt'f1"1 HIW~T LANDING -12 t nG!tft 41 w nd l>llH , .a callco ben, II scu!Pln, • rockllsn. 671 meckerel. ,,.,.,. '9uf'Mment sa-.. l"INI Anotrs Jerrvd (Swtdtnl oet Borll &.c•er IWttl G«menvl, 6·7, 6·1, 6·1, 6·4 (JMrvd wlM SIS0,000, 8ecker wl11a \I0,0001 Wln*I'• toumament ~ ...... Steffi Gtef IWffl GtNntnv) oet Cllrlt E¥trt Ltovd IU S.J •·4, 7·S IGret wlnl Sll,000, UOvd wins Sl9,000J LITTLE LIEAGU• 8.'58 8ALL Hewl*1N•fMMI AA W"""' OM.-Plre lei I•, Anoelt t Cardinali 2S, Anotfl IS Plt'aht!J';,~'*"' 17 Cardlfl.\'Tt. , lrtltt 1' An!IM 11, Vt nll"' 6 AA •ea-..ni OM.- Cub1 ll, Dodoert I I OrlOltl 24, TIS>ers lt Cutlt 16, Or~ II Oodoefl >O. TIMI'\ S Cubt 6. lloerl 1 Ood\)tr\ lf. °' loltt 6 AAA Wfftanl ~ A~• , •• ,..,, .. , 10 C..rdlnels t• Yatlkftl 1 Af!OM 12 Ca rdlnels t Ytllkeet •. Plfl fet 1 AAA IU_.,. OMl*I c \lb\ '· Oocloen J """ 17 Ofloltt 1• Cut>t I I Or~ 7 Oocloen I Tl9P1 I Meletl Wtt11n1 OMWll A,,..it S, Plrt ttt 4 Va1*-6, Cerdlnlls J Anoets 6, Ctrd!Mll S v.,.. .... """•'" l ~--a...,,~ t>odW• 1. '"°' J Orlolft 7, T'"'1 6 OrlOle1 12, Cubt S Oo<10trt I), T'°"" J Cubt 13, Tl .. n 1 Aneelt 10, Vanua 1 Dodott'I ,, Or!Oltt , NHL PLAYO,,S OMJkln samfflnalt , ... , ...... ,.,., ~ATIUCK DIVISION NY Re,_.. vt. """• I II W Al>f'll 9-Hew York Renoen 6, Pn~· onle 2 April 11>-PhllaO.IC>hla 2. New York Renoer1 1 APl'll 12-Ntw York Rt noer• s, Pl'llladtl· Piiie 7 AD<ll l)-Plllledt41>t'lle 1 New YO'tl Ranoert I IRel\Otfs evens ...-lft. 1·11 Ao<ll IS-New YorK R•notf'S at Pnli.· detPlll• NY l~ .... Wt~ Aprll 9-Wuhlngton 3. New \'orll l•landers O APfll l~Wt\lllngton S. New Yort lslen<ltfs 2 Aprll 12'-W•Slllnoton l , Ntw York htan<ltfl I IWe Uilnoton wins Mf'lfl. 3-0) ADAMS DIV™<* Hel'ttwd \'I. OWbec Apr11 9-Herlford l. QuellK 2 (ot) Aorll 11>-Herriord •. Queoec I April 11-+ierHord 9. QveC>K J (Hertford '"''"' \lnet, 3-f) ,.,....... ¥\. '"'-' Ao<ll 9-Montreet 3, 80\ton I #,prll 11>-Mo<ilrH I 3. Boston 2 April 12-Montreet •. Benton 3 (MonlrH I wl"' ttrles )·0) NOttRIS DIVIS.ON T tl'ento YI. Clllca9e Aorll 9-Toronlo S. Clllceoo APrll !~Toronto 6, Cnlcaoo • Aorll 12-Toronto 1, Clllc.allO 2 !Toronto "''"' Mrles. l·OJ St.Leul\n.~Mt9 Aorll 9-St Louil 7, MlnneM>te Aorll l~MlnnHOI• 6, SI Louil 2 April 12-SI Louil •, Mlnnetoll 3 April 13-Minnetota 7. St Louis 4 IMIM•tole ev1n' ~rlts, 7·2) Al>f'll IS-St Louis el Mlnnetola SMYTI4£ OIV1S.ON Vencever "" EdrnenMft Aorll 9-Edmorilon 7. V•ncouver l Aortt !~Edmonton S. Vencouvtr I Apr 11--Edmonton S, Vencou¥tr !Edmonton wins ...-1es. 3-0J. Catlerv ..,.. WINilMI Aor f-Cetvarv S, WlnnloeQ l Aorll lo---<etvir'V 6, WIMIDeQ • Aorl• 11-<:atverv 4 Wlnnl11e11 3 1Ce11J.erv w •ns urlts 3·0J ~ • • . " SOFTBALL Senion HUNTINGTON BEACH LEAGUE 8 OMsltn Fountain Vellt11 Amigo• J, Huntlr>11ton Bt11<h 2 Lo' Alemllo' J, Westmln•ter 2 Colt• Me\.o 6. Founteln va11ev Barons t Whlllltr 24, Senta Ane 4 C DMMtll 1n1lne 9, Co''• Mew 4 Et MOlllt 6. FulltrlOll J Seat B'8ch 13. Minion VlelO 12 Huntlnoton Beach 16, Anel\elm t W..trend tramaciklns BASEBALL A"*1un l.-.ue CLEVELAND INOIANS-Acoulred kt¥1n Trudeeu. ottcf\er, from tn. New Vork Yank"' to complete tht <Itel tnet ttnt Mlkt Flscntln, lnflelder. to New York and aulgned him 10 WaterlOo ol 1n. Mldwtt1 Le•out KANSAS CITY ROYALS-Tre<ltd Oavt 1.eeoer, oufflel<lar. to rn. PlttsburlJ/I Plr•l•l lor Ml!Ch McK•t•v, Piicher, end Ondre Ford. outfielder Anl1111ecl Mitch Mcl(tl,.v, ollcl\tr, 10 Fort Mvtn ot tllt Florlde State Lee11ue and Ondra Ford, outfltlder, to Euoen ot the Northwtll Laeoue. Placed Lonni• Smlln, outfle1oer. on 11\e t S·dev dlwl>led h'I Rtcelled Owlllht hvlor. out· ltelder. tr om Omelle of tl'\t A,,.,.,lce11 Auocla11on Ne .... LMeW ST LOUIS CARDINALs--Movecs OtMv Cox ollcl'lef trom the IS-elev dlsaOltd 1111 10 '"' 11 dev dl .. blecl "'' COLLIEG• F'OROHAM-Named Louts k t rn women ' bullttl>llM coecn LAMAR-Named Tom AOeltmerco men l l>t\lltlbd CO.Ch YIMO BASKETBALL Cltv .. Hewl*1 ... di AOUI. T LIAGUH ,.,......,., ( OMllen The TMm SYCR Wtttf Bon 8r .. kers PMI Ma""'lck T~Y's a DMllen a.vwooo &omben PMt Men.,lcll Coueer Llltle O'-' llteft'IC)u• Youtn Pint Drotllen l"t<ltk Mutuat W....._Y'•CC ~ Varmll\ 0 0 .. c J W MllcM!I T OUCfle ltoH l leltfl Tootl W.-....Yt CCC ~ Third Strlfl9 T Ml'Nlfllall Wer Devils OroW91't CSP Coe•tws LM llW a.as CllO\llet TW'Mill¥'"s .. DMl6eo! act:O Dvllat tv C.UldY'1 Foolt Ml'tta It ave l unnv .,, La«~! f[~T,.....,, , 0 , 0 1 I I t 0 , 0 2 1 l I 1 I 1 I I I J 0 I 0 , 2 0 , 0 I 0 1 I 0 J 0 , , , . I 1 I I 0 ' • 1 ' . I I I 1 I 1 1 1 . ' ....... ~~~~~~~~--~----~ .............................................................................. ~------~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-.~----~--- - - Sea Kings' Willard earns Afl-CIF honors Coron.a dcl Mar Hi&b's Michelle Willard, a 6-l seruor, hu beta named to the AlJ..ClF 3-A girls butetbell team after helpina the Sea K.iJw to the co-championship of the Sea 9iew Lea&ue. C~lnt McFenon. FOOftllll .. , Mlc:hele Carter, ~ 6·3 Radii! Norfft, S8ft Gwlel .. 5 Shm Warmua, f!.,...ni.a S-11 Jodi SandOW, Norco s-10 °*1ene ~. lf'M S-5 Marla!Wll Cna, Loullvlle s-10 S""'"8 Flellc:Mkr, ~ootNI S-10 Sf. \U Sr. no So. 2t.6 Sf. 21.1 Jr. lU Sf. l3~ Sr. w sea ·view tearn·s trjr to unscramble ties Willatd averqed t S.8 points per aame for CdM, which was I 3-l in lequc play and tied with Woodbridae for the title. The 3-A PlayCT of the Year is Palmdale's Linda Staley. * fl•l1 T•AM Ptevw, ScMtl Ht. Yr. A,,._ Linda Stalev, Palmdale 5·11 Sr. 23.1 Carrie Eoan, Bree S·I Jr. 11.7 AndrM l(MPP. Loutsvllle 6'-2 Jr. 22.1 Krlatv Oreenberll, W•lnut S·9 Sr. 19.2 MCOllD TllAM Sanctv Utttr'badt, llUv. Pofv S-1 Jiii Matwdl, El Dorado 5-1 Melenle Wllllema, W•tern H Krlaten lf'Uktl, Fontan11 S-1 Ml°"'8 Raid, Miu. VlelO S-10 Jenny a.ul>lt, Alemany S-7 Stllhnt Coont, HH W1l1on S-10 MkMlt WlllN. Cell!\ •· 1 Sut•lt• SeroMnt, Oranoe 6'-1 Krlaten McPNe, 8rM H Lynn Fla""8n, Louttvllle 5·1 \(eel• Potter, Rtv. North S-1 Plaver of YMr, Linda (Palmdale). St. '°" St. 17.0 St. HA Sr. 2U Jr, llA Jr. 1U Jr. 19.7 Jr. 19.9 Ir. IJ.I Jr. 23.7 Jr. 14.0 Jr. lU Sr. 19.7 Sl•lev New star in women's tennis Graf,16.staggers Lloyd tn two sets; Jarryd tops Becker From AP cll1patcbet HlLTON HEAD ISLAND, S.C. - There were two reasons for Steffi Graf to celebrate her victory in the Family Circle Cu~ tennis tournament. Sundays 6-4, 7.5 victory over fa vori t.e Chris Evert Lloyd was the 16. year-old West German's first pr<>- fessional tennis crown. It also marked her first victory over Lloyd in seven attempts. Indeed until Sunday's win on the clay at Harbour Town Racquet Club before a nationwide televtsion au- dience, Grafhad never won a set from Llo_yd. Graf, whose forehand Lloyd called "one of the best if not the best," won the first set after falling behind 3·2 and breaking Lloyd's serve four times. ln the second set, Graf trailed 4-0 before rallying to win five straight games behind her powerful forehand and well·placed passin$ shots. Lloyd was able to tic at 5-5. But Graf. who al?pcarcd more confident with each pomt, held Lloyd scoreless in the next game and then broke her opponent's serve to win the match. Going into the contest, Graf said SOFTBALL -- she was more concerned about having a chance to win than winning. But "after the first set, I had the feeling I couJd win. She was missing some easy errors in the fint set. I was playing well and every!hing was working for me, .. Graf said. Lloyd said she wasn't playing as aggressively as she bad in earlier tournament games and, after building a four game lead, "I felt I let her in a little bit because I was starting to play well in the second set and I let up. "She was lose and she bad nothinJ to lose and she's a very, very to~ player, especially on clay," said Lloyd, the No. 2 player in the world. She added, "Good things come out of bad losses for me. The next time I meet her, I'll be a little bit looser, especially on clay." Janyd earn• $160,000 DALLAS -Ten days ago, Sweden's Anders Jarryd figured he'd at least see the Buick World Cham· pionship Tennis Finals on television m London. Instead, he was crowned champion on Sunday in Dallas after being a last· minute replacement for Ivan Lcndl, whose injury prevented him from defending his tttle. Jarryd, the 12th and wt qualifier, took advantage of a tired and injured Boris Becker to earn the biggest paycheck of his career -Sl 50,000. "I was surprised to be here and then I win the tournament," said Jarryd. Barons face Westminster; Woodbridge, Eagles nieet "It's fantastic." Jarryd overcame limping Wimbledon champion Becker of West Germany, 6.7, 6.1 , 6.1, 6-4. The second·sceded Becker gave a courageous perfonnance on an in- jured leg but couldn't put any power into his usual rocket.fast first serve. "Boris couldn't serve well," said Jarryd. "He couldn't bit the ball hard but he played well from the baseline." It was the second-seeded Becker's third match in 48 hours and he claimed "it wasn't fair." A rested Jarryd, who knocked off top.seeded Mats Wilanderon Fnday, agreed. "It was better for me to have a day off," said Jarryd. "He was tired. But it's happened to me before. Now it was me who got the break with a day off. It was tough for him." UClstops Tltans, 9-5 Senior Tom Baine went 4 for 4 with 3 doubles, a triple, 4 RBT and 2 runs scored to lead UC Irvine to a 9.5 PCAA basebaU win over host Cal State Fullerton Sunday, breaking the Anteaters' three-game losing streak. The win was the Anteaters' first against Fullerton in three outin~. UCI improved to 3·6, 13· I 8·2. while the Titans moved to 5-4, 26.14 overall. Baine improved his batting average to .41 2 (49 hits in 119 at bats). while teammates Mike Sugar and Mike Fay also contributed at the plate with 2- for-5 pcrfonnances. Other Anteaters got in on the offensive effort, as Don Nicholson gained the game·winning RBI and League has 3 tied for baseball lead, 5 others in hunt The Sea View Lcaaue baseball race ends its first round and begins its seoond round this week, but with three teams tied for first and no more th~ two pmes separating all eight entnes, this week's schedule has an attraction in every direction. · Most noteworthy, however, i$ SaddJeback Hip's venture to Uru· versity Friday afternoon with lcatuc- leading 4-2 records going 10to Wednesday's action. Estancia, also 4-2, has a tou&h pair to contend with, first meeting Wood· bridge Wednesday night at TeWinklc: Park, then rctumm$ to the same site Friday evening against rejuventated Costa Mesa. Ocean View and Irvine, mean· while, will be trying to prowet their leads in the Sunset and ·South Coast leagues. OV's Seahawks, S..l-1 in Sunset play, visits second place Marina (4-3) Tuesday aod hosts Huntington Beach Friday. Both are 3:15 p.m. pmes. Irvine, 5-0 in South Coast action, has its bi"est game of the season when it v1s1ts second plac.c Mission Viejo (4-0) Wednesday at 3. Ba.eball Tuesday COLLEGE -U. of San Di.tlo et UC Irvine. 2:30; Pt. Loma •I Souttlern Cal Colleoe, 2:30. COMMUNITY COLLEGE -GolOetl Wat •I Fultel1on, 2:30; Comoton at Of Ml9e Coast, 2:30 HIGH SCHOOL -Edlion "'' Huntlneton e .. c.h al Mlle Sou.re Partl, 7, Ocu n View et Merine, l:15; Westminster et Founleln ValleY, 3·15 W4ICIMsclaV COLLEGE -TIM Muler's el Soutllet-n Cal CQ41eoe • 2:30. HIGH SCHOOL -Corona del Mer et s.ddletlec.ll, 3:15; NtwP«l Harbor n . Coste MeM al Ofenee Coast, 3:15; WoodMldoe vs. Estancia at TeWlnkle Perle, 7; Leoune BMc.11 e t Unlversllv, 3:15; Irvine el Mlu loo Vlelo, l. BlsttoP Amel et Meter Del, 3·15. l'tlUndlY COMMUNITY COLLEGE -Fullerton el GOiden West, 2:30; R•ndlO S.nlle90 11 Or-enge Cotst. 2:30. f'r1clilY COLLEGE -UC lrvlne et Navede·les V8118$, 7. HIGH SCHOOL -Founteln Valle\/ n . Edison al Mlle S-r• Park. 1: Hunlln11ton S.ec:tt et Oce•n View, 3·15, Corona del Mar •I Laoune 8eech, 3:15; Estencle YI . Cott• Mesa •I TeWlnllle Park, 7; NtwPOt1 Har1>or el Wood- t>rldgt, 7; SadclleOeclt el Unlversllv, 3 IS; Legune Hiiis •I lrvlne, l. COAST SEEKS 19THINROW s.twdiY COLLEGE -UC 1tv1ne et Ne¥edll·LM v...-, 7; Souttlern Giii C-.. 1t Cll L..utNrM (~),llOOfl, COMMUNITY GOU.EO~ -c.«llOI e1 ~"'" Coett. llOOll, HIOH $CHOOl -Mlt'IM "'-\IV~-et Miii S4uer'e ft~, 1; Mi* Oel 11 ~ Am9t,' noon. ,..... COl.1-.EGE -UC If'~ at ~.cte·l-91 .,,_s,I. Vollqb&U MlnllaY HIGH SCHOOl -Edltoll et LA Oulllla, , TueldlY HIGH SCHOOL -lrvlne at CUl"r-Vde\I, 7; UnlV4nltv 1t Corona dll MM. 3:15, E.standa at N9w90f1 HW'tlor, 7, Woodbflooe el COiia Meta, l:IS. w ..... y COMMUNITY COLLEGE -Lane 8MCll CC at Go6clen W9't, 7. HIGH ·SCHOOL -Hljtltlnglon 9Mcfl at Fountain V1llev, 7; Marine at~ V\ew, 7; Le Quint• ar w"tmlnJter, 1. ,........, COMMUNITY COLLEGE -W9'1mont at GolOen Wetl, 1. HIGH SCHOOL -lnllne at o-Hlb, 7; Corona llal Mar et Woodlllrldeit, 7; ~ IMecll at E•twidll, 7· Unlvenltv et C:O.ta NIMA, 7; £011411 el Fount.;/n V...,, 7;W9'1m1Mter et Marine, 7; HunllnQlon 8Mdl al LA Quinta, 7. S.M'ClllY HIGH SCHOOL -c-del MM, Fountain Vel19Y et Inglewood Tournament, TBA. Tnck llJJd IJeld ,..,.,,... HIGH SCHOOL -INllll at Oao41 Hilts, ?:A.S; Seddleback et c-o.I Mat. l ; Cotta MeM at Woodbrldoe, 3; Laguna 8Mc:tl et E•t911Cle. 3, Unl...,..lly •• NewPOt'I Harbor, 3; W9'tmlnster II .FOUlll•ll Vallev. 3; EOllOn al Huntllleton htcll, """ 3; ocean View ., ~Ille. 3, Mater o.! •I SI Pau4, l, FrtdllY COMMUNITY COLLEGE -Golden WMI, F u4lerton et SaddtebKk, 2:30. 0.-.ncie Coast, Ml San Antonio et Cwrttos, 2:l0 Saturday COLLEGE -San Dteoo Stall, Oocl.,...., •• , UC Irvine (fltld .-.ent• at It :30, ~'' runn1'n11 .i 1:15). HIGH SCHOOL -Estancle at Valencia lnvlletlonet, t a.m.; Corona del Mar. Estande, Woodbrldoe, Founteln Velll\I, Huntington 8"cll, Meter Del at Tuttln ltellvs, TBA, lrvlne, c- del Mar, Newoort Harbor gl!'h et Of°•nee COuni'Y Chllrnc>lon$hlos (lrvlne HIOll), TBA. Strfmml"I ....... y HIGH SCHOOL -Corona def Mar at ~ e.acn. 3; Elland• •I Unlversllv, 3, Cost• Me.a at ~. l, Woodbrldoe et Nftoort Harl>Or 3; Fountain Vallev at EdllOtl, 3; Mater 0.1 et Cresol. 3, Edison •1 Fountain Vellev < glrsil, 3; Oceen View al HuntlOlllon hec::ll (glrlt ). 3. wutmlntter et Marine tolnsl. l. trrtdllv COLLEGE -~ el GOiden West. 2:30; Orenoe Coa1t at Fullerton, 2:JO HIGH SCHOOL -CCKla Mew at Tustin, 3, Fountain Vallev, Long &Mc.II Whon at Footnllt, ) S.turd9V HIGH SCHOOL -Fountain Vellev at Mlulofl VlelO ln,,,llatlonel, TBA. Te.nnl.a Tlldlsy COLLEGE ("'811) -UC lrvlne at Sen Jow Sle te, 2 SoltbaJJ ~ HIG" ~ -Huntlnllton h9dl .i E~, 3; Mel'IM at ~ View, 31 Foumain VaMeo\I el WastmlMIW, l ; $t. JoMetl'I at Matw Del, l:IS. Weclrl11111Y COt..LEGE -Soutrwn1 Cll CA1111ee a1 LA Verne (~), l . COMMUNITY COLLEGE -bftcM ~ lleoo at OOldM W.t, 3; Ml. s.. Aftllllllo ., OrlNI C-1. 3. HIGH SCHOOL -C-dll Mst et Sad~. 3; WOOdbrldlle .. l!tt.nda, ); ..._, HartMlf ., C:O.t• Mau, 3; ~ 8eadl ., Unlwnltv, 3; INIM at Mission...,..,, :a. llM'MIY COL.LEGE Lovola•M9r'Vmoullt at Soulllern c.i CO!leOe (~). 2. HIGH SCHOOL -MaMr Del at lllholt N\Onltomef v. )' 1 $. P.l'MllrY COMMUNITY COLLECE -Goldltl w.I .. Ml. Sen Antonio, 3; 0renoe c:o.t., Fulllrlon,). HIGH SCHOOL -eor-o.I I#« el ~ ea.di, >; Elfencta at Colla M!IM, 31 ~ el Woodbrlcloe, l; Sa<'r!W>edl at Ulllwnllv, 3; Laeuia Hiiis at lrvlna, 31 Echon 11 F-9NI Valle\/, 3, Huntlnoton Bead\ at oc.il View, l; Wfttmlmter at Marina, l. s.tunlay COLLEGE -SOU!Ntll c.1 C-.. et Aiwe Padflc. (~). I s.twdllY COLLEGE -Or._ C_. n Stanford et RadWood Shora. 10. ....... COLLEGE -0renoe C-1 n_ Gellfiornle at Rldwood snores. 10. Fountain Valley and Westminster high schools remain the only un· beaten teams in the Sunset League softball race and that won't last long as the two meet Tuesday on the Lions' field. Ocean View is off to an ().2 start after a 12-inning setback to Fountain Valley and a 15·inning loss to Edison. ·freshman Chris Gallego hit his sec· ond home run of the year, a two-run shot with two out in the second inning. Winners of 18 straight games, the Orange Coast College baseball team figures to make it 19 Tuesday when the Pirates host Compton, winless in the South Coast Conference. for a 2:30 game. JAMES BIG HIT ATOCC. • • As is the order in the league, the contest will feature two of the area's premier pitchers. The Barons' Patti Taylor, who finished with 17 strikeouts against Ocean View and eight more in a 2-0 win over Marina, will go up against Westminster's Debbie DeJohn. DcJohn threw a three--hitter at Huntington Beach Friday night, and drove in the winning run in the 1-0 decision. Defending ClF 4-A champion Manna { l · l ) will be the next to challenge the Seahawks Tuesday at Ocean View, while Huntington Beach (0-2) faces host &:tison ( l -1 ). All games arc scheduled for 3. Meanwhile, in the Sea View League, the race is gaining steam with a showdown Wednesday between its two unbeaten teams, Woodbridge and Estancia. Both Woodbridge and Estancia arc 6-0 with Wednesday's games set for Estancia at 3. Warriors pitcher Jenny Allard will face the Eagles' Tammi Kane. UC Irvine jumped out to a 4-1 lead after three innings. and scored two runs in the fifth and th.rec more in the sixth to put away the Titans. Fullerton, however, was able to get 11 hits off two UCI pitchers. Doug Linton earned tbe win, pitching 41/J innings of fo11r·hit ball including a run, a walk and four strikeouts. The etTon broke Linton's five- game losing streak. "I had something to prove after Friday," Linton said of his beating Friday by the Titans. Linton wasn't able to get anyone out and gave up SIX earned runs in UCJ's 9-0 loss. l'tBJC ll>Tlt£ PtB.IC ll>TICE PtltUC ll>TICE The Pirates. who boast a 13-0 record in the conference, have padded their lead to four sames followin~ last Saturday's 11 ·3 victory over their nearest pursuer, Rancho Santiago. And the lead could continue to grow this week with games slated against the conference's bottom two teams -Compton (0-13) and Mt. San Antonio (4-9) Thursday. Things may get a bit tou'1ter for Coast on Saturday, when 1t hosts Cenitos at noon. From Bl The best example of James' dis- cipline and command at the plate can be found in his stats from the last 16 games. While hitting all those home runs 10 them, James has struck out just twice. And those two came 10 games apart. And is James as good as Roumimpcr'? Mayne says a com· parision is difficult to make .. "Gene played only sparingly as a freshman and didn't reach bis poten- 11al until hjs sophomore year," Mayne says. "Joey is ahead ofbim in that he is only a freshman. "Another difference is that Gene Nil.IC ll>TICE NIUC NOTICE carried our club last year aJone. Joey has •ottcn a lot of help from the p1tc~na staff." And from the winning envtronment. "Of course it's a lot easier when you're winning." says James. ''Every- one on this club is really close and it's really fun to play." Mayne says all good thin~ must come to an cod and says that James' bubble will burst. but that can't take away a season that is already a career for some players and may be the start of a career for Joey James, just like a certain relief pitcher we know. ACTnlOUS.,...SI STATIONARY ENGINE,, otrH OOIH d• IV n.. .. oet. ....... Ing DIESEL POWERED thedeceaed,youmuttflle )ectlontodllewrlttenobjec-M IOLD AT A WJC offtolal'900t'daOhMtcoun--mctedtob«$17,893.2•. NAiii ITA'n..wl SPECIFICATION NO. S-036. pn pl11lld lln ..... .... ............ You ....., went FLAIL MOWER meeting °' your el1lm with the court °' llont with the court befOfe IALI.. •YOU .-0 AN Et· ty end lhOwfl on the con--The be119flct. Y under Mid The lollowlng '*"°"'ere 81dt must be 1Ybmltted doMI per ..... a.--. to eel .,. ettorMf ....... equal to the apeotllcatlonl preeeot It to the pert0nel the llMrtng. Your appeet-PLANATION 0, THI domlnlum p4en fOf eec:t't unit. Deed of TNlt i..tob'a •- doing bulklW on the fonn euppllad by the ldd8fl -. ,....,.._ _.,. If J9U do not k-.. on Ille In the omc. of Mid repr...,,t1tlw eppolnted by •nee may be In per.on °' by N A T U R E 0 ' T H I The .ireet ~ and ecuted end dellWf'9d to the ROSEA RA~O. 1824 Dlatrlc1a In llOOOfdance wttl'I ........ ,..... ... _.... an.......,, J9U IMJ cell en District. the court wlttlln lour monthl your attorney. "tOCllDtMO AGAINST other common ~ton. underllgnecl • wntten 0.0. l(l""fe1 Court Coeta MeM all pt'OYllionl of thl apeotfl. QUtwa ..._, e un ...... ......., """'91 ..,.-Of Blda 1h1ll be clHrly from the ~te of llrtt le-IF YOU ARE A CREDITOR YOU:i... YOU IHOULD COM-II eny, of IM rMI property Wltlon of o.tlUlt end 0. CA .. ~ · ' cetlona. lftm1ll1.._., ... .,_.,.. • ..... .W oMoe (Meted In merked "DIESEL POW-euenceoflettertuptOYlded °' 1 contingent credltOf of TACT A UWYUlMOTlCa ducrl bed 1bove 11 mencU0tS..anc:t1..m.n RlcNrd J. Menren. 11124 Speclflcetlone, bid blenkl -•WI llla .. 111, ...... tM~boot). EREO FLAIL MOWER 810 In Section 700 of the the decMMd, you must 1111 OF purpo'1edlob«2182 Mepe Notlceofo.feultene.c:tlon Klnglet Cou Coet MeM and further lnlormetlon mey ..__ • un _,.... de Nf-0....-de .,. le -'824" 1dd1'1181ed lo: Allyn Prot>et• Code of C.llfomla. your eta.Im wttll the court Of TIWITU'S IALI Street, Untt II 105, Coate to Sell. The l.Wlderligiled CA ~ete rt, 1 · t>eobtllned at the11>oveecs. -'-de 1•111d11 o • .......,. .... °"8oklll Ju-E. Rowley, Purct\Ulng Ma.,.. The time for nllng clalmt wtll preeeot It to tha per.onal Of'I Mey 1. 1988. It 12:00 ~. c.ltfomla. ceu9ld l8'd Notice of O. John L M*'°'Y, 4445 Sii· dr-: T~l'lone 540-2910 UM oftctN de.,...::!: claW wted tlM'9 1111 pee.ao ager, Huntington Beec h not ~ prior to four repreaen11t1Ye •pPOlnted by o'doetc noon, AMERICAN The Utld9'16g!led Trust• '*"'end Bectlon to Sell to -BOdoe Ad .. Ptll<> Cedro. ()( 982-2411 J:o ... dlreoietto •• DIAi CAL.DID. ANOS u1onl°"51 HIQhkSchoolt p!strlci. ~Jh• from ..... the d•t• of lhe ~ cou~ wldthln fouofrll~thl. VRIECCESON\llNECYANC~ .... SER-~~-ll'!ylleblof ~·~~ ~,_...!ad~~ CA 99013 NTA .1. MOWN. lee· . p1re ~r11en er une c Yor own .. venue, ,_,,ng not ..... aboW. ..om t.... lie ••• a-, .. a v-r ep.-"""'"-"' ....... .., ..,_ • .,,. ,_ ,..,........, ,. George AM t «36 tM8fy lolrdlofDlrecton, c ... No..12122 r11puuta ..,.._I me-Huntington BHc h. CA YOU MAY EXAMINE the .uanoeofletters•provlded pointed T,,___under end liddfNlllnd<>'llercommon located. Mute T•lt ~ 'C"~en c-ttJ ...,..tlon IMetttct. The name end lddreu of .._ tlft .. ._ _.. 92648 end received II °' Ille kept by the court. If you In Section 700 ol th• purtUant to~ of Trust deelgnetlon. If ll'IY· ~ DATED: Apftl 7. 11186 Bey, CA 95711 Publllhed Orange Coat tile court ta: (8 nombfe y UM c:arta o -......... befOfe 2:00 p.m .. April 29. •re 1 per.an lntereeted In Probate Code of c.inomta. executed by Timothy P. herein. A 11 ERIC AN RI • JKti Reid 824 Kl let Dally Piiot Apt'll 14, t9&e dlfecclon de la corte .. ); talaf•ltoe no le .._.. 1988 11 ~lcl'I time and the eet1te, you mey Mrve The time'°' flllng clalma wilt McGuire, • •Ingle man, Said Mia wlH bl mede, but COMVEYAMCa llllWICa8, Count, Colt• t M .... ~A M--05& MUNICIPAL COURT OF pto4ND'll't; -r1111uule place bid• wlll be publldy upQntheexecutorOfadmln-not expire prior to four Kerry Mlctlaal ~. I without ooven.nt ()( --IMC., Al ..... ,....... ., ~ CALIFORNIA, COUNTY Of aeortt.e ................ opened end reed In Bldg. C. 1etr1lor, °' upQn the at-montlls from tile date of thl llngla m111, Kerry MlchMI ~Ill . axpreea or lmplled, r.-,..._ M. C...... ....... Tiiie buetneea 11 con----------ORANGE, Orenga County ou"'f"' ooit IH tor· Rm. 381. tomey '°' the axecutOf or hMrlng notio. 1bov9. Mc:Gun, 1 llrlQle manes. lltto, po11111lon. or d8ftt. m U.. "-ti°""' ducted by: a llmlted l*fn«· P\B.IC fl>TIC£ Harbor Judlclaf Ol1trlcl. 111 e I de de 1 I e 1•t•1 &di bid thalt remeln valid admlnlStretOf, Ind flle with YOU MAY EXA'MINE the Ron Seyeg end trudy Ann encum • to pay tile ................. CA - lhtp __ .. , 4e01 Jambo!W Blvd .• Sufi• 111npl1 d 1 al _.... .,._. '°' a period of 45 d1ya 1ner the court with proof of ..,_ nte kec>t by tile court. If you s.y.g, hulOend Ind wtt. 11 remaining prtncipel eum ot <7!~~.... ...,1 ..... ~ Ric:Nrd J. Mellren IUW!?"-IAL 101, Newpor1 Bellch, Caff. .,. le _. ....-. 1111 tile d1te epeclfled fOf Ille,.. Yloe. 1 written requeet stat· are 1 per90l'I lnt«•ted In )04n1 tenenta, and Aobart R. the notee MCUred by Mid ..-. ..,, --~ Tl'llt ltetement wu flied (CrTACION........, kr tomla 92eeG. c:.o. oelpt of bide, Ing th•t you ~ epec!el the •t1te. you may eer\11 IY91'901'1. 1 llngle men. aecfl Deed Of Trust, with lntereat ~ by: AMERICAN R~ with the County Qertl ol Or-NOTICE TO DEFEC~OPTA al~ The name, fldd....._ and ec _.... ne ........... eu The Board of Trust ... notice of the fttlng of en In-upori thaellecut&r or fldmln-u to an undMded Cl!-. thereon. u ~In U1k1 CONVEYANCE SEAVICES, (AVllO • AcuNdol 1 " " telephone number ol pleln-,......_ • ~,.... lhall betlleeole)Udgeoflhe ventOf'Y•nchp9raiMmentof istr.tor. °' upon the et-lourth lnt.,...t. a11 .. tenent1 notM. actvancea, If any, INC .• 717 Lido Pn Ortlle, = County on Merch 25· FI08ERT W. SHA080L T tiff a 1ttomey, or plelntfff perW el~ r '9 ~ qulllty of equipment ofhlred •tat1 lllMtl °' of the pett--tomey tor tile executor or In common, u TrustOl'I, and un<* tha terme of Mid Deed ~ 8-:11, CA t2M3 9 ,_..1 AND ASSOCIATES. INC., without an 1ttomey, ta: (El .....,eu..oe.to,euclnero andreMMISthenghttor.-UontOflCCOUntamentloned admlnl1tretor, end Ille wl1h recorded O.Cem~r 11, of Trust....., ct\9f90l Ind (714)87~ FRANK KA SALA, RON oombre ... dlrecclon y .. nu--, •• ,.. OOHI d• .. ject lr1Y or Ill bid• Ind to In Section 1200 and !200.5 of the court with proof of -· 1981 .. lnltrvment number ~of the Tn.ea1M llld PubllaMd Orenga eo.t "-'"~~~~ ... ~ TYSON. KA THY TYSON. mero de telefono d•I Pflpllhd alft ..._ .._ wllve lllY lrregu11rtty tner. tlleCalltomla Probet• Code. Vice. 1 written requMt st•t-18831. In book 1'321. pege of the trust• creeted by Aid Delly P11o1 April 1~. 21, 2•. ~, "Y'" DIANE MC KENZIE. 808 1b0gado del demendanto, o ....... per perte de le OOfte. In. AlfoM a MroM, Mo., Ing that you dellra apedal 45 1 of omc..I Aacord1 In the OMd ol Trult. 10< the tNe 14· 21· 1988 M-042 MC KENZIE ANO PETEA del demlndant• que no ........ oer. ........ =·Rowtef,f'urcNa.. A......,. -1'9ttttoMr, notice of the n11ng of M In-offlcl of the County ,. .,,.,ount r .. eonably .. ti-M-059 HELFRICH DOES 1 TO 10 tlence aboQedo, •); LAW ........ ,... .. _.... Intl l'7IO Hert1or ltwd., la.-. wintory and apprlllMmenl of corder of 0...,. ~. ~----------------- 't'OU ARE BEING SUED OFFICES OF C.R. "BUD" ..... ......, a WI ..... Dated: 11 13, t988 Coot. ...... CA -eetlle ueeta or of tile petl-Stete of Celltornla. WlU. BY PLAINTIFF: (A Ud. leeet• MARSH. 1n22 lrvlne Blvd.. .................... ......... Pub11Med Or•nge Cout P\Jblllhed Oronge Cout tlonl ()( ICCOUnla mentioned SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION '1Cll110Ue ..... ..... ,A,.....,,. The lollP#tng pet90M .,. bu91ne19 N! NEWPORT DUNES AUAANT (9) NEW· POAT DUNES SNACK SHOP. t131 Beot kt.,....... S>Of1 BMctt, CA t2980 8"lrtM A. DMn. 2000 PW'IOI\, HO, eo.t.e MeM. CA 82827 Thia butlMN 11 oon- dUC1ed by; en JndMdUel 8'*-A. Deen Thie atat9rMnt .. llled wltl'I tM County Qertl of °'" = County on Merci'! 27, flJIQll Publlet*' ~ COMt Deity Plot Menih 31, Aprt 7, 14. 21. 11MI& M..()44 dem1ndendFOo)RDHAROLD Ste. One, Tuttln CA t2eeO -e ... 1•11•, ,_. Diiiy Ptlot Apt'll 14. 21. 1988 Dally Ptlot April 14, 15. 21. In Section 1200and 1200.5 of TO THE HIGHEST &IOOEA ROGER BIN 714/5'4-1935. ..._ • • ......... Nf-M-457 19~ tlleC&llfomll Probate Code FOR CASH OR CASHIER'S YM ~ ~CAL.IM)Alt DATE: (Fedie) JUN 21 .,..... ell :111111 t 1 e e MT--Oe2 Jenlel fhlbot, AttorMJ, CHECK (payable 11 time Of DAYI -.._ ... !MM 198& UN °"'*'8 ell.,.._...... P\8.IC ll)TIC[ MU Vt. e>pono,........,, •le In llWful money of the le ..,..... 8ft J9U to .. 8 .I. ........-. C--. bJ Co el lllrMt_.. .._ P\BJC ll)TIC( ..._,CA *-I United Stet•) et: The front tJptww1fttlfl ,..,..... •t L8Ute ......., DelMY ,). K ,.,_ Publlll'led Orange Cout eritr1noe of tha 19'# Oftloe Of dlia oowt. ..__eel.. Publlehed ~ CoMt C... No. m11 NOT1CC OF NOTICI °' Dliity Piiot April 14, 15, 2t. Jann M. Coom!M, 717 Udo A...._ er ... -Delly P1tot MtRlh 31. AprM 7, Tho namo and eddl'Oll of OIATH OF IMIATH OF 1Ne Pane Drive,~ e.ct'I, Mt,......,. rou; re:..'r: 14, ~1. 1988 lhe court .. : (El nombre y MOHAMMAD v.-e ROelJtT MICHA.I\. MT-055 California ... right. title and ...,...... ,. .... ,_ M.o3t dlAlocton de 1. corte -~ AND°" NT1T10N llOAN, .. t-.. In,.,.., oon~ to and M '"'81 ..... *"' If JOit MUNICIPAL COURT OF TO AD•llTU • ~ M. llOAH. P\ll.IC ll)TIC( now n.ld by 11 undof Mid ... .._. oourt to Mer)OW ••"' W\ftl"t CALIFORNIA, COUNTY Of HTA'n MO. A•11:1.M1 allo llMWtt • o..d of Truet• In the pt'op- ..... ..--llllUlf\4 OAANGe. Ofenoo counry To .. , helnl. ~. 909 kOAN "91114 arty llltueted In l8'd County If J9U do Mlt • ,_ . Harbor JudlolaT Ol1trlct credltora •nd conUngenl AND°' HflhOti ACnnc>Ue .,..... end •t•l• deocl1bed ao: '"II .... Oft ...... ,......, c..,. •eot Jlmbo!W 9tvd 8ultii eredltora, Ind petaonl whO TO ui••TWR MAim ITATllllNT Pat'Qtl 1 Unit 5 • lflown ....... -. end ,.. (CnA=~ 10'. Newpor1 e..ct;, CA may be othetw'IM lnt ..... ted llTATI NO. IOCXD The IOllOWlng penona -and ca-crtbed on thet oat-...... ......, end ,,... -) 2eeo In the wtll and/Of •tale of, To Ill~ beMflol--. dotno ~ u : Com-ltaln condomlnlium plan ~ WIJ..,., M •• ....... ,~ NOTIC:~~~o EHOAC PTNT: The Nim&, liOc:lreea. end MOHAMMAD YAMIN credttora and oontl"99"t put• BuelnoM Store. 2T90 oorded April 21. 1080 "'I ,..-., ...... hM h AY!tO a A AIN number o1 p1a1n-A petttlon llal be9rl ftlod cndllora, and pertOna -"° 1 Herbot 81\/d,, Co9t• Mela 9oo11 t3581 pege 1reo of ...._ OBERT W, AOBOL T 1 lttomey or plalntttr by ISSA YAMIN In the Su-may be otMniMe lnweeted 1 Cetlf 9~ Qmclal Aeccirc1a of Ofango T"9N .. oehef ..... ,... ANO AS80CtATe$, INC.. an llliomey II: (El '*''°' Court ot Orenge In the IWlll and/Of eet1t1 or. I Kenneth Mttohell, 22130 County C.lomle ..-u11nt9. Y .. _., weM FRANK KASA LA, AON nombre le dll'wcldon'y el 111;-County requeetlno "'81 ISSA ROQER1 MICHA!L SLOAN. Temoo, •U,,.r•ld•.· Call! Percil 2· An undMded .... -........, ...... TYS_?.,N.MCKATl(HEYNZtf'•eoaON,m•ro d• ••l•lono d•I YAMINbelPt>Olnled•per-lltoltnown .. A08eAlM 192608 l/5thlnt ..... (belnQ•116tl'l l -:.:: do .... t.....-OtA..... ~ aboOedO Otl ~ 0 llOl'lal r..-ntatlw to IMS &LOAN. lllo known .. 808 1 Richard H••· 37 t N Interest'* Ufllt) ... tenant • ,,_IMJ ... M MC KfNllf ANO PETER demilndWtto que no mlnlltettN .. t1taoftheO. SLOAN Senldlo St., Orange, Calif. 1ncommonlnlndtol.ot 1 of ....,.., """'91 Mftlae Of HElFA.ICH, DOES 1 to tO eboQlido •): l.AW oadent A potttton n.. .,_, filed 9~ TrlCt No 1084t • t1tMJ1Wn • ..... aid eMOI ( ...... Ill YOU AR! BEING Sue> OFFICU (iC,' A. "llJO" The petition requHtl by MONIKA GAIL SLOAN In Ttltl bu1lneal 11 con· on 1 "'-'.In bOC* 451 P-oae ............. ). 8't'Pl>.INTIR':(AUd ...... MARSH, 1n22 .!MM 91Yc1 .. llUttlOrity to ~ ttie the Supei1of C°"'1 of Or•!dUc1ed by • general pert·138 end 39 of M~ 0..,... ._ .. 1ia -demendendo) l<llTH OU SM One. TusUn, CA t2ta0. •tate under IN lndepen-~ COutlty req..,..nng that net'tlhlp Mac:>1, recorda Of Nld Of- llOTICa .......... _.. ....... ... MOUCHE:L 71') &44-1935. denl AdmlNotnltlon of &. MONIK,4 GAIL SLOAJ<f be, Ks! Mltchell ange County. tOQ9ther with llVtTINO W ......... ..._ •..... Y .. ,_.. • CAUM»Alt DAT!; (,_,,., JUNI 21, t ..... A~ IPl)Olnted • panonal rep-. Th4e ltl*'*'t Wal llled l1111 lmptO'*'*lfa ioc.10d The County Sanitation •• DIM CAUJID""'°9 DA ft ... ... 1M6 A l'tMtlnQ on the petition ,....,,..tl'tl 10 ldn\INatet tM wttl'I the County c... of Of-,....,.,, aoept"'O .._.. oe.tf1ata of Of .. of Of. p•rl p rHHtH •II• .. ..,.,...,•,_ .... 8 4.. ........... ~ '9 Wiii be Mid on APf:\IL 30. ••teofthitdeeeCMnt 8nOO County on Mardi M. fromc:ood<NMl!llmunlta1to arqa ~. ~ wM rnun h _.. • ._ tnN••tt ... 111• 1111 .. • ~ .,..._., 1Mt at t:'4> A.M. In Oapt. Tha petition requ .. te ttM s lndUafW IOollted thereon '·" 1njl ll\t' < A11 ht, \\'f\ I \f't'l"hf\\ n1c-n~• Ill '•or '"""•r<·r rdtt'f And uchc'l h11nun1111r1~11 f)n ')tl'"ll' l.t"l°P mou nllnjl \nd ~ '° < 41n I Afton! 111 (~iftt(' Uf\ ,,,.,,, N<-N · nc: Ir + American Red C1"088 IW09IW ......, '*" untll .-..-.... ....... ... MW\. PubllMd OrWI09 ~ "° 3 at 100 CMc c.nter 111tl'IOl'ttr to actmlnlSt• the ,.... Paro.I a: A non-aca.tw Thurlday, Aprl ~4. 1811 el UM .... • ... ...... A.....,• .......... Ollllr Piiot Apttt f". 14. 2.t, om. WCllt, Senta Ana. CA eetate under tha ~I P\JblloNd ~~ 0-.. ~t ~enarit to 11:00 AM. Bide mwt be,.. ...., ........ .....,. _. ,...._.,.. ,_ ~ n. ftee n102. dent Adm~r•tlon of E .. 1o.11y Piiot Aclf1l 7, f4, 21. 28, .ct\ unn 1or inorw.eorw. ~ .. -Ollilltr'let•' M-p1111allll$ ... flip JI ~ 111111 II .... • M-047 IF YOU 09JECT to the t••AG1 , 1eee UM find enJoymont on and lllllWCratM ~ by tN _... •,............ 111 ......., ..... ..,... • ,.. orenttno °' ttte P9fl"On, you A '*'tncl on tha P9tttton M-04t ovs the oommon .,... ot lot oa• and ttme ~ ••••"' ••" IH ler· ...eh -.t •...,,.. l'tllJC NOl1Cl aflollld either 8'>PM' et .,_ wfll bt t*<I on APAIL 30, l _. tonfl. at wNdl am. ttwy M •II'• d • • I••• I•• -. -. 1'tMt1nQ and.· stMe ~ ._ 19M It 9:30 A.M In Otpt. I "8.JC NQTIC( PlrOel '· , All exelulM .. be~°'**' end ... JI •1 II_......... W ,_ ._ _. -J0W llOftea ~ 0t flll8wnti.n ~ No 3 1t 100 CMc CienW ~t to Mell unit tor ~at tN offtOO of Iha .. le ..,.. ......._ • '11111 n.e • .... ,.. .., .. mwtQ _. tlOM wltl'I tN ~ beb'e OrM WCllt. SaMa Ma. CA YOU AM ... oefAU\ T the UM an<! OCOUC*'IC'f Of Dtltftde, tOM4 Oii A.,. -. .... liM -. ..0 ,_ No\loe la--~ "'-1 tha ~ YfN' mppear-92702. ~ •MID 0/1 TMllT tM 1'99tl'CleG OOfM!On .,... enua, ~ 'Vllitll/. C... Iii .... • ,,_ • ...... ___, _. .C ~ ol TNltlila of Iha **!NY be'" panion °'by If YOU OBJf CT 10 1119 ~DATIO DlCllllH" 1t, • defll'80 II\ tlte oeden.tion ~::O"':~FOA ~;::~r:J~ :'.-""".::-..._.... t~=-l~ ~~7!ACR£MOR lnl~~M=~·~ m.~-: ~:,:~ 9nd~~:=n~ lWl aa !XHAUl'T OA8£1 m0M A • • ._... _.. ....., bMtl lor IUPC>l'r or a oontlnQent Ol'9dt1ot of 1nO Ind llata Yo4ll Ob-YOUR NONMT1, rf lllAY boott 13681, pave l7t3 ot rr.:.:J I ) I 98 Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/ Monday, Aprtl 14. 1988 THE ART OF SELLING IS MADE EASY IN THE DAILY PILOT'S CALL 642-56;7;8~:~~ ~~:~tt~::::=~~:::g:::~:::g::=:======~=~===!!!!!!!l!!=;•~C:;LA=S=S:IF;;IE:D;P;A;:O;:E:;S;.. ;;;.. 1-:;::::;;:;:;;:;;;;;; _ .. _._a11_____ .. .... ,.. ..... 1141 hda•t/Offkt .... Aftw-~ l'Ot M IO flfltNft: 0.Y\ It ,...,.,..., •II M ~ tO o.il -llrNl9d IO N...co .,.._ ... C-.... el I'>,_ ol -- 0.'-"Co --•• C-'-co.tt eno •'"-, .. ~ et lotiilllimi ........... tOl'N ,,.\ ... , I• PLUSH CONDOS wit.... front Hr 2Ba un-•HA DUPLEX. New ·-.,_· IU n I .,~ aw w/Of>N f\lm. t 1eoo1mo. 1 yr a.. Oltl>9t & d,...,.., gw-ee. Nft 08fl*•· trptc, 1'9fflg. 3028 w. Plldflo eoaet HwY Cd OG In M on iana ' w/d hkup. MW decor. AYI 1et, tut + MC M2·1284 ~ .. ~. welk to •ICW9, utile lnOI 1475. , .. Newpoft BMcft, Atfrtg TV Prof. 1Ult•. ltbrety, conf. lneraJ 2112 now 2br 2ba '89&/mo, ON THE WATEAI 4bdnn ~MIO/mo 569-5001 1'IUlllJ ITJ.1111 1125+ wt<egf nocMpoelt. rm, ?Mox. fr• pwtdng, 1br M96 111 mo + S500 · ' 11000/mo. Judy 780-2"5" ebU ·lg 2 atry 4BR 28A MO. 549-24'7 2b&. I~ ewty •-.Jtllll• !!pd ....... • •••• I ----i'iiiiim-hom• Vari bright room Of ~ 8tUdtO full kltotl $400 -H U .... IUll ~21:~;:.:_ ~~t~~ ~38'~'~ :'fs~; ~2:: ":'!'~ t:Gtl ~ ! J !~~ ~~~!.As Gixury 1bd. H;:+ ION. c!!,~~ hM off bctl M50 yrty. $1250. 2 frpkie& 4 petio. 4~2342· ~HERS AVAILABLE Incl NO PETS 545-4855 fully IUm. bMUtlf\11 eon-688 Sq Ft. VIEW SUITE Mllll IUln 540-59M ~v 733-2333 1 4br, 2ba, Fam.Rm, TIUlllT 1114111 2BORM & 28.A a7oo1mo. tamp tty1e, pool, t.,..n1.. Wllf Aec*:Orat• PllP 'l'MUllT TAKE A LOOK :w.=mj~7:2 tan-*FREE CABLE TV. Lg 1Br Refrto. dllwnhr, atov• :':'1ngro"b!~~~: 141-1111 1H/11M111 EncloMcl patio •CX*lll • . ' 28' Gtdn Ap11. POOi Incl. No Pell 54M 465 art for exec. avall 4-15 to OCEAN VIEWS fUll MfWl9 Charming WHtmlnetar 2br d°!:'75home lfyM hm S~ ~ 5 dooralllt'-1 10 1625-M25. 710 W 18th VERSAILLES CONDO ~15 only, 873-0387. eulta. Newport Cent•. w/gar.... mu.t... ..._..,, .. .,..., ut -~ 18drm 3rd Ar S726 110 Newport Center Or 3bf 1¥.ba flp. gatdnr Incl •UMlll* doded. $560/mo + eec. 38A 28A X-lg wl petlo nr 875-4912 Vllta Roif,j.,. SUMMER: LI.IX IUm OOMn-Ste 200 &44-44'2 I•-------• SiOOl mo. 891-4209 Dea4red ., .. 3br 2ba hm depoalt. ~ SC PUaladu#t• P'fd M75 front unit 4 /5br 1-liiiiiiijjil-OoNtt vtew anhence 2br tel trp1e 2 l mud\ mo. S40-2835, $45-1M2 •UITILlff • S1850wk. Red. ra1• till OFFlCE f« rent ac>Pf'OX. I ....... upda1edkl1&garkld9pet ~re uor.'1 k ldt V:C...,:9JI;~~-~~· Small Studio Apt. Eaat-18r Nr Sh0p9lng C«ttar June 15·646-tMS l80 eq ft Harbot and DU~~':&.~ UOO o thera avail 539-81918eetAltyl• ~.gym.Se95~ ll<M. Refrlg, hot plate, 1895No ~8'40-131M SUMMER RENTAL. furn Bak~~~~~ 521 ~tio'n By'~ 53M191 Ag1 coat TWO MASTER BDRMSI 3BR 2ba WESTCLIFF Walk-In clOMt. etc. $400 NEWPORT MARINA APTS Cotti M ... 18' condo mon . ' 873-0241 or S73-1541 lllltN Isla.. Hii 48d 3Be. 2 c..-gar999. 1.,g. yard. nr9P!aoe. ,.W mo + MC. 1MS-59eO *Bay View • 2Br 28e + ~1i· ~_;~1 :'~1 llWfllt llAll lfl. MwV•deS1200«fM carpet trldg S1250 lllffAPTW/YllW Oen. 1!00 Sq Ft. • Channlng5008q.Ft.on C..tl.... 1114 ~",.,:;'~., ,~•: 09t.Julla54&-2313 752-1aeaor~14 ' Vaulted calllng1, prvt Wlhr/dryr hkupa, micro, l t 1t1h t t lrt CoutHwyw/WaterlrtVu. lmlllllll,MI 3:~.,!to.. g':, Dua Ptlat IU CJe9ntt 1171 balcony. redecorated ~~·bo-:"~~~~21~';' 2114 (11')111-1411 54&-36e1 wld. fli>I. · ~Scottie Lux §6( faL 2 etry frPiC 1895 2151 Pacific Ave •ALSO• F to;;( 2 matr bdrmlbatfi OFACES SHARED. Prof'!. BY OWNER 3BA 2ba 87~ or 87 1702 dbl oar-ga. White 'wet.; c-.,, 3bd 2ba a 8 3 1 . 8 1 0 7 pm or 18' Garage Apt. Micro, Apt. In PIMCreell Vlll999, deQorated. neer Faahlon Condo. Patio, 2 ear gw. SOUTH BAY FRONT vtewS2000/mo 731.-8501 atlo low ).d main~ 955-0&85 No pets enot get $920. Sorry, no C.M. Avall 5/1 $400/mo i.land. Reception .,. .. & $105,000. tM-1923 3BR 2bath $2000 yrty. and euc1..:. 498-0500 ' E LUXURY In 1 Pine F«· petl 760--0919 Btwn 8-6 Contaci Mary 751-7835 girl. Furn. or untum. -.lo., other weekly & monthly Ptutala · 911. Lge lbr $580/mo, All 1mantt1.. lncludlng .llltU11D rental all 87l-8700 Vall z1·u Lat• a:: ZllO L~ 2b< $700/mo d/w 3B<1rm, 2B•. new crpt, Beyfront home on Balboa Zerox. Approx. 800 eq. ft. •av !!f ... ,... · • garage & frple. Stapa to llland. Flrtt and lut -Ooean vtew Below Mlct Model perMct. 4er 2a.. MOfe 11Fe hm U35 em . POOi. t:nnit. pet fr • gu/wtr pd, 2 patl<>e, beach Yeatty $1100/mo Avall 5/14. Fem• pref. 14 7 . trplc, trenc:t't door'I. Nw •-•--td "'-~ iu.t...._. kit o k nMt So Coaet Plaza adult•. no pets, year VIII• Rental• 87~912 873 5979 1ft 8·30 pm 17 ) 20-0&48 roof drtww9y pelnt eel-..._ crp ..,__,., com...-.• · · · leaM 846--08&4 • · Office 1 1oga' 11ove 8nd bathe Ptaluala 2117 utll1 pd E-Z terrN call electric. onlyl $525. ' aa1 ••& aay ILH E CM Re9pon F/n-emkr SrMll epaoea Of SflS OOO Call Robl~ 53M191 Agt fM &40-8590 « 835-7001 •EASTSIOE 28r 1'.~Ba. --2bd lba, $275 + MC l '~ rent. Eut 17th St. Futt ' ••Tl Ull• frplc oareoe. S750 1685 STUDIO· 725 Sq Ft Avall • •. • aervtca Groaa ..... Alie Tanctt 831•1298 Lg bachetof Untt. Perteet ••••• ltacla Aprtantt Irvine Ava, 18 720-9422 lmmedl•t•ly. Member• utll. 543-2811 •ft 8prn lot Bin IMWW . I~: i•~ R find tor th• perfect Two bloctC. 2 ocaen 1525 •-•--E/Stoe 381 2a. duplex only 759·14r 0y9 °' Fam 2b< 1'..tba nr bctl S350 •trd Pr.,.ny 1 ..... " li8{. Bactlelof. Only $500. FM 2 br Incl den bltlna ...-Yard d/w W/D 8<42-0202 •ft PfTI mo 'nu111. 511. 720-7827 2'f1I w ITILllllT 111-.... provided kid• d•t•ll• laia.. 2'01 hkup', ~~k:.. ~tv•t•. LARGE 38R 28A DUPLEX ¥tk 989-1292 hm Be1h -------- .. ··-ua1-539-6191 Ag1 COit SIXHouw Prom 8Xvi 2bd quiet. $975 831·3648· with tundeck, ltapl to 3 h occ "°°SQ. Ft. 318 ThZ St. * --•-* * r-* ~yearly $1200/mo Fam, br M . near • L11Q 8c:h NMr Cout Hwy 28' 28e Condo. 111Tnm138r 2Ba, 2 car gar, oc:n w . rriat 44 1950· 97s-9593 evee FURN 2br, frig, micro, 1 ml ' 648--2155 wlpoot/Jac, c9dr petl Se()OJ~ 832-4190 Deed approx 9% Axed Secluded.Fnoclyd Patio, Cd 1BRw/petiO,&/c,pooi. lil~H Ptalanla to bctl. Walk to tnope. 385 113 utll 752-0773, Owner wlll p.y buY9' I frptc, only $1095 F• lee., tennl•. gym, pet llt7 $750/mo, 87S-5735 Newport ~hll Lrg 28R 957-8160 Karyn or 8eY ........ n. UTll. cloalng coets. STEAL It 1l1LflllT 111-Ull ()Uy S850 mo Alie for Fum Studio. Utlls peld ~:o 'ropJ:~,:: Fem quiet baclc bay cond, FREE !TANOING ._ _______ ...,. ______ 1 •_....ic $123,500 &40-8120 °'I Manc552..a92,a57·2121 •ITIPITla.* Prvt, quiet, lg patio. 873.2825 otS53-0'50 1tamk,poolljac:1ten S350 LrgStlowRoom &omc. leaJ llt attftrlalt 1 ttaJ .,.. 67~912Bkr Olualc ~anoe llmol1 RANCHO SAN JOAQUIN Studio + Ml kltctl, utlll S3951mo.1 Adl1only.No •,;aec.lnct.utll IMS-5123 ComerofW•tcilff&INtne _ oceanfront 2br 2b• yr1y Incl. Refrlg, 11ove. Yrty ot pet1. 538--6308/548-8251 LIDO ISLE Furnlln.d 18'. Sign apace •YI on W•cllff 1.11111 1 II FUT Ill& Yllll UIUll I lrplc dlhW9hr & garage COND0-280, 2BA, den, Mo-mo $395/mo FM elac gar ulll• Incl Furn rm •vi now. Reep per-MM 111 IH1t1/C..U. Near Harrod• WlllMllall 48r 3Ba 2 Stoty family S950539.-8191Agtfee ongolfcouraa,avalf4-12, TILDllT lli-aee lllTllTll $625/moyny. 1 P«ton aon.Fullprlvl.20'topool --------or partne<shlp 766-2339 ~~~1~·~1 ~~= ,Ctrtu ••I •u l s13oo. 830•7708• 1735 mo. 2BR. 1·1t~A. No pe1111.11873-083•-: S275+S75 c1ep 8<42-5435 "'-~~c1a1Plz!! J2UAooml Gtatrll 1002 Unfurn Doll HM 28' 28e, *Tll Fii Im• Elllde townhouM. gar., ~ LUXURY CONDO ...,.,., ... _ ..,. _ _. •• --Alklng only S 183, 1 UNIT· 2BR/1ba, garage ale, trplc, micro Vr1y tM Be .. ___ and at the beech. lndry room nice toc.tlon IJ ltl 3bd 2'hb Offloa + Appfoxlmataty 1n Tm! lffRDU _ .... HUI --S7951mo, 719'1t FamlMI s 95 (61""''\"~....,..1 ,..,.,.. 2829 oi A NEAR HOAG HOSPITAL Lady wl r . a. s Ft of ,____. .. W •R LIT 11 · •rv--'"" Cozy Studio-, full kltctl ange va. , w/mlture empl gated 3,500 q. ,.,......., very cholo. "Bayside -Traditional 1va11 4120 Alie 11111t1 .. WOODBRIDGE CONDO S350 '*month. FM TSL MGMT 8<42-1603 2-ttory, 2bd, 11\b• comp nr s c Pl ... to at«age S795/mo ;~ve·~~":'e~n~t T:':i~ L~~~u~~C: Realty S200 (714)621..:J141 FOR RENT 2/bd, 21ba. TELDDT Ill-IMO LOFT APTS . Frpk:, l>M d~~~1m':.'&.k~2:kup, appr9ci1te.831-S..39 DareJWer• ~~~~; ;':;:~,~ e:'t:arbe~ i0 hr.1; 631-7370 i'2::1o1.'~~~9g.~.~ ~::;.r~1~· cereu •tl!lu BU rs!.~i.~ 1~'.1~:; Sunny new 2/bd condo '"l,!l!~!n!:~M~~"" 111•2242 Adult home $653,400 bedroom• & two bath•. $960/mo 760-6941 38R/28X 8f1ght I &:y 8ac:ha4of Apt1. 6-45-6404 guard gated comm, pool. _.. ....., """ T ... _.. p--1 --L11aa• ltacla l4 1 ....... (.:.. ..... .-.... 1 _ ... · etc 644-1395, Ive........ .548 3102 or 8<42-3307 I ti IO. wo .._,.., ....... , or lrri IM4 Character abound• 5 rm _ w ,.,... ..,,...,..... au .... ry 11-. llW ··-. j--=::-------c--~~ at 111 ' enter1alnlng. '369,000. 11 ., hM lrpk: I/yd dbl gar oft 1B hm. F/P, GaWd H,., 2 cM 'gar, refrg, nr ~ H .~ ••R-MI F n-amk lhr new 2BR 640•5580 ANYTIMEI DEA BURTON BMuUful P11k11da 2Br PCH $900 539-6191 walk to t own/bch• $1275/mo 875-6599 S8l51mo. E/alde 28R nr~• ~• 2'"'b• Lag Niguel condo. ira111n RllHTlll 2'~8&. lem rm home Agt coat S7001mo 497-1957 18A. patio. pool, lndry Lrg 3BR 2 ~BA ¥t/vWlw, 21 PoollJac1tennl1 W/O. f'n Comer lot on qui.t dbl .......... $950/MO + $950 MC dap. room CIOM to all ur gar, pool, tennl1, $400• 12utll 240-9038 Dati.1•/Valta Of YOUR propertlea NO cul·d•·H C 1 188.000 C9tta .... 6 tft ARCH SCH HTS 38' 28a 1BR 1ba. Sandc11t1• 149 E. Bay ciOM to bch. $1400/mo E/!TBE &JtilEX. BY CIWnl Obllgat1on by TOP l1M1 Sllam.854-6464 2L 11LR!!J!x,y"'•d,:· view home w/dack1. condo Up1t1lra. A ll TSL MGMT 6-42-1603 TSL MGMT 6'42·1603 1 M/F stir 2BR C.M apt. 28r 1.._ ._.. yd-'~· PA 0 DUCE R Ca 11 ... ... ...... .,_ -petlo & gareoe. Private arn«lltlee. 2 car covd lndry, d/w, near OCC & ..... __,.. ., PATR IC p( TEN 0 RE =:---~---1 1..,.rt ·---L l t age. No pell M50 + . $1190 LM (213)378--89M p.ntl~/1tor-. Avall FIREPLACE-POOL-PATIO llWPllT IEllm air""". $350.. 'h utll, $192,500. (213)430-5 11 63 1 12•"' • -• Credit v r ...... 1950 "A" ...... -S 2.... 8 P ""'' · "" •• --II* ··-.·Ph';'.."' ..,d,, N 1 .... 3br 2b• new dee now. t 191 X·Lo 18r 585 & 28r $675 .... rm 1 •·garage. ool,, 1v111 now. 8<42-4307 ldaitrl .~~~~~. ..,_._ m-,--..-.-.... ·~ • ' • Eattlkle 557-28<41 laundry Water & Olli -Wjpp;;.;,w.-.,. __ .,..,.. ,, • .:,.__ elegant Limo. 773-5471 •PmLY Fii* le11e. 7 U 494-2349 28' 18e w/lndry & pool. IUIP1 OLUll · snr 38r 28a hM Poot, up, 40<) • • •• • • • . 1•1 Buy Fine RE from our w/frpl, OOMn view, S1395 South Of Hwy, clean, brl1a, paid $725/mo 650-8213 NB 1 blk trom sand 1 Fem i030 Ji tlfi llde Yd'. SCRAILETS 38drm. 2 Bath, 2 car gar-(Sun) ot 818 28<4-5265 Avella bl• $885/mo. EJll<M 1sR tBA wl NEW SPACIOUS 380RM 2BA pvt prkng, a111men1$410 ~':'.~r~~~t>Or 81 U lfflllUU 809, pool, all bttln1, yard, ltwprt ltacla 650--8292 or 846-3176 CARPET dthwr bit-In /vtew Neer beach Gar· 111, tast. dep 543-2375 Bkr 8-4(µ152 llYllTORS U I W1TI PllY&ll pet• ok $1200 FM -Cftti .... BM rlo, frplc, In amt ComplaJt age V~lllS 1~ ~v~I N8-2bd, 2ba Apt, avail HOROSCOPES Your trlends & UIOci•t• TILDEIT 111-1111 •SAYI llll'Y* w/pool & BBQ $625 n ow • en • 1 May 1 $500+ ulll RENT.1125 eq n , wllrudl Oceanfront · 3 multiple zoned tote In Carlsbed VI-Level Ready 10 bulld on Ask ing $998.000 wm ln"Y your lltestyte llY· •SHARP W•tlide 28' Studio+ full kitchen, utllt S1M 1Ff 381 Hamllton. 646-9794 87~912 or 754-1792 atrgt/n-strgt QI(, pref 30; ~~ =~~O~~-J: ARE llW Ing In thlt relaxlng 3Bdrm l Ba OuplaJt. Tiie floofa. Incl $400. FM MOVE IN COST STUOIO-S400 Incl utll SPAOllll An 6-46-0194 Cafl 875-5118 L.c•JEI home where orchid• crpts, drp1, w/d hkup, llUlm 111-lllO Lge Cottage Type. 28R ave-7 14-777-3325 o; 1 mile to beectl. 8<42·2357 _N_B ___ M_•_1-ur_e_ld_u_lt-lar_ge_ --------- ,. grow & step• rrom garage $600 +MC Must 18A, pvt patio, w/d hkup, day-213•594 ... 6561. -WEST COSTA MESA 01 TllE Fashion 1111nd Only nd edl N •IAJ YllW• gar No pet1 M75/mo. t•tla Ctllt tire East bluff townhouH , W 16th St 7-151< eq n. (114) 673-4400 Fu. S352,000 (714)759-t501 sta er t ...-o petl Large 18R 18A new TSL MGMT 8<42-1603 Studio prlvacy,beeul gar-W• pool, clubhouM no pe1I SOc/ft.640-700 770-5629. decor. mini blind• 's teps -den, pref mature work'g $400 mo 720-1~4 =-----...,,,---- GW 10 beach M25 Fee 1 •m Fiii 1111 tam n-tmkr $450mo Incl IUTllT II NEWPORT CREST F/prol .. ct.. • rt'~~' ADVICE mfe8tiBJIU TIWllT 111-lllO S5251mo 18R 18A, all Incl utll 646-9240 1 & 2 BR neer So. Cou1 25-35. Namkr 3br 2'hba, 6 ,H ~a1ES --bullt Ina. lndry rm. nr •UNIQUE COMPLEX• Plaza, encl gar .. petlo, view. pool, ape, tennts, -·· ·••D'l w TIWl-U 38r 28e hM, 2 car gar. beach & th09• 1BORM l'lt dbl S59S lndry room & lots of bctl M 25+ut 831-5737 rl Xlnt view S1475t mo 735-741 W 18th St w gar ctoeet apace. COSTA MESA loc. w/off:A PAii£ rlarbor Ridge Ettate 48r. 0.a'9t ftr lt.t 760-8708 ' · TSL MGMT IM2-1So3 28R 18a w/frplc, gar M 95 505 w. Sunflower NICE large muter bdrm In & IPI• Rent• can be JBa, tam rm. highly up-Frplc, vaulted cemng1. dbl 4BR .3BA WATERFRONT 1 & 2 BR apaclout a/c d/w egi~~T~atlo, ~~447 TSL MGMT 642-1803 C.M. houae. Conaldar ra111d Tramandou.a grad ad . forme r gar, poot, •P• No pe11. • • cple ot &Ingle mom M 15 potential. Bkr. 646-2111 mode!Ocean vlew&clty 2Bdrm 2'h 81 $915 2700af Dock $2200. rec room, BBQ, pool. WllFHllOlllll llYlllllW &S125dep 557-4251 light By owner $750,000 2Bdrm: 2'.Aa8a+Oen $925 A;!6-~~~1 <;!'~~5~43 Liz $550-$650 979-1911 Want • .-.ctlon of grMt $710 mo. 2BR 1'~8A, oar . Prof In 30'• pref fem for lui an1 Pluaclal -----Ctrtll ••I .. , 10 _H.,..tffS •H 666 W 18th St 18drm Apt wl b1lcony, IMng? we can ofter any-WIO hkup, euy freeway 1 spec 28R 2b• CdM apt • .,. , .... , Est 1tt Site HUGE LOxORY ouh& n_,.. 6-45-2739 9&4-4163 , ...... 11110/M . pool No pet• $495/mo thing from• tmail apt 10 ecceu, nr So Cit Ptza wflaundry, blk to beech, l aftltant Apprx 40 •c premlum38r28a $3-49000 1~~lnln ~·,,~= 3bd, 2ba. Mm VerdeMtn &cltyllt .. vu.Phue3 __ 648--36 18 a 4 bdrmhouse.lffook. 260t AurOfa CallASAP875-9189 O,,.malty 2tll wineyard land Trees, 3 patios frplca 420 G,old· g 9r8-7893 . Home wl ig llv & fem rm. Harbor Vu Hm• Comm 18r 4-PIJt, bltn1. nu paint. Ing In CM, NB. or HS TSL MGMT 8<42-1603 Prof to •hr new furn 1n.-..1or1 Mrn 21\&1 In vlflW P<>¥tlr weter Ex-enrod/Ownr 494-8100 covered patio, lg fenced pool/ten Agt 6-40-56&4 No pete $495 + dep. think of us nrst for that 1 NB ...... vn f:~,:,•.ona~1111'2:~~~?1~ JumlneCrMk-.-=-2b-r-.2-b-,-4 luCJ .. nt1 1071 ~~.20o0a;~~r. 1 ~c91i lYIJWUllW 716DSh1llm1r ll52-9966 T~L~~~deall~~~1603 •lac.leatall =:i~r.:;.-1550:; ~~~~56·i~~!M~!n 7 O 7 I 9 6 3 5 2 6 6 or den, mint cond tap lo-*IOIAI Y11W* 545-3650• eve Lrg 38 R 38A Twnhae, 2 D p l utll, LO<t 759-7758 707-257-10 l9 •gt cation Owner 760-0473 38r 281, FR. New Hamp-car gar wtextre pkng. ·~ V611:!!ilfield UI tat ..... 27H Resp yng fem to lhr 2 bdr, 111 YM, E•llTY • lit u. "''' y .. Sell V ,., Prtptttrl Can C11111f1H, 642-5678 for information & surprisingly low cost. WR YOUR BlJOOET: ADVERTISE IN THI lhlre home Custom bYllt 3 BR T /Hme Flrac>lc. g.ar-blk to bea<:h W/0 hkup ••• nu IDT 2 ba. ¥tl tame Nr beectl, to lnveat In Income untt• vaulted oelllng1, Jae tub: aoe Comm pOOI S 1000 frplc, S 1700/mo ' F&lllU AP&ITllllT1 & Fum. room .'" CM home all amenltlel $395/mo+ wtthOut mov1f'lg 722-8189 tun .. __._ 2 -· gar.,.... mo yrly Waterlront 114 33rd Up111J,. 2Br, 18e. erM:I kitchen prtv $300 mo 722 1•28 GI .. 1 ___ 14 C~;beech' 831 1-..00 Homes Inc 63f·1400 TSL MGMT 642 1603 Sparkling clMn large apts gar No pet1 $700/mo CM1 g 8<45-2435 MC • ., na ·~ t _. • • tor 1am111ee wtth 1 or 2 3~21 Cheltam Way •C N·amkr lhr 3 BR Condo. "w"'IBO""'~w.....,hM""""""'D"'o~N~EY.,..,.for• Oy9. 498-0491 Wknd• 1.00 Ull&LIW Beautlful ov1Wllzed Condo children Nur park HMt Open Wknd• or by 'awt lg unfum NB rm, cloaa 10 poot, )ac, CM S3751mo + TOI I 10K/up, no credl1V •• ~u. Rt•n Unique Hltee arM cut• 38r 38a pool New etpt•. paid. No pet• 240-1891 Of 661-3208 prtM':i':-'• .. '~ 'ts~· n~ .. ",!tci'I '" utll 722-76-42 Oenlaon AMoc 873-7311 r I I 1 00 decor crptd thru-out lo all bl1ln1 Only S900. Fee 38drm 28ath $795 -• ~. ·~- tr It 1 dep chlld fine •t TIWllT lla.1110 28drm 28ath $730 FANTASTIC VIEW dlraetly MIV«de hm w/poot lacz RMMT to lhr 3br apt Npt Aaana ..... t1 LIDO B1yfront. BHul 539·6191 Agent coat 28drm 1'/•B•th S710 overlook Ing DANA lhr bath. full prlv, F Bch, n-amkr. S250 111 larr 18A 18A, 2 patloa EISIOE nlee 2BR Iba Canalfront 18r yrly $900 398 W. Wilton 831-5563 ~~~NAS8~~R.+ "J't'1~' n/amk $300. 862-2123 lut +dep. 722-0259 Aa.aftatelltatl 1121 N Adult Perk, ellp pou house Small gar Conv Wlttrfrtlt h... 28drm 181 "Cotteoe" • 498-7592 New Condo. INt M, pool The 673•2207·1131•7645 location Avall May 1 831-1400 Reedytogot Prlvatayard -lndry utH lncl prv 5mln 1 .... 1ttO..lffflH •llDAIDl•I* Lttl ltr l&lt 14 S595/mo 751-3898 $625/mo NO PETS Lg 28r 28• upatalrt t bch 1U · ~260 Fot the C<>mpetlble p~ ~ & ' _ Olnlll M Wllll 990-2970 OoNn view Cit to hrt>f o • rn. Roommate. Open a-8 M-F 1etter1. S9IM dey eerW)e VIEW lot In TURTLE EASTSIOE C M CUSTOM Cozy 1 BR Boat dodl Garage Adult• prat'd. Room f« rant In NewpOft 10-4 Sat & Sun 281•5777 evatl RESUME WORKS ROCK CREST, IRVINE BEAUTY· Appnc 1800 eq 1vall $900/mo 875-2332 280. 18.A. 2271 Pomona. $800/mo 8e1-0185 8Mct1 houM. 5 min from l t a t 111-1144 $235,000 tt 38R 21,;b1, fully loaded patio. carport, quiet OCC Full houM prlvl-Ulftl ti CALL 7141766-2339 kitchen tam rm wlfrplc DELUXE, IPllC•OVI 2bd, r*ghbomood M251mo 81at. ltacla . Call 6-42 8637 ~-:------:~:-z dining r,;._, 2'h car gar will !::!n1,::iY turn, wl all No Peta 546-SeoS. ;;Gg 28r 2L End Unit. leQM. • 2'140 LM1 A, .... l.L hcUVit ti con • I der Pet• etc. ocn ·~;3~· 28' 1'A8a, d/w, wl d hkup, Bate, ~r $750 Walk to ltttl1/mettll 2711 hxh._!~~ 1<ftl:s~'if wXNt oUTI 4u exdlange s 1500/mo 494-4873 EXECUTIVES wtly lt•y ~ patio. 300'4 Allmor• 28r bch 8 -17781760-1713 UIWI -&->-5137 call •ft llam preclou• e«tlfed oem• 2 WTllll OISTl IW Hotel wtten lot re.. you ,,_.Ba, "~· d/w, petlo. 3 Bedroom, 2 a.th with - -f(Ol)ADS ARE FREI Cal: lor 1 lot your equity and 28r. 18e Cottage ¥ti ger can have thlt gar.N834 ~~,;7~ flrac>laee, patio, nawty 91111. ttr!f! l1iJ ueu"'!.=.'i&ayrnenta, Incl grdnr $900/mo Anne --Ea. 0 pet• __ .,.. crptd $975. Cell aner Wk~ r.,..t•. Low rat• .,. .,. _ y call 71 30 McCutand 831· 128e EASTBLUFFS tmmac 2BR 1ba(alry epeciou1 6pm (71'4)848-0964 S 1 6 & Up/'Mcly Color r.._ Ill LOOlc toOlaulfledwtlen 38R 2'~ba. W/D. frig. cl••n) ya'rd/patlo' TV, maid servtoe, frM C<>mmwcl•I zone 2 Room YoU'reioottlngloran1weu ··~4 r ·~>· !15001moevs~980 M1tura, •dull• pref. IUWlllYILUIE ::·10~.~ct1·! ~ ~.'ifr::':= ~your app!lan<:e nM<I• , It-._, Harbor Ridge Ocean View! 1686/mo. 87S-488e all 985 N "--~ H t S795/ ~ 4br. 3ba, lam rm, furn. 2BR 1BA Apt. Carpet, WIT...,, ~n• BMd,~5~ 1 Of-..,.:, U2-Nll Eutalde large 28d. 18•. guarded g1te, pool, ten-dr•PM. rafrlg.. ttova. Live wtler• you h•Y9 au 111-111·2H2 yard. garage & lndry t•-n11, M OOO mo 160-8782 .. ICl<>Md tront p.tlo, oar· •Spectacui. aptl ~-___ -•aa. FOUnd Goidlr'I RM F9m mix Btwn Lag 8ctJ l Cor· ON Oal Mar on Cout Hwy Call t1Y 4M-'4& 1 1. dY9 645-5191 Cllltlee $795 238<4 NorM Instantly appeallng 3-4br 999 MOO 432-1197 • 1 a 28'. 1 & 2a. eult• Wkly '9ntall now avtlll. C•ll Shetyl 873-311_1 _ ll'lcis FR Ir~ upgradel 2BR 2ba. pello apt. with •Spectoua t~w $1~.50 wt< & up 2274 Garden Spot E·llde 1bode lhru-out $900 1 gar too at laundry rm Nw paint •A~ Nwpt Blvd, CM 64&-74'6 ASunho\\ Htalt\ appla flyd & Ir• utll• 539-~191 Agt I• cptl, drapea. No pet•' •Prlvat• batcon1 .. or $450 kid• no lut dee> seeo1mo. 64&-7321 Garden patios 539-6190 Beat Riiy tee 3BR ~~~/~a'!ndo & 2 BR Apt1 $&70-$700 ftl ...,, ..... llft -~~~~---~~~~~-,--- I'........ Found-Largtt Fn.ie ctM>O- IUll IPll• view $1491 720-1950 Poot. Several Avallabi. •3 Lighted tannla COUf11 Nu Condos. 2 ml to bch Lg 38drm 2Ba, view King• Cell c.lle l46..e54 1 * 2 Swimming poOle 38r 2•,;s., dbl ger 1450 Rd s15001mo or IM exit •StrMm1 l pond1 eq ft Pet ok. Fnod yrd ot Mii 646-1487 •Sorry, no pet1 Frplc, ape S1 t50 lnttant •FurniehlnQI av9ll lnl C.N 642-M&e LIDO BA YFRONT 950 ,,, .. , .. ,, a.. for ~llnp' Cooking BMut lrg 18R 1b• fum Paid LQe 3Br 28• 2 •tory mobile hm, advl1 part<. a.utlful large apta In Condo Yard. garage 873-2207 831-7645 quiet nalgltbornood WHY NOT CALL $1100 VIiia Rental• -~ Poot Spa No pet• HI 1111 875-4912 LIDO ISLAND· 3BR 28a. 18drrn . M40 • -a _111 new.r. 1paclov1, atry, 151 E. 2 1st St 548-2408 IUWlll YIWll ·~ n; lovely courtyard, avail ~------- 38r, 28a, dbl ger $1100 511. $2000 p/mo Cell 156M HuntJntiton vi,.. mo tnd gerden« Anne Sh.,.on 875-5792 UllA • IPTI ~. from Sen Dtavo McCuland 831• 1298 LIDO ISLE 38A 2b&. e¥ell 18'. fr1g. rangt1, Indy, pool, fo~=-':..~ I (°?':J!t~ta ~~~~~~-:>°'"'°· :r:1·1: a~ 1_Mc_F_adden _____ _ -~-... LID018Ll!HOV8E SAVE up to $2000* • .. u ...... 1 ..... s ... ., .. .. Oft ' •lllth ...... . • Month·to-montti 1lso 1v11l1ble ·furnished/ unfurnished • fitness cenrers. tennis, swimming Modtls optn d11tv. 9 6 Sorry, no pets • 1 ..._ ot.ata b<own lab type, Frt-810f9ge 8peaea Avtlllebta day, Back Bay area De Ana 8eyetde ~ 756--03715 • 300 E. eo..t Hwy, N 6 873-1331 Mon -Fri 9-4pm FOUN0-8mall Fttong Mir· •__,_, ed bttc/orange cet. a ,... • .., Streett of E. 8luft, niur.-ll lalt/lnt dey, 84'-8314 Loet bm & tan Yortl:ltltre la1la•1 Pr.,n,/lalt Tarrier Adame. a.... & 2'111 Lake, on 418 Ana 'Tot>y' -ml!'!~'!"!'"...,~!!"'!"'-•I 150 rftard Ho--0240. ' ... ..,. Nwpt 8ctJ rv Hoeg Hoap4-LOST· Cat b/111./!: ~ !!,!:!!~~rant ~~...,C-:: Tom Lee. aot tM2-1eoa tM0.«177 rewwd II I t faf&rwt __ _ •.. --•a LEASE--380, 38A. 1blk to W ND YILLAGI -H-.,..._ Clut>Ne/bet'I, t1IOO/mo, 2Br 18a, tarntty r<>om Ind f« m«• Info phone A•AHMlllTI wet., USO/mo Anne 71'470-2&&9 DAILY PllOT'T CLASSIFIED PAGES Ntw"6'i'i BHch No llO lmn11 Avenue PWll ............ 11_1_11 QIN Cut ... 2 PRivlfk 6WICd UiYii f YIN m C•nnery VIiiega ArH, Nwpt 8ch home MY h«bot vtew, 1250"350 30~ • ~ ... mo to mo . 87&-43t0 A9fl ~~IS/Hf PRIVATE PARTY RA TE (No Cancellation) -' line, ' time minimum i .60 per fine--Exomple: 4' lines, 5 doyss 1200 • Pl"<e ln\J'tt be included In ad • lloi. °°" t101 oppty tO ~ ot<.OYnh, A~.~ o• II.al ftfell: • NO CANCfllA f~ Olt CHA•OU -· ,.._ ad hot ""' ~ ,. ~ !of t11: Ml-'"' • FOR MORE DfT AILS CAll 6'2-5678 ' llllyPilat l cCaland 831·31 NEWPORT s~· Two R='.l i :.~: 3:9'· J,~ ---· • 11300.A;ten-tOIO NEWER 2bd 114ba. 2 Of/I, NA BACKIAY·2Dd. 11M», b111na, lndry htcupe, Neiw 2 CM 0#. f\'pte, endk. MW crpt, neet & diet\ 9116 pelnt. unfum, Y'tY. .., .. mo"'-+-= 7N45&7 ~ 1. 112.a. 5.,..... SHARP r~ 3M Hwpt....!;!-12bt ~ :;:;' ~den PoOt end -ywd .,,,~ ... -,_ w • .. •••• ft HOt1h•ld• t 1200 Inc k I d • I • I n 0 I .. c • 11 yrd /poot .... 54n04 539-f111 """,.. ,. aw• I Ht ... , Ma.I l•t 16rhl 145--1104 Newpon 81.ch So 1700 lflth Str11tt 1•1 Dovtrl 142..W ~ • 1388 I 5'45 8quenl F- 1817 WE9fCLIFF Nwpt 8ctl 541..&0S2 Ao1 8AY1'110HT BLDO EXECUTIV! 8UIU8 S 1.35' & UP 642-484.4 ... ________________ ......................................................... __ ..... ___________ ~~~~~~~~------ -r ~~·~•I• ~~··=~~~ij~;~;·;·;~~~i~·;r~~=~~~~~~-1·,i~ii~~ WJI' I Ids P'f\ ...... a;::;;;; -fWY ,._IP._. NU,;. mi Nf -• --!!!_ ~ ........ ,,."'-= -.. !-.~~ '°'""'--.'°""*' ll•Pn ------~'~·· n•. lH•••n• :m ... ,. .. ........ ~ • .__ ~:.:; ............. 11111111 .... ,.,_ rvt --· Moo ...... tftatm'HIJ1..CM.f' ···=~·I ,... .... ,_~TM _...__.=-:.:._ ---~ .................. ,,.~ .......... 7:10MM:-.. 14.7, • ,...,.. I ue»mvm..tn .......-·-----,._, •m.a..~.,... ~~.-..11 "'How . ......._ 210 w.....,., M--~----· --:::.~1111~ PIT. ttowa 1·1 o.My. .atW ~~In ow •••L41mll MoCotftllell , OM ..... OM ... Or• •• _:::;.... -... _ ..... ._ """"',.. ......... ~-;.·o::: .;;;;.;.a:.-... _,,,. ~~=;..x•• ....._. . PAlfffiMi IW*IG. ~oa'Jll11 of of. ._. +.,,.. i :aoem eem ......,o llm11Ulll =n •• -=•..:= .............. ~ ••• Of!ACIWON< ::.t::::..~"*' ........... ...._to mo ..... 1.t1i.t;i.l140 forliilieit~-.PIT• -· -r:aopm ~to !IT'!: mriW ~1':4 ~ Ilion '" ow c... .r.: tpm. Tralnli:.:. I• ........... '"· Hfty • OClftllft. M ...... I TY -•••• Day center to Ok* up. ~ 6 ,._., Nwpc a a ·-,.._.._, 0.0.. ~ provtded. Pot.n to PIT 14 ~ ,..,,.., = of Ot'anga Oouflly, --• - aomt nltHl•lrlnda 8oh.,.lllwvoommen ~ :4.-.~""'* ~ ,..,....., ...._ ;:" ~n:.,.e:. W: w/OC. ,,.., 40+ ,...,_ IWl(2tl,...J01t ,_.--.,.. ... on Tto-ft4' W/fltq),tu•1* ~· iii1J/Z' Cit• lent MWr Ind ...... (714)117·2000bttAl1 ...... tMmkr~222 T :::.:" HO-ll.f.f $399 HOUilKUHJl: ....._, lmr& llnl plfoent ~ ,_. ~ offtftd. It 1ntert1teel ,;r EXP fRAV!t AGEHt tlelnM<eUng ~~?!! per .-. MCIPTIONllf.Mlme. phonepanoo111y. T"r9n-~~~~~;,. oell: CTU) CIUl~1• =Pref l~rtln t~ .... ,....,..._. ~T~-= •=-~-=-.-..-.... ,. Otr#t ~ .......... IMnt. Ortho !"P wftf IMt ptO~. -.._,,.,.,, _ _, AC C 11 I 0 "11 I . Olp C. 114.IOD 1-.aa ••Ptf pr.f. Hd Mlf· l.Ntn vaJuab.. omo. n'•TE Fiii • •• 1111 It 131.f040. ,...n. ll90loM. ...at1'7 Clip,.., .... ,. -/11 .I ...,,., ~to•· lie ... WOfil. with nlcll A "°"""---.;"~ fifGiAL"'DAY ~ -,...... C:::..,.W _.. ,....._,._ ......!_ • oell•etc•. C111 now PeGC*t and wn '4.21 11111.ll... ---~ ........... tn --. ...... -....... •• .... T-::z;-;:• .... -.. -omen. ~292 P.,hourtollar'tf~ -.s w. ............. ._ ...... _ _., ...... co oondYct. ~ -... t110 Wk. Ian a.m.nte. • F~. 4:30 to t:teJ. 111 ..... a.IMon-M. nr John Wayne~. 91Udy lot CN ~ UllNTRI .. ,_, ... 41NT2tortt7-7122 • Ptew ct1t Ptln to lllPll•I 23051.COMtHwy,OdM. =-'1~~ :"'~ Coelt~Co. :::-' "'*";.::::-· .. ~OIL 4 ~ _ 1.. lllCPNC .. 4f5.0IOO ment.942-4121.EOE. ... --....----ofo exp, H1-l290, Mr.,._.,,. ~---a clw ... llU UR-ll(wa.~ ~'° -· •• -"" ,.....,. .... ...... .._ _.,_ ...... ....,;,.,...,.; lt_IR..,,. .-. 'C-.;:;. • 1'-.. ' -' • ...., ..... ,,.___ La-fl'IU9C, flO ......... ,.. $299 .oMCltm nee. ~ Pl .. ILL ",.. ....,..., ~·· .......,,.... quired ld..i for ,_. 1illiL A=e/Li 91 bottlood, N.I . 942 'II Equal~ llPPIC8llOI• for FUii otwoe boc*keepar mak.;I, high . MMol ~,. -.. • • ~ WEEKDAYS 2-tpm. CJ1r MllUSIM OUll · ~ ~~ ~lttor ent~per ~~ootlage.....,.. •u,.a*•• T • v:: -~~[5*+ Ta .......... ~ and •••w l'9QUtrtd •••I Ttie -..... T••u•~-•~.... w,. __,,. ....... , ·-vet • ..._.~ • ~....,... Hout.: -· epenr.-, ..., -..._a --NB hOme Tae..1oee. • .. " ~ ·--.. _.,,... ...., .. .. .. mea, .... ptOIC 25+ htt wk Send Mondw· ~ •:aoom Mal f • t parted '**° Olp co. • • Hot10rl & COnwww Phar· Cablllhtd rt1Caurant · I• 'IT l PIT H-.....~ r-.-to Kathy:. erwn co t :cJopm, 8at~rday l'\ttOflaHd ov.,..._: Olp "9111. 92, ClflCll T · , mactea are rt1ooat1ng cNln, '*an~ for (te.OO!tw'). AIJdil 1n oar-· ~ & Al80C 1.aoo e:oo.m to 1:00pm ..,, 21a,....1011 tor leefl A .. 1J-.U1•,n1 nnrw .. wlMn 4111 thltr Main OfftCJt to the .,, tntl'Y 1ew1. i;r:r:1"8 Prcsa:':i'=:=s tor eon to: •~•. e1.,py Von Kennan, 81. MO at •4.00/howr . pt111 ... hiiil Totlf ..._...,.. °' ... ......,,. RiClfXbtiVffXCRIM ~~wea,.::.o1Neiao-::~WOl'tc a4:; Wll'1tl8bfl00D11h 1Hpln =-=.a....,. leech. INlne,CAt2711 ~ PrMlee .. & ~ •d.oet Mle..c.-.:r. Aeea 4-t, ~ oemaa. growtng rQ ~ 1o.«-r ~:f wlll Northern Callf. COK .,...... "•lllH r!:· o~at attire. I ....... } lltf ... ~~ ....._, ~~;;'~ ohaln1a.-1ngAcoount-.,..,, .,, lndMdu.i Who ~-a...o Alie for OIOl'I Exp.'dontytaome ... laftd.. F« .,;:;::: :o=: w iumw=. rm •',--., ... "' ..,,... -... ......... HI Ing P-.ol..W ·hu Mrnlted =a• ..--....,.., .M. ~·-. • cond. dtafttnO t..,,_, -;;;;;;;;Ill!~ appt, .-.--... • · *•toleatn 707-644-7114 I e ,...... _, MOO'· Marano Mon.·'''-at dellke, CINlrl,~Jftff -------.11m;;;;; ....... 1 . oom--1a.uu1,_ Mutt dee>. ttuc1c. 8 4 2, '4.J 3 a b wt n a.r. 44 t .._. ldw/...... 1t • 111:111111 ~WI "u. ~~~ 11111 1111 Dey l night tNfta open. 141-8933*"!._.,...._ tam-apm. JJr after 1 ... '77 ...,. Ani••••f 80\ltMCIHt AMr .. tlon ~ .accounting e.Mf rwna to: • XVOA AW'/~ M "!Cl" ttw\I HouM cleenerel Muet &:80pm at fU..6171. ' I C...lowft,..._, Mllll CenW hM lmmtd open-1no1ucs. ~bllt\el THE JOU Y AOOEA INC HAS SALO OPENINGS ,rtday at Cooo 1' IOO haYe own t111M. HI FV 11115 CHFiY 6-to. ,.... cond, tt~. ~ Inga for teacMn w/Wf) ....... ol 170.2 ~ ,. · • NOW. 8tleCot No, N.8 752•2'01 W ltart M /hr Ml.!.." TEAMtHIX INT'L 9un1Mtal !f•'I· Low -.:... t I :u a:::: WOftdnO w/&-12 yr~ .... general tubllcllary .....,.. .. ,.v. • · _.. . mlee. ..,1 .. IC .._., ~ '1 .. ,. _ Pertamc1Clw2drMr'• ltdgere, pnlparatlon o1 INIM,CA.92714 '5&-'t534 AaataunlntTo()slenloonl englWl.MUe'79 Thandon'•....,lnpell( .... lnd ...... b9ndl ............ for SNl6nt.~ ........ lie. From '4.50-te/Hr. the flnanClal atattmen1.1, 714450-0331. U.WUYYllW Ntld J*llC)lwl8f for .. lneuranoa conttOt. tlM ~ PfWf t171. IB-7171 '7'900 ..... '*· ......._ hnllP 94000 Call 8hafyl HwklnaOn ==~t, PIT8EOAETARY Wll1I ~El~~ ::::::..~~ ft,1 ... ,111111 IJli .... of)Onutlll.1IM«ll ~MMTIJO ...,., .. ...,. .. '"",:.".i"!:!:':"~n-..:.=••"'"t.oo-.,_ =·.... ........ •IEll ... •-·-"""' -i:uf:' w ·::.•,,:a;:; M!!::-1..lf llM ~"'alb etan :,:.~~ --... '~ ~~ = c! m-:01~ Otlmente, CllPElllTlll =.., ~.~ = w_,. ,..--eon-"~~Y-~ ~· 1o ""~ .. .,_._.,, Dlltll new oommfeekln I09le -=:::: 11 'IS·TEI oompMtttYt~ ~ -· __ , I ,_ .. _ -... ---• .._., --Liii -.S Mutt haYe degr9e wtttl lnct "'AaCleP->tt.tloi""n, typing, ~ cen wn mote tl'l.ft -al llJI • lootutlvt plan, .;c ••anc ·:S:.. Mtde WOftt tao. ~ .._.,_ •1ao1. •1-21'11 Tired OI R...f. lacorno a mlnlmuft\5yr~y grapNo _.., lfTlnda l '200 In oommlallon & OOfnPMY benliftta. Celt (8ttcl 2711)( ... # 2948) • Lllll Loan All> R.E. Uc 'd and EDP Hperlence record ktaPlna. Hi'I "-· waoaa ~ ....., ontt 20 lfTER ""1 llllllU 71~13 or~ In ..... Liii -IBMS..~fotvoU~ Salary commen1urate lble.$5/Hr.8'f).7900. eut*r(pt1onu.-.tt·1 " pMaon t-5pm. · 1838 -OfWiciECOA8T ILL''= flltd + Tr~ LA PAZ. wlu.f*, + baNllte PIT SECRETARY PQlllbla to ~ more SCUN\I Wa need In..,...._. in.. Nwpor1 Blvd, CM. Jeep/""*" 1111 A MORTGAGE,. Chuck ••111 ·a-· ~/elmpte than $1000=Hout'I r1'M. dMdualwtth~tlrongcom-EOE M/it ........... ... 11• .. 2624Hart>ot c.a.-. ... (714)no.«>e7 --r ,....,u bkkg. 9·12 hrelwk, .,. flaldt*. 8dlOOf ~ "'* ~WANTED · Mtnl w .,.... .. ••"It '\1• •• u MTG. BANKING Minimum 2 $8. Olht. n-1m kt. ~ aw-JOBS =..:: .=. o:~ CMlt 19 ·'~· ::-: ........ ,,.... -13191 *"°' .... cua. 11 youe~~:P ..,.., =-·1~":' •• f~,~= BA;.e;:;.; ~n~:f.~c~f. EARN :nom:,.•;:l:*'eo: C:°'of'"\:": ~':1p::~~·up~o;:::1'!...8REW P.dwl.., IM-nll deallft9 w/dewtopera, Deta entry •JCP«lanCa PlaHant peraonallty, (114)540-0301 MtH area. Coll•JI• Nawpepaper. !arn 829-S Terminal Way.1 *--·~::·~ 8U8ANJ "71 _. iiQH:. Know11t90a ol FHA/VA, Ind acioounclng clw typing."""°·~ for MOflY degr .. preferred. &-MOO..eoc>l rno fOf P-T C.M.Sun.·Thun.M. Akoond,uwaof,..nn FHLCM and written tor-htlstful. S1l1ry com-front Cleek.~ 751-3112 Ree.ii~.... per'lence Pf'tlfln'ed but ~ "'; tn. 751.,.155, SAT ONLY· 201 Amtu8t IFOAO PU'* ..... a ap. ~Good.,_ t1-. ••d builder commit-maneuret• with tx• PRIZES n 0 t r • q u I , •• d . -am 0 ..,.,ey. REAL CHEAP 8TI.Jf'F a Gd oond w/~ ..... 5Q..at1 rnant JOIN OUR TEAMI per1anca +benefits. llllnllf/-+u 4. Retpon81blllt._ lnotude REAL oooD STUFF I Orm"'-'"" -own.''8UBA="'"AU~"""71=-""'w..,....._-....,,, ~~~ Call (213) 273-0880 for R.E. ofo. PIT. Houn t-1. ..... TRPS ~::::;. 111...,_t ...... OOME a BUY · l700/ob0, M6-7MI 1pd, n.. ••oalllc, eub dMlton Met Keith or Mnd rWM to Good typing, iplllng... .-o0n Plato cfudlng temporary dia. IQI fl...,..latlN fw ... •12&0/ClllO, "44QZ. ,,.. oonatruo1ton io.n.. 1141ao.~81\'d. ~.c.ir151-s1a1 100 ....... ........,. ,,...,... ... ability. permanent die-g;g o:nt rm pc;a • -JlffbOCi;::Eiint&dCI . . Call on Bultdet9 Ind 0. l..oaAngllet. CA 90036 SECRETARY FIT -lleoc:t>CA~ Ml.f M.lf ~rthablllatlon. apt. '"I'· Nooomplmctoo hkup, amlfm-, 111111 ~In So. Ind No. FIT RECEPTIONIST Accurate~ tor W.P., 18res'~~urna ••lf"lr• ~ & ~ blg,thabtgoerthel*t9tt lllts..!!!-11 tllll wNl.lilrMIOO.te0-1- . ooord. withe tiorN For Fut ~ Co. wfll train, Jlilt dlceaphone work for A to -efltl avellabla. If JM'lel ROM M2-H11 f ilbtRIHf rm £Uizi~a=~=!"'!!1 ofb ol one of Ca.. moat Oppty for ,..., 9'1111a, ="'Ind good Hall1M11c ::.°' tn,,,,._. lnter.ted, ptaaee Mnd I'm ~ for HOUSE· ~ '"51ea; 2 per-p; IT ._ ~ltO ~ per.on who ~ exoatl. w/numbara, t-8440. U.S. If have ,:; It you-. tootclng for extra ~to:. WORK ::!')~ son moulded p1ddlt Qncoc; Off atreta:a SubuttlenP.~.BoxH30 :::-lt==·~~: Dolabeck-tO«hoolmeen :~:~r~ancs tnJoy :-'~"'°"::·~ STITEFlll :::.·~·.,.. =r..=~new. :!~°'\:.~.000- A I• m • d •. CA nHdtd Donna A mcntlrneonyourlwldll l*IC*. .. ~ Knon. e.ifY · ilM60,..t41..()13()r.4M ... ,.. ... ~7r.20-~9 .. 180;1 •. nin;w.l. ~~~· :" :.:,-' ~ ~ Farm. or wtn Pnw and llllUIOE .......... KAYAK; <>o.i Seda Ylt-1: ... :;9'1:1 ...... ==---::::1--~~~~;::; • • &:"' ~ ~-::.=-· for an appt. 1 Awatdl., Call us nowt W• a••• ....... ---.... Ing 19/ ft. Auddar. bep. WWW Ybi'b TIP ... ,. . flaW ...... opanlng9 In .... ,_ -~ 1111 ~ pectcll, cs ,.. Alcant 1100oc, ,,.., Ur-. C.M .. H.B. or F.V ............ nae AA 50'.WI S550 714/9M-14M .. tic, Mtde tic, •1200. ForP•• ....... • • • • Dally Piiot motor route available In Huntington Harbor area. 1-2 hours per afternoon . MOTOR ROUTE 942-4333 Equal~ ~a='~C ......... n11, ......... Merc 11m=. Apt Menager couple Emptoyoer ~ • 176.. H'LYllll L• ....... ltR TopMaroadllPltlmflllld : Available In Irvine area. $300 to $600. No collect- Ing. 3-4 hours a day. Mon. thru Friday afternoon. Sat. & Sun. morning. Call 642-4333, ask for Kirk. ~~o:den~c: INTERIOR PlANTIICAPE Must ... l l4M12:3 Haw .-int. new cover.llM'JI......... CAU.~otMY Saiary+bonua+Apt. NO TECH: P/TlmeloFIUme. Uprtght freeqf, SW. _,,.Teak.8n.3834 I LOADE>WfTH!XTRAI -••&ii • • • • • • • • • • 1)9taM2-4914M•M Exper. pref. w.-• Coldapo1, rune food ... _,_/ .. 1750 831'-37M .W 1011 Actenllon atudantal gH ::t~ aicpar, Fem !!:·S:,~~-Mtde 'f1 4'cW, lllp, flrwc'g JUST OFF THE iOAT 2tlorTt4t11.aaa Call 842-4333; Monday - Friday 10-5 P.M . Ask for Art . atatlon ltandant.. Earn grt lv+brd. AHXIOUS. • 'It Rabtlft eon.... TC1'f '12 CiiCi9 GT. I llPCl. M-$8/hr pit, call Steve 'lfttm hnJtut iiif Try l35K M0-7417 All wMe. 8allt oftlr 2IK ml • ...,..._ .. 2:3()..Spm, 646-5780. FOf ta .,.. ~ C.M. 'IM PAllW Brand,.. EWwucte 4 hp l 758-1810 or 952.,.135 ... '7IOO. 141 t4IO Utm/Mll•ll ~·-=?Pd: LES M7-e133 UH wlgu tent&. ALFA Romeo 'M OlVI. wcn Seta. Nwpt Hrt>r ,11-:1, 642..=· e1~1<&:Mwt1. Doug/Din 1 An1twa. tan...._, Ml Animal H01p 125 MMa · • 5 PC. blue Wtblal aofa. ....,.... roof, a/CJ, oo.' . .,.,_ • ORANGE COAST • • • • • Oreng• Coaat Delly Piiot 330 W. Bar Drive llllyPllll 330 W . Bay St. Or. CM A(Jflty. btwn 9-3 •••.l!!!fT • =. ~~~: 24' Sklptaclt 11~~1 ~ twa j :~~.~ :m ~: Ctwtetlan church a.mp .,,.... Contwnp din rtct twtn eng wltrtr. Mint cond. 95CM>121.,.., lpm. nead• FIT dllhwMharllth la eoceptlng epplcatlone aAMa t · w/4 ~ ctws: ~ IWI.. * 1UOO. · iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil hatp/jentt, rm & bOerd for a Part-time Oat1wry Dbl~ /Mbrd 4ft oek 142 119910 831-t451/E l.AABE 8ELECTlON Of Incl, localed wt of S. J. penon, Full-time Pl1cer ctl89l m: 7ft ..itflton. l:ii L:&: fll.t HEW l U8ED 8MWSI C..,iet Lay W Randi Ind • Futf.CJrna Stodl · ..... ..... .. 714n2S..0141 Mike Per.on. p._ liPC)ly It eofa w/Of!IK. trim. M6ac. 4i fl CF· t4 iail1 Lm---225 E. 17ttl SC., CM . 85Q-.f123 days I..,. Loran/OmnlNHF Alif9r1 VOLUME 8Al.EI -------Exctnt qualty WNppec:I AC/DC, bett. otig.'. etpa 9: 8EAVIOE & l.IA8eHO PUfllll• m bemboo 2 place lo'l9 wt reedy to race or c:Nle 3170 N. a..y A• Prtvattechool, 2-tprn, & chair, zippered 'wl tiA ~ Mllllntum LOHO RAtH 536-1441. al9hlonl 1150. 551-2457 F1lcon. '78,500. PP (No. Charry~) Costa Mesa, CA PIT PHOTO LAB 1-HR King Slit ··••rbtd, (771~7430-3) •17803 Wkdy9 or t11•llll-ITll ·~-====--QtW Cut l!MJ!!!! Ntld• eu.tomar Setvtce heat• hatdbOerd com-( : .. -3 1 0 7 ~,..... wii= a r • 11 Mom wlti l);bYiit your Camera SalHptreon, fort•' $200 ot>o.' Jade Ev/Wknda. Wiit Co-Op OP£H SEVEN DAYS c:hlld In my Newport.,.,,_ **HANDYMAN** TEACt1ERS PAINT photo bedcground help-~19 aft 8pnl w/Bn* .. $2A0perday That'a ALL you P11Y for 3 Nnaa, 30 day minimum lntha SERVICE DIRECTORY CALL TOOAYll Ul .. 1.111 lneul• home Mon -Fri Large or ernall. I do " alll FUU SERV. GAAOEHINO CONTRACTOR .. bee*. fl.II, 84&-2424. --.,,,=E.RICSON""'==--33-------~--1 876-7095 ' . Pit 531-5579 or lv9 m19. No Job 2 ~or 2 lmall FrM eetlmat•. MM519 Pubic Ntatlone ...iatant ~: ":,·=:,i,.:•nrn: race/CNlet '92. Vrucom-. Fr .. alt. 64-3072 _ ____, p _,__ Clu _..._ ....__....... out Cl= •--t~ YOU BUY • I INSTALL ' = ·-It r ..... _ b Mtdlterraneen head _ ......... -U•UI • .aTIR Lt Elee LC PlumblnG Complete ctaan-up, gen'I 1 In ~ BMCt1 Par1 or nna etanda & dt....i ~loaded, feat, e1e1pa § ctEXNINd Gar.' 0pn;., WL 54M4e.. malnt, tr .. trtmtna. tree ~Nd INYEfiloR8 full time. Muet be 21 or S150 e.oao 964-9t05 ~7•2o'KB., allpb . Sac. ~K SERVICE: a throoughly alt. Mauro, "2·90'73 HANGING/STRIPPING owr. Mk tor Pemela • alow coat· c:1Mn houM. 540-0857 PROF RESIO'L SERVICES VISA-MC 873-1512 aft• 1pm 950-5029 Beeutlful oak dlnlnQ .... 8 18/840-0300 e.it Welt. for•your home 11ueuy cent back cn1lrt. HOBIE 8 CLEAN-SPARKLE CLEAN repe1t nteda. 942·7990 mra &1C1Wo.ii, ~~:..=L~CO=: llllllTY•AI• $1900/obo. 720-1704 S"9/~. · ~~~·~~[.: Thorough, reapon!llbte, •-concrete r.-. ... ~ Int Pal 1...,, ....... ,..13 Sat/Sun. Swing and Npt Bdl btl'9 tramp. ar.i buyt carlng,refa.497·1810 .. 15 yrae,(p.,":"'~-· · n "._.,__ graveyard poalC1on1 Soltdwoodklnglblawetar Daiper .... 831-7534 HOUMdeanlnQ 14 Y'S exp. LT HAULING • MOVING ...... '111 llTI" open. 839-1410 bed beaut1tu1 hdbtd & I rallabta,rw,lreaalt,own Gar.ge& YwdClnupe ~~atloa~~& DEPENDABLE QUALITY UlllJTYIUln dra;_,era undarnHth, ..... ,D:I .... ti trena. Pina 145-98te Della Jon 145-4192 Orywlll p~ 842-3238 Wortcmenahlp. 842-t813 Now hiring for FUii Ind d......, wtttl mlrror,nlte 11 KAY'S CLEANING SERV. Comm'I o.v. Corp. Grade-Cult~ Bndl-Scone Wt gala lhd hang tog7ethe; Patt-time pcialtjona. Muet :~ S::.o ~~ tr DONZJ. new 380 a;; ~. SJ*llallat. lne'd, haul-Wd. Gen comrect« Hang/ltrtp. MMoa to thf t1aW Guard Cerd. AW'/ $250' 2 eolld wood ber w/Votvo outdttlle. new Bonded, lie. 818-5703 reu. reta 14&--4831 ~F~:;t':: CtVJ. 83$-0730 lnpar90n, 15558o.eo..t etooi9S150. 857-8180 ~. trlller, ldrlt ~tll9,8-Sttll8 ~ii~~1;;: celitraeten •CONST. CLEAN-UP• Pl--U--_!iWY._LaQuna Bwh. cond, MfSOO. 494-8230 aHS. EUClldSt Dabtta & Trt1 HautlnQ SPECIALIST BLOCK ....,.. I •1 p•1 ..& '78 Jet llcl 400 wtttl New--Fuller1oft CA B.I. WILSON & SONS callCLEENCO. 84M730 FENCES . Cement, bric:tt. 1i1Jriif 11=1-' , I J I DI••• • • • •• zleman tre 0 llar with 714-elOiiiO Rm. Add. Remodal Kite. Cell24hra.545-0729 .All .... -bl..,.,& · • atorage box. St850. 21M981-41(11 ~or remove. Ory· Bath. Tlta. #357487 Ina. Haullng. MoYtng. Clean-.,....... .,. e M0-3t4I QIUCk --------1 ... Alpan.. 947-7901 30 Y'S up 84&-1740 upe. 7 Deys Loweat rl1• STUCCO MASONRY-TILE DRAINS CLEAR From s1I • an ....... AEBLOWN OR PAINTED ceutrwti.. Cal a.nY. 722 .. 73 . ~:i~0~· ::1: FaucN, Ol9poaal, Heater, : PAIT n• IFFIOE CLEll : .......... till Aleo Int/Ext Painting ' hlWiml ........ 841..()907 P&R 722-4K>ee II LY w ... LIOl2U517 831-t286 Rte aomm:;cQ x;;:;;ang 204( OH on !!!!ij R.J'1 COMPLETE Home & : Very busy circulation office needs : MUST SEU. •100. • LIM""'" Speclaltzlng In ~ eu.tom DOG Obedience *1-1 ... * == Matntan~~ • part time help answering heavy • (714) 536-3720 XACR. MENbiRINds. .ncs Alald'I. ,,... llt. at ~ home. Protecting CLEAN a EXPERT eetlmat•.~ • phone traffic. We have nice cus· • 111,./illb/lttllft~ ~ HOME8,00MMEACIAL S4Mt23 1383924 ==· ~~e'r ~-~~r.:;:~~ p., t .... • tomers! Applicants must be neat, • 'llD Call Kaom, 211•22" IUll MllJlm'ill EATING Dl~ORDERS. ~.A~ MOVINOH FU!r1MM PROP· • responsible, and have a ple~t • * -. n "·* ~ AH typaa ol ~i· An<nltla. 8lumle. Over· Qulc:* & car.fut T13804e ERTY MGMT.. 3'4 ettr • telephone penonality. Some light • MARCUS CHANNEL r.;ri;;;-.e= AePllh I Ncl487ett. t40-599 tltlnQ. Obellty. 8y IOl>t. LO RATES. 562-0410 AMERILAND 997-<>941 • office work alao. Hours are approx. • •150/M0,-..146. ~•Rooftna& ROLL8CON8TRUCTION Uc#r..19554~· ST•--.•-ea••-n•• p •Mon-Fri 8:00AMtol:OOPM start·• 38' V..e.tfl Dodi bOa. Waterprooftno• t31-'19t Contracting for quality ...... ::J:: _., ... ....,... -• -< fM) · ... 1 .. :.., • • •• ' • PoW boM. IUIMll IG ti home Improvement•. a=. 1.,...11 "'91 M. Apsdw, egt 721·753f • ~g __. :1 I.I .100 per week. Apply • o1 Atctlaa. Ha°':J.25"/::. t4'1 MMS94 552-0428 OrangaCo. onatne1 1 .... 11.,/AB.ltt.a • in penon, Mon-Thun, 2:00 to 4:00 AVI 511 MW423 ~kt i COOO . ..___ k.c.fNiiiiMVIC@ S1udtntMowta.~ •PM. ABk tor Eileen. • 40• ~ .... D Oaalgtl Berv. Btochufef, .,_. Top. Trim. Almovll. Quel Uc. T124-t34.141-8427 e , ~...,..."" TYDel atttna. GRAPHICS Entry i r,;;ct; &;; Strv UC/IN tree tat ' NEW Warthouee St«age l&i',,..&ilgf;R:ITIO&f • · e 23 COUJMBIA-&c 1•11t NIWPORf: 720-9191 By Norman The 0oonnan oeo'..8m oi 531 aaia w•lll Top Quallty. Low Prtce. • ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT • ~::..~~on . • 12 o o . TYDtrla Word f'rccialMG. OM & Flr.157-000A llDI ... _. ,,... alt. Uc. 831·2346 • 330 W. BAY ST .. COSTA MESA. CA 92826 Eve & Wltenda. t1Piiatttf .RUSHJOA llllidiAI ~ llU1J..... • ANfOUAl ~TVNrTVEMPlOVEA : lllT ... IYllL ~~PH~ENC~~· Nllt•Bll1m T=~l1~ By .... M&o3116 4lX~ .................... 0.An&a .... ~ 72M191 14~wortc·"=-.e;t.-o1 ~~TreeT::i t:!L'mf& we;==-~ ~1h~·~ -LUii REi1D1cOMM'L11No H M~ · u:=:,~=~ =:~·4:'11e1 penln1• Now Av•ll•ble at-.t uma 10 , .... ,...., yre. Oofff'lownwottl Uc Trell'Tmv'"---,.,...,...-.------m:-r-------• CALL NOW. "42........ 1278041. Al .....,1M . gwdentna. c:,--~ !1iat181 fllt DRAntNO, iMCifuintCii. !UCTficiAH prloaa. Cfiudl ~m MfilXhMRj I; MiC& ftlJrnffllnQ:go;i:no:I F..c-Aocurat•Rllabta Uc 1233109. ~= Gardening F\111 Li";tOe ard8tnor.19yraofhal:IPY A~ Remodel batt\ Call 54&-oeoe Jobe a ,..-.. Mow ectaa'ctean us--.,. ouatonwa. Uc. 2'°"'. kitchen. Call 122-1193 .rf HEWIAUAJR. Qualny. No WOl'tc. Ht-2718/E 1¥ mag. I Thank·YOUI -....114 ...... CIM·• t lrftolll r-.onebte . A.AA. PAINTING iftilbt .. ,. Area. CMltY = !.t fk)'d 8'1·2345. OLI 8 FINN. LANDeCAPE LOWEST poealbla Df1oa LET THE 8UN8HIN! IH ~. All :-. ,.. •• . P1ant...-.~ 101Mp 8aNtoe. eet.W tklMNna wtndow -9'~ote ••adtOal ~-leWn. Hontcuft ,.,.,, Ml ---... .,.... Hom-..1.lo'dltnal · malnt ........ ,.._ 141-41027 DAN SALYP PAJNTNO Ltd. Call <714> ~6MO PllotMlo eon.. "' SM4 · ....,..,. NIW I Oil e&a LAWN HAVICE Uc #42~ Par1c Window~. ~ &rPlftitY 8tr"'°8 Wood, oMM llnk~'e. Mow l:tl T.-1 month Call~ M44017 Wa llaO weal\ --~~ ,... .... ONg. · 91• t11.so1:aaa. MM122· GLAiGOWPAINfiNG Nllwpof1w 720-110 Dooie eto. a.ti 4llO ..... llHIKAWA LANOiCAPI lntlbt. ao yrt ...,.,,, lpftno ~ Spaclal CAR ROUTES E•rn Exlr• C••h For 0.1/v•ry Of Thia P•Pflr HUNTINGTON BEACH FOUNTAIN VALLEY INDEPENDENT IOilb OA AEPAI.. -IOU: ,.... ... lod. a.an-up.. Malnt. ,.,... 9424214 lalboe Window WllNnQ w .... '°°" *"tdowa. coet. '°' 3f.'· call ~ .. o.taCM1•7 HOMIOWNllUXHirii 97W 1 M Deliver 1 day a week. No pdoa. ~ ,..Nmodela.N 14tGUHS 0t ~ DUSTY'S~ lnt/llct.. • Aooua.. c..r.. If••• ... , •• 1~Ua11na........,...,,..-...-__ _,,4,,_..,..,,.,..41 ....,,, e.v. wttbtmo·1 uo1211917 131"""' collecting. no soliciting. iiii*ic.,. •. ,.,:~ 1w15• 1tirM..,_· .... t4~MO PA!NTMNiibiWOfi(.i •••••••11'1 Must have dependable car, eomm1, 8mal/W'ae 1* F9al:llM y,.. irlfft lntlbt, ~,.. c-. sa1~JonnnMOU 0ump,,...c.MJH.1. ~~"'!!... '=.::;,,.W::z=, truck or station wagon and VW 'IO SCCAROCO. 5 -.>. tilt, emlfm c.a. ,.. red paint. Good cond In/out '3215/obO. ~7118 . SOUTH 'COUNTY VOLKSWAGEN & ISUZU IN U.S.A. AM> TRYING HMOB TO Ill :: 1 • IA&.11 • IDVICI . 'MTI • LIADIG =:-=:, ..... ~Ma.120e Trea Trtm w ,..,1C>N1.1----..;;._---insurance Maz480ae ·1a, 10MW, aa Y"I•· .,.,.,.,~ *,!!"~ M.mii. ~~ ~~. k 962-4701 1o mt, 1~ *• ,... !!!!!!.!-!!..!!! -~-~~ -·-"-;";.Mi;j -i·IMjtloo/ t 11K. UO·OtOO o• td'tsra::.:Hrwi.~~lc:a'7:":-1it~iiW1. ,AIHTlNG TWneo:'t3;vrt.•.eel CALL 842-1444 •=iiiMllll ~1!.,.L_..._ ~~d': • Ho too tioo ...... ....,tvO.HorN.~a lod. Ola ..,.. aoJ!'t"' lntl!ld. ..,_, ,_. tor '" u • b Ask for JoAnne Craney ""' *' ""·· ewto, *· •rt. ..._~,IM-OIN Comrrteldtil711).71M --. TorirMl-'l1 .. ~Pl109-,;t.,.11• 1 "2 1: • uy • Lb~._ IOO "'" C*a., 2 topa, 111.IOO. ma~u-.m=-w~.:--.-.,.~;;------. t.;,.;;;;;;;;;.;;~:.:.;;.;.;.;;;.;.J.._,..il8 _____ .1;::=======1:.!::~~~~==~~~~~===:all .............. ~. .., 640-fOal pp .,.. ... ........, '°""'""°',..., • J e e 1 ) I ' I r I r) • • .. 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Newport Beach 840-8444 G) JIM SLEMONS IMPORTS 1301 Qu•ll St. -#Mw C•r Loc•tlon 1001 Ou•ll St. -R•NI• Ol~l•lon ® World's LBrQest Selection of fT\ Mercedes Benz ~ 833-9300 U.1 -uaaktl -P1rt1 -Stmct -le4y no, I For more auto deals see Friday's AUTO PILOT! are at the dealers listed on this page 0·' ... in the DallyPtllt G CONNELL CHEVROLET 2121 larhr llt4., Cetta .... Over 23 Years Serving Orange County Sales• Service• Leasing S4&-12H S,edll Plltl Ult 541-1411 MONDAY-FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY 8:30 AM -.9:00 PM 8:30 AM -e:oo PM 10:00 AM -5:00 PM o S:iith County-®-00-BPU13!_QV1l~ G ~1~1~~~~~~~1~ VOLKSWAOEN/ISUZU BUICK Lo•ua JAGUAR ISUZU • Sales • Service • Leasing CALIF'S ..,., a LARGEST VOLKSWAGEN OE.ALER the PROF ESSIONAL A P PROACH EAS r to FINV ... EA y to DEAL WITH NEED WE SAY MORE? Parts Open M-Sal 8 -5 30 Sat 9 -.. p m Service m-Frt 7 30 -6 p m tl711 IEACH aLVO HUNTINOT<>tf BEACH 714/ 142-2000 0 NABERS CADILLAC @ -2100 IAllllll IL YI., COIT I IEll (l14) 10-1100 (213) lll-1211 • Best Prices • Convenient Location Pacific Ocean 11 BARWICK NISSAN WE LEASE All MAKES & MODELS CALL US FOR FLEET PRICES Justo Short Drivo Away ... 33375 Camino Copistrono 493--3375 SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO 131-1375 o COMMONWEAL TH VOLKSWAGEN &n 'FAMILY STORE SlNCE '53' W Salea • Service -Leuing IM·OUO 0 71 4 -979-2500 2 925 Harbor Boulev ard • Costa Mesa, CA• 0 HOUSE OF IMPORTS 8 UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE HONDA 2llO Herbor Blvd. IAI .. """ Coeu M... 540-0713 3 Blockt So. of 405 Fwy. 0 BOB LONGPRE Or•,. County's Ofdftt & La~t Pont'« Oea .. nhlp M 8Ncl'I INd. & the 0.'*" ~ 'r'MW91 f7t• .. 2 ... 11 f 7t•J .... 2_ \lie perform all Ponti« warranty wonc. ~tdlfts at wheJW you 0tt9lnaHy purchltlld ~car. --llC»MaAY W. .. u.Ta ... P ... 2 bib oortb of Santa Amt Freeway oa lk•rh Blvd 6211 BEACH BLVD. BUENA PARK (714) 521-3110 (213) 921-8681 0 a marJ"Ol arncq01 SUBARU PONTIAC It Sell hdttlltlt a rncqni PONTIAC FIEllll SLASHES • PRICES! e ON ALL 1986 MODELS lHllR NfY CllClMSl Ma.S Wl Wll NOT BC UNO£RSOLD' ---·--- SUBARU 24IO Harber llYd. 24IO ...,_ llYd. Costa Mna Newport Beach Costa Mn1 Newport Beadt 714/549-4300 714/549-4300 C\) ORANGE COAST JEEP /RENAULT I # 1 ,, ,,,, ,,,,, ,,, #,. JH, s.111 F11 I ,,,,, ~Onin2e. SALES Loa'lt. sERv1cE -,.,. MAllllC)jl k VO • LEASING , ~ • ACCESSORIES DEPT o ~ rCAMPRfl 1 . ~Nl•SAN~ IP04 • Low Prices • No Gimmicks • Great Selection • Friendly People • Excellent Service 1 883~ hach toui.-..ord (714) 142-7711 ~·t.octr (213) St2· 146i ....,Exceuence In Salee SeMce & LeuJng ...., Orange County'• _No. 1 No H ..... Dealer11 WE HAveMAXEY OISCOUNTSlll (714f 147-ISIS 18881 Be1ch BIYd .1 Huntington Bch. . ~ -t- h ORANGE CO\ST • 25t MONDAY, APRIL 14, 1986 Bush steps up war.of word_s . Tensions butld ~s U.S. officials claim Li ya implicated in W. Berlin bombing Dlplomats doubt foreigners at Libyan bases. See A5. disputed Gulf of Ssdta, renwned "under way in the Mediterranean," II.id Pentaaon apoketman Mitj. Larry lcenosle. Pentaaon IOW'cet said Sat- urday the carrim were awaiuna orden oft'tbe coast of Sicily. Saturday he WU Ulvit.ed to tho Wbi1e House on Monday to dilcuM poMible acuon apmtt UbyL By TERENCE BUNT ft 2 2 ,,,_....., WASHINGTON -Vice Pres:· dent Georae Bush said Sunday that "Libyans have their fingerprints aJI over state-sponsored terrorism," and Son-day drive lllcbael Andrettl, MD of Ilario Anclrettl, raced put Al Uneer Jr. to win the Lone Beach Grand Pria.. Detail.a OD 81. Nation T.he CIA reportedly has been secretly funding Contra activities/ M World Feuding partners In Is- rael' a coalition govern- ment reach a com- promise./ A5 Sports The Angels hope their home field, on which they open play today, will treat them better than Oak- land. /81 INDEX Advice and Games Births Bulletin Board Business Classlfled Comics Death Notices Entertainment Opinion Paparazzi Police Log Public Notices Sports Televlslon Weather A10 A6 A3 A7-8 86-8 A 11 88 A9 A12 A6 A3 85,88 81-5 A9 A2 the United States has a duty to punish those who threaten Amencans over· seas. Deputy Secretary of State John C. Whitehead sa1d U.S. officials had infonnation implicating Libyan leader Moammar Khadafy in the Casper Park to reopen today Girl mauled by lion continues to improve: parents keeping vtgtl By PAUL ARCHIPLEY Of ... O.., ......... An El Toro girl 1s slowly recovcnng from massive 1nJuncs mflicted by a mountain hon, while the Orange County wilderness park where the 5. year-old was attacked opened to the pubhc today for the first time in three weeks. Laura Michelle Small remams in M:ssion Community Hospital. where she was rushed by helicopter fotrow- :ng the March 23 attack by a 2· to 3· year-old m ounta:n hon 1n Ronald W. Caspers Regional Park. The park :s located :n the Santa Ana Mountains cast of San Juan Capistrano. Don and Susan Small take turns standing watch over thcu daughter about 16 hours a day at the M:ss1on VteJO hospital. He has been worlcmg half days at Perlun-Elmer :n Garden G rove, where he 1s an optical enlJ· necr. Laura already bas underaone ex· ten51ve plastic and ncurosuracry for the laccrat:ons and puncture wounds the lion mfl1cted when 1t grabbed her head With ?tSJaWS. But she faces at least two more operations to repair the in1uncs that caused part:al paralysis on her right s:dc and severe damage to her right eye. Don Small said doctors arc op- llm :st:c they can save his dau~ter's eye, but she won't have much, 1fany, v:s1on m :t "She has repined some movement on her nght side and her speech 1s better." Small said on Sunday. "There was lots of damage to her brain and :twill have to reroute some of those circu:ts." Laura Small will soon undergo surgery for her scalp. and she faces another opera11on later to repair a hole m her skull, Small said. Despite her injunes, Small sa:d Laura 1s feeling better daily. "She's more cheerful. She gets frustrated with her speech d1fficult:es (Pleue .ee PARK/ A2 J bombinaofa West Berlin ~tclubin which an American wu killed and indicating that K.hadafy wu plottina mo~ such attacks. Pmident Rcapn is wei&hina the use military force apinlt Ubya in retaliation for the attack. Whitehead said, but added, "the prospect of military action is somethma that only the president will decide on. He bu not yet made that decilion." Reqan lut week indicated his willi npeu to l8U military action if the perpcU'ltors could be identified and an appropriate tarset located. Two U.S. aircraft carrien, the America and Coral Sea. which last month enaaaed Libyan foroes in the The Rapn adminiltratJoo was conswuna with key memben of Conareu and u .s. allies in Western ~~1.!r.,., over the next step apinst ...... STn':"lUchard Luaar. R-lnd .. said "A dec11ion will be made OD that occuion or shortly thereafter u to what our respome sbouJd be," Mid Lupr, the chairman of tbe ICDale Foreian Relation.a committee. U.N. Ambluador Vemon Waben met with British Prime MW.a&er Marpret Thatcher in London OD ~ ... LlflTA/A2) Artukovic trial for war crimes eg1nstoday Fonner Orange Coast resident faces firing squad if convicted By LARRY GERBER I& , I,,,_.,_ ZAGREB, Yuaoslavia -Andnja Artukovic, who wu cxtrad1ted from the United States to face charJes that he ordered the kill.ins of civiltans and partisan pnsonen durin& World War II, goes on trial today. If convicted., the 86-ycar-0ld Artukovic could face a firina squad. Artukovic, who lived m Seal Beach prior to his extradition, said be is mnocent of the accusations, wtuch stem from bis role as interior mini1ttt of the Nm puppet state of Croatia. Yuaoslav news media labe&ed him "the butcher of the Balkans." He avoided extradition for neatly 35 yean but WU flown to l.alrd> OD Feb. 12 after exhaut~ biJ appeals in U.S. courU. The trial ll expected to end Apnl 30 District court officials built a tbfto.. s.ided defendant's box of bulletyro.of glass. He will 'taY in quarten lll tbe courlhowe durina tbe trial wbicb have been furnished with medical equipment. Artukov1c's lawyers say be is lepDy blind and 1en1lc, and are expected to cite poor health in their arpunenu. He was moved to the oourthoUle • quarten from a prison b<>lpital. When Artukovic arrived from tbe United States, television showed him beina earned from the plane on a ~-A.a'l'UKOVIC/A2) Stockman dream job is defense post WASHINGTON (AP) -A blo- araphy of David Stockman. to be published on the heels of Stockman'• hard-bittina memoirs, says the for- mer budict director bu tok! friends his dream JOb if be ever mums to Washington would be leCJ'Ctary of defense. . One former associate says be once told her he·d like to be president, accordina to the bi01J11phy wnttcn by Owen Ullmann. But Stock.man's prospects for the Pentagon seem dJm -he manqed to avoid the draft during the Vietnam war years. And after his fonner colleagues read the blunt cnticism of them in has memoirs, many may agree W1th "one of his most an· tagon1st1c rivals," quoted anonymo usly by Ullmann, who told the author, "l say he's finished here." Ullmann's book., "Stockman The Man, The Myth, The Future." re· counts that Stockman s1aned a Stu- dents for a Democratic Society ad at Michigan State University 10 196 7 vowing to re11st the draft and signed up for Harvard Divinity School. a move that allowed him to avoid mductJon. Th~ book.. headed for stores alona with Stockman's own $2.• million account. says, "Several top White House officials ... recalled bearina Defense Secretary Casper Weinberaer refer to (Stock.man) when he was not present as 'the little draft (Pleue eee 8TOCDIAR/A2) State gives area school districts their report cards Some Orange Coast district scores Improve, others don't Numbers may not l:e. but nc:ther do they always tell you everythin~ you need to know. Schoot districts have rccc:vcd their annual report cards from the state -the results of senior scores on California As~sment Pr01J11m tests -but adminis- trators caullon that the test results by themselves tell parents httle about how their children's particular school' match up to other schools. Administrators say the scores can show whether district programs arc showing improvement or decline over a number of years, however. And districts can match their performance against districts with students from similar socio-economic backarounds, educators say As 1s usual. students 10 Oranse Coast schools scored above state avc,.._es, but their perfonnancc when compared ap1nst pnor year !ICOrcs varied widely. lJnder a leaislauve mandate, the state Department of Education t>eaan administerina the test in 1973 to third, sixth, e1ahth and I 2th vades in rcadin&. wnttcn upression, spellina and math in an effort to measure how distncts were performina. "Before there was no one test," u1d Patrick McCabe, CAP 1taus11c1an "Some tests were easier, some were harder." The CAP test is based on th~ state's model cumculum standards-a state framework that tells schools what they should have 1n their curriculum, McCabe. To encourqe arcater panjcipation in CAP te1t1na. the state created an proanm lut year called the Education Improvement Incentive Prop-am. To qualify for the prosram, nick.named Cash for CAP a htah achoo! must test at least 93 pcn;:ent of :ts seniors. ~ achool muat alto equal or u cccd the overaJI pm made by studenis statewide on the teat. CAP hat two a<:alcs, said McCabe. The absolute Kalt tells where a school d:stnct 1tand1 when the d11trict1 arc ranked from one throuah 99. The comparison score band shows bow a d1stnct did compared With similar achools. "Bacqround facton arc uled to determine what tehoolsarc t1m1 lar The CAP te•ta ksc·.ach 'tudent what is Hjgh school scores l ....... 17.0 .......... .... AM1.2 ... 11.1 .... ... .., .... .J .. •1-11.0 .. ~JU 10;7 •.o..n.1 •1 11.~10.I ... 17 ...... .. ., ...... the htahcst cducalJonaJ ~vel achieved by either parent." said McCabe The back&Tound summary alto analyic:t data on ethoicity, lenat'h ofttme studcnu have been tn the dastnct. the state and the country; number of acmcstus 11nce the 9ch arade in vanous subjects, extra curricular 1c-t1vltics: perocniqc of households recieivina welf.a.re and the perocntaae of students with limited Enaliab-1peabn, abilities. If a 1ehool 11 perform1na above cxpectattons, but K'onna low when compa~ to 1Chooll thl'O\Alhout the nate, 1t may mean the 1ehool ban tarwr percentqe ofnon· ....., ...... ... 17.7 73.1 71.<t ll.M7.I 11.t-12.J n.1-71.4 •1 11.1 12.0 ....... 1 70 ... 72..4 10.-.11.1 •1 11A 11.4 -....10.4 n.&-n.1 n.~1&0 10A 12.1 74.1 •.0-70..2 11 ... n.• n.0..11.1 71.1 11.1 ,,. 1.U 70.1-1U n.t-71.t 71.7.:n.I 11;0 1&1 n.a •A-11.1 n.o..1u ~~· 71.1 12.0 ?I.I 10.4-11.4 n .0-11.0 n..11.1 •• 74.1 11.t •4-11.1 72.0-74.1 11.9-77.1 70.4 7U JI.I ~10.I 71J.1U 11.1-11.1 •1 74.1 71.4 •1 .. 10.a 11 .... n .1 n.~N.1 native En1h1h 1pcalccn, he said By the same token. dastncu that arc domf .,ell 1n compenson to their peen "shouldn't real on their laurels either. We hope they don't slop "'orklna harder btau!t of their ICOt'CS ... B•U.C-Beae• Ual• Htp ~I Dtttrkl The dJ1tnct includes Ed1ton. Fountain Valley, Huntincton ~h. Marina, Ocean View, We,tm1nster Evtn1na and Wmtenbura ht&h 1Choo1, The number of hm1ted En1hsh-,peak1n, students 1n the d11tnc1 11 up 2 pcrttnt, u 1d ( athennc Mc< routh. ) G. JEANETTE AVENT Fo cus ON THE NEVl S dJstnct spokesperson. Y cl. "10 all areas assessed. studentJ d1strictw1de 5COred from I to I 4 percent more conut answers than they scored m 1984-SS "I'm kind of proud of that." she sa1d Accordm& 10 the CAP rtport, the d1stnct read1na score rose from 6S 6 to 6 7 percent from laSl year: wntten exprcsS1on increased from 66 7 to 67 7, spelhnuumped from 71 7 to 73 I and math mcrcawd from 72 0 to 13 4 percent. The ma.Jonty of the schools 10 the d1stnct tested at least 93 percent of their high school ,tudcnts this yea.r.1&1d McGoua,h For their part1Clpat1on 1n the Cub for CAP prosram Manna and Westminster htah schools recavcd Sll,97i and S 15,083 ml)C<'t1vely for a d1stnct total of $44,070, said McGouah "I woufdn't put a lot of cmphasn on anytbane measured by a number ... said Dorothy Krutchcr, dtstnct director of au1dance. When people arc trytn, to make a <kclsaon about where to buy a house. "they tend to want to look at tat score That d()(sn't bother u bcauJC wt have aood test .cores. Wt arc tryin, ta ma_lcc parents awart of cumcu.lum and how It mttts student needs Scores~ intctaUne, tM there art a lot of other th1np;· he aad. When parcnt1 arc looluna for a home and a aood ~hool to 10 'With 1t. they should al'° look at what counea arc ofTcrtd and what the p-aduauon 1undardt att, said ~rutcher Ne.,.rt·Meu Uatfte4 Hip~ Dh1ricl The dmnc1 1ncludn \OfOna Del Mar. COltl Maa. (Pl-..e ... 09ftle'n/ A.2) t I t . l A.9 0.-.,. eo.t OAll.Y PILOT/ Monday, Aprtt 14, 1888 46 die in stampede during celebration on Ganges River NEW D.EUU, lndJ.a (AP) -A DCVfS a,rncy said 46 people ~ k.Jlled a.od 39 others wert irtjured early Monday in a stam~e by Kiodus du.tin& a huie rchaious c:cl- ebntion at the etty ofHardwar on the be.ob of the Ganaes River. Tbe stampede occumd as millions of piJarims tb.ronaed H.arowar for a dip in the Gan&CS on the climax of the festival of Khumbh Mela, held once every 12 yean. The dead included 32 women and two children, the United News of t ndla news .,ency said It quoted police sources as saymg the stampede occurred when one of the pitarims fell down 10 the crush of people aod a crowd of others felJ on top of him. Piles of clothes and lu~ge were strewn near the main bathing area in Hardwar, which is located I 50 miles nonhcast of New Dcllu. At least SOO people were killed in a 5tampcdc at Hardwar 1n I 9S4 dunna the festival, which draW1 more people t~n any other rchpous event 10 the world. The fesuval of Kumbb Mela eel- ebrates the tn.diuonaJ beUcfthat a Jar of nectar churned up by the ~ and called kumbb was spilled by the aods 1n four places on earth, mcJudma a stretch of the Ganies at Hard war. Tradition holds tbat it took 12 days, the equivalent of 12 huma.n yea.a, for the Jods to rach paradise with the jar of nccw. Hindus, who make up 83 percent of India's 7SO million people, believe that bathing in the nvcr here gives absoluuon from sin "After bathing in the Gaop (Ganges) we feel P.urc, ~ feel tioly.'' said K.Jshon Baotk, 74. wbo traveled 3 70 miles from CaJcuua for bis founh Kumbh Mela. "I act peace and happiness." More than 20 million pilarims arc estimated to have worshipped at the Ganges in Hardwar sinoc the tht1* month Kumbh Mela fcsuval began Feb. I. But on Sunday and Monday, deemed the two most auspicious days, more than 7 m1Uion pco~le were expected to converie on the stte. Jn the pond of Lord 8..Uma, a 200- yard stretch of Ganges RJveT between two Hindu temples, men in under- ~r or lomclothc:s and -omen 10 sans spnnkJed water on their fore- heads and then slowly immened themselves. Famil¥ mcmben held bands and plunaed in toaethcr. Later, the pil&rims knelt or sat cross.-lcged on the stone steps and prayed Some threw oranges, coconuts and flowen into the nver u offennas. or made tiny boats of betel leaves and set them afloat bcanna candles and marigolds. Police ~tood ch~-decp in 1be water and beat b.ck the sura>na crowds with blmboo canes. l.Jfe- &uards dived to rescue people swept away by the \wif\ cwrenL At least four people have drowned in reocnt weeks. officials say. Hardwar, where the the Ganscs leaves the HimaJayan footh11l1 and enters the plains on au J ,57~mtle course to the Bay ofBcnpJ, was filled wttb the sound of temple bells and chanted mantras Vendor-. sold flowers, incense, sweets and cures for snake and 300rp1on bites. Off-ramps to close temporarily To cure a traffic Jam, Costa Mesa officials will have to cause a few next week. The Harbor Boulevard and Fair- view Road off-.ramps from the San Diego Freeway will be closed one day apiece for survey work, the first step toward wadenmg the interchanges The SS00.000 w1derung prOJCCt 1s intended to case traffic congestion along the portion of the freeway traversing Costa Mesa. Developer fees will be used 10 pay for Lhc y.iork, . admirustered by developer CJ. Scgerstrom & Sons. On Wednesday. Lhe falTVlew ramp will be closed from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. The Harbor ramp will be shut down from 6 a.m to 3 p.m. next Saturday. "It's really difficult to find a llme when no one 1s inconvenienced." said Public Services Director BruCl" Mat- tern. "We tned to select the best limes to allow us to do the wortc as quickly u po&s1blc while mconvenienc1ng the fewest number of people ... Dcwls from the cnginccnng survey wtll be used to pTCparc designs for the offramps Construcuon as expected in June. One lane wtll be added to the Harbor northbound ramp, while two will be added to the Fairview north- bound ramp. LIBYA IMPLICATED, U.S. SAYS •.. P'romAl Sa1uday and Wllh West German C'hanccllor Helmut Kohl and Foreign MinJSter Hans-Daetnch Genscher an Bonn on Sunday. He flew to Pans later Sunday for scheduled meetings with President Francois M11terand and Premier Jacques Chirac. and was slated to fly to Rome later. Reagan and Kohl have fingered Libya as a suspect 1n the We!>t Berlin explosion On Wednesday, the West VCrman ~overnmcnl e:tpellcd (WO Libyan diplomats. hut said 1he e'- puls1ons were not related 111 1he bum bing Bush, while refusing to accu~ "-.hadafy point-blank of planning the bombing, said "there\ proof that lht" Libyans have their fingerpnnts all over state-sponsored tcrron!.m. but I'm JUSt not going to he drawn into what's happening no"' " "The United 'itates has an obli- ga11on to prolelt Jts c1 t1tens living abroad and to bnng to JUStace in some 1n an} way possible. those who threaten the hvcs or take the laves of Amencans ahroad." Bush said Bush. who headed an adman1s trat1on tas~ force that studied how the United Stat<"'i rnuld respond to ter- ronsm. said he had ··always been 1n favor of ret4ha11on on a son of a surgical basis I don't hel1cve we need kind of an 1nd1\<·nm1na1e approach·· The vice president <;poke on tht NB( program "Meet the Prcv:· a\ he returned from a llklay tnp to Saudi Arabia. Bahrain, Oman and North Yemen None of the leaders in those· four nations offered direct support for last month's attack on Libyan targets 1n the Gulf of S1dra. Bush said. "but ind1rectl) 1 think everyone under- stood 11 ·· Asked ~hether an)' Arab country endorsed armt-d lJ S action agaiO'it fellcw. Arabs. Bush replied. "Not pubhcl'.r but there's a lot of quiet 'iUpport f kno~ thl~ for a fact cenam ·· Whitehead. appeanng on the CBS program '"Face the Na11on ," said tJ S intt'lhgencc officials have gathered ··a lot of information" on the West Berlin bombing. "~h1ch docs in- dicate that (Khadafy) was mvolved . No ultimate conclusion has been reached on thal evidence, on that inudent becau!><'.1t\ still coming in ·· "But maybe more important than the specifics of his involvement 1n that incident I\ the 1nfonnat1on we have about hi\ futun: plans, for hterall) dozens of other terronst clcllons around the world And ll 1\ those plan\ which we must react to. to protect the lives of Amcncans which arc endangered b) has plans. 1fhe goes forward wtth them:· "31d Wh itehead, tht' No. 2 offiual in the State l:kpanmenl ·· l he plans are all speufi<. They are spc:t1IH.:all} aimed a1 particular targets ~11h people enlisted to carry out the plane,·· he said, dcchn1ng to give dctaah "We hope we wtll have enough 1nformat101110 forestall these actions. or many of them before they take pl.ace. as we have forestalled a number of his terrorist activities in other places," he said. U.S. officials apparently knew un- spcc16cd locations 1n Berlin where Americans gather were targeted, but The WuhmJlon Post reported an 1t.s Sunday editwns that a commuruca- t1ons foulup prevented the m- tclhgence community's wamang about an impending attaclc from getting top priority. The newspaper quoted uniden- tified sources who had been hricfed by the CIA as saying the intelligence information was passed along at low level rather than top mll1tar} com- manders. Whitehead "31d that he did n111 believe claims by Khadafy that r 1h~J was moving m m11Jtary pcr~nnel <>1.11 or camp~ and fcplactng them w11h foreigners. including American .. "We have no 1nforrna1ion that there'\ any truth to 1ha1 claim al all.·· Whitehead 'ia1d He declined to rnmment on re pons th.at Mrs. Thatthcr ap-eed to allow U.S. warplanes ba!.ed in Britain 10 lly sorties aga1nsf Libya. · PARK WHERE GIRL MAULED REOPENS ... From Al and lack of movement on her ngh1 '>Ide ··he \Sid "'The dtK tor., think hl•r movement will get hcw:r · c:oming 1n at !ht· rate of a few hundred dollar\ a dJ) He dcchned to .-.ay how much 1s 1n the fund hills to thl· park Tony < 11mbronc. counl} park\ d1i.trie1 '>Uperv1<;or. or1g1nally planned to keep the park closed until "pnl 25 \mall didn't know when his daugh- ter would be relea~d from the hospital <ihe will al<,u facr extemJ\C rd1ab1l1ta11on therap'v after her rt lease ( ac,per.-. Park dC>'>cd 1mmcd1ately after thl.' attatk, and hunters tracked down and killed the mountain lion. "I don't want to throw the gates open until I'm sure ll'c; c;afr," G1m hrone ~1d at the tame ··1 JU!>! want to be \Ure tn my mind that we don't have· another c.at 1n there that's not afraul of human\" Although the tam1bi'i msurantt " <.overing mo~t o( hN hospital lMl' the\ will ha\\ to pa' tor her reh:ih1h - ta11on An au top'>) failed 10 reveal a rea'><>n tor the unusual allatk Authont1cc; \31d 11 w,l, tht• lir\t known mountain lion at!<I( k on d human 1n 77 year\ in C allfnrn1;1 A 1rus1 fund wa\ cc;whh'>hed .11 '-iercul) Sa\ln~ 1n 1-l Toro and ~mall said donations have tx'cn Whrlt' lhl.' park was closed. park rdngl'r\ t11m tx-d the w1ldcme~' look- ing for sign' ot other mount.am hons that m1F,ht have migrated from the Although ranger\ found frec;h lion prints in the park l<i'>I week . thn decided the danger to human' wa\ minimal DISTRICTS RECEIVE REPORT CARDS ... From Al Estancia. Back Ra\o. Newport t larhor h11th 'iC hool\ The d1\tnct's scnl()r te'll 'iCCJrC\ dropped en Jll lour areas. which left d1~tnct official\ a htl pu11lcd "We know our instruction program d1dn t change wt· have the same teat:hcn We want to watch 11 for anotht•r year to sec what happens. When a 'iCore 1~ low. 1t d<>e'>n't automaucally mean bad teaching," \31d Dale: ( Wooll ~ director of research and student \Crv1ccs He said the scores need to be analy1ed over a number of year~ to sec 1f a trend emerge'I Accord mg to the report. reading \Core\ declined lrom tiX 6 10 66 9 percent, wntten exprcs<11on decreased from 70 4 10 68 I. spelling fell from 72 S to 71 4 and math sc;ore'i decrca\Cd from 74 2 10 72 4 percent Woolley said the d1stnct te\ted II I perrent nl 1t\ students, 6 perccn1 more than la\I \'Car By increasing the number of students tc~ttd. a d1stnl I ,., also increasing thr number of studentc. who arc le'i5 motivated. hr \aid Jn the past '><>mt \tudenh did not take thr tc't because they do not receive 1nd1v1dual 1COrcs on the< Af> tc~t. he said. Although thr ( a<;h for (AP program ha'I 1ncm1\<"d part1c1pat1on 'itatewadr Woolley 'Mild. "We're not 1n agrt'ement with 11 11 put, 100 mu('h empha'il\ on 1rc.11np Wr purpo~I" did not rn1cr .. Irvin~ Ualft~ S<'bool Dl1trtct Thed.,trn t 1ndudcsAltemat1vc. lrv1nr Woodhm.Jgc and lln1ven1t) h1ah 5ehools "We can't complain at all" alx>ut this yeJlr·~ ( AP ~ores. ad Bruce (11vncr. deputy •upcnntcndenl However. "this 1<s such 1 small ,napshot 1n time ·· h needs to be compared to other cbt3 G1vncr ~ad the d1,-tnct i' wa1una for a futher breakdown oflhe test 1.ata 1n thcskJlls rcpon todetennanc 1hc mrn,th~and needsofthc d1,tnct. Scores ch.a nae from year to yt.Ar. and he pref en to pl01 them on a vaph. ~ad G1vncr "~mt yean· ~udcnts are \harpct than others " Givner l&ld It IS not really benefical to compare \(Om to othtt dJstncu throughout the state "l1 lose5 its meanm11fyou do too many compen1on• .. ocordanJt to the te1t n:port, d1'tnct reading '<orn rn<..e from 69 6 to 69.8, wntten exprec;<11on increased from 71 O 10 71 S spelling declined from 76 I to 75 5 and math increased from 77 3 to 78 6 (11vner !Miid the d1stnct tested between 94 ancl 9'1 pcrlcnt of 11s M-nior for both yea~. qucthfymg the d1str1<:1 for S67 708 1n CA P funds. Irvine H1Jh School ~n1of1 carnt"d the 'iChool $46. I 32 . Woodbnd~c quahfkd for \21 .253 and University High received $32' Saddlebaek Valley UaUled Scbool Diltrtct Tht district includes El Toro. S1 I verado. l..agun:i It 111!. and M1ss1on VieJO htgh schools 'The d1stnct improved for the third straight year .. said Jt"fT Herdman, director of testing research. According to the test report. n:adana scores 1ncreaSC'<I from 68 9 to 69.5 percent. wrmen expressaon 1mprovtd from 69 7 to 70 4; spelhngrose from 74.2 to 74 8. and math Jumped from 7S.4 to 76. 9 percent corre<.'t t J nder the Cash for CAP program the d1stnct rcce1 ved SI IS 1, 1,8, the highest award 1n the counl)'. said Herdman All of the d1s1rict's h1a,h school11 Qualified. he said Lapu Bue' Unified Sc•ool Di1tr1ct The oastnct include Laauna Reach H1sh School l~guna Bcach Ht&h School 1cncd 94 peTCCnt of •ts ~nioM last year and ~7 percent this year. Their CAP award came to $5,423 Ac.cord1na to the test report, rcad1na anCTCa~ to 70. 7 from 66 7 percent, wri tten e•pre ~ion rose from 68.6 to "'l s perr.en1. speUina declined from 1.-.s to 72 J>Cf't'Cnt and math Kores rote sJiabtly from 73.1 percent t<> 73.l percent correct over the previous year This year, L&Juna Beach Higll School went down on the spelhna test but 1m"rovt'd ~11ruficantly in rcad1n1 and wnttcn exprcsJ1on. said Ledeanc Bnslen. act101 'uper- 1ntenden1 h 's hard tocxplam thcdechne in spelling. ~UK t~ charaaenstics of students attcndana "haven't chanted very much ovcT lhe )cars. .. she u1d. 'Tm rcalft acitcd about tht 1mprovemtnll m rudma and wnt~ opress1on.'' tht uid "The wnun1 <.~mponent 1n the I I th and 12th arades ha~ 1ncreued .. Varlable hlQh doud• _... .acompany comrort1bt. temperatur91 In tM O~ COet1 tod8Y, lhe N1tlonat WMth« s.rvtoe Mid 1ncnutno doudlneea tonight wtll IMd to a rnottly ctoudy Tueed8Y with a 30 percent Chance or ~ dunng the afternoon. High• tod1y will range rrom 70 at the bMChea to 78 Inland Low. tonight will rtnQ9 trom 52 to 57 Hight on T~ay wtll be a! to 72. Light wtnda wtll blow west to M>Vthweat 8 to 18 knot• thl1 afternoon and evening through the In.,., coutal water•. The W911fll'ly awet1 le 2 to 4 fMt. A smatt Otttt ldvltoty ta In enect from PQlnt Conception to Santa RON tlland; however wtndt ere expected to deer .... to 10 to 20 knot• with 5-to 10 root oomblned .... today U.S. Temps HIQN 10W9 ~Ip"' Moncley ...... Nlletly.H Y 67 27 ~ 10 .. little Aodr l~ lllOOOC:ll ~ ,,.._ 8Mcll ~ .. 4t H )() 90 44 &O 4$ 97 13 63 H 91 47 Mldlend-00- ~­.,._SIP9111 ~ Hewone.n. Hew YO.-Cit'; "°"Olk.Va Oltlel>om9 Cl!y Omen• 12 56 74 53 .. 51 12 ... 96 61 ff 40 ... 33 M 40 90 53 82 M eo 40 98 &O 81 63 e& 3, 11 80 51 l& 83 83 80 l& Calif. Temps 45 16 10 &O •• 30 24 " 63 32 51 37 49 30 6t 37 " 20 74 '2 71 41 t1 44 .. 21 57 H .... .. 34 u 42 ., 41 ~ 24 90 6.4 93 42 I() 47 .. $3 &a '° u .. 33 09 40 24 63 34 5f 31 23 '2 n .. to " " 12 12 72 11 ee el .. 79 52 39 20 78 31 70 61 Ofltndc> ~~ ""-"-=:=t'o. p,,,,,_ :::::ro1y Reno ~ SI Louie T--$1 Plr"t19 s ... Lall• City SM 11.t<IC>No S...JuanP R ,..,, .. SN--1 r~· r.-,..,. .. WUl\1ng1on Oc Wlctolle Will(-&.ff• " 43 as 32 79 42 33 20 ~ 2' 11 43 76 51 90 ... .. 33 ~ 16 eo n ~2 .. 80 53 79 33 •1 83 90 &O SS 47 70 48 M le Smog Report POlwW-1 11-0 llldU IOell ~ 100 CIQOCI 100-~ ~ IOf ..... ,,... peoOlt 200-300 u,,,_Mul 10t ell )00.SOO ~OOul The figure .. IOt IN pt-.O 011y 1 ozone .......r 67 50 1~ TOOAY 9 flam DA w w w w 06 46 01 STOCKMAN DREAMS OF.DEFENSE POST ... From A l dodger' or "the blow-dncd draft dod er."' ~c1nbcrgt'r a former budget d1rrl tor h1m)(."lf. denied 1t The Ullmann book quotes former Office of Management and Budget economist and Stock.man confidante Lawrenn· A. Kudlow a-, ..aymg that Stock.man was ··txfuddled at the extent of Ronald Reagan's poht1C'al succesc;. ~1ven, in <\tockman's view the president'\ hm1tc:d 1n1cllectual tapdClt't . I he book, c1ung 01her unidenufied fnends. \aid Stockman ·developed a dcep.~·Jtcd contempt for the prec.i- dent and many ofh1s 1ru\tcd adviser\ because he thought th<") were tn· tellccuall) dull. la.1> and incompe· t1:nt .. '\orm·umcs l.ihx kman m<JdC f"un cil Rr•lg;tn ~ age One fnend says ht· t•>~l·d 1h•t1 the prc<,1dent m1gh1 be til'tllfl~ .i llttlt· 'iCOllc," It o;.aid. \aod.m.1n an excerpt'> from hi'> own hook ··The Tnumph of Poht1t:s \Iv h}'th~ H.tagan Re-.wlut1on Failed." ,~ewer\ 'K'' eral top Reagan-a1des ..... horn ht ..... ,,.., "ne"er read anything J hn ""l·d nfl the tutx' ·• I llm,ann. Wh1tt House correspon- Jl·nt for Kn1ght-R1dder newspapers anJ .1 111rmer economics writer for T lw \'i\oc1atcd Press. interviewed nearh ~oo people. anclud1na Clbinet ofliler~. memJ>er'> of Congress and <;1nct...man·s famil). to piece together hr'> H7-oage book. In man) respects. 11 1s a flattcnng account of a man whose intelligence and hard work catapulted him into C ongn•sc; a1 age 29 and the ( ab1ne1 at ~4 -the youngest< abinet officer in IM >care; But the book also depicts Stock- man a\ "an uncommon blend of nghtcousnc\s and deviousness." who lell behind a ~1nng of d1sappo1n1ed mentors. from church leaders who befnended him 1n his antiwar da)'s at M1ch1gan State lln1vers1ty. to Sen. Daniel Patnck Moynihan who took him in as a babysitter at Harvard; to former Rep. John Anderson who brought him to Wa~hangton , to Rep Jack Kemp who introduced him 10 \upply-s1de economic\ Stock.man 1n h1'> memoirs. and 1 'llmann in the biograph), wn1e at length clbout S1odman's unsuc- cessful attempts to tnm what Stock- man saw as a bloated Pentagon hudgct llllmann wnie<; of Stockman. .. Should he ever return to govern- ment ~·rvKc. he ha<; told fm:nd~. he has his dream JOb all picked out - dcfcn:.e secretary." I illmann wntes that Weinberger laughed when asked to comment and that Kemp o,4ud .. Tell him Kemp 'i81d he wouldn't be Hll.i defense sec retary .. Ullmann wnte'I that usan Haust" Runne. in recalling a conversation that would end her "long. 1nt1mate rclat1oni.h1p·· with Stockman. ~1d "It definitely was on his mind that he could have an impact on the world and that 11 wa-. too important to k1 personal relat1onsgct 1n lhe way " ~hl' added· "He said he want!> to tx- pres1den1 .. <>he paused. and ')aid. "He c;t1ll want<; 10 be pres1den1 ·· A.nolhcr fonhcom1ng book. "Thl· Real David Stockman The True Story of l\mtnca '\ Most ( nn- trovcrsaal Power Broker," by John Grecnya and Anne Urban. also accuses Stockman of biting the hands that ft'd ham . The author!\, affiliated with Ralph Nader, cast Stockman as an intellectual lightweight U llmann traces Stockman'<; "schtzophrenic 1deolog.ical ody~c;ey" trom rock-ribbed Republican lo antt·"-ar act1v1st to skeptical neoconscna11ve to mampulauve budget-culler " The book quotes former Secretary of Agr1cuhure John Block. one of me1n)' ( ab1nc1 officers to cross swords with ~tockman over budget cuts. as <ia)1ng, "I Ju1>1 don't think Dave appreciated the importance of fair pla) The importance of winning overrode the net:ess11y to engage 1n fair pla) ·· Former Reagan domes11c adviser Martin Anderson said Stockman "had a ba~K <:haracter flaw 10 make h1m!>elf look more 1mportan1," n 1denccd by the roof-raising 1nter- " 1ews he gave the Atlanti c monthly in 1981 expressing doubts about Re- agan\ economic pollc1cs. ''<itoct...man came to sec Reagan as a b1g-\pcnding New Dealer who only wanted to get nd of that nefanous ·wt \' -wa<;te. fraud and abuse Pn,atcl) ()rock.man ndaculed the rnnt:epl because he knew that WFA ac<:0untcd for only a pittance of the fedrral hudget.'' the Ull mann book 'iJ~. A mid workaholic . Stockman may ha'l' mellowed after hie; 1983 mar- riage to former IBM ..akswoman Jrnn1ft:r Blc1 She ..a" that after the h1rth of their d.iughtn la,1 Ma). o;hc told her \fX>u\e who had lned 10 abolish the C on'iumcr Product ~fet) Com- m1c.s1on that II was a good thing the tumm1<1<.1on wa' around to put lls seal of appru' al nn a baby scat they hough I At fif\t, \he '>aid. he replied that "1f thry rrall) hun babies, then obvious- ly thC)' wouldn't sell any more." "13ut I ..aid. 'Aren't you glad that we don't havt• to be one of the test cases'" Well, he understood.'' she related. ARTUKOVIC TRIAL BEGINS TODAY ... From A l \lretcher Bui 'llnte then he ha" been ~hown on 1elev1~10n forcefull y professing his 1nnocen(·e and walking 1n a bathrobe and paJarnas without hel p .. He keeps talking without realiL1 ng why He does not understand why he" 1c; being questioned," defense at- turnt"} SrdJa Popovic said in an in1erv1t"w with the wet"kly magazine ~OVO'ill-8 l'ro~utor (vanka P1ntar-(1aJer c;a1d <ohc planned to call about SO witnesses. including 12 of ArtukovK's former bodyiuards and o,urvivors of <"oncentrat1on camps and Jails l)honl)' after his amval. Artukov1c wa' lie:rved prehm1nary papers that ac:<.u~d him of participating in the k1ll1ng ot 231,000 people, includina < 1)'~1es and Jews. while he served as c r oa t1a · s ch 1cf pol ice official C roa11a. now one of Yugoslavia's \1a republics. wa.s independent 1n name dunn& the war, but wa5 actually dominated by I.he Nazis af\cr their ann1n occupied tb11 country. An official indictment filed lHt month docs not specify how many k1lhnits Artukovic wu charged with, MAIN OfflCI JJf) w .. 1 lier <;• ••• ~w A ..ia .--..,_, ~ ••• ...._ C• 91~~ but focu~d on tour spcc1hc inc1denls alleging that -Artukov1c ordered the machine gun k11l1ng of 450 people. mostly women and children. who could not he housed in the Kerestinac assembly camp. the indictment said he was present at the massacre. -He ordered several hundred partisan pnsoners shot They were then run over with tanks in has presence near amobor 10 early 1943. -He ordered the k1llina ofDr. Jesa V1dic. a lawyer. 1n a concentration camp in May 1941 -He ordered the detention and killing of the entire civilian popu- lation of several villages near Vrgjn Most after a Croatian fasci~t unit was slain there. Artukov1c faces a mmimum sentence of five years in prison and a maximum penalty of execution by firing squad U.S. authon l1e) said Anukov1c hed about his identity when he entered the Unittd State 1n the late 1940s. He lived 1n C'alafom1a and avoided extradition for yea rs because of a law allowing people to remain in the United SUltes 1f they may be per- sccutcd for 1he poht1Cal bchcli. ot home. The law wa~ amended in tht late 1970s, however, to allow extrad111on of person, ~ho are accused of persecution , Security wac; expected to be u~t for the trial 1n the Palace of Jusuce 1n Zagreb, the capital of Croatia. Space was allowed for JUSt 16 foreign JOurnah,ts and 16 Yuaoslav rc- porteM but 1elcv1c;1on covera.gc was being set up 1n a nearby room Ethnic nvalries deeply d1v1de the Croatians, t'rbs. Albanians. Slovenes. Macedonians and others who con'il1tutc this nation of 23 million. Serbs. Moslcms and Slovenes u well as Jews and G)'psics were singled out for persecution by Croataa'c; fa~1s1 leaders. known as the tJitash1 "I am a bit afraid of this tnal," Popovic. a <)crb. said in the recent maga71ne interview "It seems to me that the tnal will heat up some p3ss1ons that have already reached an unpleasant state and which arc not de~1rable. "(don't think we will be better off after the tnal .. D•t11 Piiot o.1tw.,, 11 Ou•rentHd ... ,.., •• J4y • , .... 0.--6'2-~19 ~ t ..,., I &d AJ71 Justcall 642-6086 "OI "-IO<I' NC'e> t'y ~1"9"1 •llllJ V ""9" ••• P"t>OV"'O ~ ' .. ........ •• .. "'A1tlht•' .. ,.,"'. ~.,,,., pr .,....,., ..,. ,.,..,.,, ,,.,9'11'\ ""'Wlty "' ... 00...C-.,, "" 4 flt1' ,. .,.. ., pr- _,,, (11 (~'9'\' -· ~ • 1 r "-' r,.....,, .. O' ,.., ,. •' • '"'• ..,.,..,. L a 'nt"N.1 fUpt ,., ~1 ' ~ 't' ' Li" "' • ,,. 1• tr' '" r b, "•"''"'"If'~'''""' VOL 71, HO. 104 What do you hkc about the Daily Pilot'! Whal don't you hke? Call the number above and your messaat wall be recorded, transcribed and de- hvercd to the appropnlle editor The same 24-hour answrnng service may be used to rteord letters 10 the editor on any topic Contnbutor1 to our uncn column must include their name and telephone number for vcnfica11on Tell• u, what's on your mand .., " " 0 !)ell)o1 , C> ... •M rrv crov .,41 i.. _ .. ., •'"M' """'' 5'..-'11" f '/OU 00 f'\()f •w•~ J''-." C°"l' Oy 7 • m La• ~,,.. ,0 •"' •rod '°'"' c ''°"'' #II· De~~ Clrcul•Uon Te4ephOM• ..... Jo'•"'Q> .. & ... , •