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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1988-02-29 - Orange Coast Pilot.. , MONDAY, FEBRUARY 29, 1988 2~ CENTS S. Laguna rental limits sought City Council to weigh code crackdown on illegal units in annexed community ByLANCEIGNON u4 ROBERT HYNDMAN .............. Just how hard should the city of Laauna Beach come d o wn on South Laauna residents who own homes that violate zon1n1 codes? Sports UCl's Frank Woods slammed one as oc con-- trolled the first half but Long Beach State rallied after halftime tor a 98-90 victory./81 Entertainment The Grammy Awards get a change of scene for the 30th anniversary.I Al lndez Advice and Games Bulletin Board Business Classified Comics Opinion Police log Public notices Weather Weddings A10 A3 A7-8 85-7 A 11 A6 A3 84, 7-8 A2 A4 The Laauna Beach C ity Council 1s scheduled to grapple with this tricky question Tuesday night. when resi- dents fro m the newly annexed com- munity o fSouth La&una a re ellpectcd to show up in force. O n o ne side arc the residents who complain about their neighbors who Birds flock to exhibit in Mesa BJ PAUL AACHIPLEY °' .............. If you to ld Jeff Wa lters his "'o rk '4as for the birds. he'd o nl) smile and agree. Call Chm Davis a birdbrain and she. "ould consider 1t a compli- ment. Visitors to the Orange County Fairgrounds hl•ard plenty of fowl language Sunday when Wallen and partner Ken Leighto n produced their first Bird Expo. Mo re than 100 vendors and bird enthusiasts s1affcd booths featuring a flight ~ fart>offcathered friends. fro m the commo n S7 parakeet 10 1hc rare --:uld.-~,pcAA1~--blue hyacinth maca"' In fact. the h\ac1nth. which 1s the largc-..t member.of 1hc parrot family. wld for a reported bargain rate of S6.500 "It's lhe Rolls Royce of birds," Walters said. "There are only about 5,000 1n capt1v1I). It's o n the en- dangered specie'> list. and 1s so rare mo'it zoos don't have 1t " Of course. 1here v.ere plenty of less Cllpcns1ve and l<quall) lOlorful birds. wh ich are b«o ming popular peis among apartment and condo minium d"'cllcrs v.here space 1s a p(e m1um Every kind of accci.sory was avatl- abh: as well. from bird cages and fowl food to bird Jewelry and avian car ~·a1s called pon-a-1o tcs. O ne vendor offen:d a b1b-hke clothing accc'>SOf) 1ha1 co,ered one's shoulders called a "dropper sto pper " Birds' name<; were as not1c as their apJ)l·aran{'l'S. \uc h as the citron col.'katoo CO'illng abou1 S550. the grcl·n wing macaw at S 1.300. v1- olaet•us plantain caters at S950 a pair or Sierra Leone turacos for SHO ha'~ con \c rtcd garages and s1n1k- fam1ly homn into mul11ple-tenant units in ddiam.e of county LOnin1 codes. The) 'kl) the sleepy. trtt-hned streets are nov. d ogged with the cars of people who rent the c:xpen51ve homemade apartments. Backed b) the <iouth Laguna Civic Assocultlon. thq would like to i.tt mult1-te nan1 hou-.cs returned to single-famll) hom es Then there arc the homeowners who s.ay lhl' l0mmun1t) has had a long trad111on o f 4uirL.) bu1ld1n1 standards The\ .lrguc that to fo~ everyone into stm t comphanct would ruin the charm of th<' n<"1gh- borhood. Morco,cr 11 ~ould d1s- phsc<' numcrouc; renter-. In 1937 thl' lOUnl\ 1oncd the neighborho od for ~1ngk-fam1I) homl'S. In thl· inll·nm. ho'4 c,er. residents ha\c had -'O }ear'> to t4rn garages into "' 1ng quancrs and hou~ into tripk'\l'S The commu n11\ ·\ 1983 specific plan rcco1n11cd 1he unusual housing ekmt'nt and d «reed that all non- con formina rcs1dcnct') built txfort' thal )Car \hould be Id\ I\ IS, \aid Doug 1 urkot. o n<' of w eral leader\ o f a mo' t'ment to retain the \tatu'> quo Turkot said he '4111 urge the rnunul to let all 1hosc hou~s modified ht'tu r<' 1983 rcmiun He said the Cll) should ha\l thl· nght 10 inspect all th<' d'4 t'lhng' 111 mak<' sure thC'\ mt"Ct building .ind Judy Ga.adlach of tbe Pet Ranch ln San Dteco COGnty abowa off a blae and told .... ,... .... .., T1lll Oit ~ macaw at tbe Blrd Ezpo at tbe <>ranee County Falr1roanda ln Coeta Mesa. .\nd an'Ording 10 Chris Da' '" who bills hcr\cll J\ the "Bird l Jd\ ... 1hn l .Hl be n l'r) h11 J\ aOi:ct 1onat~ J'> dog\ and ma)hl' a "hole lot smarter DJ' 1'i. onl' u fthc mam 'l'ndor' Jt lhl .. l'\po. "Pl'l·1ahLcs "1n 1amin1t training. tx·hJ' mr mod1tiu l11lm and lJ n ng ot h1rd' ~h«: d.lllllCU relent '>IUdlC') J'> \\t"ll j\ hl·r O\\n l'\pl'.rll'Ol'\~~-h:J\(' \ho"'n bmh po'l'lt"'l'> unt.1pJX'\l 1n1dhgcml' •\\ l"n.· 1n the \aml' room 11·, IU \t th:ll "l' ll1me in thl' lrun t door and bird'> Hlnll' 1n J .,,J c du1-r .. f);n 1s .-...ml 'hl' knows of bird!> that l'an open rnm h1na11on IOlks b~ h'iten1n~ to lht: (Pleaee eee Bl.RDS/Al) hlJ llh Jnd <wkl' ~tandard\ V. hat \\C dl1rl 0l 1A.aOI I\ J)(.'Oplt' who arl" 1hal no" tu )uff<·r lro m th11 thing. T u1~111 w1d In .tdd111un tu dt'hatt' o'er 1on1n& '1ul.1111m\ tht• ( 11> Council 1s t'>L· pt'l ll"d 111 d 1~ U\\ 11 !. ' 1cto r. last week 1n lll'lr.it1ng a proposed r~hgnment .lnJ '' 1dcn1ng of Lagun~ Can yoft k 11JJ Tht·' Jhlorn1a Coastal C'om - 111 \\11111 'uttd b-5 WcdncMia> to ll ll"l 1 thl· < .t h ran-.. propQsal after (Pleue eee COUNCIL/ A2) Babies leap into unusual birthday By GREG ltLERKX Ot ... O..,,......, Enn DrmpS('\ ma~ ha\t' 1n- ad\l:rten 1I~ tapped 1n10 a founlain ot 'outh of w n\ · B~ tht'timc'>ht:., lb~eanold \he'U t'<' onh ~ \\ ht'n \ht' turns 40 she11 be.' 10 She v.-111 m ost h L.ely nc."vc-r bt' a \Cn1or ut11en In 1..·aSt" )OU h,l\<'n't gu~scd 11 \Cl Erin Ocmp')('~ u :lc-brated h<'r "t"f) li r'>t b1rthJJ\ -the da' of h<'r actual birth -toda, a da' ·which comc'S o nl l' e' t'r. lo ur 'ears bt'lauSC' of a l hronolog11.al t .... O-,.t<'P l·allt'd Leap Year ... ti 1(h compensate\ for 11\L' .lb.5~ dau u talc~ t.b.: Eanh I~ -0rbH the \Un . En n "'ilS born at ti 30 a m toda) at Fountain \ allc') Regio nal Hosp1lal Hc:r molher Ro bin said her dauahter \Cemcd 10 1n1ent1onalh wa11 for tht' 'ipt"\.1a l da\ 10 am'<' · "I "'3S tt)talh t \Clled ... said Robin ~l) v.ho l•'l'' 11f Huntingto n Bt'ach "''th her hu'>N.lnd Eug<'n<'. 34 "l'vh nng1nal du\ Jal<' '4as th<' ~0th but the bab\ JU\I L.ep1 '4alling .. (nn 1\ thc Dc:mp'<')'S. first child Enn ,,.a., no1 o nh a late bab' s~ '4 a" a big bah\ Q pounds. I 0 o unct"S to be l'\a t .ind ··the h1gt"St bab) 1n the "ard ·· ~1d her m otht'r' proudh ~he <,aid f:nn«, unusual h1rthda' 1i. 1n linl' v.11h l.i m1h 1rad1t1on ~he was burn un \ elcran·., Da' and her bnllhcr ha' a Than~ g 1'\ ing b1nhda~ · 1 m \Ur<' 1.hc·11 be.' e\Cllt'd about 11 \\hen \ht' gl'I\ older \ht''ll ll<' a 101 \OUngc"r than m1JSI otht'r "'omen." \1 " Dt'm p'ie.'' -..i1d Riley endorses Baker for Congress The arr" JI l)I Eh.raht'1h "11col<' Z"'Kkc-r"a\.,..hl•Jule'd for I:! 30 p m todn' \.11J hn la ther. Glt'nn Ht' and h1\ ""e \and ' ~2 ar<' not th<' least bit \Urpn~·d that their firs1 child 1s am' ing tl'ld.l' The Foun~1n \'allt'' rl"'>•dcnt\ plannC'd 11 that '43\ The' ah '' ~n<.'"' thl"ir l h1ld 1s a &•r1 • hav1n& fuu nd OUI a0er lt'St'> taken t'Brl1er In Zv.1ll er'<, prcgnanq .. \\c L.ind of pill ed toda') bccauSC' lh.Jt'' m' latht'r'\ tunhda)."' '31d (·ll·nn '\j ··Ht•., al"'a)S had a lot ot fun ,,.1th 11. and '"<' Joked around a 101 o n h1\ b1nhda' .. BJ JENNIFER WEBER °' ............... Supcrvi50r Thomas Rile) became the second prominent local Re- publican 1n 1wo weeks to endorse Irvine Cit)' Councilman C. David Baker's bid for C'ongrtss. leading supporters of challenger Nathan Rosenberg to Cf) foul. Rile) anno unced his cndo~mcnt Sunda) to some." 700 supporters g.:ithercd at Baker's ca mpaign heac1- quancrs an In inc Re p. Rohen Badham. R-Ncwpon Beach . cn- do~d BaL.erearhcr this m o nth as h1'I reolacemcnt 1n the 40th D1strn:t R1k\ ~1d he det:1dcd to -..uppon Baker after "'all'h1ng him for about IO )Cars. Rile) appointed Baker nine )Cars ago to thl· county Re tirement Board "That g.:l'l' me an 10'i1ght 10 h1\ ml·thod of o peration. his commit- ment 10 eAcellencc." R ile) said Marine forestry off Newport may _spa.wn indus_try_ ___ _ A few hund~ feet off Ncwpon Beach. the f ututt of the ocean may soon be tak i na root. The Mt«nS of that future wcif-hS on the shoukkn of 1 · visiuna Frenchman whow devotion to a unique theory ohcascapi"I is as vast and lim1tku as the ocean itttlf. He lack.I moMy and manpower. but not ~inat1on. ""°Pie Mid before that iMn structwn of the 1n coukS only attract livina structura.. not develop 1t1 life. That is not true... •id Rodolphe St~ichtnbtracr. 1 former bus1- nnaman who nows spccialius 1n what he c:aJh .. IQUICuhUrt." Stftichcftbasf hu developed I uniq~ method" of .. teedi!'J .. I'll~ of 0tt1n bottom wtlh &hick two-n kelp. crcat"'I kelp forests that he c"1ms will devck>J> into cnhrt undtr-~• erot)'ltetnt •tthin 1 year or two. Such bio1uuc1ure1, as ~~calla*"'· may hold tht key to,.,..... ...... coastal +1\Vhtn you do this. ,au the boctom of the -. Vou • tlw GIEC bu no formal becqround in b\ofOsy or ocanotraph)'. but hokb dqttt from Plris Univer1ity in ec:onomin and Minas. 8'.t S.Me the latt 1970s.. he haJ bttn u~na the tCka of undmea planlil\&+ fir1t 1n h1snattve France and for the last thrtt yean in the mott tcmptratc watcn otT Nc-.pon Beach. He has 11\0tktd for the Fttnch I nst1tute for Sea ltaeard\ and MariM Elplorahon. I ttKlrth lf'OUP fundtd b) the Fttnch to~tm~nl. t~K'htnM,.rr~, uncknn plant· '"I con«pt ts bnlhantty sample Baker s.ud the backing ot R1lq a nd Badnam 1s l'qUl\aknt to "thl' <•ood Houscket"DIOll ~al of Appro' JI .. "It g1,c \OU cHn more crcd1h1ht' IO the 'o h:r<t areawide. o r d1\- tnct1A.1dl'. .. RaL.er \:lid today Da' 1d \ JfXlrcan. campa1~ u1n sultant for Ro..cnbcrg. lxlll.'\t''> thl' cndorwmcnt 1c; part of a conll'nl·d dTort b' the Orange C ount\ Re· publican Part\ h l groom Baker J'> J fro nt-runner and locL. o ut.JDC other n1nl· candu.iJtl'' "ho ha' t' an no un l-d the ir in1cn11on 10 run in the June." "' Republu:an pnmar. \ aport.'an .... ud count) Republican Chairman Tum Ful'ntes '4as among 1hu!>C "'t.1rL.111g behind the ~ncs to undl·rm1m· Ro..cnhcrg'!> support .. fhat wund ridiculous ... Fuente' ••• 11J o f 1 hl· l'h.lrgc Baler al'l(I d"m1'i'led the charges adding. ·1 'iuppo\C I \\Ould be sa~ mg that or ~oml-onc l'lt;e '40uld be SD\ mg tha1 11 thl'' J 1dn 1 iict 1th<' t'ndo~­ ment' R1k \ w1J rw v.a\ "disturbed" aOOUI \ JP,H~.ln 'Jllt~llOOS. "I l Jn ,1,\ull' "'U nnlhing hl t' that occ-u rn·J · hi.' ,J J l<1k ' ,.mJ lw ,,..t11cJ until he '48~ \Ufl' k lto,,. \upt·1 ' 1 ~1r R er tan- tun ni. nt11•m·J ,,, .1 po\\lbk c-an- J 1dJll' l"r B.idh.im ''<'31 JC'Cld~ not tt1 run II n •1 '•H 1h.:it "I ,,.ouki h3'<' (Pleaee ett RJL&Y / A2) Tht' l"1'-l <'r\ daughter '4as sc~­ uk-d for '-kh,t'r. b') C aesarean sec- tion ~s ol I I a m . four Leap 'ear bab1c\ had h«n born at Founuun \ alle\ Rcg1on:il MC'd1cal C't'ntt'r. and a to ta l of I' C\pt"\.tant m otht'rs had bl•cn adm111ed to 1he hospital th1 mo ming. .IHorJing 10 hospital of- lk 1.il\ Doctor in,mercy killing tells of wife's last hours Pill . drug failed to tern1ina te life of can er victim ~n R I \IH R\ ~la c \Pl -Pam R,,.,1('1 '"' '-'-J .11 hl·r l~'t mt'al. kt SC'J hc-r , h1IJ rrn l\("1t'l'c nJ rt'\ted in "'-·J \.\1th he• hu\Nnd The talkC'd anJ \.\l'OI JnJ huS¥l"<l. hr 'ltd and 1hc n '1.h<' )""""'-'"'l-d ~ h~ndful of ,f<.'t'Jll"I Sllll\ "\h '4 11<' '4an1cd to sJttp l ol..u't f; II 1nH' 1 IT'lful \ll"('p and die ht' too~ th( Jruf' hr n.c'lf Her IHl •'tlrds to f1l<' '4('~ I<''<'~ ou ~er,' " Prter Rll\tC'r \lid in an 1nl<"f"' 1t'• puN1"'ed unJa, Ro l(f a f on \hen rhnte'l&n. IS haf'l('\I "'"h fi"t.Jcvff munkr 1n the-death \lf h1 ..& l-)car-old •1fc n b n I\ I~ b Ht<i lnll IS hcdukd to bqin .\pnl I and profC'CUtOR SI) &ht -•llW"C"l tht\ka&hprnah 1f'M11 ft\lded Mn R .n-dtd not dtt from tbr ~p1na pill nor from tf\1«190M ot that ht' tinalh \ufToutcd her l)(·lmAn has been gnintt'd 1mmun1- '' from prost"Cut1on ProW<'utor f d \\ll1 shs Ro 1<'r con5p1rt"d an the dNlh o(hu. "''fe and an be tncd for til"1-0cal"C'(' murd<'r .\utho nt1e 1n"c hptcd th<' death o nh after Ro 1er talked about tM- o rc um'li.nct'\ on tt'k'-ISIOn Ml"\ Ro 1er '4IS d1qn~ 10 ~pni IQ 5 as havina luf\I canttr Rosier quit h1 JOb " head of the pathol°'' dcpanmc:nt al l.tt Memonal Hospe· tal 10 be ~tlh has wife. •ho. trca&mcnt at fin& 1tttncd ~ul. • I\ mon1hs latc."r, doctOf'I fo1'nd brain tumor'\ n thc-tt ~n= mOtT tumo~ tn ht'r abdom<'n ind on her d tn. Ros.tr 111d ·~ ~as 1ncurabk ht' •a.1 IOl"I to die ht' fth. wh> ao thf'OUlh tMI tort11~ \rad1auon t.htf'l~) aJI o~ lf*Jn ... Rotatf". 46.. said 1n aa inter• \ ~ publtlhcd 1n ftda ·, tdmoes ofl'M Maanu Herald. .. M wtfechole 10 end ht1 hfe."' 11 was l<*Cf''S f\rst lftl!tf'\C'W Illa hr was •ndtned in ScpMmber. tnYU'Olltnefttl Md ~door to ..... die•-'•• ••u•~ element.•• uid i.:----S.rcid11tllbt•tn· .... -• .-..y blopeu i ........ luft1ty.5'ftic8'e11111C;m Ml Usu•a prnaunnd ~ conMClrd to 1 hollow tt«I rod. dt~cn -ould blatt I ().foot~p hob an the ocun boc&om then lftlCf\ ropn •• tht holn.. .-htctt -.td lake Mid after ..d morph1M Yo hK h her hu•nd alee.ct· '" p~ her af\n • laf'!W'd tfttO 1 roma 'The tmman's Jtrplithtt, Vin· He 11td ht and •11 '"• ol 22 ,-i had DlaaM!d It ftnl IO die=· .... ~ ...... __ .,. 0..- Lhe atlftl. ..... ••••• .._ ....... -·•--/A9) en• Ddman f • on Cit), llYI ... ,,_, "' ... ' • • - --.cc=_:_Sw~art thanks supporters as superiors consider suspensiQri Another storm heads for Coast ..... o .. ] ...... ...., .......... BATON ROUGE. LL (AP) - Tclevilion evaftlelill Jimmy SWll-p~l' M would no& bawe aunived I ol af' SI-ol i......a conduct with a prouitule h8d it not ~n for the love and prayers or members of other reli,;o.ts. Today olf'1dahof\he Allembhnof od bepn ptherina at t.be de- nominauon's Slate hnMiquancrs. but the)' refused to say wbethrr Swq· gan's c~ would be discu.ued. OurinJ a brief appearance Sunday before his COfllttPl1on at the Jimmy Swagart World Ministries center. Swagan thank«! about 4,000 worshipers for their t.ckin&. ''I'll never have the words to express to you how much that I care. my concern. for you and my thank51ivin1. If it hadn't been for )OU, we would not have made it. It's JUSt that plain and simple," said Swaggart. s~. who confcued lat week to sinn11• aaainsl his wife, •in WIS unspecif'iC about his wroftedoina. l.ndtrs of hit hntmMWI deMmine- tion, the Aslcmblin of Ood, are considtrint a rehabili&ation plan that will suspend him from . ~i .... repomdly bu'lu1t he paid a 'Pf0111- tute to~ naked and tried IO make 1 ckal with a minister who confronted him about it. sw..,n said he was rectivina support and sympathy from "not only Peot«ostal. but Baptists. Methodi sts. Presbyterians. Lutherans and Catholici. ... Even my Moslem friends. I'm serious. have called and said 'we love you. ~ pray for you.'" accord inf to Swqpn. The founder o an cvanaelical empire "orth an estimated SI SO million said his worldwide ministry would continue. "first of all. this ministry belonas . ao Oocl Secondty, aJus m1n1Sb')' will continue. And last. bu\ certainly not lealt. this ministry will be what be wuu iuo be. .. S1 .,n laid. Sw • n laid a.e WOuld ~three montlls away from the pulpit receiv- i"f, ''tome meat of the Word." 'To be frank with you, I haven't btta fed. .. SWllllJlft said in a voice toned down sharply from bi1 usuaJ fire-and-brimttone style. "I don't know when it's bttn. To ju1t be fed. I would Fl a little here and a little theft. Over the next three months. I'm aoina to & fed ." Louisiana church officials have rtrom~ndcd barrinaSwqprt from preachina for three months. but national denomination officials asked for reconsideration after rc- ccivint hundreds of calls protcstcst- ina the ptnalty as too lenient. Swaaart's wife. Frances. also thanked the conarqation. front ..... "--· fllll ... t#uaIJ' ..,,__.. ... II a•,..._. ..,.,,,,,..,.,.. ""'-· ... ...., ........... Lee =~ ............. ,...._A_.... .... ., __ _,,_ -................. --............... .............. ,. .... IGGl~W-....-. Alof'I ttle or.,.. COMI ._. .. a. w 1'd1 _.. cloudlMll ................... dlmll ................... ~ ~Tueader--•,.11111d..,_ol1Mza1'W .... ln .. •·Lowa 41 toll. H11M n.ec111r In .. ,.......,_ ... From Point CcN •*"' to It. .......... lordar -0wer Inner ....,. • .,,... craft acMeOf, from 0.. Point to Point Concieptlon. U.S. Tempe Orange police taking Hispanics to INS Hy Tlae .U1oclate4 Prell Police an the city of Orange. a,garavated b) an increase in crimes committed b) Hispanic transients. have taken as man'v as 67 to the U.S. Border Patrol beca~se they could not prove their legal residency. officulls said The pohq toucht."d off complaints h> c1,1l nghts and Hispanic groups. .. It raises very serious concerns 11 to npts of due process,'' Rebecca Jurado, an American Civil Liberties Union lawyn in Oranac County. sajd. City officials said they were re- spondina to nuisan~ complaints involvina Hispanic transients who started fires. were sleeping io build- inp and urinating in public. TM problem wia .... ci1ationa to tramiea11 ror -=ta aaildemeuon is that tbcJ ._._.., live W. names. a., ofticiall llid. If &be Or,.. CcMlDty jlil ... DOC O~ crowded t.bey would be jailed. So &r. all 67 tramiaatt have beeo identified as illetll alieal and were deported. On_nee police Stt. Timm Browne said. RILEY BACKS BAKER ••• COUNCIL ••• From Al endorsed Da'e Ba._er the day he announced." Rile) said. Stanton could not be reached this morning to confirm that he wiU not ">eek Badham·s seat. Meanwh ile. Baker took his o"n shot at the Rosenberg camp. sa) 1ng his endorsements arc the resuh of his long·l1mc residence and ac11v1t} in Orange Count}. ··we ha,cn'1 come rccentl} 10 this district ... JUSt ambitious for an office:· he said. Rosenberg mo"ed to Orange Coun· t) in 1982. and his run against Badham m 1986 was his first attempt aca poritiCaT office. Baker said the dual endorsements \\'Ould boost his campaign. "It's unusual for these people 10 endorse in the primaries." he sa id. "Of course. in this race the primary means e' Cf') th ing.·· The 40th District is heavily Re~ {>ublican and the winner of the primarr is generally considered to be a shoo-m. Meanwhile. an aide to state Sen. Marian Bcracson said Bcraeson will endorse a candidate after the filing period doses March 11. Kevin Sloat, Bcrgcson's administrative assistant in Sacramento. said he did not know when the senator would maJcc the announcement or whom she would support. From Al being swayed by the urginis of council members and city residents. Mayor Dan Kenney said he will propose more cnforu~nt b~ day pohct to improve traffic ufn)'JJl t 81g Bcnd'arca of the winding rolld. 'Boat carrying illegal aliens sinks ··w e need to increase our AGUADA. Puerto Rico (AP) -been recovered and another had been sur"eillance:· Kenney said. "By Authorities said today that a small spotted but washed away before it bringing this up at our mtttina, I wooden boat carryin1 illeaal aliens could be retrie"cd. th inlcwe-c:an"di'Sc'asshoYwn:an-m~·-1rom·1~0om1n1ran Jtepulll.lc11nr-·····-one·or ,11lc two known s·urvivors our commitment. madt at the com-in rough seas off the wna coast of "has stated that there were approx- mission meeting. to improve the Puerto Rico. A survivor was quo\Cd imately 40 people on the boat." conditions out tbac." as sayi"I more than 40 people ~ Hasker said ma telephone interview Kenney said other measures such aboard. in San Juan ... We don't know any- as installant traffic wamin& sips also Elmer Haaker, deputy district di-thing about their situation .... whether will be discussed with an eye toward rector for the lmm~tion and Natu-they drowned or made it to shore is asking Caltrans to make those im-ralization Servi« in San Juan. •id unknown at this point." provcmcnts on the road. one illepl alien was in INS custody, The boat sank dunnJ. the weekend another hospi&alized. two bodies had off Aguada. about 85.males west of the capital San Juan. Al the time. the seas "ere very rough and it was very "indy. -·rn-·a· -icl~plioric-i nfc rview· ·rrc>nr Aauada. police spokeswoman Evelyn Crespo said a survivor told authorities there were 45 people on the boat. indudina 37 men and eight women. Police said the two bodies were of t" o girls. one 14. the other 16. There "as no inform ation avail· able on why the boat sank . . MARINE FOREST ST ARTS IN NEWPORT ••• MERCY KILLING TOLD BY DOCTOR ••• From Al reselllcs. Plastic tubing \\-Ould be attat·hcd 10 thl.' ropes. and anached to the tubes \\Ou Id be strands of kelp which grow at the rate of about one foot per month. Each ._elp fores! "ould aver· age about ~.000 kelp plants spaced SC 'eral feet apart . s a i d S1rc1chenberger. In about one ~ear. the kelp strands ~ould mature. turning the barren ocean bottom into a liuh environ· ment which could be home lo dozens of species of fish and crustacean\ That's the enure process. said ~tre1chenberger. A mult1·acre pla nt- ing could be accomphshcd by a dozen experienced divers working ofT a simple flanttng chan But the ben- ~fits o the undersea forest are 1umerous. 4 "Our basic 'oal 1s the enhancement Of the sea." said tre1chenbergcr. "ho said he has completed some success- ful test plantings. .. The sea is depleted. and the need for marine resources is gro~1ng There as a futu re" 1th the sea that "e don't have w11h the land." For )Cars. go"ernment and prl\atc iroups ha'e used steel chains 10 ittach kelp strands to rocks. but the lhains rust qu1ckl~ and are more xpensive than the more durablt." lastics used b> Stre1chenberger The process could eventuall) be auto- trlatcd. he said 1 In addition 10 the poten11a l for ~arvesting fish and shellfish hkc abalone or mussels. tmchenbergcr said the undcrS<"a forest could als- provide a mt. .. ns of sculpting beaches by preventing beach sand from being "ashed av.a) b} "aves or storms By placing ttie forests at strat~1c lo- cations offshore. sand could be dfrccted virtuall) wherever it is desired. he said. Preliminaf') studies on large-scale planting are completed . said Strcichcnbcrge r. All that is let\ to create is a full-scale model. To that end. S1rcichenberger has leased a I~ acre undersea plot from the state Department of Fish and Game. located about 200 f~t off Balboa Pier. Next month. Strcichcnberger and his all.volunteer crew will begin cuhl\ a11ng )Oung kelp off the Balboa Pier. "llh the intent lo ~in planting the full·scale model in the ocean in three months. One element massing from StmchenberJcr's plan 1s monc~. but c' en that 1s beginning to flow in. he said. Strcichenbergcr and several Ne" port Beach resi dents have for- med a non·profit compan} called Manne Forests and ha"c alread ) received approximately $45.000 in prl\ ate donations. he said. To seed a fi ve-acre test plot, Stre1chcnberger said he Wlll need s 100.000. Bill Crawford, a local Realtor and director of Manne Forests. said he met trcichenbergcrabout 10 months ago and was impressed b> his ideas and enthusiasm. "When he offered some of the ideas of what he could possibl) create. I got prett)' excited about ll." said Crawford. "The most im pressive thing about Rodolphe is that. because he's hereon a v1S11or's visa. he doesn't JCl a doUar for this. J couldn~ belie ve 11 at first. He docsn·t need any monc) reall}. but he doesn't want any. He Ii' cs comfonabl}. but frugally. He's doing this because he behcves in 1t. "I believe in this proJecl. I behc c in Rodolphe and what he can do. - said Crawford. StrcichenbnJ« has conducted much of his research at ahe Km:khofT Laboratory in Corona del Mar with the hel p of Profeuor Wheeler North. considcrm by many &o be the fore- most expert on kelp. Nonh pcnuaded Strcichcnbcracr to bring his work to California artcr he was snubbed by several skeptical French aroups. Nonh said plantina kelp forests is not a new idea. but it is Strc ichcnberaersapproach that he feds is unique. "The state of California is m"olved with simi lar transplanting schemes lo keep kelp beds in good condition. but Rodolphe is doinJ hjs kelp forests on sand. where kelp an these pans grows on rocks." said Nonh. "The second difference is that he plans to raise other crops such as shellfish to make n more economical. holaAl the home. how 10 di'PQSC of the pro~rty .... I told the children I could not live without Patty. But then I realized it WU RlY responsibilty to stay with them," he said of their children, Jacob. now 20. and Etira- beth. 19. On the niaht of her planned death. Mrs. Rosier '"''lied fam ily and friends for a last visit. She gave them gifts and had a catered dinner. although she wa s too ill to eat. Later. Rosier helped her to the bedroom. The couple made love. The) talked. "I had had an affair earlier on an our marriage. I asked her a.gain 1f she had the stepfather mter' encd. forgi ven me:· he recalled. "She said. "I decided to cover her mouth and ·v ou know r ve forgi ven you her nose .... I mean it was pathetic to thousands of times.' We &alked about sec th is lad> in bed and all this stuff a lot of th inas. About whether there going on for 11. 12. 10 hours. "as a God .... About how much we "hate" er 11 "as. So the thins 1s to end were going to miss each other. She 1t.'' Delman said in depositions. "asn·t scared. I was.'' The bod} was cremated within 48 Then she took the druas. • hours. "I couldn't bear 10 be with her after Months after his wife's death. she'd fallen asleep. I left the room." he Rosier commission a scriptwriter to 'd T I h I '"' R · produce a screenpla) fro m a book he sai · we vc ours atcr, ..... rs. osier "rote about her death. Then he went "as still ah' c. 1 · · d d · · · on te e' ISIOn an unng an interview Delman has said that Rosier at-said he helped his wife die, a 1emp1ed in vain to end his wife's life · confession that sparked the cri minal with injections of morphine. Finally. 1mes1igation. BIRDS FLOCK TO MESA EXHIBIT ••• From Al ··Rodolphe is a very determined qlinders click. much like a skilled Her enthusiasm was shared by to save the California condor from individual and he's stuck with it safe cracker. She has seen birds use others, such as Bob Bahner of the extinction throuah breeding in cap.- through a lot of discouragement." "tools" to preen themselves. Orange County Bird Breeders. ti\'lty, lesser known breeding pro- added North. "I "ould have g1"en up Dav1scla1ms some birds even sctm The organ ization's primary goal is aramsare successfully returning other long aso." 10 cart) on conversations. She once to educate the general pubhc about species 10 the wilds. he said. Strc1chenberger has also recruited a scolded a bird that had chewed up birds. Bahner said. small team of \'Olunteer di vers 10 some silk flowers. asking it rhetorical-Members of the group breed cvtf')'· Bird fanciers also arc bringing joy assist him in his test planting. and has ly. "Do )OU know how much those th ing from exotic macaws torommon to the eldcrl) or others who arc spoken before several diver's cl ubs no"crs cost"" The bird asked. "How ca naries. confined to homes by introduci ng and college classes to promote his much?" "With all the deforestation going them to the ownership and care of concept. Davis wmes bard columns. lectures on around the world many birds arc birds. Bahner said. "They know 1nst1nct1 vcly that this across the natton and counsels bird losi ng their natur11I habitat." Bahner "If s notan cas) job. 24 hours a day. 1s a JOb for the future," said o" ners. said. "Pretty soon, they're aoina to be sc' en da}s a week ... he said. "Son of Strc1chenberger. "There's a need for 1t." she said. eltinet unless there are people to lake raising children. Alt ho ugh pro ponents of "These auys arc expensive and brccdthemin captivity." "Butthebirdsarealotmorcfun 1re1chenberger's plan arc cxcat«I the)'rc gonna outlive you." Like the well-publicized attempts than children arc:· about 1~ potcm1al uses; his -own -i-------· -----------------------=------==----== ....... =--------interest in the undersea biostructures is more esoteric. .. Kelp 1s beautiful." said Streichcnbcrger matter-of-fa ctl y. ··1t's a strong factor in the ocean. 1 strong factor in ocean life. Creatina ______________ 11111! ______ 1!111 ___ 111!11 __ • • moreoCiican only.c:nha~ethc-«ea~ as a whole." Lotto climbs to $5 million At the same 11me as the kelp plantin~. Streichenbergcr and his team wall also be exper1 mentina with anific1al undersea homes for mussels. attaC'hin1 some to the plastic tubina used for kelp. "'hile builcUnt me&al webbing on the ocean floor lO anl"IC1 others. For the future. biostructum for other creatures arc a definite possibility. he said. SA RAMENTO ( Pl -No one &Ot 311 SI~ winning numbers IO the v.eckcnd "Lotto 649 .. pme so the $4.973.016 jackpot will roll over 10 the midweek pmc. California Lot· 'try officials said. The numbers picked Saturda) nigh1 in lotto were 46. 41 . 8. 37. 17. 22 and the bonus number. 23. f1 \.e tickets I Ot five numbers and the bonus. and each is worth S27S.988. Tv.o of the tickets were purchased in San Jose while the others were boupt 1n Rohncn Park. ORANGE ........ COAST --· r'RI MAIN OFFICI :no,,_.., .... '' ~,. ~ A Mi1i4 .--.... tMO Gc»•e 1oAeu C• ,•J ~--..., n.-• eot•• ~1 4»t Fresno and Cul"er l it) There v.ere 190 tickets with Just five numbers. each worth SJ. 741 . and 10.426 tickets with four numbers. each wonh $61. Winning the fixed S5 pme for three numbers were 207.092 tickets. The total of awarded prize was S3. 762.176. Sales for the midwed: pme totaled S 12.926.874. The rollover oftbc weekend's $4.9 m1lhon jackpot will boost Wcdnes- da} 's pot to about S9 million. the lottery es' a mated. ·· 1 hope to SI.art a marine forest movement that will spread beyond Newport Beach. I have alre~dy heard from other countries interested in this. I really believe ia is the future," said Strc1chcnbel'JCr. "And people will say all over that it bcpn in Nev.port ~l<'h." ~=-•Gw•tnll ........,.,..., . ""'. ftOI ..... ,_ .... .., S:IO!llfl'l-..... 7•"' cao..,1't I t•) ()t.,... C-"-""'O .., NO ,..... _,... el-.o-tor,.. _,,,. a -It• ........ ...... 0. ·-~ W't'n.• -~ Whal do you like about lhe 0.Uy P,toi? What don't you like? Call the number~ve and your _(°"'_,., .. . -.9d ...... O.f -~y .. )00. CIO l'Clll ,...... ,_ ft ,.... ..... tOa • -~c~• oe_...,eo ""° dCC.cr>..,.,_ ~ •"111 be recorded. tran and de· hvtred to the a~op1111tc ed110f. · : The 11~ 4"hour answerina .ervatt may be uted to record ltutts to the editor Oft anf topic. Coatributon ao our Lctten column mutt include thrir namt Hd telephone number for vrrifte1hon. Ttlh ui what's on yovr mind. .. Ctr1 ll1U1n T1t1.t41111 The largest selection in • Newport Beach Palo ·m ~i..u.n. . . . Neuropsychology lectures planned ·by London expert Dr. Elizabeth WarriftllOA. a~ from the National HOipital for Ncrvoui Di...s in London, will pment a ICf'ie\.ollllctura at ua this week. Waninaton will speak Tunday at l l :lOa.m. on the subject of memory dilOf'den in 8uilcli1112 of the UCI Medical Center in Oranfe. That e~enine. at 6:30 p.m., she will addresl the Ora• County Neurolotical Society at its ofr1CC, also in Orante. Future lectures are 1ehedulcd for Wednaday at 8 a.m. in the Medical Center, Thursday at noon in the Bonney Center on the UCI campus and Friday at l p .m. in UCl's Steinhaus Hall. Call Aletha Balentine. prosram coordinator. at IS6-60U for more informauon. Pareata' worbJJop .et A workshop for ~nts dniped to foster cooperation with children will be prewnted Wednesday by Orante Coast Collete"s Commun.ity Services Propam in Room 110 of Costa Mesa Hip School. Partic:ipents will kam the basic theory behind effectivedisciplincat the 7 p.m. procram. The cost is S 19. includin1 materials. and more information is available at 432-S880. Heart tat lecture A free lecture o n invasive cardiac testing for coronary an&i<>lf'lphy will be ,;ven Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the Mission Hospital Community HealthEd Center. 274S l Los Altos. Mission Viejo. The lecture is pert of an on1oin1 .. Heart Smart" series. Call 364-1770 for rqistration information. School nnaa~lag aired Dr. John Nicoll, superintendent of the New- 1>0tt-Mesa Unified School District. and-John Withers. director of government affain for the Oranac Countr. ~on of the Buildin1 Industry Association. will discuss "financina for our Local School -Where Will it Come From?" at Wednesday's mectin1 of Speak Up. Ncwpon. The prOlf'lm is scheduled for 5:30 p.m . at the Villa Nova Restaurant. 31.JI W. Coast HiAhway. 'Newpon Beach. Further information is avai&blc at 673-7975. . · Busineu ·ezpo·af!-fair·~--···-·· ··-· More than 9.500 business have been invited to attend the first business networkiOJ mixer/expo. scheduled Thursday evcninJ at the Oranac County Fair and Exposition Center 1n Costa Mesa. Admission is fret. but reservations arc requirtd. For additional information. call the fairgrounds' public relations department at 7S 1-3247, ext. 47 or 16. Pollce career day set .. .. A carter daY. to hiahli&ht opponunitics for police officers will be held Thursday morning at Golden West Collqc. The event. sponsored by the collqc's Basic Police Academy. will be held at the Criminal Justice Trainin& Cent.tr from 9 a.m. to I p.m. Call the center at 895-8370 for more information. Gallery alght la Laguna Out of the way pllerics will be fcaturtd at Thursday's La&una Gallery Niaht program of the Laaun.J Beach Chamber of Commerce. The evening will beain at the Las Brisas Restaurant fro m 5 to 6 p.m. and is one of a series of events held on the first Thursday of each month. Call the chamber at 494-1018 for additional information. Moaday, Teb. 29 • 7 p.m.La.-a...Recr.demc..amtttee, special meeting to discuu dcsian alternatives for Alta Laauna Park. council chambers. SOS Forest Ave. Tuellday, March l • 6p.m ........ lleeda17c-cu,sos Forest Ave. • 6:30 p.m. Int. a17 C-CU, council chambers. 17200 Jamboree. • 7:00 p.m. Ne.,.... Beecll Pub, Beat'ht ... Recreadell C.-•..._ council chambers. 3300 Newport Blvd. OfMge CoMt OAJLY PILOT /Monday, Februwy 29. 1"8 * Aa JWA p~ssenger traffic in nosedive· ., 809 VAN EYu:N ............. More than 21.000 fewer pustnaen flew out of John WayM Airport last month than in January 1987. according to figures just released. rt was the third m onth in a 1 row that similar dcclintt had been noted. accordina to airport officials. DuriRJ 1987. airline operations in· creased by 3.4 percent. althouah the total number of pusenaen nyin1 from John Wayne Airport was lower by 6.2 percent last month than in January 1987. Meanwhile. small aircraft traffic at John Wayne Airpon continued its yearlong decline list month. attording to the fi1ures. Takeoffs and landinp by small. general aviation afrcrafi declined by 5.3 percent over the course of 1987. according to airport officials. Ready for repairs Commuter ait'luw, or air WI~ oper· ations declined~ an even pater ma111n. I S.3 perctnt from January. 1987 to JanUAry. 1988. Airport auis&ant ma..., Alan Murphy said he was alto unablt to explain tht' reduction 1n the num~ of air1me passen- gers. "We've noticed it over the past thrtt months." he said. "We don't know what's causins it. but it 1eem1 to reOec1 a statew1<k phenomenon ... Planes arc flylna with fewer passengers. but passen~r loeds still tend to bt higher at John Wayne Airpon than at many 01hers. Murphy said. "This is teneraUy a v~ profitable a irpon for airlines, .. he said. 'If the '""d continues. you may 1« some culbacks 1n flights. but you may not. For the most pan. I think the airlines can easily deal w11h slightly lowertd peSKftlCr loads." Murphy said he was aJso at a loss to explain the dtchM m arnttal a vuit1on traffi(. altboup be sa.id u appeartd to rt'flttt a national ~nd. Murphy said Fnday_ that the dtthne m commuter air'liM traffic last month com- partd toa )'elfl&OCOufd. in part. be mated to forced cutbacks at Amencan E.&)e. a ma1or commut.tr camcr. ··w e had some problems wtth them overO yina their pa~ngcr hm1ts and so we cut them back substantially." he said. The figures concerning general a viation have prompted fears among local small aircraft pilots that small-scale aviation 1s being squeezed ou1 of Orange County by a1rlint' traffic. Small aircraft operators SI)' it 1s becom· 1ng 1ncreas1n&)y difficult to obtain tic- down spaces and 1ha1 spaces arc btcommg more cxpens1\e. Pilots al\O ~~ 1ha1 fl1sht regulauons in JWo JlanCucb.I, owner of Biro'• Auto Repair at 81"5 Paularlno A't'e .• Coeta lleu. lnapecb damaie Sunday after a cu.tomer who wu clropptnc a car off droYe th.roath the front of the eh op. the Los narlcs basin. which 1nd udcs Oranae Count) mak" 1t difficult for small planes lo n) One such rule requires that un- monuorcd a1rcrafl fl~ over the Los Af\ICles tov.t'rcontrol area at a minimum of 12.000 fttt. a ht'1gh1 not auainablc b\ some small plane~ · Several p1lo1s complained 1n rtt"t"nl in ten 1ev.s that the) were feeling 1ncrcas- ingl) un...,clcome at John Wayne Airport and that small plant' pilots were mo\•1ng to Chino and oth~r ~mall airports ou1s1dC"'of Orangt' Count) 0eneral a\ 1a11on ~1111 accounts for more than 0 JX"rlC'nl of 1he tl1ghh al John Wa\ ne .\1rport Murph ~ -.u1d lht' na11onv.1de lrt'nd trend tov.ard reduu:d ~mall aircraft traffic was panh due" to h1ghtr aircraft pnces aod rising fud \ ost~ Medical complex to buy property By GREG llERKX Of .. .,.., ........ The Irvine Medical Complex has com- pleted nego11a11ons v.1th The lrvme Co. to purchase I 0 acres of Land to build a medicaf office complex adjacent to the mt'd1cal ct'ntcr in II"' inc Spectrum. .\mencan Medical lntcmat1onal Inc. (.\Ml). ov.ner of II"' Int' Medical Ccntt'f". purchased 1hc Mv. sue for appro>.1mately S m1lhon. ~1d compan) offietals. The 177-bed mcdtcal C't'ntcr. e'pec1ed to open m -'pnl 19 9. 1s under construction. The center is located al .\hon Parkway and Sand \an~ on .\ \ enuc near the San Diego Fr~v.a) The purchase of the land bongs the totaJ medical C't'nt~r s11e 10 :!5 acres. The original 15 acres v.erc dona1cd to a community· based non-profit corporation by The In ine Co. to create a rcgional medical cen1er v.1th1n In me pec-trum. ln111al plans for 1he mt'd1cal office complex adJaccnt to the center call for the dc,elopm~n1 of an approx.imatel) 100.~square-foot office building. Th~ building will hou~ offices for about 80 ph)s1ctans as 1.1.ell a.s several floors of outpatient SCI"\•~ supporting tht' mt'd1cal n-ntcr's programs Panel hits state inaction on elderly homes By Tk A1secialed Ptt11 The state 1s too slow 10 prosecute board· and<are homes for poor care that has left some elderl> people living rn squalor and ma) have killed others 1n Orange County. speake~ told the state·s Little Hoover Comm1ss1on. Fnda} 's hcanng followed a surpn~ tour Thursda\ offhe hom~s 1n Orange Counl'. ..-h1ch has more than 300 such fac1ht1cs housing 8.000 people One-home was se1 for re' 1ev. Some-residents were unatte-nd~d . hung!). or Ii' ing 1n fihh. said L111k Hoover Chairman Na1han hapell :·l'vt ost of thc-sc t'ldC'rl) r~1dt'nt'> ar" conlint'd to corid111ons that 1n o ur op1n1on. Jrt' V.Ont' that COO\ ICIS IO tht' state pnson s~stem:· h~ said Poor care o r 1he failure 10 1ran<>ft'r 111 p;i11ents 10 hospitals ma:-ha' e-l a usc-d some of the 9~ deaths tha1 occurred 1n board-and-care homes in the rnun1~ las1 Byron Farwell, veteran Newport yachtsman, succumbs at age 80 Byron H. Farwell. 80. a longtime resident of Ncwpon Beach and veteran yachtsman, dit'd Fnda) at Hoag Memorial HosQital af\cr a tmd illness. Tiie Farwells built a summer home an Newpon Beach in 1910. 8)ron Farwell and his fam1I) became permanent resi- dents in I 9S5. · Farwell was the No. I mrmber of Balboa Yacht Oub and also the No. I member of the Transpacific Yacht Club. He wled his first Transpac race in 1923 as a crewman aboard the 1()6...foot )awl Poinsettia (formerly Kaiser Wilhelm's yacht). 1hen owned by Walter W. Home. He sailed in two other Jranspacs -in 1947 aboard H.B. Grandin's 67-foot ke1ch Dragoon and 1n 19S5 aboard his brother Lyman·s 84-foot schooner Sndnft. The Farwell brothers owned and sailed a number of boats out of Newpon Harbor. both as indtv1dual owners and penncn.. During World War II. Farwell seocd in the Navy from 1942 to I 94S u skipper ofa corvette. subchaser and a destroyer escort in anti-submarine warfare. After the war. Farwell continued s.a1hna for a few years before going into po~r­ boats. all of which were called Don Juan. Farwell was a graduatr of Harvard M ilitary School 1n Los -'naclcs and Pomona College. Farwell is survwed b) has wife Martha: tv.o children . .'.iama :-.logic. San Juan Capistrano. and .\llan Trane 'le .. pon Beach He also lea' C'S t1o1.o brothers. L)man of Nc1o1.pon Beach. and Fell\ of Los Anacl~. Pri\ at~ bunal c-ercmon1es v.111 be held at ROst'daJc Cemcte~ an Los .\ngclcs ~ memonal SCI"\ ice v.111 be held a1 11 a..m Wedn~) at t. Jamc-s Episcopal Church on Via Lido. '-=~wport Beach The fam1I) requC"Sts that memonal donauons be made 10 th~ \hdnight M1SSJon an Los .\ngelt"S !for~ h1ch Farw-ell was a director for SO ~eaf'\I. 10 Hoaa Memonal Hospital or 10 the-~ewpon Nautical Museum \tar Ch1cf~put\ Coroner James Beuncr 1~st1fied Fnda\ .. ~ t' shouldn·t ha' t that man\ deaths. - he said · But ll can be hard to pro\ e tha1 poor care caused a death. he addt'd Thr homes arc mon11ort'd b~ the Staie ()(panmcnt of 1al ~n ices. .... Tanker·track overtu·rns on , machmc The band11 Oed on foot. • • • Mort than S I ~.SOO in jtwelf) was repont'd missing from the safe at the Fountain Valle) Community Hospi- tal. 17100 Eu hd t. The ~If). a Rolex .. atch. gold chain and dllmond nna. belonged to a petient in t~ hospital. It was discovered m 1ss1na Saturda). s1okn fwm .i t"lu~ines.s on \tonro' 1a tn~l tht '11. t1m ll~d poh~ und~\ • • • • • • \ ~u rglar. 1o1.-u 1Tpone0 at ~ }~ pm uda' 1n the-~~1'(1 hlock of Ro~al Palm Dr1'e 15 Freeway, spilling fuel • \ landslides were reported in Malibu u SOii>' Southern Californians braced for another wet storm front pttdicted to hit Tuesday. Two 14-yea.r-<>ld cousins were briefly waskd downstmun in a Sunland flood control culvert after one slipped on a ~ embankment while trylftl to retrieve a lost bat. said polict Officer Gery Alvarez. The other boy was swept away after he entered the water tryi"I to save his cousin, Alvarez said.. Both maNlfCd to clina to a boulda downstram until mtum plucked tlM:m from the sursina watcn. They~ trealed ud meued from a neart>y hospilll. I ~ara said. aUqrdl) peu1na o ut on tbt woman's floor. ........ v.u., A S..11 na man was robbed of SllO Saturde)' after he withd.rt-4r ~ from an automaicd tdatr "*"'•• at the Bink of IMrica. 16192 ""'9of' •\·d. The man was r,w ~ w0er mu •ho said .... )Our ftlOMY. aad tool illll•ku."1Wllkthlalallluds1IMI illi ..-cy • ., c:alM °"' ol the • • • • A 1987 Hyundai Excel was stolen Sunda)' while parked at Lilac Wa) and Robson Court. The vehaclc "IS \ alued al $8.500. Newport Beacll A red 19 2 Ponct.e 911 was reported stokn Seuudey ftom the park1na lot of the Ne'2:' 8cach Country Club on East out H'Sh- •·a). Twenty worth an .. .\ "l'm.in·~ 1 4-~arat gold Bulo\a v.atch \\llh diamond 1.1.onh aNlul Sl <X\1. 1.1..i~ '>lolcn .ilon11o1.1th about S3.IX\1 "l)rth of 1htrv.al"C' from a home o n \!Jn n<"TS On'~. lhe '1c11m said Th<' thief apl)3rt'nth pned open a locked 1o1. mdo1o1. 10 enter tht home • • • Ft'l' ~u1li. 1 ther v.onh an CSll· maced S , . v.err rtponed stolen unda' fn1m 1hc CUUt'n's Men's tore in F~h1on I land v.h1k the sales dert '111$ d1stBCtt'd b\ another C'Ustomcr CoMa ..... A man expostd rtponedl) tumstlf at l 1:.3$ a.m unda' 1n the 1100 bl k o fSaJmas "\ enue. • • • mC'\.,nc \l\'k a s11cl -on Garfield J,,11 ,n er tht' v.CC"l..cnd from a c·ar parl t"J in tht" \t .. • bl<'l·k of \ 1C'tona \tn."t't The l <H v.a~ on~ of ~,·cral tm.1l~n 1ntoon the ~1rtt1 Otht'dosscs 1ndU<kJ tlxid' bc.lr\ and a S cu \11.'ITO • • • " bag •l)nla1n1 ~ S4 ~ ~ •"as \tO~n t1o1.~n Feb _:i and Wedncs· d~' (rom ~ 1nlt'r Beaut) Suppl)' a• ~ Harbor Bhd • • • " brl« let •1th aJtttNit 1 nc ~ phun and dwnonds was saok<n S:uunfa) from a room 1n the Westin uth Coast Plaza Hoed. TM Ber· muda Dunes woman who owned the S I . 00 bncd('t t<*i politt she was out of tbt room for abcMn IS m inutes._ It • Gunmen rob Irvine restaurant pns 11 tbt rnaJUllCr. ...ndi .. money. 'ftn-llk1119aa ....... m•Mlll amoultt of cul\ ud cotM. *"' ,.t •ht ma,..r ..t ~ mto another room ud flied au1 IM~ door Tht """""' ud .. ~~ wtft not 11\1~ .,.. su..,rts wtTe detct*4 • .-t mt9' •• \heir car1)' lOL a. ......... tel)61iilllL160 .. 1 uddleodwrSilrtS_.. ... ll ...... weft dim ... .. .... ...,, ra .. 111a•• .. ' .... -- Royals on southland :·grand tour LOS ANGELES (AP) -Prince Andrew a.nd his wi~. Sarah, prayed with everyday citizens in church tMn played with Hollywood celebrities at ' a black-tic dinner. where the ducheu Joked with a male admirer in 1he audien~. The DuJte and Duchess of York ended a diverse day of activities unda) with the star-studded dinner at the down1own Biltmore Hot<'I organized b) industrialis1 Armand Hammer and Arco Pe1rokum chjef Lowdnck Cool. Among the 700 gut"Sts paying S 1,000 apiece 10 du\e w11h Bn11sh •· ro)ah) \\ere Zs:i Zsa Gabor, her husband Prince Frederick von Anhalt. ··o, nasty" star Joan Collins. her date George Hamilton. Bun ' Bacharach and "1fc Carole Ba} er S3ger. allOr Michael York and astronaut Buzz Aldrin · Roger Moore. one of several Brit1 h - atto~ to pla' master'.>p)' James Bond in thl' mo' ;cs. "as master of cer- emonat'S Jul..1ng about the nature of The royal coaple a t Sunday'• Loe Angeles party. • the r\J\ al!>. tnp. \loon.• quappt'd that the h1ihl1ght "a' toda~ 's '1sit to a supermarket. "I couldn't help but no11ce the ro)al couple" 111 bl' thl'fl' on double coupon da~ .\ndJU\t in case ~ou "ant to do a lluk shopping. th1!'> onC''s for disposal diaper\ · \h.wrl' '>.aid holding up a coupon llir the lOUpk. "ho an.· npccting thl'H fir'.>I l·h1ld later this }l'ar The coupll' set of1 toda). their founh JJ, 1n uthcm ('ala fomaa. "11h a' 1-.11 m )C.'l' l"O Bnt1sh e\h1b1ts at thl' C'alaforn1a \luseum of· 1ence and Industry. In the afternoon. atten- tion focuses o n promoting British trade. . They to ur the Bullocks Wilshire clothing department store and make "hat is being describe-d as the first '1sll of a member of the ro}al famil} to a supermarket - a Vons store in .\rcadia. Both the duke and duchess d1s- pla) ed flashes of humo r at the banquet. Allowed to gave a few remarks after, t" o Ieng.th}' introductions and a shon '.>pct..'Ch b~ her husband. S3rah dre" applause and a few cheers when she said ''.\t last I ha'e a turn to talk - all these men." A man from the audience shouted. .. I IO\e )OU." 'Tll see you later." the duchc!>s quipped to more applause a nd cheers. ndre>A had goucn an his dig a m oment earlier whe n he ackno" 1- cdg~.-d Hammer's remark that the couple .. could fl) ducts" as the~ are b\llh licensed pilots. ··\ ou mentioned b\•ing abk to fl~ ducts:· the pnncc said. .. It 1s a ltule bit difficult because "'c "ould be figh ung for the controls of the plane.·· gu~ke drilling probe halts as funds cut HESPER I <\ ( .\P) -Eanhqual e 1ent1sts probing mile~ underground inw tht· an o\ndreas Fault "''II ha'e to quit drilling about a mile short ofthl'lf goal because of federal funding l'Uts. officials said. hole t\\O miles deep "'hen the} quit wo rk March 10. said G . .\nhur Barber. president of the prOJCCt conson1um. Researchers had hoped to seule some disputes o'er ho"' eanhquakl· fault<; \\-Ork b} dnlhng to a depth o f appro\1matcl) three m1lc'1. talang rocl sampk'> along thl· "a}. Barber ~1d ·-.. Socn11~.u. Crom A~ un" ers111es taling pan in the :--;auonal ~ 1cncc Founda11on gl'olog) pro1ect will lea' ea GEICO ................ GEICO has been sa\inggood drivers monC'y on quality car in ·urance sine(~ 1936. In fact. a l"e<'ent natjonaJ survey of nC'w GEi 0 auto polkyholders ·howed an an.·rage annual savings of $H)8! GEICO a lso givC's you: • P<'rsonalizc'<I covt•r<tg<' • Low down payment and money saving dt-ductibles • Round-the-dock policyholdl'r S(•n ice • f"ast. fair claim handling Find out hm\ much you may savc-j u:--t s top hyorcaU: 1331 ·B East I st t. Santa Ana 547.5335 ~t )IOU nc.14""""' .u '" .,. t ••• r '"~..,-u.-.1' ""'""'" '"• • 1 ,,. ... ,. ..... t .. ,,..,.",.,.. h' f n .•• ,..., ....... "'' 1r.ot' r.-(W1) 1.rf1fk I 61~ ft .., 4i f ...... .,.\~,.I ~\ 111 wllt\ •..-th. ..,,..., f""•tl•tl#V\ .... ,..., .... ..,...,~ .. f>' "'""Al\iucJ\rrt,ftt u • •' r •t...oti..ct--,.~•r"' n.-..,,,._..._...,.,.., .... 11 • 1~....,.U't ,. .. ~. •"lththt I "'•~"'"1~--nl' ~·~,_..,.......,,, H' •\I...,., ... .,..,,. ..... "-"" .......... r;. Brain-dead b ab y dies LOM.\ Ll'D.\ !.\Pl .\n J nl·nn·phahl bah} g1 rl. born "llh mm1 t'I her hra1n rn1.,~ing tl1l'd pcJll'lulh undJ\ night. 01w da\ alll·r \hl' ·''a" tJ~l.'n llll a rl''>Plratu'r uwd to prc'>l·n l' her organ"> tor tran~plJnl. ho\p1tJI otllciah said tt!<lJ\ b .Cl}n l\.C}S died al lfl:JS pm. undJ\, ..aid Dr JOHT Peah<xh. l h1l'I ,;r nl'Unatulug} ai Loma L 1mfo l nl'l'l\1t\ \kd1l:.tl< enwr. ·· hcd1l•d J>l'Jl l'full~-.... hl· ...... J ·· 1 kr lwJrt 'J h l'' c' cs and tornc:.t'> hJ' l' b\.'l'n JunJ ll·d fhc parl'OI!> arl' '>Jtllknl·J. but \till H'f) plea!>ed thl·1r daughll.'r ll1ulJ ltl'l' 'umc g1f1 ol I&:· PcahiiJ, \J1J 1n .1 '1Jtl'mt."nt rl'kdscd th•~ morning Thl· r C\a\ IOIJlll \\ 11h thl' u~ualh fat.II h1rth tklt:t I l Jlkd ilnl'TlCCphal; \\a\ p.1n of J no' cl organ donur program al Lom,1 Linda l 'na,l'rs1t~ :'-kJ1lJI < l'ntl't 111 u<,l' the heart'> and It Hr'> l'I '>Ul h h.1h1l·' oncl' 1hc) an: lq~Jll) dl'dJ rl·d hrJin-<kad. L om,1 l 1nda ha\ di.'\ elo ped the I nJI mn \ lir't gu1dl'lir1l'' for us111g sur h 1nfJnh J'I org;in J11nur~. T tll' hll'>P•IJI o'I males cas1 of Los \ngcll''> " ~1111" n lor ll!i> frl·qucnt 1ntant hl·an lran'lplant!>. RABBITT INSURANCE FOR 30 YEARS! r l~· • .. PAPfA & Pt4Sl1( PL a ll S • CUPS • UPKlllS • TAil( COVERS • U IVlS • fORKS • SPOONS • HATS l ISSUl OECOAA 'IONS • SI Rl UH RS • BALLOOllS • PlllA U S • PARTYF AVORS • Al88011 • GIFT WRAP • BOWS • BOH S • DECORA TIONS • CUSTOM INVITATIOllS • WlOOING SHOWER 6 BIATHOA Y SU PPLlfS • CHRISTMAS NEW Yl•R & SPECIAL OCCASION SU PPLIES • PUNCH MIX • WE RENT HHIUM JANKS • ANO MUCH MORE • SUPER BIG DISCOUNTS _ OPEN 7 DAYS • MOl.-IAT. 1:30-5:30 I UN. 12:00-5:tll ........ ...... ....... c.-r.,, .. 111111:111• ............... t•I ...... 1 oi.<• -.1 ot Tu 111t 1oeM1•11111 r ••• Pto/lt Ctftt,, .... nt •• ............... 1111 11'-Utl '"' ...... .,. 171QC.....-....... .,, ..... c.. .... ,. .. , , ... ..,. ~ .... Ill .... Ill _._. .... lllll6tnr l9"-ftilPIC....M I ._. Wei .. "91"9Mf *•Y •I '" ''" C.n 1 .. ,, ftz 1•1eD t,.. ......... ... ,. l ilM ... .......... ~t lftf ....... '•1• .. .•. ........................ lfl•m.mJ ... ..,. 1wc•l..it1._.• (1141 lilll ,. flll llta17 &llJf .... fitlltatm ........ ,. Bishop Tutu arrested during S. Mrican apartheil protest CAPE TOWN. South Africa (AP) -Police arttsted Anahcan Archbishop Desmond Tutu and other church leaders I.Oday as they marched toward Parliament with a petition protestint the government's crackdown on ant1·aP1rtheid aroups. The deraymen, wearina robes and cros~s around their necks, stood with anns hnked and Bibles clutched in their hands a.s a policeman an- no unced throuah a bullhorn that the ptherin.a was mepl. Police had been lininJ the street outside St. George's Anglican Cathedral, waiting for the marchers to emerge. After Tutu, a Nobel Peace Priz.e laureate. and other clergymen were placed in police vehicles, police fired water cannons at more than I 00 demonstnaon lin ina on abe sidewalk sinaina 1 hymn, local journalists said. The clergymen and demonstrators were taken to a police station and released with a wamfoa that charges would be brought against them if they staged a similar protest, said the Rev. Allan Bocsak, president of the World AJliance of Reformed Churches. He said they were told summonses might be issued apinst them for demon- strating near Parliament and they miaht be called to court. Police a lso took some journalists into custody. The cleraymen carried a petition. addressed to President P.W. Botha and Parliament. saying: "We leaders of a number of South African churches have come to Parliament today to witness and ~Y in a time of crisis ouuick the bualdi,. in which you maJte important decisaons aft'ect· lnl the lives or millions of South Africans who belona to our churches," The protesters, marchina five abreast, walked a few yards toward Parliament from St. Geo~'s Ca- thedral, the main AnaJican church in downtown Cape Town. In a service in the cathedral before the march, Tutu and other ministers declared the churches would lead protests apinst the government's anti·a1>1nheid policies because 18 major black oppositio n groups had been banned last week from all political activity. Fear, paydaythwartattempted . anti-Noriega strike in Panama PANAMA CITY. Panama (AP)- A general strike started today to demand the resignation of Gen. Manuel Antoni() Noriega but govern- ment intimidation. censorship and the fact that today is payday apparent- 1) hun its effectiveness. Thi.' o pposition asked the nation·s businl'sscs and industries to close toda> and remain shut indefinitelv. Dcpo)ed President Eric Anuro Dcl\alle remained 1n hading. defying Noreiga. "'ho ousted Delvalle and orJl·red him out of the country. Buse!>. b) far the ma in m ode o f publl transportation. circulated this morning hke any other morning. Most "ere full. taking people to work. About t\\o-th1rds of the stores were open at a commercial center of more than 100 enterprises on Central A venue in Panama City. Many Panamanian banks were closed by the strike. but international banks "'ere open. Sevl'ral people consulted by The Associa ted Press as they stepped fro m buses on their way to work mentioned intimida11on as a reason for not ubscf\ ang the strike. .. Thcrl,.'> fear ... said a m1ddlc-agl'd man. a bank cmplo,)el' .. We lack unit) to confront thcSt' people who ha' c all the "arms and arc disposed to u~c lhl'.m:· "The people don't have means to rcs1s1:· !i>a1d a "oman. a domestic emplo)l't' \'alking "1th him. ··one U.S. withholds pressure on Panama over drug r_unning NEW YORK (AP) -The United States will not impose muimum penalties against Panama for failing to take steps to control drug trafficking. a newspaper rcponed 1oday. Under a 1986-anti-drug law. lhe president -has untrl Tuesday to certify whether countrit'S in which major drug traffickin& occurs are fully cooperating tn efforts to fi&ht the trafficking. The .New York Tif!1es, quoting senior Reagan administration offi cials, said President Reagan signed an order last weekend to dccen ify Panama. but that h~ declined to use his discretionary powers to impose the maximum penalties. · Ho~ver. White House spokesman Marlin Fitzwater said the president has not made a decision. "It hasn't gone to him yet. It's going today." The law requires the United States to vote against new loans by international development banks such as 1he Wo rld Bank and the International Monetary Fund to decertified countries. In the case of Panama. the United States also would be obliged to keep in place the milital)' and economic sanctions imposed last year. has to hve as the)' (the armed forces) say." The two also noted that today. being 1he last da) of the month. 1s pa)da) for man) Panamanians. Po lice Chief Col. Leonidas Macias told journalists 11 would be under- standale 1f hungf) people looted a dosed supermarket. and his forces "ould not tr) to prevent them. The strike call was supponed by the industrial "orkl'rs· union of Panama. and its efTe<"llveness appeared to be greater in industry than in commerce. Most factories in Panama City's industrial zone were closed. Roberto Brenes. a leader of the Na11onal ('1v1c Crusade. predicted Sunda} that the strike would d o ~ell 1n manufacturing and construcuon. Opposition figurt."s also said they e\~ted the strike to pick up in SC\eral da)S. Israel may shut Gaza Strip to journalists Soviets halt disturbance in province JER SALEM (AP) -Police ar· rnted a Jc" 1sh settler 111 connection "1th thl' '.>hooting deaths of two Arabs 1n the \\ est Ban ~. and Israeli Cabinet min1'>ters suggested closing the oc- rup1cd land~ 10 media coverage. Thl' settler. from Neve T zuf. was arrested Sunda). according to Adi Goncn. national police spokesman. The man. "hose name was not relea sed. 1s suspected of killing two Palest1n1ans from the neighboring '1llage of '\bud after villagers blocked thl' main road Saturday. Gonen said toda\ The arm> charged three soldiers. 1nclud1ng a sergt'ant-maJor. with ag- gra, ated as!k!ult and brutality today for allegedly burying four Palesti- nians alive in the Wc5t Bank village of Kfar alcm. an army spokesman said. The inc:1dcnt occurred Feb. 5 after troops broke up a stone-throwing demonstration in the village. The Arabs escaped with the lielp of rela ti vcs. The soldiers· names not released. It was the first known case of a soldier facing serious criminal charges re· lated to the unrest 111 the occupied BROUGH-MARTIK The engagement of Anto n ia Mercedes BTough a nd · WilHam {'. Martin. both of Mia ma. Fla .. has been announced by her parents, Marianne Pe ters of Corona del Mar and Charles H. Brough of Culver Ci1y. They will be marncd May 13 an Miami. A graduate of('orona del Mar Hi&h School. \he bride-clcc1 is also a graduate of the exotic animal trainina and manajt'ment school at Moorpark Colleac. Calif. She has worked pro- fessio nally with animals at Lion Country Safari, Universal Studios and at MctroZoo and Parrot Junalc in Miami. Her future husband is the son of Mr. and Mrs. James Manin o f Miami. He 1s a 1rad111te of Cutler Ridac Hiah School. AVSRILL·PAllX Hunttnaton Beach rt's1dents Tami Lynn Averill and Michael Eu,ene Park will be married on board the M.V. Stardanccr. Pier 93. San ~ro on March 26. Mrs. Jane E. Ketler of Costa Mna and the late Zenas Emery Avenll are the parent.s o f the bride:.<l«t. who 11 a araduatc ofCoita Me11 Hiah School. She is 1lso a araduate ofOninte Coast Collete and attended UC Santa Bart.rz and Cal State Lona lea(h. Htt Oance 11 tht son of Mr. and Mrs. Leonard w. Part of kJlmalb Fall Ore.. and 11 a andU1tc of Richard Gahr Ha&h School and the Uni\"mtl)' of Souihttn Cab(om&a. lands. although other soldiers have been d1 sc1phned for using excessive force there. The arm) also confirmed 11 was investiga11ng charges that a soldier shot and killed a Palestinian demon- strator in cold blood after seizing him during a demonstration. The spokes- man said the incident occurred in the Gaza Strip last month but gave no other details. In another dc\'elopment, an Israeli se nio r commander made his officers watch CBS tele vision footage show- ing four soldiers beat two Palestinians for ncarl) 40 minutes last week. Excerpts of the footage showed the soldiers bent over the Arabs. who were lying on the ground with their hands tied behind their backs. The soldiers kicked the Arabs in the head and chest. then picked up fist-siz.ed rocks and smashed them on the Arabs' arms and legs. trying to break bones. "We have to make sure that we don't become an army of rabble," MaJ. Gen. <\mram Mitzna. com- mander of Israeli troops in the West Bank. told arm)' radio Sunday. BAV8C"D-DT·KUIDf The en111fment of Lori Beth Hauschild t to Or. Jeffrey Paul Kuhn, 50n of Or. and Mn. Paul Richard Kuhn of NewPort Beach. has ~n anno unced by Mr parents. Mr. and M rs. Wilbur HaukbiJdt o( Ida Grove. Iowa. The bride-elect recieved her n urx'1 trainina in Iowa and is now an intensive care nurx at Stanford MOSCOW (AP) -R1ot1ng broke out in Sumga1t. an industrial c11y o n the Caspian Sea 10 the Soviet Re- public of Azerba1dzhan. Tass re- poned toda). The official Soviet news agency said disturbances ""ere provoked b) ··a croup of hooligans." and "ram - pqc and violence fo11owed ." There was no immediate indica- tion "hcther the incident was linked to ethnic tensions between Azensand Armenians that sparked mass dem- onstrations in Armenia and a neigh- boring region that is pan of Azerbaidzhan. Tass said: .. Measures have bttn adopted to normalize the situation in the Cll) and safeauard discipline and public order." The news agency said an invesllga· taon has been launched. The repon d id not say who was involved in the unrest or say what caused the viol- ence. Sumgait, with a population of more than 160.000. as the second la~t Cll) in Azerba1d1han after the capital. Baku. U n1 ver5ily Medical Center. Her fianct is a Newpon Harbor High School graduate. received his underaraduate detrtt from UCLA. and araduated from t.k University of C'h•ctt<> Medical School. He is com- pletina a three•year rnidency in internal medicine at the Stanford Medical Center. A July weddina is planned in Newpon Beach. Submit your nuptial news Tltt Dlily PiJoi wanu to ~IT )"OW Mddi"' or rn,.,.nt 1nn<>u1KT1Mnf wirh rltt community. We mdr ii~ RN )'Otl. roo! Juu lill our ro,Ws ofour~IMnl •ltd Mdd•"tf:::'s. You cen nwr Pld rlttm up in our lobby •t JJO W. a.,.. SL. Coa.t • ~Y rlttoualt Friday flOIW I .. m. IO J P.."'·· "' rrtell ,.,.,. ITQUC'lf '""' a mm-. ~lf­addmlltd rntr,. 10 rltt Wtddi"' lkP'n~nl. lltily Ptlor. P. Q lo.t I~ Cos" MtM 91616.. Wedd•• and e,.,.~n• M1l't',.. p&1blishtd on • ~ ''.stMili llllis. Ofenge Ooatt OAILY PILOT/Monday, February 29. 1981 *A• Impeachment trial for Mecham opens in Arizona Senate Dukakis, Gephardt, Bush, Robertson to skip debates By TM A.ueriate4 Pr~n Michael Dukalm and Richard Gephardt wall s .. 1p nnt \unda)''s pre- SupcrTuesda~ Dcmocrauc dcbatttn mal Albert Gore Jr.'\ home state. and both GcorSl' Bu\h and Pat Robert$0n v.ill m1')\ thr Rl·pubhcan version, putting thJt dt>b.11e in JCOP- ardy. cand1da1n· J1de') .ind debate spon50fs said toJJ, Pal Robenson. an Jadtsonv1llt". Fla .. told about SOO peQ(>k toda). ''l'\e got a ft'eltn& v.e'rt t01n1 LO w1n In Aonda and v.e'rc ao1n1 10 Win 1n 1he South. . We've fOt one ""eek to the most cru 1al clecu on. I bt'licve. 1n the h1s1of) of America. cenainl)' this ccntuf) and ma) be StnCC llS bcg1n· nrng." •he Rt'publil.tn dt'batt' "'Lii bt' called off 1f he deudl') ag.am~t deb<at1ng 8hc- ~1d PHOENIX. AriL (AP)-Thc1L1te Senate today opened the impeach· me nt trial ofGov. Evan Mecham. the Republican whose I 3 months in o ffice have also bttn scarred by a recall effort and ' "1mina l indict· ment. · First on the agenda as the trial convened was a series or motions. includina one to 1hrow out the 1m~chment charics altogether. "The Senate 1rial of Evan Mecham does not concern merely this o ne officeholder. but instead addresses the very essence of democracy in o ur state consti1ution," Senate Minority Leader Ala n Stephens, a Democrat. said in a Ooor speech shon ly before the court convened. .. We are really tcstina our form of government. Will we stand up and do o ur duty amid calls from the public 10 intimidate us?" Senate leaders say they'll take up to tv.o months to hear testimony and a raumcnls before decidina whether the aovemor should be removed and possibly barred from ho lding elective office. Mecham, 63. also faces a March 22 criminal trial on six felo ny charges of concealina a $350.000 campaign loan, and a Ma.Y 17 recall election. After the tnal bepn. the Senate aareed on a VOICe vote tO let the 1ovem or's oriainal lawyer. Murray M iller. withdraw fro m the ca~. M iller was replaced by Washinaton attorney Jerris Leonard last week in a surprise move. After a clerk read the impeachment anicles. the Senate ~n hearing a defense motion seeking to have consideration of an article refemng to 1he cam{>lign Joan delayed unul aftu his criminal trial. Mecham maintains he'll bt' ac- quitted in both tnals, win the recall election and retum to the office he gave up Go•. E•an Mecham At a ne"s conkrencc aturda). Mecham c,a1d ~rnn1ng acqulllal 10 criminal mun 1~ more important than p•:r">uad1ng the Senate to keep him 1n oflin· "I rnuld h.iH· mv freedom taken a"" a) and Ix· -.c.:nt 101a1l 1fl -were guilt) (in r nn11nal t oun) Doesn't that suml'hov. sc1:m 111 'ou .. a httlt' more 1mportan1 th.in thl')ob asgo\t~rnor" It due\ 10 nw · \k1.hJm said Word of cand1dJtl\ nu-dd)..i tc dt'- c1s1ons tumblnl uu1 J'> the pres1den· ual contendeh thl.'.m~h c\ pluneed into their fi nal v.l'cl.. <JI 1.J mpa1gn1ng bt'fore the b1gg1.·\t ddrg.Hl' da~ of thl' pnma11 ~casun Meanwh11l' \IJ\\.11.hu-.c.:lh (,o, Dukaki~ v.a '> tl'ldHat1n$ another New England '1, 10r~. 1n !'vt:unc. sa)1ng he \\Ill .. ,u1pri-.c \Oml' people in the South" nnt "ee k on uper T uesda) \ 1~1. Pn·c,1Jl'n t Bu\h claimed' 1t·ton 1 n \l.11m· on thl' GOP side. · The GO P prl.'.'>1denl1JI hupdul<i splat up tod.i~ .ilt1.·1 ,nt1u11ng l'at h other on la \''' .inJ 1r.1dt" 1n J ddldl( unda) 1n .\tlJlllJ Dukak1s and Gephardt, the \\IO· ners of the major Democratic con· tests SO rar. Sll'.lppcd a Democratic debale tn Houston on Sunda} .\nd a1dt.·s said toda) the) wouldn't sho" up fo r tht' ont' neiu \lietkend 1n Nash\ tile either Gephardt. "ho had s.a1d last n. 111 be'r ht' v.ould part1c1pate rn thl· debate. sc.-nt v.ord last ""'tek 1ha1 hl· ""o uld not. no ung that 11 v.a ' Ill~ 1n Gurc's home suite, \31d Janllc Kaplan. a SQ<>kt'Swo mnn tor tht' l eague of ~ omen Vott'n· prl·\1dt>n - 11al dl'"bates. She said Robcnwn -.i' v.dl J'> Bush. "ho announ1.ed h1, plan .. t>a rher -"ould not 1.i .. 1.· f}Jrt 11 th1.· GOP dcbalc the ">amt' da' Boo l>uk has not formal!~ agn.•t•d w·Jt11.·nJ JnJ It \liU a \Un uf thl' Ulh. Jfi~ Jad.\on "hu pulll'<i tht' "l't'kt'nd'' ~urp11i.r lin1\h1nt1 J '>trong second t<• Dul.al.." 111 th,· ._.fJ1nc Ocm~rata.. CJUl U\l'\ 11n \u1\dit\ ~1th \u1x·r I ul'~J' looming bare- " J "l't'~ .i" J' Rl'pubht.an fa ~ .._l'mp '''u~ht I\• pump up his fading l:llOl)J1~n ''•thd11t>1.L at1a1.l..son Buh Jnd \..·nJh c ,r If> kada Dok )a) in~ lhl'' "'111 11111 hl-trut" to Ro nald Rl'J~Jn , lq:J 1. I h1.' wuuJ Jli l..l· I hl'' tall. ah kc Thl \ \ l \Ul'f" •rtl'd l'\ l'') 0 ~ingk 18A 1111.rc.:J'I<. 11 .i tht> 1a .. 1 eight ~ears ... .._l·mp ,,11,! "' J tnt~ GOP debatl' \und.i' 1n \1l.1nta '"If the\ 're nom1-n~t1.•J th1.• lhJl[Jn 11.•,olut1on 1 oH·r, gllnl Jl JJ ' HJr'>h rh1. tllrtl did not dim th<: g .. 1>J 11,.,,, 111.1111 \1J1nl' for Bush anJ Oul..Jl.. I\ T h1.· bl.id. '" 11 right!> lcadt'r 1. am pJ1~nc.:d fl JI 'd~ lruh: in th<' \late bu~ \IH "l'J 'trl'ngth 1n man~ pan\ ol th1.· ''" E n!i!IJnd 'ountr') side Court considers barring customs' drug tests U.N. opposes U.S. move to end PLO mlssion UNITED ~ .\ 1 101\\ 1 .\Pl -Thl· l nllt'd '.11111n\ toda~ bt'µn .in em1:rgcnC) thrl'l'-dJ ~ ~S\11 •n 111\ht' ( il'ncral .\\~ mtlh t• 11.·ondC'm n l \ dlor t' WASHINGTON (AP) -The Su· pre me Court agreed today to consider barring the U.S. Customs Service from conduc11ngdrug tests for people seeking drug-enforcement )Obs. sct- ttng the st.age for its first ruhna o n the const1tu1ionality of mandatory drug- test1ng for public employees. The Transportation Department, \\ho tht·m,c.:h l''> ar1.· not drug U\Cr\ ( ustom.,St·r' 11.1.· Jppl"ng lor promo· 10 close the L'' \11\\iun ol tht· p3 1t-.,1m,· Libl-rJ\lun nrgan1za11un with 30.000 employees. became the and tht· ll m1trd 1n1rusivent>c;s of this t10n to drug,·ntur,c.:nwnt Job) and Both thl' ~I.ill' l:>t·p.trtmt>nt anJ the t nitl'd '.:itaufti 'kl\ the nt'" Jnll· first cabinet-level depanment to p.irtmular prugr.im 111'> rea!>onable for out!i1dl'appli1.J nb lur 1hose1ob'> icrrorrsm la" that "ould dn'>t' thl' missu.rn b' \l.mh ~~ "olatC'\ the." I~~.., adopt random tt'Stang for c1,.1L1an and. 1h1.•rc.:fort·. 1\ not uncon\tllu· Thc.: union prl'\IJ,·nt Ru~·n \1 Hl"adquarter\ .\gre1.ment bt-tv.1.'l'n the l n11ed ~tatt''> and thl' l mtC'd '\.a11on' The court said it wall hear a challenge to the testing program by a federal workers labor union that says taking urine samples from employees violates their privacy rights. workers. The program covers tho~ an 11onal .. 1h1. appc.:Jls t0un ~td. Tob1d'>. prJ1">nl 1h1.· high toun's It allov.s all mi\sion'> 10 operation safety-related jobs such as au traffic Thl' '\Jt1onal Trt·a\Uf) Emplo~\.'l'S del 1'>100 to ht<Jr tht< la~ '>-1~ 1ng its S11ll. tht' Ju.,111.e Ot-panmt>nt rrpont>dh intend'> to go ahead and ordt."r th1. controllers. Federal AviauonAdmin· Union th.1lknged the tl'Sttng pro-ruling "'>huulJ dJrrl\ tht· rnn'>t1u· mission cto~d although legal mant'U\l'nng t'> t'\pntcd 10 .. e-cp thl· m1 \\1011 istration pilots and workers with gram." h1l h rt·quireHome ""orkl'r'> IO 11onal bounJJfll'' nl Jrug lt'">t1ng for open for a~ lung J '> .i \l'ar high-rated security clearance. pro' 1dc urin1.· \ampks 1n r~troom f1:deral 1:mplu~1.·n Jnd "l' ho pe. Tv.ent~·tv.u '>pl'al..er'>. 1nrludang the PLO Jmbas);ldor and th<' t'n'o~s ol The 5th U.S. C'ircu11 C'oun of !>tails a .. J per,on U\l'r!>ee1ng thl' tl'\t dl''>lro) R1:ag;..i n"' plJn) for " holl.'.sale the So' iet L' niun. Jordan Eg~ pl and "i\.na. v.t"re 10 addrt'ss thc I 5~·mt'ml>t'r Appeals ruled last year that the ~all~ out,1J,· thl' \tall The test\ are tl')ting ufthl" lt:d1.·ral v.url.. lurtt' ·· assembl> 1oda~ The l 'n11cd States. the largest L '.J contn butor. \l3H\pcCtl'd Customs Service tests. which are n'ot condul ll'd h) ..in 1ndcpt>nden1 com-The R1:ag~.10 Jdmin1'>tr.1twn \a1d tu tx· kc turl·d .ind rc.:buked b) the "orld bod) v.h1th rr"·ogn1zes tht' PLO administered randomly. are lawful. pan) h1ri:d h' thl' C. ustoms Ser' Ill' 1h1.· drug ll')l 'i Jrl' Ol'l'dt'd 111 prn ent liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiji~,, The outcome will carry no direct effect o n such tests conducted by prr,ate. non-governmental cm · plO)erS. President Reagan signed an ex· ccull'e order 10 1986 calhng for drug testing of go' e mment employees. The appeals court said the tests f h1.· un1un \a1d the tl"sts arl' a drug e nli.m:em,·nt .1gen1., "ho used II ma) be considered searches but do ··hum1h.i11on" tor "orker\. and are drugs from tx·1ng hnocd or black· not intrude unnecessanl) on thl' oc1ng Jdm1nl'>tl'rl'J 1nd1scnm1natl'h mJ1kd pnvaq rights of workers Thl' ll''>I'> J ll' ~l\l'n to those 10 thl' JuSllCl' Dcpartml'nt IJV.\t'f'> s~ud. n- ··Because of the strong govern men· 1.·n-.urrng thJt 11tl1uals respon\1bk lor .. \n\ affront tu pm"''' kit b' those I 131 interest rn employing andt\lduals thl' 1ntl'rd1t11un ul drug '>mugghng arl· Jppl) 1ng for the Jlklll'd Pl>'>lllons 1s I for key pos111ons Ill drug enforcement not 1h1.0 nl\l'h 1.·, Jrug users." uul\l.t'1ghl·d b~ thl' '\.'" 1u"<i 1ntl'fl.'.'>t 1n ....-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-,1 • .................................. __ I Drunken driving arrests. up 220% In 16 years DELANEY'S IRISH PUB I I I I I Fresh Rsh • Pasta Spedltllles WASH INGTON (A P) -Arrests for driving under the mnucncc of alcohol rose more than 220 percent from 1970 10 1986. whilt> the num~·r of licensed drners increased by 1ust 4:! percent 1n that period. a goH·rnment report sa)s. In 1986. some 1.8 mtlhon people were arrested for dm 1ng under .the innucncc. compared to 556.000 1n 1970. said a report issued Sunda) b~ thl' Bureau of Just ire tat1st1rs. In 1983. the peak )ear. there -wl.'rl' 1.9 m1l11on such arrests. o ne for e"ef) 80 dnvers. Joan l • \larr h 17th f or ST p \ TRIClr\.~·s Do\ ... r~TI \ ITll.'o 1[,lf'ndf'd Hours!~I I I le. M I ~--------------------exi>ires 3/31 AC110SS RtOlf THE ~T ~ The stud) also found that rates for dm ing under the innul·nct• "ert· highest among 21 -year-olds. reaching a peak 10 1983 w11h a ratt>ofonc arrl'.,t for c\.er) 39 licensed drivers of that age. \londd ' thru f mid' I I A\! to 1) P\I 2915 "'· 1u:ui111.1 .. c·u ... r" \lb \• %;-1%1 NEWPORT OYllER BAR I ml Since 1983. most s1a1es have phased in new laws ra1)1ng the minimum agl' for bu ing or selling alcohol to 21 . 1•1 hJ( .. 4 \orih uf /ni;r•r<ll•HI llrdh1/I .\ Hrt.1111 •1 :1 ltf'r•o l 2100 W. OCEANFAONT NEWPORT BEACH (714) S75-99n IT'S GREAT TO BE RECOGNIZED ORANGE COAST MAGAZINE is proud to congratulate its writers and artists for their outstanding achievements as recognired by the Orange County P~ Club, February 20 , 1988. BEST MAGAZINE STORY First Place: Pete Johnson, "Sexuality in the 80s" Second Place: Sharon Cohoon, ''An Oihnan's Life on Platform Edith ·· Third Place: Danny Pollock. ''Elementary, England '' BEST FEATURE STORY (less than 100, 000 circulation) Fll'St Place: Scott Hays, ''Better Off Dead: The Trueblood Thlgedy'' BEST FEATURE PAGE LAYOUT Honorable Mention: Art Director Leslie Freidson Lawicki and Photographer Daniel Fort RUTH KO Publisher BEST HEADLINE PORTFOLIO First Place: John Morell JANET EASTMAN F.ditor , ' \ PALMER THOMASON JONES Managi~ Editor GE THE.MAGAZINE OF ORANGE COUNTY ,. LE LIE FREIDSON LAWICKI Art Director ' ~- Dumping canyon road on Laguna not a solution The seemmglv never-ending war of words over Laguna Canyon Road has ·taken a silly but inevitable tum. Last week. Laguna Beach posted another victory over the state Depanment of Transportati_on's ert:on to wide!' and realign the road. La~una .Beach city officu~ls. and rest.den.ts showed up at the Cali fornia Coastal Comm1ss1on meeting m Marina del Rey to plead their ca~. They argued that the environmental damage from widening the road to a fo ur-lane highway was unacceptable. Coastal Commission members agreed and voted against the project. The victory ma) ha\e been sweet. but what ha ppened next was not Caltrans offi cials sav they have three options in the wake oftbe Coastal Commission's 6-5 vote rejecting the project. Caltrans can ask the commission to reconsider the vote. appeal the de~ision to the U.S. Secretary ofCommer~e or seek l~slation to have the stretch of road between Pacific Coast H1ghwa) and El Toro Road dropped from the state highway system. The last option would put the road in the jurisdiction of the'cit) of Laguna Beach. which would also inherit liability for the road. Such action would not require the concurrence of the Laguna Beach Citv Council. The option taltrans officials talked most about was abandoning the road. The message was blunt: If the people of Laguna Beach are so adamantly opposed to widening the road, let them assume the responsibility and liability. The response from Laguna Beach was swift and predictable. Cit) officials said there was no way Laguna Beach could afford being responsible for the road or fight the lawsuits spawned by traffic wrecks. When all the arguments over the project and environ- ment are stripped away. there's an o vernd ing fact that cannot be dismissed. Laguna Can. on Road 1s one of the most dangerous stretches of highway in Orange County. The road must be made safer. It is also a legal liabilit}. Duri ng the past fi ve years there have been 33 lawsuits stemming from traffic accidents on the road. Caltrans officials claim the) can reduce the number of. accide nts b) widening and realigning the road. They argue that placing a median in the center of the road. as Laguna officials propose. would not solve the problem of the sharp cur.es. It's easy to be sympathetic with Laguna Beach officials and residents who don't want to see the hillsides in Laguna Can)on graded and scarred to make room for a wider and safer road. It's also easy to understand the frustration that Caltrans offi cials feel O-' er their inab1ht ~ to do the job that needs to be done. What 1s not easy to understand 1s a process that permits a public safet) hazardto exist while Caltrans and Laguna Beach officials conunue the debate. Some think that Caltrans has pla)ed-the ultimate trump card b' threatening to abandon the road and force Laguna Beach 'officials to weigh the hab1ht) against environmental concerns. There's some ment to that argument. So far. Laguna Beach officials have not had to weigh the consequences of their actions against the Cit) budget or tax base. Laguna Beach should not be able to turn its back on public safet). But neither should Caltrans be permitted to dump the problem on the CH) . .\nother efTon should be made to find a compromise. If the problem existed in a famil~ setting. the next course of action would be simple. The fathe r of the famil)' would take Caltrans and Laguna Beach officials aside. boot th~m in the rear end, tell to q uit fighting hkc spoiled brats and send them to their room until the y settle the problem. 1990 census Let's conduct a census and count everybody but Swedes (-. .. or ma> be lnsh or Amencans who migrate with the seasons ... or some uther identifiable population group. Wh> do that') To fix the outrnme. silly. What other reason could therl· he'l A coaltt1on ol 1.ongress1onal members wa nts to do that in 1990 when the Comt1tut1on sa)s the country must conduct a decennial head wunt. About 40 House members want to count everyone but illegal aliens anJ "'111 sue the Census Bureau to force the exclusion. It 1'1 estimated there are about 2 million illegal aliens in the l n1tl..'d States. Wh> do the'>e members of Congress want to ignore illegal aliens? To fi, the outcome of the 1990 census. o f course. ;rhe national head count is used to distribute seats in the House of Representatives, and they fear altens will cause unfair shifts lrum one state to another. To their nedit. census officials sa) they read the Const1tut1on tu sa~ eve11one must be counted ("the whole number of pcr<tons"> Of cour c. l'' ef)one should be included. TH Dfll•,. (Ml1111.) News-Trlbu•e Easy to assess Both (Bruce) Babbitt and (Pete) du Pont bowed out before most vote~ could really assess them. But either is probably in a good position for a cabinet post or the like. depending on whose pany wins in November. And they deserve credit for brin&in1 up issues that expanded the scope of the campaign in its early period. "-'-I• AtlYtttJ"' ORANGE COAST ..., .... ~ ,....., o.-, o• ,,.. 'i9M ai »O w 81)' S1 ea.ta MllM CA ..... ('Of~ldllnCia 10 lo¥ 15'0 eo.i. W.S. CA 9292e • ·rhe size of the state makes It the 800-poundgortlla: It can •t be Ignored lfthecontestsarestJIJJlvebyJune 7~ ·• .,.. ....... Col•••W .Califoisnia primazy may be biggest test of the campaign SACRAMENTO -California politicians and pundits of aU ~ q ical colorinp hive been compla.in- ina for months that the nation's laraest state would be ianomt -save for fund-raising - by the candidates for president in 1988. California's June 7 primary would come too late. they said. for it to have an impact on choosina candidates of either party because the intense media concentration made only the DAN WALTERS early primaries and caucus count. a situation exacerbated by the fact that none of the candidates is a Cali- fornian. . There wasa substantial movement. in fact. to advance the pn mary to a date earlier in the spring. one nipped in the bud by Gov. George Deu· kmejian. California. Deukmejian argued, would have an impact simpl y because of its size. As it's turning out. Deukmejian may be correct. Voters and party acti vists tn the early tests have demonstrated an unwi llingness to be decisi ve. re nec- ting. perhaps. the negatives that cloud all of the candidates' personas. With Super Tuesday. a collection of primaries mostly in the South. loom- ing on March 8. only a few of the stragglers ha ve been kn ocked out of the running and ficrtt contests are raging in both panics for presidential nominations. There is a growing likelihood. therefore. that Californ ia's June 7 primary could be decisive. or at least determ ine whether one or both of the panics will complete the pre<onvcn· tion campaigning without clear<ut winners. Increasi ngly. one hears speculation about "brokered" C"on- ventions in volving a couple of hve poss1b1llties in both pan ics. It's qui te obviously a two-man race in the Republic<tn Pany. pining Vice President Geofse Bush against Sen. Bob Dole. but with the possibilil) that td e' ision preacher Pat Robenson andor Rep. Jack Kemp could pla) p1,otal post-pnmary roles. LETTER S ~ ..... ---'2 --- 1 he contest 1s not as quite so clearl} cut in the Democra tic Pany. but Massachusetts Gov. Mi ke Dukakis and Rep. Richard Gephardt are leading the pack. while &n. Al Gore and civil rights leader Jesse Jackson remain acti ve players. How would those li neups pla) in California? The most recent pons indicate that Bush and Dukakas are favo red in th e sta te. bu t it's many weeks before the voting and no one. it could be safely said. has a lock on the state. The state is an 1mponant pnze for both panaes.. but espec1alh so for the Republ ican pmendcrs. The 314 dcl· egates at stake for the Democrats will be apportioned roughly an hne with the candidates· relative showing. but the 175 Republican delegates will all go to the cand idate with the largest vo te total. even if 11·s less than a maJOrlt\. Thus: since onl) 1.139 delegates are needed for the GOP nominauon. Other side of CIF story To the Editor: 1 was saddened b) the Daily Pilot anicle which outlined the CIF an- ' cstigation of Mater Dea. and though I have no desire. to comment on the decision re41ched by the CIF. I do feel that a few comme nts are warranted about the impression wh ich was left by the article. If one docs not know Mr. Merino. one will assume from the anicle tha t he has a one-<limensional zealo usness for spons. Such is not the case. John Menno has been. is. and I dare say. will always be a zealous supponer of aJI programs at Mater Dea. He wants Mater Dei to be a quality school that will anrac~ strong students -a school that Wlll then offer students opportunities to (nrich their lives . .\nd his efforts to this end arc mam. He directs the annual senior musical: he takes cheerleaders and songleaders to competitions all o'er the nation. he cha perones the ma~' school act1v1ties: he is tireless 1n his efforts to make Mater Die special. I might add that during my nine-) ear tenure as department chai r for English. he was highly supportive of curricular changes which would st rengthen the skills le' els of all o ur students. So to call John Menno a one-dimensional sport!I enthus1as1 1s to do him an inJustacc. I will leave it to the Cl F to decide 1f John has been overly zealous 1n ··selling" Mater Dc1. I only know that I would be remiss in my friendsh ip to John . and my loyalt ) to Mater De1 1f I did not allow your readers to sec another side of the storv. This side says that ifa school as to have quality offerings in music. drama. academics. as well as athlettcs. then it needs the ttreless cfTons of administrators and staff members who are loyal to the school. aware of the students' needs and respectful of the fami ly's values. Mater Dei has the experienced and moral leadership of Father Wchng and has facull} and staff. and I kno"' tha t 1f the} find that o'crly zealou!I enthusiasm 1s an 1mped1ment to the de,clopment of Mater Dei's spantual and educattonal goals. they will take the pa inful CIF heanngsasa source of fun her growth for the school fami ly. HELEN SC HNEIDER Corona del Mar TV evangelists support To the Editor: It's posattvely astonishing how man} '\mericans are still willing to support the phony TV evangelists with their hard~arncd money and pension check. The Jim & Tammy Bakkers. Oral Robens and now a crying. repentant Jimmy Swaggart. What docs it take to wake you up America? I am not a supponer of street people; an) one who wants to work 1n this country. and paniculanly in this country. can. But I would rather. if you must pan wi th your money. give 1t to the bums rather than supply Tammy with a year's wonh of fakt erelashn. diamonds. fa ncy clotha and cars or Jimmy Swag.art with a )Car's worth of prostitutes. Surely anyone wi th half a working brain can figure out that thest' are not men of God but men of themselHs and for 1hcmsches. They arc business men. Period. The only way 10 buy yourself into heaven. tf there is such a place. is through trcatina your neighbor as yourself. Do unto others are you would have done unto you. Anyone who thinks they can pres- ent a receipt from any of the above cvanlt'lists at the "Pearly Gates" (1f the SO<alled Pearl) O:ues exist) I fear will be sadly disappoi nted. MARY FALCONE R Costa Mesa Pilot "eJcomes comment. .. . Tbt Daily Pilot wekomes your opinions on ma tten of public interest • Letta's and lonaer articles of commentar)' must bt s•Md. They sbouJd be 1~ or dearly wriuen and 1ent to l.£TIEltS 10 the EDITOR. Daily Piiot. P.O. Boll I S60. Costa Meta. CA 92616. Pkete indu« your addtess and tekphone number JO IMt ~may \ICrifY autltonhip. lfYoU orcfcr 10 make a vetbal s&atcme1u. you 1MJC81t awWE'ltE USTENtNO teltphone numbtr -642-6086 -and tcave a rtt0rdtd mnaee. P1ea1e lktei> ahae ~brief. California alone "'ould count for mains steadfastly neutral tn the GOP more than I 5 percent -nearly as contest. saying only that he wants to man) as Florida and Texas com· lead the delegation of the California bincd. winner. The size of the state makes 11 the The question that worries Iona· 800-pound gorilla: it can't be ignored range strategists in all campaign 1f the contests a~ still live b) June 7. camps -to the extent they can look But that size also makes the state an past Super Tuesday and other more extraordinanl) difficult and ex-currentarenas-is whethertherc will pensi' e political battleground. When be enough stamina and money avail- onc must appeal to millions of voters able for California when the ti me spread out over ncarl) 1.000 miles of arrives. territol). pne must raise and s~nd Bill Roberts. a veteran Republic~n m1lhons of dollars on television political consu ltant who is assisting advertising and other campaign tools. the Dole effort. 1s already organ izi ng With the prospec ts rising of long-an independent Western states effon term slugging matches. culminating for the Ka nsas senator. saying he an California. organiza11onal and "'ants the money to be available for fund-raising efforts are picking up. California when the need arises. Part) leaders. especially those in the . Serious and decisive contests in Legislature and Congress. are being California still may not happen. but wooed b} candidates. Assembly the possibility is strong enough and Speaker Withe Brown has alread) the stale is so large. that no one can assumed the national chairmanship take the chance of ignoring it. of the Jesse Jackson campaasn while Du Walt~rs 11 • 1yatlkated Republican Go'. DeukmeJian re· col•1D11i11 i. S.cramHto. 'JAY ~~~tLUJA~JJ .r l .. -· Orange Coast OAILV PILOcl!(Monday, February 29, 1918 ----- •• . . . .. . ~ COMPLETE NY•E COMPOSITE Tf'ANSACTIONS, M A.ge of corporate chiefs failing BJ JORN CUNNIFJI' ., ................ NEW YORK -People who at- tempt to determine just what is,oin1 o n in the executive suite are eye1n1 a vital statistic that appears to have chanacd dirtelion qain: The averaac aac at which chief executive officers are appointed to lead tOJ> co~rations is dcclinin1 qain aftera fairly steady rise since the mid-and late 1960s. The chanaina numbers arc likely to prompt a si-te of explanations. along with interpretations about the conse- quencn for manqement and the economy. But. says one authOrity, they could sianify only a tendency of herd behavior • Professor Euaene Jenninas finds that in each five-year period from J 9SO throu4h 1969 the avera4e aae of newly appointed chief oxccuuves fell, from S7.7 in 19S0-19S4 to SO.I in 1965-1969. After that, the &Je at appointment rose steadily ap1n, ~achina 56. 7 years in the 1980-1984 period. But, he advisn, it is now on the way down apin, and he projects it will be down to S2 .Yeats or less in the 1989-1994 penod. Such patterns obviously invite economic and political inter- p~tations. but Jennings cautions apinst reading too much into them. professor -he teaches business ae It may be, he speculates, that it Michipn State University when be simply "becomes proper, smart." isn't off'erin1 confidential advi~ 10 Jenninp, a pioneer in the study of chiefs -found two curious, telling ~xecutivc m~bility .• has been observ-. splits. or indications ofb1modality, an m' corpora11ons since 1949 and has • the aae aroupin15. wnttcn the. book, so to speak, on the These splits occurred 1n I 96S-t 969 upward, sideways and downward and 1980-1984. and an each instance patterns in the fortunes of hiah-led to chanan in the pattern ranking executives. When the aac level fell to SO. I yc~rs His basic studies. "The Mobile in the earlier period tt hardly rep- Managcr" and "Routes to the Ex-~nted uniformity. Instead. 33 per- ecuuve Suite." have educated gradu-cent of the appointments were below ate students, helped executives aac 47 and JS percent were above 52 understand where they fit in the larger years. scheme and guided executive recruit-That bimodahty, says Jennings. ers. was a tumin1 point. Thereafter, tht In studying the numbers. the a veraac aac of appointment began risina apin, reaching a top an 1980-1984. But then that old b1modality came into play again. In thi~tter period. the split fou nd by Jenninp wa.s made up of 36 percent below age 50 and 37 percent above aac SS. And JUSt as the spltt back in the 1960s led to a change in direction of the age pauem. this one did aJso. Followina the latest split. the average age fell sharply in the 1985-1987 period to 54.6 years. And. Jennings speculates. tt should con- tinue falling right into the 1990s. Jennings recalls that in the 1960s, when he was well into a career of advisina corporations about their own behavior. he had little d1fficuhy in selling the idea that a chief executive was good for five years. The no tion then. he explains. was · to seek optimum power from the executive staff. "Get them at their peak, utilize them and get another." Companies were growing. "You d idn't want to block the movement of cream to the top." he said. There was a strong belief 1n the system. in "this 1s the way we do things at this company." Executives were there to manage within the system. not necessarily to lead. Eventually, however. that attitude changed and the age pattern rose. accompanied by a f~ling that a good chairman was hard to find and so you kept him or her for 10 to 15 years. PEil.RY WISELY JOHNSON Karcher promotes 2 vice presidents Two new group 'ice prc)1dents -Raymoed J .. PettY, vic:c president of operations and Roberl W. Wisely, \-ICC president of marketing -ha-.e bttn named b~ Carl Karellaer Ea~ announced Donald Karcher president or the rompan) that ~w_ns. opcrates·and franrh1ses Carl's Jr Restaurants '-"1seh . of M1mon Viejo. v.111 o.vcrsec rl·search and dn elopment and stra tCgic planni.na. Perry of Villa Park "'Ill ha' l' the real estate and construction departments added to his rl"spon:.1b1ht1es • • • Dalllel S. JollJlson, an e\~rlcnced insurance manager. 1s now product manager a1 Pacific Mutual Life bsurance Co. in Ne~rt Beach. n was annoumed b' (i W Kimmerle. eitecutive vice president. Johnson 1s ~~pon~tbk for Value Pac. a group life and health product hne for employers "' 1ht ~5 or more employe-es. • • • Far Wttl Flnucial Corp. has announced the appointment of Fred Kayne as president and rh1ef C\CCUtl\ e offi cer. according to William Belzberg. chairman of the board Last Ma} Kayne was el~ed 10 the ~ev.pon Beach firm's board of directors. In I 986 he concluded a 13-,ear career v.nh &ar teams & Co . . .. Costa ~k\3 resident Briu neriot has been named director of investor relation' for J.M. Peters Co. President James M. Peters said Thcnol v.111 publish quancrl> and annual repons and hand!c go' cm mental rela11ons pertaining to the developmental prOttSs. His nev. pos111on v.as cceated af\cr the Sou1hem California home-builder began ofTenng common stock last September • • • Roben 8 \kKntght Jr . prcs1dt"nt or Costa Mesa-based Qeiksilvcr lnc., has announced the appointment of Jon C. War9ttas chairman of 1he board and chief c:\ecut1' c officer. The board's appointment of V. amer 1s 1n response to the com pan) 's desire to strengthen tl!i eAtSting management structure and pos1t1on l~ compan} for continued grov.th In Jul) IQ . Warner joined Quik.!>1her as a director and vice prc-s1dent. sales. ~e has 17 years eApcnence in maJor depanment store reta1hng -{1)111-~------------ NYSE UPs & OowNs NEW YORK (AP) -T"9 lollOWlnv "" lPIOWl '"-New York SIQQ Eaefla"9e sloc:l'5 and warrants that ha1te OCMW up the most and dOwn the most C>eMd on percertl of CflanM re1Nrdleu of volume fOI' FrlCS.v. No 5'0Jrilin trading De6ow S2 .,, lncJ· -uded. Net and percentaoe CflanMt are lhe Ml. dltf9f'enc1 the previous J !I'd. 8: lli 8: l :, UP 1 ·0 UP .• l V. Op .• 2~ l)p I • -UP l . '"° UP I . ~ Hi ~ .. ,, > 6 C1tvHolo 7 PnilioJn un I SoanA~r 9 ~.-i1Corr 10 ommceGro 11 .itularPrd 12 81W Cat>!e 13 FstAmarilo 1• Frw~nei.. lS HEI CoTea 13 A 12 12 11 6 11 s 11 ' 11 1 11 1 11 t l 11 I I -I ' ., 1~ 7 = 1 ; '. -., 4 , -., )~ -3-1. -• ' , -7 )~ -1- uni. ""' ,,,.,, • ..,,.,..,, • Hair by HaJr System • Hair Extensk>ns • Hair Transplantation • Hair Weavtng • Hair Anatysls ·Custom H-'''"rp1eoea-- • High Fr9Quency Program • Service & Aepa)r Dermato. is Ota~ County s most complete hllr r~ Clfttef We otter the most advanced DfOCtSS tor tne correcbon of hatr IGss & bekiness DERMATEX INTERNAT N For T1le Blti1m Pnlu1h EUROPA lntl'11m1111nnl ~•lion anJ ~J' ROPE ERV.ICES e tlJU' l \.'~I J.(ll e p\.'t'lll•tn~'ftt • Color • Gaft emfic. ... I :an 1 ·u r'-'' • I >"·Ju.: US"\.:.." HoJ l\t u ~aM\..' • Focaal ancJ n\u\.'.h ll'lurc MONDA Y'I CL081tlCI PRICm8 -Stoc k p rices in crease NEW YORK (AP) -Stock prices rost" sharpl} Monday. reaching new highs since the crash last fall. Analysts said traders were heanencd to see the Dow Jones industrial average surpass the 2.051 .89 level. where it stood Jan. 7 for its highest closing reading since the crash. The average failed 1n a bid to climb past that point last week. but no significant selling pressure resulted, suggest to many analysts that it was primed to make another try. One concern facing th e market 1s the repon due Tuesday from the Commerce Depanmcnt on the index of leading economic indicators for Januan. Analysts general!) expect the figure to show a decline. But the firm of Smith Bame}. Hams lJpharn & Go . .said the 0.2 percent drop onginaJJ) reported for December might be revised to show a g.a1n . That would mean that the indell would no longcr have a string of three consecutive month I) declines. a phenomenon which 1s tradit1onall) regarded as a potenttal recession wammg. WHAT AMEX Orn 1 W HA T NYSE Orn NEW YORK !AP) Feb. 29 NEW YORK (AP) Feb. 29 Prev. ~~. Meft. Men· NV ct.v av AV Advanced ill 273 Advanced 12r 1:i Declined n2 Decllned r,3 lm ¥nchanoed ¥nchalt9ed otal iu ues m olalln ues 1971 New hl91'1s 11 • New hlons 'J 9 New IOwl • 1 New lows 6 AMEX LEADER S NYSE LEADER S NEW YORK (AP) -S.les, 4 0 m. orice NEW YORK (APJ. -S.IH. 4 o.m..-cwlce and ner chan<.>e of Ille 10 molt active and ~· cha":llle of the lS most active New A~ican Srock E11change lnue5, rradino Y<><lo. Srock E11chaooe lnues. tradlno na· nationallv at more than SI tlonallv at more than Sl. Name V Lut a.., Nal!lt V Ult C~ Asamera o 2 73 9~ +3 PSvc~G s 40, Sl, 2~ + • HomeShop ' 37'7 6 -., Ohio dlson 16,611, 19' • -'• Texa\AlrCP 7'.7 11 '• + ''1 Phila l'c 6.'62, ~'!19 -'e EchoBavo s 4 , 19 1 +1 TexUtl i.211, '"1 +'• RAC M io n 3 10 -1'8 FPL. GrP •ffi•l 7/e Amdahl 22 3319 + ''II GenElct s j· . 4 •., 11'11 wanoLabB 2. ; 14', + •, Navistar • • ~l1 t • arownFors s 21 : •5•• + , , Homts1a1o.e s ·m· 1 3 , Hasbros 1 13 -'• Wendn ,1 • ''> J • Forestlb 1 : 11 '> + 1 Xer9• CP 1,9 • tt.\lo ~ GoLo Quoa s METM S Quaa s ~mtled 1, , ~ 2 I ionPk r 1,7 , 1 ~ 1~ 1aPrOQr en 1.U . 3~ -, Stoosnoo s 1, , 43''> + ~! Pllst>urv 1, '· ~ + ., Dow JoN ES AvERAGES NEW YORK t AP) -Final Dow-Jone' overaots for Feb. 79 Stocln OIMfl Hitll L" t M 11 fnd 202'UI 207•~60 2017.24 71.62~ ~ 20 Trn / 49 I 1.03 .96 1 11 4. 1 I 1.13 1 ,74 . tJcs~~ mn ul.~ 1l2.u 769~~0 1?1 Tran 4 Utifl 46.'iii".'100 65 Stll 70,t42'.000 Name totel ' Ma•cre h'c'~a s M;J.t Nt°torr ReoAm Gef'lelc s s .. pte Aootee s -I'• Econ·omy recovering from market crash WASHINGTON (AP)-Thc U.S. cconom) ha$ shrugcd off the worst effects of the October stock market collapse and should be able to escape a r«tss1on this election year. econ- om1$l$ for top U. . corporations prcdiC't~ today. Tht National Association of Bu.si-n~$ Economists said optimism among its members has nscn ap- prcciablr si nce the last survey con· ducted 1n the month followina the Oct. 19 plunac 1n stock prices. In November. more than half of the businns ~noml$tS were prediccina a rcceMion would bcsin before the end of 1988. an outlook that could have pclltd bid neWJ for Republican hopes of hokhn& onto the White Houc. Now. 1ht number of CC'Onomis~ eJtpedina 1 rctt.ssion this year hal dropped 10 about OM-fourth. ••As ~ mon· fan her aqy from t,, .. • Oc1obcr. we att a liuk ks.s ncn·ous. We an: Sttina cont1n~ improv~ mcnt in 111111ufttttun'ftt and octltt' IOCJd • thll the ci.-nsion "111 i«i> aoena. •. 111d Kathlttn Cooptf'. chin ttonomist (or S«unty Pac:ifK' N1t1on.t1 Bank of ~ '*'" Thc'nn1 om1dcnt '' hkcl)• 10 fltt' recession soon af\er takina om~. the analysts believe. with about 60 per- c,tnt of them piclun1 1989 as the most ltkcl~ )car tht downturn will besin. But for 1988. the economists are prOJ«tina f unMr arowth at a mockst pac-r. stable interest rates and a stiaht drop in inflation. The analysts prcd1cttd that the «onomy. as mcasuttd by the aross national p~oduct. wi ll expand juit 2 percent this year. down from a 19 percent ONP 1ncrcuc in 1987. This is more peuimisti< than the Reapn admin1Ur11tion. which i.s call· ina for ONP vowth this yur of 2.4 perttnt. c~. whc) compiled the •ssoci•· tion's suoicy. said the dcdint in the stock mar'ltct aua tbt majority of eronom1its to reduce tbtir JrOW1h forttans for thu year. but she 111d mos• of them hid cut bltk thrir prqcctions by kit thaa I pattnL ··&ononusu su the larieM c&ct of the markri's ~· on ~mcT ll)tftdina &6urablcjooch. .. lhr -~ nouna tha1 the)' art ~openi•car saks 10 toa.I onh 9.1 mallioa unn1 thts )Ur down trom U tapee\atlOf\ of 10 . .S m1lhon salts""'* bJort the markr• at-Cline. • , ' ' , Orange Coas1 DAILY PILOT /Monday, l:et>ruary 29. 1N8 • A9 • Gotham grabs Grammys for 30th anniversary show 87 DOLOllES BARCLA V --~ ........ NEW YORK -Everything's com- ina up New York at the 30th annual Grammy Awards. as the music indus- try returns toa town with a rich legacy of contributions to Amencan song. "We had a couple of choices this year," said Ken Ehrlich, producer of the show. "We opted to downplay that it's the 30th anniversary. Instead. 'we took advantage of what was really unique to New York. A lot of nominations are New Yo rk-based musicians and New York-oriented songs." The three-hour show will be tele· cast live on CBS-TV at 8 p.m. Wednesday from Radio City Musi-c- Hall. It is the first time 1n seven years that the presentation by the National Academy of Recording Ans & Sci- ences wall origjnate from New York an stead of Los Ange ks. Highlighting the awards extrava- ganza is a production number eel- cbra11 ng the sounds of thr caty, fcatunna Tito Puente and Celia Cruz with their hot Latin rhythms: Run DMC with ats funky raSY, a nd Billy Joel. whose songs have traveled from downtown to uptown. from roman11c Greenwich Village b1Stros to Spanish Harlem. "It's a number that has a lot of different la)ers and textures," said Ehrlich, who 1s producing the show for the seventh time. "The size and the scope of the city is so big." G u1tarast-vocahst George &nson will perform ··on Broadwa) ·· ew York ba~ do-wop group~ v.111 do what they do best. Do-wop. Jazz ~nd Miles Da'1s and sax- man David Sanborn will blov. thrar horns an tht' art d«o rntertainment palace. Michael Jackson. uLanne Vega. Wh11nc) Houston. Ten~ncc.· Trent D'Arby. Rand) Tra' 1s. K T. Oshn. Restless Ht'art and comedian Jackie Mason will also perfo rm In the past few )~f"S.. tht' Grammy show has slfUl&)ed for an upbeat image. moving away from the banaltacs of middle-of-tht'-road pop music. Last ynr the accent was on blues. gospel and country music. The ~ear !x-fore. Gramm) tncd 1an1ng things up v.1th a tnbute to bebop and S\.\ 1ng. This }'Car the nominees range from thr sensuous funk of Pnnce to the lyrical charms of Suzanne Vega. 1u11onand .\ll)\ Though the rocl-pop nuu..,... as St'r' 1ng up !>ertous songs for1Cf10US hi.teners. froth) ltthn,s still wll: Doll~ Panon. Linda Ronlladl ~ Emm\IOu Ham ha\e t>ttn eoma· natl'd for album of the year l>r ··T no" Gromrnl\ "inner WhjtDe) Houston " up tor her sdf.utled "Wh1tnC'\ . LP .\lthuugh "'•mt:n have a SlfOOI pn.'\C'nt t' m th1.· thr1.·e maJOr Gramm) rnntC'~t\ the reco rd academ)' el11111n..itt•d th1.· "best rock voca1 1>1:rlv1 mJn1.1.· kma k " catqcM'Y du \t'.tr Woody's 'Water' wacky whimsy Fun and love stall makr maJor note~ but South Africa. child abuse and national pnde have churned plac~ on the chans as well. h Sttms that listeners are ured of the t'ndles~ pan) v.ith 11s s~ntheuc orchestra- tions. and long for real emotio ns and a touch of reaht) backed b) rav. sounds and solid music. L' :! sold mo re than I:? million copies of 11s Gramm~ nom inated LP ··The Joshua Tree." "1th ats tunt'' about v.ar and the meanin~ of hk Vrga's Top 10 hat. "Luka.' a '>0111- oqu) or an abuS('d c hild. has Ot-1.·n nominated fo r record of the ~ea r jnd song of the ~ear and she's up fo r Oe'>t female pop 'ocahst. ·1 "'l~h lht· numinauons had been othl'f"\\ I\( fhrlich S31d. ··1 tbjnlt t)1S hJ' hc:i:n J krnli1. 'ear for Womd' an pop mu"' 1n ttcn~ral. I would have h~ed tP hJH' had more rock pttS· 1.·nl 1. f he <.iramm\S havt' ~paratc •Jll'gor11. ~ lor 1•1jil." and female sinter'$ By BONNIE FEVE RGEON 0..-,,..C:., P •nl Happy50th birthday, Super1nan .. You don't tug on Superman':. cape. By KATHRYN BAKER .,, ........... ....., -Jtm Croce NEW YORK -You don't make fun oftruth.jus11ce and the America n wa). but scnousl} fol ks. how do ) ou do a documentar) on Superman w11h a straight face'> ··superman's SOth .\nni'ersa~· .\ Celebration of the Man of Steel.'' airing tonight on CBS. is a charming. gentle poke at the superhero. tinged with a hint of lingering childhood awe. Superman arri' cd on Eanh from Krypton in Action Comics an Febru- ar) 1938. Host Dana Carve) of "Saturda~ Night Live" takes '1ewers through a one-hour comic documentary that pretends the Man of Steel as a real guy and Metropolis a real town -albeit one that looks suspiciously like New York. Some of the original Superman pla)ersare featured. Announcer Jack- son Beck -the gu) who onginall) said. "Look! Up an the sk}!" -does the show's opening narration. A lovely Noel Neal l. who played Lois Lane. is interviewed as Lois' mother. She complains that no one was ever good eno ugh for her daugh- ter after Superman. "I've tried to fix her up with other men. but it's always. ·can he break through walls? He is bullet-proof?"' There are straight interviews with Jack Larson. who played cub reporter Jimmy Olsen and is now a movie producer. and Kirk Alyn. the first superman. ·in the movie senals that ran from 1948 to 1950. "I felt I was a creator. I created 11. I made him look like this. I made him strong. and they bclievt>d me:· .\I) n says proudly. The late George Ree-..es was the most famous Superman. staning in the television sen cs of the 19 50s. Footage of uperman through the <kcadn. up through Christopher Reeve, is'interwovcn with new"inter- views." like the one with syndicated columnist Jimmy Breslin. who worked for the Daily Pla net's com- petitor. "I'd have to say that Perry White made all the. riaht moves." Breslin says of his rival's editor. "He's got a verv streamlined staff. What has he aot? Essential!) three relJC)rtm." Hal Holbrook has a new one-man Broadway show. we're told .. He !s interviewed backstage -in his distinauished gray hair and blue ti1t11s. And thugs sit arQund in a bar re"'initcin, about their inability to re11st wasuna bullets on tht' Mal\ of ~tee! -··1 just kept shooting on t~ chant( that one would &'1 through.'' Uhracool Lou Rttd. ~aring shades and puflina on a bull. is inteniev.cd on a· street comer: "Superman? I liked him better before when he was more sutMle. ... Now he's flashier. he's more into specll(le." We alto visit a trailer on the ouukins of town, home of Super· man's .. love child," and his mother, played by Jan Hooks of"SNL .. Her '°"· she Jl)'S. "hu that X·ra)' VlSion, but onl~ ~. IO he felS thcte lmible ba."thcnu,.es.. "Jun, ior, lift up the NovL .. Alto apparia& ia the special are Fred Willard, Ptter Boyle. Tom Da~is ud Al fraaMa, Carol Lcakr, ... [)oylt MurqJ\.l~ AmUl"I Krak1a and R.alplt reaon, amof'I muyothcn. bulstef) husband and father caught up in an unbelievable situation - an amateur photographer/tourist ac- cused of sp) 1ng. Though accomplished in her inter- pretation. Paris seems ill cast (or 111 clad) as Hollander's daughter. Her appearance in .\r t I lea ... es the impression of a young teen - inconsistent "ith the later revelation of her impending marriage as "ell as her wom anl) ad,ances toward the > oung acting ambassador Axel Magee. portra}ed b) Dan Michelson. Maintaining a fine balance bet wen c h arac terization as a class c lown/failure and a leading man/hero. Michelson succeeds on all counts an ha s demanding per- formance. Paul Simon also 1s nom inatni IPr rrcord of the \Car for tht: 111k trJd, from his Gramm ~ a"ard-v.1nnang "Graceland·· LP. "'hach fu..ed the.- song"' nter's poetr) "1th the rh' th"1' of tht' black to"nsh1p of o"'ew 1n South ..\fnca. The Grace'land , "lk1. - 11on "on .\lbum of the Year last 't'Jr L'p for Album of the 'l r;.sr I'> Pnnce's "Sign O' the Time'>" v.11h 1t'> allusions to drug add1c11on. Je<,t1· r. pop Jnd rh\lhm ·n· bl ua The rod: .a11.·gur' 1.11mh·nes them this year. T 1na T urn1.·r "'ho v.as named best trmJk fl'<.~ 'l'l\:a tast last year. 1s n<•m1n.1t1.·J Jlong v.1th Richard Marx. Hnt-">1.·g1. r Bru1.1.· 'ipnngstecn and Jex < ,... l..1.•r \I \, 11 ll'\1 ngl"r prt'sadent of '-\ R \.., iw1d the Jrndcm} has a rule that thl o o 1ndustf) professional "h•• jrl ml."mbe~ must nominate 10 P-,.'l'Pll in J la tt-gos: for that calCfOr) to l , • .,t Rod . 'ocahst nominataon mu-.1 hi.· frum solo albums. Thi!> \('.If "'-\R.\ couldn't come up ""h tn kmak nominees for rod 'U\3h'>I =.,n.;:._~ • $3.25 ~:::: := ::::::: :::; : = ... 0.. ..,_Silt T-•O. ,,_At ... Ott-l o 0,..1_, Kilroy. assistant to the am- bassador, is rendered b) Todd Laniwcll. who most delights h1!t audience when he lapses into slapstick as the result of a slight concussion. Dan Mlchelaon, Martina Parla ln "Don't Drink the Water." 6J4 IYP"'•" '" 2~~) \t••• A11J I,.,... Also highlighted in brief but ck H·r appearances are Dave Pans as Kro- Jack. tbe obsessive pursuer. and 0 11 Crockett as the Sultan of Bashir - both men intriguing by vinue of their facial eY.pressions and body language. Brian Burm olTers the animated and popular chef of the embass) \\hose cuhna~ e \pcrtase as threaten- ed b} the intrusion of the caterer from .\ml'nca·s '.\1 ad"'cst (Hollander). In supponing roles are Terr) McN1col. ;\l1chel S mith. Laura Pl'terson. Ton) Fans. u Madnnan There's a time in everyone's life that dtanges them forever. For six friends. it's thfl tum-n.r . NOW PLAYING BAU ,,. .. ,.. ... 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L-.S 4:19 ..SJ -I hlS ,_, ...... __ THI Wl llUllOI ~ii1 111• 1:4J ,,. ltt .. jaAN C&AUoe VAH DAMMI 1&.00Dl.-c>aT I .. 11• -... ti• I~ ·--... 9119 "" UMWOUCMMLD fll CAil 1• Tl Ill ............... -·· _ ...... ...... ALWIUM z ... ---.... .. IOUY ftlllOMCll __... .an.- llONWllO Ill ll>e .. ,. 7t1S lltll ALOMA SUMMll !N I l es J<W S Je 1 4S •..M OOUY snlfO '4AlllllON f OIO PR.ANTIC (IJ 1.a l:U S:4S l.Je lt:M Ta. 11\UCJI. m1't ~Y. "' ...... T'Mltl MIN I A IMY 1"' h 4e llJS .,._ , .... INIAll N MIW 1:00 IOUY mlllO<Ml WUT*D ACTION JACKSON 1"4J .... ...s "" lltU HIWAY 39 . a : 'j i.=1.'.11. (.... .. ......... M' Ull.._ •UNnC Ill '* LOil aon 111 a.....r .. TMI URC9 ... ., ....... .. Liii ..... D90 • ----·--···-.. .,-·---- • and Rick la"horn · "Don't Dnnl.. thl' Watl'r .. 1s great fam1l} entena1nm1.•nt at thl.' Cums Theater an the rn~ 's (1, 1c and Cultural Ce nter. "'hi:re 11 cont1nut's Wednesda)s through a1urda~s at p. m. through '.\fare h 1 ~ For 11ckcts or further information 1.all 5 ~~6653. '~~r'Jo 1 :00 .. 10 20 SHOOT TO KILL (II) U .t02l0 5 00 7:25 I. t H llOONSTstUCK .-0) U :5S l OS S 6S 7 1 s .. ' 30 OAOCAST ,,_ .. ca U .00 2 ·U S tO 7:45 .. 10 lO ....,. .. cwn.m 1 · ro"!': r:'J 00 I 0 00 ...... •&A•OOll •• , u .os 2.21 .,u 1 l$ .. , u 'Zt!li:fl> .. .., I 10 4 ·00 1 0010 00 MUI • A e.A8Y (f'G 1 003 lOS 20 1 JO t 4 0 SHOOT TO IULL PO ,.._, UnlOIOC"•••u ,., 8000 ..,-··· VCT'llAll 1111 Stalce~t (Jtf >-&A9811Y ""5) "'". j •ttet'tet Not 1nc1uo~ (~) * * Olll'llt IMS~ • • *•O& •S I lt'IHOOS I• UllOlll IH'lll UllltlUOTl EDWARDS CINEMAS COMING SOON EDWARDS NEW .. •m• 01m1 I" -...:..:::::=.:....:::;::.-:..~~~:'":" .... _....,.. ............ ( .. ) .......... NEWPORT CINEM A .... p..:.1• ....... 644-0760 7-DCllll ST{R(O S lO I OC 10 IS (Pl) "THE UNeEAAABLE LIGHTNESS OF BEING" (Pt 1001000 "ALOHA SUMMER" (.-G) , .. , .. "ACTION JACKSON" (Pt) "DOlll Sl'OIO 'lt I lt It IS "BLOODSPORT~ (Pl) S •S 1 JU JO .. , MIEN a A •A•Y" ,.r:,>, •• ~AL.OMA SUHR•"~ (N) , ...... . £1tl"5M "THIE DEAD' l~GI • DCUt Slfllv ll I) l :S •SO . le ' I~ .e •' "FRANTIC" (Pl) ~fc.ll • 1$! JO "SHOOT TO KILL" (RI •DO.IT SltllO 'l~••ttlO -A NIGHT IN THE LIFIE JIMMY AIEAADON" IPll HU•S 1010 "lltONWIEIED" !RI • OCUl Slllf O 1•1ta• GOOD lfOANtNG VIETNAM (9') ,._, ltACI DCllll SrtJlO 5lt ••••lt MSATISfACTION fJl'G 1ll 111' llH IH lH ~ ~ lOOD llON•tG VIETNAM -·· (Ptl ltUH•l lt Je "A NIGHT IN THE LIFIE OF JfMMY AIEAAOOfll" (Pl) US H S 111' "FRANTIC" (Pl ) i4M1!S011 f OID WE SERVE REAL BUTTER ON FRESH HOT POPCORN '"SHOOT TO Kill M (RI "'11Cl,ll s T'[lf. H SIOC t ! S IS " lO 'O "M OAOCAST l'fEWS" 4A1 -.. IV1 lft DOU\' ST£Pl£0 "BRO ADCAST NEWS" (Pl) ._ ___ 5_·•_7_»-_1_0:_,o ___ _ s 1>1-ot 10 2G ··MOONST"UCK" (l"O) " Del.I• S f[.1110 '1U •IOJO _.,POTO .. SHOOT TO KILL~ (Pl) 51H•ltlt "tlOON STUCK" (PG) H 5 U O ltOO "HOP£ 6 GLOAY" (PG13) •oo • 1s ~SHE'S HAVtNG A 8A8Y"' (.-G13) 'tM15 1tn "3 MIEN I BABY" (PGI "OOll• ST[l{O t l5 11Slt15 "FRANTIC. (Pl) ~fee ~:io·s ,10 MGOOD MOANtNG VtETMAlf" , ... DOl8t Sltl£D (ll) 6 00 Ull 18 .. "FRANTIC" (A) HMllSOll f DID s 1!11 JI,45 "THIE U.-EARAM..E LIGHTNESS Of H ING• Cl') ....... "3 MEN I A 8A8Y"' CP9Gl O(U'f '. ••·1111 ' AIDS test not infallible DEAR ANN LANDER~ I have a tip ror .. Faceless in Amarillo" and others who may tnt positive for AID antibodies. "Faceless .. said he wasn't gay. had no symptoms of the disease. and claimed he wa.sn•t pro- m 1scuous. He was puzzled over how and "'hen he could have become in fected. I am gay but pvc up p y sex because I was afraid of AIDS. A few months after this decision. I took the .\ID test and it was negative. Then I rt·ad that the lag betw~n exposure and a posit" e result may stretch from one 10 six mo nths or longer. So, six months later. I took the test again and "as homficd to learn it was positive. I "as retested b) the same doctor who ~·d the results were confirmed by the rnorr sens1tn e Western Blot test done 1n the doctors own lab. .\lier months of plain hell waiting tor .\IDS S)mptoms to appear. l Ji.'c1dcd 10 tr) for a second opinion. I "~nl to a free clinic and to my ~urpnse. I tested negauve. I then went to 1he .\IDS cl1 n1c of a prestigious v. ash1ngton hospital and got the ,;imc-result -negative. I now know tht• pos111vc tests were inaccurate . .\ recent anlcle in the Washington Post stated that the accuracy rate of pm ate lab tests may 'af)' wtdely. So pll'asc . .\nn. tell )Our readers who test posit I\ e 10 111 a different lab. prder- Tuesday. Marcia 1 •• lMms •inst me and cop a feel. l am fed up with his di91ustana behavior. I love my mother-in-law. I know she is aware of what is aoing on and is embarrassed by it. Also, other family members must notice that he hangs around me entirely too much. My husband is the happy-so-lucky t_Y.pe. the son whonevtrwants to think 111 of •••lllll••··~•IJ, !anyone. What can I say (or do) to make the ably one wtth a reputation for lcch stop this nonsense? I'm -UP acruracy, before they accept the TO HERE IN BOISE . decision as final. Thank God I did. -DEAR Ult: Take lite creep aside CELIBATE JN D.C. 'ud tell !Um a. ...... sease laapa1e DEAR D.C.: Muy respoulble 'tlalit lllil eseenave ••w,ta111es1" l1 .. , $. are opposed to mu4atory a,predaa.I aM daat J• wua laim to for U.e Yery rea10D YM uve kee,lllll•auce ..... eltplalaU..tlf • Add uoUier: AJtltMp CM· M 1eta ... dele for comfert off flMaaialhy 61 proml1e4, me41cal mere dme Y• will aaaeuee (18 • rfftfd1 sometimes f•ll Into lite votet daat cu lte MaN 18 Colorado) wroa1 U.ds ud •• ~rreca tUt YM wut ~lm to keep lats pe•· c:•ltive reHU cu be rat.oH. I plckill' lau41 off Y"· nea clo It. ve11't eve. mentioned tbe cost of • • • U.e &Hts, wlaiclt for some eu lmpo1e DEAR ANN LANDERS: In a a lteavy fbauclal b•rdea. recent column you said. "Dream • • • castles arc fun to visit but don't try to DEAR ANN LANDERS: My li ve in them." I read something father-in-law 1s drn 1ng me crazy. apropos that you may f~I is wonh The man 1s always breathing down printing: my neck being entirely too .. helpful... "Dream castles are built by neu- lfl go to the cabinet to get a glass. he's rotics. They are inhabited by psy- thcre. lfl take m y little boy's coat off. chotics and the rent is collected by he·s there. If I stan to set the table. psychiatrists ... -WAUKEGAN. he·s tht-re. (He ne\er helps m) DEARW.:M•yladd,"uclwe4by mother-in-la" with anything.) boUi U.e state aJMI federal 1overa· Latel~ he has been trying to brush meat." ARIES (March :?I-April 19). Some restncuons are stan in .. d11Terent" direction. Popularity increases. green light flashes for progress and adherence to your o" n st) le A "new Jo, e .. could be on horizon. Leo invoh ed. r~·m0' ed. crcauve -------------JUI Cl'') are actt' atl'd. \ hJnge occurs allo" · 1ng \Ou greater free· Jorn of thought and SYDNEY au 1un You'll learn ruk\ :i nd break o them .\nd \ou'll be MARR Jpplauded b) pecrs. ••••••••••••• TA UR US ( .\pril 20. \la) :?Q): Stud) Anes message. C'lash of ideas occurs. pro' es stimulating. results an dec1s1on fa"onng ~our d Tons Me mber of opposite sex figures promanentl ). You'll learn more about tax. hccnsc rcquirements. GEMJNI (Ma) :?I-June 20): Puzzle pieces fall into place. famll) member seeks approval concerning resi- dence. possible purchase. major domesuc adjustment. Be d1plomauc without becoming 1nextncabl) '"'oh ed. Taurus featured. CANCER (Ju.ne :? I-Jul) 22): C'ount your change. sec others in rcahsuc hght. rcahze "hat appears to be hot romance could be mere Oinauon. Scenano accents 1llus1on. glam or and wishfu l thinking. Mone) emphasized. · LEO (Jul) :?3-J\ug. :?2): Focus on rcspons1b1ht}. pressure of deadline. intensified lo\e relat1onsh1p. Man) arc fascinated b) your motives. ideas. actions -you co uld be asked to appear before the media. Capncorn spotlighted. VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept. 22): You could strike chord of unl\ersal appeal. meaning dissem1na11on of 1nformat1on concerning love. You'll complete proJect. JOyrne) could be in offing. Emphasis also on clandes11ne arrangements. LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 22): .\ccept challenge of frl·sh By CHARLES GOREN and OMAR SHARIF SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): Intuiti on rings true. career gcts boost. ) ou'll be repaid for favor. Reunion with famil) member indicated. gourmet dining on tap tonight. Cancer. Capricorn. J\quarius people play significant role!'>. SAGIM'ARJUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Open lines of communica11on. purchase sufficient clothing to bring "ardrobe up to date. Emphasis on popularit). social acu vit). invttauon to travel. Gemini. Aquanus play kc) roles. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19}: C heck source material. be aware of accounting procedures. You'll $Cl nc"s concerning funding. finances. possibility of tn· hcntance. Taurus. Leo. Scorpio people figure prom•· nentl}. Trad111on shattered. AQUARIUS(Jan. 20.Feb. 18): Mot1,esared1scerned. confidential repon is placed in your hands. Plans change. member of opposite sex talks about "true f~lings:· Yo u gain b) reading and wntang. Virgo is in P.icture. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Fam II>· mem ber who appears lackadaisical could actual!) be a$1tated. Focus on sccurit), basic issues. senous d1scuss1ons concerning budget. SubJect of safet) and ho me repairs could dominate. IF MARCH 1 IS YOUR BIRTHDAY current C}'Cle highlights populant). movement. travel. scns1t1v1t) concerning wardrobe. appearance. weight. body image. MaJordomest1 c adJustmcnt takes place this month, could include actual change of residence or mantal status. Leo. .\quanus people pla) 1mponant roles 1n your life. Yo u a re anHntl\e. an anno,ato r. romantic and sensual. d ynamic and stubborn. Money co mes from unusual source in .\pnl. Ma~ "'II also be memorable for you in 198!. Q .1-As South , vulnerable, )ou hold: + QS4 8J AK 1072 • 762 The bidding has proceeded: Sortb East outh West A.-ean ner cannot have more than 15 points. E'en if you count your hand as wonh 10 points and he has a maxi mum, game would-be much too iffy. Do n't jeopardize a partscorc by getting your side coo high. Pass. ·~ ,.... 83 AKI072 •762 The bidding has proceeded: No.U East outh West J • Pus J ' J -; 1 NT Pass ? What action do you take? A.-This time the auction carries different implications. With a mini- mum opening bid, North would 1 • Pass 1 Pass J NT Pass ? What action do yo take? Q.~-As South , vulnerable. you hold: --------------.---------------, have passed. Therefore, you can ex-RU ff ELL'S pcct him to have IS points, and they ~ AUTO FACTS SHEDDING LIGHT ON SAfETY It has been two yurs since the eovernment required all riew cars to be equipped with the rear mourited cyclops · brakin& la&ht lhtse thtrd eyes· help prevent the possiblhty ol rear end colhsions by removine any ambt&u1ty lrom the clusters of red tail lights N.ew studies by the National Highway Trafhc Safety Administration show that the new braking heh! has reduced over all rear-tncl colllSIOns by hfteen percent In instances where rear crashts involved the brak•n& of the front car. crashes have been reduced by approximately twenty-two per cent On the baSIS of further stal1stical evtdenct. the study also concluded that tht "thtrd tyt" btakana hgM was es pecaally effective 1n pment1na chain col hsions If you dr1vt an older Cir t~t's not equipped wtlh a third bta•inc hcht. wt suae-st haw.Ill one 1R$lalled. Here at caP. wt~ lfl str~e re9111 on wand VW. W.'N do_.. JObs. such as o.i c""""-Md l"'I ltStJfll as well as NfOf ...-~ We're nearby at 2090 .......... Op9'I U tof your convt- n.enct Tel 64U'l0 ~ by MA Mlp credft eatds .._. are likely to be worth more because UPHOLSTERY INC. of the position of his heart honors .,, '•...., c..tri lllrt! behind the ovcrcaller. Invite by rais- 1m llUIOl l lYI .. CtSTI •SA-SU.·115' ing to two no trump . (714) 581-6111 Full &rvice Retirement Living from •J~5 ... G~~=~;-----------------------1 I 24552 Pd\('O dt• \dlt nr ,1 I I La11una Holl' C1l1forn .1 'l~f'>)J I I Ple.J\t' \t'nd mor1• 1111orm.i11on •bout Vtll• V•lenc•• I r ';•me I I I I ..,ddres~ I I C11y Lip Phone I L-----------------~---------~j -1-~Quite possibly the most ~'2"*1. ' beautiful collection of J J doors in th~ world. 100 Doors Oa Dllplay Oak, lolewood Teak, Muog~y • French Doors (Conventional and Sliding Unit.) • &y Windowt • Custom WindoWI lNSTALLATIONS (714) 0 581-0854 ll•Prl .. , • Sa&68u 10-6 22722 Lambert S Suite 1701 El Toro, CA 92830 SHOP AT HOME AND SAVE 01 COME ON IN Cat41op Ava&ble ,. -· • D • • • • • • • • A wee touch of old Scotland Q. Who was the American zillionairc "ho hared a bagpiper to wake him up C\CI) morning? A. Andrew Carnegie. His personal re' eille was the Carnegie clan tune. played b) a full) costumed Scottish piper who marched every morning around the grounds of Carnegie's Bt.•rkshirc estate. hadowbrook. Carneg.ie had come here fro m otland at the age of 13. Q .3-Both vulnerable, as South you hold: +6 \/QJ73 .)J132 •A~ The bidding has proceeded: North Easl South Wes1 I + Pass I NT Pus l v Pus 1 What actio n do you take? A.-Don 't heave a sigh of relief and pass just because you have found a trump fit. In support of hearts your hand is worth about 11 points, so it clearly rates a raise to three hearts. Q.,-Neithcr vulnerable, as South you hold: + 7 \7 J87 t/ AQ 10932 • A93 The bidding bas proceeded: Soutli West North Easl I -J Pass 2 NT Pas,, ? What do you bid now? A.-With your miniumum opcnina bid, we don't think you should be looking for an I I-trick contract in diamonds. We would sim ply bid 1thrce no trump-your hand rates to produce a lot of tricks for partner. Q.S-As South, vulnerable, you hold: • 761 \7 K18151 0 Q7-• KQ9 The biddina bas proceeded: Nort~ Eut South West 1 • Pqs 1 \7 Pass l \7 Pus ? What action do you take? A.-You arc worth a move toward pme, especially in liaht of your fit for partner's suit. We suue$t a raise to three hearts. That tells partner you need controls outside the trump suJt if he is to con idcr procecdint to pme. Q.6-Both vulnerable, as South you hold: tU7 p QJt v1' •AON2 PartMT opens the biddina wkla OM diamond. Wbil do )'OU reepood' A.-With your soft valuaud- likelibood or a ma,jor-M& "'· JOU lhoWd be lookh-a for tM al• pmc. A minor suit (Oftlne:t, .._ if partner hu. ct.ab nt, doa not lool 1uraa1ve. A jump to two DO tNmp daaiba botb the •ftDllh and ..,,. of ,our ai..I •ftclb, Md protec:u your t..-ca. Japan's people -half as man} as the United States· -buy 10 times as many comic bools. Q. Where was the first professional football game played? A. Pittsburgh. Nov. 12. 1892 . A new owner of a computer tends to stan out a bit scared of the contrap- tion. but gets o'er 11 shonly. Oc- ACROSS 1 Dwell (00) 5 Shakeepeere 9 Yellow shade 14 Eternally 15 Friend: Fr. 16 Flic*er t7 Byway HIF!eeoe t9 Wyoming'• Grand - 20 Abysaes 21 lnstrum.nta 23 Sult part 24 Ralfroad car 26 RubMrneck 28 Heed mo~ 29 Wee6cender 33 Region 38 Charges 37 Grand -()pry 38 Strop'• kin 39 Confined 40 Wood or coal 41 Wapiti 42 Defies 43 Mushroom 44 Portions 48 US patriotic Mltl. 47 F..s the pot .., 11 contrite 52 RalM food 55 Canvas stand 57 Dllm 58 Auclbty 60 Str91 2 3 14 11 20 24 81 Jewel 62 Luy per.on 63 lr8nllt ellowance 64 Beemlreh 85 Pent up 66 Robust 87 Weight unlta DOWN 1 Aaelsta 2 To no - 3 Income: Fr. .. Beerlng 5 Cried 8 Love altalr 7 Commotion 8 Deputlze9 9 Many tlrnee 10 Bright 11 A~ 12 Gr9ek god 13 Houlin,g cost 22 Surt.ited 25 Marijuana 27 Footed llnffn81: IUfl. 29 Wlurda 30 Auster• 31 To .,,.,.., 32 Outc;ty 33 Thoeef<*• 34 Charaet• 35 Singer Paul 3e 8cerce ,,.. .. ...... cas1onall). though. such a new owner doesn't get over 11. This son is said to be a .. cyberphobe. •· People so af- flicted do some funny thing.s. One recently opened up the computer and ,poured honey all over its innards. Surveys show one out of fi ve supermarket customers switched stores in the last 12 months. What makes them switch? How they're treated at the cash registers. mostly. ftght 51 Convlnc. 52 WMther word 53 Ac:tOf Robert Of Alen 54 Smell bfMd 56 Mer9h bltd st l..eotll 10 11 12 13 TBS l'AlllLY CIRCUS '"" by Bii Keane IN TBS BLSACll&R8 by Steve Moore "Thank goodness Leap Year Day comes only once every four years." I It MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson DEIUtlS THE MENACE (I PEANUTS RATS ! ANOTHER '' D-MINUS '' ! GARFIELD YOO KNOW, '1ARF'lfL~ MAY0( Wf. SHOOLP SKIP '1f!>!>( Rf TONICiH'i TUllBLEWEEDS I ' 1 I j I I . I • by Hank Ketcham Wtw'SM USEQ=TEWN6 FISSIF NO~ \S EVER 00MAA IJEV~ NE?~ LIFE HAS ITS SUNSHINE AND ITS RAIN, SIR .. ITS DAVS AND ITS N16HT5 .. ITS PEAKS AND ITS VALLE'T'S ... by Jim Davis by Tom K. Ryan rf"j 't4«DL.A1f-P\JC'PINc:i"N1dH1"! .--;, 1)tMl'\J. HA /MJt#. Miff-HAU. MAM. CMlft WNO ff'fS ·~ 't\?c)lf Nffl~! """ Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Monday, February 28. 1988 All , , BLOOll COUNTY GAMIN AND PATCHES .,..,, SOf-J ! tc:'.E£P PU.GGl~G ! FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE SHOE JUDGE PARK.ER !MPResseo ev DAVID'S PAINTINC:, OF THE OLO M ILL, SUSAN ACV'.MS APPEARS A T SPENCER FARMS THE NEXT ('11,()RNINC, TO LOOK AT O THER PIECES OF H IS ART ' FUNKY WINURBEAN .. ., ~ y :$ ... e-... (A'f'll. "''\('' ~:cf.L " , ( ~D AND I LIKE 10 1<Ef:P IN !OUCH Yes • by Berke Breathed by Addison by Lynn Johnston by Jeff MacNelly by Tom Batluk DOONESBURY by Garry Trudeau '::~:t.~' S~\\J)~\-lt.~s·:: ,.,,ff~ !Q:W#ll-1 TIQlJ) 1N/ill/E 11115 ~ ()IJI) MQIT H OlmllJll'.- (Al(T Pt.IT HY •. Nll»elt.. FMi#ltON "-\ IE HAO AN EA5' SM':.£ A.VJ ~ /l1UIGHT I« n< HIM A FflAJ 6«¥? ~ ~ IM. HEY 0 • ,__, 1HllT U.S. 450- ~ NA7ES F#IUJSI tF'~ fT ~ A 06IJ). OF aJUfl.'fl.. I) fl(}M1 (JJT.,,. awal5 .,.., """'""' .,,.. ~' \ •·~ ... cu•' -OU•,. e ·· : 1"-~:7~ ,., ~ . .. [[EEL 1 a j _I I I' l _ lA DO lC l'l'll J ' I '. New • '.Jn Orange County · 1 Located At Harbor 6 Ncwpor t Blvds. Friday, March 4 IO a.m. to 9 p.m. Saturday, Match 5 IO a.m. to 6 p.m. Sunday, March 6 IO a.m. to 6 p.m. To Help Celebrate', We' re Having: •.West African Dancers S howt imcs on Siturdiy ind Sundiy: 12 p.m .. 2 p.m., 6 4 p.m. An Accfaimcd I ntcrni tionJ.I Touring Group wi th TuditionJJ Music ind Dress • Experts In Adventure Travel • Hot Air Balloon Display • D·rawing For a F rec Hot Air Balloon Ride • · F rec Rides On A F ull-Sizcd Indian Elephant • Llamas • . Whitewater Rafting • Guess The Weight Of The Pack Contest • Rock Climbing Demonstrations • Representatives From The Top Outdoor Adventure Clothing 6 Equipment Companies • Opening Specials of Up To 40°A> Off on Sweaters and Winter Garments • F rec Balloons Walk Into The Most Exciting Travel & Outdoor Adventure Store You've Ever Seen! When you enter an Adventure 16 store , yo u enter a world as great as all outdoors! Whcthct: you' re a backpacker, rock climber, car camper, ~o untaineer, day hikeF or adve.nturc traveler, we're just the store you've been wai ting for . ADVE OUTDOOR 6 • " I ....... . .. 1870 Harbor Blvd. Costi Mesi, CA 92627 ( 711) 650-JJOI ------------ MO NDAY, FEBRUARY 29. 1988 \ Former AL IMHlng ch8mplon H8rveJ Kuenn di•. 82. USC dropa Into tie for IMt In Pecltlc 1C.bnketbell.13. Fitting last day for U.S. Bobs led teamjust misses medal as Olympics c ose Wiley49~rs topple UCI Long Beach Sta te defen se, shooting k ey r ally, 98-90 By JON FERGUSON otlllo~,... .... PCAA s tandings c~ Oveul 'Nh•O•·I.•\ •r?•I UC ~""'• 8~· ~•·a V••t ~·o•t l on~ 9•• • •'t VC• Nt..., Y:ti•tC(. 141~ !lo• JC \t !>'4'r f",., 0 '\•• .. C• \•a1e r;-~ • "'Ot\ P•t I c W L W l 14 1 2S l 17S 100 11 S 16 t 10 • • ' .. "" I I 16 IJ 6 10 11 14 6 10 ' le ! I I • It o lo S 2 • "' ...... ., ~.J .. •'" \ea\OI' t t ~ Suno.v•1 korfl LIO • 8<>• • ~···· •• UC• 90 S• ·~ ~ t •• "'•" S1a1e •s ,.., CALGARY. Albena (AP) -Time ran out on Amenca when the Winter Olympics ended Sunday. with Brent Rushlaw a tick away from a U .S. bobsled medal and Yvonne van Geonip a triple go ld mcdahst with umc to spare. The best Amen ca could do was six medals, its worst WtntcrGames in 52 years. LO G BEACH -To re"ard tht' pnde and hard work of his ~nwr<. Long Beach Stalt' Coach Joe Har- nniton started his Ii' e honom.•\ 1 n -tneu:-U.ruat.home~c Sunda) agaJ mi UCI a1 the Long Beach Arena n.u~\1Nv'1 G- NtA. Ylt •.-. !.:a..·-. .. ,.:...~i..f. ... ~:..<>- r'rp\""' ~, •. ., •' •-ir S•a 1t , ., a~• , s~i•t' di' N• .. 4aa a1 Y~\ !OS Rushlaw missed winning the first U.S. bobsled medal in 32 years when he was beaten by .02 seconds for the bronze. Van Gennip of the Netherlands. a speed skater, look more than six seconds ofT her own world record in the 5.000 meters 10 win her third gold medal. American Mary Docter was 22.87 seconds back. East Germans finished 2-3 in the race. and a banner hung tn the stands g~.~laiming: "Van Gennip 3. DOR Finland won the hockey silver meda1. handing 1hc Soviets their first loss <>f the Games. 2-1, when Erkki Lch1toncn broke a tic wHhJuSt 1 :40 to play. The Soviets clinched the gold medal Friday night. and America finished SC\ cnth for the second s1raigh1 11me. In 1936. Amenca wo n JUSt four medals. but only 5 1 were available- then. This 11me, 138 medals were banded out. a w101er record 29 to the Sovirl Union and 25 to East Ger- many. The Soviets finished with 11 golds. East Germany w11h nine. The U nited States had two golds and was tied in lht' medal standings with Sweden. one behtnd Finland and the Nether- lands. two behind West Germany. fo ur behind Austna and nint' behind Switzerland Tht' Games finished on time after 16 days. de pile 1emperatures 1ha1 nuctuated from 5 below to 70. winds that bit'" up to 98 mph o n Mount Allan and no snow. While the opening ceremonies concentratt'd on the history of th<' area. the closing pany was an extrava- ganza of fireworks and ice capades. About 250 skaters used the world's largest temporaf) tee nnk to show off before 60.000 peo ple packing McMahon 'tadtum. where. on Feb. 13. the Games opened. Among the skaters were past 0 1) mp1ans Doroth~ Hamill of the United tales a nd the Oamboyant. crca11ve Toller Cranston of Canada. Olympics o f the future also were represented. with children from Al- ben ville. France. host of the 1992 W inter Games. and a group from Seoul. sllc of the ummC'r Games. skating. Double medal-winning speed skater. Bonnie Blair. earned 1he Oag this 11me fo r the nited 1a1es. Lyle Nelson. a fo ur-ttmc U.S. Ol)mp1c b1athle1e. had earned 11 in. Not a lot had happened for Amenca tn be· tween. Van Gcnn1p added the 5.000 gold 10 the ones she won a t 1.500 and 3.000 meters. finishing in 1 minu1es. 14. I J (Pleue .ee WINTER/&~) UCI'• Mike Labat l• Nndwtched by Lone Beach Stat e defenden Andre Puny (from behind) and driving for By ROGER CARLSON OI ttlo 0..,. rt1o1 ll•fl Thl'rc's ~omcthing about 11 v. hen a senior 1ake'i the tidd. kno\\1ng full \\ell that \\ hen ht:.' "as a freshman. his school "on the ·un<;('t l l'agul' l ham- p1onsh1p, going 21-7 and to thl' Cl F semifinals_ .\dd a sophomore ~ rar \\hen his school \\Cnt 19-5. "on the league lttlc and ad' anc1·d 10 the Cl F quar- terfinals As a Junior" Ho\\ about 20-., anothe r league c hampion hip. anolhl'r berth 1n lhl' ( l t-4-.\ 4unr· tcrfinals. What 11 all adds up 10 arl' gre.il C\pectauons. as \\C'll as lhl' pn:s.,ure o f knO\\ing an) thing less than 'lo I 1c; go ing 10 be a big fall Thai·., the s11ua11on at (°)(•t•an \'1l''' High "hcrl' 8111 Gibbons' ~ahJ"k" arc tuning up for thl' I Q8X ha~·hJll campaign "1th"~ rl'turn1ng <;tartl'r<;. including ptlchcr Dan Nault) and four infielders. laung a n) nl'\\C<.'lma I" at ,·a1r hl'r. \\her,· Enc Chnstopherson·s created 'acanq must be filkd ~·nior Mark Kl'llh and 1un1orr, Greg zuba anJ' (o r. C o lht·n arc faced \\tth the ta'>!.. \ acanCll'".t IO th<.' outfield an: abo ob' 1ous "llh no rl'turning starta~ ( omf)t'llng for staning as<..1gn· ment~ arc o;t•ntors John Beaubien. Frl·d Fried. Mark Brenner and Rand' t-..1moto. as "ell as Juniors Bri:tl Rl'cd. D.J .\ndr1."1~s and Ke' in Mulkns Else" here in the Sunset Leagul'. Edl.aa Paul Harrell. a' eter.in coach on the fdl\on mifT who e nters w1th a \Cr\ late ~tart. ha\ mg been named 10 take o'er the Chargers· haSl.'ball JOb less than four "rrl s ago Bui ti has not tal ,•n him long to get J good a'>sessml'nl o t his team's lhanc:l''i ··tf v.l'.rl' going 10 bl' sun:cssful." <..11d Harrell. "the <;l'n1ors are go ing 10 hail' to ha'l' a goo<l ~car. o.ly No4 ....... "' ""' 0. ,,.. ~ ... ,.ny Langeton while ;la~ during fin t half. It's a normal practice tor Har· rington. tn his first )ear al l ong lkad1 after se'en veao at Georgt' \1 ason n" erst I)'. But 1n the earl) ~tage~ ot the 49ers game \\1lh l '(I lhe .\nt· eaters took a quid. lead and sub'>t' quently controlled the ftr'il hall taking a 44-33 ad,antagc Jt 1n1n- m1ss1on. Three of the wnHH') Odmeh Mo rio n Wile\. l.t·H·d a '>l·t:ond halt comeback fueled tn pre~sure ddi:nw as thC' 49t'rs (IO-fl I fl.Q) pla~ed I heir ~t offenst¥e half of thc.-~son en route to a 9 -90 Pauli{< oast .\lhlcttl .\ssoua11on '1cton 0 ' er l C'I fQ. l ~-12). . "For Wile\. 11\ bl-en his ')(hool lor four )Cars." Harrington said "It's tht' same \\llh t De.\nthon} I La ngsmn and (Bill~ I \\ alker Tho~ fi, e ~n1or-.. haH' a lot ot Long Eka h pndl' I tell hke I o"ed 11 10 them I ha' c 1 stam'tl senior non-sta1 tc~ li ke John Holl· man unda)) tn the past I ma' rl'· · e' aluatl' 11 ne\I Februan .. '>-tie~ '>Cored :!3 ot his 3~ poinh 1n the seco nd half dished off l'1gh1 assists and grabbed ft, e rebound<. Long Beac:h h11 75 percent from 1hr Ooor 1n thl• S(.'COnd half. 1nclud1ng four of four from three-point range for a sea'ion high 65 points. "I lhtnk ~orion Wile~ "a~ mag- ntlil·ent." said LT l C oa h Bill ~ull1gan ··Their" htlle team 1<. good but tJke \A."'°'' off and thl'' 're nut nearl) as good ·· · \11lo.i; Ht'S'>. \\hll led L ( l .ind had Pa t. "' !:.•"" Jv\~ ~·a~• S.'t11rcs..,,..1 G amo1 ~( d' UC .>d""'• Ba,oara 1.. """" 8~• ... \•J'" a~ Cit St•'• '-;.J f'"' J" (~•"'"•' S6 b H t\no Sl•t• "' >•• JO~e S•e•t N~Y!f M~·· 0 ~'•'~ o' "'~·Od5 l..e\ ll!t\lH ,.,..~.,. 9 at I OS Pt • c $' ~·a· S'a•f' A 11amn •• I 30 '"''~" no•eo END REGULAR SEASON thl· rl''>pon~1bilm of guarding \\ tit')'. ailiied ... ··He: '> o nl' ot th< lought•st gu~s in thl league 111,ontJ1n hi-. ba~h·t~ d n• nvl l hl'J p \ 1) JOh 1.1i as to \top him hul hl· pla'l'd 'C~ aggn:sst'e \\ 1 lh lhl· ball . But \A. 1lc\ "'a'>n l the on h .. ne n;\puns1bk ll r ·hl· turnaround Rigo \foore plJ \eJ l 1n)t\tcn1h "llh I point\ ktr"l J'ltn \.Jmc otl' th<' ht·n"h for I J and l ang~ron htt ntnt' ol h1'> 13 tn lht' Sl'UlOd r.Jll The Ll•ng lk·Jlh pr~' and hJlf· ltiun Jl'li.-n\c.' t11ru:J l"lght l C I turn· u' l'f'> d'> lhl' J'il'r' 1.1i ent 11n J ~ 1.i-. '>l'tund-halr rur ll> take thl•tr t'tr'!>t lt·Jd '\(,.q "'Jth ! 5)> rrma1n1n~ on a 1hrel'·pu1n1 !!. 1JI h~ St.'n1or t11r\\ard ' Rigo \h>lHl' Vo ,ie, had l'tght and Llng'>lvn '" n thl· run .. , lhtnl.. L 1111e &:.ich 1.1i ore u' out ·· \t ulligan '>31d .. , do n·1 think tht·ir prl'\S gpt tu u' \ll piu" h. hut 1n thl· sec-ond hJlt thl'\ got four or li'l" turntl\ t'r' II' J r11" It "'.1' a 1.l1mh1n.i- 1111n 111 thl•m 1. 11111nl( c11 U) rc:JI hard (Pleue see UCl/821 Lakers' streak hits 10 "Having four returning tnlield stancrs pro' 1dl''I tht.• 'ltabk foun- dation 10 build around." i.a1d (i1h- bons. He has Matt Benram al fi~t. Steve' Hemande1 al second. (1an C'hnstopherson at third and Todd ··1 dl1n·1 kno" tf \\l' ha\l' l.1ds on our plll'htng staff" ho can '>hut people do"n da' 1n and da' out. but \\Chaw lo.id'" hl) thro" strikes and arl' smart I fl'all~ teel "hoe' er "1."ll put out lhl'rl' "'" pul lhl' ball over the plate .ind lhallenge 1h1.· battl'r ·· Pitcher Dan Naalty le one of the retumln& eta rtera for Blll Gibbon•· Ocean View Hl&li baseball team, which appean to be the team to beat l n the Saneet thle season. .... ·• • .... · · · ·• .. · ·" · .... · ·· · · · · · .. · .. · .. · .. • · · · ·· ..... Ba~le>-. at _ sh on. He.cn\ln~e1 and INGLEWOOD (AP) _ Byron Christ~phcr<;on are Junio rs. . Scott scored 30 points and reserve C~nSJopher\on is a co~"'" of ~m uard Wes Matthews added nmc 10 ~bnstophe~on. the 4\11.( !F cah:hl'r ~hefourthquarterSunday ni&htasthr in 1987 who t~ now at San Otego Lakers extended their wtnnin1 streak State. . fi t 10 games w'th 1 111-97 victory Whtie the in 1eld 1s loaded. the 0 1 S h F m same cannot be said for the outfield. over the Phoenix uns ll t e 01"1:' • or for nitch ff depth for that mall(' Mag.ac Jobnson added 23 points .. 'I" 1 . · r and 15 assists forthe defcndina NBA This sta rem11:ids me of 1985 champ"ons who have won 34 of their which lacked. '31'511) P1tch1n1 C'\· last 37 ~m~ pcnencc and s1~pl) .developed a~ the Reserve forward Kun Rambis and )ea~ progressed. \atd Gibbons. W~ Matthews, subbi"I for the injured can t afford any tnJunes o r surpnse Michael Cooper." helped the Lakers Naulty retu~ns W1lh first team all- e.xtend a I S-pom t thinl.quartcr ad-league ~e~ttals. and at 6-6. wtll br a ntagc to 19 with 9v, m inutes to Ocean Views tower of i.trenath. He vi was the MVP of the Lo An~lcs P ~imbis was a fo~ under the Summ~9ame.s toui:nam~nl. leadtr;tl defensive boards. a nd Matthews Occ~n iew past R1vers1de Poly in red . ...... La&.-the title game. sco, SI~ strat ... t ~rs poa~ts Other pitchers Y.ho are beina dunn1 a S.11 span ''? help neutrahz~ counted on are ~nion Derck Osle 10 founh.q~et point~ by the.Suns and Manny Lopez. and Junior Brent Tyrone CC?~tn, who finished wuh 16. Woken Armon G ilham led the Suns with I?. Possi"bt , the bigest aiSt.nment The Suns. wbo have dropped their tut I l sames 11 the f ONm, uted a J J Tholx'. n b-5 right-hander. 1s l'Un\ldl'n·d the h .ltson hurler 1.1i llh the be-.1 f>\,)t1.·n11al. allhough there ts al o Franl. \ 1dal<.'s . .i 1hmi-\ea r siana \\hO l".t lx'ing l'OUOled 00 hC3\ll) h~ Harrell \mong E-dt'>on· returning stancrs are St"\.Ond h<l~man Bill Bertucci. third lxl<.4.·man fosh Sammer. IC'ft ficldr r Gre~ Ddx·non. shonstop JO<' PenCt' and hr<.t ba~m:tn Mark Vo hit- cher. 1n add11111n tt) \' 1dalc\. Thobc 1 .1 1un1or and 1c, t01ng 10 rt.'CO' er from a htHI! with mono- nuclcow• "We're counting hea' 11) on Sam- mer at third:· ..aid HarTt'll. "He\ cal)3blc of doing a lot of good thing'>. h1111ng with po" er a nd fo r an a'emge Ocfenmel h~ hlh lo have a gocxl ~ar for us .. Ot-b<'non 1s tht• ~ ounger brother of former &h)()n standout Mike De· benon. who 1s p~ ntl) at tanford on J tull -rtdl' Penn· \l'f' 4u1l l. from J c;.7 frame . ... l't)O\llkn·d JO l'\l't'llent drfCMIH' pla~er and 1\ J '"lllh hiller. Othl'r\ prom!'}'-'nl tn the Cha.rgC'f\' gamr "l'Otl'' l ~-'" Llo~J (of). senior Chn' RJnllJ t pl \Cntor cat htr Dan I \k.id Jnd 1untor outliC'ldcr Jas0n S<.-ralin ·~n1m' "in dn lhC' maJont' of \tartrn~ .1011 pl.i' 1ng .. addC'd Harrt'll fd1 .. 1ln ' •l\ .. league" f"C'tord. 8-J Fountaln Valier \\e~tm1n\lt"r (oa h ~rn 0 - tro\\ ~L.1 lk~ n tx-d the Baron\ as an "am'~" and ron~1denng lhC' :! \-11U1n ~uad tinHrar ch Kt'nt , ctl 1 working \\tlh 11\ ll fa1rt) acn.innc dc:scnpuon etl. "ho 1.oa hed the frrshman team t"v }Cal'"'i ago. hi a &OOd hnton ht\ battalion. ho~e,cr. and lht com- b1na11on rould prove to be a surpnSt' "I kno\\ mo~t ot tht'm and things al"(' going ~al ~e11:· <.aid "e•I "ff\ a comPt"tlll' e group \\ c·, e put in a lot oft1mC'and \\e'll stt ~h3t hap[X".n' · ;\ed enter\ thC' unset .tl"('na tollt1~ · 1ng J pi.1' tni carttrat Redland' H11th n &:mard1no \ allt'' Cnll~<' and l n1ted \tJte' ln1c.-matttlnal l n1,l·r· !>ti\ His •l'J•hin~ Nl g.rl'UnJ out\11.il 01 \ht •rt•,hman le<im. 1n I~ (\ 1nduJe, J '11nt 1.1i11h R1.-<llanJs High hanJlintt rit1. hl'f'\ JnJ ~Jll her<; ··r 1tl h1ntt " thl' ~u1·,1u1n marl " c,a1d 'e•I \\.: 'h1•ul,i htt th<' hall "L'll and plJ' lil•"-"I J1·ten..c and I thtnk "'"II~ .-ap.1t'lk nt mnnine. the ba<;('s \\ l' II \tn:" Jdcn'4.' anJ hitting ·· \ml1n~ 1h1· R.l rt'n'· rt'tumh~i '>l.trtl"" .1n• nttht-handl-d Ptl her ~ te' e \h,ntg1,mcr. ~n1m th1n1 hasemJn ~'h \~('ntcr .ind 'SCntM outtidd"" Brad l ut:il. and Jetl l 'man \h mtgl'"'"" <ti " ' ha' a h'e faMha ll and ~'und l llf\ l' Othr~ "ho tigur<' to he '>lJrtinf ,1·1 1 on' \p.ian al <ot'(Ond hasc ;in,l 1lJOhll ,,ll\.hr1 \1arL. Dodd T"'' -<nwr rctume-t"~ Jt tir,1 ti.1<.t' .lrl' .lnhn l>JI Pogge111' JnJ ~ •l'1•1Qt" HoO,tJl'llt'r In ll'fl tidd I' 'l1' c l1ra1.l. "h•> "'11 1l 1n1n~ ll' ,hc-J 1,,, N' l'tNll unit,,rm In .tdd111on ll• \1nntg11nll·n •n 1 h1' hill thl· Rar1.rn~ hJ' l t>· 3 2 ' p•>u·11I ,,·nwr t ratg L .1ne '-1(.·nwr l>a'l' '\.1·M1'd'l. tig.111•, t n1aL.1· .111 1mp.il l tn tht n u11i1·ld Otht•r, prnmincnl tn lhl· R..i r11n, p1llurl' ~n11..,r-. T 1m \1111"\•n, a <.1,.'I\. ._rr \t:rndout .11 ... 11.1. hc1 l l hn' lantor(pl. O:n1d < haut~h1,i.1~~1 Chm \.l)t'r<. (p l •\I 1un1or<. R1,i., \h~l. d) \11L.r \\al ott 101) le<.~ "'-no\\ IC'~ 1p1 Tom \.tcndo1a C\\I Jc-0 H1ghc1· '"· 11h). JefT\\ att,Cdh· lh1. C.ra ran Ito( ~l'>I and phomor(' pitcher kfl Hall' Founuun \'allc\ \ I~ J lraguC' rc- rnrd ~q (Pleue eee SUNSET /M ) 14-6 spun in the lint four minutes of the thud ~r to r't'ducc a &~point halftime deftCJt to 68-61 . But a I s-6 Laken rurr, climalled by Johnton's drivi"S rate around Phoen•x's E.ddJe John10n fOr a layup. ratored the IJ\Ullft to 91· 77 in the final minut,e oflht q ua11er. Beck claims elusive first PGA Tour victory at LA Open The 1*kourt duo o( Scou and Johal0111 combined few 17 points in the first half u tile l.aUn built • 62-47 9dvanuiee by in......ec.. Scott. wbo bad lO poiata ia IM 6m two CIUlrWI. .,. ft~ ..... 15-6 ftra..period N ft and JohDIOla ICOftd dlb• to (Wt a l 7-6 bum over the liast )\\ mtftUla of the leCODd quutier. LOS 1ELES (APl -1p Bttk. who was tJeainn•na to v.-ondu 1f ht would t\tt win 1 tournament. mastered the rain·~ R1V1CT"1 Cou.ntry aub count wuh a under-par 68 Sunday to captutt the Los Anecles ~n. Bed, IC\'eft times. NftMMIP but ne~. #inntf:i·n tus . \ioul_n1ne )Uf1 on the POA Tour. a romfbnablc -.S when tie birdied ._. W. holea Oft tlte front nane. In command '"' rest of the -.y, ht fi.nllbed at a 7"undcf .,par 26 7. bar thou ahad of M ac O'GraJ) and 8111 nd~r Rain halted play l'*t<'t' und&) for Marl t~o hours. ontt 1n the art morruna and qa1n Just~ noon Altho uah the rourx was very Wet, it remain«! pl..)abk. and the showui mdtd 1n &ht C"arl) afternoon Bttk bepn the round al 14-undrr-par. ltJOd b-• thru shot k9d °" JI)' Kab. Ed F-on and ~,·e Elkaftl'\oo of "u'traUa Haupulledto,.i th1n onc t r oflhelead ""'"a budie o n tht fifth Wok to to to t 2·unditr. tor. btrdte o n the-final bok to rtmsh v.tth. b6 • rad • ~ to the lead thro.ua,h ut tht toumaft\(1\t. ~\a dos1na Han had a 11 to finish 11~ 'lro\.n brh1nd the winner Male Reid. wtlh a 6Q. and ion, wuh I I, Ibo finlJbfd II 272. Elkll\ltOn bad a cl "" 1' 10 fin11h cisht lhou bdund ~~---ii"'4 kl' 11\t or lt'CO~ fuutaia 1n- cluda th( I 916 U ()pt1\. tht Ollinpioftlhilai of GOif and thci TUC'IOn -tht fi•l tw e\CftU of &917. \ l Jrtn .. , BllllJ bl••lr Canac•• Rookie Ga-11..i, stopped 13 &boll ~ b IUs first NHL slunout as the vititi• • K.inas blanked Vancouver, 2.(), Sunday ~t. movU. ail Poi.DIS Meed ol llae ' CUucts ia the race b &be ftMI .. yotl' bcnJa ia dae ~Div'8ioft ...... Dre•1-:;:e2=lod~ &nd I leCOftd.period tally by ... eJl Wt1't m~ than noup IUppoft ror Healy, wbo ... CHAN OLER. Arit. Harvey Ill bombarded for 1ev~p.laS.twday Dilht la an M Iola Kuenn. a former ArneriQn J.eaaue bettina ' '° Pbiladelphla ... Elewbm. 8"* Vlift recorded b.is champion who ma~ the Milwaukee ninth career NHL hat trick Ind lle9e LanMr reached ~ra to their only World Series appear· the JO.toal plateau for tbe fifth time in aix yean .. anc:e, died Sunday at his bome in Ptoria. Ariz .• the club Cbi~ downed visitioa Pittsburab. 7-S . . . Pat announced. He was S7. V-'ed scored fourplund &lft)lllillf added tt.rec, Kuen.n. the 1953 American Lnaue Rookie of the rallyina New Je!Wl _put MinDCtOCL M. in f.ast Ycarudlhc 1959ALbatti~champion. had been the Rutbnford ... lnBuffalo.~ ......... IDlpped INwera· . latUiC 1COut.1na consultant siott bein& a 3-3 tie with his first NHL pl to &CIMS tbe Sabres '°a replaced as manaacr at tbe end of S·3 victory ovrr Winnipea •.. In Edmonton. .._ the 1913 sruon. Peflla*i, retumina after playina for Canada at tbe Milwaukee General Man-Otympi~ Gam~ sco~ the pme-winni~ pl at 9: IS aaer Harry Dalton said at the o~theth1rdpcnodtoaaveCalpry1J..2v1ctoryovertbe team's spnna training facility that Oilers. ~ the club was shocked by Kuenn's sudden~eath. ~he cau~ofdeath ~tubbs 2 for 3 ln -.nuad game was not 1mmed11tely known. ;~ -, "Harvey ~uenn was a. wo~-VERO BEACH. Fla. -Finl beteman ~-·- derful persor:-. Dalton ~id. I Franklin Stubbs we nt Hor 3 and drove in 1 know that might sound. tnte. ~ut run Sunday to lead a team manqtd by he was. H~ w~s a ge nuinely ni ce coach Joe Amalfitano to 1 4-0 victory over -. . ~uman beina. • a team manaaed by scout Joe Fcrauson in the Dod,ers' ___ ~".'I pohcc said 1he cause of Kuenn s death SttOnd intra-squad pme ofsprina trainina. woul<t no{ be known for about.two days.. . Stubbs' RBI sinaksparledathree-run rally apinst . Kuel_'ln sufkred from• ~ncsofmed1cal comphca· right·hanckr Tim Crews in the sixth innina and keyed llOns dat1n1 ~~ to the mid-I 970s when he was the the squad's ei~t-hit attack. Brewers. beuina inst~tor. He underwent ~pc~ bean Stubbs said he's prosressina well from off-season SUl'ltfY in I ?76. and in March 1980. he bad h1s right leg surgery to repair a dislocated riaht shoulder and is a!'lputa~ed JUSt below the knee after a blood clot cut prepared to battle to regain his job as the starting first' c1rculat1on. . . baseman. Kuen!" returned to coaC'hmg only six mo nths after "My batting stroke seems to be. coming along the OJ>erauon. . . prett) well." Stubbs said. "I'm working on hitting the .. I I~ that was JUSt the type of competitor he ball lo the opposite field. That's all I'm 1rying to do right was, said Brewers Coach Larry Haney. who was a now. coach on Kuen n's staff. "He was easy going. but he was "I want to use the whole field and use my hands a competitor. With all the things that happened to him. more. 1 want to wait on the ball a little more. I think that he kept coming back." will make me a better hitter.'' Stubbs added. Tony Muser. another Brewers coach. said. "You'd talk to him about it (the suraery) and it was as ifhe never went through it. He never complain~... Bonnett outflnishes Allison Kucnn was named The Associated Press AL Manager of the Year in 1982 after taking O\er the Brewers in June when Buck Rodgers was fired and leading Milwaukee to the World ~rics. Kuenn took Milwaukee from a 23-24 start under RO<IFrs to the American League East Division title with a 9S-67 record. Quote of the day • Neu Benett scored his second straight \ 1ctory Sunday, outduelina his rival and neighbor a.Mty AW... in capturing the NASCAR SOO stock car race a\ Calder Park Raceway in Melbourne. Australia. Bonnett held off Allison by0.86 ofa second in a thrilling Erle Gr~. the".300-pound National League umpire. setting tn a final word to a trainer who put G reg on an extensive weight-loss program: "Let's not overdo this. I only have to raJI the bases. not steal them." Reed appears set for Nets job finish to the first NASCAR event held outside the United States. Bonnell won the Richmond 400 last v.cckend and finish~ founh in the Daytona SOO the previous "eek. Allison. like Bonnett from Hueytown. Ala .. wo n at Da) tona. but was unable to· catch his foe ,.,Sunday ... The Porsche 962 of Priff C... and ' Englishman James Weaver held off one of the feared Jaguar XJR-9s to win the three-hour IMSA Camel GT Grand Prix of Miami. Cobb. from Everarcen, Colo .. "as at the wheel of the Porsche prototype sports car for most of the last ho ur. driving a ~~ race on the narrow. concrete-lined downtown Miami street circuit. For Cobb. it v.as his eighth career IMSA GTP victory. SACRAMENTO Sacramento Kings asSJStant coach W illis Reed flew to Ne" Jersey Sunday to close the deal that will make him the Nets· new head coach. according to newspaper reports. Reed said It was "not a done deal" and that se' eral details must be "orked out before the hiring process 1s completed. but added. "I think I've got a great shot." Reports in New York said Recd will officially act the job toda). Reed wouldn't confirm that an announcement 1s planned fo r today. according to Sacramento newspapers. But he said. "I'll pack enough clothes so I don't ha"e to come right back." He al'° is bringing his wife. Gale. Perez, Taylor meet at Marriott Tomas Perez of Santa Ana. former California super welterweight llthst. will box youna Sammy Ray Taylor of San Dicso in tonight's 10-round main event at the ln·ine Marriott Hotel. The first preliminary fight is set to stan at 7:30. Perez. idle since last October. stopped G1lben Baptist in his last bout at the Marriott. The 27-ycar-old Cuban transplant is I(>.) with I 0 knockouts. Man•r Jackie McCoy is ho peful that 1988 will lead to a title showdown for Perez with International Boxing Federation super weher""eight champion Matthew Hilton of Canada. Taylor (9-2) will be making his first effon at a 10. rounder in the fight for I S4-pounders. Trevor "Rocky" Goddard. an impon from London. will box G res "Doc" Holiday of Los Anacles in the feature preliminaf) match. scheduled at I 7S pounds for four ro unds. Tickets arc $30. S25 and $20. and will be on sale after 10 a.m. in the Grand .Ballroom at the Marriott. Weaver"on fo rthe second time in IMSA racing. Hero- dro\e to a wm wi th Co bb last >Car at Road Atlanta. Player captures Seniors event NAPLES. Fla. -G ary Pla\'er shot a final-round 67 and held off Dave Hill Sunday to win the PGA Seniors Challenge golf tournament. Hill made a hole-in-one on the 16th hole. but Pla)er replied with a tee shot that landed six inches from the cup on the par-3. I S7-yard hole. Pla)cr took the S4S.OOO winner's check with a 207 total at Pelican Bay. and first-round leader Hill also finish~ with a final-round 67. and one shot back for the tournament. Harold Henning. in S«ond place after two rounds. finished third three shots back of Player. Second-round leader Bob Charles ended four shots out in founh place. Hill's seven-iron produced the tournament's ~ond hole-in-one a day after Sarasota-based. Dick Rhyan made one on the 16th. Player was out for the third. Television, radio TELEVISION , 4:30 p.m. -COLLEGE BASKETBALL: Providence at Georactown. ESPN. 6:30 p.m. -COLLEGE BASKETBALL: Illinois at Indiana. ESPN. 7 p.m. -BOXING: Azumah Nelson vs. Mario Maninez in 12-round super-featherweight bout. from lnge lwood. Prime Ticket. ~lecTV. RADIO No events scheduled. Winter Olympics results .. . . -·- --ic~ w_.., ...... ,,..,, CJ o .... ,, •• ,.,,. s._, ~-,,..._ -·~-> Hlfl COIO t6U 61t .. II. llSI .._ --C.,,.... ""8u OfO lncl't1clual ... <••lllMed '" t.llieenl Nerdk cM'Mteel UM' ceuMrv I ... _ ... 11-. Sw•ll .... ,,., JI ( .. C-., -) """"'~I 161 t«O••<lt I T .. -" LOlllltn. --·• )I I 11'-u\ W•--llu\lri. ..,,...,, .. 1'0 --· noooo OGM" >' .. s t H'-"' ot-swn1 ... "'"" ) ""-' Lev-• )o• .. I Uftloft 1' IU JI 161 11030 • u-,.,..,,., E••' o,.r..,."•· l "-"' se: .... o s .. ,,.,,...., JI ,.. JI 110 , .. uo S .....,,.._, ~ h •·ll.,-. I U•• Pfon1• Ea" c;e,,,,.... Jllto .... l llOJO • TO'-" l OU.tfl -·•• J1 1't S .._...,.,,~ow )o• ... ~ , --· ot-.i , .. ,-... ,. JIJI I "' IH Jl •O •Von '-•"'" )ov ... U-JIJIS I Mono h -f H • 0..--• 111 nt 1'•1 1 ~-N~iloro• Sn ... U.._ • l-• .......... , .. , a......... •AJ 111 '" JO SI I I Mw-• 1(-Cl~ .............. 10 ...... &.•iftt. ,. .... u-. -~' s •••. "".,. 11 Tr-·--•IY. •t>t t "•" ~I. ,,,.,....., ..... " ._ .. 0...-0•, ,.., ... u-"' ... Jill i .. ....,_ ~~ W..• 0.. u -· SC:-• _, c;.r,,,.... .....,,, ,. .. •. ,., "' t i )) I II -ll• ,.,,.,.. t: .. 1 c;.,....,,v I• Sot-N!lt.119row J.ll'fi91 ~ lt"-1 .... • JI) U 4W l .. -)ow ... U..-,. 17' rs"""'-' ,_ .... *"' u.L 11-. U F-a Ovw ,,,_,. Jt It 1 " --~. VI *I'S ti fl I 14 M U Y-F-Jf'1>6 • ,_ w-. -· .. ,..,.... c .... ,.., .. 0". " -"'"" lllN ,_ ,. ,. •• .. c;.,,, cr ....... o. ,._, '--,.. "' C• t.Hll U.1.11-,. ,._.. -...... "11. YI ..... ,..,. 1t T ............ W-,..,, c ... 4itt1t '" .. ~ 41 k• ,,_. ~ * ..... C•. O.M1 M.Ua ' ' .............. ,. ....... Frank Wooda of UCI )una In two of Illa 12 DOlata d1llilll tbe flnt half of Sanday•• aame at tbe Lo .. hell Araa. • UCI ••• ...... , Md warills us out.·· fna daeft, the 4ter'lcontia.aed °" a lltttch or IC'Ori• Oft 20 o( 21 ~ wllith arried them hm I S<M7 ddidMo I U.7S lead with I :S7 remaini"l- Wilhout f:neels&ed arni111 the t.11 m&&Ch in tbe Aneaws· Wkoun offense. Heu took thinp in hand with a career·hiah 21 points. 17 in the l«Ond half: bcepc for a pair of free throws bY Enarls&ed. Hell hid IS of UCl's 11 points from the I S.mfouae mark until Kevin Floyd's thre. pointer with S: 11 left. "I lhink Heu played pat. .. Mullipn said. "Heu 11 the aD-time over-achiever and he tot tired. We've aot to mix it up and have Floyd handle it more. He provn what bud work can do. He's had four straiaht really aood aames." But his performan~ couldn't un UCI. En,elSlad scored 11 of his 20 points in the final 2:20. The Anteatm pulled within 89-83 on Hns' follow with I :OS left. Heu handled the bell almOll exclusively as UCI broke the Lona Beach press consistently i:n the first half. The first meetina between the two was a very physical contest with many no calls to the 49cn' advanaaae. The first half was the extreme opposite as Lona Balch was whistled for 16 fouls and UCI hit 19 of 22 free throws. "We didn't want to let it ,et out of control," Hess said. "They took us out of our pmc the first time because of that. and they did it again in the second half. .. Area sports calendar Ilea'• buketball T .... Y COLLaCH -NAIA District Ill Cllevotk ICllrl\tlen Herlle~ et SoCel COleee. 7.JO) w....-. COMMU .. f'TY COLLaG• -Second round ot JC llffionel 11141voth NIGH SCHOOL -CIF 2·A Hmlfl,..ls (San lernerdJllO et WOOCIOrlcloe, lite to be en· noYllCtd, 7.30) S.tunl9y COLL«GE -UCI et UC S.nte 84irllere. 7 JO, MAIA District Ill 11141voff\, TBA. COMMUMITY COLLEGa -JC lt419lonel 11,..ls HIGH SCHOOL -CIF flnels tor S-A. 4·A, 3-A end 2-A divisions •• Los Allffles 5-ts Artn •. Women'• baUetball TundllY HIGH SCHOOL -CIF 2·A wmiflnels (Ofl· rerlo et WoodbrlOlle. site T8A, 1.JO) Tlwndey COLUGE -U(I et Nevede·LH Vt11u, S COMMUNITY COLL•G• -Goto.n Wnt In Stele JC IMe volfs e t Secremento 11nrov1>l'I S.turoevl Frtdev HIGH SCHOOL. -CIF 4-A eno l ·A flners •• Ci t POIV Pomone. CIF 2-A. l·A •no Smen Sct>ools fin• s er •l•H to bt ennovnceo sunca.v COLL.EGE -He .. ell et UCI. 2 ltlen '• 90Ceer Tundlly HIGH SCHOOL -CI F 4·A Hmfflnets (New· burv Perk et Founteln llarrev, l). CtF 2-A stmlllnefs IL.eoune eucl'I II Leoune Hiiis. l l 'rtcaev HIGH SCHOOL -CIF 4·A fl,,.ts et GeM • S.twdey HIGH SCHOOL -CIF l ·A flnels et Gehr, •• CIF 2-A GnelS II G•llf. '· (IF l·A f•nell noon Women'• 80Ccer TllelMv HIGH SCHOOL -CIF semlllnels fcv 4 A. l ·A end 1-A divisions FrtdllY HIGH SCHOOL -CIF 4·A f•nelt et Genr. S.tvrctav HIGH SCHOOL -(IF J·A r.,..tt et Gehr. 4, CI F 1·A f!nets er Genr 1 Wre.tllft6 ,rldav HIGH SCHOOL -Stele c11•mo1onsnlol •I Unlvtnltv o! Peclflt . S.tvrdey HIGH SCHOOL -Stelt cl\emoionsnlin ., Un•versa. ot P•«f•C TUHdeY COLLEGE -UCI e t University ol Sen Diego, ? 30 COMMUNITY COL.L.EGE -O••noe Coest 11 Fut•erton. 2 GOiden West a1 Rio Honoo 7 WedMMt.y COLLEGI -SoC11 Cotle9t e t T~ Mel· '"'I ? .JO C•I 8eollst •• UCI. 2 30 TiwndaV COLLEGE -PtM Slete et UCI, 2 lO COIW\llUHITY COLLaGa -o .. noe Coesl •• LA Vetiev 1. ltlo Hon<IO ., Golden Wtsl, 2. 'rtcll• COLLEGa -UCI ., Cl\eomen. 1.JQ, HIGH SCHOOL -Ceol"reno Velltv Cllrl1· hen er WOOC!tlrldee 7.lO, L.oere T __ , (First round Nmtt OcN n View 11 Wni.m, L• Q\;lnte et Fovnteln V1111v. Downtv 11 Marl,... University e t Et Toro. Petltlca t i Hunt.,,91on a..cn. Los Am•oot et lrvlnt; al 11 l IS o.m ), Wntmin"er e t El SeoUl'dO TOUf'- nement S.tvrdev COLLIG• -Wtstr'nO'!t e t ~el Colltoe (Oii), noon. Ooml"9Ull H tllS ., UCI. I. COMMUHfTY COLL.EGE -Cerritos et Oret\Oe Coes•. l'IOOft, ltenc:tlo S.nll•t>O er Goeo.n West: noon HtGH SCHOOL -S.OdllOKi.. et Sunnv Hilb (dll). 10 • m , Coste Mese •• SOiie Grel'Ot (dl'll 10 • m_, El ~•OO 11 Oc· .. " vi.w (dlll. II • m . Et Toro et E•••ncle (dtll. II • m , Wtstmlnst• 11 El 519\Jnoo TOUf'nemtnt. Softball , ... (OMMUMITY COLLaG• -GOiden Wnl el Gr0H mo«1I. l T ..... y COLLEGa -SoCel Cotle9e et L9vole Mer'tmounl. 1 ........ COMMUWTY cou.aoa -ltlvtt-1... •• Of•not Coesl, l, GOiden w .. 1 ., P1Mdllll. , ~H SCHOOL -Cosle M41M el ......._., 1o1er110r. 3 n . ",,.. . COLLaGE -ScMlll'tern Ut•h St•I• ., SoC•I c~. noon. ... HIGH SCHOOL -CCKll Meu et Lone a..cn wnson, 3, NewD(l(t H•rt>cw 11 S-tlffo. l"IS; WOOdbrldllt et El TOl'o (dtt). 3:lS; VIiie Perk et Unlver,ltv; S.nl• A1111 Veli.v et Seddi.- bKlo.; EdlSOI\ e t Cerwon Tournement. Ilea'• tennl• Tundlly HIGH SCHOOL -Pec.lflce 11 Coste Mne, N~. El TOt.f .et .. ~Olson, )•IS w ....... HIGH SCHOOL -Hunllnelon a.Kn ., Irvine. J, Co\le Mese er E\lencle, J, Edison ., UnlveHllV, l IS, VIM• Perk ., l'ffwPOl'I Herbor. Thuncley COLLEGa -Cllllfo<"nle t i UCI. l.lO, Ft Lewi\ 11 Chrlll Cot+tot INlnt, 1 HIGH SCHOOL -WOOObrlOve et Irvin., J ,,!day COLLEGE -UCI e r Petllk Coes• Doull!H in L• Jolie 11rvovon. ~•vi COMMUNITY COLL•GI -Otanee COlll 11 Mlr1Coste, 2 HIGH KHOOL -Irvin~ a t WooOOrlOOe, J, E•••ncl• •• Edison, 3 IS Womea '• teanl• TundllY COLLIGE -UCI er Univtrsltv ol San Dtll>O I JO WeclnndlY COLLEGE -C•I Sii i• Fu!lefton ., UCI ,, ... COLLIGI -UCI 11 UC S.nte 8ert>er e, 2 Men·· volleyball tllelMv HIGH SCHOOL -G1rcien Gro.,. el Coste Mes•. S 30. Founteln Veltev 11 Oe n• Hiit\, 6 45, Ceolstreno Vetlev el Oceen View, 7 IS WeclnndlY COLLEGE -UCI et Lovole·Mervmount, 7.JO COIW\llUNITY COLL•G• -L• Verne ., 0rl "9e (OH i, 1 HIGH KHOOL -Footl'llU ., Co••• Mese. SlO, Est1nc le et Huntl119ton 8Hcl'I. 1 ThundeV HIGH KHOOL. -Coste Mese et Meter Otl, 4 JO tr vine et Octen View, 7 IS. l'rtdllY COMMUNITY COLL•G• -Or•nee Coest et El Cem1no, 1 HIGH SCHOOL -Alvmnl et NewPOl'I H1rt>or, 7, Sen MertOl et Est1nct1. 1 S.tvrdev HIGH SCHOOL -OeH n vi.w et R.tOonOO Tournemtnt Ilea'• tnc~ T'tWnaY ..._..SCHOOL -CO\te M4Ke et Unlwnltv, NS, WOOdtl<ldM ., Miu lon Viejo, ), Edison ., cw-.. """". > l'r1dH COMMUMfTY COLL•GI -Or•not Coest er Se n Dit90 Meu, t:JO. HIGH SCHOOL -Marin. et lrvlnt, 1 '5. NewPOl't .._rl:lo<. Fountefn Veli.v. WoooorldM el S.nte ,.,,. •.ins S.tw9Y COLLa6a -UCt t i Sen C>l9" Stelt HIGH SCHOOL -S.nle Ane Aelen , EOIMlft et ltlo ~ $Nrt1n ltetevs Womea'• tnc~ TW'Ml9Y HIGH SCHOOL -Co"• M4Ke el Unlv.,1llv, 2 •5. Woo«wldM ., Min ion v•. l . Cor- del Mar et Edison, l ",,...; HIGH SCHOOL -Marine et Irvin.. 2;45, N"'OOt' .._,Dor, Founteln Ve~. Wooclbrlclee 11 S.nte Ane A ... n S.tw9Y COLLIG• -UCI el S.n OletO Stele HIGH SCHOOL -S.nte Ane lt ... n . Ilea'• •wim:!:fv T y .. HIGH SCHOOL -trvlnt et Elte~le. Cotti Mne et Dene Hlh. TW'M19y HIGH SCHOOL -G¥dtf> Grove e l Wooo- OflOOI, Wntmln""' et Cost• Mete 'rtdl• HIGH SCHOOL -WoodtlrldM 11 Veltnele, l . Newoorr Herbof •• Lone 8"ch Wiiton, >. E\lencte er Leovne Hiiis, l S.tw9v HIGH SCHOOL -Sunw l ltelevs ., Founl•ln V1ttey, 10 • m Womea·•~wimmbJ6 T ..... y HIGH SCHOOL -Costt Mese e t De,.. Hllll. T'lwndaV HIGH SCHOOL -G111dtn Grove et Wooo· t>rlOoe. 3, Wtstmln"er et Co,te Mfte ",,... HIGH SCHOOL -Woo«ltldllt et Velencle, J. Elltnele el L-.unt Hills, ) S.tunlly HIGH KHOOL -SunMI ll ... Y~ Cre• S.tunllY COLL•Ga -UCI In Perker Cuo el Ntw· l>Of'I. l:JO e m WINTER OLYMPICS ••• From Bl seconds. She set the old world mark of 7:20.36 in 1987. Andrea Ehrig of East Germany won the silver. her third medal. in 7: 17.12. and another East German. Gabi Zange, won her second bronze. The East German women won 10 of IS speed skatina medals, but only one aold by Christa Rothenburger in the 1,000. Van Cknnip joined ski jumper Mani Nyk.anen of Finland 11 the Games' only triple aold-mcda.I win- ners. Her three 1old1 were the most by a woman speed skater sinct Lydia Skoblikova of the Soviet Union won four in 1964. Hippolyt Kempf of Switzerland won the Nordic combined -a 70- meter jump and IS-kilometer crou- country -with Klaus Sultcnbecher of Austria second and Allar Lcvandi Jiving the Soviet Union its final medal of the Games.. a bronze. Earlier, the four-man bobsled was won by a Swiss. Ekkehud Faucr. who edaed defcndina champion Wolfpna Hoppe of East German)'. Rushlaw. the rouah-hewn. reclusive 36-year- old vetera.n from Saranac Lake, N.Y .. had the bronze won with the fastest run in the final heat. America hadn't won a bobsled medal since I 9S6 and could onJ~ look beck to • llorious past of \he 1930s when brawny. bcer-swillin• Adiron- dack Mountain men from Rushlaw's own backyard u~d to win all the time. Then. Ian is Kipours of the Soviet U nion came down the run, the last staner. One of the new breed, trained to perfection. athletic, mechanical. Ki pours beat Rushlaw by .02 teronds -got even a blink -and added the bronze to his aold in the two-man. "lt'sa rtal disappointment to lose a medal by two-hundredths of 1 aec- ond.'' Rushlaw said. "I've been lhinkina beck in the race to where I could have picked up those two- hundttdths of a scrond. But it's too late now." The United States won twoaolds in the Games -Brian Boitano in f&&ure skatioa and Blair in speed skatinf- She ~as America's only mult1- mcdatist. also winnini a bronu. "I don't think. really. the bottom line is medals," Blair said. Ju.s&tetting to the Olympics was thrill enouab. But could she undentancf the a.nauish or anairr of someone like Rushlaw? Never so aood. Never so close. And then beaten by a Soviet. Speed skater Dan Jansen lost hu sister on Vakntfoe's Day. She died of leukemia. And Jansen raC'cd for her, cnterina t•·o events. one on the day she died. He fell in both races when he could have won. On Sunday. JanRn finally tot his medal for Ja.ne when ht' was awardtd the USOCs Olympic Spirit Awa.rd. Newsboy, KachlnaDickson class winners By ALMON LOCKAIEY ................ Fony-four bolts turned out Satur· d•> for Newport HarborYachtOub's I 4lfi-mile Hunti111&on TadeAands rk"'e, the t«ond 1n tile Dickson Series for PerfOnna"" Handkap b01'1 Flttt yachts. Clata A winwr.,.. Jack laallit's I 2·1M1Cf Newsboy. taiti.... b the ~ dub. Sttoftd .._., Raider. J1m Linderman. Bllbol YC'. 1.nd th1nl f was Cursor. Jeff Farwtll. NHYC. Clan B winner was Kachina, sailed by 0clT)' Mldipn, NHYC. and runner-up WH Paniolo. skipptred by Ken Dutcher. BYC. In Clan C. the winner w11 Lapwonb Came.I with Odln Bruden of NHYC at the helm; 9C!Cond wu CnaMCkr RabbeL John DrlltlDOtt. vz Y • and lhml was Electric P\am "· co-tktppmd by' hl'Utarll •nd ip Uhntt. NttY . ·. o,._,c.. ... ...,.. ktTOlson and Marte Cooa •med up to win tbe Humphey lopn Trophy for Ldlman-121'"1 .._ ... sailed Sundly 11 Newport Hart.or YldtOub. The 1cJtan r,.,..,. ii fof coupla ........ 12·.._ N atiee SecOed ... -.... fllNed ...... ud JortTWlll. NHYC ........ ... C1tudt ud Dadt .... Ntn'C. Nu~nu ,.,...CNl fof dlecwaL f NU wan••• cow•••MC• ~---• L ll'd. .. •S 9 .m l3 21 .611 " 2' fl .Sii 17 17 >7 .llS 21 14 ll .2tt ,. 12 40 n1 ai o.ie., Oenllef ..,.,.,, Ulell Sen Anlonlo S.C:r amento MlllwMt DM.- 37 17 l3 20 n 21 27 H 21 31 16 ll EASH•N COMPUINC• AllMlllC ~ ao.ton ,, 17 ·"' New Yorll n 32 .#111 16 PNladelohla n 32 .¥17 16 WHhlntton 21 )'l .)t6 16\lt New Jerw, 12 ., m 2' C:..11 OM.- 0.trOll lS 11 .UO Atlanta 35 20 .636 I Cnlcffo l 1 24 564 S Mltwaukft 2' 2• 5'7 6 Ind!-2' 25 .537 6\lt CteW!and 21 21 .500 l \lt ._.,,.,k_ Ullan 111, Pnoanht '7 O.trOlt 106, 8o\ton 101 0enYll' 109, New YOrll: 100 HOU\lon IOI, San Antonio tS T ....... , C.- Ch~ at Pnlladelohla, •:lO P m. 0envtf' at Oal H , s.30 P.m Wa\hlneton •• GOiden Stat•. 7:30 p m Ut•h •t S.Cr•nwnto, 7 lO P.m. C .. velellel at Pwtlallel, 7·l0 P.m. ulren 111, SUm '7 "40SMX 1'71 -Giiiiam 9·11 1-1 It. Eel JOMson 6·13 0-0 12, Wn t 6·10 2·7 I•. OaYll S· IS 2-l 12, Hornac9tl 7· 12 3·• 17, Adam\ 1·• 0-0 2. COt'bln 1·12 0-0 16, Crlle 2·• 1·2 S. Totals· .... 9•17 97 LAJ<l•S (Ill ) -Gr""' 7•1 1-1 IS, Worthy 1·12 0-0 16, Abdul·JatlMr 2·S H •. Ea. ~ """ H n . Scott 13•n 2-2 30, M. TllomP\on 3·• 2·S I, Smra 0-0 0-0 0, Mat· thew' 3·9 3·3 t. lltaml>I' 1-1 H 2. w_.,.,, 1·3 0-0 7. t TllOml>iOn O·• O•O 0, Tolbert 0·7 2·7 7. Total\. '7·13 IS· II 111 kere w Quertws '"'-nix n 2• l2 1.-97 Laktf's 2' l3 n 11-111 ThrH·Po lnt ooats-koll 2. Fouled out-None. Retlounch-f>hoeflla SI (Gllllatn, Wnt ti. Laktf'S • (M ~ 11 As· snt\~X 2' (Hornacell ISi, Laktn 3' IEa. JollMon ISi Total lol.A-'"'-'la It, Laker1 IS TecMk•l-Phoenb Co.di Wellel Attenci.nc-17,SOS. COLLEGE MEN --~ St8 .. M, UCI 90 (KAAI UCI .. " ... La~t • 7 S 10 wooos • • s 17 E'-4S19CI S t 3 20 Hen • 10 3 21 Flovel S • S 16 Ht1'dman I I l S An<lef\C>n I 7 0 • Ookt0<czvk 0 7 • 2 Tot•h 14 JS 27 90 Hlll1time-UCI. 4l·33 L-a.di Stata ,.,_,, Hoffm•n Le119s1on Walker Wllev MA!\uno E•\lln Purrv H•rvev Hatt.n Flamino Tot•!\ .. " ... I I • II 0 0 0 0 s 3 3 13 I 0 S 3 10 t • n 0 0 0 0 • • 3 14 2 3 s 1 3 3 • 9 1 0 I 7 0 0 7 0 3' 2S 31 91 Tnree·pplnt _,, UCt -Heu 3. FiOvd 2. Enoet\l•<I '· H..-cim.n '· Lono BHCJI Sl•lt - Wl .. y ), Walltt1' 1. Moo<e I TecMiC•"· N- GSAC••• (Alli) C1t1-W L II 3 10 ' 10 ' 10 • 1 1 • 10 • 10 0 ,. MAIA Dl*tCt • ......... P•IT 9'0UMD IT_... .. till) CMrll • L. JO I JO 10 IS IJ 17 ll "20 lO II 10" 1n No. I FrntlO·Paclflc (10· 111 ., No I &Iola 12'-31 No. 1 AJUM·PKlflc (10-1') •I No. 2 Wnl· l'llCllll (20-11 No. 6 Cel Lulhef'an (IS• ll ) at No 3 Cel a-1111 120-IO) No. S CNllllan Htrll ... (1 ... 13) e t No • Sout""11 c.ilfortlla c..... I 17· 131 SemlflnM at Whittler COl!e9e, Mardi S. 6 alld I PJ'll,; final\ et Whittler COleee. M¥dl 1, 7:l0 p.,m. CrtalnPk>n ~el'Cft to natlonat •-nament. M ·NAIA Dtstl1ct • "-AY•• OP TH• YEAll Ste•• oe La ....... Cal Lutneran COACM OP TM• YIAll Dave~'· 8loill P•ST T•AM ,_.,.,, 5dletf Ht. Yr. A,,,.. •st-dt U YffN, Cal Luth •·• Jr 11 S • .ionnnv Griffin. &Iola 6-S Sr 20.1 'Ill O..Rocnen, luuM·Padfk 6-1 Sr. 22. I Mlltt Kelly, Wfttmont 6·S Jr. IU Paul Horn, &Iola 6·7 Jr IU M1cNe1 8anll,, Cal 8utl•I 6·S Jr IS.t Mark KrN t1, Chr. Herllaee •·2 So 17.1 Todd Dillon. SoCel C..... S·ll Jr ls..7 Brian Fall\, Fr-·PKlflc 6·6 Jr 20.• t rad Schmidt, Wn tmjllllt 6·2 Jr 14 6 'Retlfft AU·Olitrlc1 Ill Mleetiofl\ HIGH SCHOOL M>YS c" ... ..,.. T•NT A T1VS SITU S·A S«T'lptt , ....... .,, 91Vloo Amat (2'·21 Y\. Ull-000 ( lt ·tl •I Lono llffGh CC Matef' Del I It· 71 "'-St. INrnarel (20-t) •t OcMll View •·A S.1J& I Simi V...... 12S-l l at 5-nta AN 176·31. TUftdav •t Cl'lu man c ..... San•• tart>ar• •I Caolitr-V•ll•v 125·•1. WtclnHdn •t SaddletlaCk Co41eoe >·A Sen1dlMlt Kennec!V (20·7) •t lltottlno Hit\ 121·6), TUft· on •• ReCIOnCIO Hleh Tu"'" 1n -s1 •• Paios v..-Clft 120-11. WtdnftdaY •t ltedondO H'91\ -2·A S-. ..... 1 Santa Clar•;(lt·ll •• a.nnlne (21·0), Tun· on a t Can'ldtl *'119' H1911 S.n.......,ardino (21·1) al W11•r'ldee 121-S). Wec!~Y •• Or•noe Coe\! COl!e9e l·A Semi ...... (TMMIY, 7:lll LA 8•Pli\t (lt -•) ., a.ti-Jeff (17·,I. Notre O•~ Hl9n (Shefman Oak\) C•lneelr•I (21·6) "' t .. umont (22·Sl, La Sette Hl9n Smell SdlMb I TlleMeY. 1:lll O.kwOO<I 123·11 •t Soron I IC·f >. T-"«hae>l Hien ~la cnr1,1tan 111-21 •• C•tt 111-11 C•rolnterl• Hi9n A" oame~· at 1 30 ' COMMUN ITY SCOREBOARD HIGH SCHOO\. O.U CIP....,.. ALT••un llT'SI 4·A I S 0 (~l MIO'.. ..... 111· l) •t ~ <2•·f) leftte ..,0.r• (t4•1) al L.Yfl!l'OOd (V·J) ).A ... IQ ... (T..-w) '-" Altos (It-)) •I c:.Mlt-Valle¥ Ill••> El Toro lt•·SI •l ..... V•dlft m-11 J·A S.lt I IT__.,) Ontario 174·3) •• w11 a,.,.._ Ill-SI Arrovo Gr•noe 1n ·ll e1 CNno (21-61 •·• s.mn . IT--y) Valev Chrlitlan 123·21 at 5-nt• Yne1 (2.C·O) Sant• Cle•• 110·61 al t annlne (21·SI SrMI SC... IT....-wl HeW>tf'ia Chrltl•.n 117·S) at Tr-llJ-•I L-Pine UO·ll •t Hemet t •Pll\I Chr"tlan (10•51 GOLF Let M9lfiH 0.... l•t llMll'• c.....-v O.l ., C"ip 8tci<, s llS.000 t lll Saneler. 66,000 Mac; O'Gr~dY, 66,000 Mlto.e ll•ICI, 33,000 Eel Flori, 33,000 Jav ..... ,. 2'.062 Tom Purtle< 76.1167 171 17) 174 Donnie Hemn'IO"<I 22 SOO Steve E1111ne1on n soo H•t S1.1t1on, ?0,750 t en Cren'"•w, 11.000 Scott Simoson. 11.000 Jef1 Sluman. IS 000 Jim C•rter. IS.000 ""4tr1l H•vft, 13, 11S 17S 716 177 171 MaMt C•·••t«hlt ll.12S Vt Tom W•tson. 10. lSO Deni\ W•IM>n, 10. ISO 81111 Anelr9Cle. 10, ISO O•~ld Peoole\, 10, I SO Mike Hult>erl, 10,ISO lltlclt Fehr, 10. ISO Tom !Cite, 6,311 Joelle Mudd. 6,32' Nick Price. 6,321 John COOi!., 6.321 Oarenu Ro\t, 6,n 1 John Mana"-v, 6,J21 Jumoc Oi•kl, 6,321 t ruce LJet11te. •.•S1 R_. MAitbie. •.4S7 8ol> Twav. •.•57 Morr\\ H•t•l•l"'• • 451 Larry Rlnktf', 4,457 - 111 Scott Ver'*"" •.•S1 Curt 8vrum. •.•S7 a·Michee4 Sc>r1-•.•S1 111 Lanny Wadltln•. l,S2S Ronni• tlack . l,5'S WIMie WOO<I, 3.S-lS Pavne Stew•rt, J,000 Tom 8 vrum, l.000 Oe n PoN. 3.000 Fred CoucMes. 3.000 Oen Fonrnan, 7 US It le• Pearson. 2 007 ltlctlero Cromwtll 1,007 Pa t McGowan, 2,007 6S·6'·U ·61 70-6'·6'·6' .,_ ........ 67·6'·67· .. ...... 61·70 6S-61·69•71 6'-.. ·•7·6' 6'·61·n ·67 •t-'1·6'-n 10·61-61·6' 69·'4·71-n 10-6'-69-61 41·11-11· .. 11·69-61·6' '1-10-•n 1l·6S·70-70 10-10-n-•1 10-.. -n • ., •1·11-n -6' 61·11·69-70 69·61·'7·7S 61·73·61·71 61-11 -10-n n -61·10-11 .,_n-61-11 61-10-n -10 n-69-69·71 69· 11·6'-71 6S· 1S·6'· 11 n -69·61·71 10-69-73·69 n -61-11-10 10-ff-.,-n n -61·'1-n 6'·10-11·1• n -10-10-., 69-71·11·70 70-67·11·7• n-6'·10·11 69·70-72·71 7Hl·6t-n 10-6'-n -n 6S•11·1HS 61·11·69·7• ... 10-n-1• 61·61·1'·1S 11-10-n-n 6'·n -10-1s aASKETaALL ... _,.,, Soul'• ....,. ll-k -0.tto.t\ •7 ~·• Fte~ t t ·--k ....... ~"'-' f'IO 11 , ... ~ ... ,. _ _.. I("'--· •1 City ef New1*1 ... di -ll'S LIACWI -•C •••••• c .... Pff I /INrWJ<k _,,...T•Wlft ,....,,_, ~-·· ...... Hl"I ltl'O<llto CIUD s-1'--· ---~ .. " J .. w LOI.,.,., -W•"-"" ~ y c .. " COAC 0 Mef•ef'• •ut•" ef'd fuct.lf Norri\. e ..... ~""' T·-· I TN J•1 ,_.. ..,.,., Ho " ..,,.,.,. . ·--.... k ... E-Soc "o<>f< .......... '°""'" """ ,_ .. ·-.,Ho t -·· (--Po<O.•O.,_ ............. ""'°""'•' Fooh Con•ull..,h TN ~ "'"'""'"" A- W-•CC Too..m f ~an War O."tf\ c ... ~ie. ,_,.. •oo• c-. .. -•• ~-,, w ...... o ...... ,.,. "--• c Th.rd S~"'9 0.. Heck AllK\ "'•'""" TN TH m WMO ......... , A>-l•N MMnv·, SOFTaALL City ef Newl*t ... di --·Moll'\ c l-1¥ ...... , FOf-• ~--' ... ., HO>oi•O! Fa• Stan CorON EaltH Ou•'• N•le Out C-Trott..-> T-'I -·I .... Y(Nc: .... ..-. Cf> ........ S•oo• ..... ---. ~ ~-­,_ Tho ,..... . ....-. ,_, -·CAM"• :II.II,., -Wll'O> Slln'le Doe• Ttom s .. -Wo< Attl<k °"""'"' T-V C.. C .... _ .... ,, ....... CM• H11 Te-• Pr.., •• ., P.-,19'\t\ S.-L-tlOft SttS h ell\ .......,u.-• Ln Froe L-s..11.,,, o1 Sw"'9 Commt>e•••h 5, att•iode Hlt•er -•-•CC Aw"'-'<\ Hll..- lt oll • 0...• ~, • .,,It ,.,. -.. ,.,,, ,,,._ --·~· L-•L-• ..,..,0 .... ' '"""'I< °'"" ,.,. Sc: .... .., Doe\ Nol""'9 "' ,.....,.,..., S4 l• .... 1' D••ll' n C-A .. ,_ 11 11 Qll y---· ,_.., . .,,.,,.,.._ Cv •• '""' EV l•ll- ~·· O ""'•"""·ftO I 1 C-"•" I ) c.-.... ' si.-t L.._,_, J ...... .,,_. T,,....,. Heoov ~-.... ) • 0 LllCM ISi 7J t Or.. IE I 17 S l HoMl.O ICl l 17 0 h•"" Ill 17 0 1 ---1 • ....., • .._ 1S EV,_,..,, It 1 L~ ,. ,_,, rs t C-• ...,. .. Tt-H-Y lit I ~. a , ) ) J-· , .... Or Tooo .. -. Site,...-, • 0 ==~ . ....._....- • 0 ) ' ,_, I J I ) ' J • O L.Meoe k eren ) • si-I-• ,,, c-... "' ••• ) I tan Ill IU. -IHI IS> , , ---' I ........, ,..., S4 Or Tooo U ' l • .,~,...,._ • ., ~ ..... ~ ! 1.-., t. It-t tl0t•o111 0 ) -· 0 • • • • 0 ·~tt• CoMl9e Per• u w ...... P•:Wf"tl'llO It -· """"""' , .... ,...ff ,_,, "'""""" oln off ..-ttec-kor9\ c-.. P•" I l6 l(lllvl»'-• l l ,...,..,...., I JI C-"lorn<a I 17 P-lftO II lS ,.,,,.,,.,... II ll WMI_., .IO -· II w """ •1 "°""""' lo ~l'f'IO I c ... ,.... ,_ ...... ,......,_" w.- ... _ Gll1> • ·-'""' c-""'\ ,, ,. __ " It c.i.1or··· 5t .... _ •• ltlhbt-• 1' P..W-I 1• v--.c , , - • I I , J I ) • • • • • ) MEN'S aASKETBALL Cnt1 Mnl Llhu,.. Serrice ... ,_ _.,.., ,.,._ "*' GN '\ c_,..,_ --·· °"" -.. I ) ltltvl»'ooil• I I J ,..,,_ 0 • ,.......,..... 0 I I J J l l 1 ' -0 c .. -.... ..... ,,,_.. '°"' c;.-~ .. s-.... waoc_.,, EPE u... k-.n Hi1<-10 1 lU H.,t1 .. (Mil ISO -•IWI lH .,........ c ._.... c ..... C•-•• _,.,, A.Yea ... _ On-. OIM4I ,,J .... 11t CM"() u..ie keren °""di 1•01 ne. --1001 J t 1U TorHI ll\11, .. 0 CetN ... ICH), tt.e, ,, ~'-'" 1 l tt.-.e CUM W, llYCO ..... I 1 ~ 0t...s .. Ce-•• U t J 1\1 ... ti\i 0 , CMPO 'M O J ..--VI . ) Oltt ._ L-"'-'" ........... c- l -..,..,, 'o.-' o-.. ..... _ I Ueele SC..... 1 1--W CNICI. ti l. 1¥-1091. , ..... -·· '""t ·~t ~k~ Door-1-1 IU F ''-CHl l \10, C..,.. ICCI 1U, ...... 1091 l<I ----c-....,, •7 C-• Crew l1 --S1 °°" -· .. --Ill -· SI y--. .. ·-k:-,._ 41. Senor• u ,_.._I W, Kil--• I It .._.... u. _,,.., ,. 0 0 l • 1 ) l J , , ' 0 l"-tllo 11 C ..... """ IO It--• II .. "'""-11 It..,_• H SJ C ..... ,..,,. IS -..a c-11 • y _ ...... • ) I 0 • , ....... _ 1(--·" ,_ .. .,. -· ·-'""' IOl'W'Of'OOlt• I 1' Cat ........ p_. II ......... "'O C"I\ I• lt•tvl»'-• " ti c-"•"' " "-II W...1 ll Wt~ 14 Pa~'"'° IJ GOLF UtlUM 9Nefl Giff As~latlen -™l Y TOUltM-lfT l•I G<.-It_. -~I .. ,_ 0.... ..... AMO C.Ol\1-1 J &t..C• ....... .- ltttol ,.,,,,, t row" It ... ltoeitn ........ . ,_ ·~' ~ ..... Don cr1-w..._ ..,_, c ,_ Jo<• l-E..W ... ,_ J""° , • ..,,. "°"' o,_ T, h'O' ( r..r\IW'-\ef'I JK ' It•'~' E"°" l '"''' ,. l>-6> ,. 1..-..S , .. ..-., ,_ tl·I~ ,...,_, t2·11~ IJ•I,._.. M·l~ Q ,,_.) •1-1 .,.»-* .,.,......, •C ·:i.-.1 - 1'-7t-7t-7> 11+1 .. 11 1'-1'-1>12 ns61•1'-1• 1'-1' .. H .... ,,.,.,. n ....... n -n 10-11-n ·n ..... ,.,. n-... 1 ... n .... ,,,.,,.,, 6'-10-1•·1• , .... 1-n-1• ,.. .... 70-.,. 11-•-n -1' 11-11-n -n Jev Olfl .._., 1,1'1 7>·61·n ·7S e>www Eoww•. l,567 .,_7'·11·1S ~ ....... l.»7 72·70·16·10 Sle¥e'--Y, l,W 66·•·11·11 s.IWt teumemeftt , ......... ,, ... I -Garv Plllv .... M S.000 O.~Hll.'6.000 -11' Hwolcl Hennlne.11,500 toO Chal'tn, 11.000 tooov Nldloll, 14, 500 111 JU t i• Gav er·-· IO,W w..-zem0r1\ltl, 10,sso Oon Blft.l ,ltt aruc• oe-tlin. 1. "' ~Lftllef,l.lff JU Cl'll Cl'll •o«Jeue1. I. 1'9 211 Alltellev,6,• Orville fWxltN, 6, .00 Joe Jimena, s.500 co-.. LaMiftll. S,500 11.n Smith, s.soo Aelm 8arllN. •.450 Cl\arlft COOCIY, •.•SO Dale Ooufltii , 4.4SO 0on MaHet,.ele, •,450 211 119 120 C"ar!ei Slftor<1, l,IOO 121 Al Challdler. 3,200 9"uce Cr-ton, 3,100 Gwdrlel' Olc1llnson. 3100 Jim F...-r ... l ,200 Ooti1 F orel, l.lOO Jim I( in. • ..,;200 l lttv Maxwell, l,200 11·6'·70 tt-10-n IS-..·n 11·11·12 n -11·10 '9•6t-61 69-n -1• ,,.71 ... 7 ..... 73 11·70-6' 1'3·10-1' ,,.71 ... 76·7•· .. n-n -n 7•·75·70 n-n ·10 n-u -n 6'·76·1' '1·7S·61 1S-7S-11 17·70-74 11-10-n 16·n -n ...... 71 ..,..n 1'·13·14 NHL C~ILL CONFERENCE ~ DMs.lllt W L T l"ts G" GA c •IOeTY 31 10 7 II 30'2 2«2 Edr'l>Onton JS 21 • 7' 219 m WIMloeo 21 11 9 .S U7 741 K1t1e1 7S 37 S SS 1S I 2'S 11.ncou.,,.,. 21 31 1 ., ns 2St Nerm DM"'9ft Detroit 31 7• I 70 2SS 11' St LOU•\ 79 2' S 63 :z:2o 710 c111caoo 76 l 1 1 St ?26 2s1 Toronto 19 l4 10 " no 2n Mlnnewra 17 31 9 43 1'7 211 WALES CON"E•ENCE Pftl...,..f)tllil NYl~nde'' WH rt•l\OIOI' New Jwwv NY lt•-1 Pin souro" Montr••' Boston 8utt111o Harttord Queoec ... ~ DMslell 33 n 1 lO ,, • )1 16 6 ,. » s 71 ,, • 7S lO 9 A-.ms DMsiefl 3S 10 10 31 22 s 79 26 • 26 lO , 26 » • SUNlllY'\ Saore\ l(lftlla 2 V•ntO<.IYet 0 ,....., Jtf'M V I , Minnnc>IA 6 Chicaoo 1 P•tt~Of! S 9uft910 S, W 1M t.11e9 l CalGerv 3. Edmonton 7 T...._.., Gema 1\1\onlrH I •• Oueoec ' 3S 0 m n m •• l •S 61 11S ,, 226 60 n7 S9 2'1 IO HO ,, ,.., ., 22s S9 192 S6 111 220 115 •• 2 .. 121 2Sf 103 200 , .. 210 2ll SI LOUi\ et N ... Yori It•~'' • lS om I I ~2 0 0 C>-0 "Int ~ I LO\ A~ ~ t I hvlOr Nlc:noit\I, 17 S9 (POI ?en•llte\-Pneir LA oou-minor ll>OlcSino. rouoh•nol. 6~. Bute~ V•n. oou-minor Cn19n·1t!Cll;1no. rouori1no1. 6-ol, C•roenter LA <no1<1•nol. 9 73 Ououa'Y. LA, mlnof'·mator lr01.111n•no. f19rttl119I, 14~. Butcner, ll•n. mlnor·mator trouo111no ''°"""'' "34. Bavmoeri....-. LA maior I rion11no' " "' Stt1'n, Van, dOUDle minor·m.ior 11'119ft·\llC1uno n\tlOatlno, 11onrl1111I I• .. Me4nvk llen tcron · cr..cklno> 1131 s.c.-~ 1 LO\ ,.,,._... Fo• 16. I 41 l"ena l· 11n-Plavt•" LA lholdlnol. l SI. Huoe< llan ll'IOl<linol lit_,., Hammond. LA, <IOUOle minor· meior lhleh·"lcklno. 11onrln91. 14.33 Sut1e< ll•n. m1nor·mat0r (ln\li .. tOf", flotttlno> "33 n..~ None. Penalliet-Atll\Ol'I LA 1rouo11111111 l It, Pe<ter\Ol'l. \Ian (rouo!'l.nol. l lt St•,,..• llen l\la,nlnol 6 17 RoOO•il!e. LA h la"'•nol 11 ll. &.nn•no Vaf'I lhOl<finol. •1"06 Sholl on -..-LO\ A~ t·lt 1~1 V•ncouver •·6·)--13 Power·PlllY _.lunll .. \-l.O\ A~ I OI 6, V •ncouver 0 o4 • Goatle\.-t.o• Anoete\. Hffl'r ( 1l \hOI\ • 13 \aVft). Val'COU•et. McLH n 141·3'1 A ttef\Clana-1 ltS. R eftr ee-Andv ••nH e l 1tmon<1 Line\men-4lv•n 8oi•k, llton Finn o... ... ~ ... W~T LAMO..e - 1 llOet, t .,._.~ 6 !>an . tO mac:kwll, l roefl. fl.n. S ~ OA'laV'S LOCKI• ,......, -..ell) -3 DOals. IS ~ 37 roet. f"ISll, n C.a11Co Mu. .. ..,,,, 0.H , t2I meet.ere!, •1 1111'9 ...-ch. 17 ~. f K\#11\. 1 Wl9 ~~~-...~...,.,~~~~ Pistons eztend home ~ COOLING SYSTEM Kevin McHale finished with 33 points for Boston but tbt Celtic1 fOt little production from their swuns ~ .. . Detroit's Dennis Rodman tCOf'ed six of his 17 points down the streich Sunday as the Pistons mainlained their home dominan~ over Boston with a 106-101 victory over the Celli« in Pontiac, Mich. The Pistons have won eiaht s&a<> cns.ive bomc prnn apinst tbe Celti~ datina blek to Nov. 1 S, 19U. lncludina playofh. t.ht home w.am bas won ihc last IS p.ma between tbe two teams. fuards. Danny AinF and Ocnftil ohnson were ~less in the ftM half and finished with four and e:iaht points, respectively. In other NBA aames: N._... I"· bkb lit: Ma.et Ada.ms scottd I ' of his II points in the fa.nt quaner. hctpina Deaver tet off' to a fast start and tbe Numeu went on defeat visitina N~ Yoft. § .§ ~ e •SPICT COOUllG SYSTlll e RUSH COOl•C SYSTEM e CllECI HOSES llll IB. TS The Pistons, who trailed Sl-Sl at balt\imc, 'ftR ahead 79-71wi\h2!S9 ranainiat in tbe \bird q,.ner. 8'a\ Larry Bird scored a• ofb1126 poia~ ~ it1 a 26-1 S run. caDOCd ~ a du'et-pouuc; that put t~ Cdtic:s aWd 97.94 with S:S6 rcmaini• •• ~Uae ....... 'The Pistons.. •ho en 27.0 IHdi na after-19llne nen1 oullCOftd tM C'cha 1 lw4 ,_ OI ::..::·= .. re: = nom.. do ftailhed l 1. The Nuatts' vk tot'Y &napped the Knicb' three-tame winai11 aueU.. Adams opened the ICOri.nt with a thfte.poiat pl It 11ve bim a hechite recOfd 64 tor the ~ bnakills IM old mart ~ by left C()llldoG in the I 96C).10 __. wtft '"lllt-..m "'ia the ABA. e IDTORE WITH UP TO 1 CAL. AITIFIEEZI ................. It ............. , ..... "' ..... "' .................. , .• , .... ... ... ..,. ... ..,........ ............. .... • Or.nge Coat DAILY PILOT /Mondey. F~ 29, 1911 - T9 ... U.S. ......... , .. Mtlft D ~ ............ Tom .llMVO!te (U.S.) dllf JcNt FltJ .... ald l ...... l~alial MM't JS ............ WI ... ......... , ,....,. .Jow HlluafH (Soelnl oef. aoo ....,.. (U $.I, 1·S, 6·• (H~ti win• M.000; Lut1 wlM ll•I ~,.... Olc.t Slodllon IU.S.l·ROM Caw (A.u\lr lllal oaf ...._. .. ·TCN'I\ G«Y'Nf' IU.$..l. 7•6. l ·6, •-4 w ................ le!,..,_ .. Ve.I ~,... MArtlM Navre!llo•• IU.S ) def. PWll Slvlv..- IU.S ), 6·0, 6·2 c..... ..... se.Mlr'tl " ua J .....,. Tar.,_ ISi Off !(......,, .... 6·1 .... , McEnroe (SI def Kr~. 1•S, 7·S. Luont>r IUCl l oef. 8Jaclll\'IM, 2·6. r >. 1·6. C.alhr .. ISi def &riWI 6·) •->. ~ ($) oaf l(aNOI< r l, 1·S, Dunn ISi def c..a~. •·6. •.• ..o 0.-... 8rl99\·Kr-"" IUCll Cl9I Mc:Etvoe· &laellman ........... r 3. 1(-.11-UJOM< IUCll Clef WhHton·h r.,,.o, S-7, 7-S. 6·1, .....,, C•tnraO IS> o.t lt-oll-Caoioan. 6-J, •·2 ~ . . .. " s.6er'I ..... SS·ANO·OVa• LEAGUE , .. " ........ e.adll A ~ FtAerton 11. Fount•" ll•lle• 17 Oownev 0.aM 5 Hunt.ngton 8eecn 2 Southern Calllo<n•t Br•vtt 11 ~· J~,. _CaDt\tr-1 • OMu.. Or•-s.n-, • ,,,.,,.. J Sanl• Ana ' L~ Al9m•IO\ Wl\llllef n CO\I• Me\e S Cl Dhrbllll El Monte lt Fo;;n•••" Va~v I Or-•noe Coe\' C••o\ 6 Hunt1no•<>" Be•c" NeWllO'I 8•ac" II <>-•,_ '°""'" Eu•• C2 OM\ien WHtm.~te< 4 J:,,,.....,on 2 G¥oen Grove 10 Co''• ~ "l\altel,,.. )4 II ll•'en< • ti w .... ....,~, aASEaAU Al'MricMI L- 8AL Tl MORE ORtOl ES-Trao•o It•• Kn191ll fll"<I De\•"'41" 10 '"• De••o+I l•O.-\ IOt ~" Thurrnono P•'C"tr BOSTON RED SOJ1.-ll9•tte •o 't<'""' ,. '" wn G•r-o.tc"«' •no ;~ ~·1•--0 ,.,~ SEATTLE 1\1\AR t~ERS-S 9r>eo 8 w .n1t0n o~tc~ •o • one-. •• , CO""litra.c! TEXAS RANGEltS-S11"4'C! Eow ~ C0t•H .,,., 80C»Y W It P.1(-\ 10 (11\4'• •••' (Of' trec1\ T~ONTO BLUE JA YS-SIOMO JOl'r Ct<~· ti o•tchfor to • ~·v••r contra<' .......... LH- PHIL AOELPHIA PHILLIES-S10~ "'t• T"OmO\Ol'I OU't.f'~ •no ~r·1nn ~,.H...,•"' P.ICf\t< to on.· ¥tar C1>'11fAC1\ a ASK IETaALL NaMNI &a\11.-.. A\Melatlel\ CUP9£RS-S911eC! ff>"• i:_, 'O'•••o to a \0-0.¥ CC>r'" •<' NEW JERSEY NETS-S-one:: It<•• W \<>'" HOCKEY ......... Hedlev LH 9'H HARTFORD WMALE R5-S•9".C Seo. YOUnQ torw ero fO • .-...y)I .., •• , COl''f.C-1 •t'C M•'• Mee ..... oete"\.4"".t• 'or .,,. •em•~ o' lfle , .. 7 •• ~·'°" MINNESOTA NO'IT"' STilRS-RK a ~ ~nnv v • .-e rO\ oei..-wimaf'I lrom fl.A .,..,.,oc ~ ·~ tn1..-na1 ona Hoc• .. • Le.-lllEW JERSEY OE lllLs--f!Kalle" M.,.r•a• Brum•.it Of'fenwma" 1rom Utica o• ,., .. A,,......clf'I HOC'h L••oue PITTSt UltGM PE!\IGU1Nr~1 D••• M<Ll•••n lor•••<I to MuV·4'90" o• ,,,. '"'e• l\ahOfta l HOC'•• LN9"9 ~~~~~~~~~~ Santa Anita results WNOAY'S •EW.L TS IS-.. f l· .. • ~ .. rnHtillel :: . :· ,, .. ST RACE 1 I It ,....e\ ScMl9 Un'""° CO' Ot'O) lt919Clecl LO•e O«<er.c>u•~.ot Do<iD• 0."t I ll•le'll ... 'A 560 I 90 H• • ~ iO l IQ ~oO . T•me 1457 Atl>O r•n 8 0lO llAll•• C.t •• E""<>t•ll'I )..&>« SurP<'i~ Grh W•tl{l Po·n•.. : "-<a 'w\Q•en~ SECOND ltACE. • ,.,, un~~ ~v HO$' 1C.ryoe1 lQ ~ Net " Pr 1>tn\ II• n • .. ez L•1t~ M \\ II• f"'l wf'A T~ I 7 A•M> q~n S.;rt Ano C1 at•, ~ ttt'~' P•c•. Po1..,ce P•r••·• .., mo• "< o.. • C ~u a te S1toe>er ADO•e '' t R~> U DAILY DOUBLE ~ q "*" \9\:00 THNtO ltACE • t '"''"~9s (•\•la Me•• .. •Pto0tOlAJ 8 r•..it01a ~•D•ll4t CIJ\ll•QI' Cu• P "<•• Ti"W I 17) A~'"•" L.. -1-e 'li 6C'•·r "'It•'..,,, ........ "o "•'"°"' U EXACT A • l a o ''' 06 "OUltTH ltACE I t '• r-H 800-Ac~,... "I \.AH()r e 0C • 1C t0 P~4"1~ .,_f'Vf'"'O# •"'-.O.•'l :;:.a i 10 V .,...,()t' L l ~"'~ ......• ,., I. 80 T ma ·~ A'~ "'• Oo• ''•Qt' ( t'nlpt Qt s v"'' Bovttar• F IF'TM A ACE t ' u ~' S..i""•"C• SQ...... C.·. Jt' """•' ~ F ff'\ H ...... ~·· ,.~ lilt• ... 8•~@·•' f"W! ~· A \t: ~ B•t Cil" \ ( •••• 0 \"<) ~D .. GA,. S..W'OO ,., ."4t 0 ., :..~ ... •"' $4"1(1 t' Soc a 0 e~nc • t "Vf' .,,. •"')t w'' """•' U EJlACTA 0 I~ o. c l '~ )(i SIX TH RACE • •.,••,)"~' ':l•m•s.c '"'' la-"'nd"' ~",..,• .. Ror Bu• T • CO•C"' . 0 •••"'°'-'\t•f T ,..~ a ~ ... ,. E ·-•"' c ... ~-, J , ~c· • v:"t",_.. liilaoe"' Y e" ' ~t. ..... ,~.. .,v-"l0f' 'TN c; • ..,. s··tt· 11 ""'•' 11~ SEVENTH RACE Pf119., $ t-"" O ~ • " , v ,.. .. ,. 0 .,,.,. .. ~ ~Of"'I.•"'.... .i•' M t t• T ,...~ u It -t> ~ :'C • ..e .... t ot •)O )QO A ~ "'•"" ~I M~1•: " 10 6aoe D#•~C Q•o A' ,."• Dov .. Cee ' "'\11<>" ;: ~ ..... 0. ~ .. ~. !.tr.t~ VO't U E XACT A ' t oa c s:.o loO EIGMTM llACE I ~ • .-" M \)l'l•m f'C Ac;o., 0 ..-h ., OC T~ ~ o •· ..,,,. ..... _. F~ UY'"ff p.......... .y,.,..., L A.ooto• (;.>~ ........ ~.,. n~ t-tl"'* l .. ..,,c_r Al'-4• .. °>eOOl'a !>•• ·e • ""• SJ OAIL Y TIU,.LE : "'-°" o ~H 10 HINTH ltACE t ' ~ ~. ~~ B•'l<l"U P A • 9 .0 C~..-.f'lr\o",,, SO• iif JAll Pla it"' :>e a"'Qv\W v• T"W 4J • • ?O ·ao •llO J ~ HO A i.c ..... S ~ er '"'*" Re"'IOO...." ......... ... \or \ -... ~"'-:; °"'"' ,,,,. .._,. •. O" U EJlACTA J e>•o S9 0C. o EXAC'T• aox l ... .a \!>4 .0 S2 ll'KK SIX • 10 ' 1 ,_, i:a.·c "7 .JI t9 10 '•O .....-*""'•"".,i '·C•fT\ "• ~~\ OetO ,.., a?• oO '"" •' ~ '"~ l"'G 1 , ... ,, ., .... "l(Y'""' \I PKK NINE S •·2 •· 10·7 1 ~ l o.lo VS.00 •o • • •"II '<•••s '• -.0-H \ Palo \i 00 'O "1 "' -~'.I • ., •• , ¥f' "'IO"\.e\ Tcfel c•·..,,o•@• oo. WI 1 •:» • A ••f>"':).a4'. • ...., t(> v.• _. · t ; ~ " )tJ u Q No. 1 Sta nford s t op s ~ue1, 6-3 P.\l 0 .\L Tl> -l t Iv.on tv.o of thr""'I: Joubh:~ mah. he') from the '>;o I 1t·am 1n the\ nuntn 1-iut the .\ntt'alcrs .. 111110,1 ,1 "· 1 d l"l. t\tlln to tan ford in a men ' 1.olkgl' h'nn" mallh unda' Thl' t1:.im tit ~M.e Bngg~ and T ~' ,1r J...runemann upset the I ~th· ranl c-d 'lt.inlt1rd N tr >I P:itn d. \fcEnrll\: .ind \1 arun Bla~l m.in I'-~ ~-6. t--' v.h k I < I'' \1arl i...Jplan and RtLh.trd l i.bnc-r "-no~lctl l'll the nauon ~ 'l' 2 1.h•utik .. team lll n·.i\ 1d Wheaton Jnd kfl T arJngo '-.. ~.' b-1 40 Acre Ranches In Northern California Ill Lim Ut Pilll11 Fantastic recreational .,... with fishing. hunting . snow skiing. beat- ing and water ~ling all nearby. All paroets are heall11y treed with Oaks and Pines. From S 1200 per Acre With Elioellent Financing For More Information. Call Mr. Randall / Agent at 714/161-!m S£ll£R Rl~STS ~At.S MY TAX PREPARATION with thla Ad. Let us Mtp you MAXIM= your R!TURNI The Accounting Arm of Melby; Meador & Williams, p4, For Y01Jf Tu Preperltion CALL NOW FOR AN APPOINTMENT. Melby, MI ldof & Wlli8rnt The a.t ..,. 8"8dlng 2801 Coat HW-way, •no. tt9wpon a.ct\ CALL: 131-f f #I ' ,. USC hits bottom ofPac-10 ...... ,.. Alleda ... Pres• Troy Morrell hit a carttr-hi&b 16 paia11aad USC was held scoreless for dlle cins 7: 11 of the second half as lk ubiDatou Huskies registered a 71-47 Pacific 10 Conference victory over the Trojans Sunday in Seattle. The victory moved the Huskies iato a tie for last p~ in the coaference. Monell. senior guard playing his 6nal home game at Washingto n, (8-17 overall and 4-12 in the Pac-10). connected on all four fieki goal attempts, including three thret-point-m and five free throws to lead all tcOren. Bob Erbst paced USC (6-19. 4-1 2) with ei&ht points. all in the second batf. The Huskies extended a 28-24 halftime advantage, outscoring use 17--0 lo take a 45-24 lead with 13:54 mnain_in_a.. In a PCAA game: Su Jeee State K. u~ State 1$: Rodney Scott hit a j ump shot with fourscconds left in overtime to help San Jose State end a seven-game losing streak by defeating U tah State at home. Utah State (I 6-9, I 1-5) lost its third straight game despite overcoming a five-point deficit an the final 20 seconds of regulation. Kevin Nixon's layup at the buzzer sent the game into 6ver:time at 86..aJL Danny Conwa) 's °"1sket with 33 seconds left in ovename gave the Aggies a 95-94 lead. In the fina l seconds. San Jose State (1 1-14. 6-10) tried to get the ball to Ricky Bcrr). but Scc>U took a pass.. cut down the lane and shot from six feet In games invoh•ing top 20 teams: Temple '18, West Virglnia It: Mark Macon htt his first six field goal attempts of the second half and scored 27 points as top-ranked Tem- ple scored its 25th win of the season by beaung Atlanuc 10 nval West Virginia in Ph1ladelph1a. The Owls. 2 S-1. shook off 31 percent shooung in the first half to record their I I th straight vic tory to remain undefeated an the conference. It also marked the Owls' fifth straigh t season Wlth 25 victoncs. The Moun- taineers fell to 16-12. Georsia Tttb 91, Dllke 87: Tom Hammonds scored :!9 points and Bnan Oh,er hit three crucial free throws an the final .tS seconds as No. 20 Georgia TC<"h beat f)fth-rankcd Duke in an Atlantic Coast Con- SyracaM center Rony Seikaly towen oYer Kentucky'• Cedric Jenkin• and Rob Lock for flnt-balf buket Sanday. ference game in .\tlanta. It was the seventh victor} in a ro" for the Jackets (2 1-6. 8-4) and the second loss in succession for the Blue Devils (20-5. 8-4). · Nortll CaroUu 88, Clemson $2: In Chapel Hill. Scott Williams scored 20 points to lead fi ve pla~ers an double figures as ninth-ranked Nonh Caro- lina overcame a sluggish stan and ran awa v to an AC'C victory over Clemson It was the 18th straight wi n at home over Clemson (12-13. 2· I 0) f<fr the Tar H_ecls. who improved to 21-4, a league-leading 10-2 in th<' <\CC. Kentucky U , Syracuse 58: Freshman Eric Manuel scored seven of Ken tucky·s final eight points as the I .2th-ranked Wildcats overcame a nine-point second-half deficit to beat No. I 0 Syracuse in a non-conference game in Lexi ngton. sec to host playoff opener Sou them Cahfo m1a College t'amcd the founh seed and will ho t Chns- t1an Hentage Tuesda)-at 7:30 in the first round of the NA I ~ Otstnct Ill men's basketba ll playoffs. Af~r a poor stan 1n non-con· fcrcnce ac11on. sec put together a stnng of 13 v1ctones in 17 games to finish 17-13 ··w e·r<' glad "e got a home game:· said SCC Coach Bill Re)nolds. ··eut Chnstian Hentage is a prctt~ good ballclub.·· Chnst1an Heritage (I S-13) handed B1ola. the tournament's No. I seed. one of onl) three losses. The Van· guards defeated Christian Heritage twice dunng the season. once at home and once in ovcmme at San Dieao. The Vanguards finished 10-4 in the Golden tale .\thleuc Conference. t>•ng Cal Lu1heran and <:;al Baptist for second. one game behind cham- pion Westmont. · rt.a.IC NOTICE P\8.IC NO TIC£ PlllUC NOTICE Ml.IC NOTICE PlalC NOTICE SUNSET BASEBALL PREVIEW ••• .. . .-...... , .......... d Coech Mike Dodd Im every reMOD 10 believe he Ml I CODteeder rot c:MmDioubip honon. wl coalider- ina bis track record and a summer wbic:b fowad bil teem powinr uppaded tournament play AUIU'llian venture, not many .. We =marily a lellior team and 1we·re lookina at rna1urity u a suona p0int," said Dodd, who'll be benkina on much of his team's success on the ~ of senior piacher Dominic Alvarez. Alvarez. a ri&ht-handeT with all- leapc honor$ as a junior. is also the team's clean-up halter, having ~ livcmt six home runs a year lfO. Backina Alvarez up as a patchina saatr consistina of fiab1-banden David Wentworth. Chad Phillips, Tim Wimbish and lefty Paul Noyes. all juniors. as well as senior Ken Pope. Hunliqton's s&anin& lineup f11- ures to be close to the following; At shortstop is Brad Walker, a 5-7 aenior. who has moved from second basc. At catcher is senior Tom Aorcs. another returning st.aner. Brian Mena returns at center field. and Alvarez is the No. 4 hitter. A bonus at first base isjuniorGerad Cawhom, new to the program and a s&andout during summer play. At third base is senior leuerman Darrin Vipllon. followed by right fielder Bnan Wright. left fielder Chris Bowen and second baseman Dan Miller. a8 ielaue c:IMMcc II a desipated biner (.lll) and ii a •ll'Olll fiabt· baoder. c.nbbe WU I .250 binet at a junior and Ml one of lbe bat aloves Ul \be leliue II sborts1op. Tbe rest of the 111rth• lineup shapes up wit)a juniar Eric Ciocker at first; llellior Chris Cni& a1 leCODd; tenicwTed Luch a1 tit~ ~ore Robin Uncbey at catcher; Sam Chirco i.n left {bllcked by Chris Bo.Yd when Cbirco•s on the mound); tenior SaeveJio in cenaer. and senior Kevin Hiaht in riJht. Chirco 11 the No. 2 pileber, with Paul and Man: Newfaeld and sophomore David Schultz alto in the pitchina siable. Junior Mike Benson provides beckup ~ 1be infield. Marina's 1987 kque record: l-12. "'"""'" .... Coach Ken Osarowski knows he ha$ a prob&em to solve -es&ablisbed standouts such as shortstop Al Rodriauez. caacber Dan Villeps and outfielder Dean Eddy cannol be counted oo -their careers it West- minster are over. No one is Jivina Ostrowski much sympathy, however. not wilh a junior pitch in& corps of Ryan Klesko, Brian Stubbs and Brett G~. "They're all pretty good," admits the Westminster coach. KJesko, a left-hander, struck out 73 in 50inniw•a~ S1ubbl, a ri&b1-huiter. tab a 2.45 ERA ancf allowed just 22 walks in 69 inninp as a ~ and Greb- be's ERA witb junior vanit)' was just l.77. Amons Westminster's retumina lettermen a.re seniors Joe Maisano, Ben Mendou and Ou Hammen, u well as junion Jim sa.ate. IOel.ko and S1ubb&. The lions. 9-5· I and runne,..up a yearaaotoOcean View in lea&~play, appear to have all the holes fillcd. Klesko and Orebc will share first base, senior David Rodriaun is at secnd; sophomore Chris Lanen is at shortstop and Sla&le is at third. Hammers has a lock on the catcher's spot. The outfield consists of Stubbs. Mendoza and Maisano from len to riaht Others in the fold: Pitcher· outfielder Richard Spear (jr.), in- fielder Brian Mantel (sr.), out(aclder Ron Hackett (sr.). catcher-outfielder Jeff Fortune (jr.) and junior catchers Angel Lopez and Joe Titano. "Ocean View has the ~t left side of the infield in the leque," said Ostrowski. "The rest is up for ,rabs. Fountain Valley has an army o kids, Huntington Beach is always com- petitive. Paul Renfro has a &ood facility and&~ bats at Ma!'na, af!d Edison has a pnde factor going for 11. Westminster1 We'll see." Westminster's 1987 league ~rd: 9-5· I. . Chance Agnew, a 5-11 junior. is a catcher-designated hitter. and the balance of the squad consists of seniors Dan Miller (infield). Jamie Hernandez (of) and Skip Murray (utility), and junior Joe KiJeski (of). Sunset League baseball schedules Experience is tHe Oilers' trump card. lack of speed could be the joker. Hun.tington Beach's 1987 league record. 6-8-1 . If 1-0 baseball games bore you. follow the Vi kings. . ... Fri .. Merell t-erM~. Sat., Mardi S. lf·Aprh '· 16. 73. 30-EI ~ Tournamenl. s.1.. AorU ?-•I Velentle (dhl. II a.m .. Tuei., April s-<>ctan V'lew', Fri, Apr0 t-at Huntlnolon he<ll'. T\191., Aorll 1~1 Mllrina•, Fri , April IS-Weslmln1ttf'•; Wtd .. Aprlt ~at Fountain v ... v·. Fri. Aorlt 22-at Ocffll View'. Tun.. AorA 26'-+iunllnotOlt e.ac11•. Fri. AprM ~me· Tun,, Mav >-at Wfllmlnlt.,.•. Sat , Mav 7-Fountaln Vallev'. noon, Tuft., Mav 11>-0cu n view•, Fri, MllY 1>-at Hunllnoton a~ac11• "We averaged six runs a game last year," said Coach Paul Renfrow as he assessed this year's talent. "The only Feuntalft Vf/W/ problem was that we gave up seven Mllrer. •·l?-Loera TourNment Cflnt rouno La Qulnla, Tua, Merell IS-.1 Mll.lio<I Vlelo, runs a pme." Fri. Merell 1t-e1 0ceen v1ew·. s.1 . Merell · Manna. 3-12 in Sunset play a year 19-Lono 8ffc11 Mllli1<a11. "°°"· Tun . Maren ago, lost five times by one run. n-+1un1l""'011 a..c11•; Frt.. M¥Cll 2s-.1 EOiton• The team balling average was .292. s.1 .. April 2-Ro41lne H1u1. 11 • m. wec1 .. but according to the coach. the stats April , 6--W111m1n11er•; s.1 . Aprll t-a• d•d • h ',.._ · Marina', T\Jft , AorU l2'-0cff11 View', Sat , 1 n t come at t e n.,.t limes. April l6--at Hunitnot011 IMKfl•, 1 P.m.; weci . So far th<' picture appears similar at AprM 10-eoiton•, Sa•.. AprU u-.1 wes1- Manna - a lot of h1ttin11 potential, mlMier•, noon Tun .. April ,...-Mart,,.•. Fri P • April ,._al OcM t1 View' but the pitching is a btg question Tue\.. ,.,..., >-Hunt1ne1on 1ffc11•. s.1. Mav mark. 1-a1 EOl\on'. noon. Tun . ,.,..., 10-wes1· "We just have to play hard and m1"'1"'· Fri· Mav l?-at Marina' intense." said Renfrow. who has four Huntll....., ... di JUniors and four sophomore~ on the Marc11 •·1?-t.oera Tour,,."*"' cflr11 rOUl'CI varstt). Pac1f1caJ. Sat. Mllrell S-ArllnglOlt (Jtlver1toel. ··1· I t 15 " d dtl, w.o Merell f-at lrvliw. Mon. Merell m on Y going O carry · sat If-at LC>n9 a.ec11 wo.11 1a1a1r Flelell, 3 o.m the fifth-year coach. "It's the smallest 111111. !.at. M11re11 1t-w111m1n11er·. 1 p,,,.,. in numbers si nce I've been here. It's T~. Me rell 2?-at Fountain va11tv•; s.1.. 25 Ma rett ?6-at Octan View'. noot1 just too hard. in a -game season. to w.a . April 6--Mllrlna•, Fri. April gi ve everyone playing time. I didn't t-Ecll\on', Tue1. APrR t2-a1 we11m1n,1er•. keep am senior who couldn ., start.·· • !.at· Apr It l6--Foun1~;,, .vat .. v•. ' Pm. T"". Th ·v·,,· · h b 1 AP<il If-Ocean voew ; Sat. Aof'U u-.1 e t~tngs C ances att UI t Mllrina•. I pm . Tuet , Aprll ,6--at EOl\on", around the play of senior pitcher s.1 . 4pr11 »-W•"m1n1ier·. 1 Pm Marcus Nelson and shortstop Robbie Tun · Ma v >-at Fountain va11ev·. Fri· Mav 6--at Octan View', Tun,. Mav Carabba. Nelson was a second team 10-Mltrlna'. Fri. ,.,..., •3'-EOl1on• MllrtM 'Merell 4-11--Loera Tournamenl lfll'll round Oownavl. TUii. Merell IS-La Quinta. Fri. Merell lt-•l EOl\on•. T1111., Merell 22-<>caa11 View', Fri., Merell ?S-al wes1mln1ltr', Mon., Merell 21-Coacllella Valllv Tournamenl. Wt<I . Apru 6--at Hunllnoton 8aflPI'. s.1 .. Apr II ~-tal11 Vallev'. I Pm , Tua', Aorll 12-EcJlton•. Fri . Aprll 15-at Ocffn \llew': Wtd . Aprh »-Westminster•. Sat.. April 13-HUnt1119ton a .. c11•. 1 Pm . Tue1 . Aprfl ,.,_.I Fountain Vallev'. Fri.. APTM ,,_., EOlton' TUH., Mav >--Ocean View'. Fri, Mlly .,_.t Wtttmlnller'. Tutt . Mav 10-al Hun1l""ton 8tac11•. Fri, Mav l)-Fov1111in Vat1tv• OcMn V..w Merell •· 1>-Loara Tournament (flot rovrld at Wester111, S.t , Mllrell s-Et Ooraoo (Ott) II a m, Fri. Marc.II lt-Founlaln Valltv'. Tue1. Merell 22-al M1rl111'. Sat . Merell 26--Hunlln11ton e.acll', Mardi lO·APfll l--S.n Lul1 Oblsoo Eultr Tovrnament Tuel , April S-at EOIM>n'; S.t, April 9-al Wtttmlnlltr' I Pm, TUI\ . .AP<ll 11-t Foun· taln Vallev'. Fri. April ls-Marina'. Tue1 . Aprll 19-at HunHneton 8eacll'. Fri. Aprll tt-EOl\Oft', Tuu 4prff ,6--Wtttmlnsttr' Tue'. Mav )-at Mllrlna'. Fri. Mav 6--Huntlnvlon 9ffctt', Tue1, ""6iv 10-.1 EOl'on•, Fri, Mav 13-at Weslmlnlltr' WnlrnlMfltr Merell •·l?-EI $e9unOO Tournament, Tuet.., Marcil IS-11 Lal<twooO ldfl), S Pm , Sat. M.l>refl If-at Hunt.notOll 8.-cr.• I pm. TUI\. Marci\ n-EO•M>n'. Fri. Martll 2s-MartN'. Ma<Cll 26'-lt-Anallllm Llon1 Tournamen1 Wtcl. AMII ._, Fountain Vallt¥'. !.at . Allf • J-Ocaan View•, noon; TUH., Apr II t?-Hunllnolon aaecn·, Fri., Aprll lS-at EOllOll', WtO , April 20-at Marina .. Sat . April ?>-Fountain Valtev• llOOll, Tues . Aprff 76'-al oc..,, v1tw•. s.1 , A~ll »--at Hunllnelon 811et1•, I pm Tues , Mav >-Edl,on'. Fri . M.av .-Marina•. Tuet Mllv 10-.t Fountat11 Val· lev'. Fri. Mav l>-Octan Vfaw• 'ClenOltt SIJnlMll L .. l!u41 N'Tll All games 1>t9ln at 3 IS untni ~ltd Nil.IC NOTICE Nit.IC NOTICE Ml.IC NOTICE Orange Coa"St DAILY PILOT/Monday, February 29, 1 .. * -': NGS. CALL 842-5878 FROM NORTH ORANGE 540-1220 FROM SOUTH ORANGE 496-6800 ~-111111111!11 ielii.tate f• lale llwal 1112 C.ta ._. . 1111 ••pt.... 1111 c.,.., ... ._ llU C...... 11111ut. ~ IHI •.,.e liiii . e I 1 --------•n. 3BR 28A ~ doub6e UITWl9l.D • i«IX 18foe yerd . ~ ctz119~t c/Ul~witl "" IZll"' ~·I/le" 1111 842-6878 YILU llLllA -Pool, view, Eelft>tutt lrpl, end get a patio, 18dr+ M,Wfng"" pyt---newly remode6ed. cloM ...... 1111 ll·UUl•HIALIJT 8Mulltultyremodeled4BA 1311.111. 780-1108 lndry fK, rtdecOflled eurtty ata.aveilMwdl 1. to ocean '-sc~oots. ••••••• 3BA pool hOIM with $1400/mo 842-"18 84.5.,301 80-5037 $1350/mo 213 392 ~6~4 • .-.. wmn MAAY ANN McGUIRE avetythlng. Total QUelhy IRft lift '9l0 FRT HSE 816-A Avoe.Oo 5'8-78~ Call fOf .,_ MARINERS WALK -Light. SNred honl9 ownertNp HAA80R REAL TY throughout & onty 2 On ttw Mind-,,._., bldg 2BR 28a W'Oia gllf, W/O polntmant No pell bright. airy & jUSt a ,_ 0 ,., -t ber wld ..._ Acquire a htn 'JOUf etio6ee1 ~ 673-4AOO mlnut• lo golf OOUIM . onty 8 Y'N'S o6d Has hk up. new carpet rMiW please S800 I mo blclc*s from 11\e bnch car get F•l'Olll 1111 RE. Bkr 631-4532 Residence 646-.6770 Must ... to IPPfedete. 3BR-28A up & 28R-28A pa1nt.Sl200/mo Stoc> by --28r & 38r Townh<>mes ~~SO<~ry~no~peee;!·;·•~ll~·;a · ... •·-1122 Catt today tor 'I04JI pet-lower Btt-IM. lrplcs, • Of call 722-9509 e.t~e Eilec lwMme. Yard1/p11101 garages A_,.~1MI -_. eonal lhowina Mklng car~. Mc. 1199.950 38' 2 )Sa, yatd. 2 cw at-flreotaoes & vaulted ceil-IUM~..,__j, ebU DOPl'.EX Great Loe only S3H,000. Anne Mllll IULn LARGE 2 &EOROOM teched glr9Qe, comm Ing•. WHher ' dryer 28R 2BA· deft. ~ ":; COLDWeU B A Nl(eRLI mu Income 3/211\-212 McCMland 631-12te 11• -11 llMIU DUPLE)(. lmmaeutate. pool & •P• Avf211. Diane h<>Ol!-ups 8.0-5870 Freneh doors II S495 000 Prln Only -oaraoe.wUher,dryar,no 631-1266or 261-8425 _ _ _ white. Nopeeal14GD/MO 476-5127 Of 675-3058 Leh pet Sl050/mo. 497-4-785 Lux townhOme new 3BA lniae 2144 DaMe 1ICMIODI LEASE 0PT10N oR suv c 1w sn1USSL011 2•Ae.A l500 1qtt.1r1>1.2 .cavttv h0me.3bdb&'. ~ -1 • S 179,000 Decorators al k Newt>edlord -48R • cw get. private ywd. wlfrptc dbt oar IQ Dack-, "V'l'"'IT SU'Af ~ -Expedthebest: twnnouse 2Br tBa. atteh Im.. ABC & o Plot••O t>oous. 3 fuH BA. t>eeuU-S1300/mo S48-ne2 yatd S1150 mo Curtts \t\\1 \......_,, I JI J .,. II • get. trplc:. Agt. 646-7057 AcadaSeetion S2200lor tut S3500/mo Miii 721 -5225 0< •97·7•57 REALTORS• H I \ I I 't IA......... ******* all oroftw918i 723-2159 I Gulledge 720-9800 or .UftmlJlllTM DEERFIELD 3Br2'~B•~~~=~==~ ••,HI C"ll .... 1024 Tllnl .. Yllllt ' 760•5000 3BR. dining rm. 1~ rm, nome lrpjc lg t&m1d1nl "2 ....... •ID 4 BR hOme In e•ec loc next Beautlf\.11 lg 48' 2•-'Be ( 18' ....... ~ a av ape., -..I bar a more rm, 1/c gardener Incl ... '1511 to pwk. Ltg Pflvlle lot •IWllr w/converted loft) pool ~,f'WA .. / SUSOO mo Don ptatt very niceSi •25 760-0768 3 bd 2 be/Pwdr ""·· ~. has lovely new land-Remdled on 7200 s/I spa & panoramic city end ..... I\\ l -...11· 1u \I "I I 631-12M FOR LEASE N vi JSR qulte-convenieftt-NIW seeping home Is Im-S 179.900. 2602 Fairway. mountain views! XJnltam-\\ -" A• \. e Close to all Us pa" maeulate a In pettect •846-2111 Agent• lly nome w/f.C 2 tr""-q[ALTORS • 3BA, 2 car garage •111 Schoota dbl e--pdl• move-In condltk>nt A kl 1439 tOOI ~ r a wn1t1 marote. upgraded min 10 a..ctl. //NII.. J/1 144-.. BARGAIN! $149,900 3BR ~ ~ ... p ridt T hlM $2000/mo yrty tflru-ou11 Ove<IOolts pool &&5-730t 142-IOS7 all new k"dl and ba. lrg m~1-12M: 760-8-;:• •~EA11000NFRONT1mo >«ly18R • IC"tl.... 2114 NEW E'StOE 380, 3.,.,Ba. _!_2200tmo 640-532•_ * 54-7M5 '* New Lake Pents! •BR yard Open Sat/Sun ....,, ,. home! Poot! Jacuzzi! MS..••77 or 631-•320 *' BLOCK TO BCH 38R FIH ~'I HIT dbl g#. pYI ywd. n-pets s,..tM•lat leff •HARBOA VfEW HOME CrossfeMedl 1 59 Acresl BA $1400/mo yriy Condo. 2Br. 1''t8a. patio :~~Of2~~';':,~~ C.... 1Hatie9 38r 38a+ bOn&'8 ""· dbl Only $152.5001 Better lllT llY 28' ocn vu condo. $1600 Ot huge pvt yds avall Sml 642_3812· Open Sunday 2Br •den, lrple gar -..t-OJt50• huge Y'd7• "°7 .. e_ Homes & Gardens/John M... V•de 3BA below l.rr Wh lltn pet ok Pool 646-2846 t>ar S 1300. 854-4306 S 19 /mo. i4 • _., ._... Denver Realty 657-5118. market at St89,900. Call .___. 11....--L .. 7 ........ ,. IPT ... m ••u I-11•n-ll 657-8433, Eves657-3738 751·5000 SELECT BH&G ~ ..._ v .,...~ •EASTSIOE '9 38' 2'l•Be -•WHTHll NW• •• llH335 WllW NEWPORT BEACH hke new condo 2 frplca. Lg 38' 2¥•8a nome 0 /W, Fum Doll House LOOlts 28R 2 8A, 2 atory ---------EASTSIOE Building op--Nwpt lBR apt S650 I paltos $1325/mo No f.I P. dbl p , encl lr1/ok ach & 1~ 2 cer ...-. •n ... P&MIT1 p()(lunlty, 2 conllnguous Frb 920 lq ft. matr ste. w Newpof1 reo $900 pets 548-7S65 . yd. no pets. gardnr water ~~e I Z'od~B~ ~A b lrplc:, s 1 ioo1mo~ Wla We'll glYe you llW dOwn In tots. :;c.lstlng ~~ c:~::~·: ~~~· :~~ ~ w Npt 28d cottages 1175 Incl s !500/rno 6-46-9726 ~ 2 !.ca, Many xtr.; Rental9 67s-412 exchg torathareofown-=.ooo ~1400 approx3850ft.FR.FOfm Baytrontoonclo280S1375 4 Bt2!~*H* $1250trno72G-3912• *Bl&I* ershlp. You make tne EASTS. oe· 3 OR study pool Owner Oc:Mnfront 38d $2'400 a.~ am ome-.... ~any i--2141 --1 mthly pymll & we st\a1e . I near new S6So 000 722-1808 Lido isle 48d 38a S2550 lantastlC loc n. Frplc:, lrg ~-u #II LIJau. lelC 2-5 Bdrm --MO apprec. You receive bdrm twnhme, vaulted · WATERFRONT HOMES yard, 2 car gar New •• L :C 3n-Marti. Agt ln-trS7I OO"A r M celling, uaed brlci< Ip. & L•••• -EALTORS 631 1400 paint Trained pet OK. ~o aguna ..... rm g< 1 •tax bane 115· ust lovely yard '°' tee11no ot ..._ ..,.,_ R • s1215 /mo 848-663• TIWl•S 281 hse • ouee1 collage •Tll ..... * have clean credit. Agt d a I a ch e O h 0 m e RENT TO OWN! ...... 1ee4et ftr .... $2100tmo Walk to Dd'I •BR t~ nn f'MIA. 497-8757 Dys. Ev. Wknds S 179 OOO 631_ 1400 . Bayview Terrace OetKl'ted , A TIENTION SINGLES! Fi eplace aulled celll s Avt im!Md 675-5061 24QO aq. h. I 1e0o/mo. T-•-_ · hm JSR + o-ted comm Ptua1m 2107 New 38r 3Ba condo style. " 11 •1~ n1<u no ' --*•ii-. .... -. -~All HI Ht>'1 C Shaw BKh 760·6332 *** pc; study on triple mstrs. tip micro. 2 ~~ Sou? no ~tspqd W,au li[atl 2152 3BR 2'JtBA. fwnlty "" TIW•I• '" 1110.., '-· LUY I lllllT Ocean Front. New Meo1-car gar tndiV1du11 wl d 1 8ed1oom S805 11tNORTRV1E'W11r S 1475/mo. Botti vec. Largeet model 2 stQfY ~ REAL ESTATE W/•"--f ....... . 11 r ran ea n 11 y I e incl s 1250 432"6713 666 w 18th SI 645-2739 38' 2Ba nouse eomm PoOI• 86tr 720-7432 townhome In the ct.-~ "-o ,,..... coune in 75 506 slrable led community • Big Canyon. 3BR ... Oen. $3500/month 6 -, BRA.NO NEW condo style -pool, ale mlCIO g&r-3BR den. 2'MaA Nwpt of Bayr=::. 2 b.clroom REALTORS Many upgrades, S330K C.nal ... ... 2122 2br 2ba. get. dbl mas-F"ataia oener S1295 499-2019 ShOf•. CW\al ff'ontage. i I I I •·--iers. frplc. micro. wshr .-le L 2111 blkt to bM<:tl S1150 au 11~~-~a"· c~~l-t -·-*W SEAWARD 2 Sty• dryer incl $995 •32-6723 V1llty . 2134 _..,. __ ,. __ .,_. ___ 1 962-6&83 or 673-2253 vert """ ....,room + "' 38R 2Yi8A 2 car gatage , Ba ~ .. ""' .. """""''----""!I -bath down stalra. BYilt In $1•9.950.' Hurry. won·i 28r 1 h lrg encl Pllio.jBRIGHT. CLEAN 28r 18a 38R 28A home. frple fncd **lllffl•• 38R den ~ Po1n1 electric kitchen. 2-car at-last! CaM Liz Of Chuck frplc, comm. pool, no garage Near shop $175 yard 2 car gar Grdnr •BR plus bcnvs room yearly rental tachedgat9Qe.127e.500 Jones 831-1266 or pet$.$950.832-4818 1 1st11ast -secelePOSit incl $1200 Frayda 2600 sq ft S20001mo PLAYA REAL ESTAT£ 711-11• 846-5743 2Br28arewttouse.'-'tgar No pets979·3227 780-31•70f760-5000 Vacant Salty ~96 8T3-1to0 tndry room $1200mo ~ Ala.A..V George E.telins Realty 8 YRIOGECONOOGMed 1nctds gu/water WTSlllTIWlll• ~ I ••EXEC WESTCLl~F A • 29r 28&, lir 673-5087. 953-9202wll 3BR 2''»8A ~ garage. V• \t"'''1 -..."fr t~ \ 11 2200 sl nome 38' 2 ,08 comm, 1 \#Wt)' i pa· -------eant $1250/mo Hu,,y• \\ .1''1 c · rp c , poo • • 1--------i--------CUTE but eo~ 28 R IBA 1 Donald P1atf 642·9797 REALTORS • nice yatd. getdener Incl SISOOmo 780-1275 .Ill-·· .... 1 a · ., · $1975/mo 673-6590 Located In Newport Wl5 w...-IALllA... car garage Flreptace ·r· Beautiful JBr Condo BLUFfS 28f' Den. 1~ 8 ch Comptete wtth BY OWNER! 58' 2'118a, 28R 28A, grnd lvl. huge Drive by 51• Jasmine .• •~, ~:; 2Ba.p11lo. dble gar nr *lllffS • 2Ytll 01 gar comm pool, Nahl pt~~s tor 4500 sq. tt ot-frplc:, dbl gar. patio & kitchen. lg Piiio, water rw unit. $950/mo VIiia ~~ Magnoliallndlan1poli1 nu crpt drOS a paint, n-llQnt -~ 11~.l !tee Pis call 645-1791 yatd $295.000.751-3809 view $215,000 759-6349 Rentals 675-'912 -·---· $1050 IMO 968-9635 pets $1650 643-1717 76o-&827 M5-37M NEW & USED CARS & TRUCKS Th•nk You For Me•lng Us 11 1 In America. Come In •nd See Why WE'LL KNOCK THE SOCl(S e OFF ANY DEAL! Ready for lmmecllate Dellwery 0 THEODORE ROBINS THE~STORE SERVING OUR COMMUNITY SINCE 1921 Modern Sales. Service. Parts. Body. Paint & I ire Dep:s Competitive Rates On Lease & Oa1ly Rentals 20IO larHr lhtl., hst1 M111 ••2-1110., M0-1211 o IADDLIBACll 'J .. z .., <> ~c ... < lONG 8fAC,.. Pcirls Ope" M Sar 8 5 30 Sal 9 .: o m Service m-Fr1 1 30 6 pm 11711 SE&CH aLVD HUNTINGTON 8 EACH 7141 142-2000 I I • Sales ~ Service Leasing \.P Parts FOUNTA1N1-+----- IAVINE AUTO C£NTER 1-800-831-3377 714-380-1200 NABERS I STERLING SALES PARTS SE RVICE BODY SHQP LEASING 2600 Harbor Rl\'d .. Costa Me a 540-9100 $~ALES • SERVICE"9 L~& G NEW LOCATION! IANTA ANA AUTO MALL 1• Auto Miii Dr., a.ftte AM 135-3111 Newport/SS Frwy. al Edinger &.-Dept. 09"\ 7 SsMce HouB: Mon.-Frl, 7am-10pm •s~erllngY!! ULEI • lllYIOI • LUii• • PUTS • IYlllUI •LIYllY IPllW.llTI • PACIFI C OCEAN SALES LEASING VALLEY 5111 '21 ~· 2 ~ COSTA ............._MESA SERVICE PARTS ' CORONA CIEl "'"R 1MI 11m11a 1111, a111111U11 CALL ONI OF THESE <.....," ,_... .....,> •• lttt • •t Ut.-UM DIALIRI F"R THI llST IUYS .................. ,....................... ~ •JIM SLEMONS IMPORTS 405 Fwy. East 1 Block to 663t Westminster Ave. Westminster 714/894-&333 1-800/26-CHEVY IRVINE Au -o CE TE~ r~l\.ER 'ITY ALE & E~I CE OLDSMOBILE, GMC TRl CK 2 -HARBOR BL \'O . ta Me - HOXD..\ ~IOTOR CA R 0 2 HARBOR BL\'0 .. C1.: ta' Me ~-10-07 1 :' 3 block o. of 4 1> f 'A'). BOB LONGPRB PONTIAC 0 Ot ,,. (I • ~ Otta·t ' ..eRJP st "Al··~ SEE MOTOR 11l&ND8 CAR nm YEAR NEW I USED c11·s & TRUCKS ~ S&RVIC& OUT. OPUI MONDAY tiNT1L 9:00 P.M. 17, ........ ....... aa......&owe~. 0 ~ABER ~@'-CADILLAC '~ -:· 211 YEAR~ :-.ER\'l(E I\ OR .\\GE COL"~n· :-\Al.E:-- :--ER\'ICE LF...\:-"J~G ALL :\lAKE~ PART ~ RODY HOP 540-9100 0 HO US E of IMPORT S 1n1 f'1' ~I ERCEDE -BENZ \::I 213-714 .UCEDES 714 523.7250 . 7141750-7201 213 921-1511 r J Service Sd I .\.;a t •eel'la~ at Buch s1~a G CONNELL CHEVROLET 2121 Ma'~" ll•tl., C.1t1 •sa Over 23 -rears Serving Orange County Sales e Service e Leasing 546-1200 Spttill Parts Lilt 54&.Mll MOND4" ~Cl 0 4 • SATL,,ROA\ 8 30 "M -9 00 PM 8 30 AM -6 00 PM ~ •"-IOA' 1(1 00 AM 5 00 PM 0 ll&l&E COAST JEEP /UILE -1 In Tltt Wtst For llH lllp S'lts For 8 Yt,rs • ~ <>r~nge. SA ~E S l oa"St e SERVICE • • • • • l EASl ~G S4t:i02l e :.CCESSORIES DEPT ~ t E CAMPBEi I NISSAN /~ rf..t.01 • low '"t•' • No G 1mm1clo • Gr•ot S.le c:tton • Ft1•nd ly P•ople • luelt.nt ~rw•<• tU JS ~oc· 8o .. t•t1•~ ,,. 10·7711 HUf't·~gto11 leoc:h 1 u 1 st2.1.u THE BEST BUYS IN ORANGE COUNTY ARE ON THIS PAGE CALL ONE NOWI-· - .< D1ily Pilat ~1 . <l ss ociat.ed I ' c CIRCLE K FOOD STORES NOW HIRING SALES CLERK POSITIONS AVAILABLE 1ni.v11w1 At: 1880I.Plclllc1:1111 Hwy. 111111 lllcll, Cl w111111•1y1-·711• llllRIJI 1111•~ 111m ) KIDS. Ages 11-16 Need Money Now LAST WEEK ... R.P.earned ...... $175 G.S.earned ..... $146 J.A. earned ...... $140 W.W. earned ..... $136 E.W. earned ..... $129 P.M. earned ..... $129 WHY WAIT??? If you're a boy or girt between the ages of 11 and 16, you can make money NOW in the News- paper Promotion Field. And have a great time working. atter school and on Saturday. Call (213) 479-38 All transportation provided by adult supervisor. PllTI IP AITllT Oetal ortent9C1 wttt1 a good •Laguna Hiiie M ... ..,. of dee9' a ex· •Huntington C..t• pet'9liced In hlah ~ • So eo.t...... ·-·-.., .. production. ~llNna to E.O.E. ... ttain hlahty mottmect in-.......... IA lllN dMdual: . betWeen tam I 5pm M·F •RETAIL SALES • Or call a.ti at 642-4321 ... ..., INll Educational~ Store. u t 205 Ill, .. , IU 1111 P/Twttdays.Set10-Spm __ . _____ _ .. .;.:=~ ~~SELL •1 1, ..... c.11 Toni eU 75-0IM throuch c~ssified $ $ EXTRA CASH$ $ , .. D1llr het I, UTlS OUR Hours are PM Mon- M Saturday or truck, proof print-out re- quired. Call 642 xt. 202 for ap- pointment or a person at The Dally Piiot, 330 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa. c 2 positions available in our cus- tomer service dept .. Must hale pleasant phone per- sonality; typing a plus. Learn valuable office skills and earn $5.00 an hour to start. Hours are 11 :30 A.M. -8:30 P .M. and Sat. & Sun . 6 A.M . -10:30 A.M. • Call 642-4321 ext. 207 to sched - ule an appointment. Ask for Llolands. BOYS le GIRLS EOJU\ Mo~ ·START NOW· 11 to II Years Old WORK IVININGI AND SATURDAY YOU CAN AVERAGE PER WEEK s7500 OR MORE CONT ACT Mr. Phllllps PHONE (714) 892-1449 ALL TRANIPORTATION PAOVIOEO _...._,._IV AN'ADULT ~.-~-_,- THt OOOllf ROBINS ~ (J il (> ••/.• .. I ( ',t. ._.I .. ' I NO COLLECTING NO SOLICITING Deliver One Day a Week - Must have depend$lble car and proof of insurance Call 842-1444 Ask for Joanne Craney If you 're 10 or older a fOb as a newspaper carrier might be 1ust your size Just send en this coupon or call 642-4333 Routes are available now• It 50tltbol}. It a laity 'il•t e1rritr! '11 DlTSll 1210 4 10MO em/1m, air • 4 door 82.000 Of'lglnel mllet • S 1600 080 \ u ' • Or8n09 COMt OA.tlY pfLOT/ MoncMy, Febtu.y 21, 1888 •-K891 an• HP-altHI. 11 MrftllUl•llill• MHI _..,,,.. -. .11.-r•d fClll ... 1 ... "°"' IUll!!!2'J• .,........ un.110.00 .,, .. OX· .... 9'AW ...... ._n ...... ...._ ... 8'A'-f .... 8'A1'L.JT The tolowlf'l par'IOM •• llOta C. IMAT_!!T _...__ _. ...___.. _. ._........._ The_.....,....,_... The tolowif'I ,.,_.,. The ....... ,.._.,. TNI I' 1 nt -llad The................... The..,..,.... ....... OOlflQ ~.. TlllUITW'8 8ALI .... -- -... --......... ----~ ....... -.... ~a.."'°'" clOil\I ........... • K.9. ---•CeleDll K\.AOMIOAATNEM. .nca M6d Olli9Ml0>1 wl .-.ion C "VUI IUP,Oll'l M ITIC ~C>MttUTIM. TAOI IHTaNOM. T Y MSTALI Gfl()Ullt, 9"19 County on ~ ""1'9. 90\.TI I ~y ,.,...,. • H401 1Slt1 Newpcw1 Aven~. VOU AAE IN DUA.ULT 10 ... ..id ..... pt~~ Ell\ 1117 '°" Ctlarte. 1411 C8lltonll9 ••..:::-,_, Wawbcldla....,... 1 I . .._ It., luMant. 11, 1111 C°"'ANY· ....... J !•t ...... ...... 104, Me 2$0. Tuetln. C ... f. UNOEA Aono°' TMJeT. ~7 ~:' "~ = ,.., Newport ...... Celt. ...... c.lt. leectl, Celt .. eo.ta .... c.11. nae ,.,,. ,...., Ave ,~ CA L181"'8Hlll.CANtl3 t2tlO OATEDOCT08P" 1 ..... ---on......,__.... Mlf'I,...., 1411 ~Kaf11r· ION ~ ~ ... w .............. Or-.. c... llNS1 De (&pp Dau1lot11Mnt ThofMI I. Tuak•. 1•1 UNlESS VOU TA.Kt AC· ~7.:..<'!. = ~.: 1~ 'C:...:e ,!Mk~ ·~~on ....._, Nava a. Ofttatlo, Callt. Dally l'lo4 ~ 11. It, ICa.ift ~. 11S1t La , A Callf ~lltlon. ~A---. lutte HO, T10N TO Pf'<>TtCT YOUf' .,_ .,.._ .,_"i> -.....,, ...... , .._.. , Callf. • Callf. 91112 Mardi 7, 14, ,._ "OfftlllO "d. la Mirada, CA i Via ~lrf'a, Million Tuadn, c.lt. Ht10 "'°PEATY, IT MAY II OOfdat of 0r9"'9 Couftty, lwfl. Celt. tltlO Thlt ~ le con• TMI bu16MM la ClOft• Tiiie ~ le GOn• .... 270 toe38 Viejo, CA tHez W..,,. I Qarwlft, 1•1 IOLO AT A PU8UC SAL!. l18'a of CllllfomiL conduCt Thie ~ le COft· by:"' lndlvldual W, 1111 lfldli'ILtltll duCtad tw: 1111 lfld!Vldld .. _.,,. -- TMI bul4nw 11 con-~ety lmleetment ~Aw. Sutl9 ~ '1 YOU NEED AH ~· True•°' per1y • .CS ~~dual Aobaf1 A. '*11• "-L ~ LMry ~ ~ """-~ ~ INMLtltll CeleotM eotpCW•tlOn Tuedn. Callf t2UO •NATION Of THE NATURE lnQ Sala: INTIAITATI o.vtcl TMI .......,t .... Mad Thi--lt&tam.11 w• llled TNI .._...,..,. w fled l(a.ift m$a EJ TOfO Aoad. El TOfo: "°'*1 E'. ~. 1ael1 OF THE PAOCHDING LlMOEAS ASSISTANCE. Ne lt&tlmenf -lllad tM c.ouMy a.II of gr. .. ~ Cllt1I of O!'· wlttl ... Coun1Y a.ti"' Or· P9Cnnou9 ...... Tllie ltallfMllt ._ flied ~ A~. 8\111• 2~ AGAINST YOU. YOU INC .. 11142 lrvlna etvd.. the County Olril of Or· County on 11*'-Y Counfy on F~llWY 9"19 CoYnty on FabNllty MAm lfU•ISIT ~IN County Claf1l of O!'· TMI bulll'leH II con ull • Calif. 92'80 SHOULD CONTACT A LAW· SY.II• 2()() •• Tustin, CelltotnNI ... County on ,~ 11, 1MI 18, ,... • •• ,... TM~ ~IOM.,.. .,_ CoYnly on Fabfu.ry 4, ducted by: 1 llmlled .,.,,,,.. Tiii• butlnffl 11 con· YER. t2eaO Tll. (7 14> ~.2·779 1 ti, 1N8 ,,,,,,. m~ ,,,,. dOlnl ....,_ ~ 1MI INp M1ed by. • 09'*11 pert• OH MAACH 15, 1MI el Truel .. Sala No . 903-A "7ml ~ Orenge Coaat ~ O!'lrlQ8 Co.t ~ 0r-. Coaat OllEfWAN><> I MOVINO ......, De L Dev~I nerlhlp 9:30 A.M. Amerl11e1e AM I R I I TAT I Pu~ °"lnf9 Coaat Piiot Fetwuery t.2, 2t, Piiot Fetwuery 22, 29, Delly Not F~ 22. 29, IYSTE..S.113n8aftJole, P\lbllNd ~ CoMt Corp c:::.,. p De Lapp w-.m E. Oenrin Flnanclal Corp .. duly .,.. PINA.NC IA&. CORP.. •• Deily Pttot '*'*Y "· 2t, Merdl 7. 14. 1MI Matctl 1 14 ,... Mardi 1 14 1tN '°""'lirl v..,, Callf. t27ot Delly Piiot FtlbNWy I. 15. ~~I . • Thlt etelemenl wu flied pollrted Truat.. Of Sue-Tr•ltH ltJ leter•teta M•tell r, 14, 1MI ~·2J2 ' • M-213 • ' M·218 Howerd A. Dla.tfWdO. 22. ~. t111 Thie •t•l.,,_,I wu flled with Ille County Clerk ol Or· ceaor TNll .. unoer end &.--. ,,.........., Ma.. M·275 11323 San Joaa. 'ouni.ln M244 with tM Coun. ty Qatk of Or'· ange County on Fet>Nety 5. putwl 10 Deed Of Truet !:...~t:lPr--._. .. _.,. llft-"8.IC MOTIC( "8.JC M>TICE PWlJC ll)TIC( v~it C.:· ~=rnatdo ---------.. County on F•bfurt 1988 a.xeculec:I II)' PULLIAM --· ... _ ""'..,.; • • MlJC ll)fU 18, 1918 f11'M91 PROPER'TIES. INC .A CALI· DATE. February 18• lMI F1CTmOU8 ....... PICJllTIOU8 .,_.. fllCTITIOU8.,_.. 11323 San Joie, Fountain 11'171M1 Publi.neo Orange Coast FORHIA COAPOAATION U Publl9hed Orange Coaet F1CTIT10U8 .,..... NAm ITAftmNT MAim lfA~ um ITA~ V"*'f, Calif. t270I I T A T I • • M T 0 P Publilfled Orange Coast Delly Pllol Febfuery 15. 22. TrvstOf tor Ille llenef'll end Delly Piiot Fet>ruMy 22• 29• Mam ITATWmNT TM lollOwlnQ l*IOnl we Tiie f~ ~ we llle followlnQ l*IOM atl Tllit bullneM 11 C:Oft· WITMIMIAWM. Dally Piiot ~ery 22. 29, 29. M.,ch 7. 1984 NCUtilY of AMERICAN IN· Match 7. l988 The lolfowlnv l*90M .,. 11u91neM u: 001ng bu91ne11 as: doing ~ 81 due1ed by. oo-pann..e ,_PMtma• M.,eh7.14,1918 M·280TERS1'ATE SAVINGS. A M29l ng~81· M 8EE ~NTEAPRISES. A P P L I E D HA.IAGALLERY, 1215W. T~~ ... dOlllec:I OPUaAT9M ._ M295 FEOEAAL SAVINGS AND TONI, MARGUERITE l 17171 Sampeon Cr. Hunt· ECONOMETRICS 2701 8 Baker Suite F Ooete MMe r-Ma·-·-· PICTITIOU8 M8H .. H LOAN ASSOCIATION. 11 PtlltC NOTICE OMPANV. 2005 w . 1ng1on Beach, Calif. '2M7 SoutflSuun SI., 5.n11Ana. Celff. mH ' · with the County~.~ .... <>;· um .. _IC llftTll'C 1111-IC llftJlrc 8enefleletyendrec:Ofdedll S.lllOa. Stl. 157. NewPot1 Lerryl•Mc:Oowelt, 1555 Cellf t27CM Clfol Voung 1215 W angeCountyon ..,._, ' I The lolk>Wlng l*90l'I hu ... -. "" IW. ... -. "" IW. lnltNmenl No. M-~524 flCTJTIOUl llU..... Beech, Celll. 92683 ..... Verdi E. 54G. Coet• ~CIT. Hanley. 18Allla Baker, Suite F, Co.ta.....: 1tea wllhdrewn • •09'*11 pert· F1CnTIOUa .,._11 flCTITIOUl IU ... H on Oc1ober 27, 1918, Or· NA• ITA'R..wf Toni Cwol Mendez. 375 Mesa. c.Mf. 12t2t E81t. Irvine, CaNf. t2720 Cllll. t2t2t ~ net ffom the pwtnetthip ~ NA.Ml ITA~ NAME ITATI_,.., 1nge County, St•t• of Cell-The following persons If• Broedwey, lagune BMctl. Stent Scott Hine. 1555 I Ct1en Wang, 2208 S. Tiiis t1u1lneH le con· Pullll9hed Orange 1~t erellng under tM ktltbd The t<>llowlng paraons are The tollowlng persons ive tornla, WILL SELL AT PUB-~~~= c9:UFORNIA C9llf 92851 MeN Verdi E. 540. co.te W•lboto Aw., Alhernbta. c:lucted t1y· an lndlviou.t ~'L p~ :-r: ' ' 11u11ne11 neme of WEBE c:loinb bulinMI u doing business es LIC AUCTION TO HIGHEST OMPANY Marguerite Holub, 2005 ...... Calif. 92t2t Cllll. 91803 Catol Voung • ara • M 251 COOLERCO e1S09311tS1. (a)t>VNASTAA (ll)WEST VINCENT MANAGEMENT BIDDER FOR CASH. A ;A;H~ ~tLE~ Eoop Ori°•' W. e.tt>oa, Newpof1 Beedl, Thie bu11ne11 11 con· Thie b111lne11 11 con-Thia •t•lament wu filed • •201,Newport8eect1.Clllf. STAR TAAOtHG CO -4t1l SYSTEMS IOtO t Slsmerck CA SHIER 'S CH EC K ~: M r~allf 92628v 'Celli 92651 ducted by. a genetll Pert· Mled by: e 09t*el perl· w1111theCountyC19rkofO!'· •-11' llftnrc 92883 War A SI 21o''Hw1 Or H II . I BMch Celll DRAWN ON A STATE OR • esa. Thia bu1lne11 11 Con· nerlhlp netlhlp ... County on Febn.lerf nmu\f ..,,_ TM hctillou• llullneN lngtc:'e.:ti ~if tH.st 926"46un ng on . NATIONAL BANK A STATE SOulh Bay Sela, C•H· uctec:I lly e genetel '*t: Lerry L McDowell Richard T. Hanley 18, 1918 , __ .;....;;.. _______ _ narneetatamenlfOftNpwt· MichMI J~ Malecki Wllllwn T Vi~I 10101 OR FEDERAL CREDIT tornl•. 3l9t A:1r:or1 ~~ net'llllp Thie lletement w .. flied Thi• stetemenl w•• filed 11'171171 AC~.~.J' nershlp -flied on Mey ea 11 Centerll\lry Or Hunt: Bismarck Or Hu~lington UNION. OR A ST ATE OR Or · Coate a 1· Toni Mendez with the County Clerk of Or-with the County Clerk of Or· Publllhec:I Orange Coatl The l()llowlng '°"' ate 5111, 1987 In the County of lnglon Beech. Celll. 926-4T Beach. Calif 92545 FEDERAL SAVINGS AND 92:~1~ business ts con· Thil statement wee llled ange County on Febfuairy 9"99 County on Fab<uetY Delly Pllol Febtllety 22. 29, doing bullne11::: Orange FILE NO F3A30et This buslneu 11 con· This business is con· LOAN ASSOCIATION d ec:lll ""'Ilion wlththeCountyC*1tofO!'· 11.1988 18.1984 M•cll 7. 14. 1N8 PACIFIC SUN R£\LTY Full Name er\d Addr ... of c:luctec:l 11 lndlvldull d eel b I Cl d I DOMICILED IN THE STATE UGI y • COi,,... Inge County on Fab<uary 11'171tn 11'171112 M-291 . the Par~ Wlthdr•wlng: M1ch11~}nMaleclcl ~1111.n: T a~i~~. ua OF CALIFO~NIA (pey•ble II ~~hard c Braun, Ptesl-16. 1984 Putlllshed Otange Coast Pulllllhed Orange Cout =~ ~:. 't:z&.~llnglon Kanl B Trollen. 425 Thia sl•lement wu tllec:I Tnis statement was hied time of sele in lawtul money Tiii etatemenl was f tec:I n7MM Diiiy Pllol Fet><uety 22. 29. Daily Pilot FellNllfY 22, 29, Alic~ C Sun 17082 Berlin Beoonla. Corona del Mlf, with the County Clerk of Of. with the County Cieri< 01 Or-of the Unllec:I Slat") II lhe Ith t~ C nt Clerk of 'o r-Pulllllhed Otange Coast March 7, 14, 1988 Match 7, 1-4. 1988 rtllJC NOTICE Ln Hunting.~ 8Mcft Cllll Cllll. 92625 11\ge County on F-et>ruety 5 enge County on Febtuary front entrance to Suite 2()() w Ce OU Y F 9 D1Jly Piiot February 22. 29. M-274 M-278 t 2849 • Signed· K9"1 B Trollen l988 · 1988 (MCond flOOI') 17842 lrvlne ange ounty on ebruary · Merch 7. 14, 1988 flCTITlOUI .,... .. Pub•~ Ot•nge COU1 "~ 16. n1u11 Blvd . Tu111n. CA •tt tight. 1988 f'S10l52 M·284 rtmuc NOTICE rta.JC NOTICE .. ,,.. ITATDmWT c:t~~ 11t>u:'ri:1v.!:,.~on- 0111y Pilot February 22 29. Published Orange Cou1 Publlstlec:I Orange Coast lllle and lnter .. 1 QOn~ P bllshed O<enge Coast d The= perlOf'IS are Alice {Sun Merch 7, 14• l988 M.28 Oetly Pilot February 15. 22, Daily Pilot February 22. 29. :1~~ :;•t~~.'' 1~~ Dal~ PUol Februery 1s. 22. PUBLIC NOTICE flCTTTIOUa llU ... 11 flCT1TIOU8 IUllNISI ~EWPORT u~REMIUM TN• 11atement wu riled ---------9 29. M1rch 7, 1988 M-255 Maleh ~. 14. 1988 M-277 property !lllu1ted In said 29. March 7. 1988 flCTITIOU9 IUllNl•S T:!At=r:.~ ere T:!At~~ are BEER CO. (ll)BALBOA with the County C~lc of Ot· PUBLJC NOTICE County end State dfleribed M-261 NA.Ml ITATDmNT c:IDO bu._, as doing llulineU as. BREWING CO .. 140Clbrlllo, ange County on ebruary f'.tCTITIOUI MllMH NAME ITAn.NT The followlng persons ara doing lluSlness es. i---.. ---.,.-llft-,-""-c--+---.. ---IC-NO-Tl_C_E_-4 as. DI-IC NOTICE The toltowlng perlOf'ls •• t":fE WRITING ROOM STAMPING SCIENTIFICS, Costa Meta. Cel4t. 02e27 16· 1988 ,.111m '"-"" ~ ... ._. PARCEL 1 '"~ d<><ng lluslnets as: WEST 1870 Park Newporl 2701 B S Suun St Sanl1 Patrick C.11411! When, 140 UNIT C·1 AS SHOWN ON f'.ICTITIOUI •UllNEll AU REVOIR. 1599 Su· •314, ·~t Belch, Celil. Ana. Cellf: 92704 .. Cabrlllo. Coste M .... Calif o:,ub:~'*} ~ange 2~0;:1 THAT CERTAIN AMENDED perior Ave Suite B Colla 92660 Rlchetc:IT Henley 16AIN 92627 y ot • u•rv . • CONDOMINIUM PLAN RE· T:!A:!!iTATI= at• Mese. CaHf 92827 • Selly Spnnger Menge. EHi. 1rv1ne."ca11t 92120 Thi• l>utlntu II con-March 7 14, 1988 M-285 G 113131 NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS UNITED MOTION PIC· TURES ANO FUNDING 3090 Pullman Cosl8 Mesa. Calif 92626 ' 08 1313 (11/M) CORDED ON JUNE 2&. 1982 dOI bus1nes"::: Albert John V999. 394 I B 1810 Patk ~I •314, I Chen Wang, 2208 s c:loetec:l lly an lndlvldual AS INSTRUMENT/FILE NO R~WL AN O HEIGHTS South Bristol •307. Senti Newpcrt Beach. Cllll 92Mi0 Htbo<o Ave . Alhernbr a, Pa1r1ck Whan PUBLIC NOTICE 82-2t6S47. OFFICIAL RE· PARTNERS 13891 Newport Ana. Calif 9270-4 Th11 11u1lne11 11 con· 1111 91803 Thtt llalement wu flied , ________ _ Rlcnarc:I Euell, 224 Col· llns. S.lboa Island. Carll 92Mi0 Protect No. 17 8/R #• CO RDS OF ORANGE Avenue S~lte 2SO Tustin This business it con-ducted by· an lndlv1dual This bu1lne11 11 con· with l~nly ci.;ic:' Ot· flCTITIOUI .,...,. COUNTY, CALIFORNIA. AS Cahl 92680 . ducted by an lndMduel S91ty S Met199 ducted by a general pan-ange nty on • tuary NA.Ml ITA'RMEIT ., __ ._.. _,.. ... _ H DEFINED IN THE OECLAR· T"'~as E Tueller 13891 Alller1 JOOn V999 Thi• slatement WU filed n«Shlp 16. 1988 Tne , ........... ~persons.,. __..... proposals wlll be receivvu at t,,.., O lo.e A TION OF COVENANTS. N..;,;;;, .Avenue Suite 250 This statement wu IMec:I with the County Clertc of Or· Ric;hafc:I T Hanley nnm doing ;;;;;,;;; H This business 1s con· ducted by an Individual Richard EHH c~:~~so~=:.:n~~:.~~a ~.:~~~~: ~~:,g~lbi~s R~~gR~ED uslin Callf 926SO with the County Cle<k ot Or· ange County on Februery Thie stelement was lllec:I 0_j~b~~~eg;~ 2~°:1 LIQUOR 21. 1601 New· 2·.00 p .m. on Thurs., March 10th, at w"lch time AUGUS~ 4 1981 IN BOOK W11111m E Garwin. 13891 ange98C8ounty on Februery 11. 1988 wllh the County CleOc of Or· March 7 14 1988 . . port Blvd . Coate Mesa This statement was lllec:I with the County Clefll ol Or· enge County on Fet>ruary 9. 1988 '' • · Newporl Avenue Suite 250 11 , 1 '371• ange County on Feb1uary · · M 28 Calif 92627 they Wiii be pybllcly opened and read for per-14167 PAGE 1086. IN THE Tustin Calif 926fto • '171• Pubhsned Orange Coul 18, 1988 • 1 S•N A Saba, 41309 fOf'mlng work to furnish all lat>or, materials, tools. OFFICIAL RECORDS OF Rot>e<I E Rippe 13891 PubltSllec:I Orange Coast D•lfy Pllol Februery 22. 29, FS71174 Avenldl Blona. Temeeula, FJ7Ql54 Pullll5"ed Oranoe Coast Dally Pilot Febfuery 15 22 29 Match 7 1988 and equipment nec:.ury to rep4aoe existing roof SAID COUNTY. ANO AS NewPOrl Avenue Suite 2SO. Daily Pilot Fetlfuary 22 29, Merell 7 14. 1988 Pul>llstlec:I Ot•nge Coast NI.IC NOTICE Celil 92390 system at "J" Building at Fairview Developmental AMENDED BV .AN INSTRU-Tustin Calif 92680 March 7. 14, 1984 M-289 Dally Pilot February 22. 29. Thlt businesa Is con- Cent91', In accordance with plans and specif!-~ .. ENT19:iCO,.RsDE~s~~: This business 1s con-M-27 t March 7, a , 1988 FICTJTIOUl IU ... 11 ucted t1y: en lndlvlduet cations therefore MENT>F1LE NO 82-216548, ducted Dy a Otnef•I part· DI-IC W1nrc M·290 NAm ITA'R•NT Saba A Sall• B, ...... ~s fOf th s proWw-t must nnc.-• a current OFFICIAL RECORDS nerShip r~ ""'~ Mt.IC NOTIC£ !he IOllowtng pe11ons ivt Thoe etatement wu fllecl ..,.,,.... •--~ Wt111am E Gatw1n Mt.IC NOTICE doing butlneN u wllll the County Clefk of Or· M-2~ C-39 classmcatlon lioense(s) Issued by the Con· =~RCj~J1v1DED 2 164 Tn1a statement was filed FICmlOUI euslNEll K*10 CALIFORNIA HAWAIIAN. ange County on Ftllru•ry ---------traCIOfS' State Uoense Board Any b id received PERCENT '"') INTEREST IN 1111 lhe County Clerk of Ot· NAME ITATtMENl f1CTITIOUI llU•-·· FICTITIOUI .,..... 22.21 s Sl•nc:lard Ave . t6, 1984 P\8l.IC NOTICE Where the bidder Is not ncensed as specified wlll AND TO LbT 1 OF TR.ACT ange County on February 5. Tne totlowlng persons •1• NAME ITA'R•NT MAim ITA'R•NT Santa Ant. Calif 92707 'S71'10 r.'"TITIOUI IU ... ,, be disregarded. Jolnt Venture bidders must pos.-11353 IN THE CITY OF 1988 dOlng buslnns u The follOW1ng persons are The tonowtng persons ere Ron Meck Emmett. 2240 Publt&hed O<ange Coast ..-.... sess a Joint ~lure License. COSTA MESA COUNTY OF FS704l0 GENESIS, 9807 Adams <10tng l>uSlneSS 11 doing busm.s u Tusltn. Newport Beach, Delly Pilot Februery 22. 29 . .. .._ ITATtMENT Pref9feno&.wlh be granted to bidd91'S prope<ly ORANGE STATE OF CALI· Published Otange Coast Ave . Huntington Beien. Sf AR HORIZONS 2512 KINGSTON COMPANY. Call! 92660 M.,ch 7, 14, 1988 The lollowrng persons are approved as "Small Business" in accordance with FORNIA AS SHOWN ON A oa11y P11o1 February 1s 22. Cahf 92646 Andov11 P1eoe. Cosll Mesa, 5&21 BuSlnns Or . Hunt· Thi' t1u11ness 11 COi'\· M-276 doing buS<neSS as· MAP RECORDED IN BOOK' 29 March 7 1988 Chari_ I( M Reed. 1702 Call! 92826 lnglon BMch. Celll 926-49 t-;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiimiii SOUIHERN CALIFORNIA Section 1896 et seq . Title 2, California Admlnls-ol88 PAGES •S ANO 46 OF M-259 Flonc:I• St • Huntington Joell• 0 Smaldlno. 2512 Deniel Chle·Jln Lin. fl REALT't' 2925 College Ave trat1ve Code. Applications fOf pref9fenoe must be MISCELLANEOUS MAf'IS Beach. Cahf 92648 Andovet Plaoe Cosl• M-. t 1522 Healheltff Or . Hunt· Suite .A 10 Costa Mesa submitted to and approved by the Small and IN THE OFFICE OF THE Mt.IC NOTICE AllQe C Sun. 17082 e.tlm Cahr 92626 1ngton Beach. Caut 92705 Callt 92626 Mlno flly Business Procurement AHlstanc e CO TY RECORDER OF Ln . Hunltngton eeacn. Calif Frank J Smaldlno 2512 Shu·May Chang Lin. Del F Larson 1007 Grove Division, 1812 141h Street, Room 200, Sacramen· SAl~NCOUNTY FICTITIOUS IUllNEIS 92649 Andov91 Pl1c;e, Cosra Mesa, 11522 Heathehff Or. Hunt· • Ln . Newpon Beacn Calll to CA 95814 EXCEPT UNITS 1 29 IN NAME STATEMENT This business is con-Cel1f 92626 ington Beedl. c .. u 92705 92660 ·Requests f'rx small business preference In the CLUSIVE AS SHOWN ON Tt>e follOW1ng ~soru are <1uc1e0 by • general P•rl· T1111 business 11 con· lhts bu11ne,• Is con· WE'RE FIGHTll'G FOR 'OJR LIFE This business is con· award o f t"e contr...,.. fOf 1 .. _ above m-11. _ ___. CONDOMINIUM PLAN da1ng bus.ness as nerSh1p ductec:l lly nusband and wilt ducted by h\lsbend and wife ductec:l by an.n<11vKSual " '""' '"' "" .,....., A SO EXC EPTIN G MARBLE SHOOTERS Charlene KM Reed JoellaO S~tno Dantel C Lin Del F L1rson pro,ect is made by submitting a completed fOfm L 1126 Austin. Costa Mesa. Th<s s111emen1 was flied This statement was «tec:I Thia Slalement was filed Tiits s1atemen1 was hied STD 811 wllh the bid prcposal. No pref9fence will ~~!~:F~~~S ~~~C~I~ Cahf 92626 with the Co...n1y Clerk of Or-with the County Ci.rk of Ot· wllh 111e County c i.r1c ol O•· wltfl ltle County Clerk of Or· be granted unless the bid Is accompanied by the AND USEFUL METALS Thomas A Bn•le 1126 I nge County on Fetlfu•ry ange County on Fetlfuary 1nge County on February ~County on February 9 STD 8 l l SUBS T .AN CE S AN O Austin Costa Meta Calif 16 t984 10 1988 IS 1988 t American Heart ft Association V 8 F ___ ,,_ Bid proposals must be submitted tor ll'le entire HYDROCARBONS OF 92626 FJ7lJll rn1111 FIMOS3 .. ,_ . Roy Molewsi..1 1 156 Publ1Shed Orange CoaSI Pubhsheo Orange Coast Published Orange Coast Pubhstled Orange Coes1 work described therein. Deviations from plans and Ev ER Y Kr N D AND Paularino Costa Mesa Daily P1101 FtbnJary 22. 29. 0111y Pilot Februe.ry 22. 29. Daily Pilot February 22. 29. Daily Piiot Feb1u1ry 15, 22. spec1f1cations will not be considered and will be .CHARACTER. INCLUDING Calll 9262.7 March 7, 14 1988 March 7 1.t 1988 March 7 14. 1988 29 Marcfl 7 1988 cause tor rejection ol bids The Department has PETROLETUM OIL GAS. This business is con-M-282 M-284 M·254 the right 10 waive any lrregula1ity In e bid or to ~~~~LA u~P::~F T~ ducted by a general part- ---------reiect any or all bids. FEET THAT MAY NOW OR nersh1p Ml.IC NOTICE No bid will be conStdered unless 11 Is made on a HEREAFTER BE FOUND. Thomas Basile ,ICTITIOUI IUStNESS standard lorm furnished by the Department and 1s LOCATED. CONTAINED Thia statement was flied N ..... ITATtMENT made In accordance with the "lnstrvclions to DEVELOPED OR TAl<EN w•tfl the County Clerk or Or· .. ~ Bidd .. •s " ,, ON IN. UNDER OR FROM a1nge9 8 Count)' on Feb<uery 9. The following persons a•e "" 988 dOlnn bu-SS ts Prospective btdd9fS may examine and obtain SAID LANO OR ANY PART ,,,_ .... 0 E T • , THEREOF WITHOUT. HOW-IMPACT DEVEL PM N plans. spec1ficatlons, and bid forms by calling EVER ANY RIGHT OF SUR-Published Orange Coast 4 INVESTMENTS 214 Harl· (714) 957-52 13 FACE. ENTRY OR ANY Daily P1lo1 February IS, 22. lord Dr · Newpon Beech, A paymenl bond. Standard Form 807 In an RIGHT OF ENTRY TO THE 29 March 7 l988 Ca1tl 92660 M-266 Glen Klanian 214 Heit· amount nol less than 50 percent o f the con1rac1 SUBSURFACE THEREOF ford Dr NewPOrl Beacn. price must accompany flVe<y contract Involving an TO A DEPTH OF soo FEET 1---D1-1Da_l_C_NO_T-IC_E __ Calif 92660 e)(pend1ture In e"cess of $5.000. BENEATH THE SURFACEl ___ r _"'"'------ ThtS 1>us1ness 15 con-The successful bidder wlll be required to enter FOR THE DEVELOPMENT, FICTITIOUS •u••--·· f REMOVAL RECOVERY OR ""' ducted by an 1nd1v1dual tnlo a con1rac1urel agreement In lhe Ofm ot a OTHER EXPLOITATION Of NAM€ STATEMENT Glen Klanian 'Standard Agreement form STD 2" wl'lleh Shall SAID RESOURCES OR Tile lollow1ng persons are TfltS st11-n1 was ltled be bind ing upon lhe State of CallfOf'nla only upon SUBSTANCES do<ng buStr>eSS &$ Wtlh lhe Counly Cieri< 0' Or· approval by the State. The contract IS not binding PARCEL 3 ADVISORY T v ANO ~~~9;:-nry 0" February on either party unless and until It IS approved by A N 0 N. E x c L us IVE RADIO LABS OF AMERICA, f j71371 appropriate authorized state agencies. Including EASEMENT A PPURTE-3975 J Birch SI Newport G S NANT TO SUCH UNIT FOR Beach Cakf 92660 P;,ot.stiecJ Orange. Coast the Department of eneral ervloes, 11 required VEHICULAR ANO PED· PKll -Cett Cahlorn1a 60 Dail) P1101 February ,2 29 All none"emp l state contracts of $5,000 or ESTRIAN INGRESS AND Eagle Run Irvine Calif Maren 7 1o1 1988 I more are sub1ec1 10 state contrac1or non: EGRESS PURPOSES OVER 9271'4 ________ M_-2_8_.4 d1scr1m1na t1on and compliance requirements THAT PORTION OF LOTS g Nick P Hatzoglu 80 purwant to Government Code Section 12990 and ANO JO OF TRACT 5935 AS Oor190 Lane S~avcus N J California Adm1n1S1rative Code. Title 2. Division 3, SHOWN ON A MAP RE· 07094 PACIFIC VIEW I Seckon 8201 A bid proposal or offer tor • CORDED IN BOOK 2 t9 This C>usiness IS con- MEMOAIAL PARK contract for pub llcworks goods or services which PAGES 3 ANO 4 , OF MIS· ductea by 8 general part· . CELLANEOUS MAPS IN nershtp C emeter, • M •!vd', 1s s11brn111ed by a Contractor Who has been THE OFFICE OF THE Sha1'rom Vosovgh Pres•· (..'1a1J .. I • • ....... al , • decert1hed from subconlractlng with the State by COUNTY RECORDER OF dent Json P 1 1 e" : ·" the Department of Fair Employment and Housing, SAID COUNTY This s111emenl was hied shall oe deemed to be nonresponslve and shall be Tt>e street address and w1111 the County Clerk of Or· .,4• w .. )' t t;jeC:H ~ t;~J '. ·, HARBOR L AWN· MT OLIVE --~ rtwat t • Cef""IO•· f. (•1-'lndl '• '>'2~ C.•S e• :.. •' PIERCE BROTHERS SELL BROADWA Y MOf•uar, • C"at.0 1 10 Bro adwa" Costa Mesa 642-9150 re1ected other common deStgnallon. ange County on February S. In accordance with the provisions o f Section If any or tile real proPlflY t9 8 F 70479 1773 of the Labor Code, the Department has ~r~,~~: t>e a2°4~~~~~ Publlined orange_3eoasi ascertained that the general prevailing rates of A1tenue Suite c.3 Costa oa11y Pilot ~e111uary 15 22 wages applicable m the COYnty In which the work la Mesa. Calltorn•a 92626 29 March 7. 1988 I to be done are those rates establlshed and pub· THE U NDERSIGNED M-252 hshed by the Director Of lnduSlrlal Relations TRUSTEE DISCLAIMS ANY ---------1 Copies ol the wage rates are on file at the Ott1ee of LIABILITY FOR INCORRECT Mt.IC NOTICE the Chief of Plant Operations. Fairview De-I N F 0 R M A T I 0 N --------- velopmental Center FURNISHED FIC-Tmous •UllNESS S I Ill be held Th March 3rd THAT 5110 sate IS made NAME ITATIMINT •le inspec ion w urs · • without covenant or war-The fotloWtng p.1sons ate 10 00 A M Fa1rv1ew Developmental Center ianty •.-girding 1111e p0s-c:101ng nusmess as seSSfon or encumb1ances ASSOCIA TEO BUSINESS or es to 1n1urabllily ol !•lie GROUP FUNDING t251 E THE 10111 mount or 111e un-Oyer Road. Suite 220. Santa I Published Orange Coast Daily Piiot February 22. Paid balance 01 said obll· Ana Ceht 92705 29 1988 gallons 10091her wtlh ad-Tom Grahov1c 385 VlctOf ·~· Ch .. t of P\ant Operattone HI 'I M 296 vances and Hhmaled coslS Mereiet Orange Cahl -::=================::::======~===========J WeSley 0 Wright 2603 t 1• LaCuest1 l agune Hilla Caltf 92653 STARTING A NEW BUSINESS?? The Legat Departfl'ent at the Dally Piiot Is pleased to an· nounce a new service now avail- able to new businesses We will now SEARCH the name fOf you at no extra c harge, and .save you the time and the trip to the Court House In Santi Ana. Then. of course, after the ... rch Is Qompleted we wm file yOUt fictitious business name statement with the County Clerk, p Jblllh once 1 week f0< four week• at required by law and then file your proof of publl· C41Uon with the County Clerk PleaM stop by to Ille your fle1ltlous business statement at the Dall)' Pilot Legat Depart· ment. 330 West Bay. Costa Meta. Catlf0<nla. If you can not stop by, pte8M call us at (714) 642-4321, Extension 315 0< 31e and we will make .,r9ngen"*'lt• fOf you to handle this pr-ocedur• by mall If you lh<M,lld have any further queetlona. plMM call us and we wtl be more than glad to assist you. Good tuck In your MW butineMll Thia bus11'\ess 11 con- d ucttd by an un1n . eo•poralec:I auoc1at1on other than a pann11S111p Wesley O Wnght T'111 s1a1emen1 was filed w1111 1ne County Clerk ot Or-•nge County on Februery 11 1988 FJ71271 Published Oranoe Co•tt Daily Piiot Februery 22. 29, March 1 14. 1984 M-273 P\8l.IC NOTIC£ ,ICTITIOUI IU-11 Nam ITA'R_,.., The 1°"°'"'1ng per10n$ ere ng 1>usineu .. PRODUCTION HEAD RE· BUILOfRS SUPPLY. 2701 B S Sunn Stree1 S1nt1 /\na. Oehl 92704 Rlchlfc:I r Henley. 18 AIM E .. 1 Irvine. C•llf 92720 I C'*1 Wfn9 2201 8 W•lllOro Ave Alhl'Tlbtl. Celtl 91803 Hiit 1>ut1ne11 11 con· Mled by I ~II Pert• narll'l1p Rich.,c:I T Hanley Th•• 11etemenl wat ne.d With the Coutlly Cllr1I Of Or· 9l"90 County °"' J'.eotuery 18. 1t18 ,,,..,. P\IOll..n.ct 0rlrlQ8 COM' o.ity Pilot re«uary 22 29, Mer~h 7, 14. 1MI M-271 M-287 I·---------------~ HUNTINGTON BEACH The Daily Pilot has a new way to turn your Hidden Treasures into CASH s 80 with prepayment · f 4 .L_ines-7 Days s 10.80 No mwps In copy or~. Private patti.s orly. No C0mn.rclal, Real Estate, Automotive. Boating or Employment Ads. There Is no price llmlt to what you can ad\lenlse. It you nHd to sd your couch# high cMlr or any unused merchandl~-c~ the o-.y Piiot Classltled sulf 01 use ttw c~n be~w. lllij h.t . D.ey Nol. JJO \II. 8-SL. COiia Meta. CA 92626 642-5678 NAME~~~~~~~~~~~~­ AOORESS~---~~-~----------~---~ CITY ___ _ 'STATE ___ ZIP ________ _ AD COPY: 4 line minimum, appropriately 4 words per llne. AMT. ENCLOSED _____ _ ' • ' MONDAY, FEBRUA RY 29, 1988 2S CENTS S. Laguna rentals curb urged Cit y Council to w eigh code crackdown on illegal units in a nnexed community By LANCE IGNON ' The Laguna Beach City Council 1s OfllleDelJ,......., scheduled to grapple with this tricky Just how hard should the city o(,., question Tuesday night, when res1- Laguna Beach come down on South• dents from the newly annexed com - Laguna residents who own homes munity of South Laguna an: expt>cted that violate zonin& codes? to show up in force. UCl's Frank Woods slammed one as UCI con- trolled t he first half but Long Beach State rallied after halftime for a 98-90 victory./81 Nation . Dole, Kemp go on attack In GOP debate as Bush, Dukakls claim victory in Maine./A4 World Secretary of State Shultz makes headway with peace plan In Egypt.I A4 Entertainment The Grammy Awards get a change of scene for the 30th anniversary .I Al Index ) Advice and Games A 10 Bulletin Board A3 Business A7-8 Classified 8 5-7 Comics A 11 Entertainment A9 Opinion A6 Public notices B4. 8 Sports B l-4 Weather A2 Weddings A4 Royal couple. draw cheers By.GEORGE GARTIES • 11 •"'-Wfleet LONG BEACH -Prince Andrew and his wife. arah. rubbed shoulders with ever)day Americans in church and with the Hollywood elite at a gala dinner Sunday night that includ~d a British cclenty cntouraRe. The Duke and Duchess of York. touring to promote Bntish trade. attended a morning service at St. Luke's Episcopal Church in Long Beach, unaware an apparently inno- cent man had been swept up by their security forces as a pote ntial assassin. Later that evening. they were the special guest!> at a star-studded dinner at the Biltmore Hotel in downtown Los .\ ngelcs. Among the 700 guests pa)ing S 1.000 apiece to dine with Bnt1sh ro)alt) were Zsa Zsa Gabor. her husband Prince Frederick von Anhalt. "D>nasty" star Joan Collins, her date George Hamilton, and ac tor Roger Moore, who was master of ceremonies. For the black-lie event, the duchess arrived in a strapless black evening gown with a shimmer). puffy o range wrap draped aro und her shoulders. Money raised b) the event benefits the three-month UK-LA '88 an festival and a fund to salvage books damaged in disastrous 1986 fires at the Los Angeles Central Library. The) dined on crepinette of salmon and "hate fish . "1th champagne chervil. E~irlier, the) were greeted b) a cheering crowd waving miniature Union Jacks as they went lO church under driul) skies that set a proper Bnt1sh mood for fans of the ro)al visitors. The Duke and Duchess arrived at the church shonl) after 11 a.m. after a motorcade from the ro)al )'acht Bntannia. which 1s docked at Long Beach Naval Statton. Unknown 10 the royal retinue and the press. police officers sweeping the motorcade route had detained a man the)' spotted carrying a rifle. But tt turned out that the man's presence had nothing to do wtth the ro)al v1s11. police said. John Kasser. 30, of Long Beach had retrieved the unloaded .22-caliber rifle from the police station there and was headed to his car "hen Los Angeles cit) police o fficers spoiled him. said Long Beach Lt. Rod (Pl eue eee R~YAL/ A 2) Undersea farm off Newport IJla y spawn ind.ustry A few hundred feet off Newport Beach, the future of the ocean may soon be takin1 root. The success of that future wtifhs on the shouldcn of a viaitJna Frenchman whose devotion to a unique theory of ~ascapina ius vut and limi\Jcss as the ocean ittclf. He lacks money and manpoWtt, but not determinatton. .. People said before that innt amactum of the sea could only attract Uvint structures, not dheloo sea life. That is not we," said Rodolphe SU'eicbnberter, a former buli· newn who nows lp"ciatius in what he calb "9e1uaaalture. .. Streichcabersr lau developed a unique mcthocf of "leedi~" palebn of oeeR bottom with thick brown kelp. cratina ~elp fOttSt• that he cl&ima will devclo~ into ea lire under- • ecoeys1ems within a year or two. S•c b biourucuret, at Saeic ...... ,., calls &bcm. may bold tM key to ........ •:r: C09sW eaviraa•••• and opeo door'° ~--.-Ianni= a JO'I do lhit. you 1-.e bonom oldie -. You pro . IM ;.?J:.:.~~emen t ," uid Ion --I __..., EwclJIM blidullrill .. ily, SUedeftbajef a.ii GtEC Ka.£1u p. I . ~ .• • N t •' no formal blacqround in bioloSY or cxearqraphy. bu1 holds dqrccs from Plrit University in cconomiC'I and business. 8u1 siMC the &ate 1970s.. he has bttn·aplorina 1he idea of undersea D&antina. finl an his native France and l'or the &a11 lhrft yean in the more aem~ratt waam off'Newpon Baich. He hu · worktd for the French lutitule b Sea Rnearch ud Marine uploratlon, a march lf'OUP ftanded by lbe French eovmament. ~berter'• undenea plant· •ii coeciepc is briUaantty simple. UU.a prnsurized hoee tonnec1Cld '° 1 llllODoW sattl rod. di ven would ..... ·~boles in ... _ .... .... ...., ropes ia ... Miiii: IPI 11-uN•••A1A9J On one side are the residents who complain about their neighbors who have convened prages and sin&le· family homes into multipJe-tenant units in defiance of county lOning codes. The} say the sleepy tree-lined streets are now clogged with the can of people who rent the expt>ns1 ve homemade apanments. Backed by the South Laguna Civic Association. the) wouJd like to see multitenant houses returned lO smgJc-famtly homes. Then there are the homeowners who say the commun1t) has had a long tradition o f quirky building standards and to force everyone into strict comphance would ruin the charm of the neighborhood . Moreover, ll would displace numer- ous renters. In 1937 the county zoned the neighborhood fo r s1 ngle-fam1ly homes. In the interim. however, residents have had 40 years to turn garages into laving quarters and houses mto tnplexcs. The community's 1983 spt>c1fic plan recognized the unusua l housing element and decreed that all non- confomun& residences buih before that year should be left as 1s. said Doug T urkot. one of several leaders of a movement to retarn the statu~ quo. Judy Gundlach of the Pet Raach ID San Dle&o Coanty •ho.. off a blue and 1old ...., ......... ..,, ""' .. Ml9e macaw at the Bird ltzpo at the Ora.nee County Palqro11Dda ID Coeta Me.a. Exotic bird fanciers flock , to expoatOC Fairgrounds By PAUL ARCHIPLEY OfllleDelJ ......... If you to ld Jeff Walters his work was for the birds. he'd only smile and agree. Call Chris Davis a birdbram and she would consider 1t a compli- ment. Visitors to the Orange County Fairgrounds heard plenty of fowl language unday when Walters and panner Ken Leighton produced their first Bird Expo. More than 100 \endors and bird enthusiasts staffed booths featunng a flighty fare of feathered fnends. from the common S 7 parakeet 10 the rare -and expensl\ e -blue hyacinth maca". In fact. the hyacinth. which is the largest member of the parrot famil>. sold for a repon ed bargam rate of S6,500. - .. It's the Rolls Royce of birds.'' Walters said. ''There are only about 5,000 in capt1v1ty. Ifs on the en- dangered species hst and 1s so rare most zoos don't have it." Of course, there were plenty of less e~pcnsiH and equally colorful bards. which are ~"'Coming popular pets among apartment and condominium d~ellcrs "here space is a premium E'er) kind of accessol) was a'a1I· able as "ell. from bird cages and fo-.1 food to bird Je-.elT) and a' 1an car seats calkd pon-a-totes. One vendor offered a b1b-lil e clothing aC'CeSSOT) that co' errd one's shoulders called a "dro-ppcr stopper .. Birds" names "ere as exotic as their appearances. such as the cttron cockatoo l'O tang about S550. the green "'ng ma a" at SI.JOO. \I· olaceus plantain eaters at $950 a pair or Sit~rra Leone turacos for S2SO .\nd according 10 Chns Davis. who bills herself as the "Bird lad)," the) can bee' er) bit as afTet'ttonate as dogs and ma) be a" hole lot smaner. Da' 1s. une of the man' 'endors at (Pleue .-EXOTIC/A2) Turlot said he -.111urge1hetounc1I to let all thoM" hou!>e!> modified ht-fore 19!0 rt'ma1n a'> 1s He sauJ thr lit} \hoult.l hiH l' the nght to inspect all the d~cllin~ to ma~e sure the\ mret bu1ld1ng and heahh and s.afel\ standard!> "\\hat \\t' don'1-.ant1~ people who arc tht're no" to ~utTer from this 1h1ng.'' Turkot S<11d Airline patrons decline inOC. Passenger count at J ohn Wayne ~lips third month in r ow By BOB VAN EYKEN Of-D19JNM.._ More than 21 .000 fewer passengers flew out of John Wa} ne i\1rpon last month than in Januar} 1987. accord- ing to figures 1ust relea~ It "'as the third month in a ro"' that s1m1lar declines had been noted. according to a1rpon officials. During 1 g97, airline operattons. mcreased b) 3 ~percent. ;although the total number of passengers 1l~1ng from John Wa} nr .\1rpon was lower b) 6 2 pncent last month than 1n Janua" I q ., Mean" h1le small aircraft traffic at John \\a)ne .\1rpon continued 1ts )earlong decline last month. accord- ing to the figures. Tale-offs and landmgs b) small. general a' 1at1on aircraft declined b' 5.3 percent o'er the couiY of 19 1. accordin& 10 auport officials Commuter airline. or air ta:11:i. opcrat1om declined b> an e'en greatt'r margin. 15 3 percent from Janua0. 1 Q8"' to Januar). 1988. .\1rport assistant manager !\Ian ~1 urph} said he "as also unable to e\platn the reducuon 1n the number ofa1rhne passengers. '""e·,e noticed 11 o'er the pa<it three month~ .. he said "" e don't l no~ "hat' causing 1t. but 11 St"Cms lo rcfkl:t a sl"Mlr~ 1de phenomenon .. Plani.'s are fl> mg-. uh fe wer passen- gers. hut passenger loads still tend to be higher at John Wa}ne i\1rpon that at mitn ) {'tht·-... \1urph) said "This 1s gencralh a 'er) profitable a1rpon for airlines:· he said. ··1f the trend cununut's, \Ou ma' see some cutbaC'l s in flight~. but > ciu ma) not For the most pan. I 1htnk tht' airlines can casil) deal "1th slightl~ lo"ered passenger k.l3d~ .. Murph) ..aid he -...as also at a loss 10 e\pla1n the dC"tltne in general 3' 1a- t1on tram although he said 11 appeared 10 reflect a nauonal trend l\1 urph' ..aid Fnda) that the dr- cl1ne in ci.lmmut<.•r airline traffic la'l1 month compared 10 a.)ear ago could, 1n pan. be related to forced cutbacks at .\men ca n Eag.Je. a maJor com- muter earner ··we had <.'me problem "'1th them (Pl-..e eee P ASSEPfGERS/ A 2) Panama's ousted president-Di ding t Staying in country d espite exile order by military leader BJ REID G. MILLER ....... ..,_.,.... PANAM.\ IT' Panama -°'· posed prtS1dcnt Enc .\nuro °'lvalle s\lycd 1n h1d1ng unda and defied Gen. Manuel .\ntonio onep. the m ihtar. stronsman "'ho ousted him and ordered him out of the country. The u-pres1dent's whereabouts we'f't a cloKI) auardtd tttttl. but fam•I)' members said he--as 1n a "saft and tttutt plact" 1n Pana"" 1n "aood spmts" and cktenn1ned to ~1nh1sJob 'I am JO•"I to S\&} httt (and) tlCk 11 out." °'"a Uc told .\BC tck' '"on 1n a tdephonc 1ntcrv1cw Saturday n.pt. "I'm to•na to f'lht It all the wa~alk dtd nol reveal hll ltidiftl ~ Rodendt E.lqu1~l. °'lvallt's v~ prcticknt. also,., in htdint. . loll\ mtn ~ OU~ ft'om otfttt eetty Fnda) •• an en.on by lht NalioMI u.i.aat1~~ _.,..,.,. Of"· cMMrlted ~ Noncp. the DrftMe fOl'(ft ct.itf. °":Z lld IM .... cnm •• ~· ol con•• ciVil unrest in Panama on Thursda ""hen he tncd to fire onqa. -.ho 1 charged an Flonda wnh corruption and narcotics trafficlt1na. The n1tcd States also ha urged Nonqa to tep do-. n as m1htU) chief. On Fnda). °'" alk returned 10 his home-en an upp«<lus neigh· borhood. Pohcc surrounded the house Fnda) eventn& and Dtlvalle' tdcphonc-s 't\ett cut. ~"tnl him 1ncommun1cado and undtt an un· dttlartd houst tfTCll. Sometime that n11hl. he repontdty climbed overa pa110 wall at the rear Of the houte and ctapcd lhf'OUl.h I nc\lbbot's )&rd. aH>tdJftl tht poh~­ mcn who had been posltd on lht ~ •n front ofh1s home. Raul O.U. a brothtt-1&-&aw. ud other fam1l)' membtt1 saJd mahwt oftklalt had wanKd OelvaUt &Mt ff hc didn't leave the couaay vohlft· tanl~ he would bt •ac•ed -4 fombl ~ lMI ~sa..y-DetVlile .. ~~·~ ....... ~-­wostd .m.. ,..,, , • Dr" Ht •id Dihlll ......... '" wift_. .................. .. ..... .. ~---.. .. .... -- Gllll IWLY MOTi •ltndar, '*'*Y 21, 1111 ~emedlcal offJceplanned .. .._ lnm tf1llkal Complea Ml com- ...... 7 .......... '1111 '"'-c.. ... C,IW 10 ... o/lllld to ............ o11ce ... .-..- '1191 • .._ -edice' cnw iD lrviM S111caw. A-a.a Medk:al lawtional Inc. CAMI). owaer of Irvine Medical Ceaw. ~ tbe ... lite for pora .. by n.t Irvine Co. to c:na• a ~ medical etnter within Irvine Spectrum. , Initial plua for tbc medical oftlce complnacijacen1 tothecmtercall for tht development of an QPn>aimalely 100,nnn...ftua.---oftk:e buildi .. The ~;~u hOUIC oftic:el Air about 80 physicians u well u 1evcral floors o( out.-tient eervicn suppon- ina I.he medical etnter's propams. ROY AL COUPLE DRAW CHEERS ••• Prem Al Midielloe. Tbe pan b8d been held by po1R b..reuq,iaa a 1evera1 days after ofticel1 COftfialed it durint I domc:llic dispute, Mickelson said. ' Klmef WU laler freed and allowed to keep his 1un, PGlice said. He wu no&~ Sunday, nor had be been cbuwed -in tbe domatic dispute, Micidlon •id. .. Tbere's abeolutely no relation ~m af\d the motorcade," he said. Tbc incident did not affect the royal couple's itinerary. Sarah. wear- int a black. lmtt-lenath skin with a sreen saripe,=n jacket and black hat. ldnow the chttn with a wave u she a the prince, clad in a chan:oal .,ay suit and blue shin. enlaed the church. The Rev. A. LeRoy Youns. rector of St. Luke's, oflkated over matins, a momina terVice of prayer and sona. AndttW read the day's lesson from Romans 8:3 1. In his sermon, Youna noted the presence of the royal couple'. "I think the majority will ..,-ee with me that their presence here ,today is the bigest thina that has ha~ned in this city since the Richfield oil refinery exploded. and that was in 1933.'' he said. -..,, lhoa ........ 0.-..0IMI ... I l l ... ... .... ,....In ... ~ ............... In .... .. ...-Iii. 0... el ... ,,. .. Fi i II I IO • ...... ................. """' .. . ........................ -. ......... ... ............ ...._ .. : .......... -...... ..... £U llr1t ..... A -of~·· Md ........ I I .. ...... ...,.. .. ..,......,...,_ .. ....... '°"'*" c...ftlli .......... -... M ...,_ ...... tonlghtMdT~--==-......... tlto-11 ...... Ttoe.ow llWll II,_ 7,IOOtaat. .. M In ... INd 40s 10 .......................... Dellrta .. M CllDudr ................... ... ttoundll.-..a. Nol1Mfn ~ ....... • r-..1n "9 -loWI In the mid 40I to mid 50a. loutftern ~NII" .. M In ttoe 70.. !owe In the 50s. U.S. Tempe ...... ............ .. II ............. .. Le AIMllY ,M. Y. 11 .. =:---,., .. ...... c::··· ..... .......... • 41 n 11 41 C.Jlf. Tempe n . ., --.. ... u • ~ IO • MllM 17 • Aal'*Clly • • ,,...,. • u ........ • • ~ ............ .., • ~ .. ,, ... • • a.on • " ._ ...... u .. ..... N OI ......... 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It .. .. . .. 10 u 71 .. .. .. . .. 17 ,. 71 IO . ,. 10 •. .... 11 ., . .. . .. 10 .. 17 II . .. . .. ..... . .. 71 11 71 11 10 12 70 • . .. 17 • 17 .. 71 .. •• .... 17 .. 17 .. 70 .. 70 IO .. a1 • • ., •1 Bztended Tl dee """ .... T09A'f 1:llLl'I\. 2.1 :n-:r .... 7:11Llll. ... l:lllJJI'. .... ........... .. , ... 4.0 na.Al',r """ ... 1:44 -. 17 ~.::' .. 1:A1-. .. ,1;a1,.111. ... ._..,. ~-...... 4 2 TM -lttle • 1;21 a.1111. ...., 8nd ... ..... ,"" Tile-ftMa· $:17,,M,...., 8ftd -••·11-.111.n••.w. ... .,,. .... 11 .... 11 .... 12 Ten minutes before the royal couple arrived, British -Ambassador Anthony Acland, Con~ul General DonaJd Ballentync and their wives, pulled up in a limousine that had been smashed on one side. The accident, which caused no injuries, was blamed on a driver who ran a red li&ht a fe w blocks from the church, said British consulate official Stcwan Granacr. About 300 people li ned the side· walk across from the church. some pecked under a bus shelter to avoid the occasional showers. As well-dressed church-aoers entered St. Luke's before the service, about 2S fraternity and sorority members whooped and cheered.from the roof of the Kappa Sipla fraternity house across the street. The students, includina one in a South Seas-style men's wraparound skin. occasionally broke into chants and vowed to aercnade the duchnl with a few courses of .. KaPPI Siami Girl ." Yachtsman Byron Farwell BJ ALMON LOCLUEY ................ Byron H. Farwell. 80, a lonatime resident of Newport Beaeh and vet- UNDERSEA FARM TO BE TESTED ••• eran yachtsman, d ied Friday at HOii Memorial Hospital after a brief illness. PromAI bottom then insen ropes in the.holes, which would takt' hold after sand resettles. • Plastic tubina would be attached to the ropes. and attached to the t ubes would be strands of kelp which arow at the rate of about one foot per month. Each kelp forest would avcr-aae about 2,000 kelp plants spaced several ft'ct apart. sai d Streichcnbcracr. In about Ont' ye.ar. the kelp strands would mature. turning the barren ocean bottom into a lush environ- ment which could be home to dozens of species of fish and crustaceans. en<(Sireichenberaer has leased a 10- acrc uncknea plot from the state Depanment of Fish and G ame. located about 200 feet off Balboa Pier. 'Next month. Strcacbenberaer and his all-volunteer crew will bqin cultivatin1 youna kelp off the Balboa Pier, with the intent to bcain plantin& . the fuU-scale model in t~ ocean in tblft months. Farwell WU a vaduate of Harvard "The state of California is involved Military School in Los Angcles and with similar transplant in& schema to Po mo na Col •. k~p kelp beds in aood condition, but The Farwells built a summer home Rodolphe is doinJ his kelp forests on in Newpon Beach in 1910. Byron sand. where kelp in tbetc pens arows Farwell and his family became per- on rocks." said Nonh. ··The IC'COnd manent residents in J 95S. difference is that he plans to raise Farwell .was the No. I mem ber of other crops such as shellfish to make Balboa Yacht O ub,and alsothe No. I it more cronom ical. member of the TranSPllCific Yacht "Rodolphe is a very determined O ub. individual and he·s stuck with it He sailed bis fint Transs-c race in throuah a lot of discourqemcnt," 1923 es a ~n abo9nt the 106- added"North\ .. I would have ajven up foot yawl Poinsettia (formerly Kaittr Iona aao." Wilhelm's yacht), then owned by T he Fa~ll bro thers owned and sailed a '~~ber of boats out of Ncwpon Ha~. both as individual owners and pe en . Durina Wort War II, Farwell served in the Na y from I 942to 19415 as skipper of corvette. subchaaer and a . dn troyer esco9 in anti- submarine wa rfare. After the war, Farwell continued sailina for a few ycars before aoina into powerboats. all of which were called Don Juan. Farwell is survived by his wife Martha: two childr~. Marcia NOile. San J uan . Capist-ano. and Allan Trane, Ncwpon ~ach. He also leaves two brothers, Lyman of New- port Beach, and Felix of Los An~les. Private burial ceremonies well be held at Rosedale Cemetery in Los Angcles. A memorial service will be held at 1 I a.m. Wednesday at St. Ja mes Episcopal Church on Via Lido. Byron Farwell ) Thafs ·the entire process. said Strcichcnbergcr. A muhi-acre plant- ina co uld bcaccomphshed by a dozen experienced divers workina off a simple flantmg chart. But the ben· cfits o the undersea forest arc numerous. One element missina from Streicben~'JC'"~ plan is money, but even that is bqinnina to now in. he said. Streichenbef'ICr and 1evcral Newpon Beach residents liave for· med a non-profit company called Marine Forests a nd have already received approximately S4S.OOO in private donations. he said. To seed a five-acre test plot, Strt'it hcnberger said he will need approximately S 100.000. Streichenbc~rhasalsorecruiteda Walter W. Home. He sailed in two small team of volunteer divers to other Transpacs -in 19417 aboerd assisthim in his testplanting.a ndhas H.B. Grandin's 67-foot ketch spoken before ~veral d iver's clubs Dra&oon and in l 9SS aboard his and colleae claSSt"S to prom ote his· brotn er Lym an's 84-foot schooner COn('Cpl. Seadrift. Ncwpon Beach. The fa mily requests that memorial donations be made to the Midni~t M ission in Los Angcln (for which Farwell wasa director for SO years). to 4 Hoa.& Memorial Hospital or to the Newport Nautical Museum. · .. Our basic J081 is the enhancement of the sea.'' said Streachcnbcracr. who said he has complt'ted some success- ful test plaotinp. ''The sea is depleted. and the need for marine resources is growina. There is a future with the sea that we don't have with the land ." For yea rs. government and pri vate aroups have used steel chains to attach kelp strands to rocks. but the chains rust quickly and are more expensive than the more durable plastics used by Streichenbergcr. The process could eventually be auto- mated. he said. In addition to the potential for harvestina fish and shellfish like abalone or mussels. Strcichenbcrger sa.id the undersea forest could also provide a means of sculpting beaches by P"ventina beac h sand from being washed away by waves or storms. B> placina the forests at strategic lo- cations offshore. sand could be d irected virtually wherever It is desired. he said. Preliminary studies on large-scale plantin1 are completed. sa id Stmchenberter. All that is left to crate is a full-scale model. To that Bill Crawford. a local Realtor and director 'of Marine Forests, said he met Streichenbcrgcr about 10 months ago and was impressed by his ideas and enthusiasm. "When he offered some of the ideas of what he could possibly create. I got pretty u c1tC'd about it... said Crawford. "The most impressive thang about Rodolphe is that, because he's here on a visitor's visa, he doesn't Jet a dollar for this. I couldn't beh~ve 11 at first. He doesn't need any mone) rcall). but he doesn't want any. He lives com fonabl). but frugally. He's doing this b«ause he believes in it. "I beht'vt' in this project. I believe in Rodolphe and what he can do.'' said Crawford. Streichenberger has conducted much of his research at the Kerckhoff laboratory an Corona del Mar with the help of Professor Wheder North, considered by many to be the fore- most ex pen on kelp. Nonh persuaded Stmchenbergcr to bring has work to California after he was snubbed by ~veral skeptical French aroups. North said planting kelp fo rests is not a new idea. but it is Strcichenbergt'r'sapproach that he feels 1s unique "T he y know instinctively that this is a job for tht' fu ture.'' said Streichenberger. A ltho ug h pro ponen ts of Streichenbergcr's pla n are exc ited about its potentia l uses. EXOTIC BIRD FANCIERS FLOCK ••• From A l · StrcichcnberJer's .fntercst in the the expo, s.-rializes ill tam io• flowers cost?'' The bird asked. "How said ... Pret ty soon. they're •nin• to ~ undersea baostructurcs is more ..-.. _ .... esoteric. training. behavior m odification apd much?" extinct unless there arc people to .. Kelp (s beaut a fut.·· sa id caring of birds. Davis writes bird columns. lectures brttd them in ca ptivity." She claimed recent studies, as well across the nation and counsels bird L'k th II bl' · _ .... att m""a Streichenberger matter,of-factl y. 1 c c we ·PU IClku e '" "It's a strong factor in the ocean. a as her own experiences. have shown owners. to save the California condor from birds possess untapped intcllir.;nce. "Thcrc·s a need for it." she said. e t'nct·o throuah ~1·n 1·n --strong factor in ocean life. Creating x 1 1 n -,. "We're in t~ same room. t's1'ust "These auys arc cxrwnsive and t'vi'ty •~--r known •"• IV'ft.. m ore of it can only enhance the ocean 'r.> -1 • ~ ........ ~ as a whole." that we come in the front door and they're gonna outlive you." aramsarcsuccessfullyreturniD(Other At the same time as the kelp birds come in a side door.'' Davis ot~~. ~~~u~:S~ w;!h~r:l t~ species to the wilds. he said. plant in~. Stmchenberger and his sa~he knows of birds that can open Oranse County Bird Breeden. Bird fa nciers also arc brinaina joy team wi ll also be experimenting with combination locks by listenin& to the The orpnization's primary aoaJ is to tfihcedelderlhy or obther:s trodwho ~ anificial undersea homes for m ussels. cylinders click. much like a skilled to educate the ~neral publoc about chon '" tho omes h.Y and ucint. attaching some to the plastic tubing safe cracker. She has seen birds use birds, Bahner said. t cm to t e owncn •P an care of used for kelp, while building 'metal "tools .. to preen themselves. Me.mbers of the aroup breed every· birds. Bahner said . webbing on the ocean floor to au ract Davis claims some birds even seem thin& from exotic macawstocommo n ••Jt's noun easy job. 24 ho urs a day. others. For the future. biostructurcs to carry on conversations. She o nce canaries. seven days a week," he said. "Sort of for otht'r creatures arc a definite scolded a bird tha t had chewed up "With all the deforntation eoina like raisin& children. possibility. he said. some silk nowers.. askina it rhetorical· on around the world many birds arc "But the birds arc a lot more fun "I ho pe to stan a marine forest ly, "Do you know how· much thote losina their natural habitat." Bahner than childrtn are.'' movement that will spread beyond -------------------------------.... ...,. __ _ Newport Beach. I have already heard· from other countries interested in this. I r~all) believe 1t is the future.'' .said Strcichenberger. "And people will say all o ver that it began in Nt'wport Beach." PASSENGER COUNT SLd>S AT AIRPORT ••• PlmlAl {owrtyina their passcnacr lim its and IO we cut them back substantially." •lw •id. ~ Tiie fiaures concernina acncral e. tion have prompted fears amona • small aircraft pilots that small· aviation Is beinJ sq~ out of Onnee County by airline traffic. ' Small aircraft opei:aton say it is ~i... increasanaJy diflk ult to ......... he-down ~ and that tp1CC1arc t>Komina more expensive. --Offlea -"""' .., " C-•-...... c. .. _. _ ... IMO C:O..• Wew CA ~ ~1lot~ also say that fli&ht rqu· lat1ons an the Los Anseles basan. which includes Oranse County, make 1t difficult for small plann to fty. One such rule requires that un- monitored aircraft fl y over the Los Anaclcs tower control area at a minimum of 12.000 feet, a 'hei&ht not attainable by some small planes. Several pilots complained in ~nt interviews that they were ftthna increasingly unwelcome at John Wayne Airport and that small plane pilots were movina to Chino and other small airpons outside ofOranee Co unty. Ge neral aviation still 1a1ounts for m ore than 80 percent of the ftiahts at John WayM Airport. Murphy said the nationwide trend trond to ward reduced small aircraft traffic was partly due to hiebef aircraft prices and rilint fuel COlb. -=.::- ~--"'2•'8 --6 --M2 ~· .. ausr• •11 • ...,.f"..., I W-.. __ ..,.,..., COpyt .... t ,.., Ot.,. c-PUbWWIQ ~ Ho ,_ 110--....,._,. 9CMOl191 "'-"• 01 .0..t- _,. ,...... """' .. lepf~ ~ _.., .,.. -ol~---What do ~ like aboul 1M Daily Pilo&? What don't you like? Call IM a.mber above and your m= wiU bt teconled. vuacriMd ud de- ti v 10 tbe ~le editor. . ne --............. ICrVtCe may ... uted IO rec.iord lealn IO IM editor Ola Uf IOpic. Cornnbuton IO ow Lenen cohuna mUll illdude tbcir naaM ud .... ,.!MM DUIDber -~Uoa. Tells• wMl'aon your mind. ,., ... _ .... .,, ... -.... ~--....... ..,.,,.., -a-y • '°" .. noi ·-,_ '°"" " , • "' c.-...... IO •"' .... 'fOlll tGOr .. IA ....... Cit 111 11 T111,• 1n•z' --~ .. ~ .,.... , .... ~ The largest selection in ' Newport Beach l'ailo ~'··~ • • ' ... • • • . .