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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1988-04-05 - Orange Coast Pilot•. • * TUESDAY, APRIL 5, 1988 25 CENTS Home Ranch d .ecision delayed .. It's sn our ~t interMt for the~ela' tht' drc1s1on was continue (delaying) until the) run taken v.11hout .allov.1ng c1t1zcns a afoul of the law:· Ja} Humph re) said chanu· to n>mml.'nt and that st't ponement. Council postpones vote on pr0ject amid unsubstantiated rumors of a lawsuit Mayor Donn Hall 1equestcd the delay, saying he had heard threats of a lawsuit over the referendum. Hall rcfuwdrto say who made the threat. and both the develoix-r and oppo- nents denied doing so. footage. traffic and building heights. The 96-acre site 1s bounded b) the San Diego frccwa). Sunfl(lwer A venue, H'atbor Boule' ard al"ld Fa1rv1ew Road. The city has to file its No em~r Wheeler nipping al Hall's heels By JENNIFER WEBER °' ............ The council voted 4-1 to give the city attorney two weeks to review the referendum. which seek'> to repeal the &eneral plan amendment coven ng the C J. Se&erstrom & Sons development in nonh Costa Mesa. Councilman Dave Wheeler. a supremer of the referendum. voted against the pos1- "We have. never threatened a lawsuit 1n connection v.1th this issue. e'er," said Malcom Ro<.\. Scgerstrom v1cc.pres1den1 '\ suit 1n the future 1s ··stnctl) spec:ulauon." he said. O pponents of the pru)«'t obJCCt to the amer:idment. sa) in@ 11 was drafted too hast1I> and the <oupponing 1nfor- mat1on v.as riddled ~1th errors ballot measures Wlth the coun1y b\ Wheekr mdde sc' era I obJe<:llons 1n Aug.12.aspokeswo manwiththeclt; ,ain v.11h tt.t ll 1.utting him off or clerk's office said. 1gnonng him But v. hen Wheeler With the postponement. the coun-accu~d Hall uf .. railroading.. the c1f sttll 1s faC'ed wnh three C'ho1C't>S o n , otl.' 1hrough th<." rounc1I. Hall handling the referendum. Q,enurn snapped ")vu n: J hllle bit o ut of Concerned about threats of a lawsuit. the Costa Mesa City Council agreed Monday todela~ a dttision on when to ho ld a citywide vote on the controversial Ho me Ranch develop- ment. .\ spokc!.man lur Costa Mesa R~1dent~ for Re\poo~1bk Gro~ th, the group that 1.:ollect('c1 ~. 966 \ ahd signature~ to force thl' referendum said hl' was pkased ~•th the dela) lhc gc,oua.1 plat> amendmcnL pw lb ~· __.,, referendum on the No' em~r ballot The c111un youp alluall) forced The general plan amendment for the PfOJCCt set hm1t<. o n square . . or call a special elect1nn. A. speC'1al the curri.>nt Jml·ndmt'nt by taking election would cost up 10 S50.000 (Pleaee eee BOllE/ A.2) Evan Mecham was re- moved as governor of Arizona in the nation's first impeachment of a governor In 59 years./ A4 Coastal view ........ ...,_.,Lee,.,.. Sports Angels, Dodgers get off on the wrong foot./81 CataUn• laland atretchee acroee the borlson d~ a •11D8et lD Bmatlnaton Beach. Forecuten prom.t.e dear aklee and moderate temperaturee followt.nc earlymornlq low cloada today and Weclnemday. Index Advice and Games Bulletin Board B'usiness Classified B6 A3 B4-5 88--10 B7 CoulitianS rub elbows with Reagans Comics By GREG ltLERltX ud JONATHAN VOLZltE ot .. o.lr ........ Death notice Entertainment Opinion PoHce log 810 A7 A6 A3 Earl Rippee adm11s that it's not eve!) day he dines on gnlled Italian cgaplant T1mbale. about their ranch. were ·Nanc) and Ronald Reagan The president and first lad) were 1n to" n for a C07) lunch at a Coto de Caza home to help raise funds for the rroroscd Ronald Reagan Pres1dcnt1a L1hrary. Tile library. sla ted forconstrucuo n in Ventura County. 1s~pected to cost appro~1ma1el) $60 million and will contain ~ords and h1stoncal ac- counts o f the e1ght-~ear Reagan admsn1stra11on The SI 00.000-pcr<ouple luncheon al the home of de' elopment magnate Wilham L)on a1trac tt'd a total of a bout 50 people. said Rippee. >Aho a1tended along with his wife Barbara. both 'residents of Ne"pon Beach. Rippee 1s chairman anrl CEO of the .\n\ll Corp. of lr\lnl' a financial holding com pan~ .\she and his ..,,fe disembarked from the prcs1dent1al helicopter. the presi- dent dechned to ans~ reponers· qu~t1ons on the current pres1dent1al campaign and m1hta~ actt\lllCS in Central .\menca .. It "as a' t'I") pleasant e'ent:· said Rippee .. L'il,och v.as ve~ nice and the president 1s a great ~on' ersa11onah t He's vef) alcn and"'"' and be lool s great I think he looks bc'tter in person Pubftc notices weather 810 A2 Bue then again. he wasn't dining with average folks Mo nda) afte r- noon. Seated a few tables awa'. chamng easily ~tween forkfuls o(roas1 \(~al R~gan made 11 dear from the ou1set 1hat 1hc luncheo n v.as a fund- ra1s1ng rather than a pnht1cal e'en1 (Pleue -R.EAGAJllS/ A2) Furor over NB principal swap cooling By ROBERT HYNDMAN °' .. °""' ......... T-welvc wcek~havcpaued Janee Ne.wl)On-Mesa Unified School District officials decided two popular high school principals should switch jobs. But talk of the controversial swap has yet to subside Boal'd President Jim ck Boom was attending churd~ services o n Easter Sunday when he was appC03ched b) yet another set of parents inquirin1 about the progress of the transfers. which cake effect July I . .. Yeah, they still bring it up, asking how we're doing:· de Boom says ... Thc)"rc still interested." De Boom has no rearets about the board's unanimous vote Jan. 12 that will S<'nd Corona del Mar's principal of 17 years, Dennis Evans. to Newpon Harbor High an exchange for Tom Jacobson. who hao; been principal there for 12 )'cars. "I thank it's important in a d1stnct our size to share the talent and mo' e the JXnple around:' de Boom said ... These two high !)Choo! principals should ha"e ~en switched a long lime ago." While many might j gree with that philosoph), 11 failed to quell prottsts "hen N<'wpon-Mesa schools suix-nntendent John icoll proposed the pnnc1pal swap late last }car. H undreds o~rents said the popular pnnc1pals were '*Orking well in their current positions and argued that a trade between n\al h!gh schools was unnece~ry. and poss1bl~ cou ntcr-producllve. .. Both schools are" inners. This should not~ something tampcrt'd with." said one of several parcnts who attended the Janual) board mttung ... Therr's overwhelming parent support to leave things :tlone." Anger over the dec1s1on grew into a shon-hved efTon to organize a recall of four of the seven Newpon -Mcsa trustees. .\nd e\i.>n nov.. then: 1s 1alk ofrcn\lng the dfbate v.Mn four seals arc up for elcct1on in November 1989 Bnan The not. n leader of the recall efTon. s.a1d \1onda~ 1h:n the-effort-wattbandon«i~c-n suppont>qan 10 \\3DC: "Instead of going forward with a recall. v.e felt 11 v. as better to renego11a1 e .,.,1th them." Thenot said "But 11 became clear that Corona del 'far did not ha' e the 0 ' el"IA helming suppon for a recall that v.e had on the other side of the ba' at :-.:e"'pon Harbor High .. Recall supponers had targeted de Boom. Tom \>.ii hams. Jud' Franco and Shem Loofbourrow. The three remaining members. ~ho represent districts IO Co lJ \ksa. v.en.- e \duded But The not said Loofbourro" apparent I~ en JO~ s v.1desprcad suppon in the Corona de! Mar area and a re(:aJI of her m11tht be difficult lkcause a recall ofa board maJOnt~ v.as ~ eee PIUJllCIPAL/ A2) Eminent domain assailed 'inHB Reside nts fflsist city's downtown project is illegal _ By ROBERT BARKER OI .. o.lr NM ... Huntingto n Beach res1dents spoke out Monda) against eminent domain -the taking of pnvate propcn) by cit) go' cmmen1 for :i fair market pnce set b~ a upcnor \oun Judge - in connecuon v.1th the downtown l't'de' elopment pins Jim Koller. v.ho o~n-. the Crocker :"auonal Banl building at Main and Fffth streets. and another land par~I that has also been condemned. ac- cu~d officials at the Cit' Co uncil meettng of ac\mg 1\lcgall~ . Koller. 11 McDonnell Douglas engi- neer and a real estate brnker. da11)'led that 11' officials erred"" t~o counu Emplo~t't'S alleged!~ didn't consult him about rede,elopmcnt plans. a rcqu1rcm~nt that Koll<'r said 1s re- quired b~ a Cit~ Council rcsolut1p n T he' al~ d1dn '1 ohta1n the rc-qum~d· appro' al of 1"0-1h1rds of the proix-n~ ov. ncrs to build tht' prOJC"C'1 -a pa.rlong s1rul·turt' -on his propen~. he ..aid Jo Craig. Jnu1ber ~1den1. said she found .. e\lremt" opposition .. 10 emi- nent doma in prcxt't'd1 <i~ v.hen she tool around a pet1t10n on Easter unda~ C'halknging t"minent domain Craig 5.a1d she and a C'Ollea.gue tollected 125 s1gna1ure" 1n the down- tov. n area in about t~o ho urs Do" ntov. n buc.ines~ ov. ner Doug Langn in said plans to build a parlung structure ~ould allo" other dl"'- ' clopcrs to put more dC'nsll~ on their land because. ~Ith the c;tructure the) v.ouldn't be rt'qu1red 1n put parking faohues on 1t -::rminen1 _o_m_a_1_n-.,.llrmalce de- ' elope~ nC'hcr ·· he sa1c1 Lange' in al claimed that offiC'1als made an end run b) dedanng that the prupo~ 1v.o to tbrtt·<.tor; parking c.tru~·ture 1c, a Cit~ facility so that It ~ouldn't r<."qu1re 1v.o-th1rd5 approval ol propen' o"ners in the proJect area 1n order to condemn th<' land ~fa,or John Erskine. who told rcs1dc.nt~ that the Cit~ \ounc1l 1s not 1n fa, or t1f ··ramP.nt development." (Pleue -PaOJ'SCT I A2) EX-Reagan aide files suit over his ballot designation Br PAUL AllCRIPLEV ............. not ~ permitted. Nor would she accept a similar pr<>pc'S&I with the same title followed by the desianation "appointed March I~~." cited a section of the Elecuons Code that prohibits the usi of words that wo uld "suaesc an e\nluation of a candidate. such as outstandina. lead· ina. expert. v1nuous or eminent." East Coast cities look at Mesa's noise problems What's in a 1ilk? Votes, maybe. when it's a c.andidate's ballot deita· nation. That's what prompted con- pasionaJ candidate Christophtt CoJt to., to coun Monday~ he filed a petition seelina the riaht to ute his former title as .. senior associate t'Ointel to President Rrqan .. on the ballot. Secretary of State M;m;h Fona Eu informed Cox last week that his propoled ballot deslanation would Cox is a candidate in the 40th Conare:ssional District Republican primary. Under lhc 11ate Ekctioas Code. candidates other than dected officials art limited to tbree wonts in their balk»I desipa&ioM. E1tcted oftkiaJs ha~ no limitationl. COJt submitted an alterna•i~ dn- ianation, ·-senior Reqaa Countel- or." that met the dar.wont limit. That. too. ... n:ja1td bJ Eu. who Secretary of scate !lpoknwoman Melissa Wa~n said the use of Rcapn's name in &he ballot dnil· nation fit thac description. "We ha~ always rri«ted proper names bccaust wt fttl it suaests an '''aluation of the candidate.~ Warren said. "It should show what a person does., r:ather than who he is.·· Co>. disaa~. "I think the 1«-(PI•• -coa1 A2) Bulldlag_ laspectOr's daplmr illegal I ronfrom~ John (Htnpaai about 1t and he ldm1tted 1t dtd r ust. Wtkzak said H1npl~ wan m::invc identical tratnwnt fOr the '-iolltJOn as an) other rnidtnt He wtll ht ordered to remo,·e the ~t11'1 lttOftd unit. and fatts nvil pcnahta if he rcfUtn to do to. Frank •id the city alto will in\·eaiplf ttlt i~t fOr ~­ pun11ivt enioft •iftll the empto)'tt C>ft'klals refUtied to ..dste"Ula tht (Pia an -aca-.c:roa .. /AI) Amphitheater woe shared with towns considering arena BJ JDfNIPEll mn ............. Costa Mftl is .,ctanc_ a ~1.1uon. and 1f1 noi one C1t)' fat.hen would want 10 h.iphpt in thrir four~ llols.a News ol noqc probtems at thc- Pacific Amptuthatrt has reached East Cout can.. and fofb on the far end of the conunent are ,mana an tOUC'h With COlta Mesa ~ts to find ouubout a.mplu_lhfatn won. K.attn,M1llar. an Kttvtst wnh the atittfts• 1JC*P IUlftl W Plc1fk Amphathe91ft. Mid *' Ml m:ietvt'd tdtphoDt eds from P"ot* 1n New York . Cot.ntct1cut and MISlllC'huatns.. T1w)' aU WM\t to ""°"" tht COMA Mna IOURd setuation ftom their Wnt CoaM C'CNllM. ~of thtcalas ..... *"' tbc problem from publt._, ~ about Jim11anten bttwtte the Paa fie mph1theatre and tht ~wc:ethtf Post Pa' 1hon 1n Columhla. Md. That amph1the~ter also 1s owned b)' the edcrlandcr Entertainment aroup. and rcs1dents l1v1na n<-ar the ~nut have lodtcd numerou\ complaints o"er conccn no1te. Like the Pac.fie Amptutheatrc. lhc Mcm-.atbcr Post Pa' 1lhon 1s involved 1n ftOIK moononng 1n an cffon to kc-ti> a ltd o n concen no1K and kttp neish· bonng residents happy. In the tin) town of Wilhnston. Conn .. townspcopk thnt havt IOftc ~) ond meTC tdtphone calh -they ha'e taken out ads 1n Ora.net Councy ne-.-spa~n ask1na not~wcar)l COMa Mesa rcs1cknts to cont8Ct them and •ell chcir stones. The ronccm of W111i"11on rnt- dents stems from a pn.,..i by the NNettariiStr Entfna1n~I poup - the same ptOplc who broulht the Pacific U1ph1thca1'°' tn COiia Mtll -to buakt an outdoor •~ dleft. In a Pftttftlataon i• J_,,, Ntdntander "1'fC'Kft\IUVCS WU\• the town bmn"I t!f!•_. ol 1 multitude ol fNlllUfictat mllwll c~nts. la'Ofd•"I to Johll ..._ a rcsideftt ol the Nnl towa. llald; oromlted ''-' Ntdti'81& oe 11 "'""-.. .., ... WaPF ALLOUT IJINGERS ••• . . ca· •••llil.•.-.iw..-. •-......:.:-... .W• • • ...,. ·---..,a~ ''~ ........ o1 ......... mwben could baw Wea - [ 1 ar.t. .... aow I MW a f'Milims lill ol =r:-•~HMt.lrH• md I aiu could r.-tam S50 IO s 100 fiom mch... he said. .. After al. about IO pm:ent o( the .-eeta were llllimt the switda. I tbiM wr could insaantly put on a recall ifwc wanted.·· Theriol, wboays be has no interest in teekin&a IChool board teat himtelf. :0 c1IOn will be made to deht bou'd mcmben when, they Dest .. re-dtction. .. Evcrbody bas an Achilles bed. and I think this issue is theirs, .. he said. ... doubt they will have the pts 10nut'19in." .. My motivation is that I have a deep. deep love for that hjp school ... aid Tberiot. a 1975 .,-aduate of Newport Harbor Hiah. '1be issue is laldenhip and doina what is best for -your ICbool. I think a "°1 of parents as wdl as alumni feel that way.·· De Boom. for one. welcomes any cbaUeGee durina the ~ board dectioDs. He, Williams and Ken Wayman ran unopposed last Novem- ber. .. It would be ~ to have some competition at the polls. .. he said. -1 personally went out tryina to gcncntc aaln'est in people runnina. but there wasn•t much interesL In a democracy. discussion of the issues in healthy." De Boom says he and other board member$. did not anticipate the emotiooAf reaction from parents at botb tdM>ols to the prof'OSCd swap of principals. Even so. Ix' said. it was am~t to follow the recommen- dation ofSuperintcndent Nicoll. who pr'OpOled the transfers. Decisions as to which tchools principals shoukl be assianed to should be the prerogative of the district superintmdcnt. de Boom says. To lake away that riaht. he said. would be tantamount 10 intcrferin& I with. the personnel drqs1ons of). policy rq,rdu'I principal tnutsfers police or fire chief. would help .prevent a repeat of the .. As beard president. my interest controversy a&nited last January. fiaht now is on developing a transfeT ··1 was u~t that so many people policy for the district ... de Boom said. thouaht that if they coukl Ft enouab Currently, district officials arc voices out. they could change the pthcrinc information from school decision ... de Boom said ... That was districts throuabout the state regard-unfortunate. Once you ~t a supcr- ina bow translcn of principals arc intcodent's riaht to ma""ke USJgn- made. De Boom belicvM that a policy men ts up to a public vote. you have to in which school offici1ds art trans-start askina who•s the one in charge." fttred before five years. for example. Even so. Theriot and others remain could become part of 1hc Newport-critical of Nicoll's handling of the Mesa school district•s policy. transfers. The ammt po19 leaves such .. He offered no explanations for his ~ ~o the diSC'l"Clion of the ac:tions. •• Theriot said. -The days of 5'QJC11D L cronyism and t.ckroom politics are ... thiok. this is one aeu that will be out an Orante County. Nicoll is a cba"llCd toa 'time-cenain ·policy, .. de vestiec of the past. .. Boom said. -1 also think We should . Theriot also belicv~ that school live notice Feb. I each year notifyina board effons to ~ policy now principals of their comin& assign-will not queU opposition when mcm- rnents... hers run for ~lection. Public ditcussions or such a new .. I promise you. it will be brought policy wiU be hekl by the school board • up.apin. It will be the hottest topic of now th~ July, de Boom said. the election," he said ... Ifs not a dead • He belic•es a more straiabtforward issue.•• INSPECTOR'S DUPLEX VIOLATES CODE ••• Prom Al possible consequences facing lel;al." Hinpla. ~ said many of the owners - As Frank discussed the matter ~y some elderly with fixed-1acomes and todlly. dozens of South Laauna ra.-some artists with an otherwise un- dents -who own or live in ill:cJll steady income -count on the rental teee>nd units -marched on City Hall income to survive. Anet the seconds in an, efl'on to persuade officials to arc about the only houo;ing available. leave them alone and !lat them live in he added. peace. ..we·re probably talk in& about 600 The incident hiahbal1ts a battle in renters. Where arc th<>St people going 1...,.na Beach. in whkh city officials to live -ccnainly nnt in Laguna bave w..,:d a war of sorts to eliminate ~h ... Turkot said. .. For the city to ICCODd Wlits from an estimated 27S fttl like ifs OK to get rid of all th~ lilomel ia-Soutb La&una. which was renters is crazy ... annexed to Laguna Beach at the start But Councdman Robert ~ntry of the year. said the council tonight will consider .. TbccountyletSouth Lagunapow an ordinance that· would force out up as a beach community and people most occupants of st"COnd homes built what they felt like building... within five years. Exet"ptions would said Dou& Turtot, a member of the be made for residents older than 60. A.aociation to Preserve Diversity.• he said. "'Unlcu tbcrc is a severe hazard. they .. The county handeJ over com- should leave us alone and make It plaints they received. and ~· .. 'C received more. They are in (si._ family) zones and ¥>1M'thina must be done. so we're doing it ... Gentry said. Wilczak said the city hired an additional inspector to patTol South Laguna and handle complaints there. Frank said that section ofthe city has the hi&h~t concentration of illegal SttOnd units. "All beach cities have the problem to some ex tent because the property is so valuable and there is a lack of rental accommodations." Frank said. "But it is pretty clear that thcre is a much. much. much higher number of illegal units in South uguna." Officials blamed la" county ·en- forcement in the previously unin- corporated area for the high number of zoning violations. MESA'S NOISE PROBLEMS SHARED ••• Prom Al iatives. Broadway musicals. dassical music. A peat place to have hiah IChool paduations. An occasional pop c:oncut... along the tines of Barry Manilow. • 8edt and some other rcsidrnts were ~~population 4.800. is in aortbeaSlem Corinectirot. about half an hour out of Hartford on Interstate 14. It is a Nral town with no stwcn. I--"'-,-~~ ~y-is dnWTI from Karby wells. Willi.D110n has no police depart- ment. State uoopcrs roll into the villlle from .tbc ~t town. ei&ht miles away. Willinaton residents talked last year about takina on a full- time ollicer. but dccickd tbc SJ s. 000 au...i priclc 1a1 was too SleCp. If Nederlander. which has an oplioa on ~ly SOO acres of land in ta.e area. moves into town. residents would need two full-time tr<>QPCn. said Irene Gantick. another activist said. with Friends ofWilling1on. Concerned Cittzcns of Costa Mesa Conccmcd about the problems is walking carefully around requests associated with such thcatcn -for information. fearing that some druas, akobol. traffic and noise -the callers m~ be associated with the aroup put ads in local newspapers in Pacific Amphitheatre. with whom the Costa Mesa and cities in Maryland. citizens· group is embroiled in law- Michipn and Massarhusscts that suits. featured similar venues. "It's not entirely improbable that ··we found out that was only one our opponents will 1~ to elicit side oft.be story," Bede said. ·nfonnalion from us;-"-Mlllanaid-. Frie11ds of Willintton bis recCiv Millar has told calkrs to ask for about 60 letters in response, a quarter advice in writing. of which arc from Costa Mesa Still, the calls have been an educa- residcnts. and most of which were tion for her. negative. --- "There seems to be really a com-.. Boy. you know. what's with these mon theme here. People seem to people? .. Millar said. "You'd think think it•s really an intrusion. into they'd learn from one arena to pcoole's lives.. that it ruins .their another. Well. I aucss I ans.;a\;d my quality of life. hople are tdlin& us. own question. They care' more about 'Do somcthinaabout it while you can money than about being nri.ifi6orty. before it's too late. Because you·n be All they're really intM'CSted in as really sorq..oncc.it ~in.' .. Gantick. makina-m<>My.·· COX FILES SUl'f OVER BALLOT TITLE ••• ..._Al rewy of-~ is dead WT'Oftf.: .. lk arpcs that less .,afic desig- .... won't ~ve votCT'S a dear idea al wMi lie did befon-quinina his Mile HCMlle job to run for~- For i~. if w dcsipation ...... presidential countdor ... the .oecr c1oan•t know whether it was wida the p11esident of the United S..S. a ccwporation. " colleet or a ~ of otbcT' ~lions. Col -h if die Voltt llndenaood it to w * Mtion's pesideat. that t 11 ·1 Im doesn't tcf1 w6idt prai- ... C-.-S. ...., ~ with 'Wllitc How Ca is it·s ambipoal. IOO, .. he llil. •h doan•t •Y wllict. White ...... c. ---· C-.._CA _.._ ... ,,_C-...._ CA'"8 House you wortcd wath. ··0nc of my ~ncnts worked with the Caner adm1ni~tion. •• Santa Ana Superior Court Com- mis.sioncr Ronald Bautt ap't'Cd to a hcarina. slated tar Fri&ay. Cox may ha~a touah t.ttJe. Warren said 522 c:andidaics will be on ballots across the ~ta~ in June. exctudincjudicial candidata. Based on put dectinu, about I 0 percent of than wiU chal.__ their ballot dcsipatioas, she ";:t The teemary o( S1atc ramy tc.I. But she does ac.. Co' cited a 1912 c:aR beard in c.atibnia ia wlaic:b Sen~t Attomey Gmaal Gcof'lt N icholton 1uccetat.lly cha1lawed the tlnr ""' limit, based on his four-word title. Cox also cited a srrtion of the . Election Code that provides "the wont appointed and the title of the office" shall constitute a valid t.llot dcsianation. Whichever ".>'. the roun Nies.. it will have to decide quickly. Deputy County Countel Slefcn Wcisa, who r•led the IC!CM1'ry of 11ate•s o . in court Monday. said sample t.Jlot materials are altady being typetet by the printer. Friday is the deadline tar c:bueel. Odlcrwite. should Cox win. tk couty could &ct an eapallive -"'t in the «>th COftlSellional Driarict. ~-~ M1' .,._a...,._ tc2 4»1 Jastcall 642-8088 .......... ,.. . ... ... ,_,...., ............. , ... ... ,.._, .... ....... ~--·o..-..a.... ... .. -----..... ---c..a.r ........... -.. .. ....... ., ....... a..._._. .... __._ ........... ....,. ......................... --.... = ·--··--OS.-Ilia~-........ .,....,.. .......... DllJ PilaiC'PWlllll .. ,,...,Cll... , ....... ~ = .... ,_ t f, h I lad • . ·-=--.... · ·-11-·~.na.., .. .... _. ............. ,.,~I: C I I c•w ...... 11' -... _ _.,' s' 1 1 ma1111r .. •11·11 T .......... ,._-.... ................. ............... ..,.,, ..... ..... ......... ,.. ... ... ....... Ot 'Sc T, on 1 • Things will heat up Wednesday "-----..................... , •.. ...... ........ _ .................. -..... ..... eo. ... nc mw-. .......... .,. • .,.orooa1 ...... ..,_. ~-=:-=.. .......... .,..... ..... ... ................. to ...................... '° .. ....... -...................... "°*'*· Alof'I .. Or-.. c... • ............. ....... ..... ~ ......... ._.._ 8-dt ... tonight 44 to 54 . U.S. Temps ~ Andlor ... ..... ::::°"' ....._. a... .,. 51 OrtmllllO • • ... , ,... n • .. '-,._... • 11 .,. .......... ... 43 S1 II ~.u.IN M 41 a • ...... Ore. 14 41 M IO.......... 11 51 .. 10 ""*°"' .. ,, n • ,.,_, 11 u 11 It fllftnoncl 11 S1 ...... .,.._ ..... 51 • Sll~ • u --------------------~ .... Cllw.....,..,SC ~.NC Qllc...,o ClndN'9ll ~ ~Oflio l)allae..F1 Worttl • u Selll.Mle()ty • • ........ 15 51 : : ::... AMonlo. : : Calif. Temps -.. ..,.. ;: : IO 51 8PC*MW 41 SO ......_ .. • 14 ~ ........... ,. .......... 5 ........ ...,..... ~ 51 • • T~t Ptfq 11 • ~ 11 • ::..o::-10 14 a a TOI*!• -n 14 EMNll• 51 40 .... ..,_.. ee ~ .. 42 TllCIOll • SO ,,_ 11 41 ._.. CNI 1f 41 1$ 10 TIAIM 11 • La Aftellla 10 11 ..... Mllta 17 a ~ ~ Del~ DWoft 16 M W_,.lfl011,0 .C. 11 o.lllancl 13 SS ..... Moll6ca ~ 51 n 42 Wlctllla 11 14 "8ao ....._ 1' SI TIMe Vll9w et 41 12 51 ......... , 11 44 T-72 52 .,. • S g R rt ~ etey es 45 v-...~ 10 ,. ~ !! mo epo ..,.,.. n 44 ---------- --...,_ • 41 °'*"" IBPMO Erle ,.......,.., • 44 ........_ .--.. ................ '*'° u • Tides 2S Cit fDOcl. St-100 ~ 10l-* -leftFrendaoo • SO ~ Orancl ....... a 15 .._..._21»-211._yu•-.-....... • .. -.ay -.... ._ ..... I ............ _ ·-.................... ,_.. l t ~ ..... ......... ....--....... .Mc*_,.. ,,.._ -.,....... ..................... _ _. •• ,... --4:11P..,. IS n .....,.,.,........._ .._ .... po1cis•1rM ear 24 '*" ...,... tUIP-"' u T1 • ....... 5p.M. K ...... 0 I • 51 .... 9lecl\ '° MKAl1lu ........ »-41 ...... ., 11 =.. ":..,., t • 11 II ......_ 1111 IP¢ V.. ..... -.... 4Mll ... TOI• 11 40 ::.::r.: ~-pm U : : t:-~~-=--= ==-: :: ...... :. ,,;.:::: u ~Clly LMV.V-l.lt*"-* L...-.. ....... ............ .... .......,. ..... ....... 11 M .... IO II a-.. 1H:1tp.111 ..... WWOl ..... l a .. Surf Report c....... IS II •a:»..-.......... 711plll II II W Cllll 10 U Mooftn..•11:0211111.-llll'OI 14 U WCA,_ -..... &.-.._. • 51Llil __ Tl __ ,_1;_ _____ _ M • ........ ,..,.__ W tt1r L.A...., • A : : === ·~ = =:: .. ~ : Eztended n • ......... .......,. ~ = :-r"':'" • •. ~ __, ..,. nu.-, ""°""' .,. .. ~..... ,. -. ---... ___ ,...,,... 11 • ~c:..::: ... .-........... 11 .. .-.:....._.;k,~,,_,..,,. .... Oftalrll ......... Clly OkWaMClly • •. -...-• ... ~ ..., o..ea n • ....... --.. .. --._... .... ..._......_ ,._ • D ....... .._ .... ., • REAGANSINCOUNTYFORLUNCB ••• halDAl than he docs on television& Rippee said the praidcnt also displayed a wry sense of humor. and told tevcral jokes during his visiL -He made one mnarit that he bad to pinch himself beraute usually people Fl lhinp nanwod after them after they're dead," said Rippee. Judie Argyros. who attended with her husband. developer George A11yros. said the luncheon was "the thnll of m) life." ··He was JUSt charming. It was a spectacular afternoon.·· said Mrs. Argyros. who sat ncx1 to Reagan. "He·s extremely pc~nable. and quite attentive to the guests and what they were involved in." Mrs. ArgyTos said the president conversed about his acting carttr. his love or horses. life in Washington PROJECT ••• rrOmAl asked City Administrator Paul Cook to prepare a public repon on what officials did and didn't do in regards to eminent do main. Cook said that the limited use of eminent domain is n«essary if the city is to accomplish the goal of redevelopment ... Eminent dom·ain is not rampant:• he S3id. "We've almost accomplished all our goals (of land acquisition.)" Cook said that city officials would put the rcpon in writing and make it available an the city elm's offtee and distribute the statement to nc~ papers. -City offte~-took-b~storic action last Monday by staning eminent domain proceedings against the own- ers of five downtown p:trccls. Officials said that mtcvelopment efforts have been "stopped in its tracks .. by land owners who aUeeedly arc ask in& a price twice what the land is worth. Koller. who said h\.' bousht the Crocker National Bank si~ a year IJO· was offered SI. I million by the caty for t.he two parcels. Sources said 4'c was askina-S I .I-million. • and. of counc. his propoted library. Argyros• husband sat witb Mn. Rcapn. whom Mrs. Ar&Yral de-scribed as -bcautifu1. Clllnaias. dcUhL .. Guests bcpn anivina at Lyon's estate around 11 ;a.m. and the R~ agans arrived around noon. The .Reagans departed the ~tate around 2:30p.m. Although not invited to the ex- clusive affair -onlr a~ut SO people were -dozens of Coto de Caza residents lined their strttts to catch a glimpse of the nation's leader. .. They didn't tell us anything about what wa.s going on. but ~ read abou.t i t in the newspaper and~-the Secret Service. so we knew the president was coming. .. said Jane Hamson. w:bo stood on the street with her son. Justin. and dog. Shiner. ··They won•t evtn let us ao back to our houses until ifs OV('r. •• The practice was eviJent. as SCC'ur- ity showed few flaws for the presiden- tial visiJ, which wa.s not v.cll publi- cized by the While House. Members of Reagan's advance team. who stayed at the Ritz..('arlton Hotel in nearby Laguna Niguel. answered their telephone "Newport Beach Si&flal Corps.," while Secret Service qcnts screened everyon( who entered the ptcd Coto de Caza community. Sheriffs deputies on ho~back roamed the hills. as did deputies with dogs. The sheriffs helicopter buzzed circles around the area. and the president's limousine wa.s followed by a Chevrolet Blazer weighted down with sharpshooten dressed 1n bulletproof vests. The president's arrival meant Justin. 11. and several other neigh- borhood kids got an ('Xtra day off school. "This is neat ... Justin Harrison said as tlx' presidential mntorade left. "I've never seen anyt hing like 1t. Except on TV ... Another younpter. Kim Merritt. 10. said she wrote a ~tcr to 1hc president two years ago and rettivcd a letter and photopaph in return. so sceina the president Monday -even from a distance -was "special." .. Ifs pretty exciti~.. said Tye Pettay. 11 . ..We were supposed to have baseball practice last week. but we couldn't bccau~ th<'y were pnc- ticin~ landing the heli<'optcr on our field .• "'This is really uciting for us." said T~'s mother. Suzanne Pettay. "It's usually so quiet around here.·· HOME RANCH DECISION ••• From Al both the city and the developer to court over a prcviou.s vcnion of the Home Ranch project. Superior Court l uctee-T-uUy Seymour fllled mt-WI that the Fneral pl11n and en- vironmental impact rcrort on Home Ranch were inadequnte. and de- manded they be rcworlted to his satisfaction. Sqerslrom Slopped grading work on the projcoct after ~r's Nlifta. It is unclear when or 1f the work can first phue. The J>rojccl includes a 12- and 20-story offttt building. an art museum. a chikl carr facility. res.- wan~~~ ahors.-- Thc rcfttendum is only one prone of Costa Mesa Residents' attack on the project. Tbc group is returnin& to court April 28 to rhaUengc the amendment apin on technical points. The poup bas also collcc1ed eftOUlh sipatures to fortt a reftt- resumc. endum on Metro Pointe. another A Jiant pit and mound of dirt devdopmmt project north of the San remain where padina had SWtCd on · Diceo Fruway near South Coast ()nc.soutb_Coast_PIKr. tbc projecU, Plua.- • The POSH Windbreaker Just enough warmth to take the chill off a cool summer night, yet light weight enouch to keep you comfortable and in style, throughout the leMODI to come Tailored of a eoft pr~Mbed cotton, offered in blue denim and • blue and kluiki chambray. ·-;;------.,_.,~" I ,,, Casino ganies set to aid students "at Laguna High Lajunans will be takina a chance for, rather than with, the.-children's education Friday niaht at a special Monte Carlo Niaht at the city's Recreation Department, SOS Forest Ave .• Lquna Beach. The buildina will be transformed int.o a casino usina coupons to tradr in for prizes. Games will include blackjack, poker. roulette and bi~. Proettds from tM 7:30 p.m. event wdl benefit students at Lquna Beac-h Hiah School. Admission is frtt and more information is available at 497-3311 . ext. 201. Tom•to plant. on ule Studcnt-arown tomato plants will be sold Frid~y at 10 a.m. at Oranae Coast College's horticulture deRanmmt. Sixteen varieties of tomatoes as well as prpper, euplant, squash and cucumber plants are on sale. -There also will be nowcring plants available including marigolds, impatiens. begonias and petunias. Early arrival 1s suucstcd, as they usually seU out by noon. ac-cording to OCC Professor of Honicul· ture John Lenanton. For a harvest of information. call 432-S748. Cancer screening for women Frtt examinations for women will be held a t a pre<anccrscrccninaforwomcnSaturda} IOa.m. 10 3 p.m. at Planned parenthood/ Orange Count}. 180 I N. Broadway an Santa ~na. The services include pap smears. ·prlv1c exams and breast exams. Participants should call Estela Martinez Jt 973-17 33. EartlJwalker to •peak Dave Kunst. the first person to record a verified walk around the world. will speak Thursday at the Newport Ebell Club, S 15 W. Balboa Blvd .. Newport Beach. Kunst will detail his four-year. thr~month adventure at I :30 p.m Call Bernadette Goetz at 6 7J-OS34 for details. ·. Garden party In Irvine A tnp to the Sherman Library and Gardens and Raser's Gardens will bf conducted Saturday by the Irvine Family Service~ Program. beginning at 10 a.m. at the ln inc Youth Services Center. Pan1c1pants will Stt rare cacti and exotic tropic.al "cgetat1on. The cost 1s S7. and funhcr information 1s a'aalablc from Dave Anderson at 6~3920. Service fa.Ir In Viejo .. Reach Out," a community 1nforma11on fai r sponsored b) the South OranJ.c County Communit~ Sen ices Council and the Child Abuse Council, \\Ill be held this weekend at the M1ss1on Viejo Mall. The fifth annual event 1s planned for all da} Saturday and un~~ and will feature vanous human services organilat1ons available in south Orange count)'. Call 364-6636 for additional information. · ~er for slngle Catholics A 'Sanglcs mixer will be sponso~ by the Orange County Catholic Alumni Club Fnday at the Doubletrec Hotel in Orange from 9 p.m. to I a.m. with dance music to he performed by the band .. Rembrandt. .. The dance 1s for singles in their late 20s to early 40s and there 1s a pre-mixer S0C1al hour at 8 p.m Jackets are requ1~ for men and tickets a.re SIO at the door. For mo re information call 9S7-012S. • 6 p.m. La .... ~ City CoaclJ, round chambers. SOS Forest Ave. • 6:30 p.m. F .. laJa Valley Qty Cquctl, council chambers. 10:00 Slater Ave .. Fountain Valley. • 6:30 p.m. lrvtae City Coucll, .council -~bers. 17200 Jambortt-ROld. • 1 p.m . Newpert Ba~ Parb, ~ ud Rttreadee C..miuloa. council chamben, 3300 Newport Bl vd .. Newport Beach. • 7 p.m. H•tiq1em ~ Pluala& Com· ml1sJ•, council cham~rs. 2000 Main St. • 7 p.m . Oceu View Sdleol Dl1trkt, district board room. 16940 B St.. Huntinaton Beach. Wednellday, Appl 6 • 9:30 a.m . Orqp C-ty ....,.. of Sefer· vlson, board hearin& room .. Hall of Administration. llfCivic Center PliD. ~nta Ana. Orenge COMt DAILY PILOT /Tue.dey, Aprjf 5, JNI • Al . Vegas to ban associate of Paduano By JONATHAN VOLZ&E was Paduano's co-defr ndant 1n a 1986 ....... ,...... r federal fraud case. That case ended 1n acquittal. but Another acquaint.a~ o( ~puled New-Paduano now awaits tnal on 71 rac-ketett- pon Beach orpruzcd crime raawe Robert ing chartts m connection with allqcd "Fat Bobby" Paduano is in troubk. as armed assaults on five Oransc COast Nevada pmm& official., moved to exclude homes an an allcacd atttmpt to pm control a former co-deftndant of Paduano's from of the Newport ~ch cocaine martet. casinos in that state. Anottlh<-acquaintance of Paduano Michael Anthony Rizzitcllo, 61 . was.,.. George .. 8 11 George" Yudzevich. was included in the last of three men the state's found executed in Irvine last month. Gamin~ ~ontrol ~!d . nominated .to Ahhou&h he testified heforc the count) Nevada s black book. said board ChaJr· Grand Jury in Paduano's case autho ntics man M_ike Rumbolz. said the slaying was mO'l"e likely connected R1u 1tello -a reputed me mber of the to Yudzcv1ch's testimony against a Ntw state's only inbr~ o~niz~ cnme family. York crime fa mily last year. the Southern Cahfom1i\ Cnme Family -Paduano was listed amona 92 State ' . residents b) the California Attorney General in 1978 as being acuvc 1n o raaniied cnme Riuilcllo 1s also included m the state's cxpnized<nmc reports, and Rumbolz said he should be included m the casino black book because of his rnm1nal record and "notonousand un~vory reputation.'' Also incl uded 1n Rumbolz's nom1· nations art former Stardust Holcl ex- ecutive Frank · "Lefty" Rosenthal and James Tamer. a former entertainment d irtetor al the Alladin Hotel. The thrtt have 30 days to request a heanna before the Nevnda Gaming Com· m1ss1on. which has th<' final sa} on who 1s included 1n the book. Nine names arc on the list. Rumbol2 said 80 or 90 people arc also under invesuption for possahle inclusion in the book. Rumbolz s.a.ad R1uncllo was rcleatcd from pnson an Februarv 1988 and pm1na officials arc not cenain where be 1s hvina. Rumbolz said R1221tC'llo had 1 "history of cnmmalat) datm& oack to 1962.'' He said chafJL'S apmst R 1zz1tello included armed robbel). k1dnapp1ng. ra.cltetcerina and c~tonaon. R1zz1tcllo. Paduano and Nicholas Nardi "'Cf'e andJctcd b) a federal grand JUfY of bnbing an official ot n stock rqinration and transfer firm. then "t'llana the stock for $144.000. ~!eking the high cost of stamps in NB~· By GREG iLERllX °' ... Dellr ......... In case you didn't notice. the clock wasn·l the onl) thing that leapt ahead this v.cekcnd: The price of a domestic postal stamp Jumped from 22 to 25 cents But through the end of toda~. ~ou can actual!) turn back thl' clock on postal pnces. counes) of Post Box Newport in Newport Beach. Through S p.m. todnv. Post Box New- port will conunuc what has become a tradation of sons at the postal business. The 25-cent stamps will be sold for a paltl) pncc of .:!O cents each. said Post Box Nev.port co-owner and manager Linda Hard\. This 1sn 't the first tame Post Box Newpon. 3857 Birch c:;t .. has offered m custome·l"'S a chance to rut one O\cr on the U.S. Postal Service. When the price of a stamp hopped from 10 to 21 cents last vear. the business sold a limited number o·f the ne"' stamps for onl) 18 cents each. Hard\ makes no bones about her motives for the bargain-basement stamp • sale . .. We're hopmJ to generate ne" cus- tomers here:· saad Hardy. "When we did this last )tar. we got se' eral ne" customers so it "as "onh"'hile:· There as a limit on both the number of customers and number of stamps the) arc eligible to purchase. said Hard). Onl~ the first 500 custo mers "'II be able to take advantage of the stamp .deal. and each customer v.1ll be limited to purchasing three books of stamps. Hard) estimated that if tht maximum number of people bu~ the ma"mum number of stamps. the t-usincss "'II bt' out about S 1.500 Linda Hardy Crtiht) .ell• new 8tampe at a bu&ain Jane Gillmore at Poet Boa Newpon. The 25- rate to (from leftl Mitra Butanl, PbyW. Cueo and centen will be 20 centa tbroqb today only. Japanese culture cite'd in slaying of 2 young children By~ AIMClaled Pttss Tihbeault. It was set 1n the living r(j>Om and caused an estimated SI no.000 damage. 1" Japanese mother and her small t"'o Sakai. who mo"ed w th<' nited Stales. daughters died in a murder-su1c1de called from Kobe. Japan. about eight years ago. .. O)aku shanju" at thl' famil~ home an and hic'fhusband. H idco from Yokohama. Anaheim after the d1stresS('d woman set a were dcscnbcd b) acquaintances as quiet room ablaze. police sa1c1 Monda). and hard "'orkmg people. Mitsue Sakai. 28. wac; found Sunda" in a Sakai worked at the ~insu' osha bedroom along \\llh her daughters. Se1ra Japanese restaurant 1n ~nahe1m. and her Cand\ Sakai. 5. and Rina Stephanie Sakai. husband 1s head chef at the .\magi 4. All°thrc·c died of smolte inhalation. said Japanese restaurant an Ruena Partc. Anaheim Detccll'c Sgt John Haradon. Yosh1kazu Suzuki. owner of .\mafi The motive for the c1eath was murder· restaurant. said the couple had met at has suicide. Haradon said. based on physical restaurant about seven )Cars ago when e ' 1dence found at thr home and inter-Malsue "'orked there as a waitress. vi~ the v.oman'o; husband. Hidl'O-:--"ff>hc lost i10prtir somcth~­ Thc Saka1s had been ha' mg mantal cannot let the children hve." Suzuki said. problems. "I kno"' of man} cases m Japan hke that." On Sunda~ ,gncf-stn~ ken neighbors left .\n estimated 300 cac;c-s of oyako shanj.u bouquets of fru1f and flowers an the front arc reported each )car m Japan . yard of the home on West Hamett Lane. .\lthough O)ako shinJU 1s illegal in "The) were so cull'. the little girls.·· Japan. 11 is considered an honorable way to neighbor Georgia Rivard saad ... Just d1eand lingers in the culture. said Mamoru dolls... lga. a professor of soctolog} at California "O)aku shinJu .. 1s a Japancsc trad1t1on State C n1vcl"'S1l~. ~onhndge. and author fo \\h1ch parents planning su1c1de feel of "The Thorn 1n the Ch~santhcmum: cultural!) obliged to k10 their children so Suicide and Economic c:;u~ in Modem the} will not be orphan... JaP3n:· Ex-FV man who . gunned down wif t; faces life in prison By 808 VAN EftEN °' ............. Tcl'T}' Hannum has admitted shootin& his ('Slf'an~ ~ 1fe to death in IQ 4 and now a Nc"'pon Bcach111~ must decide whether he 1s guilt~ oflil"'Sl-degrtt murder Hannum. 54. was arrested last June in Nonh Carolina. where ht' had fled after the sla~ ing. "'h1ch too~ place at a Wcstmanstt"r automobilt dealership Hannum. a form{'r Fountain Valley carpenter. and his wife. Shirlc.-~ \\Cf(' reponedl) regular custC'mcrs of the dealership "here the shooung occu~ .\ "'llncss testified that he sa~ Hannum point a gun at his ~1 fe and hf(' h 1 rle~ Hannum died of ~ounds from two 38-ahber bullets.. according to a {'Oroner·, report. H as anome~. Ocput~ Pubhc Defender JcfT Lund. said V.edn~~ that h<' bchc'ed there was ample t'' adence Hannum killed his '41fe Lund conlcndcd, hi.)\\ ever. that the shooung was a cnme of passion and that Hannum should not be con' 1cted oifinHicircc_murder ~ThOuiflthc coupk \l.Cn' separated. Lund argued that Hannum still lo' ed his ~1fe and shot ber in a fi1 of rage after learning that she was sc'uall} '"' ohed \\Ith another man. Dcput' 01stnct .\ttomc\ Doug\\ oodsmall argued. ho"' ever. that the shooting was premeditated and t t-iat Hannum intended lo kill his "1f(!. Hannum 1s also ch.:irged with kidnapping and,auto thcf\ for allegedly t)'l"I up a Stanton woman and 1:ik1ng her car af\er the shooting. If convicted on a" co!ts. Hannum could get :!5 years to life in pnson. Woodsmall said. Lund and WoodsMall ade their clo~mg statement\ behind locked doors Monda~ at Harbor ~fo nac1pal Court. ending th<' two-"~ tnaJ. Supenor Court Judgt Robert C Todd had closed tht> courtroom to the pubhc. reponcdl> to pre,ent the JUI)' from being disturbed b~ tht rominp and ao•nas of spccwo.rs.. T e fire "as reponed at 12:46 a.m. lga said the i:nm~ 1s most often ••••••••••••••••••• .-Sunday al'td controlled at I :06 a.m .. said committed by mothers who have mone~ Fire Department dispatcher A.J . pro blems or b3d mam:igcs. Gunman rObs FV restaurant .\ homeo"' ner in the.-IQ()()() block of Kcs"'1ck. Lane alleged!' grabbed a club and chased alter stvcral "punkel"'S" "'ho allegedly tned to sell the .BO block of Jasmine someumc over the weekend. • • • Sc,·cral rare aold coins wonh about • • • T-..o men suspected of be1na bur- glars were cont.acted ~ offictn as . the~ chmbcd a ladder to the SCC'Ond stol) of the Fine Arts \enter. 14321 Yale >\ve. The pair were window "'ashers By JENNIFER WEBER Ot ....... "9t ..... A gun-toting robber got awa) with as muc-h asSSOO Monday night from a fountain Valle) restaurant. The man walked into Stuan Anderson's Black Angus., 17920 Brookhurst St.. pulled a two-inch revolver from a blue denjm shoulder bq and demanded all the money from tM but.ender. Sgt. Larry GriSY.'Old said. r-ta1avau., An estimat~ S«>.000 worth of computer monitors. k<')'boards and mittodaips reponedl)' -ere stolen O\U the •ttkend from an eleetronics company in the 17100 block of Newt.ope Street. • • • A bUraJar $tole 20 IBM Selectric t~ten last wceltc-nd from an oflice in the I 6j()() bled of Hart.or Boukvard. The ao. wa~ aaimaled at Sll.000. • • • A 1980 Datsun lOOZX was re- poncd "*" 1t 12~29 run. Monday from the l llOO bloct nf Lille Way. The tu~,.ed car, liecft~ 2AQ8.S 11. bad a Mop. c-.... A Nt'wport 8e8cb run .... 11 H ~ Moedly •• after he ••• aldy The employee aa ve the robber between S.-00 and SSOO. police said. and the man walked out of the restaurant. He was last seen drivina ~st on Talben Avenue toward Brookhurst. His car was dncribcd as an Amcri- can-tude aold ltdan built in lM 1970s. The suspect was described as be1 na 20 to 30 years oad. 6 fttt tall, 240 pounds. stocky build with a stubbly rear<ndeda wo1nan'1carand Oeeint- Aniceto Orozco Jimina. 2S. was alqedly drivi"I under me influence whtn he slammed into a car waitiftl at a stop ljpt It f.at 17th 5ereet Ud TUJtiaAwnue. Witnes~told police the man tried to drive from the accident. but his car broke dowft. The woman was tam to Hn11 Manorial Hospi&al in NtwpUrt Reech. where she WU tttataf tbr Mr iftjuries and rdeacd. • • • A car ~I (()mpiny~ ttponcd Monday that one of'in 1917 Toyota Corollas had btta stolen. The bwpndy mr. owned t.,, E•ttrfri• lltnt ... ..C. Oft HatM>r Boulevard.. has I ~MC of 2f'CY I ~. • • • Rnidnts an the 600 block of Victona 5nct "1'0f'cd a bu,..iat) at S:l5 p.m. Moftdly. beard. He was wearing a blue denim ~ball cap and a tan shin. Police said th<' cnme probabl~ 1s not connected to a robbcl)' 1n Decem- ber, when a aroup of cmplo)ttS was ambushed as the) walked out of the -same restaurant. Thrtt cmplo)ces ~ injured in the meltt after one of their co-workers tried to WttSt tM handgun from a robbers hand. No annts have been made an conn«tion with that caK. d rugs to his son • • • A neighbor rcponed that s.hc could hear a 1i1o oman )clhng in the :?:!00 block of Dcla1i1oare Strttt. The last time 1t happrncd. tM \aller said. the woman allcacdl) ·1umed on all the ps and tned to blow up the apartment. The woman was taken to Pacifica Communit) Hospital for obRrva- tion. • • • Tv.o men alqedl) armed thcm- sd\'cs 1i1o 1th cue sucks at Lmle Caesar's Puza. 1636 3 &Isa Chica SL. $2.000 "ere stolen from a home in tM 20 block of Balboa Coves sometime bet ... ttn March 28 and unda~ evc- ni ng. lrriDe Apnl Fool's pranks continue to hnacr. Polacc cul down a hfe-s1zc du mm) hangina in the rourtvard ofa rondomm1mum an tM 100 block of Kazan trttt. .... More lhan S I S.000 in ,JtWClf)' was stolen from a ho me 1n the I 00 block of Montanas Estates whe n a burglar smashed a front-4oor wmdow. • • • .\ room at tM lf'·mc Mamou was burglanzcd. lea,·ina a hottl IUHt ...lthout s~.soo wonh of her )CWClrv. • • • A blue pickup truc k ~ponedJy was stolen Monda> niaht from tM 2000 bk>t'k of Harbor Boule,·:.rd. The I 98S Ford ~s a Texas hC'<'ntc plate of 122SCP. to fight 1t out 0' er tM affttt1ons of a llloman. • • • 5(hool officials said that vandals ~,·t ~>-painted sl~M on the •alls of a Coastlint Communit)' Collqt bu1ld1"1 at 20661 Farns-onh Slain woman's head f eund near body site Lant. A prowltr v.:S •,.;.,oned at 10:08 a, fte A.111dald ""- p.m. in the 2300 block of Purdue .... , nt Biac• T"M '-ad of'1 ~woman whole Drive. A woman rnaNllrd 10 ~off a bod) wu fOu..S ill a rwt in S.nta A Che\ ro1ct Ca~;ro's SSOO Mops ~~ ~=~= Ana ... WCICtt .. d*°¥Cftld 1n the ~stolen O\cr tM •ttltend while samt aftll owr 1~ ~ and the car was -.t.ed 1n the 2300 bloct had ~ to bed shonty after ""6· Mthoritees II) dw1 will rely on ..-"" n'aht Monda wht'ft shc' lilmrd tome--·-:....-&. ...._ "-of Harbor Boulenrd. one tf)'lnt to opm her bedroom autCJl'I) ~ .. to.._..tt.,.~ .. "''1m. •1 ...... The woman t''* her 31st AD•'°"> --~eclldayon ........... •••0 • SU'ttt home th"""" a rear door and the t.dt> ~ 9-d. -~ A man called 911 to "Poft that "'9 saw a man 11anct1~ outtlde lwr ~ fou~ an a ~ c:ftltt bed ,.. ... , Of 10 .. jU\'a'lila who rouibty wttt bedroom. SM atW him .._the ... tn Sana..., "4, M · poleu wndu &lat iaftumtt <'f PCP wttt dot• and he )"'fled an ~ity 1t tDOtcswomu MalftC'a n.a... stanilll fim and disturbn• naah· her and nect on foot. C'kmt ol deatb Ma )'ft to bt *'" bon aC'f'OIS from tht Hunta,_on • • • tttm1MCL *added.. ~ Inn on Pac1fec: C"9st Hitf\wa . PoWCf' tools wonh aptWO~aru~ Santa Ana ftlldmts .,..,.., .. * • • • ~ Sl.l S ~ AOkft from a llfllt an s.r..., c.-.,. ~y ... ' \ .. / 'Nightmare over' in Arizona as Mecham ouSted Gan~ of 5 forces death penalty bill from committee PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) -Evan Mecham was convicted on impeach- ment charges and removed as gov- ernor in a finale to I 5 months of national ridicule that hegan the day the political outsider took office. "I feel relieved that this nightma~ is over," Republican St-n. Greg Lunn said Monday after Mecham, a fi rst- term Republican. bcc:lme the fi rst U.S. governor in 59 years to be impeached and stripped of his office. Mecha m, 63. showed no emotion as the Arizona Senate voted 2 1-9 to convict him of trying to obstruct an investigation of a alleged death thre~t and 26-4 of misusing $80.000 from the governor's protocol fund. Twenty votfS w.cre req uired for conviction. Mtnutes later. Mecha m smiled and told repon ers. "Well. they don't like my politics, so "e fi nished a political trial; it's as simple as that." The 30-member Senate defeated. 17-13. a motion to bar Mecham from holding any publ ic office apin. making it unclear whether he will be permitted to run in a May 17 recall election to regain the governor's post. There is no precedent and the matter probably will be decided by the courts. said Attorney General Bob Corban. Aeling Gov. Rose Mofford. a Democrat. became governor wi th Mccham's conviction. "Let us purge our h~ns of suspi- cion and hate.'' she · said in a statement. "I did not ask for this burden. But I do not shrink fro m the • job before me." Mecham faces an April 21 criminal trial on a charge he concealed a U.S. households smallest size ever WASHINGTON (AP) -Ameri- can households have shrunk to their smallest size ever, containingj ust half as many people as at the start of the Civil War. The Census Bureau n·pons that the a verage household contained 2.64 people as of last Jul~ I. continuing a long-term dt.>chne. B~ companson. the 1860 census founct an average household of 5 ~8 people. In Cahforma. the a"erage house- hold contained 2.68 people in 1987. the same as 1n 1980. Whale' the househnld size has dechncd . the number nf households has continued to climh. topping 90 million for the fi rst lime an 1987. the bureau said Monday. Household size 1s "hnnkang be- cause the number of households as increasing faster than the overall population. This as occumng. said bureau population expen Ca mpbell Gibson. because of changes in the countl) 's age.structure. $350.000 campaian loan. The Senate dropped a charge on !hat issue last week. Mecham sai,;i he d id not know what he will do next. including whether he wi ll appeal 10 the t•.s. Supreme C'oun. "We'll know in a couple. three days." he said. Mecham was removt'd less than a week after his family announced the Mecham Pontiac deakrship, which he has owned since 1950, was beina sold because of declining sale~ his son blamed on an "avalanche" of bad publicit)'. "Ladies and gentleml·n.., Governor Mecham has struck out," Democratic Sen. Jesus ''Chuy" Higuera said as he voted for conviction on the two counts. "The only defense that we have heard is ignorance nf the law.'' Higuera said. "The c11iztns of this state will not tolera te this evil insensitivity to the (Arizona) Con- stitution and the laws of the state." The vote ended I ~ tumultuous months that shook this staunchly Republ ican state and brought rid icule and criticism from politicians. com- ed 1a ns and · the comic strip "Doonesbury.·· On bis fifth try for governor. Mecham was elected in 1986 in a thrce-w~ race wi th 40 percent of the vote. He made national headlines his first da) in office b) canceling a Manin Luther King holida y for state workers on the grounds it was illegally created b) his Democratic prede- cessor. Bruce Babbitt. He subscquent- 1) offended blacks. Jewc;, women and homosexuals with ofThand remarks and official actions. An escape claws KeYln Hll1 bolda ap a 25-poand lobeter known u Shirley at hie eeafood atore In Ardmore, Pa. Tbe lobeter, wblcb coald be o•er 100 yean old, wu ... eel from becollllnC eomeone'• Euter cllnner after an animal riCbta &roap conYlnced HUI to allo,w Shirley to be ablpped to Malne to live oat her old aae beneath the Atlantic. " Meese runs into snags in filling Justice Department vacancies WASHINGTON (AP)-A'ttorney General Ed win Meese Ill is having trouble rebuilding the top echelon of the Justice Depanment after two top aides resigned an protest. wnh one planned replace ment blocked b) the Wh11e House and the second openl~ 53) ang he ma) not take the Job. James l.K. Knapp. Mccse's choice to succeed Wilham Weld as the assistant attorney eener11 I an charge of cn minal prosecutions. 1s no longer being considered. a Ju<1t1ce Depart- ment source s~aking on condition of ano nymity said Monday. Knapp. 45. as a deputy assistant attorney general in the depanrnent's tax d1vis1on. Meese had planned to announce Knapp as ha s choice to c;uccecd Weld last Fnda~. Justice Depanment sources said. But the White House held up Meese's plan. rending com- pletion of FBI backgrou nd checks on his choices. Depanment source~ declined to specif) wh) Knapp's name was being withdrawn. Meanwh ile. Arlan Adams. a Phila- delphia la"yer who had been the attome) general's choice to fi ll the Justice Depanment's No. 2 post. sa)S he told Meese Monda' that he as .. not opt1m1sllc" that he " ail he able to take the JOb. In an inter' aew . ..\d..i ms said col- leagues at has la" firm "take a \Cf) dim 'aew of my lea' 1ng at this lime-. .. because he as handling an extensa'e caseload in Ph1ladclph1::i. including a maior an111rust case. :ind "I don't want to lea'e the firm rn the lurth." Adams. "ho ~ould succeed Depu- tv Attom e' General .\m old Bums. i)oanted ou·t that he re\umed privatt' practice JUSt last )Car :ifter stepping do~n from the 3rd CS \1rcuit Coun of Appeals. ·-rve not made a dl·~ 1s1on. but I'm not opta mistic and I tole! the attome~ general that toda) ... ~1c1 Adams. Burns and Weld rec;agned out of concern that the I I-month-old crimi· nal tn\'estagataon of Mt-esc was hun- an~ the Justice Depan ment's OJ)(.'r- auons and image. Asked whether he had an~ qualms about sen ang under Meese. Adam said that "I loo~ at the 1ob as serving the United States go,t>mment and the Department of Justice" and that the an' esllgation of Meese "as not domanatang m) decision." Meese had been prepared Fnda) to announce the replacement for Weld and at least one other top J usu ce Depanment vacanc). the post ~eld b) Associate Attorney General Stephen Trott. who is leann~ to become a federal appeals coun JUdge. Francis .-\. Keatarig II. assistant T rca Ur) sccretaf) for enforcement. as to take the No. 3 drpanment JOb being vacatl!'d b) Trott. Justrce De- pan ment sources said late last week. SAC RAMENTO (AP) -The As- sembly has voted to withdraw a stalled bill from committee for the first time in 28 years, handing Speaker Willie Brown an embarrass- ing defeat enainccred by fi ve rebel Democrats. The dramatic action occurred Monday only moments after a Re- publican lawmaker. Marian La Follette ofNortbrid,c. returned from a crujse to Central America and cast the deciding vote. The votewas41 -29.a bare m~ority of the 80-member lower house. to withdraw a death penalty bill from ttw Committee on Public Safety and place it on the Assembly's agenda. It could be considered by the full ho use as early as Thursday. • Attempts to remove bills fro m committee arc usuallv c-0nsidercd political chaJlenges to · the speaker. who controls the memhcrship of the committees. Voting for the motion were the fi ve conservative Democrats known as the Gang of Five and all 36 Assembly Republicans. Democrats either voted against the motion or abstained. Assembly Chief Clerk Rrian Kidney said he could not recall a bill being pulled from committtt since 1960. La Follette rushed to the Assembly chambers after arriving at Sacramen- to Metropolitan Airport on a fli&ht from Los AngtleslShc had b«n o~ a cruise to Panama and was rctum1na to Los Anacin via Miama when w was alerted by a radio telephone call that her Republican collcqucs nccdcd her vote on the withdrawal motion. -rve b«n in an airplane for 10 hours." she said following the vote. In the past, to avoid ~ucb motions and save fatt. Brown has several times allowed a controversial measure to be put into another bill. such as the parental consent for abonions law pa.ssed la~t year. At issue Mondar was AB3501 by Assemblyman Bil Bradley. R-San Marcos.. which would allow the death penalty or life witho ut possibility of parole to be given to a person convicted of murdering a child under the age of 14. It was ckfeat.ed March 21 by the Public Safety Committee. The Gang of Five memben have been challenging Brown's authority over the past few months. claiming he has blocked lcgjslation favored by the public. Girl's body found in desert believed kidnap victim, 8 By 'he A.1soct.te4 Presa LA NDERS -The body ofa girt dressed in clothing matching that "om b) an 8-ycar-old who vanished last month from a Yucca Valley swap meet. was found Monday by a man walking in the dcscn. authorities said. Gary and Susan Mangos. parents of Sylvia Mangos. who was belie"ed kidnapped from the Sky Drive-In March 27, h2d been told a body was found. However, positive identification was not expected until Tuesday, when an autops) would be performed b) the San Remardino County Coroner's office. said shenffs SgL Dennis Casey. "The hody was decaying and the cause of death was not obvious." Casey said. "The clothing appears to be consistent with the missing 8-year-old." The body was found about 11:35 a.m. b) a man who had been walking his dog in 1~e San Bernardino County High Desert. near Grand\'aew Road south of state Highway 247. about 20 miles nonh of wherc Sylvia was last seen. Braln-damaged Infant near death LOMA LI NDA-\Tennessee infant bom with an underde"elopcd brain ~as sho"ang most of the indicatio ns of brain death after being put into a medical center's program for potential organ donors. a spokt"Swoman said. Hope Lovette Mount. born Friday njght in Knoxville. was delivered to Loma Landa U ni versity Medical Center less than sevm houn before another infant in the bo5pital's donor program died Monday without its organs being donated. Preliminary e\amination showed Hope met "most of the cntena for brain death cx~pt for an occasional gasp and possibly a bhnk reflex," spokeswoman Anita Rockwell said Monday evenins. Kay Mount. who gave binh to the girl at th<:' University of Tennessee Medical CenteT. and her husband, Rick. arrived at Loma Linda Monday to be with their baby. who was flown to California late Sunday. Hope was diqnosed 16 weeks into the mother's pregnancy as having ancncel)haly. an eventually fatal condition ao which the child is born witho ut most of its brain and p1n of its skull. Hope was the sixth live-born infant the hospital accepted in a controversial program that set the nation's fi rst guidelines for using ancnccphalic children for organ- harvestang. None of the babit"S has provided suitable maJor organs. Sheltf!r dlrector held on sex charges T USTIN - T he 41 -ycar-old director of a halfway house for teens has been charged with sexually molesting three &irts at the facility. authorities said. The -------liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil Orange Coun1y District Attorney's Office filed six counts of child molestation ~----------------------------------------•! Moo~).th~~~em ~~ni~•i~Major&mcslla~an a~t ~nt Robert E. Schmitz, u .. aNC. was issued. said police Lt. Wah Wedemeyer. The felony charges ~ere oral ' SUPER SA VER SALE ALL SALE ITEMS LOW£DST (Spring Fashions Arriving Daily ) Something Special feminine fa shions 1. v Si>t'll<ll11t' in fashions tor the miss' figure s1n•s J IK .>lso pei1tes 250 E. 17th Costa Mesa.• Hilgren Square • 045-'5 7 I I r announces the certification to otter the MEDI FAST · PROGRAM A physician supervised weight loss program at tH BIG BEAi INN, in beaatifal 8iC Bear LU~ Calif . • Comprehensive medical treatment, including: • Clinical evaluatl9." • Rap~h re<tuctlon • Nutrltl~n conseling • Physician supervision For more Information. call (714) 866-7561 Ask for Mary Solley copulation. penetration with a foreign object and ~"ual battery. The misdemeanor counts were for disorderly conduct with a manor. Wedeme)er said. Barnes is schedult'd to surrender at a 9 a.m. amjgnment Wed~~ San Joaquin Hills Rd,at MacArthur HRS: 9-5 Daily 640-5800 PROMISES . to stop drinking too much or quit using drugs DO NOT WORK OUT-TREATMENT, the new generation of treating alcohol/drug abuse, DOES WORK ... successfully Prown Program ... Improves Your Lifestyle ... No Time Off from Your Job ... Affordable with No Extra Costs Make a PROMISE you can keep. call us for HELP ~ Frtt ConfidentMtl Assessment Foum.ln Vllllcy IOl•'91 County (714) 966-1179 1-80().;341-3535 Na11Gftlil ll1DOU9rr Nal'Wowtl llldi•h-a 0...."911 Int c.tll'I Ladln9 "'°*"' d qaMlly~r\t ft-It b Chlnllc.l dlpllldllM:ill In~ c.lbnie ~(II ........... ·-Ila&&=--· ,, d \ Orenge CoMt DAILY PILOT/Tueedey, April 5. 1918'fl A.I ~jackers force Kuwaiti jet carrying-112 to land in ltan Israeli troops kill Arab guerrillas on terrorist mission NICOSIA. Cyprus (AP)-Arabic- spcakina hijacken with pistols and hand arcnades today commandeered a KuwaitiAirwa)'.sjumhojci with 11 2 people aboard. forced it to &and in Iran and threatened to Now it up. Three members of Kuwait's royal Al-Sabah family and one ~ with an American passrort reported· ly WCI'!. aboard the Bocina 747, which was huacked to Mashhad in nonh· eastern Iran on a niaht from Banakok to KuwaiL Iran's offkial lslanuc Republic News A&cncy said the h1jacken allo-."Cd an a1l1ng Jord:.nian pasKn· ~ off the aircraft after u wu surrounded by Iranian security troops. It quoted the pa52ngcr. buStnc:ss executive Mustafa Issa 42. as sa)'ing five or su. h1Jadcers armed with p1st.ols and hand grenacfes Ktzed the plane three hours aftrr It took off from Bangkok. Kuwa1t urged, Iran to handk the incident "wisel) · and requested that the aircraft not~ allo"ed to take off. But IRNA quoted Issa as sa)10g the Jlijackers ~re 10s1sllnf on Oymg on to an undetermined de(,tinat1on. It quoted him as sa~ .. be heard them say lhey -hijackC'd the aircraft in ordtt to vindat.r their deruc:d riahts from the Ku"-aiti aovcm- menL" ~ Iran fiBt denied the plane pet'· mission to land. but reverted iu decision when the ptlot said the ~ was running out of fuel IRNA said. The •ncy saad the hiJKkcn demanded fud and thsatened to blow up the aircraft 1f .. any eerson should attempt to appwach at. Prime Mirusltt H~in Musav1 of Iran told Tehran Radio be wu uyins to "resolve the incident pe8CCfully to sa v-e the lives of the pc:of'lc on boerd. - He Knt his deput) for poliucal affairs. Ali Reza Moan"tti. to Mashhad. said the broadcHL moo1to~ in Nacosia. Kuwaiti Atrwa)'s saidTI'l)>t 421 was carT)'lng 97 passrngtn and I S ett" members. _ Elias H. Sh1ber. the a1r11nc's maR· agtr in Bangkok. saad the ~r list included 30 Kuwauis. 22 Bntons. eight Tba1s.. vanou(, other na- uonahues and one ~r.on wnh bofti an .\mencan and ~puan passport. The a1rhne 1den11lred him as R Anny copter cra-h kills two Gls in West Gerinany By Tk A.ueda~ Pren / STUTTGART. West Gcnna'Y -A U.S. Anny helicopter crashed in southern West German~ today. kilhng the pilot and anothtt soki~r on board. officials said. There w~ no other casu.ahies 10 the 9 a.m. crash near Nabem. 15 miles southeast of Stuttgart. saad a spok~-oman at the Stutlpn-bascd Ann) 7th Corps. ··The hehcoptcr was on a routine suppon m1ss1on. There~ no ~apons or ammunition on board.-saad ..\rm'' spoltes,..oman Hilda Goodhand. Stuttgart pohcc sa.1d the small ~II helicopter apparent!) ,..ent down after running into tree branches an a hca''Y fog. The ~hroptercrashed m an open area. police said. American gets 6 years ln drug smaullng Ani.aallaalL Sllibcr saad the thm· members of Kuwait's ruhna fam1I~ aboard "ere l1*sam K.haJcd .\l-~bah. Fad1 l KhaJed Al-Sabah and the "1fe of Khak:d Anwar Al&b."th. Hundreds of Kuwa1us arc relate<1 to Ku"-au·s emir IRNA. aho mon1to~d 10 !'1cos1a. initial!) reponed the fl1'11t ongmated in Kuwait. BUt KuY.aJll A1rwa\s offtttS in Kuwan and Bangkok said the plane took off from Bangkok lltNA saad the aircraft landed an Masbh.a(! at 7·30 a.m. (midnight EDT) and completed r<"fueliog thrtt hounlattt. • The Iranian. agellC) s.a1d the h1- ~kers spoke an Arab1r but did not idtnt1f) thcmseh'CS (lT" matt Mt\ demands. IR ~.\ d1d not s.a' ho~ man) hijackers ..,.ere aboaid the plane - The Kuwait :-..;e"s .\g~·n~ quoted a spokesman for the a1rhne as sa~1ng contact "'as lost "'llh the a.arcraft "halt It Oev. o'er \lu~t. Oman. .\n Iranian Foreum \tan1stn spokesman said the pfone fle"' into Iranian arnpace from the d1rect1on of the G ulf of Oman 'The Kuwa111 plane v..is allo"ed to land at the a1rpon soleh for humanuanan rea~ns ·· the. un1den11fied spok~ man v.as quoted as sa~ 1ng. \1 u!Ml' 1 the Iranian pnme min1~­ ter s.a1d h1.1ackings '"ere "against hum3mtanan and tslam1c: pnnnple~ and unaccepwble as a poh11cal t.ac- tJt •• In t-..u"'all a go,emment spoL.es- man ..aid the F ore1gn \1in1st~ sum- moned lran .. rn C har.!e d' .\ffa1res Mohammed Farnugh~ "1nd told him ··Kuv.a11 1s contiJt·nt •hat the con- ceme-d Iranian authunPe'>"' ill handle the 1sc.ue "'l\CI\. an a manner that ensure'> thl· ..afe1~ ol the passenger$. th<.· l'rc"' and rilanc ·· JER SALEM I .\Pl -Israeli troops killed t"'O .\rab guerrillas who tned to infiltrate from I ebanon toda' and a 16-year-old Pal("<;t1n1an lost his left c~e "'hen soldiers 1n the occupied Gaza tnp shot him "•th a rubbtr bullet 1x .\rabs "ere a~lt'.d O'em1ght in Gaza and sold1ers '>ealed off eight sho~ an Bethlehem 1s pan of a campaign of mass .irrC'qs and collec- 11' e punishments ,umt·d at curbing four months of .\rab '1olcnce in the occupied temtones L S SeC'reta~ 01 rnte veorge P hukl onHnued tu\ '1s1ting Jordan l 'lffi 1als said ~1onda~ thdl a DO'>lll\1 ansv.er from King Hussein of J •rdari v.ac, rnucal for the luture uf the I propo~d pe:.iu: plan .\rab guernlla<. nit 'I on ta'-inl! ho,tage'> tne-d tl t•ntt" lsrJl': lrom Lebanon o'em1ght an,• d a:.hed "'1th an arm~ patrol .m arni\ \latement and Israel radio ~•d The troop'> 'urrounded the guer· ~ nllas and auac~cd at fim light today, and 1wo -'rabs were killed, the army said It said four Israeli soldiers were wounded. The st.atemt'nt did not say 1f an) other guemllas escaped or were capture~. The Pale-sune L1bcrat1 on Or- ganiz.aton·s main Fatah branch. led b\ Vasser .\rafat. clatmed rcspons1· b;ht) for the attemptecf infiltration. Israel radio said ·Al~ toda> . .\bu HaJad Ramz1. 16. from Nus.eret refugee ramp. lost bis lefl e\e and "'as m stahle condiuon after ~ld1e~ shot him with a rubber bullet. said .i\shlielon·s Banila1 H p1tal spok~"oman Ilana Ztt' The arm' said the 'outh was shot b' soldier\ t~ ing to break up a demon- stration Bethlehem cat' official Jamal \al3man said troops h:."e sealed SS !>hops 1'n the r1 t) an the last two weeks. In add111on. ann' officials sav about I noo Palesunians \\Cr~ al'Tisted In th\ last 10 da~s AND 1.~~t SpeiJ1g Sa11iJ1p4 ~carpets ~ 10% OFF Tllr••1ll11t E1tirt Sllewr••• BARCELONA. Spain -An American who says be ,..-as duped mto cafT)ing cocaine into c;pain was con victed of drug trafficking toda) and I -..-..lo..._..."'"- scntenced to six ,eanand a day in prison. a spokesman for the U.S. Consulate in Barcelona said. Conan Owen. 23. of Annandak. Va.. was found guilt~ b~ tht I threc-judgt tribunal that he.ard his case 10 a one~~ tnal March 16. more than a year after his arrest. In add111on to the prison term. Oweo was fined S I .000. consulate spokesman PC'ttt Ccccre said. ~ Talk• begin on U.S. base In Pbillpplnes (114) 841-2129 FlllMI• IYlll llU MllYI •·PINEllTS I.LI. [ fMi ( ..... r ~ .. ~ --- - " : ' • J 7391 WARNER ~F HUNTINGTON BEACH MAN I~ Ph1hpp1nes-Talks began today on thefuture ofthdast maJor U.S. m1ht.an garrisons in Southeast .\s1a. and the ch1efC .S negottator said the outcome will affect L" S.-Phihpp1ne. rela110!1s and regional secum~. ··The s1an1fican\ So\ 1et ~ence 10 the 1mmed1ate area casts a shad<>" o'er ex~ndina economic :lc11v1t) throughout the region:· L1.S, -\mbassador r~~;;;:::;;;;;;::::;;:::::::::::::::======================~~~~= Nicholas P1au. head of the 10-member American panel. said 10 opening remarks. The rC'\'lCV. of a ~1-)ear-old agr«mcnt on L. S. basn 10 the Phihpp1ncs comes amid a gro .... ng clamor b~ many Filipinos for pha.sang out the prrisons.. "b1ch th<'' Stt as a 'est1sc ofU .S. roloni.aJism. forelJll Secre~ Raul Man&lapus. chief F1hpino negouator. has called for substantial increases in the SllO million "h1ch Marula recci'cs annuall) for utie of the s1A I insiallauons. ' RUFFELL'S IPllLSTEIY llC . ... ,.. .......... am_.._ cara --sa.uM Carmel Retirement Vi llage is a private community for active seniors in a secure -environment. we·re across from Mile Square Park and the golf course. Convenient to shopping and Fountain Valley Community Hospital. <t'al111,/ filJ;~,,,,,,,1 '/!11/a 11on s... Mateo, Fountain Yeltey. CA 714/982-8887 .......... voiill'TTER WATCHm STN in partnership with JCPenney Fuffi111ill.,.m""Mlnt..., brings you bettef pt'ogrammtng. ~ hoatl. ...... inbmlllion. better mercNndi9e, b8t'8r •vice and ..... U9I • And to tNke It even t>ener. • oll ~ 1111 Pl dm1. 24 HOt"8 ~Y~YUUM ·UlOAM 11 SAl\l'DAY~Y • lO AM · t'lO /JM. PONGO -BIRD SEED MANAGER Introduces Scientifically Formulated NllCHMllll BIRD ·DIETS FORTIFIED WITH VITAMINS AND MINERALS DIE DAY .•LY IAIURllY, APRIL 9, 1888 MEET MANUFACTURER'S REPRESENTATIVE KARLA WHITE BIRD -SEf SALE OUR BIRD SEE D MANAGER OVER- BOUGHT AND WE AR E PASSING THE SAVINGS ON TO YOU! WE ARE SELL· . ING 2 LBS. OF FINCH. CANARY. PARA- KEET. COCKATEIL. AN D PARROT FOOD FOR BOC A BAG COME IN AND SAVE HELP GET PONGO OUT OF THE BIRD HOUSE 0 > a) '7tfl WESTCLIFF 161 I eoco·sl z PetCere OPEN 7 DAYS 9 AM to 8 PM 2121 WESTCLIFF DR. NEWPORT BEACH •. I Ratirig schools an interesting academic exercise The author of"Public Schools USA" admits the basis of his book is not a scientific study or sur~ey. l~st~ad. according to educatio n writer Charles H. Hamson. tl is li consumer survey that rates schools in 500 metropolitan school dis.tricts across the United Stntes. The book probably wo uld n_ot have attract~d ~UC~ attention on the Orange Coast. or m Southern California. 1f ouochools were n ot ran ked so low. , . . . Newport-Mesa-trnified School D1slnct scored 38 points o ut of a possible I 00 and that was head-and-shoulders above o ther So uthern California schools. A sampling of scores includes: Bellflower. 20; Pasadena, 2J; Los Angeles. 28; and Pomo na. 29. The study was made by compiHng questionnaires that school districts mailed back to the book's autho r. \ Newport-Mesa was one of the few Orange Coast scnool districts that particip:ited in the survey. The district received a perfect score for attendance. That's good; children are in dasses on a regular basis toilir;ig away at the three R 's. In the category uf how much m oney spent ~r student. the schools' score droppe.d to five. Forty-six.percent of the ~ewport-Mesa s~ud~nts t o<?k the Scholastic Aptjtude Test. which earned the d1stnct a rating of SIX. Seven points were added to th e score because seven advanced placc;ment courses are availa~le. . . In the comments section. the quahty of mstrucuon for additional learning opportunit_ies _at Newport-!'ifesa was rat~d as good to fair, but for low--ach1evmg students 1~ was o~ly fair. The district also received good stores on its cumculum for students who plan to go to college. but the c urriculum for students who are not going to college was only fair. Vandalism? Newport-Mesa received good scores be- cause there's not much of it at the d istrict's schools. Then the scores started dropping. . T eache r-student rati~ L-to-27 at Newport Mesa. earned the district three points. A counselor-student ratio of 1-to-430 and the number of pupils per music specialist in elementary school, l-to-1.200. each equated to a big fat zero. The dropout rate. wh ich is being contested b y l~cal school officials. also resulted in a score of zero. The book lists the district's dropout rate as 26 percent. School officials $aid 2.6 percent is closer to the actual rate here. The immediate reaction fro m m ost of the press was .. California's schools ranked among the worst in the United States ... Ifs true. O ur schoo ls were ranked low. but what has bee n m issing from t his latest stir over the quality o f educatio n is what does this report mean? The answer 1s "not much." :The results of the author's study exclude too many school districts. lack the w~igh ing factors that a scie ntific study would tiave provided a nd use some compariso ns -like the p upil-to-teacher ratio -that a re disputed methods for increasing the qualit} o f education. - Studies and sur\ eys like those that resulteC1 in ."Public Schools USA" make interesting reading and in some ways help increase awareness of the problem. But anyo ne who thinks a solution to improving the quality of education is somewhere in such a consumer's shopping list should go to the back of the class. Central .. America .. ·'Our primary promises to be Important after all. We have a contested open Congressional seat and a contested Assembly seat. By the way. do you believe Incumbents should be sacrosanct or faJrgame?' • SINCE YOU GU&,IS THIHK YOU LOOK GOOD lH STRIPES .... • California's super delegates good issue for local voters Don't you hate being t he tail of the dog and you can't even wag? Pro ud California. -political hotbed of the nation -and we Republicans will have absolutely no say in the selection of thc presidential candidate. It makes me boil in frustration. We would so much rather lead the parade than jump on the bandwagon. There wi ll be nothing If-ft to do when our primary rolls around. I have agonized through every little caucus and absolutely came ungl ued on Super Tuesday. 1 suffer from being the so-called political expert in m > famil) and was continually called upon for great insigh1s. Do )-Ou remember thC' New Hamp- shire primary? My brl'ther and his famil)' live in Nashua. N.H. The world seemed to fi x an intense spotlight o n this sleep) town. Bombarded with questions. my nieces didn't. want to appear to give unsophisticated answer<t. ''Aunt Jack- ie wi ll know," lhey'd say and quickly p ve me a call. Who knows what impact I had on the Nt'w Hampshire polling. Until J was forced off the fence by m y nieces. I was likr most other Californians -sitting comfortably on the sidelines unwilling to pick a candida te until forced t.o do so. It was time for me to take stock. What quality was I l()(lking for in a candidate to be a worthv successor to President Reagan? Th~ one quality the world has responded to is his strenJth. It disturbcd---me that the candidates sccmcd palt' compared to our rail-splittina, death-defying presi- dent. . take on a peevish tone, he would move down a notch. For me the tie-breaker would have been: What kind of a first lady would each candidate bring 10 the White House? Barbara Bush fits thl' mold of the classic Eastern establishmen t woman. She will always do the correc~ thing. However. Elizaheth Dole. as secretary of transportation, was someone I have dealt w11h and admire. In fact-, I owe her one. When I was mayor the Federal Aviation Administration officials were proposing a "rule making" that seemed to us to be enablins legis- lation to fede1'alize lncal auports. This panicked us and we scurried off to Washington. We mobilized our forces to convince Mrs. Dole that this would be disastrous to a number of Jackson wi ll be in a dead heat as far as delegates are concerned. but Jackson will be ahead as far as popular votes are concerned. Democrats have to remember that in California in the past the polls showed one thing. but the secret ballot did not bear the polls· out in Tom Bradley's case. I can visualize a way for the Republicans 10 participate. For us. the super delegates (high-ranking elected offi cials) could control the areas. No. 2 spot on the ticket or at least She could have taken the easy way ha ve a strong voice with the nominee. out and agreed with lhe FAA. How-Who would you like to be the vice ever. she di.dd n n<ot and wrote a strongly 'd ? Wh i..~ H d worded exception to the "rule." This presi cot. at aunut owar ood · ood t "'d . .,..h th Baker'.' What about .lack Kemp? st us in g s c.. w en e Wh bo J Ki k · k? county hauled us off into federal at a ut cane r patnc · Would Republicans support a court. In my opinion this helped woman on the ticket? My choice pave lhe way for the agreement we would be Elizabeth Dole. worked out with the county, airport. Our primary promi~ to be im- F AA. homeowners and Newport portant after all. We have a contested Beach. · My dilemma on a presidential open Congressional scat and a con- choice was: How could 1 continue to tested Assembly scat. By the way, do suppo'rt Bob Dole wht'n he seems to you believe incumbents should be sacrosanct or fair game'> be going down lhe lutx"c;? Tht' one critical caveat in all this But the question is moot for may be the most important primary Republrcans when the action finally in many years. So don't sit this moves to California. However, Democrat!' could have a election out! Get your ahscntcc balfot. . . . that way you won't ha.ve to agoni:tt JACIUB HBATllBR Col ....... Mental health : service needed To the Editor; As a psychiatric RN. I am con- cerned about the deci<1ion to close Hoaa Hospital's Mental Health Ser· vices unit. Mental health sen ices are an integral pan of the healing process for many indiViduals suffering from s~ch strcss~related conditions as cardiac. hypertensive and aastrointestinal problems. Long-term debilitating ill· nesses. such as cancer and geron- tological •problems. require ~~­ chiatric intervention and rehab1li· tation. With these facts fn mind. I find it difficult to understand wh y the Mental lkalth unit was selected for elimination from Hoag Ho!>pital. . Hoag Hospital is respected for its response to community health needs. Health care is a concern for everyone. and those in administrative positions have the added responsibility of making major decisions in ~es~nse to economic and Mganizattonal changes. Hoag has provided servi~s that meet the physio-psychosoc.1al needs of their patients with in- telligence and compasc;io n. and has provided quick access for manage- ment of psychiatric problems for the entire medical staff. l'jow. with the plans to close the county's second largest psychiatric facility, many o~us who are directly involved in canng for people who suffer from emotional and mental pain, are con,·emed that the shortage of psyclliatric services and facilities will be evrn mort' acute. Perhaps the absence of Mental Health Services will "not have a significant negative impact o~ th~ operation of the res1 oftht' hospital. as Larry Ainsworth. Hoas adminis- trator has stated. but I believe it will have a significant impact. on t~e community. Our population will increase. technology wi ll advance. and mental health needs will in- ~nsify. ' I join with many ol the med ical profession who are hopt>ful that some mental health services will cont1nur to be offered by Hoag Hospital. LORRAlNEGERY. RN Costa Mesa Amphitheater· ad· To the Editor: I hope the largeeye-catchingad that was in the paper a few days ago regarding an amphitheater in Will- ington. Conn. has prompted Costa Mesa residents to writr and express their views of Pacific .\mphitheatre (as the ad requested wr do) and all of the problems it has created in our town. My symphathies go out to all of the homeow'1ers that live nearby who have to listen to the dt'afcning noise that comes from there. We li ve on the east side and can hear ii on a summer ni&ht. . Herc's a chance 'to help someone else from having their neighborhood ruined by some big money-grabbing promoters. MARY L. HARRISON Costa Mesa Oliver North American s aren 't much interested m geography in Then, Vice President George Bush general .. Most are little interested in Latin America in p ve a feisty interview to Dan Rather ball. I m talk1na ~nk-and-file Demo-o~er the trash that fill s your mailbox crats not the tue~rchy. I ~ou.ld ~the last minute assume the last thing the pundits · To the Editor: ,___,,__ · ut d · '-"' ,.., btfft~--.~--t-....,rtt-moved-up a noteh--in-my partt-c a1. An sum~nnl wuen trvu u 1;1 t:. iorce I estimation. When Boh Dole would wouttt want iH brokettd-co~venrion-. _JM:tie_Be•lkLh aJorma-.Ne.• I predict Mike Dukakis and Jesse port B~•c• m•yor. o ur.fincpapcr.can:ied the story-of Col. Oliver North tendering bis resignation from the Marine Corps u pon o ur conscio usness. . You may recall the report that many Texas high school students could not name ··our ncighorto the South:· But most Americans know that it is M exico. Next down the narro w land bridge of Central America are Guatemala, then Honduras and El Salvador side by side. then Nicaragua', Costa Rica and Panama, before we come to Colo m bia at the top of South America. There are big troubles now in several of these countries. after 20 years of service to our country, which included two areas of d 1 active combaL There is little doubt F.1oi-.ida 's oc4-01 ps aftp~-e·1·s that Col. North exemplified the I,~ .& 1 , ..,-.& I epitome of an American Hero. I believe the cover of Time Magazine showina him being sworn in. right • ·1 · actice lJ otout hand to God1 medals. decorations Jn a -:ma 1• s 0 andawarosahstening intheOashof .& ~ camera strobes should be displayed Colombia sh ips i!l~I. drug~ Pw ident J imm_y Caner a nd the Senate gave the A m encan canal in Panama to Pana ma. and a vicious military ruler ho lds sway. The pitched bittle between phys- icians and lawyers bein' fought out in Florida has gone underreponcd. They are nailing their way to a modus operandi. but there arc holdouu (mostly attorneys.) who tell you ifs not going to work and who h~artify pra} that it won't work. obstetricians by the dozens an- nounced that after Jan. I. 1988. thev wpuld no lonaer deliver babies. · ·-:=:::::::::;;:;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;--pos~iitc~Mtylcin every cla<tsroom in this -u 1on~s scliools. ------ W e have helped El Salvad or stave off Communist revolutionaries and hold free elections. but the fight isn't over. In N icaragua. Com m unist allies of t.he Soviet U nion and Communist C uba ar~ warring against their own peo ple. And American t roop s went to Ho nduras as a "sign·· to the Communists that we haven 't surrendered . W e'd better pay attention .to this Central American geography and the issues. lest we be forced to learn m ore about them -the hard way. ~ Chtmoo1• (Teu.J New1-Frtt Press • Foreign policy T hey're at it again in Madison: Protests and demon- stratio ns designed to change American foreign policy. Of course, it doesn 'L American policy in Central America is achieving success in spite of the gainsayers. American troops in Honduras arc the latest chic target of protest But those troops. and a mere ha ndful o f them at that, 1lave •thieved precisely what they were intended to do. and lh•t is tell the Sandinistas that America is intent on helping her friends, whether C ontras or Hondurans. Daniel Onep tested the resolve and found that despite lhe knuckJina under ofConaress under Speaker Jim Wright. the ldministratlon was not going to betray its friends. . DIM_. (Wit.) ~"nwr. ORANGE COAST ..., ... .. ,., c.e, £• ,_ Gililet """ ( "'°' Call ... ~a. ..... c-.. ,., .............. Beginning at lhe,other end. here are data to freeze . the blood. In (>ade County. Fla .. in 1987 the average malpractice insurancr premium a doctor needed to pay was S 165.000. That was up. in just fou r years. from $30.000. Those figures were the result of ambient data. Betwt"Cn 1975 and 1985, lawsuits against doctors in- creased by 200 percent (from 960 to 1,982). Twenty-five percent of A orida physicians arc sued annually. The averqc amount paid in lawsuits incrused eiaht times hctween 1975 and 198S, from S 13,000 to S 103.000. The av~ac jury award in 1986 was s2~.ooo. The Aorida Medical At- sodation estimates that at least 25 percent of Aorida's obstcUicians have aiven up ddiverina t.bies and practice now only tynecolc:Jty. By 1987, malpractice costs had idded more than$ 70010 the delivery fee for each blby. And. finally. aJthouab 70 ptttent of the suits tl'lat racfi the couns are won by tht docton and result in no awanf to t~ plaintiff, it COits a physi_cian an ·~ o( S.0.000 to defend .even a &ivolout lawsuit. Enoup. finally, wucnoup. In the summer of 1917, MU~ in Palm Bach Co\anty ttSipcd "°"' hospital stafl'i. leavina etne111=z rooms w11hout coverap in a vi Ufc·and-clceth specialty. Other eoecilliMI. feetitlla vulwable. re- tUted to trait tf'IUml petien&a. for fear of=· sued. Entitt pvups of Ott ic IU~I theft miped tom a Plhn fte9th C.aty • WILLIAM F. BUCKLEY The negotiations have been fe verish. Substantial!\ under the leadership of Dr. Lee tisher of West Palm Beach. a youni. rr~urceful and patient family physician of the kind who prefer soft talk to 1roin-and- eyeball encounters. a coalition of attorneys and physician~ was formed. one-half of any settlemrnt went to the Their recommendations were not attorney. incorporated exactly into the new Mr. Roben Montaomery Jr., a stat¢ law, but that law reflects their famous trial lawyer in Miami. painstakina thought. Here is what it deplores what he seesasan attemptto provides: act around the jury system. Mont- • A vof untary pretrial arbitration aomery is a foreeful prncnce outside system. If a patient and doctor agrcc the courtroom. In it, he is worth his toarbitr1tion1 then. the law says, a cap weiaht in aold, which one assumes is of $250,000 1s placed on non-econ· about what he is paid. omic damages (pain and sufferina). Jf But here OM runs 1n10 the psycbo- the patient refuses arbitration, non-logical nub of the question: How economic damlJP arc l'till limited to much to pay? The hum11n desire is to $250.000. But 1f the doctor refuses ~t money damaen, YCS, from the arbitration. there is no ceilina on offending doctor, but ilto 10 pu.nish damaacs. him. And that is simply not ac· • No limit is placed on economic complished *11 the insurance com· losses(medicalcosts, •~•wages, etc.). pany is there to pay all the bills. •Newborn t.bie1 who suffer Punitive damaees. one coun held in brain or spinal cord injuries at binh the lawsuit between Quentin Re· arc looked after by the state. wbich ynolds and Westbrook Pctkr m1ny uses funds collected froin doctor's yean ago, must come out of the fen and hospital binh "haraes. pocket of the tortfeator. Thlt court • New standards h11ve been im· was OYerru~. ~ resu!t has been to posed makina it more diffic:ult to !nten IOcial ••.tsflct1on and to prove netlilmce on the Pill of increase m~ Jucfametttl at ,the CmefJeftC1 room .doc:tot s. . eaem.• of the m....we ~ • Docton who att neslieent, and ·Thirteen yean aso. calilomia lawyers who are u.nditcriminati.... pasted tori reform laws that put. cap will be reau.lated lnOft ...,,.y, Law~ ofS250.000 on non«onomk daJn· yen will face disciplinary action if .,_ Medical melp111Ctl« ~tams thn file thl'ft or mOft' mafpncticc uve since teduoed from SSl.000 '° tlafms without merit du.ri•. ftve-1"·500 ror, ~:n= year period. Lawyen' ten wid be 36,000 IO IS, 700 NJ • ttd**9 ao IS pmat of &M •tJe. IDd f'rom l".000 .eo SI ),000 fOr ment. °""' wflere the petient re-onhopedk surpm. One more trib-ft.t1e1 the doaor's oft'er to 8""tnte. in utr to tht federal ~· whim cw the lattt)'ef will receive 25 • 2 • '· 81 :Ms;r Jr, " • ~ percenL Under lite old .... elmost mle4 wl I 2 l Because of accusations, Col. North will no doubt stand trial soon, before we aJI rush to judament. I believe he did nothina more than make an effort to 4et our people released from captivity. Would it not be a re- markable event if at this very mo- ment an ·official' arm<>-for-hostagcs deal was being cut by tht' very aovemment that is trying to condemn him for makina the 1drntical effort a little sooner? GENESELJG Irvine TODA~ IN HISTORY Today is Tuesday. April 5, the 96tb day a( 1988. There are 270 days left in lheyear. Today's Hiahliaht in History: On April 5, f817, teacher Anne SUJtivan achieved a m.,,. break· th~ugh with her blind•nd-deaf puptl. Helen ~eller, by conYeyina to ~ the meaning of the word .. water" 1n the Mlnual Alphabtt. On this date: In 1614, American Indian pri~ Pocahonw married Enalish colonist John Rolfe in Vif'linia. In 1621, the Mayflo~ •ilcd &om _ Plymouth, Mata., on • mum trip to ~9. Elihu Yak. the Ettllisb philanthropist ror whom y Ile {1Jli. """'rh ~was bom. In 1792. ~ 0...: Wash-i._,.. ~ .... "'-°' rtJecti11 a !=O'-" •aMI '!I Tl I LC ..,.lllPOftiOaa ·iir-•-... a~---n '" bl9ct American educaa 8oobr T. WllbillllOn ._ bona ia Franklin County, VL ., ....... ..,,,,_ . I I~ Ormnge CoMt DAILY PtLOT IT~. April 5, ,._ A7 ~ano prodigy plays Center tonight BJ LYNNE LAlll!R ........ ow s "When you're youna. you can do anythina," ·~ 23-year-old concert piani1t Leonid Kuzmin, midway th~ his fint 7Ck:ity U.S. concert tour. I want to play as much as I can in every town bit and small - in the Nonh Pole. too. But one need not don one's pub a nd snowshoes to hear what the New York Times has called "fi nt class" artistry. Kuzmin, a Russian-born emiare. will perform toniaht at the Oranae county Performing Arts Center. The fair-haired pianist, oc- casionally mistaken for a student recruited to tum pases for the show, already has laid claim to an im- prHSivc list of cttdits: he's taken fint prize in the 1984 International Piano Competition of Praaue, the Inter- national Competition of the Ameri- can ~usic Scholarship Associatio n. the 1985 Stravinsky Awards Inter- national Competitao n and the 1986 Concerto Compe1111on of the Mans hattan School of Mu~1c, where he studied piano. Funny thing as. Kuzman never wanted to be a concert p1an1st. This was his fathe r s dre;am. and every day fo r I 0 years -from the ti me he was 5 years old -his fathtr taught him piano. But the elder Knzmin had no formal music trainang. His interest in the great pianists of the past - Busoni. Neuhaus. Hofmann -led him to read in detail about their lives. careers and practice hahits. and from these books he taught both Leonid and his older brother (who later became a computer programmer). "In Russia, everyone wants to be anactorora musician. I neverwanted to be a pianist -my father pushed me into it." he said an a telephone interview from New Ynrk Friday. At 7. Kuzmin was chosen to enter the Preparatory 01visi0n of the State Conservator) of Music in Minsk. where he continued studying for the next 10 years with Inna Tsvetaeva. The family emigrated to New York in 1981 , and at 17 Kuzmin entered the Manhattan School of Music. But has father became ill and Leo nid quit school l<' work for a Edwards signs off NEW YORK (AP) -Dou&las Edwards. who was the nation's first nightly TV anchorman. preceding Wah~r Cronkite in the job at CBS. had his last day al the network Friday after 46 years. Fnday "CBS Newsbreak" at noon newsbreak was his last television appearance for CBS. F.dwards' last radio broadcast was Friday night. President Reagan ~nt a cons gratulator) letter calling Edwards a "consummate prof~smnal." SIGN MIJWl.llB -~ PIOJNJW ._ -·---w (Ill; •IL••• •••'A -------c· ............ . -... ----------~-=::' == ... IMii" -=-E':..c... .... ----!!!!!I • ._ .... ;;;;-·-& ~~. ...... ., -I!!!!.... ..... ... ----~ lM ICOre-to the music bcina per- formed whilt beckstaer NOM of that taperie~ outside the ~room -be it the candy stcn or beck st• 11 the school-was wastt'd, he says. "Now I know euctlv what I want on sta,r -the •• ·mana,en arc always surpriled. And I have some busincu experience fmm the candy store. I maybe didn't btoome a better pianist in ~hose two yr-"ars off. but I ,..cw up a htde." Kuzmin, who 1s {IOW a U .S. citizen. considers it an honor to play in America. "Nobody cnme when I played m Ru~ia. and I pla)-ed with two or thrtt other people on the same concert. Herc. they come for some kid who's unknown -I'm always sur- prised. I play an halls from 500 to 3.000 and the) ·re 80 ~nt full or sold out Who am I? I don't havca tq name. Their cunous1ty desttvn Pfa.15'. "I consl<kr mysdf .. very lucky person -so far. 50 aood. rm )-Ouna, and ifl don't do 11 no~ I'll never do iL" But Kuzmm does no t cons1ckr himself a child prodag). "Do you know the defin1t1on of'wunderltand"? Wunc:kr (wonderful) gon Wlth aaic· kinder (child) remains. Whateve; happens to me toda) fine. What happens tomorro~ 1s most ampon- ant. !t .c:kpends on m) maN&trs. m)' pubhcasts and me With a little luck, we'll pull al off. W11h a lot of luck ... who kno'4 s..-· -...DC AFT __ .. , S:OS 7·15 10'" f'ATAL -~-· l ·ZI 1 •O 1 :1, Mezzo-soprano says opera is a drudge candy store, a mcsse"sr-r scrvict and many other jobs. His mentor at the Manhattan School. Nina Svetlanova. was l'CsPoJlsjblc for him returning to the piano after a 1wo-ytar a~nct. "Jn 'lhe winter of 1984. I heard her play a recital and it was an inspiras lion. I heard something there. and I wanted it so bad. I wanted to able able to do the things she did -not just like her. but on that level. I wanted at bad enough to sacrifice everything.·· Kuzmin through him~lf into it with unshaking determ ination. He was up at 5:30a.m .. riding the subway an hour and a half from Q ueens to Manhattan.just in lime to get the last practice room at ·7 a.m He'd let the room go for an hour or so 10 another student. returning to practice be- tween and after cla$sn. and at 10:30 p.m .. when the school closed. he'd head home for a few hours of sleep before the routine bcpn again. LONG BEAC H (A Pl -Singing is a drudge i nd the mo" ~lar one gets. the harder 1t is to rontanue. says mezz0nsoprano star Marilyn Home. "The opera world 1s not rattficd at all. It's hard work. Ills iust real hard drudge. but. of courst it has other rewards to 1t. Wt maJct our laves an --, •COSTA-. ,...,~.,._°""". __ ,_ "'~ Q I 1501 ... •C09TA_. ·- music. I can ·11hank of an~ thang that 1s a greater pm. alqe and honor -..u frustrating as 11 1!> a good deaJ of the tame." she said an a n anvn 1tw pnor to her ap~araoce ~fond.a) rught at the Terrace Theater in Long Beach <\ccla1m and suctts'> d0t'Sn·1 make 11 an) easier. she said .-!.-0• . . . . ~ - ·-.. ~ UIOYIA 11.ac:M ·~ ~ 43" :~~) ~-RJNm-AN9 AB DELIGHTFUL COMEDY. 'Milagro' is wonderful Don't mm iir -SUwut ~in. FOX NETWORK .\ l'\[\ t~Al Rt'lt'a~ ............... ~.-.-..- T H E jMILAGRtl 'iE·ANFIELD W A ·R ··r didn't cat and I didn't sleep. I practiced 10 hours a day. no movies. no nothing. I was living on SS.000 a year. I took Saturday for m y errands. and practiced five hours an the evening,·· Ull_.._. ~1-C.-*--~ ,__'-•STUfTC* '-,...=-... ... ~-7Sl-4t .. ll$0 .. ll ttl ~H• --CWM99 •LA-·~¥'a.JO ,_ ........ 1 .... -r-.. wc•-s... !~I..':-4'e ~o·-..... 6t•.41J3 ,.. l'N Despite th~ grueling schedule. -~-•&. '°"° ..>u .• ,_.. ••• ~ ._.....-.. Uo\--e tooo .,,, ... 511-•:•s,..-,.· .,..., -Kuzmin also worked as a stage manager at the school. and followed Witch the Academy Awards A,01 11 °"ABC ~ALAN ALDNS BEST FILM E\l:R!~ . ..... ......... Plffln ~1uum UP! ••• A LOT OF LAUGHS: -a.t, mil I flHf I TW llllJ ~woNDERFIIL .. BELL\' L\UGHS!~ . ... ..... ,._,., .. . . Alan~s ~~ IPG·u: fDt. • c •• -~ ·----'~ .. ~ _..,.. Eci.¥\tS C-Yllt> J5'0•10 ....-rllAOI (-~~.,, .. 6U-47SO 1---·---1 Wal ch lhr Ac<1demy Award'I April 11 ,..,. . .--~ . -c-...c.--.r Ut~ ST..,. £ ... ~as•~~~ •;a567 ••MASQUERADE'· 'tt , .. , 600 1 lO It JO wce'w •• ~ -°"""'" ----.. ...... .._ --- • "'.. r "-• t :;. ... .: .. 1., ....... ~ W ' fl, I -... ., ... 94 •. I • ... • ··R.IOJCI lll.UES- (ll'G1J) I ISl»-S&HOC l~!~ -A ... a.£" (ll'G ,, , .. ., UU 1~1020 "O.o.A.- '"' ·•TME UN9EMA8l.E SS CW •lleG-I"> l •tlS 1&.0 JU ..... - (ll'GU) 'l~ .. IUI 1NGHT UGKTS, 91CtCITr (It) Se!>l•llU -a NEW UFE- fll'GtJI , .. 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("°fl ) "THE SEVENTH SfGN~ t• l• ~• 1•t•1~ S IS-7 JIU ) * 4"1 1------------1~.,. ··~UGffTS. - 9IG CITY'" (ttl S ~•lt lS .,..,... ............... -... ............... .. ~---LR- 1. r:m.,. ~-- ' Dukakis, Jackson continUe see-saw b&ttle •1 ne .A.111m ... Pren PraidentiaJ con lenders Michael Oukakis and JCSR Jack.Ion beaded into battJe in IOday'1 Wisconsin primary on the heels of an inconclusive conleSl in Colorado. Jac-kton blasied the Colorado state chairman for .. biued and politically un- ethical" actions in the slow-movina count. Monday njpt's Colorado caucuses were a see- saw battle that saw first one and then the other pin the upper hand. When the state Democratic Party .quit countina early this momina. Dukaki1 had 46 percent to Jackson's 40 ~nt, with just under half the precincts reportina. Dukakis.had arabhcd an early lead Monday niaht in the Colorado contest. But Jackson quickly cauaht up and even passed him when Denver results t>cpn coming in. Then Dukakis pulled ahead aaa•.n. Today in K.enOlha, Wis., JK'boo complained that the dribble of caUC'us mu.Its from Cokndo could have been delaYtd to aive the appearance of a lead for Dukakis. ColonMto Democratic chair- man Buie Seawell, a Dukaki1 supporter, directed the count. . ..This Iona and sloY. count ~ts a certain ineptness ... it hei&htens suspicions.•• Jackson said. "You cannot very well be' a fair rcfeRC and coachina another playtr." . Ten'!cssce Sen. Alben Gore Jr. !aged far behm<t with 4 percent, and Sen. Paul Simon didn't gcl'cnou&h votes to count. Simon. his campaign fading. said he hoped to score with Wisconsin's voters today. But he added: "If we don't do well. we have to make a re- evaluation. We'll take one step at a time." Pre- primary polls put Simon a distant fourtli in W ascouan. On the RepubliCioln side, Vice President CieorF 8uah sai~to a suona lead in Colorado's GOP straw polls. While voters were callina the shots in Wisconsin today. tht candidates scattered to rcpoup for bia•1tate contests comirt1 up in New York, Penn1ylv-ania and Ohio in the next month. Oukakis aoundcd upbeat u he awaited the verdict in Wisconsin. "It fooksaood," he said as he arrived home in Boston Monday ni&ht. "We worked hard... - Tbe four Democratic presidential hopefuls campaiped Monday across Wisconsin. with Jackaon setting heat from rivals for his contact with Panamanian stronaman Manuel Antonio Noriep. Dukakis joined the criticism of Jackson. I . J • If you're one of the millions of Califomic1ns without group healthcare coverage. then ~u should dtscovertlle family ofBJUe Shield Plans. Because 'Ne probably have a place for you in our family. For You and Yom FamUy. 'Nhether ~u ·re responsible for taking care of just your own healthcare coverage. or for taking care of your family's plan, then ~u should talk to a Blue Shield agent or broker. Because Blue Shield has different plans. with different benefits and deductibles. that help ~u provide the kind of protection needed today. an -• I \ Every Blue Shield plan has catastrophic When You're Over 65. protection, and with the wide choice of deductibles Blue Shield offers. you have a ----If you re eligiblefOr Medicare. you have choice of how much )OOf' plan will cost. But no special needs. That's why Blue Shield gives you matter which plan you choose. you know a choice of Medicare Supplements to help you you're being helped by the over 200 hospitals take care of your individual requirements.. We'll and more than 36,000 physicians who have help you handle Medicare's deductibles and accepted Blue Shield's cost controls and coi)ayments-in fact. some Blue Shield plans payment limitations. eyen go beprld what Medic.are covers. And every Blue Shield Medicare Supplement inctuoes---seniOFHealttmac, )mthe proven health management program. . Blue Shield d California .... • TUESDAY. APRIL 5, 1988 .m Toronto'• George Bell unloeda with thrH home runa.112. New York'• Bob Sheppard, begin• 31th year with Yenka. 82. A little bit of Manning in the Land of Oz Cinderella sends brash Oklahoma to its knees with all of the marbles in the pot KANSAS CITY. Mo. (AP)-T h<' one-man team 1s No. I Danny Manning. 'he tw<>-t1me An- Amencan who earned his t~m all season. scored 31 point" and grabbed 18 rebounds Monda) naJht to lead unranked Kansas to ir~ second na- uonal champ1onsh1p. The 83-79 victory over No. 4 Oklahoma made the .layhawks the losingest champions in NCAA his- tory and ga ve Manning one last chance in a college uniform. He responded hke a c~amp1on. .. It's great to be able to finish m) career as nauonal champion in front oft he home fans in Kan~s Cit).·· said Manning. named the tournament's o utstanding pla~er ··1 don·1 think he t"ver played a better game:· ~1d h1~ father. Ed. a Kansas assistant coach ··11 happened bt:ca use we have great seniors and one super pla)'er:· said Kansas coach Larry Brown ... , don't e'en kno'A how to S.."I\ the words ·national champi ons: h0 UI rm going to learn ho" I thought 1fwe could get into the last fi , e minutt'S we'd have a chance.·· The Jayhawks. 27-1 I. pla)ed fast and slow and v.11hstood a record- sett1ng 3-point performance from • Oklahoma·s Da'e Sieger to avenge two losses to the Snoners, 35-4. during the regular season. · This was the third championship game pla)ed between two teams from the same conference a nd 1t was the third this decade in "hich a hea') underdog managed 10 v.in the tttle Kansas. who v.on the NC ~A champ1onsh1p in 195:'. was an 8- point underdog. In the first half. the Ja)hawks ran 'Allh tht' Sooners. the o nd half. the> shov. l'd pattt"nce running down the 45-~cond clocJt before taking good percentage shots The Ja)ha"ks shot M percent for thepmc. 35of55. and the) cooled off after a fim half 1n "'h1ch the' made I 7 of:!O at one point · In all there "ere J l lead changes and 11 tics "We were 1~1ng 10 talr..e 20. 25 secondsc' en time "e came down the noor... said Kan us guard Jeff Gueldner "We tned to <,Jou. 1t down The first half y.e pla~~d nght 1n10 their hands and let them s.core 50 points ... But for ~rt the strat .. g) ol Coach La~ Brou.n 11 ""as \fanning. the same pla,er ""ho led thl' Ja,ha"ks all season . · through inJur1es and academic pn;>blem'> Milt Ne"1on added 15. points for Kansas. "'h1le Ke" n Pntchard had 13. Sieger led -O klahPma u..nh 22 points. while Stace' King had 17 and Harve) Grant and· Monk1e Bia) loclr.. 14 each. But King and r.rant the l""O leading scorers. had JUq four l'al h 1n the second half. .Kansas took the lead for good at 69-68 on a hook shot b~ \.fanning "Ith 8·50 le.ft tn the ga me It \l.aS the I last of se'en straight Kansas points i .... scored by the 6-foot· I 0 center and the play started v.tth Mann1ngs1and1nga1 m1dcoun "nh the ball v.aning for Oklahoma 10 come 0111 anti appl~ pressure. Manning handed the hall olT. cut to the bask<'t and h11 the hook Chris Piper then htt a Jumper to gJ\C Kansas a four-point lead The Sooners tied the score on a free 1hro" b) 1eger and a turnaround Jumper b) Grant"' 1th 5 55 left •• .. , ... . .. ""' • 1 ••• nauon·s second-leading scoring team Larry Brown reacta u Illa team palla ahead durln& eecond and the Big Eight's regular-season and half on the way to an 83-79 upeet Tlctory over Ok-iahoma. tournament chaml)1on., In the sec- Pn tchard h11 a baseli ne dn'e ""Ith 5.34 left and th<' Ja, ha" lcs v.ere on the (Pleue Ne NCAA/82) Danny M•nnlnt &oa around Okla.boma'• Stacey IUD& and up for the bullet on the way to the NCAA buketball title. " -r *** Timingwasjustright, but.not.forWitt Brown's Williams' two-run homer ruins Angels'-bcfa<c °:'bb) Th•gpcn took b,., to Lan« Johnson loll .. -.d ~nh ' hole card: _ _ ~rn a sa e Tonwht's Game sinf.}e 10 score \\1lliams. Ollie Ch • hopes for a quick Start With 8-5 Setback LoserM1keW1tthad:i perfect game Gu1lle~ singled ma ru11 and ~arold ang1ng _ _ __ _ working a nd had rctm·d the first 14 u1el1 are idle Bain~~ RBl gro under made 11 ~ CHICAGO (AP)-If opening day had been one day sooner. Kenn) Williams wouldn·1 haH· pla)ed. batters before Carlton Fisk blooped a. WEONESDA \''S GAME George Hendn Ir.. drrl\e 1n a run .. . .. double a nd scored o n an off-the-fists AA1el1 at Chicago. 5· 30 p.m "1th a tzroundout in th<' ninth after th e pace I dadn .1 expect him 1~. pla). · single b) Dan Pasqua in the fifth. T V· Channel 5 Jaclr.. Ho"elrs double lintshed' Manager. Jim Fregosi ~•d. But he W1lltams follov.ed wtth the home Radio: KMPC (110) Th•"""" and (trainer) Herm Schneider con-r ~ But Williams. recovered from an ankle inJUf) he suffert>d last v.rttk. played Mo nday-and lt>d th<' Chicago White Sox to an 8-5 ''1C'1ory Monda) that ruined the managcrial debut of Cookie Rojas with the i\ngels. Williams hit a two-nm ho mer that capped a three-run fift h and his double keyed a five-run, gam<'-win- ninf eighth inning. ·· f the game was yesterday, I couldn·1 have played:· ~id Williams. looking down at his ~andaged left ankle. spired 10 pro'e me wrong. When "i\c1uall).heh1t abedp11chgood." TM .\ng<'ls tool.. a :;.fJ lead on Kenn} came in this mnrnang he ran said Witt. "The oth~r two hi ts d1dn·1 Jo~ nl"r's fir..H nn1 ng \a• nfilY fh and into the trainer's room and he made bother me. The horn<' run botht"red hold 'em." said Ro1as __ .L'" Johnny Ra~ ·s third-innin~ homer sure I was looking ·· me:· The' couldn·1 hold Jf"'ilhams The ope-ner drt" '' ' 9 to Com· Ro1as. who took over 10 da'. s a110 With one ou1 1n th<' ~\enth. F1slr.. islr..e~ P:irlr... Walhams. shifted from center field "i' Th 1 v.hcn Gene Mauch cell.red. said singled and Pasqua v.a lt..cd 10 knoclr.. e-.\nge s ha\<' a da~ 10 th1r to third base this season helped make fi th od r a 'A inner staner Rick Honon. who "an} time >ou lose. 11's tough. I out Make W111. 'Aho allo"ed I' t" runs ings o'er t a). returning ro '-om-thought W111 pitched an extrcmel) and four hits 1n 6111nnings and 001 th'e'" 1ske~ Park to rompletc their thret'· cam<' in an off-season trade with the c " _ _. .... T good game. there wen· a couple of loss. game set on "'n.inc:.uJ\ and hur.-.. St. Louis C'ardtnals. bloop h1tsand the big home run by the Williams doubled 011 rehe\ er tu da~ before;-retummg 10 .\nahe1m to. ··1 didn't have m) he" stuff but. kid Williams. It wasn't ::i bad pitch. 11 Cliburn 10 score Fisk "'Ith the 1~1ng open 1hc1r home season wnh a thrtt· fonunatcl}. I sta,ed a way from the "as down and he went aftt"r 11 and got run and Pasqua scored thl" lead run gaml" St't "llh Oalr..land on Fnda'. big inninJ.'' said Hon on. who allow-tt. when Wall) Jo) ner bohblt>d Donnie tht'n m~ting these same \\ htte ·,.. ed nine h1tsand pitched into the ninth .. We had the runs but we couldn't Hill's gro undt"r for an error. fo r ano ther thr(.'(' game' .\pnl I :;.1 ~ Dodgers smack Dravecky once, then runaway an~hide in loss ""Sax delivers homer on first pitch, but Giants win easily Tonlght'• Game San Francisro (Downs 12-9) at ~en (Hersh1scr 16-16). 7:05. T : None. Radio: KA BC ( 790). first game of the season "I was \er)' surprised, but 90 p1tCh<'S (actually n) and a good defense had a lot to do wi th i1:· Dravecky said h<' wasn•t dis- couraged by the first-pitch homtr. K..\:-. A CIT'). Mo I ~Pl -Just v.hen Okl2homa "as spe'Cdang up. Kan).ls slo"ed do"n 1onda~ night and beat the nc~ 10 the national , hamp1onsh1p .\ft<'r malr..in& the shot clock ob- sokte an a fast-paced fira half. Kansai millr..t"d th<' J5-stt"ond ti mer for all 11 '\.\35 "'onh 1n the SC'C'nnd half and l.'.'ame av.a' "'Ith a n:i11onal cham- p1onsh1p · Th<' plud..' Ja) hav. b matched the heil\ 1h fa\ ored 0 1..laho ma Soon<'rs step for step 1n a first half that ended 50-.SO But coa h Lam Rro~n·s te~m controlled the tempo c), er the final :?O minutes and tool.. chafltC "lt.h a l'.!·3 run "It had an effecL l suppose. but I th1nlr.. ""<' can pla~ at that spttd:· li'.IIhoma roach 81trvr---ut>t>s sal<t"-t ne,er sat on the bench "'0~1ng that the gam<' 1) getting too ~low:· .. , thought we got ro ntrol of the • tempo in I.he second half and had some phenomenal dt·fens1ve per- formances .. " Brown ~aad ··t was hoping 10 get ahead and then do It "tth our defense 1n th<' final fh'r minutes LOS .ANGELES (AP) -Dave Dravccky's first pitch of tht 1988 season landed in the left-field scats at Dodier Stadium. But Los Angeles did very little with his next 9 1 as the San Francisco . Giants successfully opened deftnse of their National lequc West title Monday by beating the Dodsers 5-1 . lead and the crowd of 48.484 at Dodger Stadium a thnll when h<' hit Oravecky's first patch deep into the left field stands. .. Steve Sax is s" ingmg th<' bat vef) wen:· Dravcck) said "After th<' homer. I thought, ·Thww a strike the next pitch, ~et the next ~uy out. and go from there. ·· The Dodaers were last in the NL in both fi elding and hitting last season. so they made sever.ii off-season changes. But it didn't help them in their opener. Brov.n said he wa_nted the Ja) ha" l s 10 go to the hasket if t~y could after breaking Oklahoma's full- T coun pr<"SS. but 1T Kansas df<ln't acta qu1clr.. shot. the playc~ were to make 0 1..lahoma pla' defcn~e as long as po sable However, Los Angt'les managed only a sixth inning single by Sax and an e•Jhtb-inning single by Mike Sciosc1a after that. Dravcck) walked one and struck out thrt'<'. Kuk Gibson, Alfredo Griffin and Mike Davis. all acquirC'd in the off. season to improve tht offense. •~nt a combined 0-for-11. "I Ju t "anted to keep attack in& but uSC' th<' locl .'' Bro" n added "l d1dn·t '14 0rn so much ahout handling them pr~!> The b1g est concern 1 had 'Aas 10 t~ to ut1hze the clock and try to get our btg ~ople to handle the ball Dravcclcy pitched a three-hitter and Breit Butler. playina in bis first pme for the Giants. had three hits. including a tw<>-run triple, to spark San Francisco to its victory over the new-look Dodacrs. who played a lot like the old ones in t~ir first pme of 1988. "Ifs a good fcehns to J.O out there and pitch nine inn1ngc;. ·-Dravccky said ... The key was the defcrrise. l can't sayenouah about thedden~. the way theysupponed me. Wt>'ve gotas~ood a defenst as t~rc 1s in the game. • .. We JUSt d1dn·t hit the blll hke we·re capable." L.uorda said. "Dra,·ecky pitched an outstandina gam<'. We didn't even have much ofa threat at any time. And a couple of pla}s hun us." "Their guards arc so good ck· lrnmeh I "'anted Dann) and Chns w ha.~dk 11 10 keep their guards l""I a'\.\a' San l"rancl8co'• Brett 8atler (left) la taaed by ~er ftnt Bro'A n·s 1ratt'S} worked best after Steve Su pve the Dodacrs a 1-0 Dravccky admitted ht didn•t ex- pect to pitch a complete game in the bueman Mike llaraball ID a nmdown-llonday afternoon. (Pleue eee DY/82) .. * * * Would Dr. Naisffilthrecognize his invention? ~:r:urp~ KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) -WMn Dr. that time. Bnorc that. offensive teams ~re had rcponsof l,SOO dunk lllJUtln. bk'kboanh •ould tum over 1n h•' ara'<' 1f he rould sec 1 James Naismith ~mbled up a~ with a rontent 10 wait out ckftnscs. .. They say at OM txina broken. rims bei"g tom down:· this." ttlll saad. "No• ~ sa~ ·1-.·as ~TOng.' is Mann ng pcach~skdunderh1sarm.he~a~ California pme apinst USC. it sot so boring For a dcca<k. n~ dunks wett pc"rmatted 1n .. much ddJcrcnt from the one that crowned its . fans bcpn rcactina nc~papers. .. Steitz said. collqc ball. Then in 1976-77. t.M Nit •-as Tht distance of t~ thl"CC'-poantcr e' <'ntu- national champion Monday niaht. The al .__ h . ..i.. ck he rescinded. laf'ICIY bealust tht col'* pcoplt all) could bt mo,·cd from 1ts current 19 fett. 9 And bultetball continues to evolve. Y . ~ ~ .. ~ c a:f.na ::I un. r 1 admimi what was aoeng o n in~ NB~. in hes. 10 th<' international d1stanc-t of !0-6. The NCAA rules committee bepn meet· basket, d~ntt a 11•·f00l nc ruhn& that "The e•c:itemcnt aencrated by tht dunks The 4S-strond <"Ioele ro111d bt mtutt<l perhaps ina ho\ln before Kanu' played Oklahoma for a player could spmd no "'°" than ~f'tt in the pros convtnced u' that at •-as somtthtnt to 35 ste0nds or 1eu. Thaw att ~ustmcnts. the title and it will continue di1CUnion1 today. ~nets t~. That JftVtnted ~center m ~should toltratt," St<"1U said ... It's the home Sttall thinks the prnc • 111 undnJ<> other major No s!l:nificant chanees 'are e•pected this time. ICttlftl u=.an lhatarea.Ftttna the pass and run of baskttbalt .. cha nan. ~·•body never hi' hesit1ted to alter the' thc~r Lboachuen ~ fine-t~n1ns. rn:""' the l980s mott chaoacs ·~re ''The ncxtchulC I .:n~1s1on isao•I\& to'~ .. Tbe ftra U-iftcut rules c:ba-Was in In. I 917-18. the commit* ehm1nated w In I 980-l l. altcrute~ions ~ intcmatio nal laM that 'A1ckns at four feet:• ~ 911 2• .._.... ·...-cenlt! Jump after every t.tet. said. "That wtll push ti\(' b'8 SU>' out funher and 1 • -.. ~ ~ etimi~ied the one-boo~ That was revolutionmy introduad and the Jump 1 wu ehminated ehm1nate the elbowih~ and push1na un<kr-dnbble, •id Dr. Ed ~tz. leefttary of the .. That led to b"•.._ .a,...._ .. Stcsu Uld. e1ctpt to swt a pm<' In I98S-86. t~ 45-neath. naln committee and athletic direc10r at • . . .... "' Dr l«'Oftd doct wu med for the fiBt tnne. "But Sorinsftdd (Maa) co11eee. whett Or. ~P:Untt11aid1t.~11dbe.atndmttt.. . onlyaftttwtdid2Syarswortbofrctearch on "And I think the) will e\ltntuall) look at Naitmithaltoworbd. Naasmatb~at. . it." ~t.z uid. The folloW1na seuon. the n11s1nath<'blskttto lt '~or llfttt.ihatwon·t 'Thal chanle was had by Kanus COKh . Even wath that powaful lobby ~"I commitltt added the th~nt fie.Id Soll. be an m) hfttirnc. but I think it will happen Phal AUm and his co11e1pn. 'WM thoulht it 1t. the ~neer JWDP ~me a • ._. .. arur.ct: The last two ~aners cnatfd much That would t.akt a.a the '7·2 au JUn\P'"I wasJoolilluoforccapllyertopa11t'-ebalfafttt But the 11me mnea~ scablt for nearty lO controversy. Manyt'Oe('hes raiard at t<'•ll and thrtt n~hn off the brand pumn11hc ball a lilllle bounce. 'heir mity on w d\ante ~n after that. unlit O~ no-4u,nk rule "' hlS comnutttt. lut ft<'W, the ruin fit rom• and hLSarmdo,..n lhrouth the l\ooo. Thafuo.1 bdpeil crmee the toeeMt allOCiation. antrod~ dU"!lll Ilk Le-Akindor .. at fonabty 1mo * pme and COllChes who at first an alhktac lt1IL W..t 'M.cbatl Jordan.. don. · ly the 1932-ll k"9IOft. dw committee UCLA in tbc m~1960\. com~iM&Uner apologlnd to s.etu. Thal' a $&111:· ~t the 10 ICcoad nlle into the pme, .. ~ t'*-ht 1t was• a.nlt·Akilldor "~ wt put 1n w three-potnt shot. Twth"t fCri Dr Naismith's tad<kr M\<'r bail_. to ....... o"' aickoun in rult,''Scciauad. .. butthalwullOCthecae.Wt GecM1t Ra~hna of ~said Dr. Naismith wouldhlvemadtitlMt., . .. M N ~ CIT Y.Mo;(AP)-Evni though the pme was on the ltnc. Dann Mannina knew 1t was over. The ore was 79. n wuh 14 stt0nds ltf\. an etcnut for Otla· homa's ratthorsc o~sc. Manni"I had bttn l-for-3 at~ foul lane until that potnL But he cooty d~ •• t•o frtt throvi.1 for a four-po.nt kwl. Oklahoma came naht bin for 1 bu~ct b) R1 k Grace And. with fi~ 1ttOnd left. the 6-foot-1 OY> Ma.nnn.a found h1mstlf bed at the foul liM 1111n. At that moment. ""'th the ~ ll-7q, thepmc•' 1t1ll in doubt .... not aerordina to Mann•ns. ''I Ml thtMi"lo 'it's Ovtf.-M9- ftt"ltnl. Wa that bd'oft « aftet M c:Mlllf droootd lM tw0 ~ ...... "" ·-•• ca Ola• ca.. DAILY PILOT/ TtHldey, Aprtl 5, 1 ... llAKNING NAMED MVP ••• ..,,.!! ... telec1ed the pane'• Ouamnditw Pla}el', ._ CIOIDDleted a -lional pme bY pabbiJll die final rebound OD a desperation law '°ce:-" K.anw' 13-79 viciory for the NCAA ~ip. Muaina finished the same with l 1 points, 11 rebounds. five -.ts, two aaisu and two '*>eked shots. .. , knew Danny wanted it bed." Oklahoma's S&ac:ey Kina said ... He: nnne out and proved it.·· Mannina committed his KCOnd personaJ foul just l l minut.et into I.be fint half and sat on the bench for I.be next three minut.et. But Kansas stayed with Oklahoma duriQI that span and, by halt\ime, with a stiftina .-ce. the ICO(e was SO.SO. In I.be leCOnd half. Kansas had Mannina doi'1 everythina. even briftli,..,.the bell upcowt. pati&ed it came in Kan• City. only JO miles or "' from the Jayhawb' C"ampus ia Llwreoce. .. Thia feels pat, to be able to dOll it out in Kaaua City bem the rieot* who supponed me for four yean. .. Manni~t~time All-American, hokls a fistful of · ' t records. incl..cti the career scorina~o ,895pniats. ButtOr~pasttwo years. he was troub&ed by a dismal four-IJC;Mnt Derformancc when Kansas reached the Final f;our in 1986. He: fouled out of the semifinal pme apinst Duke as the Jayhawlts' were eliminated. The surprisina march throuah the 64-team tournament to another Final Four for a team decimated by irtjuries and i~ligibilities .. ve ManninJ a chance to ttdcem himself. He setzed it carTYlDI his team to its semifinal victory in a ~match with Duke: and then to the cham- pionship. > . KRY TO KANSAS UPSET ••• ...... , OklliOnla hlld takn a 6WS '-I• Mookic Blaytock•s ~inter tom the riaht ol the key With 11 minutes rcmaini,.. Sbutti111 down Oklahoma•• in- terior duo of Harvey Grant and Stacey Kina. the Jayhawb limited the SoonCn ao one be*t and a free ..,row in the next niae minutes. Dann_y Manni• ... ,,ed the decis- ive nan by droppina in a spinina t~ hander, then threw in a ftatfooted hook shot over Grant to make: it 69-68 with l :SO left .. ranee." Piper uid. "Tnne was nan· nina down and we needed the shot. Luckily, it fell. If it hadn·•i I would have never heard the end 01 it." Oklahoma came: t..clc to tie it 71 ·71 on a free throw by Dave SieF! and Grant's turnaround lhnt over Man- ni"'° but Kansas came: beck with six ::f't points to take the lead f0< Piper capped the run when he released a -hi,h-archint shot over Kina from the left besehne with one teCOnd on the shot clock. The shot c~k buuc:r sounded u the shot dtool)ed cleanly throuah the: net for a 77-71 lead with ):0) lelt We have the patest P'I~ in the pme," Kansas coecb Larry. Brown said ... With a pt pla~ like him, you've always 90t a chance. The pme was tbt final one in Mannina's brilliant coll• carftf' and he was particularly "This wasn't a Jifi," MaAnina said. "We weren't lucky. We prepared forouropponunities and capitalized on all of them to get this far." Duuay Meanie& led San•• to tM 1'CAA buketball dtle and wu toaraef'• llVP. Kaaua aot the bell beck after an Oklahoma foul and, with the shot clock nanai111 down, K.tvin Pritchard drove into the teeth of the Soonen• zone defense, nipped the bell to Chris Piper op the: riaht side and he m.ck a 15-footc:r. · .. That's about the limit of my "That isn't something I pnctice.'' Piper said." Apin, it was a case of the clock runni'!f down and I had to.do something. Im aJad it fell. Destiny must have: been guidin~ the bill." :A: career Yankee, Sheppar~ is stlll calling,theDl with a toucli of class NEW YORK -While the lineups have changed at Yankee Stadium since 195 I, the: man announci~ them has noL Bob Sheppard stan s his 38th season as the Yankees' public address announcer when New York opens its season today against World Series ctiampion Minnesota. For anyone: who has seen a game at Yankee:. Stadium over the: past four decades. or listened on the radio. Sheppard's vokc is as familiar as a Mickey Mantle home run. Sheppard's job is to announce the: starting lineups. substitutions. and give an occasional plug for the Yank.cc:s' yearbook on sale at the concession stands. His first game as the Yanktts' public address announcer was April 17, 1951, and Sheppard still remembers New York's lineup. "On that day, it was: Jack.ieJcnsen in left field; Phil Rizzuto at shonstop; Mickey Mantle in riaht field; Joe DiMqgio in center field: Y<>&i Berra catching; Johnny Mize at first base; Billv Johnson at third base; Jerry Cokman at second b.ise. and Vic Raschi was the: pitcher. The Yankees beat the Red Sox ~." The: fvst public address announcers in baseball used a mcgaph9~c to shout the lineups as they moved around the.park,· "Electronically, I Lhink things improved in the 1930s or '40s." Sheppard said. "I remember as a young boy goin' to Ebbcts Field and seeing the man walk around with a megaphone. "But after World War II. electronics took over and the public address system began to be put into all of the bell parks. • .. At first, at Yankee Stadium. for example. there were huge speakers in C"enter field which boomed out the voices. But when Yanktt Stadium was renovated. they put hundreds and hundreds of smaller speakers around the: stadium for better audibility:· Sheppard said he had no style. or role model. to follow and doesn't even know whom he replaced. "I have no idea who went before me." Shefpard said. "Probably they went through hundreds o guys who came in and left and came in and left.·· Despite several changes in management since Sheppard started with the Yankees. he said he never was told how to do his j ob. "Never in my 38 years has anyone from George Weiss to Dan Toppi°" Del Webb. Gabe Paul and Mike Burke and George Steinbrenner ... nobody has ever said to me change your style. Do this or do that. ··1 knowthc:re has~na new cult of public address announcers springing up all over the country who shout and root and chttr, but that's not my style and all the people who come to Yankee Stadium know it:· Sheppard's style is 'imple: "Batting third. number 23, Don Mattingly. first base. 23." · "Nobody told me how to do this job. nobody told me to change my style and I'm not too sure I would, or should or could. · Quote of the day ''I wish them (Mike Shanahan. A1cx Gibbs and Nick Nicola.u) the.best ofluck in every game except two." Denver Broncos Coach 0.. Reeves, who lost three assistant coaches. when Mike Shanahan was named the Raiden new head coach. Nelson in line for Warrior job OAKLAND -Don Nelson. who m wanted some time to decide whether to take over as the Golden State Warriors' head coach. is expected to give his answer today_. The NBA team announced Monday that" it is holding a news conference at 10 a.m. today at the Oakland Coliseum Arena to discuss the coaching situation. · George Karl resigned as coach on March 23 with the team standing 16-48 in his second season on the job. The Warriors made the playoffs for the first timt' in 10 years last season. Sun Devils win 15th straight TEMPE -Arizona State's Linty •• Ingram pitched his ~venth complete game, and teammate Tim Spehr drove in two runs with a home run and a double as the Sun Devils defeated Arizona 6-3 Monday for their I 5th consecutive victory. The Sun Devils improved to 35-8 on the season and 8-7 in the Pacific-I 0 Conference with the: win. their ninth straight oycr the Wildcats since their last 1986 meeting. Television, radio TELEVISION 4:30 p.m . -TRACK AND FIELD: National Scholastic Championships. from New Haven. Conn. (taped). ESP~ . 4:30 p.m. -BASEBALL: Chicago Cubs at Atlanta. WGN. TBS. 6 p.m. -HIGH SCHOOL BASltETBALL: Indiana boys state final. from Indianapolis (taped). ESPN. 7 p.m. -BASEBALL: San Francisco at Dodgers. Z Channel. 7:30 p.m . -PRO BASltETBALL: Seattle at Lakers. Prime Ticket. Sclc:cTV. TBS. RADIO 5:35 p.m . -BASEB.<u.: Padres at Hous- ton. KFMB (760). 7 p.m. -BASEBALL: San Francisco at Dodgers. KABC (790). . 7:30 p.m. -PRO BASKETBALL: Seattle at Lakcrs. KLAC-{570). 7:30'p.m . -PRO BAS&ETBALL: Clippers at Portland, KRTH (930). WEDNaDAY TELEVISION 2:30 p.m . -BASEBALL: Chicago Cubs at Atlanta, WGN. TBS. "'-WEDN~DAV RADIO 11:35 a.m . -BASEBALL: Padres at Houston, KfMB (760). NCAA CROWN GOES TO KANSAS, 83-79 •••. From Bl way to the first national cham- pionship for a team from west of the Mississippi since UCLA won in 1975. Mannin&. who had five steals. sealed -the victory with four frtt throws in the final 14 tee0nds. He pvc Kansas an 81-77 lead with the fint two. Scooter Barrv had missed the second frtt tnrow ·o a 1 -ana-1. but Manning tapped th<' rebound and was fouled by Kin&. Sieger made seven )-pointen: six in the fint half, to tic the championship pmc: team and individual record set last season by Indiana's Steve Alford. The pmc was playt'd in Kemper Arena. site: of the Big Eight tour- nament and just lS miles from the Kansas campus. Manning picked up his third foul just 25 seconds into the second half but he: nc:vc:r got his fourth. "It was ci&ht apirist five." King uid of the officiating. "That's all I've 1Dt to say. They were letting Manning io anythina he wanted to. I like Danny and I'm happy for him but he bows in his mind be fouled ouL It ... t.d calls au around." Sieler' made: his sevt"nth ).pointer ff'* lllM on his I Olh shoe from that • range: but then he went cold. Sieger missed two in a row on one: possession and secmf'd ready to take a third when the ball bounced back to h im. But instead he pas~ it insic;k to King who scored for a 65-60 lead, Oklahoma's largest of the: flmC:. Brown caJled a timeout JUSt before the basket by King. The Jayhawlts scored five straight points to tic the game. the last thrtt C"Oming on a three-point play by Manning. Seahawks win. 2-1 Ocean View Hi&h's girts softball team improved to.,_ 7 overall with a 2-1 non-league victor) over visiting La Habra Monday afternoon. Cindy Schneller struck out 10 and walked just one in pining her fifth victory in I I decisions. The Scahawks pushC'd across two runs in the fifth inning. Shannon Pauelsen led ofT with a triple to left and af\c:r a 1hrowina em>r 90t pinch·hiuer Kart"n Schndlc:r aboard. an ensui~ throwina error on a steal attempt at teeond sent Paueltcn home:. Kansas made 22 of 3 I shots in the . first half. 71 percent. including 17 of their first 20. Siqcr was the: hot hand for OkJa- homa as be made six of eight. )..point attcmpt.s while the: Sooncn made 48. 7 percent as a team. 19 of 39. The first half was played at Okla· homa-s tempo as the t<"arm-furished tied at SO-SO. In the SCC'Ond half. the teams combined scored just 12 {K>ints more than each did in the: opemng 20 minutes. There were eight lead changes in the first half and neither team led by more than six -when Pritchard hit a 3-pointer to give the Jayhawlts a 31-25 lud with 9:35 left in the: half. Siegtr. who finished 7-of'..13 in ). pointers. answered with bis third ). pointer and Kina added a baseline: drive and the Soonc:n were within oneapin. Mannina picked up his second foul with 10:44 remainina in the haJfand while he was on th<' bench, the Sooners still couldn't capitalize as they outscomt Kansas"Yonly 12-10. Oklaboma had beaten Kansas twice durina the tea0n. 73-6S and 95-87. CLEANING & PRESERVING SHAKE ROOFS SINCE 1969 .............. .,..., · MAKE YOUR ROOF LAST LONGER AT A FRACTION OF REPLACEMENT COST! CALLNQW • Fe. M01E ..alMA110N AND A FREE ESTIMATE .. Bell takes out frustration on the ball three. ti.Dies He becomes the first-ever player to homer thrice on Opening Day Frem De AsMdate4 Press George: Bell became the first player ever to hit three home runs on opening day, leadins the visiting Toronto Blue Jays past the Kan~ City Royals 5-3 Monday. Bell, bitter throughout spring training with his move: to designated hitter. homered three times in that role ofT Bret Saberhasen. Bell hit a solo home run in the second. a two-run drive in the fourth and a solo shot in the eighth for the first three-homer game of his career. Forty-eight players had homered twice on openins day. with Kirk Gibson and Jim Presley doing it in 1986. Bell. last year's Most Valuable Player with 47 homers. was suspended tbr a day and fined in sprins training for refusing to OH. He re.ached a temporary truce with the team shortly hcfore opening day and agreed to move from lefi field. · The Blue Jays· victory eamc: after they lost the ~nal seven games ofthe 1987 season and blew the Amcncan League East champion-;hip to Detroit. Bell finished the year in a 3-for-27 slump and did not homer in his last 11 gam~s. Jimmy Key. the AL c:amed run average champion. save up a two-run homer to GC'Orge Brett in the first inning but did not allow another run in his six innings. Tom Henke pitched the final two innings for a save:. Saberhagen went eight innings and gave up seven hits and five runs. three of them earned. He walked none and struck out seven. . Bell homered on Saberhagcn's first pitch in the second inning. Lloyd Moseby reached on an cJ;ror by first baseman Steve Balboni to lead ofT the fourth and Bell homered one out later for a 3-2 lcad. The Blue Jays scored another run in the.inning when Rance Mulliniks doubled. Ernie Whitt singJcd and Jesse Barfield hit a sacrifice ny. Willie Wilson tripkd in the seventh off David Wells and scored on Kevin St'itzcr's sacrifice ny. pulling Kansas Cit)' within 4-3: Bell homered wlth two outs in the eighth. A sellout crowd of 40.648 watched at Royals Stadium. a few miles frnm where Kansas and Oklahoma played · Monday mght for the college basketball cham- pionship. Elsewhere in the American League: Tlaen 5, Red Sos l: In Boston. Alan Trammell hit a t~o-run homer ofT Boston reliever l....ee Smith with two outs in the I 0th inning and the Detroit Tigers beat the Red Sox. Boston's Roger Clemens and Detroit's Jack Morris hooked up in a strikeout duel for nine innings before Smith, acquired from the Chicago Cubs an December. made his Amencan League: debut in the 10th. Gary Pettis opened the Detroit I 0th with a grounder that shortstop Spike Owen fumbled for an error. Pettis advanced to third on a sacrifice and a ny ball before Trammell lined a 2-1 pitch into the lc:f\-fic:ld screen. Morris. 7-2 onopeningdays.got the victory with help from Mike Henneman. who patched the final inning for a save. Morris gave up nine hits, struck out nine: and walked onl) one. Clemens. making his first opening-day start, struck out 11 and gave up siA hits. including Matt Nokes' tying. solo home run in the six th. Ckmcns. trying to become: the first pitcher to win three straight Cy Young awards. walked four and.committed-three bilks. The Tigers nicked C'lemcns for a nan in the third on a walk to Tom Brookens. a balk and a two-out ground sinale through the middle by Whitaker. With two out in the fourth. Detroit scored again on a walk to Pat Sheridan and Chet Lemon's line triple. . -,,,. ... ,.., .... Cincinnati oatflelder Bric Dam jut mh•• ne.uac a lalt ~=z.~rom st. Loal9. Oule Smida lD third llODclaJ. who had been intentionally walked. broke second on a delayed steal and, after catcher Terry Kennedy threw to second. Molitor stoic home. Molitor walked. stoic second and third and scored on a wild pitch by Perez in the seventh. Glenn Braggs' infield single drove in another run in the inning. Rusen 4, hMliul S: In Arlington, Pete O'Brien hit his second home run of the game: on a 3-2 count in the bottom of the: eighth innina y to Jive the Texas Rangers a scason-openi~ come-from-behind victory over the Cleveland Indians. O'Brien. who hit a second-inning home run, also on a 3-2 pitch. slammed an opposite-field drive ovcr the 380- foot sign in left field to start the inning off reliever Chris Codiroli. The pmc-winning homer enabled Charlie Hou&}\ to beat Cleveland for the 13th consecutive time, with ninth-inning help from Mitc_h Williams. • The: opener drew a crowd of 37.613. Hough is 16-4 lifetimc apinst the Indians and hasn't lost to them since Apnl 3. 1914. The veteran knuckleballer Hough allowed five hits, including home runs by Willie Upshaw. J1.11io Franco and Cory Snyder. Williams teok over af\c:r Hough walked Joe Carter to start the Oevcland ninth. Carter was ca~t stealing when Williams threw hchind him and Wilhams struck out pinch hitter Carmen Castillo and Brook JaCoby. Texas tied the game l-3 in the St"vcnth. scoring twice with the help of two Clrvcland errors. A&Metlcs 4, MartHn 1: In Oakland. Dave Stewart allowed two hits in 8 1-3 innings -a singJc on the first pitch of the game: and a o ne-out singJc in the ninth -and Dave Henderson and Jose: Canseco homered as the Oakland Athletics opened the season with a victory over the Seattle Mariners. Mike Kingery singled cleanly to left field to open the game and eventually scored on Stewart's two-out basn- loaded balk. But after the: first inning. the Oakland right- handc:r, a 20-pmc winner last year, allowed only one buerunncr on a walk and had retired 18 consecutive bitters when Mickey Brantley's one-hopper caromed ofT his gfovc: foranlnlicld hit. Stewan. who struck out three, then issued his fourth walk to Alvin Davis and wu rcplactd by Rick Honeycutt. who got the: second out. Dcnms Eckersley took over and wrapped up the victory before a sellout crowd of 45.333 . Boston went ahead with three runs in its half of the .. fourth. Wade: Boas. who doubled for the: first hit of the: major lcasue season in the first. doubled again ofTthc wall in lc:ft-ttntcr and took third on Mike: Grcenwell's sinalc: o'{cr the shortstop's head. Dwight Evans doubled ofTt"he wall in center. scoring Boas, and Sam Hom followed In the National lc::iguc: a..i i , CaNJub 4: In Cincinnati. Kai Daniels singled home: Jc:fTTreadway with two o uts in the bottom of the: 12th innina. givina the Cincinnati Reds the nod over the St. Louis Cardinals. with a two-run singJc:. Brewen 11,0rielesl: Tedd>: Higuera pitchod..tbn:c- hit ball for seven innings and Dale: Svcum's two-run homer hiahlighted a 16-hit barrage: as the: Milwauktt Brewers routed Baltimore. A crowd of 52.395. the laraest regular-season crowd in Baltimore history. watched Milwaukee win its third straiaht opener. Last yeilr, the Brc:wt>rs won their fint 13 pmcs and tied the major 1equc: ~ord for consecutive victories at the start of a season. Higuera allowed only one: runner past first base. 11c: struck out seven and walked one:. Martt C1ear pve up two hits in the: eighth and Dan Plesac pitched a hatless ninth. Mike: Boddickc:r took the loss. pvina up four nans in 51/> inninp. He: left th~ pme with a sliptly sprained ankle:. Rob Deer hit a pair of RBI doubles. Ernie: Riles had three hits and Paul Molitor stoic: three beta, including home. Svcum's homer ofT rookie Oswaldo Peret came: durina a six-run c:iahth innina. Deer doubled "home a run and scored on Riles' sinale for a 2..0 lead in tbe fourth. Milwaukee made: it 4-0 in the fifth. BJ. Surboffbit a sacrifice fty and anotbtt run ICOl1'd when GtQ Brock., Daniels also had a wlo homer in the sixth innina to help the Redsovc:rrome a 4-1 deficit c:n route to their fifth consecutive: opcnina day victory. Treadway. HOOkk led-offthc: 12th with .. w.Jk from reliever Bob Forsch. 0-I. and moved to third on Barry l...arkin's sacrifice and a wild pitch by Larry McWilliams. the: seventh SL Louis pitcher. Daniels then hit a soft sinalc to center to end the pme. Pat Perry. a former Cardinal, pvc: up two walks in the 12th but pitched out of the th rat and tot the victory. The: pme was plar ed befcn 55.438 fans. the laraicst rqular-season crowd an Riverfront Stadiutn's IS-year history. Mets 11, S.,.. I: In Montral. Darryl Strawberry and Kevin McReynolch hit two home: runs each as the: New York Mets set a rttord with six openin.-day homers.. beatina the Montreal E~pos for their 13th v1et0ry in their last 14 openen. Len [)ykltn and Kevin Elater also homered for the: Mets, who broke the fC<'ord set by the: New York Y ankecs tpintt tht Philaddpbia Athletics on April 12, 1932, and tied four times since. Hubie Brooks homtted for Monual u the clubs tied the record for openina ~ by both teams a.st ... llAMPU.L/aa) Trace of Abbott and Costello for santa Afilta announcer ARCADIA -Tlld •eouncer Trevor Denman was not havi111 a llpee ot l'DeDIOIY •lie c..ued lhe ftaitla otd9e leCOftd race at S..ta Allita f!idlY wida d9e plaralt .. and it'• Ood It.Dows Who to bat Point oe MW" n. ........... .,, ................ ~ .... ).,_.._.. r::,,--Ood bnwl W.O. wlao-ICOrilllbia flrac.recrvidory ~for Ollilll1llia tnd m1lll1• wa.o=.~ .... .tr.':=n.~~g:J= .._.,....._. mn:':l~•Ooodfriitay. -_.. • .... w ••••~• "r ..... onen HMald AJul a 11• _. °"*' PW "' a q.y ,._... it ...,... " ........ • ....... aaaaH •I llJ, •ta IM ...... c:irde iii Qod ........... 11111r-.-----· .... Mia• °"'Y • Oood FridlJ ....... ,.....-. • Major J:,eagae standings Chicqo OH.land Teua Minnesota ~!'scity Seattle Detroit Milwauktt Toronto New York BaJtimore Boston Cleveland w I I I 0 0 0 0 I I I 0 0 0 0 ...,. DIVlllON L Pd. GB 0 1.000 0 1.000 0 1.000 0 .000 I .000 I .000 Iii I l I .000 l EAST DIVISION 0 l .000 0 1.000 0 1.000 0 .000 I .000 l .000 liz I I l .000 l ...... , •• Sew'ft Chiafo a. Mcels ' Detroit S. Boston 3 (I 0 inninp) Milwaukee l 2. Baltimore 0 Toronto S, Kansas City 3 Tuas 4., Cleveland) Oakland 4, Seattle I Only pmcs scheduled Lll l-0 1-0 1-0 ().() 0-l 0-l 0-1 1-0 1-0 1-0 ().() 0-1 0-l 0-l s.r... Won I Won l Won I Won 0 Lost I Lost I Lost I Won Won Won Won 0 Lost I Lost I Lost I HMM Away 1-0 0-0 I-0 0-0 1-0 0-0 0-00-0 0-0 0-I 0-I 0-0 0-0 0-I 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-I 0-I 0-0 1-0 1-0 I-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-I T ... y'1Games Minncsota (V1ola 17-IO)ltNewYoQ._(Rhoc:kn 16-1-0).1 p.m. Seattle (Moore ~I '>) at Oakland (Welch I S-9), IO:JS p.m. Only games scheduled We8eMay'1 Games Aqels at Chicqo. S:lO p.m. Minnesota at New York. IO a.m. Detroit at Boston, IO:OS a.m. Seattle at Oakland. noon Milwaukee at Baltimore, 4:3S p.m. Toronto at Kansas City, S:3S p.m. Cleveland at Teus. S:JS p.m. , .,..,....y'1 Games Aacel•at Chicqo. I l:lOa.m. Detroit at Boston. I O:OS a.m. Minnesota at New York, 4:30 p.m. Milwauktt at Baltimore. 4:3S p.m. Toronto at Kansas City. 8:3S p.m. Cleveland at Texas. S:3S p.m. Only pmcs scheduled lfatloiial £ea6Ue WEST DIVISION • " I L Pct. GJI Lii Cincinnati San Francisco Atlanta Houston San Diego Deqen New York Chicqo Philadelphia Pinsburah Montreal St. Louis I 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 0 1.000 1-0 0 1.000 1-0 0 .000 'h ().() 0 .000 1h ().() 0 .000 1h ().() I .000 I 0-1 EAST DIVISION 0 1.000 0 .000 0 .000 0 .000 I .000 I I .000 I 1/2 ·h ·h 1-0 ().() ().() ().() 0-1 0-1 M .... y'1btt1 San Francisco S. IWJen I Cincinnati S. St. Louts 4 ( 12 innings) New York I 0, Montreal 6 Only games scheduled T ... y'1Games Strtak Won I Won I Won 0 Won 0 Won 0 Lost I Won I Won 0 Won 0 Won 0 Lost I Lost I e .. e Away I· 0 0-0 0-0 1-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-I 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-I 0-0 I-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-I San Francisco (Downs 12-9) at DMatt• (Hcnhiscr 16-16). 7:0S p.m. Pittsburah (DunM 13-6) at Philadelphia (Rawley 17-11 ). 4:3S p.m. Chi~ (Sutcliffe 18-10) at Atlanta (Mah~r 8-13). 4:40 p.m. San Oiqo(Whitson 10-ll)at Houston (Scott 16-13). S:3S p.m. Only pmcs scheduled Wd•t ... J'• Gama San Diqo at Houston, I l:)S a.m. Chiaia<> at Atlanta. 2:40 p.m. New York at Montreal. 4:0S p.m. St. Louis at Cincinnati. 4:3S p.m. Pittsburah at Philadelphia. 4:3S p.m. Only pmcs scheduled 'ftvMay'1 GalHI De4pn at Atlanta. 4:40 p.m. St. Louis at Cincinnati. 9:3S a.m. New York at Montreal. 4:3S p.m. Pittsburah at Philadelphia. 4:3S p.m. San Diqo at San Francisco. 7:3S p.m. Only pmcs scheduled llOl'TUU DAft\"S L.OatD (...._,. ._., -• ~ .... ...,..,_ 2 ~. IS ........ J , ...... ldlelll oc....,... t.. u ....... redl till\. Sl C11ko ..... JO .-.d ...... 220 IMCMnll. 65 .. -a\. 1 .,,,......._ 1 ...... IWI, 16 IOANI. 1' ._ Wfit. La ..... -•1 .-1 ' , Oc9M vi.. --_, ) , ltlc""-'d ... Mlllr. 5c:tw-.r ... P9u1tw1.. • ~ (OVI ~ . " " IMmlHCAlll LSMMM ......... -....., CALWOIUllA QCAeO ., .... S I 2 1 LJeM\11 d • I I I Gull9f\ H • 0 ' 0 a.Nldfl ) 1 I l Celden\ 11 l 0 l 0 GW .. r ID ) l 0 l Fiiia c • 0 l 0 P•-lf ) 1 I 0 IC.W....._. I 00 1 L...-311 )0 1 0 Hll 2- 1 0 0 0 M6Nl4t 2'I MS' S T ..... tc.w _., ....... ., .... • I 1 1 • 0 l I • 0 0 ' • 0 . 0 • 0 •• • ' J 0 2 2 I I > , t ) 0000 2. 0 I 0 I 0 0 11 8 7 8 ~ tel •I ltl-S OK.ea -m MllC-8 ~ WlM"'9 lt81 -Hitt (II E-te Wlliem\, Jov..., L~ ~. Cllica9o I 29--Mc"~e 2 FIS&, ._,., IC. Wlllelm, Ho.,.. Hlt-tle v m K ~ 111 Sf'-Jovner • " ..... so c:....... M Wlll L ,0-1 ,.....,,, ~ '1 ) • 0 1 I 1·) I s ) 0 s I 0 1 0 0 • 0 I Olk-. Horton w 1-0 1-t s" 4 1. I ~S.I I 0 0 0 0 0 C.llOurn "''CMCI 10 l Ila''"" 1n "" 1111 Hot'ton P,IC"9<1 10 , Dallet\ In !fie "" H9 P-0own1ng lOY !10<10"1 WP-9.uice ~et-Home McKean ~ir\t, lteily S.C- onCI IC.••M< Tniro. Stluioco. r-i.so •->s.m NATIONAL LEAGUE ~ s, Declewl 1 SAN ,.ANCISCO LO' AMGaL•S lkltlet ct Aldrele " , .. , .. lb MIOl>Oo r1 MllCllll lll Melvin C It T""" 1" Urlt. n 0r ... e11. 0 •rll• •r•• S I ) 1 s., 2" • I 1 I J l 1 I Griffin u • "O 0 0 • l I 0 Glinon " • 0 0 0 ) 0 1 0 Guerre< ltl 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 I M.ar\N Ill l 0 0 0 •OOO ~ct 3000 ' 0 0 0 M•Davi\ ri l 0 0 0 • I , 0 ScloKla ( ) 0 I 0 1 I 0 0 Velenlle o I 0 0 0 Mt-!ICTV on 1 0 0 0 ~p 0 0 00 Hamltn Ofl 1 0 0 0 H•-O 0 0 0 0 JI S t 4 T... 1' I J I 1c-.-. ....... Slit ,r.ata "2 ---5 La..... ----1 G-Winl\tnt 1ta1 -Mi'dlel Ill. E-v....,Ulllli, SlleeY ~ Franchco I L09-Seft Frel'dlco 7. Lot A~ 2 »-euttw t-tlt-S.. Ill s-<>r."9Cllv 2 SF-.wtcNI. Aldrete • " ..... so S-l't ....... Ote...0.YW,l-0 t l La ..... V ..... ztAle L .. I 6 1 S • a a ..,,,.. , 00002 ..__ I , 0 0 0 0 Umolrn-Home. K~ F•r\t, Quiet<. Sec· ono Gr-llli<CI, P611one T-U• A-48 ... C-... scwe ~AC·lf Ariton. State 6, AriLone l HtGH SCHOOL STANDINGS SeooleC>e<IL E\t•ncla Tu\tln SM View L.Mwe (OtO'la ~ ,,,.., ..._oo<'I Haroor -~.,., ~- W L T ) 0 0 Ga 1 I 0 I , I 0 I I , 0 , 1 , 0 , 0 l 0 l 1Wwoor1 Harlloo' et C0tor• o.t M.ar E\tat><•• a• ~ Un1,..r\1h at T ""''" ,,.¥', c.- ~ at CorOfla IW M¥ Tu\ritl .. ....._., Henio< e,1anc: .. a• u"'.,.."'v Ocn n v- EOJMW' M.ar- ~ ........ Fouma.n Valle• H~11ne1on h KI> ~H~ef T.-V-1 ~ Ocfff' v-aJ Ed<'°" ........,,~ W LT Ge , 0 I , 1 0 ., I I 1 I I 1 0 1 -, I 1 0 I -, I 1 0 1 ., WHlm.,,.1er at l"ountam v.-v ,,,..,,,.. at 11~11neton hael'I LHtue Traouco Hll\ Or•"" Cotta Me\a W~ioee LffUN 8Mcfl LHU"a t4 ill\ o T .. .,.,~ LaeuN llNttl •' w~1oi.e Traouco Hiit •I Cott• Mfta Ot• .... el L...-Hiit ,,..,., -- Cot•• At1lfte e1 Or .... W l T Ga ) 0 0 , I 0 I 1 1 0 1 1 1 0 ' I , 0 , 1 1 0 1 L.....-~ •I L..-Hih Tr.OUCO Hiii a t WOOCllltictee. 1 s-191 C.at LHtue lnW O-t-1111\ c-...,.,._ v.-. El Toro MlulOll Vleto s.nc...... .... ....,.,~ e1 Toro et !Nine w l , -t I I 1 I. T Ge 0 0 I 0 I t ..... 1 1 0 , 1 0 2 , 0 , 0-....... Mlulon ~~ Caoittr-V.-V at Soett Clemente Al ..,_ •I l IS. Ul'4il'IJ "Ol90 BASEBALL ROUNDUP FOR OPENING DAY. • • ...... MeA .. naa• COW•tt•MC• hidk OMliell • I.~" •·LAIHn Sol 11 761 •-florli.llCI .. ,. 61' • ") • ·S..me • l3 Sl S 16 '"'-'• n ., m JO'lt ~ Sta ie u S.J JO -~ CllllMn " u ns • ,_...., OMtlell •·0 611a\ '6 1S Me ·-o..-" 26 Ut "" 1 ·Hov\ton I I 19 i16 •,, • ·Ulefl «> ) I "3 ' 5-n An'O'\lo 11 M -It s.cr-10 10 il ,,.. ,..,, EAST•ttN GON~E-•..CE Allatllk ~ •·ktton S2 11 111 ~r~. :n )t 0 1 1t we.,..neton n )t •SI It ....... Y~• )1 t0 4U lt'1 ,,... w~· 11 i.. 1so ll., c........ ~ .. ·Detro-• .. lS ... a·Allente •S 2• 634 I c~ o 19 St7 1, Mllw-M 1' )1 SV • > c .. v ... ncs )4 • •n 12 ., ~ ..ll.. ll '6S 1) •-<llnc...o e><e•ot! 09"" .f'--Ct1nc_~ 0 ~·'"'°" ,,, • ~"''~ "'o N "'H ~-T.....,., Gamft *"• et UM9" 7 lO o ,.. c:-..n er Po<11anc1 7 30 o ,., Oetro11 •' Nt • Je<i.e• • lO o,..,. N-Yor. e 1 P~ eele II"• I )O 0,.. Mllwav.,M •' At ante • V o,.,. Clevelancl •' l"CI •"• S lO om We\IW~oton ., c "•<•OO s lO 0 .., Denve< •• HOV\IOI' S >O I.I m Utar1 •' "-" 1 lO o ~ S.11 AntOll.O •' C.-r Sle •e 7 lO o"" Uken' r9fNlnlne lcMduee Tue'. Aor11 s -Se•"te ,_,.,.1 1 JO "'" Ai><ll I -C••DC>r\ °'<>""ti 7 )() Sa• Aor 9 -•' Por•i<art(l 130 TuH AIM'•I 11 -Port .. no "Omel 1 )0 Weci Aor1 I) -•' 0.-. .... 6 lO l"rl 40t'>I IS -~, 7.)0 Sufi AO<'~ 17 -el '°10\J\IC)tl 10 e m TuH Ai><·• It -•• s.~ Anlon·o S30 weci """'' 10 -•' Oe••u 5 lO l"rl llor I n -•t ~" a • JO ~ llor~ h -vOIOe<' S•••• P'IO<T•et 1130 AM l'IO">e 11•~ ot••eo e r ,,.. "°'.,.... •~ooo OlllPtn' rtmeinint ~ T..e\ ,\Dr! S -el Port>a!'CI 7l0 weci "°"'' • -Por•lancs _.,., 130 l"r, AD<•I I -e1 U .. 9'\ I )O S"" AC>t' 10 -Mov\10" _, T~ Aor• 12 -•' Uta~ •30 Wed AP'•' 13 -•' M e•ne 1.30 S.• ""' It -., c.-SI••• .. l.IH ACM' It -e• S.c• ....... 10 1 lO Wed AM II 10 -Uteri ._, 1 lO s.• "'"'' n -., o.,..~ 'lO Sun """' 1• -S.en.. -1 A~ -~•'"fl 04a•.C a• ,.,. L.t. Soar•\ Arena NaA IMdln ( 9weut111 S-.Y I k8"tle Joraa" CPlicaoo W1l1<•n \ 419-nl• &Ira 9 o\ton S.• .. lf• Pl'lti<a<M-ID!'he Ma-U1e11 Ore•le• ~•i.,no Eli\ S.enie Aeti.,re Delle\ e nv'•"' o.,, .. ~, McHale ~·Of' Olat1.1•on ~°"''Otl McO•"~ S.ar•ie Sc9",l.AM9" Cum""'f'O' M """eU"tt T~ Sac.-...._to J M.a-Wa ll""9IOI\ Cl'\am~' S.allle rt>Qroe Sacra,.....10 M ...,,._ WH M•OtOI' S•oc~ ion U•a.11 ~L.Hen JK1t\OI' N•• YO<• Porte>r Porlle"CI It ...,, A fletlle M.c.M ,, S..!llf • T"Qn\I\ Detro-• H•'°" Oa Ma\ Jolln\on llot ton c-' Pl'll •~Ot1·• • G ,G 11 07' •1 7'1 " I07 •• 6JI 11 711 " 71) 10 rn .. "43 70 11' s.• t 7 "tS '8 61S 11 .n u '41 .., ~ 10 m ,, ..,. 11 ~ .. •SO ,'T '""A"9 U7 , .. , ).t 1 •71 10'6 )1 I .. ,.., lO , 614 If)() 11 0 .,, 1tot 26 I ltt 1135 26 4 1' 1 llS6 26..j llS 1111 lH 271 1156 1S I l06 12'1 ?'I. m 1,., n.J , .. 1-21• 1lO IS>O 11 S m '"' ,, , ,. 1).&l 11 l )It 1'7S 21 I )11 ICl 10t .. 1•s 10• -I~ 10 • G ...... ..,. 11 n. I) 1 61 n1 ll 1 n 10 10> 70 111 10) •• 6.5.S tS 71 ill .. 10 Sil l • 11 5'5 I C 70 SSl 7t 10 ~ 71 . ... ... o."i.tv c "ic•oe> Ol•1u won Hou\•on Taroiev. Delle\ c....oi..en WiA1am\ New J.,W• M.atone Utat1 a.~,~ ""'''•~·· M Me-INH"•ngton L.a•mDet>t Oetto;t Gm11'\ll.t Pf\llaCM-!Of11e TllOroe S.cra,.,..,10 eiro tkn•on G <Ml Def n 110 "' •1 m m 10 llS S2I ., lOO .. , 60 7SI '60 11 n1 .o. .. )11 .. .. '11 .. , 11 150 sn 10 711 ... n n1 ., 6t 100 SSJ T• A"9 "' 12J I09 17 I 143 12 0 ,., 12 0 711 II t 141 11 1 IOJ 11 . 7 .. 11J n1 102 116 10, 7)9 100 4S3 t s , .... Geel~--.. ~G 'GA f"c1 MCHale ~!Of' -11' 5" PM. llo\IQI' ., 6j.a Sia S.r .. leY P!>nao.Dfl a 6JI -ion Stoc' tO" Utar-3'3 '7S 511 M.a-n Oetro-t 1'1 •.s.a S7S ltoomen Detro-• l.st "31 s.a Serrv S." .Antonio •1• ''° 560 Wilkam\ ~ , ... ~ • n.s SS6 ~"' '"'-'•• ,... •1' m l.•,,~ton Atlente 271 f9CI SSl A Orange Coat OAiLY PILOT /Tueedey, Aprtl 5, 11M - Team wtth more tha n one champtonsh lp UCLA ........ K~v CIMiMwtt L-"Vlle N.C..... N.C. State oette. I.AM 2 J 2 T eam s that h ave won once Gaa •••n H91V Creu us... ~St. .. ~ SIMtwd THH Wntem UtWI VllM9V• Wltc.MMrl W'lwntne NCAA TOURNAMENT (et et-.• Clf\I, Me I CH~S..11' I( ...... ' e:J °" .. ,_.,_. ;>t COLLEGE MEN NCAA FiNh let IC-1 Crt•I fllANSAl ll, 0t<LA110MA 1, KANSAS -~wton 4·• 1 2 U Po•• • ~ O O I Ma'"'•"'ll 13·2• ~-7 l ... •c'le•o ~ ' O c u c.~ner 1 1 o-o 1 e~··· O·Z 7 Ne>rmo•t l ·l 0· I 7 Herr" • O·O : ""'""' • 1·? • Maoooa 0-0 0·0 C To•&•\ )~·SS 9· l• U OKLAHOMA -C.rent t 11 ?·l la s._ 1·1S 1·2 11 1(11'19 1· U )·) '1 8 •vlOC• • 1] 0 .. C.••ct •· ,. l ·• 11 Mull "' :>·O O·O 0 To••·\ )CH O 9·1) 1' Half•·......-<•nw' SO .. ·or"'• :iO l oo·~· goai,_ef'W\ 1·6 Nt ... ICI" 7 1 NO'""Ort ?. •cne•o •·I c.-O ' """"'"II o 1 Oo<ta"D">• 10·2• ~-7 1) a1ev10C• 1 • Greet 1-7 i::ouiec 0u•-NO'>e Ile OOUnc\-t(ef\W\ 3' Man., "0 'I o-.. -l .: "'II C.•ac.t 7 •u \1\-ti:e "•H ti Pr •cnara Normo•e •· 0a .. ~ 1' ~ -C.•ac• 1 To•• 10.il\-<anw ' 16 °""''~ 11 •-• OH.c: .. '\-JOI'~ .. '°"°..,.... a.,.. .,. c r .... H-, ~ It•~ .., J 1ea H'Ofl•-._,o,.. Hl9fl KtlMI *11 ALL·O ' l ·A ~-"' .. ., .. , ll•oe .. Potitio.n. Mooe•• • l S• ,....,.,, ~ "' Yr AV'9 "'"' Tewn T •m AOl.tti\ S.nre Ciar• L W Conan Wnn9't TQl!v• z..,._.,.,,.,. Va'lev ( .,. T•ac· ScOOll"' Sa"'• viwr fl ,..., JO""'°" 8•"" "O Laur• 1-11tt1t M.ol•o &a• Dene Pa•\Ot>\ S• ~ J"1 e '11~\ 8teu""Otl• 1v ., ZP<r\ S.M• Cler• Ml("l'late Jer...-..n Atet<•ot-~ w~v II•~ WVf'le Onte•oe ,..,, Se<...i T_., l(r1\I• e> uaro Te~acl'\ae> Sl\annor Soter~ (e<n Veta.. Lrw S ... 1~ •r S.~I• _...,., Ah<.•• Hero " ,..~,.,~ C,,.. ltav ~ oi. • .-Mtl•Y>e' i:: .. "<! llOtYn<i 11-\lfl Velie; (°'• Ltt Cr e t>O•I CasetHIW\ LO' L••IOf' I" .,._, G~• lttaii·"l S."""'9 ......,..,. Oun"'"'ll' ltev na ::a~ ~ Oc~• Mo .... L N l" S•p,,_.,_ NC>t'e Oa.-. S· S J' 11 0 S·I J• 101 S-t Sr ISi S-t !>r 11 o s 10 J• 11 ) • 2 Sr IS 7 S· I' Jr t) I S· • Sr 17 • r• ~· 10 1 t·O ~, ISO 6·7Sr lS7 S·7 Sr 10 S·I Sr 14 • S·I ~r 1' • S l1 Sr US t · 1 J• II t S· 11 Jr 1 S S·I Sr 27 0 S· 10 Sr II ) •·11 Sr u s S· 10 So 111 S·• Sr 14 S S 10 Sr II 0 H<>tlSE ltACING SMlll AftlM JOCK•Y STANOINGS ~S......lt >«*.., ---,,, -Gert Steven\ ~ lOJ • e ~"°""""• •s.i .. .1 l affit P nta• Jr l08 St • C,.,..1\ McCarre>r1 ZSt ti lS S.r>Ov Hawlf• )ti )t •I lte tMI ..,,.ta l1l )t ,. A•~~ Grvo.r m ll u "". Sol•\ ).tt ] 1 lO w s-11... 101 19 n C>at lll "tN..... 1M 1' 18 )N~M' n 10 ~= ~ 1' •S )t 17 •5 19 ,, ,. '3 10 J I 1• 11 2t 50 °' .ll .. Ot 19 ,. .. ,, 10 IS lt TaA.-Ea STANO.COS T,..._ ~ l&t -)N ~ M' c ""' ••inOl'\a,,.. ,.. l1 1• n n liO 0 Ull<H 1~ 27 JO 1• 11 ~1 G ,_ 171 2S 16 It 1CI 66 M Slu tt 1... It Z1 II 10 l? • Eli' • 11 1 s 11 10 50 C Lf'W" t1 17 11 1) II Sol -a.........--~ 11 11 ,. " '3 0 LUO. 101 'S 1' II u ¥} It McAM'> 110 IS ll 11 14 l S J c.,..,. 11 11 •s • n 61 M Ml!C"e" M '• I S 17 l1 IN Soewr )I 1' I ) ·~ I I W'-. Clef!OiH •lnn."9 Derc.t''- M'll. -tft tn Ille .._., -cetlt ... ..... s...-.c. ...... ~~MAU , ......... s-1 ··-••If'•.._ l<.lllllll •' C.ieerv, 6.lS o.m WlflnlNe et EOmonlOtl. 6·U p l'I\. Mew J..... a t N Y 1'1encler\, S. •,m l>tlllaOH>fl.. e1 we.,,;neton ~ •-"' Har1toro e1 MontrM I. •:JS o.m 8 1Jffel0 •t 8o11on. •.3.S o m Toronto al OelroH •.lS om (P11cego el St l..OUt\ S'.lS o .m Tlwn49¥'\ 0- 1( .... et CelOar•. 6.JS Dfll. W•nn•Hil •• Eomont0<1, • '5 OJ\'\. N~w Je<Mt'r at N Y 1"9ndlrl, SM •.m l>tl1i.a.11>n<e er W•1n1,,.1on. •:l.S •·f'll. '1ertlorO al MonlrH t. •.JS •·"' 8uftal0 al llo"on 'JS D m T0ton10 at Oelrolt O .S om.. C PllC.auo et St LOUt\, S:JS Oft\ s. ....... v-. ~ C••11a•• •• 1( ..... 7..3S o.m Eomon•on •' Wtftn'"9, s-os 111.Jft. lol y ·~-\ at Ill.-W'WY. ~ P.J'I\ We~ne1on e r P!\1~ ':J.S •..m lltl\onttMl •' ~•r•toro. •.JS •.m 8o1ton •' 8 .iflalO • lS o 1¥1 Oet•o' •' TO'onto S-OS om S1 I.Ck.I \ et C Pl!C-S.SS Oft\ S-.¥'1 0.- C• ••• •' IC-7JS om E 0"'<>'"<>" a• "",,,,,,099 S-OS 1> m N v '""-' e• N~ .. W Mtv ••S •"' " wn,.•ne•on •' ,...,,~ ~ o.m.. MOf'litre• •• "1•'"0"0 4-0S om llo\to .. •' II_,,.•~ •'OS om Oet•o·• •' To-on10 •-OS om \.I ~°"'' •' Cn1c,eoo SJS om Tuetay, ._.... 1? l N Meft..,..,I 11,-•• Cat11a•• 63.S om W "'"C>e11 e• E omonrOfl • lS o m N~· J.-"' a· "I Y l\lanot<\ S-OS om Pf>tt•O•D'I•• •' Wa\ll•ngtO" •.lS om • "•"lo•c et Mont•••• 4.lS om &;Jtiato •• 80\1011 •.lS o m •o•on•o •• Detr0tt • lS om C~oC•OO •' s• LOVI\ SJS D m T'hur-Mey. ..,.. 1• (" llKftMr'Y) Ce19e• • •• K.._ 7.lS o rn_ Ea.._tOf' e• Wlnnl"9 .S lS D-"' N Y " .. 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"'9 ~ ............... ~ , .... ~ 29915 59995 Reg.849.00 &t052 Low As S30 Per Month• ~ Mor\nc>t Save 1249°• • • .-C Competibfftty AHows You to Choow From Tl"Ol 1 •of C*Wtent Software Pecbges e OD to Woftl wtth Dnklbte D Productivtty Softwete 89900 ANdytoU•- No Edr8a to Buy Reg.Sepern• lt9fN11'8.t5 ........... ........ ........ ........... • , ..• ••• ••• M.W Your C'hotc• :'6~~ •• ..,. Oilel ..... °' ...... • ~oeecta ~.,... ,, f Bus1NlSS Nons Lif ecycle pedaling into hotel fitness marketplace Ufe Flt11H1 Inc. has announced the sale of 50 LifC<"ycle aerobic trainers for in-room e~erc1se to Le Mcndien hotel 1n Ne"ron Beach. The cycles an: the Irvine com- eany's light. compact model 6000. ltrst sold to consumers last year. The sale 1s the fir t guest room CD RATE REPORT Rates as of ApriU. 1988 Min imum investment· S 10.000 fitness program offered by Le Mer- id1cn, which has upscale· hotels also in Vancouver, B.C .. San Francisco and New York and a new hotel planned for Coronado in San Diego County. Le Mcridien also operates 50 luxuf) hotels outs1dt-Non h America. The NewPOn Beach test site was ... Buks MM/Ullltd Cbecking 6 Month 1 Year 5 Year California Rate Rate Rate Rate American Savings 5.30 7.25 7.40 7.40 California Federal 5.25 7.00 7.25 7 45 Century Federal 5.35 6.80 7.45 7. 0 Colambla Savings 5.50 6.85 7.35 7.90 Downe) S&L 5.25 7.35 7.50 .25 First Interstate 5.00 6.30 6.30 7.25 Great American .5.25 7.09 7.14 7.50 Dome Federal 5.10 7.00 7.14 7.60 Lmcoln Savings S.25 CJ.25 7.35 7.80 Pruden tial-Bache Sec. (),I" 7.05 7 60 .o Sccunt~ Pacific 5.00 6.50 6 55 7.50 Well~ Fargo 4 00 6.40 t>.50 7.50 Rates counes' of John M. Valenzuela. CFP. Prudl.'nllal-Bache Securn~. Long Beach Manna. For 10format1on on other ratl.'s. 82 -0813. Sowc. Flnano.1 Mtt~el Focve. I~ """OUO" 1n. 'aies usecl to 1><00uce 1n1a t900'1 -· obl•....O ltom ,,,. hnttl(:lei 111amu1•0<>s •-•ule4•es finene1a1 lo'••-•• Foan cannot 11"'''"' .. l'*r eccuracy Aarea tubi«:1 lef ••••l•blhty and c;lla~ at me OiM:rat•O<> Of NOh 1n1t1lull0n cho!ie n for the Li fe Fitness "fitness Connection" prOJe<:t tK-cause of the area's fitness oriented lifestyle. £x- pan~1on of the program may begin with other West Coast hotels. A fi\e-m1nutc L&cyde instructton video runs houri)' on the hotel's ded1c:ned cable TV show, "Exercise in St) le .. An illustrated user's man- ual 1~ supphl'd in each Li fecycle suite. "Th1.5 1s the first in-room hotel arrob1c fitness pro$ram," said Dr. Wilham Flemtng. Life Fi tness direc- t.or of research. • • • American Pacesetter has reponed a net profit ofS2.b05.000 for the year ended Dec 31 . 198 7. after tall effect, on revenues of $98.927,000 com- pared to a net profit of$3.58q,ooo on rc vt:nues of S84. 7 56.000 for thl' previous year. John W Klug. presi- dent and chairman nf the board announced. The Newpon Beach company's 1987 n·ct income included S 1.744,000 of income from the restatement of its dt'(errcd tall liabilit). which was rl'Statcd to reflect the lower corporate ta>. rates pursuant to the recent!) issued statement offinanc1al account· 1ng standard 96. The company's 1986 earnings included S7:Ci2.000 of in- come relating to its sale that yearof1ts American Electro nics Inc. subs1d1a ry. Net income for the founh quarter ended Dec. 31 was Sl.:!50.000 com- pared to a net income nf S 1.884.000 for the comparable pcnnd oft ht" prior >car! The 1987 founh quaner earn- tngs included $1 .744.000 of income from restatement of it~ deferred tax ltab1llt) Macy calls Nordstrom chief rival LO ''<1lll'>1 ~Pl-~\RH \lal,&(obreak\ in tu lhl' 'H•uthl•rn ( Jhl1Jrn1a market 11 h.l'> ·long sought to t·ntl.'r. thl· mJn '' h11 run' thl' po"'crful dl•panment storl' chain '<lid hl 'l'l"' "l':1ttk·bJ~nJ '.'nnhtrnm as ~1an \ :irl hrl\ al · \la1.' Jgrl'l'J la!tt "L't:I.. tu hu~ thl· Rull11d 's. Bullocks \\ 1l-,h1rl· Jnd I \IJgnin r1.·1a1l l h.11n!t lor I I b1llton in a Jl·Ltl thJt l·nr.kd \l:Jl\ ·., muh1·h11l1on-dollJr battk \\1th ( Jmp...·Ju l 11rr ,,1 ( anaJa tor 1hc Fcd1.•r.itnJ CXpanml.'nt ~hlfl''I f h1.· Jl4Ul'ltl1ln gl\l'' ,,~,~ lh l1,ng·\(1ught OJX'Olng 1n \nuth\•rn t J ltlc1rn1J. hut ( ha1rmJn Ed"'ard Finl...·l.,1r1n '·"d \unda\ h1.· d(l(•<1n·1 1.~fX'l t \1ac' ·~ l'ntr. ~ 111 Ix· l .. I'\ • ' . ··11 '11nhtr11m s 1s thl' fl'JI llHllJX'tJl1(ln -.~nd.J ~U'f'\'l I \\t:.11 \IH•O JISl.l"Cr lhJI 111'!> -\.H0'll JU'lt ha\l' tO mJI....: our '11 •rn a nwrt: .11 trat·tt\ l' plJc1.· to shop." F111l..d .. 1l•1n !>JIJ OTC UPs & DowNs He plan., a tour ne \t "eek of thr Bullocks and other outhcm ahforn1a retail stor1.•s "'hrch Maq has ac4u1red . When hl' J rrt\l'S. F1nkelstc1n said h1\ main m1ss1on "'.'II tx· 10 tigun.· ou1 ~ac) ·s stratl·g~ in battling ~ordstrom's strong reputation for custOml•r service and qusht~. ··in order w mal e decisions about the future of our bu!tiness out ther1.·. I ha' c to get a bC'ttrr feel for each oft he propenu.•s -and team mllrc about thl'.' people running them:· Finkdstc1n said The chairman and ch1l'f e\ecutl\'C said he plans to pc1,1pone an~ dens1on on " ht'ther to put ~1ac~ ·s name on lh ne" 3CQUl'illlOnS. .. Tht• la\t thing un our agenda 1s the name:· he said. "fht' naml' do1.•<;n't mean a damn thing It\ what the namr ~t·pre\cnts 1n thing~ ltkc merchandise and customer 'er' 1tt' that mattrrs." NEW YORK (APJ -The fo11ow1ng list shows lhe Over· the • Counter sloclls and w•rranrs that !lave gone uP rne mosr and down the most oased on Price P r and I C Mondav·s e resr or 6 SomerGP 7 Hypone11 9 7+1'1) •. , + p,. 3 , + .,, s , + 1 ... 21' +S·l6 UP UP UP UP Up UP UP UP UP Up UP UP Up Up l':~ ih ::.~· oerceril of ctiange fOf' Monday No securities frading below S2 or 1000 sh.,ru are Included Net and oercen1a11e chanQes ere lhe difference belw"n lhf' orevlous cioslng N•me 1 PavNSave 2 0 1g1tech 3 Manarron 'MerCapA S OecorCo UPS Lut Che 4l , + 11 I S 9· 16 +-1 I· 16 3 + • ., 6 +-1 :?lo. + loo Pct. UP 31 0 UP 23 6 UP 20.0 UP 20.0 llo 1811 -l1bi;iliiiij.IIJ:lll;I ...... ------- ........ ,. MJrilf,........ Jodwv ..... ., ........ <=--- Settle the Debate ... Vlal t Ua Today and Decide for Yourself. HOUSE of IMPORTS "Holrtt Pf Mm:-.~" Dr • .....,~ ·~o....,,~•111 s 5"1.1Wnn Awatd lftl,... '$.1 .,.....,~ 0-.,., D191 913/714 Ml:aCSDS8 ,.,... -.... .,.. Riwnlde 0·81) ffttW1119 8 lnlMol>l WI 9 lntelllc•ll 10 N~lhLilv 11 ATI Med 12 TonsTov 13 Arll$1Greel 14 FINelOhio lS Medla Loglc t6 Atf PermFd 17 ~evlv.Co 18 eloCorP 19 halco 20 armHouFd 21 GAC LiauldTr n LiricolnBcp SilverLfsco NevadaGold HousrBlo Name 1 FuhioriCllnl 1 APAOot 3 OST Sv s ' Ferrai!ul 5 s1aars11ro 6 MJdlcCiraPhic 7 HOR PwSvs 8 JnAdamsLI 9 Face1En1 wt 10 BesAmmed s 11 McCrmckCe 12 BlnooKlng 13 HaroldSlr 14 RepubPlcA 15 Ertylnd 16 Kreisler· 1 LeisurConcP ' '• + , .. 21 ·16 + ~ + 'I• 3 + lt 2'• + ·.~ 61• + l4 21 • + 111 , . ., + ..,, 211. + I;. 2'• + .,,. ,., + .,, ,, .. t , .... 21 • 'I• ' +7· 16 10'1) + 11/e DOWNS Last Che 2\t -IV. 43(, -l 1"'2 -3~ 2 -'"1 2~ -"' A'11 -t 3117 -,,.. 2~ -· ,,., 9'11 -tl'I ,., -~ l31. = ~ 1,. -)II ~-~ l,4 -~ t ,,., -J)J. s s~-t 1~ -2 7-16 -'S· 2 -~ 3 - le RapllKh 9 JetbOrM 20 "Art9ftom 21 cac:l1n11A H -SCOR US Cor..o Nu ro 4 ~o~osm I -1 ~li'a -,,,._ ~ 'le -~ 25 variCere ~g UP UP UP UP I 14 "· t . 1 . I 1 I 1 1 I . 1 . 1 . 1 . ct~.! 6 I' 17.4 11. "· If': I : l . 11. 'j1:4 1 .1 l .I 1 .I 1 .7 1 .7 1 .7 NYSE UP S & DOWNS The company's 1986 founh quarter earnings included ss:\3.000 of in- come from discontinu<'d operations of its American Eltttronics Inc. subsidiary. which was sold on Dec. 31. 1986. • • • George D. O'Leary. president and chief executive officer of Micro Ge11eral Corp. has announced that for the fiscal year ended Dec. 27. 1987. the Irvine company reported $4.335,993 net revenues, $714.132 net toss and a 9 cent loss per share. For the fiscal year ended Dec. 28. 1986. the company reported $4. 711.1 74 net revenues, $4.232 net earnings and no earnings per share. O'Leary fun her announced that for the three months ended Dec. 27. 198 7. the company repo rted S 1.216,2 12 net revenues, $406.564 net loss and a 4 cent loss per share. By companson. for the three months endt'd Dec. 28. 1986. the company reported Sl .11 7.778 net revenues. $6.31 9 net loss and no loss per share . · O'Leary allnbuted the fiscal I 987 net revenue decline rrincipally to decreased unit and dollar sales of the company's microproccssorba1ed postal scales and product options. He attributed the fi~al 1987 net loss 10 a combmation of: the aforemen tioned net revenue decline, a change in the unit sales mi.x· of the company's microprocessor-based parcel shipping system" towards the less profitable "low end" models. higher operating expen~s (primanl) personnel-related) and increased sales promotion expenses. • TUESDAY'S CLOSING PRIC•8 Stock mar ket rebounds 'E."' 'UR).. 1\r 1 -Tht· stocl marl et fi n1<.hed higher 1oda) after sttla\o\1ng in direc1 1on- lcs\ tradin@ that "as markl·d b~ lo\,\ "olume and 1.Jut1on amo ng ma rket paniupanb The Oov. Jones md ustnaJ a\e('4'ge ro~ abour ~()points. 1n an ~rt~ t('("hnical rail~. thC'n d 1pP"<f - 1nt1> neg.all' e 1cm to~ ~·fore ni.ing again ..\nal~ st.s nt>1t'd lhll t tradC'rs v.en qu1cl 10 1.:ash 1n on 1~ IOlllal U~\o\ ing. \1arl l't "'ate her.. 1A.ert' rt'lucuant to drav. lOndus111n'> be-t.tuse i.-ading 'olume remained li ght t ht. [)o"' Jt.1nt>S a'. rage" 11f '\O industnals rose I " " I I I \l~ -' I t 1a1nC'r\ ••Ulpal.C'd ·~r' I°'' ., to ti vn thC' 'e"' ' orl.. l<X l f \1. ha11ge Big Bt1JrJ '01un'l tut.lkd I \~ ~" millton '>h.trC'> .tga1n\t , 2 2.J m1ll1on 1n thl' pre' 1ou' l>t'\!>10 0 The :..... '"Ftr rnmpo)l\t indn ros.e I 12 Ill l.S ~ ..\l ttl· .\men1.an \tod .. f ,change. thr mar C't 'alue ndn v.a" up '"''to ~Q) O"' WHA T AM EX DID WH AT NYSE Dio NEW YORI( t AP• Ap~ 5 A0..,81'\Cf'O OecH~ ¥ncnenQe<S Ole •U~ New l'liQl'I, New IOWI T~ m "~ l A Mr x Lr ADE RS GoLo Qu oTE S M ETALS Quorr s Prw. -~ ltt • ' NE.,. YORK AP A oir S ~- 1.0..,a ncf'O T4f1 ~sl D«·~ Sit 11g, ¥ nc., •"9e<: 0 1 1~1 01e u.,.~ lm New "'GM ' " Ne•<>•' n • NYSE LEADER S NASDAQ S u ~~~R ~ "'or'\\ a~·\ a~l'r.\g(' rom pt'n.Sallon of S 1 • 5 an hour v.as nt>:trh 13 tuna Mn 1ro's dollar amount TM a' c.-raaic of S 1) 46 doll a~ wa' aim°" 10 times Mc.-"ro·~ l..ov. "'Jc." ~ '' 1n Of~ , ntnes ha\C· lo ng bttn used b' Pohttoans a the rt'Hon for protC!'ding l 1ndus.- U) f'rom 1mpon' La~'r unions aJIO M\c." complained ap.an~ ~'-portJQI jO~. ·· arau1"J tt\at lov. labor costs tn other countncs e urqt l • ~ e.,,_. plor~ to fd up ptochactwn thcTe rathtt than at home." Labor 1n the.-""""·1ndusmahttd countnc~ of o\si~ anJ l aun o\mc."nCa ttma1ncd Ins than a fifth as lh M 1n tht nl\~ ta•~ Of 2 .. count~ ~u'°"c)C°d, K''eta had C'dlu. hllhcr than ,_ raie ~-'They ~-lft 'liddtttOft '° or-.'&\~ S'W'ltttrlancl ,, , 06. v.°ctl Oenna.n>. sa 6 • •'t'dea. s as '4; Nttherl1nd1~ S l l l dollan; =.SU ~and Ortuur\SM.49 ~ft 2l coatna for "hitch ttw Labor Orpanmnt h-1 t&atellka ~wed an•~ ofcom~tOe 1n t~u o•n C'\tmnc:'). 1Ml.S1 .. dlll •• wet SI.ala.. \ ' . ' . • 1 .. llhf,Afrtl.•. . Allll!IS (Mardt 21-Apnl 19): You receive news rdati• to com-------------mWtication. travd, publishin&. op- portwaity to enluwt pmouJ horizons.. S-.rw F0cus on idt.ahsm. I--~ I romance. scdJ"' ol 0 "'soul mat~ -Leo - plays paramount ••••••••••••• rt>lt. TAURUS (.<\pril ~May 20): You1J be involved in- dandcstane opaabOo. you11 also become a~ of mysterious -pnp on.-Mamtajn 1mtc of fitness. balmtt. Fanuty member will confidt Stt1'rt. Ganttr nau"e in,•ohcd. -c;BIONl (May 21-J~ 20t: Clash of ideas proves • stimu.lat1ns. rou1d lead to -cxC1tJng mc:ountcr. -SpothJhl on publicity. lirfal aftain.. n&hts and pemuU1ons.. mantal ·status. Popularity Ir.OW' )OU could win contest. C.&NCEll (June 21-..Jul\ 22); Go slow, dacdt detatl"'- be a11r.>a~ of need for m<ltt .:solid base.-PuzzJr pieces vt d~ to fall into place. You11 be uccllmt at readins cl~ lo' t' rdationsJup commands aucn\U)l). Scorpto featured. LEO (July 23-Aua. 22): E.um1~ motives, optn h~ ol commwucauon. Spothght on dtstnbutiotL sho•·- manship. scnsuaht).st'< appeal. You'll becommeodcd on ~ k . UDlQUCM'SS of pttYntatJo n V Jrgo plays key rok. VOlGO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 221. Major domestic adJust- ment featured -spotlight on home repairs. SttUnl). basic "alucs. You'll gc-t what you want if diplomattc. M ans don't attt'mpt to fortt 1S$UC:S. You will aoqutre huuf) 11tm. UBllA (Sept_ 23-0ct . .nr. Define terms. ruhu somtone behind sec~ could be "talkmg out of tum.·· Emphasas on \'aYtilit)'. tris-. visits. communecation &om rclatJvt'. Kttpplans ftt'Aiblc. Pascn plays paramount rok. 8VOaPIO (Oct. H-Nov. 21): Focus on money. .. ymcnts. insurance. pale1' know~ concerning royalti~ pou1bk inheni.ncc. Relationsfnp antcnsjfiC'S. and decision is made relating to commitment. Capncom is in picture. SAGm A&JUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 2 1 ): ~t.aalsatt Stttlcd in connection wilh long-ranst plans. Moon in your sign hiahlighu initiat ive. intuition. accuratt' timing. Romantic interests are ~lmed Aries plavs dominant t'Ok. CAPalCOllN (Dec. 22-Jan. I~): Light is shed o n area P't'' aousl)' dart.. You gain p-catcr ltf}owlcdat and more confidence. You can maltc fresh stan in new direction. You·11 have accns to privileged 10formation. Leo plays role. AQlJA&IUS (Jan. 2~ffeb. J8): Famil~ reunion featured. )ou'll be Stnsiti\'c to statements. actions of lo'ed one. Don't rush to judpncnt. play "">ailing pmc. Yo u·re dut to tum in "outstanding ~rformancc." Cancer nauvc 1ovolvcd. PISCES (Ft'b. 19-March 20): You'll upset odds. surpn11ng SUf'lt' of porulanty enables you to win over oppos111on. Be aware of wardrobe. legal parr. bod) 1m~e. Tra\•t'l anvita11on could be pan o CllC1tmg scenano. If APllO. C IS YOUll BlllTBDA Y }Ou have unusual \ 01Ct'. are drawn to muo;K: and an. appreciate lullul) and can be sclf-indulgtnt. Taurus. Libra. Scorpio ~ople pla) 1mpon.an1 roles in your life. C urrent cycle hi&hhghts tra\el. broadening of ~rsonal honzons. added popu- lant~. ab1ht) to reach ancnmprcss more people. Love wall pla) paramount role. During April. you could relocate to ba~ ""uh more sohd structure. August will be product•' c for you. profitable and feature money and love. l,,ook beyond the physical DEAR ANN l-'NDERS. Reccnt- t). I read a pttSOnal ad from a man •1'<> listed thcquahucs he wanlt'd ma woman. He ended~ sa~·ang. -afyour tumm) 1s larger than )nur chest. ~ou arc autonutJC:alJ~ dJsqlfahficd ... I am a \Aroman -.ho c-ao cook. fish. ndc a horse and ski. I am anract1vc. inklh~t.. •arm. suppon a,-t' and an cntbus1as11c bed pannc-r In short.. I ~ the quahtin he" •'311U plus a tamm ) that as largc-r than m~ chest . That man v.1U Ot'"t'r k:no .. me or .Jn) sistt'rs. and it's bis loss. Happal}. I ~\·(' a long-standing SC"hd mamagie. Our hfe logt'ther 1s "3sed on a~ Pft'(latang o ne anoth('r. the ~hole ptt50n_ 1nstcadoffocusingon specific pans that ma) be less than perfect. M} husband as not turned off"b\ m' t umm" an' mo~ than I am turned off b) bas· ~id head. One of the most lmpon.ant concepts w(' lire passing on !'> o ur th~ chaldrcn '" to rttogna.ze and respond to the ""'hole J)('TSOn and ~t get hung up on ph} sac:al fla""~ Such as too shon . too tall. too fa t. too Chan. too much nose. not enough chin. de. ('1C. Perhaps ~ man's attitude CA· plain,S ~h) ht' must ac1vm1~ for a woman. -W "5H .. D.C DEAll D.C...: ,,.._ JM fer • ,....._&e ~ • .. ae wJtt. tiea. Ben's a ldtft' .... *-rves le ~ iai h • r• as• a. shllly: DEAR A?l.'N L-'NDERS: M) fncnd "R uth-•-as attractive. ""~II- no"" that she is thin and d ying she 1s receiving loads of compliments. My onh answer is. "'It's a s1ck world." Can )OU think of a bC'tter onc-t - JANET. ISS.\Q AH. WASH. -DEAR JANET: Ne. WM9 it cema 1e •~t Mme PHPW 1e llaywttt. 11ae ksl evWatt 11 I• Ge l•*'-... ,.,....._Ow meH oaly le ..... , ~eftk .. ls.AMl)'MW..W .. , klWve lie• 11ree .... 1y lkse womea &t to leoll Ille .,reomstidl1 . ........... • • • dressed. ""'3rm. gcncrou\. lovablc and fat She had eno rmous t'ncrgy and was ne'er sick a da' an ha hfc until she contracted her linaJ illness at lht' ~e of .n_ DE.\R .\!'\"\ l.\SDERS: This 1s in In eight months ht'T wca.ght wt'nt rcspon~· to ··oregon Girl Who from 210 to l 1-0. Her hair fell out and \ksscd t • P ·· You d1dn 't mess up. she ""-as sick fro m cht'mothcrap~. But '· ou made a poor choice four yea rs sht' kept up ht'r spmu and her ago This docs not make ~ou bad. II appearance ""1th ""·a.gs. makeup and maL.l~ )OU human. scaf\cs 10 hide the r:ivages of the lt"s 11me to stop and look at v.hat illness that v.as lc.1lhng her. ~uu need Yo u said. ·-rm afraid to be On(' da). Ruth and I ran into an a lunl·:· Lea me 1ell )Ou.girl. you <\R E acqwuntancc ""ho hadn"t seen her m alone T hat bum 1s not there for )Ou ~\t'ral ~~rs Sht ra"cd about Ruth's e'en as he sleeps 1n )Our ~d. If )OU v.t"1ght ·1~s and gushed cndlcssh can·a lca\e him for )Ourself. lea ve abou1 ho-. wonderful it was that Ruth ham for \Our children. You can make final!\' -took herself in hand." Sht' .~ourv.a~""i1houth1m1f)oumake up thcnaskcd. "Howdid youdo11".'Wha1 )Our mind )Ou want to There arc ""ei&Jit·loss program did )Ou follow',.. suppon grou~ '" )Our area. Fmd Ruth looked hcrm the eye and said. tht"m "I wouldn"t rccom111fnd m} weight· loss program to an~nne I have You S3\ \OU arc on welfare. C'he'C'k krmmaJ ainttr of the ran~s." out ~our · V.elfare depanmcnt. The) L'nt1I she died. Ruth kept askm& can din-ct \Ou to a counseling center me .. h) she wasn't acreptable wht'n )Ou can af'rord. The) can also help s.be ""'as fat and happ) and well. and ~ou find da) care for'your children ijiiii~~~~~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!i!i!iii!i!i!iiiiiiiiit "'h1lc 'ou ft n1i.h ) our schooling. Help 1., a'allable You1us1need10 seek 1t. ''Developing the ext Generation " Grannies For Nannies , Inc. • Lt\·e-in/Uve-out • Full-time/Part-time ' • H1ghl>· qualified. lovifll and ~tu~ nannies. (714) 361-1480 NE\\1 AGE Computerized Hairstyling ft.,. . . ... . . .. , .... "' ~ $30.00 for 3 Hairsty le Changes Also includes: • coasultation • polaroid print • 110.00 off any chemical eer vice MITCH '"' Cill\\Pf\Nt' Hf\IRCUTTERS 4718 Barranca. Irvine 552-2023 You also must sa) to yourself. ··1 am getting out of this mcss NOW."' Thl' older )OU arc. the harder 11 1s to change )Our hfc. Trust me. I le.now. - \tPLS. DEAJf MPLS.: A ~tier ~ as }'oers is lafiaikly ~ efftttive 0.. • te,..... frem • .... tt e me. Tlaaab fer wrttiq. I ~ .. ~ .. Us teas. Neither vulnerable. South deals. NORTH •A 4 2 <:;> J 2 .V -1-1652 • Q 5 4 W~T EAST • Q J •• 5 •• 'J ~., 7 917 Qll97 v k4 + & 6 J + 10 9 I 7 2 SOUTH • &.9 7 0 A Q J It 5 4 ¢ A J +A J The biddina: S..C. Wm I 0 ha 4 ? ..... Nortll I NT .... Opmina lead: Queen of • Eatries are precious aems. We are continually surprited by the cavalier attitude many players display to- ward such exquisite poueaions. To aaake our point, we would like you to cover dw East and Wat bands Complete ........ lletlnp In lundaJ'• TV Piiot. Don 't take insomnia lying down If yo u can't sleep. get out of bed. Or m )Our head you'll st.an to link the bed itself ""1th the frustration of insomnia. So contend<> a sleep re- searcher. Some people. he says. become irritated as soon as they crawl under the covers and they don't know Wh). . "Amenca had been d1scovt'red before Columbus," Said Oscar Wilde. "but it was hushed up." There arc people who make pan· cake flo ur out of cattails. Q. How much more money docs a doctor makt' than a nurse? LI. Bon Q. Wasn't President Harry Truman a baseball player as a youn& man".' A. No. he couldn't SCI.!. well enou&h to play. so he umpired. Or so socs tfie tale. Halfof Africa's population is under 16. Q. Among the Pennsylvania Dutch. what's the difference between the "Plain" and the "Fancy"? A. Plain -Mennonite. Fancy - Lutheran and Reformed. Contrary to previous repon, no one ~rson pvc the Super Bowl that name. Rather. countless spon s writers came up with the "Super Bowl" nomenclature. Not surprising. It was a natural. Parmesan cheese is made from skim milk. romano from whole milk. A. General duty nurses average $25.100 a year. Physicians in gcnt'ral practice rcpon an average of $80.300. More than half the nt'w fathers secretly wonder at odd moments if the) 're really the fathers. On this researchers agree. But they say ifs no t because all tbcsc fathers mistrust their wives. They han· self-doubts. Blame that term "insecurity" so dcarl) loved b} the J!S)'Chologjsts. They contend the fathers arc astonished they pan icipated in the miracle. ---UMiMWI•------- CURLES iolEI with your thumbs and decide which finesse declarer should take when he gets to dummy for the one and only time with the ace of spades. South's choice of four hearts as his rebid is reasonabk, but we do feel that one other bid should have been considered-a jump to three no trump. That contrlCt would have posed no difficulty. reprdleu of the openin1 lead. If you answered that declarer should use his entry to the table to take either rounded-suit finesse, ACROSS 1 Licks 5 Fotmua.te 10 Swoon t4~ 15 Lu~ted 16 South s.aa st-c>te t7 H.,.,_ devkle 19 Amer'.w Id• 20 Be preeent 21 Aalen ootn 22 G.Ye U9e of 23 Ouendl 25 Bon Of' K~ 21 Bucket 30 A 0.bor 31 z.ny one 340fwm~ 31 Diefney: WW. 38 s.v-. gotd 39 Berber~ 42 Wed 43 Poet A.A. - 44 W.nton 45 Embo•dened 47 Topper 49 Procr•ted 50 In addition 51 Evalueted 53 Ctoee 55 Brownlh8de 56 Bftegently 11 Ear pert 2 3 14 17 12 Roof tlmt>ert 64 UtMlty CU9'omer 65 K9y M Haggerd u Sham.~ 68 Rec9-tr.at ~ 89T~ DOWN , 1 Brown shade 2 .. , .,,,.., 3 Cheeky 4 A.ppa111 fulty sear.. I Derrtdt 1 Nu1 to .B.C. I SltrmWi _J .... - 10 Unemotk>NI 11 Art p'9ce 12 Hllndcuff 13 IMgger' pert 11 e.cte. 24~ 25 Pee. Nor1tl- weet lhnlb 2t Prwtenee 27Pw'lw 21 Rubber producta 21 -....... 31 c.togrMI 32 "Onty -_ .. s e you have mined the point of the ~20~...--..--..-...... ~-.­ hand. Declarer bu 10 trkks avail- able if dummy's lone entry is put to &ood UJe rather than squandered U an entry for a finesse. 1 33 Studied 35 lover boy 37 Crimp 40 Shake off 41 Hold up 4t a.ceor. 41 Doc.1rtl• :; =-boost 8 ' 53 Urben ... 54 Flnlble tube 55 Spruce 57 Intrepid 510.....type 5tMec.i IO Ttnl 13 .. _ .. , .. 11 12 13 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil Declarcrshou~winthe openina lead in band, cash the ace or trump1 ""~ ..... . ~Ann ....... . .. , fttl good about mys~ ... ''Folowtng my~ mntKtomy, I de- c*d ...,SI tKOftltructlw ~· tn- stHd, t df<'lded ro ·wu1 CarrfJ/ ~ bre.stfonns ftwoy'~ t.nnWly Mte your own tn~ t•s~ They~ warm wtth youarld l~~~ ~ They FIEE CONSULTATION NO O.IGATION ~ lltle • NCural e.wtfmlon d yourWI. ~ chOtce ts ~ brt'~ . r rec:omnle'od ltwmlO"t~~·sNld• INUKtomy " M'Pl •Ol'l'NOTIC ifil&L&M. ....,.=.._ ..... fl1 111 .CA ... ""' ... ,. I . .. and then play ace of clubs followed by ~ jKk. ~ dd'enden are belp- leu. Tbc bat they can do is win~ kina of clubs and pennert with ...... But now declarer can win tbe ace, dUcard oae of his lide-tuit klesl and then ~ to trumpl. Decllller trill 1COre two IPade trtcb, lift trumps, ooe diamond and two ct.bt DO matter what. Noc.c tlw ii would be wroaa ror dedalw to tty to ... men tha me rouad or tnuapl before .,..,.... -dulM. The cldmdn ... win tbt __. trump ud force oa1 tbe ace o1..-~don Soutl9 hal .. .., a ..ct d'8b trick, and bt will be forwd to n1J on dte dab,...._ for .. coatnct. • --._ __ by 811 Keane 11' THE BLEACHERS by Steve Moore ,--- "If real bunnies tasted this good, Barty, I'd chase them with you ." "Well. I warned you• Play ball 1n the house and someth ing's bound to get broke-n1 Now clean up you r father and march right to your bed· room , the both o f vou! , .. llARllADUKE by Brad Anderson DENNIS THE MENACE • . ,,,. ,11,1 I .... '.ii(,; ~l~:;}L------ by Hank Ketcham "I think we're being scolded for not having a more exciting trash can." PltAJruTS GARFIELD TMERE'S AN OLD ~ 8 1Z YtN6,"' FINP 001' WHAT ~R AUDIENCE. WANT5 AND GIV( IT TO TMEM '· TUllBL&WEEDS '~ &.ISCS ~A LOT NOl$1E.R . llitS IS LIKEAUMAA'Y'SUS: I WAS AFRAID I Ml6HT ~AVE ALREAC7V GOTTEN OM IT, ROPE TO SC~OOL. STAVED Tl-{ERE ALL DAV, RODE BACK , 60T Off ANO WAS STANDIM6 ~ERE FOR6ETTIN6 TO 60 140ME .. 7(!J tj by Jim Davis APPAR£NTLY. M'i' AUPIE.NC.£ WANT5 A TARGET by Tom K . Ryan Orenge Coest O~ILY PILOT/Tueeday, April 5, 1 ... BLOOM COUNTY -Hlf la cP "MUETHC~5 ~'PONP . ~Y : N CHlllU5 f(l(Y/¥'Ol.CI ~ PR£5allr (Y rue. ~fl(}W ~ ~ 1J'! AWfNCUtf,J/1 Of~ WI~ Flft-llll HA.R ~ • ~4'~ 1./£!/( 1Hf~ f!AT ~! {)r:,Pt.,Artr A 8'.M£"!fl K"°t. ::wll{ll(. TU lf:P Ii~ ~ l'Ot.f~lf !(/NAnc ~·5 15 f>'I~ J:j,:::::"' (~I J -r • l,• GAMiN AND PATCHES THE BtG LEAGUES Sl-1DULD CALL VJ~ ~.'I\\ 11-J 'tJP Sl-UPE .' .... . 4 s ~ FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE SHOE .,v rotor A.J..,, "7f>CKLE. ..,H SJGB UKEA~L .JJRi'<, .'.:fteuJ I P!()llU Wfffl FAC/t. JM Nit fYTEN P'OCfl)l(J .J/()6£~. ~~IN? ()(HE]( LAN NJlPW6 CffdENS ~ 51"~Y ~seKT 1H€ ~ ~J11MJ ' 0'16?1/~ by Berke Breethed -FllfE MCI( ·wt~ ~~. Nit'" 9o 1Hl6 .-.:Ii .... by Addison I ·COJT 1-&AVE l~E TIME! by Jeff MacNelty ~N~NG -' -:u , ... ~-c c:Mr ..D'<'"t:Z:-> JUDGE PARKER FUNKY WINKERBEAN BUU... .~'V£ HAD STRAlbHI 'F ·~ IN rvv..; Ct..A~ ::R()/Yl IHE BEG" G I , DOONESBURY .. w.JS \lic,3~~66 5'< "'~ Gf."lel ,,A-;, (])NF /?.MW ,7 by Garry Trudeau : CANT EJUJt .~ "fH£) iU)(JUJ ()() THIS O'./ 71-1(.J~ CWN' TH/S.Pf:AC£ 8US 'J£95 HAS 60Nfi FAR EN(}()6f< .... l ' ' I ~ by Har<>'d Le DouK I COULD ~E L.298 IT;§~~~~ CAN TALK ' ~....r.oc~• by Tom Batl\4 -.,.,._..,_,.. .. .. ~. ow.< 11'9 --...... .. -oc>OtlO ~•- . . • • CALL 642-5878 ·.~ COLDWeLI.. BAN~eRO A"'v ·~' "Of N .0 -~ft ..... , ''IOU·'" ........ tAo.c•" ~ "OJ """''" '• •...r"C.• c...,-... ~t.o •' t ., ot ..... ~ ~· IN' ...,.tt\ .. C.-c1i0f'I '°''' ~ •"• --.. ~ -' -~\ ... " ' LIWll'f,__ HARBOR RIDGE BEAUTIFUL 2Br 2Ba ,,. BLOCl<S TO BEACH! 3BR. FR. 2''* BA. view, c:ts Ouplex w/marbled fin, 29A 28A. ...t & nliQe, only to pool EJ!cel cond A"1 frOIC, gar909. laundty. pvt '240,000. Call-ept S.I "8 Ag n 1. Even beactl ec:c:iess No pell ••159-9010** 6'•-9060 St•50tmo 67S-2310 Sel y .. '"''"" CilOeeelfW, Mt-5671. for information & surprisingly low cost. ,_,_ .... 1111 •••• ..... ~ ..... . an: ...... s.z.. llLllll••• •WLllll• •1U1111W1• f(Ul)ADS ARE FREE Cal: 142-1171 I 9 N •117' I ,... ... [ ......, a. ..... d -·- 0r8nge C... DAILY PtLOTn• 11 t J, Alftl I, tlll --- llfD111111 1-. ~ I • ..l!!!!f!~..!!!l~!!!!!!::::·:·~(!!!ll••L--.. h1l11 •I r•lllt•t •t llflli' •I .. ... •'"l"I Bl I 11111 191,llllJTllY T==lf-AL~~:LESS 8::.?,9~::= ·--'.A-.--.... -~ W....._ lie> 1oa Xlltl pMl'9 l'MIWW, 1·,r OtoMrltCMI~ ~-Yadttt, 1'31 8Ne ..,._,,..., ltll.,_ .. . -._. -,.. ,,,. vau • 1w .,.. ... eo. ~ •n ewtt°"W ••P Otttet & LMd "'"'*'cl firm. EARN Ptaoenti;: ca.au... trQ91 he ,,_ ••· ..... . ~ •• -~.:-~ .... ..., ,,,. JO'! ••• • dericel ..... Mlpfut. .... ..,.iencad gen-lrga1ae . .,., ...... ~~!ii:;~1r io!Gfk If..-ok ;_ ......... ... ...... a 11Mry nee. ~ • ._ .,., oflca aec:reury wttn • I Whe v10er ao1a t110. 1......_. tr _. APIAA. Nludla = ~•o IMtn? J.P. ,,T p61i1ac aurgery oMce. oMce. Mf-aoo good 'W*'9 ~ I taM $1000/tllf = ·~· cs.. wt~~ Ital. _.,...,OOl1",.......-....... ONftDe c... ~ ~!:!.'!!"'.~... 1111111111111 ~~~':& f19VV• "" -~----- pa ft Oii. lane fl ta. ~_!! "!_---~ Noe la loolc-90t --· -· ----4'.IC;UldatlOnt -8panilfl ~I' bS Imo •541-5643* ;.wortc-.i..p;;;'i; ••"* ~ 10 :. w1tt1a...8CNb.~. -••tlm ~";'.,;-'c!,! •S7IHrTt11nln9 ·comm 1or1a.n sot1 a cMlrst aa11 s 1100 011.1 .., roe II or o... .._. .,. -.c-•our Dlatrtct MeNgera ~-op12~·· s.ndae. Faatllon , .. and .. ion. IY Send ,...,,,. to Mr •IAM· 12 Hoof\ Mon-Frt Wick•. mlac c:fV9 & "*"' Iron~ lempa. dw'8. ,liiitJiiiiiiiiill..,,-- cwlul, mottvaUd wtn-3 _,. dUttno .,_ weall, --*7ICMIOll* Fuent19 at AoDer1 Bein, C.it Now . 5 PC*ltonS Left. mot• anlicauet 122 ... 15 9nd 1..,..., kltdl bet II Loc*lng for a CWMr In ~lalog? " ao, the Deity Plot haa 2 entry- ..-poalUons In C&aael- fled ~laing. " you Ilka people and cen type 45 wpn, we'd Mk• to tell! 10 you. Exoalant ben· eflta. c.. Peggy aar.,in. tor an appointment, 642-4321 ..... 301 ...... Spend ..,.., In ..... and~ ..... , .... ,IT w..... Froat & Aaaoc A•for LV/COSTAMESA ., .. ._. 110011: aome cost1nol .r~11;~~; ~ Celllorftle and App1cant ,,_,., ~ r• ~ :n.,0:.C::: •1&1111111 14125 Anon p.,..,.Y: s.e.-19 1930 s oiioii!OMll se11 '500 ..... '°'au•-II trawil 11 .-em ......... cw wtlh valid CA 10 grow wtttl ·~:-~ .!: !Mne. CA 92711 MJILA~~~2~1GUEL lor seoo 497-1951 HB (Adams/Brkhratl auapeilelOft, 4 • - wlttt our.,.,.,....... met· drfWr'8 llcenM, proof of ~ Min 1 yw ,._ ---..-982-3553 JdntCOftd.175•2*-" " 11.etlng ee.m. Paid Ir.,,. lnaurance end OMV t.it exp.' Salery l900-~,;,enc:, '!::.t¥Y lllfTl .. 111 IJflAICE' 1111 -ta6r IH "2..... • lno program. hci11"9 print-out. Stertlftg pay ii 11200 lnlar'flew by eppe t' In,._• Full time politlOn tor exp. !el,...: . .-ili!"r-• " .. wtl!!f. •bee'la~IU 1111 ..:.: ..._._.....:_ .,.. ......_ •• : bonu• pleft. '*" Ngtl S7.00 per hOUf '*" OM otty' M&-7441 ~.co. .......a dfllft•. t*lled In ..... OFRCE ~ =.... ..... """" --_ .. _ Wolnga. Company Cllfa, alowanc.. . M .. a. 1:30·5:30 M·F. anglnaating. drawings, TEMPORARY ANO uc>rlgtlt styt9 $185. Lrg •••mft• orye.ctr°"6ctc•• .-.turn twa gueram.ect. Come In 10 apply at: .... .... 642-1803 .. '°' De. ~ llnM. pumping 11• TEMP TO PERM capacity eltle. d~ $95 HY. 14 1-wey Cont. ldll•I S200 & Up. pp t.onl : C... lhrough P:rldly 11-4 '"" -, ........t ,.... _.... Mlfll. lll•fllf Ilona & atoraee lacilitlee POSITIONS AVAILABLE HB area 982-3553 $140 anywMr• In U.S.· ...... ..... only, Don Howard ...., ..... _.... ,..., .... Send to Mr. Fuent .. •• e Receplk>nists -$170 LA 10 H..,alt-Good - (714) .......... 7 ..., Piii beneftla In 1 -....... 8eect1 PI T Sal/Sun 10-lpm. Ro .. -rt Bein Wtlllam c I llT w~ .. --.....__ Thru 5198 •.e• 73"'2 -----Retlr1me-nt-home. PARK NEWPORT APT'•. .,.. • • 19ftcl _.,_,.... -~ ~~~~~~:::~ Froet & Auoc 14725 •Typis1s 6 Relrlgefalort Mike * I'!! ltnr ...... ....... •4M-.9451* Call G91Y 144-1900. Alton Parkwey, Irvine, CA •S.Ctelltlff 645-9701 * •AMERICAN Indian itama '9Wough-• lat ,,....... .. .... ..,... OPERATOR Reatauren.t 92718 •0111 Entry Opetet0ts MAYTAG Wesner I Dryer. :1:':1~:~~.bal«ett. ~s1:'~.;-"'*9 & a. • AIDE. Llw·ln. Aaala1 dlaabted fem. prot. f .............. lmmedlataopening.E.xpet mTllS SECRETARY •Word Procenors ol<* xlnlcond S300pt •1714)873-1467* llVW"9d (714)147-5172 : 1111111 .. 11.W bMWMneam&SpmM·F pref, will train. 2-10pm. FIM dlnln9 rHlaurent, NMd last. efficient ol1ice •Accounht19 Clettlt °' DeSI ottr 966-2347 llll-RlllTllT Wlrhtier 3 key b08fd E/Sd CM. Nice rm + S350/mo. Evea & wtlnda oft. F prt. Namk 145-2357 Atllll'ml lln1lllt• 1• Ill Or c.it Betti at &42-4321 Hewp«t8Mc:h6'4-7050 exp. & mature. RMara wont• tor FIT poailion UlllTll.. eJCI 40 17 00969-1067 ~. organ w/aynt"HIHr :rpf~:::0:1' d:n%r .... 205 NITtml Rea1eur.,,t.SCPtm. w1La9una Niguel in-•Em MAVlAG wuner & gu~12;"YW'*s 100 ~1~~111 Llll.•neiwsees.0rum ..... ~ ........... ,. JKttle or ~ry S4().3840 surance agency Prlr ••--• 0 ,,_,, ....... 11e ex.--''--t 9..,. .• I145. H8 912._., ...... tal .arp Ollef'ClorM lta 81&11 ft.All Tiii Oraftlftg/OOPf* work tor •llPef· w/WP and IBM XG -... .,-..... ...,,...,, ,...... own t>M>y boom! Willlng CM Interior dM9I firm. Rea1aur.,,t akllll. c .. 24M733 btwn *' .. Iii•• condition S250 l0t paw or Newpot1 Beech h nm• n 1 ... D11l111ln lo train ohalflide ....._ For rnalntenance. PIT. Hall dlya lntenor dM9I PIZZA .U 9-5 Uk t Sh ley ""'" ~ete 642-69'9 Club Old iyme Famity ' , i - 1ant Call tor lntartlew. *642-8890* bac:kor~nd prel9fr9d. Bingo Pizzi. PIT Of FIT. or " •Pm.,....._, resaie "*"t>erlhip M50 Spon• mW1ded Ind~• needed for PIT work $7/tw PIT evenings & SMurdeY.146-57IO llTl•MI ...a Cell *640•1122.,.. AdVenced Inter delql Henry eJ5-9930 SECRETARY/RECEP 18400VonKarman W&mllEIMtrie ooo 673-4678 • In .. INiDlrVUIN 110nt ok. 8e ~9d to . FfT fOf Cotta Mesa Real Ste 130 tf¥!M"474-2974 ~ Watcl6 nvy-®t)I ALUMINUM WALKER lure S750 ~ • ~~:. C1~E~0~~ED~aa. Mll\nt. I Rift lhOW samp6e ot WOf'k Retteurant Et11te ottloe c111 M111e 100"·. FREE to A.pphcan1 s21s1pair 645-52 '6 Automatic m ul 011 new VHS VCR. all CIW, *• . g r a ve y ard shift PRE~~UIN Call.Judy.540-3822 lftnPILllAll 546-7434 E OE -WM0001rel119 Avocaoo l1ron B1ack &Bec:t<•Clll ,_$200Mo10fotaPot1 NEWPORT TIRE CENTER H4MH 957.3063, ~ PLANT CARE-INT/EXTER 11 now ec:e.ptiog IC>Pll-SERVICE Station Allend· TOW TRUCK DRIVER Runs ...... $100 4 Dinette S36-6316 before 5pm 0t Ce4ular PhoM ISOOXL S Malnlaln plants O(I rout•. caliont tor· ants Fulll P111 Time Exper only Apply on Pflf· cn11ts from Qveen Mary t 01 ... n 7 30-9pm mos old $2450 obo DRAPERY WORK ROOM The (K•nna Coast Oatly VehlCle suppli9d. good elHf/letten S5 19/ht Apply 1n per-son 935 W 18th St . $10 ea 549-7519 S --Extras• 673-6699 • spec:ielly pel'SOf'I Piiot 1,-'!""__..1nn -~ea-drlvt"" record No ex.p ··--,--~·~ 90f'I CHEVERON USA Cos1a Mesa 850-0869 llQ•n o g lus door~ -11'9 ml• Pleoewofk. M t your hf&. -.. ,, ... "" .._ --"" 546 E Cou H CdM - --faraitvt 1114 6-7 • x5 SI S.. 6-T ~ •3 A--lff •-•~ s A 835 5932 pel'oenced 4 colof OftMI nee. $8/tlr 83 1-8340 Apply 1n person Tueeday 2 I wy nPESETIEI I $10 .. Duncan Phyf• din ... --mn.UJllUlll· enta na, • Journeyman Pressman. airai .-Ill••• ire thru F11day btwn 3-5 SHIPPING CLERK •All Sohd C~rywood• I set $150 557-7361 !~~~~.~.~.~ .. ~~~ MM" DRIVER --we 111.,. an exc:.llent ---• _. 2111 W lust..,. No expel' nee will ttaon Frend\ Prov111c1a1 9 P141Ce --rt NEWPORT TIRE CENTER Allen Beck Florist benetlll peck1ge. 1111111 ' PIT $5.00 10 s1an E•penenced typesetter donong room ~th $3500 fr" tt Yt• MU 1 ap1e room 9"-1121 2809 Newporl Blvd. NB $12.21/Hour Contact Great oppty tor ..... per-RETAIL SALES &46-3802 wanted Skilled 1n m•rk· sac $1400 Queen Anne MORRIS WANTS A 2 chests. 2 nlCJMltands. 675-13S3 son or manager to grow PIT. Grt. IOI' stdnt. Sml. up typese1 1100 ano coteeiend 1ables sat I HOME & FAMILY He •Sa mirror 8edspreedt 100. •L• U /llllPT, •mu (11•)W-GZ1 Id w1111abllth•d f irm aerobic boutique in CM. STiii it.Di paste-up a Plus Salary SSOO Canw•baok sota & riealthy handsome 5 yr st .. mer trunks. Chlira, Exp. on 10 k.y with llQhl Early AM. Newspaper HI ... fer Trey wl1trong 911111109 1tal1. Sal .~ comm. 548-7515. 6 months previous exp based on e11peroence lo.,esea1 $650 Elegant & old neuter9d male. OI'· giusware. 19w antiqun, typing, nlc:e phone man-Route, PIT. 1 days. No Local exp In Newport. SALES dealrable. Knowledge ot Must be w1111ng to worll: ex.cellent 973-0653 ange & white tabby cat poctura trame1. 2 dr_.ng '*' needed. 8-5. M-Fri Collecli"" Must have de-Cotta Meaa or Hunt-...._ Tll lllm TUii t>oat• helpful evenings Please contact Bedrm turn-lamps Port· Call A CotT1m1t1ee Ot boards Tllurs.Sal 9-4 • . 937.5902 Joann pendabi: vetlicle. drivers -__. lngton Beach nee .,...~ Balboa Marine Harowate Lisa or Pat at 1714> a-Potty bar 2.ct111ts re-Ftoenas 854·9649 or 2915 Bra.cl Str•t -Jr... Emphltit will be on re-Customer SeMce Repa. 2100 w. Coast Hwy NB 642-4321 ext 291 aur1ng cflner old wtleel cnair 786-7838 642•9732 ~-Boal• llc .prool olllabllilylns. crultlng. training & Chellenging position E O E.MIFIH the day and (714) 642•2698646-7965 ------..-llAll.. EKcellent extra Income. motivating. Send r.aume world09 with our cus-642-4399 eveni119s • Boat ttlow attendants L A Herald Examiner ~ to •Ad 112. c/o Delly tomet's and aerw:. tecn-TMChef •Ex.cetlent company Stand,;,.. Coucl'I Otning ••••• .. •••••••••••••· want9d. Temp full hme (7 14) 541-4384 Gardener Interior' or ex-Pilot, PO Box 15&0. nlcians. Ofder dee«. or PlllllHL C>enehls rm table W/8 antoQue • ~ r $5/hr. Muat be over 18 IWllma ~ terlor ptentl09, watering eo.1a Meaa 92828 ~ ••perlence and 1Jlml chairs Bookcases. deslls t : yrs. Call Barbar• at Needs Sales Help tor evea and Ofoomlng ptents. Cell --ill•IT P/T =It~~ Full time 12 semester units a,,tJ ia PtnM It: and MORE• 760-t380 I t ; 675--3936 btwn 8:3().5:30 & ..-ends. Must be 249-2109 Mon-Fri l :3().12:30. Front person: e..oen·s Pest ECEneed9dM()f)day thN Credenzas ok c ase .. SPREAD UWl/ILDI flulbl9 & know fashion. lft'WI Timi ofllc:e appeeranc:e. Muat Control eta ~ Fr1cS9Y 7:30 to 4 pm 4iuphl51 ct1rs tables Alli· t ! & STOCK POSITION • 1835 Newport Blvd., Ste Matot~ MWIClle* be rtllable. Typing Aw .. CM. 714-546-5570. $8/Ht Cell 647•5284 ~.a.. ::. ~tyBc~~~52T7°f t f ' Apply Gift Shop. 0 C. Air· A-115. C.M. 642-7103.. hive lmmedlat• M~ 45wpm. Exp pt9fd. but Aak !Of LIOyd Totten m..-UUS -J rm9I t THE t port Tu-Fri AM. 852-911& 1111. llmfllf ment opportunity In Wiii train. Call 780-5000 AVW"aee wtlly pay $440 OAY BED wtute & 0<ass t t "" For small ottlc:e. Mutt be C1rculatlon Dept. I~ FfT rllr ..l/!L&.V 7am-12pm 894-1357 JJI W. laJ St., ~~,~~ tru~~ ;o;n-1 t t~ delail orient9d,type.take P(T entry le1l9I poait!°"9· ~"I 1-tiiriiiiiiiri.iiiilrl~-....,.-------""1 lettaleu,C&tHH •640-8733* t NEWS • ~ Retlil nurMfY needa I atiorlhand end work on No exp. nee. W1M train ''t'.W 'JY'r'<r ru·v ·11 642 567 wHkend pert time IBM/PC computw. Call • .... lllttr'f ~. \\ \...t-..'1 ~ \.. • AAllEll•ll ESTA-TE WalnUl 9-ora-wer t ~ cashief no exp necea. 25G-9090 & leave m99 • Recrul1 & manege edul11 REALTORS~ .,_ ------dressef coffee taole end t 'fl''f 9JY. Call tor appointment motor rout• per90nnel through c~ssified WllTEI tat>le roctung cnan Pie-t ~ Mond1y thru F11dy ... I lllBJll MuS1 b9 Ible lo~~ ~~~~ ..... _lliiiiiiil-•lli•••••-.. ••••-1111111 lutes m111ors 6'2-'610 t t .. " 646-7441 1a a UPI Earn s1so-S2SOO VERY tut pace enwon---0 -Work 1n the ever expanding News-;..: I v I 0 k Experienced cameraman HENREO N dining set • oanar Promot1"on a.-.ld! If you are •! .-.S Daily. Part lime photo men . ar oiu w r CUSTOMER SERVICE REP needed M ust t>e finest Quality' s11000 t -'""' • m0del109. No eKp. No schedule availabl e. ~n ....... •-"ga"""in all•re•• S ACRIFIC E S3500 t setf-motivatedandlikeworkingwith t PIT FIT good pay Com-IN: WORLD TALENT Salary & beMfltt. ALL " v-""" ""' -5 mlulons. reliable. wlll ~GENT-Llc.lbonded POSITIONS REQUIRE ot camera deoartmenl. __ •497•19 1* t teenagers. this may be the op-t train. Apply In pefa<>n. *(8181986-4316 INSURED VEHICLE. • 2 positions available 1'n our CUS-stripping plating Paste-K1ngt>drm set·dkwd 7-tx: t portun1ty you've been waiting for. t Metro Car WUll. 2950 --------For lnlOJmation call: up and/or typese1t1m~ Ore11el walnut youtll set • Harbor Bl .. Cotta Mesa. ...UI. IFFlll (714) 541-4384 d skins a plus Must oe w oesi... Cllrs ojd park>! t t · WANTED Photo Lab ex-•l•llln tomer S~rviCe ept. a1111lao1e 10 work eve-taole etc 673-5489 . t This is a GUARANTEED INCOME of t 11111 P• Ill.YI pertence helpful Full II -mngs Salary oaseo on t $400 pe ~.--!. t start 'th ot-.. ... N 'I Co hi e--r-n~-and skills " .. .-fll-R • r ""~ O WI P ..,,. nOMal at now r-time. Irvine 250-4136 • S48-1311 * A.,.. •a ""' _." -·-" I I f s 000 • 109 beginner• or pros tor M t h I t h .l _ Please cont8C1 Lisa or nems to numerous to 1111 I: t1a earn ngs 0 up to 1 per_ te1amatketl09 ottlc:e. We ll•ILD llllULUlllTlll US ave P easan P One pe1 \ Patat 1 7 141~2-4321e•t ca11 tor oeta1ls S25 10 week. t lraln E•cel money For v enetian gondolas. ExP« Beck Oftioa PIT l't t i I l 291 Outing 1he day and S1200 721-027• t • eYerydly Sl•r1 today! Recfsknowledgeo!New· Jvne&Sepl.6«·1'35 sona I y; yp ng a pus. earn (7141642-4399even1ngs ---I• pl.-1._ t. •"*556-3715** port Hatbor. Irvine Coast tllll le...,._.. An 1nsur~ van. wagon. """ t # CLEANING person for Chartws. 87~704 ........ valuable office -skills and earn -.... ~~~::sse~;90$Qf~r;rl~ I: up/shells are a MUST. .. .. =°"~t1~u~o= .. ~~~I~;:,:,, ~:.es~~~ Newport Lab needs t9m· $5.0()° an hOUr tO Start. -J RAnAN FURNITURE 1· •• guarntd Ptealnt wont· • S68 000 Call 1&021 porary ..courter tor busy Very nice ~ used Irv-t F . f f 109 c:ond. 548-4818• 838-ee8s Exl. 391·' 111:1. Bring OMV printout. ,. •• .., St.. 1ngRoom & a1n1ng • or more 1n orma ion • Pteuant working c:ond 30 A M B 30 p M lettaleu.C&IH21 s 1200 673-23tS t t Mo n'~~~~t!ont .. TlllLTHE Call ln=140• Hodurss atre&11s: -a·-A. -M: 10.30' Yl1llllll -~· ~~~ .• r a;1,Y,pr;i . Call Mr. James t Aeac>on .. energetic:. d9-Peraon to help wlttt p1.,,1. an a . Un. . , : ~t!ONSt and ann•-Wortro $1000 sac S250 (213) 477 2870 t taiMWieneed P91aon tor Ing. watwing 81\d Ofoom· RN IC>f family prac:11c:e attendant 1echn1c110 Can del 213 862-6S88 • _ t · furnll\K• ttOfa, Variety of lnO plents. phone tri~. Fashion A M needed tor t>vsy targe __ _ duties. Aocurecy a muat _,,..... Island. 6"· 848 • • PfKllCe FI T or p T loci A~IO -lor allttle • t C.it Judy. S.0-3122 .......... , NEEDED 1mmedl1tely 2 wllnds & eves. exp pref, guy.he~ild111otof .................... . COIFFIEEllPREDLPllER-needl Mon-Fr1 673-2281 =::~~o -:,~ Call 642-4321 ext. 207 to sched-lrvtne 551-0304 --·--·---....... ""i I. Hoapital lrOdUOe our amazing new I • k 673-9967. _...... product. Poten11a1 within u e an appointment. As for ---0-A-T_A_E=-NTRY 35 tw ...-. Exp. req'd. company unlimited. LI I d Maint1lnl09 malh09 1111 on Apply In pefton. Mon-Fri. Trainl09 provided. Apply 0 an a. computer. E1tpttrl•nce M.V Conv. Hospital M1 at 1971 So. Ritchey. nec:asary. Call 640-02 18 Center. Costa Mesa. Santa Ana. 2Sl-060e WEEKEND ~SSISTANT IMMEDIA T.E OPENINGS. PART-TIME WEEKENDS -3AM-11AM SAT. SUN & HOLIDAYS. MUST HAVE RELIABLE CAR/T RUCK . VALrD DRIVERS LICENSE. CAR INSURANCE. & OMV PRINTOUT. $7.00 PER HR. + MILE- AGE. CALL 642-4536 EXT. 205. ASK FOR BETH. If you're 10 or oldef. a job as a newspaper carrier mighJ be just your size. Just Mnd in this coupon or call: 642-4333. Routes are ~ avftilable now! It H•l~I.,. It I lllf Plllanterl r~tU7°d";~.; find out-:;~;;;1 1ng a o.ity Pilot carrier. I Name ___________________________ 1 I Address ----------- 1 = :...,,... ~-I ........ I .. ._.... . -----------. .... .. • . - WOlll WITH SPUD lclEIZIE WANNA PARTY ALL NIGHT AND HANG OUT AT THE BEACH ALL DAY' FINE!!! JUST GIVE US PART OF YOUR EVENING AN D YOUR WINNING PE RSONALITY WEl l GIVE YOU A CHANCE TO MAKE GOOD MONEY REPRESENTING AN EASY TO SELL A/Ell KNOWN RE PUTABLE PRODUCT GUARANTEED SALARY + COMM + BONUSEZ = SSS IN YOUR POCKET CALL PAT COLLIN AT t71 4J 642-4536 EXT 430 FOR MORE INFO CALL BETWEEN 3-9 PM OR LEAVE A MESSAGE ANYTIME AND Il l CALL YOU! BOYS a GIR'LS 2Clli\ MOMe.Y -STAllT llOW- 11 to IS Yun Old WORK EYENINQI AND SATURDAY WORK IN YOUR ~ NEIGHBORHOOD YOU CAN AVERAGE PER WEEK •7500 OR MORE CONTACT Mr. Phllllps PHONE (714) 498-3321 •·-=~-"'-"-=--~ ALL ~ORTAnoN PROVIDED BY AN AIU.. T 8UPB\"80R , $2.56 Per day Thaf s ALL you pay lor 3 hnes 30 day minimum In the SERVICE DIRECTORY CALL TODAY11 &llFllLm Your S-Vice Dnctory ~ .... tati119 142-4U1 at.111 J ~~~ "\ 'ft 0 t ···1· ........ ~ . . . -..., """'-~ Dq[field Marine Come t5y and see our new & used Eledric Boats . 2806 Lafayer,e in Newport 675-9487 ll'l&JP/L91ml Exlnt. location & eecurlty. Sail boat p<trcl. 673-227• .,,...,.... .... ........... CASH FOR CARS! 1 •ll ()[lUlo. I ROBINS I ~•II • ,_ - .... , :. mllm.&.11* ••11111"'1 And trucl\sl Ouk:tc and 1111.22* & Easv' Call 962· 7282 • • •,. fW~HIDlift/Jilie l~•-•------- •tnla ,.., 1111 CREVIER ACURA ,,. ....... ...... CHEVY -s. to Blaze1 T7 •h4 white. Tahoe pack· age. S yr wrrnty loaded! lmm8C\Jlate cond 40.000 mtles $12.750 854-7445 mT&aa&H&.• ........ , .. ..... Just bring us yoor lowest I flW IU9lU W bonaf!M Acora deal end -....... _., we'll beat It • GUARANTEED' •1&.1..Slllll • • • • • • • • • • 10010UAILST ,N.B llfl te 112-Hll llAOIU 01assffit4 "you're not m11cn1ng to the ciaUll\td tune. you ~Y be 142-5118 ;;"9Pfleesthttertoutot 84 JlJi M O ~ llQll:l90 85 11s. ~\Gd 1oadfd 1&am 8~ ~18t IYIO ~ l IAAI 11 86 11~ 1u)O loiidfd l M 111 86 5 '5• aulo lo~ 66840? 81 mtt aulo IC~ ?COU6~7 Sales · Se1v1ce Parts • Leasing 135-3171 POASCt:4E 112 Red. 1M7. Gd cond. Many u tr•I '4800. c.11 ..,.. .,.., 5pm ... 5-1261/831-4217 .......... de In C0$11 Mt~ 192~ 1Urbo1 Blvd '''"_,.-tlt\f ~ ' '· BUICK ESTATE SA LE. 1 '78 BUICK 2-dr. auto. air. 6 cyl. $ t400 • '81 VOL VO won $3950..642-4610 NABERS CADILLAC U.S~ troops in Panama to protect Ame~can citizens PANAMA CITY. Panama (AP) -A military-run newspaper warned the public to prepatt for an invaaion after the United States 11id it wu sendina l.300 mott soldiers to Panama to safeauard the lives and propeny of American citizens. Some of the additional U.S. troops were expected to arrive &oday in Panama. whett a two-week pneral strike aimed at oustina 1trOnJl1'an Gen. Manuel Antonio Noriep crumbled Monday when most businesses opened. In another development, an offer by the Roman Catholic Church to mediate Panama's crisis appeared doomed when a ~vernment official said only houn before the church-imposed midniaht Monday deadline that the aovernment had received no official invitation to take part. The Pen~n saiJ last w~k it was sending the additional soldiers to auard 10.SOO U.S. troops and installations used to pmtect the Panama Canal. The decision followed five weeks of unrest and an opposition attempt to oust Noriega. As head of thr I S,()()()..member Panamanian Defense Fo~es. Noriega is the power behind the civilian government. He is under indictment in the United States on federal drug trafficking charges. La Republica. a military-run newspaper. told its readers Sunday. "Panamanians must prepare themselves to reject the inva~fon." The United Statro; contends the troop buildup is within the bounds of the 1977 trc~ties that p ye !he Panama Ca~ne bac-k to Panama in 1979 and w1ll 11ve Panama the . I at thr end of 1999. The United tates. which suppons the opposition move to oust Noriqa. has cut off Panama's now of dollars. virtually para[)?ina thc alrcadY,·~nkrupt aovem· ment and leadina to d o,urc of the nations banks. The U.S. government ~id ~onday .it docs not plan military or further economic acuons qaanst Panama. White Hose spokesman ~arli.n Fitzwater sai~ in WashiflltOn that even thou&h 1t m1Jht take more umc than anucipated. NoriC'll will eventually step d own. Opposition leaders insisted on Monday that the strike officially remainrd in effect. but their call appeared to be generally unheeckd by retailers. Many factories. which are more directly under the control of the strike organizers. remained closed. Monsia,nor. Marcos Antonio ~~rath. the Roman Catholic archbishop of Panama Caty •. had offered I~ mediate Panama's dispute between Noncga an~ _oppos1- tiqn aroups. But govemment<Ontrollcd te!ev1s1on Jtl- tions quoted unidentified govemm~nt ometal~ Mo~y.. as saying the government never {!Ce1ved a formal, wnuen invitation from the church. MonsiJnOr Oscar Brown, the auxiliary bishop of Panama City. said in an interview on ~he . C.ll_annel 2 television station "We didn:t make the inv1tat1on an a formal. written fa~hion to each of the parties involved." .--~~~~~~~~~~ 1500 Auto Mall Or. BEAUTIFUL SELECTION of Ille model. low mileage Cedlllacs In Orange County! See us today! Santa Ana Motor Routes 55 Frwy at Edinger IPEl l llYS Servi<:e Hrs. Mon·Frl 7·00 am to 10 pm 140-1100 2600 Harbor Blvd COSTA MESA Reagan officials interceded for Honduran charged in death plot CUk.UI 'U INeraH available in .. ________ "'81arrrtz, xlnt · cond, 1· owner $10,200759-1178 Costa Mesa Huntington Beach Fountain Valley MAZDA 626, '86 GT turbo touring seoan, loaded' 5 spd. 55K m1. 1 ow11r. $8995 721-1503 PANDTS 111 ... 7 Too much cash down? LeaM '79 or newer MBZ Compare oor lerge select. 0 .A.C. FORD-FIESTA 1978 Yel· low. good condition! Runs well! $800 GOOd " trans 675-4750 Ron JIHSOl I Sii Or lllf C..1t, i ol4•'' 1.J1col1 l 11c111 M•lt r , ••• '"'" '11• ,.,1rt, WASHINGTON (AP) -Rcasan administration officials helped a Honduran general involved in a drug- financcd plot to assassinate that country's president get a lighter sentence. a former U.S. ambassador says. Francis McNeil. former U.S. ambassador to Costa Rica. told a Senate subcommittee Monday that top U.S. officials interceded on behalf of Honduran Gen. Jose Bueso Rosa because he had helped the administration's program of aiding the Nicaraguan Contra rebels. Manuel Antonio Noriega probably has evidence of U.S. officials' complicity in \entral American drug trafficking and is using ii to buy time. Jose I. Blandon. a former intelligence official and consul general for Panama who defected last year. produced a document Noriega sent to the country's U.S. diplomatic offices in February sayin$ he has proof that American officials knowinJIY established policies that supported people involved in the drug business. NO COLLECTING NO SOLICITING •tlEIAINITS dlal MERCEDES (213/71•)637-2333 ulu UrtlU & ltU lll 1'2' Kl,., ltt·• , C.iu In• S41 SUI 5 Frwy near Beach Blvd In Buena Park PONTIAC 6000STE ·a• Whanyou'va10at1omathlng rare edition HO V-6 & valueble. a clMlltlachd can loaded. 67K m1. 1 ONR Among those who interceded on Bueso Rosa's behalf was Assist.ant Secretary of State Elliott Abrams. the administrauon's top official in charge of inter-Amencan afTafrs and a prime architt"Ct of 1hr Contra policy. McNeil said. "General Nori~ says he has proof of the involvement of (U.S.) government authonties in drugs in Central America,'' Blandon said in Spanish through an interpreter at the heanng of the subcommiuce on narcotics. Blandon mentioned trafficking in Panama. Guatemala and Costa Rica. Deliver One Day a Week - Must have dependable car and proof of insurance. be1valu1blatrlend. car $6250. 721-1503 11~ CIZJI 9et McNeil said ~ucso Rosa was charged in the Un11ed States wiJ h taking part in a plot. financed by drug traffickina profits, to assa5Sinate Honduran President Robcno Suazo in 1984 Two others involved in the unsuccessful plot received long sentence(,. but Bueso Rosa got off with a fi ve-year term afirr the U.S. officials intercrded for him. said McNeil. Asked by the subcommittee chairman. Sen. John Kerry. 0-Mass .• whether he believes Noriega actually has such proof. Blandon ano;wered. "Yes." Later. Kerry said he. too. believes that Noncga has potentially embarrassing in formation abou I U.S. officials and is using it to try to maintain himself in power. Call 84'2-1444 CIUl fJllicM# witl Ask for Joanne Craney aJt ""ill ~" Oall 842-5878 At least one rtasu n for the intervention was the general's .. past usefulness to the Contra program." he said. The Senate Foreign Relations subcommittee also heard testimony Mond:ly that Panamanian military ruler Kerry said he diJ not pursue the matter more extensively in the puhlic hearing because he 1s stall awaiung corroborauon of that and other information about alleged use of airstn~ used to resupply the U.S.· backed Contra rebels in Nicaragua to handle drug sbipments as well. OtllH No11us 1 __ flt8. __ 1C_NO_Tl_CE ____ PlBl. __ IC_NO_Tl_CE ____ PlBl. __ .IC_NO_TICE ____ PlBl. __ IC_NO_TIC_E ____ rtlll __ IC_NO_Tl_CE __ 1 __ rtllllC __ NO_TICE __ ......... _NIUC __ NO_TICE ____ Nl __ IC_NO_TICE ____ Nl __ IC_NO_TICE __ "°' 103911 121Warm Creek lnvHtors Trust dated January 5 NOTICE Of MOii Note dated Deoambef 31 85-29100050 "1fllen owns NOTICE K •wt E~GLI H NOTICE Of a Ca111orn1a general pan'*· t986 as Deblor TMJITEE'I IALI MOTICI Of 1985 u amended. rn tht! among 01her things. real INVfTIN0..01 t(Se'lll*I BERN ADE TT E D£ATHOf ship (whi<:h is the geMra1 To obtain turth rntor-NOTICE IS HEREBY "'9l.IC IALE ong1nal 1moun1 01$395.000 propeny 1mp<oved W11h •P-NOTICE IS HEREBY (CITACION.IUDICIAL) HMt!CE a. OfFNER par1ner ot Warm Creek AS· maiion including. but not GIVEN that on Fr•day Ap.11 NOTICE IS HEREBY maoe by Baker& SimpSOn A pro1umatety 120 IQlrtmant GIVEN llU I sea led NOTICE TO DEFENDANT M ARY· ~G L lSH. J ANO OF ~TITION TO soc1ates. a Caltforn1a hmlled ltmlled 10 1 detelled de-29, 1988 at 1o·ooam . at the GIVEN pursuant to Section C111forn1a general partner· units. IOCat~d at 70•0 pr090sals for furn1Shlng all (A v 1 so a A cu sed o l agt-i2. a ~tden l ttf-+ ADMeMS'Ttlt-tln'T! net51'1•p C-11hcete-of scnption of-the Coltaterel l -ofl.ee ol l.,ry Rothman. 9504 of the .Ca~fornl1 Com-.snip 10 Mrloe$ Anderson. •nd Arcn1bald Avenue 1n 1-. Coy tabor matenats, equipment, HERMELINDA ARAIZA San Juan upisirano . I ESTATE NO. L•mrted P"tnerSh•P. Sec· oeing S04<1. and to ar11nge iocated 11 ""0 Beach matc•al Code tl'ltl on F11<1ay. ( t5l and unsecured debl in ol Rancho Cucamonga, 1rensportat1on end such YOU ARE BEING SUED ~~~~....-1 a"' a' f'ndav A·142431 re1ary pl S1a1e File No tor "' insoeciton ol the Se· vd Suite 106. West· A.pril 15, 1988 11 1 ~a m . the emount of appro111m11t· County ot San Bernardino. other flCll1t1es u m1y be ra-BY PV.INTIFF·tA Ud. le Hta m orning She IS c•ed•lors and contingent among othet thmgs real Collaleral documentation. Rothman on t>ettelf of a02 H<>m4! Loans 2700 Nor1'1 Olympus Group to M1i.t C4)Co1ton·F1irway As· c:onc1ete blocll fer>ong et. la)'NCH ..........,...~ · · I To 111 heirs oenetoc1eries 85-12200035 "1tl!Ctl owns. curtly AgrNment and other m1ns1er C1lllorn1a. Larry II the ot!IGes of Bonoed ty S328 098 21 owed by The State of Cahtornial quired tor tnetattauon of dem1nd1ndol KENNY K s u r ,. I\" t• d b v .i c:rtd1to1S ot BERNICE B OF-property improved wtth ap-contact JEFF . W LANE. TWENTY -FIRST STREET M11n Street. Suite a04, And9'son and lovgene G socrates :0 1 I Clltfornra hm· Smallwood Pwll. 16'6 Cor· You tw.. JO CALaNOAtt brother. John J0seph FNEAa,,dpeisons wnomaf pro1umately 300 1partmef'lt ESQ or KING WEISER. CO-OP ASSOCIATION AT S1nteAna,C11ttorma92701, Anderson, husband and tied partnetSl'lii>. C-trticate 11e1P1ac..Cos11Masa,Ca.h· DAYI .net tNa -• C N be otherwise 1n1erested 1n unois located at East Third EDELMAN & BAZER. 20a9 PUBLIC AUCTION TO THE George A Smith and wife and Miles Ariderton' of limited PertntfShtp. Sec-101n11, w1n be received by It Mf'fld on JCM8 to ... t a nno n . t'Wp ort tne will and or e11a1e Street 1n te City of Sen Century Par~ East, Suite HIGHEST BIDDER FOR Pem~a J Smith will sell at and Lougene G Anderson retary ot Stete Fiie No lheCltyofCotttMeualthe typewrtttaft JMPOftM •I Beal·h. n e phew. A petmon has 1>ee<1 llleo Betnard1no, County ol San 900. LosAngeleS, Calitornra CASH. CASHIER'S CHECK pub1tcauctt0ntothehrgnest II Trustees of the Miit's 86-15400016 OltlGe ot the City C•k. 77 .W.--.. _ Patnck E Cannon. by Btn11m1n F Pearaon 1n Bernardino, State ot Call· 9 o o 6 7 1 e t e p l'I 0 n e OR CERTIFIED CHECK btdder, for casn (pay•ble at Anderson Family Trust. (5)Sandtrap Auociates. • Fair Orr~. Costa Mesa. Call-A.....,.,,.__ C.-wllf Cambria two nit'CeS tne Superior Court of Ot· lotni11 1213)5S3· 1600 (p1y1ble at trme of sale 1,, the time of sale In lawful dated December t3. 1985 Calltornr1 1tm1ted p1r1net· lorn1a unlll the l'lour of 11 oo net protect ,.u: ,_ ~ · anoe County reoues11ng thal 13JWOOOwind Investors: 1 QEOftQI A. SlllfTH MCI lawful money of the Unlled money of the Untied States). S11d sale is P<{'SUlnt 10, ship, Ca<t1lieete ot Ltmtled am , April 22. 1984. It whldl wn..... r1•1--• be Noreen E C annon, Ben1am1n F Pearson be ap. Caltforn•a generel partntt· 'AMELA J, IMfTH •r: Stlltsl 111 r1gn1 title and the ent1re interest of Mlle$ ano said Pfoperty1lalng SOid P1rtneun1p Secretary ol trme they w1h be °'** lfl P'lt'lf ..... 9or1'I If ,.u Newpor1 Be.:1ch . and poi11ted as personal rep.. snip (wn1Cn rs the genetel KING, WEISER, EDILMAN interest crea1ed by a Notice Anderson and Lougene G constructs the Co111tera1 State File No 85-25500010, pubhcty and read eloud rn •Mt ttla -e to._,_ Sheila A Espinoza. resen1a11ve 10 admlnlstertha partn« ot Woodwind .A.. a aAZEtt 2Mt C1t1turr of Default and Election 10 Anderson. hun11b1nd and under. the Secvrlty Agree-(6)Woodl>end Associates 11\e Counc41 Cl'lambels Seal· c.a. O tJ M Ena) h estate or BERNICE B OF· soc1ates. a Calttornra ltmrted '-" i.tt. lutta IOO ar: NII Pursuent to Oectaratlon wife. end MU .. Anderson ment. dated October 15, a Ca1tforn11 limited panner-ed p1oposals snall belr the " ,_ do not ... ,_ ran"t' rs • JS FNER undet the lnoeoen· pannersh1p Cert1flc1te of .-FF w. u•. Attomare of Covananta, Conditions & and LO!J91M G Andlreon 1988, as emended. between ship, Cert1flc11e ot limited tllle or the work and the ,..po-on u.na, ,_ .,.., ".is a membc•r nf the oent Adm1nis1111t0n ol u -L•mlled Partnership Sec· tor a.or,. A. Smlttl MCI Restrlct10n11 which notice ., Trust-of tile Miles the undalslgned. as Secured Partner1hlp. Secretary of neme of the bkldal but no e-tM -· 8ftd your Cdtho)JC' Daughkr:. of 1a1es Ac1 111ary of State Fiie No ,......,.. J. Slftfftt was recorded on FabrUary Anderson f'amrly T1ust Party. •nd M1i.s Andalson State File No 85· 1'100089. othlf d11hngu1sh1ng marks ....... _, 8ftd prop-Amenca. Court Mana The pet1tt00115411 lor ne11-8S-29100050 '#tllCh owns. Publtsned Orange Coast 18 1987 1n Ottte111 Records dated o.c.tnbef 13. 1NS. ln end Lougene· G Anoerton. (7)250 Sh11estn COiton· Any l>td recetYed 1'1ar tne lf1J ,,.., be tatlllft w""°4lt • tt>g 1n Department No J at among othel tti.ngs. rail Dally Pilot April 5 1988 of Of1nge County. Cell-MQh of 1he loltowtng nusband and wife, aod Mrtet F11May "1. In<: A C•I•· schedutacl oloslng 11m1 tor fwttlaf • .,,.. fr-IM D e I ~I a r N u m bt-r 700 C1vtC Cen1er Drive West. property improved wtth ap-T t07 1orn1a, 1n accordance wi1h 1 I l)Costa Meta Investors Andarsor> IOd L~nt G. tom1a corporation. Iha raceii>t ot 1>1<11 ltlall be cowt. 2008 San <.:lemenk. Santa Ana CaJ1torn1a 92702 prox•matety 120 1p1rtment o.c:111111on ol Covan11111, • 1. 1 C1lltorn11 general Andaleon as Trust-of the (8)250 shares '" Costa rt1urnad to the t>tddaf un· n....,. ...._, ..... ,.. Tht' Third Ordt'r of on "P"' 20. t988 a1 1 •5 units, located at 70•0 Conditions & Res111Ctlon1 partnership; MllH Anderson F1m11y Mesa Assocllln "'· Inc . • oc>ened 11 shall be the Iota ............ You...., wattt ~ P M Archibald A\l9flue 1n the City Pla.IC NOTICE recorded 1n Ofllctal Records (2)Warm Creek Investors. Trust, dated 09Qember 13, Calltorn11 corpor111on, responsibility ot the bidder to cal an 1ttomar rteftt Satnt Franns San 1F YOU OBJECT 10 the ol Rancno Cucumonga of Orange County. Call-1 Callforn1a genctfal partntt· 1985. 11 Debtor (9)25 sharH In The Olym· to-that hrs b1d 1srecetved .. .,. If,_ do net 11- Juan Cdp1,.tr.in11 Jnd granting of the petthon you County ol San Bernardino. K Jt1G tor"''· 1n the Pf09111Y srtu· tntp ('#tlich Is tlla general To oblllfl turthlf •rifor· pus Group, a C1kforn11 cor· 1n Pf<>Plf ume • ...._,,,.....,celllft th Yuun~ L.odtt" In· snoul<I eothet appeer 11 the State ot Callforn•al NOTICE Of ated 1n said County and panner ot Warm ~eek As-mation. lndu<hng, but not l)O(ahon. A Mt ot p11ns, specif•· ....,_, ,.._,., -.io.., SlllUlt' ,,1 Sdnt .. ,\n.; "earorig and state your ob-1•1Co11on-Feirw1y As· DE4TM Of State Ol5c:rrbed as IOC4etes. a PertnertlhiP. Sec· Mmtled to. I detllled di-(10)250 Shares in Sand· cauons, and other contracl 1 ..... Md aMce (Jltttd lfl , 1ec1tons ot hie wr1uen otnec· soc11tes "\ e C•htotn1111m-LA YEM H. Wiii Loll 2 ano '· BIOCk 429, retery of State File No. scr1ption of the Collateral wedge. Inc . 1 C1hforni1 cor-docluments mey bl obtained "'-,...._Mell). \ 1"1141111n l•~•k µIJl<' p•ons witn the court balore •led pannershtp. Cer11ficate AND Of "1'fTION Unit A as per Map recorded 85-12200035. wntch owns being SOid. and to .,r9ng1 Pofl llOn, at tri. Otflcl of tne Dapert. ~ • .,. 11 - .111 da\ Sund.,, tn '"' nearing Your appear-ol L1mtted Plt'1ntfstnp. Sec· TO ADMINllTIR 1n Miscellaneous MIQI ra-..-noung other things. real tor en inspection of the S.. (11)259 Shll~ In _werm mant of Leisure S.VIOll, 77 .,.._.. aeta cftac1e11 tu· l 1 ,11, ,k ( tJ11n IJ I ~noe m•y be 1n person or by retary ol State File No EITATI MO. A14M25 cords of said county l)foperty improved with •P-curlty Agaament and other Creell Inc · I C1hforn11 cor-Fair Drive. Costa Meu. Call· dlclel ueted ttaM"" pteaa • R tour allorney 86-i5aOOO 16 To ,1111 heirs. t>eneficlartes Record Owner LOUIS P<O•lmetaty 300 eparlrnent Collateral documenteton. POtlllon, '#tlich 11 • gene.el lornla. upon receipl of a d8 • DIAi CALEND~I lhJ~l'.l l'\.'tl.J'ICIO tlf IFVOU AREA CREDITOR (5)$andtrlP AUOClates I cred1to•1 end contingent MCGOFF ANO GERI unl1s. loellld II 495 East conlact JEFF w . V.NE. partner of Werm Cr..i< In-nomtfundablef .. ofleOO. ,.,. p r•••ntar wn• lht 11 11 \ J<1,.,.1r\ -; ,itr o• a contl"91"t cred1t0t ol Callforn11 limited panner-credtlort, Ind DerlOnl wno SALAS Third Streat tn the City ol ESQ. ol l(ING. WEISER, vastors. I Callfornta general It blddafs raqunt plans and ,.,, u 11te -"a t -P M "''•II 1.;' ,, nd In~ deceased you must hie ShiP: CerttliCate of limited may be othenlt1se interested The Street Addrest and S.n Bernar<Mno, Sitt• of EOELMA'N & BAZAR, 20~9 partnerltlip (whlCl'I ts the IC)lcificettOM be l'TlllllaO. Illa __..,. eeta eatta. '\l.i'' . \ 'hri,tt.•n your cl11m W1tn the coun or Pannersh1p Secretary of rn the w111 tn<J/or estate ot other common designation, Clltfotnlal. Century P"k Elcil. Su11e general panner of Werm c:t\lfg Wtll be $7 so par Mt u.. caru 1 -._...... . present rt to the personal State Fite No 85·25500010. LA VERN H WEIS. AKA LA rt any, ol the reat plopafty (3)WoodWlnd Investors. a 900. LOS Ange!H. Californle Creetc Asaoclat•. I Call-Each bid Shall be ma6t on • I , .. M .. ..,.,.,, B trr" "' .. ~ (•·I representatlll'tappolntedby (6lWOOdbend Associates. VERN MARIEWEIS.Al(A LA desc:rlbed above ii Ct lrfor'"• ~al partner-90067 . te l ephori t forn1 ra llml11d 1P8rtntfShlp. ttlePrC>POM1form1ndlntlla ,.11u~h ;;.., ,.,,llft ... 1 hr,l t• I ~ II 1 ·\ \.1 int coun w1th1n tour months a Ca111om1e llmited partner· VERN M. WEIS purported 10 be' 402 2 tat lf'llp (.itlich 11 the general (213)553· 1600 re erred to In tern numbel ml nntf p1ovidad In the con· __..a.,............_ ... \lt1ntl .. , ''"'* dl from the d81e or trrtt Is-ship Cer11flclle of Limited A petition hes bean tiled Street. Unit A. Huntington partner of Woodwind As-UOftQI A IMITH end (2)abow. tract documents. end Shell c11"''"' con la• for- suance of letters 1$ l)(OV!ded PartntfShlP Secretery ot by GORDON FIGARO In the Beach C1lltorn11 SOCilllS. I Clllfornlt limited ,AMIL.A "· ·--::.-:. .. ~ ( 12)250 shim In Wood· b• accompanied by a "' ••• ct. ct. I •••• , • I ':'4 rr •• l ·h·'I" :\lho;rom .n Sec11on 700 of 1ne State File No 85-1• 100089. Svpa<lor Court of Orange Said sal• wrll ba made. but partt>erlhtp. c.tofieatt of K91G. WllUR. E bend Inc . • Clllfotn11 Cor-oart1flcateor euf'llef schectl ••plidu 11 ueled ....,_ St1n Ju.Jn ( "•J;n•'r •• n .. Ptooat• Coot of Cal1torn11 171250 shares 1n COiton· County requesting that with<>ul covenant or w11· lJmffed_Panntf'1hip. S.C· a aADtt ... c-tWJ pcM'a1ron, tmlGh 11 • 991*11 Of 1 bid t>Ond fOf not 1e11 .-ta cor11 _... w \'Ith Kr...-~ •• th•r Tmr11metorhtingcn1ms'W1lt Fa<twtly • Int 1Galttorn1tt GOROON Fl<>ARO be~ r1nty.eaprnsorimpllad,1a-rttary of Stet• ~llt ~...., .......--IAa ~ner ot Woodwind •th10 TO"~of-m.amount UM. Paul 1\1 ~1.1 11 111 rtot e•pira Prtor to rour corporation pointed as person11 rep. g11drng 1111e. posHMOOfl. or No.IS-2910050, which ....._CA_,,.,..,, -•or1.1C.wtornl1gener11 lhtbld,madapaylblllolht .. _._ ne ,..._...., 'TIOnins from the date ot 11'14! (81250 Sh"" 1n Costa rasentallve to admlnltter the encumbrances. to pay tor OWTll. among °''* things, W. LANI, AtterMf9 '°' p.nnarlhlp (wtlicl'I Is tlla City of Coata Mesa No ,....ea a .....,_ ,_. Pastor. ul I 1u,1trn~ 111 nearing notic.d above Mesa Associates • 1. Inc . a 11tate of 1he decadent dellnqu1n1 m11n1en1nc1 real property Improved with °:: A. '"''"' and general P•rtner of Wood· p1oposal shell be con· ,.,..., .. c.a, r 11 ~ l<'rm('nt !ollo\.\t'll 1n vou MAY EXAMINE ll'le California c:orPOr1t1on. Tl'la petition requ11ts assessments, c:osts and ti• 1ppro111~tely 120 ei>art· ' J. Smlttl windA1soci1tn.1Califotnl1 lldaleduntessaccomp1nlad ....., 111 ....... 111--. Hnl\' Sc·.,uli hi 1 l\ m· f1~ ~epl by 1he court II YoU (9125 snares tn Tne Ofym-evthorlly to 1dm1n11ter the torney·s tees. t o wit: rnent units. locatld at 7<MO Publllhad Or.nga Daily llmtttd p artnership by such ce1t111r'1 Cf'llctl, r 1tr11 c11a1 •• 111 N ·rv Or 1 , Th art ·nterested 1n 1"9 eS1111. pus G•oup e C1J1torn1a cor-estate under tha lndeoan· S 1.833 20 with 1ntar11t Arctllt>ald Avanua in the City Piiot Aprll 5, 1988 Norirecou111 Promlsaory caah. or Ofddat'a bond ,. ••It Ill tin .._ .. . • ,., lo:I 1~ you may serve upon the P · por1ilon e1ar11 Adm1rHst111100 ot E1· tl'lt<90n H PfO\llded In sli<I II Rtncho Cucumonga. T 106 Note dlted December 31, The Cont1'11Ctor Shall, 1n c1efta1,., ,_. • 11 .... . \.\hll ''ISh Old' mdkt 1ecutor 0t aom1n1str1t01 or (10)250 anares 1n Sand· 111nAc1 Oeclareuon advanca. II County of San 9afnardlno, IN S." -1ded,'" tne tllapal'tormaneaofthlwork ....._. ..,_ ,., hlUJ l'<>11tr11Jultl 111::. to tht> 1upon 1ne enorn~ fOf tne ex· wedge Inc 11 C11ttorn1a cor· A '-rlflO on the petition t ny, undlt tne terms ot slid State ot Calltomlt): Pt8JC NOTIC[ or.ginal emount of IAOO 000. end lme>fO•emants. conform ........ ,.... _... ...._ Old M i"o;IOll &hi•il in lecutor or adm1n1strator. • por1tion wtN be held on APRIL 20. Dactaratton: lees. charges (•)Colton-Fefrway As · MCIOI m•ClebyBaller&Sompeon,1 to lhe Llbor Coda ot the ............ ....... ... ,. wm ten •eques1 s1a11ng tl'lat (11)250 Sh11es 1n Warm 1988 at 1as P.M 111 Dept and expenses ot said At· aoc111 .. •1.1Ca11torn1ellm· ......... 1 ,.. 9!.lrtor~•1~~~~~ StateofCtllfornlaendother 1Mt1illl 1as aMl ... ne--n ,. r m 1' m Or ' you desire special notlGI ol Craell Inc .. a C1llfornr1 cor-No 3 11 700 Civic Center torney 1ted pannarlflip, Cert~tl ....,,_ ..... ...1p \O " ...,, .... ""'"""" ...... llWI of the State of Call· ... a 1111 1tr11 ... ,_. Lt.-snc>Skl M ortuary ine 1111ng 01an1n-1tory and poratlon. "1tltCl'l 11 a general Of'lvt west. Santi Ana.. CA The Homeowners Aa· ot Limited PartMt'lllip. Sec.-~IC aALE (15)an unMCrured debt In forn11 ltld otlllr laWI of the ......, e _. .-. ,... tHO South El Camm<i 1aopr1Jsement ot estate ... partner of Warm Creatl In-IF YOU OBJECT to the eoo11tton undef' Hid Oaclll· rettty ·of S1.ie Fila No. NOTICE IS HE·AEBY tne amount of epproximata-late of Cellf0tnla app11-..... llrlll Ill 1 a Real Sa~ Clc·m"'nl"' sets ot the pet•ttons or ac· vattors a C111torn11 general granting of the petlllon. you auon helt1otore e11acutld M-154000HI: GIVEN pursuant to Section ly $321.098 21 owed by Tne tlllfato. witfl Illa 911• -....._ •.,......., · _" _ " coun11 tTl9f'lt!OnecS 1n Sac· partnerlhtp lwhteh IS the ll'l<>UWI 11ther eppaar at the and dallver.O to tne under· (5)6endtrep Aaoclllet. a 9504 ot Iha Calrfom11 Com· ()lympua Group to Allan M t!Ofl onty of IUCh 1181'1-(Ne .. .,_..._ t.i.. Dtrl'C'tOI'!. -19:! 1 • 1 • 1tons 1200 and 1200 5 of tne gene<ll pennar ot Warm hewing lltld 11111 your oo-~ 1 wr11ten Oacleratton Calrfomia limltld pettnar-marcill Coda that on Friday, Condon tnd Matgot Con· atlons a may bl requwad ....._). California Probate Code Cr• Assoc111... a CaJt.. llC1ront or flit written objtc-of Oafault and Demand tor ship, C.ltlc;ate Of Limited April 15. ltl8, at 11:00 a.m • don. hulOtnd tnd wlta. and Illa tp«:lal It.all..-c-Ne.. - PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemeter~ • Mon..ia•. Cnapeo • C:rematcr. 3500 Par••·c V•t'~ D• .... 'fewpon Bea • 044 -roc HA .. •Of' LAWN· MT OllVE Mo• tua1) • Ct-me te•, Crematorr 1&2!1 Gisler A11e C.o'1~Mes.i 0 !i554 Petitioner Btnl•mrn F lornia JllTl(lad pannet'SNp, tlon• with Illa COUft 1*0t• Sala, Ind a written Notlell of Pannatlfllp. Sec:fetary of at the officas of Bonded Allan M Condon 81 Truet11 auant to .itlic;tl Pfocaad· The name end~ ot Pearson rtfarred to .,., Item numb« the lllartng. Your ~· Oafevlt and EtactlOl'I to Sall State Fiii No.8~26500010: Homa Loens. 2700 North Of Illa Condon Famlty Trull. "198 har'IUflder •• laklft the court i.· (El riombfe y ......_ ... '· ,__, lfl (2)a~). tnCtt~ybelnparaonOfby to beracordld1ntheCounty (8)Woodband Allociat•. Main Str"'· Suite 404, datl0May2S. 1978. wtlich have not tlell'I diracdonde,.eottata) SU· ,roprte '•raant. 1221 (12)250 llhar• In Wood· YfNf' anontey. wMra tha rMI PfOC*1Y de-1 Celltornla lifMIO partner· Strnte Ane.Cllffotnla9270l. Seid Mia 19 pureuant 10. uparaaded by tlla PERIOR COURT OF CALI· •r •4t.wr r tto•d, Lii bend Inc .. I Californla Cor· IF YOU ARE A CREDITOR scnbed lllraln II located lhlp, Certiflcele of Llmltld Georg• A. Smltll and and said propeny e.ng IOtCI of 1he Labor FORNtA COUNTY OF OR· ....,....., c .. .,,. ~ POf'•tJon. Of a contlnglnt Cfldltor ot Trust11 conducting Mir P•t11e1lflip. Secf .. ary of Pamala J Smitll #Ml ... ti conatttut• Illa Cotlelaral P•...,•Kie lo labor ANGE. '100 CMc Canter Publtthad Orange Cout (13)250 .nar .. Wood· Illa OICJlllld. )'OU~ file Llrfy Rothman, At1omay It State Fla No.15-1.,oooel. puWc auction to tM hlgfltat Yndlr, Iha Secunty ~ be ti'*! onty In tM Oft\19 w .... Pott Office Boll Dally Piiot Maren 2SI 30, Wind, Inc. I Callfornlll Cor· YfNf' Claim wttJI Illa court Of Law, 14140 IMch 8tYd . (71250 ..... In ~ bidder for Caall (payebla .. IMftt. dated October 15, prOlllOed by.... 138, a.ma Ana. Californla Aprrt 5. t988 porlflOll, wnictlla e geMl'll praaent It to Illa Pfrtonel Suite 108. Wfftm1n1t•r. FlllrMy •1, Jnc .. aCelMomia Illa time of .... In lewtul 1111, • amMdael. ~ NobidahellbaCOMICMred H102~. TW098 partner of WoodWlnd In· reor.-itM•va i!pPC)lntld by C11ltornl1 92683, (7 14 l corpotatlon: . money of IN United St• ... I. Iha uno.rlioned. aa Seclncl tt la made on a bler1ll The nema 8dd•1t1 end ..,.tors. • Cllifomle IJ9Mf'el Illa court within '°"' montM ets-3308. (8)250 .._.. In eo..a IN lfltlra Int.,... of Men. Pany, llnd ~lien M. Condon m """"'*' by Illa City ot llllPholie ~ ot ~- partnal'll'ltp (wtllcfl .. IN from Illa d... of ln1 ... DA TEO· Mardi 30, 1981 Meaa AalG cl 1•11 • t, Ille.. • ••t Condon tnd Marf04 Cort-and Marf04 Condon. hue-• Meaa llnd .. made In ,.,.. ettom.r Of plainttlt 1--.. ---.,.-.,.-T-~---general partner of Wood-..ancao111tt .. aaprovtdecl By Latty Aottwnen. At· Catlfornea oorpot~: don. Hulbllnd and ..... and band and..._, and Min M. ccordanct with 1111 lllfthout en aiiomay, II: (Et ,.._""' ~ wind ~.•Celfomie In hctlon 700 Of Ill• tornay ., Law 19125 ..... .,, The~ Men M. Condon .. Tru .... Condon .. T,,,.... °' tha ol Illa PrOl)Oaal "°"*9, .. clr'90dofl , .. nu· •---------limltld pait,..INp, ,.....,_ ~ ot Callfornlll. ~ Or.nga Coeat 11'18 Ofoup. a Ce110rn18 oor· °'IN Condon Famlly Truat. Condon 'amlly Truet, dMad m•ro O• telatono Oel ._ to In 11am number (3) abovel. The tllM for Mr1Q ctelln9 ,.. Dally Piiot N>rll 5. f2. 11. 21. poratlon: Mar 25. 1t71. Jin eaefl Mey 25, tt7t, aa Olbtor tMddtf "'-I bl ~ dtl ...,... .... 0 llOTICI °' ( 1 4 I a a• cur • d noc expire pr10r to tout ,.... (10PSO .,... "' Send-of Illa fOIOWlng• To OOY1n lw1Nf lnfor· ~MCI 8ftd alto pre-dtl OafMnclefl .. .,. ;.. f'UM..fC IAl-9 NonracourM Proml-y montflt trom tlla data of thl T 104 wqe, lno., a cellftofnla cor• (1)Cott• Mwa lml9810t9 matlon. lndudlnt. ""9 not aa '"'*9d by lew. ttMoe ~ •I: ~ NPTICE IS HEREBY ~· detld l)eoafnbar 11. haerinQ no'llc. abo'M. porallon. •1, I Caltlomta 09fll'lt llmitad to, a d9talad ct. Thi Qty eounctt Of Iha p AA"llO. INC., 7777. GIVEN ~t to Sactton 1M5. Ill thl ortg1na1 MIOUft1 Vo.! MAY EXAMINE lhl (1t)HO ...... In Wetfft par1Mr1lflip ICt!Ptlon of Illa C411Merel of Cotta.._.,...,,,_ CerW A-.nut, hl1t 203 =~: 6:,. c:"'~",.= of '400,000, maoe by .._., Mt -...,c by .,... GIM'I If YoV ~ tnc • a C1Mom11 cor• gz""" ~ w-alcn, -. told, and 10 an~ ,..,.. IO r9fKt er,, or 11 Hunllnglon hecll c111; & ~. • Cellfornla gen-.,. a P9f90n IMlf nu d tn poratton, ~II•..,_.. • om .. IJ9Mf'll .,_,,,.,•. tor an k11111~011 ol Ille Jor1111 tlf'47 P110111 ' ApfM 15, 1981. It 11 00 a m .• •II .,.,,,......_ to 0eor9e 1111 _.... you mey ww ..,,,_ Off Wlr'9I C... ~ INP fwNcfl • tN ....., ourfty Aoi•••" MO.._ 7MIMI .... t i Illa omc. ol 9ondad L Hamil: ypon ._...__., lldlNfl. .-... a c.lf0tnll ..,_tt P9"'* of Wri ~ M-Coiel9ret ~. ~ft: ~ ~"' H Home Loena, 2700 NOtth end r15)an unMCut9d ..,._ or wpon lfte ... llMm nAW ,..._.. {WNClll • ._ ....._ • Calforftla......., OOfttaat ""' W. LANI. "YU.,.. ar.... o-,_ Mein Street, Sulit 404, ~ll'tlfteamountlftipprOll• 1omer 'tor -...,.., or Thi,...,.,.,.. .............. ol Wantt ............ ~ ti/I UQ °' KING. W£1tflll. ,_ .. t,I. -&.II A.-~..._, SentaAna,CallbnieH70t, 1nw1tty '321.0M.21 owed adtMllalaMOt, 8ftc1 Ma ... doiftl ...,._ aa: ,.., C.... Aaa, 1• .... Cea-........, ll•11••· t. IDIL.MMI I UZAA. l04t F111 ........ -... · J George A Smltll end by TN~ Group 10 ""oourt """,,_. ol w-WOffi9. llOl.1111191.C... fOtftll ....._. ~··•·....,, ot~ •'-NO Century Part! e... lute. NOll:llT01"1""90H • Parriaia J Smith w11 ... M Georo• l Hamill end.-.•"""'",..-.......... CA.11117 ,...,,.. ID lfl l'9M ,___ .. ,HOOOM, oaona. IOO, LOl~.c.Moma SELL --=.,_•..._.• ------piA111C auction to lfte ,._. ~ M Mamll,....,,.., .._ llll -. ,_.,. ...... ..., Lee ............ (2).... ...... , ,.. I 0 0 I 7 , 1 e I t p II one ell ....... ••t j ii H···,.··VI•• .. ••••••••• :-.-ror°'c.11..JP:-=.: =..-:c..~ .::_,-..; =:~...,-,.:,:,,';~~~ST, c..-~-:.-:=:.:: :=...""":'..:::. ":=:= '·... ~';:.:l.~lt,.=. rnoMJ of Iha tJnit9d s ..... 1. •• Trulllet ot Ille ....,. ..... -., -.. ...... T'NI .,.,_ .. .... ~ ...... ...... .. ... ... "'' .......... .throuch dnMfled , ... -I A NllDt ::::.::-~.:::.': ~---==-:::.:..-:..-=.-: :t:=:. .i!. ..... -:;: .:::: :".:::' .. ':..~: .!.?.., . T!tl' Ille-~·) lfl W ield ... It pur9llMf IO .... C .. I .. ,,.._c0. T1lle ......... -................... ~ ....... dlllO, .... "I ~ •~·~c:ros,,f,edP<J9es :. ~::r ..... ~ot.: :'=....'"'='=•~ ..,.,-,: ·. '8.-::S ~...,_a:,:.~ ==.:'c ... •ri .-·ur ,,.. ...... ,... •'== Uyou'nju.tnattlng OAd yo. r• M• to I~"' !,;:':.: .=s: =·:.. "':',:-.: ~ •• -- -=~ ..:: ,_r',.':. = r:mr.::;.: J'OUI' OWi\ hu.inw, lilj Rlit ,.., .. .-•.. • • =•• ••• ...... r n .. oir..-ewt , aa..., o.... a.. .., •111 •C111• • ~ c:: ... -=..= c... cla11lliecl'• a ~t.plalae .. ~ 11,r..--------~~. ~=·"'=---.. ao. ,_ .. l.tt.•.11.. ::::.::'~·......._ c.ir ... ti......... L.--. af ft'll...,._,.. "'!9191• •••• CllfaeMa ..... ::." ..... -.r..... . TWtOO ,. ... .... ( --~ ':' T -to uu7 OK lee liquipftWlt . .................. ......... ; ...... " -. ... T UESDAY, ARPIL S, 1988 2S CENTS Rea e e ansarr1ve 1ncoun ush falls over Coto de Caza as people .The rare qu1e1 was quickly replaced with the. dull chops of hu,e helicop- ters. Police and Secret ~rvitt walkie- talkies crackled as crowds began to cheer. attend a SI 00.000-per-rouple lunch· con hosted by 1et1rcd ~neral Wil- liam Lyon The event v.-as held to raj~ mone))"or the Rc-apn library a nd arch1,es. planned for Ve ntura Count) what was go1na on. but we read about 1t in the ~per and "IW the Secttt Service. so we knew the ~1dent was coming. -said Jane Ham son. who stood on the strttt "1th her son. Justin. and doe. Shiner a watt glimpse of president, first lady _ By JONATHAN VOLZltE Of ....... ,... ... . .. It . didn't take a slow-vowth in· 1t1auve lo stop construcuon in the Orange Coast foothills Monday -it onl y took President Ro nald Reagan. Arizona Senate votes to Impeach Gov. Evan Mecham./M Oukakls takes an early lead over Jackson In Colorado caucuses./ A4 World Hooded gunmen massacre 33 villagers In Colombia./ Al Sports KanustM.Wprtees Okla- homa to win the national championship In college basketball. /81 Index Advice and Games Bulletin Board Business Classified Comics Entertainment Opinion Police log Public notices Sports Weather 86 A3 84-5 88-10 87 A7 A6 A3 810 8 1-3 A2 Around 11 a.m. in the rural area surro~nding Colo de Caza. the h~vy machinery rearranging the hills ground to a halt. The pound1n1 of nails into what will IX" the roofs of l~xury homes slop~. There was silence. The first buac a1rcraf1 to settle into the dust ofa little-league baseball field unto.dcd a Manne honor guard. The second carried the pre.,ident and his wift. Ronald and Nanq Reagan left their Santa Barbara vacation ranch to Ahhou&.h not '"' 1tcJ to the ex- clusive affair -onl> about SO peo ple were -dozen~ of C 'lto dc Cua residents hned their strrcts to catch a glimpse of the nauon ·s lcadcr .. The> d1dn 't 1el1 us an) thing about .. Thc) won •t c' en lct us go }>Ack to ourh.ousn unttl 1t's Q'f'r •· T~ president'~ am,al meant J llSttn. I I . and SC' era I other neigh- borhood kids 1<>t an e'1ra da> off school. Coastal View ............ '--...... Catalina .Jalaad atretcb• acrOM tbe borlaoD 4ariDC a lnUIM:t m114' tempentua follcnrlDC early mornhaC low clCMICla lD B-tmctoD Beach. Forecuten ptomlM clear iklee and today aad Wed.De9day. ·Mesa arena woes reach East Coast Pa~iflc Am hitheatre neighbors ive town earfu on Nederlander proposal By JENNIFER WEBER Massachu~ns. The) all want to °' ... ..., ....... know the Costa Mcsa sound situation Cos ... M-· · tt. ta fro m their Wcst Coast cousins. .. ...-1s gr ing a rcpu uon. and it's no t one city fathers would Some of1he callers heard about the want to highlight in their four-color problems fro m pubh\hed reports glossies. about s1m1lant1es ~twecn the Pacific N.e~s of n(!isc problems at the Amphitheatre and the "ferriwcather Pacific Amphtthcatrc has reached Post Pavilion in Columh1a. Md. That East Coast ears. and folks o n the far . amphitheater 1s also owned by the end of the continent arc getting 1n Nederlander Enteruinm~t group touch with Costa M~ residents to and residents hving nt>ar the vcnuc fi nd o ut a~ut amph1th~.ter woes. have lodged numcrou" complaints Karen Millar. an act1 v1st with the over concert noise. Like the-Pac ific citizen.s' group .suing the Pacifi c AmP.hitheatrc. the Merriweather Post Amphitheatre. said she has rtte1vcd Pavillion 1s involv('d in noise telephone calls from ~pie tn New monitoring tn an effort to keep a hd Y o r k . Co n n e c t 1 c u t a n d on concert noise and kttp ncigh- bonng residents happ) In 1he tin) town of Willt ng1on. (' onn., tov. nspeoplc t.ht>re have gonc ~)ond mere telephone caJls -the) ha ' e ta~n out ads in Oranar Count' newspapers aski na no15"-~CM) Costa Mesa residents to contact them and tell their stories. The concern of Willington resi- dents stems from a proposal by the Nederlander Entertainment gro up- the same peoplc who bro ught the Pacific Amphnheatre to Costa Mcsa -to build an outdoor :ircna there. In a presentation 1n Januarv. :--icderlander reprcscnt;tt1" C'S went io the town beanng promises of a m ultitude of magnifiC"Cnt cultural e' ents. aC'Cord tng to John Beck. a rcs1dcn1 of the ru ral town. Ballet. promised the Ncderla nder rcprncn- tau ves. Broad v.a \ m us1c-als. Classical music. .\ great place 10 have haah school graduauons. An occasuonal pop concert.. along the hncs of Barn Manilov.. · 8tdt and some other rcs1dents weft skeptical. W1Uin1ton. populauoh 4.800. 1s 1n northeastern Conn«t1c-ut. about half an ho ur out of Hanford o n lntcntate 84. It 1s a rural town "'1th no tr'Wn'\. Thc wat~ suppl)· is drawn from nearb) wells. W1Uing1on has no police depart· ment. State troopers roll into the "1llage from the nca~t town. eaaht miles av.'ll). Will ington tnlde nts talked IAst year about uik1n1on a fwl~ time officer. but decickd the SJS.000 annual pncc t.a& was t()(\ steep. If Ntdttlandcr. v.h1ch bas an opuon on rouahl> 500 ac-rn of land in the area. movcs tnto tOW1>. rntdcnts (Pl---A.RUA/ A.2) "It· s prctt y excitin&... aid Tye Petta). 11. "We were suppoeed to have baseball practice IUI week. boa v.e couldn't because they were pnc- ucmg landing the hdicoplef" on our field.~· The pract.IOC was ev1cJent. as l«Uf· 1t) showed few flaws for the praiden- ttal '1sat. which v.as not wdJ pubti.· c1zcd b) the Whne House. Membcn of Rcapn·s advance ,...._ _ a&AGAR8/A2) Council clashes over CM ~ measure Refere ndum decision a in de layed: HaU says s uit threa ten ed By JENNIP'Ell WEBEll ............... Jn the latest fbrt-up between mem~n of thc contC'nuous Costa MC\& C'1t~ Council. Councilman Oa'e Wbttlcr on Monday accused the mayor of .. ra1lroadmg-a vote throuch the council for not allowtna citizens a chance to comment. The spat came after the c-0uncifs 4-1 'otr to dda' a dcoStOn on the Home IUnch ttfcrcndum for two Wttks v.h1lc the ett)· anomc~ rt'VICWS ll. But the 'oic came •'lthout opciuna the topic to public d1scuSSK>n. and that set Wheckf Olpptftl at Mayor Donn Hairs heels \t. hcdcr madc~\'CBI ~S 111 va m wtth KaJl·cuttmg ham off or .· ianonna him But "'hen Whttlcr accused Hall of "raJlroad1na .. the 'otr tbro~ the rouncil. Hall snapptd. .. , ou·rt' a httlc bn out of hoc·· . Hall sugestcd the tv.~Wttk dela). SA) ml ~ had heard threats of a la111osu1t O\ er the rdCf'C"ndum. wtuch Sttls to o'ertum the couOC1rs a~ pro'al of th(' gcnn'&I plan amend· ment CO\'('nng Ho me Ranch. Hall refu5ed to sa) v.·ho mad(' the threat. Thc gcncral plan amendmcnt for , the CJ . Scgrrstrom cl Sons proJCCt set hm1ts on square fooiatc. traffic and bu11d1ng heights. Thc ~ site lS bounded b) the San Otego Frttwa). Sun n o -.er "'c nue. Harbor Boulevard and FauY1e" Road. (Pl•• w COUNCIL/ A.2) ~congressional hopef tJl sues to get Reagan in.ballot title Man who shot down wif ell waits verdict 8y PAUL ARCmPLEY °' .............. What's in a title? Votes. maybe. when it's a candidate's ballot desia· oation. That's what 11ro mpted con- aressional candidate Christopher Cox ro go to coun Monday where he filed a petitio n seeking the right to use bis former title as "senior associate counsel to Prnident Reapn" on the ballot. Secretary of State March Fona Eu informed' Cox last wttk that his proposed ballot designation would not be permitted. Nor would she accept a similar proposal with the same title roIToWcd by the desianation .. appointed March I 98fl." • Cox is a candidate in the 40th Concrnsional District Republican primary. Under the state Elections Code. candtdates other than elected officials are linlited to thlft words in their t.llot desipations. EIC'Ctcd officials have no limitations. Coll submitted a n alternative des· isnation, "Senior Re .. p n Co unsel· or," that met the lhree--word limit. That. too. was rcjcctrd by Eu, who Paduano 'friend' .µiay be blacklisted :at Nevada casinos • cited a sccuon of thc ElC'Ctions Code that probibits-1bc-.usc oLwords--1hat would .. sugnt an evnluation of a candidate. such as outstandina. lead· in&. expert. virtuous or eminent." Secretary of state ~polteswoman Melissa Warren said the utc of Reapn's na me in the ballot dcsia- nation fi t that description. .. We have always ~iectcd proptt names bc'Causc we fttl 'it suaesu ap evaluation ofthe candi<1ite,'~Wanen said. "It should show what a person docs. rather than who he is.·· Cox disqrttd. ··1 think the sec-P'leue ... COXJA.2) Hannum point a gun a1 his -.11r and fi~ h1r1e Hannum dled of wounds from tv.o 3 -cali~ bullcu. accord- 1ng to a rorontt~ ~ His auomc~. ~put' Public De- fender Jeff Lund . san1 ~ ednesda' that he belt(ved ther(' was ampk e' 1dencc Hannum k1llrd his wtfe Lund contended. hov.'('vCT. that the shooting ""li a cnme of passion and that Hannum should not be con- ' 1c-ted of first dqrtt murdn. "h houah the rouplc wt"rc ~par­ atcd. Lund argued that tt~nnum stall lo ,·ed his •tfe and shot her 10 a fit of raar af\cr kamu'I that s.hc was (Pl .... -vsaDICT /A.2) Principal swap fallout lingers -0 ......... ., ... ,11 ......... , .. ~: .... ...,.a, ..... -~--ArWll ..... and I thinll dais itluc it ....._'" M ............. Ibey will ..,,. .... to run.Un." •My motivation is that I llave a deeD. deep love for that hiP ICMol. .. said ·Tberioc. a 197' .-ci•tc ol Newpon Harbor Hilb. '"The iaue it lcadenhip and doi .. what is best for your school. I think a lo1 of parents u well as alumni feel that -.y." De Boom, for one, welcoma any challe"IC durina lhc 'IChool baerd elections. He. WiDiarM and Ken Wayman ran unoppoltd last Novem-ber. ·J .... would be ni~ to have tome rompetition al the polls." he said. "I ~rsonally ~nt out tryina to Fnef'ak interest in people runni"" bu' 'here wasn't much intaat. In~~· discussion of the issues in healthy. De Boom says be and other board members did not anticipate lhe emotional reaction from parents at both schools 10 the pror<*(t swap of principals. Even so, iM' said, it was important to follow the recommen- d3lion ofSupni111enden1 NicoO, who proposed the transfers. Decisions as to what tchools princi- pals should be assianed to should be · the preroptive of the district super- intendent. de Boom says. To take 3way that right, he said, would be tantamount to interfering with the personnel decisions of a police or fire chief. "As board president, my interest nght now is on developina a transfer policy for lhe district." de Boom said. Currently. district officials are ga thcnng information from tchool district& throupout th<" state reprd- ing how transfers of rrincipals arc made. De Boom beJicvn that a policy in which school oftkials are trans- ferred before fi ve years. for p.amplc. DeaalaSYaU could become part of the Newport- Mesa school district's policy. The current. policy leaves such decisions up to the discretion of the su~ntendenL ·1 think this is one area that will be cha.need toa 'time-certain' policy," de loom said. "I also think ~ should aivc notic:c Feb. I each vcar notifyina principals of their co'mina assian- ments. -- Public di1CUssions of such a new policy wiU be held by the tcbOol board now tbrouP July. de Boom said. The IChool board president bc- lina a more strailht~ policy ~Ill priacipel transfers would hdp prevent a rqlpll of the con- troveny ipiled last January. "I WU apaet tbat IO many people dacMIP• that if daey could ~ cftOUlh voica out, daey could *• ~. Tom dacobeoD decision," de Boom said. "That was unfortunate. Ontt you put a super- intendent's riaht to make ass1111· men ts up to a public vote. you have to sW1 a5kina who's the one in charJe." Even so. Theriot and others remain critical of Nicoli's handJina of the transfers. "He offefed no explanations for his actions," Theriot said. ••The days of cronyism and bKkroom politics are o ut in Oraf\IC County. Nicoll is a vcstise of the past." Theriot also believ~ that tchool board dforu to cba• policy now wiU not Q.udl ~lion when mem- bers run for re-election. "I promile you. ii will be ~t up apin. It wiD be the hoctelt t.optc of tbe eJection," he said. .. ,..,not a dead ilSUf." Sunny, warmer day in forecast ~ U.S. Temps .... .......... ......._ ,........1..,.. .. Le ~--11111· .. "-"" ....__ ... AINft\t,NY 11 u .... .. -... ~ 11 q ...,_ " u "-Clly Alldlel ... .. .. LaV..- ~ 1t .. LMl9 .... ..... • • =r.:.c .. A-.....CClly .. u AMmllrl ... .. ~ .............. " u .......... llll!wdl ... .. ....,. .. ,...,. ... ., • ....... .... • .. .... ON.N ·-·· ... 71 .... ., ... Clly ...... u u Norfoll.V• ~VI • II ..,,.....,,. c...-to n ~Clly ~.ac 11 .. ~ CllmiS-1.W.VL n .. ~ ~_c • " .,., .. , .,,,,, • 41 ........ ClllllMlll • ., ........ o... ~ • .. ,.,, .... _ Clll ..... .c. .. • =-City ~a. .. • C.-...N.H. • • ""'° ~..,,., • 11 ....._... =·~ • .. =-~°" 11 .......... • : ........... ...... .. a .. ...,,.,.. .......... • .......... .,.. • ...... ...... ,. ....... ,..._ • . .,_ =-r I • . "' .. ·.,..,.. • ., .... .... __ • ..... • .. TlmM ==• .... .C. ,. . .... • ., ...... D.C. .. • • • f1 .. q 71 u .. ... 1t .. .. 11 1t " .. u n .. • • n • .. • 1t • t1 ,. • •• ., .. .. • I • ., n • • .. .. • • ~ Calif. Temps ====~ .. ,. ...... • .. .......,. ,. 17 ..... .. :: ..... 11 71= • 1t ·~ 10 .. L:e.= • .. Loe 10 :: ~ .. n ......... 11 .. lllUt l I 11 . ......., .. u......,,._.. 11 ·~ • • Ollllrle n ., ,.. ...... • .,...... 71 : ........ 71 n ., ....... • ....... Cllr • ......... 11 ........ 1t ===---.. .,. • §::" n " ... • ., ..... 1't • 0. • ..... 11 If . .... .. ,, ___ 11 11 ••'-n ===--• 1t . ••tiM~IM • Surf Forecast : 0.0 u , ... II" 01 , ... :! Girl's body found in kidnapping vicinity COX SUES TO GET REAGAN IN TiTLE ••• LANDERS. Calif. (AP) -The bod)' of a girl. dressed in dothins matching that worn by an 8-ycar-old "ho 'anished last month from a Yu1..ca Valle} swap mct'S. was found Monday by a man •-alkins in the desen. authorities said. Gary and Susan Man1tos. parents of Syh i3 Mangos. who was believed kidnapped from the Sky Drive-In March ~7. had been told a body was found. Howe' er. positive identification "asnotnpectcd untjJTuesday. when an autopsy v.ould be rerformed by 1hc San Bernardino C'ounty Cor- o ncr'soffi ce. said sheriffs Sgt. Dennis Case). .. The body was decayina and tbe came of death was not obvious." ea.ey said. .. The dothina appems to beconsi11ent with the miuins 1-year- old." The body wa found about I 1:3S a.m. by a man who had hem waJki .. his dog in the San Bernardino County Hiah Desert. near Grandview Road south ofstatc Hishway 247. about 20 miles north of where Sylvia was last seen. lnvcstigaton have interviewed hundreds of people who "rCfC at lhc swap m~t the day the Jirl disap- peared. as well as friends. family members. and registered sex of- fenders in the an:a. Tbousand of Oyen were disuibuled. The Adam Walsh Child RelOUl'CC Cenler bas posted an aladildoed reward for inronnation ~'° 111e safe mum of Sylvia, a tit· honor student al Twentynine 1 Elementary School. Sylvia, who weighed 85 pounds and measured 4 fet"t tall. had shouldcr-len1th brown hair. and was wearing a blue dress. a denim jacket, white socks with yellow trim and white tennis shoes. Landers. about 15 miles northeast of Yucca Valley. is 120 miles cast of Los Anactcs. . . . HijacRed .~uwaitijetlin~r lands in Iran NICOSIA. Cyprus (AP) -A Kuv.a111 airliner en route to thailand was hijacked Tuesday and later allowed fo land in Iran after the pilot reponed he was out offud. the official Iranian news agency rcrorted. The Islamic Republic News A&cn- c y. monitored in Nicosia. said the jct was comm3ndecred while on a niaht from Kuwait to Ban&Jcnk and that it· landed at Mashhad airport in nortt\- east Iran. The report said Iranian officials "at tint rejected a reqi.ics,t for landina. but later had to agree af\cr the pilot of the plane announced he wa\ out off uel." The two-paragraph Enalish- lan&ua&e dispatch gave no ot!'cr details. It was not immediately clear who had hijacked the plane or bow many passcnsers and crew membcn were aboard~ Iran considcn Kuwait an ally of its en~y Iraq in the Persian Gulf war. and Iranian forces hnve attacked .Kuwaiti tankers and ports in the gulf. COUNCIL CLASHE~OVERREFERENDUM ••• From Al Opponents of the pr<'ject objc(:t to the amendment. saying n was drafted too hast1I)' and the supponins infor- mation was riddled with erron. In i.1dd1u on to objectin& to the way Hall <.·allcd for the vote. Wheeler also took C.:'.\Ccption to the mayor's claims of a threatened lawsuit. sayina. "I think there's a possibility ofhtiption JO just about anything we do here." <\ i.pokcsman for Costa Mesa 1<c .. 1dents for Respon\ible Growth, the group that collected '·966 valid signatures for the referendum. said his grouP' had not threatened to sue over the ref«tndum. Segcntrom vic:c president Malcolm Rou refused to comment. plan amendment. put the referendum on the November ballot or call a special election. Ir special dections would cost $25,000 to SS0,000. Costa 'Mesa Residents for Respon- sible Growth forud the current amendment by takina the city and the dcvelopenocoun over Home Ranch. Superior Court Judie Tully Seymour naled last fall that the seneral plan and environmental impll('t repon on Home Ranch Mre inadequate, and demanded they be reworked to his satisfaction. It is unclear whetiM'r Scmcrstrom. which stopped wort on the first~ after Seymour's nalina. will be able to rnume work before the election, nsumins-the council does to .rescind its own vote. project. thouah. The arouP is retum- ins to court April 28 &o challeftee the amendment apin on points tha& arc largely technical. Residents fOf Responsible Growth also collected enouah sip\atures to qualify a referendum on the second phase of Amel Devtloment Co. ·s Metro Pointe development and for Costa Mesa's version of 1hc slow growth and traffic control ini~tive. REAGANS ••• ~l PnmAI mary of •tc is dead WfOlll. .. he laid. He tbat lell 'fie .... . upes.. . spea ....___ ua-natlOnl won , mve Yotrrl a,.,_ ~ of wMt be ct:d bebT .uUi ltit Wllite ff.-job IO run :, ~. For inacancc. if dk' ..._.ion llatCI .. presidential counldor," lhe voter docsn•t know whtther 11 was· with the president of the United States. a corporation. a college or a variety of other po\itions. Cox araued. Even if the voter unJcrstood it to mean the nation's president. that desisnation doesn't tell which presi- dent. Cox said. "My problem with 'White HO\IK Counsel' is it's ambiguous. too," he said. "It doesn't say which White Home you worbd widt. '"One of my ~tents worbd willl Ille Carw~ .. Sula Ana :r.-CCMlft Com-millioMr Ila._ llwr ..... IO a bcari ......... -Fridly. Cox may•ve a *P t.nle. . Wamn said 522 can<tidates will be on ~!lots across the !'tate in June. excludin&judicial candidates. Based on past elections, about-I 0 percent of them will chaJle• their ballot designations. she sa~. The secretary of state rarely Iota. But she docs lose. Co' cited a 1982 case heard in California in which senior assistant attorney ltftef'a) Geor&e Nicholson successfully challenged the three-word limit, based on his four-word title. Cox also cited a S<'ction of th< Election Code that provides "t~ word appointed and the title of the office" shall constitute a valid ballol dcsisnation. Whichever way the court rules. il will have to decide quickly. Depu~ County Counsel Stcfen Weiss. who represented the secretary of state't offite in court Monday. said samplt ballot materials arc already beulf typeset by the printer. • Friday is the deadline for cbanse< Otherwise. should Cox win. t~ county could face an expensive reprint in the 40th \onarcssional District . ARENA NOISE REACHES EAST COAST ••• .· ·. From Al would need two full-tim~ troopcn, said Irene Gantick. another activist with Friends of Willington. Concerned about the problems associated with such theaters - dru15. acohol, traffic and noise -the group put ads in local newspapen in Costa Mesa and cities in Maryland, Michipn and Massachusscts that featured similar venues. "We found out that was only one side of the story," Beck said. Friends of Willington has received about 60 lcttcn in response. a quarter of which arc from Costa Mesa. and most of which were nq.ative. "There seems t~ be really a com- mon theme here. People teem to think ifs really an intnasion into people's lives, that it nains their quality of life. People arc tellina us. 'Do somethina about it while you can before ifs too late. Becauac you·n be really sorry ontt it socs in,• "Gan tick said. Concerned Citizens of Costa Mesa is walking carefully around reques&s for information, fearina that some callen may be associated fOf the Pacific Amphitheatre; with whom the citizens' group is embroiled in law- suits. "It's not entirtly improbable t~ our opponents will try to elicit information from us." Millar said. :: Millar has told callers to a5k fOf advice in writina.. :: Still, the calls have been an ed~ tion fOf her. ;. "Bo~ you know, what's with thnf people. ' Millar said. "You'd thi°' they'd learn from one arena ~ anotMr. ~ell, I auess I answered nQ own question. They care m<>tt abolll money than about being neiahbortf! All they're really intnatcd in iC malt.ins money." :: •• ·. P Ai>UANO 'FRIEND' FACES CASINO BAN ••• ~~ l"rolaAI . .• Rumbolz said he should be included Commission. which ha' the final say "history of criminality datina back j6 1n the casino black books because of on who is included in the book. 1962." He said chafJCS -aaainG his criminal record and "notorious Nine names ~ on the list. Rum-Rizzitello included armed robber!. and unsavory reputation." bolz said 80 Of 90 ~ople are also ~dnappina, racketecrina and ext~ Also included in Rumbolz's nomi-under invcstiplion for possible in-tJon. • • nations are former Stardust Hotel clusion in the book. Rizzitello, Paduano and Nichol8l executive Frank .. Leftv" Rosenthal Rumbolz said Rizzitcllo wu re-Nardi ~ indicted by a fecknd and James Tamer.• formcrcntertain· leased from prison in February 1981 grand jury of bribina 1n officiaJ 0 r.1 ment director at the Alladin Hotel. and pm inc oftkials are not cenain stock firm of a stock rqistration adli TtR,hree have-30-daysto request a where he is-tivina. -uansfff frrm, lhcn scn.na the stoc rqr hearina before the Nevada Gamins Rumbolz uid Rivitello had a Sl.-..000. · Jay Humphrey. Com Mesa Resi- dents· spokesman. s.'lid he was pleased about the counC'il'S delaying a dcC'ISIOn. In the meantime, a giant pit and mound of dirt rtmain where gradina had stancd on One South Coast Place. the project's fint phase. That included a 12· and 20.story office buildina. an art museum. a child care facility, restaurants and small shops. tt'am. who stayed at tiM' nz•Ciihon Hotel in nearby Lagum Ni.auel, answered their telephone ·•Newport .---------------------------------------.;.:.., Beach Sianal Corps.," while Secret • "Ifs in our best 1nten·st for them to continue until the} run afoul of the law." he said. W11h the delay. the rouncil still is faced ~•th thr~ cho1~ on handlin1 the referendum. The council can overturn 1ts approval nf the tcneral The rtfe:rendum is only part of Costa Mesa Residents' attack on the VERDICT AWAITED ••• From Al tcxually in volved with another man. Deputy Oistnct Attorney Ooua Woodsmall araucd. however. that the shooli .. was premeditated and that Hnnum intended to kill his wife. Hannum is aJIO cMrled with kidaappi .. and auto thf'ft for &1119ed- ty 'Y'lll 11p a Scanton woman and taki .. lier cs after the ~ ... Lund and Woodsmall made their .closinc statements brhind locked doors Monday at Hal'tlor Municipal Court. mdina the two-week trial. s.ocnor CCMan Judtr lloben C. Todd bed doled tM counroom ao tM public. "l'Of'1edly to pttvent lhc ~ury from beins disturbed bv the conuap and IOiftll o( spccll'°". l(coavic:ted on all counts, Hannum could ,et 25 yan to life in prilOft, Neither attorney would comment Woodlmall •id. . on the cate Monday. ~~111111 .,...,.m ......... ~--.CA ... ..._ ... 1• C-....._ CA llWI Service qcnts screened everyone who entered the ptcd Coto de Caz.a community. Sheriffs deputies on horwt.ck roamed the hills. u did deputies with dop. The sheriffs helkopter buz:ml circles around the area. and tht president's limousine was followed by a Chevrolet Blazer weiahted down with sharpshooten dressed in bulletproof vests. "This is neat," Justin Harrison said as the presidential motorcade left. "I've never seen anythina like it. Extept on TV." Another you"ltf*r. k.im Merritt, 10. said * wrote • ~ to tbe pmideat two yan.., and receiwed a letter and pbotosraph in mum. '° tm"I tht president Monday -even from a diMance -wa "tpecial." "This It rallt cacitina for us," said Tye's mother. Sulllnnt ~Y-"It's utually so quiet aroupd here ... .. 5 .. ....... ,. ....... . ~ ....... ,.,. ............. 1-4~1 ~ imo..,..c..~~ No J..tcall 842-BOBB ........ ,_ ... ., ................. .. ,.. ..., .... .... _ ....... _, .... ,...or....,... _. ........................ .. __ ..,...._ ........ .._....I ... .......... ... _.,,.,.. .... ..... ••111.•,_.., .. ........ • Cl1J 0 fl .... -- The POSH ·windbreaker Juat enough warmth to take the chill off a cool aummer night, yet liaht weight enouch to keep you comfortable and in atyle, throucbout the MMODI to come Tailored of a eoft prewuhed cotton, offered in blue denim and blue and kuld cbambra, .