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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1988-04-19 - Orange Coast Pilot, I • TUESDAY, APRIL 191 1_988 2S ('E~T Metro Pointe fray moves to court Costa Mesa City Counett votes to test legality of citizens' referendum drive By JENNIFER WEBER °' .. ..., ........ Pining the city qainst a c111zens' group, the Costa Mesa City Council decided late Monday to go to coun to determine 1f a referendum dn vc against the hagh-n St Metro Pointe de"elopmcnt project is legal. i\ c111zen's group forced the refer· endum 1n a recent signature dnve. leaving the council with the apparent dec1s1on of rescinding approval of the pro1ec1 or calhng a citywide election. The council's decision 10 go to coun brought an angry rcaC11on from lone dissenter Counc ilman Dave Wheeler. 1o1oho ..aid ht' ma~ help citizens mount a relall campaign against some ofh1s colleague) In another dl'' dopment decision. the council dda ~ed pu111n1 a slow. growth in111a11' e on 1he ~ovember ballot The rnunul '>uggesled 1t may not make a dec1s1on o n the in1 t1a11"e un11I mid-summer The .i-1 '01e 1c1 go to Su~nor C'oun on thl' \kuu P111n1c pro1ect came after ( ''' .\aomc' Thomas \\ood lold the counol 11s affirmative 'ote on the oro1l'll ""a\ .. not lawfull} sub1eo .. to a refcrcndum 'Wood r.a1d the counul'~ apprc" a l of the no nh Cosu. M~ de"clopment 1o1oas an adman1stra11'e rathtr lhan a lcgJslar· 1\C d ecision He 'kl1d onl~ legJSla11,·e dec1s1ons -those that \et pohc~ - are subJCCI 10 referendum \\ ood ..aid opponena of the <\mel Dc'elopment ( '' pr1JJett v.a11ed 100 long an the planning process 10 stop thc pro1ec1 al the ballo t bo' Wood's m .. ommenddt1 on puts the ell\ 1n the po)111on of taking the clliLens' group 1ornun a posture that 'W htt"ler sharph l n11u1e-d Wht'ekr e'>llmdlt.'d 11 v.ould 1.1>\l a!> m uch a<; S2S JIJ for tht" 1.1111en \ group to defend the \1etro Pointe referendum "It's a prett~ dea• Jnd otn 111u'> <;lap an tht' face to m.i~e the u111cn<. ht-ar the burden ofatturnc' .,,. lt.'n \I, hecl er~1d Tht' .\med £.X , d p mt nt N 1e t planned I 1r I.:! Jun n .. nh t>I • ri_· \,m Diego Frcev..a~ .i nd ""l''I •' !kar Strcct includn 1ff1l tiuald1n 'JD I•• J 2-SIOflC'> d'> \.\tll J\ . .ind l \.\O j)J' • 1nf -,tru1. 1ures Some mcmben of Costa Mt'Y Rc'>1dl·n1-. for Res.pdnsable G rowth. lhC' gruup behind the referendum. dJ1med the\ v.e rc not surpnsed by 1ht· w unul''> dcc1s1on. Othe~. how· c•er \I.ere \Urpnscd b~ the move 'Tu n1gh1 ma' be one of the peat •l "' tor lhl· C 11, Council of Costa \11.'-1 .. rnhkn1 ·eob Colt said "1 rrJll • 1ruh bt:lte'e that there 1s a dd1hcr.i1c Jllt'mpt to th~-an the Pt'oPk t Plea.e eee ntA YI A2) , Iran continues assault as U.S. hunts for copter West German court con- victs Abbas Hamad I of ·helping abduct two West Germans in Beirut and sentences him to 13 years In prison./ A5 Coast Nesting duck that held up completion of a Newport Beach sh ipyard dock has abandoned her eggs and flown the coop./ A3 Entertainment Irvine's "Oldest Living Graduate" and magician David Copperfield are re- viewed./ A 7 Hit from behind • Co.ta Ilea puamedlca help Kenneth Mad- den ·sr .• 60, who aaffered a neck atraln Monday when h18 car wu rear-ended at the lntenection of 17th Street and Newport Boule•ud. Erle Wttttc. 29. of Newport Beach told officen be tried to eqa~ into the left turn lane while drlYln& eaat on 17th: tricgerlnc a three-car colllalon. Iran says i t sank U.S. ship: mines sighted in t h e gulf By AL V MAHMOl"D • dst••,.... .,..., ~1.\S .\~f .\ Bahrain -I \ '-a" v.ar\h1ps .snd ht'11u1ptC'r\ 11.J.s' -.earl hcd fur a m1'>'>:n@. l hello.. np- ter Iran .111.id.t·d tv..11 neutrdl ship' and morc mim·s "'err '>tghtt·d in the Prrs1an Cruif Iran cla1mrd ll hJJ '>hClt dov..n lhl.' hcli1.op1er during. a -.ea hattk that raged \lunJa~ v 't'r mu1.h 111 tht· !>nuthl.'rn gull In 11'> la ll."SI repun on \1und.i'' fighting. Iran alsu d a1med Iranian gunboat'> wnl a L S '>hip \fondJ' Thert.• v..a'> no 1m mt·d1atl.' u•mml n1 frum the Pentagon Iran tirt>d ti"e land·ba'>t'd m \\II~ aa l" "ar'>h1p'> during \h 1nJa, s fi~htang.. 1n "hit h .\men1.on lorC'('\ d1.-.;\ro~ed tv.o Iranian oil plc1t1orm\ and bla'>tt'd Sol\ Iranian \N.!>el\ 'J'' •ffica' 1dt•n11tied thl.' m1'>S· 1k' a' ( hant'X'·m.iJC' 1l~1o1o orn1'> ~ut :t '-Pl'nt.agon said at had yet to , ntirm v. hat ~and of missiles -... h \tkd pas1 thc warships .\dm \\ tlham Cro-.e. cha1mun of thl Joint Chiefs of t.aff. told Pn:s-1· dt·nt Reag.an dnd Republican c'on· grl'\\ional kackl"\ that the~ was no l' 11.kn,e Iran hll.d fired an} tllv.vrm'> White H9 use spokesman \ta rhn F111"a1er ..aid In a' l•td1ng the m1ss1le'>. the three· \hip w n' u' led b~ the L'SS Jack \\ 1ll1ams 100~ n asa'e ac11on and f1n:d thafT intu the aar. v..h1ch con- tu~d thr rockets· radar guidance \\\tem Jnd 1.aus.ed the m1ss1les to m1'>S thl' u>n' O\ 10 the southern gulf \.1 ondd' 's u infron1a11on. 1''llS the m•1\t o,cn,•u<. t"iet""een L S and Ira· n ..in fonc~ \tnle the L'. 1'Jav\ sent 11' 'a'~ for~e tn the gulf last ~ea'r Rc..1g.Jn tod.1~ ..aid thc gulf .. ~ms 1 ~· \.lU ll'ting dov.n ·· l1u1f-ha~ man11me \ah .age e:\· ~-r .. rep<>nrd t"'ic Iranians attac ked t\lou wr len 1n the uau..of Hormuz 1 >Ja ·. \1 1•nda' the' fired on three net.Ira \h t ~ The ..ah age e'~ns ~ad one of the '""' wnt..c~ pu1 out ad1st~s1gnaJ at 'Tl Jm •minti and ga"e its name as (Plea.e eee GULFf Aa) Index Advice and Games Bulletin Bo a rd Business Classified 88 A3 85-7 Mesa OKs settlement on thi!ater noise Comics Death notice Entertainment Opinion Paparazzi Police log Public notices Sports Weather B 10-12 89 84 · A7 A6 88 A3 8'4, 12 81-4 A2 By JENNIFER WEBER °' .. 0.-, """ ..... In what could be an end to )ears of legal ~ranglang. 1hc Costa Me$3 <. ·,,, Council appro,ed a proposed setlk· ment with the Pacific Am phitheatre and the Orange Count~ Fair Board earl) toda). ' The agreemt'nl calls for the arena to be fined as much as $9.()(X)a night 1f1t e.11cecds established noise hmats dur· 1ng a concen . A draft released toda" orooos.es Council ignores Mola demand; delays project Dec is io n on sc~~i~g_ _ down HB revamping put o ff.for a nalysiS- By ROBERT BARKER °' .. ...,,... .... Hunttnaton Beach Caty Council membcn rtfus.ed to decade the fate of the monbund Main Strttt Town Square condo m inium ~evelop­ ment proJCCt Monday niaht. <kspite an ultimatum from dcvefo pcr Frank Mola. Mola. 't'ho planned to build 89 condominiums and town homes on 3. 7 acm n~r Main and'Fifth streets. urpd City Council members to set on with iL The project has been on tlw! d rawing board for four years. At one tame at ~rmiucd as man) as 400 high·riStcondominiums to be buah in the m idst of sinaJe-family homes. But it's been toned down an recent months to meet the arow1n1 demand for moderatio n. "You can·t treat people hke this." Mola said ... we·ve addressed all your issues. Either approve it or dcoy It 1o nighL'' Mola. who said his company spent SI lo S l.S million in architectural and enginecrina scudics and in 1equirins about 20 pcrcc_nl of lk land, tbraln- cd to meet with city staff members loday for "a buyout" of his invest- ments. Mayor John Erskine told Mola. "If you force us into brinkmanlhip. we can accommodate you. But tbat"1 (Pit•• w 10WM/A9) that lOnccns l'Od b~ i 0' \Q p m Sunda}.-. through Thurnia}S and b~ 11 p m Frn:ti} sand Saturda~., In :i k iter 10 the fa ir t>oard and lht' amph1t ht·a1er management. <:1 1~ ~lanagcr .\lien Roeder encouraged appro ,al of the document \\tthan \I) daH The fair board 1sdue tocoM1der tht; pro por.al at 11\ .\pril 2 meee11ng dov. n lht· oiler ources s.aad OtTicaal~ Jrr hoping lh(' Jrarl agreement 1" Jl1."l0 PIJble Ill thl' nl'1ghbo~. hO\lo<C\ er anJ 1ha1 lh\'\ .... 11 d rop their la"su11 could 11 •)1 e"\Cl'ed SQ lloO The dl·cts1on on no" tn 1.ompl' '-' 1lh thl' <\OunJ \lJmiJnj\ I\ k it Ur' 111 lhl' amph11hc:atl'" manatiemcnt ( ·onn·rned C1111cns ot Costa ~k\3 :i res1dC'nts' $roup suing the amph11hea1er on its ov. n ..... as asked to panacipate 1n nego11a11on'> but turned Thl· drah lJlls ll1r 1he am phllht-atcr to obc.•, th(' no1~· standard<. the ct\\ and Fair Board agrl>ed to 1n Ill (I II ,·, J1)l'" not. ti "vu Id t'tl' Ii neJ S l .IJi ltJ ior l'J1.h '111IJttl'n \'"1c,.'t11n: ~pm . SJ.to l'\l'f\ t1ml' lhl' bama 1s tirO~l'n bc.'l"l'\'n 'I and 111 pm and S5 .o ca1.h ttml' lht• mu,11. _$<'IS 100 louJ alkr I• pm Th(' linl'' torone,1.1n,v·• \tone' from tht· ( ne' v.. ould 1.w 1 nt•' a ,rio..·t 1al 1ru,1 lund that the cit\ "11uld lt'ntrol \1onc' lr11m 1he lru'lt "oulJ gll 11.• ncarti' r1.·~11.knt\ "'h•1 hd\l' ht:t·r. p!Jgtit"d "~ d101.1.'n n 1 "-... 101. ( :hc .srl'nJ 1Jf"-'"l·J 1" the \ummcr 11 i ~ ' Rd1e: '1.•' thl· >x·lt·Jguert'd nl·1g.h~1r' , 1ul.!. •ml.' 1n ·hl ·11rm .11 1n,i..l,tlh1n J o ul>1vpJ:'l • '11.h '' d'lJ •t1wr 1m· Janitor fumes at bingo in smoke-filled schoolrooms By ROBERT BAR.KER Of ... 0.-,,... ..... .\re high schools playang \I.Ith tin~ t"I\ JX'rm1111ng 'imoll'r~ 10 puff av.a) at the h1g.h·' olumc bag-mo n('\ bingo gamrs held on their campu~s" Daniel Naeme)er. a custodian at Fountain \ J lln High School. bt'heves thC} are. Bingo and ats gambling asprcts ha'c Ol' pl:lle 10 schools. he said. And neilher does smol ing The air's turning blue and the 1o1oindo1o1osarr 'elk1v. and hard to ckan at the cafetena at Foun1.21n \ .illc' Htah School 1o1ohe~games are pla~ed Thu~~ nights. Nicmc)<'r claims. Stude nts complain about the ~mcll of stale smoke an the cafctena \\'ht're the game' arc held. he said. Besides. he womes 1hat tobacco smoke 1s hazardous and frets o ver possible camnogens that are left for 1he students 10 inhak after a night of fast-paced binao. ··The cafctena stink.$ all .. eek long. .. h<' \31d Niemc)cr said binao simpl) pro~ adc 100 mu h of 1 double standard. ..How can )'OU pul smoktna an front of the kids and tell them not to smoke and take drugs''" he asks. ··Ho\I, can \OU tell •hl''c.' i.. ._j, 11 thl· •nd"'' pri1t-lcm., 1ha1 g:imbl°ing l·an k aJ l•• Jr>J iht•n rat<.t' nt•li'l~., "'llh ~.1mhhng gamc~ .. "\\1th the gnwing '>t·r t 11rnt Jd\'" the 1.Punlf' Jg.ianst smok ing 1n ru~t1, r Jd'' h·•'-' \an '•'U dllo" 'mo ling m publil SI. ~"·-'I\ ·· 'ieme)er 1s Jsling Hurt n~aon Bt'a,h l n1on l hgh hool D1!.1n1. t truq et'' '" Jt k ..1'1 tn1 e'11s,a1c ltlf ~1.,s1blc carc inogeni. But he·s talmg ,,n '4.•mc prl't1' 111u~h ,.u,tomer"' -1.·1garette-smol 1ng h1nt1\' f'IJ•('f' p.a renh "ho are ra1s1ng mone) for prl'Jc-...-~. that" h·~l,,·Jn ·t c11herv.1\<' afford. and school l't)iuJ ., ~ hl' dun t lool ~tndh 1o v.ards cutting otT an entcrpn)(' t.hal bnngs an ilbou1 S I ma I hon a )Car 'Wttkl) pme" arc pla,t-d at .lll ft "e d1stnc-1 high ~ hools -Foun1ain \ allc' Ed1~n. Oc-ca n \ l('Y<. ~l.lnna. H unun,ton &ach and \\ t'\tm1n tcr Doroth\ 0 Bncn.. a ~Q.,ear-old .. o man v.ho dc-\Cnbes herself as the '\ hamp1o n hanJO pla'er of all btngo pl&)e~" s.a1d 11 v.ould hc nd1C'ulous lo put up no-smokana signs at 1hc g.am~ "The children don't l l' into the ca(c1m1 until noon 1hc nC\t da'. and b" 1hen the air ha\ C'lcarcd ... (Pleue .. llDIOO/ A2) Lagu:a.8 officlal loses vacation pay 8J JONATllAN VOIDS ............. A Llpna 8e9ch city official who made an additioft to hit home without the proper permits in 1916 will tole two weeks ol lait VKatioa .-y aad..Jnus& rctwn his boUIC 19 its ontinal dttlan. City M.,..r km frank l&id Monday. frank •id he .. t~ly eum"' incd" t.ht dmamsca..a sunounctint the WOft on Community Dl~lop- •~n he rn11MC1. Frank u 1d H1naula's '1ola11o n, howc,tr. ha' been <'Of'Tt"Ctcd Bun~ck also \ olun1CC'ft'd to ~mo't hts 1Ucp l addauon. e'en thouah ~ roukf ha'e aont lo lhc count) ao ,rt 1~ pc"Opef P""flll Fraftk •Ml "Ht pttkrmt to takt 11 out talhcr than ao thf'C>Ulh the pcmut prOttS .. frank !lltd The Cit) manaert 11td lM lou o( t .. -o-Wttlts' "1('1t1on pa ., .. , 1n ticu of suspension Bunervnc-k •a una,a1l1bt<" fi r rommtnt. Frank satd BultcNl ~ mad( t~ I SO.tQiart--foot add1tton 10 h1' "' 1n1 room lxfort tu Top of 1hc World commu-n1t) .. -uannt~td tothcot 1n l 9 Pre' 1ous to l~ annt\ltton. the nc'lhbothood • ai 1 n u nlC'OtpOf'I \td rounl) tt'mtOf). mt"an1n1 pnnul' would ba'e ~n rTOuarfd from t~ COUftl). pre" t•mt:nt~ To \tart the fu nd the thrtt pnno· p..1l'> in the agreement -the Pacific \mph1thc:a1rr th\' Cit\ and the fai r h.1Jrd -""ould l'~h h put s -o.ooo an to lht J"·ount Tht .ii\ and the board "oulJ "Plat the tine\ 'un11l 1he1r share ·' thl· ur-fn1n1 ml•n\"\ had be-t'n paid l>J, ~ .\ ~·unJ c:"\flt'n appro'ed b~ all tha-i ~rl•Ufl\ v.ould mon11or the ... •u .,,! •· m :he t•dge of neag.hbonng (Plea.ee .ee TBEATERfA2) Teacher in child sex case released .\ tormn l or11na del Mar prep "'ti.• 1 'l'J• •wr a"a1ting tnal on 36 ,1, ~· m •ll \111•n 1.harge.s 1s fru tO<b a11~·r pmt1ng S~du.000 bail. \.an Th, m.i .. R1gb'. 40. posted a , •r lo\ n.it lr •f (ash and pr~ to ~Jlr Ii 'lrt'\"<l••m lrom Ora. c~n­ l\ l.11 "ht'!\' hl' has ~n <X>llfincd ,,n,, h1' ptemhcr arrest, •.Kt l 'cpUI' ruti11l ()('ttndcr Wilham t\cllC\ R agt" '' .t'7<'Used of orpn1.tJna 1 ._.,, ~'-'' l luh \lf ~'en ~ouna boys at H.irhl'r Oa\ hool and pcnuad1na them 10 u~ a '1brator a.s a n 1nitia11on 11tt' He al\t) 1s charged with two c1,unt~ of 'Odom) and a vanety o( other ~\ull a ~uh ch&f'ICS. It C'l)n 1C'tcd on all chaftes. RcbY c<'uld hc St'ntenced to more than-60 'ca" 1n pnwn .\!> pan of h1~ bail requirements.. R1gb' annot co mr into contact with an} bOd) under t~ aaie of 21 witM.t anothl"r adult prnent, satd ~ D1Mn\·t <\ ttome) UW1S Roteftbhuft. "'ho 1\ pro \C'CUu na R11by. R 1gb) al.so IS (Of1»ddm 10 ha we U )' contact wnh his I 7 allqed VlC'tims or 1he1r (am11tn. \&1d R09Ctlblum. ROSC'nhlum satd Monda)' thet a.it v.-a o~ to R .,b~··s rdeMe.. e~ on $~00.000 bl1l The bltt'e O\ef Rcb)-'1 bell has hcen •-ell foupt 1n coun. = t• act "°"'8h' • ~uruon in tht ,..h1 'e Row-nblum mot1 rcomtty to ~ _•_Jads to ncaw 1M amount to SJ00.000. ROlmblu .. ttad he WM coece1 Md for the pubhc 11.fet) ~ req..W.. a h'iheT ba1I Cl'tn• -mD9Y I All t M• Oea4o...eDM.VMOTl....._,Aprt119,1111 Boy's baseball caQ trtggered_ 'I shooting of 6 -year-old girl LOS ANGELES (AP)-A buebalJ cap or lhe wrona c:o1or apparently ss-rted a drive-by shootina by suspecicd pna memben that left a 6- year-old 11rt dead and four family mernben wounded. the &irl's brother said. .. It IW1ed with this hat,.. said Manin Saucedo. 13. who suffCT'Cld a minor stomach wound in the attack Sunday niaht. An ongoing araument with Pna members who tried to take his blue Kansas City Royals hat appumtJ~ prompted the attack. Martin said Monday after retumina to his Compton home. ··The auys that jumped me said it was a pna hat and I should ajvc 1t to them. l said no. I bought it with my . own money at the Paramount swap meet and it was mine.·· Our\na a fight with a suspected pna member over the hat Sunday. Martin's parents called deputies who broke up the argument. But the gang memben a~ntly returned. Martin's sister Irma was struck 1n the chest and killed by one of about two dozen bullets that ripped through the family's East Compton home while they ~re watch in• .. America's Most Wanted.·· a television program about fugitivr-s. Saucedo·s mother. father and cousin were wounded. Three other family members. includ- ina an infant. were unhurt. .. Shootings happen every night. I don't want to stay here:· Saucedo's 16-year-old sister. Alexandra. said Monday as she sobbed and cl ung to a photo of her slam sister. The 1ir1 ·s parents. Salvador Sau~o. 39, and Mana Hernandez, 39. were hospitalized in critical condition today. said sheriffs Deputy Dan Cox.. Her 7-year-old brother. David Sanchez. was reported in fair condition. Authorities investigatinjl. the attack Irma Saucedo were seeking two ~unman who ap- parcntlv fired a high-powered rifle and scm 1-automat1c pistol from lime gtttn Cadillac. then Oed. .. The investigation so far indicates It was a gang-related retaliation shooting." said Deputy Hal Grant. "although we·re not yet sure exactl y who it was targeted against.·· Martin Saucedo 1s not known to be a gang member. said Detective R.M. Graves. The attack was t.he worst Southern Califorma gang-related incident since a drive-by shooting on Good Friday left one man dead and a dozen other people injured. A 16-ycar-old has been arrested and faces a May 4 arraignment in that attack. Meanwhile. Ma)Or Tom Bradley. in a state-of-the-city speech. warned street gang members Monday that the police dcpartment·s recent crackdown · on gangs. which has incJuded weekend sweeps that have resulted in hundreds of arTCSts. will continue. ··As mayor, I am resolved that we will not surrender one square inch of people's turf to aanas and drup. .. Bradley said ... We are in a war, and , the enemy is within -poisoning our children and our neighborhoods. On another front. the American Civil Liberties Union filed a Superior Court suit Monday charging Six Flags Maajc Mountain with violating civil Tipts laws by denying admission to a Hispanic youth and three young Hispanic adults. ACLU attorney Carol Sobel said park officials searched Juan Hernande?, 14 . Franci sca Hernande?. 21 . Carlos Melgoza. 20 and Ernesto Hernandez, 19. and their van but no weapons or drugs were found. "Just because these kids were of Muican origin and lived in Hawthorne. they were stripped of all their dignity ... said attorney David Lash. Sherrie Bang. spokeswoman for the suburban Valencia amusement park. said she was unable to oomment on the pending litigation, but said the park's three-year-old screening policy 1s designed to protect park patrons and is not discriminatory. Bank boxes looted BOSTON (A P) -More than 300 safe-deposit boxes were cleaned out . after thieves cut a bank's alarm system and dnlled a hole through a concrete Ooor into the vault. police say. Everything of value contained in the boxes at the l iben y Bank and Trust Co. in downtown Boston was stolen over the weekend. police said. TOWN SQUARE DECISION DELAYED •..• Jl'romAl being kind off ooh sh ... By a 4-3 vote. the City Council approved a compromise offered b> Ci ty Administrator Paul Cook to make an analvsis of what effect a further reduction of units would ha"e on fueling new downtown businesses. Cook said. though. that he rt'C- ommended appro"al of the 89 unltS and that the project reflected a change of direction of redevelopment that would cater to residents all }'Car rather than relying on tounsts. Council members Peter G~n. Ruth Finle) and Grace Wanchell joined Erskine in putttng off a decision until an analysis is com- pleted. Councilmen Jack Kelly, Wes Ban- nister and Tom Mays voted against a dela). Mays. who appeared to be p;1nicu- larly angry. said that the Ci ty Council ga' e Mola directions for an identical proJect four or five months ago in a closed-door e~ecuu ve a«sion. .. It 's ridiculous to jerk these re- developers aroand hke this. The guy goes out and spends ,thousands and thousands of dollars We're getting a bad reputatton We've done this on e'er) last damn project .. Ma)s said toda~ that the delay 1s another example of Ci ty Council "indecisiveness and poor manage- ment." Winchell, who said she took excep- uon to Mays· remarks. said that officials ha ve negotiated in good faith in an attempt to resolve downtown problems. "tt·s very complex and we don•t know the bottom line. we·re doing our very best for downtown Huntington Beach. I sympathize "1th Mola.·· Opponents of the Town Square plan claim that 11 would thrust the condoman1ums (three stories on an underground parkang structure) next to single famtl) homes on Maan and S1uh streets. Parking as inadequate. the) say. And Fifth Street would have to be closed to accommodate the project, the) added. BINGO, SMOKING IN SCHOOL ASSAILED ••• Jl'romAl she said. o·Bnen, a Huntington Beach resi- dent. is a smoker. She has smoked unfiltered Camel cigarettes for 63 years. She also is a winner at the bingo tables. She collected $350 an Jackpots la st Thursda) at Fountaan Valle~ High and S 1.500 and the bingo marathon. also at Fountaan Valle>. last Februar). she said She·s pla)ed an e"er) bango game during the 150 weeks that the) ·ve bttn pla)ed the game at Edison High School. she said. Fountaan Valley High School Pnn- c1pal Make Kasler 1s a non-smoker who believes smokmg 1s hazardous and fails to create a good image. But he thanks that the benefits of bingo outweigh the disadvanta~s. He said he knows that 1f his school bans smoking. bango players will take their business elsewhere. And that would leave his school out of the mone) ~ -perhaps as much as $200.000 a year. "Each )ear the bingo people set aside $3.000 10 $4.000 for regular school programs (in addition to co- cumcular activi ties)," he said. .. We've used 1t to buy computers and science lab equ1 pment. They know we don't have enough school money for 1nstruct1onal purpo~. ·• Kasler also said that bango money goes to the Parent Student Teacher RIGBY ••• P'romAl Kelley. meanwhile, said Rigby's release will aid in preparina his defense. "It nakes at a lot easier to sec him. He can just come into my office ... KcUe"y said. "Plus. he can do some of the footwork for me:· Another benefit. the defenK at· tomey said, is that Riaby will be home with his wife and two children. In addition to a 9-year-old son. his wife gave birth to a ajrl after his arrest. ORANGE ... ..... COAST .... ,r-1 lllA8'tOFFICE i)O Wftt Re,-S1 ~· i.oeM CA ...,. -eo. •5e0 Coste -• """:76 .1.ssoc1a11on for scholarships. Kasler said the bingo rooms separated into smokang and no- smok1ng sections -are cleaned prompt I) after the games. Kasler also said that exhaust fans have been activated 1n the ceiling recently. making for cleaner air. He said he·s never received a complaant from a student about how the cafeteria smells the morning af\er. "When )OU go to Las Vegas and watch them pla) the slot machines, the) (gamblers) have a drink in their hand and a cigarette dangling from their hps. They are unique people:· School Board member Jerry Sulli van said he believes tobacco is "1ns1d1ous" and 1s sympathetic to non-smokers. "But the question 1s. do we give up the co-curricular and cumcular pro- grams. If we tned to stop smoking we·d have a a real fight "PersonaJly. I can understand the concern. I find cigarette smoking detestable when I ha ven't been smok- ing. And I ha ven't smoked an seven days:· said Sulliva n. Dave Hepburn. a bingo fanatic who helped launch the games at Edison High that will celebrate their third anniversar) nC\t month. said the games are b' far the most successful fund-ra1sang programs that schools Correct ion In the April 14 an1clc about Harbor Municipal Coun Judge Russell Bos- trom. it was incorrectly stated that Bostrom 's decision on a I 98S mari- 1uana arrest was appealed to the state Supreme Court. Bostrom's decision 10 dismiss the case went to Orange County Supenor Coun. where his ruling was upheld. The case 1s currentl y beina a~ pealed by the District Attorney's office to the Fourth District Coun of Appeals. ha'e e'er had .. Bingo enhances act1v1t1es. Schools ha ve football teams. Money from bango is used to buy knee braces. conditioning equipment. weights. special awards. plaques. Parents want their sons to look good when they go outside of school. The booster clubs (through bango) buy swcatsuits so they look nice. They also provide transportation.·· Hepburn acknowledged that about 70 percent of bingo players smoke - more than twice as many use the ~mole.ans rooms than the non-smok- ing sections. "But I'm not sure that smoking 1s an issue:· he said. "A crew of volunteers cleans up immediately after the games. We ha ve exhaust fans and smoke eaters and the crew uses air freshener. "When you walk into Edison Tuesday morning. you never knew there was a bango game the night before.·· "Ifs a th orny issue," School Super- intendent Larry Kemper said. "We would rather not be in that business. It was brought along by anterest of the community and the parents• desire to help." Kemper said to his kn owledge the custod1an'scomplaant about smoking 1s the first 10 be lodged an the commun it y. But he agreed there 1s no question that residue smoke lea ves "a very disturbang smell ... Still. he believes that ex.haust fans are effective in getting nd of the latent smoke. Niemeyer, who felt seriously enough about bingo to go to the board room and lodge a complaint to trustees. said ifs not only the smoke that he worries about. He said he's also concerned that students aren't aettina the right mcssqe from adults about binao. "They're not doina jobs to niite money because they know binf> will pay for thinp." he said. "They re not lcarnina the foll y and heartbreak about gamblina. •• D..,Pllot o ..... , .......... o.<"'.0 647 Y.J•& --& r''"'"' OU •l}' Jastcall 642-6086 ~··00 'IOI ...... '°"' ~ .,,. ) lO P "' Cell (le!Qo>e 7 ll m ..-0 fO/JI COO)' M _..., ~ •9e3 ()r ... eo.tl ~ "°""'9"1' Nr ---~··-~~ ........ ,.. ·~- --... y ci. ....,.OOll<:.O ""'"""'' "'* .. ' --ol~-What do you likt about the Daily Pilot? What don't you like? Call the number above and your mesuee will be ~rded. t:ranteribed and dc- livetc<tto the a~opriatc editor. The same 4-hour amwcri.na lef"Vk:e may be used to rtCOf'd ltttas to the edjtor on any topic. Contributon to our Lcnen column mu1t anchtdc their name and telephone number for vmfic:ation. Tell us what's on your mind. s.tUfde\' ef1tl Slinde, " yOW 00 "°' ~ '/fN OOCIY by 7 • m tll'I o.telf• 10 • m "'° Yo" coo, •1 lie Oillll«ecl l More ratn-tiovers over e oast Southern CeillforNenl lhO&.tld ,...,,.., to tMe tN6r um~..._ wmi them.._, tMv...,. hotneWedn•dey, •the Natlonal W•ther Ser;toe le torecMttno more rein ec:woee the ~ wtth enow In the mountalne. AStonn ayetem mewing intoaou.Nrn CaMom6e from oft IN COMt of Oregon wM upec1ed to bttnO ahower'I throughout the .,... by this ewnlng. wtth the wet WMtMr continuing through Wedneldey. Along the Orange Cout It .... be moetty ~ ttwougf'I Wednetday. Rain likely tonight. Showers on Wedneedey. South to .outheaat winds 15 to 25 mph let• ttwough Wedneedey morning becoming west to-.outhweet 20 to 30 mph Wedneeday afternoon. Lows tonight 52 to 54. Cooter wtth tllght Wedneedmy 58 to 63. From Point Conception to the MeKlcan Border -Over Inner watws. • smell craft edvlSOfY Hkely tonight and Wednetday. Wind• tonight and Wednesday morning eouth to eoutheut 20 to 30 knots becoming west to aouttwl9at 20 to 30 knoll Wednelday afternoon. Seat Increasing to e te.t tonight U.S. Temps Meme>fl•• 71 42 Calif. Temps E .Jdended Mlaml8Mcll 71 74 41 21 Mllweull• cio..oy and ~ cool Tlluf .. .. Lo Mpl .. St Paul .. 2$ High. IOw '°' 24 llOurl erlCl+nQ ., s. "' dey w!U1 • c:fl.,_ OI _. ,.,,.,, Al1>1iqvorqw 64 ., Neslw•lle 73 38 Bel& .. sflekl 78 51 Al'\GllOf. 48 38 81 SI t ureh 80 51 clOudy .ttfl a llOw wwmlne trend Frldey New 0rlH nS _, s.1 ... dey .::r.: S5 10 15 Thut9Clor Allan1a IO 59 NewYO<lo. Clly 65 38 F•"1'0 74 SS wwmlnO Into -eot lo wound 70 on All•nUC C11y 61 40 Oillehome Ctly SS 38 Lot Angeln "' ST S1111td1y l ows 48 10 51 Aull In 83 48 RaplO Clly 62 31 Oakland 64 r, Ba111m0<e 83 3S Reno 61 48 Puo Rotit. 10 Ohartolle,N C 7S 51 SI Louta 54 3S ~ng 6S S2 Surf Report CtliceOO S2 28 Sau L•k• C•I\' S7 42 Aed'<oood City 87 SS c1nc1nna11 es 30 Sen An1onio M •6 SKI-lo 10 SS .. ...... Clevelltld 59 28 Seallle 80 4S Sallnes 68 54 LOCATIC* 1-3 I.it Huntlnglon 8Mcll Columl>Us ()No 63 29 Soolo•ne 58 38 San oi.oo ee 58 "'-JtllY.~ 2-4 ·-Oell&s-FI WO<'lll 62 37 SVflCUM 61 28 Sttt Frena.Go 64 54 40tt\Str ... ~ 2-4 , ... 63 21 82 70 Sen.io.. 73 57 nM •• ,__ NewP0<1 2 .. pOOt 0.ylon Tampa-SI Ptrst>Q o.n-• .. Tl)9elte SS 30 High. lOwtOf 241't0ur1 endinO el Sp "' 8elbo8 w.sg. 2 .. pOOt Oes MOlnes 541 27 Tuceon 11 Sl S.•1-63 541 L ..... &eecll 1·3 pOOt Oelroll 47 2t 58 37 8-Mnonl 63 48 $8'10-t• 7.3 OOod Tutse W•t .. temp 81 Duluth 40 18 Wut1lng1on.O C 63 41 Big her se 28 S .... d!fecl-W•I Sout-1 E• Paso 72 41 WlcNI• 541 35 8l9'loC> 68 39 Erle 54 29 Bly1he 711 52 54 35 Cataline ., SS FlllrbatlkS Tides Flagatan SI 31 Smog Report Lene .. , .. 70 41 Grano Repi<ls .. 25 Long 8eactl Ill 61 Honolul\i .. 74 LA Al<pot1 es se TOOAY Houlton 12 41 ~l llandWO inOe• (pal) 0-50 SeoteAna 71 se Second IOw 5111 p"' 12 lndlanapoliJ S7 30 OOod. 51·100 ,._.,, 101-IM ..,._ Stttte Barberi 67 47 Second"'Oll ,,35,,.. 55 Jeckaon MISS 111 so hNlttltul. 100-299 ~ -"""· 300 Seota Cruz 63 so ft~-· 81 .. and -llVWCIOul Flfl1 flOut9 II Sante Merle 64 so flr•l IOw ,., . ._,,. O• Jecktonvllle ~ d"Y"• ·"-P9i s-.11 • ~'o!:'iow ~1•ii"' 30 ""'-47 3S •GMf• pal lorocaat S-.1• Monlea 62 S7 s·:Mp"' ze KM.-Clty se 34 .... ...,, 10 MacAtl""' BM! 2M2 Taho9Valley 52 32 S....Mlla172tptn.,_~ lMV999* 74 se "-• S4ICIO'eC>ec* V'*'f 3)-42 Ton&ne41 ff se ., a 1~ •"' ancs-...,... a1 1 21 P"' UttteAoclt 17 42 ...,._...,,(tot_,, u W•twooO 63 se . Moor> •• " 11.21 pm.,-.. ~ 87 3S Loe~Alrpon ~2 Yoe.Nie \fly 58 37 WtOMld4IY Ill 1:03 ._ .... THEATER NOISE SETTLEMENT BACKED •.• From Al properties. according to the proposal. The amphitheater would pick up the tab for the consultanL Other highlights of the agreement include: • The fair board and the amphitheater may not schedule con- flicting events that would draw more people to the grounds than on-site parking can accommodate. The two would stop charging for parking and would ~t up transportation systems that would cut down on the demand for parking at the fairgrounds. • Tbe fairgrounds and the arena would gel its own traffic control people to work with police to get a smooth traffic flow out of the parking lots. Cars would be di rected out of res1denual neighborhoods. • If c'ef)one agrees to the proposal. each would drop its pend- ang lawsuits against the other. The Cit)' also would agree to discontanuc its funding of Concerned Citizens. which at has supponed financially. FRAY OVER PROJECT GOING TO· COURT ..• F rom Al "Arncl doesn 't C'' en ha' e to enter into 1t:· said Sandra Genis. a leaders of the c111zens group and a City planner an Newpon Beach ... The city docs their dirty work for them.·· As the council preptred to vote. d1scuss1on collapsed in(Q bitter argu· ments among the members. Wheeler finall ) asked Citizens to wnte him an suppon of a recall movement aga1f'lst "t"o or three" fell ow co uncil mem- bers. Mayor Donn Hall said he favored seeking a coun judgment because of the legal com plcx111cs raised b) the referendum. In another development-related issue. the counci l got its first glimpse of a staff analysis of the proposed slow-growth initiative. similar to th e \ount)wide slow-growth measure set to appear on the June ballot. Fearing the 140-page repon could be misunderstood. the council asked Wood to analyze It and determine 1f it City outlaws cats SAN RAFAEL (A P) -In an issue that sparked interest around the country. the City Council rallied to the support of the nearly extinct salt marsh harvest mouse with a refusal to reverse a ban on house cats an a planned housang development. The body was asked Monday night b) Councilman Gary Frugoli to re' 1ew the ban. possibly the first of its kand in the United States. which bars residents from ownina cats. should be d1stnbuted to the public. Wood is scheduled to make has assessment by May 2. If the council distributes the inch- thick report to the public. it would then asked citizens to respond 10 the doc ument. The earliest the council would put the 1n1t1auve on the ballot as mid-summer. council members said. In a third building battle, the council postponed a decision on whether to call a citywide election on another referendum. this one 1«kang to repeal the approval of the general plan amendment for C J. Segerstrom & Sons' Home Ranch project. Council members indicated they may wait for a Superior Coun opinion on the general plan amend- ment. which sets limits on square footage . traffic and building heights for the 94-acre de velopment. Judge Tully Seymour ruled last fall that the general plan as well as en"1ronmental documents for Home Ranch were anadequate~ He de- manded they be reworked to his satisfaction. He is set to review the ctt) ·s efforts on May 13. Meanwhile. construction on One South Coast Place. the first phaSt' of Home Ranch. remains suspended. One South Coast Place would include 12-and 20-story office build· ings. an an museum. a chi ld care facility. restaurants and small shops. The site is bounded by the San Diego Freeway. Sunflower Avenue. Harbor Boulevard and Fairview Road. Fruit fly eradication declared SACRAM ENTO (A P) -The Onental fruit fly has been eradicated an the Santa Ana area. state and local agricultural officials said Monday. The state Department of Food and Agriculture and the Orange County agricultural commissioner also an- nounced that they had lifted a quarantine that restricted movement of produce attacked by the flies. The 78-square-mile quarantine zone covered portions of Santa Ana. Tustan. Orange. Anaheim. Garden Gro,c. Westmanster. Fountain Val- le) and Costa Mesa. Eleven of the flies. which dama~ 236 varieties of fruits. nuts and vegetables. were found in the area between Sept. 23 and Nov. 23. 1987. but no flies have been discovered since then. Officials said they used an eradic- tion treatment that combines a sell lure with a pesticide to auract and kill male flies. The bait was placed on utility poles. trees and fence posts. Erad1cat1on was declared as of Saturday. after three life cycles of the Oies had passed with no additional finds. officials said. Warm Wea th er Elegance The POSH Sport coat collection. Tailored of raw silk and ' silk/wool/linen blends. Presented in a variety of textures and patterns. Perfect for the warm weather to come. I Gent lemen's a othing S6 l Newport Center Drive Phone: 640-83 10 f • J Volunteer group to honor county corporate donors The ~venth annual Oranie Count).' Corporate Involvement Recognition dinner w11l be held Wednesday at the Westin South Coast Plaza Hotel in Costa Mesa 1n celebration of National Volunteer Weck. The dinner 1s sponsored by the Volunteer Center of Orange County to honor corponations for their community strvicc. The cost is S95 per person and proceeds will JO to the county's volunteer •centers. Call 526-330 I for reservations. AIDS I acts glven A parent information night about AIDS and the education of ch1ldrel) will be held Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. in the ArttSIS Theater at Laguna Beach High School. A panel of health professionals will discuss the disease and ats causes at the e' ent. sponsored by the school district and PT.\ orgrn1za11ons. Rape preventi on lecture ~ .\n 1nformatl\e lecture o n rape preventton will be held Wcdnesda) from 3:30 to S p.m. 1n the multipurpose room of tHe Oasis ~n1or Center in Corona del Mar Mane Holt. a guest speaker on over I SO radio talk sho"' s. "111 C'O nduct the presentation There 1s no charge. but scats are limited and resenat1ons may be made b~ calling 644-3244. Businesswomen to meet Huntington Beach's Wind Son$ chapter of the Amcncan Bus1ne~s Women''i .\ssoc1at1on will meet Wedoesda) at 6· 30 pm at Francot'i Restaurant in Hunt1niton Beach. Chiropractor Dr Linda W1lk1n~on will i;peak o n the reduction of pain. headaches and stress. The dinner cost 1s SI 0 and reservattons are being taken at 847-0146. Fuchsla Soclety convenes The (osta \.tesa-Ba' C'111es branch of the ~attonal Fu hs1a octet\ ·"tll meet Wednesdav at 6:30 p.m. at the ( osta Mesa Commun11~ Center. ·11 4 E 19th t National president Bill R1etkerk "'Ill speak on the growing o f fuchsias 1n small containers T he meeting also "'1111.'.elebratc the 40th b1n hda) of the Costa ~esa organ1La t1o n. Ad women to meet .\dvent'i1ng Jcc-,1gner Bobbi Baldennan "'tll addrl.'~s the Southern California Women in Ad vcrt1s1n~ Wednesda} at 5:45 p.m. at the Count!) Side Inn, 3_5 Bristol St .. Newpon Beach. The l'\'Cnt "'tll 1nclude d1nner at a cost ofS:!O for members and S~·UO for non-members. Call 631 -6541 for rescr' attons and more 10fonnat1on HB Tomorrow to meet M 1chael \1 udd. director of cultural affairs for the ctty of Huntington Beach. \\tll speak at the ne\t meeting of Huntington Beach Tomorro\\ Wednes- da\ at 18460 (1othard t · ~t udd "'tll gt\ ea slide presentation on the plans fort he .\ns and ( ultural .\ff airs Dn 1s1on of the Cit} The session 1s planned for.., 30 p.m. and atendees are asked to bring their o"'n chairs. Health care talk ln NB The futun· of ht'althcare marketers "'111 be d1scus~d at \\ cdnesda~ ·s lunchl·on meeting of thl' Hea lthrare Publtl Relations and Marketing .\s- soc1at1on at the Le Mend1en Hotel in :-.leY>pon Beach. Details about thr mt'ctang or the organ11atton may be obtained by calling L) n P~ymer at 951-1., 33 CALENDAR . Tuesday, Aprll 19 • 6 p.m. Laguna Bu eb City Council, council chambers. 505 Forest A' e Wednesday, Aprll 20 • 9:30 a.m. Oru1e Co.a1y Board of Sa~r­ vlaon, board hearing room. Hall of Admrn1strat1on. I 0 Ci 1c Center Pia~. Santa <\na. • 6.30 p.m. Costa Mesa Traffic Commlsaioa. counci l chambers. 77 Fair Dnve. • 7 p.m. Lapaa Beach ()pea Space Com· ml11loa aad Parld11. Traffic aad ctru lattoa Commlf1tt, counci l chambers .. 505 Forest Ave. • 7:30 p.m La1aaa Bead1 Eavlroameatal Safety Committee. police depanment conference room. SOS Forest .\ ve. • 8 p.m. Fountain Valley City Coaacll. council chambers. I 0200 Slater Ave. Orange Cout OAILY PILOT /Tueaday, April 19, 1988 * A3 Where '-s-the-beef?-ln-pa-rk-ing~Iot~ By JONATHAN VOLZXE a code enforcement officer Ol ... Oellr,...... The c1tat1 ons allege the can -a 2-foot b' 6-foot pu!>hcart on bicycle wheels -A Costa Mesa hot doa hawker who cannot be Jc-gaily tefl in the parkin& lot an draws auen1100 to has shop with a bnghtl) from of Campbell's shop cotor'Cd hot doa stand hasrcceaved another Campbell. 40. and his partner. Kate citation in his ongoing bttf wnh Cit) -Di Domenico. 35. ha' e battled code en- authonues, who contend the da!>pla> 1s forcement offi cers since first receivina a illegal. rnatton in March The tickets allege their ") must have upset someone at Cit-. shop needs a condt11onal use permit to Hall." said Wall Campbell. co-owner of the dtspla) the cart. Chicago BeefStation. 580 W. I 9th St . after According to the rn111al cuauon. ha\lng being handed a citation alleging fi ve more the orange and red can 1n the \hop·s violations of cit) codes. parking lot violates Costa Mesa Mun1c1pal "She really filled this pupp) up." he Code 13-237 -1Uegal outdoor storage added, referring to thec1tat1on filled ou1 tn Campbell disagrees He contends the can 1s 1mponant to ht ~tore lx-cau~ tt 1s v1s1blc from 19th trc-ct. "'hale tht' store itself as set back in a stnp shopping ctnter .. We're not gu ilt) of stonng an) 1h1ng It goes out at I I a m and comes back in at '. pm.," Campbell ~•d "If that's storage. then \\e're all guilty of stonng our car~ ever) 11me \\e park them " c ,mpbell Y>aS ISSUC:d thl' '\econd CllBllon ~hen he appeared in mun Monda~ 1o gt1 a heanng date on the 1n111al cuatton Because he has conunut"d to park the can 1n front ofh1s shop. the c1 ta11on alleged fi' c more v1olat1ons. usan Spe1gelman the: t ode enforce· ment officer who issued the c1t;s11ons aftt'r !l<'c:ing tht' l art "hale on patrol. said 1n an C'arl1er 1ntt"r• It'"' that thC' can as not allo~t"d lo it' in public va('w because oft~ art·J\ ~vn1nwrc1al 1omni. The' 1lat1on 1\ l'1ther an 1nfract1on -a kg.ii s1m11 J ril' tv .i parking ucket -or a m1..aemc:.mur punishable b) a fine or less thJr J .c:ar 1n 1ail Spe1gelman said. l th· off1ca ~1d she .. doubted" < .impt>l'll "ould ~tand a chance of gaming th<' ne~ l''>~r~ pc.•rmns from the Cit) < 1un, ti .. lx'lJU!>t' "1r's agarnst thC' orda- nanu·~ l he ma!lt-r \\ 111 be resol\'ed b} a JUd&C' aftl·r d "'1J ' '\ ht.'anng Campbell said. Duck abandons would-be family Jly JONATHAN VOLZKE Of .. 0.-, ......... A duck that held up completion of a Ne"'port Beach shtp)ard dock b~ la~ing nearl ~ a doten eggs 1n the dock's frame"'ork ha) Oo"'n the coop and lt'ft the eggs behind. offiuah at the bus1nes~ aid The Y>ould-be mother built a nrst for her 10 rggs 1n an unlin1shed dock at the Manner's Mtle ~anne Center on Pacific C'oa!>t H1gh"a). spumng thl' builder to work around her nest and 1>.a11 until 1he eggs ha tched . )a1d Cath~ ~a~fteld . an e\CCUll\e )ecretaf) at the centl'r The eggs "'ere discovered 1n the ngg1ng oflhl' Y>aterfront dod 1n mid-March. Jim E' ans. president of Turnstone ( orp . the com pan~ bu tiding the manner's comple\. billed the duck as "our first trnant."' But JU St when e'en, thtng set> med duck~. the mother eloped \\Ith a common mallard "The mother left last "'eek so I went do\\n there Frida~ night about '1 JO to take the eggs home and hatch thl'm .. \ta~ field said "But the~ "'ere JUSI muck "V. l' buried them at sea •· Tht· once-amusing scene of contractors carcfull> \\Ork1ng around the nest to bUlld the doc!I. Y>tthout d1sturb1ng the eggs has been replaced b> a completed dock. \1a\ field ~1d The center is des1gnt.'d for manne- onentl'd businesses -ship rt'patr and related companies. \1a~ field said he said cmplo~ees of the omplex had follo"'ed ne\\S of the duc!I. and "'ere rutlled at the abru"pt ending. ··11·s a sad ending." she said. "We were hoping to scl' a bunch of little ducklings \.\'e "ere all read~ wtth cigars and e'er) thing." A wa yward dac k , who held ap con•truction of a Newport Beach •hlpyard dock after worken o.,.._,..... di8Covered • nest and l 0 eu•. ha• flown the coop, leaving her woald ·be family behind. Laguna, Irvine school districts High court win approval on land exchange upholds 8>' LASCE IGSOS buold '" d<m<n!3'> «hool to "'"' the ''" on School Do<tmt "'!!'"'"'• , secrecy of 0t1,..oottyP1io111011 1.\>m. mun11~ \\ht1.h thl' Je,elopc:r plans to means that Lagund -...tll hand ~'er J~•u1 d • .\ u1mm1ttl'l' th.11 i)\l'r.t·e-<, .,lh\iol R h El T R bu1IJ on both '>ldt'S of Laguna C'an~on acres 10 the In tn(' l n1i ,·J ........ "'1 g.rian }Ury 1.lJdnon ot om oad D1stncttne\Changc for ~: a1.n'' d1strtct houndar: 1. h.1ngl'' ha, agreed h• Th La L Id I Id pcrn11t lh .. L.ioun.1 R•'alh Jn• Ir' in·· c gu na Jure e'i.-opme~t \\OU The dec1S1on "111 no\\ ~· ra,'>t'd ••n l ' ~ • u • add I 11:~ ~lUdl'nts to thl' d1 tnct s ('nrol---schonl dt,trtd' w )"JP proPl'n' lmcnt h~ tQ-i4. according to l'Sttmates. the tate Board 01 Education tor 11nai Thi.' land C'\d1ange "'" gl\l' thl' Laguna The dtstnd ha., ht't.'n t''<penenctng appro,al. said Denn i~ m 11h 'u~r· Beach l n1tinl \1.·h1H1l [)1<.tm·t JUr1,J1ct1on Jl'diningenrollml'nt for St'' era I ,ear' The 1ntendent of the Laguna &·alt l n111.:d o'er a pmp1N'Ll '.21w1-uni1 h11using de· Jll''""ard<.p1raltnl·nrnllmenthas<,1gnifi-hoot D1stnct 'elopml·nt l>.no" J'i the L1guna Liurl'I l'Jnth reducl'J fun ds the J1~tnct n."('i.'t'e~ "The basK dt'ets1 on has r.t·l.'n maik I•' pro1cc1 from the stall' done ... Srn11h said If The ln1nl· (n dt''l'hlpmcnt mo'l''> Thl'dt•c1s1nn "htlh "asapprl''l'd latl' Final appro,al 1Se\pcdl'1.1 1n Ji....,u1 •, fory.ard the Laguna 'chool dt'\tnct "ould last \\t"t'k b' the Orange Count' Commit-da~s. m11h said Karcher calls for ethics in business PO MON.\ ( .\P) -The founder of the Carrs Jr restaurant chain. under in- ' est1gat1on for rns1der tradrng. stresS('d a nt>ed for ethics 1n busrnes \tonda\ "The lack of 1ntegn1~ gets ~·ou no- where:· Carl Karcher said at a nC"ws conference at C'altfomia State Pol\ tC('hn1c nl\ ers1ty in Pomona where he Is sched- uled to be the first participant 1n a ne"' e\ccut1ve-in-rcs1dence program. Karcher. 71. is under in' cst1$ation b~ the: Securities E\change C'omm1ss1on for allegedly releasing 1ns1dc 1nforma11on about company profi ts to relat1v1'' Fifteen others. 1ndud1ng I J tam11' membe~. also Y>ere named tn the Et laY>~Utt tiled Thursda' Before· the nl'"'S conft'rence. rq>oner; "'ere told Karchc-r Y>l1uld not d1S4US" the 1ns1da trading allega t1ons Karcher did sa~. ho"'e'er that put'llt1.· f'f'pon<.1.· has sho\\ n that a lot of people an-"ht-hind us I 10 percent .. Karcher said hl' haJ no r lan' w ,hange the tttle or su~)tance of his ...,·heduled spcet'h W l·dnr ~da' on "Pcrs1.'lnJI Ph1Jo.,oph~ 1n Bus1nes~ and Life .. "Wh~ chani.w plans \\hen I ha'e no ireling 1.11 guilt, .. ht' a l'd 1'.ar, 'll'' ;,trcs)(.'d t1e rin.'\! '1.'t \.I'll'"'' •n huSlnl'SS dralin2., 'C'J..," ., arid ma1'l- 1aining a p.·<.1: ,-c J-..! rt "' ,. , lr<tml' ill mind "I f~I that the at: :.i.!l " ur team 1s 't'fj 1mpor.art .. ht <...11~ -\ pers<'ln v.1th a smile goes J l0n~ ''·'. .\id 1 ~.per<.\'"" ho IS not ha pp\ .. • ... ;Jg1ilUS Karcher tt'lt• •.d'l'r .:if I: , h1ldrtn ponra~t·d him '<·" J• J faf'lth man Jnd the rmbod1mt•n1 '''ll· ld-1a~h111nC'd .\men- 1.·an "alul') hl' ~J' '''l'\'U<>l.'d 1n tc k' 1~1on commeroal'-.,, '" ' 'ia1ri "'""' f-R-'.'< l'-lO 1.\Pl -.\ statt' 'ur:in'""'" 1 • ur rulrn~ 1hat grand Jur: lt'l • C\l1 ~:1un' mu•; rrmatn .:onfidenuaJ urh •,J, ..1r .mr-r..a nl 1rad1t1on that en- :..'Jg1·' .ana 1C1 •c~! •1i.:10' and protects .... : nt ')(.'\ Int• l llU 1 '<!IU • "~ u 1rg \I n..:J -~ •ccted arguments t· ... nt'"' 'fl!Jr /.J.' r' ·tia; the public's ... .i"· u ' '!-;( v.orl tngs of ~· i.::~;;.c::: -) .. ·~e~..i !J'3ndJu~ powerof • " j '4.1 ,,tw .. ~_. \ 11ng .i" '"''-'ear trad1t1on o i' grand .,r, '" •:, ''ll'.vJrt!1Jled6-l 1o uphold3 r ·' 'U"(\ \ure-nor Coun judge· .. Jr," ... " "' ng the toun1~·s IQ 3-J ~"J"J Jr ... r· ·rleas1ng transcnpts of t• ,. ·~1l1~ "'' Je•ed 1n its probe of a "' . ~ \ T'h ,r, •e,' 111 g:and 1u~ procC'cdrng.s. , .H\'lulh ""' ..... .-l'J Jnd protCC'tt-d dunng ;~a t r:,; · ... 11 r 'l.ing h1<,10r) conttnues to 'C'n' ~p. i.Jl"i 1n:ere.,1s:· said tht' 1.lr1 r 1 " ... , Ju,ti., \1J••u" 1'..aufman ' •t:r.t' ~ra n.j ur·e' tn\CStlgatC' local g,., .. .,. h""t .. ~·~a1 ""' probe reports of "· 'lt d'' n~ t' ruh.i, ,11T1c1als and issue 1.rtm1r.J ,_, 1 -.... h ' Judges say new guidelines rob them of independence t('f~ll'f" '" h<' turn1,.j 11.1 '<'II al thC'm on<' ii.n1'1\. l.<·J him un,1•ns1,,us .,. llh 1h(' , r,,_. l'\.lr \\ h<'n h<' camC' 10 thC' radio was ~··nc Pl<'' 11.11M \UrTC'r<'d a largC' bump on th<' hNJ "'h1d1 pvli1.·C' thought could be a m n1.H ,,,n..:u~"''" T°'IC' usa1lan1s "'<'IT J,, nt'ieJ .i~ l..Jlln•'' 1n thC'tr mid-:: On<' "a' Jc~·nt-c'J J' t>C'11lJ 5 fttt 8 1nchn tall. ..,,J1um Jar I. h.:ur anJ had a full beard and mu,1a1.h<' llr v.as v.ra nng a h1h1-rol<>n'd .. 111n J.irl. a<l.<'t Jarl. panuand 1 hat Hts , l1•lh<"' "'C'IT rrponf'dh din' Tht S«Ond mar ..... , J~ nl:'C'd ;u btm& 6 f«t :: mchts 1.ill Jarl. ~1,mplt,1on. dark hair ""1th • full btard ~nJ mu\ta1.·he Ht l\ad a dart. dtm \kC'p1nr. l\ag 1n <'r one ~houldt-r l ''IJ \k'J Ii )I!~ '. "' 't"t tht' V.('('\. c:-"1.! .....,.\! • Jnv "'"~ I\'(' \ITllm m.lh\ Tht" ,,,, "J' l'U! Jt s' -~ . . . R,., J1"'I' .. "'•t" :: ..... hktd . \11 l ~"'''" Or ' c ·ct' '1l"'<l a t-u~J)ar. at ~ : rm \f , ... ,i.1• ~ S '· • .11r , m~'~'r "as a~rc-ntl\ SI•'"'" \(" :!'. "'<"C end from " IO"'lnf-~" '''(' "' t'Jt :,,.. lcxl (If '('\41)1\ri ~1yi('\ .s°l1 '• • ,., ... ... ~ ihrou,&h a windo111 a• r" ' I \ "l'" \1am St and 10011 i;ioanc"' 'r •r• • c \"3\t\ reg1stC'f l t ., 'f' ~·nc-.!; pra,t door 1n lht :'•~II. I'll, ·L ,,(Ht'~' 1 1rdr and s1olc a silvC'f h1, "'°" '6 1Ut'"° .J $.'\ Rufill" ",,a,h0~ ; "''ndo.,. in th(- -~ h l x i.. • f<'WrJ J IA1nC' and stok a Si 11 l<"lc-' "'"r '(.'' S' • n , ln1h1n1 and S~(, r f'""t'lr. P<\SADE\I .\ (~Pl -'\e" guide· hnt>s de 1gned to cltm1natc d1'ipant) in sentencing "'111 depm"l' Judges of their indcpenden~. according to some federal Junsts who m<.'t to consider proposed const1tut1onal challc-nges to their pov.er The U ... Sentencing C:omm1ss1on. organazt°'d 1n 1984 as an arm of thC' Judicial branch o( government. adopted the sweeping guidelines last November in an attempt to end the disparities in crimrnal sentencing. ''They're cold and implacable and as immutable as a computer.'" said U.S. Dastnct Judge James ldeman. one of 20 of the J2 U .S 01 tnct Court jud&t>s 1n Los <\ngel~ who met Monday to discuss the proposals.. Donald . Purdy Jr •• repreS(nting the comm1 s1o n. said the auidclincs ~rt developed to 1ncre1tt re pect for law by ensurina that defendants arc ttntcnccd fatrl). He cited a 1974 study of SO JUdtes \hat showed 1entcn~ for the s.me crime ranee<! PoutabiYaU9J Aft.cf IP'9Y1ftl ~ a I dirrt's ~. I man robelcd rhe •ra~ sUllld a1 the S.luob Famu Arid. The lllilft "PClf'kd!Y walked to the stand a1 abcMtt I p.m.. Sunday. demanded calh Ind~*' •, 1mnty ... MKe •• -fil* dab. \ from three to 20 years. The U.S. Supreme Court ~ 111 make the final detennination on the guide- lines. In the meantime. the .S. 9th C1rcu1t Court of Appeals has sched· uled oral arguments on the issue May I 3. That court's decision will ~ band- ing on tnal couns throuahout the West. pending the hi&h court's ruling. In the meantimr . Judtt Manuel Real. the chief judge for the U.S. Distnct Coun in Los Anacin-said the court is considerina iuu~· an en bane ruling that would a y to all cases 1n Los Anaetes. rat r than seeking ind1v1dual ruhnp from each ju •. Se~c~ of the judges.. s1ttin1 in a special appellate courtroom an Pasadena in what Real called a "historic event." uprcs1ed clear ir· ritation at lht notion ofan) 1nckptn- dcnt commission fixina Kntcncma options for ftdttal Jud&rs. lbt pUdclinn. propoxd at Con- grcss· d1rt'Ct 1on . established a r.mge of penalties for all federal nmc'> that occurred after No'. I. Minimum Jnd maximum penalties do not var: mo('(' than 25 percent and judges aren't penn11tcd to deviate from them unless a case involves factor.. not cons1dC"rcd by the comm1ss1on. The controversial gu1dehncs ha' e prompted d1 v1ded opinions from district judae-s throughout the coun- try. 1nclud1ng those in San Diego ~ho held a similar hearina earlier this year. OpponenUofthC N&c-s have araued that the commission. as an a.rm of the Judicial branch. did not have authority to assume what hu bttn a function oftM ICJISlative bnnch "What It does IS It ckstro)'S all tM ditcrction.ary function of a Judie and at aivn an opponunit for pn:Jll· ecutonal m1sbchavt0r... .S. Da trict JU<tee Olcltnn Tevrizian said Mon· day. \n Orang<' ma~ ~·s UTt·s1f'd Sundl' afh-r hC' .illegt'Jh flf'd tht SC'C'nt after (IUSln an Jl.'(ldC'nl that lnJU~ IV.O prl1pk Pohl"t' caught him •bout tv.o blocl.s ""''h from lht crash on Euchd lf'l"t't \~uth ofEdm1er .\~C'nuc. Tht min ::.i \4JS t>ool.C'd into Onn~ Count~ Jail on susp1 .. ·1on ,,f fC'lon' drunken dn,in1. f<'IM' l\11 and run ind a!~h bem1 an unh,'t'.'n~ dm rr Th< Het1ms 1Tfusai mC"d11-al 11T11tmtnt • • • .\ l ost1 \ft"I man wh<i .,."&.\ al~I~ 1r. "'' 10 Pr) a .:-u \ttrt..> from a ptekop was a~'\IN nrl) 4'aturda\ on Jiupoon of 111C'm~1f'd buf1lal') ~ tNd. wtll<'f\ wai ptrtC'd I I Par\ PicifK' .\.p&nrMftlS.. had I sma.she'd v.1ndo., Poll<"t atd the' man's C'U .,~S par\C'J J'('\t 10th(-lnK'lt •hf'n ti(- .,. .. ~ anntC'd Th(-man 21 • .,.u booked into Oran,r Count~ Jail and held on SIO. Ooeta ..... " I ..l-vnr-<>kt Ccma Mesa bo) •• arrntC'd ·,, I 'S Lm Monda> afttt h(o al~)) polntC'd 1 tn1fr M • COl&I Mt9 H rhOOI C'lanm1tt and ~rnlmfd lo lol tum ~ t'O rrpontdt) po..nted tl C'iow 10 lhC' Olhef bo\ 's Md Ind 1okl t11ff\, ... , am'°'"' 10 lut11ou and 'OUr latnil If 'ou mC'Ss "'Ith me • • • mconc tK'otct thr snad bu wincto-u • • • ~ "'; \t,11J J R \ • "'3' •ep.'nt"J ' s101L'n tic1"'"''"' '-tturda' i nd \1 C\nd.a' irl'l'l'l lh<' 11 • l'>ltXk ,,, , ular'C' Dn't . . . ~ 1..i· ... TC\'•'14 t 11r\,n1 ..... rrpon<'d h ~toltn .• un.la' nt&hl from an apanmrn1 ~uilJ1ng in tht> ~f'Wl bl ·l of " tst "ti n 'trttl m('(lnC' stole' SI I.A.• ... \,rth of t""''\ o' C'r 1hC' "C'C'\:tnd from a "10~ eCtmf'lln mcnt 1n tht . bl l of 8n'1ol trttt Pohl'<' l'leht' r the th1rf m1\ hl\t' had a kr' 10 th<' arra. .,.h1.-h 1\ 'tta~ b' an <'IC<'tron1~ ,oml'ln' ' ... . mfflM got 1n1(\ th(-1t11C'ns Banl ollil"t 1n lht ~ l'ICk Clf Har~'r 8ou~ard (\'<'r tht .,'ttl.tnd lt'llln av.a' •1th SIJ " 1h1d rrponc-dh• ,;ok' a 10~ l "ht• rok1 ''" Sund.\' fmm TGI F~' ·s ''" .\nton BouJe,ard lhmtl.qton Beac h "i.o~r said a ~ah r C'\.tt dovtn her •'lnd ct11m() and nttntd 1h(o rrma1 n' on hC'1 fron1 Potth in the' I \ of Dnntan Lane • • • -\woman Sltd that t -..onw11a.da11rl eonta('ted tin after sht madt I "1tbdta•._I from• automatK' ~U« IMdllftC •• fll'$l In~ lenl It Edt'*" A ~'mut and ~ti BoulC'' ard ~ &okt tw'f cht1r C01"Ya1r bumtd °" th(-"""°') aDd ~ stnndtod. ~ti(-wild p\t thtm S20 bua lattt bt-1~,"td 'ti(-ma) ha'>t bttn tiam ~ltd ••• Newport Beach ~'mt'l.lnc ~11,hed 1 hC' con' rntblf roofot ~ 1..i\..i \l<'f«'d~·lkru \,fl L -.tulC' 11 wa) pJr~ro 1n th<' hh'<'~ of Promontof" r<'tnl \\<"'I hoet..,.ttn ~ r m Thuf!da~ Ind ' \1 r m ~unda' !nd s.tolt th(-car'$ .. •mp.ad di"' '1<'1't\' <\ s1m1lar 1nc1dcn1 1n' 1.>h 1ngano1her \~<'rt'Cdts.. which hlld tis L'\'n'l"n1Mc roof ~la\t.c-d optn and sttrn> 'l<'lrn 111':ls l'Cpllr1C'd (In 1he Mmt strttt Jurin& th<' "'mt' hmt· ~nod \ h1\ 'tlr .ind ~1~\~h~a t'QutpmC'nt wett \tokn (rom a µn11c in tht 1000 bmc.t o( "''uth &• ''''nl hc-t111~n I ~ p.m \foodl\ ~ s I ~00 \l<Tt'O ~..;, ~<*n from a I~' \fef'l't'..k'\· Rtn1 '\EL partl'd 1n lht lO hhxk of MontCrt\ C11'C"k bctwta S·•S o m ul'da' and o· a m Monda ... , Totnadocuts deadly swath through North Florid• town MADISON. Fla. (AP)-A tornado b&asud thr'OUO this Nonh Florida lOWD before cfawn today. destroyina homes and a coUeae library. blowina off rooftops. flil>Pina cars and leavina four peopk dead and 12 injured. ofrteials said. The tornado touched down at 4:30 a.m. just west of Madison. about 50 miks east of Tallahass«. and CUI a 12-mile swath of destruction. authorities md.. .. There was this huge roar and then I heard a trtt crack out thett and thous)lt we were all aone ... said Mane Prince. a Madison County shenff s dispatchcT. The tornado passed only four blocks from the her office. Al least four people wett killed non.b of tov.-n and at lease a dozen people Wl th injuries were at Madison MeinONJ Hospital, said Shcrif'f' Joe Peavy. A house-to-house seareh found no mott bodies and Peavy said the death and injury count will probebly uand. A man and a baby had to be freed from separate homes whett they were trapped. be added. two of the deaths occurred in mobile homes blown apart b) the tornado, and four other bousn wctt seriously damaged as .. -en. said Madison County Ct\•il Defense Di- rector Bernard Wilson. .. rve been hett 32 r.cars and I've neva seen anything hke this." said Peav~·· "This is the first tornado that has hit Madison· that I can rcc.tlJ •• Jtcscuc units from ad1oming coun- tics v.~tt helpana out. atona with Slate law enforcement and fOrcsuy of- ficaals. State prisoners wctt also on their way co help with the cleanup, Peavy said. He had no estimate of the damaac. The tornado was part of a storm system that struck across the Southeast wuh hi&h winds. lightnina and hail. TrttS. roofs and mobile homes v.ett damagrd. and at least four other inJunes ~tt reported. Madison. a town of about 3.SOO people. is the county scat of Madison Count). a thinly populated tobacco growing att~ of piney woods. rollina hills and s""'mps on the border wich Georgia. The tWlster"s destructive pach staned in front of a shopping center • and then proc:ceded strai&)\t into North Florida Junior Colleae. where it ~totaled the new library and took the roof off the auditorium, .. Peavy said. The twister blew away several homes. blew the roof off a nearby church. overturned can and knocked down trees, Peavy said. As far as his office knew. all the damage was from one tornado. Peavy said. Israelis deport six involved inf atal · clasll w1til settlers JERUSALEM (AP) -Israeli today deponed to l..ebanon six Palestinians who were involved in a fatal clash with Jewish tettJen in a West Bank villqe, the army said. Two other Arabs wett expelled from Israel and flown by an army helicopter to Israel's self-proclaimed security zone in south Lebanon. the army reported. The deportations brouaht to 20 the number of Palestinians expelled since the start of the Palestinian uprisina in the occupied territories Ott 8. .. wants to ronunue the occupation and is disttprding Palestinian na- tional ria)1ts. • "Such a polky will inflame the sif uation and accually add t~ ~he dctenninatton of the Palesunaa.n people m their struale for their national aspirations." said. Siniora, rditor of the pro-PLO daily news-- paper Al Fajr. The United States has condemned deportations. saying the mcas~re violaled the Geneva Conventton which bans the cransfer acrou borders of civilians living in occupied zones. So far. 16 7 Palestinians have died in the unttst. according to U.N. . fi1ures. Two Israelis also have been ------------------------------------• killed. Israel. which has not accepted the apP,licability of the conventjorys co the W~t Bank and Gaza Stnp. has defended the practice, sayina only mass expulsions ~re bam:d and that such punishment was less sevett than execution. permitted by the conven- The army accused the deported ·Delaware FAA official supports proposals Palestinians of inciting and orpniz- ing distur'banC'CS in the occupied West Bank. It said lhey had appealed to ao arm) re"iew board but did not take their case to the Supreme Court. gi:ves Jackson big push suggested by presidential panel .\rm) officials said the six Bcita ttsidents were involved in a stoning attack against 16 Jewish teen-agers and two armed guards fTom a nearby West Bank sctllement on April 6. tions. . Also today. an Israeli Cabinet minister criticized the slaying of PLO commander Khalil al-Wazir. wamina it would backfire on Israel. The army ceosored a newspaper editorial about Israel's reponed role in the assassina- tion. NEW CASTLE. Del. (AP) - Presidential hopeful JesSt Jackson headed into today's New York pn~ mary with• new win in his column - in Oclawatt·s Democratic caucuses. where be handily beat rival Michael Dukakis. With all 41 precincts reponing. J•ckson had 86.5 delegates for 45 percent. Dubkis had 51 .5 delcptes for 27 percent and Tennesstt Sen. Alben Gore Jr. had four delegates for 2 percent. i-"orty-scven delegates were uncom- mitted for 25 percent. The <klegaces sclcrted wall attend the state con"en- tion Ma) 23. where Dclawatt's 15 nationaJ convention delegates v.111 be chosen. Based on the results. Jackson picked up seven delegates. Dubkis five and thrtt arc uncommmw. The Ocla\A.att caucuses were over· shadowed by toda) 's New York contest. with ats 255 delegates. Jackson had been urganaed state· wade in Delaware for several months. \A.hale Dukak1s opened shop about chrC'C \A,«ks ago. Gore has no or- gan1zat1on in the state. Before the cauc-uses. thett had ~n pred1cuons that Jackson supponers "ould tum out in force. Samuel L. Ship\('). the state party chairman. predicted a hea'~ turnout. spurred b~ a Jackson organizin$ dnve. Jackson coordinator V1v1an Houghton said Jackson supponers an the state were --fenenc and com- muted.'. Caucuses v.ere ~ing held 1n .i I stace represcntati'e d1stncts to select 189 delcptcs co the state convention. Candidates had to win at least 15 percent of the vote lo reu1 ve a share of che delegates. W ASHJNGTON (AP) -Federal Aviation Adminiscracor Allen McArtor said today he is .. <klighted that there is a consensus that change 1s nccdcd .. in the nauon's air safety system. ~It's not a matter of unsafe or safe. or that something as v.Tong: its JUSt that improvement 1s necessary. im- provement as required." Mc Art or said on NBC-TV's .. Today .. shov.·. His comments came a day after a presidential commission said that the government should step up its inspe<"- tion of the nation's airianes if safety is 10 be maintainw. and should estab- lish a "permanent program of an- depth" examinations ofa1r earners. The findinJS were released as the FrderaJ Av1a11on .\dminastration concinurd its detailed anspect1on of t\A.O of che count') 's largest a1rhnes. Conunental and Eastern, and a staged a broad review of safecy a mong the countf) 's commuter airlines. The presidential panel called on the F .\A to hire additional inspectors. stage mott frequent surprise in~­ lions and gave pnonty to airhnes undcrgoang ma1or changes. .. Thcst chan$CS to the anspecuon program are cnucal to maintaining safct\:· said John Albertine. chair- man "of the Prcs1denfs Commission on Aviation Safet). Al~rt1ne. also appearing on '"Toda>:· commented that the FAA is falhng ~hand 1n the area of tec:h- noloJ) be-cause of frderal regulations refa11n g to procurement. In add111on. lhe aJency is hampered b) cn ii service hiring rules. .\l~nane said. Siblings buried as faniily calls for judicial ref orni By De Auedak4 PttSI SA .. "iANTO 10 . Tr'"as-Four s1bhngs brutal!} stabbed to death m their home v.ere burird sadc-b}-side as famtl) mem~rs alled for a reform of11 J ud1c1al S) stem the} part I~ blamed for the deaths. More than 1.000 mourners filed past the caskets of Jennifer Mann. 19: Shannon Mann. I 7: Manha Mann. I 5:and Erne-st Mann. 11 bcfott their bunal Monday. The four v.ere killed earl} Fnda\ when an assailant broke mto their mobile home and attacked them \A, 1th steak knives. some ofwh1ch broke an their bodies because of the slrength of the blows. authonti~ ha'e said. The parents. Ernesl and Rebecca Mann. who are separated and v.ere not home at the time of the attack. had to ~ supponed ph~s1call) b) relall' es as chey v.alked to the bunal s11e Shannon Mann·s 20- )'car-old former bo) fnend. U-0 Nan a1z Jr .. who was arrested shon l) after the attack. Abandoned glrl leaves hospital with new legs CH IC ..\GO -A 9-)'ear-old gin whoSt" frostbmen lower le-gs v.ere amputated after she was abandonw m an unheated building walked out of a hospital toda). and doctors said she had mosc of the ab1ht1es and all the energ} of a chcerfulJoungster. Darlwtn Carlisle, who has b«n fitted with art1ficiaJ lambs. limpe \'Cf) shghcl} but smiled and held tv.o dolls when she walked down the front steps of la Rabida Children·s Hospital. Mission Pine & Supply Co. 'i.nc.1• BATH COLLECTION Featuring International Des igns by EUer E~er commissioned internationally famous designers to create bath- rooms for today. These bath de- signs, like the one shown above, are now premiering in our show- room. 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Pft>wridlt °' quallty outpebent tN:ltMCI" '°' chemical dlpcl-w;~ In Souchem c.elitomN Clltrlr .................. llCI r The panel relca.srd ltS report after a nine-month study of airline safety and recommended: -The FAA ~ separatrd from the Transportation Department under an independent authority funded through av1at100 taxes. -Creation ofa top-ranking official in the new F.\A v.ho would assume the job of"a"1ation safety czar" and have broad regulatory po~rs. -Safety rc4uirements for com- mucer airlines~ gradually tightened to put them on the same level as the major air earners. A settler girl and two Bcita resi- dents were killrd in the dash. An arm) repon said the girl was killrd by a bullet fired from che weapon of one of the Jewish guards. The arm) has destroyed the homes of 13 &1ta residents linkw to the stoning attack. Hanna Siniora. a prominent Palestinian editor. said the deporta- tions were a message tha1 Israel Soldiers scaled off parts of the occupied West Bank and Gaza Stnp and clamped a curfew on 17 towns. cities and refugee camps for a third straight da) to quell rioting in the occupied temtories, the military said. Ninet«n Palestinians have been killed since Salurday's slaying of al- Wazir -Requiring small. pri"ate planes fl)mg near .. hub .. airpons to have equipment that tells controllers altitude mformation. The FAA alread) has proposed r~ulauons that v.ould require such equ1pmer.t on an e\en broader scale. Nicaragua, rebels agree to break in peace talks Meese nominee withdraws name WASHINGTON (AP) -Attorney General Edwin M~ Ill faces new problems rebu1ldanga Justice Ocpan- ment roct-cd by~gnations now that has S«ond cho1c-e for the No. 2 post has told him to find somebo<h else Meese is looking for a new nomin~ af\er former American Bar Associa- tion President John Shepherd cold the attorne} general's aides on Monday to ~gin searching for a new can- didate. Justice Depanment sources S8)'. MCCS(' told rcponers Monda} that he didn't e).pect to ha"e a final dec1s1on fro m Shepherd until m1d- \A.CCk. But while department sources said Shepherd had not flatly withdrawn. they said he alrcad) had informed the department that he probably would do so. MANAGUA. Nicaragua (AP) - High-rank.mg government and re~I delegauons agreed on a I 0-day suspension of direc t peace talks after a fourth da} of ncgociations failed to produce a definitive cease-fire pact. Also Monday. President Daniel Onega warned that Sandinista troops v.ould continue fighting the U.S.- Qa<:ked -re~I forces 1f rebel nego- tiato rs bowed to pressure from their 'to p m1litaf) commander not to sign an accord. A joint communique issued at the end of Monda} ·s talks said the govenimen( and the Contras. as the rebels are known. would next meet in Managua April 28-30 to continue negotiattons to end their 61h-ycar-old civil war. The statement descn~d talks be- l\A.een Sandinista offictals and leaders of the Contras' Nicaraguan Re- sistance organization as "frank and cord1a1:· and said the two sades had entered into "permanent session" to reach an accord. Contra leader Prdro Joaquin Chamorro cold reporters that govern- FANTASY LINGERIE WHERE YOUR FANTASIES a DREAMS COME TRUEI YEP! WE EVEN HAVE SHOES a BOOTS AND THOUSANDS OF OTHER THINGS. COME SEE us' BtZAAAE FASHIONS BREAST CREAMS LINGERtE KUMASUTRA HOSIERY PETTICOATS GLOVES TIGHTS LEA THEA SHOES INCENSE JEWELRY BOOTS GAG GIFTS 161'2 Narbof ~ Fountotn ~.CA t2IOI (714) 71WlN mcnt and re~I officials had agreed "thac at an) moment we can renew the negotiations to give continuity to lhis process." "We are cenaan the n~otiauons wall end in success." said Nicaraguan Defense Minister Hum~no Ortcp. who headed the go"ernment's nego- tiating team. t'madent Ortega. the defense mm- 1ster's brother. charged that Col. Enrique Bermudez. lhe Contra mali- taf) commander. and the United Stales wett pressunng tt~I nego- tiators to a"o1d a cease-fire agrtt- ment. Ac-cording to Onega. Bermudez threatened the Resistance directorate saying re~I mahtary forces "would hqu1dale them" if they signed an agreement with the government "lfth1s happens. It would leave us no other road but to achieve a total victor) in 1he military field." Ortega told thousands of government sup- poners gathered in Managua's Plaza de la Revolucion on Monday eve- ning. RUFFELL'S UPHOLSTERY lllC. ... ,_ .... c.-s llln! till -··~ cesTl IUl-541-115' Robert E. Schmitz, u .. INC. announces the certification to offer the MEDIFAST· PROG RAM A physician supervised weight loss pro«iram at lite BIG BEAi INN, la -.ttN Bl& Bear Lab, Calif. Comprehenatve .medical treatment, lncludtng: • C linical evaluation • Rapid weioth reduction • Nutrition conMHng • Ph~tan supervision For more lnformatton, call (714) '866-7561 Ask for Mary Solle)' ~lleart Altodallon , • GULF ••• Pram Al Mehem. They could not secure additional details. The other tanker. the l 2, I 2S-ton Fal-S from the United Arab Emirates. was aet ablau but Omani coasts~ patrol boet1 rncued the CfeW. Mines were spoted by a passina vessel in a central aulf area where no explosives had earlier been noted. and shis>pina executives oredicted commert1al vessels would be dis.- courqed from sailina in the rqion. Sources close to the Kuwait Oil Tanker Co. said the convoys of 11 U.S. rcflaaed Kuwaiti tankers sailina under U3. Navy protection were di9COntinued until a major shippina channel further north was cleared. The Pentaaon said Monday that U .S raids on the Iranian oil {>lat forms came in retaliation for a mine strike last Thursday qainst the USS Samuel 8. Roberts, which injured I 0 crewmen. Iran said sevoral ~pie were killed or injured in the raids on the two oil platforms but gave no further details. It has denied planting the mines. No Amcncan casualties were re- ported in Monday's fighting. How- ever. Defense Secretary Frank C. Carlucci said in Washington the Navy was searching for a Cobra attack helicopter with two crewmen that had not returned to a cruiser. . Iran's offi cial Islamic Republic News Agency. monttored in Cyprus. said Monday night that Iranian warships "in a heroic clash with the aggressor American helicopters in the Persian Gulf shot down one of them Monday af\ernoon." Pentagon official~ said the helicop- ter did not return to the USS Wainwright Monday af\er a "routine reconnaissance mission." · Iranian t'llCboat ezttacutabee oU platform after attack by U.S. wanblpe. Persian Gulf' quieting down' after U.S. lambastes Iranians. WASHINGTON (AP) -Presi- dent Reagan said today "it seems to be quieting down" in the Persian Gulf af\er a round of sea and air battles Monday in which the United States dealt a heavy blow to Iranian force-s. ..We hope It continues that wa)." measured:· said Sen. Sam 7\u nn D- Ga., the committee's chairman .. But I think wc·,e got to ma ke sure th at ~e don't conven this into a L'S -Iranian war our pohq ," 7\un n ~1d But the senator also said that ··~e need to get our all ies .. to protec t cenain zones·· House M1nont) u ader Robe n ~11chel. R-111 .. appeanng on .\BC'"s ··Good Morning .\mcnca:· said "I th ink we don't want to untlatcralh be there. the policemen o'er there .. · Orange Coat OAILY PILOT /Tueeday. April 19, 1988 • Aa Hijackers obs~rve Moslem holy day as hostages wait ALGIERS, Algena (AP) -The hijacke rs of a Kuwa1t1J umbo jet read the Koran and their 35 hostages fa sted dunng a religious o~rvan~ that appeared to take precedence over negouauons aimed at ending the rwo- wcek-old h1Jack1ng This morning contact "1th the Moslem Shiite h1Jackers began with a request radioed to the control to~er .. Good morning..'' ~1d one of the h11ackers. spc:-a ingclearl~ an English "\.\ e'd li ke.-to ha'e ~atc.-r fo r the plane. someone to clean the to1kt~ and nev.spapcrs fn e in .\rab1c and three 1n Frenc h ~e al~ need one medicine 1nten 1afo rm " a treatc- mt'nt for diarrhea .\ 'ellov. \ar 1..arned an a1rpon ~or c:r to tht' plant' to fi ll the rcQut:st ~.. the ~1oslem hol\ month of Ramadan bega n \1ondd) the hi· 1ad.t:r) requestl'd rnp1es of the 1'oran the \to .. k m hoh book. v.h1ch ~CrC' deh' ered · During Ramadan obser' ant \loskm!> do nn1 c:at or dnnk dunng da ~light hour'> .\I the h1Jal ker;· rt·4ue<,l. a tr.id1:1unal pre-fast meal ~a~ dd1,ered t' the plant' \unda) night tor al! atx•.irJ .\bu \h.inda\ "man 1dcnt1tit'd d.'> a mt'mber ul ~.i ~a1t'!> ro'al lamil · spoke frum the pla nt" and said he hoixd his gen ernmejlt ~ 1clds to th? gunmen's demand'> . \1ost oi the.-bnef radio me'>\3ge from the ffidl" the h:jackers said ~as Fadel Khaled .\I-abah ~as 1mpos!>- 1blc to understand C\Cept for the pan about thl'1r demand that 1'uwa11 free 1-pro-Iranian pnsonc.-rs con' 1cted 1n '>he1kdom "I hope that Kuwait reteascsall the pmoners ·· the man said. speakins in .\rab1C 1n a fee ble. halting voice K u111 an1 offi cials insist the\ will not &'' t• 1n 10 the htJackcrs . .;..ho have k11lt:d two Kuv.am passengers Tht' recorded appeal was the founh b) a pa )~nger'Sin~ the plane amvc.-d 1n .\l~1c.-r~ Wednesday Thl .tppeal and one '1s1t to the plane: b~ an .\lgenan mediator we~ the onl~ signs that the negolJallng prcxe'>S wa'> 1n mouon Monda}. The t-.uv.a1.1 .\arwa)S flight from ThJ1land to Kuwait was hijacked .\pnl 5 111 1th I I::! people aboard and f11rted lO land an Mashhad Iran. v.hert' 5 .. C\eotuall} were rt"leascd On .\pnl the Jet new to Lamaca. ( ~ pru~ where two passengers v.ere tiled and 13 frce-d Smee landing 10 '\lg1c.-rs one passenger has been frt'ed k a' 1ng ahout 35 hostages aboard. 1ndud1ng three members of i...uwa1t'<, e'ten'>•'e ro)al famil) The fi,e to t'1 gh t h11ackers are armed ~1th grenades and guns and ha ve threaten· ed t<i blov. up the plane .\ hoMage freed Thursda~ . ..,0-)car- uld Djumaa l\bdallah Chatt1. Ocw out "( .\lgt'na \1onda~ night on a Kuwa1t1 c.-\ecut1' e Jet Esconed to the plane b' lour members of the Kuwa1t1 ncgo- 11at1ng delegation. Cham v.a,cd to ll'lt'\ 1s1on cameras before getting on the plane but said nothing. The Pentagon identified 1hc heli- copter crew as Capt. Stephen C. Leslie. of Ne" Bern. N.C.. and Capt. Kenneth W. Hill. of Thomasville. N.C. They were assigned to the Marine Corps Air Station in New River, N.C. Reagan told reportcrsdunnga photo- taking session at the start of a meeti ng with Republican members of Con- gress. Sen. John Warner of V1rgin1a. the comm1ttt'e's ranking Republican said ""e'd hke to see a more coordinated pan 1c1pat1on b) our allies" in the gulf. "Our allies arc there. but thus fa r the) have declined elTon s b) our nation to suggest that ~e work at a more coordinated fa shion .. Rep Robert Tom celh. D-" J . a me mber of the House Foreign .\ITairs Cummittc.-e. said on the same pro- gram that ··~c·re not rcall) protecting intern ati onal sh1pp1n$. ~·hat we're protec11ng 1s ships fl )1 ng the .\mcn- l'an tlag. \fan ) of the cnuc1sms that we had when this pohq began 1s that we began ll un1laterall) without getting 1nternat1onal cooperation .. 'the :~-3 altal ks on the l and I he h11ackcrs· onl~ d1rcc-t threat an .\lgt•na \I.a~ that made Saturda) when th t'' askt'd that the plane be refueled '>O ihe' "ould "~ttle our score" w uh 1'uv.ait an another countn rather than 1n "fnendl~ °'"lgcn a .. · The missile attack Monday rep- resented the first reported finng of the Silkworm battenes along Iran's coast at ships in the southern gulf or the Strait of Hormuz. the waterwa)''s narrow entrance. The attack was witnessed by As- sociated Press correspondent Rich- ard Pyle who was aboard the Wil- liams with a Pentagon news media pool. Fi&hting bepn early Monday when the 0 .S. Navy blasted two Iranian 011 platforms as a ··measured response" to mining of the Roberts. U.S. forces then sank an Iranian gunboat defending the platforms. Later Monday. two Iranian navy frigates fired on U.S. jets. which then bombed the ships. setting them afire near the Strait of Hormuz. U.S. warships also sank one and damaged two other patrol boats attacking neutral shipping Iran took a licking when 1t tncd to strike back after the United St.ates destroved two h anian oil platforms In the· most intense exchanges since Reagan beefed up U.S. firepower in the gulflast summer. American fo rces sank or damaged four Iranian attack boats and disabled two frigates that fired missiles at U.S. planes. Asked if the United States had underestimated what the Iranian response would be. Reagan re plied: "No." • ··11 sccms to be quieting down . We hope it continues that wa y:· Reagan said. Meanwhik. leaders of the Senate Armed Services Committee said that while they suppon Reagan's acuon. the nited St.a tes should reassess its go-it-alone polic) of protecting the vital sea lanes. "This 1s an acuon that was taken that was j USt1fied. and. I think. Nunn and Warner were inter- ' u:·wed on NBC-TV's "Toda) .. show Both Democrats and Republ icans 1n Congress united Monday behind Rcaµn's warning that Iran will .. pa) a price" 1f1t persists in trying to trade blows w11h a m1htanly superior force of .\merican warships and aircraft in th{' Persian Gulf Nu nn said toda} that ""e need to rc-c~am1ne our pohq of protecting onl ) 11 (Ku~a1t1)sh1ps. Man) people don't realize it. but 1fa Briush ship or a French ship 1s attacked b' an Iraqi aircraft nght 1n the sight ot our o~n Amencan ship. we don't do an)1h1ng. That has g1' en the perception that ~e ha 'e hncd up with the Iraqis." ··w e·,e got to correct that per- cep11on and we·,e got to re-examine .. .\s time has gone on. the Bnt1sh. the French and the Italians have come.-to assume roles:· he said .. But. indeed. 1f there was a mistake 1n the pohC) onginall~ we did not act t0geth er and get cooperation ~hen this bega n .. The initial platform attack had ht-en in re taha11on for the mine e'\plos1on last week that damaged the l 'SS Samut'I B Robens and inJurcd 10 cre wmen \\ h1te House spokes- man \tarhn Fuzwater sa id there 1s "concl us1,e e' 1dencc" th at Ir.in planted the mine that e'plodcd Fnda~ T~rrorist kidnapper sentenced to 13 years 1 French embassies in the Pe"'1an Gulf -...... H.-A ' r-~ . t .., ...nv .. ;a'~' .... -i ._ DUESSELDORF. West Gerrnany (AP) - A Hamad1's arrest. has been fret"d. Arend appealed do so~ething to block the possible eurad1t1on (t~ I court convicted Abbas Hamadi today and for the release of the second._ businessman Rudolf th t' L n1ted States ) of Mohamme-d Hamada. I sentenced him to 13 years 1n prison for helping Cordes. who has been held since Ja n. 17. 1987. Arend said. . :a'"'C: ··,; "'.eT'lC!c~!·'2C ·:-. ::...~.c. : -. :J-csf :-sr:--· _ o .: .ass~~ :-:::irr: :\:. ::.~s.c abduct two West Germans in Beirut 10 hopes of "Free Rudolf Cordes and sh ow th e world ~our In tes11mon ~ at the tnal. \\ l'St German pohce forcing the Bonn government to free his brother. own humanuy." tht' j udge.said. said the~ had mon11orl'd telephone calls made b~ TWA hijacking suspect Mohammed Hamadi. He condemned terronsm. saym'-: "Tcrronsts Abbas Hamad1. 111 ho has h' ed in '.\est German~ The 29-year-old defendant looked dCJCCted work to bend oth er people to their will... for se' era I )Cars. after hcanng the sentence and slumped into his Arend said that af\cr Mohammed Hamadi's Abdul Had1Hamad1 is Beiru t S<"Cunt~ chief of chair. He made no comment. arrest at Frankfun airport 1n Janua11 1987. -\bbas Hezbollah. a rad ical pro-Iranian h11tc.-:vtoselm Presiding Judge Klaus Arend said Abbas Hamada talked b) telephone with people 10 the group that 1s be he,ed to be an umbrc.-lla for the Hamad1 was guil.ty of the charges of kidnapping. Lebanese capital. including anotht'r brother. groups-holding :::: foreign hostages 10 Lebanon coercion and possession of explosives. Abdu l Had1 Hamad1. Throughout the tnal that bega n Jan 5 • .\bbas Alfred Schmidt. one of two West Germans ·· .\f\er the c-apture of Mohammed Hamad1 Hamada denied ha' 1ng an~ thing to do with the kidnapped in the week af\er Mohammed these men formed a Circle 1n Beirut who decided to kidnapping . San Joaquin Hills Rd . at MacArthur Hits, '°"' · 6pm Daily 640-5800 CLEANING & PRESERVING SHAKE ROOFS Sl\ICE 1°oQ State Licen.s. No. 478940 MAKEYOURROOFLASTLONGER AT A FRACTION OF REPLACEMENT COST' CALL NOW FOR MORE INFORMATION AND A FREE ESTIMATE Carmel Retirement Village is a private community for active seniors in a secure environment. Carpets We're across from Mile Square Park and the golf course. Convenient to shopping and Fountain Valley Community Hospital. 11017 SM~ Founteln v.n.y, CA 714/--8817 FINANCING AVAILABLE 900.AYS • NO PAYMENTS 0 .A.C. FAMll. Y OWNED ANO OPERA TED FOR OVER 22 YEARS (714) 847-2729 Additional Savings On •CARPET • VINYL • ~ARDWOOD FLOORS •WINDOW • TREATMENTS• TILE • MARBLE• WALLPAPER Quality Destgner Showroom with over 1, 000 samples 7391 WARNER #F HUNTINGTON BEACH ' , • Truckers should lead, fallow or get out of the way Truckers are worried that they are getting a bum rap from the Orange County Transponation Commission and thl· South Coast Air Quality Management District. The) 're upset over the growing demand that big ngs be banned from Orange Co unty's traffic-choked anta Ana and Costa Mesa freewa~s dunng rush hours to ease traffic and pollution problems. About 150 trucking and sh1ppmg compan) offi cial gathered in Orange Count\ last week to kick their lobb}. the California Trucking Association.1ntQ high gear 10 counter the tro ublesome trend. e eral count) transponation offi cials were invi ted to thei r meeting to li sten to concerns and gnpcs The truc kers warned that 1f their dell\ er) hour" arc squeezed they"' 111 have to 'put more trucks on the road to meet shipment schedules. They also complained that the) an~ at the mercy of shippers and customers who set delivery timl'!. and that it will be hard to find dnvers who .... 111 .... ork at night and during the early morning hours. The concerns are valid because the trucking industr~ 1s not the onl) group that will ha"e to change the wa} 1t operate to ease traffic and pollution problems. Shippers and those who depend upon trucks for deliver) will be affected. So "' il l e very person who dnves to and from "'o rk. the market or shopping center. Truckers are feeling the first pangs of this painful change. Modifying the way trucks operate will produce significant short-and long-term effects. Limiting the times trucks are on the road wtll 1m prow traffic because trucks are slower. take up more room and are involved in proponionatel) more instances of traffic accident dela)s. Does that make cars more 1mponant than trucks'> :'lio. but It does make controls on big rigs a li kel) candidate for quick traffic relief. County transponat1on officials say they would prefer the truck1n$ industl') begin 'olun1al') effons to help ease traffic congestion . The request 1s not unreasonable since the same thing is being proposed to other industries and companies. The count) go vernme nt has instituted a program that encoura~es count) emplo> ees to use car or van pools. It 1s also attempting to change the hours employees work in an effort 10 reduce the number of cars on the road during the trad1t1onal rush hours. Air Quality D1stnct officials ha' e proposed that pm ate 1ndustn and businesses take s1 m1 lar action. \' o'tuntal') efforts. hke those county officials are asking 0 1 the truckers. would be nice. but both the count) and .\1r Qualit) D1stnct have the muscle to make some change mandatol'). The) have also said the) .... 111 use that clout to get the JOb done. Let's face it, no one likes lO be first. It's understandable that those in the trucking 1ndustl') :ire up et that thl·~ ma' ha"e to change "'hen and \\hen.· the~ drne lnd l\1dual ,m.· going to be upset ""hen their turn comes. 100. but the~ -li kl' the truckers -"Ill ha'e to accept change There is no other choice It's ume for us to begin mo' mg 1o"'ard meeung federal air quaht~ standards and rehe"tng traffic conge t1o n at the same 11me. The onl) wa > we can make signi ficant st ride in that directio n is to change ho w and \.\hen "'e drl\ e \Ve "ill change no t because we want to but beraust' we have to. Truckers and tho se who depend on them to dell\ er guuds should band together and exam ine ""hat the> can do be fore change is mandated . If the) can improve upon the plans proposed b) the .\1r Quality District or count~ T ranspor- tation Com m1ss1on o r o ffer better program s. the~ hould do 1 l. Government o fficials ha'e not corirereathe market on good ideas. The) have onl) identi fied the ob' 1ou'I fir'lt step' to \\ard a goal. Trucking industry officials ha' ea choice. The~ tdn lead. follow. or ~et out of the way. We think a trucking industf") that leads i" in e' r n one''i best interest. Ke s t erson Refu ge U nder an order from tht' state \.\ ater Rr,ourtl'~ < ·ontrol Bua rd. the Departm1.·nt of the Interior ""as suppnsl'd to begin deaning up the tox11. "'aste mec;., at the Krstrr,.nn Na tional \.\'1ldhfe Refuge on .\prtl I But some agncultural interests in the area joined force!. \\1th the federal Bureau of Reclamation lO ll') to persuade I ntcn o r 'Ul'taf") Donald P Hodel to renege on his pro m1s1.· to corn pl~ "11h the order Hodel hasn't g1,·en in to that pre ... sure -hut he ha~n·1 \tane<l deaning an} thing up either. The a ppeal for dela~ 1s a n l'~tens1un of the bureau's persistent efforts to downpla~ the danger at Kesterson while at the sa~e time wlldl> exaggerating the costs of doing anything abo ut 1t. Now the bureau and so me growef"' an the area (who are "ome<i t1ey migh t e' cntua11~ h:h em repa~ pan of the coS1 of a proper cleanup) have enlisted the aid of a pair of congressmen from Geo rgia and Indiana who happen to head the appropnations subcommmee in the Ho uc;c o f Representa- tives that oversees the budget for Interior The two have sent Hodel an extraordinal') lettc.-r ordenng him to suspend the cleanup and announcing that they are withdrawing all funding for the effort. Ifs doubtful that these two representatives. no matter how vaunted their positions, have any authonty to frustrate the will of Congress. which has a lready approved the federal money for the cleanup .... The state water board, meanwhile. sho uld not be deterred from seeking full c'ompliance with its order . The cleanup of Kesterson 1s alread) long overdue. ORANGE COAST ..., .... 1'¥()1 ~ _, Clay ot """ ,.., " ,3JO W S.y SI 1a ....,_ CA AodrlM corr~e to Bo• 1660-~1 ~ CA~ °"''...., Cil1 [MM ,_ Cllllll ""'[dlltr er-.Mt Storts C..M _,.._ 11r.-. Onct« " .... ~OlfKtor ~~ ., ,.,,.. CKl-"lloft Dw«t0t Ct,.. ........ l11wm Ottca ......, ·'These super delegate pledges provide timely assistance for Dukakls because whlle he ·s favored to win New York. has there ever been a more lnvlslblt! front-runner?'· Voters will have to determine if . Jacksonisasbadashesounds It's probabl) true. to borro"' from \tJrk T"'a1n on Wagner. that Jesse JJd .. son 1s not a~ bad as he sounds. but ihl' yuef.t1on an!>cs \\ hether one reall) "ant~ soml.'Onl'.,.. ho sounds that bad nominated for president Thi.'~ sa) -the Jac kson people S3) -that one: should not hold a$3 inSt him ''hat he has ~•d and done 1n the pa-.1 Bui 1t "ould he easier to plead fur Jhsoluuon 1f 1hcre "ere a sign of luntnllon. Thal' hal>n't bee n. saH for :'-Ir. Jackso n·s manicured d1stam- 111g h1msclffrnm Louis Farrakhan (he has not denounced Farrakhan·s hl·,1d) an11-Sc m1mm. he has s1m pl) drnounled antt· cm111sm. "h1ch 1s a grl'3t 1.kal l'as1er and hegs the point) '.'or ha'> thac tx·en an~ sign that Jesse J.1d,,on 1' d1)posed to take a fresh lovJ.. Jt the: planJ..s ofh1s foreign polln 11hl· 'io' tl'l l n1on. according to J,1, hon. 1sn ·1athreat.111s a .. threat .. I 111 ul h 1'> donH·sul poltl ~ (for fal·i...,on thl· l'lunom' is 1hc creaturl· of thr Pl•ntagon and of1ht• vel) nchl Thal· 1'> .1 u:na1n e' oluuon as to form '' hll h tl'nds to be true ot l0 \l'P1tnl' But the ~me intclleu tha1 'r.rnh·d fat J..~nn·., 1nhutes to Castro <•Ul'JrJ JnJ .\'>'><id frame\ h1\ thuughts on rclatl'U matters. In ihr laq dl.'hJll' hl· had "1th the 11thN u>ntl·nJrr<, 1n lhl· ~c" YorJ.. rau.· thr -.uh1l'l I 01 tl·rrun\m came up and Jad·"'n turned 10 \1 1(had Dukak1s and ,,11d 't ou da1m to Ix· against (l'ff\Jrl\n1 \\l•ll. ti \OU art•. do \OU 11ppi1\l' dealing .,..·1th the South \lnlan go'l'rnml·nt" Isn't that a ll'rronst rl•g11nl.'" Pour Du~aJ..1'> Hr isn't allO"'l·d. 1n polt11cs. to U'>l' anal) 11cal gnnder\ It he had Jone \ll one supposes. he·d ha'e bt:cn a,lU'>l'd of racism. or of being soil on ou1h .\fnca H~ mumbled \ome1h1ng about outh .\fnca being .. akin .. to a terrons1 lUUrltf'\ -dnd \\aS ba iled OU! \\hl·n the 11m·c ran 11ut Jar k<:.on should ha ' r bct•n will that terrorism 1s nnt the na11onal pohr~ of outh .\fnca. an) • mort· than 11 "as the natio nal pohc~ of the Jim Cro"' South (the Ku Klu' Klan "as ne,er an arm ot go,em- mi:ntl Dukak1s might haH added that lad<.on hac; no probl~m 1n pr J1\lng the terronst go' l'rnmen1 ol 'r1a. or ot the PLO. or -"ors..· - 1he totalt tartan go,ern men1s bt'h1nd WILLIAM F. BUCKLEY thl' Iron ( urtain. against nonl· ol Ii \t' in .\fnca. and'' c arr not rctemng "hit h ha'> \1 r Jac k\on C\ a propoM'd "' South \II 1ra Ge" rrnor Cuomo sanrt1ons · lllnt ludrd 1ha1 \1r fack~on .. 1s When Go' ~tanoCuomu "r1ghed mnJ..ing a unique rnntnhutton ·· l et 1n 0n thl' r:tlC "1th his tributl.' to U'> hope 11 pn"n Ill bc un1qul.' J.tl k!.on . unl' ''ondcred "hcthl•r the poli11cal 'trU'> 1s lt•thal to 1he mind It ~urpr"l'' ih.H thl' rnnnpal and thl' conscience ... (Jar k\onJ ad-Oemocralll ligurl· 1n .\mer1lJ (\.11 drrsseo; ideas in telllgentl\ and ( uumo is gl'naall~ thousht lo bc '>Ubstant1,ch ... sa1dt oomo lt 1s,en 1hat1 should J\\ll\IJll' h1m ... t'll '>O d1flkult to undCr'>tand ho"' SUl'h an \~l·ophanllrall) \\Ith j'Xl!>lllOn'> and e' aluation ran be made b' an\om• Jndl) ltral \uix·rtil 1Jhtll'\ th;H l'ltha l .lpahlc o(, ngorous 1hough1 Jc:SSl' hl '>l·orn' p1" atl.'h u1 l·l'l' 'hould J:ic kson·s anal_,ucal mode goes.in for d1s4uahf) h11n tr11m tx·111~ taJ..cn \efWUSh dcnunua11ons of na11 onal po hn . .\nd poor Sen . .\lhtrt Gore• Ile described as ··merging .. the corpor-nel.'dS to spend must of his umc ation\ 10 effect a .. purgi ng .. of thl' "<'rker... tn dfert ihe .. -;ubmer<>ing·· l,1 r \pla1ning hi\ JnH·lcdent pos111ons ~ He maJe a pith~ rl·mark about thl' l'urnom~ f h.at 1<. the language"' hl k.son ( .. \\ l' lll'l'd J kaJa. not a i..ind\'rgarten teachers Mr Cuomo·, PH'illhl·r'·i thJt ".i' \h.tllu" and dl'l'P th1nJ..cr hai. proclaimed 't a'i-.er .\rafat ··a trUl' hero" "hose .. commit· '"' id1ou~ 11lwrl' "" 1.tn\lh1ng "rong rnl'nt ICI JU~t1ce is an absolu1r one.' "ith preadll'r'> Pl'r ~I JnJ '>pl.'nt J \tr Cuvmu·s intelligen t and substan· "h1k stra1 ghtt•n1ng 1ha1 out. Hl· ~as t"e canJ1da te has said of h del an U'>l·J b) pru~·rl) ind1g1~?nt 'l<.>" ( a~tru one of th<.> truh Ii h ·d 't ork. fr,,s of panda1ng 10 1he totalit~nans of th" cc 1 · 1~1't~ ~ .. Je" 1sh 'Vil' b) hi\ near·\Jt'r::tmen tal ' n un. ou r ob'> ·qu . t ha t. • r I .\ , struggk1s ourstrugglc .. · ( 11.:~ !1 '' (\(f e "' s \Ir ( uomu il'lls ~s !hat .. ]l.',,e pohc~ "as ll\e m1nutl'S ago ~nd a11 JJl '. 11 has tan) 1 d he: roulJ thml<. 10 \d\ 10 in'1ders "as: "'" unn \a e capaut\ B I · h 1· to '>ummo" passion from people ~ho ut ~11 i.J\\a )~~ pra15e t l' iarmers. ll~ten to him .. Perhaps that was" hat Don ~ ~ou. in ~.c" 't ork. praise th e hr "a' dom s Je''S ~1 urra\ Kemptnn \\fOte fou r g -ummon1ng passion ,ear' ago thai \\herl•a\ Jc,.,,. Jacko;on -"'hl·n hl' le~ 1he march last mo n1h · 1a.,sitied :"ic" York ( 11, ao; al ~tanfmd l n1 \ers1 t~ prote ting a .. H, • "' ·· J.. w I • \t cuur)C 1n \\ l·Mcrn c.ulture. chanttng_ · micto • n. 11 too d la on- .. Hn he:' ho ho v. <.>slern cullurc's dale and Gar~ Han in nu: pnma~ g•Jl IO go :. lampa1gn tu treat 11 as \Ulh If 11 "ere no1 for Western culture. K'illlam F . Buck/~y Jr Is• syndi- "'e "<1uld he It' ing 1n ~menca as the} cated columaist. Burdens of public service should be studied, lightened New appointees often take pay cut and undergo micr~scopic FBI, IRS scrutiny \\hen Ronald Reagan first cap- tured 1hc pre\1denq. I can rcmemher tlw JU) thl· ad,enturesome t iOP tro<•P' had " hen the~ stormed Wa~h· mgton I)< fhl' Republicans. so stan ed for p0 .... er. j umptd at the rhantr to ')l.'n I.' lhe "master:· l11tlc did the} realize what sacnfices that would entail tarr)-e~e<.1 ideologues. the' co uldn't wa11 111 rid the c11y of ah ( arter ml1ucn1..l'' It was several montm bt'fOIT the funs ofhfe-stmk m. If 1he appoin tee "as other than someone nch. ent f)·lcvel. young or female. 1he) \truggled 1n d1s~hef at the d1tTeren cc bt'tween corpora te ~n 1 c and go' ernment service. Rcaganttn often lacked the ex- pertise to survive in the Washinston jungle. "We can·t even get a parking spl'lce." thcy·d Cl'). "The 'Bushics' have •hem all." What a cut in pay! The average w15 21 pcrC'ent and that was ei&ht years ago. And the hoops they had to jump through JU~t to get the appointment. Intense IR scrutiny and microscopic FBI scrutiny kept their ncigh bor1 wild wit h curiosity. In 1978 appointec1 were hi t 'With the Ethics in Government Act. Dis.- closure and d1vntment 1'Quircments vcrc CJpendcd tQ a ridiculous dcpu. Given Waterpte and the numerous indictments and convictions of hi~ officials. I auess this kind of ovcrtull was to be cllpccted. The Bush pcoplt have ~ to the moun.1.11n and att no lonaer starry· e)ed id~IOJun. Where will the nut 1dm1n1strat1on set Its unelected SO\'Cmment? Twcnty·thrte ctnturies qo. Plato said. "He who refusn to ru~ is llabic to be rulrli h\ one who is v.or-.c.· lhan h1msl·lf .. . lf )ou agree "tth Plato. il's not too e:i rl> to lll'\Ch)p a proct>Ss to recruit and l'ncouragc wise men and women to take pa rt in U.S. govcmmental afTa1~. Amencans can look back wtth pndc 10 the ex1raordinary group of c1111en soldiers and civiltan leaders who entered public serv ice when calk d and reromcd to pnvatc hfc "hen perm1ned. l hil kind o1ret>cl· ing of talent and renewal of pubhc leadership was the ~nvy of countncs burdened with closed burcaucnmes. However. asa nation, we ha ve now built in so many disincenuves. hur- dles and roadblocks. that top-quality ptoplc are reluctant to run for h11f\ office. much less be a~inted to one. Remember the travail of Judge Bork? Would you want to~ a candidate to one of the five "executive-level" pcliC) pcsitions subject to Senate confirmation? First of all. you11 takc a cut in pay. and you'll be limited to a IS percent cttlin& on outstde earned income. The federal fO Vcrnment sivc:s mini· mal relocation allowance -no cAJ)ense a«ounts other than for offK'ial travel. You may havedifficul· t)' ~ontinuina private peffsion or insurance prosrams~ and you aive up a commitment that your employer rthirt you after federal service. Your peers assutM that the "psychic in· come" WJH ma.kc up for all your losit-s. Do you apte? You m·ust also make a full pubhC' financial dasclosurt. If IMtt 11 a polential confltet, you must divest or place 11 in a blind trust. God help you if you ~"I to an JACKIE ,. HEATHER (~ ehttSt. e\cl us1 onaf) duh What ~an be done'' Pre'i1den11al candidates ~hould 'llop knocking "big go vernment:· It might ""In them votes. but should the wm who would want to bt' part ol o;uch a disparaged bureaucraC\ ~ The new president need<; to rreatc a climate tn which poltq makers take pnaeln their roles and will sta\in office a productive length of t1m~. Except for eab1net members - raise the pa)' Ltaders in the pnvatc sector '>hOuld support public St'n ice "1th fewer barriers to entl) and em Corporations should gi ve mort' credit to veterans of public service and support programs such as Federal Executive Exchange Program. White Ho use Fellows and the Conference Board's \ongres'l1onal Assistant Pro- gram. They lhould pan1c1patc in the Brookinp lnst1tut1on's shon pro- arams that they tell us aive business lca.dcrs intem1 ve exposure to govern- ment c:xccut1ves and expand their undcrstandinJ of the problems and the pitfalls of public admin tStration. Ollie Nonh should have taken this course. You would hate 10 think prcsidm- halappcintees like Monopoly players be advised to so directly to jail...do notpess Go .. :and do n.ot collttt $200. How can we con11nut to nptt't proplc of htsh quality to serve when the rewards arc so few and tht dis1ncent1vc:s so man)I' ~· Jectie ..... ,. • ,.... ...,. ., Ne,,,.,. 8-d. JONA THAN WOLMAN AP writer ANALYSI S --- The invisible primary n ets Du kakis 105 new delegates By JONATHAN WOLMAN WA HINGTON -On the one hand. Michael Dukak1s has won all oft\\O elections in a row and on a good da} he dra"'s maybe half the cro"'d antl a quart<.>r of the enthu~tasm of Jesse Jackson. O n the other hand. over the past I l da)i. Duka~1s won an in visible pn· maf) the s11c of New Jersc) and qu1etl~ boosted his claim on the Democratic pres1den11al nomination In the h1atu!> bct"een Wisconsin's pnman almo!.t t"o weeks ago and Tucsda\ 's \Ollng 1n New York. Dukak1~ p1l·J..~ up pledges from 105 national con' cn11on delegates. and he \\On another 22 1n aturda) 's .\nzona caucuses. .. He's being lallcd 'El Nue vo Kenne-d) · in 1he bam os around Phoenl\,.. ihc govcmor's Western coordinator. Ri chard Ybarra. enthused after Dukak1s defeated Jack\on and shut ou t Sen. Albert Gore Jr 1n .\nzona. .\II told. the MassachuSt'ttS go' - lffnor stretched h1., delegat~ margin from J mcash 3b to a more subs1an- 11JI 114. Wht•rl' did all thl'Se delegate!> co me frnm" Half q t me fro m Puerto Rico. where (in' Rafal'I Hernandez-Colon de- ll' errd h1<. ble'>sing and S.2 prev1oush unrnmm1tted delclU)trs. But the S' other pledges ma) pro' e more '>1gn1ti1.d nt. for the) ma) s1gn1f~ the tirc,1 rumbli ngs of an establ1sh- mrn1 hJnd"a~on f ht') cam '-' trom among the '>0- l alkd 'IUpa delegates. Democratic part~ leaders and omcehold~rs who an· bcholdt'n to no one and free 10 \Ole 1hr1r consc1cnces - or to sn11T thl' poh11u1I "''nds. -, he nom1na11on ofDukak1s-stt ms all hul IOC\ 11abk -e\Cept when )OU con'l>tder that hl' faces a suff test from Jack,on to<la' 1n -..:e.,.. York and his ~ 7 2-<lclc,ate iotal remains far bclo" thl' ~ o~-needed to win nom1nat1on 1n .\tlanta. ..The popular wisdom 1s that Mike has tx-cn a front-runner from the beg1nn1ng 1n Ne" York .. (but) I ..aid Ill "erk~ ago that )OU should not take lhl· polh too '>rnou~I) and that Jes~ uwld ~1n:· (jo, Mano Cuomo !>3\S ot the DukaJ..1s-Jachon ba11lc :., don't thank an~ thing has changed sinn· thl·n ·· (iorr 1., 1hc ""d card Ii he does "ell. 11 could hun Dukak1s ··1 don·t think there's 30\ douht that he !Gore:) is stronger no"· than he ''as a couple of wc<.>ks ago," Cuomo said ~undn). ..JesSt' is doing well beca usr he draws cro.,..ds. th~y·re cnthus1as1 1c and that ma~ be the vel) bc'it barC'lmetrr of all.·· Du~ak1s. co ncerned that his ethnic su pport ma) bt' soft and his backers must be moti,at~d to vot~. had some infl uential surrogates campaigning 1n "le"' York C'll) on Sunday. He brought in onr of the not-so- nue' o Kenned) s. Sen. Edward Ken- ned) of Massachusetts, for a bnng- ou t-the-votc ~ffort and a fter marl·h1ng in a .. Salute to Israel .. parade. he attcndrd a Gaelic football game and a rerept1on with Gov. Hcrnandct·C'olon. Gor~ "a tounng Hispanic. Italian and kw1sh neighborhoods while Jackson met "'th community leaders in a session set up b) one of his most prominent Jc.,..1sh supporters. Yet for all the a1tcnt1on. New York 1s not the onl) election being hdd toda~ -t•ongress1onal Democrats "111 laucu~ toda) and Wednesday 10 choo~c thl·1r super delegates to the Atlanta con"cnt1on. Most members were .. nominated" 1n dosed-<ioor part) me-etings last wec.-k and Dukak1 did 'Cl) well on both sides of tht' Capitol. even 10 1he Senate. ~ hKh is home to two of hi s remaining nvals. Most Senate delegates remain un- eomm1ttcd. but nine are hncd up with Dukak1s. Gore picked up just four pledges from his colleagues, as well as his 0 "' n. and Sen. Paul Simon -who doggcdl) maintains a onc-st.tte stritcg)' -had two pied~ his own and that of fellow lllino1s Sen. Alan Di'<On. Jackson won no plcdses from the Senate but fared better in the Houst. where I 42 mem~r-dcleptc:s arc still uncommitted. Dukakis has Ptcdees fro m 26. Jackson IS, Gore 12 and Simon 10 (most of them from Illi nois). These super delqatc plcdan provide 11mely assistance for Dukakis because while he's fa voted to win New York. has thcrcevcr bc-cn a more invisible front-runnc'1 The crowds drawn to Jack:son, and the New York 11y mayM...--EclKoch -drawn 10 Core practically drove Dukakis off the local newtcasu., e;11:cept when he was under anack by the Ttnneuee senator. Cklqa•c counten for the M..., chuietu ec>vtmor do not eJtpect •nyone. no matttr who wins. to pick up more than I '°of the lSS ck"91ca at \lake in New York. But that'• a lo• of dtatp~ in the splintered Dmlo- cntic tnvironrnent -ll would pui Dukaltis almos• halfway to • nomi· natan; majority. '-.... ,, ..... ,, ... Art .............. dM.I ...... ..... D.C. • • Feisty 'Graduate' playing for laughs, tears.in Ii·vine IJ IONNIE PEVERGEON ..., .... c.1 0 0 ° In the arcat tradition of intimate community theater -with a auaran- tced funny pjccc by Preston Jones - the Irvine Community Theater is ~ntin~ "The Oldest Livina Graduate.· Reminiscent of Henry Fonda in "On Golden Pond ... an aaed. foul- mouthed Col. J.C. Kinkaid wields his verbal whip from a c-0nfining wheel- chair, creating great comedy laced with tender bits of mclanchoha. Constantly clash ins with son Floyd (this time over a piece of land 'he wants to preserve for memory's sake), the feisty World War I veteran fervently grasps his few remaining shreds of control and self-respect. Director An Winslow well or- chestrates a small collcc:tion of vastly different personalities. including the colonel and his land-grabbing son and daughter-in-law. Maureen; feather- hcaded Martha Ann with her wealthy, egotistical husband, Clarence. and the colonel's pupp) dog-loyal handy- man, Mike. W1I Thompson is superb as the crusty colonel -a show stealer who charms and dcliahts his audience with his hilariously rotten disposi- tion, Usina viJc lanauqe as conversa- tional punctuation. Thompson's characte r vents his an,er, frustration and fear on those he loves the most. resulting in almost constant turmoil. As if to balance the humor of the work. there arc emotional moments heavy with memories of happier times ~d dear friends long si nee dead and buried. Caretakers of Colonel Kfokaid •re son and dauahter-in-law Floyd and Maureen. interpreted by Tom Hardy and J(jny Karp. Hardy is spon- taneous with the possible cx~ption of a slugish banter with Thompson 1n the first act. However, they more than . make up for 1t with a fluid interaction in the first scene of Ac t II where the two seem to feed each other's energy, o ffering a great com- bination of personalities 1n an ex- plosive confro ntation. Karp warms to her role. becoming progressively more believable a!I th<' work develops. Facial expression is well used to enhanc<' her character's communication ofa cynical ~·1t. Handyman Mike Tremaine 1s sensitively rendered by Paul Anderson, offenna a fresh brttze o( compassio n 1n contrast to the staJc air of self-ccntcredness. Marcia Bertholf is the wh1n1ne. empty-headed gossip Martha Ann S1ckengcr. Her spouse. fl()yd 's poten- tial business partner, Clarence. 1s pla)cd by Chuck Salisbury. Obsessed with her own comfort and matenal poucss1ons. 1t 1s almost impossible for Martha Ann to stt, much less understand. the desires and needs of those around her. Bcrtholfs interpretation 1s a bit n gJd. thus not vcr) convincing. Sahsbuf) comes alive 1n Act II for ~me bnt'f. hand- slapping business d1~ou~ w11h flo)d and Maureen Supponing roles arc credited to G arry TeW1nkle. Brancon Belzer and Mananne U\olo l\ For an entertaining evemng.. don't miss .. T he Oldest L1' ing Graduate:· pla> 1ng on th(' stage of T urtlc Rock ( o mmunu' Park at unn,h1ll Road and T urtle. Rock Dn'e ·in Ir. inc. Fnda's and aturda)'> at pm throuith Ma~ ., with a 2 p m. matinee Apnl 14 Yuu ma) call the .. graduate" h1m~lf at 57-5496 for add1t1o nal 1nformat1on Orange Coel1 OAILY PILOT/Tueedey, APrH 19, 1918 A7 ,. I WU ThomP90n replay• World War I for Marcia Bertholf (left). Kitty Karp ln "The Oldeat LIYin.C Graduate." Roches: A jabbing harmohy BJ ROBERT HYNDMAN Of-0.., ........ In 1tght soanng. thrtt-pan har- mon). the Roches sing about the dl"'Cp, Ii n~nne pam of a 'tell m "'ho has been k.n1fod. So'14 1ha1I1m mppltd.. 1t 1s helpful 1fl kno" tht' w11/ 10 IH r is tnplt'd bur 1hr 14hedchatr is slo14 "Knifed .. is a dar ... unsettling tune "'rapped to the nch di01rtilce a capella treatment the Roches ha'e adopted u an unofTtcial trademark over the past decade The treaJmcnt ma) Sttm incon- gruo us 10 the I~ ncs but such uncx- JX"(.·ted ad,cnturt"S art what set th~ th re<' s1'>tef'\ from ~<'"' Jersc~ apan in th<' pop m uc,1c v.orld Ifs the offbeat approath ~uu' \.1aggie and Terre Roe hr " 111 o ffer· in concert at o'clod w n1ght at the ( oach House 1n a n J uan ( .:1p1s1ranu Ha' ing JbanJo nc:d Warner Bros I , ln1o1. ng J handful of acclaimed 'l'• irJ'> lur th<' independent 0 R e~urd'> th.:!><. >I Stt"~ arc domg 11 for • "ll 'Tl')<..' es Thl'.r lat~l otkn ng v.ac, th<' IQ 6 1 Uh ul EP "'o Trespassing.'' .,, 1)1, h ll'iitUrl'd tht' S\ ntht''>IZCf· Jr"n~ hcJ 111k 'ut. th<' \ ocals-o nh i...r..red the: a1n "That "'o n I H.sppc:ri· .snd lh<' o tT-lulter "La \It' 1 :-.1 w \ 1c · "'h1ch featurrs spo .. en .1 J ')1..tng \ rll ~ -\.lrvugh the maJOnt~ of their -..g~ .in-treated tu hght. instrumcn- Magician Copperfield upstaged by his own ego '.J .1rr .sngc:ments tt is the 'ocals that ..:. •'4'~ Stdnd o ut But d o n't call tt fol ~ ""•»1·, J\ lountless cnuc-s ha'e tned In an m tef'\ I<'"-some ume ago the K '"h<"s a rgu<'d against sucn :-:6<'unnoling By LYNNE LASSER ....,,...c... 0 ...... g1c1an ofCopocrfield's caliber ha' e 10 do . L1p-s} ncing Frank ~1natra's pla} the stud~.. . . "Come fl) With Mc:· an a11ractl\ e Case in point No. 2: Copperfield woman from the aud1cnc<' floated on When David C'opperfield stepped tossed a rose into the audience. which a board 1n the levitating 1nck on the stage of the Performing Arts was then tossed back twice more b) To be sure. Cop~rfield 1s a fu nn> Center Sunday aflemoon:-the hoots audience members. eventually rest· and affable entertainer. and mam of and cheers from the sizable crowd ing with the woman who wo uid 101n his tricks do reflect that sen~ of made it seem more like a rock concert him on stage for a romantic ~nano. humor -particular) those with tl-te than a magic show. She was asked to name the city, street death-defying pct duck. Webster. or And Copperfield didn't disappoint and address "'here their date would his parody of M r Rogers· ne1gh- h1s fans -there wt"rc plt'nty of mind-take place. what she'd wt"ar and what borhood. But while then: arc not too boggling illusions. But the art of th<.') 'd do. A "e1led blackboard hung many illusionists who·,e made the 1llus1on too o f\cn seemed to tak<' a from the ceiling. and aficr sh<' had Statue of L1beny disappear. who back seat to the ego of Copperfield. finished the d escription. the veil was wants to watch 11 o n a screen. sated • If you can imagine MTV mixed removed to reveal exactly what she with Copperfield hype. at a hve sho""" with mag\c. you'd have a notion of had described. There were some incredible mo- Copperfield's approach. In contrast Copperfield called for a lad} 1n the ments in the 11 ~-hour shov. This to Blackstone's show earlier 1n the audience who had the fantas) of '1e-.i.er cannot begin to guess at ho"" season. Copperfield's thcatncal scns1-wanting to fly. pla~ 1ng up the innuen-he managed to survive being cut 1n bi Ii lies pla) to a )Oung, hip audience ·~~:!i~=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~T-======~=~~ Take the first lnck. for ex.ample· I r~=::-•sJ.15 ~::==~;;~~:::::~= Fashionably dressed in blac k pants. s.-.o..4-S.T_ ... ._......, ... 0"_11•0,_1•1 white sh in and a black leather jack<.'t. the handsome 29-)car-old 1llusionis1 appeared with his IC$&)' assistant. clad in red. As_ th<' music of Phil Collins blared from the hou~ speakers. the duo cnactt'd a sexuaJly su1Jest1vc dance amid dry ice and dim lighung before he strapped her into the h1gh- tcch disappearing apparatus. Call me old-fashioned . but why does a ma- PRIME T IME So A PS Richard in federal case on 'Crest' BJ LYNDA HIRSCH A-v&<R-WTRE LIFE: .\lice and Joe pay an t'mouonal '1s11 to tht' farm wht'rc Ahct' was ra1SC'd .\hct''s s1rona-w1llcd motht'r 1s d) mg. and wants AhCt' to learn hov. to lt't go ~l'v. s thaf sht' ma) be prqnant lloods Ka} with ft'ar and JOY. u well as v.1th qut'suons about h« ability to bc a good motht'r Facing yet another buihday botht'rs .\nnt'. who ref~ to kt hl'r family or fncnds Ct'kbratt'. A minor illness makt's Ruthu: crabby and Lindley crazy. • •• DALLAS: Clayton learns that J.R fo~ Laurel into bc-d in uchanac for 1nformat1on that got C1ayton ofT1he hook for David's murckr Nicholas' where- abouts arc fC\'t'alcd to Sul' Ellen. Connie. obsnSC'd with Ray. rduS« to let him t'nd the rclat1onsh1p. Kay's Wash1naton ac- tivities put ht'r roman~ with Bobby on the beck buml'r. • • • FALCON CREST: Magi<' bcht'ves Richard was unaware of1he Council's evil doinp. Magil' mo"l'S hick with Richard. Vk k1 returns hom<' Enc stays 1n Eu~ to di1euss business w11h Mldamc Make. An,rla stn\'eS to rekindle the romantt of Mt't;sia and LanCt'. Richard is in trouble with the 1ovcrnment for hts involvt'mcnt with the Council ofThinttn. 0.n C'SClpes dt'ath whl'n Carl) maktt 11 impossible for him 10 drive thl' load Of t'Xplosivcs In h1s truck. • • • &NOTS LANDING: Gary IS susp!CIOUS about the m~ Val is rtttivina from kn. A watt that Gary plans to l~tcn to the last meu1S B<'n lcf\.1111 ioc.UsJ11~ VIJ.'.1. houteand replaces the mnalF tape with• blank cusette. Olivia's suicide attempt is thwarted. Olivia's therapist blames Abby. Manny doesn't cart whether Olivia lives or din. Harold's plan to return to Olivia is vciocd by Manny. Frank. wottina undrr· cover ror Mack. learns Manny is a dnal dealer. Manny's attcntton to Kal't1'I 11 mak1na Maclt}talous. Abby dectdn noc to wort with Otta on a bu11nns taaowr. Johnny tets a fitt at the di& to allow hilt to plllC't an aniract then:. While the duo are wcrtina. a shady rtpte loots Oft. • • • LA. LAW: After a tttm.ary movet IOIM fbldtn, 'knny ~tally ttimts ICMM imponant files jnstmd of duphcatina them. Jonathan tctls ullnd tbat he did 1\. A ptlt-Oddm Brnny conrt.n '° I.dud tb!ltt he ... ~·blc for Ge.........., and is prepeftd .to bt fired. I.dud-... ltnny thlt ht did not fire Jonatllan ud lw will noc fire ltftny -and ems .. = many a unan mu would llOt M"C IUCll aioeaty • ..., ~ DoallM ... low witla llaty. the lowrof'lris IMt .... w1 the ~ °' "" half'•oaer Emil. Errol ..., ill Oft DoallM -ll.-y ia bed, Ot1ICt retWM to tht DA •a.,,.._ Her ftnt .-...mmt it the ~ ol a -"'° ._.. ............... . pf chtb. A Wit ...... dlM dill -lhod...,..1haw1-oW11~ lowl}' ..Ult "' ... COllCle'fttrMiM °" .. .., ..... OftlCt wiM dw c:e.. iltctmt ..... womaft --killed .. ,..... .., "' ..,. otr d• to ..., ... iM"U1Mty • •ETu•• TO SM>WY aJVIQI U (f'G) I JO l •O $ SO • 00 I 0 IS -IGttT~'n, INC Cl ) 12 SS J 1 S JO 1 so 10 20 STAND 6 DELJVE• ~) U ·4S 2:U S·I072S&.t4S 634 2SSJ1 h't.1"'•" ,;n <.111; A"' F w-t A80VE THE LAW (It) I 0 0 l I 0 S 20 7 JO a. t SO .. LO•tk&laS .,C-tn U :lS J ·SO s 00 ' 20 &. t 40 C1ty(t'nl" CE NTUR'V 0 iJ4 ')'411 Mt110011l•I•" ~~S Cit C"t' Sil Cetr MOONSt•UC:lll l•t ~>'00 7 IS t ld a•OADCAST .. wsc•• s ·os 1 is 10 oo ll1JIUI "'' ........... ·-... -'8111Tiffii' .. _..., ... AT•· --....... _ ........... SHOOT TO lllLL <•t 7 SO II AU1n JPG I S SO A. 10 OS P"ATAL ATT•~C•) s U 1 40 9 :U --..,... 10 INOWT IMI •: "',. sms.n 111e:tf~tl1•u MtGI~---... tlial'd•t• ... ~ •••n•ea ... ·---•a11Am .... ...., __ WM&~• D. O . A.(•) Cooo Morn1nt \11etn•m (A ) THE KV'ElllTH Mell, ... MuQ11er1oe (Al HI WAY 39 ··-~--.. 1..~'1.l . n .. ........ fte fllT• half b' a u rcular yv. ~1 \ h~t·• in d1amaier o r ho" he managl'd ,; •um b:lck the hands of time a nd p e~~ his <>1111 m o\ ing hands and f~1 back tugeth<'r stage. onl~ . .s~P.,...l' standtntz r. '-C'a in the m1~d t• • R"l"IA. l m ~r-:' lat<'r .\nd the finale. ··Esra~ . tro m .\Jcatra.z." had him -.i.rangle uut ot .1 strallJac ket t>scape fro m a Jail cd l "1th n'ctt'd steel ba~ acro-.c; ns door and ch mb into a cardboard h<.>\ on ~tan) a1.1d1en\.L memoen ·e· sponded in ..t , ..... ,J ing O\Jt ,,,. .11t~· thl sho"' Pahdf"' 1t v.,n Jt·'<·r• t•..! But -.i.hat H"\on.1tcc; most "1th 1!'!1'- 'ev.er is D.1 ·.1J loppe,...·< d . .,, run the ''v~ 1:---. star -.., H .. ' 1 us1ons Fol.._ music 1s Ilk<' trad111onal rrius1c That's"' hat I think of -songs thot are real!~ old ·· Suzz~ said \\ 'i('n ~ou 't'nt<' ~our o v.n songs. it's "1.ird 10 l'all them folk songs ·· ·\\ e' re: more rnntempol"il0 mean- "! :h.it 1o1.e 1us1 ta~<' from the wo rld thJ; ; "•gilt riov. and not as much from :hi: ;><l'>:~ _ "ABOVE THE LAW" -" (blll "'l UOI 00 I 0 00 "TOKYO POP" (R) s• 1 •u s "SEVENTH SIGN" Ji-, .. , 'M •• ,. "A80VE THE LAW .. tt , •• '~tt • ~4:::9 \.s: ~'4;..; ~ ........... ._ 6J1 Jso i . ., . . •COl.OftS- (f') ... ,. ··•AO DREAMS .. -tr (f') , ........ T :)*N C EN TER t : .......... ~ 751 -4184 I .... , ..... ~ r I • .,o(" 'w • "THE MILAGRO HANf=l£LO WA"" (fl l 1100 z •st0 • JO.-ttoo "•tlOJtt llUJES" (P'G 1S) 1 1~ HO H~tl IOU ·•PtGHT UGtfTS, 9fG c rrv-<"' t ... *'6 l~I .. II!! "9'ET\JMI TO SNOWY MVOt" (P'G) 6 1HJll..ltll "STANO 6 D£LJVE"" (~) S •~100 .0 IS COL OAS fll .. JC ,. ----·eEETLEJUICE A) . .... ~ .. "THE LAST EMPEAOA' (P'Ctl l "QOltCll "M.OXl kUES -ft (~lJ) It" )00.~ :~. »• •• -'. .. AD DREAMS 'M ... , -~-'.It.Ult .&: ·CCH..Df'S- tfll , ..... l )l l •• ~TO~llWO' tP'GI 11 Jtt .. t~s~••1•• BARGAIN DAYS -a TUES. AND WED. t ~cot<>fts .. (fl) ' •• , .. s ·STANO 6 0£llVUr ~ (fi>G I •••a .•.~ "840 Df'EAllS- (fl I ... ,11CY ·aEEnEJUtcE" ll"G I ~ l :it ;~ ·MIGHT LIGHTS * IUG CITY 1911 i )I I·~ t 4l A80VE THE l.AW"' * (Oil) .... FAllfll Y u.-GAJN NIGHTS 12 00 TUESfWEDIT"'-"'S ,._ T STA'IM.D SCltf(NS '"'C Ol. °"9- (f') .. \ ••• It )0 •n .. ,....• ... ... ......,. ...... .... ...... .................. ... ·www1w wa• tt ••uC~. ""ETU"N TO 5MOWY ._.~-(P'G) StS ' ._,~ ··eAO Df'EAMs- (R I l lS l l~lt lS -a.ox• kUES- 1~1>1 .~ l •H S HO It I~ -STA.ND 6 DEUV£"" -tr (~) • • •••1~•• 1•• .. ~TUOtfTS. ~ 8IG CITY~ C"I U• 1 1~ It• A•OVE THE l.AW-~ (bill ,,. ... ttt~ "C.QLOltS~ (Jiii ••••1u~ M Orange Cout DAILY ptLOT/ Tueeday, Aprtf 18, 1888 WE'RE CLOSED TOMORROW !IL 12 NOON TO DOWN OUR STORES WITH SAVINGS . IN EVERY DEPARTMENT. .. THEN FOR 12 NOON TO 9 PM YOULL SAVE 10% TO 50% OFF OUR COM~ AT PRICE ON - DREDS OF HOME ISHINGS :I •WHEN YOU USE OR OPEN A WICKES CHARGE 3 TOUGH GUARANTEES: If for any reason you're not happy with your furniture when you get it home. we will take it back within seven days. WE WILL NOT BE UNDERSOLD. If you find the identiGal item in stock elsewhere within seven days for less, we will refund the difference. We will give you a five-year limited warranty against factory defects in wort(manahip and construction. Details available in our stores. 5 WAYS TO CHARGE: Our convenient Wickes Revolving Charge, American Express Card. MasterCard, Diecover Card or Visa. ANAHEIM: Santa Ana Frwy. and Magnolia. Phone: 714-821 -8550 VAN NUYS: San Otego Frwy. and Sepulveda Btvd. ~en Burbank and Victory. Phone: 818-780-2244 WEST COVINA: San Bernardino Frwy. and Vincent. Phone: 818-919-1971 COSTA MESA: San Diego Frwy. and Harbor Blvd. Phone: 714-540-8242 Open Monday thru. Friday 10-9. Saturday 10-6. Sunday 12-6 . . Diiiy Piiat TUESDAY. APRIL 19. 1988 Orlolee f.ce proapect of 13th straight Ion tonlfht. ~ Ex-UCI at•r Kevin MagH Invited to Olympics tryout. 82. Vikes unleash double trouble against Lions Knba lflCbt (left) and Ste•e Jlo of llarlna couldn •t handle tbe ~J ti&ll bit by Ocean View'• Daniel Hernandes. It 0-. ......... ., ......... dropped for a double, but tbe Seabawka couldn't capltaltu. Later a eolo homer keyed tbe 1-0 Ocean View victory. Vikings can only sit, Ogle record Seahawk pitcher no-hits cell ar-dwelling Marina By RICHARD DUNN o.., ..... c:.. ' •• 1 Just wh en Ocean Y1ev. baseball team needed a hf\, a hardl)·known pitcher thav.ed out from the deep freeze to give the Seahawks a shot 1n the arm. Senior n ght-hander Derek Ogle, whose time in the bull- pen latcl) would not qualify him asa top candidate to throw I a no-h1uer. walked the bases 1 loaded in the last inn ing Mon- day against Marina before ..... _....;;;====-__, finishing ofT the sc hoors first OSie no-hit game ever as the Seahawks squeaked out a 1-0 win in Su nset Lea1tue acuon at Ocean View. "If there was a guy at the beginning of the season that I predicted would throw a no-hitter. 1t would not have bctn Derck Ogle.'' said ~an Vie"" Coach Bill Gibbons. "He would not have been high on the list." Ocean View (3-3-1 . 9-7-1 ). which had lost four straight. needed a wan to stay out of the cellar Baffled by a pitcher being u~ 1n a spare staner role. Manna (2-4-1) was hoping for a httlc1ust1cc in the SC' cnth inning when Ogle walked three in a rov. v.1th one out. "We had men an sconng pos1t1on se'eral times:· said Gibbons. "It looked hke n was going to catch up with us 1n the seventh. Our pitcher v.alks three guys. but he's got a no-hitter going. I didn't know what to do. I don't know 1f It was a lucky decision to leave him in or what, but he ruade the pitches he needed to make (to get the last two outs). ''(The players) were JUSt happy to wan the game. It was nice to have a no-hiller. but we've had four games since a win. That's not to take anything away from Ogle, h<' pitched well." It was p1nch-h1tter (or) t<•lbert. the game's backup catcher. wt.o homered 1n the liflh inning to giv~ the Seahawks the edge as Ogk outp1tched Manna's Sam Chirco (fi,e stnkcouts onl' onl' walk). · ··we go down to the sc'enth and Manna\ unable to score with one last dn'e · \<ltd (11bborh "The) ·re probabl) thinking. '"here\ th(' iust1~ 1• But )OU have to make )O ur ov.n JUSt1ce .. So what makes this no-h11t('r so \P«tal"' For one thing. ~e. 6-3 on last >ear t hamp1onsh1p J\ team. docsn t O\erpo,.er hitters v.1th his fastball .. He has to hits spots." Gibbons said ··He's nut a gu) who throv.s 90 miles an hour ·· Ogle. after v.alking the ba~s loaded relorded onl~ his second stnkeout. then co,ered first ba~ on ground ball out to Man &nram ~le v.alli.C'd fi\e in total. He evened his record to 2-~ You could consider this a ""e•rd no-h111n one which did not require tremetous fielding suppon behind him · .. It wasn't a s1tua11on wh •' there ""as a lot of (Pleaee eee OGL~/83) After 26 miles, they still had a kick left for finish BOSTON ( <\P) -Ibrahim Hussein and Ju ma lkangaa ran shoulder-to-shoulder o'er the last four m1ks of the 26-milc. 3MS-}ard Boston Marathon course. and. with about a m1k to go. their C)CS met Twenty-four miles 0 ' er the rain-splattered roadwa~ s of Boston and 1tssubtlrbs. and the t""o were still that close "I looked at lkangaa. and he looked at me. and I said. 'It's going to be a 100-meter kick .... Hussein said "I thought I had won the race. I didn't even hear his sh~s." lkangaa said. and Hussein passed him on the nght Wlth onl y a few stndes left to v.1 n b) one second Monda\ in the closest of92 Boston Marathons. · Hussein thus became th<' first African to wan the race. and lkangaa. the world's top-ranked marathoner in 1986. was second again. as he was last }Car at Tokyo. "I was a bit upset to be defeated with a few meters to go." lkangaa said. "At the same lime. I was happy to be able to ma1nta1n the pace I set at the Tok)o Marathon ... The Tanzanian coach. Samuel Tupa. said lkangaa was surpnsed b)' Hussein's strong fmish. As Hussein crossed the finish hne. Roben Ouko. ~crctal) of the Keill)an track and field federation. draped the count!)·~ Oag over him. • ··1 kne"" we were going to do well. so I earned the Oag "'11h me." Ouko said "We are proud of our nation ·· And he ""as extremel> proud of Hussein. who had ~aten man) of the world's top marathoners and i:stabhshcd h1mst•lf as a 'ICnous threat for the gold medal in the Seoul 01) mp1c Games in September. The battle !:>(tween the 2<).year-old Hussein and lkangaa . .28 . ""as one of the most sumng 1n the long history of the race. but unfonunately it was not tele\ 1scd li ve outside the Boston area. ESPN. the cable spons network which had televised the race the past two years. ""as unabk to come to agreement with the three Boston network affiliates producing the h ve telcc.ast. H ussc1n 's time was 2 hours. 8 minutes. 43 se-conds - far under his pte' 1ous personal best of2: 11 :0 I in wanning last Novc.-mbcr's New York City Marathon. Killick. Winkelman combine to nab s e ven individua l \·1 r toric~ Manna High'\ 1~1ng\ <.prung their I ·~ pumh )f v. n\m O\tl"r \h1nda' afternoon in J J 'lunwt I t'dguc trad and field ml.'l't ..HJ hc.·1""c:l·n \tare Ka lht li. and \hJr 1r \\ ,. ~t fl .sr thl'' IOd l\Jdualh pr"'HUJ ...... lhl \'1 kes· tearr p< "'" 1r. ~h\· "'•" 11 .ir l'' entual "'~. '' 'l41..~·,1 h 14dSWr1 t•I HllOt P t•ff'l \l 11 for C arlisk 1r. 1 -'"u 11.r " ,,, 1 agatns1 a I 1.0 • Actuall\ th( \ ~" h;1d ., ure lh Jn '"JU)t Ka ll1d .. .ir J \\ "~' t·1 JI ni.• tons1dt:r th1~ Kallu.li. ""On lo ur c •l"Ol' tJj., • ~ the: long Jump .ind tnplr Jun fh "' • respectabk etlor"~ vi 20.Q J' .1 ,.' ' the discus 111 I ~ l .. q and th • 1~' hurdles 10 1.; ~ .\II ~ 1nkc:lm.in J1J ".t) r.;n ..1• run, and run He ""on thl ' ~, c: ti--, • • (.l ti) and"\_• ,1101 - ··1 don t ~n '"' ""hat " i:: "'llhout \ht'n \J1d lht:' •'J' .. Da' c 0 1..ur .s I'll"' re.-"' • t"'• team onc.-ntcd .i'lu ust '-'ant t "'n '"' ""hat the' hJ\l · do I ir :ht" :t"am 111 ha'e J ""inning.,.. >1c: .. \lc1n. 1!>n t •ur be~t d1~u' •hr••"" C'f buthegoc\ ut.ind ""IO''hJt '"Jr docs a pcf'\una. ~'>t 1n the tnpk ,\t the time the point<> ""en.· \('I"\ mJ)(ln· ant ··" estmmster ""l~ get11ng wml" rc~all~ guod pa 1 rmanct"\ and ~c.-tt1n~ somc.-pf'\ and "'t nr<."de'd the J)(ltnt\ .it tne 11me .. ha non -ht' JUSt run\ '•HI l'nough to l41n It "'ould hJ't' hl-l"n n J1l·uJou~ to Ill h1m..elf"'tth an•ll he1 m~·t thl" Thur<id.i' and the:-\11 '-.tl Jn, 11atwnal ')a111rtl;1, 4' ...__._... "In long-distance ru nning. changing pact's 1s a big problem." Tupa said. ··You cannot Just change pace hke a motor car. Sometimes. that person takes )OU b) surpnsc. and you can't pick 11 up." The previous close1t Boston finishes came 1n 1978 when Bill Rodgers edged JcfT Wells and in 1982 ""hen .\lbcno Salazar defeated Dick Bcardsle) -both by tv.o !><:Conds. Kenya'• Ibrahim Ha.eelD bl ta the tape at the Boeton Mara· (Pleue eee 808TON/82) thon lD 2:08.43. Tanzania'• Juma Ikangaa traila. * * * Women's field routed by Mota BOSTON (AP) -Portugars Rosa Mota ran hcrsec:,ond best time and the second best for women in Boston Marathon history to capture the laurels Monda) for the S('COnd straight year by nearl y five' minutes over her nearest nval. Mota took the lead at the 3-mile mar1c and womed only about the clock from there on as she finished an 2 hours. 24 minutes, 30 seconds. The time was second only to Joan Benoit's 1983 Boston Marathon rt'COrd of 2:22:43 and she was a mmute behind her own best time posted an the t 985 Chi?JO marathon. Angels kick one away with a balk Oakland rallies with three in bo~~~m of eighth f o: vtct~ry OAKLAND (AP) -Cun Youns of the Oak.land Athletics committed an early damagina balk Monday night. but the California Angels' DeWayne Buice made the balk wllich was fatal. "I heard the umpire yell 'balk' and staned home. The pitcher ran at me likt' he was go1n.J to tackle tne," said Glenn Hubbard, who scored the e1ghth-1nning run that made the A 's 5-4 Wlnners. Oak.land c•mc t:.ck with thrtt runs 1n the eighth after Wally Joyner's first home run of the season. a two-run shot. gave California a 4-2 lcad an the top of the inning. "The game was definitely lost by us. It wasn't ""On b) them ... Bu1et said. "Balks can change the outcome of a game.just g.1ve 1t to another t~m." Buiet was penalized for not com1na to a full stop. 1n the opinion of third-base ump1rt Dale 0 11 Th(' pitcher thought he was innocent. "The champ1onsh1p this }Car '-'Ill ~ dt."("tdt'd b~ the umpirts. -the Angels' frustrated managa . l ook1e ROJ3<. said. "What can I say? Both team$ had runs on a halk." -\0 \ Manqcr Tony LaRussa said. His team. 1n breaking a th ree-game lo~1ng ~trcak survived us 19th balk 1n I J gaml's The .\ngels ha' e committed onl) nine balks. Terry Steinbach singled leading ofT the -\'s rail) and Buice replaced staner Dan Petr) Mike Gallego ran for Steinbach and went to S«ond on a "" 1ld pitch. tan Ja, 1er doubled Gallqo in and. after Hubbard singlC'd Ja, 1er to third. Dave Henderson. pinch h1111ng tor Wall<'r Weiss. hit a sacrifiet fl). Camey Lansford "as safe on SC"C'Ond base-man Mark Md..cmort's fielding error. and. "'1th t"o outs. Jose Canseco walked. load•na the baSt's. With Don Ba} tor up. Buice. ()..l. balked home the v.1nn1ng run. Eric Plunk. 1-0. ""as the winnt'r The schedule 4WAY T,"' ;"''--04' 4"<1 1 JS om • Ao• ~ ..... r\C 11 IS om HOME Aor :•-~all .. 1~S D OT> Aor :~-~al!le 1 OS om Ao• :J ~a•11e 05 om Ao• :'•-~a">e H>S om Aol' 1S--IO•f • On T Cnanne< ~ • A, ga~s on l(MPC. 710 .. Ht' ""a!> t~ 1ng to hold something b.tl t.. for the rt'st of the v.eC'k ·· "1nt..c.-lman has best!> of Y·UJ in the 1 ~oo list "-rcad1a1 <a· 11 n1 the I bOU llJ'>t \l"3r v.hen ht' didn't ha'e to dnublt't .ind I 59 in lhe 80 r hl' \\ 1n t..c:cp\ \1c1nna I 2-11 v. tthan r.in~t" 11 f.d1sun 1 '-01 ftSt""' he r<' \.1onda\ in an ab- brt' 1ated Stht'dule. "".llh JUSt two of la,1 fhursda' ·'> ra inouts getti ng in 1ht h.slJOlt 1t·ntdt 1 ,d~ !>('t for toda~ •Doag Dav11 of Corou d~I Mar ""un the 121 ~ ard high hurdlt''> 1n I 5 0 'l.sJ n~1he 'x·J "-ings 3-ll to .i 121·1 5 "1 n "l'r f: \t.i nu a 1 n a \t>a \-It'"" l t·J~ur met't < hm ) agt·rte ncr of f 'ldll Id had J thCU14 Of sr1.1 In tht' ,1 ot put In g1rh ml't"h •Jill \' oung of Corooa dt'I Mar. ·:1J..,1ng hi:r fir'lt !>tan ev('r 1n 1he ''0 .. rd lo"" hurdle.,. surpnM.'d t'' c.-n her •Jl t running a .; ., 6 1n d 'c:.i \ 11."v. I t'Jg_Ul me-t>t ag;u nst E'itanua Tht' 'x•J "-ng., v.on. 6 -SQ . < •JJ h COitC''e Kacz~nst..1 ha d i ''""~ .i 'nphomore. in lht" ract' to wt .>. hJt 'ht: t·ould a.garnst team matt 1 ht t.. l \101<,o and Estancia~ C ind) I\ Jt'>(.111 \1o1so and Pearson dut'IC'd 1 ·!ht'.-r<.t halfofthe race but Young .. .,t·d J \tr ng li.1cli. Ill clod, tht· fa'ltt'St • -.1l· tn kagut' th1'> season \hmt ""hCl placed fifth in the (If fnJI' a \t:ar ago "'11h a J~ .3 ""as .,._.,onJ 1n J 5 ""ht lc.' Pea~on fin- 1\htd third 1n J 4: C mina .,d·La,ne t-..err ""on the 100 \JrJ da'h 1n 11 'i and Cd\1 team- nut{ \.ind1 Lul a~ ""lln lhl" tnple Jump "'•th .i '\.; "' PeJ""" \fled to a I ~ in tht· l I'' ' ird hurd It'' a'> J1d \101\0 e'A.no K11s1ngt'r It'd \.1anna to a 1• :t . .,... ! h1.1!>t \\ ('Stm 1ns1er 1n \l.n\~;I l ~'lg.JI.' rla\_ ta IMlt \hC hur• Jk•, 111 1" and .l ~ to olTSC't the dTnrt' o l "t'<.trn1n\tl"r·, hdhe- 1 ><.. hlul.. "h "'J\ J douhk winnn en tht' ~fN :-• Jnd .lt)()t i. 11t. \t 8 area girls chosen for All-Stars South unit f-1,... u'l\C'l L ,·a~uc \WnJout girh a• 'x ~·n h "tr I r th<." iut h in thC' I 1r J nn..ia '>ra,...2e C 'U"'' .\II. Game ""hll h "''II ~ pla,ed at 1he B rl'l f\l·:i:' { cn1t·~ •ri the l Cl C'ampus June 2' \tahnJ H1gti 'f)J" ... l harro1ri and Oc-l· Oc-c ~ttgar Hun11 ng1on &ach '' T:lm1 l ht\'.' Hunungton &ach\ 1l'f4n1e Pl·mper anJ Ed1wn·s Wend' ~and-.11.'dl an.-amoni the • uth ~uad >''·~-·J lllr E.l r < tt, ( ll.llh (1reg ) eel.. \1.,0 twm tht· Orangt• ( oast are" l'l E \lJnu J ' ha"' '13 '""' hc'rn "ooJl'-n dg( ·., "'ath' \f 11lat and l ~'"' 1 hri .. t an' L .\a Wli11nt' c int" ,, :ht" tnp girl'> ctwsrn tor ttre '· •u: ' \t " m \It'"'.' T~c1a '' '1~hJT .I '> '•l\.ll-\tJrk t v.h0 "·" t~. -.. u• .. l •a<i>I L.ea1wt··.,. \10 .. 1 \ J .J ... ll p J\{" 'it· J-c·'.tf('~ ·" i""'tnt' and <J ~ ~"J' .. !!Wn l in leaJ mg the D1at-l., : ·h( t'.lllu<" ,hamf'tOO\htp 11'\ ... gn<' 1 "' • ., thl' I '11\('r'\ll\ nl lb \J ,,.,._ ' •r'"' mu.h a"'arc 01 '' ~r,, · ' ........ t., a., ""ell as thfl'<' l th r" •• 1111 i.w \1,uth l oast. inl~lud· "~ 'l , "':i f I.tint' ) oun~ and \n,jr,J' u"'~ 'I , ~ ' :hnl •tar coa h at El l l•r. ir .! h.t' l"i'tt'd a re'Cord ot •' H.· "'-.i"1stC'd h' Jim lrb\ t\1' I"' ,,•n 1 .1<.•i .. tanl at f l Toro · I Ii. '' ,.~ ,, ,,13,hed bv Full · l" IPI ' \ 'lill F \Hl1 and among ht~ , h.1 r~,' 1·\ ,.~ "'' R,)hin ~ahrool.. of I .1 H.t"'J <x·a"T • n, "'·'' lhl' \1 \ P of the I ~·'c"' J' i "'~·'t .rnd v.a' the ~ond kJdtnf ,, re.-• 1n <'rang<" t ount) v.1th Jn J '\'!J~l • .it :1 •J>l11ntsa g.ame he 14,)\ 11 • l"J~Ul \ \l \ p t .... 0 )'C'.&r'\ runn n~ JnJ hJ~ ~linC'ti v.tth the l n" , .• , • , t 'utht'm C ah fomia T hqwmt ''J>l.m~1rt'<l t>' the Co ta \k'\...1 i... "Jn <.t lub Fin1shina second -and first amonaa strong contingent offinn1sh women -was Tut)a Jousimaa at 2:29:26. Odette LaP1em of Canada wasthirdinaclusteroffourwomcn in the 2:JO..ranac. Fourth. fifth and sixth respectively were Britain's Priscilla Wekh, who at 43 won the Masten division, and lizanne Buss1ercs and Ellen Rochefort. both of Canada. Mota finished behind 63 male runnen. Her time was the seventh best all-time for a woman. A blue chip night for Leary in 6-0 Dodgers win Ammann to Stanford Kea Ammann. I former All-CIF s&andoulfor Edison Hi&h School. has commit&ed his junior and tnuor leUOftl In buketbell to Scanfbrd. He"lJ redabirt for OM one ltQOn afttt sptftdint hit ftahman teason at Cal State Bekcnftdd and toOhomoft w:uoa 11 llucbo Sanw.> C'ollclr. While 11 Rancho Santillo, undtr COKh Dana Paertt.. he 1vft'llfd over lO points _per pnw i• belpiftl iht Dons to a 2 W ovtrall reconl. At 6-foot ·l bis major mponsibiJities will be •• lhootiftl paard. Padres stifled on three hits, go down on s kes 11 times LOS ANGELES (AP) -Tim Leary pitched ~Nit he called pmbebty the best PIM of hit Ii~ Monday ni&ttt. limitina San DietO to only three hits and stn'k.ina out a career-It• 11 batten 11 the Los Anttl~ Dodlen beat the 1'iMtftl 6-0. "I had two sJ.utoutl in the American Leapc and they wett four-.hinen. .. 1...-y llid. "I tot abctld ofthe hitttn. That's vay impon.ut. rm just aoina to ao as hard as 1 can. with the bullpn we ha~. "1 fttl suona. I fidt strona all wintn and spri~ i..,ar-<>kt npt-handcr lllO hed. two- ND Malle to cap 1 lbtenan thard-1nnisw rally u the ~ ~ IJI thrir Nftl in the fint three inn1np. ., couN IUI pretty wdl whcn I WN ,.,.... .. larytaid witll a unite ... , do lake to swiftl the bat." ~ Lary. 2-0. walktd Oftty IWO in pitcbi"I htl first comJ*te lllM sintt be was W1th the Milwaukee lrewm 1n 1916. The only San Dtcao hits v.ert a double b~ Benito Santiaao in the S«"ond inn1na. a s1n&k b Tony Gwynn in the third and a single by Rand) Ready in the ninth. uary had 10 of h11 stnkcouts tn the first five(' inninp and struck out five in a ro .. at one st.qc - the last two hitttn in the founh and all thrtt in the fifth. His ~vtous carur-haah 1n slnkC'Quts was ftine. ..Lary was a one-man Wl'Ccima cttW 1e>-aip&... Padres man., l.arry Bowa said "He m•t beat the '27 Yankca the ..,.> h( was throw1.ftl I.he bell. He had lhe bnt stuff 1',t tten to far this year ... Leary was l-11 for tbt Dodern la.it tieason But he elCldlcd in winter ball. eoena ~wt th• 1.24 earned Nn avenee for Tuwana of the Mn1ca.n Winter I~ Thai .,aforrnance. pl.as the Dodern · tredc of Bob Welch to Olk&and. p~ tum a shot at the club's suniftl rowioft. .. , tlli1d ht ""'1 Ins arm, I tlunk ht was favonna it .. Oodam mullll" Tom Lnon'l& "6.J whnt uled about the chffbcftee oflary from lut year to t.tus. .. He~ Qed to tbf"OW1"11t that,.._ .. , think he s '°' mote enenstt0n on has dC:lt\C'f' thl\ \('ar tte p1t.-hC'd 1ust h!Lc-~lhlh (\\etch ) ""ould ha'e He had a good fastball. good rommand. he had that good forkhall .\ pmt hke toni&ht h.i h.' g.t'l" him a lot of confidence ·· lh~ 000~" took a 1-0 ltad off Enc-• ho~. ()..3, on a ru n-sconng stngk b~ ~ro Ouc~ro 1n the fint innini. tt''C' SaA hit a two-run s1 ngte 1n the ~"Ond and 11l e 10 aa·s RBI dc..)ubk l noc!Led ho~ out of the pmt 1n the third u ar) follo•C'd •1th hi\ t .. -o-run S.Jngk utT ~lrt' t.r Cane!) 1cm1 'C'ntcmi the pmt batttn&Just I 0 and had onh '"o hits 1n h" m t ft'C"Cnt ~ at-bets In add1uon, he hAd Ju t four hit~ in l1ftt1mt' at-bat ap1nst ho• But Mntkd in h1 first , .. o at-bat -thf' fiBt hclpcod t.M ~ 9C'OC"C thcar rtf't run and the t«Ond dro'-c 1.n lbclr ttt0nd and third n.1nl Los Antcln \tft·flddcr K1r\ ••bton •u 1 late f(TltC'h from the tantna hncup bttauw of a putlC'd hamstnl\I. The Oodaen abo had to rcpt.a.ct John • hclb end • dunna the pme -Shetb\ beau"' or. tclt abdominal mu k lltain and saJI btauw ( • ~·n«i n.ah• n na fiTilt' Tiie ecbeduJe .... T Oft!Gl!lt-1.,_S.l\ 01eOO 1-0S em Aor'* 10-Sain O._,, 1 ~ e"' Acwl 11-s.n Oleeo. 7~ D m AWAY APrll n-S•n i:~.~sco 1 J! • m • Aorll 1~ S:r•l'ldte», ltJO om Awll ,.,_* Fr~Jvo •ti om • AoirA u-tdlt • On T\I, CMMll " • A•..,,.• lt•ec .-.-o no • \ • • °'9nge CoMt DAILY PILOT I Tueed11Y, April 18, 1"8 _H w long_9ari Baltimore stay q_ for the se~son? .. .. Hapless Orioles trying to a void adding to list The Orioles' 4-1 loss to the qevcland games. Orioles hatters att hitlns in their last Indians Sunday put them within one loss of 27 at-bals with runners in scorin' position. the major-leaaue record for consecutive losses Cal Ripken Jr. hasn't had a hh an 29 at-bets. at the start of the season held by the 1904 the IOf\IC$t hitless stttak of his career. and is Washington ~nators and the 1920 Dctro!t bluina .047. Tigers. Pointina to the lack of support. catcher couldn't wan. Bodcltckrr struck out l 0 in a completc-pmc pcrfonnance Thunday niatn, but lost 4-3 to Kinas City. The Royals' winni"I n.1n scored when left fielder Jeft'Stone I01t a fty ball in the liahts. "You don't make chantn that. you don't think arc soina 10 help this club 1n the Iona run." Robmson said. "But then qain. the ~Y we arc aoioa. 0-12, you could do somethlf\I different to loosen them up. Maybe send them up to hit standi na on thci~ head or SOf!?ethina. Anything. Go up there wtthout a bat. BALTIMORE (AP) -The numbers arc 1ett1.,_ to the Bahamorc Oriol~ -the zero in the wm column, the .186 betting average. and. maybe the toughest of av to take. the 12.game losi'na streak. The Orioles wall be trying to avoid the Terry Kennedy said ... You can't blame the record book~ when they open a th rte-tame pnchers if they feel like they have to throw a seri es with the Milwaukee Brewers tonight an shutout. Milwaukee. He couldn't resist adding. "But then it McOrqor pve u~ three runs in 7 1·3 inninp, has loqest stint in almost a year. but lost 3-2 Friday niaht. Cleveland manager Doc Edwar~s is sure "Balli more is going 10 come out of at. Baltimore manager Frank Robinson. who took over halfway throuah the losing streak. is trying to keep the team's morale from getting worse. That zero an the win column ts magnifying would only be a tie." everythina. The Orioles' last four IOSSH, by a total ofsix "Losing 12 or 13 games is one thin'-'" runs, have been particularly frustrating. Morpn ~itched nine inin.np ofshutout ball Saturday naaht. but the Orioles fell 1..() in 11 innings. "And when they do: they're going to kick somebody's tail ... Edwards said. "They've aot too many quality hitters on the ballclub to stay d own too long.' "I don't want to panic and then they thank I'm losing confidence in them," Robinson said. "l have to keep a level head o ut here because all kmds of things arc going through their heads ngh1 now. I have to keep a level head and show that I have confidence 1n those guys." Orioles manager Frank Robinson said. 'A "The most difficult thing is, the last four loss 1s a loss. But what makes it doubly tough is nights especially, that we've been in every that we haven't won a game. h's notJUSt a 12· ballgame and wejustcouldn'tget the hit to win or a 13-game streak. h 's that we're (). and it." designated hitter Larry Sheets said. whatever." Kennedy said, "We easily could have won "Our ERA came down bis-time this homestand." Kennedy said. "So d id our batting averaac. When asked 1r he'd ever been throuah a losing streak like this one, Kennedy said, "One time in (American) Legion ball. we lost every B'lme. That's 1he last ume I've ever Sttn anything like this ... The numbers behind the Orioles .186 thrtt of those aamcs." a verage are no less discouraging. The Orioles have go tten excellent pitching The~ '\C.' scored one run an their last 27 performances from Mike Boddicker, Scott inn mg!> and haH' put across I 7 1n their doze n McGregor and Mike Morgan, and still Robinson, who has remained remarkably good-humored through his first six games, wants to avoid any drastic moves just yet. -SPORTS BREAK ' British continue in quandary over Zola Budd sta~us From fte Associated Pre11 LON DON -Efforts to save the m career of South Afncan-born d1stanC'e runner Zola Budd intensified Mo nday as the athlete's coach and Bri tish traC'k officials announced the) we re seeking legal advice. The government also intervened, sports minister Colin ~oynihan sa) mg he would be "II ling to help study ways of keeping Budd on the team without opening the door to an o\frican boyco11 Qfthe summer Ol)mp1c Games. .\ spokesman for the Bn11sh spons min1stl) s~ud Mo)nihan "would be prepared 10 have a meeting" 'A 1th track officials 10 tr') and help solve the cns1s. But. the spokesman stressed . the government would not ~otherwise become involved. The Budd affair dominated newspaper editonal~ in Britain and South 4.fnca, and opinion was mixed But more of her teammates urged track authont1es hert.' tO SUlnd by the 21-year-old In her hour or need. "J will be talking with laW)ers on Zola's behall because 1r J do n't, nobod) w111 :· said Budd's coach. John Bl)ant. Shortl) afte~ards. the Bnush .\mateur Athletics Board said 1t v.ould be going the same wa). - "Clearl) we need the strongest legal opinion before next Sunda).'' BAAB spokesman Ton~ Ward said. "There ought 10 be a compromise s1tuat1on that we can reach." Sunda" 1s when the board will decide whether 10 com pl) "1th a mandate from the sport's go' erning bod) to ban Budd for a minimum of one-year for I mks to her homeland. or nsk the en11rc Bnush track and field squad being barred from the Seoul O lympics Last Saturda)'. the International Amateur .\1hle11c Federauon's ruling Council said It "ould C'Ons1der ~ng Britain's membership 1f Budd was not re)ifc)\,ed from the national squad. a move that would bar all this count I) 's track and field athletes worldv.1de Quote of the day "When a man rc11res. his wife gets twice the husband. but onl) half the income ... -Cbi 01 R.clriq•ez. Wheelchairs: Frenchman routs field at Marathon 26 miles. 385 yards: less than t wo hours with a wheel chair BOSTON ( A.P) -Moussetapha Badid of France overpowered thf wheelchair dt\ ISIOn or the Boston Marathon on Mondav and won the 26.2-m ile race in a world record 11me or I hour. 43 minutes. 19 seconds Badid, 23. a resident or Ponto1~. France. led the hillv race at e' l'n checkpoint and finished with a lead of more than I I minutes. battling a cold steady dnzzle. He took six seconds off the wo rld record set by '\ndre Viger of Q uebec in this race two years ago In second place was Bad1d's neigh- bor and training partner. Philippe C"oupne. a 25-year-old resident of Ponto1se. who finished 1n I 54·~ Finishing third was Bosse L1ndkv1st. 29. of Sweden. in 1:56·58 . ··1 thank J was stronger than o ther people," Badid said afterward. speak- ing an English with help from a translator. Badtd. who was bom without the use of his legs. thrt'w his heavily muscled arms an the air and smiled broadly. Unseeded Gurney tops McNeil HO TO -UnSttded Melis ~ Gurne~ o' ercamc gusty wands and danled third-seeded Lon McNeil with accurate passing shots Monda)' for a 4-6. 6-2. 6-3 v 1cto~ an the S250.000 Virginia Slims-Houston te nnis to urnament Gurne\. ranked 96th in the world. lost the first set. w1th the first w. games decided on service breaks. But shl· took control of the winds raking across the Westside Tennis Club in the second set and started passing McNeil. who tried to attack the net. McNeil. ranked I 0th in the world. struggled throughout the match. Sh'e had to go to four deuces 10 hold her sen e in the fifth game of the final set. Then. 1n the sc'enth game. she was broken by three stra1gh1 passing shots and a fo rehand error Gurne~. "ho hasn't advanced past the second round of an) tournament this )Car. broke McNeil again 1n the final f.lme. \'Inning it on the first match point when McNeil sent a voile) wide. As a 1 5-~ear-old schoolgirl in 1984. Gurne) tool Chris Even to three se ts before losing 4-6. 6-4. 6-0. T"'o ~cars ago. she upset Kathy Jordan in the U.S. C'la~ Court Champio nships. "I've pla)ed 1us1 about all the top 10 player\ to three sets. but l've never beaten them ... Gurney said." 11 helps m) confidence on cla) to beat someone in the top 10 .. McNeirs loss was the second upset of the fim round. which was dela)'ed three hours by ram. Gretchen Magers of San Antonio. Texas. made e1gh1h-seeded Rosal> n Fairbank the first upset '1ct1m with a 6-4. 6-2 \ l<."tOf)'. Fairbank double-faulted twice in each o f the three games she was broken an the first set. The South African also double-faulted at game point to fall behind 4-1 in the second set. Losing all four of her sen·1.ce games. Top-seeded Manina Navraulova plays Iva Budaro' a and second-seeded Chris Even plays Mana Landstrom an first-round matches today. Mariners s~nd Diaz to Calgary SEATTLE ( .\P) -· The Sea11le Mariners announced Monday that they ha"e sent infielder Mano Diaz oumght to C"algaf') of the Class AA.\ Pacific Coast Ill League and purchased the contract of first baseman Brick Smith fro m the same club. Diaz was the on!) Manner without an appearance this }Car. Smith was batting .222 with 4 RBI for the Calgal') Cannons. Manner first baseman Al\ an Davis pulled a groan muscle Saturda) night and Sm11h has been called up to replace him. He was an the hneup at first base for Monda) ntght"s game with the Chicago White Sox. Magee invited to Olympic trial Cavs·clinch berth, 112-107 . COLORADO SPRINGS. Colo. -• RIC HFIELD. Ohio -larT) Nance m Two-time All-American Danny Manning scored 24 points and Mark Pnce hit two or national champion Kansas. as well as free throws with seven seconds left to put (ormerAll-American ~evi n Mageeof UCI, the game out of reach as the Cleveland led a hst of93 pla)ers 1nv1ted Monda> by A BA USA to Cavahersclinched their second playofTbenh 1n IO>ears next month's Olympic Tn~ls. with a 112-107 victoryovt'r the Indiana Pacers Monday Four players were 1nv11ed from Final Fo ur teams.,. •night. Oklahoma and Arizona. while seven schools had three Cleveland won for the ninth 11me in its last 11 pla)'ers extended opportunities to make the U.S. team sames and assured 11selfofa1 least the No. 7 playoff spot that.will play under Georg~town \oach John Thomp-an the Eastern Conference. Indiana. which has l_ost son in the Seoul Games which begin on Sept. 17. seven straight road games. dro pped a full game behind Invited from Oklahoma were Mook1e Blaylock. New York and Washington, who are tied for the final Stacey King. I?ave S~eger and Harvey G rant. while 1wo pla)'ofTspots w11h three gamcs 10 pla~. Arizona had 1n v1ut1o ns extended to Steve Kerr. The Cavaliers. who evened 1he1 r record at 40-40. Antho n> Cook. Sean Ellio11 and Tom Tolbert. led 11 0-106 after John W1ll1ams made one of two free The trials will be begin Ma) 18 at the Olympic throws w1th 15 seconds left . Training Center here. Between 30 and 40 pla)ers will be Indiana's Scott Skiles sank one of two foul shots named for th<." final two days of trials which will include eight seconds later 10 get the Pacers w11hin three kales a doubleheader at McNichols Arena in Den,er on May then 1mmed1atcl)' fouled Price. "ho h11 both free throw~ n for a fi' e-point Ck' eland lead On Ma) 24. approx1matel) 20 players will be 1n\ 1ted to continue training at Georgetown University in m1d-J ul}. The final team of 12 playe rs will be determined before Sept. 2. Television, radio Manning and Delray Brooks were the onl)' high school players invited to the 1984 Trials. Alonzo Mourning o flnd1an Ri ver (Va.) H.S. was the onl} high school pla)er invited 1h1s time. Mourning. a 6-foot· IO cen1cr. has signed to a11cnd Georgetown. TELEVISION 11: 15 a.m. -PRO BASEBALL: Montreal at Chicago Cub~ WGN. ·U5 p.m. -PRO BASKETBALL: Chicago at New York. TBS. ~ 6:30 p.m. -PRO BASKETBALL: Lakers at San Antonio (dela)ed ). Channel 9. David Ro binson. the 1987 college playe r of the )Car and the NBA 's top draft choice last year. was 1n' 1tcd as was fellow Armed Forces competitor Kevin Hou!>ton. 6:30 p.m. -PRO HOCKEY: N HL Stanle) Cup playoffs -Edmonton at Calgary. ESPN. 7:30 p.m. -PRO BASEBALL: Angels at Oakland. Channel 5. Spartans in early PCAA lead 7:30 p.m. -COLLEGE BASEBALL: ll( Santa BarbaTa at USC (delayed ). Prime Ticket M idnight -COLLEGE BASEBALL: LSll a t Miss1s.s1pp1 State (tape). ESPN. Leader Patnc1a Hurst scored opening !I rounds of 78· 76 on Monda~ to give San Jose State a 28-shot advantage in "the RADIO Pacific Coast Athletic 4.ssoc1a11on's "omen's golfchamp1onsh1p an Mission VieJO. The final 18 holes will be pla~ed at Coto de C"a1a toda}. San Jose State. defending PC .\A champion. had 626 after 30 ho les of pla y Monda\. 6:30 p.m. -PRO BASKETBALL: Lakers at San Antonio (d elayed). K.ABC' (790). 7:05 p.m -PRO BASEBALL: San Diego at Dodgers. KA BC ( 790). K FM B ( 760). Rams sign up four free agents 7:30 p.m. -PRO BASKETBALL: Clippers at Sacramento. KRTH (930). 7:35 p.m. -PRO BASEBALL: Angels at Oakland. KMPC (710). The Los Angeles Rams have signed a Eil total 11 free agents. including four signed •II• Monday. the NFL team anno unced. WEDNESDAY TELEVISION Signed Mo nda) for the 1988 season arc. Thomas Henle). wide receiver. Stanford: Greg Roskopf. nose tackle. Nonhern Arizona; James &awnght. linebacker. South Caroli na and Guy Teafatiller. nose guard. llhno1s. 11: 15 a.m. -PRO BASEBALL: Montreal a1 Chicago Cubs. WGN. WEDNESDAY RADIO ,,,. ,, .. 12: 15 p.m . -PRO BASEBALL: Angels at Oakland, KMPC (710). r HocKE Y Calf'ary, ~dmonton taking it at low key From 'he Associated Press In the past. the battle of Alberta has turned bitter and bloody. This time. things could be quieter on the National Hockey League's western front . As the Edmonton Oilers and Calgary Flames prepare to open their Smythe D1 vi s1on championship series tonight an Calgary, both sides are taking a lolA key approach. "Both teams arc being quiet about this whole sen es." Calgary de- fense man Al Mcinnis said. "I don't think anyone wants to say anything inflammatory. Save your talking for on the ice." The Norris Division final also opens Tuesday night. with St. Louis at Detroit. In acuon Monday night. Washing- ton defeated New Jersey 3·1 in the ~opener of the Patnck Dtvision finals and Montreal stopped Boston 5-2 in the Adams. It's not surprising that the Flames and Oilers have one of the NHL's hottest rivalries. The battle is an extension of the long-st.anding com· petition between the two cities. whic h arc only 200 miles apart in the province or Albcna. "Geographically, there's always been a very healthy rivalry," said Edmonto n defenseman Randy G regg. who has lived and played 1n both cities. Edmonton eliminated Calgary from the playoffs in 1983 and 1984. But the Flames got revenge in 1986 when they beat the Oilers in the d1v1s1on final. halting Edmonton's bid for a third straight Stanley Cup. This season. Calgary ended Ed- monton·~ fi~e-year rci$Jl as regular· season d1 v1S1on champions and won their regular-season series 4-3· I. Calgary has the home-ice advan· tage in the best-of-seven series. "When two teams arc this evenly matched. every little thing counts." C"algal') forward Tim Hunter said. "1 thank we're an intelligent enough team to realize that we have to play hard. but with c.autaon." Flames goahe Mike Vernon 14fCCd. "Everybody expects this sencs-to go haywire." he said. "I think they're going to be shocked. Both teams realize what's at stake. It's soing to be hard and tough. but not World War Ill." "It was a surpnsc for me," he said of the record time. adding that he had to race only apinst h1m~lfon a chilly day. By virtue or winning the race. setting a course record and a world record, Badid collected a total of S24,SOO. Without uponsor, he had to pay his way to Boston. a nd Badid said he would use his winninp to offset the cost of international competition. Wheel Claalr entrt• take oft at tbe etart o,f tbe 92nd ranotna of tbe ao.toa Marathon. OGLE FIRES NO-HITTER ••• From Bl "In France, I don't have a sponsor. So to to to Boston. I pay from m y pocket." he said. The 1988 rllC( went off smoothly, without a recurrence of the accidenu ind pile-ups that m1rTed the stan of the 1987 rllOC. In response to the hazards and injuries of last year. Boston Athletic AllOClltion or· pnizen chanted the sun. For the ftnt halfmUc or10, down 1 1hppcry llopc in Haptinton where the runnen peteed IS minuics later. the .-lcMlr nccn were held in check by a pMr car. .. , .. , a FOCI idea," ledld 9id. ldda1 tMt it wa clifnaah to brKe with ii Mndt bccaute ol the "" coeda1ioM. .. It's bcncr than llllt year ... BOSTON MARATHON GOES TO THE WIRE •• From Bl It was the fourth consecutive victory for Hussein 1nd by far his most impressive. since he not only had to outfiJht lkanlh but a powerful international field in his first attempt at the difficult Boston counc. He ran the teCOnd-fastcst Boston ra« ever. behind only the 2:07:S I dockina by Rob de Castella of Australia in 1986. And he shattered the Kenyan national ruord of 2:9:44, SCI by Joseph Nr.au II Chicqo in 1983. lkanpa. the earty leader at Boston in 1987 before f11tcrin1 to 11th. was timed in 2:08:44. lttland's John Treacy. 1984 Olympic silver medalist who made a late decision to cnkr, was third in 2:09: IS. Overshadowed by the duel btt~n Hussein and lkanpa was the te'COnd contm1tive Boston viciory in the worMn 's di v11ion by ROM Moui of Ponapl. Mota. 1984 Ofym~ bronze rftedahst. taf'Md her fifth oonsccutive marathon triumph. and ninth in 12 starts. finithina in 2:24:30 . The time ..., 1tearlf a minutt faster thin Mo11's 1987 cJoclti,. of 2:2S:2 and the ICCOftd.fuiat for a woman at Boiton. behind only the 2:22:43 by foen Benoit S.muclson oflhc Unatt!d States in 1983. Tuij1 Jousimu of Finland was the second woman's finisher 1n 2:29:26. with Odetk LaPierrc of Canada third in 2:30~3S. Hu11ein and lkanpa ran at the front oftbe peck for the entire race, and af\er shakina Treacy with about four miles lef\. the two sllfed a piny bettle to the finish. Before the ~. Huucin said he thou&tu at would come down to he and lk.anpa -and that's clUIC11y what happened. Huuein, a tbnner tteeplechltcr at the U nivenitl' ofNew Me1tico, said that as the two hc8dcd for the finish an the ocnter of Bolton, he checked lkanpa. "He looked very reta111ed and very ~l'f. and r was a little wonied," Huadn •id ... , hid lboulht we would start push Int with one mile to 90." Huucin said he lhoulht his thrillina vtCtory would propel him hi&htr into the top echelon of world marathoners. A1'.cr his previous wins, there hid been some lkrilin. tMauee &he fkldt he beat wett not considered 1trottt 1nd hit tima ~ not eJtCCptionatty fall. He hid won hat a.1 three maraibons: Honolulu in 1986, New Yort City last Novanber and Honolulu apin siJl weeks later. ' • arcat plays." G ibbons said. ..Just routine plays. There were not many balls hit hard the whole day. but lots of ground bell outs." Osle tossed a strona. ei&ht-innina victory over Kennedy, 2-1 , in the Loara T ou.rnament. but has spent the majority of 1988 in the bullpen. "He hasn't staned much," Gibbons said. .. He\rbttn comi .. around. thouah. He's piiched better in tbc last oou~ outinp_. but he hit a stretch ~ he wasn t binina his spots. "Periodically, we've been ustr\a him out of the bullpen. We'd start him here and there, but we don't rolly hive any suinen. It's a merry. IO-n)Und. We aure needed a complete ,pme." Lou .. 0.n Nautty. tbe ec:c of the S1afl'. becaute o( ditrilll~ f'CDODI. hasn'1 hdped Ocaa \'iewone bit. "We ~ ..... \M otber pilebm in suppon roles." ta.id OibboM. "We stantd (Nauhy) in key pma. then we lose him. "Nobody in their riaht mind would have said that Derck Osle would pitch a no-hitter with the disasten wt've had." <nan View had opportunities to scott. but Colbc"1 the pmc's other surprise, unlOlded his tie--breakil\I blast in the fifth. "Colbcn hu stancd the last two pmes. but he's {)layed off and or\," Gibbons said. "Hes 1tar1ina to hit the bell 1 little, so I decided to al ve htm a chi~ to sw1,. the bet and he put the bell out. I didn'\ put biE there to put the ball out. but I was he did. It w11 a quick pme and y tot some dt1td1 pitchina from Chirco:· Daniel Hcmandn went 2 for 3 with a doublf for Otan Vie'w while O.J. AndreM. Gary Chri~non and Steve Hcmandcz alto bled. Tbc Scahlwts had a man thn>wn out at the pgte 1n the teC'OftCl. tbe •me inn1,. they left nannen Oft .conct Ind third. • Ma}oZ! League standings American £alae WEST DIVISION Chicaao Oakland Aqel1 Kansas City Texas Seattle Minnesota w 7 7 6 6 s s 4 L Pct. GB LH S .S83 6-4 6 .S38 1/z S-S Stteak Won 4 Won I Lost I Lost 3 Lost 2 Lost 2 Lost 2 Home Away 3.3 4-2 3. 4 4-2 6 .SOO I 5-S 3- 2 3-4 S .SOO I 6-4 3. 3 3-3 7 .417 2 4-6 2-4 3-3 8 .385 ?•Ii 4-6 2-s 3- 3 7 .364 2'h 4-6 2-2 2-5 EAST DIVISION Cleveland New York Detroit Boston Toronto Milwaukee Baltimore 11 10 7 8 s 4 0 2 .846 9-1 Won S Won I Won 3 Won 2 Won I Won 2 Lost 12 6-I 5-I 5-0 5-3 4-I 3-3 6-4 2-I 3 . 769 I 7-3 4 .636 3 -6-4 s .6 15 3 7-3 7 .41 7 S1/J 3-7 2-4 3-3 7 .364 6 3-7 2-I 2-6 12 .000 IO'h ~1 0 ~ 8 ~ 4 Muday'1 Scofff Oakland S, Aa1el1 4 Boston 4. Texas 3 Detroit 4. Kansas Caty 2 New York 18. Minnesota 5 Chicago 4, Seattle 0 Only games scheduled Today'1Gamee Aa1el1 (Finley 1-1) at Oakland (Stewart 3-0), 7:35 p.m. Bahimore (Thurmond 0-2) at Milwaukee (Nieves 0-2). 4:05 p.m Texas (Hough 2-1) at Cleveland (Bailes 1--0), 4:35 p.m. Boston (Clemens 2-0) at Detroit (Moms 2-1 ). 4:35 p.m. Kansas Caty (Sabcrhagen 1-1) at ioronto (Clancy ~2). 4:35 p.m New York (Leiter 2·0) at Minnesota (Niekro 1-0), 5:05 p m Ch1c~go (Reuss ~ I) a t Seattle (Langston ~ I), 7·05 p.m. Wedaelclay's Gamet ADJel1 at Oakland, 12: I 5 p.m . Chicago at Seattle, I :JS p.m. Baltimore.at Milwaukee, 4:05 p.m. Texas at Cleveland, 4:35 p.m. Boston at Detroit, 4:35 p.m. Kansas Cit) at Toronto. 4:35 p.m. New York at Minnesota. 5:05 p.m. Natlonal League WEST DIVISION w 8 9 7 8 4 I L 3 4 6 5 9 Pct. GB L18 7-3 7-3 5-5 6-4 4-6 1-9 Streak Won I Won I Lost l Won ., Home 4-2 4-2 3-3 4-J 3-3 ~ Away 4-I 5-~ 4-3 4-l 1-6 1-l .727 .692 .538 61 5 .308 2 I 5 Houston Dodcen Cincinnati San Francisco San Diego Atlanta 10 .091 7 Lost 2 Won EAST DIVISION Pittsburgh New York Chicago Montreal Philadelphia St. Louts 8 8 6 5 4 3 3 4 5 6 8 8 727 7-3 Won'! Lost I Lost 2 Won J Won I Loy 3 3-0 5· I I · ~ 5. 4 5-3 J. 3 5-3 ~ 2 l-6 n-5 .66 7 1'2 7-3 .545 2 5-5 .455 3 5-5 .333 41'7 3-7 3-2 3. 3 .273 5 3-7 Monday's Scores Dodsen I , San Diego 0 San Francisco 6. C:1nc1nnat1 3 ( l ~ innJngsl Philadrlphia 10. New York 7 Only games sc heduled Today's Games San Diego(Jones l-l )at Dod1ers (Valenzucla 1-2). 7:05 p.m. Montreal (Martinez 1-2) at Chicago (Moyer 1-0). 11 :20 a.m St. Louis (Cox I· I) at Pittsburgh (Fisher 2-0). 4:05 p' m. San Francisco (LaCoss 1-0) at Canc1nna11 (Rasmussen ~ I). 4· 35 pm Ph1ladelph1a (Carman 1-1) at New York (0Jeda 2-0). 4 35 pm. Atlanta (P. Smtth ~I ) at Houston (Deshaies 1-0). 5:35 p m Wedaesday's Games San Diego at Dod1en, 7:05 p.m. Montreal at Chicago. 11 .20 a.m. St. Louis at Pittsburgh. 4:0S p.m . San Francisco at Cincinnati. 4:35 p.m Phlladelph1a at New York. 4:35 pm Atlanta at Houston. 5:35 p.m. ~ • • . . '~ AMalttCAN L• AGUE AtNetkl S, A.-S 4 CAl.l•O.NIA OAK LANO .McLmr 1t> Ownno dh COa vl\ rt JOYnel' lb A.rrnu cf Rtv If OWllllt cl Howell lei loonec 8\Jdlnf pr. Sd>ofllcl" ar11111 • 1 7 0 s 0 1 0 ) 1 I 0 4 I 1 l • 0 0 0 4 0 I O Q 0 0 0 • 0 , 0 ) 0 2 0 ' 0 0 0 ) 0 0 0 L.en\lrO lei J-l"ll\11 HHM'f t Centeeo r1 Perll.« Oh eav!Ot dll ~Gwlr lt> s1t1n0cn c Galle9o" Jevler cf HuOOfO 1t> Weluu OH9cttn cf JS 4 II J T ..... k_lw...._ Mrlllll S I I I ) 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 l 0 I I • 0 I 0 I 0 0 0 • 0 0 0 ) 0 I 0 0 I 0 0 ' I l 1 ) 2 2 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 ll S t 4 c.aMwMe 1•1 -nt-• ~ -II• lh-S c;a,,... Winning R81 -NOtlt E-.MCGwlt• • .Mcl.emor• OP-<aUtornla I 0..lend 1 1.09-CatlfOl'nle 7 0.kla"<I 11 28-C o .... is. 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C-,......T'w. tU l '-! t-fi.. k H .-T LaMU9 ---. .... -v...-lMI _, '9 ......,, ...._ ... ~ 1 • c.-.. , . ._ r ... t -.. ,.._ H -·~\ ICtNU llirU ._ k """"' .. , .... ~ ~ ,,_, ""' .......... .,,,, .. ,, _. .._....,_ t-t, .... I ¢AN 6-l, .._._. ..... IMt -•'4. t·I 6-t. ....... -SNl!e tM) -........ ,.., WATER POLO ,U.S. poloists win Swedish tournament STOCKHOLM. Sweden -David Im bemino of Newport Beach scored 1hr~ goals, two on penalty shots, to lead thr United States .. 8" team to the cham p1onsh1p of thr Stockholm Cup ~1th a 12-7 win over Fran~ Monday The l ' nited States 1umped to a 3-0 k ad madwa) through the first penod. but France retaliated with th~ goals 1n the first three m1nutcsofthe second period to uc the game. In the final four minutes of the second quarter. thr L ~ scored four goals. two on e:-.tra-ma n s1tuat1ons The .L built a 10-4 lead after three penods Goalie Chns Duplant~ stopped 10 shots. while Craig !<Jass and Alexis Ro ussau each added a pair of goals . In tht first round of the round· robin toumt' the .Unned States defeated France I I· I 0. behind Dan O'Connell'~ fiH goals. The United tates thc:n i..nockcd off Poland. a ne1.1.comtr to intemauonaJ wa ter polo I C)..6, behind fo ur goals from ,l."" pon Beach's Scott Thomte>n. In the third round the L' S defeated \\.\eden lhe host countr\. I I -"' bc'- h1nd a balanced attack led b' Thornton lmbem1no and Roussau. j Jl of whom scored two each 1 he L'S .. B .. team. the core of Ahtlh ""'"be v-.ing for spots in the I 1.14 ~ 01) m pies. Is 4-0 this St"ason and 1o1.1ll pla' Holland an thc fi rst round of lhr eight-team Marseilles (up in FrJnlt' Thursda' It will be the onl\ R" team in the Cup Cuba and Spaui. roth ran ked an thc top ~ven in the 1o1.orld ""111 also ~ on hand UC/signs two to pact The: L l I ""umrn·s baskrtball team ~lgned l \.\O to basketball national letters 01 ir.tent 'Aonda' l\.e1ba Lc1o1. 1s oflancoin H 1gh in San Diego and l<..ath~ L11arraga of Calex- llO ha'e comm1ued. Lc:~1sa 6-1001 forv.a.rd 3,craged 17 points and 11 ~bounds per game her ~n1or 'ear he 1o1.3\ first tea.m o\11- ( entral Leagut' and a four-~e.ar 'ar>1- t\ 'tancr !.('\lot\ :ii~) k tterrd an track fOr tour 'ea~ and a 'car an cross ~OUOtf" and \Olk'>ball Lrzurra. a ~-4 guard. a"enged '! points pcr gamt this past season and 1o1.as a 'ars1t~ pla~er thr« ~ears he 1o1.as the \1ost \ aluable Pia, er of the Dc~n \ alk~ League and an .\JI-CJ F ~--\ ~lccuon -\dd111onalh shc let- tered 1n .:ro'>s (O untf' for four vears and trac tor thrtt 'ears 'Aean1o1. hale at ·a recent pons a""ards banQucL -..;ata he Crawford "'as namt"d \1 \ P of the I Q87-8 ttam Others rt'('CI' ing special awards 1m luded Chf'\.I Elland I most 1m- pro,ed1 'atasha Panes (coach's a1o1.ard I. \.1 1dc~ . ktert"Sz lraptain's award l. and Chenl Hoffman lfree ~hro~ a"'ard1 · I TENN IS Leach's streak at 39 straight Frt"Shman fon Leach ran his record tu ,Q .. f 1n prep tt"nn" \ionda~ but hr and i.m Laguna &arh High -\nllit< tcJmriatc\ ""err I·'· lo~rs 10 ~a \ •l'"' leagur pov.cr L "'' cr~1t~ on the f\1 ser's 1.ou ns U-ach a 6-loot-1 15-,car-<ild. v.as 'l' I 1n uthrrn C ahfom1a and "'o 'nat1l1nalh la<t \Cason in the 14-and· und<.·rs "''ll' th(' •urrrnt ranlo np \Ct w ti..· dt'tcrmanrd 'Thl' l)nf, difference brt~rcn him and h1< hrClthcr Rad .. 1s that Rick was a lrt:' ·· .-.a!d ha~ coaC"h Bob Walton · Rut Jon 1!> a lmlc stron_ger at this <;ta~e Hr realh m cw('S well for a kid ht< <11r Jnd age ·· El<.e1o1. here in tt'nni~ "1onday: •Dan 'l 't'n .md Brian Emde paced \lanna • ' " l I-~ unset l..t'Jlguc 'erd1d . 'C llu'1t1 ngto n Beach On the: .1.mmunat~ college level • 1l1IJrn \\est droppt"d v1s1tmg l cmtl1< .... ~ behind the pla) of \1arcclin, R<l~lt"\ SPREAD THE NEWS Wo rk in the ever expanding Newspaper Promotion fletdJ If you are self-motivated ~ Uke working wtth teen8Q9n this may be the opportunity you've been waiting for. Thfl 11 a GUARANTEED IN- COME of $400 per week to start with potentl• MrNnga of up to S 1000 per..-. An ln9Uf'ed van, wagon. e>iCk· up/9helts are a MUST. FOf more fntormetton C•ll Mr. J•m• · (213) '477.2970 ' ()qnge Cout OAllV PILOT/ Tueeday, Apfll 19, 1988 _,_Wanted :--One good, for sure quarterback ' \ NFL teams search, but only a very ew display strong arm Frem McClaktiy New1 Service lfthe trend oontinues. thc U.S. Fish and Wildlife Servi" miaht be sum- moned to list str~rmed quar- terbacks among its endange~d speci- es. Such animals arc becoming harder to find each year. "Quanerbacks are likt maJor- lcque ruchers and 7-foot centers." said Gi Brandt, the Dallas Cowboys' vi~ president in chal'Jt' of player persongel. "Evef)·bod} 1s looking for them. and they are hard to find Everybody's looking for the Mark Lanastons and the Dan Man nos." The quanerback hunt could tum even more d ifficult 1f Kelh S\ouffer. the unsigned Phoenix Card.inals 1987 first-round choice. 1s traded before the draft Sunday. Should that hap- pen, Universtt) of Washington quar- 1erback Chris Chandler 1s about the only strong-armed prospect Id\ After Chandler. forget tt .\nd the future looks C\ en more gloom~ UCLA quanerback Tro} A1!1.man 1~ rated the ntxt great quarterback.. but a team will probabl~ have to lo~ all of its games this \ear to be 1n the position to ta kc· him "'1th the first choice in 1989. For the start of a ne"' * * * dec-ade. Todd Ellis of South Carolina. Tom Hodson of l...cluisiana State. Cary Conklin of Washin&ton and Jeff Georae of Illinois arc the only h<>J>". "There's always a premium on quarterbacks:' Seattle Seabawks President Mike McCormack said. "Some tall guys throw short1 but we don't cater to P«>Plc on just size. You can have a 6-5 auy with a thrtt- quarter delivery who might throw more like a 6-footer." Pro teams seek quanerbacks taller than 6-3 because those players can see downfield over the heads of the offensive linemen. Shorter ~uar­ terbacks have limited visio n. Sax of the top eight quarterbacks in this draft are 6-2 or shorter. The others have throwing defects. Mike Perez of San Jose State could barely complete a pass during his workout before the pro scouts at lnd1anapolis. Todd Santos threw for more than I 0.000 yards at San Die~o State, but hi s sideline passes move in slo"' motion. Kerwin Bell of Florida doesn't have great arm strength, and a slight shoulder separation at the ~nn10g of last season huns his chances even more. SHacuse's Don McPherson. the Heisman runner-up. was an interest- ing prospect until scouts measured ham after the season. Not man) 6-0 quarterbacks with marginal arms make it. but McPherson as such a good athlete -panacularly with his ..i 4 speed -that coaches want to * * * comert him to receiver. Perhaps the rawest quarterback prospect as Tom Tupa. a tall. burl), hard-throwina Ohio State pla)er who is restricted only by his slow feet. .\s for Stouffer. sources in the C'ardtnals organization conceded Monday that the) might not be able to sign him by Saturday and thus might 1n1t iate offers 'for a trade in a day or t\l.O. McCormack tned to reach Larry Walson. the Cardtnals director of pla~ er personnel, without success Mo nda). To date. Wilson says he has not discussed Stouffer's value with an) team Reports out of Green Ba ) tnd1catc the Packers might be w1 lhng to give up the 35th pack in the draft for hi m. "M } gut feeling 1s the Cardtnals wall trade ham. but the practical s1M of m<' sa\S that they wilJ miss the boat and Kell)" 111 go back into the draft." said Stouffer's agent. Mike Blan * * * Quarterback's ego takes beating SEA TILE -Frustrations ha' e ht.en building within Chns Chandler since the first pro draft rattn~ circulated in Janual'). "A second-round prospect at best " the repons said. "The best of a bad crop t)I quanerbacks." the~ conunued Chandler qu1ckl~ aettpted this backhanded praise and retrcatcd to the golf course. ..\t least there he wouldn't hear football op101ons he wished to debate Onl) five more golf dates remain unul the NFL draft Sunday. "I feel I'm dcfimteh a first-round quarterback.'' Chandier said "It's hard to take. but there 1s not one thing I can do about tt ... Chandler studied the I 98 draft. 1n ~hteh four qua rterbacks "'ere ~lected 1n the first round \'inn1e Testa"erdt' was the first choice Chandler accepts that. The rest of the first-round s.electtons "'111 anger him 1f he 1s relepted to the second round What don t pro scouts hke about him., "'\s good as Kell) Stouffer and ('hns Miller are -and 1he) were taken u the St\th and l 31h picks 1n tht' first round -I thin).. I'm better than them:· Chandler said. "It almost seems unfair E'en (1 tahcl Jim Harbaugh (t'nd atahc) was a first- round pick last year. E:tcept for Stouffer. the other guys ar"C 6-2. "Stouffer'?" Chandler said about the Colorado tate product. "What teams dtd he pla~ against tn that league., .. Mike Sullt,an. Chandler's agent. thinks his client wall be taken earl\ 1n the second round. but he has scime hope that a team "'111 .,.,,ork a tradt' "1th a club that has a selecuon in the latter pan of the first round. ~ice thought. The difference of being a S<'cond-round choice compared with a first-rounder could translate into a S!OO.~a-\ear loss for Chandler. That is another irritant. Chandler lll-.es his stausucs and assets. but he "'onders what 1s missing to ple~s.e the ~outs. The 6-foot-3. :! 15-pound quarterback from Washington has .i 91 speed in the 40 and a s trq_ng arm that enabled him to complek 54 6 percent of 59" passes for 4.161 } ards and 32 touchdo"' ns in four seasons On an mtelltgence test gt\en to all draft-ehgibll" pla)'ers. Chandler had the second-highest score BLESTO. a scouting combine for seven teams. rated him the 11th-best prospect tn the draft .\II the nght numbers. but tha1 d~sn't appear to be good enough ~FL gcneral managers and scouts place him on the second round on their draft boards. sa)m~ he needs to de' elop better football instincts and that he might need a couple of~ t'ar'l to learn pro offenses. He conStders the op1n1on that he 1s anJ Ul)·prone an insult "The) ha' e to come up "'1th something." Chandler said. "Sa) ing I "as inJUl)·prone was o ne of the worst ofall ihe things. In three years of high school and m) first three years at V. ash1ngton. 1 never missed a down ~ca use of an 1nJul). I never got hurt. Last ~ear. I had more injuncs than an) )ear of m~ career. but I onl~ missed pans of one ga me (Anzona ) I could ha'e eas1I~ ~t out agams1 Te\as -\&M .. Chest. hi p and knee problem~ plagued a senior year that "'as supposed to help him earn Heuman Troph' consaderatton. Instead, he felt as 1houl}l he should ha'e received a Purple fieart "Being a Washington quarterback. you don't get the t) pe of respect that a M1am1. Stanford or Brigham Young quarterbacll. "'ould get," Chandler said "The first thtng that 1s thought about a Washington quarterbacll. 1s 'Don't )OU ha'e a great defense and don't ~ou run the ban:·· Pl8JC M>TICf Pta.IC NOTICE P\&.IC NOTICE NM.IC NOTICE Pla.IC NOTICE K _,1 Puohsl'ted ()(anoe Coast OflOI" TO NOTICE name sriou•d nol be grenled ITA,._NT M Delly PllOt Apr~ 19 26 May IMOW CAUN '°" INVrTINO 9!01 IT IS FURTHER 0tdel ···~NT M 3 10 1988 CHANCM M NAMI Notice IS l'lereoy gtven U'lll that a oopy of this Ofder I UHM ftCTITIOUI T l25 I Bunni LQu FreHr on the 8011rd of Trustees ol the Show c.use t>e pyblllhe<I ' ., ..... NAMI I behalf o('S6an Peul ROdOlf Huntlnglon. BHch Union the Orange Coul Delly Piiot fh• tollowlng persona hes flled a P&tlllon In thll H•gh Scl&I DIStrlCt W111 r• a n-SQ•pe• of G41nere hive 1btlndoned the uae of P\&IC NOTICE court for, en Otder allowing cetve sealed bidt l0t aupply· C1tculet1on, publlalled fn thl lhe Fictitious Bualneu petitioner to Ch1ng1 hit Ing ATHLETIC SUPPLIES county II least once a Name Play/mates Smell .:-~ neme from See.n Peul Rodolf meeting or equal to tile for tour ;on0secu:'veid'*:! W0<ld Pre·Schoota 2950 OI .. -..,... 10 Cameron Vernon Fr•ser SQ«:tfica11ons on We In the pri<>r tot e •Yo u r M Cll I " w Co I ... " ..... It .. hereby Otdered that office of UICI Dtalrlc;1 Bid• Ing M~sa C~c92626 ay, s a ' H A z f L 0 N f I TH A all persons lnletested In the t hall be clearly marked Oet.O APR 7 1938 The FICtlllOUS Butcnes• 81'""AM>, .... Ir-fl -mailer eforeHld appear ATHLETIC SUPPLIES. BIO JAMii L llllTH, Neme referred 10 ab<MI was HAZEL O. MMUM> bef0te lhll court tn o.p.rt. NO 670" eddreHed 10 I of tM ~ COW1 CO filed on 11.3.33 in lhe Coun-ANO CW NTITIOM TO ment No . 3 at 700 CIVIC Allyn E ROWiey Otrec10t of Published ange as ry ot Orange F229~ ADMlMITE" llTATE Centat Drlve Weet Santi Procurement. Huntington Daily Piiot April 12 19 26 J1c11 H Perk 89 l~T~TE ~· Ana. California, on 5112, Beactl Union High Sch~ May 3. 1988 Peularino Costa Mesa CA To ell ~ ~o<:tl Jet 1988. a• 2 •5 o'clOCk P<n. Dtstrtet 10251 Yorktown T 11 92626 I rs ' · and then end there lllow A....,ue Huntington Beech. PtltllC NO""c JMn Perk 789 Pau1arln0 I credlt0t• end contingent c.uM. If eny they h•ve. wily CA 92646 end reoalved •1 or · 1 n.&. COii• Mese. CA 92627 ere<lllors Qf HAZEL ON-u ld petition lor Chenge of befOte 2·00 0 m . WtdnM· ---------This business wu eon-EIT HA B~RNAR O also nemet11ouldno1begran1.0.d1y.Aprll27. 1988,at whton NOTICICW ducted t>y lndfvldualt (HUS· ke~~~~RO.. HAZEL~ It II furthel' ordered ihll 1 mne •nd place bldl will be AVAtLAM.ITY cw band and Wife) and persons 0 copy of this Otder to 9'low publlCI)' opened end read 1n ANNUM. MJIORT Th•• 1111ement -s nled may be Olhetw!M mt.,nteo c:auM t>e pyblllhed 1n Of. Bldg C. Rm 361 Pursuant to Sectlor tllllh lhe County c 1er1r 0 1 Of. In ~~~!,nd~!'; =• ltlad lnQe Cou1 Dally Piiot. 1 Eecn o•d Shall remain vii.lid 6104(<1) of lhe Internal Rev· ange County on April 11. RI B-.. C newap1pe1 of gener1I or 11 perlOd ol •S days,,,., eoue Code, notice IS heteb) 1988 t>y 11 _.. Oton.Oo in clrcullllon. put>lllf\ea In lhll the dale spectflctd f0t ahe r.. g.lven lh•t Ille annual reoon Jecti H Par11 JMn Pat II the Super10r Court ol Ot. GOUnty at .... , ~ I .,.. pl of bids '°'the calender )'Mr 1987 ol · Ing& County raq~llng that fOt lour ooneecutlve week• The Board of Tru11 ... The George E Hewitt Foun------------4 Rita Bait• Coronado be ai>-prlOt to lhe dey of UICI,_,. ahalf be the SOie fud"""' of the dlllon for Medlcal Re-• polrfted es personal rep-,_ . •---.... a ....... 1 f-_ ... _tlon O!l'H Nor1cE s ,_,tetlve to edmtnlslet the ""' uauty Of eQulpment Offet.O ._r.,... ... ... • ""'""" eetate of HAZEL ONEITHA ~IL llllt'TK, JUOOI and r~es lhe right tor• la availeble It the foun. BERNARD n I cw THI~'"°" COURT jec1 any or 111 DKll I nd lo datt0n '1 prlnelpel office f()( Ollft Ill __,._1 .. du der the l\de-1 0.ttd MAR 28 1988 waive any irregulartty ''*.. ln1pec11on dunng regular ---------.....,_. "' rn1n1s11111on o Put>ltsned Orenge Coa1t 1n business l'IOU•• from 8:30 PARKHURST Et~lles Actl 1 Delly Pilol Aprll 5 12 19 26. 9tgMd Allyn l . flowter. a m to 5·30 Pm by In) N J (M ) ht pe1 tton •S set o• heer-198& OW.Ctor of hoc~• clttzen ~ raque111 n within or ma ane ac 1ng In Oepanmen1 No 3 11 • T 103 Oiled " 1 11 1988 180 days ah., the date of Pa r k h u r s t , pas se d 700 CIVIC Center Drive West. Pubhll't~"oraiiQe Collt thlt pyblteetlon away April 15, 1988 Sen•• Ane Cllt1orn1e 927oi l "8..IC M>TICE Dally Pilot ~prll 12 19, 1988 The foundation'• principal N Be h on Aptll 27 1988 81 1 •5 T 110 offloe It loceted II 137 '" ewport a.c PM •....a Jumlne C<.-Orlw, Cor· Mrs Pa rkhurst IS IF YOU OBJECT to lhe MOTICI cw ona dal ...... Calllornl• su rv ived b y her!gramingoltl"lei:>etlhonyou "*-ICIAU P\&.ICNOTICE 92625 d a ugh t e r D i a n e sriould llthef •Pc>ear 11 the 0# ""90MA&. The prtnQpe! maneger of ' I ~rtng and s111e you1 ob-~RTY •01• I ftCTfTIOUI MllMll the foundation la Geori E (Eldon) Rush. grand-J«llons or file written ooiec-Nota ls t>ereby g1ven ihet NA• ITATE•NT Hewitt ge sons. DaVld Edwards llOlll wltll the cou11 1>ef0te purauant 10 Section• The following peraon: ere Roy B. wooe.y, Anomey. and Jason R ush lthe t>ew1ng Your aopear-21701·217t5 ot the c.io-•dOlng t>uslnesa u eclel 2099 Sa" Joaquin Hiiia J • enee mey be '" person or by 1 eus.ness nd P W0t111 120 E 18th St Cotta Ro.cs Newpoi1 e.cn Call-granddaught.er. en-your 111orney i:.,s Code ~Ion 2;fe 1Mesa. CA. 92e27 fornu; HMO • ntfer Rush : alsol IFYOU AREACREOITOR oftheC1llt0tnl1Cotnrnerciel Susan l ee Gel~amp. Pvt>lilhed Otenge Coelt survived by s1ster 0t a cootlngent cre<lllor of Code S.C110n S35 of t~ 337 Unit C 2111 ST Coete Delly Pilot Aprl t9 ttee . G '"' oeeeuec1 you must file • IM .... CA 92627 · M ild r ed a rv1 n ""'•rcfalm w1ihthe court or Celtf0tnla Peoat Code and Thia bu1lnH1 11 con-. Tt22 G 'd 1--the pr0il1llOOI OI Ille Call· d t_... b di Id I raves1 e services lpreeen1 11 to the perlO"lal tomle A ctlon Lice eln uc ...... y antn v ua •-ec Mnl1C( will be held W~nes-repreMnlallve &pi)Oinlld by Act the .~ .:.1.J SuNn Lee o .. tenlcamp ... -. "" d l l ·00 A M p t"t court within louT months ' -··-_,,. -Tl'lls 1tat~t -ftled ---------• ay, · a t a· from 111e da of flrat I• ll put>l"Nle bycQmP911ttve wl1tllhe CountyC*1tofOr· -.. --cif1c View Memonal of'-t te _ ...... .-...bidding Ot1 the •th dey 01 ~County on March 1 _ .. "_ .. wanee ""tert ••pr.,..._, Mey t988 11 11 00 o'CIOCtl • IA¥WICM Mm LOM Pa r k , N e w por t 11n Sec;lton 700 or the PM ~ 1tie premi.. wtler• 19 MeoaATIC*, Beach In lieu of IProt>ete Code of Callfomla. Mid proper1)' hH bMn "= 1 F"'ecterll ~ flowers memorial The1tmt l0t fl~c:1a1tn11wt1111or.o. end which ue Dal~~~~:"f:. tt n andLoen~lon b ......_ I not •1t.ON'• ..,.. "" to our IOc:ated II Put>flc Storage . . . MOTIC9 °' cont.rt utJons to U'C' month• from the d•t• ot the t7792 Cowell 1n the ci.y of 1988 ....uM. WtiiU made to Ow Amencan ltMr'lng notlead •bove IMM County Of Otaf\09, T 10I 0# ZIM'alM c.ancer Society. Pa-YOU MAY EXAMINE the State' of Cat"ornla t..,e TO All MEMBEAS c1fic View Mortuary, ~~. 'j,,9[1'.,.by ~ lrlcourtl ..... ~ ... you good9. cnatttea1 or ~ "8JC llJTIC( PL"'EASI TAKE NOTICE DI 644 2700 -..., , ... -• • propeny detCf' bed below In THAT ttlf' AMull MeMlng of rectors. -. you may aar'V4I ue>on the •· the mettfl of " .. IN ~tlart of tN Aeaocie· -:::::::====::::;;;;;::::::;::-ecutor or llOmlnWtretor, or A1ct1 Lund Se> I t13-flte OUO &SOR COURT tlon wt11 t•• p1eee on Thurl- Uc>Ol'l 1"9 ectorney lof then· ~· ' OP ~ c:tay, Aortt 2 t, ttll, at t ·OO l'AC.,IC VIEW MllllO"tM. ~··· Cemetery • Mortuar~ Chapel • Cremator., J500 Pac11ic v~ O•·~~ "4~wt>O•I BfoaC" 6U ·2700 M~LAWN· MT OUYI Mo1tua1y •Cemetery Crema101y 162S Gisler Avf' Cos•• Mesa ~o 555• eautor or lldrnlnllt1110t. • Lin da Young. Sp. 1 COUWTY °'GRAW AM .. ,.aclftc ~ s.v- wntten ~ "etlne t"-' 145-Z '"*' rntac b~• 11'1 tM *'-of .. Aool-Inge T'lffte. at tM Aeaocl• you deM-. epec;lel notlele of '"'-' a .....0.. . Q at I 0 l'I 0 I E 0 w,. "D tlon'• offtoll at 3200 Pn tM fllinO of an ln"'91'1tory Ind o.j..., ,_.,.. IN rigflt GUSTAVE POWEL.L. for Cientet OrM, Suite S&C>. aoc>ral~t of tetet• ... to bid et fie .... ~ ~of Name Coeta M.... C111forn1a _., of IN p«t!IOnl or eo-,,_,.. Ille made""" C8lfl Of"r No. A 142 ... 1 tM2t count1 mentlofled In See-Ind p.ics tor at ltle ...,.. of AMeHOIO ON>I:" The INllterl to be con-lklflil 1200 Ind 1200 5 of !tie P"'~ All pwc,... TO SHOW CAUSE .._.., 91 tNe AtwMt ..._.. ~ PrObeee C<* tooda .. eotd • la. and F'a.. CMANGl 0# NAMl tno are: ia.tltloner, Ma .... ., ""'* Ille ,..,,...,... • .. ..... E 0 W Alll D 0 U IT A Y ! 1 Oftloer'e "9port Coronedo of ........ ~ '°,,. fl'OWa.l.L ...... a peillOfl l . .-..... ... ,. to ~ DORA P. MU•U. • • ......_..In .. ~ of lrl lNI court tor ell orw If-2 of tN "•acl1ttolt'1 C...· :i.:. ~ ~ ·::;5 .... I ... ~ OMw :=:>:'"':..-:ow--= :.'a:=;eof ":..:: L' .... Cs .. 1111 = =•==·~GUSTAVE ,OWILL to"°"· ~ Qt.,. CoetC ACwl 11M ""* S-. I 0 WI H 0 U I TA V I I lllcttofl of,........, Of ~ "°' _,. lf. ta, ''· Mlifl9oewt. Inc , .... ANDIMON .. A• ciMID , ......... 1... (111) 14•·IOIO fT It ~MaY ~ Dtl..,a. HIRE through c~ssified' Ml-1111 tlDrOMw 'IMtll ...... 11"'* I Uln flOllTM • f C" IA¥-~ <>ra. c-tNtNl'-lb '1....., ... Miii LOMAS- ,_. ,._. " " ,... ......... oourt In ~ IOCllA1111l• ...... ..., ........ ~ • • "" No. .s • no a. _.,_. , a ,.. .. Or""9 -.. ...... .,, ......... , 12 '" • • .. C .. a 1t111. Ofl MAY I . ~ 1 es , _,It = 111 la ""· II 1:41 o'Clloall 'Ill, o..;...,. ,,, 142 1171 "*' and ...... .... "'ti "'"' ar... 0... -p..• .. -:. ':: ,_., -= o.ly ........ ""~ -IVUH1!£@111~UU@!i·-------------­ Giants pull out thriller Leff erts Is key for San Francisco in 6-3. 12-lnnlng win over Reds to be that way every pme we play the Reds. Both teamJ want to beat each other t.d. It's aoint to ao down to the wire like this." EJJewhere in the National Lcquc Monday: From ne A•IOdated PN11 CINCINNA Tl -The intensity level ofGiants-.Reds pmes continued to reach· new hei&)lts Monday ni&ht. providina yet another in an onaoing series of dramatic, ttnsion-filled thrillers decided in the late inninp. nJWn tt. Mees 7: In New York, Chris James drove in three runs with his first home run of the season and a sacrifice fly as the Philadelphia Phillies o utlaJted the New York Mets I().. 7 to snap a seven-same losina streak.. This one. played before I S,226 at Riverfront Stadium. wasa dauHna spectacle of more than four h ours duration. and the Giants overcame the Reds' blurring bascrunning for a 6-3 victory in 12 innings. In the American Lca&ue: Yukeet 18 Tw181 I: In Minneapolis. Jack Clark broke out of an 0-for-10 slump with t~ree hit~ a~d th~ RBI and Dave Winfield conunued his hot hntina wtth three hits and four RBI as the New York Yanket'S routed Before the Giants broke throu&h with 5 of their 13 hits in the 12th. the Reds' vaunted runnina game was the dom inant feature. They stoic seven bases in seven attempts to make it 30 for 34 this season {88 percent). Minnesota. . . The Yankees. who haven't scored as many runs 1n sax years, had 20 bits. Every New York stanerh~d at least one hit. one run and one RBI 1n suppon. of wtnn~r ~arl~ Hudson 1-0 who allowed three hits tn ~ven 1nn1nss in This time. at least. the tono1sc beat the hare, thanks to some marvelous relief by left-hander Craig Lcffens when Cincinnati was threatening to run away with it an the 10th and I Ith. rcliefofineffcctive starter Richard Dotson. '· WtilteSox C, Martaent: In Seattle, Ivan Ca~deron hit a two-run homer and Carlton Fisk followed with a solo shot in the fourth inning as the Chicago Whit~ Sox won their founh straight game over the Seattle Mann~rs .. The Giants were gi vcn life after reliever John Franco was lifted for a pinch-hitter in the 11th after retiring six in a row. Pat Perry. who yielded Will Clark's gamc-winnin_J. 11 th-inning homer at Candlestick last week. took over 1n the 12th. Dave LaPoint. 2-1. pitched seven shuotut innings and Bill Long pitched the last two innings. · Jose Uribe led off with a bloop single to lcf\-<:t'ntcr and raced to second on a wild pitch be(orc pinch-hitter M 1ke Aldrete J><>pped to second. Brett Butler then singled to second, sending Uribe to third. Red Sox C, Raqen J: In Boston. M.ike.Grccnwell.'s sacrifice fly in the bottom of the ninth 10ning drove tn Wade Sous and gave the Boston Red Sox a 4-3 victory over the lcxas Rangers in a rain-delayed game. Tl1en C, Royals !: In Detroit, a double by Tom Brookens triggered a two-run sixth inning as the Detroit Tigers beat the Kansas Royals for a rare victory over Floyd Bannister. Butler's single was the key hit Reds second baseman JefT Treadway. a rookie, broke toward first, braked and had to go back to stop Butler's grounder toward center. By the time he'd thrown to first. Butler was safe. * "I lost the ball." Treadway said. "I never saw 1t. I don't know how I lost it, but I d1dn 't sec it till it got to the pitcher's mound It's the strangest th(ng that's ever happened to me." Ke' in Mitchell's sacnfice fl y to center broke the tic. W""9 Sex 4, ~rtnen O CHKAOO S•ATTl• •r•.. • .... l.loM\l\ct •OOO Co110Ci J OOO C.wl-u • I I 0 IC'-• Ci 0 0 0 0 lhll'ftelll •I I 0 • ..,,.,.1)1> 1000 Ce-nn l I I ) ,, .... , lll I 0 I 0 Clark follo.,.,ed wtth a run-sconng double to left-center. Frank W11hams replaced Perry and gave up singles to ('and) M· .ldonado and Jeffrey Leonard. c.w.io.r ID • 0 I 0 .......... M • 0 I 0 Fl" c l I ) I .... _Of\ • 0 0 0 Pe•-~ • 0 0 0 G-'1 • 0 ) 0 IC~•Jo 1000 V-c •OOO I.'""' Jo 0 0 0 0 I~"' ID J 0 0 0 01• 11> J 0 0 0 ~.. ) 0 0 0 "Th .. : was a gut-chock out there." said G iants starter Make Krukow. who pitched into the seventh. "It's going -rvo0 1'o 0 O 0 O •-11> l 0 I 0 T-n 4 6 J T-JI t J t ~ ----· ------· * * ~~ ::~':9 ~:.:o -0~~~ I ,,_ ... , 10, NII.ts 7 Sfflllt I 1.09~ ) S..l!lt • PHILAOal PMIA · N•W YOtll( H•-<•-0!' Ill Fi>• 111 M r ltllll .,... IP H • •• U to Glantl 6, Aech l !AN l'•ANCIM:O CINCINNATI l ut .. • t• Mttcf\tf Jo ('-'• 10 M-n L~IO,. 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I Wt!• •uu.., ""' ""' t... 0 • -• , ) J ' , l ) • 0 1 I I 9o•O ) 1 I. ~l\W l-1 1 1 w-1 W"1 "11-<:l'- U_H __ -"911 "'"' CCkl\lfl\ Se<ONI •oe TNrO I(~ T-JOO A-ll '7t * ~s 4, Revell 2 .n.sas CfT'f CMITllOfT WWlt\l\Ci s.1 .... >o l r.-t• lo Trtabl rf 'WNto 1" .. _ .. ....,,"" '*""" Mec'tWWt C S•-u •r11 .. , 0 0 0 • 0 1 1 t 0 I 0 , 0 0 0 • 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 • 0 0 0 • I 1 0 1 I 0 0 Petllt Ci ., .... ~.­-. ... a WN1wa Tri1tl'IM U ---. L.-" K ...... 1 ID --10 ....... _ ... ( Jl tS1 ~ Sc-. ... .._ •r11 .. • 0 ~ ' • I ) I • 0 I 0 0 . 0 0 J I I I t 0 I I t 0 I 0 t 1 I 0 • 0 . 0 J ••• I I t 0 JI 4 ' • ·-•Cll>t '" -__ , -., ---· Ge"" w ...... ..,. •11 ---If) 0~-· (tty I 1.oe-«.-. (ttv t Oetroll • 11-.--. ., __ SI-Tr.-!11 • ....... '° F•tn<o l 0 0 0 J 40ul•tt O•tC-twod 10 • 0.llef\ i!t IM ffh """'" ollc;..o IO t OAI! .. , If! ,,.. 61~ It ·~• o••~ •o 1 oett.,• "' •M .,,. HVO-W 1·0 ·-°"' P .,....,,, I. I l 1 ) J ) 0 0 I' Wi11l1"1• I ) 1 0 0 0 lrowr.'"~8 O•fC"41Q ,0 J IMH•'t r ,~ ,,., "I P-f M•• v \Ov tt•"'o* I ~P-lro•f'lrfl'l9 l("°""ow P Perr" Umo•"tt-~ W9'f"CMt.'flO' F1rt' tt..,..,..,1 S.C-°"'4 M6r\l'I r"'·'O o.~•,. T-02 •-IS nt ~IP--S...,..-l ID• A~tt. 01e vM o~ lNt~~ M T~ U•• MwM') ....,_ • .,..,,. l ......... ,_ , 9(-Wa.t-..,. Vmct ,.,~ Cre..toro r; ''' O•v ct~ S.C.Of'\CI .... , ....... T"i.rcs .....,.. ,_, .. •-t• .,, ~ ....... ,,..l 1·1 t i-> l tylf,,...ll·I ) S S • lle<t. 11·J C:erl!O" 1 t t O - • 0 ~~::.: t 1 M ~ : l ==-~·~ :n : ~ ._.._ 11•) 0 I 0 I 1 W_T_,,_ Oo""" ,..,....., >o • ,...,.,., .. ,,.. >o ---""'' v'" I W.-il ,._ C.•l!C>•• -lo ,,__ -...., TNrO _.._ T-) lJ A-JO u J •-10 A-II 001 NM.IC NOTICE NM.IC NOTICE P\&.IC NOTICE P\llllC NOTICE NOTICE INVITING SEALED BIDS CC·711 Notice 1s hereby given lhat the City Councll of the City of Huntington Beach. California wlll racetve Mejed b4dt f()( the Commodore Circle Rehabllllatlon Project In the City of Hunllng1on Beach. Callf()(nfa In accordanoe with the plan1 and spec1f1cations and special provisions on Ille In the otll0tt of the Director of Public; Works. Document• will be available on April 19, 1988 A Charge ot $15 00. not refundable, will be required for each set of specifications and accompanying drewino-. DIRECTOR OF PUelJC W°"KI EITIMATE WORK ITEM 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 Remove and repl~ 4 · wide concrete gutter In stall 2 x 8 redwood header Remove and replace cross gutter Remove existing blockwall ConstruC1 6' high slumpstone wall Cold Plane Remove and replace 202 curb and gutter (6" C.F ) Remove and replac:e 203 curb and gutter (8" C.F I Remove existing • wide concrete walk Construct 5' wide concrete walk Import aggregate base (for alleys & street) Import asphalt concrete (for alleys & streel) Excavation (A C .. A.B. & Native soil) Remove existing trees In parkway Remove ex11llng street lights Remove and repleoe concrete driveway Raise 10 grade (manhole) Raise to grade (wale< valve boxt Remove existing water meter box Install Brooks meter box 37137 ·IP cover Construct 10· wide concrete sidewalk Construct tree well Remove existing wooden fence Install 1 112" Schedule 40 P V C conduit Install 2 112" Schedule 40 P.V C. conduit Ins tall Pipe 8-rrlcade Asaembly Reduced Preuure Backflow Device Electric Service & Irrigation Enclosure 4 Statton Automatte Controller Shrubs 1 Gal. Size Shrubs 5 Gal. Size Automallc Irrigation Ground Cover 24' 8 011 Trees Wood Chip Mulch QUANTITY ... ns Sq. Ft. 115 L.F 1.415Sq. Ft 317 L.F. 524 L.F 11 ,817 Sq. Ft. 1,357 L.F. 200 L F. 5,IMO Sq. Ft 6.470 Sq. Ft. 522 Tons 1,058 Tona 722 C.Y. 21 Ea . .. Ea. 500 Sq. Ft. 2 Ea. 4 Ea. 20 Ea. 20 Ea. 2.630 Sq. Ft. 4 Ea. t27 L..F. 1.302 L.F. 100 LF. 4Ea. 1 Ea.. 1 Ea.. 'Ea. .. Ea.. S2 Ea. 3,000 S.F. 650 Ea. 30 Ea. 17 C.Y. In accordance with the provl11on1 of S.Ctlon 1773 of the .. L.abOt. Code. the State of Callf()(nla, Director of the=ment of lndustrlal Retatlons shall detarmlne the genacal prev8illng rat• of wegee. applicable to the wor1c to be done; of"- latest general waoe rate de111fmlnatlons are on ftle at the office of the City Clerk and the omc. of the ow.ctor of Pu WOttc• of the City of Huntington Beech. callfOfnla. Plans and specifications, together wtth propoaal form, may be obtained •t the omc:. of the Director of Pubic Wori11, City Hall. Hun11ngton Beach. California. No bid will be received un .... n II made on a tMantc form furni.Md by the Olrector of Pube6c woru. The 1P9d91 •ttentlon of prospective bidders Is called to the propoul ~ti. Mt forth In the spectftcatlona, tot ful dlfectk>f• • to the bidding. The abOve quantm..,. approximate only. being gh9r\ Ma~ tot the oompsteon of bldt... and the City ol 0 ttuntt1igt0n Beach doea not ...,,_.Of by lmpflcatlons 119'• tMt the ~ emount of wcwtc wtl oorreepond therewith but ,... _... tM rlghl to lnctMM Of deef .... the amoun1 of eny ctw Of pordon of the wort!.• be may~ .._111..y Of...,....,, by the Oltec10t of Public Wottca. All bld9 wtn be comc>ered on a balls of the DlrectOf of PublQ WOttc• Mtlmete of the quentt• of wort! to be dona. Substitution of aecutltlee for any mof'6el wtt"'*d br,. Qty to....,,. pertcwmenc• IJt'8I be permtttied In eccor•• .- prOVi-'ona of the ~n&e Gowmmet1t Code. 8edloft 45'0. Eactl bid It*' be m9de out on a form to be obtall ..... IN oMoe ol .. Dnctcw ol Pubic WOtke, 0..1' C11 1w1t Mii. 2100 Main S"-C. =....,I Cllto>M; ..... be ...... -.... -"" .. Qty Clilrtl .... CMc o... leoofid loor MmlNflretlon ~ 'lOOO Mein ln.t. Hunt1ng10n ....._ c •• ••on°'....,. 2:00P·"'-olMar14, '* " ... be~ br •--......_Med ol .. Cllv an. .. Qlr,..,,,.., and Olleetor ol '-''* Wcwflla or"* ... ._. ~and the,_,.. ol .... ~ wlil be i 9' I -W to .. Clly COUid ol allkt Cfty -Hlil*84bt ....... I'* ~c.i'":'tno to be heed on Moftder. tfte ol """9.,.., • .. "°"'~~_.!·~.:..~Qty CouMI 0.11& .. 1n .. ~ of Mid ctty ol ~on 8Mclh and IMI '9....,...,,. br--·r ___._ 9l the,....,.....,.°'"""' .. ,.... . Tht City ol Huntington-... Calfoc.,.. ·-we .. ngM IO~ llf'f 0t el b6da. and to 8COIPt ._ btCI 1111 oWI tDr ... .,... .,,.,_ ol •Qty ol ""'"""'°"' ...... c.ll'oO'ftlL ly Ot'der of the Qty COunol o1 .. Qty of .......... ....,_, e.-ot• .. ~ 1, ,.., ATTUT: Mill Watluaa, c=-ra.tr ·' ·' ti Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, Aprtl 19. 1988 Bailout may be imminent for American Savings Popejoy expects company to be sold or ~formal government partnership due By MARTHA J. ALCOTT -.c ............... A bailout may be imminent fo r the nation's sccond-laracst thrift. Amen- can Savi ngs, which has been stru&&l- ing for nearly four years to dig its way out from under a multibil hon-dollar mound of bad loans. "M y feeling is that in the nl'~t thm: months the compan) w ill either be sold or a more formalized pannersh1p with the govl'rnment will develop," said Wilham J. Popcjo). chairman of the In me-based F1nanc1al ( orp of America FC .\ 1\ the: ll:ln:nl lOm pan~ of tockton-ba~d .\ml'ncan Sa' 1ngs Amern:an "'llh 11<; I 5-branch nct"'ork •'> < .iltlCJfn1a 'largest thrift A.lthough tho\c and other \lCOarto\ for ..\nll'rtt ilO hJ ' t' bee n d1~ u'>sed s1nte I 91!4 thl' rn.cnt 1.ktc:nora11on 10 the 1n<,t1tut1on·, linanu<1I u>nd111on and cflon<, h' 1c~ul.11ors 11. 'lop a run on dcpo<.11\ Jrt· nt:rhdp\ lomng the Fl·deral H11nw I uan RCinl.. Board 10 1.:ome 111 ~nm1 '"r •>I den'>t0n ob<;i:r' l' '' 'd' 1t1 h< n~ h<Jard 1\ the'. w u.1 agc nq l ha 'lied "' 11 h oversec1 ng 1 hr- na t 1on '\ 3 20<J thrifts "Thcrt' "'a~ a 101 10 make \Ou belle\ e that gt\ en enough lime and '>umc lulk that !FC A's management) wuld Y.urk that s11ua11on out .. said Oun C ro"' It>' a financial anah st"' tth Kcr-fc Bru,~·ue $. Woods 10 <in Fran<:l'>lO said, unlr-~s the compan' gl·t s '>ume ~n of capital tnfu!.1on "lt'SJt,J5t too "'t'll·kno"' n a problem <11 this point .. '><ild Jerome Sawn .in .mah '>I "'tth Prudential· BachC' 'x'· l unill'\ in 'e"' '\ urk \1 oreu' n t"\ l.'n da' that .\mt'.n· can Sa' rng~·s pruhkm' rl·m .u n un- resohel.l is anotha da' that the \d..L 1ndu)l~ rl.'m,uns 10 a \Old f:3a ron In add111on 10 o\mencan. regulators arr juggli ng a number of other sick thn ts mainh 1n Texas. In fact. those Jnd uther a11t ng thnfts represent db<1ut a third of the 1ndustt') but their lo"..e" la<tl ~l.'ar outstnppcd earl)angs 1JI ht"al\h~ unes b> about S6 8 b1lhon. h•dl'ral Home Loan San~ Board (Pleue eee BAILOUT /B6l ··Tha t''l> no longer a poss1btl1t)," he Apple posts 51 percent quarterly improvement ( \ PERTl"-0 .\Pl -.1.pplc ( omputl'r°'-' net rn enue<t rose 5 p•:rll"nt in the li'>l 31 quancr ended .\pr1I I w mpMcd '""'ha lt kl.' perwd 1a ... 1 H:.ir It· -...a~ the third consecutne quana thJt th\.' ·i1 1l1m \ allc' lompan~ h.i~ po~11.·d -.all''> increases 0' er SIJ P\.'rtl.'nt ~ale<t tor 1h1: quaner this \t"ar \\ere Sl<6~ 2 mill1 un Lo mpared Y.lth $5-5 "\milli on reroned a \Ca r ago :-.;ct inrnmc for th l" nl'"' quaner -...as $19 -m1ll1on 135 ;x·rl'ent O\ er the 198 -quaner "'Ith per-share earnings l>I A I len t~ tor the latest quarter co RATE REPORT Rates as ot ..\pn1 ' " 1'I ~11n1mum "'t'<ilment S Banks \t\1 l oltd < beduog Ca.liforo1a Ratt Aml·ntan ~d ' r ~' ' ' Ca lttorn1a Fl·1fr1.i l ' Centun Fed1.·•.i • ' •' Columbia a\ 1ogs 5 35 Do..,.nc' ~&.L First I n·ta!.tatl ' I Grl'at .\meman ' . ' Home F edtral 5 IU Lincoln ~a ' 1ng~ Prudent1 Jl-Balhl 'c·, S.Ccur•1t\ P..ic1ft, ' ~ell-. F .. ngo .: 6 ~1ootb l 's'ear 5 Yur Ratt Ra tt Rate' .. ~5 .. 4l) -40 t 4 -Ill -45 ~ 1't -4) -0 6 83 i .35 8.00 -' . ,, -"'' ~5 (.' 3• t ~5 -25 1-,i -23 -(111 i .00 i .14 i .60 -... ' -J5 -I ' -'' :'• f, 5 ,.., : ~ -511 c J 0 'i1 -:' "' l\pple IS \UCCCl'd tng IO bus1ne~ market!.·· said .\ ppk , h1ei offi cer Delben ~ \exam .. .\lceptance fo r \tacin to~h produus continues to 1n rease on a "'ur.d...., 1dc basis .. Rates count"'I' "'John \I \.:ier:J..1l'l.t (fp Prudt-n11.sl-B.11..hr St-urn' L. 'l React \1,.• r,1 f • ntvrma11on on othl'r rate!> 82--11 : ) Sowitce r l\AnC. • \itw•.-c'X\4 # Yocam credited the lOmpan~ ·s star resu Its. 1 n pan -... 11h "the in' estments "'e ha' e made O\C~rthe past ~ear in people and programs .. ~tt'0.19 .. "t• ,_ •• .., ... ..-; ·c Cl''».JC• .,. '1 .,...... ct '.....C •• ..,,., '"-""'9nctait tna1 rtuh0"'• r~ I"~· ... .,,.~ tx ) ........ O'Qiwat•'"'•'~ •:.c .... " lle::•wOteC1 •O••Ma°""•*"'° ~ •. ,,.. 0'1!C-W'"'O"' ,. MO'" .. , ... 4, O"' We're interested in Y.our business. Wher. jro'J need a oar. -·:e-:) !':1:.'1Ute COlL'1ts W~ unde:-s:.anC t.:.a: Ever:; :nmute of eve=:; ca,:; Call w; lll•Harbor Bank /)~ (_/.~ ~ . ~ ' \' ~(~Z/ C) :.C:-..g Seac~. :.Cs Ala::l:;.os. E.:.::..-.r....::: ::3..-:-·:~ f .!:::.a:. "J&Jey :r .-.nt u ~;: ~ · -:~ 398 ~~ .. -:4 :~ r. · !.~-=t'fr r:n~ WE'LL BUY YOUR OLD BANK CHECKS FOR $10.00 It\ our wa \' of .... h~'\\ in2 \ l'U Fir t Interstate . ~ Ba nk\ LOm- mll ment to the futur~ t ,f H untmgton Beach . From OO\\ until \fa, 31 . 19 c'8. \\e v.ill bu\ \OUr old non-. . . Fir t Inter tate Bani.. Lhcd\' for S 10.00 \\hen ~ou open an~ ne\i. pers nal ched\mg a(co unt at the ~1 ai n Office of First l nt~r. tate Bank.• H untmg ton Beach- If you need a new bank . you can bank on u. alwa~. bei ng here to serve \'OU. Sand .. Chapman. Manager Huntington Beach Main Office 309 Main Street (714) 536-88 11 , . • Orenge Coat DAIL y PILOT I Tuetdly, April' 19, 1988 .. THE ADVANTAGE CD $10,000 MINIMUM DEPOSIT % % CURRENT RATE CURRENT YIELD* N°"' you can earn a high CD rate with $10,000: And stay totally liquid in the process. The Advantage CD from Great American pays an impressive 6. 20%. The rate changes on the first of each n1onth and is guaranteed through the end of the month . Better yet. your CD is insured by an agency of the federal gove rnment. Make deposits as often as you like. Make \vithdrawals whenever· you like . Our Advantage CD gives you access to your funds through te lephone trarisfers into a Great American checking account. It ·s easy to make the most of your time, money and effort . Just get an Advantage CD. Phone 1-800-423-BANK . Or stop in at any Great American office. ·c um:nr • n· .. I ,h,,..n ''Jn ette.i"c Jnnual '1clJ hJ,ed 11n 1hc: ,·urrt'nt annual Idle: a"unung 1ha1 p11n,1 pal and 1n1crr'1 Jf~· kll ''° Jc:11<••1I I"! 1•0<· ~tJr ln111•l 1•lkrtn~ rdlC md~ d1.in~c: Jail} lnt~r<''' "u•mpuundtJ J411\ ""a Jh~ '6~ tt.,,.,, I h<' a·~··r~ " ,ut-ic.:1 1o1 ,han~c nn the 111"\l J.i) l>I e"' h m11nth Th< inltrc't rare nn ac-cnunl' "1th tv.ih1111.·t, bch"" \111110 0 mJ\ 'J7' ,JJ1l~ IT\nur ,f\4nt;a~c: CD~.mrn ~lilt\ l'k-111\l -~16.tJOO-dattv rn11111110111 1cqur~~nt }'1llHiC«•>unt "111 .,,_.•ul>1t·,1 '" ,, m1in1hh m~1nt<'n.in<.C' ,harge "1.i"mum halan•<' S:!~O(lo1i Great American Your advantage bank: ., .... -·- 0.•~•.nfl• ~ Ow-r> ~Jl'lflf' • Hl1'M ..... I \,""I' ol 4nl•JOl•• I•" !l"ftlt• \C\IAJ• • Uf\Mll S.i'lflJ• •SM,..... ... FIN S...tllf' • ~ \o>"lf\ • ftr•I S.\lftl' 8.-nf ~""-'> p..-fta •II .. ~,....-,• K-1111 S..Mt•·~-r·-v""•' 0 1••~,._,,,.,,,..s...,..._. .. BAILOUT IMMINENT? ••• rromaa spotesman Karl Hoyle denied d\it the board was under any new pressure to resolve FCA's dilemma in tht near futurt. .. The deposits turned around and we feel that the (current) interest-rate situation has helped them both witl't their mortgage-backed S«urities and their convt'ntional monaagcs," Hoyle said. -¥et, -since January. FC A's prob- lems repeatedly have made head- lines. -After eking out profits in 1985 and 1986. FCA was forced to report a $468 million loss for 1987. In an- nouncing the loss. Popejoy asked for a SI. 5 billion loan from the govt'rn- ment. The loss put both FCA and Amen· can in a negative net worth situation. That means that if they were shut down and their assets sold. there wouldn't be enough money to cover all outstanding debts. including de- positors and creditors. -After the 1987 loss became well- publicized. FCA had a run on deposits that reached $61 $ million. However. it was far less severe than the S6.8 b1llioil run the compan y experienced in 1984. • A related. but much less publicized. side effect to FCA's loss was a 60 percent increase in the company's employee turnover rate. Before that. Popejo) said the ra te had been one of the lowest 1n the industry. -Fearful of the direction interest rates wou ld be going. the bank board fom:d FCA LO sell $2.5 billion in mortgage-backed-securities -assets that PopeJO} argued were needed 10 help the company earn its wa) out of 11s pro blems. -The media reported that regu- lators were meeting w11h FCA's competitors to discuss selling Ameri- can 's 185-branch network in Cah- fo rn1a. The board later said it scrapped the idea. -Rc~ulators were forced to re- assure Wall Street securities dealers that tht'i r short-tl"rm loans to FC'A - called re' crse repurchase agre<."mcnts. or rev<."rse repos -would be handled "11hout disruption should the institu- tJOn fail . Some dealers had threatened to dr) up FC' .\·s source of hQu1dit) and earnings -The Federal Sa vings and Loan lmurance Corp. said 11 would pro1ec1 all depositors and general cred11ors of ..\mencan Sa' 1ngs. even if they ex- ceedl'd the S 100.000 limit. The move stopped the run on deposit s. -The board also md1cated 11 has narrowed 11s options for resolving FC ·\ 's probkms to c11her arranging a merger or granting PopeJoy·s request for a ba ilout. In rev 1ewrng the n cnts of the past fc·" months. PopeJO) sa id hloc' er C\f)l'Ctcd 10 rl·ach this point ·-r , c been 1n 1h'c real estate .-nance hus1ness for a numher of years. and NYSE UPs & DowNs NEW VORI< (AP) -The foltowino list snows lhe New Y orll Stock E xchanoe stocks and warrants 1hat have gone uo 1ne most and down lhe most Qased on percenl of chanoe reoardless of volume for Mondav No securities 1rad1ng t>elow S2 are incl· •uded Net and oercentaoe changes are tne difference t>etween the previous cioslno price and M ondav·s 2 o.m orlce N1me 1 F inCpAm of 2 Facel Entro 3 OabirCo 4 BarrvWrght S Adot>eRsc 6 Fairchld 7 Berkev Inc 8 SvcResour 9 Ailet_n Inc 10 GenOata 11 SouUnCo 12 Armtek l3 CamronlrWk 14 MCoro CVPf 15 ReadngBa• 16 Cfyst8Ld 17 Asarco Inc 18 L earPet cv of 19 NL Indus! 20 NtlHerige n 11 ParkrOrill 72 Tonka UPS LHt Ctle 2' 1 + .,, 31', + 3~ 2 • -+ '. IS~• + ll!J 7', + \\ 1011 + 7'11 3'e + '·• 41 . + lot 3 • + •• l~ + '• 11 + >1. 30' 8 + 2 17 + 1' 8 20 + 1 • 2 + .,. ~~~-i l~ 6 l c + ~ 61e + ~ .). + •1. ·~ + '• ll'Jt + ,.., 14~ + ) .. 23 Cron ldSav 2<4 EnlerraCo 7S Navslr wfC 7~ + ~ 211'2 + 119 DOWNS N1me I UnilCP 2 NwAmShoe n 3 vjWhlPifSll 4 HorizonCo S Hanson wl 6 EmerRad 7 Marcade I MAI Basic 9 viPSNH 7 l lff 10 AlisChalm o 11 CharterCo 12 An1100 13 HadsonCo 14 OrienlExo lS Ese•Chem s 16 Carriaoelnd 17 lnterReo 18 Newhallnv 19 AdamMillis H AmBrd 2.67Pf PhllV1nH s Auge I CbunsTandSF RLC • 2S CoooerCo 26 M1nhalfNfl ust chtl 2'8 --··~. 2•, -'• 14 -1.lot 2~ -'• 2l • -•1. 3'• -''• 3'• -,,. 13•, -1 s~ -~ •'• -'I• •'. -''• 1711 -3(4 •Jot -'. 7'. -119 16''• -t'I s -I~ 10111 -'"1 s·~ -''• 13.lot -~ ·~v, -. I \t -'·1 1 ~ -,.., S.\11 -'I• ,, .. -~ 11'"1 -1h S''> -•,1,o Pct. UP 25 0 (;p 13.0 Uo 12.S UP 9 6 Up 9 1 Up 9 1 UP 8.7 UP 8.6 Uo 8.3 UP 7.4 Uo 7.3 UP 71 UP 7.t UP 6.7 UP 6.7 Up 6.2 UP 61 UP S.9 uo s.a UP S.7 UP S 7 Uo S.6 UP S.S Uo S.4 UP S.3 Pct. Ott 10.S ~Off 19·~ :~ 7.1 ~ H 6.5 S.6 S.6 s.s S.4 H ··i •• ::~ '· '· 4.4 ••• ••• 4.3 4.3 I've m:ver Sttn anythina th•t ap- proaches the d~pth o~ orob~ms we are having here. he said. add1na that the problems are inherited .o!les· "h is not only surpns1ng and disappointing. 1t v1nually borders on the unbelievcablt'." Sine.: 1984. FC A h•s added some S 1.6 billion to its r~rvcs for bad loans. . Yet. PopeJO~ u_quick to point out that fewer than 35 of the 45.000 loans American has made since he took over are more than 30 days dehn- qul'nt. The bank board ousted FCA's form er chairman Charles Knapp in 1984 once it became appa~nt that American was on the verge of collapse • frOIJl soured loans. mostly on real estate in Texas and California. and from the S6.8 billion run on deposits. The board hand-picked Popejoy to replace Knapp. and sin~ the-n'. has had a hand an every ma1or decision made at the company. However. 1t has refrained from taking more drastic action. such as putting Ameri- can Savings 1n10 receivership. The board had been hoping to buy time -time the FSLIC needed to shore up its own dwindling capital base. and time for FC A to show that it co uld resolve its problems. Or time to-find a buyer who could inject 1010 FC A more than SI bilhon of sore I) needed capital. Yet, thattack has so far been unsuccessful. Former FH LBB chairman Edwin Gra' had set the expirauon of his term last summer.as the deadline for selling FC A to another 1nst1tut1on. but he was unable to meet it. Then. after preSt"nt chairman Dann) Wall took ovt'r. the board again attempted to negotiate a sale. But it announced 1n January that talk s "'1th Ford Mo1or Co .. which own s San Francisco-based First Na- t1onY.1de Bank. had broken off. Pope JO} said he still gi ves a merger. possibl> c' en with Ford. a 5050 chance. But he prefers to have the board go the other route -financial as- mtancr. spec1ticall> the S 1.5 billion loan - a goal that pretty much guarantees that Popejoy and his management team would remain in place. ··we·re not asking for one dime from the taxpayer." PopeJOY said. ··The dollars the FSLIC holds arc not taxpa)er muney. lt 1s money paid into the insurance c-orporation 1n th e form of oremiums b~ the S&L industry." He points out that FC' A has paid the FSLIC-S 135 million in premiums o'er the past four years. He hkens the loan to the one the go' l'rnment ga vl' Chrysrcr Corp. abo~t I O~ears ago. Chrysler ended up pa~ 1ng th<.' loan back early with interest. .. , think our company has th e sa me potenual for the FSLIC .. Pope- JO) he said. OTC UPS & DOWNS NEW VORI< (AP) -The lollowlng llsl snows tne Over • tne · Counter sloe.ks and warrants lhal have gone uo the mosl and down lhe most t>esed on oercent of cnange for N\onday No securities trailing ~ow S7 or 1000 shares are Included Net and oercenfage cNtnves are lhe difference betwe-en lhe orevlous closing price and Monday's last or bid orKe , UPS N1me USI C"9 Pct. 1 Quioo 18 + 4•11 Uo 33 3 1 F'ace1En1 wt 14 e + 3.l.t UP 31 4 3 Swanklnc 7 a + ''1 UP 30 8 4 SOI un Jl• + l • UP 2SO S Unlfasl 6' ~ + I'. UUPo 2S 8 6 Chemclear S • + 1-. 10 7 SunairEI 6' • + 1 UP 19 0 8 ClinlcalScl 41,. + l,.. Vo 1; 8 9 OiagV_t n un 41. + l4 Uo 1 8 10 CnemFabric 10' • + 1''1 UP I l 11 PrudentFdl 10 1 + 1'1) Uo 16.1 12 SlanWslMng 33·16 +7·16 Uo IS9 13 Medlma9e 31. + ', Uo lS • 14 NfBusfnSv 27'1 + ~ UP IS 0 IS TtlcoSvs 3'11 t 1'1 UP 14.8 16 JG Ind 47'1 \'I l,Jp 14) 17 SwslNfl 2P"' 2~ Uo l •.S 18 Haw,.,insChm I + I UP 14,3 19 P F Ind 21'> + S· 16 UP "·} ?0 RoOHorse 3 + ~ UP I•. 21 TrioTech 2 1 '• Uo 14 13 Howtek 20' • 2''7 UP 14. 12 Windmere 22 21.1. UP 14.j 2• Alpha 1Bio 9•1. + I UP t3 2S Foreland 4111 + ,,.., Uo 13. Name I Caprock 2 MlllooeGP 3 CSC Ind • lnferand 5 Vlk~nlcs 6 AL Comm 7 HC 11\dust 8 HighPtains 9 NW Grouo 10 Comarco 11 ~PeeoRsl 12 icomTch 13 raicisBio 14 CalMlcOev IS lnvstSvg 16 Suotrtex 17 AmBiQnet 18 HRI Group 9 BasAmmed s !0 HunltrMelnr 1 Lusklnl 2 MacMTech 3 MrdnOiag • HuffKoos S MeuAlrl 6 Telemundo DOWNS Last CM 2''ll -?·16 s -1 '~ =-~ 3.,. -. .., 2''7 -lot 2,.., -~ 3!\lt -.,., 4Ji. -~ 71,, -~ 2 ''• S'l'I -,._, ••.• -'IJ •.. -~ 6'• -l.t. 3'• --2~ -S·l6 4'1• -'·'l .. .., -•;, ·~ -II) 2~ -'•· 2~ -11. ~~ = ~ ),..,-~ 7'. ->. Pct. li7:} I .8 1 ·~ l . Lj l1 11 1 ,, I ., l . ! .7 I .1 l :t 1 .6 J :J 9.• :.: -l!Dlllllllr:-:------- '• ----- . . • • Of'enge CoMt OA.ILV PILOT/Tueedey, Apttl 19, , .... .., NYSE CoMPos nr T RANSAc r1 0,.s ., TUESDAY'S CLOSING PRICES Mar k e t in mild rally 'if" 'nRt.. 1 .\Pl -Tht' stock marlct't ~ 1 .,,.'><ia . r d mild raJI~ inspired largrl~ b) higher corpuratt' t'arn1n~. but a sdlotf latc 1n tht' tradins ~\s1on t'ra!>t"d -nuch of tbt gain . .. ( cr..aanl~ tht' market 1sn 't reflectmg a lot of , vn' 1< 1wn:· Joseph Banhel. ttthnacal stratqJst at Butthcr &. ~ing<:r In~:. said 1n a~mJ WaU ~:rt·t>:".. ~ha " 1or e,_'acth s1>. months afkr the " stunl l f'illh · The markt't's inab1ht~ to sust.aJn htghcr lcvt'ls lw ('\en a ft'" hours sugcsted to many analvsts :hat undt'rh mg uncen.aint' will conunuc to affhct :~ad1r.g ror the for~ablt' (uture The Do" JonC'S a"cra&e of 30 industnals. '"'h1" h had bttn up more than :::'.5 points c.arlacr 1n t h~· se\sion slid in the final hour and finished down .6: :u I. ~"Q 50 It v.as tht fin.t umc the indicator llOSCd bt-lov. ::. in l\\O ..,.,~ks (Jaining 1ssuc-s narrov..I~ lead declines on tht '!.'")or~ ·1od. E\ hange. v..11h -..,Q up . ..,33down ,rnd .1ti5 unchanged B1g Soard ' olut' totaJcd 161 <11 m11l,1on sham. ~ 1mpared ~ nh l -1.: 5 mil hon \1onda~ WHAT AMEX Dio WH AT NYSE DID NE-A "'0~1( AP AP!' 19 """ ,. !llEW 'l'()Rk IAP ~ T~r ~. , .e.ovance::: T~r 11 Ao .. a..,cec ~~ ~~ ~1 [)ecl ~ 736 ,:c u "'C" 4 "9eC 161 i§ ¥'IC l'\a !'Q«! ~ T:i•a n'"'" Ill o•• \~ ,..~ ... "'9"'\ ., ~ ~1'1•011\ u • "le• >O,..) 6 ' N•w llOW\ lO AMEX LEADER S NYSE LE~DER S GoLo QuorE s Dow JoNES A ~E RAGE S S..C..C -QOIC! -._., 0, T._ .U. ~--·ed~ L . ...._ ~ '"''9 11 ... ~SS a' S1 •S ~·~··~•S.OS61C :1"$' •C ..... ""OJMOC)r' "•"Q • $4 s,. 5Ci "' 13 S3 p...-...,,•,~ • SA!otH :l!'S' !>7 i--... ~ :.< $.&~-x ""''' <O $4•--.: -..c --,a-t SA5e\iC ""$' •O ,,....._... SA!>l l3 or s· •O , .......... ~."'·~~··~ NYC-~ IOOI _...,,. ._. S.059 _, 4> Sl 50 METALS Quo rEs NASDAQ S uMM~R' £\VoorT.1"'°111 Dollar Value! HOUSE of IMPORTS • """'-.of Maid ts· Btn: ~ Dial 213/714 MERCEDES Santa Ana P·st and ~ Cl 9 ll f l't"C"" ' ' --1' ':Visits vital to visitor DEAR ANN L.\NDERS: I would like to respond to th( reader whoSt elderly mother as an a nursing home. The woman no lo~r recog01zes her dauahter and she li ves in the past. I ao not condemn the daughter for feeling that it is an awful chort to visit her elderl) mother. The dear woman's m1nd is gone and she recognizes no one. My heart goes out to thoSt' who must spend hours. day after day, with a loved one who is differenrfrom the person they knew. But I would like to tell the daughter 1hat thert is another way to look at at. Surely you know that whether your mother acknowledges your presence or not. you.are doing e verything ~ou can to bri&hten her days and make her feel that she-as part of the living world. You do this not only for her but for A11 l.uDEIS LIBERTY. IND. -~- DEAR N.1..1.: 'here'.a a lfUl AlW of wisdom in wlaat yH laave written. nanu for slaa.riDI you i*Hosophy. • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: Toda¥ in the dog we are concerned about might be dead by tomorrow. Our neighbor has left her beautifu l pct outside for the last two days. I cannot understand people hke this. The woman 1s intelh~ent and very pleasant. I have a cousin who is the same wa). I'll bet any1hang her dog is outside right now. T hese are the same people. Ann. ' "ho wouldn't leave a hou.e plant out on the porch. How c~n thC)~ be so uncaring.about their animals? What as " rong \\1th them? What wo uld you do~ -WARM AND SAFE IN DETRO IT. DEAR DETROIT: Don't ask me what's wrong with thesr airheads. I can't tell you. -.)'o urself. : • When your mother is gone. you wall :~glad that you did everything )OU ·<ould for her. You will never be able :l o live thoSt' days o ver. In life there ~~re no dress rehearsals. -NORTH Detroit it is I 0 below z.ero with a wand chill factor of 45 below. People are tucked safe and warm in their homes. This momini hundreds of mothers drove their kids to school becau~ no matter how warm they were dressed. it was too cold to wait for the bus. If I bad neighbors like tlaat I'd phone them and malt~ an urgent plea. If after IS minutes the dog was still out in that miserable weatber, I'd call them again and tell tbem I was taking the poor pooch into my house. Theo I'd do it. Tonight I called the Humane Society again about the dog next door. I was told . "We are swamped with calls. Try again to morrow." We think . : Weaesday, Aprtfto ARIES (March 11-Apnl 19): You'U receive numer- ous calls. messages. Confusion could arise concerning direction. purpose 1k analytical. dis- cern motives. com- "111 u n i c ate w i th >'special" member of oppos i te sex Gemini plays role. SYDNEY 0MARR TAURUS ( i\pril 20.May 20): Attention centers around monc} in connection with fam ily. home. Domestic ad1us1mc nt featured. surround tngs w11l be ·beautified. You'll receive gift which represents token of affection. Libra involved. GEMINI (Ma) 21-June 20): Emphasis on pressure of deadline. added responsibiht). intensified love rela- tionship. You'll complete pro1e<:t. associates will adm n you were correct all alo ng. Cancer nauve plays role. ·' tual cunosll). be aware of v.ardrobe and bod~ image. Social act1' 111es accelerate. you could be an \'ltcd to eq~nt which ·includes journey. Saglllarian will figure promi- nently. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-rNo'. 21 ): Emphasis on de- terminauon. a bi ht) to perceive cl ues a nd to come up wtth "complete st Of)... Scenano highlights c~c1temcnt of d1scovet). romance. challenge. added recog0111on. Gemini will do minate. SAG ITT ARIUS (Nov 22-Dec. 21 ): Focus on ll1na- t1on. vanet)'. travel. attention to public image. Be aware of lepl nghts. permissions. Questtons concerning matr1age wtll also arise. Get 1deason paper. submit unusuc.l format. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Go slo". tx diplomatic. pla) waittng game. Individual close to ~ou talks about .. change of sccner) ... Be aware of obhgat1ons. check accounts. kno" that employment picture will soon brighten. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Emphasis o n intrigue, "hat occurs behind scenes. communication wath one associated" nh instttution or hosp11al. Be discreet, secret meeting "Ill be arranged. Pisces. Virgo pla) roles. CANCER (June 21 -July 22): What had been source of concern wtll be eradica ted. You'll know where vou stand. what to do. and confidence will make remarkable comeback. Reach be~ond prevto us hm1ta11ons. Anes figures promtnentl). LEO (Julv 23-Aug. n): What seemed out of reach becomes a vallable Focus on fulfi llment. romance. : speculauon. powers of persuasion. You'll make fre~h start. love relat1onsh1p will blossom . .\nother Leo is tn P ISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Practical affairs dominate. incl uding investments. objecu ves. long-range prospects. Older individ ual. poss1bl) family member. does have valuable advice to im part. Gain indicated if ) ou arc rccepu vc lF APRIL 20 IS YOUR BIRTHDAY vou are sens11n c, emotional. mother had more influence· than did father You could be successful in deali ng with public. especial!> "omen. Taurus. Cancer. Capricorn people pla) 1mpon - an1 role!> in ~our life. Current C)cle highlights travd.~ 'anet~. possibk add111on to fam1I). lfsingk. marriage 1~ distinct poss1btltt). lnvatatton to tra,cl will am'e befor<' mo nth 1s finished MaJordomestic adjustment takes place in ~ta~ December "ill also prove significant for you 1n IQ8 · picture. • VlRGO(Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Focus on 1ntu1t1on. fa mtl) reunion. securit). home. purchase or sale of propen~. You'll deal successful!) with pubhc. espec1all) "omen. You &am objecu ve through unonhodox procedure. • Aquanan featured. i : LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Diversaf~. sat1st\ intellec- ' .. . ~ • i -:-. 1ilMllillli Maybe life just seems longer Seaweed. soybean curd and raw fish -the) rank high in the Japanese -.diet. And on that diet the Japanese liave overtaken both Sweden and the "United States an life expectancy. \.. Busincs~ partners rel) on each other for m oney. not affection. Our Love and War man notes with i-nterest that a business partner 1s statistically far less-1tkel) to break up with his business partner than wtth his wife. Q. What kind of harness does a domesticated }ak wea~ A. No harness. To make 11 go nght or left. the dri\er throws rocks at 11. Some fi sh light up "'Ith a lumi- nescence" hen the' s" 1m. but remain dark when sti ll. An underwa ter pho- tographer sa~s schools of them hang motionless so the\ "'on't be seen But when spooked. lh~ streak-the depths with sudden light, creattng a sort Of deep sea fire" or ks Quite a sight. e' 1dentl). If ~ou'd la ke. ~ou can clip this and paste 11 on ~ our ba throom scale: "The most fa mous female in ~merica - the Statue of L1ben ) -weighs 225 tons .. The real logger wears suspenders. not a belt. it's said. What the best of the baseball pitc hers can do ~oda) 1s wl:lat-was done b) the most respected of prchastonc men They threw rounded rocks -to kill ga me. In those cons. the knuckle rocker was a nobodv. But a good fa st rock pitcher. he was a· hero. -- 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 j 9:30 10:00 10:30 11 :00 11 :30 D I""' s;as ..... 2 Ofl tM ... -CNtlll c:.. C.-r• ..... '""'"' ..... r-"'""' -'""'" ....... D ..... .. EMrtlif\ c..., ... IKll J..l ltftucll ......... lhllllld Ian ..... '""'"' ..... TOfliatit Clull ."'"" u ....,._ SIMf l_...1 Cliomia Mglll at OMiand A'1 (LN9) ..... f islwnln. C..11 Clwe11 Tai 1s..o,. D ..... ..... AIC Eye on Wtlo'• "" .. ,., llllonllti.int thlftylO!Mthlng ..... NIFCIM ..... LA. .... , (R) , ... ( .. ® CIS ..... PM Siii lup -CNttll c:.. c ...... r .. ...... '""'"' ..... llMaaiM DllGo "'""' -'""'" 1 .... a LallM Pfo ...... 1111111 Loe An\)1111 l.lllttS at Sill AttotlCI SOllll ..... 1::-The T'11Ci111 rn1 .. ~ L.9• l11tta11111 ' CollMCC'n @ AIC ..... People'• Will. LON Who'• I.lie Wonder Mionllthtlng 1t1111po1111tlllng ..... ....... ,. ..... Court or Dftw ... , (A) , ... '" m lllM'• Cloll/ F1111ilr WA'S'H Tiit 14u,..,. (511 .. ..... C11rT1nl Thi Tiit Lall Colli•-ColllfOft n. Alflit IJtflertOM Show m .... .,_. Dltlng Whitt ol Jto91tdyl EdQI of 011'11 .. 1Pw1 21 ('Ml .-Min Maloy, RU1ildQI !Thi 9tat r .. 11 GMlt Gt1111 Fonune 9trlll Eli) lutllllll MlcNtM.th,.., Wiid Nove The Hldl*\ SoldlM l!':°lot Froml ne ~• on Fiontllnt YOlll Fll;lt AIPOlt NlwlHour Anlmalt Powtt ol Pia,., C'mandlr flt Rio San Juan " Clnctled m NIC C"'-Whitt ol iJto9•dy! flllillocll J..l 9'nucll Wollllll ltNnd IMI ...... '""'"' ..... fol'lune 1""°'1 Em Th• Ans•r Prtilt tht Loni Pr.I• the Lord Pflile IN lord TIM E.V. HIM Mllllltft Johll Toav S.lamlll Jlcolll ~Focus on HUl!llll· Bu11111se Thie Old Sho.tln"9 W'*9 MDVI f ht Hlddltl FrontNne ~""' on VolcH and Vllionl W.ercol'r itlff Rtpol'I Hou• Was tt' Power ol ~,.., IN Ro San Juan Ehza1>et11 Be/loo m • Ed Gona a. Dark HorN Chlmpionshlp Wre•· Goo4 1::1 Tiit Fugitive Hun of Hora Kleid~ Shlldows Racina Una Lh Mltion Alci1111 AIE IBurn! 1PG. 'WI **'* ColMCIV lmll9IO~n1 11111ml 1PG. 691 ... BRAY "'°"'' ,g INlooll IA 11..-Wiii !PG. 't$ *'* 1.n111 It Mi..ina f5ll CBH !Th• 700 Club Tllk Chtls 1Rtin1nQ1on 911111 111m1 I.A. ltnny llMOllCho ~·I llM 700 Clu• , CNN lL.arrv Kina Uve! IE venina News ,Moneytine l::iOOl'll •WIHlalC IPolitkt Nt ... iahl Uoe11t1 ISllGl'll CSPN Event of the Day tSl Ewtnl of the lift l 11'\1911C ...,~ Co nt1'9l\CI DIS Tiit P.anut Butt" :sctution CltMll Canterv1llt Ghq• ameon and 111111111 r•tt ·-JOZZlt l•vil 1£SPN 18odvb'ld. Hockey ~HL l"'lilYO!fs 'lon'tS 01 S""YI"' OIYtSton F1nar tlive) Jin PGA Scholaleic JTrivil 1:.pol'ILIIM l!lateant" GALA Sen1 An1.1nc11dl Lot Cuatro JuanH 1comldl1 124 ,.,., -ro-I S.h1ndl Fi,. Ind Ice I PG, '97) • • IBhnd Date 1~1). 97) * Hllf I UftlllM Hoo-*' (PG Ml IHBO Scenes ' UFE Ca~ool . &31 .. Caaney 6 t..cey JJICll • MIU lnwt•mtnt Adv1eory I Hltan! (5 JOI 1'621 • ... The Grapn of Wr•n f'Ol ..... led Company (10 10) ,PG, '1'Z) Mo¥lt I MAX .... NICX Finders Dennis Cant Do Obi. Dare \ 1 Oldcty lllllt. Ed 3 Soni 10. Alld Y uah In !Cir S4 1•n-lff :5l.9le SH Gnomea Adwnlutt 1Vio1tts Are Blue ?(;. tJ 961 •• Mlnnequ1n 1PG. !I) * 11.-. 001.C unll 111. as ... SHOW t h,,,1nll01' l"G ·w • tO to Midn1aP1t 111. &l' •• lP'lml l utlltr't DIY I.ITT ll'G-Ul , T\tC 51.immer of ·42 5' iTht Alln19hter 1"".i-13 !7l * I_,. Soffel 1PC>1l. !loll *'* IAao1na BuN !Al 1 USA Cano on Enreu 1A11wolf Riptide 0111~1on Ptc1fic I Stl .... •wwo• ·WGN Take 1roe Money1Run , ...... 1USA Ton. T•thgtil IMICl!IUm IA W01111n of Subltanc• r&11 **'* WOA .Monon DoW!'ley Jr. ....... ISllMI I l'IOOlt All Talkl~ !Enttl'IHI. Jot frll'lkhn Home Shopp~ WT BS Pfo Bnkttblll (UV91 11rie far Coumry ,f 5011'~ ••• 1,.1aht to HolOcliat 1tso1 f71\ • :;rac-'" the World WPlX Bneoall si ~ Yorw. at M.r111eso1a 'lMll USA Ton. H'mooner 19'• Trek . ITWlllQN lu:iA Ton. :tUCClst ISUCClll z Movit •Trocac:tero AraDHQUt 66\ ••• l:iteondt 166\ .... Th• AMniQhter By CHARLES GOREN and OMAR SHARIF Both "ulnerable. South deals . ~ORTH WEST + A,8 6 K6S 10 9 8 .a • A J 4 EAST • Q 2 Ql.094 j 7 6 2 + K 7 S • J 10 9 7 2 Q5 • Q JO 9 8 3 2 SOL'TH + KS 4 3 A J 8 7 3 AK 3 • 6 The bidding: South Wt>sl J Pass 3 • Pass Pass Pass ~Orth 3 ' 4 Opening lead: Two of East Pass Pass Of the original 10 Life Masters named b) the Americ an Contract Bridge League, only two survive , aud the) ha"e homo phonic last names. They are Richard L. Frey. No . 8, and Sam Fry. Jr. No. 10. Although he turned 83 two months ago, Fre>. who is chairman Complete televlelon. lletlnga In Sund•Y'• TV Piiot. o f 1he Goren Editonal Board , still rcttains much of the skill that made him one of the most successful play- ers of the '30s and '40s. Watch him in a ction fro m a rubber bridge game played at his winter retreat in Palm Beach. When his partner made a forcing jump raise of his one heart opening, Frey made a three-spade slam try o n the South ca rds. With his flat mini- mum, North was having none of that. After the diamond opening lead, declarer was happy with his con- tract, despite the mildly disappoint- ing dummy that appeared. That is, until he. captured East's queen o f diamonds wit tr the king and cashed the king and ace of trumps, to find ACROSS -61 Treaty gp. .., Seal type 62 Slip away 83 USSR "nix" 5 Ridge 6.4 Eris' brother 9 Template 65 C0<p. parts 14 Asian ruler 66 News 0<g. 15 Strop 67 Instrument 16 Decree 17 Tennis sc0<e DOWN 18 little one: 1 Supports suff. 19 Su~ 2 Love: II. 20 A lum 3 Yukon or 22 SSTs Yazoo 24 W0<ld -4 Chairpersons that he had two trump losers to go with an apparent spade and dia- mond !Qser. There was one chance. If West's distribution was exactly 2-4-4-3, the contract could $till be brought home. Declarer continued with ace and another diamond. West won the jack. but dummy's ten was now established. West shifted to a spade. Declarer won in hand, crossed to the ace of clubs and discarded a spade orr the high diamond. A club ruff was fol- lo wed by a spade to the ace and another club ruff. Frey had tele- scoped his spade and trump loser into one, and scored JO tricks via two spades, two top hearts, two ruffs, three diamonds and a club. f'MVIOUI PUZZL1 IOl YID Models set examples in drug avoidance 26 Threesome 5 Fema.le 27 Venture 6 Ms. Negri 29 Undetermined 7 Out 30 Except 8 Reorganized By SHARON TETRAULT 1a111r .... c .... ,.,... ,, .. Ther~ are mus1Clans agatnst drug abuse. artists against drug abuse. and ·athletes against drug abuse. so I tho ught. 'Wh) not models against -d rug abuse: .. Tom Meler said at a .recent fund-raiser at lrvme·s lntC'r- national Arts Center of South Orange Count). Meter and his wife J .J . founded Models Against Drug i\buse. enlist· ing models 1n the crusade against drugs because "they are so visual in our society and can be vet) 1nOuen11al with }Oung people.'" T he MADA fund-raiser was spon. sored by Face Finders of Irvine. FF President ltarla Rou brought together a group of beautaful young models. some local bust ness people a nd representatives from Los Angeles and New York modeling agencies. The event not only benefitted MADA to the tune of $3.800, but gave cxPoSurc to the approximately 20 models. most of them just starting out tn the business. Most of the models at the pany were at the age when exposure to drup is arcatest -high school and collqe years. Said one model. ··1 know a lot of people at my school who hLve talten drup. It's considered• bia problem. I'm happy to help out With this event." lbe models attending had been chotm from more than I .OOO~wbo mtettd a "Paris Model Search0 conleJt. &ch rcc:eived • pho10 snaion with top pho1opar:>hcr P ... C......_ for a nominal ftt. The photo teuion was held durina tht part~. with the moddl 'POlina .. ba&lmw suits. cvenina wear and ~~ar. Cutetlano has pftoeopaphed top models for Elle. Harpers Bazaar. Cosmopolitan and Glamo ur maga· tines . Meier gathered <:'l'T)One in the lobb\ of the center to announce that ~ ood' tl'"' Dn dpmcnt. a local com- pam had donated $:!.000 to MADA. Derk De Young. "ice president of ~ ocxh 1c ..... received a plaque in apprcnat1on for the contribution. ~ftcf\\ard~. ~kier talked to the models about the importance of .. JUSt lending )'Our ear or )'Our shoulder to someone who ma) be in trouble with drugs .. B~ doing so. "you are helping to .,..,n this wa r." Those attending the pany Sunday included James Davidson, Saslaa Spoba, Stiellee Mclliuey, Yvette Hevell, Patti GrttD, Aue Marie, Cyntltia Ulller and Joni IUrkpatricll. .,.., ........... ., .............. Karla ROiie, Tom Meler, Dirk DeYoanc a t ceremony. ,• 33 OutS1andlng 37 lndlan garb 36 laughs 39 Andiron 40 Contradict 41 Crew members 42 Good « Eastern cape 45 Wave 46 Depress 47 Fish 49 Inventor 53 Nol IClred 57 -voce 58 Located 59 Geralnt's wtr. 2 3 .. 14 17 9 Lose 10 Mountain nymph 11 Miid oath 12 Mar~ln 13 Dre 21 SlllcheS 23 Miik measure 25 Indian tltle 28 car ... 30 Exotic Isle 31 Tune 32 Canadian rebel 33 Melayoraft 34 Equine cok>r 35 DeMf'W 38 Manyeru ' • 6 7 37 Local 40 Tlel 42 Endure 43 Charge 45 Nethenworld 47 Hibernated 48 African land 50 Fixed of lo<*: var. 8 51 Fur 52 Halter 53 Manipulated ~ Green lhade 55 Spin Ilka -- 56 Vanllt'8a 80 Sota' lllMM: abbr. • 10 11 12 13 TBS FAlllLY CIRCUS .. ~ ---- by Bii Keane "Mommy's putting infecticide on my cut." MARMADUKE ... ·' • ,, .11/' • I .. tp"'c-.... by Brad Anderson "This 1s only the first load ... a trash truck tipped over In the next block.·· PEANUTS BACK DOOR, OPEN ~ SUPPER . COME OUT ! GARFIELD TUMBLEWEEDS DRABBLE R08EUIR08B IN THE BLEACHERS by Steve Moore .. MAA4 ! Bc8 ~ A Um.£ HELP! I CAN T ~EATHE.! BOO~' AAAAA H ~1.~ DENNIS THE MENACE T~s ~LY ONE THING UUMSER Tt-W-1 A. DUMB CW GIRL THA1S TWOnuMB OLU GIRLS ~ by Charles M : Schulz by Jim Davis by Tom K. Ryan by Pat Brady BLOOM COUNTY Orange Coast DAILY PILOTITuesdey. April 19, 1118 • lfJIS, 14Ke NCOl<E f1£ ~ f*j(,!. N :iltf£U Ml MY f(UllNN6 Mlf TC 1' IN /IN f9UOH(,f.JC c~ -. Bf lt:Et.1(1(1()(/., ff'ANU' I by Berke Breathed by Addison --- FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE by Lynn Johnston WHFrer1A ~N· ;i a.rzP.ee1H? __ --.../ ~ ax:it<ieS) v - SHOE I I I ., !J NOW ~TI ~\IE f,UVPENDEO M'( ~~14E Pi<~t~NC."f', JUDGE PARKER I D i..1K£ lVOff~ 1<:) RfVERE~O l~~ ~£ ~ ~ M'f' ~6€. CAMP~GN INi(,,,i. "E.. by Jeff MacNetty Of (.Ol.QSE ~£ .. .._ MA'IE TO ~ING R::lR A NEW RZ0rr BlD by Harold Le Doux FUNKY wtNKERBEAN by Tom Batluk DOONESBURY . ' '. . . ~,, . ~-~~- by Garry Trudeau A./'<.:-: _ ...... ·f;4~ : : ~ A£:-1l£ .,..._ &f)f{[AH"f 7HIN6 'S~5T1£L '1.AN6/N6 llJ 1'HER£ I _,: ·::~~· s~~JJ~\-Jt.~s· = ----.......... C\>-• tr0&.4..A .. -~:; ~-;-.. :~: : ,_ ~ ~· • t•r • -..,. f ~0:£'!> I· I I : l' ! ClUG~ i : i I' I~ I T(.J\ 1: I I' I' I . ,,._. ~ .... ;:> .... Cll.ll2t9 If\ ,.,._00 --~ _.._.. sevs .. H9y 111-• -· I s "' u J I I I I' I'!!~~~::.~~ ; ; I I I I I I I . . 8l0 ~Coat DAILY PILOT/ T~. Apri119, 1988 CALL 642-5678 FROM NORTH ORANGE FROM SOUTH ORANGE --,-========;;:;:;;:;;;;::::;:i,..:.c.......,.11_-... ___ 1_m_ • .,.. 1w1a I cLAssiFIED INDEX 6'2·5678 1 ·- PllOM WTM ~CO. -.1221 PROll IOUTH ORANGE CO. -lllD nte DAILY PILOT CHECK Y°"" AD cu1SS1F1EO OFFICE HOURS TI4E FtRST DAY T~ Se<•>ee M·F I 00 AM 5 30 f>'1.A ,,,,. l>•'• P "'14 '"'"•' 'Wif -""""""" S•tV'"d•y 8 00 AM·', JO 4~ •!'Id • Jt•' '"'0•••., O<U•~•h 8us.ness Counter M·~ • ,11, Of .xt"' ,._0 • 11\J9ofl ·~ 8 00 AM-$ 00 PM .,,., •~ '1t•O O.\o• •N c~•.,..., .. ., ............. '"'"' ,~ ...... . DIA.DUNES !\~, "'' '"''W O•···~ k t ... ,~ OE 4(~ llriit "' . ., lltrl'. \~Vy ,, • "'•IV< "'" c ... y. .0 It '°" .... , •"9' .H .0•Kt4W ...,.,., •w •"'"-" t ""'-• u. ,.,OOft\1.,_ .... .oi "°" ~ .,, "" ~ MM<'• 4 • .• • !W.tvOfl'O th •°"I•~ 6' (•H 1 ' (M 1.-0-.ii ~ ~ •. ,., ,,...,.,. ''" •v ""''•·v ~ Py ~ I " Ari.} A • •"'O""''....,. o.f-0 ..,, • ..,,,. t0 Of•\ -------~ ., ~+".0: •'ti °"\"'°•' •I)°"'',..., I --.ct -•1n.""(t '~'"" (~1.-g """mlillil~-.. •• • Of .... ~"° er.••"<• ... ""°""" -t:O'WflOf' f MI\ MO ..... -. ···~ .,,.,.,....\if'lft .,....., ........ ests1de. >Ont toe. Quiet street Good condition $152,000 Ownr '497-4579 lut. •ecll 1iiO Your own ,pvt._ grassy bckyrd. 2BR 2BA • gar. 5 blcks to boh. $ 1'43K Bkr. 963-8377 R E Prof ~--.Off Alders Bristo~ Model , 2BR 2BA. great Wood· bridge locatron $127.500. By owner •640-0507• ' Tllnl llCI IUI 3BR 2BA, 1700 s/I Green- belt view, pvt spa off MBR. New crpt, oak nrs & paint Call Agt/Ownr Princs only. $262.500 Pnil & Eugenia Starlo.en- l>YrQ 854-86361760-5000 RE/JMtl( .. / ~t\XT\l:T tlj·\ ·11 IPElllllE lllLY 1-1 ,2111 YllTA NUU *WATll YlfW* In newer NOf lh Bluffs. Elegant 3BR 2'i'tBA No Agents please. YllUIUE PEITlllSE WITIYIEW! 2Br 2Ba 2 gar spaces. View ot Saddleback & Bay New on milrket $144.900. 644-7211 ... VERSArLLES 1eR-:2nd tt;:, quiet location. full secur- ity No pets! Agent. no lee $795/mo tea.se 644-7211 Wll'TWTI Only $225.000t Well-loc 2BR townhouse 2 trplc. 540-1220 496-6800 REALTORS .. skytt5. pool. gar Wllt 2Br 188 SUPER CLEAN lease option 722-7381 dp•~ lg yd gar. dtw wl d l1WJ1rt ltacll 1019 MtLa'lt Roats nk-up, cat ok. $750 -sec. • 1952 Meyer 549-3484 •AY CREST Fer Sale 1100 * * 2Br -1-Ba ca th cell MESA Verde spacoovs ex- COST A Mesa Xlnt senior dlw. w/d hk-up $700/mo ecutove-3000s/!. park .' .WIE. view, near golf courses park 2br 2ba -den Lo 752A Center St (entry on Lease/Option or rent! Beautiful, 4Br. 2· .. ea, lam space rem Pool. clubtis. east side) 432-7767 52300/mo 5,.5•3722 rm. New kitchen $4251< $43.500 Bkr 556-6358 EASTSIDE CREAM PUFF Wl cooperate wt agents hatals Never been lived '" 1mY 11.aTll 675-0040 or 955-2510 Ad orabl~ 28 R 28A 2BR w/gar. new crpts, Call Jim M ~Hltlt Ctatos house trplc. pvt patio. tncd yd 636-'4120 1-5PM • aYflllf* - -1 d hk d p me 2526 Santa Ana 'D' .. $710 • · atH ZIOZ n ry up. grn r r1 E/sode foe Perteet tor 2aR 2''1BA TwnHS'e-:Huge '4Br. lam/din rm. ottice NEWPORT BEACH older couple or sngl who D 1 5\•B&. pvt dock & slip yrd wl au10 access. b Accomodates app<ox 60 <Ill Newport 2Bd $825 wants pnvacy $ lOOOtmo gar, xtrast $995. Pet ok 2 CM 2Mas1erSu11ess1200 No pets Ma11tyn ppl 646-126'4 /6'42·9666 L..-----------------"""" boat Next to ''> lot gar-Npt Hts 2BR condo $1200 Coombs C • • 1022 den on West side across Saytront condo2BdSt275 631·1266 Quiet E Side Ilse. V/Cln. •--) •·tilt Ftr •-Je 1na1 ti If from Lido Yacht CluD & 500 BR 1 & 1 ;:.:/C.a•t1 -Ftawiess extra iarge CdM Ill II FLllllT PATIHI N~~1AE~A~L~~o~is~!3e~~~~s-11:~i·~T>•· ~pea:~o. ~EtJ!~ngS8~ Dupiex. built by Warm-Parking for 4 . cars ,~__.... lfMrlJ 1002 s t ,350,000 By Owner sec dep Shown by appt inglon Front Muse 3BR P11nc1pats only 673-5373 lalMI lslaa• 218' ------2450-B Elden 673-0231 AMOl8Ell.OFTHE ' 2'" BA. 1az trplc large Piease leave message i •BEAUTIFUL EASTSIOE SEMIS ANANCIAl..NE'TWO"I< deck 4 car garage Rear 28R 1BA Yrly Lrg br ck 2BR lBA. lrg yard. w/d hk· l•--------unot 3BR 2BA tncome Beautiful lamtly home 4BR crtyrd steps to bch & up, refng , trplc. garage COLDWeLL BANl(C!RO $3,175permonth Prmc1-3BA,poot spa$•08.000 convenient shopping $850t mo A.sk for pals only $590,000 Sy Ownr 2101 Leeward S.t lOOtmo 673-3773 Jean/Craig 631· 1266 ••720-9966•• Ln For appl 645-2421 Seautltul 3Br 2Ba Ouple11. Expect the be~: ~:f,~~~~g-~ AdoraDl;1~r?g~~~Ebreezy 3 =~~7a0,~0!s'~~d6a7131~053,4F8~1~Y 1;~:fia , 607 lrtS bdrm. oeamed cethngs, $ • 1mo • -·----~ ILi Cll 1Georgeous CdM Dup1ex. 2 ftrep1ace & de11ghttul CertH •el Mar 21 f2 •llAlll IEW * 12,ll0,000 oetacned 38.A 2'18A sovtn patio on xtra large Front SBr. 2Ba $1300 incredible combo-highest units Appro• 3300 sq It lot $.<489,000 ~31-1400 2Br 1Ba gar wl dry. deck. Back 38r. 28a S 1250 qualtty new constructoon New appliances paint. -\.\-\It Hf Hn" trplc. close to beach 210 A & 8 E !Stll l)lus best view Dream landscape & carpet 3 $ 1300 705 Poppy *756_8558* hovse wtevery luxury and large decks Income llll'1I " ho<. •6•0-4072 * 100 It tot front row S3 350 per montn RE AL E;Sl.t.H 2-Cute ·but cory Dupleic •BRtGHTON SPRINGS• ocean S585 000 Pr11'tc1pats r Units 28R tBA 1 car Beauhful spacious con- l ••-1-0 1 only 720-9966 REAL TORS D 5 dos TrHvl 2Br 1 ''>Ba --gar Frplc rove by 14 $950 & 2Br 2Ba wi den iHI llWI PHMHT'? Ct1t1 Mell 1024 Be au1 1 ~~~0 :~;~o1 1on al Jasmine. $900tmo s1150 & 1Br !Ba $750 • h d YILU REITAU Loe 1n a quiet water-We II give you t e own 1n baytront nome with 7i 17& •112 scaped complex Frplc. WESTSIDE VILLAS IELllCOllOS llWLUSlll •IWllllW!* Large 3 Br. 2 ,ea 2 car attached garage wtd hkups. trplc. pv1 yards pool.~ spa $1250/mo RESERVE ONE NOW' 726 W Wilson St For mtor call 548-7001 exchg for a snare ot own-Y Owner Drive by call water frontage & shps tor 111-~ h f 372 M I wld tikup pool 1ac All 1 -.--------ersti1p You make t e or app1 agno ia several boats Two story BEAUTIFUL 2'Br 2Ba 1• mlhly pymts & we share 3br 3ba. tam rm 3-car I 5 Ddrm llDrary format oupleit w'marbled firs c~gLa~ ~e10::;~.9~~4r;1s iiiit. ltici 2140 apprec You receive gar frpl Sktlts remodel d1n1ng & sun rooms shut· trptc garage. laundry. !\VI 100•1. tax t>enefns Must $266 000 722-1375 ters. wy covered walls I beacti access No pets •NEWPORT HEiGHTS• 2'i,BR 28A Condo with ~~~~57c5~a~ys~~e:·~ ... ~3~ WT Siil llll HISE and br1c1<. terraces $14501mo 675-2370 Luic targe 3BR 2'>BA. tam ~/~a~et~~r .. 0~~11m1~~~· -~-- !Just fell out ot Escrow $3,900,000 631-1400 IUlllrw rm.trplc.gar.$1175tmo $1100 964-5232 ICWFlllT COllO Must sell'" 3BR' Re· \.\;\ti HI Hll'\ r Lrg 2BR 2BA Upstrs * * * * * 2 Bedroom plus Den 2 , modeled kitchen bay tit J'11 , Inc rrplc. micro. beamed ceil 3BR 1' 1BA house. lrg 8 1 1 - ~" 548-0397 Alll now 1 d & h 1 d a e A 1 2BR 1 A. d 'w enc gar n Batti Home or great on· win ows muc more. RE .t.LESTATE deck gar wi d nkups enceyar ,gar Q va1-• 1 I I II u d•r I Red reo to &279 900 --able 1mmed1ately $950 • family oriented ... p ex come po en ta n ~ • u... · .. Ntsmknig Chldrn Ok $660tmo 8'48-4730 grovnd secunty parking Judy Kolar K Investment RE.AL TORS S 1600 mo 721_8335 ut1llhes 964-6935 ASKING$280000 I Co • 640-1212 * --------JBR 2.,8A twnhse Nr Lg 2BR 2 story. 1soOs1i. larr W•itt lltrs IEtlm UU--Cl'IA CIYE oeacn Dbl gar, fncd garage tmmed occupan- 17& •••o WATllFIOIT yard spa. trplc sml pet cy $925/mo 835-2072 .--• Large 3br 2ba home near ""'s. Wlo.nd/Ev 963-6940 -----the oest schools· With Unique 4 or 5BR 2BA. 2 ok S 1245 646-654 1 ~, YEISlllllS 00111 large oonus rm & wet bar story prvt home in quiet. JSR 2BA MARINERS WALK-:-Ught, 'l"ov will love this 2 Bdrm . dining rm. drama1tc ttre· e•clusove community Avail now• bright airy &·iust a few 2 ba. end unit wttn some place . iove1y patio & Spacious & versatile floor S 1195 blocks trom tne beach oay view from master backyard RV access plan Wonderful views L•z 646_3627 2Br & 3Br ToWnhomes t>edroom Great bu1.t1-1n $215 000 Call SELECT Great rront patio. plenty Yardstpat1os. garages. storage m oolh t>edro'om ' BH&G 75 l-5000 ot parking All new decor •BR 2BA ti replaces & vaulted ce11- ciosets Mirrored doors ----Lse a\/1 at $3500/mo Available Now' 1ngs washer & dryer Neutral colors through· Liil ISU YILU IEITllS $1195 hook-ups 840-5870 out Gate guarded com· light and airy 5BR home lmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-irliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii9 lll-4ll2 u z 646-3627 1-m'ae zt•• mun1ty pool spa & on one of the very beSt ---------.., clubhouse Call now to street to street l~at1ons. -.U I LlllTS YIEW NEAF; new 3br 2·.,ba IUCI IHSE W/Plll see S 13!1000 Half blck to bay Greal From 1he hv1ng rm & mstr towntiome with garage View, 2BR S 1300/mo. llFNI OHlt 711·1100 I family home Xlnt finance Ddrm Gorgeous 38R de-4 3 9 · 1 Fe r n 1 ea 1 Drtve by 963 Arbor St IEW-PUI I CarolynRoss673-7677 teched house in gated $1800/mo760-1465tev lllfl9ILYI... 2BR 2BA. W/D. $1200 ( ii ( ~ ;f r.I KJ~i... Mer~~i~~ Alty ;~~.z~e6~rl ~=~~nil~ NEW 2t>r 2ba 1--lv-I -co-n-do JBR 2BA. forced air heat. Sotheby's IR 979"3565 12 ' • 1\'l'\''1 Golden 559·7466 or Lovely garden. Indoor fnc.d yard at $975/mo s,..tac1larleff ~ IH \I 1011,• IEW LISTlll 760-5000 1ndry. gar. cluDhs. Oasis Call Pete 751-5000 IHati .. 21r +4tl 1i11tN Peaiasal1 ~ M.A.V Sr area Sl950 731-6~3~ -lllETtluil'" Frptc. garage. wetbar ale 1007 USTSIDE C,M, KU'F'"" / SSISSSISllSlllS Lg upgraded 2BR 2'1tBA 2 s1•00 760•506 .. RernOOeled 3BR "'•BA \t"\\',\l...,"Yf' j{.1-"( ·1 r story townhome wtth Liji11 lta clt -'flfi new gourmet kitchen 'v\ ~ ,· 1 -I TURN W/D. Ing. trplc. garage _ 208 E. Bay Ave Reduced S40K-now $455 000 Nu 4.br 3ba 3100sJ.t 3·Sty AIR Realty 673-5870 OPEN SUN 2-5 BldrlAgt master Odrm suite, tor-Q(ALTORS ' THEM Community pool/tennis SHARP 2br 2ba oondo. mat d•nong wtoak par---------• INTO Small pet ok. $1200/mo beautifully turn1stied, ouet Breakfast nook JIONEV YIW IEITALS encl gar $1 450/mo. frptc Owners }'lave Ill •112 1-800-777-8668/days. purcnased another Call -~ 805-259-0943/eve $249,000 Curt Herberts Tne c1ass1fted network 642 5678 Good jobs. retlabtelMll'Viea, Loottlng 1018 job? Hit the Ctrtar •el Mlrl022 fthnfATll ftEW?!! 2 aAILUON DOLLAR VIEW l"or S930toC; Ag! 759-9070 11 631-1266 puts you 1n touch w1tn -1 •nter•t1no tilings to buy . newlC>'lnt befOle )'OU htt the the right people hrough the Clatslfledsl 1t·1 allth«• ewry day In payement -COMUtt cl--842-5678 11111asmm11 ='1 uaifled=· =-· --_;.;;fled_. -- R6/Mfal(R . ~·i .... -•• • WEEKEND ASSIST ANT IMM EDIATE OPENINGS. PART-TIME WEEKENDS -3AM-11AM SAT. SUN & HOLIDAYS. MUST HAVE RELIABLE C AR/TRUCK . V A LI D · 8RIVER S LICEN S E. CAR INSURANCE & OMV PRINTOUT. $7.00 PER HR. + MI LE- AGE. CALL 642-4536 EXT 205. A SK ·FOR BETH. NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING The City Council of Newpor1 Beach wlll hold a publle hearing to dllCUU the projected UM of '407,000 In H.U.0. Community ~t ~ Gr.nt Funda for fttcal year 1988-19. n. Pl•la Heartne .. lie held on Aprl a. 191. .. T• ,._. lft .. Cler Counol C"8flllllfl of Mlap1rt •111tt Cllr ...... _ ... ...,. ......... wp1rt •11ata, CA. The pubic II invited to comment~ the CD8G Oil,.._ and lllocatiOn of funda. fheM lunda ~ be Ull d for • variety of community dewlopment, ...... Md IOClaf WW.~-- Forqoelltone, contllCt Ctelg ..... Senfor ,,..,..,,.,., (71•) 8"-3225. If you·re 10 or older. a 1ob as a newspaper carrier might be 1ust your size. Just send 1n this coupon or call: 642-4333 Routes are avflrlabte now• It so•tbMJ. It 1 Dlity 'iltt carrier! r;y~7~;:~~~:~:;~~:,, 1ng a Daily Pilot carrier I Name _____ _ I Address I I I I t•h ZlP I I ~~~ Tiit ..., ,...--I I JJIW . ..,St.· _J L----~~.!..n_! ___ :__ •TlllUFFS• NWPT Crest condo lg 3br 2' 1Da. near pool/tennis Avl 511 Obie garage. $1400t mo 1se 544-30'49 3BR • Den. 3BA. patio, 9reat locatt0n Furn $2100/Unt $ 1900 Agt 759-8934 L V Props, NWPT Crest condo wlk to Marte F 673-9333 bch. 3br 2' 1Da. nr pool, -A AtLABLE NOW rennis Highly upgraded V R d JBR $ 1500/mo yr rse 548-0391 Harbor 1dge con o. . _ __ _ lam rm. mnt view, close PANORAMIC OCEAN & to pool $2850 644-9060 BAY VIEW CHARMING -UYFHIT FHllSIH CUFF HAVEN 2br 1' •ba $1 lSOt mo 631-6359 Spacious •BR 3',,BA. 2 story home w/huge patio SIPll SPAO•SI Magnificent view Lg mstr 2BR twnhse Frplc tn mas- su1te wi encl porch 3 car ter bdrm. skyfts. wet bar. parking Avail now pool, garage w /opener $1500/Wk or $4000/mo $1550 722-7381 Yllll IEITILS 171-4112 BA VRIOG'E CONDO 2Br We!il:Held APJITM£m Large. attracttve apts 1n a beautolul garden se1ting Poot/spa. garage or carport Sorry. no pets. •SEVERAL LOCATIONS 2Bdrm 2Ba $8CC 398 W Wilson 63 t -5583 2Ba upper. ltp. dbl gar , ------- see , pool. WtD lrtg 1ncld. I•--------1 Bedroom $655 $630 $750 642-9850 Superoor Nwpt Crest Plan· tat1on shutters. 3br 3ba. gar pool. tennis. sauna $ 1600/mo lse 675-2332 1 Bedroom 2Bdrm 1Ba 301 Avocado no pet $1300mo 675-94!>0 Totally remoOefed 3BR 24l w. Wilson 631-0960 11,-SlllES 2BA. sngl sty beauty is a _ -- bargain at $1650/mo 112 llH ... APTS 3BR 2BA Cape Cod Cti1ldren & pets Ok Short 111 STAITill AT H20 S2500/mo Avail 611 or long· term rse poss. 2 Swimming pools Agent Deb• B1Db 1mmed occpy Doug Crose 10 Schools & 'Snops 644-9060 or 642-8868 Herbst 760-5000 or Small pets accepted BEAUT Harbor Vu Home 2 stry 4BR 3'~BA in-law .Q u a r I er s $ 2 7 5 0 644-6610 or 673-317 4 BlG -CAN'tON 3BR 2' )BA 720-3980 VILLA MARSEILLES ftr M.A..V , I 3101 So Br1s101 KU'lrlra · s51.9200 l.\[\Xl\.'"'Cff I~~\ ·1 REALTORS" 210-1 hi ••r condo w/pool. spa & ten-l•--------tBr garage· stove, vac- cant $595 756-8558 n1s Only S 1795/mo Call Et1zat>eth 631·1266 WEST BAY-FOR LEASE 2aR lBA, upstairs. 19 LARGE executive tiome deck garage very nice •BR 3BA Family. dining. $725i mo • deposit lllffl Ill LWI laundry rooms .. 3. car References 494-7008 Ed OR 2BR -Den. 2''lBA gar ~2600 /mo · ___ _ 645·8897. 650-4928 or 2BRlBA. xlnt cond New $1450 OR Hrbr Vu Hms 4BR 3''JBA Portoftno 553-2180 k1tch cabinets. new crpt s oo prvt patio. carport, laun-mdl Pool spa 23 mo, 4"'rtatats dry rm $650/mo 360 6 mos ise 640-5664 Bkr ltaer1l Biz Victoria St 548-8523 BRAND new luxury 2·sty •SUNSET BEACH. 28R 2Br 2Ba llOO s/f, d'w, condo 2br 2ba. lrplc, tBA 10W&r duplex, water-lndry, lrplc. gar Sml pet ok $850/mo, $500 dep attcn 2-car garage front. boat sllp avalf Avail immed. 2,. 1.7353 $1395/mo 854-217 t $900/'mo Uhl included DELIGHTFUL BAY VIEW ~5_0_:.2758 ~ 8'46-4682 •S200 BONUS•-Great E- -side loci LG lBR $600 & 3BR. den & dining rm. lllltN up. Cable, BBQ. gar. etcl balOony lully furnished lslau 2'H Sorry. No pets. 631-8427 S 1925/mo lse. HAVE 18R 1b , unfbm. paffo, ---***** bit-ms. 11'4 Agate Rent: 2BA 19A. stove, retrig, $850/mo for this ~m-crpt. drapes. patio. gar mer, the<eatter $690 Call $700/mo 557-6932 Mrs Collier 714 77'4-3055 ---1-1.a-,..-0 ~-----** -** l1lllt1 Ptaianl1 A small. quiet complex JM7 nestled among tall trees IP.!'!'!!""'!'!!-"'!'!!-"!'!'!"-~ & lavish landscape 1& 50 Nice 1Br utus paid. tlke new wfbalcony. ca- no-pets, near beact\! the<lral ceiling, frple. gar-102 (, laJ age. pool. spa, lndry lac A NEED? T1r• t1 NO PETS $700 • sec Call Velma 5'49-2'4'47 Reod the closs1l1ed poges llasslftt4 ond 0 you're sure 10 !tll 111 142-6118 lilly Pilet 142-Hll 1• t t t t t ~ t t t FIN·D through classified •Oulet & clean 2Bdrm • 2Ba Apt Dshwshr, new decor garage. lndry rm. $795 No pets 640·2'495 meatiBJIU APAITMEIRS Sparkltng clean. large Garden apts Beautttully landscaped grounds Pool & spa. pauostdeclls. garage or carport Sorry . no pets •SEVERAL LOCATIONS Bachelor $605 1 Bedroom $680 Bdrm 11 .ea $775 2250 vanguard 540·9626 Bachelor I Bedroom 2Bdrm l'•Ba 2Bdrm 2Ba 825 Center St Bachelor I Bdrm 2Bdrm 1• .ea 131 E 18th St Bachelor $560 $655 $750 $850 6.42-1'424 $600 $680 $790 646·6816 S590 $680 $790 1 Bedroom 2Bdrm 1' .ea 161 E 18tn St 642-0856 · • EASTSIH • Spacious 2BR 1BA nouse Frplc. lg yard. w/d hkup NO PETS $850/mo 329 Un111ers1ty Or .,S 642-2816 Beaut quiet 1 BR. vlted ce1I· 1ng pVI patio. carport laundry room $625/mo 360 V1ctona 548-S523 ClliPLnE Hlllll ir$100 OFF* Rent brand new tor lesst Beaut 1 & 2Br apts ready tor move-tn S550·$650 Must see tne dttterence W•AlllPTS. 530 W Wiison TSL MGMT 722-9012 or 642-1603 ClnAllTYPE EtSIDE 2Br 1Ba, gar lg yd wtpatto. wshr-hk up. new carpets/firs $750 Imo 2544 Orange TSL MGMT 6'42· 1603 con CLEAi EISllE $550 1br pool 1 persn, no pets 646-5137 11·8Pm COZY unfurnished Studio Frplc, large yard. refrlg, stove Utlls tncluded Pet ok S6QOtmo 5'48-8493 WDlll IAlllLll UlllS inci $550/mo 1665 Irvine Ave "A 720-9422 Eas1s1de huge 1BR 1BA with w/d hkups. walk-in closet, garage. No pets $650/mo. Call Jean or Craig 631-1266 EAST SIDE. Lovely new 2BR apt w/gar In quiet atea. W/d, frig. Adult, no pets. $795/mo 642--3760 Claelllled Ilea epeclal lnfof- metlOn tor peop69 with apee!a!needa. TURN UNNEEDED MERCHANDISE TO '4.80 ... h •• ...... ., ..... ......... •·:. ..... ..., .... ,. .., ... o..a .... ' .. ...__..,..,,__._ ..... u.,.. ..... .• __ ,, __ .. Orange Coelt OAILY PILOTIT'*day, Aptll 19. 1988 811 -------::~·~·:-··-:::;-~•;ll~F.;:•:L:;•:·; .. ;;;;•;•;; .... .. ....... ... •••• ......... Jiii iap..,_. HM......... IUI t • HJI .. ,..,.... SSJI S.plez••• IAITllOI lo~ 21t9'. llACl l,, MANNI" fttl MA TUM HOUSE CARPET INSTALLER ft.IUl llUftlf ... Mtsl•I P1,.ANTSCAPE 1n 1er1or fWtlUfacllll Nw _... & lf'Oi>e 21,_, full 8 A upetAltl AA"'9 "** .VW l<EEPl~"'IANNV Oeper1d1ble & up d f'O" CONROY S Newport Piarll M11nt8f'lane:e £11p PIT llST / .•• ...,, ........ IUI C..... 1'99dy. Chad °" Mllllllla&.m ''BA. kltcil. PMio ~ In ..,.. '*"lne .., ... 'Otfamlfyof• ~011 38 COf'l\ltoek C.,.pet S4lf & F11rv1e. Needs~ Tne Or•1111e Cou1 OallVJ '*ld ~-"'• n ••lllftU lllOMopela e31-4155 .... 11Tmnl .,..,. NIC*•. MM/mo. 150/M o. , ..... ce ll Nt wk l5hr FO< t Yr v>ees (17416S&-1813 organ.zed 1no111 10 oe-PtlOI II IOOk1ng IOf an trans 751-2271 AM PMl lC)IJl 1M11 Appl'• f/SK>E. M 75 per Mo ••S.U-*2•• Trecy ec Per-~ R.. required Pleau ..... PIT lr...,y fiow.ts M on-Fri 1 -oe1ic pe<t()n 10 H · •m•r•• CGeOled 3-5Pft'I d&lly 2bdn9 11M1, lrplc, -~ •S...,.L....• t & -R ••t1 W~to ...._..-Hr ...,.__ 844.7333 Ml'4 rewmet IO .. Cell 645-0246 lor ,nter1t srst ov1 Otstroct Managers Pll THE NEWPORT BEACH ....... ..-4 V ...... -"""' ·----c Mandela.3740Cempus Ret11I t\Uf--r nMCll ii NO e1<p nee $10·S1S Hr COUNTRY CLUB PMlo. lnOfy rm, 0-909-•DNhw..,_.t e 18R Me5 ltll• 1741 Or Nwpf1 Bctl. Ce 926e0 wullen o par I 11me FOOD SERVERS & 3 aay$ ouror.g lhe ~ I M1 JanMn 520·40~1 t600 Eest Coast H-10 by 20 131-4038 eMln0ted aoee.1 e2B A 28A $815 -----BUS PERSONS w~end• .tnd nolldays -, e Prtval e P•tlol Pool ...... e11tra~~ ---...... ss•• cashier no ••P ~ess AP?l•C•nl mu$! have re 1 • Nlml -111 • N B 644-9550 EXTRA LRG 18A New .....-••-••---ary Cell IO< I PQOintment E .. per1MGeO & <1gress1ve 1 d CA -pt/paint m eCeillngfant 1401SUP8'10f 6-< Co1t1 M eta/Newport Mono1 y t nru fnoy Spec 111, re"auran1 habie c.11 .. 11n var GroW>ng T-Sn•rt Co ·n lflllllALUP/T cs'sso • 35'ono pe11 •HMtedPOOl&Jacuul Wat-tr-t ··~th""~k.28r border 2•·hr access Mllltnl&llllTllT 1two.7u 1 N .,_ PT~f TC ll drt ... erihc:;en!>f proolol C.os1a ...-esaHel<S Qual• ~ tee •Rec rm/B1lllard1 .... "'' ..., """ bu·•n~• ~ personal /T _....... t A t ""'"" I wpt .,..n .. • nsu•enct '"" OMV '" m "O•d ind v•dulil ,..s,.,,111 A9'00IC ~1•8q_ve7511n5 ••646-3&18•• 1Ba. lg dec k Great "" .... ~ ...._.'" .. °' «.oun 1 Mr Pu•• '52-5200 1 s 1 ' I M ~I eomm~ · •Exercise rm W 12•20'1121130' 6-48-3878 ..,, .. 11ant at large Ao1 OAllllll I>' nl·out lat "'ii P•~ '' fAp d n muh·cooor o - Garden-Ao•. spaclOUI •Clote 10 Shopping s,;~:1~~~70~' comple>. RelC)Onllbllll~ f T Ii P1T West Mari,,. flllT .,,. •lllAl , .. 00 ~r l'IOUI 1>11.i' Q•~ ~·gn\ c au 71•·631 •260 SALU/lll- 28A, d/w, w/w cpt1/drp1, • 10 Mlnut" to belch C:.....CW will ~ Preparalloo Qf a 900 w PC H ..., e jP T Oer'maio1o0y ottice aucowa~ tA!fo•11 12 Noon IEll~sse BoullQ"8 Better c:abae ready End gar •Small ~ts Ole wrdep. WEEKLY NOWI Beauhlully LL lllt"a.t dally bin• depos•t. t1hn9 6'-S-t 7 11 As1o. t0< tony Call i< at ht 848-0770 ome •n 10 aC>OI) "' Sportsware l!ld Auto Ac- $HO No ?811 645-5517 19132 MAGNOLIA AVE furnlahed NB oce.en front haLna/ ti!! leal some p&hones tro~~~~ice lfFtCE PHSll cessories PIT wllnd days ........ ... 964·5567 3br 2ba. patlO, lrplc, 2 .. -work typing (..vwpm1 OllLI O&IE FIT lllYH laily Pillt PT tor n1c11 laitl growing Newport Imports NB ... •-• --.. -garages. 640-4784 2'111 $1300/mo Refs reQ d WMlll DAVE s FLOWERS Co Nr Hoag Fltn nrs 642_9,05 Karen 28r 1~8a Townhouse LMATTll -Xtnt benefits Apply on •891·0418• 1,pe & misc 0111c.e work L.undry room all t>ullt· Rent an on-11te Travel llbc. ....... WllTIUff...... pe<1on 11 Park Newport For Chrtsuan School hOV!>t!"l•lt> or re11reo on SALIS In•. gOOO toe S785/mo traller 1n our RV Park. l;t;l1/ll!t!la fill Corner Wntcllff & Irvine Apts 1 Park Newpo!I 16835 BrookhurSI llllHIEI s• "' 72'1·tllJ60 E ~Gelll'nl $<1Jes oppty now 2078 Thurtn S~25 ~ elK • dee> CALL _ Nwpt 8ch·COrn41f Vu Sult(! Newport Beach CA Foun1a1n V 963-7831 WA.NT ED f T Must 04! re-p J P•IE SAl.ES avallable tor full· lime TSL MGMT 642-t603 5 6-83 l6 8am·6pm IHI 111 •Tll Full service EOE O•IPIACTIC UST I ltaDIP Ne"lport area 330 Wttt lay St. ..., ""'' llfl< Ca,. m1ik pos1toon Apply 1n person lllT'-II L;•H ltac~ 1141 Wkly rentllls now avail 141·1111 lllm pay••• ir • E1t1e Garaenong Service I C.sta •esa Cl 12121 r ·0 e~ t' a1 Benetton Main Piece -• 5147 00 wk & up 2274 IG -Front olfw:;e en1hus1as11c 646-5™ I • o,,.., ~1000 w~ Be <1w n M<tll Or c:;all Kayta at 2BR 1BA. laundry rm. F N Studio, TV. poof Sr. Nwpt Bllld. CM &46-7445 1200 tq It on Belt>oa Pen Ollll cheerful good Offret 1;.;tlwe.r ~ ....... & '>CJrr M-F oou Gtof!I' C3 4 162 S4 8283 E•?ttt pref CIOM to shopt, t>uMS prof $595 Incl uuls _ _ Ample Parll1ng u111s pd eeded IOt Comm&fcral R skills Ft T 1nclv01'5 Sa1ur lfFICI •Lnl WMte4 Or '" 6.-i• ... , b4• 4J1 • Will accept OC HouSlng Nl smkr 40~ Also Room Vacatita ltatah $1400/mo Call Sieve E Developer in Newport days Carot 631 '>66.4 Se4frnouva1ea To perloicrn 6'1 20' $650/mo $325/mo 494-0451 2'7U •673-0920 • Beach Detailed oriented CUllC&l varoous olltc Out'8s 10< '-*M E A :J•• rePENC.E • TSL2~~o'.~T22M ~!2~·1603 ..... rt .... ~ ... JASMINE CRK sOUJeA 1300SQ II al S1/SQ tt-trtple EAp erience 1n W I P Ao~~"' Potenul pnotograpl'ler 1n lrvl~ S•O s·s "6' M()ur w0<•·· ... "" M ,... net Fullw lint1he0 oase-Plea~n1 n-smok1ng •SECRET .. "'Y eap req d F T 2S0-4 136 ,our J"'' !>Clte<l"',. .., RENTAL 28r •den lurn , ,..,.. LARGE bachelor apt w11h l ___ ..,...,llf""!"!!"""'1!"""'11Mt~-Tennis. pool. gated men1 carpeted tire enwonmen1 s i8 K l yr Moi ,8 ... 0 IEHllLlfflC( s.o es ci,,. i< 302f IEAlll &I UUS P r "' r""t>S -•co..-., Sa1 9 , II M l'I 9 ~ " c •JOt'~ ~ • 01 t' ') ~OI.' Ito< 1>1118!> ' ie.-O , l"\U1t~ w •I tr 01r ;,. -;. :,i , """'" '•vsa .. f>f 6b0 ~ ... _., ! 0 A\ft: (. ~A lrg pattO In goad locale IPAlllll • $3000tmo 720-3776 sprinklers Great COM lo-l•Chl lnes ... et matute SO wptr w ;. NewpOf' Ben P T 9-, UIASEI Prater single p erson le lt ... l M2·211l _ catoon 645-6505 Two Co•porale Plaza 1• RECEPTIONIST p ease '::a I 6"5..41;5 $470/mo 859 W 191h -ltalah tt l~lrt :250 Newport Beach r. 141< yr M11u•t nec11 4( E•r>e• s.... •• ; .•. • RECfPTllllST !BR !BA YEARLY *Mii ib s.ites • G 2B 1, B 1 le • ~... Z724 · .c an Manlyn 759-9531 wpm pno"es 1£1.lfHCIWT. Mng• ''"'v'' C"-' d'f'li ' -t-•:e•e•·eed Bu~,,..e RECEPTIHIST &.O. L r t a rp p11110 Steps to t>eaeh .. ,...OQ. ·-----------A/C Ampleprllg S325up NB a ea 6JI ·~ -Mec•J• a ., .... o.~ " • ,., .. -s& '"'>f.' 0 W Pl '"' II ••st a• lllCY 1 • •L •v..is• •e .. a 6 .,,.,e EnghSf' new carpet pa1n1 / ping I car parking aya Resp F. HB di• mllr 2855 E Cs1Hwy875-6900 utl , -. -. rlrs M ~, S-• 631_825(; rec 4 1 • ... ~· ·~ v ... :.1 Avtnow S79511no .·dep Rea1Estate673-1900 Br/Ba po ol 1az. lux •-ala•i••n Entryteve1oos1t•onm Ad CIOl'S-S.ntrs t>'", '>a •·~~ :••t .. llECEmtllST TIPIST 2273 Mlner=A 645-8161 2B~ 18 A charmrng cot· ground' $425 •ullls Kim .vv • ..,, Agency ,.,.11n advance-F Ptlme ,,81 ,.., .. ,r P'"' ~El OFFICE 5t-r·c .,., ....... .,. "" •, N• "· " a .. ac.• .a .. •• 111111 S 650-0827-0848-0745-N 1617 WESTCLIHORIVE ment o•·"'·rtuntty Musi W nostc.r, IC & • ··~ • • 1 e'• 1440: tage frplc 1eps to lhe B A 54 1 5032 ,...,... Cou1 Hwy a1 MacAnl'lu• t>each No pe1s $1050 * N B steps 10 ~ach Nwpt Ch gt . nave strong wntong spell-P~ • P'> 1°1"'9 lu 1-ltmt> C.,s1c1 IJt-'><> • 1 2BR 2BA lrplc encl gar-eoe. au t>u111-1ns near mo Lv m.,.. 631-2167 FOR LEASE 576.,., 11 at •ng & 1,ping sllills Call -n• flfPAIR • .. ~,.,I.> Ac,pi~ IPG shops. $6951mo *211111100• ..., Master bdrm w/ga1 Prof ...., 76 9333 --.-• "' ·~· s C 1 n/smkr shrlu•unit $625 6Sct sq II Back Du1ld1n9 •mmea 171414 -No exo nee '$•2 !;•:, ..,, '"' •1t.>a1•0 ••C e IECMAllC W TOOLS ~ ,.,,, 1;•~0,,00,.. tor 8 10 CENTER Frig. dlShwasl'ler stove TSL MGMT 642-1603 incl No pets 545-4855 EAtle' t"' <,, ,.,~......._,a·, • ~ct-"'<"""' • ,.., CJI f,.,. a~c· ·.• ,., "''' !' ~·~ l:l'3-! *1•4ical* •' . 111111 HHSH WHiied Rt ct11tiHist 440 E 17th St C M 1 .. , Jenran 520 40', I "', .. • '••ne 1 pr one 650-3633 or 639-8722 1 "" ~, 645-8523 6 191346 6366 IDVERTISll& CHITH ULH Avail 1mmed Newport MUST SEE-LARGE 3Br 2Ba. gar yard, S825 1021 Valencia I Mesa de1 Mar) No Pets 650-7 105 •111111100• Frig dishwasher stove incl No pets 545-4855 Cres1 Condo Room s & master t>drm avall Prol preferred 722-1126 Ocean view s1J11es Park-llAlll( 1ng phones lite sec-Lookmg tor a career 1n p T f •T Engine Pd"~ :i. reta11a1 duhes. sign 5pace Adver11sm9., II so lhe h ardware salPS E • r avl On Co15l Hiway Dail) P.101 l'las 2 entry-pref d Good Ot!rtf'f1ts , .. ,.. "'IJ<"• " roder s.:>IS f • .. , • .. ~~a f\tdh" * •EASTBLUFF;lt• llWlY -~TH 1BR 1BA trpt S72~ Lse 2Br l''tBa w/gar crpts 2BA 2BA lrpl S895 Lse drp1, blttns. lncd patio 722-8140 or 722·8011 636-4 120 Call 1 SPM _ 2439 Orange A $750 l *EASTBLUFF Townl'ISe 2619 Santa Ana O S735 Apt 3Br 2Ba 2 car gar. 667 Victoria L S720 no pets $1025 mo yr lse ---644-10 10 8-5 Mon -Fri llWl Y •MUTH! CUFF HAVEN New decor 2BR !Ba l'at in ll1tc paho encl gar no pets $800/mo Agl 642-2134 CdM 2 s1ory hOUSt' mce S.3/sq/11 2l3 592-083.3 1evet pos111ons '" Class1-Nwpt Bct1 & ..Seal Ber cond quiet walk to bCh y.a fUAltftY( SIUTl f1ed Ad11er1ts1ng II you 1 area Boat Swain s , ex • M/F Avail 518 $500/mo •-••11 ,..., ~ 1 -"" t pe ~·--por• Cir Fasn1on tsl li .. e peop e a .. ., can Y er Inc 714-64?-6800 Call Mark 6 73-4243/E ,,,.... ' 45 ~ d 1 ~e to 1alk The Ef11c1er1t Allerna1111e Npm w., '" ...... IM•ah Full servlCe or answennq 10 1ou E•cellent t>en· llTA EITRA EJCec Nwpt Bch home Rm s ervrc e m a tl onli eltts Call P1!9gy Blevins IPIUTHS •t>rd in 11chng 4 LI lei & 640-5470 I lor an apoo1n1men1 I errands n /srT\JC resp • • • 6'2·432 1 exl 30 1 Immediate 0per""9~ ,. 20•25 yrs old anractive laaaaHI A F1a1ac11l 1oca1 area all sntlt., .. i.;1 ")ri"",:. •f:'r te "leeoeo NP--Nl>V'' .,t ~}" ... ,, S•afl p T NB shop I POlil'· .,,J, ..... ~ .. ~. t ·, ;~ .!8 T ... es-Sat i;o 6rn .. O"-' •• r r • ... MELPW&ml i::, ,-• p,.,. Warel'IOuse l)r vP <S ~ Assist Mr•grs ,,,,...O .. d Ir, T ~A. s .. OP "' C.o · d Mt>sa 646-1356 .. R ~.r:. C.r»e•nment 1005 P~;j\.,"' ,,. '••"'... ·~ Ca 1 • A •,A • b4 •.: • MED•'-"· ;.& 0 RlfO 1') .... ·.~c' r, :>w,.. a .... 1:i"' 't -.. 41 ,. ')6_.:.~c~· ~ • J'.,.d .our 3'"" Many mrneo •HICAL lfFtCE :;o.-n·"~'>S15i<-S68000 Bus,:'.><•~ ... ~., , c i.• Ca 602 €38-€88S e•t 398 ,.,~C> e•. ·~'· ''·" 1nte!gn1 well groomed Laey Tt LMa 914 I ASSISTAIT IUUlll TIP PAY! Mst hallil car 640-2838 DO H S SSS Beverage shop t>enehts CALL TODA 'f' 58~ ) •JP Call Dtwn 9-9 OOpm • WI w A F T Lill 150 lb keg "'0'<! _ -for TOs1 SIOK -up No Ho Time 11 646-1737 llLIYHY STICI llSIT ATIUIAIT ~ss s· .: ::J, A • ~48 ~ '"- Large 18drm near Baller & Fairview NEW Carpel, me. drl(>eS paint vanity f 1.ct ures Garage $650/mo 540-3393 Eastt>lull-Oeluxe 2300 sit API 3BA 3BA 19 t>Of'luS rm. dbl gar wtopr;irs W /0 hllups cen1ra1 vac 101aJ1y renovated prol decor comm 0001 No pels S 1850/mo • sec oep 675-0068 Appt only Female 10 Shi lrg h<>use on cred .,.. no pen Oen-• F T t>enehts 1..1ll SO Bch al 1rv1ne Cove N n1son Assoc 673· 7311 * Asst to "' B ndeonoent keg 250 Ogll' St CM t Maure •e able gooc IOYIE EITIAS 'II( 'Pe 'lC f'> Pe< ·t'<' ~ 2'3 469 •0£• SMALL BACHELOR Newport Heights Pvt yrd New c:;rpt S5101mo · depos 548-3932' SPACIOUS 1Bdrm Upper Dishwasher large Closet garage $570 No pets CALL 63 1·6155 SPACIOUS 1BR Pool. lndry carport stove & relng No pets 1939 Wallace S565 • $350 dep 642-1401 642-5723 ATTUCTIYE LH 1U ..illl paid. d /w. rlrig. cethng Ian. cat oll S625 650-7105 laat. ltac~ 2'41 Newpon Island unl ur n !BR encl garage S7751mo yr1y only Reis req d 536-6617 Lag Bch Gat Gated Co mm I R E B r k Comm S550 · Oep Aaataact•tats Pl'IOnes ttle typing IElfYHY n1smkl pels 494-7659 Git I Ftad 925 rionesl &.dep 760-6062 UP 10 s 10 Hr Bille mo10• M 25 40 <MP shr Mesa am~ I scooter or Ci' nee 18 yrs • · UN 4~1 emtblk 111-u • nave .nsur.1nce Ga Verde home w/pool spa, Lab 2-5 vrs Vic E 1811'1 Sporis minded 1ndrv1dulllS B HBO & hse cleaning $450 , 2 dr•v•ng •eeord 1n90 mo-S200 ·~ 540-4464 Cos1a Mesa 722-991 !'eeded for PIT worll Piu a Co Call 675-9930 """ $7 '1r P T evenings & MATURE fem 25-35 non , ________ _ Salurday 645-5760 Dependable hard-work· 1ng F T Gd wages t>ens IHTIL ASStSTllT smkr to shr quiel clean furn 2BR 2BA Prom Pt S550 Alison 675-6104 lll••••••••M /F C M house near FOUND ADS ARE FREE Call: 142-Hll .ltlla's llM Clf Wasll I lhtail.141· l 441 Oral Surgery Huntington Ben olc Cnall'stOe AU•!tl F T Or P T 8•2· 7729 DENTAL ASST Exper X-Ray 11c Deoen· dat>le Xln1 sat in Quahtv olfrce CM 631· t420 CMAl-IPTI Wmt., ... Nwpll 17th. SAOO/mo No I uts 1sl/last Furn, except t>drm. Greg 548-1660 M/F non-smoker Hunt Beach near beach AfrtlEIYICE TUllEE • NEWPOR't TIRE CENTER llclv11•t Bue~ Colnmu111h ~) 11tr1it<lul l BR ~I • !¥rt OlllO O.\/lw1\M< lllltrO pt • P•111tt 1>c•~ sm S350tmo , u111111es Avail 511 Ann 84 1-1460 l"-1822 28R 2BA. washer dryer. 1 Aho lBI! \lilfl 11 SI I'>~ f I • •T .. -OTll • F 0 U N D 0 o g 4 I ~ BOA TING Dllll& 11001 SERVERS car g1raie •rep ace -• M/F Prof wanled 10 share t>lk t>rown lem med sz le4enrlttr h Ttolt. Lvncn s 0, a·nre• E• pool spa 8•5•mo S650 Souy Mo Ptts Irvine W oodbridge friendly Lampson Beach Mu'SI t>e Scut>a Certifoeo oeroence prf'IPrf'd Aop•; deo 848~2454 l ..... 11 house $440i mo • deo , 53t-4018 Wilt train 673-3630 oet"'M"" ' Spm lw1on "'" Avail 5115 786-4586 I • 8-• O '* * * * °!~!!!~~~~~~~ FOUND Of'I 4 IS Female BOATMAN A••PC"'" '"" 1 J 2BR Lrg pa110 encld gar -; M tF snr HB 3br 2 1t>a I white w black PUPPY MacAnnu• B••O ·~·ne new crpt and flooring ABOVE lwnhm Gar Ip d 'w w o ~ea COiiar 650-6003 Ellp eroencea Boa1man No Ol'IOOA c.i11s PleaS4' $725 962-1582 •• , 3 t>ll(s 10 t>ch SJ.JO ·dee> I lOlf wanle<l 10, pnvatt yaCl'll lllTllCT * '* * '* Avl 5 1 536-0925 eve rTrlt'tl clut> Apply "' person 111 3BR 2' r9A lrplC pa110 M F 10 srir 2t>r 2oa 1 Round trip & 1 Way 1801 Bays1CJe Of CdM MAl&IEIS laundry hOOllup 2 car poolside apt m NB 1 yr I Certs-Cont1nen1al S80 We<l-Sun 8am-1 lam Suoer..:1se Car•,.rs '" Ot' gar $995 962· 1582 new fully furn walk to pe '" t~ US Use t>y 1 ,e--1 and sa•es IO• •np -I ocn $467 50 mo -.uhl 1 5 25 839-6606 Alt 5pm IMllUnli lll lfC O•an<Jt' Co...ri; ~t"g·StP• BUY & S300 dee> 6A~463 -llmmeo opening E-p on S3Q() PL s com,... !Son . lapl•et•I I AP AR & general 1eo~r Full oene1tis c au Jt>" 101 N smkr prof shr 2BR IBA L t JOii Lolus 1-2-3 Oesored more ,,..,01mahon " " COM Apl nr t>Ch · Great -•H let Salary OOE Paid t>en-, 7 t41 5•0·3008 through classified A loc' $425 -utils Dys AIOE-UVE-IN F0< etderty eltls Fashion Island area I ~NEW -955-2510 Eves 721-0929 Fem Walll-oa1 h-cook CALL 760-84 11 llSTllCTlllUIHS T•rl fl PARK NE\X/P()RT SHARE c M 3BR hom~ M·F hve 1n 0t 7 30-3 30 Sul)efvose carr e•s on oe- room wt pvt den. park hlle I Dys CdM 852 8688 llSlllSS IS..... llve<y & sales 101 me CllSSiftt~ (7141644-1900 yd. lf'ldry w/d , util Pd BABYSITTER WANTED No Run Hose 4 Diet Pa1cn 11 11111£ CHITY _"(>,,..,.,....,..,_ ..... .,...., s 00 631-0603 1$ here Nal I Co •S IOOll-142-&118 ~""''"'-"',.....,.. Refurb 4 imo M~ Cosla Mesa home ing for teade•s SSOO lo IEllSnl o~ ,s•ta ccnd "on-s...-~ • ocrcao e C.ED o• ""S gr~d "-0 e •C: .,ec s: b Ciih i5""3· ·')~ .. TlllECMI M0Tt1ERS ._,~ARKE-6 K tenf'n 'i dCC"P'·"9 clC p1ocat O"S 10• Coo•s D snwas,..e•s "' tC"t>n CaS"•_, '-::>artr, P"•son 10 N OL• 1n Ou• {o>ge•anar RPSlaurant eves 1' ,.,. nos P1ea~ oPP'; 31 225 E 1"~s• Cos1a Me~ llStlEUUt En~rgt".C so•iwa•e ::o~ oan; 91 0 .... •ng b> eaos anO onvnas n et'(lS "S•O" Saies people Pe•'PCI •o• yOun<;; ag;res~•vE' .no · ··ouat s -,.,, com- m. 55 ._,. i:: e••ble .,ou/s Ca Tom So• s..~ • .e•; .s923• • 1ma1H PUil Ttc• J::o• ma•ntenan<:e p - •642-S8".l>O• No •OOIT' 1en '"•roe gaiaoe IOf tne eat? A Ult 10 ~­ •..O c.an l*p llHHYUUSF T _ ~--ct"~ ... ~' ~--•411.1"1<" ·: ;".,A ..,.~·h toio-S'oOt1St.,. .O,-tOt-) ~"'' • ,•a' ,.,. ·,; .,,.;. Saar, sc.or.; s·20{ ··~t .. e<A c .... f.:.• :>'' 0:4t -441 IURSES AIDES t. I ';"hl'< ~ "C ;l..i' 4"" O"':""P' t'-" .. dq;.1"X 8'itd':., •4'1¢ •4<,F • '"'·ot..•E ri:<1t ASS 1 Pt;>C ~n !'1 -,. . . ,. 4.p:_•r' .... ~ ,,,, ~, w~ ,...9 '!4e • .,,.:o~ PAH-tl•E IEllSTUTHS ~·OCe<• 510'€'" ;i•e11 Cai "'"CP~'d'. SE "OU' ~·j e4c. 3JVc ~., >-t•r-·8 PtCnlE FUMll E•t. P•C-v•t" •raf!"le< "· 9~Q.ra1 Mor' i::. 8-5 U ~ .... b "' SELL 8-Jpm lnlanl & toddler S4500 mo comm ..... o•k-SJ90 · oonus potent al =ii•••••lll••li•••••••• .. I C!lll afler 3 30 642-7686 1ng trom home 549-482 1 lull oenel•ts ~o• !'l"IO•e 1---------.....,r--'-------- I HOUSEKEEPER COOi( 1nlc call 8111 842 1 ~ ·' Ct•tat/Ctanttt Cuet....., --~ ' I f d p T lor elderly woman cunm• DRIVER liiiiiiiiiiiiiii=iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii; 10 .. vev.avs oal•OS oatns C~il4 Cut y ('-.... ra c:. "~ .. &£a TRAINEE through C assi 1e I Occass drrvtng N smkr Rough & F1n1sh Allen Be<.k F10,.s1 $2 56 d e•c .. c >tl • , ~mall MJ•llll I M-F 11·4 Nwpt 760-3680 631-2.345 2809 "lewoort BlvO "49 • per ay Ql'tlS "te"E'I C.1f..0~SJ POSITIONS 6i5-t353 T~a•' ALL ,ov :oa~ ior Bl=I C" O...,lRE.f "'"'• o'R1VfR ENTRV LEVEL J 1 n~ 30 0.1, "'"" ,.,,...,., P·.;.I ,,. ,tt·1e '"' t>IS The Dally Piiot has 2 positions Must be re .. pon~.o e p•t'S n ,.,M ~~EE e~· ,., • -.•. c A!\j available. Need Good phone per-M t Routes 8"''al:Jlt' c_ .. ., .. ~.,... SERVI.CE 0 0 r cor;J •PQv •f'<l S5 50 lir sonality; typing a plus. Training a63 ·--- E'::.; _ ... ~e·,. "" t=s ~a .. ~ ,. .. ~ ...... , ''ie' ""1 • r oJ t,~ • t • • • .. r '1tr•t--. '' .Jf"• ,. d' f'.J.'.:i t:: d ll .JrJor REAL ESTATE ASSISTAITS . "' ::'' ~Pf"1 _."> ~•OOuCe• ,. .. . -' . \ ... ' 1 c;~•P1tJt • .... E .... -! A" C) :0 • ~ \,,.ff • £ ·~ :.' ... t-0 e ~o~ 4o' RECE PTtlllST ......... , ': rr .:.:.;_** • ,t_• ,., f'A(1nt" J.J'• E ... 11 •"' • ·, ... ~c·u ..,., • ""'-'0'" (J~ .... "' .... ~ t ' I" .. , ft • ' 1; :.-• -.. ,. -4t .. - HCEPTIOllST Sf CY lllSn P£LICll ..... ltdnl. •Lau~ FM4 S.ntr ADC • ' Pf"'~' • ....sea~ t~ ..... C:r.oa. o·•"' \ ! tlHW.C.astlhrJ• ~ome q~4" P1umt>•"C oa1" • ' ~ 't'""d Jd ! ._ "' ~3'" 6-t -::-a ~ lastr•ctiH Lad1u,ia1 & Lanurt SAl.H'""' '/T for Ari Gal~.,> Design cus1om framing • arl s..1t11> E "" pref a Good "" pecipie ~ fol'°"" ·Up$ Ca •or appt 675~~52 SALf S Re1a11 sales appar~ 1n11fll'l-·r., Duyong e•penence 'e•plu lor gOff shop Appl; T ves-f:rt 10·2Pn' • ... E lllEWPORT BEACH COUNTRY CLUB •r,CX, f Coast '4wy N B 044 9l8C .;erry Ande•,O<"• IHI CUil llisltts Wdl 1rain SHURl-.Ttl , ·~ "''-'wpon Btv<! C.M 646-7'45 ' IEPT. ncanau :::.•0w1ng C1v11 Eng1nue•1ng -. .aiio Planning i::.,m ._...., s "~De'•enceo gen· .. r al olhc:;e secretary with ,,...,d 1ypmg & Phont '" •Is delatl O••en1e0 Ex· • '"'"""' beneltts ~ rl. ... e,.,1i1'0",..,,eor• 1n •ulnetl" Orange COun ·, Sena resJme tc Mr ~ ., .. ,, tt>s ~I qot>en Be.n ,V a..-~•OSI & 4S..OC. •.s • ..,.5 Alton Par1< ... a~ "~ CA92"18 HCln&H ~?' Po•SC"e V•• eaes ...,,. >•Je• : n1pr951 nc dl"l'O :lvl•t'S ~"es5 :.i:u·Jd 11te •,pi.,~ G:>Od !1.Cf' S• s ·ec J Sai.orv C. .t!>ee Ot 9 • j; c.omrr <: ~ .. ea ~4~-"-•PQ SECRnlllY FIT ae-.e ,,., 'lil'Y>i>O•I !::leac~ -.ee~ s deta11 onen- 'PC ~ .. .,,,_.,.., w 10· ""Ct" ~~r..,,(' ~,.-... ,,,,, .. ac• 3CI ..., n , .• -t1 )r •. '~r·flr'tC~ '.A ' ' • •t'.l ore• d N r "' ~ ;: il ClilD"'"' t' t. 5 f" t., l f" 0 .. 0 0 ;:.,..,..d~d .. ' ""' Sf'9'\0"' tf\Q !ltH· •• , ... , l1Y1stm111t ·<#ii ::"'rZ\J'd'41 o•l• • !: "'P~PO" Beacr J ,au•,. ·s~-95.J' SEClnUY F T \. g..,• ·..,~OQ ~ b ~DQ :a 6 'Oam -20--08 « SELL hrou~h cl.bs11 ed 9' • .,,. :>a,~rf>• )'(ti._.,,.. 1 Oul a o :i ~•P• fe>v .,t'f'<l CA .. L ,at.P:::' AP~ tlt"\.a"'M" ~ · p .;d' 3'"~ .. ~ 6'.l' 5J4 .. '•l. .. t.(._ ~C> P 4 •°'1•1NG S'. ""' •.IA.E'R A .. ~ -q-plf-'l'"tec f-., ·~ •PA(~I.. ~.:.N .. NG • "'"' U -, !. ~~Oditbl• \ ,..~ <> 6 20QP '~' ECE _ .... ·~ .-. !'\t"-.S ' :i<.c-~~s~.s·-ult' provided. We would like to hear lllYEH DIRECTORY from y OU, $4.50-$5.00. Benefits. avat'lable jn Early AM ~.-,,.soace• ___ "!!! ______ P4 '. E•. "' CQITlotel 581k..A ... F'4V • .., ,,.5 P";-:J .-( A,..·v<t Ce't ~-· S--.o1--H Route P T • aa, s "lo Customer Vl Yl\,IV ours Cooechng "'4u5t l'la•e ile· , 1:30AM -s:3oPM M-F Costa Mesa ~ndaoie .en·oe "' ·e·s 6-10:30AM Sat/Sun 11c p·oo' "'' 11ab1111. ns B h Eccetlen1 t'•lt• n ome Verification Hours Hunt1·n·.• ton eac L A HeralO e.am1nt'r 4-9PM M-F • 1 -1•1~•1-438• and 2 ::~~~:~b5P~ month Fountain Valley Call 642~321 ext. 207. ASk for Ms. Garcia. IRIYIH OCB Rtpr .grao"•CS "f'f'.:l~ re5oons1t>le Ot'l:'C' " ' d,.ve comparo• avl"S Part· Ttml' P~c. • ,,., ava•lat>ie Aooi. " P"' <.a" w OMV repC'•I eQ48 E .., ::lf4<;E •'1 c Qf.i. ... ~ Gf-' ~UQ \.IPQI"\\ ":' TVHllE I IEW S.mct lirectery YEUIWPAIES ~ "'' '"\Ote nf()t ~ ~ltO' CA.L L TOOA1 &SI Fii LllS Vour Seor .. ct> Dt•KIC". Represer,.~1 •e 1•2-•a2111t. 110 NO COLLECTING NO SOLICITING Coasl HW) Unot B CCI• ·--------· ona Del Mar See o,,, •d Daily Pilat The Softer Side Of Dressing Mll:MI .... .... 10to20. FlaH9flng tie· _,. owMoclol glYH elHtlC ..... drele I r-=,= M-tltorAA(M- Deliver One Day a Week - Must have dependable car and proof of insurance. C1ll 842-1444 Ask for Joanne Craney CUSTOMER SERVICE REP 2 .positions available in tomer sel"Vice dept. our cus- Must have · pleasant phone per- sonality; typing a plus. Learn valuable office skills and earn $5.00 an hour to start. Hours are 11 :30 A.M . -8:30 P .M. and Sat. & Sun . 6 A.M. 10:30 A.M. = .._ Call 642-4321 ext. 207 to schect- o::=..~.:.= ule an appointment. Ask for lllYEIS Reltable muSI l'lavt' own car F T 01 p T 4!> ~· 21( mtle 240-99, t PllllC MTICf -"' • • -._ •.!E A =IE • • • ~ ... : c. .. ..., , ~ ... a ' f'd • , • ~ NI!-!? 5af'O Cleni•t Semce ,,. .... ,, "9 e~Pt>• 't' :!Jt ~ t'., rea.son~~1- .,. ..... ;.~ ~a•O ~.&Eot.!-0. -...: .. i'""Q 'Jt1•ce• 10 , •5 •» r q,.,tat>lt' IX "0f'd ~ ~ fl'"r-. ~ .. s.:i"z' • O "-(,LfANi""v • -'."!""" ~~.c::ie~•a "' .. Qtt•c~~ ~~, ~~·-• c>,j• oQ48 ~ ... t'\: ,,;: N•ndo"' ~\ar.l'I .,.:; ·~ ,.,,.. ,a,p ... ("if"\ ,~ ~.. • , ~<. o:iRtiE u "" \ • a'lOa .;a•..: .. r ~t ~·· .,. .. a· ~ • asi ~oc "~ "C"V~ -'tl'" 64.._ 3"... 'X •.o.•c,, S'ftVfl' ~ .. -.50 ... =~pi,..·~ '~ , c;,D; ,. ... ~ "S1a ~1' "' ....,, " -' ... ..,_..,, Q•.:ti'S ''" "" :3AROEN1N<. "E"'• .. ,,. P1peria UPS .. a,,.ns Ciolll"" ..... -~""!"" ... '!P'"'!"!W!'!!'!!!!~~-. lnm garaQf' " -..1 .. 4•• L AR .... "' IN RI .,A">il> NG STRIPPING DUSTY S LanOS<...lt~ '"' '. ~ o MC. 673-151 Main Sf-<11 ""' ., ,.. o• .,.. 1 11me "•t"f' t>•' 'l~ l'u11 Sf.<.,ree ··"',,.ft ; No ;N~ ;'. B~ • S-,, l=ree ~I f,Jo '•· "t ~ "' r i:4,t.1t, /1. REMO\/A.t •v W r;llCOll9rlng LlC : '•' .)011 wori. 496-20 UPlllSAn ... "" fYP(IS lie •13--" ... r...-wtrk -a:•p....-=:""' Llolanda. ===.:::.-. o • ···--· • $ • ,.J,..,.,. ,_....,... ... -.. .i.. .. a."-'_.~~ .. ~--=---•1&.. ... •.• .. saa ... ~_.1-. ................. lllllliiilili .......... 111111 .......... ~~~n~1 ~1~~~~~.c:''='=~:._~~----~~...;..;..----------._------~--------------------. ·• 1' 911 ()qnge 0oeet DAILY PILOT/ TUMday, Aprl 19, 1 ... .... , I If' ... ooenin8 In eon- SINCUort dlot b .... •e-191 II l*'90ft w+tf\ •oe169'11 tyiMng elelll•. •• aiptltuda l oordlel ~ rnenner. Thia II Ptlm•rlly • aecratarl•l pc>altlOtl but •!so oftwl d f11 ar slllad o t h •r r••e>on11b11tt1H Word proea .. ing 1northand lll'ld/or r .. taurant equip- ment •1C.l*'iancle 1 dali- nit• plu9. Good baMfi1 package .!<pply In parson l::JOam-4pm .,. ~ RE oftlce °"""'9 tor 5 hr/dy. ettnoont Mutt 11eY9 kn~ ol W/P, ahortll•na, • d•t•ll oriented & a Nlf-11.,1.,. Pleelant n/'"* environ. Net oc alrpoft. Good TWo13 ~~~1(ayWi• =:t•,nk. sterllnrJJ -:m·~~ '='°~~: ~,:::. ..a TEMPOAAAY AHO ... 750 a.rribOOcMlrl '300• "7·t635 ENO Chart9f St....of• • OrJa. own.,_~ tt~ 1 1000 c•AllAC TEMP'rO H AM ~ ...-=• ~.=· T SEL An 3'' Cr~ Pt!g Matte e71-70l3 McWtngl fU.0904 Nll.[1' POSITIONS AVAILABLE M9 ~ pe1ct 1350 _. 22 in c.wd IYOty Tuell dMI w/lk~ 175~7 tOO 8WM '17 53515 >Ont concl. VW •i1'VAN. runt = SEAUllrul SELECTION :=:ioMts ::C, 1W,5 :.' = =:_ :~~. :,-;.r. o-i· llifa/ ..... /111111t7 ..... °" ...,°"' ~a.':r::-:=. ::.-V~1-l9N ~=in~:;:'9 ti.Ra ' ... 758-9090 H ypilll Art deco bemboo ..._ 1AOH •-IEIT lllL .... m .ooo 751·24545 Ewe 111-~ eoun1ytS-ui1tod..,i :g:e'e:~°'*•tor1 f:! 12eo _.. ... 1100 Automa11e llhut °" MW b'sdPWWWOfti)! AO •• lttt Mez ·a.. 190£ 115 900 a. ... ••••"" 1• •••-11M SECRET ARV /AECEP. FfT :or Costa Mau Real Ettata ottiQa. c.11 Maria. eso-1121. CM1 Miit pe1c1 S400 Wll won. aa.eti & Deck• c.. 111/abfd. .. ,., .i.e. tac Pet1ect cond · '&Noot I ...,.. •W«d ProceMCl't ... 1 125. 722·7110 636-eSlt befor. 5""' or tnc:t '340/rno let/Ill 15'0JAM80 REE ROAD •m/fm ac•r•o CH I · 'ft D<S&ii Sterted Re9-2eoc>H•00t 8tvd •A.ccoun-linglRCtertl .. • Ml t>twn 7:30-tpm e 87).8800 * Open 7 d•ys aw.-7~9205 L _.......... ' tor•tlon Aur'9 gr•• Fut1 COSTA MESA um1 .... niiif -----;--Extended Service Hours " ··-..-I d rlt/fflg Lost my lllOC> - ·--SOFA. LOVE SEAT WITH •5 BOAT DOCK Sldatla 7 •11'1 ·10pm Mon-Fn -·-··--' 13t 1276 ORO FIESTA 1978 v• In •n axclusl,,,. waterfront Ra•I Est•t• office PIMM caH 673-9333 -CHAIR AND OTIOMAN. E•calant toc.tlon • · r11 I · low. 9ood cond1t1onl *'-... ..,.,.. ~ 8rown tone. Huntington ~rt>our Too rnucn Cllltl <town? JWna w.nt RJOO Good TRANS/PACIFIC RESTAURANTS. INC 170•2 Gillette Ave . Irvine (71-4) 250-0331 Security OttlC«a TUUll-Pll .-. PMale scnool HB are• 8· 12. 2-6 536-10 1 TIUPlllllEPIJI NO e.rcp nee S12-$15/Hr Mr Jen Mn 520-•05 1 •P.W Iii•.,. Only $250. 143.9294 1450/mo M CHI022 §i L .... ·nor newer MBZ ''~' 67~750 Ron -C~• our wga M6ect • • , ... ,........ E dbl dOOt 23 cu tt. No ~... II ..... ,.. O.A C. 18400 Von KarrNn Fro11-Retrlg. almond (P9191fcomput«-ptlntar· SIOO/mo. ~ BM<;n. ____ ...... ,.. BUY Sle 130, lrvlna •74·291• w/cuatorn watet & tea monitor modem. 2 disk Att.il•bla now. 973--8535 dial MERCEDES 100%FR~~t~Applieant dllP9f'Nr.A'*>lulalyllke drw.t & sttwr Sl,500 IM441'111f CR IER (213/714)137.2333 nawseoote7s-3462 obo 4ae-7286 ave For .. 11 boll• Sh0t1 term 5 Frwynot8Mct1Bhid through classified VETERINARY HOSPITAL -E Ra1;1geraior:-1uge ine .. , .. --.. ii 0 I< Gregg 551-1111 • , .............. ' in 8uan•P-" STIPWAIESS IPTG $7.00/HOUR FOR QUALIFIED PEOPLE PllSTlllllS UTll ..... ,., TelephOne Sales lflTIUlllY ... EARN $400-$1000 /WK I •57 Hr Training • comm • • 6AM-12 Noon Mon-Fn • ..... , ... .,.lllCI C•ll Nqw • 5 Posmons Leh i• Iii¥-Yieie, ASll ror LV COSTA MESA Lapa lllh. u I 548-6919 T".' ~ IHlll MJ LAGUN.A NIGUEL --...... 582-1723 IMIHti•cte• ....... •f.alu4 I Tetemar~ettng Bnghl parson•• Medlc:al & size, 1•.; yrs old. W•ter & - Surglc•I AUi AHT crultled & cubed oca on FRtE 10 ;;od nom. v-'Y • ,,............ .. ......... ..... prefefred. but Wiii tr•ln dOOt $750 759-9394 IOYed MUI. male dogs. 2. iii......... I I a ......... . w1l1tng person BH ch 3 yrs & 1 yrs. nice per--.,c 11 -.. - front pr•cllce Studio 1 llY ~ tonality. 648-1258. 1111 .. 11 &l snf ·--- apt Included 642-38'3 Ratr~•tors. w..nars ' '"' I ··.L-.b ..... , H A ISS21e Mo, ... INlll mu.Ill' -Otyets _Mika_M S-970 1 •---.. 1980 Low mis Auna grt, 15 32St ~-_,. IKSl111 ~1t<>rtiSlS. Anlm .. Al· r11111itut Ml4 FREE to good horM 2 v .. r leg•I and ctn S800 • Sl51 ..... YMC2 tendtnts. & Tachnteian * 1i3& LXRde orn•t• ~:!-:'1y~~4~~~1e1 _ 647-1635 • 3& ~,II* 101 ~ lor busy i.roe t•bla. 6 ch .. ,. wittl bufte1 w -...s t~'"l'--1 BIRDS nc•• s • u;~--·~..::-zs11 practice FIT or PIT incl (old en.fry wood), good ..,.,... ,..,.,... _.. ~ ~._ wllnds & eves. tlJIP pref. cond •MUST SELL• 2 grey cheeted Parrots 'U ....... ~TN Petts -LeMing 1r111ne 551-0~ St200 O~ 673-1856 * w t c •ge s25o Call oaded xtt 1ow ~ 1•1 •111 __ __ ---650-23'3 or 662·2002 S8900t0 tfer 64tr201 1 ' • •• WlllUU/W&nll * •·PIECE king bedroom M t -500 Witn car tor iuncn delivery wtm.,treu. alee bl•nket Pi .... •Ortus hi lltl 1 Auto Mall Or. serv1ce Est•b routes & otM< bedding S325 ltSt Santa Ana pro111ded "0-$60 d•lfy comple~ 873-3073 FOR SALE-(•'6in) Baby ... Ftr4 w .. 1-111 55 Frwy at Edinger L.l,. lfTllll Ir. Power St98'1ng. Aul~ ~• J aa .. • 1U1S 111111 .. •11 Gr•nd Soh•ffer & Sons · mahc. 11'ln1 cond Musi .,.."" -•• llMl'l l!Hdboard. lootboard. l ike new w•fnul lmish sell (2H33838) Service Hrs. Mon-Fri _ Side rails S 195 840-8733 $3,000 26 1-7566 11,111 7:00 em..to 10 pm '85 380 SL Prl Blk IGr•y. 25M m1. SHOWROOM Loaded PUT-TllE 2 POSITIOIS IYllLAILE CAIEIAllll conlemporary • mos o.it Grand Baby 5·~ Fr.Prov water bed. o•k with dr•w· style. S1eg1er. tltgh gloss THEODORE ... !111111 ______ " w/xras 1421< •Trlillia1 .. 4 Hifer•s •rt•i4d. 11 yOU 1e ever Deen Ots-· warn• ers cost s~ooo wlll seU #81 •yrs new. Cost $10K• courageo aaout 1ele tor $800 722-7110 $5500 FIRM 786-0377 pr one saies oecause ot I Expenenceo camerama" DA y BED wntte & brass 11&111 I 11111 NII poor IT''anagement or need e d M us 1 be Mattresses, trundle com· From TOfronlo sc6m operators please knowledgable mall are.s p I e t e S 2 • 5 S 1500 obo. 650-5 t44 ,:i1ve us <l call We otter or camefa dec>.,tment •8•0-8733• ROBINS FO RD "~(",~) ...... 8()Q f'\l V (J CO~lA Ml ~A r.1 J iC"f' ,,,. .. llassffietl 142-&lll 1714) 240-8460 p p 'lJ ••• , 211 c Grav. good snape. $4200 646-8 157 Sell Y ,., Pr.,ttty! C.u C1111ifit4, 642-5678 for information & surprisingly low cost. .. •lletirH1114 ctll•c• stw4ellhwtlet••· •lat.rt i•4iwi4111ls ,,. .. ,, .•. •PrtftHiHll Trli•i•c •Later1tiY1 C.••iHiH Str•ctwrt .,.. ....... ,. smpptng p1a11ng Pi ste-GIRL S decOf•tOf S-plec:e li~ln 1MI up and/Or ty~se111ng ma1c111ng BEDROOM PR<f.611<~. Medic•. Col· s1<1lls a plus Musi be SEl Xtnt cond. must Mel umbus SP red/Wilt au ava11ati1e 10 wOfk eve-$575 5,8•3390 brush 11 tra 1 set mngs Salary based on GL336/Campt wtifs 1 e• pe11ence and skills Hide-a-bed t>etge tweed set Galli/Mallard wilts. Please contact LIN or ne<tulon S2•5 Rust •rm Vella trainer low m1 Patat71416A2-4321ut cna11 S55 Both gOOd m tnl cond $1950 lllTllW!* •Yl•TIElmt •lJ YW UllPH YU! '"'' .... ......... !! GIT THE ·.IUMP ON A GOOD .IOB CALL TOIAY! bfirH•Ht. DYNAMIC PROTEt T "' ., • ., ......... l'ty S6RV CES W11t 29 our ng tile day ano cond111on 5•8-2687 854-2484 or 673-3600 -14 642"4399 evemngs MOVING Tremendous ---- vatue. hk&-new turntture lpertiat c.Ms. 6"5 Complete hOusetlold & G'Ollers Compt Set Hagen acoes.sOflft 644-8746 WOOds 1-5. Lynx Irons 2- .. .,., ... t7•4163J-t952 an.tme •Aft11C••••t 191,ert .. itJ ftr r;,llt ill4m4HI NEW nouse 100 sm-.11 lpr P Can-n-access SW & l•--------too mucn furniture Puller SJSO 63 1· 1275 Equa1 Oppty Emp1~r M c 330. I St Coucnes ctiatrs rafrig ,. __ --._ A•lll l•pertt4 tlll • IJ '' tables ett Mutt sell .... .,. -In -ucanaaY Ce1t1les1,CAl2121 960.9510 ACURA lmmed openmg for well I QUEEN SIZE •• .. nRESS C..t1 .... ~ 1124 Pilat ~ oung growing compan~ ...,,.. orgamzeo & ambitious neeos energetic em-& BOX Q UIL TEO MOTHER died Every1'11llg llSTICIUHLIE person w clnt typ.ng pto•ees 101 door to door BRANO NEW' $155 A 1 t I skills r.gure ap111uoe & , goes PP 1ances. urn Jus1 bring us yOYr owes1 t>anOtl•ll d1str1bu1ton No c.i1 846-4293 rvs saOdle, ett 3272 tionel1oe Acura deal and cordial pnone manner sates $4 hr to start -Col 549 228 WIP knowledge & SH SOFA. LOVE SEAT WITH orado Ln -1 we If t>eat 1t J Good t>enellt pkg Nr J Ca11 642-4536 Apply at Bingo Pilla CHAIR ANO OTTOMAN T -1-,.-GUARANTEED• W -59 •906 E•tPrs1on 430 2819 Newpor1 Blvd Neveruled Brown tone rlal!!!!_IJea 'llSll-SIOl•a ayne airport 1 • J JG ~ 00 P M 2-4pm only Only S250 843-9294 Pnrer ,.;ti 701 Z ··1001 QUA.IL ST . N B I SECRE T ARV As• tor Pat c .,_ I W J • 2 1 •• 01 •• Neeo 1as1 ell•c1en1 o!lic.e ... 9JaH1 1a1-TROPITONE CANTINA 18· CEl'lTER CONSOLE jl12-21l -"" wo1ker tor F T pos111on Need 1 Ctitmney sweee>'> Or 1 5535 • arm chaises 8 arm N-120 H P. 0 18 Xlra ACURA .87 Legend coupe w t Laguna N1gue1 1n •snow silo.....,'>Howaoout I~--""'!!'-----cna1rs 01n1ng Ible um· nice $1 t ,950 I L low mi XLNT cono sur a nee agencv Pr r someone to tune your piano · F student 30 • wants to t><elfa Ible 2 coll tbles (8 18195~8382 Dlue ivory cnrm wnts ex per N WP ano IBM XG or i .. ch you hOw 10play11.., Houses•! WIH~pg ecp Santa Barbara Market s24 400 OBO 951.0277 skills Call 249-8733 btwr> lots 01 soecatlty _,,~are Will srart 5128 for summer umorelfa All tn cream Jl' TUWlll·Sll/l1J g.5 ask for S111ne1 •Ovaniseci In claSSlfleO Xlnt rels 548-685 7 wtttle' Orig $7000. ser 5 days/mo year lease SIClnllY Pac•llC View Mortuary N-p0rl Beacn yP•nq lthng genera ol11ce work Call Tom 644·2700 SnoweO uno.t W'1h stuft"> OtQ your Mil OUI wn!l I classi- li9d 10 7/ou ca11 9~t cad 'l"'cH, witl alt ad ill c~a Call 142-5818 PlBUC NOTICE Nil.IC NOTIC£ $2500 721-0714 Bertned at Newpor1 •iactllHte•• IOIS eeacn 57>7100 FISH MACHINE 8 5 -.-A-M1111E""'R""1C•A·N-lnd-1••n•11·ems-BA YLINER 20 center wanted" rugs baskets console 125 HP w/ 180 also ortenl•I rugs nrs Loran. hsn lmdef •17141 673-1467 • VHF ba•I & wasn oown system Emb1m1111 top L~tf1Qlor ih"lend7 f'ln0 outrtggers & more 1111 .. , o1 er111.,1 tnclanl'*2 S 10 500 111•1 524-5289 NIUC NOTIC£ Nil.IC NOTtC£ HAVE A NEED? Read tht> c1ou 1f,,.d DOQ"S ord i10u re sure 10 I 111 lailJ Pilot ••2-1171 Ptlll.IC NOTICE KIDS WANTED 12-16 1. Bonu-, PrlzH and Trips 2. We provide transportation 3. We'll train JOU 4. Have tun and mHt new friend• 5.Full adult aupervlalon NM.IC NOTICE Nl.IC NOTICE LM.,. • m uuge Md glYe us yout name, tlddr ... Md phOna number. IWld we will C4lll yOU b-* by the"91l1~ c.1...-........ ..... m ,... .. . I • ' TUESDAY, APRIL 19, 1988 25 c ·E~TS Mesa taking referendum to court City attorney says ballot drive against a pproval of Metro Pointe offlces,in valid (o.'s prOJCCt 1n nonh Costa Mt"Sa was a n admtnistra11ve rather than lcg1slat- 1ve dec1S1on .and that onl) leg.islauve decjs1ons -tho~ that ~1 policy - are subject IO rt'.ferendum. th1.· po\1taon ol ha\ 1ng to dt'fend th"ar effort Wheeler es11mated 11 would cost s 15.000 to S:! s.noo for the Ci tizens group to defend thear rderendum BJ JENNIFER WEBER Of ... O., ........ • T he Costa Mesa City Council dec1d(d in a 4-1 vote Mo nda)• to seek a Superior Coun Judgment on the legality of a referendu m dnve against the Metro Pointe office project. Retired Ohio autoworker John Oemjanjuk ls con- victed Monday of Nazi war crimes by an Israeli court./ AS Nation Jackson takes most del- egates in Delaware caucuses./ A2 Sports Ocean View Hlgh's Derek Ogle fires no-hitter in 1-0 Sunset League baseball vict ory over Marina./81 Seven Orange Coast area girls chosen for Orange County's South All-Star basketball team ./81 City Auomey T ho mas W ood ad- v ised the council that thetr vote in favor of the second phase of Mc.-tro Pomte's develo pment was .. not law- fully $UbJcct" to a referendum Wood said that the council's ap- proval of the Amel ~'elopment Hit from behind He said opponents of the Amel prOJeCt v.arted too long in the pla n- ning procc\\ Hi \lop the project a t the ballot bm Councilman lrcne Wheeler op- posed taking the reffrendum to court because he .-.aid rt ' pub the ci11uns group that backed the referendum an ~· "It's a prett~ dl'ar and ob\ ious slap in the face to make the c1111ens bear the burden ot auorne·,.,· fees·· hc.- ~ad The .\rnel fk,elupment project planned for 12 aut's north of the San Dat'go Freev.a~ "-C''>t nf Bt'ar c;;treet includes 12-\l\· dnd fou r-stur. office 0.-, -,..... .., LM ,..,_ • Coeta Ila& puamed.lca help Kenneth Mad.- den Sr .• 60. who aaffered a neck atraln llcmday when Illa car wu rear-ended at the lntenection of 17th Street and Newport Boule•ar d. E ric Wittig, 29, of Newport Beach told offlcen he tried to aqueeze lnto the left turn lane while driving eaat on 17th, triggering a three-car colllalon . building~ anJ 1"11 parking -.trut turts < v '>Ul \1e~ l<t-..adents for Re-spon- \lhk (1ruv.ih -lht' '><imc group that tOllected \1gnJturn fur a \low-growth 1n1t1at1\t' dnd the lt11mt· Ranr h referendum -gattwred .i -~., 'alad s1gnaturn 1n at\ Jr,\t' Jg.t•ll'>I "vietro Pc11ntl.' ' fhe rr1.ommt'nd.H1nr, '" t.i l' the mann t.1 lUUr! 'urpr \nl hJl l l•r\ ol tht· \1t'tr-•1 P111ntr •t•l1·rl·•11ur .. To night mil ~ n. nt t •hr' great lov.' for thl' < \\ 1 ,. I 1 r .,,ta '111:..a ·· rcsadt'nl Bob Cole satd . ··1 rl'all~ trul; believe that the~ ts a delibcr;st1.· anempt to thwart the people ·· .. Arne! doesn't c.-ven have to enter an to at ·· saad Sandra G enis. one o f the leisdl"I '> of the c1t1zens gro up. "The c1l\ dlX'~ th~·ir darty wo rk for them." "-ood "31d however, the develo per would ah o be a pn nc1peJ in the ac taon .\' the lOuncll prepared to vote. (Pleaee eee lllUA/A2) U.S., Iranian forces clash in Persian Gulf Ira n loses fCJu r boat~ a fte r p latforms h it : Navy copt er missi n g By ALY MAHMOL'D .&. I ••• ...,.... w.m.. ~1 .\ '..: .\.\1.\ Ba hrain ~ -\ml'nlJn furu:'\1.k'"\tr >\l'd lv.o if Iran'> Pt·r\1c:tn C1u ll 011 plJtio rms \1 )nda" <w1n~ "r damJgl·d t111.1r Jllal k hna'' .rnJ di'· abkJ l '.'t• rn~tn th<:1t ftrl·11 m1 .,,i1r, at -\ml·ntan pl Jnc\ l ~ ,,ffi , 1ab rt·pnn ed lr.in1an na' J I t11r,t'\ fC''>P<•nded "tth an.itl..' •n .\rat) 111 1aulrt1r' l ' \ Bntt\h ,ind C ·.pnr•t cmnmero.sl \l'\\t.'I'> and nn J tll'ltloptt:r l hartert:d b\ thl 'H< tdt'\ 1'>1on net ·.Aor '''·-\merit.an ~a,uaitu.·' v.l're rt .. portt·d. but l)ekn"l' Wl°fC'l.lf"\ Fran._ ( ( JrluH 1 ..aid a ( ohra Jttal ... hc:IK11pter "'11h t"' o 1. rev. 'Tll'n "'3\ late' in returning w a 'a'' ,rui-.t·r anc a )(':in. h had tx'gu n Iran·, otli,ial hlam1c RC'puhlac ~e"''i .\genl°~ tn a J1sp<:1t .. h \1onda~ night !>aad Iranian -.-.af\h1p\ ··1n 4 hero11. clash "'nh the aggreswr .\ml.'nt '.ln hd11.l•f"Cr') 1n thi: P~r,1al' '1ul' ,h111 du"'n vnt' of tht'm Monday J 1tc:rn11on .. The agenc~ monitored 1n Britain ..:nJ C • pru~. dad nut elaborate. \1ondm ·s conflict lxtwccn the I nttl'd \tatt.·!> and Iran was the most intt'n-.e sanre President Reagan o r- dal·d liist summt'r that Navy forces ht· 'tn·ngtht'nt"d 1n lhe gulf. where 1ra n and Ira~ ha\t' been al war since \t"ptt"mber I >-1 r1 \\ J \h1ngtun 1.alled dt"Strucuon o f !ht' oil platlorms a ··measured rl''>P<•n'>C. ·tu the n.plosaon ofa mine. .ilkgedh planted h\ Iran. that blew a h11le 1<r1 the .\ mencan l ' Samuel B R1•bt.·n' !a\t Thur"'-1a' and ~ounde.d • ! 1 • '>Ja lors · The lraruan ne .... s agenC) said there "-l'rt' Jl.'dtn., dnd IOJunes aboard ifie plJtl•1rm hut 1t THll !I.Cl~ ho" man~. Re..igan .. aid '1u nday's operauons \A.ea J ""amtng w Iran that "wt> will pr 1tt'\.t our ships and 1fthe~ threaten u"I ·th!.'' 'II pa' a ome \\ e undenook thl\ <l\ twn tc> ma ... t' 'ure the t ranians hJ'e n) 1llu ~1on~ about the cost of arrespon\lhk beha\1or" In tht ground"" ar between Iran and l rii~ iht" Ba~hdad governme nt d a1med 1 regained most of the (Pleue eee U.S./A4) Index Advice and Games BuJletln Board Business Classified 88 A3 8 5-7 Laguna official docked for iJlegal addition Comics Entertainment Opinion Paparazzi Police log Public notices Sports Weather 8 10· 12 89 A7 A6 88 A 3 84. 12 81-4 AZ 8 y JONATHAN VOLZKE .Of ... O.,~-- A Laguna Beach Cit) official -.-.hu mad e an add111on to his hume wuhout the pro per pennm 1n I 1186 "Ill lose. '"'o wee ks of his vaca tion pa)' and m ust retu rn his hou'<' w ats o riginal design. Cit) Managcr l\.t'n Frank said Monday Frank said he "thorough!> e ~am· med'' t-he c1rcumst1lnces surrounding the work on (om mun1t} Develop- ment Dirtctor K) le Butterw1ck's home before rt·ar h ang the dt•t a\lon and .. th1\ condude'> thl" l!>'>Ue d'> tar .i' I'm rnn1.l'rncd " l ht• alkgal v.urk un Buttcrv.al .... \ home "-3' d1'>1.losed last month dt thl' sam1.· lime ~guna BeaC'h ufficaa ls learnt'd that anolht•r cmplo~ee -J housing tn\peUor -had 1lkgall~ conH•rtcd h1'i homC' into a dupk'< T hat emplo~ee. John Hangula. ~u QUtt h~~ )Ob t WO wt"Ch a-go while h1\ \a~ v.as under tn\ cs11ga11on. Frank <;a1d Hinguta·., '1olat1on was ton- s1dcn.·d mul h mnr(' -.eno u<> than that l>i Buttl.'rv. 11. I.. th.: cit~ manager ~1d l':.trl lt'r fhe , It\ of l~guna 8eJ1. h •~ amid Jn Jg&rt'""''l. hattk again .. t Jn esll· m Jtl'J 2-i h11rnl.'s llkgall~ lon,ened tn hou<,e t'-'rt families Fran~ \aid thr rn l'I Jthrn thJI l"' o of ht'i emplo~el~, 1'-l'ft• tn \ w lJllOO of Cll\ 1.0dt'S V.J~ .. Jn t•mbarr3\\rnent'" to the ut~ 'n dt:"Cl'imn on a pos~1hle punt h- nll n1 hJJ h .. :en made for H 1ngula v. hl'n hr n.·<;1gned. Fran... ~1d H1 ngula., '11o!Jt111n ho"n t•r hc:t' uimml·nt tx·ch .iJrrt'dt'd FrJnk ..aid Bu1te~1clc made the Rultt'r'.4 11. k JI'>•• 'olu nti:el"l."d ·-i~---l '' 1-'-quari:-1001 add111on to his h\lng rcrnm l' h \ alkµI add JI fl n C'\ en rHom bl'lon:' his Top Qf the World th11ugh hl· ,,,u!J hJ\e gone tc1 •he' ,11mmun1t' "'d'>dnnt \edto thecll\'tn ~nun:' rn ~\ 1 thl r r11fX'r ix·rn· '' : ~l\11 Pr\.' iou' 11., !ht" anne"<ltllon:the .. Ht' prdt•rred 11.1 t.i. ... C' 11 out rather nc1ihhm hood v.a~ 1n un1corporated thJn i;o thr••ul?h tht' tx'rmn pr•11.e'>\ ,,,uni\ temtor. meaning. f'CrtnllS Frank ...:i1d ·' 1u.J hd'c: occn rt'Qu1rcd from the f hl' lit\ m.tr1J~t'r .... m1 1hi: h.>s' • I t~..un--k'!..,'.h.Ji1Htlpa'"d'lnl1e1 ! \U'fX'n''' If' Hutlt'~llll. "'l' unJ\J •lahk •,,, "urt 1 "It "'a~ prt'tt~ c'lea r the 11ddt11on "J' m<1dt· hefore thr annexation. '"""~· .,Ji'!lputtngthat ·· Franksaad Magn~tic trains viewed as solution to county traffic Bingo games at HB high schools a smoking issue Duck flies coop, lets builders continue BJ BOB VAN EY&EN Of ............. High-speed t rains that float o ver tracks on nagnctic cushions could provide a n altemat1~·e to freeways 1n Soulhcm Ca lifomta. Orange Co unty Supervisor Hamett Wieder said Monday. "I believe this ts the first step -i'Oward solving our air quality 'prob- kms, and another step toward solving our traffic problem s." W ieder said during a press ronfercDCC o n magnetic rail technology. Ma&nelic trains_hay_e~ in fact, alrudy crossed the thrnhold from idea to reality in West Gnmany. where two tracks have bttn con· sUUctcd. including OM that is e 1t- pected to ao into public use later this year in West Rnhn A sim ilar train, known u a People Mover. is beina planned 10 Las Yeps and there also bas been talk in rttent months of a high-speed rail link bctWttn Las Vegas and Orange County. l'o be built by the Gennan-owned firtn Magnetic Transit of Amenca, t~ People Mover is cJt pect(d to begin 1'aJISporting people from the do wn- tO'Wn casino distnct. to the city's airpon in 199 1. Wieder. who serves on (h e Southern California Air Quality Management District board and the the Co unty Transponation Com· mis sion. called toecthcr a group of regio nal planniq. transportation and _air Qu_&[ty offi~ials~on@Y.~n d iscussions on t fcasabihty o People Moven in <>ranee County and other p.rts of Southern Califomia. Amo" the ~ffkials attcndina Monday s rncc11na was Tho mas Graham . director of dcsip and ckvelopment for I.be city of Lu Veps.. , ................ ,.u) By ROBERT BARKER .\re high schools playing w11h fire b~ perm1tt1ni smo kers to pufT a"a~ at the nigh-volume, big· monc~ bingo games held on their · ca mpuses~ Daniel Niemeyer. a custodian at Fo untain Valle~ High School. believes the) arc. Bingo and smo king have no place at schools.. he said. The air's turning blue and the windows are yellow and hard to cle.an at the cafe teria at Fo untain Valle) High School where p mes are play(d Ttrursday nights. ~~ claum.-S~l$-00m­ plajn about the smell of stale smoke 1n the cafeteria where the pmes are held. he said.. Besides, he wo rries that tobacco sm oke is hazardo us and frets over possible ea.rcinoarn.s that arc lef\ for the studen ts to inhale a~er a mght of fast-pace h1ngo ··The cafrtl'rta 5l tnl..\ all v.ed long."' he ~1d He', as ... ang Huntington Beach l nion H igh 1.·hr1ol Distric t tru<.1t·c-~ to Jt !cast tn' <''ill~te (or DC'~"1blt' .. ar1.1m>gen' H<' d also 11 ... e tn \Cr utlici.ils put a halt to the g.lffil'\ But h<'·, tal..ang on ~me prc'tt~ h'ugh c-u~tomt·rs -cigart'te-smol..- ang htngo pla ~er-.. parc.-nts who art" r.u .. 1ng mo nc' for projects that ~ho1.1ls ran ·1 otherv.1se afford. and ~hoot offin als \.\ho don't look 1..andh to"ards t'ul!l"g off an enJ<:_ n~ that bnn~ 1n ahoul SI mallaon a }l'ar \.\i e-e-ld) games are pla)ed at all fi' e d1s1nct high schools -Foun· ta in \ J lk). Edison Ottan Vie" Manna. H untington Be.ach and Wntm1nstcr Doroth) O'Bn en. a 9·)car-<>ld "'>," ,i""'h..~ her-<lf .t!> the \ h-t" r1 .. n h1ng ) pla\ er 1>1 all h1ng1 'llJ\l'r\ .. <.J ld II 1'-0 U)d be' nJ1, .i' ..i' to rut u~ no-'>m tlkang \1gm J' tht f.Jmc<. 'Th, h IJ<,·n Jl1n 1 go into th<' ,.ttt·tc:nJ ..inl nunn tht.' ne\t da'. J nJ h ·~rn lht· Jtr ha\ dcart'd:·· 'ht• \,11\l ffl-\n,"1 .i lfun11ngtl)n Beach IC'\ldt'"' · ' J '>mol..l.'r 'h<' hu ,rn,"l ... ,J untillrrC'd C ame l uµrt 11,., 1.11 t1 I H'a" She' also is a "'1nnn at !he: tungo tables ht 'l"'llrt 11.'..i S '~( m Jackpots last Thur..J.i, J I F1)unta10 \ alle) High Jnl.! SI '<II J nd the bin o mara- tTwn ah .. ~t Filunt.un al C\. la\t r d'iruar.. ~h(,' ..alJ ~hl'\ · pla,cJ an C\tr) bingo g.lmt· Junng the 150 weel..s that tht'\0 \C hctn pla>cd at Ed&son H a~h 'hl'\\)I . ~h<' s-11d (Pleue eee 811100/ A2) Fountain Valley council may hike p&y ~0% First raise since 1972 wo dlncrease a, JOfUftAN VOIDS .. .._ ...... A ~opoltd 90 paunt pay iacrcait for Ouftcain Val.lry City Councd manbrn would put the pud at the upper limit o( ...... COii ...... 1M lllary of1ocal decled olki11t, the per month city ma.., laid Monday. ~ C04lnci1 ldled'Ukd to ton· sider u i.DCra.le torupt an 1ti sa1ar> lO $'°° per month from the CUfT'Cft' S262. SO a month, wtuch has been the council .-J!'..., more than a dcadc. said City Judy K.ehry. Kelley said ssoo IS the Upptt limit of a state la"' rqulatint the •'8ria ot cit y council membm.. Tbe law 1tts the para~ by population. • SJ id. - Accontt"I IO 1986 fipres -KIU in ute for 11.lar) puf"POtCS -fountain Val~' po,NtMtem tJ roe.Pl) S6,000. Ke1st) said the k>~r eod of lht sm montlll)· salary ranee ,, S0.000. E~ wnh tht ra.1se. wt\t('h m\l5t be apprn>\-ed by the m..,ont of the fi \le- mt mbc:r council. Fo unt.am Valle) l~ad<'rs would make ku than tht H co untcrpans in mosr other Oran,e Coast c1t1c-s. t"•l>On Beach has the highest· p1td rounc1I tn Onanac Count) O ffi ills there d CH) Couht1I -lnCIUbers rtc.tH-C S6ll mon\hl>. ~tulc the m.t'or l'C«l'~ S~ll a mon t1'. <'"Poft lka(h's populallon IS 67.1 lS o uool mtmb(n 1n Irvine •"' p11d S600 prr month for thrtr •-Ork.. u arc ( osta ~ksa rr~nt3tl' C' '"' 1ne has a populahon f nurh q and Costa M~ 1s home 10 J\@.ht1)' mort than • . 1ccon:hn1 10 count fiautts. h houah ll'lt larac~t c11-. on the Or1n Cout wnh 1 populatton ot I S-..1 . H unt1n. to n Bu ch' ounc-11 mcmbtrs rttt1\(' JU ' Sl, per month. v.1th an C'\l)rftl( budatt of S H~ a month In Hun11naton ~h. the nu\ or·, a nnual salat) u $7.•64 ~-PA.T/A2) Con~truc. lion c re"r hdd been wo rking c.tround n e ~t in doc k B y JOSATHA..'IW VOL.ZXE Ol _O..,,._,_ .\due~ that hcld up compleuon ofa 'e""pon Rca,h shipyard dock b y la\ ang near)\ a d01en eus In the -ded · ~ tram<"" orlrlTas floWll"thc -c~ and IC't\ the eggs ochtnd , officaa.ls at tht• hU!>IOC''>~ ~Id the v.o uld-bc mother built a nnt for her I 0 eggs 1n an unfinished dock at the MannC'r\ Mile Man ne C.entcr on Par1fic (C\Ut ra tfic. spumna the hu1ldrr to work around her ntsl and ""a1t until the esgs hatched. satd 3th) Ma)field. a n e1tecut1ve 1«· l"('tal"\ at the center ~ CUS ~ert d1scovCftd ID the na ing ofthe waterfront doek 1n mtd- \.farch Jim E an p~1dent ofTurnttonc < orp • the compan) bu.1\dioa \k manner's com plex. billed the d..at a "our lil"\t tt'nanl. •• But center of'fic\115 counted Ille esp before the)' ha.lohed. and nO'lW tl\ev n('vcr w•ll, Mayfidd •Jd. --~ m other let\ last -eek. IO I went do~-n thcte Ftaday n.Pt about Q· '° to take the ctP borne and ba~ 1hr m:· Ma}fkld sa.d. .. But they wen JU\l muck . "We buntd thcm at tea." Tht ~mus.na ~ ot coa- iracton carefully WC>fti"I lnMlftd die nMt to bu.ild &he ..a wtmo.t (1'1••• -DIDC&/MI Mesa llot dog vendor given new ticket for parked cart 8J JONATHAN VOLZU! .............. AC0&11 Mesa hot~hawker who draws attention to his shop with a brithtly colored bot d<>J stand has received another citation in his oneoina beef with city authorities. who contend the display is illepl. ••t must have upset someone at City Hall," said Will Campbell, co-owner of the Chiclao Beef Station. 580 W. 19th St.. aftri beina handed a citation aJleaina five more violations of city codes. ·~really filfed this puppy up," he added. referrin1 to the ~tation filled out by a code enforcement officer. The citations altcae the cart -a 2- foot by 6-foot pushcan on bicycle wheels -cannot be leplly left in the parkina lot in front of Campbell's shop. Campbell. 40, and his penncr. Kate Jackson wins in Delaware caucuses NEW CASTLE. Del. (AP) -Jesse Jackson won Delaware's Democratic caucuses Monday night. with Michael Dukakis edging the uncom- mitted ranks for second place. With 41 of 41 precincts rcponing. Jackson had 86.5 delegates for 45 percent. Massachusetts Gov. Duk.aJcis had 51.5 delegates for 27 percent and Tennesstt Sen. Alben Gore Jr. had four delegates for two percent. Forty-Stven delegates were uncom- mitted for 25 percent .. The delegates selected will attend the state conven- tion May 23. where Delaware's 15 national convention delegates will be chosen. · The Delaware caucuses were over- shadowed by New York and its Tuesday pnmary pnze of 255 del- egates. Jackson has been organized state- wide for several months. whale Dukakas opened shop 'about three weeks ago. Gore has no organazation in Delaware. Samuel L. Shipley. state pany chairman, said the a\lerage caucus turnout 1s about 2 percent. But he predicted a 3 percent or 4 percent turnout. or about 5.000 Democrats. due to the Jackson campaign. "We ha ve an inspanng and fervent and committed p-oup of people wh o think this is going to ~ a Jackson state:· Jackson coordinator V1v1an Houahton said. Caucuses were ~ing heJd in 41 state rtpresentauve districts to select 189 delegates to the state conve nuon. Candidates had to win at least 15· percent of the vote to receive a·sharc of the delegates. • Pany l~aders have stayed neutral since favorite son Sen. Joseph Bidcn Jr. dropped out of the race . PAY RAISE .•• From Al .. Elsewhere in the count). the La Habra City Council -with a c11y of 49,000 people. the closest in size to Fountain Valley -receives $350 a month. official~ there said. And residents in Seal Beach and Valla Park arc not paid for serving on the counCll If the Fountain Valley council approves the raise. the move would cost the cit y an additional S 14.240 a year, according to a staff rcpon. DiDomenico. 3S, have bettlcd code enforcement officers since first re- ceivin& a ci tation in March. The tickets tile&c their shop needs a conditional use permit to display the can. Accordin& to the initial citation, having the orange and red cart in the shop's parkin& lot violates Costa Mesa Municipal Code l 3·237 - illeaal outdoor storaac. Campbell disagrees. He contends the can is im~rtant to his store becauSt it is visible from 19th Street. while the store itself is set back in a strip shoppina center. "We're not auilty of storina any- thing. It goes outat 11 a.m. and comes back in at S p.m.," Camp~ll said. "If that's storaac. then we're all guilty of storinl our cars everytime we park tftem. Campbell was issuod the second citation when he ap~red in coun Monday to get a hearing date on the initial citation. Because he has con- tinued to park the cart in front of bis shop, the citation allqed five more violations. Susan SpeiJClman. the code en- forcement officer who issued the citations after secin& the cart while on patrol, said in an earlier interview lhat the cart is not aJlowed to be in public view because of the are-a 's commercial zonina. The violation is either an infraction -a legal similarity to a parking ticket -or a misdemeanor. punishable bya fine or less than a year in jail, Speigelman said. The officer said she "doubted" Campbell would stand a chance of pinina the necessary permits from the City Council because "it's against the ordinances." The matter will ~ resolved by a ju~ge after a May 3 hearing. Campbell said. • .............. A dack mothers ber ~· tn an anftDJalMd doci at Jlarlner•• lllle llarlne Center. 8iildera bad beld •P WOl"k on tbe dock to &t.e tbe ec&• a chance, bat tbe dack later left tbe neet. DUCK ABANDONS NEST ••• From Al "It's a sad endma," she said. "We were hoping to see a bunch of little ducklings. We were all ready with cigars and everything." disturbing the eggs has been replaced b) a completed<lock. Ma yfield said. The center ·is desianed for marine- oriented businesses-ship repair and related companies, Mayfield said. She said employees of the complex had followed news of the duck and were ruffled at the abnapt ending. Santa Ana teachers ratify new contract By ne Anociatecl Prest Teachers il'7'the Santa 4.na Unified School Dastnct ra ufied a new con- tract Monday. ending a nine-month dispute. while Orange Unified School District educators prepared for nrore negouations Tuesday. Santa Ana teachers voted Fndav and Monday to approve the contract, which includes a 7 percent ra ise in the 1988-89 school year and a 5 percent one-time bonus during the current school year. In Orange, teachers and district officials arc scheduled to meet at I I a.m. Tuesday in an attempt to end their 14-month impasse . Teachers have demanded a 3.1 S percent pay increase this school year and a 6.3 percent raise in 1988-89. The district has offered a 2.54 percent increase th is year and 3. 76 percent in 1988-89. Man jailed for microwaving wife's kitten LOS ANGE LES (AP)-A man was sentenced Monday to 30 days in jail for cooking has w1fe·s kmen 1n a microwave oven. George Jimenez. 26. of suburban Atwater. pleaded no contest to one count of cruelty to animals in the death of the cat on Sept. 16. He reportedly had become u~t with his wife because she chose to go to a movie w11h a female fnend and he cooked the cat in the microwave oven in retaliation. MESA REFERENDUM .•• From Al amendment. which sets limits on square footage, traffic and building heights for the 94-acre development. -Chanee ef i:aiR in afternoon Loom"'°"*• *tale along .. Qr ... C.0.t • lnoi 1111 to a .O ""*" °'*-ol "*' durtng iM lfteitlOOl'I. tt1g11a .. ,~ "'°"" ., to .. ~ ....... .,. .= Wedneedey, wtttt locel gutty lllltndl oonltnulng tNe Ind w~. Lowe tonight_. ranoe ttom the upper 40I to mldao.. ~thallvwCOMlal .......... ~ ~ to eouiti 15 to 25 knot•. wtth .... .t 4 '-' end a weeterty ewell of 3 to 4 '-'· Mn wtll epreed IOUtft OV9r the mountaiN todey and tonight, wtth the enow level lowel Ing to wr 7,000 ,_ Wedneedey. Wind• 15 to 25 mph todey wll lnct9ele to 25 to 35 ~tonight and Wedneectay. Htghe wlll be In the 409, Iowa In the Chence of .now.re In the deMl't• tonight wl" continue through Wedneedaywlth wlndl beowlng to 25 mph. Upper dMert hight wttl range ftom 87 to 77, Iowa from 45 to 55. Lower deMt1 hight wlN range ffom the upper 70. to lower eo.. iowa In the~. 74 .. . ... 40 51 t i II 51 11 SI M 51 74 51 7t 43 .. 40 12 11 71 Calif. Temps Surf Forecaat .. .. 40 H 31 54 ,.. 12 12 43 .. 72 H 41 )() .. ,. 53 )() ,.. 43 as u ... 40 $2 40 S3 31 31 11 45 42 27 12 33 31 ·= ... ., u ff .. II 50 .. 53 n n 51 43 55 27 53 IO M 50 u 57 .,. M 4t •2 • ... &7 53 75 u 12 M t1 u 71 ... S4 41 61 IO M 74 .. 23 .. JI IO 13 .,. ... 51 u 57 ,. .. 12 12 31 M u n 4S • 12 ., .. LA ........... T.....,, 71........ .... ~ as M lot Angelea City ! : ~ :: ;: ~~~ty • ,. eo 50 I 8erw•Ven111ta ' 12 74 41 ...... ~ Weal Quttooll lot 10 .e w___.,. 1ncr..ino eurl and .... • 51 • 51 65 51 71 $2 71 M 71 51 .. 60 ,. 53 12 M ... 51 ... 53 II S7 70 54 10 •• .... 17 52 17 S4 TO 4' .. 52 .. 57 70 M M M ... Sf 73 53 11 M 87 47 13 50 .. 50 12 57 72 50 52 S2 . .. a M Tides TOOAY .. ,, .... 1252pm 5-Ge P-"' ll35pm .. l*ltDAY 1 lte.m 2 ltpm 5 3'pm -4 1 u 22 $$ -4 3 3 0 2t TM Ml,._ a1 t It a.m and -al 7 2tpm 1oday T'ha -.... •1 • 12 ..... and-· at 11 27 pm today Extended BINGO GAME SMOKING AT ISSUE ••. From Al Fountain Valley Hi&h School Prin- cipal Mike K.asler is a non--smoker who believes that smokina is hazard- ous and fails to create a aood icmee. But he thinks that the benefits of bingo outwei&h the disadvantaees. He said he le nows that if his tchool bans smoking. bingo players will take their business elsewhere. And that would leave his school out of the monc)' -perhaps as much as $200.000 a year. "Each year the bingo people set aside $3,000 to $4,000 for rqular school 'Programs (in addition to co- curricular activities)." he said. "We've used it to buy computers and science lab cquipm,ent. They know we don·t have enough school money for instructional purposes." Kaster also said that bingo goes to the Parent Student Teacher Assoc1a- 11on for scholarships. Kasler said that the bingo rooms - separated into smoking and no- smoking sections -are cleaned prompt!) after the games. Kaster also said that exhaust fans have been activated in the ceiling recently. making for cleaner air. He said he·s never received a complaint from a student about how the cafeteria has smelled the morning after. "When you gb-lo Las Vegas and watch them play the slot machines. the) (gamblers) have a drink in their hand and a ciprette danaJin& from their lips. They arc unique people." School Board member Jerry Sullivan said that he believes that tobacco is .. insidious" and that he's sympathetic to non-smoken. "But the question is, do we &ive up the co-curricular and curricular ~ grams. If we tried to stop smokiq we'd have a a real fight. "Personally. I can understand the concern. I find cipn:tte smokina detestable when I haven"t been smok- ina. And I haven't smoked in 1even days." said Sullivan. Dave Hepburn, a binao fanatic who helped launch the games at Edison High that will celebrate their third anniversary next month. said the games are by far the most successful fund-raising programs that schools have ever had. .. Bingo enhances act1v1t1cs. Schools have football teams. Money from bingo is used to buy knee braces, conditioning equipment. wei&hts, special awards. plaques. Parents want their sons to look good when they go outside of schools. The booster clubs (through bingo) buy sweatsuits so \hey look nice. They also provide transpo11ati9n." Hepburn acknowledged that about 70 percent of bingo players smoke - more than tw ice as many use the ~mokinJ rooms than the non-smok- ing SCK:llons. . "But I'm not sure that smoking is an issue." he said. .. A crew of volunteers clean up immediately after the games. We have exhaust fans and smoke caters and the crew uses air freshener. When you walk into Edison Tuesday morning, you never knew there was a bingo game the night before." "Ifs a thorny issue." School Super- intendent Larry Kemper said "We would rather not be in that business. It was brought along by interest of the community and the parents' desire to help.·· Kemper said to has knowledge the custodian'scomplaintabout smokin& is the first to be lodged in the community. But he agrttd there is no question that residue smoke leaves "a very disturbing smell." Still. he believes that exhaust fans are effecti ve in getting rid of the latent smoke. N 1emeyer. who f cit seriously enough about bingo to go to the board room and lodge a complaint to trustees. said it's not only the smoke that he womes about. He said he's also con<;tmed that students aren't getting the right message from adults about ,bingo. .. They're not doing jobs to raise money because they know binfo will pay f<;>r things," he said. "They re not learning the folly and heartbreak about gambling.·· PEOPLE MOVERS FOR OC STUDIED ••• From Al Graham, one of the planners of the Las Vegas People Mover project, ~ve a presentation in which he descnbed People Movers as a practical and efficient urban transit system. People Mover cars arc kept suspended over their tracks by a maanetic field. Graham said. "You're literally ridi ng on a magnetic field. levitated above the guideway," said Graham, who said he has traveled on the experiment.al system in West Berlin. Because the suspension vinually eliminates friction. the amount of energy to move the trains is greatly reduced. Graham said. To move 11 0 people one mile would ut ilize about 20 cents worth of power. he said. "I don't think you could walk I JO peo ple a· mile wtthout usina more than 20 cents in shoe leather," said Graham. Officials attendina the meeting at the county Hall of Administration included Stan Of\elie, executive di- rector of the Ornage County Trans-- portation Commission, Keith McKean, director of the Caltrans district office in Oranr County. Don Griffin, president o the Southern California Association of Govern- ments. Jim Lents, executive director of the South Coa.st Air Quality Manqcment District and Paul Tay- lor. executive director of the Los Angeles County Transportation Commission. .. , think fai r 1s fair," said Coun- ci lman James Neal. .. If there hasn't been an increase since 1972. then it"s fair." The pay hikes would take effect after the Nov. 8 election, during which Barbara Brown and Mayor George Scott are up for re-elcct1on, Kelsey said d1scuss1on collapsed into bitter a'lu· ments among the memben. Wlth Wheeler fi nally asking citizens to wrne him in suppon of a recall mo"ement against ··two or three" fellow Council members. Judge Tully Seymour ruled last fall t~t the ~neral p~n and en-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- viron mcntal impact repon on Home Ranch were inadequate. He de- manded they be reworked to his satisfaction and will ~ reviewing the ci1y's effons to comply with his nalin& Correction In the April 14 article about Harbor Municipal Coun Judge Russell Bos- trom. it was incorrectly stated that Bostrom's decision on a 198S mari- juana bust wu appealed to the state Supreme Court. Bostrom's decision to dismiss Jhe case went to Oran~ County Superior Court. where his nalina was upheld. The cue is currently beina ap. ~ by the District Attorney's off"tce to the 4th District Court of Appeals. ORANGE .... ..... COAST ......... . 11A1N Off'tCE aJC> W. a.y SI ~ ....,.. c.- ..., 9ddr-9cH 1580 Ccsla .,._ CA 01929 C ounc1lman Peter Buffa. who sided with the counci l majority, said he was "concerned about propeny nghts 10 the Cit)." Ma)or Donn Hall said he favored ~eking a coun Judiment bec:au~ of th e legal complcX111es raised by the referendu m. "I would cenainty fee1 more com- fonable 1f so meone who's a pro- fessional in the field comes back and says. 'Yes. it's legal.' or 'No. it's not.'" In another development-related battle. the council postponed a de- cision on -a reltrcndum teekina to- rcpeal the approval of the ,eneral plan amendment for C.J. Seaentrom & Sons· Ho me Ranch project. The Home Ranch project may not be put on the ballot for the time beina. Instead, City Council memben may opt to wait for a Superior Coun jud1e's opinion on the teneral plan on May 13. Opponents said they will challenge the amendment in coun. as well as at the ballot box. They contend the general plan amendment was drafted too hastily and the supportina infor- mation was riddled with errors. Meanwhile, construction on One South Coast Place, the first Phase of Home Ranch, remains suspend~ -One South Coast Place would include 12-and 20-story oflfi« build- inp. an art muteUm, a child care facility, rntaurants and small shops. The site is bounded by the San Dieao frftWay, Sunftower Avenue, Harbor Boulevard and Fairview Roed. Qeu..., -641 S61& --' eQ>llV •• , •31 • JustcaU 642-8086 ..5 ... .... y>FftcMy II yoi. dO l'tOI ..... 'fOlll praclll Dy ~ ao 0 "' cal l>9'0<• 1 0 m and 'IV"" OOfOi't .. De o.wet.O ' ~ llU 0r-. ea. l'IOWWlQ ~ No -•or,. a.JJ••-tc:lllO'W metter or ~­ ....,. ~ ,.,,.,. De 1-00.C.C ...._, -'* ~Ol~·-.What do you like about tbe o.ily Pilot? Wba1 don't you like? Call the number above and your masap will be recorded. 1tantcribed and de- livered to the appropriate ectiuw. Tbe •me 2'-<hour amwerb111 terYic:ie may be uted 10 record letten to the edi10r oa an~IOpic: Contributon to CM Lenen mlgma mlll& inc:t.le""--.--. their name and~ number fOr verificalioe. 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