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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1986-05-13 - Orange Coast Pilot... •• 25~ TUESDAY, MAY 13, 1986 Lottery's unluckiest fro• BB his story. · After winnTrlg T9 possi le entries to the _big s pin, he's sttll waiting for the call -------------- By ROBERT BARKER OflMDellrNotl ..... John Cirson may be the luckiest unlucky guy ever to play the CaJi- fornia Loncry. Ci rson. a 47-year-old Huntineton Beach real estate broker, has posted 19 entry tickets with the Lottery Commission -each of those tickets could have made him cli&iblc to Rookie Wally Joyner hlta two homen and dri•e• 4 runa to lead Aneelea to a 7-1 wln o•er Boaton. Bl. Coast become an instant multimillionaire in the 8jj Spin. But C1rson•s name has never beeo drawn and he's still waitioa for a chance to spin the big wheel fQr big buc~s. And for someone so lucky, he's pocketed little cash for his winning tickets. He won S 1.000 one time and SI OO another. He aJso had four $100 Blaze in Big· Canyon doused By PAULARCHIPLEY Of .. DiallJ ........ ·- A fi re in NcwPort Beach's upscale Bia Canyon community destorycd two garages and damaged two others and a couple of adjacent con- dominums Monday. As firefigh ters arrived, explosions from the vehicles' gas tanks rocked the quiet cul.de-sac above Newport Center. The fi re started at about 6 p.m. in the garages at 14 and 16 Pauma Lane and quickJy engulfed both garages. No one was inj ured. Two adjacent condominiums and garages sustained minimum damage . (Pleue eee l"IR.&/A2) winners when cnuy tickets to the 8'& Spin draw1na carried a call\ award instQd of just the word ''entry." But he's JOt fresh hopes. He bad two cntf)'. tickets last week that are still cligJblc for the drawina that determines who acts a chance at the 81g Spin. . ·•1 would love to win one-hundred grand. I'd buy more investments," he said. "Th.at not askfog too much for a fail auy from Yugoslavia." • California lottery officials in Anaheim, who have come to know Ci.non from his almost weekly visits to tum in his entry tickets, confirm But Ibey say that it's a long hauJ from winnin,1 an entry ticket to winnina lots of money. The chanc.es for players to be selected for the weekly pand prize spin arc 1· in·l,2SO. Yet Cinon appears undaunted. He buys about l 0 tickets a day for the fun o( 1t he said. .. J'm drivinl down the stnct and a voice tells me to stop au certain place to buy lottery tk kets. SometJmes J know that I'm aoina to win . ., Cirson aaid the same voice tcllfoJ him what to do at times saved his life l'lremen check Oftl' tbe amolderlnC re- m•tna of two&ane• tlaat weat ap lll wke when be was a child 1n Nazi-occupied YU&<>Slav11. When he was about 5 or 6, he visited his aunt and uncle 1n a nc1ghbonng village, he Mtd. A Ger- man soldier came to his uncle's house and asked C1rson's aunt for still uncllplained reasons to ao into the front yard and flap a towel up and down . As she did, another German shot and killed her, Cirson said. His uncle then shot and ktlled one of the Ge-rm.ans. The infuriated NazLS then rounded up his relatives in the villaac and nccutccJ moa or t.ftem, bet a.- and h11 uncle eteaped. .., heard this voice t.beft.. It laid, 'run John.'" And run be did. A German a;• machine aun knicbd him in Ge . hand, he said. But he made it IO and walk.ed about 20 kilometeri IO lad parent•s vi~ and rejoieed his mother, be Ja1d. Hit father ._ in a concentration camp at t.bt time, be said. After the war. Cinon wcnr toli\'t in France. Another uncle spolllOftld bia immigration to the United State1 m (Pleue -U1IUJCSY /AS) Blast levels stores, kills2 Cause ts unknown. but specialists arnve to search for bomb BJ PAUL AllClllPLEY _.STEVE MA.IUILE °' .. ...,....... . Fl Invcstiaators sifted tbroula~ the rubble of a Santa Ana ~ter Monday after an early liionWla explosion and fire killed two ~ and caused nearly Sl milbon in da~. A developer being sued because homes are cracking near South Coast Plaza says his pro- ject Is not causing the damage./A3 California Homeless children living with parents deserve the same state aid as other homeless children. a Judge rules./ A5 Identities of the victims WOQ&cln•t be dCtcrmined ootil the Or8lljt County Coronercomp&eted .....,,_. today, aid Santa AM rn o.p.n- Car -pool lane accident study disput~d i=~~. and dies.... Am .... Caltrans 0 Clals say roup Opposed to Tbe Caltrans official satd be llOOd week f'CDOf\ed charina \be ~ 13 fin~iaa._.. behind \he department's own fll\lrcs week.Io( car pool \anC operanon. the •inHMll II ......., al 1 l \bat IMw the number of accidents Cal\taDI ltatiMics. which compare and McFadden A~ tbMa111altlq•1llle speci . ane compare app es, oranges hueonedownsinccthe lan«opencd the ~ 13-week period with seven 1:40 a.m. expk>eionudfire. Nation The Government Ac- counting Office finds Michael Deaver may be guilty of violating conflict of Interest laws./ M The f antasles and fears of Americans are profned In a survey./A4 87 LISA ll.UIONEY °' .. ..., ....... .. A citizens JIOUP opposed 10 car pool lanes on the Costa Mesa Freeway did not do a proper 1tat,islical analysis to SUpPOrt 1U claim that 111ccideots have increased 77 percent siace the lanes were installed. a sta&e Oepert- ment of Transportation officiaJ said Monday. At the same time, James Roosevelt., chairman of the Orange County Transportation Commission crill- cized the aroup -Driven for H~way Safe.ty -for not brinlitll their analysis to the COlllllritlton before releasi1t4 it to the media. After reviewu'I the material from Drivers for Hjpway Safety, c.ltrans District Director Don Watton con- cluded the group was comparing "apples to oranges" when it matched a three-year average accident rate against figures compiled during the frrst 13 weeks or car pool lane operation. NO¥. J&; 'weeb prior ao the openins of the TlaeH• daw ""We're c:omfor1abk that oar fia-laoel. · llllow die llCCident rue -. c8llll • lllillll ures are more 1epenen1ative and pi•liom•awenweofl.Sa W.Sao liid. truthful of wbaa is really "--i-an IVCf'llle of 2J.$ a week. Tbe . "."We "'!ft8' ~· and we ICUd belaiDd daole ~ deaale is not coalidered 118tisticaJ. IJ!YOlwed •die fllll .. _•ii n..•-Cou .... J • ·t1cant didn't .. tour -~= c'::.~. nt)' 1 l'WpOr-y :f.!o. .id the ~year •VU'IF ~ ~ weft Ckberl -• The st.atistics uted by Driven for canitot be fairly coms:-rect wilJI lk tceae.. * ~ . Hiabway Safety showed accidents I 3-week ftaure brlcaute .ccideat N<:! mceo_diary devices .were ~ increased 11 percent after the car pool statistics for the latter period~ more ud aavestJp.aon weren t cenaan 1f lanes opened when compared to the comprebensi ve. the. blasu t.arted the fire or was cauted aVCf'IF weekly accident rate in the The fint data includes ODl,Y IClci-by IL • • • yean 1982 throuah 1984'. dents in whicb a CaJjfomia Hiahw.ay JUSbce department 1nvest111ton The three-year wcekJy average was Patrol officer was called to the scene were on the scene in cue a bomb wu 12.8 co,-=: to 22.7 accidents a ,...._ .. CAllPOOL/A.2) (Pl•••-Bl.A8T/Aa) INDEX Advice and Games ·Bulletin Board Business Classified Comics B6 A3 A8-10 B8-10 B7 FV teachers vow to work against superintendent Death Notices Entertainment Opinion Police Log Public Notices Sports Television Weather Weddings B10 8 5 A6 A3 B4, 10 B1-4 B5 A2 A7 By ROBERT BARKER Of llleo.ilf .......... A union official said Monday that teachers will work for the ouster of FountainValley School District Superintendent Ruben Ingram for all~y masterm inding a hard-hne position in a contract clash. Bill Bianchi. executive director of West Orange County United Teache rs. said Ingram "has begun his last days as supennteodent. .. Bianchi declared that Ingram is NB woman pleads not guilty in hit-run By SUSAN HOWLETT Of .... DMly f'tlOt ..... The Newport Beach woman <\C· cosed of felony hit-and-run and vehicular manslaugher in a January -death of I 5-year.old jogger pleaded innoce nt to the charges in Harbor Municipal Court on Monday. usan No rma Long. 34. entered a not-gu1hy plea before Judge usanne 'ihaw. according to court officials. Claude Hubert. a Newport Harbor H 1gh School freshman. was struck b1' a car while on a Sunday evening run with his sister along Irvine Avenue. The car did not stop after the accident. Huben died three days later at Fountain Valley Regional Hospi- tal. Long was arrested Jan. 24 in connection with the Jan. 19 accident. She was taken into custody after her silver. four~oor Cadillac was dis- covered at a Santa Ana body shop w1th damage that hoked it to the accident. She has been free on batl since her arrest. Two refuse workers reported seeing (Pleue tee BIT·RUN/ A:l) going to find it tough to administer the distnct .. because he's going to have hard time in getting volunteers. "One, he may not feel good and may quit because he has no cooper- ation and two, if we work for (school board candidates) who would look for a superintendent more responsive to teacher needs. We're goinf. to be (here) a long time after he is. • Sparlcin~ the angriest words yet in the long-simmering dispute was the unilateral action by trustees in April to implement a three-year contract Rodney Jamea Alcala Arts center pedestrian plaza a victim Of the automobile ____.__ --Segerstrom quietly withdraws proposal to close Town Center Drive to traffic An enthusulst cnv1s1oncd a cob- blc'ilOnc plan, wtth str0lhn1JUllkn nd wandcn na mm,trcl , Nnn1na hctwccn thc new Oranse C.ou.nty Perform1n1 Aru Ccn,cr and South ( oa 1 Re~rtory theater in Costa Mc~ ( m tralll" rnain«n and en· v1ronmt'ntnl t'~J)CrH en\ l'llOncd snarled roadways 1( the portion of Town Center Onvc kPtflt1n1 the artscentfrand lhetheaterwcrtc1o d to sencfal nffic and turned into a pcdc! tnan-onentcd plaza Neiahbonna dcvelopet1 saw red because they had depended on Town Center Dnvcto bnna ~oplc to their pro1«ts When these v1S1ons eta.shed. tbe faJlout proved (at.al 10 the propoted plata that supporters y would ave llvc n a fcchn of unity to the pa.rat~ theaters Developer C .J Scacn trom & Son has quietly withdrawn its rcquc t for thc cit) to abandon Town Crnter On \'e and leave the four.Jane trcel as a dead end C'H)' plans call for To•n Center 10 be c~tcnded to A venuc of the An.s · .\150 rtleptcd to the d . burner \lrCrt tbc m troms' plan to build a package. Terms included an 11.4 percent pay increase tbJs year plus a one-time bonus rangina from St.200 to Sl.400 and 6 percent pay inC1'CISCS in 1986-87 and 1987-88. More than 160 of the district's 298 teachers arc in the hiahcst pay range. More than 70 wtll receive pay of more than $46,000 for their lcu than 19<Hiay work year, district officials said. The teachers union, opposed to fringe benfit adjustments and a change in teacher transfer policy, has filed an unfair labor practice. Some teachers also allegedly st.a_pi a one.day sickout Friday, according to district spokeswoman Cheryl Nor- ton. The matter was turned over to the district's lawyers for possible action, she said. Fountain Valley Education As- sociation Prcs1dent Tom Conry de- nied knowledge of a sickout tha1 saw about 45 teachers absent Friday. "I knew of no planned effort," he said. "But the action (by the board) is causing lots of stress and the teachers can become s1ck. ·· Conroy said teachers have set up a ~litical action committee and raised S2,SOO in a week to elect candidates wh o would be more favorable to tbier positions. The terms of trustees Ann Galas and Carole Mohan expire in November of 1987. Dcspne teacher contentions. Trustee Roger Belgen said trustees have taken "a substantiaJ risk. .. with their multiycar offer. There is no guarantee. he said. that state revenues will increase to finance . Alcala.' s prior conviction to be kept secret from jury By STEVE MARBLE °' ... .,.., ......... Jurors will not be told that accused killer Rodney James Alcala is a convicted felon when and if he takes the witness stand in his own defense. a Supenor Court)udae ruled Monday Alala. 41 . 1s standinJ tnal the second time fo r the kidnap and murder of Robin Chnst1nc Samsoc. a l 2-ycar.oJd Huntington Beach girl who wa s slain nearly seven years ago AJcala. a former UCLA student. was convicted ofSamsoc's murder in 1980 and ordered executed He spent almost four year. on death row before the 5tatc Supttmc Court overturned the .au1lty verdict ~use Jurors in 1he fi rst tnal were told that Alcala was a conv 1ctcd child molester Defense attorney Joh·n Dolan ..aid 1t has not been decided 1f lcala ~111 take the WJtncs stand 1n the ~tnal "It may not be neccssaf"\i.'' "31d Dolan. up~ssina opt1m1 m af\cr the prosecuuon co ncluded its case Mon- da ... in the murder tnal. which opened in Apnl in San• Ana. Dolan has sta ted that the catc against 4.lcala 1s weak and held together by statements made by former Orange County J:ul inmates who claimed Alcala made 1ncnmmat-ina statements to them. Deputy Dtstnct Attorney Tom Goethals said there 1s cnouaJi ev 1dence to convict <\lcala a second time (Pl eue .ee PRIOR/ A2) I LB handed deadline I TONY SAAVEDRA on El Toro widening Focus ON THE NEw s 350..room hotel ac from the S m1lhon pcrformina aru center. The stttet abandonme nt would have al- By U A MARONEY O. ... DiallJ ......... La una Beach cllv oflic-1 '' are amll£..tO have to find a. V.a\ to ....,,den lll 1 oro Road 10 \Ill lane' ~u1h ol Moulton Parkway 1f they want 10 keep about S 1 l 2.000 1n county road lowed the company to build the hotel im provcmcnt money .10 feet away from the 1dcwalk. The Oranae c ount) Tran por· instead of the 20 feet required on talion Comm" ion Monday alJ"ttd pubhc roads. • , 10 11vc the bca h cu until January AJ thousJ'I the controvcTS.1al oeJ·. l 9U to come up .,11h 1 woru c estna.n plaza was rccommcndcd for .,i~n1n.1 solution or lost match1na approval by ~e city Plannina Com· fund intended to rthah1htatc Gkn· (Pl-..e'" PLA%A/A2) neyrc and C•tahna trttt The moncv wa to have l>ceo av 1lable fo r tholt' road ptOJCCts dunna thc next two fiteal years. ~u lb ciucs and the county of Oranae rtee1vcd matct11na f1lnds under the Orange County Urufied Tran ponatton Tru)t, a three-year ptOJTlm that channels tran '' dtsuict 1nttrcs1 1nto road improvement pro- J«t'-But ch&ib1hty snais atscovm:d in pnl threatened to leave Liana Bea h and . nta na ()Ut or the fund1na fest nta Ana ha ·~ . (Pl--... LAOUKA/ A3) L Qr-.. COMt DAILY PILOT/ T&Mdey, Mt)' 13, 19M AZAGIVESWAY~ •• ..... , ••Mlllt lhe 5-nttoms had httk ~oftmiq die-final nod from the OiyCouncil They. anen>P.ted to nqotiatc a compromite wath developers of The Lakia. a rniAed-u1e complex fcaturlna a l~ Beverly Hentqe hotel that would be at the end of the Town Center Dri~ ex&ension.. Tbc Seemttoms also arappled wt th Cotta Mesa's traffic enJineen, who were becked by a state-required environmental, study that warned the prooosed street closure would pile traffic onto other routes. Plan desi&ns were rehashed to allow limited access between Town Center Drive and Avenue of the Ans. But mo1orists would have 10 drive throuah a oomplicaced, slow-moving traffic circle wrapping around a large fountain ·and a planter filled wi th palm trees. · ' After t 'h years of debate, plans for the ans mall ended up in the round file, to the dismay oflocal arts leaders and the relief of traffic engineers. David Emmes. co-founder of South Coast Repenory, said he now feared for the safely of pedescrians who would have 10 dodge cars to get from one theater to the other. "There arc going to be lhousands of people going back and fonh. They should be able to meander. to look at the posters ... to interminJie with other audiences," Em mes said. He added, "The overaJI ambiance should be one of a whole, a free- flowing place. not one that is all c hopped up." £mmes said he didn't buy IM araunifnt that closana the street IO lhtoutft traffic would snarl other incersections. Ncvenheles , City Traffic Enf!neer Rock Miller malnta1ocd the plaia "would have been a terrible mistake. "I was very &lad to ~ them withdraw it," Miller uid. "How many people would be 101n1 to South Coast Repertory and an arts center performanoc in the sam venina anyway?" Malcolm Ross. plan · tor for the Scaerstroms. said the c - pany was torocd to scrap the plaza to prevent the ans center's 3,()()().scat theater from missina its scheduled Sept. 29 opening. Cny r~u1rcments call for Town Center Onve to be extended before the cunain can rise on the new theater. "We reached the \)Oint where we had to blow the whistle on further discussions 10 aJlow enough time to complete the screet," Ross said. The Segerstroms donated the land for both the Performing Arts Center and South Coast Repcnory. Ross said the company may con- sider resurrecting che arts mall at a later date. But for now the plaza, in the form of an architectural model, sus unnoticed in a Segcrstrom oon- ferenc; room. shrouded in a black cloth. ' "It was· a can of worms, we were never able to fully resolve all the issues." Ross said. JobDClnoD UNLUCKY ••• From Al 1967. He went to work asa laborer in a tobacco faccory before enterinJ Che accounting field. He moved to Hunt· ington Beach in 1977 and went into the real eswe business in 1981. Coast travelers return from Kiev worried, angry about accident He plays soccc:r and basketball at Perry School in cheevenings and aoes dancing frequently. He said he doesn't drink or smoke and hardly ever gambles. When he goes to Las Vegas, he sees a show. But Cirson's nol ~ving up playing the lotlery. Theres a Huie voice telling hjm that he mi&ht still win the whole shebang. LOS ANGELES (AP) -Travelers from the Orange Coasc and elsewhere returning f_rom a v1~it to ~ev in the Soviet Union are hv1ng with worry and anxiety about their exposure to rad1a1ton following the nuclear reac- tor accident at Chernobyl. Tour member Dyanne Reagan, a real estate saleswoman from El Toro. said she had a blood test but has not ye t learned the results. She left her luggage and boots an her garage. she added. but has not had them tested. "I have a lot of anger." she said. "I feel very naive. I'm not educated wnh any of this. 1 hope. as Amencan c1t11ens, we can learn from this." One traveler said the expenence remanded her of the motton picture about the death of antt-nuclear ac- t1v1st Karen Silkwood. who died in an automobile accident as she was attempting to~ ve evidence about her own contammatton in a nuclear plant. Anne O'Rc1ll). an acupressure specialist from Costa Mesa. said. 'You see the film 'Silkwood' and everything. but if you ca;'t sec it, expenence it. 1t docsn 't exist." When Mary Anne Hardy recumed she was womed about radiation her bod)'. might have absorbed. The Pacific Palisades psyc hotherapist was one of 62 ~mencan members of a tour group that anived in Kiev on April 28. two days after the nuclear disaster occurred. The group amved without know- ing anything of events at the power plane 60 miles away. The surpnsc and concern she and other travelers felt on learning about the accident did not end as their F1nnair 1et landed at Los Angeles lncemational Airpon last Thursday. Not only did the group receive no advice or guidance about possible health nsks or con tam inatton of their belongings. either before or after they ""ent through customs. but those like Ms. Hardy who sought tescing to allay their fears discovered it was not easy to find out where to go. "We were told nothini; we were met by no one," said Patricia Sun. dtrector of the Berkeley-based In- stttute of Communication for Under- standmg, which organized the trip. "I expected to Stt some kind of tcsttnf at the a1rpon, but there wasn't anything," said Wendy Milette of Laguna Beach. After leaving Kiev, Che grol,Q> was tested mdiv1dually with Geiger counters at a Moscow hospitaJ and were told th mg.s were nonna!, Ms. Sun said. HIT-RUN ••• From Al Long's damaged vehicle being driven out of the carpon of her 44th Street home the day after the accident, police said. Three days later, investigators located the car at J&.O Auto Detailing in Santa Ana where it had been taken for repair. LAGUNA •.• homAl rectified its eligibility problem. Under trust guidelines, cities must have a plan of arterial highways that substantially conforms to the coun- ty's plan. But, while the Laguna Beach and Orange County plans aarcc on paper, the county learned that the city allowed a housing developer to build retaining walls into the road's right- of-way. Ci t1 Manager Ken Frank said he permitted the encroachment because be did not believe El Toro Road would ever be widened to its planned width. lnYeettcatora a~rvey the damage at a Santa Ana mini-mall •here an exploalon and fire. .............. killed two people and caaaed nearly $1 million in damace early Monday. BLAST LEVELS STORES, KILLS 2 ... From Al the cause of the dc'itruc11on Frank said. Firefighlers told tn"esttgator\ that bystanders said there had been homh thrcics aga1n<tt some of the merchants. "We have no wa) of determining the value of those alkgat1ons:· Fran!.. said. Peoete as far as a mile away lelt 1hc explosion. The blast and bla1e "'h1ch appeared to stan 1nav1deo store or Jn ad~accnl auto supply shop, gulled a hair salon, a dry cleaners and a gift shop in the shopping center The front windows of a home behind the mall also ""ere blown out Damages were estimated at S~00.000 to the structure and S4S0.000 to the contents. she said It took 41 firefighters from Foun- °c~~~~E Daily Pilat MAIN OFFICE JlO W•I Bay $1 C....I• ........ A MA .ocll-Bo• l !>flO C.. .. !a Utt.11 A ~. 0 ' tain Vallev and Santa Ana nearly an hour to co'ntrol the blaze. The bodies of the victims were fou nd a few yards apan in the video store several hours af\er the fire was ex11ngu1shed. They were so bad.Jy burned in- vestigators al the scene couJdn't determme their sex, age or raoe. Jack Chou, who built the mini-maJI \IX years ago, said he couldn't locale the auto pans store owner and feared he might have been one of the '1ct1ms, the Associated Press re- ported Can Penhall. a Costa Mesa res1dcn1 and owner of Care Cutters in che shoppmg center. said a car parked 1n lront of the auto supply score belonged to etther Che owner or one of h 1~ workers. Penhall said she learned from a news rcpon thac h~r shop had been destroyed. "Five years of effort gone," she said. Penhall said her loss was $1 00.000. Penhall said all of the shops had been burglarized, but she knew of no problems at the center that would lend credence to theories a bomb caused the explosion. .. But nowadays I'd almost believe anything," she said. "This is a hard area." She descnbed the owners of lhe video and auto supply shops as Vietnamese who seemed to be suc- cessful in their businesses. ··1 didn't know them weU but they were very nice iuys, quiet but real nice.'' Penhall said. ~"'°-..-2.597111\11>-' .O·•O<·• ,., •ll• Justcall 642-6086 MorlcUly ''.otr If YOll do not ,,.... 'tflAM 0.f)to Dy $)()ptt1~-tor•7p1'1 tllCI yOUI COOy 119 ......... CooY''ll"' •9&3 Ot1~t C0t1I Pl>~ ~g Co<-pft , >; -110> ... ""'11'11!0"1 e<)lO<_. "'•''" •l•P 'H .-aa ~ -¥ De ·-OdUC*S .. .snow -· ...-ol ~1"'9"' , .. .._. tee-tiHI OOI'• OtO el C:0.11 ... """ •' fUf'i 1.a.a-to01 ~ ~toon 111' CA"'t ~ ~ """"' °' -$1 00 "'Of"'"" YOL. 71. NO. 111 ' What do you ll"kc: about the OaiTy Pilot'!What don't you like? Call tM number above and your messaae will be recorded, trantcribcd and de- livered 10th~ appropriate editor. The same 24-hour answerina acrvice may be used to record letters to the editor on any topic. Contnbuton to our Letters column must include their name and telephone number for vennc~uon Tell• qs what's on your nund '111(,t .. , ~y l( ,._. • ""' -'°"' ...,., D'f , • ti\ • Cal Welt• •O e "' MO 't°"' C40J .. 1119 ........ C1Nt1latton , ... , ....... ... Or ..... ~ ·-.... ~ ............ U.8. Tempe ...... .......... l(IU'I\....., .. Le ......... .,. 11 ., ......... . .. ~ IO II "'...... 11 11 MlllM .,. • AllilllllO ei.r • ., ~ 11. .....,. n., •::•--1t .. --.... ... ., . ..... u .. ....... . .. ........ Vt. \ • 40 ~ ., .. ~.1.c. a• QwtoM.N.C. 70 II ....__ N a a;.;;-• u c...... n • Cl9wlllld 11 41 c.wv"' e.e. a • ~°"'° a u ~.tut J7 • OmlllM"I ..,... .. • ~ n • '*-" • 42 O...._ II N --71 .. -~ • u ,...,.. ., 31 ,.., 11 .. ........,. . " ............ .. .. .... ,.... .. » Giw,..o)llC.. n w ......,,,. 16 • ....... 11 .. HoMMw 11 n ......., 11 • ...... "* •a ,,.,.,._,...... .. .. ...... 40 11 "--Qty .. II Lii """' 11 .. u..-. •a ~ 11 ... ~ .. 61 ......... .. .., " . .. " ., .. N • • II .. . : :! . " • It . .. " ., ft : • • . .. ,.., .. ., .. n .. 1'I • •• .. . 91 • ., ,. . .. . .. '° • .. . n .. .... a• .. 91 •• n • " . 71 • •Q@~ :-:::..\...,_. ~-fta.tl ""''•' ~-~....,·~···· ........... ................ .._., ..... t~J4A. U'"'1 , .... , .. \ ••••• I r .. 41 • ., 41 11 .. a • ,, 11 . .. CARPOOL ACCIDENT STUDY DISPVTED ••• holaAl while later IUltillict also add up over- the-co.atcr accident reports. thOte that took place on a\Wliary lanes and ramps, he said. Wataoo estimated the additional data accounts for 30 to 40 percent of the difference between the fi&Uret put forward by Caltrans and the citizens group. Before hearina Watson's report, Roosevelt cast doubt on the reliabili- ty of the Driven for Highway Safety figures. "It seems to me if there were a problem, wd be hearina from Caltrans and tlae CHP," be said. ''l . ~lieve<the car pool lanes arc WOftina Tust fine." Rooeevelt criticized the citizcu arouP for ..... ita informatioft with the media iDtU8d of tbe commitlioa and Caltrahs. He said the group ought to be held accountable for any misinformation. Joe Catron, chairman of Drivers for Hiahwar_ Safety, said the group would &ave liked to work with the two transportation qencies but that they made it clear tbe group's findinp were not wanted. Catron pointtd out that com- missionen declined to review an earlienet of statistics complied by the aro~ in March. "Tbey said no, we're not interested. So wby would we eek them out further when they're not interested," be said. Furthermore, Catron said the group aot no Ulilllnce from Caltrans or commillion staff memben when they asked for more recent statistics to compare. "They will not releue that data," he said. Catron said be did not know that the three-year f11ure1 -taken from an environmental document -were le11 comprehensive. But he cballeneed tbe transponation aten· des IO provide com~ ttatiltic:a IO \be public CAD Me wbo'I npt and wbo'1wrq." Driven for ffiabway Safety will not ac:cept the ICVen YiUk pr&ear pool lane accident race u acicurate becaute memben say it includes a period wbc!b the Costa Mesa Freeway wu under construction. Caltrans denies the claim. uyina that resurfaciq wu complete and travel lanes restriped between SepL 30 and Nov. 17 when the data wu pthcred. But Catron insisu the road work wunotcomp&eteduntilOct. t8or20. Some lanes were two to three inches hi&her than others, resurfaced ramps bad yet to be striped and construction equipment remained alongside the freeway, he said. The unfinished conditions helped boost the number of accidents during the pre-car pool lane period makin1 it appear that the Janet have made the freeway &&fer, Catron said. lfCaltrans would provide another pre~ pool lane, pre-construction period to study, Catron said he would back off on the 11 pen:ent accident rate . But be predicted that no fair compariloa would show that there bu been no increue in accideats since lbe lana were im&aDed "Will it brin1 that accident rate down 11 peroent? It will not." Car pool lanes on the Costa Mesa Freeway stretch from the Rivenide to the San ();qo freeways. Created from the inside median and by aqueezina other lanes one foot, the car pool lanes are restricted to vehicles carryina two or more people. The car pool lane experiment will continue throuah November. PRIOR CONVICTION ••• FIRE •.• FroaAl From Al One of the prosecution 'a chtef tbe murder trial or her testimony. witnesses-a former forestry worker -surprised courtroom observen more than a week aao when she said she no Jon~r remembers testifying in AJcala's onainaJ trial. tn tbe enJusive pted community, includina partial damaae to the roofs and walls, a fire department spokeswoman said. The forestry worker's testimony helped convict Alcala in 1980. She said then that she saw a man resembling A.le.ala push a y~una, blond girl toward some bushes m the foothills above Pasadena. · The prl's mutilated body was later found 10 t.be foothills. Judge Donald McCartin permitted GoethaJs to read Dana Crappa's 1980 testimony to jurors even thouah Crappa said she has no recollection of Samsoe's mother testified in the openina days of the retrial that a pair of told ~~· found in a Seattle locker allqedly rented by Alcala resembled a pair her dauab~ was fond of wearin&. The mother said the carrinp were distinctive because they had been altered from their orisinal deti&n. Dolan said be will introduce photo- araphs of Alcala wearinl similar ea~ wbeo be appeared on ~e televis1on pme show "The Dattna Game" in 1978 -almost a year before the airl was killed. Alcala is bein& held without bail at Oranae County Jail. lnvesu.pton were on the scene late Monday studyin1 the possibility of anon and weren't available for com- menL The cause was not yet known. Damaac to the structures and contents wu estimated at $200,000. Fuefi&htcn cxtinauished the blaze in about 20 minutes. Three vehicl~ includin& one parked outside the ~. were destroyed. A Ford Bronco, a Cadillac and a third car that appeared to be a Cadillac or Oldsmobile were burned. Two of the vehicles bad Orcaon license plates on them. Standing out quietly. -/ "Natural Shoulder" trousers. The cut is Corbin's very own, designed to fit all men comfortably ... precisely tailored to each size. They rest securely on your waist. The stride is easy. Among the distinctive fabrics for spring are: Prime Poplin, Cotton Patterns, Wool · Tropicals and Seersuckers. Westcllff Plan A Corbin® tradition. 17th &r Irvine Ave11ue __ ._ Newpon lelcti 645-0792 J -. .. ,-,. FAIR I 'OMCASTa ON Al TUESDAY, MAY 13, 1986 HB downtown facelift advances Council ~pproves concept of n ine-story o el. shopping-restaurant com plex By ROBERT BARKER Of ................ City Council members speeded alona S6S milUon in redevelopment projects Monday niaht th•t will cbanae the face of downtown Hunt- ington Beach. The council reviewed plans and drawinas and pve official approvaJ to the concept of a nine-story hotel at Art• FHtlYel 1118 In todey'• Delly Piiot Coaat Main S~t and Pacific Coast Hi&h- way and for about 7S shops and restaurants on the ocean side of the coastal hiahway. Council members asked developers to proceed with plans and enaineerina studies. The redevelopment effort appears headed for a public hearina before the Planning Commission in July and then to the City Council for consider- ation. Construction could start this TwoBlg Canyon garages razed By PAUL ARCBIPLEY Of .. ~ ...... Investigators today were trying to determine the cause of a fire that destroyed two aaraacs and damqed several nearby structures Monday in Newport Beach's Big Canyon com- m unity. The fire started at about 6 p.m. in the aaraJt'.S at 14 and I 6 Pauma Lane and qu1ckly en~ulfcd both garages and three vehicles. No one was injured, fire officials said. fall , officials 111d. .. I'm positive this prQjcct will tum the tide for redevelopment in Hunt- ington Beach," City Councilman Don MacAJlister said today. "II can become tbe acm on the coast that everybody can be proud of." Old structures will make way for the new hotel and other develop- ments, thou&h some historic build- inas will be relocated and itreserved. And d~velopers have applied for permits to demolish the 1920s-cra Golden Bear oi&htclub and the adja- cent Wayne's Automotive building. Demolition could come u early as this week after developers take photo- araphs and measurements of the Ool<Jen Bear to incorporaie the facade in the new development. The hotel envi1joned by the Hunt- inaton Pacifica De~elopmcnt Group will be a $40 million, nino-story hotel in which auests would pay about SI op a ni&bt for rooms. Across Pacific Cout Hi&hway and on the ~1!&,. Bryant Morris and AllOCiates of urlsbad is planning to build a $2$ million, 7 S-shop complex that includes a couple restaurants and ·an ci&ht·i)lex movie theater. Parkin& structures arc planned for \. both the inland and shorcside de- velopments. Earlier City CouncaJ mtmbcrs approved expansion plans or two redevelopment projects by the Mola Development Co. One 1s at the Charter C.cnter developmental Beach Boulevard and Warner Avenue where the Mola company has erected 1 I 4-llory office building. restaurants, a movie com- plex, a parking suucture and other buildings. City Council officials have authorized Mola to offer a redevelop- ment plan that will take 10 the entirt .,.., .... ..,_.., ............. block from Warner Avenue aoutb to Cypress. Pla.ns include a partiaUy undrr- around park:ln& structure to eue the strain at the existin& de\'elopment and the possible construction of a hotel. Mola also .aot the OK to e~pand tbe construction ofcondomin.iwns in tile Town Square redevelopment area on city-owned property at Sixth and Main streets. The plan now calls for Mola to develop perhaps as many u 300 condominiums instead of the previously specified 240. Alcala's record won'tbe revealed Judge rules jurors can't be in f armed of past conviction 8y STEVE MARBLE Of ............... A developer being sued because homes are cracking near South Coast Plaza says his pro- ject la not causing the damage./A3 As firefighten arrived, explosions from the vehicles' gas tanks rocked the quiet cul-de-sac above Newport Center. Firefighters e xtinauished the blaze in about 20 minutes. J'lremen check tbe amoldertJa& rem•••• of two larai• that went ap In emoke In BIC C&llyon OD Monday eYenJ.na. Tbreenhlclee, lncla41n& thU Bronco, at.O were d•maced. Jurors wdl not be told that accused loller Rodney James Alcala is a convicted felon when and ifbc takes the witness st.and in his own defense, a Superior Court judge ruled Monday. Sports Two adjacent condominiums and prages sustained minimum damaac an the exclusive pted community, including partial damage to the roofs and walls, fire officials said. Newport Beach Fire Dcpertment spokeswoman Jayme Freer said the three vch.iclcs were destroyed in lhc blaze. She said two were owned by Big Canyon resident Richard Bnnon who said one was an Aston Martin valued at S 100,000. His Ford Bronco also was destroyed, along with another resident's car, believed to be a Cadillac. Freer said the damage to structures and 'contents was estimated at $260,000. Alcala, 41 , IS Sta~ trial the second time for the kidnap and murder of Robin Christi tie Sam soc, a t 2-year-old Hununaton Bcacb air' who was killed nearly seven YQBJllO. Rod Carew thinks his career lsover./81 INDEX Animals massacred at school Alcala. a former UCLA student, was convicted ofSamsoe's mwderin l 980 i nd ordered executed. Kc spent almost four ycan on death row bdc:n tbe S\a1e Supreme • Court ovcnumed the auiltY vadict bec:aua J\U'CM'I u• the &a Viial were \O\d \hat Alcala WU a CODvlded dUJd Advice and Games Buer.tin Board Bu8'nesa Clualfled Comics Death Notices EntertaJnment Opinion Police Log Public Notices Sports Television Weather Weddings 86 A3. A8-10 88-10 8 7 810 8 5 A6 A3 84, 10 81-4 85 A2 A7 -·· Police say th ey h ave no clues to explain who kflled more than 33 rabbfts, ehf c k ens fn HB 8 7 ROBERT BARU R Of .. ~ ...... Police arc invcstigatina the bloody massacre of more than 33 rabbilS and chickens at an animal farm at Golden View elementary school in Hunt- ington Beach. The killers climbed over a fence and apparently beat the small animals to death with chains after torturing them with golf balls, police reponed today. "It was aruesome," · PriAcipaJ Michael Merz said today. "Tberc were so many body parts scattered all over." Merz said the bizarre slayinp were discovered early Friday morning by several sixth-grade youngsters who care for the animals early. each morning at the farm. The sixth-graders took it upon themselves to remove the body pans and clean up the farm as well as they could to spare younger children tbe srisly si&ht. Merz said. Tbe ICboof farm, officiaJly called the Student Environmental Leamina C.cnter, was started a number of yean qo by aoven unent environmental pants to heJp urban younpeen care for and Jeam about farm animals. Sheep and other Wie animals also are kept at the farm, but they were not attacked, Men said. Merz said he's discussing with maintenance employees how to make the farm safer. Members of the community are offering to donate more animals. .. But we can•t accept them until we can usure then safety;· he said. Men alJo bu aone door-to-door in the commwliry, wsinl residents to be viailaot ooooemina J)Olliblc rutw-e attacb. Superintendent Dale Coopn aid ·police have expressed terious con- cern about the violence and have been looking for clues at the school. Police did not comment on whether they found slopns or sym- bols at the school at 1725 I Golden View Lane to indicate who the killers might be or what may have motjvated them. molt1tcr. · Defcnx attoniey Joba Doau llid 1t bu GOI been doc:ided rf ~ wiU take the Wltnell -.ad ia die n:trW. .. It may no1 be nei 1a y.'" mid Dolan, H]JftUIQI opcim.ism after ck pn>ICCUtion concluded its c::ue Moa-- day in the murder uW. wh.icb opened in April in Santa Ana. Dolan has stated that the caJC apfost Alcala is weak and held toaether by statements made by former Onnge County Jail inmates who claimed Alcala made incnminat- ing statements to them. (Pleue Me ALCALA '8/ A2} Caltrans criticizes· car po~l lane opponents Bay Club lease good until 2 011 By USA MAHONEY Ofllle0.-,"'4 .... A citizens group opposed to car pool lanes on the Costa Mesa Freeway did not do a proper statistical analysis to support its claim that accidents have increased 77 percent since the lanes were installed, a State Depart- ment of Transportation official said Monday. At the same time, James Roosevelt, chainnan of the Orange County Transportation Commission criu- cized the ~up -Drivers for Shopping center blast investigation focuses on extortion threats By STEVE MARBLE OflMO.-, ......... An explosion and tire that leveled a store in a Santa Ana shopping center and killed two people early Monday appean to have been a deliberate act. pc>ssibly the work of extortionists, authorities said today. Two bodies were found man auto parts nore that was rocked by an explosion and gutted by fire. Autopsies were scheduled today. No names have been released. The 1:40 a.m. explosion and fire damaaed or destroyed five shops in the retail center on Harbor Boulevard al Mcfadden Avenue, just beyond the Fountain Valley city limits. The owner of the auto parts store and an adjoining stereo shop and his associate have not been seen since Sunday evening, according to repons fficd by tl\e Associated Press. The store owner was identJfied as Liem Kbac Dinh, 23, and the as- sociate as Thap Nguyen, 2 I. Dinh, who 1s from Vietnam. had been threatened by other Vietnamese for refusing to pay protection money, said Billy Bryan, whose fa1her-1n-law owns a book store damaged 1n the blast. f Pleue Me BL AST I A2) Highway Safety-for not bringing its analysis to the commission before releasing it to the media. After reviewing the material from Drivers for Highway Safety, Caltrans District Director Don Watson "Con- cluded the group was comparing Art gives way to commer~e; cobblestone plaza crumbles Walkway from SCR to OC Arts Center alls victim to proj ected traf le snarls Ans enthu~1a.sts env1s1oned a cob- blestone plau, vnth str0lhn1Juaalen and wandmn1 mmstrtla, Nnnlna betwten the new Oranae Counly Performint Arts Center and South Coast ReJ>Ctlory theater in Co ta Mesa. City traffic enainttn and en- v1ronmt'ntal upcru env1s1oncd snarled roadways if the pon1on of Town Center Drive 1tpara11n1 !he arts center and the theater wctt closed to scneral traffic and tumed into • pcdestnan-oricnted plata. Ne1&hborina dcvcloptn aaw red because they had depended on Town Center Dnvcto bnna people to their prOJ When these v1s1ons clashed. the fallout proved fauil to the proposed plan that supporters say wou.ld have 11vcn 1 fechnaofun1ty to the separate thea~rs. Developer r J Sqerstrom & Sons has qu1ctl wuhdrawn its requt1t for lhe city to abandon Town Center Dnvc and leave the four-lane street u a dead end City plan call for To~n Center Dnve to be utended to Avenue of the Ans. Also rtlcpted to the back burner ~the ntroms' olan to build a "apples to oranges" when tt matched a three-year average accident ra1e against fiaurcs compiled d uring the fint 13 weeks of car pool lane operation. The Caltrans official said he stood behind the department's own figures that show the number of accidents has gone down since the lanes opened Nov. 18. "We're comfortable that our fig- ures arc more representative and truthful of what 1s really happcnina (Pleue eee CALTRAJlf8/A2) By SUSAN HOWLETJ' Of ... 0.-,,... .... 4. 12-year extension approved by Newpon Beach's City Counetl Mon- day night makes the Balboa Bay Club's lease on its 12.S-acre bayfront (Pleue .ee BAT I A2) For a lucky guy, this lottery player keeps com ~ng up a loser After e tting 19 entry tickets. plus cash. he's still wafting for ch_ance to spin btg w~e l By ROBERT BARltER Of ... ..,,... ..... John Orson may be the luckiest unlucky guy ever to play the Cah- fom1a Lottery. Cirson, a 47-year-old Huntington Beach real estate broker, ha~ed I 9 entry tickets wtth the Lott~ Comm1SS1on: Each of those llckels could have made him ehgiblc to become an instant mult1m1 lhona1rc an the BtR pan. But C1rson·s nam~ ha~ never been drawn and he'" \till waiting for a chance to span tht' big wh«l for big bucks. And for somt'onc '>O lud .. \ he's pocketed hnle cash for ht'i winning t1ckets. He won SI 000 one 11me and SI 00 another He al\O had four SI 00 winners when cntf) t1ckch to the Big Spin drawing earned a cash award instead of JUSt the ~ord "entn " But he's -ot fresh hope, He had two entry tickets las1 wec.•k that arc stilt ehg1ble for the drawing that determines who gets a chance at the Big pin "I would love to win one hundred grand I'd buy more investments," he said "That not askan~ too much for a fair gu} from Yugosla' 1a." Cahfom1a Lottery offic1als 1n Anaheim. who have come to know C 1rson from h" almoc;t wcclr.l> v1stts to tum in h1'i cntl') uckets. eonfinn htS StOf) But the> <ia) that 1f<, a Iona haul from wanning an entl'} ticket to winning lots of mont')' The chance for playt'n to be selected for the (Pleue eee LUCKY/ A2) TONY SAAVEDRA .. Affordable housing decision due soon Focus ON THE NEws 3SO-room hotel a('fOSs from the $80 m1lbon ptrform1n1 arts center The street abandonment would have al- lowed the {'Qmpany to build the hotel 10 feet away from the i1dcwallr., instead of the 20..foot ~tba k fC'- qu1rcd o~ubhc road Allho lhc C'Ontroven1at Ptdt e tnan p ata wa1 ~om mend~ for (Pleue eee TDAT&ltf A2) By LISA MAHONEY OflMO.-,NMlwr Too much or nnl enough" That'\ the que,11on the Orange Count) Plann1n C"omm1 ion mu11t d«1de rqard1n1 affordahlc hou\lnl Proponents of both \tews ~poke hcforr the comm1\\Jon Mondi\ ~1th one side ul'Jln& an end to mandatof) affordable hou ina requ1rcmentc; ind t}\e other na1nta.in1na that the rount)' hu not done enou&h to mttt tttc aced1 of11~ tow-1ncomt' ~\1dent'I Comm1ss1oner~ mu\I dec1dr whether to rt'C'ommrnd a final phaSt" out ol mandatory affordable housma tn tavor of devtlopcr 1nrent1vc to volunanl> provide low and moder- ate income hou 1ng. The Board of upen 1\0rs ordered a thrtt-)Ur pha~u1 ot atfordable housana control 1n t 983 Bru~ Rasner, "'~ cha1rm1n of the Lquna Ntauet Community Council, spolr.e 1n favor o( end1na affordable hou •n& rcqu1remcnu Dcveloperi a.re alrud) bu11d1 mott than the councy-requu~ 2 percent affordable uni ~ he main· (Pleue Me A.Pf'OaDABL&/ A2) ' ' J • AS* Or~ Coat DAILY PILOT/ Tueec:tay, May 13, 1988 TBEATERWALKWAYPLANSKiiLED ..• heaA l •~val by the cuy Pt.nn1na Com-ma111on, lhc Seterstroms had linle hope of tenilla the fin.al nod from the City Coun~il. They a.ucmpted to negottatc a compromise wsth developcn of The lakes, a mixed-use complex featunna a HS-room Beverly Heritage hotel \hat would be at the end of the Town c~nter Drive extension. The Seaerstroms also Jrappled with Costa Mesa's traffic engineers, who wt~ backed by a state-required environmental study that warned the pro1>05Cd street closure would pile traffic onto other routes Pina dC$igns w1:rc rehashed to allow limited access between Town Center Dnve and Avenue of the An~. But motorists would have to drive through a comphc.ured. slow·movma traffic circle wrappina around a larae fountain and a planter filled with palm tttc:S. Aller 11;, years of det>Ate, plans for the arts mall ended up In the round file, to the dismay oflocal 1t1s leaden and \he relief of traffic. engineers. David Emmcs, co-founder of South Coast Repertory, said he now fears for the safety of pedestrians who will have to dodge cars to gel from one theater to the other. "There arc gomg to be tl\ousands of people going back and forth. lhcy should be able to meander. 10 look at the posters ... to interminJle with other audiences." Em mes said. He added. "The overall ambiance should be one of a whole. a free- flowing place. not one tha~ 1s all chopped up.·· £mmes S&Jd he didn't buy the araumeot thal cJosm1 the treet to throuah traffic would snarl other intersection . Neverthele City Traffic: Enaa.neer Rock Miller maintained the plaza "would have been a terrible mistake. ''I wa.s very glad ro stt them • withdraw it," Miller said. "How many people would be going to South Coast Repertory and an arts center performance in the same cven&na anyway!' Malcolm Ross, plannmg dirutor for the Scierstroms. said the com- pany was fOrced to scrap the p!~ to prevent the ans center's 3,000-scat theater from massing its scheduled Sept. 29 opening. Geese on patrol at U.S. Army bases City requirements call for Town Center Dnvc to be extended before the cunam can nse on the new theater. "We reached the point where we had to blow the whistle on further discussions to allow enough time to complete the stccct," Ross said. FRANKFU RT. West Germany (AP) -The motto for intruders at LI m1htaf) 1nstallat1ons these days •'>· When you hear a goose, duck. Army security forces are using geese. which ob1cct loudly when unaccustomed sounds offend their sens111vc hearmg. as an early-warning system at three sites 1n West Ger- man) and e'\pect to have them at about 30 installattons beginning 1n September Goose G uards are new to the Army. but have a long trad1t1on. The ancient Romans u\cd them on the Palatine, one of Rome's seven hills. 'Legend has it that, dunng a siege by the Gauls m 390 B.C., the Palatine was saved by honking geese that warned the defenders of an attack. The U.S. Army's 32nd Air Defense Command now has 18 warning honkers at installations. "The command has tested geese ar several sues, and they're stall out there," Maj. Joe E. Padilla, spokes- man for the command. Who wtll clean up after them·' "We'll probably just call that pan of regular sccunty maintenance " The Segerstroms donated the land for both the Perfonning Arts Center and South Coast Repertory. Ross said the company may con- sider resurrecting the ans mall at a later date. But for now the plaza, in the form of an architectural model, sits unnoticed in a Scgerstrom con- fe rence room. shrouded with a black cloth. ··1t was a can of worms, we were never able to fully resolve all the issues." Ross said. ALCALA 'S RECORD CAN'T BE REVEALED •.• From Al lkput} Dmmt .\ttornt'' Tom < 1octhal<, said then· 1'> enough l'' •<knee 10 con' ill .\lcala a second time Onl' of lhl· pro">ccuuon''i chief w11nesses -a forma forestry worker -surpnsed counroom observer., more than a v.eek ago when she said she no longer remember" tesufying in .\lea la·~ onginal tnal The forestn workc.-r ~ tnt1mon) helped con,1ct .\lcala 1n 1980 'ih<' said then that \hl' saw a man rcc;emhllng \lcala pu'h a ~oung. blonde girl toward some bushes 1 n the foothills above Pasadena. The girl's mutilated body was later found in the foothills. Judge Donald McCanin permmed Goethals to read Dana Crappa 's 1980 t~t1mony to 1urors even though Crappa said she has no ruollect1on of the murder trial or her testimony . amsoe's mother testified 1n the openmg days of the rctnaJ that a pair of gold earrings fou nd in a Seattle locker alleged!) rented by Alcala resembled a pair her daughter was fond ofweanng. The mother said the camngs were distinctive because they had been aJtered from their originaJ design. Dolan said he will introduce photo- graphs of Alcala wearing similar earrin~ when h~ appeared on tllc television game show "The Dating Game" in 1978 -almost a year before the girl was killed. Alcala is being held without bail at Orange County Jail BAY C LUB LEASE EXTENDED .•. From Al o;m·cllecu'e through lhl· u•ar 2011 The 6-0 \ote c:amt• aftl·r a puhltc hl·anng \>.llllh drew no oppo\1t10n tu thl• ll-3\l' t•\tCn\IOn ·\lthuugh the old lca'>c .. 1111 had 12 \.C:tl\ on II Ra\. Cluh rcprc\Cntatl\C\ c,:ud lht'\ needed the C'\ICns1on ttl amon11c loan\ tor 1mprovemenh tu the cl uh ( 11\ and Ba\. ( lub official'> agreed to renegotiate the lea~ about two 1,car .. ag11 .,- fhe Ba) < lub "-Ill pa~ thl" l'll\ SI, 9 m1ll1 on 1n rc"cnue from ll' manna. apanment'I and other scr-_ "ICC'i unul 1998. accordmg to Ne""- pon Beach < ll) \.ianager Rohen ~) nn. Th<' figure 1s an 1 ncrcase of $9 2 m1ll111n to 1he etl\. dunng that time From I 998 until the end of the kase. the dub will pay the city S4 L2 million 1n rent for the city-owned property. The 12. 5-acre site. donated to the Cit)' in 192& b) James Irvine, was not gl\ ing the city a fair return under the old lease. Wynn said. The extended lease gi ve~ the Bay Club the extra time 11 wanted while gi ving the Clly a fatr- market return on the property "I think the lease terms are very fair to the l·1 t)." W)'nn !>aid. The terms were studied b) a pair of independent appraisers. Councilwoman Jackie Heather d1 s- quahfied herself from the vo te. She said she ma> have a conn1ct of interest because she as pan-owner of a boat moored at the Bay Club's manna Councilwoman Evelyn Hart tned unsuccessfully to put a restncuon on the lease that any money the club borrows using the r.ne as collateral be spent on the operations and improve- ments of the club itself. BLAST L INKED TO EXTORTION TR¥ ... From Al I le told me he had gouen these th reat'> belorc. hul that the-. had gotten "-Or'>C 1n the last week ·or so. and that two V1ctname!>C gu)!> had thrcatt•ncd him · Bl)an told re- poncr'i. In \l'\llgator\ <oa1d toda-. the)' art" cena1n tht• hlJ!c.' wac, arson and are e,.plonng the poc;s1b1li t) that It wa<, set b' e'ton1C1n1'>t'> .\n Orange lounty Shentrs De- partment bomb detail, which combed the charred remains of the auto pans store Monday. did nor find evidence of an incendiary device. .\rson 1nves11gators said they art' not ccruun 1f the blast staned the fire or was caused by It. The blast and fire did an estimated S950.000 damage. said Fire Depart- ment spokeswoman haron Frank The explosion rocked neigh- borhoods a mile away, and blew a window out of a home behind the auto pans store. said Frank. The fire roared through ad1oin1ng shops, mcludmg a beauty shop, dry cleaners. book store and dentists' office. It took firefighters from Santa Ana and Fountain Valley almost an hour to quell the blaze. AFF ORDABLE HOUSING DECISION DUE •.. From Al ta1ned He urgt:'d the rnmm1 .. s1on to drop mandatory rnntrolc, -which pn manl) impact \outh (uunt\ com- mun111cs -1nd1Cat1ng that the\ drc rcwo ns1bk tor inc rt·a\cd traffic rnn· gl"'>t1on and · undlll' hurdcn' on th<' intrac;tructun· · r he Fair I lmJ\IO~ ( ouncil anti the ()range < ount\ ll uman Kclat1on., ( 11mm1\-.ion twld .1 difTt-n•nt 'it·~ Spokec;men fo r both 'laid that the count)' had set its defin1t1on of affordable too high A.s a result. developers arc prov1d- 1ng plenty of affordable units to young professionals. ( omm1ss1oner Jean Forbath said in a wntten statement "The greatest unmet need 1'> below SS0.000 Ca year)." she said l nd<.'r Orange County's affordable housing gu1dehne\, people earning 120 percent or lcso; of the coun1y·~ median income are ehgJble 10 buy or rent affordable units. The median income 1s about $42,000. The commission will accept more public testimony May 27 Its rec- ommendation must go to the Board of Supervisors June 11 LUCKY GUY S TILL AWAITING BIG CHANCE. From Al "'l'l·kh grand pn11• 'pin arl· I 1n I 2'ill 'rlt < 1r'>••n .1ppt•,11 c; undduntcd Hr h11\\,1h1 1u1 llll1l h·1,add\ lorthelun 11111 hl"\Jld I m dn' ing d11\.\rl the •.trcet and d \.111u· td" ml t11 <,l11p at a lerta1n place 111 hu, l11tll n ttl kl•tc; \omcumc\ I knm~ that Im gwng to ""'n ·· < '""n -..11d tht ,,1ml· Hille telling him ..... 1i.111 11<l1 <111inw1, '<l"c:d h1'i hie \l<hl·n hl· "'·"" t h1ld 111 l\;,111-o<:cup1cd 'r ugoc,l,1\1.1 ~ hl·n tw '4;J\ Jh.1ut 'I 1Jr 6 ht• \ 1\1tc:d h" .wnt .ind undc: 1n a nc:1ghhonnK '111<1~ hl· "11J A. ( 1<'r man \old1l·r 1,1me 11 h1\ unt ll'\ hc>U<;e and a<,kcd < 11\11n ., dunt lor <,\Ill unexplained a·a.,nn\ 111 go into the tront }arJ i!Od llap a 1111.1.d up and MAIN OFFICE VOL 79, NO. 133 down A\ she did, another German shot and killed her ( 11'\on said. His unck then '>hot and killed one of the German<,. fhe 1nfunated Nazis then ro unded up ht\ relatives in the village and executed most of them. but C1r~on and his uncle escaped ·· 1 beard this vo1ct thtn It said. ·run. John.·" And run he did A German finng a machine gun nicked him in the ng.ht hand. he u1d. But he made at to u(c.t) and walked about 20 kilometers to h1'i parent'i' village and reJOIO~ h1'i mother, he said Has father was in a concentration camp at the time. h<.' said Af\erthc war. Cirson went to hvc 1n France An other uncle sponsored h1'> 1mm1grat1on to the United States 1n 196 7. He went to work as a laborer 1 n a tobacco factory before entering the accounting field. He moved to Hunt- ington Beach 1n 1977 and went into the real estate business an 1981. He plays soccer and basketball at Perry School in the evenings and goes dancing frequentl y. He said he d~!>n't dnnk or !>mokc and hardly ever gambles. When he goes to Las Vegas. he sees a show But C'1MOn's not ,1V1ng up playing the lottery There s a httlc voice telhn& him that he m1&}lt still win the whole shebana. Dally Piiot O.ltvery It GuatMtffd Justcall 642-6086 ,......,.,., , ,.,.. If '°" .,. 'IOI l\e¥t 1<>>< -· 1\1 \ '.!OP<fl u tw•.:>te 't"' •"4 ·-tA'f'1 .. • "" -td What do you hke about the Daily Pilot., What don't you like"' C1ll the number above and your mu~ae wtll be recorded, trantcnbcd and de· ltveted to the appropnate editor The same 24-hour answenna service may be u\Cd 10 record letters to the eduor on any topic. ( ontnbutors to our Letters column must include their name and telephone number for venficatton Tells us what's on your mind • 511"'"'°l """ r,v..._,.l •I """' 00 "Ct •• ~.. , :"Ju' •r.iot ci, r a "' • 0.1,:..a •O a ,. ,....., y(IUt COO\' ,. ,,._~ CJrculatlon T•phonee fog to burn away by afternoo n Low ctoude and tog w«e •xPeCted to C<M1r the coaet tonight end W.,need9Y momtng end to be drtwn e-.y by attemoon Min In • eofttlnuetlon of notl'MI Mey weether. Sklee ~ the mounteln1 end dteert• Wiii be mo.tly cteer, .ccordlng to the Netlon.i weethef a.Moe. Wedneed•v'• t~etur• wm reech 85 to 70 et the beeehM, 7 4 to 82 Intend. Along the Orange Coast It wtll be felr and ITI09tly eunny WtcMeldey. Lowe tonight et the bMoMe 54 to 58. High• Wedneed•Y 18 to 73. L.OWI tonight In the veh)'9 48 to 58. High• Wednetdey 77 to M. U.S. Temps •A\.~.~' ffllONTt ' ~~~ Wttm-ColO.., Sh0we•1 AWi Hitr111 Snow OccW.<1......,. Staloll#y .... Not-WM'* ~ MOM U $ 09ol OI c;o..-u Sen.i- SanlAIAN a.ni.Cful &MtaM.n. SMllAIMonlCA Tehele V...,. Tottenc:. ll:t .. 71 S5 64 >le 117 •1 111 H 9 1 '17 et s.. •• Mexico blames drug probleills on U.S. MEXICO CITY (AP) -U.S. Senate hearings on Mc~ico and allegati ons that widespread corrup- tion here is fueli ng the illegal drug trade to unprecedented levels touch- ed off an indignant response Tuesday. "We insist that it is a matter of international delinquency. that it must be faced and fought inter- nationally." federal Attorney General Sergio Garcia Ramirez said of drug trafficking. Mexican officials have said re- peatedly that the problem is as much one of uncontrolled demand. or of consumption in the United States sending, out huge amounts of money to attract drugs. as it 1s of supply. U.S. State . Dcpanment deputy spokesman Charles Redman said Monday in WashinJtOn that "deepl y entrenched corruption among (Mex- ican) officials nominally engaged in anti-narcotics programs" 1s panly responsible for a sharp increase in drugs entenng the United States from Mexico CAL TRANS RAPS CAR POOL LANE FOES ..• From Al and we stand behind those numbers,<• he told the Oran~e County Transpor- tation Commission. The statistics used by Drivers for Highway Safety showed accidents mcreased 77 percent after the c.ar pool lanes opened when compared to the average weekly acc1den1 rate in the years 198 2 through 1984. The three-year weekly average was 12.8 compared to 22. 7 accidents a week reported during the first 13 weeks of car pool lane operation. Callrans statisucs. which compare the same 13-weck period with seven week,s pnor to the opening of the lanes. show the accident rate drop- ping from an average of 25 a week to an average of 23.5 a week. The decrease ts not considered stattstacal- ly s1gn1ficant. Watson said the three-year average cannot be fairly compared with the 13-weck figure because accident statistics for the latter penod arc more comprehensive. The first data 1ncJudes only acci- dents in which a California Highway Patrol officer was called to the scene while later statistics also add up over- the-counter accident reports, those that took place on auxiliary lanes and ramps, he said. Watson estimated the addit1onaJ data accounts for 30 to 40 percent of the difference between the figures put forward by Caltrans and the citizens group. Before heanng Watson's report, Roosevelt cast doubt on the rehabiJi- ty of the Onvers for Hjghway Safety fi11ure~ "It seems to me 1f there were a problem, we'd be hearing from CaJtrans and the CHP,'' he said. "I believe the car pool lanes ~ working just fine." Roosevelt criticized the citizens group for shanng its infonnauon with the media instead of the commission and Caltrans. He said the group ought 10 be held accountable for any misinfonnation. Joe Catron, chairman of Drivers for Hag.hway Safety, said the group would liave liked to work with the two transportation agencies but that they made 1t clear the group's findings were not wanted. Catron pointed out that com- missioners declined to review an earlier set of statistics complied by the group in March. "They said no, we're not interested. So why would we seek them out further when they're not interested,'' he said. Furthermore, Catron said the group got no assistance from Caltrans or commission staff members when they asked for more recent st.at1s11cs tocompa~ "They will not release that data," he said. Catron said he did not know that the three-year figures -taken from an environmental document -were less comprehensive. But he challenged the transportation agen- cies to provide comparable statistics so the public can sec .. who's right and who's wrong." Drivers for Highway Safety will nor accept the seven wPrlc on-~"r pool lane accident rate as accurate because members say it includes a period when the Costa Mesa Freeway was under construction. Caltrans denies the claim, saying that resurfacing was complete aod travel lanes rcstnped between Sept. 30 and Nov. 17 when the data was gathered But Catron insists the road work was not completed until Oct. 18 or 20. Some lanes were two to three inches higher than others. resurfaced ramps had yet to be stnped and construction equipment remained alongside the, freeway, he said. • The unfinished conditions helped boost the number of accidents durin_g the pre-car pool lane period making it appear that the lanes have made the freeway safer, Catron said. If Cal trans would provide another pre-car pool lane, pre~nstrucuon period to study, Catron said he would back off on the 77 percent accident rate. But he predicted that no fair compan son would show that there has been no increase in accidents since the lanes were installed. "Will 1t bnng that accident rate down 77 percent? It Wiii not." Car pool lanes on the Costa Mesa Freeway stretch from the R1 vers1de to the San Diego freeways. Created from the inside median and by squeezing other lanes one foot. the car pool lanes arc restrict~ to vehicles carrying two or more people. The car pool lane expenment Will continue through November. Standing out quietly. -- J \ / . ~~ .. ~ • "Natural Shoulder" trousers. The cut is Corbin's very own, designed to fit all men comfortably ... precisely tailored to each size. They rest secu rely on your waist. The stride is easy. Among the distinctive fabrics for spring are : Prime Poplin, Cotton Patterns, W ool Tropicals and See rsuckers. Westdiff Plaza 17th & Irvine Avenue Newport Beach 645 -0792 A Corbin® trad ition. ' j t t • • t Summer cla88e8 previewed at UCI Cracking home responsibility denied Academic&Jly talented 11xth throuah 12th- pden interested in taldna aoc5clerated summer classes al UC Irvine arc invited to attend a preview ICIFi sion Wednetday from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. in the me Arts ViUqe Studio Theater. Parents and students will view demoMtratlons of SP,C«h and debate, speed readina and Aik.ido and rece.ave an overview of the univenity's Pcpsus ben1flts and tips for college planning. Admission is free but reservations should be made by calling 856-5358. Lamue clauea •lated Prepared childbinh classes usioa the Lamaze me~bod will be offered for six weeks, beginnina tonight, at the Women's Health Center at Saddle- back Community Hospital, 244S I Health Center Drive in Laguna Hills. The sessions will meet each Tuesday from 7 to 10 p.~. and the cost is $74. ~instructor Lyn Dee Rankin at 857-0420 for registration and further information. Drag talk at CdM HlglJ Susan Newman, daughter of actor Paul New- man. will visinhe Corona del Mar High School campus Wednesday niJ)tt to speak on "Drugs and Booze, Our Media's Mtxed Messages." Newman, who Josi her brother Scott to drugs, said she is "dedicated to influencing the media to take a positive stand against the glamorization of the drug culture.·• The program sponsored by Parents Who Care and the PT A. will t,C&in at 7:30p.m. in the school's gymnasium, 2101 Eastbluff, Newport Beach. Candidates forum planned Orange County candidates for elective office have been invited to a forum presented by the Balboa Bay Republican Women, Federated, at their luncheon meeting Wednesday at the Huntington Beach Inn, 2111 2 Pacific Coast Highway, Hunt- ington Beach. The business meeung is scheduled for 11 a.m .• followed by lunch and the program at noon. The cost is $10. Call Goldie Joseph at 673-5729 for reservations. Stop-smoking session set A smoking cessation program is being offered by Fountain Valley Regional Hospital, with free introductory meetings scheduled for Wednesday and Thursday at 7:30 p.m. The hospital is located at the comer of Euclid Street and Warner Avenue in Fountain Valley. Call 966-8175 between 8 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. for details. .. Spr1ng·concert at colleg-e The Irvine Valley Community Band, directed by Stan Steele, wlll present its final conc.c:rt of the spring season Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. in Room A31 I. BJ TONY 1AA VEDllA °' ............. A developer beina lued by IO reaicleQb maintained that conllnlClioa on South Coast Plaz.a ti did not c:aute the land movement that iscnckifta~nt homes in north Cotta Meta. Malcolm Rou, plannint director of CJ. Seaerstrom A Sona. iesued • ~pated statement last week notiat tbe reaults ofa city-commiuioned eeololic:al study t!)at aeneraJly cleared the mall expu11on of Back to the •&<>9 Range~s on lookout for mountain lion I • • at Caspers Park By STEVE MARBLE °' .. .,.., ........ A mountain lion was spotted near a campsite being used by 40 families this weekend at Ronald W. Caspers Wilderness Parle where a S-year-old El Toro prt was mauled and critically injuried earlier this year. Orange County park rangers kept watch over the campsite after Saturday's SJahtmg but did not close the park. satd Ranger Darrell Bcnoen. He said the mountain lion was seen digjng through trash near the campsite. Five-year-old Laura Michelle Small was attacked by a mountain lion March 23 during a family ouumg at the rural county patk, located off Ortega Highway near San Juan Capistrano. The little girl as still recovenng from bead tnJurics. She was released from MJS~uon Communit) Hospital an M1ss1on VaeJO May I. A mountain hon, believed to be the same one that mauled the little girl, was shot the day after the attack. Following the mauling. the park was closed to the public for about thrtt weeks. No other lions were seen dunna that penod, though fresh tracks were found. Mountain lion rarely attack humans; acx:ordmg to the State Department offish and Game. The attack in March was believed to be the only reported 1 oc1dent of its lond an Caltfomut an ncarl) 75 )cars Corridor Committee holds first session By LISA MAHONEY °' .. .,..,,... .... A joint powers aacncy to oversee development of the San Joaqwn Hills . Transportation Corridor held its fitst meeting last week. Formed by five cities and the county of Orange, the agency will be responsible for exlendma the proposed corridor from the Corona del Mar Freeway in Irvine to the San Diego Freeway in San Juan Capistrano. Thursday. San Oemente Councilman Scott Diehl was named v1u chaannan. Costa Mesa Mayor Norma Hertz<>& waJI be secretary. Other agency members include San Juan Capistrano Mayor Kenneth Friess, Santa Ana Mayor Dan Griset, Newport Beach Councilwoman Evelyn Kan and county Supervisor Bruce Nestande. The concert includes classical compositions and a medley of Broadway tunes. Admission is free and an formation is available at 559-3333. Gene lecture at UCI How genes tum on and off ts lbe subject of the 1986 Steinhaus Lecture by Dr. Harold M . Wein- traub. director of the genetics group at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle, to be prnented Wednesday at UC Irvine. Jack Allen and bladaa&bter Jemalfu of Bma~ Beach prOTe the tbrlll of duad.a& clOM9 the aeneratloa pp u tlaey aplD for a dance coateet crowd at the maal C..-ma.aCtJ Peeti'ftl at Golden Weet Coll .. e. Tllouaada enJo7'ed. the 'SO. and '60e themed f.U'ftl OD Sahlrilay. Land acquisition, final design and the assessment of devclopcT fees to belt> pay for the corridor are some of the duties of the aaency. Oransc County Supertisor Thomas Riley was elected chairman of the agency lrvine Mayor Dave BakcT will also sit m on meetings, thou&h he may not vote. Irvine bas been precluded from joinina the agency because of\itl&ltion over the city's ri&ht to collect developer recs. The S5 l6 million transportatJon cor- ndor is an tended to provide moton1ts with an ahttnative to the con.,ested San Oiqo Freeway and Pacific Coast fu&hway. I The lecture is scheduled for 3 p.m. in Room F 114 of MedicaJ Sciences I, and is free and open to the public. Call 856-5315 for additional infor- mation. Laguna told to widen road or lose OC funds State insurance bureau · _ slow to answer complaints CALENDAR By LISA MAHONEY °' .. .,.., ......... threatened to leave Laguna Beach and Santa Ana out of the funding fest. Santa Ana has since rectified its eligibility SACRAMENTO (AP)-A report from the state audttoraeoeral's office says the California Department oflruurancc bas been slow in processing more than SO percent of the thousands of consumer complamts made an the _past fiscal year. In a report to the Legislature delivered Monday, Auditor General Thomas W. Tuesday, May 13 Laguna Beach city officials are going to have to find a way lo widen El Toro Road to six lanes south of Moulton Parkway if they want to keep about S 132.000 in county road improvement money. problem. • Under trust guidelines. cities must have a plan ofarterial highways that substantial- ly conforms to the county's plan. Hayes said thal in many cases, people with complaints find it difficult to even reach the de~rtment. Citing Pacific Bell reports, Hayes said. "Dunng ~k pcnod an Ma rch 1986, consumers received busy signals more than 7,000 tames. when attemptmg to telephone the department." • 6 p.m .. Lapu Beacb Eacrgy &ltd Envlroa- mut Committee, Laguna Beach Community Center, 384 Legion St. • 6:30 p.m .. lrvlae City Cowscll. City Council Chambers. 17200 Jamboree Blvd. The Orange County Transportation Commission agreed Monday to give the beach city until January 1988 to come up with a workable widening solution or lose matching funds intended to rehabilitate Glenneyrc and Catalina streets. . But, while the Laauna Beach and Orange County plans agree on paper. the county teamed that the city allowed a housing developer to build retaining walls into the road's right-of-way. In a few cases, the report said, complaints have not been acted upon for more than two years. "As a result, the public did not rccc1ve prompt protection from unfair insurance practices," Hayes' report said. Wednesday, May 14 • 7 p.m .. LapDa Bcacb Plauillg Comml11loa, Caty Council Chambers. 505 Forest Ave. • 7:30 p.m .• LaJa.na Beacl1 Recreation Com· mlttcc, Recreation Conference Room. 505 Forest Ave. The money was to have been available for those road projects during the next two fiscal years. Cit)' Manager Ken Frank said he permitted the encroachment because he did not believe El Toro Road would ever be widened to its planned width. Charging that "the public lacks protcctJon against improper conduct" by insurance companies, the audJtorgeoeral recommended that the department assign more pco~to handle complaints, install additional telephone hnes and consider asking the Lcg1Slature for funds to install statewide toll-free lanes. He also recommended closer monitoring of complaint backlogs. In a lengthy written response that was attached to the report. Insurance Commissioner Bru~ Bunner said: • 7:30 p.m.. lrvlDe Commulty Service• Comml11loo, Caty Council Chambers. 17200 Jam- boree Blvd. All 26 cities and the county received matching funds under the Orange County Unified Transponation Trust. a thrcc-ye.ar program that channels transit distnct interest into road improvement proJCClS. The city has already submitted a plan that would permit the six traffic lanes by elim inating a bicycle lane and sidewalk on one side of the road. he said. The proposal is being reviewed by the county's transportation program division. ''Whale the comments of the auditor general have ment. we arc nevertheless deeply dasappomtcd that their report does not acknowledge the posnive d1rect1on and usefulness of our self-i nitiated activities to better serve the consumer." But eligibility ~nags discovered in April PoucE LoG Irvine man identified as critically injured cyclist B1 PAUL ARCBJPLEY °' .............. An Irvine man critically mjurcd in a bicycling accident Sunday was identified by oo-worken Monday after they became alarmed when he didn't show up for work. Yasuo Shik.i, SS, was listed in critical condition from massive head trauma at Fountain Valley Trauma Center Monday. Shilt.a hal his head on the road or curb when he collided with another bicychst al I p.m. Sunday on Back Bay Road. Newport Beach police 1nvest1ptor Mark Miller said. Shi kl was riding a blue, sirl's three. speed Ram par bicycle, Wlth the name Fountain Valley Two men tned "quack chanie" lhef\1 unday ntaht at thrtt busancu neu Warner A ven~ ind Mqnoha trcet. The men awro-ched cashiers. asked to chal\IC a $20 bill. then con(utcd the c11h1er while coun11n1 an order to end up with Clltl money With this technique, 1hc pe1r s1ote S68 from the Fountain V11ley miniature aolfrc.>unc and $60 from the batt1na cqct. A clttk ll n~rby rommy'a H1mbu,.cn ma1nta1ncd tus count. bo~vcr. 1nd dad not lote 1ny money The men Ocd 1n a din) arctn AM(' Hornet • • • A rn1dcnt of the 10600 hlock o( La Bah11 rcponed Sunday thll '°mconc cntrred her opcn pra~ and \!Ole 1 b1cyck, "Megurni S." on it. He carried no identification and the bicycle was unlicensed, hindering police effons to identify him. Newport Beach police put out a aeneral broadcast to other ~lic.o agencies, to determine Shik.i's ident- ity. Irvine police were contacted by the com~ny where Shik:.i works. Shik:.i 1s a vice president al Kyowa America Corp. of Irvine. When he failed to l'CPort to work Monday, co- workers contacted police. Another vice ~ident went to the Shik:.i home Wlth police and con- firmed a bicycle was missina. and that Shiki's dauahter is namcd"Mcaumi. The executive also told Miller that the victim's family is in Japan. a Vlcuum cleaner and four 1n11quc kn1aht's helmets. The lo'ls was estimated at S~7S. • • • An Anaheim l"C$1dcnt rcporttd ahat his aray 1985 BMW l18i wustolcn ovcnhe weekend when he perked ll 10 Fountain Valley on W1mc_r Avcn~ cu1 of San BNno tr«t. The lou was csum11cd 11 $19,000, •• ..! An employtt at the ucmoo a tore, I 7()9q Brook.bunt t .• l"fPOned that 10mconc stok 1 Video c.auctt.t rccontcr from the a~b.ancc dtpanmcnt The Jou was estimated at $749. • • • McMahon Oc-vtlopmcnt of Santa An 1hc contractor for a houuna proJcct under conttt\lcdon 11 17077 San ~atea 1 , Co-wortccn later went to the hospi- tal and identified Shik.i, Miller said. The aocident occurred when Shiki was ridina downhill on Back Bay Road about 400 feet west of East Bluff Dnve and Lola Dion Reif, 58, of Garden Grove was riding uphill. Both bicyclists veered to avoid a collision, but'they veered mto each other. Reif suffered minor abrasions when she was knocked over and was truted by Newport Beach Fire l)e.. penment peramedics at the scene. Shiki was rushed to the trauma center for immediate su11cry. Neither bicyclist was wcarina a helmet, Miller said. reponcd SatuRtay that someone <itok thrtt French Windows ftom the site. The lot• was estimated at SI ,SOO. • • • A tcvtntb padct 111 Vista Va~ hool. 162.SO Hickory, told poltee turday that t0meonc store peru from the locked btc)cle he lcn at the tchool oveml&ht The lo.s was estimated at S92. Coetalleea Cash totahna S 160 wu rcponed stolen from a cash fCl)tter 1t Mo.m's Aowers. 121 S Beker Sw, ~Wttn S:lO p m unday •od 7: t S a.m. Monday. Entry was possibl y tnldewhhakcy • • • So~nc tned to •tul the head off 1 mannequin at London Exchange, 2340 Newport Blvd.. about 2 a.m. Fnday Pohcc am vi ng at the sccne found the front window smashed and 1 mannequin's head stuck bctw~n some metal security bars. • • • Tools wonh $455 we~ reponed stolen from an open garage in the 130 block of Lexington. • • • A computer. tools and rash, all tot.ahna S2.070, were rcpon«.I stokn from an unlocked aaraae In the 600 block of V1ctona Street bctWttn noon and ~ p.m Saturday Newport Beach A bl1ck11ck video m11chmc was taken from behind 1he bar 11 Buter's m the 300 block of Bayside Dnve It wu wonh $~50 • • • Bualdcn at a construct1on s1tc ~poned Sl,000 1n aluminum m1ssma from the loc~tion at 4700 Campus Dnvc • • • About $300 damqc was ~poned 1ner 1 car was \Cnnched m Promontory Point. • • • A. buritu who cntert<S through 1n unlocked door took S ,,200 in Jt'Welry frt)m a Stem V aita home • • • A purse conta1n1na SM.S w1' taken from 1 car perked on ll th trttl and Wnt Balboa Bouloard Pola« Yid the bural.u appercntly used 1 h1nsrr to ge1 1ntC'l th<' vehicle. • • • A fil't' helmet and roal wunh S200 wert takrn from a fire truck parlltd It N<"wpon Be.ch Fa~ Station No 6 at ()()ver C>nvc and Irvine _.,ve nue Int.De A stereo and televmon ~t were stolen from In apanment on the 700 blocli. or Stanford • • • A blue boys, »inch Monaootc bicycle wts stokn from thc 00 bl of Hamilton Strttt. • • • The 11dc mirror and tht hoot 1ni11nia was stolen Imm a ~r par~td on 1h 7200 block or Jambol'\'C AC'lulcvard • • • • The body bra from a 1979 Volkswagen convertible parked on lhe 3800 block of ParkVlew Lane was stolen Monda)'. • • • A side mirror. a s1x·pack ind cooler and some car speakers were Stolen from a Volkswaacn bug parked on Bayberry Monday • • • i\n AM/FM Sanyo cas~tte tapc pla)er was stolen from a car parked on the ~700 block ofH1m1lton Street Mondt\)' Laguna Beach A purSil' and its content\ were taken from the lld1e1' restroom of 1 ( hlT Drt\le rtslluranl. the v1c11m told pohcc ~unda) even ma. The'°" wu e~hm11cd et S9 .000 • • • Vanous item• totahna Sb 7 S we~ \tolcn from 1 car parked unday mom1n1 on South Coast Haahwav. ahe v1c11m said . ' . Police arrested 1h1tt moton\U Sunda ) on su p1c1on of dnv1n1 under the in· Ouentt or 1Jcobol. Felipe GraJcda .# Valen1ucla. 37. of Laguna &ach was 1rrnted at 11 OS pm on Ocean A.\ICnue and South Coast H 1&hv.ay Robert Chutes McMahon, 28. o( M1ss1on VtCJO was sto~ at 9· 20 p m on Fore-st A \lenue and Third 1rcct Gary Dun Greff. 27, of Westminster wu arre,tcd at 2 10 a.m along the 100 hlock of Jasmine trct't Hantlntton Beach Buralan en1cred lhc Gnnckr ~<,t4ur1nt at 21002 PIK'lfic Coast Htahwa) throuah an air duct above the kitchen ind \tole an undisclosed amount of food and u"h • • • '\ dnvcr who slimmed h" true~ 1n10 a v.111and1n Ed1~n uuhl)' pole on EdinJtr <\'enuc WIS trc1tcd at Human:a llo~p1t1I Hun11ng1on BC'ach tor m1unt\ Juveniles Wt'l't' ;pp~hcndcd with hur &larv tool~ af\er ullegroh prvina a lt1rn~ plate olTa white M11d11 p1d..up trud. 1n the perkma lot 1c.:ro"' Imm 1hr t cntral l1br1n a1 Tllbcn "'enuc Ex-cops sentenced for selling n aval property By tM AHGClatcd Preti LO ANGELES -Two former members of the c1v1han poh~ fol'Ct' al the Seal Reach Naval Wc.aPon tataon wtrt sentenced to two yea~ ln ftdenl pn!IOn for $Clhna sovcmmcnt pro~rt)' stoltn from tht l\a~ Ralph A Barry. a heutcnant vmh the federal Dcpanment of Ocfen pohoc. ind Joel Washanaton, a tu· dent intern on the fottt. ~ c-on· v1ctcd by a f"edcral JUf')' an Apnl on• tofal of et&ht felony count-' 8an). H , of A\n11h<'tm and Wa h· anaton. 22. of Lont Bea b, who rt'laancd af\er their No~ 13 anuts v.ere found 1u1lty of selling locken. tlectnc 1ypewnttf"I. an emcricnc~ hihtin sy<11cm and an aluminum boll td an undcl"C'o"er FB1 aJ('nt hetwcen la" ~t 9 and Oct ' Barry. who WI fouod &ulll~ ol \1\ counts, and Wa hanaton. "ho "'a' conv1ctro on two rounl\, ~ 5tntenccd Monday by lJ S Dl~tnct Jud Ahccmant iot1C1' ' Tape left by crash victim tells helicopter's defects IJ C11e A11odated Prus A Tustin Marine who died in a fiery helicopter crash len behind a tape reoordina de.scribing mechankal de· fects in the aircraft he flew and doubts about the wisdom of those plannina some of his training missions. Arnette was from Silver Sprina, Md., and had been with the Heavy Marine Helicopter Squadron 465 at Tustin Marine Corps HeUcopter Afr Station. miNn to problems with the tail rotors. And thou&h re pons on the San Oemente crash have not been made public. U.S. Rep. Robert 8adha.m, R· Newport Bach, said Marine officials have testified in Conaress that t.ail rotor defects may have been to blame, "We had problems, there's no doubt about it," says a voice on a tape attributed to S~. Dulles Arnette, who was killed Fnday along with three others in the crash of a Marine helicopter at a desert train.in& center. Atnene and three others died Friday when a Sea Stalhon crashed and burned at a trainina center near Twentynine Palms, in the desert 120 m iles cast of Los AnJClet. Public affairs staff at the helicopter base were unavailable for comment early today. Since 1984, 16 servicemen have died and 16 have been injured in Sea Stallio n crashes. That record led those who worked with tbe choppers to look closely for problems, Arnette sajd on the tape. The tape was played Monday by Mark· P. Robinson, ari attorney representing the fam ilies of two of four Marines killed an the crash of another Marine CH·53E Super Stallion helicopter in June 1984. Robinson said Arnette, upset at the death ofa friend in the ocean crash off San Clemente Island, had agreed to testify an a lawsuit against SikorsJcy Aircraft. maker of the copter. Arnette, a crew,, chjef on the choppers. said on the tape that 6e had fo und crucial bolts loose when new Sea Stallions amved from the manu· facturcr. He described finding broken P!rts on the ground, the loss of which, af undiscovered, could have led to fai lure of the main rotor in flight. "Everyone is cdaY and everyone is lookin' at things iliey didn't look at before, 'he wd. "And we have come across other thinp that have been wrong." Arnette said he als0 objected to being ordered to fly missions at sea in newly delivered Sea Stallions carry· inf. unfamiliar equipment. He made the tape an 1984, the lawyt"r ~11 111 He also spoke of failures an a component of the tail rotor called the VISCOUS damper. 'I was all worked up over that and I told everyone I djdn't like the idea of taking new planes out on the boat," he said. Marine reports have linked at least two other crashes and several near· Judge: School 1nust keep ca1npus safe By "e AHoclaled Pren HA yW ARD -In the first ruling of ats kind, a)udge has decided that Cahfornta's "Victims' Bill of Rights" mandates that school districts halt violence on campus. Alameda County Superior Court Judge Ricbitrd Bartalini ruled on Monday the safe ScChools provision of Proposition 8 enacted by voters an 1982 gi ves children a _, const1tut1onal nght to "safe,, secure and peaceful schools." Until Monday: no j udge had sought to enforce the measure on a school district. Ruling in a case involving the Oakland Unified School District, the Judge said that parents wbosccbildren are threatened o r inJured can suce district for damages. Poll touts Herschensolm SAN FRANCISCO -Los Angeles television commentator Bruce Herschensohn is the new frontrun· ner fo r the Republican nominauon.. fo_!i-E C U.S. Senate. with Rep. Ed Zschau and state Sen. Ea tJ~ vis c lose behind in a statewide California Poll re l a d Tuesday. Herschensohn led the field of 13 Repub n candidates with 18 percent. follo wed by Zschau and Davis at 15 percent each. <Rep. Bobbi Fiedler. Los Angeles County Supervisor Make Antonovich. economist Arthur Laffer a~d Assemblyman Bob Naylor ued for third with 8 p!rcent each. Nineteen percent of the 328 GOP voters surveyed saying they arc still undecided. Democrauc Sen. Alan Cranston led all the Repubhcan candidates by a wide margin an a survey of78S registered voters without rega rd to party affiliation. Intent to klll argued SAN FRANCISCO - A state prosecutor contends that a recent U.S. Supreme Court ruling should s1,>ur California's high court to overturn a 1983 ruling bano1ng a death sentence unless the killing was intentional. Deputy Attorney General Ward Campbell made the pica to the state Supreme Court Monday as justices conducted their second round of arguments in t.he death penalty case of convicted triple·murderer Billy Ray Hamilton. Campbell -Said the· recent U.S. Supreme Coun ruling shows that federal constjtutional law .. no longer requires that actual killers, such as the defendant in this case. harbor the-intent to kill" to be legally executed. Homeless chlldren alded LOS ANGELES (AP) -A judge has ordered state welfare officials to provide eme'lency services to homeless children who li ve with their parents. a ruling that could affect homeless families throughout Cahfom1a. A prclimmary injunction granted Monday by Supcnor Court Judge Norman A. Dowds requires welfare abcncies to offer shelter to homeless families previously denied aid unless the parents arc willing to place their children an foster homes. "The order puts an end to a policy by the state where it ignored the desperate needs of the homeless or contnbuted to the breakup of these families," said attorney Robert Newman. Spy's ex-wife testifies about his brutality SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The ex·wi(c of confessed spymaster John Walker, testifying at the trial of Jerry Whitworth, said Walker gave her two black eyes when she confronted him in 1968 with evidence of bis spying. Barbara Walker testified Monday that she could not bring herself to tum · hlm in until several years later. She said that in 1976, after learning that the Walkers were _getting a divorce, Whitworth "asked me if I could ever tum John in .... I said I did not want revenge." She then put a tissue to her mouth, said she was sick to her stomach, and left the courtroom briefly. Mrs. Walker. who turned in her former husband _in late 1984, was p-anted immunity from prosecution an exchange for her testimony against Whitworth. Whitworth is accused of selling secrets about Navy code and com· munications systems for $332,000 to Walker for relay to the Soviets between 1974 and 1983. Walker pleaded guiJty last October to spyi ng for the Soviet U nfon for I 7 years and has already testified against Whitwonh. Walker's son, Michael, has pleaded guilty to espionage, and his brother, Arthur. was convicted by a federal judge. During seven days of tesumony as the prosecution's star witness against Whitworth. Walker described his ex- wife as a hard.dn nking blackmailer:. Chernobyl core to be entombed; death toll now 8 MOSCOW (AP) -C~ at the ChemobY.I nuelca.r reactor sto~ ~e wh.ite--hot core from bum,ng anto the earth and ~t now will have to be buried m concrete for centuries, Soviet officials said today. Alt0 today, a Soviet official said a total ofsix Pe<>ple h.ave died since the April 26 Mlddcnt at the Ukrainian power plant spewed radiation over much or Europe. A vquely worded 1ovemment statement, issued Mon- day, led to speculation that eiaht people 11\i&ht have died. In a report from Chernobyl. the CommuOLSt Party new5papcr Pravda quoted Yevacny Velik.hov, a coardi· nator of the.cleanup at the plant, as sayi04 it could take m~nths to finish cncas1~ the reactor m concrete to seal off 1t1 radioactive core. Ivan Yemelyanov, deputy director of the orpnizatJon that designed the reactor, said today the concrete also would be poured into the reactors coolina apparatus and other portions of the system. Once scaled, the reactor would have to remain "entombed" for hundreds of years while its radio. active core decays into harmless substances. Yemelyanov told West European rerrtcrs in Moscow. A transcript o his comments was provided by one of the reporters present. Vclikhov. vice president of the Soviet Academy of Sciences, told Pravda a crisis developed 10 days after the accident, which began when an explosion rocked Chernobyl's No. 4 reactor and it caught fire. "The reactor was damaged. Its heart was -t white:hot core, a scorched, active zone that was some~ how 'hanJing.'" Velikhov said. Scientists had feared that tons of sand, lead and other material dump. ed on the reactor to stop leaking radiation would force the burning Imported f oods show r adiat ion W ASHlNOTON (AP) -The Food and Drug Admmistration said today it has detected the first trace radiation from the Chernobyl nuclear accident in imported food -isolated samples of Norwegian salmon and Italian mushrooms -but 1M levels arc far below any threat to health. The FDA said I 7 samples of salmon from Norway showed IOwilb no detectable radiation, six with a trace amount and one sample with a reading of 225 picocurics per kilo. gram of Iodine· 131. Three samples of mushrooms from Italy were tested, thcagengsaid. One showed no detectable radiation, one 153 picocuries oflodine· 131 . and one I ,6S6 picocuries. G uidelines established by the FDA in 1982 set acceptable levels of Iodine· 131 at 8,000 picocuries per kilogram for general use food, and 1.500 picocuries for infant food. core into a reservoir of water below the reactor, be said . "Would we manaac to keep it int.act or would it go down into the earth? No one in the worl4 has ever been in such a complex situation," he said. Velikhov said scientists averted a catastrophe by puJnl>ing out the water and drilling holes to draw heat from • the reactor. It was not clear when the holes were drilled, but Velilchov said the effon succeeded. U.S. envoy asks Syria to move fortifications has said nothing about the repon Guard planes fly supplies to Honduras TEL A VIV, Israel (AP) - A U.S. envoy has asked the Syrian govern· mcnt to remove new tank positions which are within artillery range of the Israeli border. Israeli newspapers reported today. The English·language Jerusalem Post said Undersecretary of State Richard Murphy weot to Damascus at rsrael's request to ask President Hafcz Assad to dismantle the earthen tank emplacements in Bckaa VaJley an Synan--controllcd cast Lebanon. The U.S. embassy an Tel Aviv refused to comment about the report. Israel has used the United St.ates in the past to convey messages to Syria and defuse tensions between the two enemy states. Western diplomats say Washing- ton views the situation less seriously than Israel believing Syria's moves are purely defensive and do not signal war preparations. SACRAMENTO (AP)-For eight years. California National G uard planes have transported mahtary supplies to U.S. m1ss1ons an Hon· duras, Nicaragua and elsewhere. says a ranking flight officer Lt. Col. f andy Bozeman told an Assembly Ways and Means subcom· m1ttec Monday that there are trips to Honduras "two or three tames a week." and to Nicaragua "abou1 once or twice a month." The subc-0mmittee as examining California's decision to send 30 state guardsmen to Honduras for a road· buildrng project. Bozeman said the California guard's C-130 transpon planes do not carry weapons, munitions or troops. "I have not hauled an airplane load of small arms or troops we were going 10 drop someplace, we have not hauled explosives,'' Bozeman said. He described the cargo as "house· r you essto get hold goods, foodstuffs ... and pa~n· gcrs on 'R·and·R' (rest and rec- reation) ... which I would define as military supplies." His testimony caught the subcom· mittee by surpnse. "l must say, I find this very interesting." sajd Chair· woman Maxine Waters, D-Los An· gelcs. ··we have good reason to be suspicious .. . whether we should be Considering refinancing your home? Household Bank has a better idea. Hou..chold\ ven Jow·rntcrcst Hnmt.:owncr\ PcrS<m.111 lnl' of C rc<l1t h:i\Cd on home cqutty It\ q1mk to 11h111in Jn<l cao,y to uc;e You c:in apply over the 1dcphnnc, or .1 l11.H1 m:rnaji!ct w11l come 10 your home .1t vour c.:onw111L·nc.:t· :uw tl:iy of the week Once you re: .appro\ctl vou t Ml d raw nfl you r c:rc<l11 whcm·vr:r you w3nt, for \'<'hatcvcr vnu w;rnt .,amply lw WTltln~ J Ch<.'l k . 111e IMllk tllat • • Jiii' blsi11ss. Anah eim 772-7440 We~tmm~tcr 89.3·2491 Mission Vic10 ';86-8900 Nt:wport Beach 833·0 l67 )anta Ana Canyon.998·8282 Long Beach 426·6116 Huntington Beach 9_fH·6 329 Placcntrn 99.3·.l 3CXJ Cerritos 152-6420 ' involved an any way there. We have traanmg missions, but we don't really know what that means." Several lawmakers. led by Demo. crats. have expressed anger that C'ahfomia Nauonal G uard units arc panicapatang in a national road construction project in Honduras. contending that the presence of American soldiers may lead to U.S. involvement an a shooting war in Central America. ,---------~~ RUFFELL'S The rcporl.r which did not say when Murphy earned out his mission, said Israel had held up releasing anfor· mation on the new Syrian for· tifications hoping the matter could be resolved through U.S. mediation. A statement Monday by military offi cials was Israel's first official word that Syria was building the earthen fortifications in Lebanon where it maintains about 25,000 troops. Syna Israeli sources also say Syria has not manned or equipped the pos. itions built by Syrian engineers over the past few months and there arc no signs that Syria is preparing an immediate attack. But the veteran defense analyst of the daily Haarctt, Zc'ev Schiff, wrote that S¥ria has in the past converted defensa vc positions to offensive use in keeping with the Soviet military doctnne adopted by its army. UPHOLSTERY 1Nc. Bhopal la its h Id flhwt Yu o.e. to.en Mlrtl WSU · 8 OU 1-m-zHU1D_ ... _w_ .. cos_'A_•_S1r-_su._11 _ 56 --1 be tried in Indian courts ENROLL NOW "for the right start In life" HAWTHORNE CHRISTIAN SCHOOL ALL DAY KINDERGARTEN Kindergarten thru 8th FAU SEMESTER STARTS SEPT. 8th • Door to Door T ransportatlon Where Possible • Reasonable Tuition • Arithmetic, Reading. Spetung, with Phonic Emphasized • Before & After Schoof Care for Students of Working Parenti (6:30 am-6:30 pm) A PAIVAT! SCHOOL OF DISTINCTION FOONOEO IN 1942 IN femtm YIU.IY 11UllllKllllT (l1C) 111-1111 By tbe AHoclaled Pre.1 NEW YORK -Indian courts arc capable ofhandhng lawsuits stemming from the chemical disaster that killed an estimated 2,000 people in Bhopal, and to leave the cases in the United States would be a form of imperialism, a federal judge says. U.S. DistrictJudgcJohn F. Keenan ruled Monday that the 146suits filed in the United States over the Bhopal accident, including one filed by the Indian government. do not belong here and should be transferred to India. The decision was a victory for Union Carbide Corp., whose subsidiary owned the plant that leaked poisonous methyl isocyanate gas across a crowded slum the night of Dec. 3, 1984. In addition to the deaths. an estimated 200.000 people were injured. Italy expels a Llbyaa dlplomat ROME-The Italian government has ordered the expulsion of a Libyan consular official in Palermo, Sicily for activities inconsistent with his I diplomatic status, Foreign Ministry officials said today. The officials said the Libyan, Mustafa Mohamed Alarlcresh1 had been asked to leave Italy as soon as possible. One Foreijn Ministry official sajd Alarkrcsh would have about a week to pack up and leave. He detcribed Alarkrcsh as a Libyan consular official. The order came a day after Libya announced the expulsion of 36 diplomats and staff from seven European Community embassies in Tripoli. Black worken end store •trike JOHANNESBURG, South Africa -Black workers reached a settlement with a supermarket chain today and ended a six-day stnkc that cost the stores an estimated S3.5 milUon in sales. More than 6,500 members of the Commercial, Caterina and Allied Workers Union walked off the job ~cd~e_sday at m~re than 40 Pick 'n' Pay outle~s nationwide. The strike, which Pick n Pay pres a dent Raymond Ackerman said cost $3. 5 million in lost sales was punctuated by a brawl between strikers and white customers in on~ supermarket, marches by ttnkers throu&h the aisles of some stores and numerous sleep.in protests. Strikers were scekina a raise of$45 a month. Mllltant group ja•tJfla kidnapping• BEIRUT, Lebanon -The country's most militant S~jjte Moslem aroup said \oday that the kidnappina of American and moat Frebcb hostaaes was justifiable, but condemned all otbCT "mobbish abductionf' in BeiruL ''We did not condemn the kidnappina of Amencans and Frenchmen because that happened in cenain specific conditions when America and France tried to comer the o~rcucd, conflicate their freedom and their naht to self· determination,' said the statement from Heibollah. which was published an Bc1rut's leadin& daily newspepers. "So they (the opprnlcd) had no other alternative but this me&hod and we found it justifiable," said the statement. "But this position of ours should not be consttutd to cover the rest of mobbish abduction that have lately jolted west Bcmn. involvina an invalid 1 Frenchman. a profest0r or a doctor or a journalist or Lebucte or foreian students." I Marc• denied IJome bJ C•,. Rica SAN JO E, Costa Rica -President Oacar Anu S&ncba has refu~ 1 I request to allow former Ptuhppioe ~t Ferdinand Marcos to live in th11 Centnl Americ.n country. Mininer of the Praidency Rodrjao Ariu 11Kl Monday the &Ovetnmcnt received the rcQUCSt durina tk fid&l days of the aovemment of Presadcnt uus AJbeno Monaie. He refv.ted to say v.-ho made the request. The new prntdcnt. who took omcie last Thursday, rejected the ftquat for reasons of "nalional auitablllty," 1he minister id.. Marcos h been If vina "--------------. rn Hawaii stnce he fled the Phthppana at lhc end pf FcbNary. ' r ~ Ex-White House counsel drawn into Dearver probe Fielding accused of giving inaccurate inf ormatio~ to investJgators of lobbyis~ WASHINGTON (AP} -Fonner Whltc House counsel Fred Fielding provided inaccurate information to investiptors of lobbyist Michael Deaver af\er Dcaver's company broached the subject offieJdinagoina to work there, a congressman says. GAO invettipion cond\aded io their own probe that Lewil. tboueb bit Upeftltl ~ paid by tbe $lite .t>eDertment. did receive teduucal staff au"pon from the White Houae. violated federal copflict of interest 1 Sikotlk.i uid r1elding'1 memo was laws in connect.ion with the Rcqan incorrect. administration's decision last year to Lewi1' 1t1tus-whether he tecbni· a~int a special envoy to Canada on cally worked for the State Oeput- ac1d rain. ment or the White House -is Rep. Gerry Sikorski. 0..Minn., said Monday that f".ield.ina may have violated federal conflict of interest laws by writing a memorandum favorable to Deaver after discussina the job i>obibill!Y with a member of the lobbyist's office. Deaver. a close friend of President lmpon&nt to connict of interest R~n and bis wife, Nancy, left the alleptions apinat Deaver bccautc Wh1te House and f ormcd his lobby· the two men met last Oct. 2S to ing company last May. Jo July, he discuss acid rain. s1ancd a SIOS,000 contnct to ~ One provision in the conflict of resent the Canadian aovernment. interest laws prohibits a former 1enior The GAO report was refem:d to \he official from reprcaentina anyone J ustic~ Department. which is de-before hja former department for one terminina whether to recommend year after lcavina aovcmment. Sikorski said Fielding told the staff of the House Energy and Commerce subcommittee on oversiJht and in- vestigations that be and Deaver discussed possible employment for Fieldina with Deaver while "both of them were still al the White House" but after Deaver bad announced he wasleavi~ that. an independent counsel in-Following the hearing. Sikorski ves~te f?eaver. . told rePortcrs that it was "bad Sikorski says . the ~us~ce, Depart-enoup' that fielding wrote the ment should revtew Fielding s role as memo after havina the luncheon well. . . ~ectina with Sinman. But. .. Then he Tb.c congressman said the vice 11aned the memo and it was inac- president of Dcaver's firm, William curate." Sikorsla s comments came at a hearina of the oversight and in- vestigations subcommittee. of which he is a member. Sittman, told Fieldina over lunch Feb. 27 that Field.in& "abould come He said there wu a "primie facic by and discuss" possible future cm-case" that Fielding had violated ployment with Dcaver'a furn. ethfos laws. The next ~y_ Ficldina wrote a Ficldina told the Washington Post memo to the Office of Government ¥onday ,be "never seriously con- Ethics reprdina Deaver. udercd' 1oing to work for Mike At the hearing. a General Account- ina Office report was released that concluded Deaver, former deputy White House chief of staff. may have Fieldina's memo said Drew Lewis, Deaver. There was no job offer made the ~al envoy to Canada, "had no on Feb. 27 or at any time.·· He called adm1Distrative su~l><>n from the this "a misundcrstandina of the facts White House office.' and the law." Julyl987 target date for shuttle WASHINGTON (AP) -NASA chief James Fletcher, in his first day on the job, announced today that space shuttle flights should resume in July 1987 for the first time since the Jan. 28 loss of the Challcnacr. America 'sf an tasies: lf e want to look like Re9f ord, Linda Evans NEW YORK (AP) -American men want to look like Robert Redford and go on safari. Women want Linda Evans' face and a niabt of gamblina at Monte Carlo. But both sexes' top fantasy, accordina to a national survey, is savina someone's life, and their biggest worry is money. "We think that July of 1987 is an appropriate flight date which is rcasonablf safe. as safe as we can make it,' Fletcher told a House appropriations subcommittee. Fletcher quickly added that the date could slip, dependina on rec- ommendations from the presidential panel investiptina the loss of the Challenger and the death of its seven member crew, or because of other factors. That profile of American dreamers emerges from "Fears and Fantasies of the American Consumer," a survey of l,SOO people released Monday by D'Arcy Masius Benton & Bowles Inc., an advertising and communications company. "We sought a psycbol~cal profile of the buyina public," said Alice Goldber&. a company vtce pJeSidcnt. "What we got was closer to a split imq.e. On one side, a nation pinned on the rack of worry and discontent; on the other, a nation of optimists and dreamers." Fletcher made bis disclosure dur- ing a hcarin' at which he also said be was appointing a special review aroup to .. revisit how NASA manages its entire proaram." As evidence, she pointed to Americans• attitudes toward family members. In the survey, baaed on written questionnaires from the fint quarter of 1985, children and maniqes were the top two souroes of pleasure, but 44 pcn::ent said children caused stress. Lookina toward retirement. two of three people expect their bigest .problem to be money. Broker accused of gaining Two exposed $12 million in stocK deals to radiation By tk A11oclaled Presa NEW YORK -A managing director of a prominent brokerage operated through a secret Bahamanian bank account to amass SJ2.6 million in the biggest .. insider t~ina" scheme ever uncovered, federal officials say. Dennis Levine's position in the mcrgen and acquisitions department at Drexel Burnham Lambert gave him advance wamina of some of the bigest takeover deals of I 98S. and he took advantage of that knowledge to make a killina at the cx~nsc of uninformed investors, the Securities and Exchange Commission said in papers filed Monday in U.S. District Court. Surplus of wheat and corn foreca.t WASHINGTON -New world crop projections by the Aariculturc Department show an abundance of wheat and com m 1986-87, indicating further that American farmers may sec grain prices S8J even lower in the coming year. According to USDA economists, wheat pnces at the farm may averaJC $2.25 to $2.50 per bushel in the 1986-87 marketing year, compared with Sl 16 last season and S3. 38 in 1984-85. Reagan'• Fed noml.nee pral.ed WASHINGTON -President Reagan is receiving high praise from economists forhissclection of an intematfonal financial expert to fill a vacancy on the Federal Reserve Board. The president announced Monday he was nominating H. Robert Heller. an economist at Bank of America, to a position on the seven-member governing board of the nation's central bank. Reagan also said he planned to elevate Manuel Johnson, currently a fed board member, to the post of vice chairman. E:r-congreaman Jenrette releaaed GA LIV ANTS FERRY, S.C. -Fonner congressman John Jenrette said he dOC$n 't know ifbc will ,ct back into politics after the "bumbling experience" of spending 13 months ID jail on an Abscam conviction. Jenrette was on temporary furlough from a federal prison in Atlanta so he could conduct family business when he got news of bis early release Monday. "I fOt a call from Atlanta. and they said, 'Don't worry about co~ioa back," Jenrette said Monday niaht at a Democratic mectina at Galivants Ferry. He was convicted in October f980ofconspiracyandacceptinaaSSO,OOObribein the FBI Ab!cam investigation into polittcal corruption. He was sentenced to two years in prison and fined $20.000. He bcpn scrvina the sentence in April 1985. Homelea advocate feted In morie during test LAS VEGAS (AP) -Problems from last month's test of the "Mipty Oak" nuclear device at the Nevada Test Site continue to p~ue the Dep.rtment o( Energy, which now says two workers were exposed to low levels of radiation. The contact with iodine 13 1 posed no health hazard, and both workers are back on the job, department spokeswoman Barbara y oera said Monday. She added that neither is takina any medication or feeling any effects of the exposure. She said the two were exposed last Friday when they entered the chamber where the "Mighty Oak" device was exploded on April 11 . Problems with the doors in the chamber allowed some radiation to accumulate, which the department bas been vcntina since. Shults aaya Aquino need• more money W ASHlNGTON (AP}-Secretary of St.ate Oeorae Shultz said today the Philippine government or Presidcn1 Corazon Aquino inherited "a real mess" from deposed leader Ferdinand E. Marcos and the United States will try to help the debt-ridden nation secure aid from other nations and financial institutions. Shultz. intcrViewed on NBC-TV's "Today" show, said the new aovem- mcnt 1s trying to solve its financial problems, but a packqc of $I SO million the Reagan administration n:cently requested an additional econ- omic and military aid won't be enough. WASHINGTON -Mitch Snyder. Wubinaton 's most vocal advocate for the homeless, has slept on steam grates to keep warm, dua into prbaae cans to feed the bun1ry and starved himself to pressure the aovcmmcnt into providing ·~~~~~~~~~~=~~ shelter. Monday night, dressed in the blue jeans and fatisuc jacket that have become his trademark. he was surrounded by aulOIJ"lph seclcen who peid $50. S2SO and $5,000 to sec a made-for-televis1on movie about bis life. "Samaritan: The Mitch Sn)'<!er Story," st.anina Martin Sheen as Snyder. will be broadcast Monday on CBS. Bodle. probe ancoven $1 mUllon O\'MP SPRINGS. Md. -lnvestiaators disoovercd more than SI million in cash 1n the attic of a house where the bodies of a father and dau&hter were found last week, police said. The St ,002.121 ID cash -most ofit in f20 bills - was ditc0vcred in tw0 suitcues late Friday while authoritici searched for clues r::;;::;:;;===iiiiiii=iiil:iiiiiiii0iiiiiii0;;;;;' in the mysterious deaths. Prince OeoT&e's County Police spokesman Cpl. Bruce Oen tile said Monday. PoUce said the countyc:an claim the cash If it can prove the money is the profiu of illepl drug traffiddna. The ditc0vcry of the cash was not clitclosed earlier becautt invcitiptors were countina the money. poltce uid. $ J 00 mJlUan •peat ln campa"1D• WASHINGTON -With nearly aiA months rema1nlna before Election Day. c.andidatcs for the Senate and Koute almldy have spent more than SI 00 million on their campaian the federaJ Election Commil&lon uyi. The FE r.,um. made public Monday, also showed most incumbent lt.ftAtOn were far ouia1ripp1na their potential opponents In fund raiaina. At the top of the lisu of lcadina fund·raisen and spenders wu n. Bob Ptckwood, R-Ore.. who has ratted U . 9 mil hon and spent neatly Sl million. An aide said most of the money Packwood has IJ)nlt so far wa" the oost of di met-mail fund nisina. ?~~ 1107 Jamborff, Newpon h NOW OPEN! • Hair Dfllans by JoAnne • Natural Manicures • Pedicures with Swedlth Foot Mau11e and Reflexol09y by Dee 644-7090 ... ., .... ,. .. 9cn1et cU8eldeat8Teleaa Bollner and Aaatoly Slaelaarauky meet lD Jlfew Tor•'• Random Hoa.ae ontce.. Freed Soviet dissident to tell Reagan about life in prison NEW YORK (Al») -Anatoly Shcharansky, who was to be honored toda.r,: the U.S. Capitol, said be will teU idcnt Rcapn about bis years in Soviet prisons because it will help the administration's efforts on behalf of Soviet Jews. .. I wiU thank him for all be bas done and I will share my experience with him, wbfoh I think will help him understand the proocsa with wbkb he is dealing." Shcharansky said today in an appearance on the "CBS Momina News." "And I wiJJ talk about some of the most tragic cases of Jews in exile in the Soviet Union," said the former Soviet dissident, who spent nearly nine years in Soviet prisons and labor ca111ps. Shcharansky said his release in a prisoner exchan,c on Feb. 11 docs not sianal a cban,c in Soviet at- titudes, and he said that while be is happy to be me be feels a s~al responsibility to help other diwdcnts and Soviet Jews barred from emigrat- ing. "People should not be deceived by my release and abould not forget those whq arc still in Soviet prisons and exile;· be said. Shcharansky vowed to continue spcakina out and said the fact that his mother and brother are still in the Soviet Union won't silence him . "I am sure that the moment I am silent to try to help my mother and brother, they will never be permitted to leave," he said. Shcharansky, one of the founders of an organization formed to monitor human rights in the Soviet Union, will be honored today in the rotun'da 4of rhe Capitol. The ceremony comes one day after the House completed conaressional action on legislation authorizing President Reagan to present con- gres s1 o na I gold medals to Shcharansky and bis wife "in recoa- nition of their supreme dedication and commitment to the cause of individual human ri&hts and frtt- dom." · A vital Shcharansky, who cam- paigned in the West for her husband's release, did not accompany him on his two-week trip to the United States because she is prqnanl The House on Monday also voted to set aside May 21 as a day to honor dissident physicist Andrei Sakharov, who remains in internal ewe in the Soviet city of Gorky. Sakharov's wlfe, Yelena Bonner. who has been in the United St.ates for several months to receive medical treatment, met With Shcharansky on Monday. h was the fint time they bad seen each in nearly 10 yean. Warning to NASA on shuttle revealed NEW YORK(AP)-A lettergjven to NASA nearly sltt months~ the ~ disaster warned of the pouibihty the seals in the booltcr rockC'tl would fa.ti in temperatures of SO °" below, IClCOf'dina to a repon pubhthed today. Tbe newly disclosed l~ttcr, written by an enajneer for the rocktt'1 manufactum in Auaust I 98S. de· IC'riba the results of laboratory tests detianed to determine whether a t.ckup o.rina seal can remain in contact wilb the rocket cu1na during Lauochina. the New York Times reponed. Ruptures of both the primary and b.clcup teals of the booster rockets have been blamed for t~ Jan. 28 di111tcr, which killed th~ aeven utronauts aboard. The Cballcnau wu launched in with temperatures in the 30s, colder than any ~vious shuttle launcruna. It dtsmtqnted 74 1CCOnds later. According to the Aug. 9 letter by Bnan G. Russell, an engineer (or Morton Thiokol Inc., "At lOOdecrccs Fahttnbeit the O nna main.t.aJned contact. At 1S dqrees the O nna lost contact for 2.4 seconds. At SO dqrees Fahrenheit the 0 rin.& did oot estab- lish contact in 10 minutes, at which time the test was terminated." Tbe backup 0-ring seals become critical if the pnmary aeal ruptures. The letter, which was given to officials at the National AerontutJcs and Speice Administration's Marshall Space Flight Center io Huntsville, Ala., appears to challenge testimony by NASA officials to the pres&.dential commission invcstipting the disas- ter that there was no clear correlatJon between low temperatures and failure of the seals. The Times quoted one source close to the commission as sayina the letter was "the closest thing to a smokina aun," saying NASA was clearly m- formed that the backup seal could not be relied upon even at SO.dqrccs. The primary seal is made of the same material. Commission Chairman William P. Roaen has said information about the teal's wcaknCS9CS was ~almost covered up .. by the space qcncy. But Lawrence B. Mufloy, who beaded the booster program at the Manball Center, said the test was not conclusive. "It wasn't a cue of warninp bcin&. ignored, .. he said. Bated on stud'es of bow \one it would take the primary and tee0ndary 0 "• \0 ~ in\O position. be said. "1t was still our conclusion that it WU safe to ft ... • ! 0rMg9 Coeat DAIL y PILOT I TUMd~. May 13, u~ee No easy solut io n for Lions ' Park controversy Assuming that there are no other laws being broken it would seem that the day Laborers who gather nea1 Lions' Park in Costa Mesa each morning fo wait for work have a right to be there. But the men -mostly Latino -have become the subject of controversy in the nearby neighborhood. People who Jive in the condominium complex across 18th Street from the park are uncomfortable with the group, which numbers anywhere from 80 to 300. Poverty, up close and perso!lal, tends to m~~e people nervous. It might be contagious. And ev~n 1f tt s not, a crowd of mostly youn~ men whose energies may not be channeled into their jobs ~ight find . other, threatening, ways to while away the "Clay. Their very presence transforms the park. it chan$es the familiar environment into something, well. foreign. Costa Mesa city government i~ in the f!llddle of_t~is issue. Jt must balance one group's interest m tranquility against the other group's ri$hl to be in a public place. Of the conflict, City Counc1woman Marr H.?rnbuckle observed, "Perhaps there is no easy solution. Perhaps not. But at least the city 1s trying. It voted last week to form a task force to find a compromise that .will attempt to resolve the situation. The danger here is that the city's involvement may preclude a solution. The city, after all. is the establishment, officialdom. law. ~nd many of these men who congregate at the park hopin~ ~o find ~n honest clay's labor have -in the euphem1st1c phrasing of our reporter -"neglected to check in with U.S. immigra- tion." Although th~ city h~s adopt_ed ~ gentlc_app~oac~ to the issue -opung against calling 1r;i the 1mm1gratto n service to chase the undocumented a hens out of town - there is likely to be a lingering wariness a bout cooperation among those who have entered the U nited States illegally. And, although the mem_bers of the Cll ~ Council have ge nerally conc~ded they will not c_all in the feds. neither can they dissuade lmm1grallon and Naturalization Service agents if the) sho uld c hoose ~o pursue illegal aliens at Lions' Park or anywhe re else m Costa Mesa. The real quesu o n, tt seems. 1s no t how the city can control this situatio n, but should it. If any of these men, whose motives appear quite honorable. are breaking an existing law. they should be arrested. If. however_, they are simply responding to an economic fact of hfe by gathering where potential employers can find them and hire them, the city's proper response might be to do nothing. ff the solution to this situation is to deny poor men the ri~t to find work and improve their li '"'.es, then Amencan is no longer the Land of Opportunity. Sto p work on the Statue of Libeny. Throw a bag o ver the o ld girl's head and send the poor. the tired and the huddled masses packing. The task force's first task. and Its m ost 1mportan1 one, will be to decide if it sho uld exist. Opinions expressed In this space are those ot the Delly Piiot. Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors end artists Reeder comment ls Invited The Dally Piiot, PO Box 1560, Costa Mesa. 92626 Phone 642-6086 ·'Only one caJlfomJa s&L has actually folded so far this year. but regulators say they don't want to set up any new ones In a Ume when exlstlngS&LsaretngerllouscondlUon. '' , I , Entrepreneurs frustrated in efforts to charter S&Ls Troubles with old S&Ls has led to the moratorium There·, frustration in San Ramon and Em:in1ta~ Th"rc·s anger 1n Em· el)' Ille and St Helena. Th('Se are some ot the 50Cahlornia ut1cs "'here 1n\e'lt0rs haH· put up hundred'> of thou\ands of dollar-; 101.1.ard the ~tan-up costs of oe.,., '>3' ing'.) and loan a~'>oc1at1on' -none of 1.1.h1Lh ha\ been given a \late or fcdl'ral go-ahead '>1nce Januaf) ot l ll XS Thai·, th\C' longl'\l moratorium in mL·mol") for chartl'nng of Cahforn 1a S&Ls. v.h1ch trad111onall~ have grown and proliferated wheni:vcr the \IJtc\ real l''>lJll' pnl'l'~ r05oC .\ neY. real csrnte boom no.,., appear<; to be 1n 11s na~cent. stages. fueled b) dropping interest rates. but there v.on't be an\ new ~&Ls around to take ad\antagc ot 11 And folks whose monc\ ha~ been on deposit at Lo~ .\ngcles area 1nrn1u11ons hkc Y..cstY.ond a "1 ng~ and fkvcrly Hills \a\lng5o kno-.i. Just wh~ nc11her the <.tatc\ ~vings and loan commissione r nor the Federal Home l oan Bank Roard is eager to end the Cahfom1d hanki ng mora- torium Tho\c arl' JU't t.,.,o of the l I truublcd (ahforn1<1 S&Ls now con· !>1dcrcd "unsalc and unc;ound" by th e state and federal regulators, who have had to take 0' er operations at e111.h1 SEARCHLIGHT ---- - former h1gh-O yers tn the last year. Only one Cal iforn ia S&L has actually folded so far this year, but regulators sa} they don't want to set up any new ones 1n a time when existing S&Ls are in penlous conditton. "I would like 10 sec a belier pallem of success in 1he ones we ha ve (before allowing new stan-ups).'' state S&L. czar William Crawford recently told one rcponcr. His altitude and that of th e federal bank board has left thousands of 1nH~stor~ v.1th millions of dollars 1n ~ed money hanging in the wind fo ully 66 potential S&Ls have rcce1-.ed state permits to organize. but await either the state charter or the federal in surance they need to open for business. This s11ua1ion leaves plenty of entrepreneurs unhappy. One 1s Felicia Wiseman. rebuffed earlier this )·car 1n her hid to open a new S&L in Norwalk. after getting a permll to organize and raise funds 1n August 1983. She lound 3.500 in vestors aflcr getting her permit. Wiseman now charges that < rawford "has abused his authority and acted m an arb1tral) manner." Like many other potcnual new S&Ls. W1seman's putati ve savings ba nk was designed to be the only locall> owned S&L 1n its town. The theor) behind this bank and many other small '&Ls 1s that by being locall> run. the> can be more sens1t1vc to local needs. draw more deposits and make more clever loans in their c111cs th;\n !>latew1de S&Ls. But that doesn't mollify the in- vestor~ wa1trng their turn to open THOMAS ELIAS "&Ls. R1ghtl > or wrongly, all are connnced their plans will work. no matter what's happene<t>elscwhere. It's a s1tua11on that can onl y lead 10 frustration and anger-or 10 ar:iother Ohio-style collapse 1f regulators allow such feelings to o verwhelm them. But the b1gS&Ls have expanded so much that there seemingly are few street comers -or solid deposits and loans -lef\ for new operations. "The small guys have to feed where the hons aren't around and there's not much left 10 feed on.'' Crawford observed That rcal11y led outfits like Beverly Hills. WeMwood and the failed Man· hanan Beach &L in10 making large loans to nsk> construction ven1ures. When some projects didn't work out. the high interest the S&Ls were supposed to be gelling from the shaky loans d1dn··1 materiallLC and the) sank. Federal insurers and !>talc regu· la1ors. watching these -.enture!. drain their resources. became more wary of new S&Ls. which produced the current moratorium. Thomas Elias Is a Santa Monlca- based columnist on state l11ues. N ewport Dunes ' evolution TBOllA8 &LIA8 colamnt.t JACI AIDEISOI and JOS[Ptt SPf AR Defense cuts will affect· schools WASHINGTON -The public may be confused about Gramm- Rudman cuts in defense spending, but it's really simple enouJ!l for a first-grader to understand -if the kid happens to be one of the I 56.000 students who attend schools for U.S. military families overseas. The $26.8 million lopped from the military schools' current budge1 amounts to a 4.9 percent cut. This translates into a whole catalog of personnel. equipment and actiVlties reductions that affect every school- age military dependent overseas. Herc arc some of the results of the cutback in funds. culled by our associate Stewan Harris from copies of recent orders issued by the Pen- tagon: •Cancellauon of 1986 summer schools. •Canc~Uauon of all field trips. •A moratorium on purchases of new textbooks and miscellaneous equipment'. •Drastic reduction of the teaching staff by attnlJoo. One out of three teachers who leave the system Wlll not be replaced. •A freeze on hiring of art, music, physical education and other "specialty" teachers. . •A 25 percent reduction in purchasts of audio-visual equipment. One program canceled as too costly -the annual Pacific region basket- ball tournament -was rescued by Nonhwest Oncnt Airlines. When the Pentagon canceled the tournament by cu tung back on extracurricular tra vet, the airline flew the competin& school teams to Japan from South Korea. the Philippines and other U.S. military bases. The decision not 10 replace one- third of the teachers who quit or re11re means that the military clJlssrooms will be packed even tighter than they have been. Already 1he military's classes arc more crowded than their civilian counterparts: Currently there arc 24.3 students for every teacher in the military system; the avcra~e for· CIVIiian classes 1s about 23 children nationwide, according to Nauonal Educauon Assoc1at1on figures. And even before the cuts. the military spent much less on its pupils than the U.S. average. Jack Rolhns. president of the Overseas Education Association, said the Pentagon's ex- penditure 1h1s year per_ pupil was S2.998.40, compared with the na· tional average of$3.814. The Pentagon "is m essence run- ning one of the poorest school systems in the United States." Rollins said Horsesenseissometbing from recreation to profit you don 't learn in school In a letter to military school administrators, Joseph Larkin, direc· tor of the system's Atlantic rqion, made this pointed ob~rvation: "As you become aware of the cuts we have already made, you will think they arc harsh. You will be right.'' Fooinotc: In a wriuen response to our inquities, the Defense Dcpan- ment confinned the $26.8 m1lhon. 4. 9 percent budget cut. It also dis- closed that the opening of the 1986-87 school year will be delayed until Sept. 5 as an economy measure. The Pentagon claimed that students in the military school system have exceeded the national average on college en- trance examinations for the last 10 years. • To th e fd1tm >\ letter appeared h> an Ander K 1~lcr appeared in the Pt Int Apnl 23 ~hat I rnndudcd from 1h1s letter I!> that thl'> pcr'lon ·~a c:ollegl· gradua te, i\ lot ol tolh ha"e v.hat 1\ known a~ horse ~t·n<,e I I the same pcrc,on goes to college. he w me<; out with :i few facts. and a Int of thl'onc.-' 1n hi\ head. but no hOl')C 'tl'n\(· Tht') " )U\t likl· thJt lhl·~ S3) e'tccpt tor J egrl'l" The tau 1s that degree make' Jll thl· d10crcnu.· 1n the world kc and \\-atcr and air arc the same. l'\Cl'PI fur degree Below frcc1 1ng. 111\ 1u· .\ho\t• hrnling 111.-. pan ol the air Tests tor auto dn,er., arc alrl'ad' being he ld l<> detl'rm1n1• drunli.cnneo;~ Drug test\ arc.· Jlrcad\ lx·1n~ U'>cd. 1n tcnain JOh' I woul<l hope an aeroplane I might n~ 1n \\OU ld ha\C a drug-free pilot I al~o '-'OUldn't want.to hire o;omeonl'. and pa\ them good mone> todoaJoh. .,.,.ho 1s a drug abu~r ( ufTt'l' and ch<X"<>l3tl' arc 'ICl''> onh in thl· mind'> of nut'>. f h1.-. letter made no hor<.c 'll'n"C at ,tll I am sure 1h1<. per!.on ha' :it least been to college The college k 1d'I are '>u nutt > the} hold note; 1n I os ..\ngcles bet·ausc 'lomeone t\ \Clltng < oc:1 Cola to •\fncan.-. A M1\\0un mule h:t<. nwrl' 'icnc;c than that It atmo't looli.".I hkc the} to gn < ollqtl' I<• ~l't un l'du(atcd II M HOI DI""' I ( O'>tJ Mc<.a Teachers s till doing their job To the Editor I am wn ting in rc'ipon\e 10 Rabbi Einstein's comment in the Dail; Pilot a few days ago He stated that 11 wa<, time the teachers 1n Fountain Valley aot back to teaching. I want him to he aware that the teachc,, I know. and with whom l teach, never got awa-y from ORANGE COAST tl'Uching. As usual, they ha-.e all been working lond and hard at a profc~mon w ..... h1ch they are very dedicated I le 1c; m1sgu1ded 1f hl' th1nkC1 we abdicate our pos111on .. .,.,hen there is d1,agrccmcnt between uc, and our Board of T rust<.'C'S JllD\ SEWFI l. JONLS 'lewport Beach K.,.11 Wltlm., P.,r. hl'r Daily Pilal ' ~ I ,ltf\11 llnl hf.lo• ,_,.,, ~ CIM-cltmen Control• M•"tll'"q Eo ,,,. OOfl,..., C·ty EO.t0t TOflllClefttft N•_, (dl!Ot Ct ... IMff S00tn Eotoo ~LCMt,.. Proo.ictoon Mara~ • T wrr ICMdlle Gor~llOn Man~ ..... ~ M•rk•tlflO O..actor ci'::r'9d ~°' Dunn~ thc'>e past te"' wec l..<. l ha"c told )Ou a great deal about Harl) ~clch the man who persuaded most ol the d1ss1dcn1 clements 1n the Orange ( oa<;t regi on to 'itop their h:uding. 111.., idea wa!> that 1t was all right fort hem to competl' in business hut that that compe1111on should he a rl\ all) among fnends. One ofl larl) Wclch's admifers wa~ I lc1 n1 Ka1~cr. Hcin1 was a thoroughly dd1ghtlul gu} He s1aned on the Orange < oast plying his trade a'l a l hl•f He occupied a 'imall building on the '-"l'\l side of the old bndgc acros'i the channel bct'-'cen the upper and lower Newport Ra\ We u~nl to hJ"l' a lot of problem".I with the count' 'upcn.1'ior fro m the 5th D1'>tnct .ind when election ume came around. thl' good people of th e Orange Coast area who constituted the 5th District ~aid. "We want a man we can trust so kt"~ elect He1n1 Ka iser " We did. JUSt be fore the "fam1l} recreation park'" now called "Ncwpon Dunl'\" was opened The Board of uperv1sor\. at that lime. wa'I composed offtvc males. not all of 1.1.hom were 'i1mon pure o along c·amc 'iupcrv1M>r Hc1n1 K.a 1~r Hein1 wa<; amon& lh( attat ad· m1rerC1 of Hnrry Wekh. ~o he and Hen Reddig. rn) cc.npctit1on at the 11me, thou~ht Hein1 would be the perfect C'and1date we buned our d1f· ferences for the moment and uraed 11 votr for Heinz Ka1!1>Cr for \upcrv1sor Now. you know that the Oran&c (_ oest area, tn ract the entire county ot Oranat, had our ration of "crooks." In fact, you rtmcmber that in c:srher SearchliJhts. f told you the rtu on the little Globe Herald. prcdeces~r to the Daily Ptlot. won ~ore of subsrnbcr' wa b«auSt we elected to fight what these aamblers were doin& to lhc Oranar Coast Even thouah Ben and I didn't a.am i~mpletel)' on much o( •nY1h1na. wt ~':ld -'Wee on the ~e'1rah1ht> of Hcin1 \ WALTER Bu11oucHs Kaiser for 5th District supervisor. So. Heinz suggested the park be named Harry Wekh Memorial Park. Okay But not all the other super- v1~ors agreed with Heinz. Some other members of the board contended {publicly at least) that to have a waterfront park would cost the coun- t> too much. So. they dug up an old la.,., and decided there should be "compe11t1on." There was competition all nght, and Heinz was the No. I one target of some of those who survived the competition. As I remember 1\, there were four 'iurv1vors among those who wanted the contract. Three of them were unqucs- uo nably "hoods" -r oups that wanted to u~ the 1slan in part for tlhc1t ar t1vt11es. Some of the smarter lawmen pointed out tha1. because of the island's remotentss from close '>urvc illance at that time. 11 was ideal a~ a spot to unload drugs and, po~stbly. to carry on 1lhcit sexual ot)(rat1ons for profit. That's nJht. But I didn't sa y It That's )US\ m your dirty minds. Well, 'oni evening into my old offic.c in a separate buildin.a on Thurin Avenue, just nonh of Bay trect where our main plant was located, walked a f nahtencd uper- vtsor He1ni Kaiser With him wa.'i a one-time deputy shenff (1 believe), named Cuba Moms. 1 didn't know what wa\ cau,rna Heint to be so fearful but they ~oon rpld me. Heinz had aottcn several telephone calls thrc1tcn1na his life 1f he d1dn'1 lead the oaradc for o ne of the groups of hoods that was try mg to $Cl the contract. I called the FBI office in Santa Ana and asked them to look into the situation. The chief o f the office s~11d they could not do so unless they could prove that 1he telephone calls HetoZ got were from Las V cps. At this pan1cular time my brother, Howard, was consulting engineer for the telephone company in Las Vegas so I asked him to find out if anr calls had been made 10 the sevcra tele· phone numbers which He1n.t had given me. The only telephone call on the specified date to the Orange Coast area was to a lady in Laguna Beach. That did no good, of course. So the FBI held that 11 was stnctl y a county and state of Cahfom1a matter. Well. the "non-hood" clement won out. by guaranteeinJ a certain pay- ment every year. But in order to produce the money for the payment, thest characters held that the place would have to be called "Newport Dunes" and there would be all kinds of entertainment for profit built around that. So the Board of upcrvisors. without Heinz' agreement. gave them the contract. Heinz told me at the time that he thought 1t was a dumb idea but the other members of the board feh there should be complete aarcemcnt; so Heinz, as I remember it, voted "present" when the vote by the Board of uperv1,ors was called. ActuaJJy. Heinz had so much for the good ofh1s dismct to accomplish. he thou&ht a dune or two wouldn't make that much difference. If you've dnven by there, or even ins1de the around • you'll not!ce that Harry Welch's bit dream 1s now about as appealina u the former Kttlement at Ma.nz.anar in the Owcn1 River VtllC')'. Walter Barnq)ll I• tM POol't folMlq ,.a.11t1tu. J•ct Aoder1oa .. , Jo1epb Spe•r •re 1yndic•I~ col•.O:UU1ts. TODAY IN HISTORY By tlle A11ocla&ed Pre11 . Today is Tuesday, Ma y 13, the l 33rd day of 1986. There arc 232 days left tn the year. Today's highlight tn history: five years ago, on May n . 1981 , Pope John Paul 11 wag shot and scnously wounded in St. Peter's SQuare by Turk1 h assailant Mehmet Af1 Agca. On this date: In 1607. the English colony at Jamestown, Va., was settled. In 1846. the Unncd States declared that a state of war already existed against Mexico. In 1917, three peasant children near Fatima, PonuaaJ. reported sec· 1n, a vision of the Vif1in Mary. n 1940,inhisfirsupeechasBrili h prime minister. Winston S. Churchill told the Hou~ of Commons. "I have notb1na to offer but blood. toil, tears and swat." · ln I 9S81 Vice President Richard M Nixon's hmous1ne was battered by rocks thrown by a.nll-American dcm· onstrators in Caracas, Veneluela. fn 1968, substantive peace neao- l1t1ons bctwctn the Uni led States and North Vietnam ooencd in hns. Today's birthdays: Actress Butrlcc Arthur is 60. Drama critic Clive Bamn is S9. Oirector-chorcoaraphcr Hctbcn Ross is S9 Aclor Fnnk.110 Ajayc 1s 31 ' c GOODllAll·&DlALLA Charlene Mane Kjra1J1 of Hunl- intton Beach and Jeffrey Wayne Goodman of Westminster were mar- ncd at the Newpon Mesa Christian Center 1n Costa Mts11 on March 15. They arcctcd 500 aue ts at their reception at the Costa Mesa Nc1J}l- borhood Community Center. The bride is the dauahtcr of Mr. and Mrs. Monyer (Mo) K.iralla of Huntinaton Beach. She wore a aown of white silk taffeta with renaissance slcevesand a low cut V -necked bodice of beaded Aleneon lace. The full skin was appliqued and bordered with beaded Alcncon lace pyramids. and ended in a cathedral1rain. Kathy K.iralla, sister of the bride. was maid of honor. Cindy Broaddus. Lydia Reaney, Terrie Heidkamp, Marilyn Upshaw. Teri Horick and Debbie Tatosian were bridesmaids. Also in the bridiJ pany were candlehghters Paul Todd and Dan Berrier, Wendy Roadenbaugh as flower airl and twins Leo and Joey K.iralla as rina bearers. Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Goodman of Westminster arc the parents of the bridegroom. His brother, Greg Good- man. was best man, and ushers were Tracy McDonald, Chris Graves, Mike Kfralla. Fred Kelly, Monte Gaustcd and Chris Kiralla. The couple, now residents of Hunl- angton Beach, honeymooned in Ban~ Springs in Albena. Canada. She 1s employed by Vons Grocery Co. i'n Fountain Valley and he 1s with Goodman Church Builders of Gar- den Grove KIRK VIK-LOOMIS Robin Elaine Loomis of Irvine exchanged weddinR vows with Rolf- Hugo K.irkvik of Oslo. Norway, on March 22 an St. Andrew's Presby- terian Church. Newpon Beach. The evening wedding was of- ficiated by the Rev . Wilham L. Flana~n. Following the ceremony, a reception was held at the University Club m Irvine with 150 guests atteBdtng.-including IS from Nor-way. The bnde 1s the daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Willard Loomis of Irvine. She wore a gown of white satin and Terry Harold, K.D. Willa HAROLD-WILLS Mr. and Mr~. William J. Harold of Ncwpon Beach have announced the engagement of their daughter. Terry Lyn Harold. to Kerry Dean Wills. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Gary L. Wills of Watonga, Okla., and Gem Gatlin of New York City. A graduate of Newpon H.arbor High School and the Un1vers1ty of Southern California. the bride-elect is the director of public relauons at the Beverly Hilton 1n Beverly Hills. She 1s a member of the Epsilon chapter of Alpha Chi Omep soronty. Her future bndcgroom 1s a gradu- ateofOklahoma State Un1vers1tyand a member of the Gamma Delta Mr. aod lln. KlrkT!k orgaoza finished with a scafoam . ruffle and Iona train, and she carried a bouquet of white 1ulips. Carolyn Ellis was maid of honor, and bridesmaids were Diane Sa~y and Karen Loomis, sister of the bnde, who also played a Handel flute solo with organ accompaniment during the ceremony. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Rolf K.irkvik of Tromso, Norway. His falher was bis best man, and ushers were Arnold Eriksen and Ted Johansen of Norway, and the bride's cousins. Mark and Keith Williams, of St. Louis. The bnde is a 1979 graduate of University High School in Irvine and spent her senior year as an exchange student in Norway. She attended UCLA and Cal State Fullerion. Prior to her marriage she was employed as an account exccuti-se with U.S. Promotions. /"" Her husband is a 1975 graduate of Tromso Gymnas, and holds the degree M.Sc. in structural engineering from the Norwegian Institute of Technology, Trondheim, Norway. He is employed by Control Data A/S in Oslo as a structural engineer at the Offshore Technology Center, Nonh Sea. The couple honeymooned m Palm Spnngs and New York Caty before flying to Oslo, where they now reside. A Norwegian church service and reception will be held m mid-May in Tromso, for the family members and friends who were unable to attend the Newport Beach ceremony. Robin Yata, M.A. Brewer ChapterofSigma Chi fraternity. He is a stock broker with Dean Witter Reynolds in Beverly Hills. They will be married Sept. 6 at St. Monica's Church in Santa Monica. YATES-BREWER Robi n Rae Yates ofNewpon Beach will marry Michael Amerigo Brewer of Anaheim Hills in the fall. She as the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ra}'mondG. YatesofNewpon Beach and is a graduate of Villa Park High School and Cal State Fullenon. Her fiance. son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Brewer of Yorba L1 nda. is a graduate of Troy High School in Fullenon and Cal Poly. Pomona. The Geneva Presbytenan Church in Laguna Hills will be the setting for their Nov. 15 wedding. Submit your engagement, nuptial news 1 LOW FIXED RATES All the world loves a lover - cspec1ally the Daily Pilot. We want your wedding and engagement news. Our wedding and engagement forms make it easy for you to submir your news. Pick them up in our lobby at JJO W. Bay St. or send a self. addressed stamped envelope to Wcddmg Department. Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560. Cosca Mesa. CA 92626. 93/a + 1 S yrs FXD 9 3,4 + 30 yrs FXD * We Specialize in * Jumbo loans Coll Rick Floyd for Current Rot.s Sierra Mortgage Co. ( 714 ) 559-4828 Engagement news must be sub-- mittcd at least ~vcn wccks pnor to the wedding. Include a pictutT of the bnde..clcct or rhe couple with the form. 1fyou wish. ~===========-i Weddings will be published afler the wcddinj,date. Quality photos of the bnde or t e bndnl couple are "'-elcome. Bia tc photos are preferred to put your name on the 15-YEAI FllED OWNElltOCC OWNER OCC AP'llt. 10.06 714. 956-0SOI VANOUAID MOITOAOI COl~ATION ms '' 111•owrw .. • IMttCl \1"°9• & MOITOAot NOlll AMERICAN AIRPORT TRANSPORTATION & LIMOUSINE SERVICE. I NC. Buaes/ Minibus/ Limousines Slotlonwogon11 Vons/ RVs r to Ooo0r ~rvlc• Charters ond Tours Ad•ertiaing Art lemcea ... a...:i.1., .. 1ce1~ ~ .,• ..._,c.rp.,.,.. tO Pw1i .... ti ~ c.....,.. ..... hff~ ....... ...t GBAPlbCl•EWPOaT (71 4) 720-9191 UfH_,....c.,i..o. ,._. ...... C:AUMO ... Orano-CoMt DAllV ,._OT/Tuer ta;. Miit 13, 1• A.7 • You help uS keep our priorities strai · t. Walk into any Imperial Savings branch these days and you'll see u:-, wearing bunons with a me~ age that really makes sense: 'You·re #1." Not "We 're # J "or some other way of telling you what a big deal we think we are. But an honest, simple statemenc that let~ ye >u know we have our priorities in order: "You•re #1." Quite a swicch, isn 't it? A big financial institution that realizes it's in business to serve you. You ·11 fed it in the way we greet you. TI1e way we listen. And, ye:-,, C\'en in the buttons you'll sec us wearing. See for yourself. Our asset~ are in the bi II ion:-,. But the n1ost valuable one b you. Making your investments work harder is a top priority, too. Sometimes, the pr<x >f of our priorities is in our product~. Take Ceniticates of Deposit for example. Our tiered Tomorrow .. avin~~ CDs are designed pecifically to he responsive to your individual need';. They're not just a series of one-size-firs-aH accounts, bur savings qpportunides wruch an5wer J'Our fi nancial priorities. ln1periaJ ~avings CDs pay solid, safe, competitive races-naruraJJy. Bue they share the special advant.tgc of allowing you to choose from shon or long terms, n1akc sn1all or large deposit~. And enjoy either liquidity< >r long-term gn>\,th. To learn rnore ahoul the tiered CD right for you. caJI u~ toll-free, at: 1-800-243-CHEK-NOW (1-800-243-5669) Herter \'eC, stop at the ln1perial Saving~ branch nearest yc>u-we'd always prefer{() ~ee you in rcr~on! H ~-.--. Association Where Tornorrou1 Begins Today .., Haad.-oa leach 19021 Beach Blvd. Huntington Stach, CA 926-i -2_\0c; ( 14) 847·3386 ~"'' flC:"Ull\ htt """ ... 1t..h •• ti Mc-mllf"f N It Ne~rt Be8ch ~ \66 \'la Lido ~fWpOrt lk'lch. (A ()!66.\-.\90- (-1 l) 6"'\-\1 \() Ntwpor1 Ctntt r .. .. 550 Stwp0rt Center Orne ~ewpon Beich. CA <H660-~011 C-'11) (H4.J .. (ll M ion Vlefo H..S2 Alicia Parkway M~ion VieJO, CA 92691-2699 I C'I .. ) qsl-8757 ' t I'. \ ()qnge OOMt DAtL Y PILOT I Tueeda~. Mey 13, 1988 COMPLETE NYIE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS. A1 • Coupons remain popular, instant games fade Coupons are distributed 'like confetti,' 2, 195 er U .S. household in 1985 By Sgu> WOLLENBE RG lost some of 1heir appeal as promo.- 1ional devices, bu1 the discount coupon arows 5teadily mort' popular with consumer marlcc1ers. a new repon says. Coupons comprised 70 pertlCnt of the nearly I 1,000 consumer promo.- 1ions spotted last year in nine major metroPolitan areas by the adven1s1na agency OFS Dorland Worldwide. That share is only maf'linally hiaher than coupons commanded io 1he past 1wo years. acx:ordina to the New York-based agency's annual survey of promouons, but it is up sharply from the 62.3 percent level reported for 1981 . Citing estimates from Jhe market rcseardi firm A.C. Nielsen Co .. the rcpon said coupons were distributed to consumers at a rate of 2, 19S per U.S. household in 198S. ....... NEW YORK -Instant winner games and offers of trips abroad bave .. That's more than cluner. it's confetti," said Edward Meyer, senior The Great American 1-Year CD The greater your balance, the greater your rate. Minimum balance $1.000; rate and yield above are for $50,000 balance. Five different rate.\ for five different balance levels. There arc many other term~ available. from 32 day~ to 10 year~. AU inc;ured up to $100.CXXl by an agency of the federal government. \\11h 114 otTice<i -<n in)( Oran)lr C <iunl\ i\naMim Hill\, Ralhoa l\l,ind. ijalbn.11\'nm,ula. Capi ·tmno Bcadl. El Tom, f"t>Untain \"al!C\, Huntinf!ton lkadl l.u¥Una Reck:h . l.-tguna Hill~. Laguna Niguel. Mi~1on \'k111. '\1onardl Ria~. 'rwpon Beach, Oranic. San Clcmc:nlt . <i•m ( ltmcnte A\tflida PJco. li...ln Junn Cap1 tranoand \\bocJhrld~ t 11rft"I \ 1 .. 1.f ,~ .. n I• 1M I ft1 jMf'U.11 ~ "'' f .,I 11 I 1 .. t.nv1i• "' ,. ... nJnJ .N•h "'" "'~ "~ tw~\.. .... ..r.t"1'llf ., (!ftf\ tllt f:.lfftl"f ' MM~ !W • tt!Uf.ff ,_ fl '" 1 r1 1<r ...., I '""' r--.. "''''' .._, ~"'ti.,_,. .. ,, ...... u., fl ' 4,.. l'N .... .,.,.,. •' ...,..Mif"'""""' ... ,,, Mftllt\tl,, , ..,.,. ,, • ,,...,,_,,.,_, ., f"tn.. f\tl pr11• t11m,illlf h • 111 Mil •I'll •M~t-1M1~I 1r''"'"'''JVf1Jlf, Great American Your advantage bank:- o \er ltll)r.1"ofSnfe1y-A,..ct\O\.et<d 1 B1lhon ..... , __ ..._ .... _ ... a,.. ......... ~ Open your account today. CaU the toU-free AnandaJ Line now: 1..&0M2J..BANK. ,,. ... .,... \Ml><rij "°''""''"'""'r.,.,...i'-'""''"1""'"'' 1.,. htflt<u •l<if,,,.. \""\f''-.h""f'l" 1,. ...... 111r• ... .W•\,\• •ltf'4'" -ll..Mooll'-N Rt\rutdir\.4\tll'•9',.foihi.l\l"'f' •""" MtN( ,._,., \.r""• ~-··-~-.J"J\,_ .. , .• _ vice president and dlrector of promo.- lion services at DFS Dorla nd. Advertisint e~ecutives have long viewed sales promotion as a short· term solution to sales problems. They contend that promouons discourage brand loyalty and eocourqe sho~ pen to cbanae brands ba9ed on price. But manufacturers have com· plajncd about the risina costs of adven1sina aod are f aahtin-1 dai battles for store shelf sp1ee. Son producers have found promotions quick method for relicvina intcru competitive pi;essure. While coup(>na capture the lion share of promotional activity, tl repon said refund ofTtrS. bonus pacJ and sweepstakes were also widel (Pleue ... COUPONS/ A' added. On the West Coast, the ad cam paign will tell the consumer that th• green fruit is "user-friendly.' Banelme said. "Avocados aren't jus for champagne and caviar, any more." These ads wtll present the avocadc in salads and burgers, omelettes anc casseroles. One problem facing the avocado ii the tapering of demand from the Wes Coast to the EasL WhiJe shippin' handling and storage costs probib11 large. yea r-round shipments to tht East Coast, avocados are available th~ during most of the year. Tht maln supplier of East Coast avocados is Florida, however. ··we educate prescnl users that avocados have everyday uses while initiating new consumers to its vir- tues, and we're made," Afficclc said. Educating avocado growers bas been the cornerstone of Affieclc's professional career since graduating from Chico State with a degree in mass communication. Prior to join- in& the commission in early 1985. Affleck spent six years at Rancher Publications Inc., in San Diego. serving as reporter. then publisher of Avocado Grower. "I never even ate an avocado until joining Rancher Publications," Af- fleck said, "but I've learned to Jove them.'' Funded by a grower assessment of S. 7S percent of gross annual sales. the Commission was created in Septem- (Pleue Me AVOCADO/ A9) 0 - ty IC a IC 's e .s y t) • ostonhouse • rices are tops ASHfNOTON (AP) -The re-c value of homes in tlie Boston area re~sed during the last year more n 1n any other community in a tfonwide survey, while five other ies actually saw decreases in hous- P.rices, a trade group ujd, ces increased most strongly in Northeast, while they slumped st dramatically in the South and e~t. the quart~rly survey by the taonal Assoc1at1on of Realtors owed last Fnday. · The survey said that the average ·ce of homes in the Boston area creased by 37.2l>ercent oowccn the t three months of 1986 and the me period a year ago. leaving the edian home price for the area at 1~9.~ -and makinit Boston !he auon s mos~ ex~ns1ve housing a. The median pnce 1s the point at hich half the homes cost more and alf cost less. The Albany-Schenectady-Troy rca of upstate New York ex- rienced tho second greatest rate of ncrcase, 20.5 percent, with the me-ian cost ofa home there $67,500. Prices went up by 18 percent in artford, Conn .. to S 106.400; 17.8 rcent in New York toSl47.200;and 14 percent in Providence, R. I., to $71 ,900. The housing market that did most poorly was in Houston. where the median price dropped I 0.4 percent to $70,400. Prices also slid by 5.3 percent in Tulsa, Okla .. to $66.100: 4.6 percent in Louisville, Ky.. to $48.100: 3.2 percent 1n Portland, Ore .. to $59,900; and 0.6 percent in • Oklahoma Cny to $62.800. The report found that the Louisville area was the least ex- pensive metropolitan real estate mar- k.et, with a median pnce ofS48, I 00. Tturty-cight of the 43 metropolitan ai:eas posted increases in the median resale home price between the first · quarter of 1985 and lhe same period • this year .. "Housing aema.nd is strong throughout the Northeast. driven by increased job opportunities and more afTordat?le interest rates:• the realtors said in a statement. "With the demand exceeding the supply of homes on the market, significant price increases arc the normal result ... Orange County_ ranked third with a median ofS 138,000. The Los Angeles area was fourth with a median price of $120,400. followed by San Diego's SI 10,000. The $78.500 median posted in the Miami area and Minneapolis-St. ~ul's $76,300 were closest to the nationwide median ofS78,200 in the first quarter. That national median represented a 5.8 percent increase over last year's median ofS73.900. Slumping oil prices were blamed for the decline in value in Houston and Oklahoma City. North Dakota led the realtors' state-by-state survey with a 36 per- cent increase in the rate of existing home sales from the first quarter of 1985 to the first th ree months of thi s year. The pace of home sales over a year ago increased in 25 states and the District of Columbia, while there were.declines in 21 states, notably in Texas and Louisiana where slumping oil prices have hurt local economies. Rhode Island, South Dakota and Utah reported no change tn the rate of home sales. Figures for Alaska were unavailable. California had the highest annual rate of existing home sales-395,000 units -followed by Pennsylvania's 199,700 and New York's 189.700. U.S. dollar hits new low in Tokyo Eighth postwar low recorded in 14 day-s- at Foreign Exchange totaled $5.930 billion, up from Fri- day's $4.106 billion. Traders attributed the dollar's fall to speculative selling and the lack of an agreement by participants 10 the May 4-6 Tokyo summit on action lo halt the dollar's fall. The plunge continued Monday despite Prime Minister Yasuh1ro Nalcasonc's requcsl lo the Bank of .. Opening a cef1ificale account et Pldftc Sa>Anga Bank coukt be one of h 1111t1M _. you'lt..,. rnahe. Simply open• 85-d9v ~ ltCCOUnt with a miomum deposit of $5,000, or a 6-month or longer certificate account wtth a minimum deposit of $2,500 from a IOUrce other than an existing Pacitc account W9'tl not only give you compet- itive rates, we'U give you two ticteta to a selected Dodger; Mgefa or Padres home game, courtesy of the 65 Rotes Sports Club and• 3Smm catnera wltt'\ carrying caee Oimlt 2 tree tickets and 1 camera s-r houeehold). For every qualified account. Wl'ff llao make a $25 donation to the Cystic Abfosia Foundation to help find a cure for CF. Emir our "65 bee WDrtd ..,._ •••pMmUe" Vou may win an action-packed trip for two to the flr1t two games of the W?rid Series. Just fill out an entry fo~ at your local branch Otenge C0Mt DAILY PILOT/T.,...,, Mey 13, 1Me Ae by June 30, 1986. No purchue nec111~ So catch our Grand Slam ofttr; For current rates Of tnOf'8 Information, call f -800-PACIFIC ot eend In the coupon bek>w. r---------------~ 1Ntme·---~~~~~~~~~~~~- 1Addrea. _______________________________________ _ I I City .. 7ltt eoo. ____ _ I Telephone I I .... 1ilM '° Cllll I L~.,~~~~8:..~~~~~...;_DP_j \ TOK YO (AP) -The U.S. dollar plunged another 2.65 yen on the Tokyo Foreign Exchange Market Monday to close at 160.20 yen. the eighth postwar low 1n the past 14 trading days. Japan last Fridaytotake'·appropriate r---------------------------------:---------------------- steps" regarding the yen's rapid nse. and rumors that the central bank bad intervened to support the dollar. The dollar opened at 162 yen, down from last Friday's close of 162.85 yen. and never went higher. At at one point it traded at 159. 99 yen before rebounding. On Friday, when it fell 1.45 yen, the dollar ranged between 162.55 yen and 164.35 yen. The dollar now has fallen 15.65 yen in 14 trading days and more than 81 yen since last September, when financial officials offive major indus- trial nations agreed to work for a lower dollar to help ease U.S. trade deficits. Spot trading Monda y 1n Tokyo - Traders said the dollar will con- tinue to fall until the United States stops tolerating the decline. since speculators feel the Bank of Japan alone will not have much effect on the market. Japanese officials have called the yen's rise too rapid, and said it hurts Japanese industries that depend heavily on exports. The higher yen makes Japanese goods more ex- pensive abroad. Historic food f es ts to open in Japan A senes of Amcncan Food Fcst1· vals in Tokyo and Fukuoa. Japan between May 16 and June 2 will be the first time these Japanese outlets have ever imported vegetables and other produce from the Untied States directly. "It's an excellent opportunity to expose our fine California produce and fruits to the Japanese consumer." said Jon Hubbard, president of Irvine Ranch Farmers Market. Three leading Japanese retail outlets will be hosting the festtvals and they expect the attendance to be about 1.9 million people. During the last week of February. Japanese buyers were in Southern C'ahfom1a to review the various fruits. meats and grocery items that will be featured. Hubbard said the Rams Cheerleaders will accompany the first AVOCADO··· FromA8 ber 1977 10 replace the Cahfom1a Avocad o Advisory Board (formed in 1962) under Cahfom1a's Marketing Act. allowing growers to organize and assess themsclvs for the purpose of crop promotion and pmduc11on rt· search. The commission 1s responsible for national advcrt1s10g and promotion. monitonng of market and foreign activities. crop estimating and com- munication among the R.000 Cah- fomia growers. Some 20.000 people arc employed $l8tCwtde In thC industry, With lf'OVCS Mrctchina from Santa Barbara to the Mexican border. m:unl} alona a coastal strttch c'tend1ng SO miles inland. Locally. the Irvine C'o has 1.400 acttsof11vocadosarown IOmonthsof the year nywhert from 8 m1lhoo to IS mil hon pOunds of avocados art arown on the Irvine o Ranch annually and haf'\'csted by I 0 to 20 p1ckcn. l('('()rd1na to Fred Keller. agnculturt d1v1 ton vi~prt'1dent • J • shipment of food to the Tokyo festival which is now expected to be an annual event: plans for a much larger festival in 1987 already arc under way. Denis R. Alonso of Denalon. Inc .. the Pacific Rim Consultant to the Irvine Ranch Market. wa~instrumcn­ tal in organizing the event. He was delighted at how quick and decisive the dealings were with his Japanese counterparts in coordinati ng the festi- vals. Any food company wishing to participate in this historic event should contract the corporate offices of the Irvine Ranch Farmers Market at 2651 Irvine Ave .. Costa Mesa. Companies interested but not in the food industry should contact Alonso at Denalon. 2035 Westwood Blvd., Suite 201, Los Angeles. 90025. COUPONS ... From AS used. Meyer said sweepstakes planners, for instance, arc getting more adept at p1ck1ng prizes that reflect current trends and lifestyles. · He said the planners are making more offers of cars as pnzcs and fewer offers of foi:eign travel. Lower domestic gasoline prices and the fear of terrorism abroad may be respon- sible for the shift. he said. At the same time. he said sweepstakes planners arc more frt· quently ofTcrina home-exercise equipment and h~lth club member· ,hips as prizes. lnstal\t winnerpmes wt'rt on~ the mo t p()pular of the promotion tcdln1qucs, but wert u~ I 0 percent le s frequently in I 98S. Meye r said He said the &Jut of instant wtnner aamcs ~ms to have dimmed the cnthusuum of marketers and con· sumcrs ahkc. Ovef"31l. promouons 1n the nine metropoht<iA markets 'urve-ycd h)' Df'S Dorland rose 27 percent to 10,Q7S 1n 1985 from 8.7 H a )CMllO This Norman Rockwell print is FREE at all More than a quarter of a centu ry before Norman Rockwell sold his first lllustr.Lllon to the Saturd2y Evening Post, Amerian Savings opened its ftrSt f:uniJy savings account Now. more than ~ years after the American sm~ family began serving families like yours. we are proud to salute the artist who portriyed the American firnily the W2Y it was for so much of our first century of service. Beginning Monday. M2)' Uth, every Amerian Savi~ office throughout Cali- fornia will be otf ering FREE, fulkok>r, It x 14 " coUector's edition prints of some of Roclcwell's most famous paintings. These pnnts, faithfully reproduced from the pages of the Saturday Evening Post. will be otrered monthly. while sup- plies last And. we will offer a new print e:.ch month, so you can collect an entire series or six. just for stopping by Limit oneLper person. please. We know you'll enjoy these prints ~use they are so rem1niscent of the famil y photos arefully contained in all of our family albums. Norman Rockwell built his rep- utation by treati~ ordinary people with extraordinary care At American SsvinRS. we undersund that ph.iJosophv \\'e\'t built our bush~ on it American Savings-tht familv savm~ place' kif •• American Savinp branches while supply lasts. l '"'"'''h' \un" Puhh<111na tJ""tl•m 1111 ~ Accounts in~ured up 10 1100,000 COSTA MF.sAISANTA ANA .~929 S Bristol. 92 04 (at Sunflower) ("'l'f) q 9-9800 GARDEN GROV'E 12141 Garden Gm .. e Blvd . Q~()'f \ (al Harbor Blvd ) ( 14) ~3 8690 ""- Hl1NTINGTON BEACH "'8~0 Edmger Ave . 92M ... (at Huntington Center) ("'14) 8-.8 HH lll'NTINGTON HARBOllR 16911 Algonquin St <HMQ (In lluntmgton Harhour Shopping Center) ("'14) R4(l ,B)~ LAGUNA HIW 24085 El Toro Rd . 92653 (at~ de Valencia) C14) .,70-281h ORANGE lQM N Tu~tin ~ve . 926M (north of Tuft} ('14) 9~4 1620 SEAL BEACH 801 Pacific Coa~I H\\ y 1)()"'40 (at Main) (lH} ~44 HXc;i; TUSTIN 641 E First St . Q2hM (at Newpon Ave ) ( 14 ) 8U !li81 ERICAN SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION " . • '" Div I'( \e .. , L .. t Cllt I i ·- NYSE CoMP OSll l T RANSACTIONS Stock trading subdued NEW YORK(AP)-Stock prices pulled back in subdued trading Tuesday. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials wavered near Monday's closing level during an 1ndec1s1ve session and finally firushcd with a modest loss. Concerns about the consequences of the dollar's drop and about tt)c economy have impaired the market's recent perfonnancc and have kept ~tocks trading in narrow price ranges, anal ysts said. The dollar bas been sinking against other major currencies for months and, in the past few weeks. has repeatedly hi t record post-World War II lo~ against the Japanese yen. , WHAT AMEX Orn WHAT NYSE Dio NEW YORK (AP) Mav 13 AMEX LEADERS GoLo Quo1Es , METALS QuoTEs NEW YORK (AP) MllV 13 'J.ev ~y Adv~~ • ; ~::i=,· NYSE LEADER S NEW YORK (j) -F. In.ti Dow Jones r•ot or Tilada . ' 'rt. 1 • • r d!i : 'I ,· . ~u• 'HI· ~Ji~ll k.li~: Toltott t11ZS fTom t.iw. Robirt, To\\::d..t.. ~~ &t.ucho 1n cormel vol l¢)' t.htz. world~ f\na.st, hondecwn t.1@ olway-9 Lh2 pitOz.ctgif\., ond eslv.ioy& Uu lo~t 9CZ.l«tton. ' • Wally Joyner, the Aqela' rookie eenaation, wu buy •laJ>Plna handa and acknowlectatn& ovationa llonday ntaht I .,.,.., ......... ., ................ after hlttln& two home ran• and a •tncle ac&1n•t eo.ton. E•en the fana &ot Into the act. Tough tasks ahead for area teams Ocean View hosts Los Altos; HB gets No. 4 seed Esperanza By ROGER CARLSON Of .. .,.., ......... Two-time Sunset League baseball champion Ocean View opens the C IF 4-A playoffs with a visit from Sierra League representative Los Altos Friday afternoon -but the bia one in terms of first-round matchup involves Huntinaton Beach, which qualified for the playoffs with a third place finish. The Oilers drew No. 4-seeded and Empire League champion EspcnutZ&i a 20..3 dub which has ranked at the top of Orange County rankings since the start of the season. "We're just glad to be there," said Oilers Coach Mike Dodd, who shruped off the tough assignment, almost haJf~xpcctma il SOFTBALL Barons seeded No. I Edison third=5eeded in CIF 4-A playoffs; Woodbridg_e 3-A No. 1 Sunse1 League softball champion Fountain Valley High, the top-seeded team in the CtF 4-A playoffs, will begin its quest for the title Thursday when the Barons host Long Beach Wilson in the opening round. The Barons (21-4), who ran away wtth the league crown at 9-1 , two games ahead of second-place Edison, will face either Mater Dei or Foothill in the second round 1f they advance. Wilson ( 10-12) finished third in the Moore League behind champion Millikan and runner-up Lakewood. Edison, meanwhile is seeded No. 3 an the 4-A bracket and will host Redondo ( 10-6), the No. 2 representa- tive from 1he Bay League. Edison finished the regular season with a 22-5 record. Marina ( 12-12), the Sunset League's NQ. 3 team which defeated Ocean View in a playoff last Friday, will travel to St. Joseph ( 16-7-1 ), lhc champions of the Anaelus League. .. , saw their coach at our e m e on Saturday and I've been thinking. ·no. no, " said Dodd. "But on second thought I think we match up pretty well. "Their best hmers are left-handed and Jeff Haack, our pitcher, as a left-handed guy. "We'll have to go wtth more breaking pitches to contend with Esperanza's speed and hilling." Elsewhere in the 4-A playoffs, Westminster draws a road assignment against St. Paul of the Angelus League. In the 2-A eliminations, South Coast League champ100 Irvine. 18-8-1 , is seeded No. 4 and will host Hacienda Lcaaue representative Chino (I S-10). ' Sea View Lcaaue k.:inapin Univenny (12-9) wlll host Santiago (16-10); Estancia {11-12) as at No. 2-seeded Mountain View (18-3); and Saddle- back ( 13-1 J-1) is at Garden Grove ( J 4-7). While Huntington Beach has some solace with Haack ( 10-2, 0.82 ERA) on the moun~ there is also a big problem in that shortstop Rick t.u~y. whose fine defensive efforts on Saturday helped propel the Oilers into the playoffs for the second straight year, may be lost for Friday's 3: 15 opener. He was on crutches Monday because of a sprained knee. Should Ocean View get past Los Altos in the first round, the Scahawks will be pitted qamst the winner of the Loara-Scrvite first round match-up. St. Paul awaits Westminster with pitcher Art Salas, who has racked up a 9-2 record, with an 0.96 ERA. Coach Bob Aint's lcvine Vaqueros aiet the home assiinmeat and it comes against a club which they met three years qo at the same site and same fint-round cin:umstance. Chino led 6-0 in the sixth inning, but Irvine raUied for five in the sixth, then two in the seventh to tie it at 7, eventually to win, 9-8 in eiabt iMinas. Chino's big gun is 6-2 riaht-hander DJ. Aoyd, (Pleue Me BAB&BALL/)12) Elsewhere, Woodbridac, top-seed- ed in the 3-A, will open first-round action at home against Walnut, the Sierra League's No. 3 team, on Friday. The Sea View League cham- pion Wamors ( 17-3) have th~ players hitting .356 or better and two pitchers with five victories. Big night for the Rangers Tea.a playen conantulate themaelYea after poundln& Cle•eland, 19·2 . behind a 22-hlt attack Monday ntaht. The win keepe Tezu In flnt In the AL 't/eat. See etory, 83. TUESDAY, MAY 13. 1918 ally: l'ID just riding: .out a wave Angel rookie slugs_ two more omers in lea tng 7 . .:1 win By JOSEPH DUDEVOIR DllllJ .... Cen•JrP•I I They haven't changed the name from Anaheim Stadium to Wally World. And there hasn't been a WaJly Joyner Day yet either. But the way this rookie has been riding the crest of a swelling adulation from Anicls fans, it might not be long until you sec either of the above transptre. • .. I've acen a lot Juys who 1 thoua)lt were talented,•• sa1d Don Sutton, who has seen a lot of everything during his 2~plus years in the major leagues. "But this guy does it with the ease and p-ace which I've never seen before. The best thing to do is to keep the geniuses away from rum." Joyner's sweet stroke carried the Angels past the Boston Red Sox Monday night, with the first baseman swattinJ a pair of homcn m the 7-1 win in front of 25,450 Wally lovers at Anaheim Stadium. Sutton, who likened himself to The Tonight Show's Ed McMahon, 1et- tin1 ready to say heccrc's Wally. Sutton said lo the troop-Of reporters TolJlllJt'• lame Boston (Brown 2.0) at Aqelt (.Romanick 2-1). Time: 7:35. TV: None. Radio: KMPC (710). Wednesday's pme: Boston at Angels, 7:35 p.m. · sta o arou oyne s oc er: "l'Ujust do a little tap dance for you IUY1 until Wally~ here." Sutton picked up hts 297th career victory and his second of the seaton to up his record to 2-3. He went seven stro~ innings. aivina up five hits. "Its amazina how good a pitcher you arc with seven runs," be said ... I JUSt threw the baJI for strikes o nce I aot that lead." He also controlled Wade Boas. who came ID hatting. 363. Boas was 0 for4. .. I ought to frame this win," said Sutton. "Not many people can shut Boas down." And not too many arc bavina luck with Joyner, who is now hilling .326, with 33 RBI tto(>S in the. majors) and 12 bomen to Uc rum with M1nne- sota's Kirby Puckett for the ~or lcque lead. Coming into the pme, however, Joyner was 0 for 9 apjnst Red Sox fPleue eee JOYIRR/82) Workman toaat Bdl8cna JDCll'• farewell celebratioa to BUI W•k· ... u ae c~· football co.e• ,_ tbe put 18 Jean la acMct- a&ed f• .i ... 8 at tM 8a1boa Balu Cl~. Work-aaa led 90lltoare- oord ol 1oe..aa-1 wlda dane CIF tlt1ee aa4 ...a ~ CMat-911.l ... ......... _ ~ .. 7 ~· ..... tanr:c;: "' htda7. hltMr -............ , ... . '7 .............. . at 882-138e. Sooner or later, the dream ends Basebalrs numbers' game finally catches up with this pitcher By RICHARD DUNN ......... c.. ' ..... It was amazing. It was the mosl thrilling tragedy of a lifetime anyone could ever ·expenencc. A dream of 23 years shot out o f midair wtthout any quesuons. Every baseball player -maJor leaguer. manor leaguer. college player; you name 11 -sees the end of ha s career. It happened to me after a long. bittersweet, coast-to-coast tnp to Kinston. Nonh Carolina. All winter I had planned on patching somewhere in a high Class-A level league (California League, Caro- lina League, Aonda State LcaguC') this year aflcr 1he season I had in Idaho Falls in 1985. The decision was made to dnve from Santa Ana to Kinston -2. 78 I miles away-because I had naturally planned on stay1n1 out there for the sax-month stason. Obviously m y plans took a drastic nose dive and I had to dnvc back Taking a different route, it took 3.156 males to get home. The intent was to play for KJnston. a co-op team (an 1ndcpenden1 club with players under contract from a multiple number of ma~or league organ11auons) an the Carolina Lca1uc which u~ to Ix aflihatc-d with the Toronto Blue Jays In any case. I had bcc-n 1nv11ed out there by 1he manager DaH Trembley. It sounded extremely positive and It appeared as if there was a spot already there for me. After receiving some literature in the mail and a few phone calls, at wasn't hard 10 decide that I wanted to go out there. I was playina for the Milwaukee Brewers this winter under my old field boss in Idaho Falls. Reuben Rodnquez, and was no doubt anxious to begin my second ~ear of professional baseball. After spendina four days to act across the country. stopping at rest slops along the way to sleep, I made at to K.Jnston wt1hou1 any problems. On Monday. March 31 , the first day of an abbreviated spnng training took place - a nd tnat's when the bad news h11. The players on the field - all 70-plus of them -were told that I 7 spots on the 25-man roster had already been guaranteed to vanous organizauon players. You don't need 10 be a mathemat1c1an for figure out that only elght JObs were available Fon) percent of the playerswerc pitchers and the front office was only going to keep three or four The numbers game. or m this ca~ the lack of knowledge of the numbers. was a batter pall to swallow from the begmning 4.nd although I threw well enough 1n 1hc-scnmmages 10 stick around for the length of the tryout, 1hc dream turned into a n1ghtmarc two days later when my number wa n't called an the clubhou~. I kncY. 11 was coming. though I wasn't surpmcd Thc-y took two nght-handcd pitchers. one who'd pla)'ed 1n 1npk-.. and another who'd (Pleuc eee DUlfJlf'S/821 Ex-A.ngel Carew has given up hope of playing again Sea View runner-up Estancia ( 12-7) and third place U niversity( 11-5) wall be on the road Friday. The Eagles travel to O range League champion Western ( 14-4), while the Trojans arc at Garden Grove. the Garden Grove League champion and No. 3 seed an the 3-A bracket. Fountain Valley has been paced all sca50n by senior naht-handcr Patti Taylor, who has posted an impressive 11 -2 record and 0.24 earned run averaac. The Barons don't stop there, however, when it comes to p11ch1ng. Junior Jacki Blake has a 6-1 mark with a 0 21 ERA $900,000 salary may have retired him early whal'!> smng o n but I don't "t around thanking aboul at, worrying about at. I'm JU t going on with my hfc " maJor league-leading 33 runs batted 1n Cartw earned $900,000 wnh the Angel\ la t year and his high salary might have Karcd off potcn1ial employers. but he ha' emphasized that he would play fo r le s Macke., Mantle tor w.1h place on baseball, all- ume home run h!ll Jackson will be 40 ne~t '\unda¥ Taylor. who h.ls 128 stnkeouu and only 11 walks. 1 alSCl FountaJn Valley's lead1na hitter at .260. hclly Mardon. (.2S4). who has two ho mc runs and thrtt doubles. Launr Alvarez. who ha th~ tnple and (Pleue ... aonaALL/M) From AP cllJpatcbea LO ANGELE -Seven-time ~mencnn t..nauc baltln& champio n Rod Cartw s.11d Monday he has given up hope of play1n11 m.1101 lcaauc ~scball apin ~"I don't h vc any hopes of an}'onc s1an1na me," Cartw 1d hy telephone from h11o Anahc)lh Hills home · "I'd hkc to pla~ • I don't undcntand .. If th1u's the way 11'\ &01ng to end, that's 1hc-way 1t's '01na to c-nd. If n's no1 in your control, there s not much you c.an do .. (. orcw. 40. wu the Angel · lcadinJ hitter lor five of the past s1it K'asons., 1nclud1na l:i t }tlr wh°t'n he battrd .280 He 511d last year that he wan1~ to plav tht 1986 .awn. then retire The Anacls. ho....,t vcr, dtc1ded dunn the off-season that they would aivc Carew'' fi~t '-l>BstJOb to rookie Wally Joyner and didn't offer C'artw a ne cantl"lct Joyner, 23, hat h«n a .,1, uttt h11t1na 326 wnh 12 home" and a 'Tm CDJOYIDI my~lf I've rcall l Otlt'n 1n"olvcd with my Jtrlf wflball tt'3rn. llj 1ng 10 tea h them," he \aid. "\\c'rt w1nn1na It !. bct'n lun .. C art'w satd that nJels' -.tandoot Rcgic Jackson ha'I continued to stay an touch with him. and he appm:1ated that "l'mJUSt tt11ng back and pplaud•na what he's doina, ''Carew '4lld of Ja b o n. who hit hi\ 536th career home run unda'r . wins ham wtth ( arcw ha!! a carttr ha tung avclllgC of 328 t-!r h11 lCXl or mort 1n I ~ ofh1s I q mljor tcaaue \Cl'°n~ and colkctcd h1'\ "l OOOth ctrttr h1t l1st l\USU\l Bu t. a he acknowlcd. ed. he hasn't been 1 po"'-crh11ter and ha~n·t dn"en in 1 lot of run an rC'C't'nt yean. "I don't know what mort I could have or cihtmJd ha' c done." Carew said ··1 think we all haH' i.omc-hon comm in our talent. "It 1how' 1n tht' rTCord what l'v~ done in m) I ~-year arecr I havt' no rqrct ... ( . ,· U * Or8nge Cout OAJLY PILOT/ lueaday, May 13. 198e __ .......... Two UC Irvine Bluea rally to tie up Calgary ST. LOUIS -Doua Wickcnhe1ser Iii climaxed a rurio~ St. Louis comcbe~k ' Player h d with a rebound goal 71/1 minutes into 8 onore ovenime to IJVC the Blues a 6-S victory over the Calgary Flames Mondt)' ni&ht and force a on All-PCAA teaJD~~~n-e:n~~nth aame in their Nat1onafHoclcey ~aaue W1ckenhe1scr's goal. his second of the ni$ht. tied the Cumpbell Conference final at three games apiece and sent it back to Ca~ry for the deciding pme Wednesday niaht Two UC Irvine &tondouts -Gene Roumimper and Ton) Baine -have been accorded all Pacific oa t Athletic Associa- tion honors on the PCM baseball teams. the conference announced Monday. Shonstop Mau Wilham of Nevada-Las Vt"gasand second baseman Scou Cerny of UC anta Barbam have been named co-players of the yea1 .\I Ferrer of lJCSB was selected as the PCAA 's baseball coach of the year. Williams is a 6-3. 190-f.°und Junior from Carson City, while Ce rny 1s a 5. • 160-pound senior from Vacaville. Jo1nin~ Wal hams and Cerny on the All-PCAA first team arc pitchers Larry Cas1an of Cal Slate Fullenon, Mike Goff of Fresno State. Mike Trcsemer of U<. "SB and Mike P11z of Pacific; catcher John Eccles of Cal State Fullenon; first basemen Mike Oglesbee of Nevada-Las Vegas and RoumimperofUC Irv ine, third baseman Vance Te1xeir.1 of UCSB. oulfield<"rs Tony Fehcion<' of Long Beach State. Bame of UC Irvin<' and 8uinn Mack ofUCSB. designated hitters Tom Logan of CSB and Keath Watkins of Cal State Fullcnon. and utility player Mark Leonard of l{JC'SB Members of the second team arc p11chcrs Mike Belanger and Mike Harke> of Cal State Fullenon. Anthony Telford of San Jose State and Bruce Egloff of UCSB; first baseman Greg Vella of UC B. S<'cond baseman teve Moser of Nevada-Las Vegas. third baseman Pill German of Cal State Fullenon. shonstop Erik Johnson of UC'SB. and outfielderc; Jcf Garcia of Cal Stat<' Fullenon. Steve Bates of Fresno tate and Reed Peters of Nevada-Las Vegas. Quote of the day Kenny Rice, spons director of WTVQ-rv in Lexington, Ky., hyping visits to Keeneland Race Course the same da> by actress Elizabeth Taylo r and John Henn. lhc mult1m1lhonaire now in retirement at nearb) Kentucky Horse Park .. Not only will John Hen!) ·s appearance at Kecnrland be his first at a ra<'e track since retirement. 11 will also mark th<' first time Elizabeth TayJor ha~ ·appeared with a gelding. .. Golf legend Hines succumbs The winner will pla}' the Montreal Canad1ens in the Stanley Cups finals staning Fnday night. Tra1hng 4-1 early in the final pcnod, St. Louis awakened with 14 minutes to play when W1ckenheiscr scored his first goal on a 35-foot slapshot past Calgary goalt<"ndcr M1Jce Vernon Former Blue Joe Mullen answer<'d 1ha1 at 7:04 with u high blast from 30 feet, but Brian Sutter rebounded Greg Paslawsk1's blocked shot past Vernon only 64 seconds left to cu t Calgary's lead to 5-3. Paslawsk1 convened a goalmouth pass from Sutter a1 15:49 to make ll 5-4. Pastawski then stol<' the puck from Calgary defenscman Jamie Macoun behind the Flames' net and knocked in a four-foot shot to 1ie the score w11h I :08 to play. Center Dan Quinn scored goals 97 seconds apan at the 'itan oftb<' second period to key a four-goal period that yut th<' Flames in charge after 40 minutes. 1m Peplinski and John Tonelli scored Calgary's other second-period goals Two Bruins co-players of year LOS ANGELES -Pitcher Alex • Sanchez and infielder Torey LovuUo, members of th<' Pacific-IO Southern Dtv1sion champion UCLA Bruins, have been nam<'d the divisjon's co-Players oftbe Year. Sanchez, a sophomore, had a 16-2 record, with a 4.06 earned run average and 134 strikeouts in 130 2-3 innings for the Bruins. Lovullo. a junior, hit .323. with 16 homers and 65 runs batted m during UCLA's 60 games. Bruins Coach Gary Adams, whose club wound up the regular season with a 39-2 1 overall record and 21-9 league mark. was selected as the Coach of the Year. Also named to the 1986 "'1-stars was outfielder Lance Blankenship of Cal, who made the oonfercnce·s sou them division team for the founh consecutive year. The other outfielders selected were Mike Senne of Arizona, Toi Cook of Stanford and Rick Morris of Arizona State. Rounding out the pitching staff were Brad Brink of USC. Jack McDowell of Stanford and Gilben Heredia of Anzona. The catchers were Todd ~ii<' of UCLA and John Ramos of Stanford. • The other infielders select<'d were TOdd Trafton of Anzona. Ted Dyson of Arizona State, Kevin Maas and Jerry Goffof('al and Dan Henley of USC. JOYNER ••• Prom Bl p1tch1na, He chanted that in a hurry with'his first·inn1na homer. Joyner teed ofr twice on liaht· banded Bosox pitcher Al Nipper ()4), who made the fat.al mistake offaJlina behi.nd in 1he count and arooved fastballs to the lef\handed Joyner. Monday's pme was wha1 is be- comina almost a routine act for Joyner. 3 for 5, two runs scored and 4 RBI. 'Tm just ndm~ out a wave," said Joyner. "And lovma it. I'm going to keep ridin1t 1t until it hits the sand. "I can't explai n what's going on , but I have a pretty good reason: r vc: worked very. hard and it's pa~ina otr. I've worked out with wei ts and played quite a bit an Pueno ico." While playmg for the Mayague1 Indians, Joyner won the Triple Crown and had a Wally Joyner day in his honor. He remembers It well ... "That was some day," he said. "They had five-by-seven pictures of me that they gave out to the fans. "I ended up striking'out three times and had two errors. Every inning I kept sccjng more and more of those pictures tom up around me." That's the thing Angels Manager Gene Mauch likes about Joyner. For a rookie. you'll have trouble matching his composure and level-headedness. "That's what's best about bim," wd Mauch. "His stabil ity and the way ho handles himself impresses me the most. It's nice when somebody like that comes along." * ANGIL NOTIES. Garv ~etttt rnede Ills rtturn lo ,.,. A""4 llMUP ~\I en<I pk:keel UP •n R.81 s'"91e . . "'"""-'-I e111en<1e<1 his hltll119 &lrMk to four ~ with e seconcHnnlno Cloutlle. His lllsl loo.If nits "•,,. l:lff<t <IOUtlles 911<1 JlJI of eleht 0\0~ •• ..,,... L"9 plf<hed enotller """ IMlno slmuleled Nmt, throwing 65 pltclles wltll no Clls<:omfort ... ._ .._. Is now two """' beflln<I Y ... ..,.,. tor sl11th •" time In oemes caueht et 1,69'. A<lcl 8-: he llH11'1 "°"'*'eel sine» Julv 14, 1"4 Sllortsloo Ola ~ stlll he\ll't committed an wr« lhll .eeM>n In the ?1 oemes 119 ri.1 ._,eel e.twe 0. ~ ~ them, Ille 8otton Red Sox came lnlo town •mono IM ... oue lffdera In MJVW•I Cll~. •mono them: flnl In pltd'tlll9 (2.17 ERA). Wide ..... WH third In hitting with his .Ml e vet"e'" en<l lle<I with 9tieft O.W-.. fOf the IH<I In ~ wllh 11 9-s leech the AL In on·bl.e -centeoe (.412) The Bo.ox's » 10 11er1 wes the!< ~1 sin« 1"1 OellJ ........... "' ~ 1( ..... Ancel pitcher DQn Sutton took another atep toward 300 'rictorle. Monday night. workinl .e•en lnnlnga and getting win No. 297. MONTEREY -James J. 00J1mm )" H mes of ( armel \ alle>. a professi onal golfer. golf course designer and one of the early developers of the electnc golf can, died Sunda) at age 82 after a long illness. Hines. a native of Mineola. NY , won the Los Angeles Open 1n 1936 and also won the Glen Falls .. N. Y.. Ope n three tim es and the Metropolitan, Ri verside and Tacoma opens. He was a member of the 1939 L'. R)dcr (.up team and serv<'d as chairman of the PGA Tournament C omm1ttec in the 1940s. Steve Strong of Arizona and Scott Sommers of use were the designated hitters. and John Joslyn were selected to a spot as a utllityman. Cunningham new Fresno AD~ Sampson needs better game He lelt the pro tour 1n 1947 and <"ventually beca me director ol solf at thl' Thunderbird Country Club in Ranrho Miragc. when· he was instrumental in de\ cl oping the ek ctnc go lf can. LARAMIE. Wyo. -University of Ill Wyoming Athle11c Director Gary Cun-1 n1ngham report<'dly has been offered the same JOb at Fresno State. but as of this Houston,Lakers meet in game two tonig_!lt at Forum morning he hadn't tendered his resignation to Wyoming officials. In the 1 9~0'1 and 1%0s Hines helped design and bu ild ~' eral golf rnur<;cs. 1nclud1ng the Eldorado ( ountl) ( lub at Indian Wells. Royal Laha1na Hotel and Golf t tub at Kaanapah Beach. Hawaii. and the Del Universny of Wyoming President Donald VeaJ said today that while he knows Cunningham inter- viewed for the job last week. the athleuc director hasn't told him whether h<' was offered the job. "I don't know yet," said Veal. "He may well have been off ercd the JOb ... INGLEWOOD (AP) -Ralph Sampson's array of physic.al gifts has pushed his 7-4 frame to the perimeter of the Houston Rockets' offensive scheme. That's right, away from the basket. afan t ountry ( lub at Palm Desert. At the age of 70 he shot a two·und<"r-par 70 at Sp) glass Hill and he con11nu<'d to play golf until he losl his C)CStght 1n 198 1 According 10 today's editions of the Rocky Mountain News, CunninJham was indeed ofrered the JOb and likely will accept 11. · Because he passes and handles the basketball so well, Sampson has been forced to let teammate Akeem Ola- juwon play the center position, the focal point of the Houston attack. Canadian upsets Soviet boxer REN0-8111 Do"'ne>.an 18-)ear·old m Canadian. upset vastl y more expenenced Television, radio TELEVISION Olajuwon scored 28 points and grabbed 16 rebounds as the Rockets lost to the defending NBA champion Lakers 119-107 in th<' opener of the Western Conference finals. Sampson, meanwhile, wasn't the offensive force he has been this season. enc Nurka10\. of thl' Soviet Union on 5:30 pm. -BASEBALL: Dodgers at ')1. Monda\ at thl' World t\matt'ur 80'ttng Louis. Channel 11 . RADIO ( hampion\h1p'> Do" ne) ·., 3-:! <.let 1c;1on over the :!6-year-old SO\ 1et bo\.er sent ham inw thl· I 25-pound class quanerfinals ngainst :!I-year-old Kdc11.' Banks of Chicago. 5:30 p.m. -BASEBALL: Dodgers at St. Louis. KABC (790). He scored only two points in the first quancr and had 19 points before Rockets Coach Bill Fitch benched him with 41'1 minutes to play. Banko; occame thl' ti lth l l "i ho'ter to w in when he knod.ed oul ''vkhmet K1hg of' l urke) "-Ith a 1remendou' nght to the bo<h at 2·42 of the !>Ceond round 7:30 p.m. -BASEBALL: Boston at Angels, KMPC (710). 7:30 p m. -PRO BASKETBALL: Houston at Lakers. KABC (570). "Ralph has to have a better game," Fitch sajd Monday prior to practice. "I look at the first game against the games in Denver and he didn't have the same quickness. But as the game wore on, he got into it. WEDNESOA Y'S RADIO Ml•anw h11e. Cu ha ran its record to 15-0 when Pablo Romero knod .. l'd do" n East German Renl' Sue1ov 1us in the firc;t round and "-On a 178-oound slugfest "\.;! 10:30 a.m. -BASEBALL: Dodgers at St. Louis, K.ABC (790). "Over the course of the senes, he's DUNN'S BASEBALL DREAM COMES TO END. • • From Bl playl'd 1n douli ll'· \ and a ldt·handc-r T he left~ p1t(. hell 111 th1: Dodger•; ""'em :rnd thrl'" nt1th1ng hut smoke Ii mean. th" l/.U' v.a., thm"'ing some \t'raouc; ··c-hl'e\t.' \h fa\thall "a'n'1 neon in the-c;amr lcagur.l \In c:rth<'IC'l'i. moc;t of lhl• pill he" thrl'" v.dl. "-hllh v.a\n I '>Urpm1ni. l llht•r P1tc-hl·rc; u'iuall\ dominate hlltN~ 1n thl''l' nnt'-lllOl" '>hot ~llU· al ions lieta u\t' thl'\ h.n t• murh morl' adrl'naltn grnng at that particular 11me .\ h1t1<.'1 h,I\ tu tx· p.ll1l·n1 at thl· pla1c and wait tor J pill h tw lan dno,.l' a p11c-her 11 lw hJ\ llw t ontrol.1:an 1<'111 all out · Im J lc>uph' ol 1nn 1ng'>. ,ind at 11mn ,., t'I\ • p111 h lw~ond htm \elf'" It didn't make a lot of d1fTeren n· how \\t'll )Ou thn:v. because the: gl·neral managl'ment had a prett ) good idea of who th ey "'ere going to ~1gn 1n the fi rc;1 place. One of the nght- handcr'> had pitched eight years in the minor leagues ~1m1lar to th<' s11ua11on 1n San Jo'IC this )ear. K1nc;1on was looking to beef up m tt>am v.11h pe rhaps older and more ex perienced playcrc;. Which ma kes bu">1ne'is senc;c Ho"'cver. nobod)-understood why the) hadn·1 been aware of the ahcr- a11ons on the roster Not ma.king the hall club was the mo\t disappointing thing 1n my hft:. l could probabl) MILD DEPRESSION? The Psychopharmacology Research Institute needs volunteers with mlld depression If you feel depressed but are uncertain If It Is sertoua enough to be considered for a study, please call. Our research staff will perform a telephone screening to let you know If your symptoma are troublesome enough to qualify for a visit to one of our cllnlca. Symptoms of clinical depression Include some, or all of the followlng. 0 Loss of Interest or pleasure In usually rewarding activities 0 Feeling depressed, sad, blue, or hopeless. 0 Changes In appetite. recent significant weight loss or weight gain 0 Excessive fatigue or feeling very slowed down, no energy. 0 Dltflculty getting to sleep or staying asleep, or steeping too much 0 Feellng gullty, worthless or useless. 0 Indecision, poor memory, or p6or concentration 0 Increased, physical problema To qualify, you must be at least 18 years old, experiencing de- pression for a minimum of one month and be In gOOd general physical condition. Qualified volunteers wlll receive a brief phya1ca1 exam. EKG. labora· tory tests and weekly visits with a profeulonat-ALL FME Of CHAROE. Coples of all medlcal tnt results wlll be provided to you or your doctor. upon your requ .. t. Your participation may lead to the UM of a aafe end effective m.CStcatlon for the treatment of d41prellton. For more Information, or an appointment. p ..... call: (714) 1&2-7910 Of (213) &11-1101 .... . .... ... ....., .. ,,..., ......... ..... PSYCHOPHARMACOLOQYRESEAACHINSTITVTE handle leaving the game at the Memphis. Oklahoma City and Albu- professional level much easier if I querque. It was an awesome 1rip and hadn't pitched well. or had a bad I'll never regret doing It-though my season. But that really wasn't the case. pocketbook will be feeling the crunch (Ev<'ry player knows deep down for a while. whether or not he's capable of Sometimes you have to take a competing at a cenain level, and let's &,hance if it's ever going to work; you JUSt say that I was pretty hungry for also n<'Cd to be prepared to pay the this opportunity after teanng up the consequences 1r 11 doesn't. Pioneer League last season.) For a guy who has been pitching I understand that pro ball is since almost an embryonic state-or poltt1cally chaotic. a system run that's what 1t seems lilce, anyway - purely on numbers. Naturally I had to it's a dream not lost. JUSt gone. deal with this setback and accept the Nothing can ever replace the feel- fact that my dr<"am of playing major mg of pitching when you're "on" in league baseball is over. front ofa large crowd at home. It feels For a baseball player, the way out as 1fthe whole world 1s behind you on can nev<"r be a sweet one. The end as a every pitch. backing )'.OU with bitter taste. enthusiasm after every stnke. inning I know that there are a lot of six-after 1nnmg. Until finally, af\er ex· foot nght-handers with an average ha us ting your mind and body for over fastball. And at 23. you·r<' not euctly two hours on the mound with intense considered a young pup anymore. concentration. when the last out is That's the way ii goes. and life will recorded in the ninth inn mg and your go on. teammates encompass you with Oh, but talk about an expen<"nce on handshakes, nothing else m the world the road . 1t was the first t1m<' that I seems to matter during that brief really had a look at the country, moment of exaltation. out,.d<' or the western st.ate and a It 's a feehn~ you bottle in your bncf we<'k·long 1np to Ohio for the mind because 1t doesn't happen very College World SC'ne~ a couple of years often or last very long. It's a part of ago. tlascball that has brought o lot of joy It took 'llX da}~ to get home after in my life my family had w1rcd me some Like an alarm clock. waking you up mon<'y And instead of taking 1-40 from a plcai.ant dream on an early home. the route I took going out, I Monday morning when it's raining used J. 70 and went 1hrough St. Louis, cats and dogs outside. It is tame to k t Kansac; C'n) and Denver rather tha ao ofa warm dream ----Newport's Cannery Village---_.. r=(Aff~DO DINNER NIGHTLY 6~00 P.M. to Midnight Mondays & Tuesdsyt1: Two Dinner a for 11 ~.9~ Wedn~ldaya: 6 Courie ltallan Dinner .9.9~ 2900 NewPQrt Boalevard •Newport 8 acb • 87G·2968 got to get 1n10 (the game) quicker." Sampso n will get that chance tonight in 1he second game of the best-of-!><'ven senes at th<' Forum. Sampson said that instead of playing the low pos1 away from the acuon. he moved away from the basket hoping to contribute in ways other than scoring points. .. When I come out and play as a passer and play facing the basket, I have to realize what I can do." he said. 'Trrt more involved m ihe offense when I play oul there. That's because we run a ce nter-type offense 10 the strong side and post up from there. That's the key to our offense ... For most players in the NBA, a game hk<' Sampson had in 1he fi~t game would be a nice night's work. Not for ampson. ··1 didn't play a gr<"at game," he said "I was trying to ke y ortplaymg Kareem (Abdul-Jabbar) Tuesday night. I'll have to come out more aggress1velv. esl)('c1all y on offense." Things didn't work out at e11her end as Abdul-Jabbar unraveJed Sampson fo r 31 p01nts 1n the senes opener. "I think he·s a great pla yer." Abdul- Jabbar said. "He's come under a lot of cnt1c1sm for the way he plays But he plnys great for Ralph ... Magic Johnson of the Lakers pointed ounhe Rockets found room 1n their offense for both Sampson and OlaJuwon dunng the regular season. He knows Sampson can be cffectiv<' away from the basket. .. They both always seem to have high numbers,.. Johnson said. .. It seems hke five 11mes 1hey go to one guy, fi ve times to the other. Ralph can play out there because he's got that medium-range Jumper that he·11h1t1f you let him take 11." BASEBALL PAIRINGS. • • From Bl who has compiled an 8·5 record with a 2.50 ERA. He has struck out 84 batters. Irvine counters with slugger Bobby Hamelin (.520 1n league, .51 4 for the season) and control pitcher Bria n Snoddy. who has racked up a 6-2 record an league, with an ERA of2.33. Estancia Coach Ken Millard ex· pr<"sscd only mild concern with has first-round foe. despite Mountain View'!> 18-3 credentials. 'Tm not womcdabout them," said Millard "I JUSt worry about m) own." Millard said he·d most hlcely start Pat Norville. whose 1.5 ERA · 1c; enhanced by the fact he has figured 1n every Estancia victory 1n league play Norville went 6·3· I an kague and had three saves. Millard credited a great deal of Estancia'<; c;uccess to catcher Tomm)- Campcau. "He's worked his head off ... said Mallard. "At this time last year we had no catcher. I threw him into the breech and he's become a respectahle h11th school ca1cher ·· Un1vcrs11y Coach Chris Conhn said he expected to &tan 6-5 lcfi- hander Todd Krueger, who has a 5-6 record and 2 10 ERA. Am ong Un1vers1ty's ma1or weapon~ behind Kruc~er are short- stop Al Contrera (.S20 in league, 418 ov<"rall ) and sophomor<' ( asey Simpson Simpson was brough t up for the s<"cond round of league and lashed out 14h1 ts in 20 at-bats. for a phenomenal 700 l<'ague batting average Like OcCDn View. Univer<11ty enters with back-to-back league champ1on~hips under its belt. Stddleback Coach Bobby Man- gram 1d he'll stan his acc. Jcfl Rowe, who has fashioned an 8-2-1 overall record. with a 2.36 ERA. fie has struck out SI in 77 1nr\lngs. * Wtl.0 CUO OAMU cw.-... •. lllS II.I'/\.) 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OIN fl'olv It 6 11 et 0.ll•OOd <II Sl Av.,, Cl2•tl 11 llo"fl' lttl>IJl)ll( 110 SI P-a11lll•I PO 71 11 Crouroedt. 1110 m WllO Cera I •• WftlllltV C1'·SI WllO (.,d ~ el a loofT'lMIOI\ C1W'hllen I 11·41 Owttlt V alltrv It· ~I el It Otemoncl 114 l l W Id Cera G 11 L nl .. l<I CIW \l•ell t 11 ) 11 , ' lnd~ans get ambushed by Rangers, 19-2 Texas bangs out tn first tn AL West ....... AP '11,_tdtec CLEVELAND -The Texas Raqen have been doorvtats too Iona to tet complacent. even after collect-i~ 19 runs on 22 bits to stay in first place in the American Leque West. "1t•1 a Iona season,•• winnina pitch- er Charlie Houah said after Texas sel team ~ for runs and bits in a 19-2 victory over the host Indians Monday nilbt. "If we can sustain the intensitl, I don't know if we can win it, but think we're goina to be all riaht." • Even rookie Pete lncavialia, one of seven Ranters with at reast two runs bitted in, sounded a note of caution after the team's bigest offensive pmeever. "Riabt now we're swinginf the bat real well," lncavi&Jia said. 0 1t s a &ood feeling to sec guys up and down the lineup rutting the ball. But we've got to fofJCl tbjs one now and th.ink about win~ tomorrow." Despite the larJC final margin of victory, tbe game was tied 1-1 until the Ranaers scored eiaht runs in the sixth innina. Larry Parrish, who has four homen in three day1:a, sparked the outbunt with a three-run homer. "AU of a sudden, we started fi ndina boles, and we got on a roll," Tom Paciorek. wbo was S-for-6, said. "LP (Parrish) hit that ball a mile. A thrce- run homer with the score tied is a gamebrca.ker. rm sure that knocks the wind oul of their sails." TaXAS Mc0W91ct Fletdlru Wlllvlll H Hwrell2b lncvglla rf GWrlohl rf WardH LAPnhdh S4auetll c Petra .. c Padonl lb Buachle JI> T ..... * all r 11111 s 2 3 2 4 I 2 2 2 I 0 0 3 I 2 4 4 I 3 2 I 0 0 I 53 2 0 3 4 I 3 3 2 I 0 2 0 I 0 6 2 s 2 s 2 2 2 CLavaLAND Buller c:f EW!llmslf Francou C.Vlar rf Thrntndtl CCasllMl>h Jacobv )ti Talllar lb ~If &andollf'I knzrd2b ltohn 2tl AU.nson c Ulf2211 T ... sanw ..... .. , ..... 3 2 2 0 I 0 0 0 4 0 I 0 4 0 I 2 3000 I 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 4 0 I 0 3 0 I 0 I 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 J1 2' 2 Tens -I• 441-19 ~ 1••1--2 Gamt Wlnnlno Rll -l.a. Parrish <•>. E-ttolln. DP-Te11as I, CleYeland 2. l.06-Texas t. Cleveland S. 2&-eutlar, M. Ha•. Harren 2. Wwd. Hit~ PvTlsh (7) se-.....,,_, m. Butler (6). s-euact1a1e. SF-Wrlohl I .. H It •it aa SO Orlo1•4, 1VJdtehzS fint ipnin& off Danny Jack.Ion, 1-0, before the Royals jumped on loter Dave LaPoint, ().2, for four in the second. Jacklon allowed sh hits and • two NM in ICVen inninp. BALTIMORE-Lee Lacy tinaled Balboni an4 Darryl Motley started home the winnina Nn with two outs the 1eCOnd·innin1 rally with one-out in the ninth innina afttr Jim Dwyer • sinJ)es. • l\ad tied the pme with a pinch-nit . l\orner as the Baltimo~ Orioles * rallied to defeat the Chicqo White Dn.orT KANSAS an Sox 4-3. •r111111 •r11w Rich Bordi, 1-0, who pitched to one ~~ !: : ~ \ i :c: ~ T g g batter in relief of staner Scott ColH • • 1 2 2 u-. w o o o o McGreaor, was the winner. Bob t=.~ c : : I J ::'~ ~ ~ : ~ g James, who worked the ninth inning Hemc1on w· > o o o ..._. lb • 1 2 2 for Chicqo, fell to 1-3. ~ 111 ! : : : =~ : : : ~ Harold Baines' seventh homer, .._,._ n a o o o SYndl>rl c 4 1 1 > with two outs in the ninth off 5Pllmll l>h 1 o o o ASaleir" 2 o 1 o · McGreaor, pve the Chicqo White t::: ? ~ ~ g Sox 3-2 lead, but Jim Dwyer tied it SMr1dll 11< o o o o with his second of the ICISOn with one T..... 25 s" s T.-JI 6 1 6 s-.. w ..... out .in the bottom of the innina. ' °""" • • m-s Mike Young followed the homer ic-Clf¥ ...... _, "th waJ" d he ad _ __. Game Wlnnlne 1t•1 -SullclbWt (2). wt a ..., an va~ to E-wNte. DP-Kansas CltY l. LO.-o.tro11 second on Alan Wigins' sacrifice, 1, Kama• City s.. a-<ottt. MdtM. settino up Lacy's pme>-winnin& hit. HR~o (2). S&--Wllllakar (I). • * Detl"8lt ... • " " •• .. so c.neets ci TOlleln3b hlnelrf F!Mc Nldloll If Kittle dh aaon11 1b HU6ttl 21> GUiiien U •rlllll 4 I 2 0 4 I I 2 • I 2 I 4 0 0 0 3 0 l 0 )000 3 0 I 0 3 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 aA&.TMOa• . , ... Wlwlnl211 3 0 I 0 Lacvrl s 0 21 Lvnn cf 3 O 2 O M!.Jlrav lb ' 0 O O lt"*8nu I I 0 0 511Mtt di\ 3 l I 2 a.Mpph 1 000 SMIWlf •OOO ltavtrd 31> 3 o o o Owvtrllh 111 1 Dempsy c 3 0 I 0 MkYn1111t1 0 I 0 0 T.... JI J 7 J T.-JI 4 0 4 T-outs wt\111 wlnnlnt run sccncl. s-..w ..... ~ --·1-J ... _. .. -__. G«na W1nn111e Rll -Lacv Ill. E-Gu11911. OP-Chlcaeo 2, &alflfNA 2. Loe-<Ncaeo I, lhlllmore L 21-LYM • ....,.._ HR-sMels (2), Tolleson (2), hlNI (7), ~ (2). $-W!oolM. a.a. ,....,.,. McKaon James L.1-3 a ... , •• • H llP N IO 6 62244 2 0 0 0 0 1· 2-3 2 2 2 I 0 McGreeor l t-3 7 l 3 o 2 lordlW,1-0 1-3 0 0 0 0 I Seever P41dl90 to I IMlltar In Iha 1tll. HBP-ftlt*an (bv Seever). Um9'rat Home,.Hlnchtleck; First, larneo; Second, Brwnloan; Third, Roe. T-2:& A-IUOt. Royal•B, Tl6en5 KANSAS CITY, Mo. -Jim Sundbera's three-run homer stretched rus bitting streak to 10 games and carried Kansas City to a 6-S victory over the Detroit Tilers. L.aP'oW L,0-2 C.l'NIOlll ScMrrar Hernendat ic-1 c;ity • 2·3 1 6 6 2 I ll-3 0 0 0 I 0 I 00002 I 00002 OJaduOnW,1-0 1 6 2 2 I 2 ~lbetrl 0 3 3 l I 0 Fan 1 I 0 0 0 2 ai.ca 2·3 0 0 0 1 I HultMannS,I M 0 0 0 2 0 Qultenbarrv PltcMd IO • batt'" In Iha Ith. HIP-A. Salaut (tlV Ce!'nPOell). WP-La· Point. UmPlrat-Home. McKae11; Finl, Clerf!; S.C· oncl. Shukldt; Third, Mormon. T-2".AI. A-JI, •. Taut HOu911 W,2·0 MaNar s.2 • ) • 2 2 0 2 0 0 l Steve Balboni had two bits and drove in two runs as the Royals ~ handed the Tigers their fifth loss in six ~ HMIOft l., 1-2 S 9 S S 4 2 Karn I 1-J 6 I 7 3 l Eallartv 2 2-3 7 4 6 2 2 HMIOft pllefted IO 4 ballan In Iha 611\. Ha~ttl¥ Houlfl), ~ lb¥ Karn). Umplr•-+4ome. 0...lneef'; Fnt, ltallv; s.c»nd, Coble; Third, Mc:Clalland. T-3:14. A-f,354. ~e:· Tigers, trailin& 6-2, ICOred three runs in the ciahth after toad.in& the hues with no o111Lapinst rd.icl' ace Dan Quitenbcrry. who failed to retire a batter. The Ti~ took a 2-0 lead in the MINNEAPOLIS -Rickey Hen- derson broke an O.for-18 &lump with a 1ina)e, a double and a two-run homer and New Yotk withstood Minne- sota '1 six-run rally in the ninth innina at the Mctrodome. * NNYOAK •rll'1 • !I , 2 J I I I • 0 2 I •OOO • 0 1 0 SI 2 0 s 1 '0 , J 1 a , 0 0 0 .... Ytrtr ._,,__ w,,.., Arm&lt .... ltllNttlU ~· - -•M>TA ., .... •Ooo I I I 2 s 1 ) > S I I 0 4 0 2 I 2 l 0 0 4 I I 0 4 0 0 0 '2 2 2 2000 I 0 0 I 0 I 0 0 .. ,.. 12-3 • ' ' • ' 0 22200 MOOOOO ...,,,..,... L.0-J s 3 4 4 4 2 A.-.0 22·3 1 s l 3 4 .... ..,. I 1-J l 0 0 I 0 ~ iMtcMd IO 2 Mtl9n In Ille ftt\. U"""'• llome, VO!tM9IO; Finl, Wtlle; 5-111, ~ Tlllrd, MtcCov. T-JS A-M-. JfadilelwB, are ..... a SEA 1TL£ -Deve Hadenon bit lwo bomen IDd left-buder Man Youas allowed three bits in '"en inniQll of relief u tbe Seattle MariOen blanked tbe Milwaukee Brewen6-0. Y ouna, 3-2, caane on to pi1eb in the third inmna after N.ner Milt Wilcox pulled a mu1ele while warmina up. * MILWAUK.•a •ATTLa .. ,,w Oalllftra !Ito lt8MV211 1000 ....... 2 0 •• ~-3000 Tounf ci ) • 0 t .... "' J 0 0 0 Ollllvlt If 4 0 I 0 0-rf JOtO 5¥eUm 31> , • 2 • ~c 3000 T.... '11 0 J t T .... s-..-. ...... 'trllW I 2 0 4 0 I 0 J 0 1 I 4tOO JtOI 4 I I 0 4 2 2 2 J I I 0 4 I 2) JI 610 ' ......... ----0 ...... "' ttJ ti•-• Game W'"""'9 R91 -D. HeftdlrWI (2). E-Ow. D~ "91119 2. LCle MllWI 111• 7, S.tttl 1. ~_,,.,,. aw.i. A. Devit • ....,...,. Hlt-0. HendlrlOll 2 l6), Y ..... (2). .......... Hltuara L,A· 3 OWWln McClure ...... "° N ll•a N IO 52.J • s s 2 ' IM 0 I t 0 2 I 2 I I 0 0 Wllco• 2 00022 MYo.Jtte 1 3 0 0 • t HaP-<aildaroft (111'1 ....,_.), GenflW (.,_, M. YOYN), Owell (111'1 ....... ). um.ti• 111111•, an.-; Finl, K.a!Mr; lecand, c:.aMY; ~ .............. T~. A-13,'19. 8lae.Ja7111J, A'•S • OMU• •r11• • 1 I t 4 ) J I 4 0 2 I I 0 0 0 4 0 t I S 0 d I S I I I • 0 1 0 tOOO 2t00 200t •Sit S T ..... '-"""' ...... ., ... SI I I 2 •• t • 11. •••• J. '. . 4. '. 2 I I I • I I I 3.'. I I 0 I T..... ltl tll --· OlllllM ----J 0-WWlilll ... -Mulllllllt (I) E-9111. Gt1fllll. M--T.,.... J, --... t l..09-ToroMo It, OlldaM 7. ---... • Mu!IRIQ, Gerd9, .---. Hit-e.rtllM Cl), ~ Cl), $a-u..tlew (t ). SF lodll9. • M llUMIO 62·3 • 3 J , , 21-3 0 I 0 I 1 I 2 I I t 0 SM 4 4 3 4 !I 22·3 2 0 0 3 2 Mets-maintain red-hot ways, 1-0 Teufel breaks up pitch duel in nin inning From AP dJspatclaes NEW YORK -Tim Teufel singled home Ray Knight from second base in the ninth inning Monday night. giving the New York Mets a 1-0 victory over the Atlanta Braves. Knight led off the ninth with a double against reliever Paul Assen- macher. 1-1 , and easily scored when Teufel followed with bis single to center. Mets starter Sid Fernandez and reliever Roger McDowell, 3-0, com- bined on a four-hitter and struck out 13 Atlanta batten. The victory was the 19th in Lhe last 21 games for New York.· ATLANTA $amClle r1 Ramlri JI> Murl>hvct Horner lb Harper If WlhOlnrf AThOmlU VJrollc Hutlllf"d 2tl MahierP Alnmctw P * allrlllll 4 0 I 0 • 0 0 0 3 0 l 0 • 0 I 0 2 0 0 0 l 0 0 0 4 0 1 0 3 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 N•W YOAK Ovt111ra ct Mllc:helllf'I McOwllP HJOlllll n Hmndl lb Slrwl>rv rf C.rtar c Foster If Knlohl )ti Teufel 2tl Frndel P MWU111 c:f JI 0 4 0 T ..... ScweW""*"" Mtrlllll 3 0 I 0 l 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 2 0 2 0 0 0 4 0 I 0 4 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 4 I 2 0 4 0 3 I 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 JI I t I ....... ----0 NewY9"1 - -•I-I None out when wlnnlne l'\lfl KOred Gamt Wlnnlno RBI -Teufel (I) E-+iullberd, FCKlar. OP-Allanla I LOl-Allanl• •• N-Yor11 10. 28-Murl>hv. Knlohl. Se-«amlra1 (6) IP HitaataSO ....... Mahler 6 1-l 1 0 0 3 4 A1"""8Chaf L, l-1 I 2·3 2 I I l 2 NtWY9"1 Fernendet 4 0 0 I 10 McDwlW.3-0 2 0 0 0 3 3 Auenmadlar pOCllad lo 2 IMlllen In Iha ""· Ul'nPlrat llome, KMllaf', Finl, Fr~lno. s.conc11 Matlll, Third. Davldlon T-1:59. A-2U06. PIUU1e115, Aatro. 1 HOUSTON -Von Hayes hit three doubles and drove in two runs. backina Sl\alle Rawley's seven-hitter as the Pbiladelphla Phillies beat the Houston Aslrot S-1 . Rawley, 4-31 struck out three and walked two. Jim Deshaies, ().1, pve up four runs on five hits in 4 1-3 1nnin&sandtookthclo Dcihaies held the Phillies hitlc until Hayes tined an opposite-field double to left with one out an the founh. Juan Samuel then s1nalcd home Ha~. The Ph11Jics added three run an the fifth. Glenn Wilson's pop fly fell in for a single with one out, and a walk to Steve Jeltz and a single by Rawley loaded the bases. * l"t41LADaLl'HIA HOUSTON Roanlck ct H1yHH S.m1'812tl Sdlmdl lb Sctlu )ti Joltssll c GWllson rf Jalll '' lt1wlev P Mrlllll s 0 l 2 4 I 3 2 S 0 I I 2 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 3 l I 0 2 2 0 0 3 I I 0 Doran 2tl CalllOUn p AIMW pt1 OIPlnop Halehar If Gamarlb GOavls lb laHrf Tllonu &alteYc Walker ct ~p SolanP p PMovts 2tl n S 7 S T.- 5-'trt ..... ., ..... 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 2 0 4 0 I 0 l 0 0 0 4 0 I 0 3 0 I 0 3 0 0 0 3 I 1 I I 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 JI I 7 I ."'_. •.•. · l"NlaJ I * -I• •1-s Heu11911 -•1 --1 Gama Wlnnlnll Rll -S.mual (2). E-<krner. OP-Phlladeklhla ), Houston I. LO&-f»hl~ 7, Houslon S. 28-+iavn 3. HR-Walker (1). SI-G. Davis (I), ~ (2) s-ttawlev ~ " " ..... so ............. ltawlev W,4·3 t 7 I I 2 3 ....... Onheles L,0-1 4 1·3 S 4 4 2 6 ~ 12·3 I 0 0 2 I Calfloun 2 0 0 0 I 2 OIPlno I l I I I 0 Urru>lres-Home. Rannarl; Finl, arocalandar; Second, Monlaoua; Third, Waver. T-2:11. A--t,JS4. Red•4, 1Dzpm3 MONTREAL -Eddie Milner hit a solo home run with two outs in the ninth inniDf. giving the Cincinnati Reds a 4-3 v1ctory over Montreal and snappina the Expos' eight-game win- ning streak. * C~ATI ~ct ltOMlb Parlr.ar rf EMlllV" CncPCllH lall 3CI Po_.,P BOlaz c O..ter2b Oannv• ~lcep ltunnals3b •rllllll s 1 2 2 s l 0 0 4 0 2 0 3000 2 0 0 I 4 I 2 0 0 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 2 I 0 0 l 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 ltalnellf Watltlarci Oawton rf Wall9cll)tl GMrrolb L.aw 21> ~wmnu •llrdllo c J'Thctln ptl FIUtendc McG"9ftp Sdll1dtP Krndlc Pll Robar .. • ••• J .,. ... s-..w ..... altrlllll 4 2 2 0 s 0 2 0 S.O I 2 3 I I 0 3000 , 0 2 0 2 0 I I 2 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ,, J. J CM4 " ... .. •1-• MeMrW •1 Olt tlt-J Gama Wlnnln9 Ital -Miiner ( 1). OP-Monlr•I 1. LQt9-<lnclnnall 7, .MolltrH I • H•-Mllntf(I) le~ (5), It~ (II) ~ 2, Newman IF Newmeft Qd••" 09MV Prtot ~W,1·3 --.... P M llPMIO 1 tJJJ IO MOOOOO 1 '•3 0 0 0 0 I McGetftten • 3 J ' 1 SC:11t tadar 7 0 0 0 I ltoMr9t L.0-1 I I I I 0 0 , Otnnv IMtelleel to > llelten In 1t1t Ml Ha.-Watlacll (tlV OtMYl aK-~affl9an UINIKt• llOIM. ltl!*Y. ''"I ~. ~. WMt, TlllN, I .Wiiiem T-n4. A-11,911 If you've been planning home improvements, special investments, a vacation or college education, now is the time to check out our more affordable home equity loans. For more information follow the arrow to any oonvenicntly located Bank of America branch. Or to apply by phanc, call l~ 551-3113 Moil. -Fri. 8a.m. to 8p.m. And take advan- tage Of our low rates while they last. ~ ...... Bl I S2oo (Agt REBATE I I I I I I ---~~ N1HA I L------------.J , ............. ...... ..,....~w-·-·· I M * Orange Coelt OAlLY PILOT/ T\Mlldey, May 13, 1986 Warmingupat200mph Indy 500 cars aren •t comfortable unless they're oln that speed caution flaP. for.a total of 41 of me 200 laps. Winner Danny uUivao avcrqe speed was a non-record 1 S2.982 mph. But pccds an excess of 200 mph under arttn flag conditions were common, with two-time winner Rick Mears postina the fast lap of the day at 204.937 mph on the 14th lap. lNDIANAPOLJS (AP)-Michael Andnmi uys it's fou.en to th.e point wh~ou warm up at 200 mph at the ndaanapolis Motor S way. . "These cars don't even feel comfonable unttl you act up to ~peed," Andrct.ti said ~onday before goi~ onto the 21h-m1le track to begin work mg on the setup of his car for the May 2S lndjanapolis .500. Rain fell ovemiaht and throuan the momina hours Monday and the track did not open until 4:40 p,m EDT. leavina JUSt 2 hours and 20 minutes in the practice $C$SIOn. . Andrctti who will start on the outside of the first row m ttlc 33--0arfleld, said. '.'lfsaoina to be pretty fast. at lea t at the start. Really, I thank everybQdy out here is getting osed to runnma the kind oflaps we've been runnina." The track aot busy in a hurry, with Ma.no Andrett1, Michael's faiher, who qualified in the middle of the second row. runnina a 212.414 mph. That was the quicktst lap recorded Monday. ' Among the qualified entrants, Sullivan. who will be in the m1ddleoftht front row, turned a fast lapof210.280, while Cogan was caught at 210.231. Tom Sneva, who will 'llart neitt to Cogan in the middle of the third row, also had a fast lap of 210.280 Kevin C~n. Andretti's former teammate and the inside starter in the third row, said, "[ wouldn't be surprised to sec some early laps in the 206 or 207 range, maybe even h•&hcr. The cars are prcuy comfortable when you act them into racing tnm. But 1 wouldn't expect that lund of pace to keep up for long with the track cond1t1ons chan1mg hke they do 1n the race." Michael Andretti was cau&ht at 207.852. Others taJcing laps 1n qualified cars were Al Unser. Those two were amona 13 of the 28 first-weekend quahfiers who made it onto the track Monda y dunng the rain-shortened practice.· Last year's race, which featured the fastest qualifying field in the historv of auto racing, was slowed by e1R}l1 Emerson Fitt1p:ildi of Brazil, Pancho Carter. Geoff Brabham of Australia, Robtrto Guerrero of Colombia and Johnny Parsons. who did a lmle setup work for teammate \hip Ganass1. All were clocked above 204 mph ~ • • . " MAJOR LEAGUE STANDINGS A"*1can LMelM Teaes "'*" Otlllend Ken1HCllY Mlnneso•• S..llle C1tlc.90 ao.1on NewVori.. Clevtlenc:t MllweukM Sell.more O.troll 't«Ol'llO WUT 04VISION W L " 13 II IS 16 11 I) 16 I) ta 12 n 10 It EAST DIVISION 10 II 10 II 11 12 16 1• IS I• I• IS 1• 11 Me!IM'f'I ~ All99h 7, 80llOll I Tuu 19, c1e .... no 7 8•111more •. Cn1ceoo J Kenll11 City 6, O.lro11 S New Vor" 9, Mlme1011 8 S.1111e 6. Mllw1ullN 0 Tecte'f'I Ge~ Pct. SS2 !>4S Ga 48S 7 ... 3 •19 ' u.. 6 ~s 6 MS MS Sl6 7 SlJ 3, Sil ' 483 s 431 61J 8o1ton 18rown 7 01 el A""'1 (Romanick 2 11 n Ntw V0<k CJonn 1 ·01 •' Mlnnesote ( Blvltven 3· 71 Tt•u (Cortee 7·21 a t C1tvt1eno CSchuilt 7·0) C,,lcego (8ennlster 1·31 at 8e1t1more (Ftene111n •·•I. n Detroit (Morrl• l u e t K•ns.e• Cilv lS.1>errwi11tn 2 31 n Mllweukff !Leerv l ·71 11 Seattle CMoroen 2·31 n T0<onto (,t,<:k•r O 71 el O•l!llllc:t !Codlr011 l 31. ,, Wtclnt\de'f'1 GlmH 8ol•on el A.,...1 n TO<OlllO 11 Oeklenc:t Mllweukff •• Steme Chlceoo et Ntw York n T tot el Ottrou n Mlnnewte et 8elllrnort n CteYNnc:t at ll:•nH\ City n Natt.nal LMelM WEST 04VIStON W L Pct. Ga Hou11on 17 12 Sl6 S.n FrenclKo SenO'-It " IS 16 S63 '> ... ) '" .. , •74 s •• .. nta Ottdeert Clnclnne 11 I) 17 ,, 19 • 19 EAST DIVISION 296 8 NtW York ?I s ... Montru l II 11 601 s St Louil 1J 1 S "' 9 Pl11\Durgn 17 I• '61 ' ChlCIOO 1l 16 ... 9 1 PnlleCS.ID,,18 17 1 S ••• 9' l Mondlv'' Sc0<•1 Clnc1nne11 ' Monlru l ) N•w York I, Alla nta 0 Pnllec:ttll>llte S Hou,1on I Onl• oemtl \C!lec:tultd Todlv'1 Ge~ Otcl9tn 1 lteuu 7 1t ., SI LOU" Tuc:tor J·1), n Clnctnnal1 !Soto ? •1 at MorHreel (Youmel'tl I JI Sen F•enc11co 1Gerrt1t\ 3 l t "' C111cago IS.nc:te"o" ' II ,t,111n1a t Jonnson J JI at New vor- l8trenv1 I 01 n Sen 0 ego •Sr.ow I ,, 11t Pltt\burg" l81t1eck1 l OJ n Ph11aoe•C>h•a fot.vtr O OJ a t Hou,•o<> IScOll ) 2 n W9dne'41Y't Games Oedeer' at St LOU•\ S." F' ••nc•lCO •t Cn>eellO Allt nle al Monlrtet n C·nc•nna1 al PMe c:te•on • ,, Sen 0 1t00 11 P 1111>urQI' n Ntw Vor• •' Houston ~ AMERICAN LEAGUE Aneets 7, Red Sox 1 90STON CALll'~HfA OwEvn\ •I BOOGl JI> 8 ucknr on Rice fl 8evlor lb Goeoman t 8erre11 2D Lvon' cl Romero u Tot1t' eb r n bl ab r 111>1 4 0 ' 1 Pelt l rt S I I I 4 0 0 0 JOVl'er II> S 2 ) C 1 00 0 ltJCkV>dll )000 4 0 I 0 QpCnCl lb 7 I 0 0 ) 0 0 O Oowntng ti ' I ' O ' O 1 O R Jonfll rl I t 1 0 l 0 I 0 Willono 21> 3 I I 7 .I 1 1 o Scnoltld u l O O o 1 0 0 0 BO()ne c • 0 0 0 10 I • I Tofell )() 1 I 1 Scor. bY lnn"'91 llosttn 001 000 000-I Cell+oml• 100 t.00 00.-7 Game W1nn1no R81 Wlllong (11 OP-8 0\IOn I Catttorn1a I LOB-8o••on S ( oi.torn•a 1 '8 R Jonf'' LvOn\ Ow Evan\ r.toman HR-JOvl'll!lr 1 11?1 !> Romf'•? IP H R ER 88 SO ltU8fl No09•l I 4 I. I I 1 I 4 Lollar 1 I I !) IJ O 2 Sttwarl 1 1 0 0 0 Cellftml.t Sulton w 1 I ~ ' "O<\ler I 0 0 I 0 Umolr~\-HO<Tl• (OJ\ r s r: r\I IOf'r \Of'I. !>t<Ol'c:t Merr I Tn·td Hf'ndrv T -2 JS A 7S 4SO J8Ck\On Oownl119 6urlt\on HendrlO Jovner Wlltono S<nollt lCI 8oona GrlCll OtClnctt Jonts Pe111, Nerron Miiier Tttell Anett evenees (~e..ttfl Meftdev'i Gamel aATTIHG Al A H HR 1181 Pct 13 's 76 6 1 s J l) fl• n l' s n 301 IO 17 7~ I ' l ll 63 I 11 \ 11 '70 13' 26 •S 17 IJ 326 u 1J 75 , n m 13 1 10 l ' 77l •• " 22 ' ' 1l• 0 6 11 7 ' '"' .,. 11 " l I~ 73• 79 'n It ' 11 10 101 10 ?I 1 I 709 1• ' ' o 1 m l1 ' S 0 1 IH 1097 169 lOS 44 ••I 170 PITCHING IP H aa SO W·Ll•A Cor1>e11 17 q S I 0 0 1 JS Fb'ller ll IJ S t l 1 4 IS Wiii ~ A1 11 '1 1 l l 07 'Leton '34'i •S It 11 4 I J jO McCes•ut 19 lt 16 JI 1 3 •IS R01'1'11t11IO l7 17 16 20 2 1 4 67 '"'dell ,, 'l ,, 14 17 1 0 so. Mo<lrt IS 11 I 11 I 1 00 l'oncn 17 II 6 9 0-1 too SYllOI\ 171 46 I 21 2 -l • •S C•noreria 1 6 1 o O 0 It 00 T..... 1'1• 1 1'0 I°' 191 11 IS •AS s.vn: Mltr't '· c~ i. "enct1 Parsons also went out 1n his own car, which is yet to qualify for the race. ltUNS-P ucl<efl Minnesota, 32 ltHtnoerson, New V0<k, lO, Jevner, A119111s, 2'1 PnllllPl, Oeklt nd, 2S. GHlll, Mlnnt\Oll, 23, 0 '8rlen. Tou, 23 lt81-J9.-, A~. U1 Cen"'o, Oek lend, ?t, L• PerrlV1, TtxH. 27. Malllnol• Ntw Yori<, 27. A OeYI\, Stellle, 26 HITS-Pucktll, Mlnnt\Ola, Sl, JtVftff, An981•. 4S; Mosebv, Toronlo, "· Vounl, Mllweuket, "· 80991, 8011on, 41 OOU8LES-8ooo•. 8o\lon, 11, O.wn• Int. A.,...1, 111 Ow EYtn1, 80$10ll, II. Wnllt, ll:en111 Cltv, 11, 'art lied wllh 10 TRIPLES-Fletcher, TUH, ), 17 ert Ii.cl wlln 2. HOME RUNS-Je'tl*, Afteell, 111 Puckell, Mlnnewte, 12, Canseco, 0t111enc1. 10. A OaYI,, Seallle, I, S ere tied wllh 7 STOLEN 8,t,SEs-R H~IOl'I. Ntw Vorll 23, Ce~11 Chlcego, 19, Moubv. TO<OlllO 10, Ft40tr MllWellkM, 9, TOiieson. Cnlcego. I U1>1/ltw, Toron10, I, WJiXlln1 8elllmore I PITOUNG 13 Otelslon,1-BoOOICktr, 8elllmo<e, 3·0 l 07, c 1emen1, 8 01ron, ~-o. l.99, Heu. 0.klend, 6· 1. 2 7•, Gulc:trY New Yon., •·1, 2 11 J Nltkro Ntw YCM'k, •·1, 2 IO, Lel1>reno1 KenM\ Cltv. 4· 1, l 44, Slelefl. "'-'· •• 1, l.SO. STRIK£OUTS-Clemt111, 80,lon, 60, HUI'S!, 80llOll. S7 Hl11uen, Mllweul<tt ss. ltllO. Oakleno, SS, Witt, • .,...,, 411 Morrl' Oelroll, 41 SAVES-lttQhtlll Ntw York, 9. Ane Belllmort, I, Cemecno CltYtlenc:t. 6 Metre, A1'19111l, 61 Herr!\, Texes, 6, Hefnanc:ttr, 0.lroll, 6 Natlenlf 1.Meue I~ MeftdtY'1 Games> 8A TTING (63 el l>etO-Rev. PlllJIX.trgn, .313, Gal•rr•iN. Monlrtel, .3S7, Gwynn, Sen Oleoo, 344, 8roo"'· Montrtel, m , Hemendtr. New York, 330, Se"-l>edeen, .llO. RUNS-W Clerk, Sen Frencl1co, '12. GlaOc:ttn, S.n Francisco 71, L90nerc:t. S.n Francisco, 10, Onulett. P1t11oor11h. 10, Raines, Monlrtel, 10 R81-8foot.\, Montreel, 74, Schmlc:tl 1>r11t1c:t.ic>nle, 2•. MlnMI, DoeletO, n 1 Leonerd S•n Frencl\CO 71, Rav Pll "NrGh, n HITs-Gwvnn, San O•ew. ~. Rev Ptllll>urgn 41 Leonerd. S.n Frenclsco. lt 8r00111 Monlreel. 31. Relntl, Monlreel, 37 OOU8LE~nandtz, New Yori<, 11, II Revnolc:ts. Plt1ll>\Jr11n 10 6 ere llt<I wit,, 9 TRIPLEs-&roo10 Montrtal 3 COi .man. SI LOUii 3 ltetnt\. Monlrtel ), S ~e tied With 2 HOME RUN5-8rOOlls. Montreal 7 OawlOl'I, Monlrtel, 1, G OeYIS. Houlton. 7 Me""81, Oedeerl,'7; Murl>fly Allente, 7 STOLEN ll•SES--c>uftall, o.o.n, ll1 Doren, Houston. 12. E OeYI,, Clnclnnell. II. Rel11e1. MonlrHI. 11, COitman SI LOUii, t, Oyk1tre, New VO<k, t PITCHING (3 c:tecl11onS)-81.itckl, Pit 1$1>urglt, 3-0, 3 90, Oerllng N•w V0<k. 3·0. • •1, Fernenau. New York, •-O, 711 L•Cou, S.n Francisco, 3·0, 1.SJ. McDowell New vori.., l·O. l 38, Qlede, New York, S·O. 1 49, Tll>C>s, Monlrtel, 3·0, I ~ STRIKEOUTS-I Smith Allenla, SJ, Scoll, Houston, S7. Wik.II, Oecteers, 491 Valeluu ... , Ooctetn. 46; Pelml!r, Atlanta, O. Sutclltte. C,,lc;ego, 0 SAVES-0 Smlln '1ou$1on 9 OrolCO, New Yori<, 6, Beller Cll1cago S Goueoe. Sen Qiego s. S ~re l•ed ""'''" c COLI.EGE A•·PCAA FIRST TEAM P -La rrv C1U111n Cet Ste•• Fullerlonl Milt.I Gott tFresno S1a111 M•lt.e Trt~tr (UC Ser1t1 8e•bara M1~e P1t1 tPeclllc) C -John Ecc•es •Ce• Steff Futltrlon) IB -G-R~ (UC 1"""'81 enc:t Miit.i ()gifSl>tt Nevade·LH VeguJ 2B -Scott Cernv UC Senta 8ert>trel JB -V "'• Tp ''"• IUC S.nte 8e•ben!ll SS -M11•1 W I ems INeYac:te La\ Vege\I OF -Ton. • e c ne •Lone 8eecn S•e•e Tom 8•1M IUC Irvine) Quinn Meck UC Santa Barbare Ot< -Tc.rr Looa UC Senta 8ar1>era t IC,,,,. Wa•• os r a ~11111 F' u •erionJ U"T -Ma•• LPOn.t• Cl UC Santa 8ar1>1ra SECOND TEAM P -M11t.e BP•anQl'• IC• Sta•e Full 1r1on1 Mike Harkev Ca• St1111 F ulltrtont Antnonv r eitoro I San Jo't Sta It I Brue• E11tott •UC Santo 8arbar~J 18 -Greg Velie IUC. Senta 8oroerel 2B -S•tve Moter INeveda LH Vtt1e1I )8 -Pal Germen ((el Stolt Fullerton) SS -Erik Johnlon IUC. Sant& Barbera) OF -Jet Gare•• !Cal St<1•t r utterionl, Steve Bates ffrflno S•ate1 lleec:t Pttllrs !NeYade -Les V•11es1 Co·olayer1 ol tne veer -Melt W1lllam\ INevec:te·Las Vflln J n end Srott C••l'lv !UC Senle 8ert>ereJ 28 Coecn of ll>t veer Al Ferr er 1 UC Senta 8erl>ere) NHL oMYoffl COHF•AIEHCIE "HALS ( .. It If....,.,, Wetts C.,._e ..... YOfk lie,_., Yl. Melttl'NI Monl•HI , NV Renoen I Montree• 6. NY ltenoe" 7 Montrtel 4 NV Renoen 3 1011 NV ltlinQtri , MontrH I 0 Mon1r .. 1 ) NY RenGtrl I IMonrrut "''n' "'If\ • II Cel'lltlbtl C..,._ St. LAuls Ys. Celatrv ~' LOUI$ ), Celger" 1 Celgerv I. SI Louil 2 c •loerv ~. $1 Louis l St LOUii S. Cel9erv 2 CalQerv • SI Loult 1 Monc:teY'' KOft -St I oul\ • C e111erv ~ 1011 CS.rla• fled, 1·31 Wtdnt•d•v -SI LOUI\ •I c aioer. STANLIY CUf" "INAl.S , ... , ......... , Mon1r .. 1 "' SI Loult·Cetoerv wlnntt Oattt Mid t1mtt TaA VOLL•YBALL UIYA~ ..... , (It Wl(Ma, kMIMtt) "IRIT •OUND ...OOL PLAY lt•Ymond CIW!llrUCllon IOr111M Coun•vl df'f Wlcllltl $tttt IS •. IJ•1 R•Yn'lond Conllrucllon <Or•• Ceul!IYI <Wf PSA IAncllOr ... I IM 1S·f ~ t I . " SOFTBALL Hlth KftMit MYoffl WILD CARD GAMaS (T""411ty, > p.m,I ar: 4·A St .Paul 11•·71 el South Torrance ( 10•7) CIP: J·A Chettev I 14·6) al Fonlene ( 1•-61 CIP: 2·A Peltnei.le (t-9) el 8t41-J.tf (9·S) CIF Smlil SdlMfl IA) ElllOll Pooe (S·SI el Yucce Velltv ll·tOI 181 Vtne nove Preo (11·01 et Ttm911 Chrl1llen 17·61 ICI Cellfor!Q Luthtren 16-S) er P~ 8eollll (7·3·21 10 ) Le Sl.,re Academy 11·31 et Ille e .. r 11 .. 1 1£) F lnt Luthtren <•·•I et Feith lleotl11 (9·6) (F) Alvtrno 19·6) ., Rio Honoo Prep ( 12·•1 !GI Memmolh (7·l0) e t COltvlllt (1·>1 (HI FUntrldlle Preo (7·9) at R- Con\18ftt ( 13· SI II) Arrowl'IMCI Cllrl$11en 19·61 el Vk:lor Velltv Chrfsllen ( 10-31 FIRST ROUND GAMES Cl .. 4•A ( Tllunday, , p.m,) L 8 WlllOl'I ( 10-12) et P'tu1119111 Vetlt\t !21·4) Ml• Otl ( 11·6· I) el Foothill (11·1) El Oorec:to (lO·S) ., Rolllno HIUS (19·)) S.nte Merle (16·7) el Dos Pute>lo1 121·31 Vtnlura (17·Sl el ltl9flelll (23·7) Hert (U-6) et Ntw~ Pent (20-71 L•ktwOO<I (10· 11) et CefrllOl 114·7) Wlkl cerc:t wlnMr al CYoreu (22·51 Rtc:tonc:to 110-6) el Edlsen (22·S) 8urrouom, 8Uf'bentl I 11·•1 el Ml•llien 113-tl Oownev (11-l ) et El MoOtne 114·11 ltoyet 111·7) al Kenntc:tv 122·61 Mlt'IN (12·12) el SI JOMOll (16-1·1) Tnou .. no °'"' 11.-.1 ••lklrtlenk121·11 Lornooc llS·lll el 8uene 117·7) Cef'lvon, Anaheim (l~lOI 81 C..hr 17l-Ol CIF J.A < l'r1dltv, J pJI\.) Welnul llS·S) el W11i111""9 07·J) Snenne 11·6) et 8ollll Grenc:tt ( 10-1) Mevfelr (13·1J 11 Arcedl• (11-5) ~nor• 112-11) •• Nor1h Torrence (17-SI ~ Le Qulnte 113-12) el HH WlllOl'I ( 11·2) Velencle ( 13·1) er ElltMo-(17·SI All• Loma (I•· 1) el COYlne 113·71 Glenn ( 1•·6l at Sunny Hills (13·3) ~ 111·5) el Geroen Gro•e (17 •I lttdlencb 113·7) el Rowlend (13-71 Soulh Hl"I ( 14·S) et SI. l.UCY'I 111·)) CutYtr Cllv (1•·6) el CreM:eille Valley (19·•) IEl'9ftde t 12·71 et WHlefl'I ( 14·4) Wlld cerc:t wlnntf el WOfk!Nln (17-JJ Torrence 116·S) er Fullerton (13· 10) Gltnc:tele (9·1) al Le Mire~ ( 11·3) ClF 2·A (Friday, J p.m.) Le Sltrre (I HO! el Ctlert•r Otll (23 11 SI Btrnerd 110-7) el Altmenv ( 19·21 NO<CO (1S·9l et 8rewlty (13·9) l.89une Hlll1 (11·9) el Cnlno 111-SI Onlerlo 113·7) et Sen 8ernarc:tlno (21-0) Min ion Vlt io (11·91 ., La Sefn• (18·?) CenYot1. S.U9us Cl· 1 ll el St Anthon• I l•·SI Benell ll·l l el Arroyo ( 17· lJ Cen1rel (11·9) el Corona (19·21 Et Renc:no 110·71 al AIUlll ( 19·S) •~ VelleY 111·1) el Querh Hlr1 (17·7) Chemlnec:tt 116· SI at El Monte 120-21 WllCI cerc:t Wll\MI' ., Olemonc:t 8er (IS ,, Artln111on (11·11) er lnc:tlo (19·)) Mt View (II·" e l Merv Ster 111·21 WhUI ,, (9·91 at El Toro 119-SI cu• l·A ('fllllndieY, l pJI\.) WHl•rn Cnrltllen ( 12 J) et Yuceloe 1»-11 Ca•11tnltrl• 111·11 al Pareclele ( 16·2) Whittler C,,rl1tlen 117·1! et Conntt•v '1·•1 St JOWC>fl (t ·S) e t S.n M.rlno 112-s-11 Monrovle (h ·ll el S.nle Vnt1 116·2) Senle Paule (11·71 et Cet>rlllo 110-12) El StQunc:to 11S·S· II el LA Bepll" 111·1) Fiiimore Cl3·71 et 8rtlhrtn (17·2) Rim of the WO<lc:t ( 1S·SI et Pomona Ca1no11c ( 13·2) l • Canec:te 110·11 et VIiiage Cnrl1llen Cl6·3J 811noo 111·•> at Merenetne (17·0 RoHrv (1·9) et Notre Oe'"9 ( 1•·61 Temolt Cltv (IS·" et Le Reine ( IS·S) i.,.u1lnger 110-81 el Alescec:ttro (11·3) Tleflachaol I 11·1) el Cele1>ell11 ( 11·11 lla11tv C,,rlsllen If· 7) et Mlretestt (11· II CIF Smell S<Mth (~"411y, l P.ll'L) Wlkl c.rc:t winner CAI el Pellldene Porv •I•·•> Trone 117·•> 11 Owtn\ VelltY (10·01 Oekwooc:t I 10-SJ el Velttv Cl!ft,llen (SM) i.·61 Wlkl cero wl""'' 181 er Merlcooe (17-IJ HesPtrle Chrl\llen lf·l l •I FlintrlCloe Secrec:r Htert <1·9) Wt1I ShCM't1 OS·l) el CSOO 11· 12· 1) WllCI card winner (CJ et Vltwooln1 (1 71 CrOl\f08CI$ (II-SJ el Avelon ( 1•·>1 Wiid cerc:t winner COi et Llnfltlc:t Chris llen ( 1'·•1 Wiid cerc:t wlnMr IE I et CelYtrY 8eo1"t (M) Tem•ton ( 10·41 et Simi l.ull\tfen l 10-SI WllCI cerd winner (FI et 8tl Air Prto ( IJ·SI WllCI cerd wln,..r <GI 11 Pro•l°"1<:e <10 •I Wiid c.rd winner CH) •' WhllntY ( IS·6J Wiid cerCI wln11er lll el $11Ytr Ville• (17 7) Letfln11wt11 Chrl1t1en ( 11 ·6) 11 Sen Jecln to 116·)) .. .. V olleybal l This Johnily Ray isn't team wins crying about publici~ WICHITA. Kan. -Ra_ymond ConsttUction, cbe Oranie County· based volleyball ccam under the dtrccllon of Oolden We c Colleae Coach Alben Oaspariaq, opened the S7th United States Volleyball As- sociation National Championships with a pair of easy pool vict0rir.s ~onday 1n the "'<~k-lona competi· uon,. Led by Mike D'Alessandro, Tom Wade and Steve Sebastian, the Or· angc Coast area-oriented team breezed past Wichita State, I '4. 15-7, then dealt PSA of Anchorage. Alaska, a 15-4, I S-9 defeat. D'Alessandro was credited w1th 39 assists during the two matches; Wade had 22 kills overall; and Sebastian added 16 kills for the tournament's No. 2 seeded club. An all-star unit from the Ohio- Missouri area (Midwest Volleyball) and Paogea of Northern Ca.liforn1a furnish the opposition tbdJy an thr second of two pool play days. NBA ~LA YOPPS s.c.d NUN , ...... _, WHTUlN CC>tf,.R•NCE Ltllwt Y&. Delles u11.en 1l0, Delle• 116 Lekers 117. Delles 113 Oalle1 110. Lelltn IOI OelH 110, Leto.er1 118 Lektr1 116, P•"" Ill Laktrs 120, Delles 101 (Let..,-i w1n Stf'lel •·2) Otftwr Y\. Heua• Houston 126, Denver I 19 Houiton 11', O«lvtr 101 Denver 116. Houiron 11S Otnv., 114, Houston 111 (ot I Houlton m. Otnver 103 Houston 126, O«!Ytf' 1n 12 011 (HovllCll'I wins s«IH, •·2) &AITIERN CON .. l!Rl!NCI! PITT'SBUROH (AP) -When Johnny Ray comes m1.rch1na up to home plate these days, he's one o the National l.elauc's best hitters-even if he isn't the best·known Afier four years as one of baseball's steadjcst but most undcrpubhci1cd players, the 29-year-old Pittsburah Pirates' second baseman has blossomed into a star. He bas been the kaguc."s lcadina hitter, or near the top, almost sinoe opcnins day anU hu hit safely in 2S of the Pirates' 27 games. includins a suspended aamc. Ray fltned with the .400 mark for five weeks and now as hittma .373 with 22 runs batted in, despite lacking home run power. He has hit only one homer. "I ~n hve with that," Pirates Manager Jim Leyland said. "He's the kind.of player you wnte in the lineup every day and forget about. 1 wntc him 1n at No. 3 (in the batting order) and Tony Pena at No. 6 and then worry about the rest. You know he 1~ going to do something every day to LlM Houk belp your club." :/ "I don't mind not tcthna a lol of publicity," 11jd Ray. who never bas batted below .274. ''I Uke my privacy. Just as lo"-' u I know I've done my JOb I'm satisfied." When Ray JOined the Piratn in September 1981, he became Just another consistent hitter in a lineup then loaded with ltitccrs 1uch a O.ve Parker, Willie Starscll ind Bill Madlock. Even when teammate• became involved in PittsbwJh'a weU- publicizcd dru,1 scandal, Ray was ao island of stabihty in what became one of bascbaJl's stormiest Qnda.ls. • But then Ray is used to being overlooked. He never has betn p k- ed for the All-Star Oamc despite a .285carcerbaninaaveraae. Hewun't drafted by a m~or leaaue team after graduating from hish school in tiny Chouteau, Okla., and bad to play at a JUntor college for two years before ratina a m-.jor oollqe scholanb.ip. Kay hit .281 in '82, .283 in 1983 and enjoyed his bcsueason .. 312. in 1984. All-American ~honor to Houk Lisa Houk, a four-year standout with Cal Polo San Luis Obispo's softball team and a product of E.dlson High School, has been named co the Division II All-American team. The captain of Cal Poly•s RegionaJs runner-up with a .344 batting aver- age. Houk caps hercollcgccareeraft.cr a four-year cour as Cal Poly's starting shortstop. She earned A.11-CCAA honors four times. She led Cal Poly to a 32-19-1 overalJ record. As a prep at &tison, whe was twice named AIJ.CIF and was Edison's scholar-athlete as a senior. She leaves Wednesday for Akron, Ohio. where ceremonies will be held. AIMlllY\. ilelNft 8oslon 103, Atlenle 91 Bolton 11', Atlenre 109 kslOft 111, A11en11 107 Ali.nit 106, llo1ton 94 llo"on 132, Atlente 99 lllollon wln1 .., .... ••1) .......... ""' M1w.-.. Phlledelonle 111, Mllw1ukM 112 MllWtukM lit, Plllledtlonle 107 Phli.dt!Pl'lle 107, Mllw•ukM 103 MllweukM '°'· Phlledtlohle 104 Mllweuk" 113. PhlledelPhle IOI Phlledele>l\le 126, MllWeuk" 1()9 Sunc:teY'I Kor.-Mllwe ulott 113, Phlle· Are Mets holding all the right Cards? delc>hl1 117 (MllweukM wins s«IH, 4·31 CONhlHNCE P:INALS w ...... c ..... •tee , ...... _, L.ellltn""' ........ Lell.,-i 11'. Houston 107 Tonlllhl -Hou\lon 11 l•ktr\, 1 Frklev -Leto.•1 el Houiron, 6:l0 om Sundev -Le11er1 el HouSIOfl, 11:30 o.m WtdnKdev, Mev 21 -Hou'IOfl el LMltf'\, l:lO o.tn. (H ntCHiert) Frlclev, ,.,.., 23 -Lelltr'l er Houston, T9A (H nec:euarvl Monday, ,.,.., 2• -Houtlon e t Lek8", llOOtl (If necflter'V) (,t,M llmt\ POT) Eastern C•"' eoce , ... , .. _, TonlQl'll -Mllweuk" el llOlton Tl\ofWev -Mhweuk" el 80llOll Se•urdeY -llOllon el MllweUllM Sul\OeY -8011on el Mllwe..,._tt Wec:lnt1dev, Mey 71 -MllweukM •1 8011on (II ntetnervJ Frldev, Mn 73 -8011on el MUweuk .. (II nece111rvl Sunc:teY, Mn 25 -Mllweuk" et &ollOll (II neceuerv I TENNIS lt.alaft °"" let Rtmtl .. Int Reuftd ~ Mell Wllenc:ttf (Sweden) Otf Jimmy 8 rown (US.), 6·2, 6·2, •eron ll:rlel<\leln (US I Otf Mlkt 0. Pein'\¥ (US ), 6·7, 6·• Wwnen'I teumament (eta.tin) Ftnt •tulld SM9et 8e11lna llunot (WHI Gtrmenvl c:ttf •nc:tr•• Hollkon (Czechollov•kl•I. )·6. 6·3. 6·1, lllloel Cuero (WHI Gtrmenvl Otf Regine Mer1l1<0Ye (C1tct10,love11le) 6·• 6·1 COLLEGE NCAA Dtvt'*t II Quartwflnats (It Cit S'9 .. N~) Cheornan c ..... s, • .._ (Fltncle), Slntlts Turbull <Cl CS.I Emmtll, 6·7, 7·S, 6·4, Wtkt\e (Cl dtf Attl>Of'1, 6·3, 6·7, Jc>hn•on (R) Otf. Amerllnll, 6·•. 6·•. Perktr (C) Otf Soltll>tf'Qtr, 6·•, 6·•. Piell (RI Otf SP11rmen. 6·3, 6·3. Dtiuelit\ Hou1181l·Arntrllnk IC) Otf. COPtlend· Plell, 6·3, , ••• (~UH metclt WH c:te· ftf'mlnec:t, orner two c:toul>IH teems Old no• lil'llh . ,.,..,., tr8ftMdtefts IAS•IALL A"*"8n L9"Ut CLEVELANO-Sfoned Jeff Shew, ollcl'I· ., • •nd eulonec:t lllm to leteYi. ol tl'lt New York·Ptnn LttOUt OETltOIT TIGERS-Sent Scotll Medlson, lnlltldtr·calcl'ltr, lo Ne\tlvlllt ot 111e •merlun A11oclellon 0Al(LAN0 A'S-Pleetc:t Ow111ne Murl>l'lv, outfltkler. on tllt 71 ~v dllltllec:I 1111 •nd MICH\I Tellltlon, (.llehtr, on lht 1S·dev c:tl-.Oltd 1111 Celltc:t uo Eric Plunll, oll(Pltf, tron1 T1~ ol 11'11 Pacific Coesl l.e1oue rt . . St~ Louis -playing into Mets' hands with slow start T . LOUIS (AP) Under- standably, while struggling to emerge from a disastrous slcJd, the St. Louis Cardinals don't care to admit concern about the New York Mets. But they face a lalle problem. W11h fi ve w~ks of the maJOr league season gone. the defendmg Nateonal League champions trail baseball's hottest club by 9 gam~ -I 0 on tht' loss side -1n the Nat1onal League East entenng tonight's game~. "The Met-. have Jumped oil to one of tho~ oncc-an-a-hfeume stans. It'~ tough for an ybod) m any division to stay close to a club when they're doing that" St. Louis General Manager Dal Max viii said ... All wc can do 1s go out there and try to wan." 4-)t. Louis made a stan 1n that dtrecllon by winning four of s1' games at home last week. Even then. the Cards lost ground to the Meh. who won live of !>IX games. SL Louis· biggest problem ha~ been a slumbenng offense that through 2R games ranked 11th in the NL after being first 1n 1985. On a recent West Coast tnp, the Cards hll a woeful .186 and scored only 13 runs 1n seven games -five of them losses. Over a span of 12 game'i. they suffered six !>hutout losses For 16 strcught gamt!>. they fa tied to \Core more than three runs in nine innmgs. ··tr we don't get straightened out soon, it (the pennant race) m13ht all be over before school's out," Manager Whitey Herzog said. The Cards' balling averascs haven't improved much. Heading into a two-game series starting Tue5'- day night against the Los Angeles Dodgers. only the averages of All.Star shortstop Ozzie Smith (.322) and slugger Jack Clark (.295) were re· s J)C{'ta b le. Second baseman Tommy Herr ( 141 ). whoa year ago hit.302 and had 110 runs batted in. said the team must not panic. "I think what we've got to do is just worry about our own club. We're not going to catch the Mets for a wbik, so we've just to concentrate on playing well." Herr said. "If we can do that, we feel eventually we're going to close the distance between us and them. They're JOinJ to get to a bad streak. too. It's mc v1tablc." Dunng one stretch, the Cards lost 13 of 15 games while New York was wanning 18 of 20 games. "We can't do anything about the Mets," Smi th said. "We've got to worry about our thing every day and 1ust go out there and play." While St. Louis has struggJcd offcns1vcly, its defense ( 17 errors) and 11s pitching (2.98 staff ERA) have been strong. Moreover, the 13-15 record equalled St. Louis' start 1n 1985, when the Cards were 51/i games behind the NL East leader. But at this point, while in third place. they were nearly that far behind chc second-place Montreal Ex~s. The sJumpmg hitters include WiJbe McGee, last year's league NL most valuable player (.252), third baseman Terry Pendleton (. l ?S), right fielder Andy Van Slykc (.234) and catcher Make Heath (.108). Herzog has Juggled the patching and compensated for injuries to Danny Cox (0-2). Tim Conroy (2· I) and reliever Jeff Lahti. Bob Forsch as 2-1 with a 2.14 ERA and John Tudor is 3-2 and 2.55. Todd Worrell, 3-2 and 1.11. has anchored the bullpen. Crazy Horse takes Whitney Series title By ALMON LOCKABEY °"" ......... Wftt9r Larry Harvey's 49-foot sloop Cra1y Hot'5C. Cabrillo Beach Yacht Club. emerged as the overall wanner of Lo Angeles Yacht Club'\ Whitney Scncs after the final race of the seven.race scncs Sunday . Second overall in the Wh1tn~y. the oldest and mo t pn:st1gious offshore racmg sene-. an Southern Cahfom1a, was Victory. skippertd by Rt)bcrt Butkus.also of CBYC. and third was C1t1us, campaigned by a l.os Angeles Yacht Club Syndic.ate. Wmnrr in the new International M~urcment System (IMS) wH Calhsto. s~ippcrcd by Jim Eddy. LA YC. SBOC 11, Bruce Wallcrstcin. LBYC, and Red Shift. Ann Kahl e. LA YC, tied for ~cond pendina a protest. The Whitney Serie is s:uled 1n con1unct1on with the Los Angeles T1mcsSene\ for Performance Handi- cap RaetnJ Fleet raun,as, and the Lntle Whitney Senes for Midget Oceln Racina Club CMORC) yachts 30 feet and under Winner of the T1mM Senc wa Pnmera. Mitltd by Mark John ton, KJna Harbor Yacht Club Second wa Kill , Jim Ha kcll . LA YC. and third v.'U Galcno. Neal Commerford and Dave Klatt. Anacapa YC Tnlc to the Lm&t Wh11ney Trophy ~nt to Cowbor.. co-skippered b~ Stan and Stacy G•bbt. Cabtillo lkach YC Second w Crttpe-r with co- skippers Stratton, Norton and Cun· d1ff. CBYC, and third was Aloha II. skippered by Glenn Recd, South hore Yacht Club, Newpon Beach. SOFTBALL .. From Bl "' Lon Peterson help provide the Barons wtth enough offensive punch. Wilson counters with junior pitch· er Shelly Fink, wh.o has been the workhorse on the mound with 1 7-.5 record. Jenny Alllrd Has done it all for Wooclbndge this season. Her S-0 rtcord and 0.36 earned run averaae on the mound and .36S batt1na avernar at the plate a~ tops on the club Patti RuSStll(S.l ), who has an ERA of 0.48, 1s the other Woodbridac pitcher wuh five victories. Ruui!J has 58 stnkcouts and 21 ~ whilt AJlatd. the ace of 'he staff. bas 48 stn.keouts and JUSt lhrtt walk.s. Estanc11 shouldn't hive many problems af senaor nJht·banderTam- mie Kane has the lund of ltu.fT she's capable of ap.in t Wescem. Kaoc.. whose isltt Kclhe as lhc CllCMr and one of 'he dub•s tadina hutcti u .)JJ, has• I 3-6 n:cotd and 0.12 ERA. be: also ha1 8 7 trikeouu and II watu. TV L1S!INL'.l I .... u~ ~Thief" (1MH Jlmle C.. flllldty Wt6d. 1~~ ... ~"Body Helt" (1811) Willllrn Hl.wi, KllNMn Turner 1:=- •'A "Tread Softty, Stranger'' ( 19581 Ollna Dort, T nnct MOfOlfl. fl~ Nltled Feet" (19841 mr~·· Rod S1tiOlr t't t ''Ghoatbllttlt1" (1"41 BIU ~Ayktoyd. <fl. "Cocoon" (1985) (Pl'H*· view~ Ameche, Wiiford 8r'""9y f£ MOW lill.LER ** "Hot Dog The MOYie" (1984) Ot~ Naughton, Ptlllck Houttr. -•:30-1 (JJ GAOWINO PAINS JOt<ErlWID E::sM.O. Orange Cout qAIL Y PILOT /Tueedey, Mey 13, 198e M 'Baron' pUlls out-most of the stops With a title hlte .. The Thwamng of Baron Bolligrcw," one realizes in- stinctively that he's not about to sec anytbinf. resembling "A Man for All Seasons · -even though both plays were written by the same author. Robert Bolt's madcap medie val farce, curTCntly being introduced to Oranae County audiences at the Westminster Community Theater, actually is more of a children's play for grownups. "Translated" from British to American by director Larry Blake, with original music added by Jan Angelino and Charles Taylor, the end result resembles a Mel Brooks conception of "Camelot." The Westminster players have expended a great deal of creative energy and nearly succeed in raising silliness to an art fonn, much as they did a year ago with ·'The Death and Life of Sneaky Fitch." Only an often- inert first act, laden with scenes which neither provoke laughs or advance the plot, keeps this "Baron" from reaching Its COqllC potential. Heavy-handed comedy is defi· nitely required to prop ua-.the fragmentary plot which centers on a pansyish knight sent on a mission to Toi TITUS La Donna d eBarros adds dimensions -ah, djmension -to the role with her sexy, Mac West inflections. Martin Eckmann as the duke and Kenny Barker, William Carmignani and Ginny Kunz as his court fill their ahignments effectively. Others in the large company arc Lon Richardson as the one-man "orchestra." Karla Abrams as the duke's sultry squi re and Allan Viner, Sylvia Hunter, Margaret Robertson, Clifta Frizzell. William Custard and Aaron Abrams as a motley collection of peasants. Little Vanessa de Barros and Nicole Barker pop up per- 1odically with "applause" signs after the musical numbers. La.Donna delluroe u tbe draCoa tempta Tom llatcly in .. The Tbwartiq of Baron Bollljrew" in Weatml.mter. · overthrow the evil baron and slay a voracious dragon. With a large cast such as Westminster's it's often hit and miss. but some performers excel in creative craziness, primarily Ed· ward J. Steneck as the comically evil baron and Tom Hardy as his slow. witted squire, who have the show's bnt musical number. "I'm Bad" (with lrycs by Hardy). "The Thwarting of Baron Bolligrew" is good, wacky fun and the show picks up comic steam in the second act. particularly when McWilliams. Young and deBarros r:::============;;-,r.==============tl Eric Hindley is an understated scream as the pink-<:hceked knight errant Sir Oblong; onJy I 9, Hindley treads the line between comedy and campsplendjdly. Wayne Mayberry as . the storyteUer has a good share of the sight P&S. some of which come off better than others. One of the more inspired is his Groucho Marx . im- pression with a rubber chicken acting as tbe "You Bet Your Life" duck. " The spellbinding sorceress is done with fine farcical stylinlby Lorraine McW illiams. while ynne Tav· emetti's cowering. reticent lady mayor is fun to watch. G mger Francis contributes some gleeful moments as a put-upon peasant. while Helen Higgins and Jane Youns portray birds of a feather hilanously as identically garbed magpies. When the dragon finally is re- vealed. it's revealing indeed as Somethµtg wonderful has happened ... No. 5 is alive.. arrive on the scene. The set 11lustra- ttons by Bronson set the offbeat tone nicely. An extra weekend has been added for this show, which should be a family favonte. Performances con- tinue Fridays and Saturdays at 8:30 through June 14 at the Westminster theater, 7272 Maple St. Call 995-411 3 for ticket information. CALLBOARD -The LP Reper· tory Company will hold audj11ons Sunday at 2 p.m. for its two summer shows, .. Any Wednesday" and "Night of January l 6th" .... the tryouts are scheduled for the south lawn of the Muckenthaler C'uJtural Center. 1201 W. MaJ vem. Fullerton .... the shows ate non-Equity but salaried, and information is available at 73 1-2792 .... BACKSTAGE The murder drama "Ladies in Retirem ent" will open Thurday for I I perfo rmances tn the recital hall of Cal State Full· crton .... the show plays weekends through May 25 and details are available at 773-3372 .... -CINE Fl GONE-PEAKERS •RE BACK STADIUm a S CIHTTDS ... ·lst I at ••II/ I MHllon W•ll• To Ole (f') at 1 141 NSTTY "' "'"K ... ,., 1 00 & l tOO Ill I! 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CHAllU GIOOll 'LAST HSOIT" (I) , .. ··~ 101) 11.MJIQIWll 'CllTTEIS" (PC 13) 1 10 TN( MOllU '"" (PCI •• 'O 10 00 ••••• Dl~ IOWI 'HSOlUTl BlClllllEIS" (PC 131 •I~ n o 10 10 UMJWllW '110 UTIUT 110 SUllHDEI" (PC) • n IO) II Oii 11.MDQIBI "flll WITM Fiil' ~It •Oii 10) 1910 edW.,dl MISSION VIEJO MAU 364 6"70 I D f W.,fOCllO-YAlll• U.MTllllWO. "Fii[ wtTll fll(' ~II• 4\ l1Ml ,,, JU U\ IZ.M tllll ml UlD M\SOll •u' SlflD' "ILU£ cnr 111 I J.P t-10 ll .......... I l'aL• 00l8' SIUIO SMOIT CllCUIT" (PC:) I 1' 11~ • I) 6 JO l ll lO JO edwards sollH• C. O AS l l A(,l/""A ,,..., • I • 1 1 ' . .... . ........ ...... ....... StSTtts" a• CN·UI ""°".,. .. "' ". "' Ill ~·IWP I Jt (PC) ..... a"' • 10. IHlLS" ,. lt" Ill I .. .. • ~ <>r.,. Coelt DAILY Pt\.OT/ TUMctay, May 13, 1988 We8eMaJ, May H ARJES (March 21 -April 19): You could get more than barpined for - people have faith, will trust you wilh money and love. Focus on power, authority, achievement. presuae. Older individual is in your comer and will prove It. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Emphasjs on security. long-ran'e prospects. mineral rights. land, special pun:hases. Individulll you trust will return compliment, and you'll be happier as result. Love plays major role. Aries ftaures prominently. GEMINT (May 2l-June 20): Accent on movement. creativity. ideas. cunosity. Restlessness replaces ennui -scenario bighli&hts relatJves, visits, ~ jdeas which can 6e transformed into valuable concepts. Leo. Aquarius play roles. CANCER (June 21-J uly 22): Follow throu&h on first impressions. Ideas click. valuable contacts are made and financial prospects become brighter than orig.anally anticipated. Family reunion could be pan of exciting scenario. SYDNEY 0MARR LEO (July 23·Aug. 22): Popularity surges upwards -moon in your sign highlights charisma. initiative, physical actraotion. Long-distance call relates to prcstiJious social affair. possible journey. Gemini. Sagittarius play key roles. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 22): Penod of"confincment" is temporary. Know it, refuse to be discouraged by initial delay. Check fine print. discern motives. begin process of rebuilding on more solid structure. Scorpio plays paramount role. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): You'll tum in "outstanding performance." Moon position spotlights friends, hopes. wishes, speculation. powers of persuasion. Popularity grows, especially with membersofopposite sex. Virgo plays top role. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): There will be discussions concerning possible "relocation." Be thorough, weigh various possibilities. Refuse to give up something of value for mere speculation. Get guarantees m writing. SAGITrARIVS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Don'ljump at first offer. Focus on dutancc. language, travel. ab1hty to perceive your own potential. Be sure meanings are clear -someone could deliberately attempt to mislead you. Stand tall for principles. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Focus on authonty, respons1b1l11y, executive orders. employment, basic procedures. pets. lnd1v1dual you aided in recent past as ready to return favor. Steer clear of those who want something for nothing. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Emphasis on nr w starts, greater independence, willingness LO take risks to achieve goaJ. Lunar emphasis on pubhc11y, possible partnership, cooperauvc efforts. marital status. Libra figures prominently. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): What seemed out of reach will now become an actuality. Focus on the practical. employment, willin~ncss to contact those who share your ideals. Make first movr. don't permit pnde to block progress. Leo plays role. . IF MAY 14 IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you have marvelous opportunity to get nd of superfluous matenal -and unnecessary expenses. Current cycle as such that you can streamline techniques, define terms. get credit long overdue. You'll perceive difference be1ween fancy and reality. You have knack for expressing ideas. feelings 1n artjculate, entertaining manner. Gem ini. Virgo. Sagittarius people play important roles 1n your life. Social act1vi11es accelerate this month. October will be memorable for you an I 986. Put safety deposit box in one person 'sname It's a mistake to put a safet> deposit box in JOint ownership. contend the lawyers. lfone partner dies. the bank has to lock the box to await a tax inventory. they say. Put the box in one partner's name. the) advise. a nd assign the other partner as deputy for access nghts In the fields of Tnn1dad. the Afncan slaves were forbidden to talk but not forbidden to sing. So in the French-Creole dialect called patois, they ~ng to each other constantly stories. warnings. gossip, complaints. whatever ch11-chat came 10 mmd That was the o ngJnal calypso. Yorkv1lle, that section of New York City's Manhattan where so many Germans have lived. histon- cally has had a su1c1dc rate about twice as high as that of any other neighborhood thereabouts Tl\c re- searchers stall don't kno~ wh) Sir. what's your hat band Sile., If 7 '•. you could've traded hats with James Garfield. the U .S president with the biggest head. If at'~ 7 1 ~. you could've traded hats with Cal\ 1n Cooltdgc, the president with the smallest head Q. At a bullfight where the bulb arc really killed. how many bulls die dunng one afternoon performance? A· Six Three matadors work. Each kills two. Takes about 20 mmute\ to finish off each bull. L.M. Bo YD Q. How much should a man on a tight budget spend on a diamond engagement nng? A. Those who calculate rules of thumb say three weeks' salary or 6 percent of the annual ancomc. Q. Quick. what's the only sort of athlete worth more after re tirem ent than dunng the competitive years? A. The racehorse. This 1s expected to remain true u ntil Jack Nicklaus retires. Rcclu!.t"~. lho)c peoplr who hole up, refusing to eo OUt tntO the world. tend to be indifferent to food The famous Collye r brothers of Harlem. for example, ate almost nothing but peanuts and oranges. The Wayana Indians of South ~menca's northern rain forest count only one to ten then "many." Two out of three living cnttcrs can n~ L.M. Boyd l• a •yadlcated columal11. Are today's grads really prepared? This month, Jines of graduates aJI over the country will weave and sway their way down aisles to claim their passports to the "real world." But are they prepared? Is computer science enough to bring them sua:ess? Will physics prepare them for life? Is 1t enough anymore to be able to conjugate French verbs? You silJy, shallow child. Of course not. Man docs not hve by academia nuts alone. Students need relevant courses that w1JI prepare them to meet the chaJlenges of their daily ljvcs. Think about it. What is it we do more than any o!her activity? We watch soap operas on television. For several years now a college in the Midwest has offered a course on it. It deals with how soaps treat sickness and dying. How the)'. perceive the elderly. Who are the villains of society. (Of course, we are spawning an entire generation who believes a fulJ pregnancy is less than three months and you don't deliver lines until you're S years old and belong to a umon but .... ) Another collcJe in the West has a course in movie watching. People who just sit in a theater and chew ace and cat popcorn arc missing the very essence offilms. You must draw from your own experience and .relate to what 1s going on and preferably go alone to apprcciade the adventure. But colleges and universities are dragging the1r feet. We are hunP.Y for instruction on bow to cope with the reality of our Jives. Maybe next faJL, we can hope for new areas to be opened up: CASHING A CHECK WITH ONLY ONE 1.0. A seminar on how to apply make-up for bank cameras, look earnest and convince cashees that you are allergic to plastic. A pre- E11A Bo11Ec1 rcqujs1te before taking the SU- PREME COURT DECISION Of YOUR RIGHTS WHEN A SALES- PERSON FORGETS TO REMOVE A Pl.ASTIC SECURITY ANCHOR WELDED TO YOUR SKIRT. THE WIT AND HUMOR OF APARTMENT PARKING. Laugh aJong with guest lectllrcrs who con- tend apartments were built for Russian dissidents who have no family or friends, a person hiding out from the law, or a tenant who has no car and does not associate with people who do. ROTATING THE GARDEN HOSE WITHOUT CHILDREN. A frank look at the wisdom of having a lawn without children to maintain it. HAVING C HILDREN WITHOUT GRANDPARENTS. A frank look at the wisdom of bearina children where there are no grand- parents to sit.. feed, indulge or inflict guilt. C ONVERSATIONAL RE- PAIRMANESE. Learn to speak the l1nguqe of washer rcpeinnen, auto mechanics, roofers, electronic ser- viceme o and air-conditioning spcciaJists. Manuals translated 10 English. There is so much to learn and so little time. Until we learn how to heal our can through meditation ... we live in ignorance. Bedside manner still inappropriate DEAR ANN LANDERS: Why do you have such a filthy mind? Why must you always assume the worst about people'! I was truly upset with your answer to the man who walked into his brother-in-law's bospitaJ room af\er VISlting hours and found his nurse, Rose. in bed with him. Did it occur to you that the patient might have been depressed o r lonely and Rose was doini nothin~ m o re than comforuni him? It as not uncommon for sack people, especially those who arc hospitalized, to want to be held. Any physician will tell you at can promote healing and good mental health. Merely because the nurse was in bed with the patient does not mean they were engaging in sex. Your knee- jcrk reaction and instant verdict, "Rose has got to go," was unwonbyof you. I believe apologies are in order. -VOICE OF COMPASSION IN LOUISVILLE. DEAR VOICE: U yoa believe Rosie 1ot Into bed wltll tile brotller·la-law only to "comfort lllm" tlaere'1 a brtd1e In Broolil)'lt I WODld lite to a.ell )'OU. I do not bow of a dittctor of naralng la till• coutry wlto woald condone aacll bebvlor. U YOU do, I'd IJlie to bear from Iler -or lllm. 111 print Ute lener ud my apology. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: I just read that nasty letter from "Dignified Denture Wearer" and urge you not to be so quack to accept those 20 lashes with the wet noodle. You referred to "false teeth." "Dignified" thought the phrase was crass and outdated. I disagree. I am not "hearing impaired" in the sense that my hearing can be im- proved by an a.id. I am deaf. I have a friend who cannot be helped with &lasses. He is blind. I also wear~ but do not call m yself "v1sually handicapped." Why use a fancy let'm for the problem'! I wear glasses so I can sec better. I've known more than my share of plain drunks. They do not seem 10 be in better shape now that they arc called "alcohol dependent." ··substance abusers" arc still dope addicts who arc shooting up the same drugs. When a change in terminology will help these people to stop JcjJling themselves, I'll be all for it, but let's not try to dress up problems by substituting fancier names. Keep telling it like it is. Ann. and use the old-fashioned words. That's one of your charms. -H.H. IN LONG ISLAND. DEAR D.R.: OK, back to ba1lc1. T1aaW for tile remlader. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: My wife and I have been attending group therapy sessions for fi ve years. These sessions have helped us com- mu01cate better. The therapist is highly respected but she has never given us a ny idea of when this marathon will end. Is it ethical to keep a ~oup together indefinitely. using our insecurities to keep us hooked year after ycat'! We believe group therapy has added value to our laves. but we resen\ shelling out year af\er ¥Car with no end in sia.ht. Arc we Justified? - FEELINa-TRAPPED. DEAR F.T.: In croap tlaerapy people HDally come ud 10. II )'OD DO lon1er feel tile need to attend, 1lmply atop 10LD1. U at 1ome later time yoa wlala to r~tan to reaolve 1 1pedflc problem, drop back lD. t'snot the travel, it's the unpacking By tbe A11oclated Preu (HATTA.NO<X1A rcnn Mis' A men ca SHu Akin \.l}'i c;hc doesn't mind weanng 1hc tiara all the 11mc and making \O many appearancec; tor worth) cau~" - it's the packing and unpacking ~he dreadc; "I go ~meplacc new about every two dayc;, and ~ometamc'I 1t'c; hard to keep 1hings or- gan11ed," Akin. 21. 'la1d after a vi .. 1t to a center for children with birth defects ··1 have my aerobics clothing mixed up with my evc- n111g sownc; .. Weanns her rhinec;tonc tiara, the Un1 vers1ty of M1 mss1pp1 senior met with children at the B1nh Oefcct \enter of the T C ThomP'Qn Children's Ho .. p1tal "I thank 11 ha.hten5 their hvcc;," said Akan. wno lost a ,ISltr to Down·s syndrome SI'< ycan ago Widow honored TOK YO -Coretta Scott Kt111, widow of c1v1I nitm leader Martin Luther Kin Jr . hH rtce1ved an honorll'')' docton1te dcvee from Seman Oakum Uni- \Cr1UY in southern Japan. Klna, 58. has lonJ contnbuted to 1mprov1n1t scx1c1-y through Coretta Kint non·Vlolencc to pm human nghts, freedom and peace based on Christ1an1ty, Chancellor Charles L Whaky sud. Mondale retreat MINNEAPOLI -Former Vice President Walwr MCNtdalt has built a cabin on a secluded Ontario lake wbere the fi1h1ni is good and curiosity teekm can't find ham. has ton says. . ., I Mayor Ed Koch To ac• to his cabin on 8 11 Canon Lake, 40 miles nonhwcst of Drydtn, Ontario, Mondale must cross a lake by boat. dnvc two males by truck. then tnvel by another boat. Ted Mondale said. Has father chose the pro~rty bccaust "the fish ma was aood and 1t was way out of the way where no one would bother him, and 11'1 pretty," said the younaer Mon· dale, 1 rim·year 11udcn1 at Wit· 111.m MitcbeU Colleac of Law tn St. Paul. Kochcruhed NEW YORK -Mayor Ed- wanl J. 1.ocll, whose trademark query i~ 'How am I do an ·r instead asked fwo &aJti passcnaers how THEY were doin, when their cab hit his limousine. - No one was injured in the accident in rainy Manhattan Thurt<by niaht, said the mayor's spokesman. Tom Kelly. Kelly said he and Koch were in the back of the 1986 Lincoln, with two detectives in the front, when a cab rammed the driver's side, causing extensive damqe. sm,er•ulnC HILLSBORO, Ohio -Coun- try lln&ef J .... J PaJcMd has filed a S6 million lawsuit aplllst the bar where Paycheck allqtdly shot another man. Paycheck's lawsuit accuict the North Hiib Lounae and owner Emtst Turner offa_ili na to prol«t Paycheck from intoucated pettons on Dec. 19. when Pay- check allcttdly ~ot another man dunna 1 dispute. - ' LAST Of THE BIG PENDER. &th vulnerable. South dh1l8 NORTH WEST •A 93 • K 85 <:;>A Q 10 9 0 863 • K 94 EAST •Q • vi ' 2 O AQJ 10 9 '7 76153 0 715 2 •J 101\2 •873 SOUTH •J 10762 9 KJ8 OK4 •AQ 6 The b1dd1n~ South Weal l. 2 0 NoF\_h~-East Obie Pas• 2 NT Pasa 4 + Pua Paaui PaH OJX>ning lead. Thr<.'<' of + Bridge is one of tht' chief actlv1· ties aboard L'Tu lsc s hips. Thi hand was played recently aboard t ht• S.S. Noordam. one of Holland America Line's l11x11ry ship~ phty· ing tht> Car ibbean. North's double of the t wo- diamond overcall was negat1vt>- in theory. a takeout double for tht' unbid suits. When South showed a balanced minimum. North made an inspired decision whe n he elected to bid four spades rat her than three no trump The latter contract stood no chance; the former needed e xcellent defenSE' to defeat 1t Expecting to find a som('what more unbalanced hand an dummy. West led a low spade Declarer guessed rorrectly wh(•n h(' roS4: with tht> king, then started out on CHARLES GOREN OMAR SHARIF 1 hf' ri~ht t nu:k hy runninJ( hf'arts. If W t•st does not ruff the third heart dedarer can lead a fourth heart' and ~luff a diamond from hand The best the defenders can th(•n do is to colle<·t two spade· tnck11 and a diamond. If West ruffs low, when dcdarer ~ains the lead he simply exits with a trump. and the ace and quc<>n lUmble together Sin<·e the king of diamonds is safe from attack, tht' defenders are held to Lhe samt' thrc•e tnrk:, ThPrt> as a solution to Wt>st's di· If" mm a, and he found It at t hP table Declarer's line of play suggested he did no t havt' th~ queen of trumps (SIO<'f' he dad not simply draw trumps) So West ruffed with tht• ace of -.pades and returned a trump In with tht> queen. East had no difficulty an finding thf' d1a· mond 'lh1ft that netted tht.' d<•fc.•nd· ers I wo diamond trkks to J(o with thc1r tw11 trump tnck~-down onl' T~~:t:~' $© ~dtl }.i\ -"t tr~• WOID GAMI 0 ~.o.,onge '4tt1ert ol •lte fovr scrambled worth bf' tow •o •o•m fo"r \•""ol.-wotdt 1 I r 1 1 I HATEL I ,....._,..l---r--11-......-1 -,,---,t ~ ,OUA"I ------,,-----..... I V A I N E 1 · · Wa111ng on lone •S a way ol hie s I' 1 1 1 ror 1'1051.' hvonq on largf' <;ol!es so . _ _ _ p allf'nCP-1s a rear a'iSf'I The secret 10 pa11ence 1<; 10 fond I I c;omelhonq &l<;P 10 do on ltie --- . SMEEUB . 1--~1-, .... 1--rlr--..,1-..,.,,::--1 0 .. r ,..,,. ''" ~ " ,. ., ~1.,d • ' ' • f ) " '"• ""•t\·"Q wordt ---~~~~----,, .... 101 t 'lm ''"'"" '"o 3 b,.,,""' e -: ··~~ ·· :j\f~f A~( r r 1l 1· r 1· I' 1· 1 e ~~-I ·'·~~,:}p '1 ''f0'l I I I I I I I I TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 1 lnte<val 6 US president 11 Simulate 14 Gas 15 French chem1s1 16 Fronl pref 17 Twin 19 Place 20 Sultan of - 21 Suppose 22 .. _ Foollth Things" 24 Floor covers 26 Shoe spikes 27 Make current 30 Peelers 32 Produce 33 Wise ones 34 Math subj 37 Venetian bflnd part 38 Oispene 39 Ski lift 40 Vestment 41 Looks ror 42 Mediter- ranean island 43 Ontario city 45 Lurch 46 Dyes 48 47 49 58 60 48 Peal 49 Think 50 Pledge 52 Stnger 56 Ktnd ol room 57 End 60 Period 61 Warble 62 Rockies, e g 63 "My Gal -· 64 Region OI Germany 65 Piiasters DOWN 1 Pouches 2 Ship area 3 Water· Sp 4 Difference 5 Inner prel 6 Area unit• 7 VIC11m 8 Syna, once 9 USSR vlllaoe 10 Situates 11 Paclflable 12 Pte par1 13 Heads Fr 18 Sharpness 23 Possessive 25 Western Indian 26 Personnel 27 Bear lat 28 Cover 29 Fiendish 30 Winter wear 31 Middle -. 33 Worry 35 Behind ume 38 -Chaco 38 Water bodies 39 Sheer fabric 4 1 Etas11c11y 42 Bad pref ,~ 44 Weight un11 45 Next 10 Mass 46 Apple parts 47 Stage presen1a11on 48 Cord 50 -and cons 51 Andy s pal 53 Fluff 54 Garmenl 55 Dollar bills 58 Before long 59 Macaw 11 12 13 16 19 ) "' MARMADUKE PEANUTS A 6000 OVTDOORS PERSON LEARNS TO PREDICT ~E WEA~ER GARFIELD TUMBLEWEEDS DRABBLE ROSE IS ROSE by Bii Keane ~G GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP) I ~f ( t~ ~ r"'•JI "So you went downtown yesterday ind It was a ~oo, eh? I've got a real one right here In th• next room." , \ by Brad Anderson DENNIS THE MENACE by Hank Ketcham -- ~ ANlr'ONE TELL ME WHAT TME WEATHER IS 601N6 TO 8E T0!7AV? 11J=AIR AND WARMER~ AMAZIN6 ! TELL US MOW '(00 KNEW THAT ... IJtJXZ OFF, INVW'l -ANP l'M NO'T" ~"IMACING-l by Charles M. Schulz by Jim Davis by Tom K. Ryan by Kevin Fagan by Pat Brady BLOOll COUNTY FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE SHOE r ~~· '™-~~ - JUDGE PARKER I'M SORRY. MR. DRIVER •.. el.fr MRS. ~Ft IS IN AN IMPORTANT STAFF MEETING ANO CAN'T eE OISTUReED ! IF YOU'LL GIVE ME "°UR NUMeER., I 'LL MAVE HEF\ CALL '1tXJ BACK! FUNKY WINK.ERBE.AN USA 'TOOK 1l4E NE.W5 1HA'f £X)() WAN'fED 1l) BREAK UP PREffl.l HARD I HOl-4 ~ DOONESBURY 8!Sf()f.5, Mt:JllCA ~A LOVE Af MIR (J()N6 MlfTH CAPTAIV aYCf-'S 5lPER ·CfXJi'J!.5' If Wl5T fllENIN/5'.J Mt ANY HOCA'T1(>.I ITU (JC A AoaJ 5(£.Nt '/W:R£ JlPIY I . b9Jlm Dam by Lynn Johnston by Jeff MacNally lty Harold Le Doux TEL.L MRS ~ER THAT I 'M l(f' THE POLICE STATION WITH HER 0-.UGHTER I l WANT 10 SPEAK 'TO HER NOW I OTHERWISE. I 'LL LEAVE HEl'\E I by Tom Batiuk AOO 6a1E.VE. ME ... ~E L£f ~A Ulf! - by Gary Trudeau (j(X)C) WCI< IT IA/Ill THE Cl Y~ I H<Pf 510fl£'5 00Ne T rJIC.£. A WT OF PRIJ I ~7 MOTIC»J I ( \ \ • -°'M9t Cout DAILY PILOT/ Tueidey. Mey 13, 1188 CALL 642-5678 . IF CAWNQ FROll NORTH ORANQI IF CALLING PROll IOUTH ORANQI 11'1 Ult TO •IVI LR WAI Olel IO IBMY 11111 I -IY lllAlll IOlll MT 1Y LOOllll 111111 DMY PIOT'I OUSSllDS • • 41~¥ -Ml MIO •11111<1 .................... -1 ... ........ ~ ... ·-~ _.,, ...... llW_ -· --.. collkllon C'Mtt ~ MY rM tonaA:tile .... ............ 'nlill c.ta.. 1111 111'!11.... II• C..ta-... MM l!!J!111Mclli Mlt ltatalt te l•art •lfn•/-a.t ..,,..,,...,. II• .... ,~ uoo l8LICIMAT LOC HUGe t8t 2\.a. """'--bCft 1714 IHI ~-·· ... .1 ua •eati•flU ic.~~ .. ·~ :c,.n~·~alrrN>"1JL~~'';"~,:::· ~~~~ ,:~= "=~~ jif£,:a m WWW "' 11•1 ~;, .... °" ... olll42·Mee . . 5101 N•= Ave: HOO/mo. eftar• utll, ~··•ai ~~-=-nr 2be ~ w get too ...... .. .... ~ Vt; U.-::;:: rr.: CL!AH & ~AP 2 IA, 17 722.o:sM Comar of W.-cllf & IMne 1171 ...... 13Mtto Frpto,_,...~dbl mo"""-·~ cipta & dfpa, OIW, oer· ..,..,1_ 'to* IOr C.M. home. VIEWSUfT! In GEHEML:::"'kM* ._My... ~~J:'i:'a j 0 llma :tt.&°17,..._ tMOfmo . .., ._.,18 Cntr •/Yu f~111,r:;. •,.=an: MM111 ~...,.. ,_.,; flllWmJIU lllW. 1Mlll. .II~-S7SONoPllCll40-tM4 wNctv.N/emktM&-2367 8mall Ofb ep.-tor upertenoa ~· OnlOfttflelend. 141-2111 ..._..,., 1.,....wllM111 ~ 1• 111 EnJov tfle Luxury o1 tN LA~ii'Ad4 .._ fWtt. !alt mt1 St. Full Celo.te1~~1= Prtcaa to Al e1f1t 8'ldDM -· _ Loe. ol wood, *'476Tmo. bwdUI aunounc1r9 of 2bd.. 1 _ w w ..w.. a50 & Up. A.Ill!. E\l9nllngll Pfopetty Hew "2..-0 311r, ~ __. ooun-~~I ~ No P9CI ll0-8?0 • IMJll Ult *Pa to bd.-, : for .. 14&-3* ,~.=(".:".:11&:":':"".l=:l::=l=IPf=-. -..... ...... llR ttY kltclMn. :r....... place. patio. near E·ltde 28' 11a, trplo, '"c:n= 1 • 28dJm 21-+. *'400. 1:Z:.,r Watdil nu wtttl ~ °'°"'· Mni&Gw/i;i;lill;n 8'100/mo. 8ubrntt on olubhou" & bHch ~o.11.~... w/1 ... P••ca,e!:' M•..ow/111aneoe'°" 1a 1i 1l(M•) lxperlenoed In offloe ~ oc•ofronc 1750 ~··1 ;~t1~ne t1aoe>.AQtln-tOeO :..C-1221eeo-1ne+ ~:=.,:T'-W/d lootclng to ahere 8Q,.. oc Aarpor1 Alea. =.~:.. ·~ : ,...,....,....,.,,1 11 Luxurloua 1ldrm ~11119-IUOfOI to.mou..ww& tm&t1131.IU-41to lwty.....,_. Aefoot!C ~ca:-,:-=::-~ 851•1...., ~,..:'·,:-'.:= wAMHOUii"""ofb .,-~. ~10 \ UNf\MN STU0t0 APT ttMO/mo. Cal...,_7113 xer· wrtl 1how M·F l.tg MA 2...eA w/W#t, 2 k'icl utl. 493-7"" trPeoa In Npt 8dl, 1IOO Mra. ~ Pnlng.. •..=· ,,.ty :30-7pm, 8-8 10-12 0t oer ;er. poof. tannle, Mature ptof Mela to ltw ICI· tt1 90 '** ICI. ft. ORTHOP!DIO front oftloe. ~ /mo •PenNOGe COVE• WMAJU.U CONDO llPPC. MOO. eao.tt41. dOM to bdl. t1SH/mo. 2bd COM ~ *'425 nagot. u1.a111 Ot cot-exp'd N9wpott leeohl 164-tnt 28r21aCondotlll. Over 2:.::. ~..!' = Fum. 1 bdrm. Utll paid. TSL MGMT 142-180$ d . 2 13. 517 .'12 d laoi 211474-«>72. Good~ Cell~ ...... t• & atNema. New No peea. A.flt M4-fa11 ' l560 mo .. 1250 MC. clap. NEWPORT HEIGKTS .. 714-72.(1..1120, 0.. hd1• I flUMW ~ °' 176-4642• halataJa lll'f decOt. W/d Mlup, 2 cs 5tt Hemllton C M Cei 28drm 18a. Pool eJedlli/fm!! 14i1 • ._1,_* 1:,o~ .. ~ ... 7"° + ... ,, c .. ,, letse ... eem..11.inMe-1111 ~· w~r: "::1 =·::, = •·• • I viiiiiii 28r frtg.atve,lltradaef\ 1111 ..,llT.. 1700&1728 1 IMmlu, yng prof ....... _l!Mdalllll ... IW!tft'Senta AM Lumber k .HUrry,ontyt750 .... D ,.. IUI 11M conao .• mo'• Old. 1795/mo. 21A 1"'BA NEWPORTMAAtHAAPTI '300+ ... ns.om '&~'OiWftii: """ .,,,.,.,...,. ooeNna ~ ,,..._ [~ 2& 4& &ftdO In visy aherp. Pool. Jeo. l'wMM, Elltde, poof, BMutlful 29drm, 2aa. Pl'Of. Mt? 2br 2be.. OM· Dapa1malit o1 PMca & for me;... per9oft wttfi a quiet ;et9d comm. Moe mlcto, 2 CM oer .. eWlll ger .• lndry rm, quiet loo. micro, "'*·.-Id ;et. PttY wood pool ..,,,.. wn Aacfedon te IOllotllni computerized bllllno Clleu W L llB loo. ao.. to~ & 5/20. 1175/mo. MM758 . 2310 Sant•~ bdl lt7H/mo. Sorry, no ,,.., 'beedi l ~: Bide for.,.. ~::n ~t credit end oolaoelon .: 21; "" 1&: oer .... Mey acoaaa to ... ~ .. _, TSL MGMT 142·180.1 peCa. 7eo-ot1t ltwn M *400+\t utl. 142-1tel a~ Con..-llonl ~· ..... ,.... etPte l pelnt. So Of Hwy AIC. =:;'A.Gta• Call 411 1.~~ trptc .,.:.. 3 mfllT. OCEANFRONT: Yaarty. AMMT ..med M/F 2 at Cfy9tal Cove 8tat.1 w/tJllMy l\llatOfy to Box lf400mo.21W2S-1to0 Mor IC>-83S3. «*'oW Onlyael& ,.e 1735 mo 28A, 1~ Shr. 2BR 1be apt bdrm 1~ be twnf.. Pn. IMda .,. to bet No. 33S, ~Plot, a30 or 213-55-1500 luL..... 1141 TR.min 11..:... E/alde t~ oer.: w/aaldOm home '**"· ctoaatoOOC aeatmo+' cpenect at 2:00 P.M. on w.a.yat. ,CAt2129 llllll • • I& inc; a:;; Gina I jiu; lndry room. nice~· *'496/mo. Aflt.14&-3113 \t utll.13MOi7 aft lpm. t:,.~1, .:::! '~~~ lll:lllPll exec Home ~ 48r blc• to ocaen 1625 flat ~ 1"· den....., w/d, . 2e2t Orange Ave. On C.W 2Br 1k new Amta '° • 29r Condo n-SecrarMnto Celtomla. Full time. Menual ~ + pool. "Stt Down" ocn ~ yourw 53tMtt1 lele• =mo°:1::~ TSL MGMT 142·1803 c:rpt. ckpa. dlw, ~ oer· .,..r. PoclU)9Cual. C.... TM eomr.ct' 11 for a g. ..,., benk rec .• exper'. w . EJagantl *3000/mo. A.flt coat opttOn &40-1112 :C,1No :r"-5-0441 IM 1375+13 utll. Avell Yw P9nod. Pr~ '*'*9d.a.nd,.....to DrM\atlc 28r S1e+lrldedl luL ...... 1141 \\fEstfleld mo. lmmed 722·7142 mag IMdder9 m9Y putdlMe. Edwerda T'hellear9. P.O. 1IOOalftwnhmal1500 ~ti UNFUAN BAVFAONT· llllTll:n ·-oopy of tfle ptoapectua Box .90tt, Newport .:~=:ri a.. •Rm~.,.* ~ pa..y ~ Vrty, 2bd. 2t1e. den. loft. r ror a.io et eny o1 the fol. Beech. ca 92961 • ·-2 Bedloom, 28a. wood ~ 0-. --..,.. frplc. .. ,... dlb ;er. e~ oompuW updetaa lowing Offtcaa of the -··-ftoors. .. bfttna,dlw,ger·...... for,.,.._ wttti''10:-i 11400/mo, "2·tlll. •Moralaedl. ,_., ...,. Stetl Depertrnent of Wl1Wll1 Ooaal= ol c: Hwy 5 .. Only 1750. ,_ ...... ... chlklren . ...., pert!. Heet •Alai..... tol•led ;::,, end ~ ~ :::0 =.no: ~ ~' get-= m.mn ,,.._ ..... 111..... ~~ t720 11~ .. , •• '-' .. ~ofwvallC MMphol• voio.. ~ ......... ,..... ....... 1112 s1oeo53M1t1Agt ... 1n1M IHt 1lll*t. t200 wlty. 29drm28elh .,40 (114)M1.a11 the..,,.~... SM*ll••~· ~ FOR SALE OR TRADE WALK TO BEACH dRXNd@f Ad/&ie p:ao Yrty rnal. &4M7'1 3N W. Wlleof'I 831-5513 8tw Ht ~ Condo. ~:=-.:::-: tf:. ~.m;'' tocetlon . ..... /c.MI 12,000 ft general atore LO SBD. 3BA HOME. hm. 28r/den fl!>', A.IC, LAGE 1BOAM fumaNd & •FREE CABLE TV 41111r Fum, pvt hot tub, "*d. ~ P,. lllddar•'· ~lliiiiiiiiiiiijiiil w/me>cMrn 3.bd IMng $2000/mo, tor Info cell pool. tenn1.,-ouao•. f\lly equipped. Super to-& 21r 2aa cw~ Apta. *M 12 ..... ....... SUO/mo. Gary. W«tc terenoa at ~ Cove 1 Dllll' almllY ... ll 1112 quertwa. Ptua cat. & &4()..0232 efl• lpm. 1950/mo, 14CM111 c1t1on. ~ly LM Pool,•,.. room 15~ All 647-o.eoc> Ev 162-1150 May 21, 19M at 10:30 Now II tfle time to llWt• *_EL.,* llUndt~:.:Oto-ctliA illM 1114 woooeRtooE Sbr 1~ 17 1166. 11ow 1ett1 st • .!i".:: ......_ .. illl l•ill nll A.M. Cell (714...-1Mt thet~ a.c· Onty 12400 Down • t~ :!n'°"2CM31-3917. 'llfl 26d :;;en, ;pom ~ "'-.-: l:°c.,"!'d Clleu W... liB •MESA VERDE D'lux j Mb X 56 A6Uii or ~ ~ =;::o".nc, ~ hae tnWnect. ~ ....... 8Nrp 3 bdrm. 2 oereoe. '9noad yd.~. por1 ~ld9/am pat oil ae15 ;aJtt WWW. 1C ...,. 28drm. 11a.. ,_. o.cor. • Month-to -month APTlnCoaeaMw. MOO Aacel Afhtlra 1411 IMtl lngforutrongwnilWy. bath •Ir condition~ lnlUll....... pat oil, tl60/mo, 2015--B 1~ +nag. clap. no QUal. eoe & 11'1* SleOfmo. dlhwllv, lo<*ed ~· also available or lower, E. tide 8'feet. Roo.ft 11<'7·25, OUlleanclno ~ Condo. 1 t>11 to s. c. 21IPlllll.Y 1-a w.,_., 142-7404. lmm9d OCIClUP 380-1411 11Mt12 VIie Ran.-N75 No P9CI 84o-495 • Fumt1hed/ pi.,.1ect. 541 41$4. (t1~. forttle rtont pencn, ~.·g;~2~G,. ~ 4 Bed, 21A be. fwnly& ***** 211Altbe, ~ ~· ce¥! Ciiia... lil4 t750mo. Elalde2br t'M>e untumished 1111111 ler ltat °':';r, Cout otatrtct, = :'c.a~· bdrml • 172 ooo. 2511 lorm11 dining rooma, lndry, rehlb. 1700/1750 _ _ _ IN8TXNf IA townhouae, frptc, patio, ..... 1 1 EntarpNa Ulne, 647_,lfe2a' · YM w Sunflower. Cell Sue labulou1 pool. Well w/MOO NC. 241 Coate ~be • oereoe. lndi=· °" . Fitness centers. ..... Huntington hecl:h, CA __ "' _____ _ .-.,d 93;.12ee or priced at "4et.750. Mw St. 142·17"3 atape to beh, bldg pMt· S:::":. 1:ry1~ : atNat. quiet . tennis, swimming §INdli cXR/ifOAXdi ~ 8 AA-~ ... 131·1MMM 21 Bodega Bay. •MESA VERDE 38r 28a. Ing . I 2 7 5 . 0 0 0 . baecfi & 8hoc.. • 2tt7 Orange Awl now, 145/mo, 1 I c~· ~~o 12 Smell 3 Qlft °""*-Nead ·~·~\·· -WATI RI RO"ll ,,.. cptl' pelnt. Qu6M ""'*'SO'· 716-1741. 735--741w.11th St. JIL ~. Ml-1111 Models open daily, 9~ Senti Ana/Wol. CM ~:o-u42· 1833 good phone. eocur9t• •~ .-llOMI .. •-., 1treet. Aull now •."' llft TSLMGMT 142-1803 IUITR.UIJW Soriy,noplts 716-7322 Dal"'° loudl. typtng. RE llno••·~ ,!'!....,__!!~=!=!:!!~ ~ REAL ESTATE 11200/mo. Gtdnr Incl 2 BO, 1U1CUry moble home 2bd, 1be.. S700/mo, l300 Huge 2BA 2W Twnhaa, Newport Beach No l11rr BH ...._ 200, San '*9o. CA ~ ~~ iii '31·1400 CelLany541rMIO onT,....,,.la6end.Patlo, dapoett, OW-• pd, over 1400 ICl ft. w/d B801rvmeAvenue EACmlib iTOMXdi: t210l(t1t)237-7'411 -°'--·----- MllT L!pulMck IMI Dbl-=-=-~· r,:~~~~ Z:.:*~~~· ~'::0,~:::·, °':;: (111&1h1 ~~~.rt.'~ §teLMa 814 =.=:~ . ... ,.. UllU .. ftUI Own'1Agtt7S..1739 142·1802or831.e2so 28r ~ TownhOuM grlded,l:f·· pool, 9')&. 16-1104 cty.~1Wkndl7~ --~-Mual~.,o+wPfll.Od '211.IM LEASE OR lS£ OPTION 38r 2Ba. IQ yd, 2 cs g«. ~ w ~. 411 bdrml. 2Ba. g:.~ Good loo, 1730: :~k:: ~=· ~;~:~:,~=~~So. C...-eill ~,.,:oe ~.,. =· ~.k:i: lwwr10ul 2 Mnn condo OR BlN wtttl 110,000 dn ChlldrenTPet1 ()4(, Od .~ ... ~l::::r. ..... ~~ ~. Oeya.142-1631/Eve 1 ... O-rl I.I. laJt"-t . 11 Y8ttaty o1 dudaa. ~ reduced In price . Supertify located dtx. con-cones. 1w1 OtymcMcAve ~ndl ·1111214--6296 &40-2~ '"'-""ndl SHA.AP & CUAN lldrm :;,. ;;.:. -l1Ma1••ll MgOC. Cell~ FetiulouaNweoftMbay dol.2..Smln.fromoneol noosueevl42-4011 or 29A"*6CMaalcd/WNC --... ~1 -";i!IN .... " ,._ .... .nd OCMn from fNf1fY ~·· ptemiat end . =-~ '!! rm pool ' • W:. _. atOl4 • i~lgerMor ~ ...,..., .... Lilt Ir~ --• M ... rooml Lerg• private moet Mdlldld beel:Na. 3 BA T/Hme f1rePC, oet· pttC'g E!J':_ M2&1mo + am.-ywd, no pata ftlf -..,._ ~ Mng, ~ pj'9f. IUnC9ec*. ......-., ber, Lota o1 que1ty taau. 1ge. Comm. pool. , atovie, 400 M.mm.c W ,w $490/mo 54&-1sn * V't. 11th at.~ el beeuUMy decOta*I. ftrapteoe. o-ted tub-•. ll!IO/mo. ~· celle. f/p. End Unit Hlfbor Bl. 979--191,. SHARP & cee.. Speeb.19 "'l.Mn....w...tr lllllMI..... a.di . ..,..700 Pff<~ Located 1 fA8!810E: 2 Bdrm, 2 be w/.,,._, Pool I 1050/mo. 1 BR den ~Patio a ~ 11 • ICf a» Nwpt lotl rw Hoag Hoapf--fnl 1111\ ADS (714)673-4400 on , btWn eo.t tOWlhlOme. Frptc:, 2 «*' 54frt012dya,1Ymag •••••••-• ,.._~,._,.._, . D/W R&BM...........il'iope(ties ~ tal. 13218'.Wtrfpay'*'t UUl1ll GIRLFRtOAYtCoetaMaae hwy a <Manayre Aidt get. ST'H/rnoyrty. Wit•· -••• ---· ""'.., • · .. .._. own~ own office. Offtoal Par1 Time. 12·5 Alderett•.731-4444 front Homu Inc. 11.,..-t ..... 1111 1poolBI'. r~'*":o ~· nopeta.1575.141-Mn luC ..... ll IOI Toml.ea.eotl42-1to3 AR£FR£E daMy.CelUllan • 831-1400 .... ,... ' $650/~ .--MESA PtNES 2taO Hirte IUIMli/XW:: .. 148 5'et ............. 4bd. t'M>a. lo twn rm. 28r 2la petio, yrd. A.JI 931W.19th ~t2 ~,~.~·sr~UP ~N2 ~ 3:252:' .,._ t Cal: lllT"' .... ..,. "'*· wt bar, le llJt cln bftln1. t:?i move-In. •a.en 28r 28e rw SC TOP AREA, P::. No Pet9 29~ 28A •e75. 18', teat: ITll HOW HINNOn °""*29R Condodeapelatel lmmec. ~--=7s 551J::' ~ 7 1'!, ... _ Plue. S.A. Cerport, ••M .. 2447•• end UOO Hcurlty. 1-. 1-. II&. 18 Ml.all llTI EITIY &DI · M\'9t ..... .,........ • • •-• •-petlO, pool. Chl6d oil. 58e-0741or7el-4M1. sqif. ti1iwts'fCUFJ= -------•I mike offer. trylowl100'a 4bd 2ba lerge yard 3BR 4 BATH CONDO Pvt $700 NO PETS 722..011 TOWNHOUSE TYPE Lg Nwpt Boh 641~5032 AG! TollNlltlnexcttlng ....... DOVER R.E. 7B-6080 exCtn't cc>nd .• no ~ pool end 9')&. s.cUrtty. •LARGE 1&2 bd, nawty :~1~ LlfY ::: WA~o'll~Enct GEOROEOUS BAYFRONT Found: 8lc 'wflll• tenter. pep.-8ualnMa OftlOe 2 S "Bd -;:,~~~B~~ ~:o z::.:,t~ ~2')'upgredaa. Cell Lea, decOtated, qultlt, pool, sees No peta 54-seo& getage(714)637-7t18 ~XECUTIVE OFFICE. =: ~HB. ::: ........ ~ *"':: ~ tory, ~ rm, ICl · o · · · -...OS 1530upl All AMENITIES . IBM Sys :M. a...t ban- ExecutlW home. ~ ~=~ Almo1t Nwpt 2bdrm Apsinlng luxury Sbdrm t114MonroYla.541033e .. .,.A_ T•1tls ~77W759-3074. Found Coctter 8p1n1et aftta end~ paten-~~~ H1.ot57,hm5'7~ ~lda'm:':91 = pool home under priced •ME8AVEROEO'lux28r, w~;~~~ YERsXilLE 8+0618 BNOHTNEWPORTOfC ~~ ~ *· N8 tlel.Applyat: dltlon. Security get.CS Ron 831-7912 hm ~191 ._... et 11000 other• at 2Ba. MW oacor, d/W, thing from• wnal apt to CONOO-Glrg. NC. pool, 143 aq ft w/""°"1et Nw . l; communfty wmi ?:fvate ..._.. 539--e190 a.at Atty... lock~ gar~ lndry a 4 bdrm ~ " took 1pa, rec rm. 1595. PCH. Poat Office & ,_ ...... .... .... !Ml. A.111!.lng I 189,500. •llllT IUll a~~D .... NEWml 38r ..l~ Ar1tatle decor ... .._ioaa tm No P9CI 2496 lnQ In CM, Na: or He 854-IOIO Mattnar'• Mle .... 2947 _,.,,a 11a.w ... ...a ,....., ... 2 to ............ ocn da condO ... opt •NICE 280RM 2BA• thrnk of UI flrat fof that ........ 330 .leySt. Traditional Realty 6.1 1-7370 Sbd, 2be upper unit ~=yd I~~~ oil M75 5SM1t1 AG!... Lndry tee. dlw. Fncd patto. dlOloa of ldael lllYlng. llbc ... tall Ample g::" uttle peld LOST: Llldle'a Alng, Gokt Coet(1e ::-) ~2Ci~~ w/lrpte, btt-lna & view of or No peta te60 N/amkn TSL MGMT 142· 1803 • .... E . •• a _....; benk w/eml ameraldl & -.._.. bay & ooeenl Lower unft CIRCLE THESE ~ '-:. ':c:~ 780-1'411 or 142·7128 2°"" Hwy 17-diamond• NB. ~pprx -------· 2bd, 2be. ,,. & pvt Nice n'qui.t buft9•low .,,,.., 'lllp. '3800/mo. luL.... B4i c ..... ,, ••• ~.... • ll:IL.... 5/M Aawerd.W Ugflt· PllYA11NIT ... petJo. Owner ~ out 1395 applil c:Nd fine not yrty (213)273-2730 1411/• I mMll I l&tl IT12 For ... ot Lw. ClllP IS3-3232 wttdya . PIT pencn 10-1:30 ?. of fartoNwptotherlet ~ Untt rw OC hlcony, flreplec e . 3~rooma +~ f•111ell Ml ToeortfMl.w..ptlon-. llTIT ... PUPll1' ....... ,.... ..... 1N* •IAITll-· Cerpott, bftlM. 1725/mo 141-0tM llfl I • · • urtt retlftaa ~ + docton ofcWOftt lltetyp6no 9W1 Nu CtJ*. drpa & pelnt 110-28A 2~ on gotf c:ne. 2 a.en & qWllt. Now V• · Condo NNpof1 Beac:tl. otfkle. Greet loc.tlon mJ ~TE> •1 15 hr ait-«tOS N]l Alll!A cent 5 rm hae ger & yrc1 c:er Oii' t 1115. 75-0079 cent. Deve 5'G-1151 28R 2be.. ct)tt/drepee. AVlll, dOM to ocean, nw H011g Hoapttal. Ill&. (111) .,..... for~ after 12:10 PM klde P9' 1175 53Mi90 l580 South COMt ,.... petlo, gerege, dllh· 11000/mo. ••le price Tom Lea.142·180$. ForyourptioneFemaay · Beet Atty,.. CLEAN 3bd. 2ba. Hlfbor .... 18drm • '9noad WHh•r. coin lndry. l125K. 81M46-93t2. $2 00 +toll If eny PIT 8EC/8K •Hiit On 1 VflfY plc1ureeque ltl'Mt, lat~ 3 bdrm with tamly room, Ml bat, 2 ..... In'" euthentle 8pen6ltl motif lnclUdee eaparat• and VflfY l>ffl•t• overatzed 1 bedroom ln- c:oma unit. Hllandll U. 11200 mo. • • $725/mo,146-1451 n oc AIAPOATAR!A · · 9-1pm . 1porta nr -Am..,. LIJ CONDO! 3bd. 2be.. frpte, g«d/Watet pd. NO PETSI pool, ~rt'r s>eC•· Wll.I fl• h zt.. At~ ofb. 4CMM80 aq WANT!D JOHN WAYNE I ch I Ade m 1 , H 11 . Prime Nwport Beech Lot petlO, poof, ger. lndry t.. 14&-2389 or M&-13M. * * ve ft Jenltorlet ~ Iota TENNtlClU8 MEMHA-841·9674, Pat. c:om.r of San Miguel end ctltty. Nw CM ccurt)Wd. e.tbfuft llngle 4Bdrm llOO·H50. 2bd, 1ba, 18r 1 Ila. xtra CIHn 8Mcti, MW 1800 eq ft of ~Ing. '52 • ._; SHIP 551-1433 0.ye. o...Red wfttl good Mac:AttNlr. Glided to In-Ayt 111. •1000. 84o-1llO femlly home. An ,,.. compl .. 11') ~.on ttYelfrto, dtw aaoo.... 2bd. 21>e.. ocaen vu, no 173-2757 e.i.•ioa. ptione. ir'°'"c::! oom- elude tennll cour1, ucat-Ealta6de large 28d. 1aa. decOt. A.JI xtree $1960 weat 17ttl nw Whittier. ~ 11...-PllCI. n-emk. 11800 mo. lai&tra•t putarak In Mw lent l\nendngl 1375.000. oar. & lndry Mlkupa. 857·1031or780-t3te 546-3121 for men data. llA-n.Ull 87).7901or852-<>330. --ofb.. 54f..1157. Bl'o1ter. 7s-1138· N9w orpt, pelnt & ~. Fabl Brand New condO. ..,llTW/WIW 1 & t8t In 14 QIU Can Mll AEM.ESTATE ~I~ 2:;•r~j~~~7•r Nvr lvd In, Hrt>r WOOda. Veult~ Mlllft9•, prvt Plane. ~•~•nnll ....... /!!!Ill ITll IWiN'i a;;i;Jout. Nit .... lllllD LINDA T AOLIANETTI BUY 75Q·9100 -----. ·-.t.•, 1 through classified 106• NSCADOll Custom single story on one of Newport's most private streets. Bay and night light view from expansive step down livlng room and master suite. Enclosed gar- den patio with pool and spa. Area's top value at $479,000. .,., 11 tt 2:10 Wt41tStlaJ COLDWC!U. BANl(eRO 144-1010 let Ut ..... Y11 Sen y .. p,_,.,.,1 Cal CluaHW. 642-5671 for Information & surprisingly low cost. 1 1 or nr Oellon. 2br 1be.. pool, b1teony. r~ecorated watarfeh. pondal a.. tor Ullll liiii _..... NQUlred. No.... c 2 ........__ .,..___ E'SIDE dlatlncttv.. 2br ..,. • 1150. 14C).5114. tet5. 2151 PecHlc Ave ~· -= ...... • 8Matl Uftlfmlead .__ lAroac I 1 ..,.._, "'"':,'v-/leYel .. ieu ttts Ali es 1 -I 1 o 7 pm or .......... · _,.. • ._.... ountry erea. ... •• 2ba up ,,,.; ..,.., ·~ ~ T..,_ 2 + Dan. 855-0lt& No P9CI From DleOO rwy, Wkly ,......... low rataa cy, tNO Wtmer A--... perlenced only. Cell eppta. 91' • conv. lrnfllec decOt lllO/MO. · north on llHch to 11u & Up/'Mcty Color Ste 250. FountMI V~ '751.ettO Of .,... po no peCe. 1195. 751-3191 175-4912 VIie Aantm E/alde luaury In. Pine F0t-~="·1~·~~ TV, ,,.., ..... ha 71U61·C>1~. lox 4166, Collea - under 1700 Sbr 2ba bMk: UDO ISLE. Ytty ...... ... 411 291', frt;, DIW. lngton Vl19oa l.n ooffae. heat.ct pool l l1•lftlll 1111 CA~ equlpt deCor EZ terma ~ 3BA 2ba. eW11 gee/..._ pd. encl petlo, . 9'epe to oc.n. Kltctl'e AECEPTIONl8T NNpof1 5SM191 Aa1... 5/2, no peg. 11800/mo, get, 1700/mo. Adulta. no ..,..111 IVllll. H5 N. C0Mt Hwy, AIDE F/Uve-ln, uelet Ctr uw Offtoe. Ught NOT A U8't AGEHCY '4tw400 own/bkr Pl'CI. 'I''-· l4&-0ll4 ...... .... 11f1 LAIOUM heetl, ~ :::='* In -:.•,;.;::, typing, lite ~ ~ STBlll IT BICI BY PLACING AN AD IN THE DAILY PILOT'S CLASSIFIED PAGE PRfVATE PARTY RATE (No CaneeUation) 4 line. 5 t.ime minimum • .60 per line·Exarnple: 4 lines, S daya• l 200 • Ptt('~ m t be incllldtd tn ·~ • R1tP dot• no1 apply ro Conl111fn11I ar~••· Au1omol1n. lloatma 0t ltNI F'.A1U1•• • NO<.ANC£UAT10N OllCJfANCESOftellthuclhatrun Cuttoni.u_,.,.,.wle ,,,, tlw ,.., ...-mt •FORM R£ D Al CALL 642·5678 2 a ~mi'11a, y;pr:. MM w.,., Am+=1mo • ...a.m1. ~ neo..14U& o. :*r.1~1!= '1'l..~ ,":,. ='• HouutcHpert Cook llllFlllmll Sl50/mo. 832-4190 Nwpt ltvd, CM ... 7445 1 = !.::.': .:_ wx:r ptlof~ c::t le!Mlt .... 811 1U I .. Lllll own c.r. Halen 1eo.t1t4 :::":I.~.,!'= •1•1111 ... 302tW.P9dftceo..t~ dapelldabla & Ml ot• AaMg. dlllti•--l lltove ··~-~no~ .... Q9flllad. Cell owe ~ Incl. NO PETS Ma 4815 .,,.. .._.. M at 7'1CM333 t Bdrm Apt on 18"1 St. l itat1J1 ti Sbrt BIBI 10111 Tuatin Av. *'400/mo. Cell ITM ACCUMTETYPNJ .,..._,. 10 em a 8 pm. 141-7122 or 141 4114. 141-21N MO, CONDO-WOT CM ' wortt quk*ty erlCI ao--------- _....,. ,.,. ~l3001000 ~7&1A ut11.1 CMatefY. be111nt oom-119T/lWllT •-~-"".. peny ~ fot fftOt9 for rwttonloo• In"*''*" tar. aec bldQ, rw bCft MM. t.-722-t07S L.or1. ' det•ll• call: Cotd ... I corp. w/rww ofoa In 175-4112 'llle "9ntatl • lh n kt r E ac r ow . !MM. "'-" WOfttlnO -::A:iUittliiiiiiiiiw.~-ING CANYON M/f prof. CSS-Crochel a pretty au .-0, Mk for a.IN. ooodltlona. "you n wal •MY I HOim* ~·· .,,,..,, ,,...,.,., :::, pansy chair set 1n hlet ... ~ eoorned & .,.te!~J 2~.,,._,pool. ~---U-n.--~ NON-8MOKW ONl Y +Neb 'Mltl. 7~ 1ot7 Use No 30 cotton in one ... ., eomp.nv Ml tM:'144t EMTILUff. Stunning i CORONA DEL MAR cOIOr Crochet d1rect10n1 Alt Equal Oppor1uNty 28r 29il Apt. Twnflaa WAU< TO HACH and lllet charl are ~ '*'· '1plo, patto, Pool. Flto ltw 2bd 1be ..__ included 1•-••••mi•------• lvty enwon"*'t· NQ :.t.. • •-. P9CI 1 tOM. ~ • t&OO/mo, lr..-11ee. Kim Send S3 25 plus 75¢ c.ta ... tilt Cteta ... •at postage handllng. tor l.,.~~111!!1;~~-·llllll"'••••Hch Pf!llern II leMIO WOODLAND va&AGI =.w:::-c:!"_u • AltA•TMlllTS C'::.~c.~ ,. '"''mMll ....... ......_ ~ ... ,...,. ...... 86 Needleaal'I Cet1iog 150 dealgns $2 • 75c 8ookl 12 95 • 7Sc p&h ,~, ........... '" ..... '11'Dlllll tMC.llyGlllll '11'~ l tf.f.llJMtlM A I ... LAUUWHllUI ft A ' T I MOTOR ROUTE Available In Irvine area. $300 to $600. No collect- Ing. ~ hours a day. Mon. thru Friday afternoon. Sat. & Sun. morning. Call 8-42-4333, uk for Klrtc. ORANGE COAST ...,,... 330 W. Bay St. Costa Mesa. CA -·--~·-· a.::e: W. ----•It llllil !I!..... II• ••eral II•........ !!II W.lw1!1!f ti!! aer W !II ~=•· __.,_....,.... W•S' [-Inn ... Qtl'I ' ~ '",~-:.--::..--.='ITT~#.....,.._.,, N"lm °"'*=1o.Uo:: ... _. ww•ia,.. ~ .... ·~~~,:_·~ w~LfflTo . 11111111111'1 ~·-~ -...PNll ,.._. .._...,_ •cw.. •NMW ,.l,.to'°90X ,......_...,...'IT tor def, ....... Allll119 ~ .. IWtllO, •IJllJO ... 1t U • ,... ... -iiiiii;Niiir-,, .... not _ ... ~ ... -~ 10111.Cf01tr7. •••111&n , .... •1•..-.•··-.................. •••••• ... •••• ...-. .... ._... -"' DIS -..., maU1111111 Liie,.. * ,,1 c.wr c:.~t co"d1t1on. .,.... cww111,. ...... ._ .... TO~COI 1ltl\oat'nu ,C,M -. ,.....1 l''l•I -----· a .._.. Mlg'e ... 1AiB fiiiMli &lfG()O '°'AllllMI...._..... ~ ... ,. -Vdwo 0 O~ = ~ · .. u•• --_... W • .. =a:, wonc ,JP .,. ~ .. PhOM e,. ING• o.-d.._ ..,, raw 1nga. ..,.. be --.. ,..._,.. w.w ~::-Wt* CNli ~~ ~~ 1•1 .._ ... ::Jt..tl • .,...:- 1 1~....... needed 1or ';....... """' :.,;:.~ . .,..... ......... ---.1n1wo.u. Ctftl OH. ••••o. lM/lft .... • lllllTllT No .... ~ .... '""loMOMCIVlllONt UftllrV -1• ...,, ............. "" 8t.LAIOOl1~ .................... m vwiiHWWW,.., ..... . .....,,. ,..,._.tor 1 per. ~~ 1714370 ~I ue;ti 1111rMtf ~-10tpm...._ttwv~ ttgoeetolllt MIZ 'U tOOiDt 1-. ec,-""' 0..: UifDCMil eon ofloe. flE ~ MP. AKIHI ..,1 -PIT I r/T ..... M8dedl No ....,... day! t Mt to 1 ,m ...... Ip!!!" "! ~,., ,.. ._ ,_ ,......, .... ...._ COMl•ORCM.&. PIM ..,..,_, ... bOoel .. -.. _. •• , ~ ~8'd No Luder9. "'*Ill-, -· VW 'U C01tMftt•lo, _. ......... _. -----rN&U --" -· ___ ..._,., -.;;;;;11 .0..1 •-i --Ii•-;~~ lnwordptfl.Clltl4,oom-Act6HOMSNowt NewOClfMllMIOflpt-.-n TR'5 1111LotMAve,C.M. ••lllngl •t:a:•ery tuafH:tC elooi a.-oeo tn.tt.... ; ~ """';; HIT-tmUUI oftwl ti•••lidcM op--· I • ... .......... . lllUm ... n111111111 ..... O.CWgouel YtHOW,blk • time IMwlng MUO nM e Deelgner unoene, TM tn-portunlty for OWOOf'· .. ........ ... 441 Unite. 14 hr woek. Mt... Henton. 1144, eplnekw, O.I ., elG. Al • ~ '11 t09, nu Ur• t4to0. 1111' VO. teh oh:& porton. ttmotie Colect6on, 8outfl ~°"::": ., flllf Hunt. 1cit1 ... 912.-S ... ,.. ,._..,,I Na._ >Ont oondi 1NM In offw 117.oaM lft •,.... ~ ~ ,... o.c COMt Pleu. ...._1221 ~ lnoolM...,. II MAiNTIHAHCI Pwt time ,,.. ev111. aeaoo offer. , __ .u_~~-----..,....,, •• m1 =r~~om''~. n.18Alu•P1NTAL1 1ng..,,. ,_ w1,.. lfYGU n..,..'f:r.,. torlell*,unior..17+ Now'*'"' for""""* 112.26Moreeo.1211. NUGaOT '16, iOiift.liiiiiiii _ .._,." ,.....,.. ..... _.11_ lafed~C..Gery ...,...-:::" .. paid ~. ~. buelne11. CHl'ller•· 'WOO\l IH81"UCTION• ~toedod.&oelcond. _,_Cl.ICK DC>DGeMA9'11.4doer, a.i. °'*'· 7M-1100. -;:y•S& tor fllttMt Info/Wt. ·IO 90 ~~ ~ Coll 876-22" or ... "**, ~..,...... lAltn to dtt¥8 30-ao,. 111,eoo. 7M-t474 ot Mf. .... • • at -·-Vwy N.I loolltlon. Moumaln, KnotW --.. J/llrwtt .,.._.. 10llm or Mee -· .ldlel fertllot, 160. n..ult• 857-1"2 IJIM.,../RENAULT MN. .. _..., OOftd, ~ .:-ac:='g.,.., PLAYAR.El7S..1IOO U91PLll ,erm, ot Win Mm-_,;d tpm8',\.WIZ.cwwtiWlna. ~-..=. ~~ guw. Coll Ill 92,_,71a Pf.UGlOT 'l6, iOiii'i. • JEEP SMOO,l•t Hllttliltl Office tkOle. Typing Rec.it 7212~ Awerdl,Collue nowtW. -PRiii iii Ko1•. Or9n91. Aft.; between...,_7ern. Fulylotdtd.boefcond. ~ 0 " ..... Shpm. 1xp or _.1r1tn. HlfldYmM now llOCOPtlnQ HUntJngton " tMM ..._.. opt1W11t In Mettno otlenttd INpyerd 5:30 PM. llll .. n 111,eoo. 756-"?' or ~ ----Knowtectoe Of Aee1 '*'-IPP!lcattone tor FIAi Ttmi l14-la·l1lt c. M" H ·1 · or '· v · ,..,..., tor ~ a 3 ....._"*to Mi. t..v. 2 HMMa e.vw ....... OI' ~ l'lelpfUI. end Pert Time poettlolie: 142~ oonorel mochenloel nwn• bo9te llOOO a2~o7 llF~iiiiii~i1 IRVINE AUTO r-tt 8"2-<'700 M"'"'I• -.ftT. Hllll crilel WOttt. EJcp ,.._ Feittpeoect<>renoeCCM'lty , , . II• •I CENTER T•--./Tr• 11111111 '81Hr. No 01CS1 noc. w. Hour• ~ Hunt· C7 14)17WMO ~tor-r's~l~ 9,:>~ r: = 71.,.951-3144 IHI IMDPBlll trltn.Collo.y.536-2372 ino-onlcitlaM-1441 _,_ grepNo. 1 yr .....,IOO ouln't c:ond. '400oo Mltell -~~!!'!"!"~---~~J!wonce -"'"'lllB Ntedld.,,.,,....etJ".Muet 50r.pm w1 llOCM'•t• .... 7tOhft2:30. . WT 800-428-7485 1-.m ,...._ --.,. on-UM ~ '" /1 ....... bO 1' end~ own car. ..,_\.tn:.:.:.:ary, Coll POtlSCHt WMltrltn."47hr.FOf wc:"':tr:':=ei :.__ $10/llr call ~:y. T~~~CdMF/Af>-. ....... eoutteout.No Jene 2-&pm,,IU,./lecb/IMlft . AUDI Appt. IAVE AGEtfCY, r.. ~ -.-Me 0648 ,..._ -'7· IPT txpontftoo ~ 71 ....... 2064> • Jiii CHEVROU:T 1o1a&-A w .. mtneew tiftte, ptomotlone from for Information coll 8*Y 9920 mo It WANTED-Men & W eA&Ci ilJP H .. twtt ~11111 Gorden GfOO¥t. IM-&700 = ~:.':,::f"a:: Cl•fa.tau•tl 8'lolfw et 176-4800 flod . Mr. Pou Hn r:rtW 11 w/dlptnd, :,"I UC) to 45 ft. Ind eld9tie up S.t.• • Smk • -T--lntweated In a ,,.... 09-llM M2-N43 10 wn 10 2 pm. ptoOf ~ tneur. tot hofM to 24 ft In em ll'tendty -·UmTll ,.., lii&IWllllll11 ---_, ~~Th. AeoteW ancllorao•. 111tboat1 11111f.l••rHI Ex~rle~~ ~Htery. . In poraon Mon-Fri llfW.... ~Jobi FIT or PIT. Fot r:::;:; I« 8off .... ,~. Eam '400-only, 131-t480. flfl1 · "f:tSpm, at tho~ 'Now Hiring Counter ll/Hr ........ 7t0Aft2Pm. 9tor1t9. 497..eeoo · llOOmoforP-ToertyAM .... n -u s£ C N•I Hw11 ---Ing locetlon: fleol*. Doy & ~ AUTO De'TAIUNG tin. Ut~156 7•11trn to • Nn•pon loch Equipment Mfa Meklna !IRHIAI IHlta. 800 E. 1oy Ave, E:xo'd, dtptndeblo o.-p_, Time ~ F~/:°" ftehlno, 673-etM Shop Men for varloc1 7227EdlnaerAve. BllboaFunZone.8-lboe telor. FVl-tlme. lmmedl-... ., W•ll'altm oruttno °"'rime ~S: ~~ijijij~ii~I lhop Out ... tuctl M... Huntlngton8eem,CA. BREAKFA8TCOOKl3to4 'a'e opening 645-7448 5 to t 9'*llllQI. AllO Elcp'd ~IT or PIT 25t-02oi ' Mmbty, tMt81 work, etc. Eq~()ppottunlty morntnge per woekl weekend houruvallablo. 1 --· · 418 ~ ••HH• "'* 542·2044 btwn hm-4pm ~ . PLUSI DEU HELP Al'fl Im No Mlllng. Soltry. Sant.I .._..._ . MOORING • Newport. Beblo brn/cork lnl Lt Sitt Wtolcende a ewnlnotl 9oMowMn Trllnte Ana locatlon. Cindy. ~... Hubor. Cllppor 21' ~ cond., taK mi.: ..... llTll.111.11 Mutt MY. hlQt\ onorgy, Newport Tife Cont« 162-6844. Stoop. e.t ofWt Oy9 1 yew wnanty ..,.bit. * mll * Fl.lll-Tlmo oppty for Aepelt high v.luoe, 1oYe food 3000 £. C0Mt HIQhw~ Quallli.ct VALET with AaNsn:a. Mii 714/832·etH X201. (210208) Dept. Trainee. ln1tell end poople. Motlltrt Corona del M"w needed good dttvtna r•--E..,.. 714/M0-0342 111,111 Qf:i~:;k-::li!P"°8'n~d ~a/W=:i ~·.: M.n.t,225EMt 17,CM. BEAUTYSALON cord, F/f, PIT. Pay'5+. Fl PM oek etc.~ S LIPS AV AL ••Fiii potontl81 97W29 Miko/ ~ ·.,.,u.. Wiii trlln. COUNTER PERSON: Con-STYLISTS/Menlc/Rocel>t 76t-0270 -for a...... w.....:U. ~ .... Ff 25,30,36'40'80' • ..,. Shor1, ~3-3092 Biii Hrly + borlO. AJJfJ"l In per-Q«llal, well groomoct, ~ dee. Milon, ~ 11111 1• llngetle cMllt teeo, pint 3333 W. COAST HWY.NB 100I Quel St., IM.8. IOf), Kltk Jewelera 2300 food ptep, pit, :; tn Verdo-lmmod. open g1 • -I etm ~ l'lutcll 142 ....... M Mon-Fri 933-t300 AmlT1llll Ill.II Expertoncod N....,..,_ Account Executive noedod for tMt growtng publl1hlng company. S.i.ty + commlill6on 8l'ld boMflta. Stnd ,...,.,,. 10: ............ ,...,.~ P.0 .8ox Coeta ......_CA t2e2e Attn: Tim OUOMmtn Hw ............ 119 c' M S51hr. S. Ana.~ 304. ront/comm. Yvonne Run lmtM ~ •1350 Fr -15 WANTED· To .,.., 8om --------...., ......,, • · _ ~ 54._1006 r801111rant omc.. F/C • • .,... • · .,.., * PEUGEOT* "'sA°'"'L:-::E8,-,,...,,*_*_*_*-..,,.PuCl-.... Rel-NEEDED exp'd a outQ01nQ bkpg peyrol pereonnot Eng olllt ormotre 14M. wt1hor• mooring on MA.STE 10PRO-SPORT8MOR8 ,P•t1on1 ~~ ... ~~ri In Pr•fBl~=ef,~caro typlng,eomeiu.woxper'. ::'2:·~~53~1= ~~.~~l~d . :ALFA~~·. EntoY a tun a .exciting ca-amou1 r.....,-r... . Feitt arowtno Co. 9dv. op-""-• * SM8 * Bl'TT!R* roer In IPOf1t t.1Ur1r1l. Ml'8t be hono9t, exp, occur8te typo, .._ port. l48 .,... 11900 mo. llrnclt. ,......ure1, clockl, •• __..... • iii&-~ tlon& Plld ~P'°"'°: truatwortlly and hard Ing to tr91n. ~™ 1. Colect 213 9244423 ""*'1 lt41mt, by ~pt • 1-r--D i.... •800 wortttng lndMdullle •••~ •ee-1111.s...a.mome.1,.__ Mt• R .. ~ 10 1• • 1400 e. COMt Hwy CdM Ul.m •n11t11 "99~ .. • • • PLUS PLUS. For~ _ • · Mttuto rtlPOft . tor Heeded In Nnt w.kMde !111111• 1111 1; ;CXQpfN IAECL Mr. lM M t-1674. ~ TIIKlt.LEY flt «tty. 25-2iT~ NI-I lft ~ WNto aluminum w/eld9 * 752.olOO * UUID'lm'la PANTRY MAN or pi t C!eH 2 lie, t>oeu, et laMt 4 ~ ,_ ., .. 1 •• wlndowe 1 100. Cell SAAB 1.111 9008. New, Wood roof oondftlontng, AM Shift 850-4320 l .30-10llm. M111ng exp. 145-7100 _. -I (71•)914-2748 My loedtd, bk& M- flame rewdlng co, hlgtl FRONT DESK CLERK ··-1 .. _.__ Ullllm---112 Pr1ce '95-MOA 25 In t HOLIOAYRAMBLEA '71 ~'!-8·~71~ commlM6one.Coo.t Roof 1 yr min exp, flu """9 ---IMRWl'W -Cff TV. Meytag ettc*ed 28FTTRAVEL TRAIL.EA ~ .. ..., ~ .,,... "'· Severa Inc. 1-.2200, 4-5 day1 wk lncl'g StudontPl•••ned,Mon-WUhor/dryer, Hotpofnt ! Awtwnbed cntrbeth 4341 Blrc:h-211, NB. HOSTESS Sit/Sun. Coete ...... Fri 4c>m-12prn, eo.ta ~-~ 2t(M321 I aaooo 4ff.2427 • OllySMt A.utoWMhlM&-1039.Jay Mela--.13 .. 1410. ' · No The f11te1t draw In the Rtfr1gtrator 17 cu ft, ftoat AaiJiii! I phonocalep!Maa. WHt. .• Dally Piiot STOREROOM CLERK COUNTER HELP wtinted. mnLIYUmm ,,.. OOld Good con-!I ClualtledAd.&42-5878. FullTimo CoronedetMwci.n.ra. Drtw 1 ~ ven from dlu0n.l17S.54&-1172 UAlll l ,.. _________ iiijiiiiiiiiiiijl P8'1 time. Ctll a.nMpm, o.c to LAX. Full or Prt WIWll 11.llllU llllll.I NIGHT AUDITOR Dennyt 644-442 U llme. Over 21 yn. gd Wwda AefrlO, wtllto, only 2 IU. IKll ,. .. ~~':tee:. llLMIY_. ~=~ro~ ::-,:.·:.::: DOMJT'l'~N Openings Now Available HOUSEMAN For Florlt1. PIT Perm. apply btwn 7AM-aPM .-il300. 54MMa llAIEYTlml ......... 13111 Herbor llvd, 0 .0. IM-2100 CAJ.t ~~~JES For Del/very Of Thi• P•per HUNTINGTON BEACH FOUNTAIN VALLEY INDEPENDEft,T Muet--" &..-... Nwpt 8ch ., .. 946-7945 Mon thru Fri. 1184 E. .:__1.__ Hl'.i ...-~.,,._. Fruit St. Santa Ana .• ...,.,... ,. 18181 BEACH BLVD. 11M1 .. ._ 5se.1sae I llY ,_,. l14/Ml-llll P1we cell for an~-~~~i: T~etlng ~K:E bedr!';!~!! 4 n..l lrift/~ betWWMpm. ~~~~ lstt.Ulteraw, ~-~-::: ........ .. MAID P8'1 Time CORMIER SUZUKI ~ .....,._ 770· 7001 •&I\ ~ .... '"". -t•ll I '""' "t.mt ttr FLOWER SHOP hft.n.. 646-0073 or 842~7. lt~"':ted"':-. ~ , __ PIT-OEU----H---EL __ P __ Wanted meturo per1IOn 3 Energotk: peopto needed RNE FURNITURE tor..... tW. and youn fOt Im-=,=.,= ... =;;;__,-.. -.- day week ....., t..... to conduct 1 Matkotlng Pvt pty. For ippt. cell medle1e deltvery. • 11-4pm, Mon-f'r1 pt1onundOOftOl'Wftowar Study tot tho <>ranee 7~1 Corona def Mir (Stk# U17l (S.I 5271) ForP•11pWed 111-1111,. "'°P wonc, 142~. C0Mt NllllNno Co. * * MOVlNG* * .... Morcedoe Boni latiilitiliWiiitilili•iPii/TF FIT.._ Meneoe *""' ........... Ullo new 8'd ' EnoMeh ORANGECOAST "!!!W!?R ... Gdn Otv t:30 4:30 euto cerrterw fot tho 0 C ~ ·~ ~ a woot llbetrect Ng, MW ~""*-" ToP'M.11 •11 ~ Pe6d · · to7 .;,....,. Ae9 leter, 2em-11am ~~,. ~It veevet etrMo 2524Hefbor eo.taMw CAUP£T£AorAAY Mon-f'r1 .• 714-53 .,__, wtloYaJwtlende. 16/llr+ --· -tor ~ lounger,.._ctlr 2art •• ma ...... 1111 gee .,..ioe. oppt)' tor maker•. hlgl'I IChOOI deeo. kldte & ~ome ".!!'. ······" lld¥el101meot, xn beft.. -*>ra. coleoe 1tuoonta lampe, Wer epen191t Yau IMI -•-•- ·.~'' -· . - BUICK DEALER IN ORANGE COUNTY 2126....,_~ C.M 979·2500 NABERS CADUAC LARGEST SIEl.ECTIOH ~ .... model, low rntleaga Cedllocaln= County! a.. I.let 141-1100 2tOO Hwbor BMS. 008TAMESA ,,., • '11 tnlW MINT COMO. Mtoo. ~1 CAMAAO '71 Rtlft :"t rnna. Nu *'-/Ina front end, cle1n THEODORE ROBINS fORO j ,,. ...... 81 .i ... ( r..1,"A Ml '.A • t SCUMLOI Ill HllllSllPES .... 1.11110 ·-Fii llYIOE WIES PllE Your flret pet, your flret Job, your fir et car, your flret home claealtled~• your flrat choice. • • • Cal a Daly Piot AD-VIS<I 642-5678 Deliver 1 day a week. No collecting. no soliciting . Must have dependable car, truck or stat ion wagon and •-••••• et1ta, noect ~ &Monctmoonalaht.,., ~ co1on1a1 din eet, g1n. cAM t tBN VXA X/C 2t3or11..-131.2333 ... , _ .... -oor, Int, gd c:ttMng rec, oy-f'r1dey 5:....,...... bdrm eat, ~ "'*"' PS I Im · ' ,:;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!.;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;!. ______ _ B•autlful Coete Mo .. cell 714·751·4165, to t:OOpm, Seturday ofc doek, M19navox • v~=-!!."' ........... ": 11900/bo 5 .. ~ meg -I insurance CALL 842 -1444 Ask for JoAnne Craney compta, rneturo coupto befor9 11em t:OOtm to 1:00pm. 8"'1 n.r..o credenza mlec c:.e. ..,_,, -' w/ptevtoua ~--. · at 14.00/hour plue tbla lamp&~ ~t· _1_se-._1_41_• ____ _ Ind gd,., to oo-menaot •1&11 •lllm bonuloe. PrMto deelc & Ing' & 1it111ographt &a~ 271 unit compta ,,..,. 8o. oc. ~only. Hlgtl phone. CHual altlro. 545-1oat C'-~i!. IMS Newport Boech. Mu1t quo1ty ~. a.tty Home workera wetcome. _. haw mllntonance bee*-btwn t-11 142~206a For Int... calf Ml. ...... u...... iii I •n PACKARO. m •• ground, $1000/mo, Ind Marano Mon.-Frl. at • •White webbfRd ....... reoont overMuted ,,... opt, Newpor1 VIII• ......... , /P-n.t e 4 2 • 4 3 3 3 b w t n DRESS Sin 5 ....,.., ong ' ,,.,,. ISOOO 090. Apt, 714-657-0075, • Mltntonance. Women ptef hm-3pm. Or eftor been wO,n. 1 150' Of 8oet 983-3323 tor Virginia, oft 12:00. 541-1516 tor tp9t. 5:30pm et "42·5879. on.. C811 M0-1288 •t1 lllUI .... I DIRT BIKE·Dlamond Authontle & In exd cones Bectc, cnrome an cones I 13,000 552-393e m~· euetomo a.nC: Aalll ....... ilii rodtw T, M3-I07t. mil Mftltlai!f llltl ...,. ..... .._ ___ 1.,.........,......., ___ ......., Pila IW. llilliAil iili • ..., ' liiiiiiiiiiiii==---1 BUILD OR REPAIR RESID/COMM'UIND 21 mr::aa: wworc. .... .... EtiCfiUCXL contn. tu~ ...... $2.40 per day Wall•. doora. Wlndowl. yrs. Do my own work. Uc. concm.. Comp potloe. freHltfwtl .... 7 .. ~7 ploe: 16ght fbrt. wire, dllt. SIMPL y THE BEST pa11oe. ~ remodell. 1219041. Al '4e-812t t5 yr1exper.1•e 4134 II'* ~-.... box-. Poe. tooll, Don Satea . s.rvtoe. t..eutno Thot'1 ALL you pay for UC/Ina. Banner M4-5tM9 NEW/REPAIR Quolty No BRtCKWORK. Smell Jobe... PAINTER NEEDS WORl<f 536-e228, 2131432~73 EUROPEAN DELIVERY 3 "'*• 30 day mlnffnum ~ · · Newport Coeta MOM. Int/Ext, oettlnga, reftn cab. p hi I 1540 JAMBOREE RD. In Ille Wl==-=et:toe Jobe to lfNll!• rwoneble. lrvlne Wt. 175-3175 (2t) yr1 exp., wortt II'*· ttl __ wa I NEWPORT BEACH SERVICE Addttlone. wortt. Froe ..i .. Mc d. 131-2'45 · o.vte Painting M4-3837 bOitAUXRIXkc pure Adlaclnt to Falhk>n l*nd ________ No Job to 1mt1 AM typtt. STEV Property Mllnt. out9tandlng, dowormed ~ un.we Paul •• mi STUCCO MASONRY·TllEES bt.s M AJI Pte*'l/lhote. Open 7 DeY9. w.- Plue Smell Romodol 8l'ld -• Ft• ost. Uc. . 131-2345 Int/~ peln1, lf)f'ay/rol a 1175. 175-Uea iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim DIRECTORY Addltlonl. w .... Doora. Cuetom Glw a Mirror llriat gen I malnt. 722"1473 FOR SALE: AKC Chow LARGE SELECTION Of MJ. 11ll, I Ull, ID WOl'tl, ....._ llkMng doon TOP QUALITY PAINTING pupa Adorable only to NEW & USED 8MW'SI CALL TOOAYll lllfllllll Y04K Servtoe Dtroe10f'/ Reproeontatlve 141-4121 tit. HI HOME REPAIR 8EfMCE etc. A· 1 GIW. 541-1507 •1-1 •vm• Int/Ext reta. fr• •t. good. homel 7»-1157 LM llAll .. A" PMNe. Repolr. ~ =a~ CLEAN & EXPERl .... 1122 lft..1111 N.wpOf1 Bw:tl. VOLUME SALES model. Addltlone. Guiat'd Owr25yw.oJlpetlonc:IO p • ooct "KC 2 SERVICE & LEASING W_..._ By Uo ,.~-or TEST,.. trim Uc. T • 119,429 730-1353 I M ... p lo " • Mex. .. .. 70 N co.-. " "'"· · ..,.,.,.._, · """ lllver retired MOX· -· ,_,, ,..,,_, Fr" ost. (714) 554-2193 Dump Nnt. C.M./N.B. ••ABC MOVINGee F · NO INTERIORS (C;, ~ 10 In neu.-LONG BEACH 0oor ... Ropa1r·Atteretlonl ., ... Jim Whyte. 142·7208 Quick & Cartful Tt3904e HANGING/STRIPPING !erect S50: 'Male chlneee (No. Cherry oxits405) CablMt ... P.,....Lodt...tc •GEN. HOME REPAIRS. LO RATES. 552-0410 VISA-MC 873-1512 Cr•tec:I, noeut. 3•,+ yr1. (114)111-llM ~-i'"""!';mlll!lllll .. ..---35 yr1 exp. Wf'/ 142~5e7 Paint. Orywlll. c.n>tntf'/ n•-•WIM ANDYS WALLCOVERING Fr" to gd hm. "40-4a27 Tract.Int Welcomo ~ CeWatt -c etc. Gwy 645-&2n PTL -·--lnetlllatlon .. Removal OPEN SEVEN DAYS RE t0 A OAPXmtb Y!!Jlt! **HANDYMAN** If-II•••.. Int. Pllnling. 541-4013 PIMl.I .... 1 50 -------• AllO Int/Ext Painting ~ IMttllatlon Lwgt Of ·eme11. I do It 1111 St~~~ Wallplper lnataltatlon & T~2~ Min. 2 •11&11 llllPUI UC#2Wt7 63'"9}95 M~.:::!~ Pat531·557tor1Yemeg. Llc.T124-43&.&414427 ~.Alltypee,comm'I STANDARD POODLES DELIVERVDEPAATMEN1' n1t · YOU BUY• I INSTAU NEWWwehouMStoraoe & reeld I. Joo &45-5180 AKC ALSO COLLIE, McLAREN'S DUW ·=-~ Clllnt!CNiitii Ll. Eloc:. Lt. Plumbing. • .... j Wegaluhdhangtogether FREE TO OOOD HOME. 1:1111111n 1JJ btt..w.y';, pettoe, potfil: OW. Opnr-. WL 548-MM awJI Hang/1tflp. Ac:Mce to tho a5e-0140/541-2848. M·F tint. S.S ttllt c ax Of any etc. No jOb too etlWlfl. Mn• Home lmprOY9-CoreM-Court~ crazy. 830-0730 • a2e S. Eucld St. t .. ~P~~:75. ,_., Mld!ey. ~ mont/repelr, etc, ouetom By tw./or pteoe. Me-3M5 Pl..W.. PlaMt au HH 1 Fullerton. CA ST.CLAIR CONSTRUCT. ==~908.1 ..... , tiilfiiflll-= ::~-= 1.,.. .... _..._ ___ ,,. Com9tet• concrece Wortt Phoiooraphy-Wed3lng1 tf, Hammond 82 Concert youf;IU, aa:ureto Roa. Rot• .........,1 la.U, 8oudolr-Portralt·A•••· AJlptumblng& 11200 OBO. Hatollon cNlrt & Interpretation, Cite='= t\"1mlJAO .DOVIAO Uoonoed. Bob. 897.el67 DRAINS CLEAR From 115 g:;c' Ptano231llnt 11500 ~~ l 10.00,9ryWl'32·1745 _ --_ 6or1t9IYwdClnupo ~ f1Ml9CS.~.Hoetor. ~W~ t 8 ING Jon . 8454192 141-0907 Lie 722·tOM RHODES etoctr1c plano 1MJS -·· _ SERVICE: a ttwoougftty Cot--t1o1JXl&e f& il¥9 ~~ w/twtn ,..,.,b amp com-I x;;e mi I '*" houM. 54CM>l67 HaullnQ. ~ eteon-1n cer. a 11te "*" tot ~ ptet• oooct cond aaoo LUID I "-"facing . Rooftf'G a Hou•dt•nlllg C*'Ptt• • Upt.. 7 o.ya. Low.I, ..... tho 9der1y (714)1S3-200IWT any m iid 175-lf70 Of 9&4-3375 Wlterprooflng• 831~1" • ..-... ~ etc. call Bin)', 72.2-1173 By 50%. 30 d9y IP9C now 1-----.,.---__,..-1 KJ(.::::~t 631·5272 r~ 8'udent /1Q tNCtt LO\lefy Aeeldentiel C... roof 1999 guer. 7~2.7537 STEINWAY Grand 100 yr Alwayt a t:remeodou t VF• • --... wt. l"hlnk Homo for tho Eldel1y olchottd oek hlndewwd "*110n of ,,._ & G'1 Gt o;;ang CJtiW8i ~ =· ~971 Kat"Y &40-4 101 deu ~~~chino ~'. ~~ carefully prep~r• Teek ctoentno. vwnWI. HOOiEClmmm: I WI !l!t terma. ~ preowned BMW a In oompound. waa.157-2419 c1eonyo...w houae. i.,l. * ,... ...... ,.... xaa•ne-o;a;;;:mr ~ · ••<>Ck I ~~~~S!~r;~ Reta. Ollll Gltdy954W155 ' ....... Top Queltty. Low Prloe, = iiii It don ma.It• • dlf IXCIWrtilif.n Xn I [w er:; t;:.t,. '™ ·-t , .... *~~I * 'I Fr .. •t. UC. 131-23"45Q crulw . fertnee ~-y~ .., -.-· SMptno-Aemo~Haul "' • """'' . • comm · Ille• new, 175 I Oeolgn Strv. BrochurlCS•• ~. Mll<E no0i2t3 17yn union exp. Ul24t30 Call anytime 845-0821 purchaM your 8MW. Typtatttlng. ORAPH - -:: ,,.. •. LOW AAT!Si dPEAT cEAXUIC Tiano --&CArtn N£wPOAf. 120-9191 aue n.,.. nm 161111~ .... ,...., 0tettnct1ve. Aflordeble y;;:;;;;;--w,:;;;;ti;;t;;;;iiMji;ft. NA~ Of remodelll1g, Kltchone. botl'll. 722 9713 lu T~Word Prcc1eelng, llcl4178" MO-f&M Topped. /rtmO\'ed. ~ '°'Info.~ Ollll -~~~~~~~I (•1•) ·····111 RU8HJ088 · up,,..,,....._ 7514471 M3-1mor~241 1-r • ...... OUA I IC IA LI TY . ST. CLAJ"CONSTRUCT. ' , 200• tit . ..,_AN GRAPHICS NEWPORT. Comm'I, Reetd'I. ....,_ lo Tr.fTM\/OeanuP ~ ":: :.~ :r Ncfl.. LET THE SUNSHINE IN .... lllt Cl06f0 "'"°"YI 7:zo.t1t 1 ~,.... ...... 1 ~eoi::21n cwt°"*" uo. ~ SuneHnewtnckM~ II IWULI TYPING, word pie Cll I 19o AllftOdel ~ ~ ~TAU fMCI l'htnll·YOUI 113-4114 Ltd. Cea (714) ..... RtO 1Mtl 8t. a St. MdreM M . ~=. ~.~t·~·,,: ......... doolmlnta. df'/-WWI 'teMnt lmSWOV· T ·T~ ~ °'* A.A.A. PAINTING lnt/&t Plf1c wtndow ~ Thur.a/15 t-Hri Slit .. a ongla5M ml, MOOO. Coll form ien.n., A a M 8Yt-montt. 141-4822 oP uC1N, ho i.e . LOWEST poeelOte pttoe. Wt 1i11o ..... mW-bllnde 7W75M241 teme. !Mne. 162~744 ~·_. ... 0t 6M -· 1o a-.,~ 812..S2'8 ~.,.. 720-1101 I .....,..~...,.,...--1 --DATSUN 2402.. '73 New -==11:~~ ......... """111!" I Entry • Ft'MClh Doon OAPOINIA. 10,,. WE C'-IAN WINOOWI red Pllnll 5K ml rblt .. lty NonMn Tiie DoonNn ex:~ CdM ..... Q.-y MAGIC IAUSH PAtHTINO Commerctot/Reeldontlal. .... ..... . on o..,,, .. 7-oooA ~d~ .. ~~ ~~~::: c!:w=~r.o a~.:::o~ DOOM LOMll AON a GA-JObO. 414 ••-'• 7 70l'lp JoMeofl eng, lllnt ) oeo 831·7tel . P~ewt.•3M4 Cea~..,,. CH~~ OAHIALYl9'~AIHTNG =/ObO~~~o lll ..... llBIL .. ·--lwvtoe MOW. EDGE TWtCf MO Uc ~.aat24 FIND ----Atd. mlntcond, 11K+ .:::=.~ . .._ lllltriMl S20-$21 541-<172..2 . Cel~IM-I017 '40 Vlf(INO U , Ilg, IWll $371(.11 .. 7t2-22SS ._ OMC def, AP, redtt, -------- OoorMitc. .... ... N 1111 Rll19I FULL KAY • ' onen. .. MW .. 'II At Miiii 'Ti him O.....toe41ed_.tnatutt?A °'*"Y~ ...... -No.lob21Macwtlmal. DlfftQ.lt/bt Our~ through cl.us1fted ,,.. t140,000 M\'81... Auto.ale.~"'* caltOclMllftectwlll U2551S Mt-7401 ffeeost~72oflfipm ucn .. 111 ~i..-thl9 ... ltT3-1974 17.000.~9-14IO.Ted • J FU SUCCESSFUL CITIZEN How much will your son or daughter know about business when opply1ng for t+ietr first full-time 1ob? Plenty, if he or she hos ever been a newspaper carrier. Through route t"f)erionco he or she 1s already a lap ahead of ttleir classmates. While t+iey all master 1deos, t+ie boy or girl w1t+i o newspaper route 1s able to put them to practlcal use. 6usineu? Carriers learn the basic leorn the bos1c pmw:1ples from lt.e fim doy of starting to deliver newspapers They buy 01 wholflole, sell 01 retail. make collections, keep their own books, and deal wrth peop~ foce to face. Carriers qutekly find out that "profit" ond "Ion' are more It.on textbook term• The benefits of ma~1ng o newspaper route or~ on equation for a future succeuful cit11en A great number. of today's prominent men ond women started their public careers as nelN<Spaper comers And they oll vouch that o neW\paper route giYeS a boy or girl a heod •tart on the futiJre Boys ood gir1s 10 vPors ood ldl'" wlxl mov bP "'P'"''Pd •ri •ovtf! wor~ $hOUld coo1oc1 lhd Do.Iv P1lo1 C11 u1ot101 lP~O''"'r"r 01 6 47 4333 Daily !.!~~,ON OEPT 330 WEST 8AV ST P 0 . BOX 1560 COSTA MESA, CALIF 92626 ,-----------------, Yes, my son, daughter would liko l information on o Doily Pilot rou'9 I I HIS HER NAME 1~------1 I I I ________ ZIP __ , I PHON AGE_I • I PARENT'S I I ~IGNATUA I L----------------J .. ---- 810 0rangie Coat DAILY PILOT/ TuMdly, May 13, 1MS "8JC ll)TIC[ G.tw..J" ~ F°""''" Ouci.O l)y' t llmHllCI S*'MJ· t3t Promontory Pt ..,toroe BMctl, CA 92863 p ·-· -Thit butlnttt " con-PrMHMnt ueled by: an Incl~ Thie 1111-1 WM fti.o Geor119 FOiiman with the County Cleft °'Or-Thie 1111-1 -tll«I at'lg9Coul'lty on A.ptl 9, 1986 ,. ,,. eou"tv c~ o1 Or-,w, IW\08 C01.1n1y 'W'l Aoru e. 19&0 ' PubllarMtd 0r.,. COMt Publlalled OrtnQe ~ O&lly Pllol M')' 8. 13, 20. 27, o.lly Pllol °'Pfll 22. 29, .... ., 1966 6, 13, lllMI I T-16' PlllllC lllTICl ffCTTTlOUa .,..._ .. ~llA'T'l*MT The lollowlng ~ .... OOlng ~ u; Hi9wpof1 MwttSM Cllart.,., 357 N. Old'~BIWI .. ~ 8-::h, CA 92990 EdW'1.::'i,m11 F...,.. LNf, El oro. CA 12930 Ttmtrt Spi1 11r, 2922 Blume Or .. Loe Atamno.. CA 8()120 T,.11 bv1ln111 II COfl· eel by' • o-'*'al pa-t- ' Ed W1gon1r, T1m1r1 s -Thll llttement WU ftled ... h the Countv Ci.no: of O.· • l'IOfl Cou,,ty 00 Apr!! II, 1118& -Publllh«l Orangto Cout 9lly Piiot ApOI 22, 2fl, M1y I 0 • . 13, 19etl T-1 8~ PlllllC NOTICE ,, .. PlllUC N()TIC[ ftCT'l'nOU• .,_ .. MAmSTAn.NT TM tollowln(j C*"'MWlt wt clOlt'lg bueir-•: snw. Thompt on En11rprlttt, •702-2 Vie; LI P9iotrla, Or· ~A92Mt ~--· ..... Thlt !:HJ-'""' 11 ton· ducted ir,: an lnc:IMdue.I enan l'lompeon Tht. 1ttt_..1 -1""" wilfl the County Clerk of Or- AnQ9 County oo May 8, 1Ne -Publl.ned Or~ Coat'! O&ll'f PMot Mty I , 20, 27, Jun11 3, 198e "" PllllJC lllTICl IUl"UllOfl COURT Of TMI ITATI OP C~POR nccOUNTY ,,,_ •teTITIOUt au&INlll I "',.,.. COMrln......,... NAME ITATfMVfT of IM,.,_ 9fld a..... M TM lollowlng pet90'l• .,. VMAN I.. MAf!LI, C- dolr>Q ~ u · Com--Wiii I pul•• A•l•l•CI Ser,.lce1 CaM No. A-12980e Get t .. the basic ABC's ;\11ie . l1ase1nf'tll, and c loset then ~et "on1e c•ash. SELL through cla ssi fied ' ' ' l•'s he 9ELLING SEASON I Now I• the ••oton to moke big buck•. Sell t ho•• unn••ded household wares, out· grown cloth•• or toy trucks by aclv•rtlslng your gara9a sal• todoyl Only .~ p•r lln• (4 lln• minimum) Daily Pilot Classified 842-5878 ~- • _,,_ -- j I . • • "8JC lllTIC[ "8JC lllllCl PlllUC lllllCL ·--m aftllL•W o.m11sr••"-t .,_ • a•: ;;;z. 3IOO~Y119' t11z;ort.._.. -•!GO MltCWDllU.wa. "'·-Mort\l:Wr • Ccc 11 a r Ct••••i tula.r· ... .,..,._ -- . .. -.. -' • Newport Arts Festival back at original site By MADGE RAMMOND With the dedication of "Metalphor," a contemporary sculpture, the Newport Beach .\rts Fesu val will get under way where 1t started l2 years ago -the lawn at Newport Beach City tUU. The art work, created by Chapman College assistant art professor R. Bret Pncc and donated by Warren Hancock, a local collector and patron of the arts, will be dedicated at noon ~turday, May 17. h is a significant addition to the c11y's art collection, acquired from festivals, which 1s displayed year-around 10 offices at city hall and in oty hbrancs. In recent years, the c11y art fcsuvali. have been at Fashion Island or on udo but the on11nal festival, a one-<iay JUned show 1n the late '60s, was held on the city hall lawn. Noung that this year's event will be at the onginaJ site and Via Lido Plaza, aru commission chairman Pani-Oene Sampson said. "We art very eAcitcd abolR rctumina to where 11 all began." The idea and events that led to the annual fesuval onginated at city hall. Soon after becom ing mayor in 1958. James B. Stoddard. who SCTVed in that position until 1962, asked a prominent artist fnend, Joan Irving Brandt. wife of another famous painter, Ru Brandt, for bclp in obtaining paintings to bnghten the walls of city hall. The art was to be made available w11hout cost to the city. Joan Brandt, the mayor's wife Florence. and some of their fnends worked o n the project, which led to art shows, and later to the city eounc1l's naming a fine arts com mm~. chaued by Brandt, to select fine an for 'dJSplay in mumc1pal buildings and promote cultural act1v1t1es within the city. In 1974, the council changed the committee to a commission. Lad1slaw Redly, who served on the comm111ce and commission 10 years, chamng 11 the last seven years ot his tenure, recallS that onginally fesuval art shows were limited to pamunp. Over the years. other at\ forms. including sculpture, photography and per· forming arts were added. C~t1ng a children's d1vis1on was another highliftlt. One of the most significant steps taken dunng the early yean, as Rcday sees It, was in1ua11ng a purchase award. The idea was to 11ve an artist a cash award for bis or her work, which the city would rcc.c1ve as part of 1t.s permanent collection. Equally important. Reday feels. was the dcc1s1on to ask businesses and others to donate money for their purchase. Donors may either take a work of art for them sch cs in return for the award or give the an to the city. Reday and his wife, Peg. 11ve a purcha<>e award each )Cat to provide an for the city. The cit) 10cludcs the ans festival in its budget. and the money provided by the city 1s augmented by donors' purchase awards, said Sampson. In add111on to accumulaung a permanent an collecuon. the City gives parucipating artists an opponunrty to c•hib1t an assemblage ofthe1r of their paint1np on a temporary basis 1n the City Hall Gallery -located 1n the main lobby and a comdor, said Ervin "Bud" Pashley, Arts Festival chairman. When performing arts were first invited into the festival, awards were given in that c:atCJOry as well. But today, professional performen arc employed. A red trolley car to be on display at Via udo Ptaza -and to be dcclicated at the festival's openma ceremonies -wilJ add color to this year's socne. It's one of three trolley cars to start running in Newport Beach June 1. The festival atttacts exhibitors and art lovers from throuahout Oransc County. Althou&h the first festival's show was juried. most o(the early shows were open to anyone, so CROSSING THE BORDERS OF f .slllO~o .... lJitlwett~" lJitltkj#e Fine Feminine A pparel Related Sportswear Open 7 days Sun 12·4 Remarkable Acceuories 3~7 Via Lido · Newport Beo..h 67~510 Museum Quality Wor~hjp--Only tht Finest Archival Materials KUHN'S CREATIVE FRAMING 272 1 E. COAST HWY . CORONA DEL MAR , CA 9262~ Established 1960 714/673·22~~ .., ..................... LookiDC OTer art entrlea are .faqee lllke llcGee from the Lap.u Beach llueam of Art and Anne Ayr1ie. itewport Barbor Art lluea.m. long as the at\ was 1n "aood taste, .. Rcday noted. However, juron now detennme which worb arc to be included in the festival. Ueo1JIC R. James, of Cotta Mesa, once a prolefC of Rex Brandt and now a prominent artist m his own riaht, as well u chairman of Cal State Fullerton's Art Department. is among those who have exhibited at the f~tival as practicina profes&iooal artists. , Another Cal State Fullerton art professor, Don La&erbcrL a former mem~ of the Newport liarbOr Art Museum board oftnist.ees and a former juror for the festival. captund the csseooe of the event with this description: "Ifs a community outpourina, with art ranpna from very hiah professional to very hi&Jt 9uality amateur. The festival is a visual expenence 1n itself." frffl$ "" I ~ carrw tu IA Midi and brouaht us GOLD b«aUK wt hold what odwn ofttn only pro..U.! So COIM find out wlult this GOLD h all abou1. Try Chef Walttr\ 1prlnc·ll9M fan and pron thAt you're 1 connolunr! -our Sprina Gourmd Ftstlval 1C1rt1 April 17- Sunday Brunch Dinners, Banquets Business Lunches 675-4904 3421 Via Lido, Newpon Bca~h D :K. MacDonald FASHION THAT SAYS EVERYTHING 675-3907 3•3~/a Lido N~wpi:Jrt B~ach 2 -Atta~ 1Ne/An AdYertlelng Supplement to the DAILY PILOT/Tueedey, Mey 13, 1918 . -'\ . . -... WHAT, WHEN & WHERE WHAT! Ncwpon Beach 22nd City Arts Festival. WllEA_E: Newport Beach City Hali, 3300 Ncwpon BOuJevan1, and Via Lido Plaza, Via udo and Newport Boulevard. WHEN: Saturday May f1 -from noon to S p.m. and Sunday. May 18 -from noon to 4 p.m. WllO: Sponsored by the Newport Beach City Arts Commission in cooperation with Via Lido Plaza mcrclian&s. WHY: Tbc Newport Beach Arts festival was established by the city of Newport Beach in 1964 to promote the artists of Oranae County, the cnioymcnt of the arts in Orange County, and to conch the quality of ljfc in the community. The Ans Festival competition ~nd displa)'1 are open to aU artists livina in or workina in Orange County. The Brass Company, 12-3:30 p.m. Saturday; Renaldo and Robin face painters. noon to S e.m. Saturday, 12 to 4~m. Sunday; jaalen Owen Mone and Chip noon to 5 p.m . Saturday, noon to 4 p.m. Su y. South Coast Symphony, noon t~ S .P·!D· Satu~y; noon to 4 p.m. Sunday;.,.Capnce M1mcServ1cc, J to 4 p.m. Sunday; Spmy Saxes, I to 4 p.m. Sunday and Winds Way, 3 p.m. Sunday. EN'l'EllTAINERS provided by Via Udo Plaza; The Mississippi Muddcn, and' mime artists MarJje Talley and Trina Hardy. ARTS COMMIMIONERS: Pani-Genc Sampson, chair, Bud Pashley, Arts Festival chair, Bunny Crosson, Debby Polonsky, Gail Foor. Carl Ncissc:r. and Molly Lynch. Special thanks to the followin1 individuals and companies who have donated money to be used for purchase awards in addition to funds set aside by the city for that purpo5e: -Carver Development, City National u u HIGHLIGHTS: Dedication of new sculpture on the lawn of City Hall, preview of the Newport Beach trolley, juried show open to Orange County artisu on city hall grounds. &roup displays, mimtai music, art demon- strallons and P.rcscntallons by the Newport Beach Public Ubrary. Sank. Don Koll, The Irvine Co., City of ------_..;.-----....-----,..-- JUDGES for the Juried Art Show: Mike McGee, ptOJTam coordinator, Laauoa Beach Museum of Art, and Ann Ayres. associate curator, exhibitions and collections. Newport Harbor Art Museum. I SCHEDULE: -N .. s.svuy,May 17-Welcomeand introduction ofNewport Beach Mayor Philip R. Maurer by Patti-Gene Sampson, Arts Com- mission chairman. -Announcement of winners in the juried competition and presentation of awards by Mayor Maurer, assisted by Bud PashJcy, Arts Festival chairman. -The mayor introduces Warren Hancock, donor of"Metalphor." -Warren Hancock introducenculptor R. Bret Prioe, creator of"Metalpbor." -Dedication of 11CUlpture by the mayor. -1 p.m. Dixieland musicians lead the may~ and audience to the Via Lado Plaza parkina lot to preview the Newport Beach trolley. -l:U p.m. Conclusion of opening festiv- ities and spectators are invited to cqjoy until 5 p.m. closina time: -Art displays by Latino Artists Alliance and Coastline Artisu Association. -City Hall Gallery Show featuring watercolors by Bea Riley, works tn several media by Scott Angle. and ceramic sculpture by David Kiddie. -Juried Art Show on the city ball ~unds. -Art Demonstration by Mimi Sharon Stein at Via Lido Plaza. -Displays by invited artists on the &rounds al C1ty ball. -Ncwpon Beach Public Library p~n­ tations, food vendors, mimes. music and entertainment at both locations. -N.-&o t , ... s.May, May JI: Same schedule as Saturday. minus opening cer- emonies. ENTERTAINMENT: Bryan Allison Duo. noon to 5 p.m. Saturday, noon to 4 p.m. Sunday; fill Colored Posters and Lltho Prlno Onlr U..SO-#.,. FRE£ l111n will ind sign FR££ ind ~rsomllze FRE.£ Postt!rs and Prinu lnlfoduclng lv1n's Newt-H Lltho Print, "Pinkt" Cuftom Picture Fr1mlns f L1thcn • Origifl.11 Arr Pcntt:t'l Newpo(t Beach, Prioe Waterhouse, Mr. and Mrs. Ladislaw Reday, Supervisor Thomas F. Riley. and South Coast Plaza Manaaement EXHIBITORS: Jose Louno, "White Shoe," pastel, "Fry Mc An Eq. .. oil pastel. (first prize). "Library Scene." oil pastel; Steven Kostec:hko, .. Obcab Woman," monotype. "One of Those Days," mixed media, "Throuab Political Strat.eaics.." mixed media (seoond place); Geri Fcrsuson, "The Journey #1 ," pbotOlflpb, "The Journey #2," photograph, "The Journey #3,"photOlflph (thU'd place). Heather ~-campbell, .. Church Pew," photOlflpb, (honorable mention), "Pei's l>oints," pbOlOlflpb, "The Painter Was Color Blind?,' pbotoarapb; Susan Carson, "Vineyard," pu1el (honorable mention), "~tom;tY ROid," pastel. "The Study,'' oil;. V1ctona Currens, "Sheets," prisma color, (honorable mention); Jay Vouna. .. Dancer II J, .. oil, "Dancer #2," oil, "Dancer 13," 011, (honorable mention, three judlcd u one). Marpret M. Andrews. "centnl Sink, .. oil: Cecilia A. Aviles, "Kam A Cbeese Croissant," oil; Dorothy Bartlett, .. Wild Sea." watcrcolo'i Helen BcllUIFf, .. Man of Abb With Birds.• wateroolor. Joan Ouisteme:n, "Croquet At Ctaires." watcroolor. Elaine Davault, "Aam· inao Surprise," mixed media, "Cow and Bird Altat." mixed media .. Agnes Ena. "Misty Dawn," watercolor. Doretta Ensign, "Parrots." woodf.acrylic; Jerome P. Gaston. "Sprina Run.Off, • water- c.olor, "Winona (')noorl-" watercolor. Karvev Geller, "lampli&ht~otop1lph. "Old Joe,'· phOlOlflph; Jolin Geojs, "Fashion Island," watercolor, "Ferry," watercolor; Henry M. Godines. "Surfer Sandy," oil; Marcia Cox Holzman. "Black Monday," monoprint, "S. F. Rainy Day," watercolor: Maria Janas. "Tiger," chincae brush; Olivia Johnson, "Blue Door # 2, Taos Pueblo.'' photOlflpb, .. Cow, High Road to Taos." photop1lph. Donna Klassen. "Drager." pastel, "Sea Pups," pastel; Hazel Lamb, "Whafs Cook.in"!," watercolor and ink; Lillian Lennard.. "S.S. Lily," watercolor. Gloria J. Marston, "The Nine-0." oil. "Rose Bowl Taitpte," oil; Helen (Pl--... PUTIV AL/P7) ART DIMENSIONS GALLERY Custom Frames Posters • p thos • Original Art 3431 Via Oporto# lOOA. Newport Beach 675-5377 VIA' LIDO DRUGS For Graduate or F~er Cross Pens, America's Ultimate Writing Instrument, is the Perfect Gift. • Hallmark Cards • Free Gift Wrapping • Personal Service • C.omput.emed Preecription Records 3445 Via Lido • PH 675-0150 Arts FMtlval 1988/An Advertlatng Supplement to the DAILY PtLOT/Tueedey. M9Y 13, 19M -3 =-I ) ~ -~--------------~----~~-. ........... ~--------~----._.~._..--------- Newport's permanent collection impressive By CBRIS CRAWFORD o.9p ..... C.n ... I Morgndgc's "Before Irvine Terrace." Thomp- son's work won a purchase award in 1974, When James Stoddard became mayor of Morgndge's last year. Newport Beach 10 1958, he discovered to his In reference to "Back Bay O itT," Pashley dismay that city hall was a very bland building, said. "I like the looseness and the freedom she's devoid of any an. used. and the feeling that the work fives. Most "Can you do something about these bare painungs exist on feeling, and in this case, you walls rm surrounded with here?" he asked local can tell that it's a threatening day." In contrast, artist Joan Irving Brandt. he said, "You ~t a happy feeling from To remedy the situation. Brandt and some Mo!Jnd.c's worR. 'which he also termed "very others formed the city's first Fine Arts bnlhant.' Both of the works, he said, "arc Committee (later to become the City Arts among my favorite watercolors." Commission) to select an for display through-The assistant city manager's office displays out the city chambers and offices. and to another watercolor by Eve Thompson, "View promote cultural activities an the community. of the Bay," which was a purchase award In 1970. the city began making purchase winner 1n 1976. "This was a little later in her awards to arusts whose works were entered 1n career." said Pashley, "and it is a somewhat the annual municipal An Fesuval's juned tlghtcr pa1nung. but it still bas a nice overall show. These purchased works arc now part of looseness typical of transparent watercolor the city's permanent collection of displayed art. art." "The city sets aside a sum for purchases, Hanging on the opposite waJI in the same and also various donors give us money for office is ''Clock.," by Dana Warwick.. a 18 by 12- purchascs," explained Newport Beach Arts inch. hand-carved, wooden clock. with all Commissioner Bud Pashley. wooden works. "It is a beautifuJ piece-of During last year's show. the city gave craftsmanship," remarked Pashley of tbe 1977 purchase awards ranging from $250 to $625. to purchase award winner. five different artists. "We give the artist the Two works hang in the purchasing depart- price that he sets as the value of his work.," said ment office. One is Marion Dou&hctty's Pashley. "Dragonfly." a Chinese brush watercolor that Today, more than 30 award-winning was an award winner in the '85 festival. works, by local artists and other professionals, Another is Joan Christensen's "Balboa Ferry," compnsc the art collecuon on continuing recognized as the poster for the 1985 Salute to display m the city's offices and hallways. the Arts. Manyofthescdep1ct local, familiar scenes. In city council chambers hangs Scott For example, in the mayor's office is Ruth Angle's "Liberty," a large, 30 by 4(}.inch closc- Hynds' watercolor of the Balboa Pavilion, up view of the Statue ofLibrty, rendered in 011 entitled "Spring Weather -Balboa," Hynds' colors. . work was a 1975 purchase award winner. ··Angle is a young. very talented artist ... --- ....................... IDelucled ID the permanent collec:tlon are "8 A.Iii. Yeeterda7:• bf WlnJ.fred Smith (aboTe) and "Before Inlne Terrace" by Remy MOJCddle. Local scenery is also depicted in the whose work 1s currently on djsplay in the artwork hanging in the city manager's office: corridor portion of city hall." said Pashley. In ~E=v=e=T=h=o=m=pso==n=·s=="Ba==c=lc=8a_;_y_Cl_i_rr_·_a_nd~H_c_n~ry~~~~......:(~P_lea.e~~eee~-CO~L_L_ltC~Tl.-;0;-K~/;--P5;-;-->;;;.;;;;~~~~~;;;;~~~~~~:;::;;::;;::;;::::::::::::~====~~~~ .. -Atta F-eltlvtl 1988/An Advertllfflg Supptement to the DAILY PILOT/Tueeday, May 13, , • • COLLECTION ••• FromPaCe4 ri:fcrcnce lO An&lc's .. Liberty," Pash.Icy charac- 1cn1es the ~ntin& as .. more modem 1n its f~hnJ and au use of paint. It ii very strong, beau 11 fully placed on the can vu, and really says ~hat hbcrty is all about." This p&intin& was one ot the purchase award-winnen in last year's \hO~ Council cha:mbcn is also the home for Eve Thompson's watercolor entitled "Balboa Pa\llhon," a 1976 pwchuc award winner . .. This 1s done in the impressionist style," .,plained Pashley, "and one of the nicest p1.:1ures oflhe Pavilion I've ever seen." .\ISO hanging in council chambers is \\ in1fred Smith's "8 A.M. Yesterday," an oil pa1n11ng of The Cannery, donated in 1982 by f ncnds of the Art Commiuion. "It is a very n:alislle painting, and very nicely done," said Pashl ey. Another realistic work is Norman Lloyd's '-'atercolor entitled "Balcony," a 1982 purchase that 1sd1splayed in the council conference room. <>ccupying the same area is Vincent Farrell's hluc felt pen drawin& entitled "Newport Bndge," a 1984 purchuc award winner. Hanginsabove the staircase, which leads to 1hc e11y attorney's offices. is the large wall hangmg entitled "This Is The City," acquired in 1973 from Ensign Middle School. The muJtJ- colorcd fiber anwork depicts various scenes of 1he Newport Arca. One of the notable works in the city .1t1omcy's area is Suzanne Carson's ''Man an Thought," a pastel that was a 1983 purchase award winner. "Carson's work is very special1" commented Pashley. '"She approaches oil, watercolor. and pastel with equal capability and Oe:ubility. She is a very talented lady who had three paintings juried in one show." Still more works can be found throughout the buildings and even out on the lawn, where Rafe AfTeck's iron sculpture, "Horizons '76," greets visitors as they approach the lobby. One thing for sure: Stoddard's once-barren city hall now looks like a bona fide art gallery. Perhaps you'll find just the treasure you've been looking for in one of the American or European Antique Shop.5 or Design Studios. Take time· to dine or have a glass of wine at The Boozy Rouge Bistro, known for its wine cellar and fine food. ' Remember-Cannery Village is a wonderful experience to add to your Day at The Arts. • o.Jsn l>lmelWona • t.. Canard lnterion • Wllcl Gooee Chue • Newport Harbor lmporu • The Country Shop • Cornicopia • Tom Stanabury Antiqu .. • Booay Rout• Bi1tro • a A wall hanaJ~ eadtled ••TJala la die City,'' ... acqairid 1973."~WeatMl'­BalbM. ••a watercolor by itati B~ wu addecl la 1975, uad '°Clock," a wooden coutracdoa by Duaa Warwick, wu a 1977 pa.rclaue award wla.aer. Art&" Arts F•tlvll 1986/An Adwrtlemg Suppeement to the DAILY PILOT/Tueeday, May 13, 19M -5 I Co missioners devoted t o Newport art programs By JOYCE SCHERER BODLOVJCB In response to their own and the public's enjoyment of fine art gracing the walls of Newport Beach C'ity Hall, city council mem- bers in 1961, formed the first Fine Arts Committee to select works for display in municipal buildings and to promote cultural activi1ies within the ci1y. Committee members included Joan Irving Brandt. Florence Stoddard. Donhc B. Cunis. Dorothy Ahumnson and Ehzabc1h T W1nckkr. The council cttanged the name 10 the City Ans Committee 1n October 1965 and on June 6, 1974, the committee officially became the Newport Beach City Ans Comm1ss1Qn. Commissioners were required to be New- port Beach residents and would be selected by the c11y councll through an interview pro<xss. The comm1ss1on, according to clulirman Patti-Gene Sampson, has proved its crcdib1hty over the years. A yearly budget ofS I 00 1n 196 7 has increased to $31 ,100 for the 1985-1986 season. "We have grown quite a bit since 1he early 1960s," sa1d Sampson. "As volunteer com- m1ss1oners,. our JObs encompass many hours of work to assure the succ.css of the numerous art programs we bring to the community each year." Sampson cited the annual Salute to Arts, a combination of concerts. art shows and cockta1I panics, as an cllample of how the commission has extended itself from the early days when us only respons1b1lity was to fill the walls of c11y hall wnh anwork. ··All of the commissioners are involved because of their lov<' of Newport Beach and th<' JOY of seeing \Ome1hin$ we have pul together bcncfi1 the city.'' she said. Comm1ss1oners arc: Cbalrmu Patll-Geae SamplOll is a mem- ber and past president of the Orange County Ans Alliance. foundin$ presi dent of the Orange County Theater Association: and the ettator of the Salute to Ans. She was awarded Woman of the Year in Theater in 1981 by the Da1ly Ptlo1 because of her ded1ca11on to unify Orange County's community theaters into an organization of common interests. Currently she is a travel director for a Newpon Beach travel agency. Ervl11 "Bad" Paskley, Ans Fesuval chau- man. was born in Oak Park, Ill., and attended Beloit College, Wilham & Mary College and San Francisco An Institute. He studied ponra1ture wnh Thomas C. Leighton and attended watercolor and landscaping classes at Coastline Community College. Reti~ from Santa Fe International Corp .. Pashley serves as curator of the City Hall Gallery dJSplays for Newport Beach Arts Commission. He was one of the founders of Coastline Artists Association and served twice as student trustee on the Coast Community College Distnct board. MoUy L)'llc .. has served on thc Newport Beach City ArtsComm1.SSion the last four years. She 1s a member of the Junior Lcquc of Newport Harbor and serves on the board of Ballet Pacifica. Lynch received her M.F.A. from UC Irvine. Cumntly, she works as special events director for South Coast Repertory. Debom Poloa1ky, a natjve of Massachu- setts. 1s an alumna of Brown University and re«1ved her M.8.A. from Clark University. An avid supporter of the arts. Polonsky serves on the Fine Arts Patrons Board ofNewport Harbor Museum . 1s fou nder of the Orange County Performing Arts Center and patron of the Orange County Philharmonic Society. She has famous la b~ls ... orZ""fT-";, bi.xi, '+'+ f0~1an ~lord , 11'!1 &t~ ~70 \)i!l....t.\IK'f d Jtlln."7 ;001~bhid ,2\Y2aJ 327~ p-1....,.,.J111 • ., .,2~3out.h lek4tM& ,81A/~'t Q~!i~ me 11 t..t11ulq 11 >ttJ J, !lal.a•rdoy IOt.oG C. 9hridoy t\O-•fl to~' .. ...., ........... Sel"rinC OD tbe Kewport Beacla City A.rt. Com•••ton are (&om left) lkmny CraHOll. Bad Pula.ley. Debonla Pol onaky. G&l1 Poor. Patti-Gene Sampeon. cbalrma.D. and former member Bob Allen. aJso served on the board of Temple Bat Yahm and the Jewish Federation of Orange County. Gall Feor IJ'lduated in 1984 from UC Irvine in the field" of social ccolOI)'. She bas been active in the Newport Beach City Arts Commission for the last two years. She serves as vice president of the Showboat Chapter of the county Perfonnina Arts C.Cnter, and also is on the board of Art Dirutors and Dcsi&ners of Oranae County. Di versified in the area of art. mu.sic and theater, Foor bas been a consultant in the field of print papers, and hu lectured at various colleges in the art of peper making. She has s~!li and acted with the Long Beach Civic Light Opera, the Huntincton Beach Playhouse and performed with the St Andrew's Church choirand I.be Laguna Beach Concert Chorale. a-1 er.... a 28-year resjdent of Newport Beach, is a founding faculty member of C.oastljnc Commuru1y Collqe. Crosson's medium, needlework, has enabled her to become a needlework instNctor and desiJncr for several najor yam companies. She has been involved in the Oranae County Fair as a needlework judge, and also as a state judge. Crosson is a member of Embroiderers' Guild of America, National Standard Council of America Embroiderers and American Needlepoint Guild. · A member of the art commission for two years, she is involved in fashion sales at BuUocks Wilshitt in Newport Beach. (Pleue eee COlllll8810NfP7) Jeans and Active Sportswearl 8~~~ 56 FASHION ISlAND ·NEWPORT BEACH · (714) 644-5070 6 -Arts Fes11val 1986/ An Advertising Supplement to the DAILY PILOT /Tuesday, May 13, 1986 udgingart onsidered real honor By JOYCE SCHERER BODLOVICll OtMr,... c..nae 1 l a nl Mike McGee and Anne Ayres feel honored and e~c11ed about judging competition 1n the 2~nd annual Newport Beach Arts Festival. McGee. program coordinator of the L;iguna Beach Museum of An, said, "I am honored to be selected as judge." For Ayres. associate curator of exhibitions and collect1ons at Newport Harbor Art Mu-~um. Judging 1s a first for her. Honors for McGee, 31 , and a nanvc of \ 1rg1ma. seem to 10 band-in-hand with all his endeavors. He brings to the position of judge. a ho~• of talents as an educator, lecturer. gallery O\\-ncr. administrator and artist. McGee. now a Fullerton resident. gradu- Jtc:d ~1th honors from CaJ State Fullerton where he ~1ud1ed with Tom Holste and George Herms. lfr com pleted his formal education with a M F.A. m studio art from UC Irvine in 1980 under the skilled teaching ofTony Delap, John PJul Jones. Alan Sarct and Jerry Anderson. From 1979 to 1981, McGee's paintinp and . h-.e mblage/collqe artworks were exhibited at numerous galleries throu&hout Southern Cah- torn1a, and then he turned his skills and talcntS towards administrative opportunities for visual Jrt development available in Oransc County. He orig.inated and produced two videos. ·· .\n Interview with Roland Reiss" and .. An ~arch:· an award-winning documentary on the .1rtworks produced by the inmates at Chino Men's Pnson. Because of his networking and interaction '"1th local regional artists, curators and an a J .. organizations. McGee was appointed chairman oftbe Visual Aru Committee 10 1984, chairman of the Inter-Discipline Committee in 1985, and in January was appointed to the advisory board for the Orange County Center for Contem- porary Art. Ayres, an educator, lecturer and writer, says this role as JUdge IS a "first" for ber. "Although I have been involved in the Geld ofan. one way or another, for a number of ycan, I have never had the opportunity to judge." .. Also. I am a new Orange County resident...so this is a wonderful way to be mtroduced to the community," she said. Ayres received her 8.A., M.A. and Ph.D . from the Fine Ans and Art History Department at tht' University of Southern California.. She captured many academic awards includin& the Yvonne M. Krammer Scholarship, Raubenhcimer Scholarship, Alma Mac Cook Scholarship and the John Paul Getty Memorial Scbolanhip. Ayres has taught varyina fonns of art at UCLA. USC and UC Santa eart.ra. Also included on her impressive resume is education programer for the Norton Simon Museum of Art. a a ..., .... ..,.._ .......... SU Clemente utfM l!Meft KoMeclako (top plaotoJc..wlll _,,IMt 0 °'9ee• woaaan •• ••0ne of 1'la09e na,.·· and ''Tlu'oaCb Poll 8tra......_ •• Gloria ....,....,.;, Newport ll•eb, aacl lltl8baad Bll1 bOld ber palntia&. ''l'allptiaC ... FESTIVAL PROGRAM ••• FromPaeeS \1cClanahan, "Mercado 2," aCl)'.lic; Audrey \kNeill, "Balboa F~ ... oil; Anllyn Moran- La~Ttncc. "Saturday Night," pen and ink. Howard H. Morgrid&e, ''Newport Bcach- l-nsenada Start," watercolor; Anne Mu~ll. "'Amy. The End of Summer," oil/crayon,· Mc Ry Me," oiVcrayon; Hortencia Ramiru, "Fires," oil; Winjfrcd Roth, "In The Begin- ning." mixed media, "Newport Beach Tu mini Basin 4 " mixed media; Oavid Rymar, .. Pool C hair," :icry!Jc; John Sanders, "Or. Pepper," acrylic; Robert H. Sawyers, "Street Scene- Newport Beach," watercolor; Joel Severson," A Sailor's Day," oil; E. L. Smith. "Vista Firenze," watercolor. Steven Squire. .. K.aulelc." airbrush/acrylic; Bcmrcc Thompson. "Laon Dancer," stained glass: Emi&dio Vasquez, "We SbaU Be All," mixed media, "Bteldlinc1 Circa 1984," oil, "Day Laboren," oil; Olona Walter, "Pot Pot Pourri," watcroolor; Kate Weiss, "Ni&htwalk I," ceramic; Soo West, " jct Harbor " brush and ink; Desire R. Wilcox, "Crab Cooker," embossed colorgrapb; Pat Wood. "Forest Shadows." fiber. COMMISSION ••• FromPaee8 Cu l Net11er, newly appomted to the arts commission, 1s a benefactor of South Coast Repenory Theater, serves as a trustee for the Newport Harbor Art Museum and is a board member oftbe museum's Fine Arts Patrons. The Wisconsin-born Neiuer received hls formal education at Yale University. Employed by Amcncan Medical International as proJCCt manaaer. Neisser is an avid art collector primarily interested in contemporary art with several fine pieces of Asian art added to bis collection over the years. OPTICAL FASHION CENTER NEWPORT Enormous S.tion of Rftullr Eyewear and SurwflSStS • Cdor kif lf"MM IOI your suson • Soenbfic hltbtW • Wt ,,, color trllnfd • Cl11hre 1nd Clf"W opbclllns Jfltll ptrSOlfllll«/ 1ttenhon • flf'llU' wtlicll rnll I» bNut1ful, complilnltltlf1 I 11fordlble Insist Oii """ •ff/111.ss prlSq)botl It tell)~ to fOU .34'1 l Via Lido 613·1883 Call Now-Don't Miss the Boat! r;Jft HAltlOR CltUISE IOA T "ISlA MUJERS" LEA vtNG CANNEIY DOCK 3010 LAFAmTE, NEWPORT BEACH• 615-5TT1 Arte FeetlVlll 1N8/An Mwrt .... ~ ~·to the DAILY PtLOT/Tu.dey, May 13, 19M -7 • .. ... .. .. ·~ ------------------ VIA LIDO TALENT STAGE PARKING LOT PARKING LOT OPEN AREA NEWPORT BEACH CITY HALL CORRIDOR GALLERY PARKING LOT JURIED ART 8 -Arta FeltJval 198e/An Adwrtlalng Supptement to the DAILY PILOT/Tu.day, May 13, 1986 STORE DIRECTORY 1. Washington Cleaners 2. Optical Fashion Center 3. A. Kline Kreation Chocolatier 4. Le Midi Restaurant 5. Security Pacific Bank 6. Marbles Beauty Salon 7. Via Lido Drugs 8. Edwards Lido Theatre 9. Video Zone 10. BidweWs Bidtique 11. D.K. MacDonald's 12. Hughes Market 13. The Corner Table 14. Charlie's Locker ART FESTIVAL EVENT LOCATIONS • VIA LIDO TALENT ST AGE • Can Can Dancers • Mime's • Face Painter • Dixieland Band-Mississippi Mudders •Newport Trolley Dedication w/ M iss Newport Beac h & Mayor • "Me talphor" Sculpture Dedication •Food •OPEN AREA Latino Artists Associat ion Dis play Art De monstrations by Mimi Sharo n NEWPORT CITY HALL Wate r Colors by Bea Riley (Lobby Galle ry) Ceramics Sc ulpture by David Kiddie (Lobby Galle ry) Works in Several Media by Scott Angle (Corrido r Galrery) Coastline Artist (Corridor Gallery) Violin and Guitar (Inside Gallery) Brass 'eand & Jugs (by Sculpture) Juried Art Show (City Hall Gro und)