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1986-05-15 - Orange Coast Pilot
- ----- FAIR . • POMCMTa C* Al • - THURSDAY. MAY 15, 1986 Firefighters get h~t over contract· County may push new overtime policy using part-timers to avoid extra costs By LISA MAHONEY ud PHIL SNEIDERMAN Ot ... ...,,......,. Orange County may try to force a new ovename pohcy on firefighters now that contract negouations have broken down. The new policy would involve using pan.time firefi11.hlers to Coast Authorities will set up a sobriety checkpoint In West Orange County on Saturday./ A3 Nation Student mountain climbers perish when caught In a snow storm on Mount Hood./ A5 Wor ld Gorbachev addresses the Soviet public on the Chernobyl disaster. says nine have died./ A4 Sports Dodgers benefit from five St. Louis errors to beat Cardinals, 8-3./81 INDEX Advice and Games Boating Bulletin Board Business Classified Comics Death Notices Opinion Paparazzi Pollce Log Public Notices Sports Television Weather A8 BS A3 A6-7 97.9 A9 89 A10 85 A3 84, 9-10 81~ 86 A2 avoid paying ovenimc to full-tame firefilthters. "We beht've we do have tht' nght to modify policies and we're looking closcl) at that," county negotiator Dick Thornburgh said follow1n$ a unsuccessful mediauon se'is1on Wednesday. "We know that 1fwe do. Legless veteran crosses country On his hands. he lets walk in' do ta1kin · for hunger in America By tbe Associated Press Bob Wieland says he doesn "t hang a sign around his neck to tell the world he"s a Vietnam veteran because .. I let the walkin' do the talk1n'. .. Aod Lhe former Laguna Hills resident's walkin' says a lot. A monar shell took both of Wieland's legs 17 years ago in Vietnam. He strengthened his upper body by lifting weights, and on Sept 8. 1982. he began a 2. 784-mile walk -on his hands -to raise money to feed the hungry. The veteran finished the tnp m the nation's capital Wednesda). met with President Reaga n at the White House -a session he said brought tears to the president's eye -and wall greeted at the Capitol b) House Speaker Thomas P O'Neill Jr .. ~ Mass. Wieland began the last mile of hi'i trek on a downtown street corner b) strapping his torso into a thick leather seat and slipping his heavily calloused hands into the pads he calls his .. size one running shoes." Swinging forward on two power- (Plea.e .ee W /!d:.K/ A2) they'll probably light 1t all the way." Larry Simcoe. pres1dent of Fire· fighters Local I 0 14, said he wasn't surprised by the proposal. ··1 don't doubt 1t. They've been 1ry1 n$ to unilaterally implement new policies and procedures even while we were still at the (bargaining) table." Simcoe said union members will try to sur communtty opposition to the pan-ume fire fighter proposal. citing safety problems. The umon plans to file an unfair labor practices charge, arguing the count) na im- properly reopened too many provisions of a contract runnina tbrouah June 30, 1987, he said. Orange County firefighters have been at the barga10ing table with L~ county personnel department since Sc~tember, tryi na to implement the faJr Labor Standards Act provisions governing pvert1me. • A 1985 court dccisfon extends the act to public agencies like county governments as of April I 5. meaning the county must pay time-and~a-half 11#&..I _, .... Bob Wieland la e.corted by Vletml• Yetera.Da 0.Ye Delfayer (left) Jim Syl•eater and· f)en9WCaoper from tbe Vletaaa Veteran'• Memorial lD WubiJaCtoa. D.C. New Nordstrom opens; mall expands SizeofSouth Coast Plaza will double by November with Bear Street ann ex This week'c; opening of the new S29.5 m1llton Nordstrom building at South Coast Pla1a marks the fim installment of an e'\pans1on program that will nearly double the mall's me by November Taking shape across from th<' mall on Bear Strt·et 1~ an annex 1ha1 wtll bnng two morr depanment \tore~ and 60 'ipcc1alt~ ~hops to the ( mta Mesa shopping center .\dd111onalh . the shdl of 1he 1>ld "lordstrom building 1s being tran>:>- formed into a 1hrcc-le' el mall area lor at lea!lt JU morl' shops. while Bull- llCk 's ha~ hcgun adding 92.000 square ll'l't to 11s store. ~hoppers'"" &l't their first taste of lhl' plaLa 's nc" affiuencc when the doors 10 th e b1~cr and tx•t1er Nor- d~trom open Fm.la)' morning at 10. fhe nl'" 224. 7 50-squarc-foot bu tiding I\ ncarl~ twice the Sile of the original \IUfl' and "Ill become the largc<11 ot lhl' 16 Nord stroms 1n C ahforn1a South Coast Plaza was the first shopping ce nter tn the state to successfull)' woo the family-run fashion retailer. After opening here in May 1978. Nordstrom quickly be- ca me a victim of its own success. Customers and employees found themscl,es competing with man- nequins and merchandise for elbow room. compan> spokeswoman Theresa Clark said. "It "as so crowded and inconve- to employees who work beyond their rqular shills. U nder exi una county policies, firefi&hters may volunteer to work extra houn. but they arc paid stralaht time, Under the new rules the the county would have to pay time-and~ a-half. To save money, the county has proposed ussna part-time employees to cover for sack or vacationina fircfiJhtm, shifts that now go to other fuU·Ume firefighters. But Firefighters Local 1014, which rcpretmtS about 4SO Oraawt C.oue1y firefiahters. enaineen. fire capuias and paramcchcs. won•1..,_. County fuefiabten aft responsible for unincorporated areu and 10 contract cities, 1nclUdiQ1 Irvine. Costa Mesa. Ntw(>Ort Beach, Foun· tain Valley. Hununiton Belch and Lquna Beach have their own fire departments. After the county declared ntao- uations at an impene last week. about 175 firefiahttts and suPPonen (Pl ....... cotnnT /A.2) Badham: Copter _. probe may spark further inquiry Marines report c rash killing four was human error By SUSAN BOWLET!' Ot .. D!lllr ......... Rep. Robert E. Badham said today a congressional investigation into possible mechanical problems with the triple.enpne Super Stamons may trigger additional probes into tbe worlananstup of otber Marine heli- copters. Badham said in an interview from his Washington D.C. office that he has been assured by Marine Corps officials and the manufacturer of the CH-53E Super Stallion that there was no mechanical error involved in the May 9 crash that killed four TustJD· based Marines in the desert near Twentynine Palms. .. The Marines-ibere and in Tustin have told mt that nothing appeared to indicate that thet'C was any mechan- ical failure." Badbam said. He said be decided after talk:in1 to Manne Corps officials and the manufactum-of the craft. Sikonky Aircra1\, that the crash was cauted by .. human error ... However, the 40th District con- gressman said the investiption w1JI continue. "I envision the role ofConsrcss in this thing as being one of an cumin· TONY SAAVEDRA nient_" Clark explained. "Now cus- tomers will have a greater selcctton and the space they deserve." That populanty seems to be spreading throughout the 45-store (Pleaee eee LARGER/ A2) ation of all the records and acci· dents," Badham said. He said the investigation was necessary to re- 1nsull the confidence of the Marine au· crews and the community. Badham called for an invesupuon of the helicopten Tuesday in a letter to Les Aspin, clwnnan of the House Armed Services Committee. "I believe tbat an investigation is appropriate and necessary as the safety of the CH·53E bas come into question," Badbam said. "It ts essen- t1al that all perunent facts rcprdina the auworth1oess of the aircraft be made public." One of the Marines who died in the fiery helicopter crash Friday left behind a tape recording describins mechanical defects in the helicopter he flew on and doubts about the wisdom of those planning some of his tr.uning missions. "We had problems., th~'s no doubt about 1t," sa~ a voice on a tape attributed to Sgt. Dulles Arnette, a helicopter crew chief. Badham said he questioned the operational record of the Super Stallion at the rqular Procurement and Mibwy Nuclear Systems Sub- committee bcannp on naval avia- tion last month. He said )\C was assured that the ncccssa.ry rcpajrs ~made. "I was confident after I found out they were~ and alt I.be fixes were made," Bedbam said. ~-COPTEll/~ Woni&lidies ofinjuri~s fronicrash A Huntington Beach woman in- Jurcd 1n a weekend traffic accident died Tuesday afternoon at Fountain Valley Regional Hospital. Huntington Beach police traffic investigator Roben Barr said an autopsy determined that Helen J Hagan. 25, died of head injunes. Hagan was 1nJured at 2:20 a.m. 58th Assembly District blackout by KOCE criticized Saturda} in a head-on colhs1on on Pacific Coast Highway at 9th Street in Huntington Beach. Barr said Hagan had pulled her Plymouth Champ into a left tum lane at 9th Street. He said David Way, 31 . of Nt'wpon Beach. was dnvmg west on Pacific Coast H1ghwa¥ when hJS Cht'vrolet Blazer hit a raised center d1Vtder. struck a signal pole. veered out of control and struck Hagan's car head.on. By STEVE MARBLE PfhOeltJ,...llMI A Huntington Beach history teacher seeking her pany's nom1- nat1on for an Assl·mbl)' district thal 1' spltt between two 1..ounttes char$l'd Wednesday that a pubhc telev1s1on station 1s dcpn ving 'oters of fair t'lection coverage Jay Du Val top science teacher for fourth ye ar By ROBERT BARKER °' .. ..., .......... With a background in ge neral science and biology, Manne View School teacher Jay DuVal probahlv could make a lot more money 1n the pnvate sector. And after 21 )'<'an. 1n Huntington Beach's Qc<ean View hool D1stnc1. he might have abandoned the classroom long ago for a prestige JOb 1n the adm1nt!ltrat1on. But DuVal loves being a \cacher. and he's a h1ghl v accln1mcd onc He was honorl'd as Orange Coun- ty's science teacher of the year last weekend b the Orange \ount~ Dcpanmt'nt of Lducauon It wa~ the founh time he hu~ received tht' award And he wo~ nne of thl' thou~and'i ol teachers honorl'd Wednesday dunna the Day of thl" T cal hcr obwrvnnce' throughout the \t, tc (PleaM tee T&ACHER/ A:.I ) ' Pegg) ~l:igg-. an in'itructor at Crol dcn We\t ( ollcge 1n Huntington Beach. \aid KOCE-TV hac;dcc1dcd to "black out' covt'rage of the 5Rth \'i'icmbh D1<1tnc1 ra<.:l' .. fl115 '' a 'llap in tht• Ian· ot lhl' entm.· d1s1r1ct." said Staggo; om· 11! three CX·mocrat'i lighting lor thl' opportunll\ 10 tal..c on incumhcnt \\\\'mbh m.1n lk'nn" Brm.,n. R- 1 llllg lkal:h l\taggs 'aid the puhlic !>tat1on has 11ptcd 10 1gnon.· the race bccau c 'ltg.htl) morl' than half the A."scmbly J1,1nc1"in l 11\ A.ngl'lc'i ( ount}. But lhl' d"1nct al-.o tal..c~ in all ol 'wal Bl'3l'h. "unM'I Beach and about h.111 ol Huntington Beach. ta~s said more than 80.000 Orange ( ounty rc'i1dcnto; arc registered to 'otc sn the d1stnct. ··Manngl·mcnl has ca,altcrly de- cided on a T blackout of candidates 1n 1h1s conteMcd race with the lame c'\planat1on that a portion of the 58th D1strn:t falls 1n LA," Staggs said. h<' ~1d the station. in effect. 1s Studenta at Venado School In Irvine honor (from leftl math teacher De Ann OeBev. OettrNet.-. • ..,~~· lndu.atrlal arta teacber Jobn Diedric h and home arta teacber Madalfft Se-pin. •r • .., giving the Republican sncumben1 an upper hand by 1gnonng the race and the three Democrats scrapping for their party's nomination. In addition to Staggs, Long Beach residents Andrew Kincaid and Michael Farrall are seeking the nght to challenge Brown next fall. (Pleue eee CAllPAIGN/A.2 ) Way, 31. was arrested on suspicion of felony drunken dnving. Barr said. Ht' was taken to Fountain Valley Regional with senous 1n1unes. Teachers given celebrity status on special day School districts on Coast go all out to honor instructors 87 G. JEANETTE A VENT Of ... 0.., "-' ..... Bannt'rs, brunehe'i and halloon\ a~ JUSt a sampling of tht man\ w y ~hoot d1stn<1'1 and parent-t~t·hcr orpn1zat1on~ celebrated 1ht founh annual Da ) of the Teachc1 WcdnC' day. Proclaimed 1n I 982 b\' Go~ Gcorsc Ot-ukmcJian tht' Da)' of the Teacher 'lhould rank nah1 ~htnd Mother·, and Father·~ Day 1n 11n1fi- cancc. said Rohen Pttcnon. upcr- 1ntcndcnt of the Oran c < OUQtY Dtpartmcnt of t-ducat1on Tea hcM arr more than 1u'lt k c· lure" or d1'll')('n~n of sntorm1t1on said RIC ~tcphenson. president of of the Cap1'itmno l nified Education i\ssoc1auon "Teachers go beyond stt'nle relationships and snstcad stnve to ignite a spark of enthusiasm or a burst of\..reattv1ty . " To recognize its teache~. the Capistrano Unified School Distnct took out full-pa e ads 1n local news- papers. o;a1d haron Tanner, a 1slAnt to upenntcndent Jerome Thomsle)' The Parent f-aculty Guild at Cap1strano'<1 Moulton Elementary ~hoot scrv~ a luncheon to m trache~ ~1d pnne1pal John W Hopkins At Laguna Brach Ht&)\ hool, the .\~soc11ted tudcnt Body proVlded treat and rrfrcshmcnts 1n the tu her·, loun~ throughout the day, sa1d Judy Chn,pms, act1na d11tnct ui>enntendcnt Chrispen who 1 also prina pel of Fl Morro Elcment.a.ry hool. sa.1d her fP1--_. 8CBOOL/ Ai) r AS * ()qnge Coat DAILY PILOT/ Thurwday, Mey 16, 1918 CAMP .MGN BLACKOUT CRITICIZED .•. Prom Al Jim Cooper. who handle poht1cal cove~ for KOCE and is the station s vice ptUident of comm uni· 'Pick slx '~ame Joi ns the rottery SACRAMENTO (AP) -Bea1n- nina this fall, Cahfomia lottery rans will be able to pay SI. pick si~ numbers between one and 49. and be eli&iblc for a lotto drawina for millions of dollars. The State Lottery Commission approved the dcsi'n Wednesday for the new computenzed aame. sched· uled to bqin in Stptember The odds ofa player p1ck1na all six numbers arc one in 13. 9 million. COPTER ... P'romAl However, th~ larger Super 1a ll1on may appear to be only pan of the alleged helicopter safety problem. Since 1984, 66 servicemen have died in the CH-53E and the smaller CH-SJE A and D Sea talhoni.. Badham said the 1n vest1goat1on into the working order of the lar~cr craf\ may open the door for 1nvesllgat1ons of the twin-en!\1ne CH·53A and CH·S3DStaStalhons. There are 59of the Marine hehcopters st1ll 1n service. .. We will look at all the data. and make the findings pubhc,'' Badham said. "And if there needs 10 be other 1nvest1ga11ons into the other helicop- ters. then. yes. we will do them." . ty amurs. said the .S8th 1s one of fi ve Assembly races the station has de- cided not to preview. He cited bud1et cuts for that decision. Cooper also said 1 t 1s "prepostcrouJ" to uuest that the station is deny1n11 viewer fair poht1· cal covcraac "We had to ehrtu n le !>Orne races and the cn"na we used was to cut races that arc wholly or partly o utside Orange County." Cooper said, adding ' unchallenged contests arc likcw1sc being dumped. He said th e station, underwntten by tax dollars. will feature 13 pre· election proarams. 1ocluuina A'· tcmbly race in nonh and central Onange County. StallfS said Cooper's dec1s1on is "uto1ush1na" hc-cau~ thl' CiRth DI'· tnct takes an the Huntmaton Be cb campus where KOCE is located. "Our turf 1s Orange County," Cooper responded. ''Orin~~ County is 1mponant to our station. Staus said she wrote to Cqast C.ommunity College Distnct trustees about he r oonccms hut said !ihe bdieve5 there is little school trustees can do. ··tt's 100 late. 100 close to the race.'' he said. COUNTY FIREFIGHTERS •.. From Al picketed oumdc the County Hall of Admin1strat1on. • Union president Simcoe said the firefighters arc worried about their safety and the pubhc's if pa,rt-t1me workers arc used 1n emergency s1tu· at1ons. Firefigh ters don't feel safe working wn)l pa1i.t1mers because they don't receive th e datl} training n~ded. Simcoe said. He q uestioned wheth er part·t1me firefighters could be counted o n 1n an emergency and suggested they migh t panic and leave a colleague 10 danger Since part-ume firefighters would be called in only on an as.needed basis. "there's no c:ontinu1ty, no way to develop their skills,'' Simcoe said. County negotiator Thornburgh said his team was prepa red 10 address safety concern~ Wedne-~ay. but said tirefiihters weren't 10tcl'C$ted Instead, local representatives stood firm on their demand that the county allow them to gjve up sleep time in return for a full y paid benefi t package. he said If firefi ghters were to give up some paid sleep 11me. 11 would reduce county overtime payments substan· ttally and permit full·ttme firefighters to keep working extra shifts. 13ut a fully paid medical. dental and op.. tomctnc plan is too much of a tradeofT. Thornburgh said. He accused th e firefighters union of creating a "bogus" safety issue to win public op101on when what they reall y want 1s more overtime and benefit . "They want what they can get for their ex1st1 ng employees." Thornburgh said. LARGER NORDSTROM STORE OPENS ... From A l chain, which wind!> through Cali- fornia. Washington. Oregon. Alaska, Utah and Montana. Seven morr stores are scheduled to open within the next two years. 1nclud1ng one in Santa Ana and another 10 the wa.,h- ington, D.C.. area -the company·., first foray 1n10 the eastern market A senes of chanty benefit'i at the new Costa Mesa store dunng the past few days were targeted at introduc10g arts patrons. business leaders and those in society nrclcs to thl' new facility. To keep from lo'i10g too many valuable busine~~ hours. Clark said the move to the reccnll) fin ished building will be done overnight. beginnmg today at 6 p m About 1.000 employee'). from sale\ clerks to administrators. will roll up their sleeves. loosen their white co llars and help carry merchandise out of the old store and into the new one. "It's gotta be done m less than 16 hours. so we need everybody who's available to help." Clark said Dunng the move, South Coast Plaza workers wall erect a special walkway to take cu'>tomers from the main mall area through the ol d stvre and into the new one. Later this month. work will begin on a plan to convert the vacated building 1n10 130.000 square feet ol leasable space for retail shops. James Henwood. South Coast Plaza manager, said the structure will basically be gutted and rebuilt. with 50 percent of the space expected to be occupied by November. Henwood said he doesn't yet know how much the renovation will cost. One of the mam challcn~c~ faced hy mall planners was how to incorporate the three-story building mto a two- story shopping center An architectural model show!> an escalator enclosed 1n a glass atnum ta king shoppers from the plaa'!> second level up to the new third-slot) area. Several 'ikyhght'I w1ll t0mb1ne with the g.lass·covcred escalator to g.i ve the new mall space a "light and airy feelmg," Henwood said, A not her escalator well in the center of the bui lding will take customers through the three levels. while bndges will be bu ilt attaching the structure with a park10g garage as well as with the new Nordstrom store. Henwood said three major tenants have already bt.'Cn signed for the new area. including Perk1n s·Shearer clothing and high.end luggage retailer Louis Vu1tton. Mall·owncr C.J. Seiterstrom & Sons also unveiled plans for a ground· level pcdestnan walkway from the Orange County Performing Arts Ce nter across Bristol Street. through th e nonh end of South Coast Plaz.a to the Robinson's.Broadway annex under construction on Bear Street. Company spokesman Tom antley said the landscaped walkway or "promenade" may have canop1e!> in some areas. some bcnche!> and trellises "The idea 1s 10 make 11 hkc a European walkway," Santlcy \31d. adding that pedestnan bridges over Bnstol and Bear street\ art> not tncluded in current plan\ for the walkway Henwood explained: "l think the bndges w1ll happen when we have (a business) to connect them to. We Just don't think people would wa lk two stones up to cross a bndge." TEACHER HONORED ... F rom Al DuVal, 45. received handwn11cn cards and oatmeal cookies from his seventh and e1ghth·grade Gifted and Talented Educauon (GA TE) students and a free lunch from the Parent Teachers Organ11a11on He took the lunch into his classroom and spent the lunch break VISlltng with a reporter and talkmg over science projects with his pupils Manne: View 'itudents are fresh from winning firs\ place in the ;unior high school d1v1s1on of the Orange County Science and Engmeenng Fair. DuVal had bet>n a teacher at C'1rclt> View previously and his pupils there had won top Orange Count~ awards the three previous yearo; They enter such pro1ect'i a\ How Taste Can Affect Your Pero;onahtv and The Effects of Air Pollullon on the Growth of Molds "I could make more in rnvatc industry,'' DuVal said "hut reall~ enJO) the kids "I receive lots ofgrat1fica11on from w11nessing a student learn a concept -I really like 10 sec the light bulb turn on. "It would be nice to earn more money. but teaching 1s my chosen profession. I was warned against 1t - m)' mother wac; a teacher But you don't m10d your parents." He's also taught 1ndustnal arts, photography and physical education. He's the current coach of the boys' seventh-grade \oflball team. which has tt!> first game today with Park View. Du Val received a bachelor of ans degree in ~c1encc and biology from Nebraska State Teachers College 1n Peru. Neb .. and a master's degree from Peppe rd 1 ne. Du Val 1'i one of three outstandmg \C'tence teachers at Manne View. according to Principal Jame~ Endt>r'ion ( ollcagucs Cecily Far- quhar and Mar; Schuesler have pre\ 1ou'il) ~on hono~ as Orange Count}·., science tcachen of the year .\nd ama'is1ng further honors. Manne View recently cAme out on top m D1st1ngu1shed ~chool compet1- 11on 1n Orange County and is vying for <;tatew1dc laurel'\. Mannt• View ha~ been '>1ngled out for llS c;c1enc<' Jay DuVal and fore1$n language offenngs and for pup1 l'i' high test scores in th t> Cah- forn 1a Assessment Program , Endenon c;a1d. SCHOOL DISTRICTS HONOR TEACHERS ... Fro m Al school displayed balloon\ and ban- ners for teachers "Teachers came an Wedne'iday morning and they wen• c.11 surprised and happy ·· In the Newport -Mc\a IJn1ficd School D1stnct. ~upcnntendent John W Nicoll said the d1\tnn ordered special key nngs with the d1\lncr'" 1ns1gn1a. Each year 1t\ \Omething different. said Nicoll "Lat:.t )'Car. we ga ve a gold apple on 11e tacks and lapel pi ns" Al Edison High \chool 1n Hunt- inaton Beach. "student-. have hcen putting little present~ 111 the teachers· MAIN OFFICE ltO N.-8••'>' •t "'•M lo .., •• ,,,,."' e . , ..,...v""' ,. o.•l' mail boxe\ .ill wc{'k, said ( hn~ G1hscn. assistant pnnupal. On Mon- day, 11 wa~ an apple, on Tue~ay a lapel pin with an appk and a ribbon. and on Wednesdy a continental breakfast spomored by the Parent Academic Booster Club. he t:.atd . Manlyn Koeller pnnc1pal at Spnng View Flcmentary School 10 the Ocean View School 01stnct. took a direct approach "I and ~veral parent~ fixed 1eachcr5 a breakfa'>t of French toast. sauc;age, coffee ond 1u1ce." In add111on. each teacher received a button w11h a red heart and a red and white apple on 1l. she ~1d "We think it's a very :ippropnatc celcbrat1on. because it's one of th e very few 11mes we recognize the teacher,'' said Dale Coogan, Ocean View i;uperi ntendent. According 10 Peterson, the llpark behind the Day of the Teacher was Newpon Beach resident Galal Kernahan, who patterned his idea after a \1m1lar day celebrated 1n Mex ico The 60-year.ald planner wi th the county Communtty De· vclopmenl \ounc1l 1n1t1ated the idea. said Peterson, and Sen. Joseph Mon· toya (().El Monte) and the AsM>Cia· tton of Mexican-American Educators sponsored the bill . o ... , Piiot Del~efl t1 Ouatenteed 0 -ted-&Al c,1;11 --· & e<lolOhll t 4, 4l'' Justcall 642-6086 i.tol\Olr '"°"' 11 y0u oo "OI ..... t°"' 0909' tty ~ lOo 111 «I IM>tnr• Ir"' af\O pfNI COC>y De .,......eo c 1'>1''11" •'ifl.l ....... c. •• ~-1>'•""'9 c.-r ••• " ..,...... ""4' ny,1 .. ~or'' •1,l"W . ""''" .. "" •ih• ·~ ,,...n11 , ... ,,., , ... _., ~ 9''*~11\'1 w t"~ t{f" • ,,. in..-~·r f "4 't' (If• ., .,, VOL 11, HO. 135 What do you hke abou1 the D11ly Pilot~ What don't you li ke'> Call the number above and your messttae will be recorded. tranKn bed and de· livered to the appropnate editor. The same 24-hour answenng service may be used to record tcuers io the editor on an) topic Contnbutors to our Letters column must include their name and telephone number for venficat1on Tells u' what'• on your mind I ( 'S•l1;<0ly l l'CI ..,,...,.. ti l'Ou 00 "'11 •ec-you• c;oov 0y 1 • "' ,., °"'°'• tO •"' •no ynuo ct>Ov •·~ oe oe"-ee Ctrcul.etlon Tel1~e1 "'~I <>··~ c.-·· ..... ao-cau ~ --------.. Fair and w cl rmer after clouds Moe1ty fair akm .,. In atore for Sol.ittwn C .. ltornlana Friday, but the IPflngOme pattern of night and morning low ~· wtll contln~. Tempef'atut• will be lllghtty w.,.,,_ In the cou111 .,..., wt1h hlgN of aa to 72 along the t>Mctiee and 78 to 82 In the V911eyt. Lowa tonight will reech 45 to 55 In the bNOtl er ... and 50 to 5$ In the v .. le)'I. Morning Ckludl will Unger In the ... tern valteya and eouth coutal ,,...., Along the Orange Coeat It will be fair tonight and Friday ext;itpt totne nlQht thrQUOh mid morning ctouda In the Mltern valle)'I and eoutn ooutal ....... Wtrr'r* Friday. Hlah• Friday at the bMc:hea 88 to 72. Lowa 45 to 55. High• Friday In in. vllleyl 78 to 82. LoWs 50 to 55 U.S. Tempa .._YM!;Ctty .. &1 HOffotl<,\I• N se 0.ltihclme Cny 17 M .. l .• OmeM ,. '° ,,_ONTI. AMleny,H Y 71 $0 Orllndo 14 14 •Qr(@~ z=Que 11 u "*•Hlpllle 66 M \ ..... wwm _ COIO..,.. 14 43 "-ltll " • 41 37 ~MAIM 74 5o4 MOlftf/fl09 ... ~ 11 '° 93 le ShOwtll R#'I F~IOH Snow Oc~d ~ S 111t011ety&y AIMll'ltlc Ctty N 5o4 P0011enc1,0re Pr~ 62 44 ,,. .. ON I w ....... ~ HOM us 09ol OI eo-tt A11911n 71 17 ... 31 ... 51 leltll'noN eo 61 ==rcny 72 90 lllr"*'QllMI " 74 .. at Calif. Temps Sant• Cnoll .,... 6t l2 lletlo 7t 41 8-ntaMatll 17 11 Boelon 62 48 Alcll<nond $7 H Santi~ 64 .. 8'111'60 .. M 81 LOUle u 93 "'::· IOw for 24 llOUr9 llndln9 11 5 • m T.,,,,. ..,....,. ., ao CM9« 62 30 $.it Lelle City .. 37 8 ••flelel .. 57 Torrence 10 ea 75 .. $4111Ant~ '° .. v_,.ite\lly 74 4$ Clw•ton,SC hen!• 59 fUl'eU 5t 41 CllWIMton,W \la 74 64 .. Fteeno .. H Cllwtone.H C 64 64 s~ .. .. lalle•t• IM 64 CNyenM .. 41 Spoil-57 :S2 Loe~ 10 611 CNc:9go t7 50 ,.,._ 75 5t a.~ 71 50 CtnOlnMll 75 12 T~t PtrallQ .. ., P-RoO!ee 85 45 Tides ~ n 51 Toe>e1<1 77 62 Red Bluff 13 57 eounc-.Otllo ,. 13 Twceon 92 M "-'-C.tr 70 51 o.a.fl Worth 78 .. TulM eo 11 s.r-10 13 &2 TOOAY o.yton 77 12 WuNngtonOC 51 H ~ 93 48 ~· t'4pl'I\, :s 4 0..-74 45 WldllfAI 71 M ..,. OleQo t7 st 8->dlOW II t4 p l'I\. 2 I O..MOIMI 11 5t Wlll!-Betre t7 5:s a.nFt-.. 52 MDAY °""°" 78 H &Mt• llafl>M• t i M Flltt Noll 2 11 Liii 4 1 Oulultl 58 42 Stl!C*ton eo 56 Fltet IOW t0'24 • m oa EP-.. H Eztended Hlgtl, 10w IOI' 24 "°"' 1 erlClltlQ 11 5 f m Seeono Noll t .06pm 37 ,..,.., &I 37 Apple v.iiey • ., hc;ond '°"' 104tpm 29 Faf90 75 41 Bwetow 9-4 87 ~ MoetlV IUlln)' oey. encl ... nlgllta. ....... 70 8Mwlon1 11 48 Sun Nla today 11 7.4 7 p.m , ,.._ Fl\dey Otllftd~ 70 41 Ho.pt lele nlgl\I en<I =-~ Bill Beet 73 34 11 8:6 I • ·m. en<I Ml• agelll 11 7;,.. p m. OtMIF* 48 S4 OOMial IOW CIOude. lleec;tl M to 1 . 8WIOCI .. 48 Moon 11-11 11•09 a m , Mtt FrtOay 81 ........ 50 )4 Lon 64 to 80 Vlllfeot hlgl\t 78 to 17 81ythe t7 8 1 I 04 . m en<I "-llOelt' .. 12 11 pm HonOllAu M 71 Lows 5 Ito 57 CuNer City 10 57 ~on IO 71 l °"G 8Mcfl 87 51 ~ 75 eo M.,.,.._ 13 51 Jel*IOtl.MlM .. ~ Smog Report Monro.le 71 5o4 Surf Report Jldl_,,,., u Montebtllo 72 57 ,,.,,_ 52 42 Mont~ 62 52 K_.Ctty 77 80 POllUIMtt ttandMO ino.a lpell 0-tOO Mt Wlleon 7S 49 LOCATIOM ea.I IHAN Lal \legM 93 ff goocs, 11»-200 un4'1e111111M for _,.. "-Pott 8Mc:fl .. 57 HunUftO'on llNcfl 14 .... Utile ll'loCll 17 12 people, 200-300 ..,,,,..lllul lot ... Ornwto 74 I t AIYW Jetty, Newpot1 ,~ .., l~ 75 62 >Oo-500 IWIZ8rdoua '1r9l f!Out• .. Pelm Sc>rll>ot t3 62 40lll81teet.~ ,~ .... ~ " 72 •odaJ'• pet 10tece91. ~ .. prwtoul PMadeN et " 22.nd aireec, ~ 2 .... M ...... 8-:11 1t 12 Oey' .. nllned pe1 "'-wide 70 63 == I fW ............ .. 41 Sen SernercllnQ 71 &7 14 '* Mplt-StP~ 7) M °':::: CoMt 60-60 SenOao<tel 72 H SMa.n-te 1.2 ,.. .....,,.,.. ti e2 1n Orenoe County 50-50 Seri.i-74 50 Wt1• *"I>! t t ,...,. Otteen• "' 70 ~·opolltan Loe~ 100.50 Senta Ana 70 67 , ..... dll'ectlon! Soul- NewportdeveloperJohn Vogel dies John F. V°'el, a long·Ume New· port Beach resident who contributed extensively to development in the Harbor Area. died Tuesday at Hoag Memonal Hospital following a lengthy illness. He WH 90. Services are scheduled fo r 2 p.m. Saturday at Pacific View Chapel in Newport Beach. Vogel was born 10 Madison. Conn .. in 1896 and moved to Richmond. Va .. after compleung his education 1n hi s native state. Vogel operated a b1cyle and hardware business in Richmond. which he retained when he moved to Fullerton an 1919 and entered the orange-growing business. In 1928. Vogel sold hi s business in Virgina and moved to Balboa Isla nd, where he purchased the Balboa Furniture Co. When the banks in the harbor area closed in 1932, Vasel purchased the vault door and safety deposit boxes from local banks and 10stalled them in his fu rniture store. turning the store into the town's only banking business for the next five years. Vogel later turned his 10tercst to real estate and was responsible for much of the construction in the Newport Harbor area. both in com· mercial and residential development. He took pride in building and selling his own designs. never con· tractlng for someone else. Vogel also was instrumental in the development of Yucca Villaae in the desert community of Yucca Valley and built several commercial build- ings in Palm Springs. Vogel was a member of tcveral community and civic aroups, spend· ing various terms on the Newport Beach Planning Commission. the Oranae County Grand Jury and the state Democratic CenttaJ Commit· ICC. Vogel is survived by his son. Dr. John F. Vogel Jr.; his wife Deny of Anaheim; grandsons John F. Voeet Ill. David and Richard, and three grcat-vandcbildren. WALK FOR HUNGER IN AMERICA ••. From A l fully m uscled arms. he look a "step" of three feet , rested momenlanly on his buttocks and reached fo rward fo r another of what he estimates has been a journey of 4.9 million of such motions. Surrounded by rcponers and pho- tographers, he reached the Vietnam Veteran's Memonal at a normal walking pace. He swung down the path along the memonal's black grani te walls and found the name of Jerome D. Lubeno. the man he was trying to save when he lost his legs. Wieland. 40, was a combat medic with the Army's 25th Infantry Division. On June 14. 1969. attempt· ing to aid Lubeno, who had stepped on a booby trap, Wieland himself tri pped over an 82mm mortar ro und. "My legs went one way and I went another," he said. After surgery, 50 pints ofblood and a bout with malaria, Wieland weighed 87 pounds. He had once stood 6 feet tall and weighed 200 pounds. Nine inches remained of his nght leg. 5 inches of hlS left. He began his rehab1htat1on pro- gram unable to hf\ fi ve pounds and culminated it tn 1977 by be nch pressing 303 pounds. He earned degrees in physical educati on and Smooth Sailing Blue skies. tht wind a1 your back, and a casual outfit from Phelps-as good as it gets! Picture your~lf in the outfit shown ... a r~rsihlt baseball jacket by f-trrcl Reed-seu sucker stripe to solid in 3 spring colors. Sl 10 00. worn QV'tr a conon pique knit \hin by Gordon. S),.00, with pleated whht denim slacks by Rh'tr Ciry. S .. ,.00, The boal ShM'i are by Co~·H11n. S69.tkl j usr • sampling of the fun thlnp nailablc at Phelps! •-1 ... \hmn l'l•l'd ·""'"'" lk•• h t114J lt44 1l264 I recreation and ~rved on the faculty of Cal State Los Angeles. In 1981. now a bom·aga1n Chns- t1an. he decided to make the tnp, inspired by a verse from the Book of Roman ..... We then that are strong, ought to bear the infirmities of the weak ." After training for 18 months, he se t out from Knott's Berry Farm. At a rate of three to five miles a day. he crossed Cahfomia, Anzona. New Mexico. Texas, Oklahoma, M1ssoun, llhno1s, Indiana. Ohio. West Vir· ginia. Pennsylvania and Maryland. He spent his nights in the homes of volunteer sponsors. The worst times came in the Arizona desert in the summer of 1983 when the reflecti ve heat from the asphalt soared above I 00 degrees. he said. Bob Wieland's goal from the age of 3 was baseball. He starred an high sc hool, played sem1·pro ball and was n~otiating with the Philadelphia Phillies when he was drafted. In Vietnam. Wieland said he was first impressed with the pain of hunger when village women would approach him. seeking med1c1ne for their babies. "As l held these babies in my arms, I no11ccd something drasllcally dif· fe rent They were starving and hungry. They had disease and infcc- t1on." he said. "I brought some of those memories back to America." He hopes to raise $25 million, to be distributed to organizations like the Red Cross and Salvation Army, by persuading people to sponsor each of his steps for S5 each. So far, he's raised S305.000. Aecom panying him on the last mile 1n Washington, along with his parents and other veterans. was Dennis Cooper of Miller, Mo .. who had retneved Wieland's broken body and loaded It on a helicopter in Vietnam. Cooper. who had driven to High- way 96 near Joplin. Mo .• last year to see the legless veteran crossing the country. did not rec.all Wieland except as 'Doc.' It was only after returning home and looking at pic- tures of the men in his unit that he connected the legless man on the road to the man he had put aboard the chopper. He drove back to Wieland on the road. "Doc -you're still alive.'' Donations may be sent to Spmt of Amenca -Walk for Hunscr, Box 2686. Laguna Hills 91563. • • •camelot' night . at Estancia High Dnna st.udcnt1 at Estancia Hjah School in C~ ta Mesa wall hold a ','Retwn to Camelot" ni&ht Fnday at 7 l).m. to ra1~ funds for their trip to El\lland an July where they will put on the musjcal "Cl.melot." Sctnes from the Estancta 1how will be presented and. rame for donat~ aifts will be conducted. Call 548-3078 for further information. Antique •how In HB Huntinaton Center will feiturt' an antique and collectable show and sale todar. throu&h Sunday throu.hout t~e mall. The sale wall beJin at 10 a.m. and wall continue until the mall closes each day. A u ertlon training at OCC An advanced asscnion tramina work.shop will be offered t~y as well as May 22 and 29 at 7 p.m. in the community Service Offioc of Orange Coast ~ollcae ·~ C<?sta Mesa. The cost is $30, and further 1nformat1on 1s available at 432-5880. CIJlld behavior meet tonight Parents from Newport-Mesa PRIDE and PT A groups from local elementary schools have sched-ule~ a 7.:30 p.m. meetina today in the Harper School aud1tonum on "Normal-Abnormal Behavior of C~ildhood." The meeting features a speech by a child physchologist and discussions on substance abuse ~nd peer prem~re of adolescents. Harper School as located at Tustin Avenue and 18th Street in Costa Mesa. Paralegal• to meet Orange C-0unty District Attorney Cecil Hacks will speak on ethics in lhe law profession at tonight's meeting of the Paralegal Section of the Orange County Bar Association, 10 be held at the Western Federal Building. 4 Corporate Plaza, Newport Beach. The cost is $9.50 for members and $11.50 for non-members. Call 836-8655 for reservations. Slngle. work•hop slated A workshop for people hopin~ to meet other people for romantic attachments will be presented toniaht from 7 to 10 p.m. an the Science Lecture Hall J at Orange Coast College in Costa Mesa. Admission is $1 5 and tickets may be ordered by calhng 432-5880. Shrine party planned The El Bandito Shrine Oub of Newport Beach will present its annua l Cinco de Mayo party ton1~ht at the Costa Mesa Neighborhood Comm1,1naty Center. lfhe cost is $20 per person with proceeds going to the Shriners' Crippled Children's Hospital. Call 675-1271 fo r details. Llbrary falr ln Laguna The Laguna Beach Library will hold Its annual Book Faire Saturda1-and Sunday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on the library s lawn, 363 Glenneyrc St. Ten other organazations are pan1c1patmg with booths of used books, magazines and records. Llf eguard tryoata set The Huntington Beach Jr. Lifeguard program will hold annuaJ tryouts for boys and girls 9 to 16 Saturday froin 8 a.m.to noon in the swimming pool at Fountain Valley High School. Tryouts also will be held from at the same hours May 24 and 31. Kld•' health tata •lated Free children's ph ysicals and low-cost mammo- graphy and osteroporosis screening and other tests will be offered Saturday from IOa.m. to 3 p.m. at the grand opening of the Memorial Health Center of Huntington Beach. The center as located at the Beach Boulevard off-ramp at the San Diego Freeway. Thuraday. May 15 • 4 p.m.. La1ua Beach Hamaa Affairs Committee, Community Center, 384 Legion St. • 6:30 p.m., Lapa Beaell Board of Adjaat- ment Committee. City Council Chambers, 505 Forest Ave. • 7:30 p.m., La1UJ1a Beacll Cable Televlalon Commlnee. Community Center, 384 Leg10n St. • 7:30 p.m., Irvine Plu11lD1 Comml11loa. C'tty Council Chambers. 17200 Jamboree Bl vd. Pou cE Loe ..... State needs totai.ckle toxic pro Lt. Gov. McCarthy tells Newport group toxic rwaste clean-u p costs could exceed 10 b illion By ROBERT HYNDMAN Of .. ...,,... .... Clcanina up toxic waste an California will exceed the current estimated $10 billion price taa if steps aren't taken soon to alleviate the problem, state Lt. Oov. Leo McCarthy says. McCanhy, who also serves u chairman of the state Economic Development Commission, said in addition to the health threats toxic waste poses, the problem continues to drain the state C(lC)nomy. "It's important to not allow these problems to destablliie the economy," McCarthy said Tuesday momina at a Newpon Sunrise: Rotary Club mccuna at the Balboa Bay Club in Newport ~ach. "Currently, a full cleanup will cost an estimated $1 0 billion and, if you don't clean up a lot of it, the potential for additional costs as enormous." Special beautlea The finallata In the 8th annual Special Olympic• Beauty P~eant were all amllea a• the wi.Dnen were annoanced Satur- day at the Han~n Beach JUCh School aadltortum. Pic- tured from left to rtcht are: Holly Smith, MCond nuuaer ap In the junior dl'rialon: Janice Boeton, Ont nmner up In the aenJor dlmlon; Denna Schott, Senior Queen; Tamra Robert8on, aec- ond runner up In aenlor dl'rialon; Roe.arlo Garcia, Rnt runner up In the junior dl'rialon; and Jenny Lynne Skinner. Junior Queen . In addition to cleanup coJts, McCanhy said pendfa1 lawsuits reUitina to toiuc contamination total about S3 billion 1n claims. , McCanhy said a packqc of acven bills currently before lhe state l..e&aslature addresses toxic waste concerns. Amona those proposals is'a bill that calls for formation of a "guas1-public foun- dation" to review specific methods of toxic cleanup and how available tccbnoloay hould be applied to toxic waste problems. The foundation. McCarthy says, would also build pubhc confiden~ that linaerina problems with toxic contamination can be solved. McCarthy also said effons arc under way to encouraie private firms lo tackle cleanup projects throughout the state. In a state report on toxic waste 1SSued last June. McCarthy said most of the Capitol flag salutes Tillie Fiorina of NB on 102nd birthday By SUSAN HOWLETT Of1Mo.llJl'lle4 ..... The American fla,a waved with special purposeoverthe nation's Capitol Wednes- day. It was flying an honorofTilhe Fiorina. who celebrated her 102 nd birthday with a a~uhering of friends and government representati ves in Newport Beach. · "I asked Tilhe how she fcll 1h1s morning, and she said 'I'm glad to be anywhere at 102,' "said Newport Convalescent Center spokesman Jim Gill. Fiorina was flanked by Newport Beach Mayor Phil Maurer, Orange County 5th Distnct Supervisor Tom Riley. and rep- resentatives for Rep. Robert E. Badham. state Sens. Marian Bergeson and Ed Royce. and Assemblyman Gal Ferguson. She smiled and talked w1th her 76-year- old daughter, Natalie. during the after- noon celebratton. The flag flown over the U.S. Capitol for F1onna'sb1rthdaywasag1fi from Badham. who said he arranged It an commemora- tion of her special day The eldest of eight children, Fionna was born an Oakavalle. Ill., an 1884. She mamed her husband, James. when she was 18. He died when he was an has 90s. Seventy-li ve years ago. she came to Cahfom1a where sht' owned and operated three famil y restaurants an Ventura, Los Angeles and the San Fernando VaJley, her sister wd. At the age of 60, she retired from the restaurant business and bepn runnina an orchard and turkey farm in Northern California. ··1 was a little worried about her," her daughter said. "At 70, she was carrying bi* pails offood to spread out to the chickens. And Fiorina still looks good at more than a century. She docs work with her hands. and is still able to communicate despite a stroke that impaired her hea nng and speech a year ago. "Sht' looks at me and asks. 'How come you have so many wnnklcs,' " said daughter Natalie. "As you sec. she hardly has any wnnkJcs." Natalie 1s the only la"ing member of F1orina's immediate family. Her brother, Robert. died when he was 5 and a second brother. Ra ymond, died at 76. he has great-granddaughters Lon Whistler and Pamela Boone. great-grandson Kart , great- great-grandchtldren Katlyn. Kel by. Jourdan. Ashley. arah and Knsten, who was bom JUSt a week before Fionna's 102nd b1rthda). Natalie crcd1tSJUSt plain hard work with Fionna·~ long hfr. he ~aid long yearo; of Stale'' key 1ndu1tncs lft ~ton tbc use of 10xic chemicall. "Yet our failure to •fely m~ thete chemicals threatens the abtlHy of tbcte same mdustriC'S to conttn\M: 10 arow." be \ltd. "For every dollar of new mvettment rcsuhinaCtomeconomice•panaion.-•re spcndina two dollars maftllins &011c chemicals." lo his 20.minutc talk, McCarthy allO said a lack of child-arc f'ac:ilitJeS throuah- out California weakens the aate'• econ-omy. With two. milJion mothers m the work force, there are about three million children In California who do not have adult supervision at bome durina the day, he sa1d. In addition to th~ effect tltis bas on the family1 McCarthy said the ~nt may be less efficient at work. worryina about the children at home. McCarthy S&Jd he bcheves bu11ncsses arc at least 80 percent responsible for helpina c.-rcate soluuons to chald-carc problems an the state. "It's in the C(10nom1c sclf·interestS of business to solve this," he said. T illie Florina workmg have kept her mother young at 102. " he "orked very hard be ing the oldest of eight children." Nata he sa1d, .. , thank that's 1t. She's tembly pleased. and she '>Cems to be very happy." Lt. GOY. Leo llOC&rtlly Leaking gas routs40at Barbor Court A suspected gas leak forced the evacu· ation o( •bout 40 people from the Kait>or Mun1C1pal Court buikli!'I Wednesday. Newport Beach Fire Department spokeswoman Jayme Freer said someone rc~rted what they t.houaht was a ps leat beJ na circulated throt.wb the air coaditJon- int ventt at J2:24 p.m. When tiretlatuen arrived, .t!JeY cleattd about 40 people from the buj1afoa. The Oranae County Haurdous Ma- terials team was called to tbe 460 l Jambotte Blvd. locatfon, and found the source of the ps Jcak. "The gas company was work1ng on a ps hne, and it was near the air conditioner vent,'' Freer said. Those evacuated were allowed to return to the bu1ldfof after about an hour. No one was reported injured in the incident. Drun k en dr iver checks Saturday The Cahfom1a Htghv.•a) Patrol and Huntmgton Beach police wtll set up a sobnety checkpoint an West Orange Coun- ty Saturday Spokesmen for the law enforcement agencies aren't u y1ng where the ch«k- po1nt will be, only that the locauon chosen has been the scenr of a "high numbeT of alcohol/drug-related colhs1ons." Drug suspect.accused of using dea_d as his aliases . ' . 4.n intercom unll wonh S 180 was rcponcd 51olen from Rucbcn and Co . 3.200 Bnstol I , between Thundav and Tuesday Entry was possibly made with a ~e)' Newport Beach I\ bomb 1hrca1 ""IS rcponcd at thr Ne"'pon Beach Pubhc L1b"ry· 8S6 San C'lcmente Thc bu1ld1n1 ""as r"acuated aner a tcleph(mc threat but thCtt was no bomb found 11ems -wonh an es11m1ted SJSO -were rcponed s1olrn Tuesday morning from an 4.rroyo Dn"e locatton • • • A burglary was rcponed early Wednes-d•) at a Dunnina Dnvc home Thr los\ has yet to be dc1erm1ned Fountain Valley A rn1dent of the 18200 blod ol Brookhurst ll'ttt rcponcd Wt'dne5da\ 1hat buralars entered his backyard , then his iaraac v11 an unlocked door and stoic tools wonh SS25 block of Ward Street, was hrokcn. The burilar stoic car sterw equipment val~ a1 SJ.SO • • t A rcMdent of the 10200 block of Black R1"cr ( oun repon~ Wt'dnetday that thieves stole: a tool box from h11 open praac fhe lcw1 was estimated at $)()() • • • I\ rc"dent of Yorba Linda told pohcc WednHda) that a vandal scratched the left \Ide oflus blue 1986 N1uan 200SX while 1t was perked Saturda) at Founuun Valley H1&h School. 17816 BuUlard SL The damqr was c'umated at S2SO By PAlJL ARCHIPLEY Of ............... An aHeaed drua runner who used 1he aliases of dead people and is suspected of buyina and sclhna drup 1hrou&h use of a paaer. faced amian- ment today 1n Lona Beach Municipal Court. Pohce say the suspect, whose identity as unknown. worked and lived out ofhiscar and storaae aaraacs in Huntinaton Beach and West- minster. He was arrested Mon~y by Cahfomia Hiahway Patrol officers aficr alleaedly brandishina • weapon on the San D1e10 Freeway. CHP officer Raul Mart.Inez stOJ>- l mne 81cyclc: 1h1c"ct arc v.orkJl\I O"cn1me 1n lrv1nt' Rcpont'd m1u11\1 wctt a black hv.1nn cru1JC:r from the-40 block of 1lver ("~cnt. a bltclt Hull'v beach cru11tr from the 0 00 block o( Walnut trtet, a Un1vqa cru11Ct from t~ laundry area Of I condom1n1um prOJttl 00 the .l 700 l)k)(lt of Partvacw l..ane. a blue Huffy ~ach cni1tcr from a "hool on Gold'- cnbvsb, a blue h•1nn cnmcr from Vcnad<> hool on Ottrl\cld Avenue and 1 20.inch boy• Mumy 1lvcr and black 8MX bicycle (rom Allqhcny • • • A 1tcf'('() w11 itoltn from an 11nlutkcd 1982 VolkJWll"ll Jena~'" Akka ped the suspect at 7th Street an Long Beach and found a chp for a . 38().. caliber semi-automatic on him. said Capt. Ken Rude. A subseq uent search of lhe car reveaJed a cache of coca a ne. 1ncludin174 o ne-sram bindles and 11 quarter-ounce biodles, Rude said. The suspect was carry1na a valid Calffomia driver's license an the name of Michael Rote rs.Officers also found four birth and two death certjfi cates for different people, and business cards for two storaac praaes in Huntinaton Beach and a third in Wcslminstcr. Af\er obtainina search wamnts, officers inspected the praaes and found thrce-(lulrters of a pound of • •-t A 1clev1 ion and S.2YU was ttolcn from a home on tht l 700 block of perk view Lane • • • Some Jewelry and a Cl\~llt' pla)'er "'"rt stokn from a home on lht 14700 blcxk o( O.hlqu1S1 Road T uctday nt&ht • • • A stereo was stolen from a l<K kcJ Volkswaacn Rabb11 parked on T1mbcrhnc • • • About SlSO in cash v.as stolen from a afcttna ca1h drawtt 11 a tehool on lht 4700 block ofC.mpus Ori"c • • • Some stereo components we~ \tolcn from tht wood shop locker of• ~hoot un ttfr-,.7 block« ampu On..-.--~ cocaine. 14 handguns and rifles of different types. 12 homemade silencers and S7,800 an cash. Accord1na to anvest1gaung officer Std Parsley. the suspect would as- sume the identity of a dead person by obtain1n1 that person's birth and death rttords. "You go toa graveyard and find someone about the ~me age," Parsley said. The sus~t was being held on $50,000 bail. but police were scckina to double at, Rude said. He as beina charaed with possession of narcotics with inttnt to sell. assault with a deadly weapon, possession of stolen property and possession of silencers. Coeta Mesa 1cltvl\10n wt and v1drocas5t'llc ""ordrr wnnh S8SO wcrt rcpone'd \tokn trom an apanmC'nt 11 744 Jam<'' St ~tv.ttn 8 JO a m and ' '<l Pm Mtmday fntry v.u madt' thtouah a bedroom w1 ndo* • • • ~ S l 200 bro nit bust l)f a woman v.i1h tlov.ina hair wu rq>0nt'd missma Mon da)' from lJJ)\111" Oalltry at South C Ol\t Pla11 Tht hu\t cn111lcd "La (spcra ' - 1ipAn1\h for ''The Wai.-·-wa' on • pedestal en tht 'h(~w~m IUOI bO\ anJ tool\ v.onh s I IWIS V.('f\' rtpontd m1is1na lrom 11ur1n a ~on•Mu\ 11nn \ltt 11 \ n• l\nf' St • • !... A buratar made on 1N1th SS.600 1n JC"'elry and cash from an Even1n1 S11r home. The burglar appercntly ('ntr~ '1a a Sttond-slor) rear balcon ) • • • ;\b<)UI S ~()() damaac WIS rrpon('d afier I w1ndo"" wa\ broken 11 L1nroln ~hool 1n th<' \100 hhxk of Pac1fir View • • • '\ I 97Q whllr Honda (I'll wa\ rtponed ~tolcn from 11\ park1na spot 1n the ~00 block of Nat\."ius • • • The owner of car parked at Ncwpon 8oulr"1rd and Finley rcponcd the T lop of hi\ c.tr n11u1na. It wu v.onh SI .<XIO • • • i\ hurglar who apparently <'&!It'd a home un Royal l\t < .corge bcfoprr cntcnna took Sl70in cnh • • • A &l'nd 1hcf\ ntttt'd $8.900 in Jrv.elry from a home 1n thc 2400 bloclc of J2 nd trcrt La1una Beach \ I ~-\rar-0IJ male v.1H1tcd tor dnv1na v.ithout a ht.:enst The )Outh, who~ name ""'" wtthhrld v.a\ \lopped h pohtt at 1tM1u1 6 1 m ~t'dnttd•y alona thc 1300 bind ufClilTOn'e • • • f1rcfi1h1cn t\11n ul\htd a ~•r hl't' Tur~•' rH·n1na Y.ht'n a red I Q7f\ P11~h<' llliaht Ii"' nn 8trn l>n"t • • • ~1i'4'.t'llan~lll\ ur p11n' •nd dnth1na "'<'"' \IOlcn from 1 C lln)'on ~\ltt On'f l111.111on, the """m told poh <' T uc~la) I hr In' v.n c\l\m11ed 11 S2t1S • • • Barbci.IK ('~u1pmcnt anJ mi1tt1. dh1ncou' ••• A. rcs1dtnl of the Q200 block ot El l\rbol rcpont'd that 1h1e"es pnt'd optn a wind-wtn&, then tamptred with an 1gn111on wtre 1n an attempt 10 stcal his >Cllov. I ~t>4 C'hcvrolcl pickup IN< I.. which wa\ parkt'd near his home The 1htfl at1rmp1 then fai led, but the intrudCf did an c'tin1tt'd $200 damaae 10 the \'th1dr • • • Two Irvine rcs1dcnt\ rcpune'd Tuc!oday that 1hc1r wallets writ' ,1olen from on un11tcndt'd 'hopp1na can at lhr Home Club 'tore. 16021 Brookhur\t 'it • • • Vandals 'mashed a d a\\room window at Vista Virw School. toHO lt1rko11' • custochan reported Tuewa) Damaae wa~ csum1tcd al SI 00 • • • The lock on a Tu,hn tt11dcn1·, v«n 1968 Pl ymouth Vah1nt. which"'" parked Wcdnttday at a hu11ncs on •hr I K2<Xl Huntlnaton Beach Th1evrs stoic S200 in cash and S2.SO 1n m1sccll1nrou~ Item\ from a dcs1 1n the Huntington Beach l1n1on H1&h School D1stnr1 offilt' • •• BuraJan rut • lock 10 a prqc 1n ltlt 8000 block of Florclle and stoic tools and fish1na ix1IC\ "'•lu~ 11S730 • • • A \lranarr wal ked into a hou\C 1n 1he 1100 hl~k ot Alabama and wouldn't leave tlr wa' later taken into cuslod)' on ~u,p1rmn of 1rt1pl\\1ng • • • .\ man uiina a pa)' tclt'phone 1n the 700 block of[d1ngrr .\venue S&Jd 1no1her man 1pe1 on him v.hcn hc rdu~ to ecc off the phonc Rape t ry th w arted in Mesa l\n attacker tryana 10 rapt a -.oman early th1 moman11n Co ta Mesa >Na \C&rtd away when a resident he rd the commouon and fired a hotaun bla t rohct rtportcd The would-he raput tackl~ a 22· )Ctr-old Costa Mn1 v.-oman who wa "' .. lkana 1n tht 700 block of Wal~n \trttt about l a"' , Octt'Ct1 ve Rack Johnsonwud. t I Tht' man rcmovro has cloth1n1and v.as attempting to rape the woman *hen someont from a nearby home came out and fired one round from a hotaun No one was ll'IJUred by •M hot, said Johnton. Ht rtponcd the attacktr wa dc- nbed as a male whatci I to H) old S fttt. 8 1ncht w . 140 pound wllh br_own hi.Jr ........ 'I t ' .,. I' • * OrlftOI ~DAILY PflOT/ T'hur8day. May 15. 1o&e Chernobyl ·disaster death list twill rise • MOSCOW (AP) -An American : doctor treating victims of the •.Chernobyl disaster said today more Soviets will die because they received • lethal doses of radiation released by • the nuclear power plant. ; Dr. Roben P. Gale, a bone marrow • expert. told a packed news conference • that Soviet and foreign specialists •have identified 3S people who suf· • feted severe radiation exposure after \the April 26 accident at the Ukrainian •plant. Despite around-the-dock efforts ~by doctors in a Moscow clinic, Gale •said, seven of those people exposed to ~ radiation cases have died. He said mon: deaths arc expected. ., Soviet officials, including Com· .: munist Pany leader Mikhail S. ~ Gorbecbev, have said two other ~ people were killed in the explosion "' and ftre at the plant's No. 4 reactor. ..; The subsequent radiation released a ~ cloud of radiation that contaminated .; the area around the nuclear plant and ... gradually spread around the world. ~ In a televised speech Wednesday ., ni&ht. Gorbachev announced the • death toll from the accident had ~ reached nine, and said the disaster • bad shown the "sinister force" nu- •· clear energy could pose. ~ He also extended a unilateral .. Soviet moratonum on nuclear ~ weapons tests until Aug. 6, the t anruversary of the 1945 atomic • bombing of Hiroshima, Japan, by the ,; United States. Gorbachev called on : the U nited States to join the test ban -and asked President Reagan to meet • him fo( talks on the issue. t ~ Washington, White House : s esman Larry Speakes reiterated • th American position that a Reagan- • Go bachev meeting was "possible : this year if Mr. Gorbachev desires," • but said it should deal with a broader • range of issues. ~ Of the accident itself, Gorbachev • assured the Soviet people, "The worst • is over." • He also accused the West of trying , to score political points over the disaster in a "highly immoral cam- : pa1gn," saying the Soviets were faced with "a veritable mountain of Lies - dishonest and malicious hes." 6 Gale. of UCLA. said 19 patients • have received bone marrow trans- • plants. Heavy doses of radiation destroy bone marrow. which can be fatal. . l • ,. • ' t • • • . • • , ' • • • • • • . • • • ' • • • • :, ~ <4 c • • c '4 :, . , . .. l ~ f A~I INTERN/< HQt 1AL I 000 N BRIS i(;t 5. RH T • Jf WPORT BE A( H (A 92660 71 4 95;, 500 Bia Canyon HortJr)r R 1dge lrv1~e Cove Vin toge Club M onor(h Beach Belcourt PGA W est Turtle ~ock Crest Century City T e wers Bel Arr Belmont Shores Naples ' Terrorists threaten to harm hostages BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP)-A telephone caller claimina to speak for the lsl&mic Jihad terrorist aroup threatened today to make American and French hostqes held 10 Leb&non pay for purponod Western pressure put on Syria for their release. Deukmejian says he was unaware of guard missions CSFcancels bigot's show By IM Aaeda ... Presa White supremacist Thomas Me~• cable TV show ''Race and Rta0n" will no loqer be taped at the CaJ State Fullerton campus. a spokes- man &&id. The anonymous caJler also said the number of American and French hoJtaaes held by the shadowy Islamic Jihad, or Islamic Holy War, has "decreased a lot because a number of them have been liqutdaJed." "The remaining hostaaes with us will be the first to pay the price," if Western countries "do not stop maneuvcnna apinst Syna and lslamic Jihad," the Arabic-speaking caller told a Western ncW$ agcn()' office in Moslem west Beirut. An editor of the 14ency, who S{>C?ke on condition that neither he nor bis wire service be identified, said the caller did not give names or the exact number of bos~cs who might have been killed. There was no immediate way to authenticate the call. · Islamfo Jihad said in a statement March I 0 that other factions had been falsel y using its name and that all future announcements would be typewritten and accompanied by hos~· photographs. In· Washington Wednesday, White House spokesman Larry Speakes said about the bostaacs, ''We do from time to time get rcpons regarding their status and their well-beins-l think they're generally in &ood shape, noti~ the fact that their capuvity has extended over quite a period of time. Also today, about 800 Lebanese students at the American University of Beirut staacd a silent march to protest the kidnapping of some of the univcrsjty's professors and students. Students at schools throuahout west Beirut stayed out of classes in suppon of the weeklong protests at the American Univmity. And Education Minister Salim Hoss ordered a daylon~ worlc stoppage at his ministry in solidarity with the university apinst' the chain of events ... that threaten to collapse the entire educational sector." Protests at the university began after the May 7 gunpoint abduction of Nabil Matar, associate professor of cultural studies and a Lebanese Christian . Commander Zero nees to Costa Rlca By me Auoclated Preti SAN JOSE, Costa Rica -Nicaraguan rebel leader Eden Pastora, known as "Commander Zero" from his days fighting with the Saodinistas, will seek asylum in Costa Rica for himself and 400 me~. bjs _spokesrt?en sa!d Wednesday. They said Pastora, whose fight against N1carqua ~ lefhst go"c:mment bas sputtered for three y~, woul~ make the rcq1:1est J'.nday on the Costa Rican side of the San Juan Raver that ts the border with Nicaragua. The Costa Rican government did not immediately comment on the repon. ''Tbe commander will denounce the maneuvers that the Central Intelligence Age ncy bas carried o ut for the past two years to divide bis movement and separate it from the struggle against the communist regime of Managua,·· said Miguel Caracas, a member of the political wing of Pastora's Revolutionary Democratic Alliance. Waldhelm denles lnvolvement ln crimes VIENNA -Kurt Waldheim said he verified field reports as a German army officer during World War II, but rejected claims that he was involv~ in massacres of Yugoslav panasans and civilians. "I haven't seen this hew document which the World Jewish Congress has presented, but those allegations are certainly not correct." be said Wednesday ni~t. "I was~'t involved in any panisan activities. I haven't even seen a partisan. as I said repreatcdly," the former U.N. secretary general who is running for president told reponers during a campaign stop. Waldheim, who served in German Army Group E in the Balkans, _has acknow!edg~ that be kn~w of reprisals against parusans, but has consistently dented involvement 10 them. Gen. AJcxandcr Loehr, the unit's commander, was executed for war crimes. WHITI'lER (AP) -Oltclosura that the California National Guard has flown supply minions in Centr.r and South America the past eight years were a surprise, Gov. George Deuk.mejian said. "I don't like surprises!' the aov- crnor said Wednesday ... I do think that the aovemor should be made aware of what missions are involved.. especially when they're involved in sendina in some of our troops into foreign countries." As aovcrnor Deukmejian is com- mandcrofthe state's Nauonal Guard. He bas been in office three yean. "My understanding is tbat ap- parently approval for that type of mission had been given during the prior administntion and that the iuard simply continued to operate under that initial authorization," Deukmejian told reporters. "I was never requested by anyone to either confirm that authorization nor was I personally made aware of it." Alien seeks news about companion LOS ANGEES (AP) -A Mexican seasonal worker from the Frc$no area fears be may be separated forever from the woman he brought to this country to join him. Mana Arevalos is missing. Jose Herrera, her 48-year-old commoo- law husband, said Wednesday that be has been searching since May l, when two Immigration and Naturalization Service agents took his companion off a train at Oceanside for question- ing. She may be m Los Angeles, but she cannot tell anyone her phgbt, because the 34-year-old Mexican national is almost totalJydcafand can speak only a few words m Spanish. She cannot read, write or use sign lan$uage. She carried no identifi- cauon papers, and bad only $5 in her pocket when sbe vanished two weeks ago. "I think something bad happened to her," HerTCra said. "Or maybe she met somebody at the bus depot in Los Angeles. a kind and good person who is takmg care of her." FARI INTERNATIONAL Designer Furnishings Retail Division LIQUIDATION SALE Due tn th e expansion of our design and custom development d1vb1ons, we wi ll be closing o ur retai l divisi on forever. All designer furnishings on display will be liquidated in a 3-day ;:,a le at a fraction of their wholesale cost. This is out wa y of sayi ng thanks for yo ur fabulous patro nage during the last ten yea rs . 1 his ale will be held at our showroom : I 000 N. Bristol Street (at Jamboree) Newport Beach telephone: (7 14) 955-1500 Friday, May 16th thru Sunday, May 18th -9:00 pm T trn" and cond1uon ol s.alt clih 01 cuhk~ chtck only, Vl~ and Masttr C.ard add }\., 111 mtrch1nd1w ~Id a\ I\,"' .and all ul~ •~ final FOB or ~wpnn ~ach showmom-m1lct own .i1Tangtmtnts for dtl1YC'ry within 7 d.a~ (no warrhou tng) rh~ \air will~ hrld by tht bu~lnos ofT"t ptA<>nntl-no dt~1gnr" or saln ptnonnd will ~ ava1la It 1n 1h1~ rwnt (bnng your room d1mtn,.()ns) • • But the aovernorsaid his office can find no written record that former Oov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. approved the foreian fliabts. "I think it was aJI done vetbelly," be said. "My information now is that the auatd simply continued doinf in effect what they bad beeo doang, appa'.rentJy bclievina that there was no nccnsity to come back to the aovemor to ask whether they should continue with that or not." The disclosures came at a Jeaislat· ive bearing Monday_ when Natio~ Guard officials testified that Cal•· fomia gµardsmen bad tranSP<>nod military supplies to Honduras and had been Dying provisions to U.S. embassies 10 Central and South America since 1978. Deukmejian said be bas instructed guard officials to inform him of any future proposals to send troops over- seas so be can decide if they should go, and that approval "der,mds on the nature of each mission. ' The u1e of colleae television wpina facilities by "et.tter, · former Southern Cafifornia director of the Ku K.Jux Klan, bad drawn protest& from Fultenon students. Group W Cable, which ~ti the show, has decided to produce ~ of iu public access prosrams at ill headquarters in Fullerton, said Jim Bray, manqcr of tb~ .~mpany's north Oranse County divtaon. Bray said Wcdiiesday that the decision stemmed from the com· peny's effort to strea.rnlin~ its public acocss system and was not m response to student protesu. Under federal law, cable com- panj~ must provide on~ channel for pubhc access propamm1na.. "Race and Reason,•• a JO.minute show that Metzger said some viewers may regard as racist or anti-Semitic, bas been distributed to cable com· panics around the country. Ez-1Dental patient faces chargesof1Durder,rape By th A.11odate4 Pre11 RJVERSIDE -A mentally disordered sex offender wbo was releas:ed from an institution despite _psycbia~u· warnings bas bee~ ~ with murdcrillJ one 1 S-year-old girl and raping another. Joseph William Hart, 33, fac.es arraignment May 23 on five felony counts for the March _2S attaclc on t~o students from Riverside's La Sierra J:fifb School. Hart .•s charged with murdering Diane Harper with the special cuaamstanccs oflcidnap, attempted rape and attempted sodomy. LA ba• drl.ver held alter •m••hap LOS ANGELES -Police arrested a shuttle bus driver for investigation of driving under the influence of drugs today after her bus smashed into 11 other vehicles near Los Angeles International Airport, injuring 2~ peop_le. The bus, belonging to Alamo car rental ofln&lcwood, rear-ended or sideswiped 10 can and another shuttle before it came to rest a half-mile from the initial collision point, said police Sgt. Harry Ryon. The bus was traveling away from the airport at SS-60 mph on Century Boulevard, a 40 mph zone, when the incident occurred j ust before 10:30 p.m. Wednesday, Ryon said. No passengen were aboard. Record cocalne IJaal 11ehed ln LA Harbor LOS ANGELES -The largest amount of cocaine found aboard a ship in Los Angeles Harbor, 129 P<>Unds, was seized by federal agents aboard a freighter chartered by a Colombian shipping line, the Customs Service said. Cocaine taken in the raid on the Merkur Beach was valued at S 10 million. Four men, all citizens of the Philirpines1 were arrested for investigation of drua smu&JHng and intent to sel cocame. Customs Service spokesman Mike Flemmg said Wednesday. 4A 3A 2A B SIZES 7 10 61ft-10 f>V,.10 4 ·10 Susan Low heel comfort. in thia clreeey T-1uap with stacked heel White, Nall)' Bone calf 99 Fashion Island • Newport Beach• 759-9551 Open Thurs. and Fri. till 9:00 pm., Sun 12-5 PLASTIC SURGERY ... IS LOOKING BETTER Join us at Costa Mesa Medical Center Hospital for a free lecture about the exciting new developments in cosmetic and reconstructive surgery: • liposuction Surgery • "Brow lifts" • Better, Longer-lasting Focelifb • Chin and Cheekbone Reconstruction Advances in Plastic Surgery - Thursday, May 22, 7-9 p.m. presented by Ira Levin, M.D., plastic surgeon. Seating is limited, so please coll 650-2400 to reserve your space. cm me • Cotto Mesa Medical C.m.r Hospttal 30 l Victoria Stt'fft Costa MMo, CA 92627 • Or1nge Coat DAILY PILOT ITIM.trldey, May 15, 19M NASA reveals new plans for manned space station CAPE CANAVERAL. Fla. (APl-Fou~ •PICC shuttle f\iptl wil be required for a new, sca.led-down manned apece 11.ation that NASA plans to construct in orbit in the l 990a with the help ofitl cloeest allies. Tbe fint auembly fliabt ia planned for late I ~2 or ,1993 and the 1tation the size of a football field. ahould .,.; completed by 1996, aaid NASA's project director, John Hoc!ee. The reviled plan, unveiled at a news conference Wednelday, initial- ly will ba.ve five najor preaaurized ~oduJea 1natead of the seven oris· inally planned, and it is desiped so a permanent crew does not have to be aboard from the besinnina. which bad been the earlier plan. Hodae aaid budaiet constraints dic- tated the new desian and puJhed back the date for permanently m~ the station from 1992 until I~. The structure atill will be built for $8 billion, be said, the amount President Reapn set in 1984 when be com- mitted the United States to develop a permanent station. The United States will build mod-ul~ for li~ng and for lopstics and m1croarav1ty research; the European Spaoc Agency, a consortium of 10 nations, will supely a life sciences module; Japan will provide an ad- vanced technoloSY module, and Can- ada will develop a mobile satellite servicin& and repair ocnter. The modules wiU be clustered inside aiant metal trusses to which are attached solar panels, power stations antennae, shuttle docking ports and ex~ent and ~uipment bays. The serv1oc ocnter will move about the ,., u• _, .... complex on rails. Conflamation for permanent 8pace station depicted. Hope dim forBlost on snowy mountain TIMBERLINE LOOOE, Ore. (AP) -Rescuers and dog teams have resumed the hunt for six teen--agcrs and two adults missing on Mount Hood sinoc a blizzard ambushed their school expedition Monday, but hopes faded that they would be found ahve. The Air Force helicopter with an infrared dcvioc that can detect temperature variations of 2 dcgrccs found nothing late Wednesday, said Air Force Staff Sat. John Harkness. DolS trained l'or mo untain work were brouaht from Seattle, but were also unable to find the missing climbers. Two six-man ground teams with two dogs left Timberline Lodge at 4 a.m . to sean:b the 9,~foot level of the mount.a.in. The teams, to be joined by another ground team later, planned to use metal detectors in their efforts. Low wind and only a few high clouds over the mountain provided good conditions for the search today, officials said. Unsafe footing forced a postponement in the hunt Wednes- day. Rescuers had hoped the climbers had survived in a snow cave, but those hopes diminished as no sign of life was seen Wednesday, when sunny weather and noisy hcHcopters should have prompted survivors to di& out. "They should have punched their way out," said Oackamas County Sheriffs Lt. Don Vickars. "That's what the general opinion is." However, Master Sgt. Rich Harder, chief of rescue efforts for the Air Force, said today he had not lost hOr,?.: • Over the years we 'vc had ... people hike out two or three days later and we're just hoping that they arc down in the tree lines maybe and we might run into them," he told "Good Morning America." "Home of Fine Handmade Pcrisan &. Oriental Rugs" Persian Treasure Rugs OF CORONA DEL MAR Persian Treasure Rugs Buys and Trades Used Oriental Rugs we will also ... Clean and Repair Your Rugs APPRAISAlS $ 2 5 Reg. $50 1673-6981 1 1110 B. Pad& Cout Rwy. Corolla clel Mu (Nut ..... ., AMrtea) ' Sale of unapproved drugs abroad backed by senate BJ ~e Associated Presa . WASHING TON -American-made drugs not yet approved for sale in this country could be '°Id overseas under lCJislation passed by an overwhelming majority of the Senate. The legislation, bitterly criticized by Sen. Howard Mcttcnbaum, D-Ohio, as giving pharmaceutical companies a "blank check" to dumP"unsafe drugs in Third World countries, was approved Wednesday on a 91-7 vote. Sen. Orrin G. Hatch, R-Utab, the bill's main sponsor, called it landmark legislation that will encourage U.S. drug manufacturers to keep their domestic facilities rather than go overseas to a void Food and Drug Administration rules. Ta% boa.t mot have Reagan '• OK WASHING TON -Democratic leaders said today the House will join the Senate in calling for a tax increase and a sharp cut in President Reapn's proposed military buildup. But the tax increase won't happen unless Rcapn supports iL House Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill Jr., D-Mass., emphasized to reponcrs that the House won't enact the tax boost envisioned in the budget if RCagall would then claim he had been forced by Democrats to sign it. "He bas to embrace it, that's riJllt." O'Neill said. "Bipartisan suppon (in the Congress) is oot enough." Despite administration lobbying, lawmakers of both parties say the S994billion spcndi~ plan drafted by the Democratic-controlled House Budget Committee wiU wtn today, and a Republican alternative that's somewhat closer to wtiat Reagan requested wiU lose. • Slayer of two wome.a ezecated HUNTSVILLE, Texas -Jay Kelly Pinkerton, convicted of the mutilation-slaying of one woman and the murder of another, said goodbye to his father and was executed today by injection, nine months after escaping the same fate by just 26 minutes. Pinkerton, 24, was pronounced dead at 12:25 a.m., said Assistant Attorney General Monroe Clayton, just hours after federal judges rejected an appeal hand-delivered by Pinkerton's mother. FAA, House panel cla•h o.a safety WASHINGTON -The Federal Aviation Administration says it's ferreting out unsafe airline practices aggressively and better than ever, but the chairman of the House aviation panel said today the agency just docs not have enough inspectors "to keep the airlines' feet to the fire." Wednesday a congressional study concluded that the FAA inspection system is in such a state that the agency "cannot say with assuranee" that airlines arc obeying safety regulations. Salt Lake pumping plan approved SALT LAKE CITY -The Legislaturc'sapprovaJ ofa $71 million plan to pump away Great Salt La.kc floodwaters gave Gov. Norm Bangerter what be wanted. but the governor says he isn't ready to celebrate. Bangerter recommended the plan as the only realistic way to reduce the level oftbc laJcc, which bas risen I I 1h feet in the {>&St four years to a record 4,211 .65 feet above sea level, causing S 175 million in flood damage. The governor bas called the plan a ~mblc, but he says there is no other way to lower the 80-mile-long, 30- rnilc-wtdc lake in time to prevent it from swamping Interstate 80 and inundating two major railroad lines. OL&A HAS IT ALL ALL THE BEAUTIFUL LINGERIE YOU NEED AT EVERYDAY LOW FACTORY OUTLET PRICES. Choose from a selection of discontinued and Irregular styles of: bras, panties, daywear, sleepwear • I .. I COU,ON I '0LGA9 5.00 OFF . ANY ltURCHAN OWR '20.00 eirp. 111/-.-COSTA MEIA STORE ONLY 70-A 8AKIR ITMIT , ........... ., .,,.'°', COITA •SA. CA mae "'--(7M) 117•1114 • . HOURI: ...., 10:0CM.-OO IAT. 10:00-5:00 PlonM.oadll19 1a.,to "'' :•la® Y.deoca111la 8ac-wlhWlralau ...... 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Gale, a bone marrow · expet'!_. told a packed news conference ~ that Soviet and foreign specialists • have identified 3S people who suf- • fered severe radiation exposure after i the April 26 ac.c:ident at the Ukrainian ~plant. · Despite around-the-clock efforts : by doctors in a Moscow clinic, Gale said. seven of those people exposed to ~ radiation cases have died. He said more deaths are expected. .-Soviet officials, including Com- Pj munist Party leader Mikhail S. ~Gorbachev, have said two other ~people were killed in the explosion •'and fire at the plant's No. 4 reactor. .; The subsequent radiation released a : cloud of radiation that contaminated ~· the area around the nuclear plant and '" gradually spread around lbe world. •. In a televised speech Wednesday • nt&ht, Gorbachev announced the • death toll fro m the accident had : reached nine, and said the disaster .: bad shown the "sinister force .. nu- t clear energy could pose. t· He also extended a unilateral .: Soviet moratorium on nuclear • weapons tests until Aug. 6, the ~ anniversary of the 1945 atomic .. bombing of Hiroshima, Japan, by the ,; United States. Gorbachev called on ; the United States to join the: test ban • and asked President Reagan to mec1 • him for talks on the issue. • In Washington, Wh ile House : .spokesman Larry Spealces reiterated • the American pcmuon that a Reagan-~ Gorbachev meeting was "possible : this year if Mr. Gorbache v desires." • but said it should deal with a broader • range of issues. ~ Of the accident itself. Gorbachev , assured the Soviet people, "The worst ' is over." ~ He also accused the West of trying ' to score political points over the • disaster in a "highly immoral cam- : paign," saying the Soviets were faced with "a veritable mountain of lies - dishonest and maltcaous hes." • Gale. of UCLA, said 19 patients • have received bone marrow trans- 1 plants. Heavy doses of radiation : destroy bone marrow, which can be ' • 1 . r ~ • fatal. ,. • t : • ' • • ' • • • • . • • t • • • . . • • 4 • • • ~ :, ; • " ( ·. • J • ' • '. \ fARI INTERNATIONAi 1000 N BRISTOL STREf T n f WPORl BEACH CA 97660 7 14 955 1500 819 Canyon Harbo r Ridge Irvine Cove l ido Isle Vintage Club Monarch Beach Belcourt PGA West Turtle Rock Crest Century City Towers Bel Air Belmont Shores Naples ' Terrorists threaten to harm hostages BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - A telephone caller claiming to speak for the Islamic Jihad terrorist aroup threatened today to make American and French hostqes held in Leblnon pay for purported Western pressure put on Syria for their releue. Deukmejlan says he was unaware of guard missions CSFcancels bigot's show ., die Aueda ........... White 1upremacist Thomae Me~• cable TV show '"Race and Reuon" wiU no loqer be &aped at the Cal State Fultmon campus. a spoket- man said. The anonymous caller also said the number of American and French h0ttqcs Mkl by 1M s~dowy Islamic Jihad, or lslamio Holy War, bas "decreased a lot becau1e a number of them have been liquidated ... "The remainina hostaaes with us will be the farst to pay the pnoc, .. if Western countries "do not stop maneuverina apinst Syna and Islamic Jihad," the Arabic-speak.ina caller told a Western news agency office in Moslem west Beirut. An editor of the lfC'.ncy, who S(>C?kC on condition that neither he nor bis win service be identified, sa.id the caller did not give names or the exact number of hos~es who miabt have been killed. There was no immediate way to authenticate the call. Islamic J ibad said in a statement March I 0 that other factions had been falsely using its name and that all future announcements would be typewritten and accompanied by hos~· photographs. In Washin1ton Wcdnesdar,. Wh1te House spokC$lllan Larry Speakes said about the hostages, 'We do from time to time get reports rcprding their status and their well-bein$-I think they're generally in aood shape, noting the fact that theircapuvity has extended over quite a period of time." Also today, about 800 Lebanese students at the American University of Beirut staged a silent march to protest lbe kidnapping of some of the university's profesaon and students. Students at schQO.IJthrouahout west Beirut stayed out of classes in support of the wccilong protests at the American University. And Education Minister Salim Hoss orde~ a daylo!w. work stoppage at his ministry in solidarity with the university ap10st' the chain of events ... that threaten to collapse the entire educattonal sector." Protests at the university began after the May 7 gunpoint abduction ofNabiJ Matar, associate professor of cultural studies and a ub&nete Christian. Commander Zero flee• to Costa Rlca By die Auoclated Pres• SAN JOSE. Costa Rica -Nicaraguan rebel leader Eden Pastora, known as "Commander Zero" from his days fighting with the Sandinistas, will ~le asyl um in Costa Rica for himself and 400 me~, bis .spokesD?en 51:1d Wednesday. They said Pastora, whose fight against Nicaragua s leftJSt government has sputt~ for three y~. woul~ make the rCQ';ICSl f'.riday on the Costa Rican side of the San Juan Raver that 1s the border with Nicaragua. The Costa Rican government did not immediately comment on the r:cpon. "The commander will denounce the maneuvers that the CentraJ Jntelbgencc Agency has carried out for the past two years to divide bis movement and SC{W'Ate it from the struggle against the communist regime of Managua," said Miguel Caracas, a member of tbe pol itical wing of Pastora's Revolutionary Democratic Alliance. Waldhelm denies Involvement in crimes VIENNA -Kurt Waldheim said he .verified field reports as a Gcnnan anny officer during World War II, but rejected claims that he was involved in massacres of Yugoslav partisans and civilians. "I haven't seen this new document which the World Jewish Congress has presented, but those allegations arc cenainly not correct," be said Wednesday ni$ht. "I wasn 't involved in any partisan activities. I haven't even seen a panasan. as I said reprcatcdly," the fonner U.N. secretary general who as running for pres1den1 told reponers during a campaign stop. Waldheim. who served tn Gennan Army Group E in the Balkans, bas acknowledged that he knew of repnsals against pan1sans, but has consistently denied involvement in them. Gen. Alexander Loehr, th e: unit's commander. was executed for war cnmes. WHllTlER (AP) -Ditclosu.ret that the California NatiooaJ Oua.rd has flown supply missions in Central and South America the past eiaht rean were a surprise, Gov. George Dcukmeji.an said. "I don't like surprises.'' the JOV- cmor said Wednesday. "I do think that the governor should be made aware of what missions are involved. es~ally when they're involvec;t in seodin& an some of our trooPJ tnto foreian countries." As governor Dcukmejian is com- mander of the sta&e's Nauonal Guard. He bas been in office three years. "My undcntandina is that ap-' parently approval for that type of mission had been given durin& the prior administration and that the pard simply continued to operate under that initial authorization," Deuk.mejian told reporters. "I was never requested by anyone to either confirm that authorization nor was I personally made aware of it." Alien seeks news about companion LOS ANGEES (AP) -A Mexican seasonal worker from the Fresno area fean he may be separated forever from the woman be brought to this country to join him. r Mana Arevalos is missing. Jose Herrera, her 48-ycar-old commoo- law husband, said Wednesday that he has been searching since May I, when two Immigration and Naturalization Service agents took his companion off a train at Oceanside for question- ing. She may be in Los Anieles, but she cannot tell anyone her phght, because the 34-ycar-old Mexican national is almost totally deaf and ca n spealc onl y a f cw words in Spanish. She cannot read, write or use sign lanJuage. She carried no identifi- cation papers, and had only $5 in her pocket when she vanished two weeks ago. "I think somethang bad happened to her," Herrera said. "Or maybe she met somebody at the bus depot in Los Angeles. a kind and good person who is taking care of her." FARI INTERNATIONAL Designer Furnishings Retail Divi sion Lf Q UI DA T IO N Due to the expansion of our design and custom devel opmen t d1v1s1o ns. we will be closing our retail division forever. All drstgner furnishings on display will be liquidated in a 3-day :)a le at a fracti on of thei r wholesale cost. This is our way of aying thanks for your fabulous patronage dunng th e last ten years Thi s sa le wi ll be held at our showroom l 000 N. Bri stol Street (at Jamboree) Newpon Beach telephone: (7 14) 955-1500 Friday , May 16th thru Sunday, May 18th 9:00 am -9 :00 pm f('ml' .nd lOndauon of ~It\ ca\h 01 cuhkrs clvdc·only. VISA and Mamr Card add l% .ill mt rch•ndlw ~d .u 1s • .and all ults :a~ final FOB or Ntwpon ~ach thowroom-makr own 1 rrangtmtn& for dth'>Try wuh1n 7 daY' (no warrhousmg) Thit ,.It will ht hrld by 1hr bu\inr" nfflu ptrionntl-no dt-s1gnt'n or '"11t'' ptoooncl wtll bt 1va1leblc an 1h1s evtnl (bnng your mom d1mrns1on\) • • But lhe aovemor said his office can find no written record that former Oov. Edmul\d 0 . Brown Jr. approved the foreian fli&hts. .. ..I think it wu all done verbally, he said. "My information now is that the pard simply continued doinf in effect what they bad been do1n&. apparently believing that there was no necessity to come back to the aovemor to ask whether they abouJd continue with that or not." The disclosura' came at a leaislat- ive hearina Monday when National Guard officials testified that Cali- fornia auardamen had transported military supplies to Honduras and had been flyioa provisions to U.S. cmbusies rn Central and South America since 1978. Dcukmc~ian said he bas instrUCted guard offiC'l&ls to inform him of any future proposals to seod troops over- seas so be can decide if lbey should go, and that approval .. dCf?CDds on the nature of each mission. • The use of colleae televiaion &apina facililtes _by Qetzfer, former Southern California director of the Ku KJu:x Klan. bad drawn protests from FUilerton students. Group W Cable, which broedcaau the show bas decided to produce ~ of its puhlic ac:cess _prosrams at its headquarten in FuUerton, u.id Jim Bray, manager of th~ .~mpany's north Orange County diVlatOD. Bray said Wedriesday that the de<:ision stemmed from the com- pany's effon to stteamlin~ its public access system and was not an raponse to student protests. Under federal law, cable com-pani~s must provide on~ channel for public access prosramm1na. _ "Race and Reason," a JO-minute show that Metzger said some viewen may reprd as racist or ant.l~milic, has been distributed to cable com- panies around tbc country. Ez-1nental patient faces charges of niurder, rape By ~e Aalodated PrH1 RIVERSIDE - A mentally disordered sc:x. offender who was releu:ed fro m an institution despite psyc~iatrists' wamaop bas bee~ ~ W\lb murdcrinJ one 1 S-year-old girl and raping another. Joseph William llart. 33, faces amugnment May 23 on five felony counts for the March .25 attack on t~o students from Riverside's La SittTa Hi'11 School. Hart .ts charged Wlth murdering Diane Harper with the special circumstances of kidnap, attempted rape and attempted sodomy. LA ba• driver held after •muhap LOS ANGELES-Police arrested a shuttle bus driver for investigation of driving under the influence of drup today after her bus smashed into 11 other verucles near Los Angeles International Airport, injuring 2~ peop.le. The bus, belongini to Alamo car _!'Cntal oflnglewood, rear~nded or SI~~~ I 0. c:ars and another shuttle before it came to rest a half-mile from the truual collision point, said police Sgt. Harry Ryon. The bus was traveling away from the airport at 55-60 mph on Century Boulevard, a 40 mph zone, when the incident occurred just before 10:30 p.m. Wednesday, Ryon said. No passengers were aboard. Record cocaine haul .elzed ln LA Harbor LOS ANGELES -The largest amount of cocajoe found aboard a srup in Los Angeles Harbor, 129 poun~. ~~~by federal a,ents a~. a freighter chartered by a Colombian sh1pprn1 hne, the Customs ~~ce wd. Cocaine taken in the raid on the Merkur Beach was valued at SI 0 milhon. Four men, all ci tizens of the Philippines, were arrested for investigation·of ~ smu&Jling and intent to sell coca.me. Customs Service spokesman Mike Aemrng said Wednesday. . 4A 3A 2A B SIZES 7 ·10 61-'i -10 61.'z-10 " .10 Susan Low hMI comfort in tM• dn11y T -1ttap 1rith atacked heel. White, Navy Booe calf 99 Fashion Island • Newport Beach • 759-9651 Open Thurs. and Fri. till 9:00 pm., Sun 12-5 PLASTIC SURGERY ... IS LOOKING BETTER Join us at Costa Mesa Medical Center Hospital for a free lectu re about the exciting new developments in cosmetic and reconstructive surgery: • Liposud ion Surgery • "Brow Lifta" • Better, Longer-lasting Facelifta • Chin a nd Cheekbone Reconstruction Advances in Plastic Surgery - Thursday, May 22, 7-9 p .m . presen ted by Ira Levin, M.D., plastic surgeon. Seating is limited, so please co ll 650-2400 to reserve your ipoce. cm me ; Costa Meta Medical Center Hospital 30 l Victoria Street CoJto Meso, CA 92627 • • Orange Coui DAILY PILOT!Thuf'lday, May 15, 19M NASA reveals new plans for manned space station CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP)-Fo~ as-e abuttle fli&btt will be required for 1 new, IC&Jeckk>wn llWlned specie station that NASA plant to construct in orbit ln the l 990I with the help ofi~ cloeeat allies. Tbe fint auembly Oiabt is planned for ~te 1992 or 1993 and the station, the me of 1 football field, ahould be co~ple1e_d by 1996, II.id NASA's projeet ~tor, John HO<Ste. The reviled plan, unveiled at 1 news conference Wednelday initial- ly will ~ve five najor preUuri.zed ~odulet iDlteld o~ t;he 1even ona- inally planned, and It lJ desiped 10 I permanent crew does not have to be aboard from the besinnina. which' bad been the earlier plan. Hodee II.id budfet constrlinu dic- tated the new desip and pushed beck the ~te for permanently mannina the muon from 1992 Wltil 1994. The s~ure a~I will be built for $8 billion, be wd, the amount President Reapn set in 1984 when be com- mitted the United States to develop a permanent siation. The United States will build mod-ul~ for li~ina and for l<>&istics and m1cropav1ty research; the European Space Aaency, a <:<>nsortium of 10 nations, will sup~ly a life sciences module; Japan will provide an ad- van~ tcchnOIOIY module, and Can- ada will develop a mobile satellite servicina and rei-ir center. The modules will be clustered inside giant metal trusses to which arc attached solar panels, power stations anten~ae, shuttle d~kina ports and ex~ent and C9Wpment bays. The servtce center will move about the ,,, • 111 ,, au complex OD rails. Conn,uratlon for permanent ..,_ce 8tatiOD depleted. Hope dim forBlost on snowy mountain TIMBERLINE LOOOE, Ore. (AP) -Rescuers and dog teams have resumed the hunt for six teen-agers and two adulu mining on Mount Hood since a blizzard ambushed their school expedition Monday, but hopes faded that they would be found alive. The Air Force helicopter with an infrared device that can detect temperature variations of 2 degrees found nothina~ late Wednesday, said Air Force Staff Sat. John Harkness. DolS trained tor mountain work were brou&bt from Seattle, but were also unable to find the missina climben. · Two six-man around teams with two dogs left Timberline Lodge at 4 a.m. to ~h the 9,300-foot level of the mountain. The teams, to be joined by another ground team later, planned to use metal detectors in their efforts. Low wind and only a few high clouds over the mountain provided good conditions for the search today, officials said. Unsafe footing forced a postponement in the hunt Wednes- day. Rescuers had hoped the climbers had survived in a snow cave, but those hopes diminished as no sign of life was seen Wednesday, when sunny weather and noisy helicopters should have prompted survivors to dig out. "They should have punched their way out.·· said Oackamas County Sheriff's Lt Don Vickars. "That's what the general opinion is." However. Master Sgt. Rieb Harder. chief of rescue efforts for the Air Force. said today he bad ~lost ho~. • Over the years we've had ... pie hike out two or three days I r and we're just hoping that they are down in the tree lines maybe and we might run into tflem," be told "Good Morning America." "Home of Fine Handmade Perisan &. Oriental Rugs" Persian Treasure Rugs OF CO RONA DEL MAR Persian Treasure Rugs Buys and Trades Used Oriental Rugs we will also ... Clean and Repair Your Rugs APPRAISALS $ 2 5 Reg. $50 1673-6981 1 asso B. Padftc Cout HWJ. Corou del Mar (l'CUt le lul flt AMrb) ' Sale of unapproved drugs abroad backed by Senate By tile Associated Press . WASHINGTON -American-made dfugs not yet approved for sale in th!_s country could be sold overseas under legislation passed by an overwhelming majority of the Senate. The legislation, bitterly criticized by Sen. Howard Metzenbaum, D--Ohio, as giving pharmaceutical companies a "blank check" to dump unsafe drugs in Third World countries, was approved Wednesday on a 91-7 vote. Sen. Orrin G. Hatch, R-Utab, the bill's main sponsor, called it landmark legislation that will encourage U.S. drug manufacturers to keep their domestic facilities rather than go overseas to avoid Food and Drug Administration rules. Taz bo<Mt ma•t .have Reagan'• OK WASHINGTON -Democratic leaden said today the House will join the Senate in calling for a tax increase and a sharp cut in President Reap.n's proposed military buildup. But the tax increase won't happen unless Reapn supports iL Hou5e Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill Jr., 0-Mass., emphasized to reporten that the House won't enact the tax boost envisioned in the budget if Reagan would then claim he bad been forced by Democrats to si.gn iL "He bas !O embrace it, t.~t's riJht." O'~~ill A;id. "Bipas:tisan support (in the Congress) 1s not enouah. Despite admin1ruaoon lobbying. lawmakers of both parties say the S994billion spendina plan drafted by the Democratic-<:ontrolled House Budget Committee will win today, and a Republican alternative that's somewhat closer to what Reagan requested will lose. Slayer of hro women ezecated HUNTSVlLLE, Texas -Jay Kelly Pinkerton, convicted of the mutilation-slaying of one woman and the murder of another, said goodbye to his father and was executed todar by injection, nine months after escaping the same fate by just 26 minutes. Pinkerton, 24, was pronounced dead at 12:25 a.m., said Assistant Attorney General Monroe Clayton, just hours after federal judges rejected an appeal hand-delivered by Pinkerton's mother. FAA, Hoa11e panel cla•h on safety WASHINGTON -The Federal Aviation Administration says it's ferreting out unsafe airline practices aagressively and better than ever, but the chairman of the House aviation panel said today the agency just does not have enough inspectors "to keep the airlines' feet to the fire." Wednesday a congressional study concluded that the FAA inspection system is in such a state that the agency "cannot say with assurance" that airlines are obeying safety reguJations. Salt Lake pumplng plan approved SALT LAKE CITY -The Legislature's approval ofa $71 million plan to pump away Great Salt Lake floodwaters gave Gov. Norm Bangcrter what he wanted, but the governor says he isn't ready to celebrate. Bangerter rcoommended the plan as the only reaJistic way to reduce the level of the lake, which has risen 11 1/J feet in the l>8St four years to a record 4,211 .65 feet above sea level, causing S 175 million in flood damage. The governor bas called the plan a ~mble, but he says there is no other way to lower the 80-mile-long, 30- mile-wtde lake in time to prevent it from swamping Interstate 80 and inundating two major railroad lines. OLGA HAS IT ALL ALL THE BEAUTIFUL LINGERIE YOU NEED AT EVERYDAY LOW FACTORY OUTLET PRICES. Choose from a selection of discontinued and Irregular styles of: bras, panties, dayviear, sleepV1ear I COU,ON I '01.GA 5.00 OFF ANY PURCHASI OVER '20.00 ••· l/1/ll-COSTA •8A STORI ONlY 74"'A aAKIR ITMET (OM llloM ... , ol .,,.IOI} COITA •IA. 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With man· ual #28-258 Batteries ••era Dual-Cassette Modulaire"·2200 by Realistic Compact Cassette Tape Recorder Save PRICE '100 Minrsette,. -9 by Reahstrc HALF ,-•• ~I 2995 15995 Low Aa 120 Per Reg. 59.95 Record lectures or "voice let· ters"r #14-812 Bauer,.• ex111 Reg. 259.95 Month on CltlLfne Copy pe1sonal tapes at l'l1gh- speed or record AM/FM #14· 763 Check Your Phone Book for the lallle /"8ek Store or Dealer Nearest You ~. 1 M uru~t FuNo s FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS Assets Deposits Net Loan h1reholder • Equit y Earn in as Befort Tue Net Earnings March 31, 1986 ti 'Al 1>1 rt·D1 March 31, Much 31, 1986 1985 ---- \ IXO .O 19.CXXJ s 122.071.000 s 166.246,0(X'J s 111 .896.()(X) \ ~N.2.\0,000 \ XJ.JJ2.0<X'1 ~ 9.558.CXX> \ K.JX7.0CX) 5 SWdXX> ~ 'Ko . ()()() s 2'> I ,OCX) s 206 .tXXI 0o lnc~ase --- 47°,, 49° .. 19" .. 14"o "2"n 41 " .. Commerce Bank Hr \OQI \RHR<; OHi< r t 11\l \H Rt f Ro\ 'k RI lll>l'C' l~fll I>·"~ \trfft , .. ,. I'"" Ht , h l \ 4't.t.11 1•1-1 111\I ~·I \II \1111 M f UI< • \Ot TH (0\~l Rf<1IO...,AI OHi<. r nm p.,,._ <. cnttr Omt 11 lH \n1un 111\J 1 < '"'" \k\.11 (A 4lt1}h , .. , '44 ~'20 LO'C. Bf \C II UH 'I l'ROOl <.TIU!' r>rt IC£ 1111 f l\I f kt"•n IJl~J \UllC' \Ill l •'"ll Ut .. .:h cf\ '111'1112 •2"• '<Ill ~~ ' Spedellzlng In Y echt lnterfon 642-2255 »40 A~ St., Ne~ a._h ..___ ___ '----" _......__ AMERICAN AIRPORT TRANSPORTATION & LIMOUSINE SERVICE, ll'(C. BuMa/Mlnlbut/ llmouatnes Stcrttonwogons/Vont/ RV' Door to Door S•Mc• Prl\lote Cl'lorte11 and loura l ·800·524· I 300 Advertlalng Art lema•• " .._.._o/Cet~· 0....- "' t..e-/~• lD '"~"•• QBAPlllCI llEWPOllT (714) 720·9191 tM"---0•••0.. 11_,_.hwhClAtU. .. , . . '· , Stock prices .plummet NEW YORK (AP) -Stock prices took.. a sharp drop Tbunday in selling attn'buied pertly to risina inierest mes. Newton Zinder. analyst at E. F. Hunon & Co.. said the ICSlion got off to a shaky IWt becawe traders didn't like the performance turned in by the market on Wednesday. lo that 1eSSion. strona pins in a few bia-namc stocks pusbed the Dow Joocs indu.stria.l aveniee up ocarty 23 points while the mt of tbe martet went .nowbcR. By this afternoon, Zinder said, sellina in- tensified and broadened as rates rose in~ credit mar\eu. Prices of long-term s<>vemmcnt bonds. which move in the opposite diRJCtion from inttftSt ra~bowcd losses of as mocb as S 1 S for every Sl,uw in (Kie value. A ~EX L E~Df PS .. . . GoL o Quo as Dow JoNES A vE R ~GE S METAL S QuorE s NASDAQ SUMM ARY famous la b<ils ... OC'W'p'lft. brz.oeh ~ fbehion ~lo~. 7l'V&t'i 5070 ~~"'tlogiz. lOOhw&tNood bl\d, 2l~~~7' poeedizm 52~ 9CUth lo~""" . SlSI 30't 93M mon th1" rh l0t.o9. ~t.urdoy 10 too t eundoy ricon to~ I Frtd•Y• Ma1 lt ARJES (March 21-Aptil 19): Emotions tend to rule -emphasis on romance. 1b1ht) to att to heart o( matters. You'll make new stan. you'll gain added rcc()ln1t1on and greater indcpenden~. Leo. Aquarius play oumand1 ng roles • TAURl1S (A.pnl 20-May 20): Spotlight on ~unty, land. aballt) to pc~el\e Iona·~~ opponunity. Family member 1s on your side. will prove 1t lntu1t1on nnp true. Cancer native shows way to o btain genuine barpm. GEMINI tMa) 21-Junc 20): Diversify, gave full play to antellectual c unos1t). Emphasis also on close net&h· bors. rclau,cs. surpnses. gin package representing token o f affection. Honz.onsexpand. long-<!istance call will s be reason for optimism. YONEY CANCER (June 21-July 22). Check details. read fint' print. realize you arc o on verge of s1~ifican1 discovery. MARR Mont') picture bnghter than ongmall) ••••••••••••• · ant1 c1patt'd. Payment 1s made tn your behalf -represents "gift.'' Scorpio plays role. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Be ready for change. travel, vanety and what could be a "serious" flirtation. Get ide-as on paper. know that you gain through written word. Gemini. Virgo. Sagittarius people play outstanding role" VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): MaJor domestic adjustment could include actual change of rt's1dt'ncc. scnous consideration of mantal status. Look behind !>Cent'!> for kc} data. lnd1v1duaJ you aided 1n pa'st is ready to return fa,or. LJBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Scenario hjghlights m ystery. intngue. glamor. Be d1scrc,t. romance will flounsh. play cards close to chest. Wish comes true in unonhodox manner. Pisces. Virgo natives figure in dramatic fashion. SCORPIO (Oct. 23·Nov. 21 ): Emphasis on power, intensity, loyalty. determination. sensuaJity. You have chance to .. strike it rich." Lo\t' relationship will grow stronger. Cancer native and Capricorn will figure 1n d ramatic fashion. SAGl'M'ARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21 ): Ftn1sh what you stan. look beyond the 1mmed1a1c. realize what had been missing will soon be present. Spotlight on tra' el. basic instincts, yearning for knowledge. You'll get recognition long overdue. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Ave nues previously closed will be opened -you'll make fresh stan and have chance to correct recent errors You ·11 also get to heart of matters where romance 1s concerned. u o. A Quan us pla) roles. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20..Feb. 18): Learn by teaching, follow through on first 1m prt'ss1o ns. realize you are going in nght d1 rect1on. Family reunion could be pan of exciting scenano. Money comes from surpnsc source. Cancer natl\ c pla}S role. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Perceive picture in its entirety-leave fine points. details fo r another time. You'll get news which could involve 1nt·rea!>ed social act1v1ty, travel. Excellent for adding to wardrobe. Gemini figures prominently. IF MAY 1' IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you may not be religious in onhodo>. sens.e. but )OU a re spiritual. New honzons open for you this year. you'll travel )ou'll study, you'll encounterexc1ung.. creative 1nd1v1dualsand you could fall madly 1n love Pisces, Virgo play important roles in your life. You will be free of obhgauon which was not your own in first place. You are sensual. afTecuonate. stubborn. and you cannot hve without love. August will tx· memorable for you an 1986. Roadrunnerdoesn 't go 'beep, 'it clatters That h1rd c.:allcd the roadrunner rap1dl) rattles 11s heak.. It doc'> not go "bet>p beep:" as 1n the t.anoons. but "clatter. cla uer " If the mother needs help with the kids tht' fathe-r tends 10 stay with her 10 g1 \C' that help If she doesn't. he docsn't This 1s not a Lo"e and War man llt'm. e"actl). It's a snent1fic da1m about all animal species. "The malt• 1-. usually monogamous. 1f the female " r('liant and usually polyg.a· mou-. it llw tcmalc 1'> ~1f • .,uffic1ent " l..,oml· ner'e' in ~our hod) arc ,111\.\l'I than otht•r., to transmit .\pain 1n ~our tot· -\lgm1led at a hall mile per hour -can take several second\ to gl'I tc1 \c1ur <,p1nal cord <) HJ ' can' \atdhtc piece'> falling h;ll I. tu l·anh e' cr hit an' txxh '' \ \ ( 11han rnv. got dc)bhcrt•<l um l' T h.11 'all \O far U I lo\' ta .. 1 1.Jn an l'lk'" antkr's ~ruv." \ llalt an 11llh a <la' t) I ,,~ . ., an' h<kl' lo.nov. the a"t'rage h1rth "eight ot a gonll<t ' \ Thai·-. 4 n<>unth 14 ountt'' ~ hcrl' "'omen v.ere sea rec the) got the \Otc earl\ In \\-~oming. for inc;tancc .\nd tht' women on Pll· 1.a1rn\ l\land -"'ht'rc the Bount) muti neers '><'I up their lllllc ~O'-'Crn- PEOPLE L.M Bo YD meot -got tht' vote in 1818. the first women to do so in an} Enghc;h- speak1ng t·ountr) on earth Q Which S pre!>1dent~ said 1t was unconst11u11onal to declare Thanl.sgl\ ing a na11ooal holiday" .\ Thomas Jefferson. Andre"' Jackson and Zachary Ta)lo r .\ ckvcr convict who went over the wait 10 bloodhound country escapt'd the dogs s1m pl) by weanng another man's shoes to then' er and changing to hi\ own shoes on the other side .\n authorit> on Peru wntend'> lour out offive men who hold down !>tead y JObs there have m1stressc'i Dcsen air 1\ too hot for tl1gh1 t'' 1dt'ntl'.t Mo\t dcsen IO'i<.'l t\ Lan't fl) Bank" \Ort 1.000 or mort' l ht't l..'> a minute L.M. Boyd C'olumnl•t. Is a ~yodlc11t~d Why don 't we all just go barefoot?· O h please. Surely hosiery manufa<:turcrs aren't senous about putting scams in the front of hose this spnni. It's bad t'nOolh to have your grandmotht'r's lt'gs hanging o ut from undt'r yo ur dress hkt' a basrchef map of Brazil without dividing them into fours. I am old enough to remember when seams snaked up the back of your legs. It was terrible. If they slipped off ccntt'r. you looked hkt' you had been in the saddle too long. ff they veert'd ofT 1n d11Terent d1rect1ons. )-our legs looked llkt' a si de of tx-C'f being scct1ont'd off for the freezer. And hav<.' you any idea what the odds are of havins a run m rach leg follow tht' path of the seam down to your heel? There's a whole generatton ofwomt'n out there who blouse at the knt't's. We don't need hosiery that sparkle. shimmer, have buttt'rl11es on the calf or arrows made out of rhinestones. We're looking for some nice firm sa usage casings that sack up the legs and cut our losses around the waist area Instead. we ha'e as man) dcc1s1ons regarding hos1el)' as we will make 1n a hfet1mt'. Knee-hi or th1gh-h1? OpaQUt' or tummy control? Barefoot or cotton crotcb'l Bik1n1 or wide load? Dcs1~ner or embryo 1n an egg? A. 8 or XX . I was returning socks to my husband's drawer the other day and noted. "How come men never strt'ss out making cho1ct's of what M>Cks 10 ~car,., .. "I have choices,'' he said. "09 I want to wear the brown ~ock with the black sock or the navy one with the beige'>" "Don't 'itan wit h me about the odd sods again.'' I said. "If l'\e told you onct' r ,e told you a m1lhon times - there-1s a Bermuda Tnanglc some- E11A BOllECI where with thousands of s1nale \{)Ck float1ni around." "Or I could mix a hnl-<O\<erTd wd. ~1th one that was laundertd wrona· side out " "The point." I said. "1~ your sock~ never chnnge ... ccntuf} aOer l't'n· tury .. "That 1s because men are not vain and do not feel the n~ to call attention to pans of our body that are better ofTlefi a secret. We arc perfectl} happ)' to have a nice. warm. com· fonablt' sock that will keep our vancose 'cins warm." " · He htt a nervt' •• 1 thank It ha'i deeper psychological roots than that!" I said. breathing he3'-'ll)-. "I think men have a low threshold of pain. They can't stand the burden fa shion imposes upon them Do not judge us until you have walkt>d tn our pantyho!le that have no front or back Hold your tongue until )Ou wear our knCt'·h1''i m a fitting room tr)1ng on a bathing suit. Hold back )Our sobs while you shp on a pair ofS6 hose for the first ttme and watch a hole spnng over the knee. Socks will never be unisexual. You know why? Men can't handle them. They're weak1" "I can handle pain.'' he said. holding up a pair of socks. "The) 're the onl) pair I have that match ... and there's a hole in the toe .. If you think you're slipping, you 're not DE .\R .\NN LANDERS: I'd like to quote Sandy Rovner. who wrott' \Ometh1ng in the Washington Post recently that I believe I!> well wonh rt'peating I cenaml) \a"' myself in her amclc and I'll bet millions of others"' 111 ..cc themselves. too So man) of us fear Alzheimer's disease that 1t has us worried sick. Rovner wrote: "Try to remembt-r. Did you lose your car kt'ys today? Did you panic because you thought. 'Ah-ha! There they go. another hundred thousand brain cells zapped! Senili ty 1s setting m! This 1s the end!" "Slop a minute. Have you ever lost your car keys before? How old were you? 20? 30? 16? Did you think then that 11 was all over? Of course not. So what made the difference? "One of the problems. according 10 memory expen Robin L. West. psycho logy professor at the Univer- si ty ot Florida. is that people hear so much about the memory defici ts of aging that they lock them sci ves into an inappropriate mindset. They for· get all tht' memory failures they had when they wcrt' young and are unable tu assess their normal fa1hngs an a reahsuc hght "When memory failures occur. no matter what the reason. 1t usually is all11buted to atting 1f the person who makes the mistakes is older. If a young perso n makes the same mis· take. we say It is caused by memory u'erload. ('I have too many things to think about nght now' or ·1 should have wntten It down.') ometimes the} la) 11 on a health problem ('I have a headache or rm recovering from the flu')." I hopt' you will pnnt my letter. Ann. It may bnngcomfon to many in your reading audience who. like me. were sure before I read 1t that I was getting '\lzhe1mer's or JUSt platn addled at an earl\ age. -BETSY FROM Attte lAIDERS BETHESDA. DEAR BETSY: I'm sure your letter scored a bullseye wltb a great many readers. AaoU1er comlorUag tbougb1: People wllo are 1ettlll1 AJl.llelmer's or 1olll1 bonllers are almost never aware of tbe symptoms. la fact, tbey are tbe last ones to reallle that tbey are not ~bavlllg ID a aormal way. So, if you tblllk yo.'re goln1 a bit loony, chances are tat you aren't. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: A recent column greatly dis1resscd me. You told a bereaved widow whose friend kept sending over undercooked casseroles and freeier-burned meat to tell "Mrs. G reathean'' to please g.ive the food to folks who were truly needy. Bad advice. Ann. The need y don't want 1l. They want nounshment. not garbage. She should thank the woman politely and throw it out. My dad ran out on us in the depths oft he Depression, leaving my mother to.raise nine kids alone. People gave us a lot of spoiled meat. rotten vegetables and bad fish. We threw 11 all out and made do wtth what we C!>uld raise 1n our µrden and were gi ven by the Catholic Chant1es. . People insult the poor when they g1v~ them food they wouldn't put o n their own tables. -KENOSHA READER. DEAR KENOSHA: Well said. A good rule of thumb: If you wouldn't ~rve 1t to yourow.n family, don't give It to anyone else.L Joan Rivers cancels Letterman gig By tht Auoclated Pren NEW YORK -Comedienne J oan Riven. "'hose new late· night show this fall will challenge Joltuy Canon on his homt' ground. has canceled an appear- ance on NBCs "Late Night With David Letterman," which 1s co- produced by Carson's production company R1vt'rS :ind Letterman agreed that she'd come o n his program 10 the fall . which would be after sht' started her own show ... , he latt' Show tamng Joan Riven." Rivers '"II appeared as the sole aues~ on the syndicated "Donahue" talk show this week Dolly rebound• NEW YORK -Country sina· er Dolly Pa.rtea was so depressed a few ytars q o that \he put her career on hOld and even con· templattd suiadet~~! sa_)'s. Her problems ocpn an 1982. when health problems forced her 10 canctl some coocens and th~t prompted some Ja.su1ts, she said an 1 rciccnt tntcrveew with Ladies' Joan RIYera Jlomt Journal She also rCUl\ed death 1hreat~ and was 1n the m1d<it offam1I)' problems. ihe said Dolly Parton "It wa\devast.at1n1tobe1n ttull depressed \late of mind." he said ·1 don'1 think I'd have done It. killed myself. but I can't say for sure. "I have greater wisdom now, more tolerance and patience for people who are struggling With liquor o r drug& or suicide or being in pnson." Parton. 40, who sturcd 1n the movies "9 to S" and "The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas," s~ud she 1s happier now thnn she's ever been. Diana'• denial LONDON -Pnnccss Diana has authonzt'd a den11I oh rcpon 1n the na11onal-c1rculation neW$- paper T oclay that she 1s cxpcctina a third baby. The newspaper said that che 24- yar-old pnncess is expectin& a bib)' in November. but aides a«<>mpen >•na the pnncc s and her hu band, Pnnce Qarla, LO Japan quickly moved to deny the SlOf}' Diana and J7-year-old Charles, who mamed in 1981 'have two c1uldren -Prince wiluam bom on June 21. 1982, and Prioce HArry born on Sept. I S. 1914. FORCE THE S IUlEN0£1l :-..t•1tht•r vulnc>rable North dt!al11 NORTH •QJ' "K 98 A 5 4 •AKQJ EA81' • K 7 6 3 '7 A63 ~ 0 K 6 2 •74 SOUTH ... QJl064 QJ 10 • 10 9 3 2 l'h,• 1111!111111( North F.att I• Pai.Iii t NT PalJl!I 3 Pa111• Pu111 Pau 8outh 0 1wn1n1t lt'ltd ~lllt' of _, Wut Pan Pan Pau Wlll'n you haVf' lonl( trump~. w1nn1111( dcfrnse oftl'll t•onsists of forcing declarer to ruff and fatall y weaken hts trump holding F,ast ex plo1tt•d that pnnc1plP J)('rfectly on this hlmd from a recent tournament Once South f'll(·tted delayed heart support from his partner. he cho!«' the suit game because of his -.inglPton With a more fortunate trump break. a winning diamond fine: se or les~ 1nsp1rt>d defense, he would ha' e t·oasted humc Wt•st 's diamond lead was ducked to Eas t ·s king, and ht> took som.- Um(' to ronsider thP possibilities. From tht' lead and tht> high cards on the table, it was obvious t hat tht.'n· W(:re nu more tnt k:, to be had from the minor s uits Besides the CHARLES GOREN 010 SHAllF trump ace, the defenders woul< have to l(et either two spade trtclo or a spade and a second trump. I declarer held the ace of spades, the contract could not be beaten Th<>rProre. East based his defense on his p{lrtner holding the ace-o: s pades, and his plan Included the possibility that dedarer held onl) a smgleton spade. . At trick two he shlfn?d to tht king of spades! When that held East needed only for his partner tc hold on(' trump to be sure of de- feating the contract. He continuec with a low s pade. Declarer ruffec and led a trump to the king and ace East continued with another spadE to force declarer down to threE trumps. and his long trump provec to be the setting trick Note that a shift to a low spadt would not do. West would win thE ace and t'ontinue the suit. Oeclare1 would rurr out East's· king, and hE would still have a spade control Ir dummy '::~::;~' S©"-otl~-"ctrs· WOii . .... 141••tl ~) CLAY l ,OLUN ------ 0 ••o"o"g• le"•'• of rhe I°"' IC'O"'b ed WO•dl t.. low •o fo,.,. lov• 1°mole -·d• I C l 0 B T H I I I I I I' I C U E E 0 I .. I r I I I I " . M' U P J y I I r I One grad 10 anothef Yep fl s lcke my uncle said A good llduca· lion 1s lhe neirt t>est thing 10 a -- mother I· s p y U R Y I e Co••'"" '" '"'"" •·••d 1~ I I I I bf I II "II " lh• m "'"9 wV'dl ' <l•••'oc l•o"' ,,.P No l bel0w 9 r11,•.1 '· ll>'e f Vf:J ,1!l[Pj •N 'Hf'( 'i•.-v .. ers e UN~rllAMf f Aer..i[ lf11£RS 1:, C.f I At<SWtP TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACR088 1 Hall pref 5 Flower part 10 Steal 14 Roman god 15 Parallelize 16 Trademark 17 China pref 18 Monaco town 20 Attitude 22 Jacket lype 23 Stranger 24 Ouoles 26 Wither 27 Canaries 30 Ogre ~ Narcotic ~5 Comrades 36 Scud 37 Curve 38 OeduC1 40 Fashloo 4 1 Prospector s quest 42 Card game 43 Flo.,oed 45 KnotteJ 47 Swearers 48 Eliminate 49 Bow Fr 50 Suppressed 53 Body par1 54 Billiard shot 58 Busy road 61 Nut 62 Unfre- quenled 63 Fur pioneer 64 Cut lllm 65 Debtor 66 Noblllly 67 S11tstas DOWN 1 Impudence 2 Gtve off 3 -Lisa 4 Foolproof 5 Card game 6 Weds quietly 7 Spikes 8 Theater gp 9 Shelter 10 Valleys 11 Jehovah 12 Give lhe eye 13 Marsh 19 Small change 21 Feat 25 Bargained ~Sad 27 "Rur" role 28 -glass 29 Sheets 30 Entangle 31 Oarlock 32 Sea duck 33 Orchestra section 35 Nolebook 39 Sprout 40 Wrong 42 Lurk 44 Calla 46 Mefchant 47 Seize< 49 Fry 50 [)..Day town 5 1 In a llM 52 Popular song 53 Mlalay 55 Soft drink 56 Boat mooring 57 Chow 59 Senl~ 60 Vocal Msltatlons __. nm PAMILY CIRCUS by Bii Ke~ne "Old people get bent over so they can look at their grandchildren. by Brad Anderson LOST and FOUND "I assume you're looklng for your master. Well, he wasn't turned in here." PEANUTS IF VOU GET LOST IN ™E WOOOS, ONE ™IN6 '<OU CAN DO 15 CLIMB TO ™E TOP OF A TREE TO-SEE Wl-IERE VOU ARE .. GARFIELD TUMBLEWEEDS DRABBLE ROSE IS ROSE CONRAD WILL NOW ~ DEMONSTRATE FOR US MOW ™15 IS DONE ... ~· -- "'? rr~ HOT" ~re ao. CR ~IH ... fT'S 9nU.. 1 GOM-~. . . BIO GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP) -... . . .. . '~ , "' -1f" "Where c•n I find th• get·well cards?" DENNIS THE MENACE ' I I by Hank Ketcham by Charles M. Schulz by Jim Davis OUCN t GUrT 11' I OUCM ! ~ CUT 1'NA'f OUT' I i ~~\\~ ~ ) I by Tom K. Ryan by Kevin Fagan by Pat Brady BLOOll COUNTY U.S. ACRES POR BETTER OR POR WORSE SHOE JUDGE PARKER rr's R SEPO'liFU.. ~ M\Off.L. I lAffi'\ yvv 1l> SffiV OOTT~ ~ GE:'T"'SOtJE. A'ESH A\Rt excuse Me .,.evr I 'M L.OOKING FOR MR. DRIVER.A l.AWYERI DO 'IOC.J KNOW WHERE I CAN FINO HIM ?,._ ... ,flt~-·~ FUNKY WINKERBEAN CX)t.l'i ~I I.ES •-l'f't\ SORE USA WIU..€V~ 6€1" OOER ~BREAKING OP~ UER.! DOONESBURY f by Lynn Johnston' Q<. .. CPNI CDt'EIN ~'? by Jeff MacN&lly by Harold Le Ooux I AGREE WITH YOU, SAM I THE KIO eEL.ONGS IN A HOSPITAL VllHE~E SME CAN ee DE· TOXIFIEO 1 t •U.. SEE WHAT WE CAN ~ OUT• I\.L. CALL. THE r------~ F>EOPl..E OVER AT excuse ME A MOMENT I JUVENIL.E I HERE•S Hl!A MOTHER 8VT~7 IQlfM$A MINOR.fTY~ I NOW! by Tom Batluk by Gary Trudeau AFRAIONOT AU MY 8AJt:ER5 AR£Ki)R/:AN I WT IN KORE.A I ,,. • • ~ ... COMt DAILY PILOT/ Thunlday, M~ 15, 1988 f'rtd~, May H ARJES (March 21 -Aptil 19): Emouons tend to rule -t'mphas1s on romanct', ability to Jet to hcan of matters. You'll make new stan. you'll gain added recognition and greater independence. Leo, AQuanus play oumanding roles. TAURUS (Apnl 20.May 20): Spotlight on security. land. ability to perceive long-ranac opPonunity. Family member 1s on your side. will prove at. lntu1tton rings true. Cancer nauve shows way to obtain genu1nt' bargain. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Diversify. g1vt' full play to intellectual curiosity. Emphasis also on close neigh- bors. relauves. surpnses. gifi package reprcsenung token of afTect1 on . Hon:zons expand. long-distance call will be reason for optimism. CANCER (June 21 -July 22): Check details. read fine print. realize you arc SYDNEY 0MARR o n verge of s1Jnificant discovery. Mo ney picture bnghter than originally anticipated Payment is made in your behalf -represents ''gift." Scorpio plays role. LEO <J~ly ~3-A.~g .. 22):. Be ready. for change, travel, variety and what .. could be a ·senous fl1nat1on. Get ideas on paper, know that you gain through wnuen word. Gemini, Virgo, Sagittarius people play outstanding roles. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Major domestic adJUStment could include actual change of residence. serious consideration of marital status. Look behind scenes for ke} data. Individual you aided in past is ready 10 return fa,or. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Scenario highlights mystery, intngue, glamor. Be discreet. romance will flourish, play cards close to chest. Wish rnmes true sn unonhpdox manner. Pisces. Virgo natives figure in dram atic fa shi on. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Emphasis on power. intensity. loyalt~ detennanauon. sensuality. You have chance to ''strike it rich." LOH' relationship will grow stronger. Cancer native and Capricorn will figure sn dramatic fashion. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21 ): Finish what you start. look beyond the 1mmed1ate. realize what had been missing will soon be present. Spotlight on tra\CI, basic instincts. yearning for knowledge. You'll get recognition long o'erdue. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Avenues previously closed wall be opened -you'll make fresh stan and have chance to correct rece nt erroRI You'll also get to hcan of matters where ro mance is concerned. Leo. Aquarius pla} roles. . AQUARIUS (Jan. 20..Feb. 18): Learn by teaching. follow through on first 1mpress1ons. realize you are going an right d1rect1on. Family reunaon could tx· pan of exciting scenario. Money comes from surprise source. Cancer nau' r plays role. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Perceive picture in its-entirety-leave fine points. details for another time. You'll get news which could an\'olve increased social activity, travel. Excellent for adding to wardrobe. Gem1n1 figures prominently. IF MAY 16 IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you may not be religious in onhodo'< sense. but }OU are spiritual. New horizons open for you this year. you'll travel. you'll study, }ou'll encounter exciting. creative individuals and you could fall madly 1n love. Pisces. Virgo play important roles in your life. You will be free of obhgat1on which was not your own in first place. You are sensual. affectionate. stubborn. and you cannot live without love. August will be memorable for you an 1986. Roadrunnerdoesn 't go 'beep, 'it clatters That bird called the roadrunner rap1dl) rattles 11s beak. It docs not go "beep beep," as in the cartoons. but "dauer. clauer ... If the mother needs help with the kids. the father tends to stay with her to g1\C' that help. If she doesn't. he doesn't This 1s not a Love and War man item. exactl) It's a sc1ent1fic claim about all anamal species "The male 1s usually monogamous. 1f the fe male 1s reliant. and usual!} polyga- mou\. if the female '" '>elf-sufficient." \Oml' ll l'f\e" in \Our hod\ arc 'ilov.cr than others 10 iransm1t A pain in \our t<w -r,1gnaled at a hall mile pt•r hour - can take several o;ccond'i to get to 'nur ... p1nal cord. (.) Ha\e am '>atd l11c pu:ce'i lalhng hjd, to earth l'' er hat am h<x.I) '' \ .\ C uhan '-o"' got dobh<'rcd nnl't' 1 hat'' all 'iO far <) ltov. ta\! lan an elk"• antlt•r"; grov. ., .\ 11.ilf an inch a da\ <.) D1K''i an\h()(I\ knov. thea,l·rage h1nh "'t•ight ot a gon lla'' .\ r h~ll'<i 4 pound\. 14 OUOlC\ \.\here v.o mc n were scarce. the) gm thl' \Ci te earl~ In Vt :tom1ng. fw 1no;1anet: \nd the women on P11 - \.J 1rn·., !\land -v.here the Bount) mutineers 'iet up their little go\Cm· PEOPLE L.M. Bo YD ment -got the vote in 18 ~8. the first women 10 do so in any English- speakang country on earth Q Which .S presidents <.aid 11 v.as uncons11tut1onal to declare Thanksg1.,.1ng a nauonal hohda}'' .\. Thomas Jefferson. >\ndrcv. Jackson and Zac hary Ta~ lor A. clever convict who went over the ""all an bloodhound country escaped the dogs s1mpl} by weanng another man's shoc'i to the nver and changing to h1'i uv. n shoes on the other '>Ide A.n authont\ on Peru con1cnc1<. four Out offi\e men who hold down stcadv JObs there have m 1stresse!.. · Desert air 1c; too ho t tor lhgh1 c' 1dentl) "vtost desert insect'> 1.:an·1 n, Bank'> '>Ort 1.000 or more chel k<. a minute L.M. Boyd columnist. is II syndicated Whydon'tweall just go b8.refoot? Oh please. Surely hosiery manufacturers aren't senous about p1.tttina seams tn the front of hose this spnng. It's bad enough to have your grandmother's legs Jiang.mg out from under your dress hke a basrclief map of BraL1l without dividing them into fours. I am old enough to remember when seams snaked up the back of your legs. It was temble. If they slipped otT center. you looked hke you had been in the ~ddle too long. If they veered o fT in different directions. your legs looked like a side of beef being sectioned ofT for the freezer And have you any idea what the odds are of having a run 10 r ach leg follow the path of the scam down to your heel? There's a whole generation o f women out there who blouse at the knees. We don't need hosiery that sparkle, shimmer, have butterflies on the calf or arrows made out of rhinestones. We're looking for some nice firm sausage casings that sack up the legs and cut our losses around the waist area. Instead. we have as man} dec1s1ons regarding hosiery as we wait make 1n a lifetime. Knee-hi or th1gh-h1? Opaque or tummy control? Barefoot or cotton crotch'> Bak.int or wide load? Desi~ner or embryo in an egg? A, 8 or XX. I was returning socks to my husband's drawer the other day and noted. "How come men never stress out making choices of what socks to wc:ar'l" "I have choices," he said. "Do I wan110 wear the brown sock with the black sock or the navy one with the beige''" "Don't -.tart with me about the odd socks again." I said. "If I've told you o nce l'\e lOld you a million times - there is a Bermuda Tnangle some- 1'r . E11a ~ • Bo11Ec1 i .:.. L where with thousands of single socks floating around." "Or l could mix a lint-covered sock with one that was laundered wrong- side out." "The point," I said. "is your socks never change ... century after cen- tury." "That 1s because men arc not vain and do not feel Lhe need to call attention to pans of our body that arc better ofTleft a secret. We arc perfectly happy to have a nice, warm, com- fortable sock that will keep our varicose veins warm." He hit a nerve. "l think 11 has deeper psychological roots than that!" I said, breathing heavily. "I think men have a low threshold of pain. They can't stand the burden fashion imposes upon them. Do not judge us until you have walked in our pantyhose that have no front or back. Hold your tongue u ntil you wear our knee·h i's in a fitting room trying on a bathing suit. Hold back your sobs while you slip on a pair ofS6 hose for the first tame and watch a hole spring over the knee. Socks will never be unisexual. You know why? Men can't handle them. They're \t!eak!" "I can handle pain." he said. holding up a pair of sod..s. "They're the onl} pair I have that match ... and there's a hole in the toe." If you think you're slipping, you 're not DEAR ANN LANDERS: I'd hke to quote Sand> Rovner. who wrote something in the Washingto n Post recently that I believe 1s well worth repealing I certain!) saw m~self m her an1cle and I'll bet m1lhons of o thers will see themselves, too So many of us fear Alzheimer's disease that 11 ha~. us worried sick. Rovner wrote: "Try to remember. Did you lose your car keys today? Did you panic because you thought. 'Ah-ha! There the~ go. another hundred thousand brain cells zapped! Sen1ht} 1s setuns in! This is the end!' "Stop a minute. Have you ever lost ~our car keys before? How old were you? 10? 30? 16? Did you think then that 11 was all over? Of course not. So what made the difference? "One of the problems. according to memory ellpert Robin L. West. psycholog} professor at the Un1 ver- Sll) ot Flonda, is that people hear so much about the memory deficats of aging that they lock themselves into an inappropriate mindset. They for- get all the memory failures they had when they were young and arc unable lo assess their normal failings in a reahstac light. "When memory failures occur. no matter what the reason. at usually is allributed to a$ing if the person who makes the mistakes is o lder. If a young person makes the same mis- take. we say 1t is caused by memory v' erload. ('I have too many things to thank about nght now' or ·1 should hav<' wntten 1t down.') Sometimes ihey lay 1t o n a health problem ('I have a headache or I'm rccovenng from the tlu')," l hope you will pnnt my letter, Ann. It may bring comfort to m any in your reading audience who. hke me. were sure before I read 1t that I was getting .\lzhe1mer's or JUSt plain addled at an earl\ age. BETSY FROM A1111 UllDERS BETHESDA. DEAR BETSY: I'm sure yoar letter scored a bullseye wltb a great many readers. Aaotller comfortlag thagllt: People "fllo are getting Alz.laelmer'1 or going bonkers are almost aever aware of tlle symptoms. Ill fact, tbey are tbe last ones to realize tbat tbey are not bebavl•§ ID a norma l way. So, if you tblok yH re goillg a bll loony, cba.oce1 are tlaat yoa aren't. ••• DEAR ANN LANDERS: A recent column greatly distressed me. You told a bereaved widow whose friend kept sending over undercooked casseroles and freezer-burned meat to tell "Mrs. Grcatheart" to please g.ave the food to folks who were truly needy. Bad advice. Ann. The needy don't want it. They want nourishment, not garbage. She should thank the woman politely and throw it out. My dad ran out on us m the depths of the Depression, leaving my mother to raise nine kids alone. People gave us a lot of spoiled meat. rotten vegetables and bad fish. We threw it all out and made do with what we c~uld raise in our ~rden and were given by the Catholic Chan ties . . People insult the poor when they g1v~ them food they wouldn't put on their own tables. -KENOSHA READER. DEAR KENOSHA: We ll said. A good rule of thumb: If you wouldn't ~rve It to your own family. don't.gave 11 to anyone else.L Joan Rivers cancels Letterman gig By the Associated Press NEW YORK -Comedienne Joan Rivers, whose new la1e- n1ght 'iho w this fall will challenge J ohnny Carson on his home ground. has canceled an appear- ance o n N BC"s "Late Night W11h David Letterman." which is co- pr~uced by Carson's productton company. Ravers and Letterman agreed that she'd come on his program 1n the fall. which would be after she staned her own show. "The Late how uimng Joan Riven " River mll appeared as the sole a.uest o n the ~y nd1catcd r.Donahue" talk show thi week Dolly rebound• NEW YORK -Coun\ry ~1ng er Dolly Puwa wu so deprec;~ • few years 110 that she put her carttr o n hold and even con- templated suicide. she say,. Her problems bcpn 10 1982. when htalth problems forced her 10 can«l some concens and that prompled some la-suns, she said to 1 recent anttrvicw with Ladae~· Joan Rl•en Home Journal he al o received death thrtatc; and was 1n the mad\t offam1ly problems. she said. Dolly Parton "It wa'i de\•astat1na 10 be 1h that depmsed 'it.ate of mind,'' she said "I don't th10k I'd have done it. killed myself. but I can't say for sure. "I have greater wisdom now, more tolerance and patience for people who arc strualina with hquor o r drugs or suicide or bc1hg in pnson." Panon. 40, who starred in the movies "9 to S" and "The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas," said she is happier now than she's ever been. Diana'• denial LONDON -Princess Dla.u has authon1cd a denial ofa rcpon 1n the nauonal-drculation news- paper Today that she is cxpcctma a third baby. The newspaper said that the 24- ytar.ald pnnccss is c:xpcctin1 • baby 1n November. but aides aocompany101 the pnncm and her hu band. Prince O..riet. in Japan Quickly moved 10 den y the story. Diana and J J.year.ald Charles. who mamcd in 1981. have two children -Prince William bom 011 June l l, 1982, and Pri nee Harry born on ~PL 15. 19 •· t'ORCE THE UUEND£R !\t'tt.hcr vulnnabl<' North dtialR. NORTH •QJ ' \, K 9 8 >A 5 4 •AKQJ EAST WEST •At0832 'V 7 0 9873 • K 765 <:/AIS3 2 • 8 6 IS 0 K6 2 •74 SOUTH •9 : QJ 10 64 O QJ 10 • 10 9 s 2 'l'he bidding: North Ea1t t • PaH 2 NT Paas 3 9 Pu• Pu8 PaH South 1 \ 3 + '~· Opening lead Nine of :> West Pau Pa88 Pu8 When y~u have lung t rumps, winning defense often consists of forcrng declarer to ruff and fatally weaken his trump holding. East ex- ploited that principle perf('('.tly on this hand from a recem tournament. Once South elicited delayed heart support from his partner, he chose the suit game because of his singleton. With a more fortunate · trump break, a winning diamond fines e or less inspired defense; he would have coasted ho me West'' diamond lead was ducked to East's king, and he took. some time to consider the possibilities. From the lead and the high cards on the table, it was o bvious that there were no more tricks to be had from the minor suits Besides the CHARLES GOREii OMAR SHARIF trump ace, the defenders would have to get either two spade trtcks or a spade and a second trump. If declarer held the ace of spades, the contra,·t could not be beaten. There fore. East based his defen..'Je o n his partner holding the ace of spadeR, and his plan included the possibility that declarer held only a singleton spade. At t rick two he shifted to the king of s pades! When that held, East nN?ded only for his partner to hold one trump to be sure of d e· feat ing the contr act. He continued with.a to w ·spade. Declarer ruffed and led a trump to the king and ace. 1-:ast continued with another spade to force declarer down to three trumps, and his long trump proved to bt" the setting trick. Note that a shift to a low spade would not do. West would win the ace and continue the suit. Declarer would ruff out East's king, and he would sull have a spade control In dummy r::~;~;~' S©~~~-[J,£!fs• wou IUlll ltlitotl ..., CLAY I POUAN 0 ll•a"O"Q• '•"•'• ol "'• lour K•o,.,bled words be '--•o lo•"' 1011• s ,.,01• "'°'d• I CLOBT~ I I I I I 11 I CUEED I -,~,1 -1 ___.,, \ 11-__,,....M_U~P.......,J,__Y ....... -41'" One grad to another Yep.11 s I I IJ I hke my uncle said A good educa· 11on is lhe ne1Ct best thing 10 a -·· .---------..... mother I" I~ pl ~ IU RI Y I I 0 Co.,.01e•e •he ch~ckle Quoted . . . . . . . b• I I ·"9 "' Ire m•l .. "9 w0<d1 •" '38•t '<>D 1,.,.,, \leo No 3 De 0w C) UN~rliAMBlE .A81 Vf lflHPS TO Gf l AtlSWH > TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACR088 1 Hall pref 5 Flower part to Steal , 14 Roman god 15 Parallelize 16 Trademark t7 China· pref. 18 Monaco town 20 Attitude 22 Jacket type 23 Stranger 24 Quotes 26 Wllher 27 Canaries 30 Ogre 3<4 Narcotic :l5 Comrades 36 Scud 37 Curve 38 Deduct 40 Fashion 4 1 Prospector's quest 42 Card game 43 FIO"IDed 45 Kno11eJ 47 Swearers 48 Ellmlnate 49 Bow Fr SO Suppressed 53 Body part 54 81111ard shot 58 Busy road 61 Nut 62 Unfre- quented 63 Fur pioneer 64 Cul mm 65 Debtor 66 Noblllly 67 S1es1es DOWN t Impudence 2 Give ott 3 -Lisa 4 Foolproof 5 Cerd game 6 Weds quietly 7 Spikes 8 Theater gp 9 Shelter tO Valleys t 1 Jehovah 12 Give the eye 13 Marsh 19 Small change 21 Fast 25 Bergalned 26 Sad 27 "Rur'' role 28 -glass 29 Sheets 30 Entangle 31 Oarlock 32 Sea duck 33 Orchestra Mellon 35 Notebook 39 Sprout 40 Wrong 42 Lurk 44 Calla 46 Merchant 47 Selzer 49 Fry SO 0-0ay town 5 1 In a line 52 Popular aong 53 Mislay 55 Soll drink 56 Boat mooring 57 Chow 59 ~tenee 60 Voe.I hflitatlona • # Orange Coat OAlL Y, PILOT /Thurlday, Mey 15. 1111 M -----------------------------------------------------------------· by Bii Keane "Old people get bent over so they can look at their grandchildren. by Brad Anderson LOST and FOUNO "I assume you're looking for your master. Well, he wasn't turned in here." PEANUTS IF '(OU GET LOST IN T~E WOODS, ONE TMIN6 '(OU CAN DO IS CLIMB TO THE 10P OF A TREE TO SEE Wl-IERE VOU ARE .. CONRAD WILL NOW DEMONSTRATE FOR US l-IOW ™IS IS DONE ... GARFIELD TUMBLEWEEDS °™E WAR t'M'l'f"S ~NA MIP 'THE Sf. S1ANISL.AOS PARISH l!JU\160 HAU... DRABBLE R08EISR08E 6'i '? IT~ N0r CXWINt ~ l1' AQA~ ··~ fT'-S SflU, I l::::l:::::Cf SON-~ . ~· -- BIO OltOROE by Vlrgll Partch (VIP) -1r- "Where can I find the get·well cards?" DENNIS THE MENACE ~ S·l5' by Hank Ketcham by Charles M. Schulz S ••f C>••-·--· OM '-~-""--""'~--------' by Jim Davis OUCHt QUl'f l'f'l OUCM! ~ CUT TMA'T OUT! i -~\\~ ~ \I by Tom K. Ryan by Kevin Fagan by Pat Brady BLOOM COUKTY ~ 1 I , .... FOR BETT~R OR FOR WORSE JUDGE PARKER rrs f\ SEP(Jl°jfUL f?f!j, MOftL. I \AffiT yuv 10 srnv OOTT~ At'() ~SOtJE. ~AIR~ • i excuse ME ... euT I 'M l.OOKING FOR MR. ORNER,A LAWYER! DO 'l'OlJ KNQ\111 WHE"Re I CAN FINO HIM ?--.. -.. .... --t~ FUNKY WINKERBEAN DOONESBURY ' \ by Berke Bteethed by Jim Davis by l.ynn Johns1on by Harold Le OoU)c I AGREE WITH YOU. SAM' THE KIO eEL.0NGS IN A HOSPITAL WHERE SHE CAN BE DE- TOXIFIED I I 'LL see WHAT WE CAN WOfl'K OUT! I'LL CALL THE ,..------~ PEOPl...E OVER AT excuse NE A MOMENT! JUVENILE • HERE'S HER MOTHER NOW! by Tom Batluk by Gary Trudeau AFRAIONOT AU MY 8AJ<E:RS ARt KOREAN I , ··. AlO Orange COMt DAILY PILOT I Thutlday, May 15, 1N6 Teens should be kept away from Satanism The sixth graders at Golden View elementary school in Huntington Beach learned a lesson they hadn't counted on Friday: There are some seriously sick people out there. According to Huntington Beach police, 33 rabbits and chickens from the school's Student Environmental Leaming Center were tortured and dismembered in ways too hideous to repeat. The kids cared for the crea\ures as part of a program esu.blished under a federal gram to help urban children learn about rural life. The school farm also houses larger animals that were not attacked. The shock these children must have experienced when they discovered the gruesome scene is reason for outrage. But the fact that it is not an isolated incident is reason for serious concern. Every police department on the Orange Coast has received reports of similar incidents. though usuall y on a smaller scale. Small family pets disappear from yards or patios. Many are found dead, often mutilated or burned. in secluded areas. Though arrests in such cases are as rare as hard evidence, police speculate the culprits are teen- agers acung out some satanic ritual. One need remember back only as far as last summer when a Satan-worshipping murderer dubbed the "Night Stalker" terrori~ed the state to realize that there is more at stake here than Persian cats and Lhasa Apsos. The practice of Satanism among youngsters may be more social than religious. it may be a perversion of the common desire for peer acceptance and. in most cases, it may be a passing fancy. But it is dangerous. It holds the power to warp permanently the values of the young people whose lives it touches. A kid who can accept the infliction of torture on living things is not growing up normall y. He may not understand the concerns of others, and he may not be able to orient himself to commonly accepted social goals. And he's not likely to be someone )ou'd like to spend any ume around. It is the responsibility of every parent of every teen- ager to explain what Satanism is all about. Parents should be vigilant for signs of unusual behavior. They should know where their children go. whom they go wi th and what time the,,. come home. Responsible. ·caring supervision can save an impressionable teen from influences that could ruin his hfe and inJure others. Opinions expressed in this space are those of the Daily Piiot Other views expressed on this page are those of therr authors and artists Reader comment Is Invited The Daily Piiot. PO Box 1560. Costa Mesa. 92626 Phone 6•2-6086 Mooring penalties could resolve NB bay pollution l u thl' El.htor Thl 'ev.port Bc.tl h < 11unul l hamocro) v.c:rt• packed tu ht·ar the prc,c:nta11on ol the draft ol tht• ant horagt' .ind mooring ord1nann· recenlh In rc\1t•v.ing tht· dralt lht• mo<.l impo rtant tact\ 1n nn t'\t1ma11un did not appc:ar Th1c, 1c, 1ht• 11me 10 ind udt• lo haH a moo ri ng 11r '"P number 11 thl' hoat mu\t ~ rt•qum•d to h:n c J holding tank 2) tht• h<1t11 mu,t lx• ahk tn [1.l'l to a pumpc1111 \IJ IH>n. rn u't Ix opera bk to get to a pumpout station '\) an) boat caught d1c,charg1ng 11c, holding tank or head 1n the ba' .iutomat1call~ IO'>C'-"' mooring or Jo<.·k <,pace. The thought ot lo•11ng their lO' c11:d moonng or dock space "'ould he J g.rrater deterrent than an\ tint• and v.ould help 1mmeasurabl\ tov.ard tkaning ofl'<ev.pon Harhor .\l 'DRE\ C1Rl1NDY "Irv. pon Bea('h Advice to gay teen misses mark To 1ht• I J1 11w ..\nn l ~1nun-. 'I 2 ·'"'"l'r lor J g;I\ tern-ager"' ho .t\1-.' hnv. to rxplain h1' c;e·wal ont•ntatmn 111 ht' p<1rt•nt\ "a 1~ p1c:al "'v.t• don I k1111v. wh' But"" eva'ilOn ot th l0 lal I\ tc1 rll'rJXIUJll 1gnoranlc .rnd lh l' tratm Prill' mo\t \Oung people ha \c 1mpo<.t•d upon them O\ \0<'1Jl \loncv.a lling .\(cor<l1ng to lhl \mn1tJn .\cadem' of Pcd1a1 m' f '<Pl nm1:n 1a11on v.1th hommnual lxhil\ 11ir " l:ommon 1n 1he ll'en·Jg1: \l';tr\ a' a part ol tht• norm,11 ro ute le hrtcr o<,' JI Je,el11pnH·11 1 In lht '"'' aJOr t' nt ca W\ \Ill h t' m 1111 n ll'rc, c111 ot pr dl\po\t' 111 l.11n holll•l\l'\UJll t Homo\C·w.1li1 ' h.1, n1~11:J 1n rTIO'\I \OClellC'I \lnl l' lhl· hq11nntnl! 111 rt'corded h1\10r\ Jnd thl\ torm o l tx·ha' 1or 1\ r'lo ·1ongt•r u1n"dn1.·d ,1 mental d1<;or<kr "11nu• hnm°'n ual charactcnst1c'i oflen arc c tablt!ihcd before adolescence. parents are ad- vised to be alert for pos5ible ps )- ycholog1cal problems in children who rxpenence re1ect1on b\ their fncnds harac;sment or social 1solat1on be- cause of a homose,ual onentauon .. Landers. the media and c;oc1e1~ ha'e a respon4'1b1ht> to state thc~t· tacts and empha s11e mo'it e'el)one got·s through an adolescent homose\· u.it phase that wouldn't be the 1rauma11c horror 1t ha"i become 1f all pt•rc;on'i recogniLe this as an a'ipcct ol human se·rnaht} e'er) one ex- J')Cncncec; and. usuall~. during the 11rne onl"S sexual potential 1s at 1t!l mo.,t powerful phH1<.·al and mental RR llC F-~ llOPPI NC I l a~una Incarcerate parents, not kids To thl' Ed11or l"'t' t<1ken \Our paper lnr q111ll' " "'h1lc and undn~ 'VIJ' ·l I "•" readi ng the anidc ahout luH·n1k Hall tx'ing o\ercro""ded V. h' not ORANG£. COAST Daily Pilat JU\I put 1ht' parent\ in lht•rc'' l hr) arl' the ont''I 1h,ll arc to hlamc ,,.... llftl Ea.tor TMI Telt Mit"llg•no Ed•IOf Don,.., Cily Editor T-Cleftlft ~£d1t0t Cr ... aMft Se>ort1 Ed•10f P \ l l \R~ON < o"t:i Mr'la ~C ......... 41ft COn110liet ~L.CefltNll P•oducl.on M~~ TflffYKeMle C11el,l41tr0n Man'91f 14owllt4 ....... .., ~1rl!•l""G IN.CIOf C~~:-OI ''Youngergeneratlonshaveanlmporlant tskelnprogramstoa"ld th e elderly . · · CYRIL P. BRICUISLD Amat.can ~latlon of Red.red Pen I -mY IT.[. YOU'L ~It ... ! CD .. .. COMMENTARY --~ ~- Honorolder Americans as part of national (amily May h ave reached a n a rbitrary age, but they h aven 't s topped contributing By CYRIL F. BRICKFIELD Ma) has been proclaimed by Pres1- urn1 Rea~n as Older Amencan Month. a 11me to honor the increasing number of Americans over the age of tis Thl•re are now more than 28 m1ll1on of them. or nearly 12 perce nt of our popula11on. Pr0Ject1ons are that this group will continue to increase. panicularl) v.hen the so- called "baby boomers" begin 10 reach 65 around 2010. B' 2030. 11's ex- pected that there will be about 65 million older person'\. or 21: times their number 1n 1980 But numbers don·1 tell us e'~r) thing about the older population In fact the:-ma)' tell us 'ery little For who are these people. really" Quttc s1mpl} they're our fathers and mothers. grandparents. auntc; and uncles. and our friends. They'vt• seen this country through the flu cp1dem 1c of 1918. the Depression. the Great Wars .. and th e "Landy Hop." the conquest of polio. and the economic progress of the 1950s. They've v.orked hard. bot~ 10 earn a hvang fo r their fam1hes and for the sense of Jo~ that comes from gi vi ng of themsel've'\ w11hout expecting any- thing 1n return. They persomf)' both the work ethtc and the volunteer sp1nt that huilt this country. But we honor them not at all if we think only of their past contribu11 ons. Just because they've reached an arbitrary age doesn't mean the) 've stopped contributing to our society Now that mandatory rcuremcnt Jaws ha ve been eased. many older persons are s111l working 1n full-or pan-time JObs. And many. many more arc finding new ways to serve their families and communities. Groups like the Amencan Assoc1a- t1on of Retired Pesons provide them opponun111es to get involved 1n s1gn1ficant community service ac- t1 v111es. everything from energy con- servauon to atd for abused children and the widowed. And older c1uzens are taking the lead before Congress and the st.ate legislatures in advocat- ing for quality health care at af- fordable prices for everyone in this country. But as we all know, aging can bnng wtth 11 some very serious problems - health concerns. diminished financial resources. and isolation caused b} the loss of spouse or friends. In their later years. man)' older persons depend on government programs such as Social Security and Medicare 10 help them maintain a ,,. decent quality of hfe. A few cnt1cs of the~ programs arc now charging that older pt'rsons arc rcce1v1ng more than their fair share of help from our society and that resources should be redirected toward younger persons. What this argument fails to recogn1LC 1s tht' fundamental interdependence of gen - erations which underlies our s0C1al contract. Younger genera11on<1 have an 1m- ponant stake 1n programs to assist the elderlv. Not only will the> one da> benefit themselves. but programs hke Social Secunt} lessen the need for families to provide direct financial support to older persons. This means that more family rtsourccs can be directed toward other -younger - famtl) members These programs also make 11 poss- ible for older Amencans to remain independent and continue to serve all of us in the same spint of canng ihey've manifested since they guided us through our first school days. baffiing teen-age years a~d first JOb. We can honor older Americans best. during this special obscrvanct' and throughout the year. by rccoa.n11- ing lhem as our parents and grand- parents -as part of the Amencan family -and by alTording them the opportunity to continue to ~rve each of us. our communil1c!I. and our nauon. Cyril F. Brickfleld 11 uec•tive director or the American Auodatton of Retired Persons. Just when no tax reform seemed viable, Senate acts Pack wood's bi ll equals a n exciting step towa rd j us tice The only redeeming thing about Congress. a wag remarked only a few months ago. 1s that sometimes it does the unexpected The rule. 1n demo- cratic s1tuat1ons. is for parliamentary bodies to do that which 1s. not that which 1s not. expected. · But the sclerosis in Congress had be-come 'luch that. a mere week or so ago. the pubhc v.as convinced that nothing 1n the wa) of tax reform would be fort hcoming. notwithstand- ing the pubhc clamor for 11 For one thing. there were the infernal comphcat1ons. There was the Regan proposal (back when he wac; .. ccrctary of the Treasury), then there was the Reagan proposal. tht'n there was the House of Representative' propo~I You had to stay tuned 24 hour a day, with the appetitetodoso. exactly to remember which was the bill that said this about the de- prcc1at1on schedule and which was 1he bill that said that about state tax dcd1.1c11ons What happened. really. was a lesion of public 1ntere t The average Amen- can figured nothing was going to h3ppen At that moment. suddenly. under the lcade"h1p of Sen Bob Packwood. R-Ore .. the enatc Finance ( omm1Hec l>truck. Twenty to nothing! It is be}ond memory that an)' tax bill got that kind of cndorKment from a comm1tt~. The onl > cqu1valt'nt ..cnsat1on of recent memol') 1s the Gramm-Rud- man bill. which suddenl> came bt'fore the public. ri~ina hkc Venus from the ~a. unheralded. unclothed. and bcfon-you knew It. )'OU had Jes~ Helms and Tedd)• Kennedy voting for a bill that called for scheduled reducti on in federal spending aero ~ WILLIAM F. Bue KLEY the board (excluding certain sacred categones) if the bud~ct didn't match a scheduled reduction in deficits. Bang bang bang. and Gramm-Rud- man was the law of the land. So it is- as a staner -with the Packwood bill. Now 11 has a considerable way to travel. Under Senate rules, any mod1- ficat1on can be entertained on th e floor. and many will be. But the package has the feel of an artistic creation. defying 1mprov1sation. Few of us would resist the temp- tation. 1f we had the opportunity, to add JUSt that httle extra touch of blue. or to bend that bronze over jusf a little more thataway, or to chanf.e just slightly the shape of the nostri , when gi ve n a piece of art still malleable, fresh from the creator's fingers. And no doubt senators will attempt their modifications of the Packwood bill. And of course even 1f they do not 'lucceed. 1l will need to go into conference to get the collaborative acquiescence of the House But nght now. the inenia of that b1ll 1s as strong a!. that which has attached to any bill in rtcenl memory -which en- courage\ an asse~smt'nt of 11. however prtmature What 11 mo t e'c111na <ibout tht' Packwood bill 15 le s 11s economic conftaura11on than its 1mpltcd ph1losoph1cal prtm1 . There at"(' >\mencan ~onom1s1s and Amencan oc1al ph1loso pbers who would ar1ue for this pro' 1s1on of the bill or ap1nst 11. engagmg rtsptttful pubhc atten· li on. Dot' 11 make ~nw to d1'1COntinue futurt IRi\s at a ume when "-C att asking the people to take steps to look after their own retirement bentfits? Does 11 make sense to d1scont1nuc the investment tax credit at a 11me when we are womed about our trade imbalance, and desire more indus- trial development? And -most 1mPortan1 -are we. by building up the busi nes" tax (Packwood calls for a no--nonscnsc minimum business tax of20 percent. even though the maximum rate 1s reduced from 46 percent to 13 percent). subs1dmng a sle1gbt-of- hand by w~American wpayers dreamily assumt that because corpor- ations are ~y1ng the lax. they arc relieved of it'> There 1s a fair amount oftlw. kind of thing in the Packwood bill, lntlc sleights-of-hand. by which peoplc'c; attention 1s diverted. For instance, the top rate ofta,ation would now be 27 percent, but an individual who has a taxable income of$87.240 would be charged 27 percent beginnina with the first taxable dollar, ~ubs1itu1ina for the conventional formula whcreb)'. the h1~er tax rate is not levied until the higher income is reached: the result being that a "27 percent tait" on an individual earning $87,240 would not differ very much from the cxistina 1ax. which beains to charac SO percent but only af\er reo china the SSS.000 mnrk Bu t the cxc1t1ng aspect of the Packwood b11l 1s the dramatic rtduc- tlon 1n the marginal rate to 27 percent, which has philosophical 1mphcat1ons that !>hould be arccted with cnes of JOY· Tht' rccog~on thai high d1scrlm1natol') tauuon ap1nst the affiuent 1s a) cconom1cally stuJMd. and b) ph1loso~h1cally un~1se 1n a soc1et) that pndcs itself on equal treatment before the law The Pa k· wood bill 1 an cxc1t1na. proares •~ step toward economic ~nic and ph1losoph1cal JUsticx WUllam Bed.Jty 11 1 1pdlr1tr4 col•mal11. JACK AIDEISOI and JO SC PH SP£ AR Money failed to help Amazon WASHI NGTON -Overpaid, underworkcd officials in Washiaa. t()n. ~ttting m their plush offices a1most totally out of touch with tk real world. are often tempted to throw millions of dollars at a problem despite the urgent, knowledgeable warnings of underlings that open- handed spending may create more nuscl)' than 11 cures. That's prell)' much what's has>- pencd with the extravagant. ill- concel\ ed dc-..clopment plan called PolonorOt'ste 1 t was supposed to bnng progress and development lO Rondon1a. which 1s not a tin) European kingdom but a West Qn.. man-sized ~late in the far northwest of Braztl As the home of the vast, ecological~ ly fragile Amazon rain forest, Ron- don1a is about as far removed from the carpeted, a1r-<:onditioned offices of World Bank poohbahs as it is possible to get without a rocket ship. And the disastrous outcome of W Polonoroeste prOJCCl shows 1t. Most of the World Bank's $500 million contribution to Polonorocs~ -one-fif\h ofwhichtS"guannteed by U.S. taxpayers -has gone into a paved hi,hway through the heart of Rondon1a. According to en- vironmental experts and others fam- 1har with the project. this was a badly misplaced pnont). It opened up hU&e areas to a headlong rush by Brazil's tandless poor, who were lured on by government propaganda promisina fertile farmland for hm1tJcss numbnt of settlers. The reaht) the poverty-stncket'l p1oneen encountered was a cruel disappointment. Most of the rain forest land 1s hopelessly infertile. unsu11ed even 10 subsistence fannina. Most of the httle arable land Wll5 alrtad)' held by large pnvate owncn. who wanted cheap help, not com- pe1111ve '.f'eomen So. unhkt' the sod-busten who foll owed their dreams into the Great Plains of the United States a century ago. the Brazilian settlers found land that couldn't suppon their families. p1t1fully overburdened health ser- vices and rampant violence. There ha vc been re pons of enslavement and the disappearance of entire families. 'itaff spec1al1sts at the World Ban.k warned that a disaster was tn the malung. but their advice was un- heeded b) top officials. "Most of the soils are infertile 1n lhe1r present st.ate. all the nutnenu being locked 1n the growing forest and deca) ing l11ter... explajned one in ternal report. "After clearing and hummg, these nutnents are relea!ed. hut the soils do not have the phy11caJ and cht'm1cal capability to retain them." But the compos1t1on of soil was too grubby a subject for the h'Ch muckamucks in their gilded offices . World Bank officials told our as- sociate Donald Goldberg that there are areas of "exceptionally 1ood soil'i" in the rain forest that could su~tain .. uch 1rce crops as coffee. Outs1dt.• er11ics and the bank's ltafT ex pens strongly disagree. "The sugaestjon ... that tree CTO'J>S arc capable of providing a sustainable production 'iystcm for a fairly lara.c proportion of the area docs not accord w11h ~servations expressed by research workers in Brazil," one internal report stated. '"The soils of the Amazon area as a whole are generally poor:· another repon stated . "To use unproven technolotJesasa basis for agncultural seU~rM under extremely adverse soil oon- d111om would be a highly nsty undcn.iking and would prove d1sas-trou~ for the c;cttlcrs themselves. .. warned an early staff memo. But the wam1ng.c; were ignored and the World Bank encouraaed the Rru1han land ru h. Desperate ~ tiers keep clearcutt1na and bumina. dcstroyinJ an 1rreploceabte environ- ment in the vain hope offin~ina land wonh farmina. The disaster the cxpens warned about &rows worse by the day. FUOOL E F.\C'TORY The Bu. reau of -\lc:ohol. t obacco and Fi~ rm shpl)C'd up last year when ii turned to the CSOtt'OC samphn& Of wine Bureau sleuths were lookin_a for Austn3o wine contaminated wnh a po1sonou ~weettner better suited to bmkc Ou1d than wine. While they checkrd shipments that amvcd 1ftcr Jul) I themselves. they left 1t up to the 1mponcn to test their own WlntS pnor to then. But they ~ to compile a Im of finns s~ of 1mporun contaminated wiM. te they had no way to d<>u~heck &M rt-ulb Congress1onal 11td1tors sue-ac led tht' bureau u~ bt'Ucr \CStin& PNXcdUrr'\ Jut AflhnoJJ ud J~ SpMr .,t • odlcalftl nJl•m..altlJ. Angels let orie get a way, 8-5 Halos low ead: Jackson blasts ome run No. 537 By JOSEPH DUDEVOIR ......... C..1 011• I Kirk McCaskill deserved better . • The Aogels' startina pitcher for .even innings, outpi\ched Mr. io K himself, Roger Clemel)s of the Boston Red Sox and appeared to be sailin& to an easy win Wednesday night. But between the Boston bau and the Anael bullpen, all McCaskill got was the wind taken out of his sails. "Mr. Clemens didn't have bis best stuff," said Boston skipper John McNamara. "but he kept battling and kept us close enough to win it." The Anaheim Stadium crowd of 32,966 saw Boston score eight runs in the last three innings (six against the Angel relievers) for a comeback 8-5 win to saJvage the third game of the series before both teams leave town. Boston's Bill Buckner knocked in the go-ahead run with a single in the ninth off reliever T .R. Bryden. ''I guess things went our way," said Buckner. "It's nice for Roger to get a win even when he gives up some runs. "I was up there trying to bunt (with men on first and second), but 1 got a hit. We got the most out of what we had." Meanwhile, the Angels wasted Toda7'• 1ame None scheduled. FRIDAY'S GAME Aqeb (Witt 2-3) at Detroit (Petry 3-2). Time! 4:35 p.m. 11V: None . Radio: KMPC (710). McCaskill's etTon. After losing his last two stans, 4iving up 10 earned runs in 71/J mninp, McCaskill bounced back in fine form. Apinst Clemens, who on April 29 established an all-time mark for strikeouts in a game with 20, McCaskiU was up to the task, dueling K for K with the whitTkina. McCaskill ended up fanning nine, giving up seven hiu and walking only two in seven inninp of work. The Angels also squandered Regic Jackson's two-ruri. homer off Oemens in the ftrst inning. The blast to center gave Jackson his 537th career round-tripper and sole possesion of sixth place on the all- time list, ~ssing Mickey Mantle. Harmon Killebrew is next at 573. "I bjt a good pitch. I guess it was in my wheelhouse," said Jackson, without rus usual fire. ··1 guess I'm a little down. I felt we lost a game that I felt we had won." On Clemens, Jackson said: "As hard as he throws (97 mph), I was just trying to get my bat on the baJI. That (Pleue Me A1'0EL8, 82) Dick ScJaofleld la thrown out at Ont OD around ball (left) whUellegle Jacbon •trlkea f•mlllar poee after blttiJaC .......... ., ..... -..- blatorlc flnt-tnntna homer Wedae9day m,iat at A•t111i Stadium. Boeton battled back to wtn. a-a. Thompson to return to Marina after all Vikings' coach has second thoughts would be construed as such by district officials. leavmg Thompson wuh a staff of on- campus aides Donegan (the atblettc director) and Larry Doyle, as well as substitute teacher Tim Recd. Donegan on May 5 when the story broke. "I don't think he'll leave," I told Donegan, Thompson's top assistant, wbo wasn't convmccd. about decision to resign football post Nothin~ sends a burr under the saddle quicker, and if that's how SuJ>c:rintendant Marie Otto o r her ch1efadvisers saw 1t. chances were slim that Thompson would be back. Despite four trips to the Cl F Big Five semifinals in the past five years and an overall record of58-32-4 against k.illerscbedules, the situation had all the ingredients of a loser. By ROGER CARLSON OftlleO..,Not ..... Manna H1gh still has a footbaJI coach -Dave Thompson has re- considered his recent resignation, one which never was accepted by the Vikings' principaJ, Ira Toibm. 'Tm going back." Thompson said. 'Tve had pretty good suppon from other teachers, parents. boosters and my assistant coaches, and some of the issues arc resolved. "My staff will remain intact with the re tum of Mark Rehling (to the Vikings' campus, as opposed to his current post at Huntington Beach). SteTeSaz Hanan, Glenn top all-county volleyball team Edison High senior Danny Hanan and Chargers Coach Dan Glenn have been selected Orange County Player and Coach of the Year, rcspect1vcly, by a vote of the county's prep coaches. Hanan sparked the Chargers to the Sunset League championship and a benh in the CIF finals, where Edison fell to Dana Hills. Other members of the first team included Matt KessleT of Lquna Beach, John Alstrom of Newpon Harbor, Rick Smith of Edison and Tim Johnson of Fountain Valley. Alstrom is a junior and the others arc seniors. The All-Orange County team: FlntTum Matt Kessler (Laguna Beach), r ; John Alstrom (Newport Harbor), jr.; Tim Glasgow (Dana Hills), sr.; Rick Smith (Edison), sr.; Ryan Mcnnelay (El Toro).Jr.; Tim Johnson (Fountain Valley), ,r .. Jon Lee (La Qumta), sr. SttoDCI Team Chm Knowles (Dana Hills), r.: Drew Sheward (Newpon Harbor). soph.; Dan Murray (Estancia). sr.: dam Keefe (Woodbridac), soph.; Bret W1n~low(lJnivers1ty), sr.; Eddie Rapp (Edison), sr.; Bnan Lewis (Corona dcl Mar). sr. ntrcl Team Norm Abella (Fountain Valley), sr .. Jeff Cummmg.s (Laauna Beach), sr ; Rohen Binder (Capa Valley), sr. Joe Graham (Ottan View), sr.; Matt Kot (Woodbndgc), Jr . Mike Curet (Newport H1rbor). <1oph.; Brian Bowen (Dano Hills). 'Ir ; Mike Whi'· co"'h CL.a Quinta) 1r --- .. l'mexctted-l'mglad they didn't accept my resignatfon right away. Really, my job here is a career job. "Yes, I can see myselfbeing here for anoljler I 0 years or so, as long as we're not beating our heads against the wall and the sacrifice is not so great" Fonunately, ll obviously was not construed as such. What the V1ldngs had was a coach who has endured an ironic situation for years. Here was the reasoning: First, blood's thicker than water. and afterei&ht years, there's no question Thompson is a Viking. Secondly, he has a devoted staff. Poor practice field cond1t1ons and an even worse situation in the locker rooms and weight room belied Marina's success. And that's what Thompson simply could no longer endure. To suggest that Thompson "won·• the gamble is a misnomer. Thompson's initiaJ decision devas- tated his staff. The first rcactton to the revelation that Thompson had resigned his position af\ereight successful years was one of disbelief. And. his staff wasn't gaining, but losing the fi&ht to stay intact, or build. There really was no gamble to at. If he stayed, there would be improve- ments which he could livewtth. lfhe didn't, weU, those problems would be moot. Thompson admitted on Tuesday that he was "probably staying,·· add inf" My coacties have won me over.' Was 1t simply a power play? More than the actual rCSiJnauon. that was Marina AthJctic Director Andy Donegan 's biggest fear, that it One solid assistant (John Seeley) waslostforgood(to Valencia High) and another, Rehling. spent most of his tjme at rival Huntington Beach. Now that it's over, howev~r. I have my own conclusion, and it's one which was predicted to a disbelievmg He admitted he softened bis stance and rus wife, Sue, atthouab firmly behtnd him, said: ""They hung out the worm and you took it.•• (Pleue eee TBOMPSOllf /821 Cardinals self destruct tOhelp Dodgers win Five St. Louis misc u es, 1 7 hits key 8-3 victory ST. LOUIS (AP)-Steve Sax, hitting .449 for his last e1ght games, sensed irony as the Los Angeles Dodgers rolled Wednesday to an 8-3 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals. "We've been kind of ridiculed for o ur defense (47 errors m 35 games). and now the Cardinals had that kind of day." Los Angeles' second baseman said. "Thal's wha,·s so great about baseball. to have a day like this when they make all the errors and we get aJI the hits:· Not assailed by St. Louis Manager White} Herzog. however, were Cardinal defensive lapses that accompanied the Dodgers' 17-hit attack, their best output this season. "We just haven't hit. We didn't play bad today. We hustled." Herzog said. "There's no t a team that has won in history with only two regulars hitting .300." In contrast to St. Louis' prolonied slump, ax as now hitting .353 while extendmg a sur$e that began when htt .325 dunng the final six weeks of 1985. "I think I've hat the ball as Jood at times but not with this much luck," said Sax, whose contribution Wednesday was a 3-for-4 per· form a nee. "I'm Just relaxed. rm not pulling off any pitches. I'm seeing the ball good. I'm waiting." Sax, in tandem with Manano Duncan. keyed a Los Angeles offense that made 11 easy for left-hander Fernando Valenzuela. Duncan had two hits and stole his National· League-leading 14th and 15th bases. Sax ''i second of three hits was a double. one of only two Los Angeles extra-base hits. "They played today hke we've been playing. That was an unusual day for the Cardinals." Dodgers Manager Tom Lasorda said. "We were fortunate. It was good to get CdM'sB&Bboys await· challenge Bearbower vies-- in CIF decathlon, Bain in discus By RICHARD DUNN o.e, .... c...110 •1 lim1l." said CdM assistant coach Bill Cool. who works with the discus and shot put throwers. "Our goal for him as to gel to 200 feet ... and if we can get him on the weights during the off- scason. 200 feet is a goal he can reach." o Bearbowcr and Bain -the B & B Boys at Corona dcl Mar -have been making enough noise to create their own band this year. Today'• game None scheduled. FRIDA Y'S GAME New York Mets (Gooden 5-1) al DodJert (Hershiser 3-3). Time: 7:35 p.m. TV: None. Radio: KABC (790) some runs for Valenzuela for a change." Valenzuela, 5-2. pitched into the ninth inning. givin~ up all three runs on five hns. stnkingout nine and walkrng five. At one point. he retired 12 stra1ghl batters. Ed Vande Bello who got the last three out,. gave up a run-sconng stngle to Vince Coleman Five St. Louis errors, the most by the Cardinals in one game smce April 15. 1981 . pve the Dodgers two unearned runs. St Louis starter Tim Conroy, 2-2. lasted H i innings, leaving when the Dodgers scored three runs to snap a 2-2 tie. Duncan's second single drove ID the $0- ahead run. Sax and 8111 Madlock followed Wlth run-sconng hits. Sax. who hit a sacnfice Oy in the third, doubled 1n another run in the fifth against reltever Greg Bargar. He scored on Mik.e Marshall's two-out single. Valenzuela, who had two hits. stngled home a run in the seventh. Hts wildness enabled St. Louts take a 2-1 foad m the first. when he threw two of three wild pitches on the day and htl a batter Catcher Mike Sc1osc1a let in a run with one of two passed baJls charged to him Tern Pendleton drove ma St. Louts run with a single in the first. Valenzuela struck out Jack Oark and Pendleton twice each. At one point.. beiJnning with two out 1n the second, be fanned six of eight Cardinals on called third strikes. Ferdinand, .6 others run ln Preakness BALTlMORE(AP)-T~were no urpnscs today as Kentuclcy Dcrb} wmner Ferdinand was entCTCd agamst six other 3-year-olds for Saturda) ·s $350,000-added Preak- ness Stakes at P1mltco. Ferdinand, the early 9-5 favorite, drew the.-No 5 post postt1on. Tod Bcarbower, who Corona del Mar High track coach Jim Tomlin says is such a fine athlete that he could letter in any event he wanted, is taki11g on tt\C ultimate challenge - the decathlon. For Bearbower, the road to being a dccathlete has seemingly been predestined. For Bain, well ... he son of had his ann twisted into throwing the discus. which he thanks Tomlin for now. °""',... ...... .., ......... k ..... Trainer D Wavne Lukas. wtnnerof t"'o Prcaknesscs. had an entry of Badger Land and Clear Choice. Badger Land w1ll lcave from the No. 1 post. while Clear Choice will go from No l "He's probably 1he be t athlete we've ever had here," said Tomhn, CdM's coach since 1977. "We've always said to him, •you can do ii all.· "But. every year he'd go out for spring football and he'd never have the opportunity to do it. This year. now that he•s a senior, there's no sprina football for him." That means Bcarbower. an all- around athletic figure for the Sea Kings since he was a freshman, can devote all his time to being a decathlete. After all. h1sname appears throughout the school's record book The Sea K1 ng.s. however, don't stop there when 1t comes to record-setting track Slats this year. Mtehacl Bain, a junior. haJ already set the school and the Sea View taaue discus rtte>rd at 17&-6 -the best mark 1n the CIF Sou•hem tion this year -and 1s headed for the state quaJtfyma meet o n May 28. "J fttl he sttll ha,n'1 reached his "When he came out (has frc hman year), he wanted to pole vault." Tomlin said. "Bu' he didn't have a clut· 1n lhe \Bult. so I said to Mike, T'\e never done this before. but 1 want you 10 check ou' (of the pole vault): "So he went over 10 the d1scu!>, which I originally wan1ed him to do . the resl is h1s1ory " Bain won every dual m~t l"~l year as a sophomore before bcina nipped 1n the league finals by Saddleback's JefT Arvizu. whose 14 74 to won Ole tttlC'. Bain' 145-0 throw took third. Bain. who also won rvcl') dual meet this year. fouled on ht in1t1al throw 1n the lcaaue final, this )Car and hppe-d on his Sttond 1hrow before brcak1n the rttord on ht!i third throw "Cool calmed him down after h1'i lint twoattemp1s:· romhn ..aid "He Corona del Mar lllCh dbcu atandout Michael Bain. told him to JU 1 stand there and throw ·· Batn's previous high was 174-2. which he accomplished at the Arcadia In' 1tat1onal. And Tomhn feels 1hat even 1f Bain doesn't throw to his potenual at the state quahfytn1 met't, he should be one of the top fi ve finishers who go on to the final~ "I found some1h1n~ that really worked for me," Bain said. ''I'd lake to hreak the national rrcord -214 f<-tt 1s mv goal and I have one }car to improve and do 1t " Bnrbowcr. a ~ntor and a four-year letterman. has the second hest h1ah JUmp mark (6--5) m the hooT·~ ht'itOf'} and hold~ the long 1ump record at 22-3 H1'i 4 l-6 tnple Jump mar\( 1s the founh be 1 ever at (dM "He JU 1 ha 10 learn the shot put, di u and ,a,ehn now." Tomlin id. "But that f'Ple.aee eee 8 • 8 BOTS/82} • The field for the I 11 th Preakness. second leg ot the thoroughbred Tnple (. rown. was in sharp contrast to the Ma) 3 Dcrb} field. which oons11tcd of 16 * ~" ....... Tl'\e IM '°' S.•u•'Oev'\ 111111 ""--""' Slelt9\ w•lll l>Qtl OO\lhon llOr ... , -· IOCktv ' ,..me •net ooch 1 Ml<Klt Wood Ml"-'· Jr 20-1 ' W • CPIW.1 Soll\ • I 3 e Clear Cl'Ol<'t Vei.outt 1· 1 4 Groo"" ~t lt-i S F~ooneno ~" ,., • &ro.ct Bruill C McCarroft l •i 1 •-~•Leno v ... .._, ?·i e-0 WI\'~ l..ullH tra -eftt~ Tta...n (by"°'' DO~lloftl 1 Fwrt1 """" 2 Mt4 SIU!• 3 0 Wa't'M Luku ' Ho-cl C:rowell S Ch•rftt WllllttlltMm 6 .-icn-c1 ~ 1 0 w,.,~ Lull•I OWntn lllW _, .OIJl!Oftl 1 A-.n F Alll!I, h 2 C~ GrlM'-4 eftCI .... ·~ ) tw aM Mn E..,.._ I( .. ' JeNI .._ .,,_ T ... Krv<ll.11 S l~t ...... Kectl 6 ,_"'-1 Ml1.,,... 1 NteA ~'""· 0 W.""' L~ Md Jellt Lllllu Wt•Oll'' in llOIUllO• ..ct1 ow'~ 1 ,.,, fl"tlift ~ •• \~,oilOO ff Wvtll •lett ,Inf ·-.c. ,..11,900 S.Conct l!Aaoa. •10..000 Tllll'd .-.. W .000 'ourtn .-C. "1 ,,_I time t• o I'll ltOT • I I ' n * Orange Oout OAJLY PILOT/ Thuf'lday, M1115, 1888 Milwaukee's tape of game to undergo a disappearing act 11 ... m AP dfJpatc~u BOSTON -Boston Coach K.C. m Jones watched the videotape of Tut'Sday n~t'sonc-s1ded NBA playoffv1ctoryovcr Milwaukee and found ways for his pla~ to im prove. Bucks' Coach Don Nelson watched 1t and decided not to show it to his players. "We've made an inteUiaent decision that we're not aoina to watch the film with the team," Nelson said Wednesday "We're Just goina to kind of do the Richard Nixon disappearing act and over- expose the film." The Celtics overwhelmed the Bucks. 128-96, in the opener of the Eastern Conference finals. Milwaukee still has a chance to gatn the homccourt advamage by winning here ton1&ht in the sec- ond game of the bes1-of-seven series. · "We're going to try to forget the (first) same.'' Nelson sajd before pracuce. "There's nothing pos1t1ve that we can gam by watching that. I've already watched 11 and ifs disappeared. It went down the toilet." Jones studied the tape Wednesday morning and actually fo und something wrong in the performance of a team that led 29-I 2 after one quarter. went ahead by 29 points less than five minutes into the second quarter and held a 22-point advantage at haJf\1me. "Each game you should improve and you look at the ta1>c:s and find where you were hurt." he said. "lfwc lost eight or nine points (off the lead) m the second quarter, then we had to be doing something wrong." Jones looked very hard and fou nd something. He said one of those things was Boston's rebounding. even though 1t beat the ijucks 67-51 m that department. "We have to doa better job on the boards," he said. "(Terry) Cummings had five offensive rebounds in the ballgame and we have to stop the inside game. They got a lot of penetration last time and we have to do a better job there." Quote of the day Marty BreDDama.n, the radio voice of the Cincinnati Reds, after hearing that Michael Jotdan had scor_ed 63 pomts for the Chicago Bulls . in an NBA playoff game against the Boston Celtics: "I couldn't score 63 points in an empty gym." Rama release veteran Bain Veteran offensive lineman Bill &tn, m an All-Pro in 1984, has been released by the 4 t Rams. it was announced Wednesday The 12-year veteran, who had been a starter with the Rams in 1983 and 1984. had been rclepted to reserve duties dunng the 1985 season behind staners Irv Pankey and Jackie Slater. • Bain, 33. was drafted in 1975 by the Green Bay Packers and played with the Denver Broncos and the • New York Giants before being signed as a free agent by the Rams in 1979. Fresno St. tabs Cunningham FRESNO -Gary Cunningham said m Wednesday that he has no reason to apologize for leaving as athletic director at the Uni vers11y of Wyom1n$ for the sanie JOb at Fresno State Un1vers1ty. Wyoming's Western Athletic Conference may have a higher stature than Fresno State's Pacific Coast Athletic Assoc1a11on. but Cunningham said at a news conference announcing his appointment lhat he secs "a greater opponun1ty" 10 Fresno. "l don't think anyone should apolog12e for leaving W)Omtng or the WAC for Fresno State," he said. "Fresno State has been able to compete with anyone in recent years. including teams from the WAC I see a greater opportun1t) here·· Sportswriter to sue Denny PHILADELPHIA -A Cincinnatt spons wnter planned to take legal action 1oda) aga1ns1 Reds pitcher John Denny following an alleged assault pnor to a game 1n Philadelphia. Bruce Schoenfeld, 24. of the Cmcmnatt Post told poltee he passed Denny in a tunnel leading to lhe pla \ mg. field at Veterans Stadium before Wednesday night's game between the Philadelphia Phillies and the Red\ .\ct0rd1ng to ~<:h~nfeld. the 6-3 Denny said the "'nll'r h.ld no busines~ in the tunnel, then placed his hand\ around S<:hoenfeld'' neck and banged the v.ntcr\ head into a wall Thompeon '88 Olympic coach WASHINGTON-John Thompeon. head coach of the Ocorae,town University bukelball team, is expected to be named head ooac:h oflbe 1988 U.S. Olympic team Fnd.ay in C.olondo-Sprinas. Thompson is ellpected to be chosen over leadtn& candidates Larry Brown, coach or the Umversity of Kansas· Denny Crum, coach of NCAA champion Louisv{Ue, and Lute Olson of Arbona. Thompson gujded Qeorsetown to the NCAA championship 1n 1934 and lo the Final Four in l 982 and I 98S. fie worked with lnd1ana's Bob K.ni4ht at the 1984 Olympic trials and currently is workina with Kniaht on the Olympic player selection committee. Krtiiht was the coach of the 1984 U .. Olympic champions at Los Angeles. Flamea advance with 2 -1 win CALGARY. Alberta -Goals by Al ~ Macinnis and Colin Patterson gave ' Calgary a 2-1 scventh-pme victory over the St. Louis Blues Wednesday night and a berth in the first all-Canadian tanlcy Cup final since 1967. The Aamcs, winne~ of the Campbell Conference championship, will meet the Montreal Canadiens Friday night in Ollgary m the opening lime of the Stanley Cup finals. For the pitty Blues there were no more miracle finishes. Unlike pme six, when they overcame a S-2 third-period deficit to win in overtime, the Blues co uldn't mount any sustained offense in the final period Wednesday night. UCLA signs Oregon forward LOS ANGELES -St u Meinert of m Salem, Ore .. a 6-6. 208-pound forward, has signed a letter of intent to play basketball next season at UCLA. the school an- nounced Wednesday. Memert averaged 20 points and I 0 rebounds in his senior year at South Salem High School and earned third team all-state honors. He fin ished his prep career as the school's second all-time leading scorer beind his brother, Scott Meinen. Scott was a redshirt !iOphomore this season at Stanford University. Lawsuit filed against Reggie MILWA UKEE-Amanwhocla1ms • baseball star Re$8ie Jackson choked him and slammed him to the floor during a barroom scuffle over an aulograph filed a S 150.000 CIVIi suit against the Angels pla)er on Wednesday. The suit, filed in Milwaukee County Circuit Coun, claims Jac kson "struck and battered the client without warning and without consent," said Alan Eisenberg, an attorne)' representing Donald E. Weimer. 26. of Racine. Wis. The suit seeks SI 09.000 1n punitive damages from the 39-year-old Jackson . It also asks $50,()()Q.An compensatory damages for past and fulure medical care. past and future pam. lost earning capacity and pcrmanenl scarring. Rams-Oilers rescheduled The Rams· exhibitton opener against the Houston Oilers has been rescheduled from Wednesday. Aug. 6. 10 Tuesday, Aug. 5. 11 was announced Wednesday. Kickoff for the Rams· preseason opener will be 7·3U p.m. The game had to be changed because of a clause in a contract between the Angels and the city of Anaheim that states that no football game may be scheduled within a 36-hour period to an Angels' baseball game. The Angels play host to the Scat1Je Manners on Thursday ntght. Aug. 7. The game 1s scheduled to start at 7·30p.m. E.z-USFL owner Bassett dies TORONTO -John F. Bassett. who [I] invested heavily m trying to build •II• franchises 1n the US FL and World Football League, died Wednesday after a long battle wtth cancer. He was 47. Bassett. the father of teen-age tennis star Carling Bassett, was a former Davis Cup player. The eldest son of flamboyant Canadian media magnate John W. Bassett, he recently sold his interest m the Tampa Bay Bandits of the Untted States Football League. Bassett previously owned in terests 1n the Toronto Argonauts of the Canadian Football League and Memphis South men of the WFL. Television, radio TELEVISION No events scheduled. RADIO No events scheduled. Horse ~acing results HolVWood Pan WEDNESDAY'S lt£SUL TS 116"' o4 '7·deY !Mreu....,,.ecl "-'IN) l'lltST ltACE. t. lunono\ Rooer ' Se<.retarv tPoncevo Amtce J tSOllSI Bold Rumor IC.iu 1011on1 Tom• I 11 I S SICOHD RAC.IE I '''''°""' uOdo ' L•l'ld P ncev O""' Tomorro,. 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Ont l'lllle MO GM C#ff Jeot ICrootianl t 40 l IO l 00 Pot lllvtlv ~O•dY !Todd Ill )40 )00 looola IMt '"ulr) HO Time 200 U IXACTA <I •> P•ld U7 20 '1 lttClC MX 11+2·H·I) 1191d tt,t11IO tO -Wlnnlnt llcll•I (\la llOtttsl Sl ll'ICll Shi conlOlttlOtl Mid • 16) IO 10 71 •t11111ine llc.kah (fl'tft llOfMtl TINT'H RACI. One rnlle "c. DnQl(lou• <V•N•ndll\Ollt ll'I) •• IUO 560 Dt .. MtlV IOfftencol 17 to s.10 Kool Jeu !Kin i '00 Tlmt '°' llj $J IXACTA I I >i Pt1 d I 16.J IO Alltndanct I UJ ANGELS. • • Prom81 kid ts pretty 1ood." He wasn't McCask.iU's cqUAI on Wedncada~. 1bou1h. When McCasklll ltft, the Aqels had 1 4-2 lead. The runs be pve up came on Wade Sous' two-run homcT, bul both mrt unearned. On the otheT hand, Oemens was banaina by 1 thread. In ei&h• inninp be suneodered only six hits, bu1 be walked five, uncorked three "itd pitches and hit a batter for a.ood mcas·ure. One other thina be did was win the pme, and is now 6-0. He aJso upped his l«gue·kJding strikeout totaJ to 69 with the mnt K's against the Angels. "Our pitching has been good," said McNamara, "but our hittina hasn't come tbrou&h . But we didn't act our heads down after it was 4-0. and finally we got 1he JOb done." They did a job on the Anacl bullpen, that's for sure. In the eighth Ken Fo~h took over for McCaskill (who stayed at 2-3). Fo~b torched any hope of McCaskill gettina the win when he gave up a three-run blut from the bat of Rich Gedman for a S-4 Boston lead. Then Angel Manager Gene Mauch called for Bryden. who got the Angels out of the inning. Then in the bottom of the eighth, Jackson siniled off Clemens and took second on Doug DeCinces· flyo ut to right. Ruppert Jones delivered the equaJ- izer in the form of a double to nght- ccnter to score Jackson and make it 5-5. It was the seventh double in Jones' last nine hits. Bryden walked Dwight Evans to open the nin th and proceeded to gi ve up four straigh t hi ls and three runs. * ANGIL NOTES: 0-* MMr'e rK91v~ en entH l'flemmetorv lnie<!lon in his rl9hl shOulde<' Wtdnesdev. H• should be reedv lw ectlon wlttn Ill• Anlltls ooen a I0·11eme roed trip Frldtv In Dt trol! . Mille Witt wH netn9d lhe Anoet•' Ple v.,. rePrtltnl•livt Glf'Y ,...... wH voled ll'IC 111.,.nere Cele~ aeo a-ti.d Yeti INrra 1n oeme1 caw111 wl!ll I ,6'6 fOf lhe elohtll •POI on ,,,. ·•·lltne lisl --w..... lle(f KOl'ed In llX W •lohl oemes. prior lo WtdnHd•v Two of ,,,. Anoell' oemts on this trip win tie •lreci t>v NBC (Cha~ 4) " the G1me of llM WHk (!Ill• Seturdev and aoelnst on Seturdev. ~v Hl 0.-, .... ,......, o.... ..... Hard-~ Boeton pitcher ROfer Clemena leta ICM* wlth pltch weane9C!ay during game aca1nat ADCeta. CdM, Uni home in CIF tennis cond-round action in the CIF ~ A tennis playoffs arc set for Friday, with Corona del Mar and University drawing home assignments and Edison and Laguna Beach on the road. ,. The Sea Kings. who brttzed to a shutout win over.Millikan in open- ing-round actjon. will play host to third-seeded Palos Verdes ( 16-3) 1n a match nt the Balboa Bay Club. Meanwhile. University will also be at home, welcoming Thousand Oaks. Hittmg the road will be Sunset League champion Edison, which plays at Villa Park, and Sea View kjngpin Laguna Beach. Which 1s at Harvard. Andretti crashes at Indy · Driver hosPffiilized with minor injuries after s pinning in to wa ll during practice L------------ -INDIANAPOLIS (AP) -Mario Andretti suffered minor injuries and possibly a major setback in his effort to win a second Indianapolis 500 when he crashed Wednesday dunng practice for the May 25 race. The 46-year-old driver. who fin - ished second here last year. has been frustrated in his chase of that elusi ve second victory since he won the world's richest and most prestigious auto race in 1969. Andretti suffered bruised knees and a cut on the inside of his left foot. He was taken to Methodist Hospital, where precautionary X-rays were negative and, after receiving about 20 stitches to the gash on his foot , Andretti was released. A Newman-Haas Team spokes· man said Andrelli had been told to stay off his feet the rest of the day. and Dr. Henry Bock, the track medical director. said Andretti would be checked at the Speedway infield hospital today before bei ng cleared to resume driving. The spokesman said. however. that due 10 ongoing preparations on the team's backup car Andreltl was not expected to be back on the 21h·mile oval until Saturday. Track observers said something appeared to let ~o on the nght rear of the car, sending .\ndrett1's Lola spinning in lo lhe thm,1-tum wall. The nose of the car was sheared away. and the nght-front c;uspension was left dangling. The car. running laps above 205 mph shonly before the crash. spun 480 feet into the concrete wall. Andretti was able to cltmb from the car before safety crewmen arrived at 1he scene The crashed Lola was the one Andrett1 quaJ1fied last Saturday at 212.300 mph, good for a start 1n the THOMPSON TO RETURN ... From Bl Thompson dtdn 't get everything he was asking for. but as it figured. there was ce rtainly enough bait available to lure him back. And, when Thompson made it official today. he said: "We sat down and bad a good talk. That was the No. I factor." Toibin's reaction virtually scaled it. "Hopefully we'll resol ve this in the next couple of days.'' said Toi bin, an ex-coach, himself. "Someone of Dave's caliber, you don't want to lose him." This isa principal who knows the val ue of a winner on the foo tball field and the residuals ofit. And, there is the matter of the athletes. Would Thompson have walked away? I don't think so. "You feel bad about the kjds," he admitted. "Some were scared to talk. others were just sort of asking about it ." . Thompson has clearly improved the situation with the move, but it's doubtful it'll ever reach the plateau of a Fountain Valley, unless that very deep, solid and On-campus staff depletes bywayofattntion. Spring practice has been set back a week-with the tentative start May 25. * * * If there isn'ta rule m the Sea View Lea~ue requiring Corona dcl Mar HighCoachJim Tomhn to run the league's track and field prehms and finals every year, there should be. No one comes close to his efficien- cy and know-how and it's over· shadowed only by the quality of athlete he has been produci ng over the years. He won't be oble to rest on his laurels. however. Therc'sanother track crew on his own campu~ stealtna some thunder. Steve Kac.tynskf s sophomore- laden girls team. which won the Sea View League championship. figure s to be the team to beat for the nexl two years. * * * Ocean View H1gh's basketball team will play Maui and Baldwin htgh schools on the island ofMaui this winter. * * * Mater Dc1. which replaces Ocean View at the King Cotton Classic in Pme BlufT. Arkansa'i, has also been granted Ocean View's role as the No 2sccd. It'll be a 12-team tournament with four seeds (including No. 1 seeded and defending champion Ainl Hill PrepofOakton. Va.)draw1nga first- round bye. Mater Dci's opener will be against the host Zebras of Pine Bluff. assum- ina Pine Bluff gets past its first-round foe. It was Pine Bluff which popE>Cd the bubble on Ocean View in the first round. * * * Ke vin McNair the former UC Irvine track and field coach, has been running seminars on ''speed," to the dehght of Notre Dame, Stanford. Utah. the Rams and Raiders, and most recently, the Corona dcl Mar H i~ Sea K.jngs. • He's re-ally helped us.'' said CdM Coach Dave Holland . One ofh1s next steps 1s expected to be Edison. "He's the hottest item there 1s at the clinics," said Edi on Athletic Ou~c tor Lyman Clower. * * * A istinaMis ion VicJo H1Jh Coach Ron Drake for the Soulh 1n the l 9th Orange County All·Star baseball aameat La Palma Park June 10w1ll be Fountain Valley Coach Tom DcKraai and La Quinta Coach Dave Demarest. middle of the second row Bob ~prow. Andretlt's chief mech- anic. said, "The race car tub 1s on its way to England 10 be repaired at Lola. We hope to get it back by WednesdaX we we can use it on carburetion day. • Sprow was referring to the final two-hour practice session next Thurs· day B&BBOYS •.• From Bl shouldn't be any problem because he's a quancrback and he has a good arwe~rbower started this past football season as the Sea Kin~· quaf1:erba~k before movmg to wide receiver 1n order to let sophomore Mitch Melbon QB. Bcarbowcr has also accumula~ 178 points this year in track -~ most ever at Corona del Mar. Lance Martin ( 1983) held the old record with 160 points. The Southern Cali fornia High School Decathlon championships begin May 31 with the first five events and conclude June I wi1h the other five. "Coach Cool ts helping me with the shot put and discus," Bcarbower said. "But I think the l .SOO meters is going to be the toughest. "It's going to be a real test." * Gahr to ba.t CIF' prellm• NO RWALK -Gahr Htgh is the site of Fnday's and Saturday's CIF track and field prelims for 4-A and 3- A athletes-wt th the top nine in each event qualifying for the cbam- p1onsh1ps a week later at Cerritos College. Friday afternoon's ~A meet begins at 2 with the top three finishers from all league finals competing. including those from the Sunset League. The 3-A meet, which includes athletes from the Sea V 1ew League, 1s Saturday, beJlnmng at noon. The CIF finals are Saturday, May 24 at Cerritos. CdM'sDuPre qualifies for state amateur Corona del Mar High sophomore golfer Tony OuPre has qualified for the California State Amateur tour- nament, shooting a 76 Tuesday at Los Serrano Country Cl ub. DuPrc 15 one of 82 golfers from Southern California to cam a benh in the ~tate tourney. He had a 38 on the front nine Tuesday. then closed with a 31 on the back nine to cam the trip to Pebble Beach June 18. Du Pre. I 6. had earlier qualified for the CIF state championship at Lakeside June 9. And he has been invited to fllay in the U. . Amateur qualifytnJ toumomen' at Big Canyon CC later in the summer Area volleyball team earns pair of Yictorles WICH ITA. Kan -Hun,mgton &ach-t3'scd Ray- mond Construcuon continued its success at the S71h United Statrs Volleyball Auoc1ataon National Cham· p1onships with 1 pair of v\ctoncs Wcdnclday mfklt. The team. coached by Golden West Collc&e s Alben Oasparian and made up of area playen. <1ercatcd Anncd Force' IS-7 t S-6 and Gcorae Mason Univcn1ty. IS· 7, 11 -1 S. '1 S-3. '1n the Sll·tnm championship qu.artcrlinals of the tvcn' In the 1wo matches al Wtchita State University, W:llCT Rocle}' Ctarclh rrom Hunting,on 8C3eh had 56 assists and Bob Ctvrthk contnbulcd 3S bits. Raymond Construction now play' today in the semifinal round of the double~lim1nat1on event aaajns• Norfl~t of Los Angeles The winner's bracket finals aJT scheduled for Fndar Ratmond Construc11on finitbed cond 1n last yur i compeuuon • ./ AMERICAN LEAGUE Gubicza snaps, drought; Brett hits milestone Royal third baseman takes all-time team RBI lead in 5-0 victory Pr.m AP dhpetcMI KANSAS CITY -Marie Gubicu, winless since October, fired a tbree- hitter Wednesday night and Georae Brett dtove in thr~ runs to take the all-tirne team lead in runs batted in P!'cing the Kansas City Royals to a~ victory over the Oeveland Indians. Gubicza, 1-4, who failed to get past the fint innina in bis previous start, struck out ciaht and wallced none. Tony Bemazard's one-out sin&Je in the fourth and Otis Nixon's infield sinaJe in the sixth were the only hits aUowcd by the 23-ycar-old ri&ht· bander until Julio Franco's leadofT double in the seventh. Phil Niekro, 2-3, gave up 10 hats and four run1 1n S'r', inninp. Brett, the Royals' all-star third ba~man who bas spent most of this season in a slump, singled home one run in the third and stroked a two-run double in the fifth as the Indians * • ..,. s. lncleflil 0 CL•V .... AND KANSAS CITY l utterd S.,ntro2b Franco» Ca rter rt Jacot>v 3b Tabler lb CCaitlM dll Batldo c NlxOQJf ellrlllll tltrlllll 4 0 0 0 Wlltond ' 3 1 I 0 4 0 1 0 uw If s 2 3 1 40 10 8~11~ 3123 3 0 0 0 Wlllte 2b 4 0 I 0 S 0 0 0 Orta dtl 3 0 1 I l 0 0 0 MdtH llfl t 0 1 0 l 0 0 0 Balboni lb • 0 0 0 3 o o o SUftdtlro c 3 o 1 o )010 MolleYrl •110 ASeteu n • O IO • 0 J 0 T..... M S12 S SC...IW ...._ a.v.IMd -... •-o K-• CltY 001 .,. olx-s Game Winning Rll -Brett (4), E-Bernazard, Franco. OP-<!.rvelalMI 2 LO&-<i.veta!MI 3, l(an .. 1 Clfv 10. 29-l.aw, Brett, Fra nco, McRH SB-Law (I). White (1). W"-' (6) ~ P Ni.llroL.1·3 EH letlv ~·Qty Gublaa W,l·• WP-<iut>lcta 2 ... H RIR aa SO s 2·l 10 4 4 3 2 2 1·3 2 t 0 2 0 ' l 0 0 0 • Umplrtt-Hom., 5nulock, Flrit. Mo<rlion, Sacond, Mcl(Hn, Third, Clark T-?;21 A-20,326 WMteSH t Y-* ... 2 CHICAGO N•W YotlK Ca"9Mcf Totlftn30 h lnnrf Fl•k c Blonllla H l(ltttedh Helrsln Pll GWalllr lb HUlell 2b ~ltlen" Mrlllll • 0 0 0 • 0 1 0 4 0 0 0 ) l l 0 • I l 0 3 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 l l 1 1 • 0 2 0 • 0 l 2 llHnchnd Rncllotl 21> MtnolV lb EHterdtl Wlnfleld rl Grlffev If Pelruloltl WvneMrc N\Khl'llU RM!ldl Otl Cotto Of M J 7 J T ... SC... IW ...... ellrllM s 0 1 l • 0 2 0 • 0 2 0 4 0 l 0 • 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 4 1 I l ) 0 0 0 3 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 u 2. 2 suffered their flrst road loss in their last elaht away aamn. Brett now has 993 RBI, 1urpassina Amos Otis. In other American Leaauc action: ~ I, Raqen "I: At TiJCr Stadium, Chet Lemon, L.ance Parrish ind Darrell Evans homered to beck tile five-hit pitcbina of Walt TmclJ as Detroit beat Texas. ftUe Sox I, Yaakeet I: At Yankee Stadium1 Ozzie Guillen's two-run triple wttb two outs in the nin1h innina capped a three-run rally that pve Cbic.,o the win over New York. OrMlet I, Twla I: In Baltimore, Floyd Rayford launched a 1even.f'Un rally in the seventh innina with a two- run double and Fred Lynn capped it with a three-run homer as Balumore Orioles defeated Minnesota for their fifth strai&bt victory. A'1 t , Bhle Ja11 f : In Oakland, home runs by Jose Canseco, Dave Kingman and Mike Davis keyed a five-run seventh inning as the A's beat Toronto. * OrteeH S, TwlftS J MINNI SOTA aAL llMOtt• Srnatv dll P\Kllett cf Hrbek lb BrnMkv rl 8\ilhlf GM1tl30 Lmbrd12b, wooch Pll S.IHC Gaoneu T.-.. llllrlllll Mrlllll 4222 Wlooll\Slb 42 21 4 1 2 l Lecv rf l 1 1 1 4 0 l 0 L'IM d l l 1 l l 0 1 0 N\ufrav lb 2 0 0 0 3 O O O llllltlen u 3 1 1 O 4 0 1 0 St\MIJ dll 2 0 0 0 1000 Benlqzdl 11 00 1 0 0 0 MkYono If 3 1 l 0 3 0 0 0 ltavfrd 31> 3 l 1 2 3 0 O O Oemolv c • o 1 l • i 1 a T..... a•• a sc.r..w...._ Mll!M.-101 -llt-J ....,_.. •1 • nx-1 &etll~ Mfe Oft c.aldler s.&ai lntarl9fenc;e Game WIMlnt Rll -llavtord (11 £-S.la• OP-MlnnftOte 3, h lllmon • L08-Mlnnft011 4, Baltimore S. 2B-<0Hltl, Revfcwd. 38-Wlooln•. Hll-Smallev 2 is>. PIJCkell n>>. Lvnn (3) S&-Wloolns 9), MA. Young (1). SF-Lacv. ~ Butcher AeottOL,1·3 It. Smith ......... I~ H lllll H SO 6 0 2 3 2 2 s s 3 • 3 0 0 , 2 2 2 l OlxOftW,•·2 71·3 7 3 l • 7 ~ 12·3 0 0 0 0 1 8uteher oltdled to l Detter In the 7th, AllOllO ollm.d to 4 batten In the 7th. UmolrH-Hom., CoOle; First. McClelland; Second, Orilnoer; Third. R•l•v T-2 St. A-ll.'61 TIXAS McOwetd Wlltlr111 u 08rlen lb Wright rl Ward If LA Pr.ii di\ SlaUilllt c Peclork30 Buachle 211 Pefrall 211 Titen •• laneen 2 aerlllll • 0 0 0 • 1 1 0 :s 0 1 0 4 0 l I • 0 0 0 • 0 1 0 ) 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 1 l 0 OaTilOl'T Whll•llr 2b BrOkM2b Trammlu Co411M If LNPaf'""1 c OEvMdh COIHlb &er-gmn lb Lemond sr.lcln rf Har_.rf n 2 S 1 T .... s-..w ...... lttrllM 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 l 0 1 0 3 2 l 0 4 ' l 2 l 2 , , 3 0 0 0 • 2 2 0 3 l , 3 2000 ' 0 0 0 ••• 1 Texas • • on-2 ~ nt IM lb-I The homcn drove T oro1uo 1W1tr Dave Stieb, ~s. from the mound and pve recently recalled A's left.hander Cutt Youns bis flttt victory. Brewen t MartMn t: ln the Kjnadome. OWlie Moore ICOred lhree runs and drove in two u Milwaukee snapped a three11me losint streak. Dan Plesac, 2-1, pitched 411> inninp of scoreless relief after starter Juan Nieves was unable to get throuah the fif\h innina with a 9-3 lead. A'I t, ,:. Jen 4 • TOltONTO OAKLAND elHll~ 4 0 0 0 sooo 4 l 3 0 '° 0 0 3 ' 1 1 2 2 2 1 l 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 3 0 1 1 l 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 l 1 l'tlllllttl30 Petertlf CanMc:Orf Knemn dll kctll• lb MOavlscf OH112b Grlfflnu Wlllardc » 4 I 4 T"'8 ~ ......... .. , ..... 1 1 0 0 l 1 0 0 4 2 l 3 s 2 2 l 4 l 2 l 3 l l l 4 0 l , 4 0 0 0 • 1 1 0 » 'lt. T...... m •1 tlt-4 oeldeM --Slx-t Game Winning RBI -None. E-Grlffln, Garcl1, M. Davi•. OP-Tor111110 l, 0.lllnd 1. LO&-TorOlllO I, 0.klend 7. :tt-e. Martinet, CanMCO. Hiil-Johnson (3), Cameco (11), l(lngman (I), M.Oavls C3l ~ SF-f'ernanaet. M" H R•R aa SO T .... $1190 L,,O-S U -3 f I 6 3 0 Ceudll 1 l·l l 1 l 2 I oelttaM c. YoungW,l·O 71-l 6 • 4 3 • Otlllver~ 1 2·3 2 O O O O HIP-f"l\11111>' by $ti.ti, uoinew l>V c. YOYng, Garcia bY C. Youno. Umpirff-+icl!M, G.fde; Flrlt, IC.OK, S.C· ond, llMCI, Third, Ford. T_,.A, A-10,HO. * .,.....,.. •• MartMn ' MILWAUKI• HA TTL• Mrlllll s l 0 1 3 >,, s 0 2 1 3 0 1 0 l 0 0 0 4 l l 0 1 0 0 0 4 l I 0 • 2 1 0 l 1 1 1 4 0 I 2 Revnlds 21> &radlev If 8onnelt It ADavts lb C-.dll c.ldlrn rt PrelllVlb OHedllld Ramos.a Y....,c •rlllll 4 0 0 0 1000 4 0 1 0 l 2 I 0 5 l 1 0 • 2 l l • l 3 3 l 0 l 1 • 0 l l 4 0 I 0 Yount lb CMoorec Coooerdh Qollvt. If JCHllA2b RNOY2b Sc:hroor 11> RAMU Mannned H ""1lclr rl s-lb T .... 119M I T .... ~ ......... l!Mwaul!M 111 .. 000-t SMt9e -.. --6 Game Winning Rll -Yount (1) E-0. ~. Swltl. OP-SMllle I. LO&-Mllwaul!M 10, SMllle L 2&-ttllH, Raactv. A. Davis, Pr..a.v. Ila~. S&-Yount t6>. ~Mholder m. s--ttllH SF-0. H«lderaon. ....... Nlevet PlaMcW,2·1 ...... M. Moore L.2-4 GU91t•man Swltl 8Ht HBP--HouMtlolder WP--M. ""-'• 2. • H R•lt N SO 0 ·3 • 6 6 • ' 41-3 2 0 0 0 l 3 2-3 6 7 • 3 2 11·) 2 2 , 3 0 2 20002 2 0 0 0 1 1 bY NI.Moore umolfft ltome, Coonev. Fin l, Palwmo, s.cond, 8'1nllman, Third, IC.Mer T-?'.56 Giants oveipewerCab CHICAOO -Maftlltf Rottr Craia of the San Francisco Oiantt bad to admit that three-run homers are .,eat. especially when they are unex- pected. Jeff ~natd hit a th~run homer in a hit•nd-run tituation in the third in•ioa and Dan Gladden was tryint fora slcrifice fly when he hit bi1 three· run homer to cap . a six-run ab th Wednesday 11 the Giants roUed to an 11 ·J victory over the Chicaao Cubs. "I lcnow Hae-Man is my fourth· etacc hitter," said Crail of ~natd. 'but I decided on the rut-and-run. Why not have them running to stay out of the double play?" What did Leonard think of the strategy? "No comment," be said. Gladden's homer was h.is first of the year. "I bit the ball &ood," Gladden said of bis opposite-field homer into the riabt-field bleachers. ..I was just trying to make good contact for a sacrifice fly in that situation." Elsewhere in the National League: Expos a, Braves I: In Montreal, Andre Dawson homered, stole home and threw out two runners from riaht field, lcadinJ Montreal put Atlanta. Bryn Smith, 3-2, pitched seven inninp and pve up one run on seven hits. Jeff Reardon relieved Smith and * G1Mta 11, CUM J SAN 'RANCllCO CHICAGO ... , .... s l 2 J 1 0 0 0 3 1 0 0 s l 2 0 0 0 0 0 • 1 1 l s 1 2 0 l 2 2 0 l 0 0 0 3 2 2 l s 1 l 2 2 l I 0 1 0 1 l 0 0 0 0 l 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ~IOllll Mlittflwsll Fru1er11. Sndllrg 2b Mort!Mrf OUt'flm 11> Cevlb JO.vise Dernier cl SUtdlfle o l(aougfl 0 F011'-1P Fran(Oft If Mrlllll s 0 1 0 4 0 l I 0000 '0 1 0 ' 1 2 1 3000 3 0 l 0 • 1 2 1 • 1 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0000 2000 Gtaddancf MllY1tlc WCJerfl lb ClrownJO Qulnonslb ~dlf COavli rl lrentvc Yonobld rf lllTllWl?b Urlt>tu i..co.ao JRobnsn o ....... 0 Mldf*llfl Minton p Tlllll Jt ll 16 It T ..... ~...,---JllllJ -,r.mc:. .., .. --11 QIQee •1 Olt tit-J Game Wlnnlno RBI -Laonetd (6). E-J. Davi•, Otmler, OP-$an Frenchco 2, Cl\lc.aoO 1. LO&-San Franctsc.o I, ChkAtlll 7 • 2&-ertnlv. Den~ler. Je-<. Devis Hlt-tAoNl'd (6), J. Devis (4), ~ (1). Mof'tilencl ( •>. S&-Ga.dden (6l. aren1y (2), Urlle (6). $-W Clerf!, S...ldllfe 2. IMP:~ L.COUW,4-0 J. ROlllnwwl ~ Minton a.ic... IP H llUNSO SM 1 2 2 2 0 12·3 , 0 0 0 1 ' 1 ' l 0 0 l ' 0 0 0 0 SUldlfte L, 1-6 S 10 7 7 3 2 KMUQtl 1 4442 1 Fon'-! l 2 0 0 0 1 Fratler 2 0 0 O l 2 S...tdltfe olldled lo • betten In !tie ""· 1(-.fl Plldled to 2 bett.n In IN 7tl\. UmolrH llom4t, Wtndlb19dt; F\rst, Tata, sec:ono, Crawford; Third. C. Wllllams T-2;5l A-16,173 pvc up a one-out1 RBl sina)t to Ted Simmon• an lM mntb. The Braves went on to load the batn in the ninth with one 01.u. but Reardon retired Claudell Wuhina· too a.nd Rafael Ramirez on short Ry bl.Us to t.be outfield to eod the pme ind cam bis siith save. AalNlt,Metal: In theAstrodome, • Bob Knepper patched a five.hitter and became the rmt scnn-aamc winner in th.e m~or teaaues. lead1n1 Houston past New York. Knepper, 7-l. struck out r\,¥.t and walked ·ooe in h.is third complete pme of the teUOn. Kneooer's only loss this season was apinsi New York onMay6. Padres lt, Plratet f : At Three Rivm Stadium, Steve Garvey hat a two-run, first·innina homer and Bna Bochy added a solo shot, powcrina._ San Dieao over Pittsbur&)l. Tony Gwynn went 4 (or S, includ- ing a triple. and scored three limes in Alftlt.Mllb2 H•W YOIUC HOUSTON MWllind Mltdlallu HrMdl lb c.,.,., c Slrwtwv rf Fo.ler If ICJllOflt )b l.MCll 0 NlemamP Teuf912b Oltda 0 Santal\a n T .... tltrlllll 4 0 0 0 • 0 1 l • 0 I 0 J I I 1 4 000 4 000 io l 0 0000 0000 > 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 Harcn.r cf ,,,,_ovt• 2b Crut lf Walker d GO.vts lb co.r .... lb aaurl Thonu B•llev c I('*"'" p >t 2 S 1 T .... ~ ... --. Mrlllll 4 l 1 0 s 0 0 0 • 0 l 1 0 l 0 0 400 0 4' 2 l • ' ' 2 • 0 1 1 1 0 l l • 0 0 0 u 611 6 llMWY_.. --lJ--.2 ....... .,, ., »x-• Gemt W1Mlt10 Rll -eau 121. E-MllCNll, Strewtierrv. Gemw Of"--fMw York '· Houlton 1 Loe-fiMw Yort< 4, Houlloft I t&--eau 2. s.n1ana, Mllehell l&-T1'0n Hlt-C8'1er (5) S~alel'ler 2 (6). NewY..- C>Mda L,~1 LMCll N"'"41nn ~ M" H R•R N IO • I l 7 • 2 l 7 > 2 2 0 t l 0 0 0 0 ic.-w,1-1 ' s 2 2 1 s Umolr• llOme, Mont99UI, Finl, W-; 5-lcl, lt.-rt, Third, lroQMndllf T-2:2'.J A-11,626. ...... ,~2 ATLANTA MOWTlt•Al WlflOln rf ltarnln u ~llflvd Hor .... lb ~If Oberflll)O Vlrollc ATl'IOl'M JI ~dltl $1mmoit1 c S.mole Of Umltho CN'rltlft llfl Gartler o Moir-oh T ... •r11111 so 0 0 5 0 2 0 4 0 0 0 4 0 I 0 4 l l 0 ' l l 0 2 0 1 0 l 0 1 0 l 0 1 l 2 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 , 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0000 1 0 l 0 ltalMSM w....,.cf Wlnlflmd O.__..rf .,..., " Wall9cf\l0 G_,.re lb Law2b Flh-1c!C ISmlttl o ~oh tt•roon o U2l12 T .... ~ ... --. •r•• 3 0 0 0 4 0 1 0 • 0 0 0 J 2 l I 4 I 2 0 3 0 I l 2000 JOOO :s 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 l 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ..... tlt -•1-2 MMlrW • • tla-J Game Wlnnlnt Ral -None. OP-MofltrHI l LO&-Allllllll t. Montraet •. 18-Walladl. Hlt-Oewton (I). S....O•WIOl'I ()), Brook• ( l), Herper (2), Wtt>lter Ill. Ramlntt (7) · • " ..... so ,. ... LSmllhL.3-l 6 • 2 2 J 2 ~ 2 11 103 ---a. srnlll'I W,l~2 1 7 1 l 2 7 llaeroon S.6 7 • 1 l l 2 ~: .... ~ATI ~~ •rllM •r•• Mllnerd R-lb . ~at'kW rl EMtltvll CnatCll tt ... lb 101•• c OWer1'1 ltrOWMeP FrallCO o Po-o S 1 1 t Mllwlwcf • 0 1 I 4 0 t 0 SC:twndl Ill I l I t s 2 l ' RM!lkll" J l 0 S1'2 ......... 402 4 1 2 1 OWllMft rf S 1 2 •110 .._..,.,. •lJ • 0 I 1 )Oft ... C • 0 l '0 2. ldlu• , 1 1 J011 .HIUM 4 12 l 0 0 0 W.Gfott• •• 0 0000 Hume• , •• FCllev -'! 1 0 0 Rudi.Ito 0 t 0 GGfOMl'I! 0 1 0 c.erm.n• •• 0 A9UllVO I'll 0 1 0 1Wot11• 0 •• Jt • 1J 6 T..... M llJ sar.w...._ CIMMMt * ., --· .,..,,,a ----· G-W1Mlne Rat -None • E-0..ler OP-ClnclllnMI t Loe-clnc.Hlnall I, pt• , I 'He L 29 0.., Hll-EMIMIY (4), HeVM (2) SF-5etnull . " ...... Cllldlllletl 8'ownl!W Franco L,0· I ~ ..., ....... . • 1 1 ' l , 2 1 3 • , , 2 1 l 0 0 I tC.. crroa• 11-3 • $ s 1 • Hume 7 2·) 2 0 0 0 2 ltuck• 2 7 l I I 1 CarmMW,HI l l 0 I 0 I e.csr111i.n U l 0 0 I 0 I lrOWftlne oltChed IO 1 Mtler In Ille 1'11, Fr.,_ llltd* te l Miiers In 11\e ~ U~-+.ome, M41rtll, Flnt. OavlclMlll Second, W.lblef. Tlllrd. FrNmmlne T-1:27, A-21,117 * ......10.~4 IAN OftlGO lto«iart• 211 Tl'Nlttn u GWVMrf G8"H'Y 10 Mcttvtd cf ttrntwa ........ aocnvc l(Nll If w.,_ct 0raYdlYO MtcCll9n 0 ...... Goa .... o IMO-.. .,. .. s 0 0 0 $ l 2 0 s 3 •• • , 1 2 4 2 >a 2100 1 ' 0 0 l l 11 • 0 2 1 1 0 I 2 2900 0 0 0. l 0 0 0 ' 0 0 0 Ora....olv W,l·l NICCullers GOSMMS.6 ,... ...... l(._L.o-l OeL.-, Wall! ci.n-11 Winn WP-WIM, I(._ """ ..... 61-3 • 1-3 0 2 2 • • I l 1 1 1-3 2 2-l 2 ., ... 2 1 . 0 l •• 0 ' •• 0 • J 1 0 4 I I t ' 1 • 2 0 • ( ' ' ' J • 1 • l I 0 • • • • • • 0 0 • 1 • D 6 2 , 0 0 2' , s ~ • 0 0 0 2 2 1 a > 4 0 0 0 ) 3 2 I • 2 1 • • 0 ) . CNc.e9a -.. tN-1 Mew YM -Mt Mt-2 Game Wlnnlne RBI -Gulllen (1). Game Winning Rll -Lemon (2l. r.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;::;::;::;::;::::::::;::;::::::;;. _________________ ..... E-Whllaker, ltrookenL OP-TexH 1, 0.· troll 2. LO&-THH '· Detroit 4. 29-<o411ns, A-t,714 Vmll4r• 11ome. W.t; Fini. aw•latm, s.cono. RIPPie¥; Third, Pull. T~4. A-11.l(» Urnlllr•""""-• PWlona; Finl, E,_, S.- ond, Q.ika, TPltro. """" T-2-..52. A-9,00. Loe-<hboo 7, New York '· 28-MHcNm. It. ~'°"· 36-Gulllen. HR-P"41arulo Ul Se-tl. Henderson (26). IP H R•R aa SO Wrklttt. >1-hrgman. Hlt-Ymllll (3), LN. Perrlll'I (7), Da Evan• (7). SB-Trammell (3),. H It •1t aa SO Olkltee J. Davi• McK~W,2·0 Jan.1S,6 6 l·l • 2 2 2 0 0 0 2·3 0 0 0 2 1 Tu .. I 3 8. Wiii L,2,2 5 666 42 1 2·3 3 2 2 2 0 1-300000 l 0 0 0 0 l 0 I Mahler ....,,Ywtl Shlrtev • 52227 Flsl'lerL,1·2 1 2 l 1 0 0 Shlrtev l>ltthed to 7 betters In the flh. HBP--<;. Walker ov $tllrtev. Umolr"-Hom.. 8remloan; Flnt, Roe. S.C· ond, Hlrichbtck, Third, Bernett T-3;0S A-10,l• HenrV M. Williams Detrelt ' Terrell W,4·1 t S 1 1 1 2 B Witt oltched to l batters In the 6th WP-B. Witt, Mahler. umolr_.._, Phllllos; Fl"'· McC.ov; SK· ono. Vollagglo, Third, Welh. T-?:22. A-14,404. Early Bird Dinnei-s •7 .50 Featuring Prime Rib or Fresh Fish Complete dinner with choice of Soup or Salad and Dessert CHANDELIERS & TABLE LAMPS ¥~ 70%oFF BATH WALL BRACKETS 60%oFF 4 to 6 PM 7 D~ys a Week 801 E. Balboa 67l-n26 DECO ITEMS 25% OFF RlSETO E ~LEN GE RISE TO THE CALL OF THAT PATRIOTIC SPIRIT SO SYMBOLIC OF AMERICAN ACHIEVEMENT Rise to the challenge of returning the America's Cup home. Warmington Homes has joi{led The lrvine Company in making a major contribution toward this effort. Jom Warmington Homts and jom w team now. The America's Cup, symbolic of international yachting supremacy, rested on American shores for 132 years. ln 1983. America lo t the Cup to Australia. In 1987. we will haw what it takes to bring the Cup home We have the Eaglt. The Eagk is the yacht of revolunonary de 1gn which ha been built to win back the 1987 America's Cup from Australia. Training and testing is under way now off the coast o( California. The Eagle'Challenae. the.Southern California organiia· tion formed to upport rhis effort. ha combined the talents of the be t kipper and the most profe ional team co reclaim the America's Cup and bring 1t to Southern Califor- nia The Eagle Cha»enge has been named as one of the top three contenders for the Cup by Australi a' defendmg skipper. John Bernand Before the Eagle sets sail in Perth , Australia. additional funds must be raised to maximize the effort You can make the difference Join the team' Rise to tbe Eajle Challenge today CaU Gary Thomson. Prestdent. at (714) 557-2262 • fjo:C;:: ~r 7"c~-;: n:-ra:-d"cd:°'ct1bk c::-mnu0<:-o;--I I $25 00 r SS(" l'(' r1 SlOO 00 0 othrr 0 I I N1mr I f Addrns __ C.ry SDrr Z•r--I L ~~I~ ~~u~•:_ ~·~~~ c:_q~6-_ _J AMBRICA'S CUP 1987 )('90 Pullman rrttt, c.o.a Mtia 1""11.t ~261b \ \ ~ . ' • • MAJOa LaAeus .,. • ..,..., AIMrtc:ell '-- WSIT OM:leOM w t.. ..a. oa Alllllll " " JO THH 16 IS Sl6 I Oel>i.M It 11 S 1• I l(e11M1 Cltv IS 1' * t MIMUOte IJ 20 m S s..111e 13 n ,,. ' Chlceeo 11 20 3U ' &AST OtVISK>N loJton n 12 4:M New Yorll 71 12 4ol6 CleV91end II 13 511 2 .. ttlmor• 11 14 .s.e 3 MllwaUllM 17 IS S31 )..., Dt1roll IS 16 4-M S Toron10 i. 20 •12 7'n ...... Y'.~ to.tone,.,... s 0.klend 9. Toronto • MllwaukM •. S..llle ' Cl'llca9o 3, New York 2 Detroit I, TelCH 2 l etllmor• I. MIMnOI• J KenHJ CllY S, Clevetend 0 TMIY'a Gemet Clllcego CAiien 0-01 11 New York <Guid- ry •-II, n Teu s (Meton 2·0) •I Detroit (hnane 4-2), " MIMH Ole (lllole 4·21 II lettlmort tloOdlcktr J·OI. n C...,etend (Schrom l ·ll ti KenMt City CL-rd 3·31, II l'rtdlY't G- A,,..n •• O.troll, " S..llle et Hew Vorll, n T ••H •• Boston, n Cleveland 11 Toronto. n KenMis Cltv et Chlceoo. n 0.kten<I 11 l eltlmor•, n Mlnnesot1 11 MllweukH, n N•tteMI LM..- W8ST DIVISION W L !let. GI Houston 19 12 613 San Frenclsco 10 14 5" "" San oreoo 11 16 sis l Dedeerl 16 1' .4S7 S Atltnle 14 II 43' S1'2 Clncrnnell I 21 27' 10 l!AST DIV~ New York 2 I 1 1SO Monlrtl l 19 11 633 l Plllltde!Pllll 13 16 4411 11'2 SI Louis 13 17 4l3 9 Plt1st1ur9h 12 16 429 9 Chlceeo 11 11 419 9'1'J • WedneldlV's k erts Dedeerl I. SI LOUii 3 Se n Fr1nclKo 11, Chlca119 3 ~ Monlr"t 3, Atlllntl 2 PhllllM11>111• I, Clnclnn•ll 6 Sen Diego 10, Pl1tst1ur9n 4 Houston 6, New York 2 Ttd8Y's CO- At11nt1 (Petmer 1-21 11 MOntrnt CTIOC>s 3·0) ClndMell CGulllcAsort 2-)) el PTlllllde4· Phi• !Hudson 2·2), n ~ Vorlt. (OerNnv 3·01 ., Houllon tRva n l -4), n F r1dlY'I Ge""' N-Yorlt. •I Ded9en. n St Louis •t Allent1 Plllll>ufgh 11 Clnclnnall. " Clllcego 1t Hoo111>11 n Montreat et Sen 0'-9<>. n Pnll•dell>hl• •• San F rencl1eo n AMERICAN LEAGUE Red Sox I, Aneets S IOSTON CALIF°" NIA 1brhbl abrllbl OwEvns rl 3 I 0 0 WUf-2b 4 O I O LYPllS d 0 0 0 0 Grich l>h I 0 I 0 B099S lO S 2 3 2 JO\IMI' IO 4 0 0 0 Buduv dh S I I I Oownl119 II J I O O Rice If S I 2 I BOOM c I 0 0 O BevlOr lb l I 2 O RJcksndh l 2 2 2 St•Pltn lb I o I 1 O.Cnc' lb J I o o Arme' cf s 0 I 0 N•rrPll c 2 1 1 I Geomenc S 1 7 l Henc:trCk r1 1 O O o B1rrtll 7b~ S 0 0 0 R JOM\ rf 3 0 I I Romero n ·-• I I o Scnoflld u • o 1 o Ptlll\ ct l o o o Burlttn Ph I 0 0 0 Totah 41 I 1J I Totala ll S 1 4 Sew• bv lnnlnes l osfWt 000 000 nl-1 Callfomllt JOO 100 010-s Game w 1nn1no RBI -Buc1t.~r (lJ E-Wllf1>119, 0.Clnces OP-Bo\1()11 I , C•llfornre I L08-Bo1ron '· Cetlfornle 1 2B~ Jonu Rice HR-Rt J1c1tson 111 Boo9s 141, Gedmen m IP H It Elt BB SO ..... Clemens W,6·0 • s s s ' SamoHoS,4 I 0 0 0 1 Callfernll McCHkill 1 ' 7 0 2 9 Forsc,, 1·) 7 l 2 0 0 Brvoen L.2· 1 I 4 3 J 1 0 For\ter 7·J 0 0 0 0 I HBP-Oownln9 bv Clemens WP-ClttneM 2 Umplres-44ome. Merrill, Fir\I Henorv S.Cood. Cousin\ Tlllra. Jot\n\Oll T-3 IS A-32 966 A"91i 8V9"89H (Tllroutfl WednndeV's eemel BATTING AB R H Hit lt81 Pct. Jovner 146 21 46 1J JS 31S Oown111g 121 23 31 s n 306 l urlesO<'I II 12 2S t 9 l09 J•c1t.son .. 11 ,. 1 17 Jll Wllfe>n11 90 13 26 2 ll .m Nerron 16 ) s 0 3 J13 Hencrlck 64 • 17 s 11 266 Grich "' ' 13 2 4 .213 SCl'IOflll<I II 7 ,, l 9 .1S9 O.Clnces 131 1J J2 4 .. 244 )OM\ ., 73 70 2 12 2JI Boone 91 ti n 2 7 224 Penis IOI II n I • 206 Miiier 31 4 s 0 2 IJS Tetab 11'0 "' )It 47 110 .2'1 itrTCHING IP H 1111 so W·LEllA Corotll 19 9 6 • o-o 1n Will SO' 41 11 41 2·3 3 02 Sl••Pll 4.)< 0 11 ,. 4· I l so Romenoc• u 47 11 n 3-1 410 Moore IS II 1 17 1·2 4 IO Footer lJ4, lS s 9 3· I 461 McCeskoll "' "' •• 40 2·3 4 II Brvdln 77 l n IS 11 2-1 6 0S Su1t1>11 37~, 46 • 21 2·J 6 4S Forsch 17 I 19 6 9 0-11021 Cen<Mteri• 2 6 l 0-0 llOO T9'1k JOtl 1 JIO 112 204 19-1' 4M Saves Moort 6, Corbell 4, ForKh I Something special waita for you today in de•ified . • ' NAnoteAL L•..U• Dell9lrl .. ~ J LOS AMle•LH IT. a.OUtl .. ,.~ Utl • 2 J) • 0' \ I. 0 0 S 0 I 1 sot 0 so 1 0 • I , 0 , 1 , 0 S I t I 0 0 0 0 (oltmellll OSmltnn Meo.eel J(IW'lt lb ..,,,_ ~Hlllltt\ C V~rl Conrov• OwllCleY. Qouendpfl ..,..,. Wl\ltt tll Horton• Lndm\ ol'I fl 1 111 T.._ SC-11'¥ ......... -'"" s . t 1 I I 1 I • 1 0 0 tOOd )000 .011 , 1 1 0 • 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 • 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0000 1 000 00 0 0 1 0 0 0 u)., ............. 101 112 lit-I St.Lwk -1tO ltl-3 c.,,.. Wlnnl119 RBI -OIJncan (I). E-C01Yov, ~111, Hwr, Owno.v, Sciotcla, Coleman OP-SI. Loula 2 L~ A"""1 11, St. L.OUfl t. 28-S.11. Scl06.C.la Sl-McGM (3), Duncan 2 (IS>, COlllmall ( 121 s.-• Wlllt.m. SF-Sax "' H R 8R Ba IO LM_,..... llelenrutla W,S-2 • 3 S S f ll•nde ..,.. 1 0 0 0 0 St.u.ta Conroy L.t-2 l 2-3 10 S 4 0 2 Ow,,btv 1 1·3 2 O o 0 2 laroar 2 3 l 7 I o Horton 7 2 0 0 1 l llllen1ueta PlfcM<I to 7 t>ellers In the 9111 HIP-McGM bv llelef'l1uele Wfll'-Vetenrutla 3 P8-Sclo$d• 2. Umlllru-Horne, GrtQ9; First. Devis, s.tond. Harvev. Tlllrd, SltllO. T-2 SI A-31,671. MAJOA L•AGUE LEADERS AmertcM ......,. <Tllnutll w.-...Y'• 0.-1 BATTING Ct.> el batil-f>uckell, MlnM· sote, .JIS, YOUlll, MllwtullM , 3t0, loo91, aotton, .JSS, Moseov. Te>ronto. .346, O'l ri.tl, Texts, .m ltUNs.-Puckt ll, Mlnnesoll, ll; R. Htn- Otrton. N-York, JI; .,_, ...... '111 PlllnlP•. o.111enc1. 27; 1099\. Boston. 24 R&I-"-• ,.,....., 151 ca,,saco. 0.1t.- 1anc1. 31; Melll"9tv. N-York, 21; A. 0 11111. SHtlle, 271 LAP•U IJll. Tues, 21. HITs-Puckt ll, MlnntlOll, ~. Moset>v, Toronto, •7, 8009•, Boston, 4', ~. .,....., 461 Voun1, Mllweui. ... 4' OOUI LE5-8o99a, l oaton, 11; l uck· ner. 10\lon, 11, ~ Afttilb. 111 Ow Evens, Boston. 11. Rice. Botton. II. White, Kenws Cltv, ti TRIPLES.--l•rr•ll. lolron. 3, Flt"her, Ttxu , l, Tolleson, C11lca90, 3, 13 are ti.a with 2 HOME RUNS.-~, Melb, 131 Pvctt.•11. MlnnftOI•. 13, Cameco, Oakland, 11. A Devit. S..llle, I, Klnvmen, 0.klancl, • STOLEN BASEs-RHtndlrson, New York, 26, Calli*Osl. Cllfc:aec>, 19; Moseoy, Torooto, 10; Felder, MllwaUkM, 9; Sfletbv. 811tfmol't, 9; Wl99lna, leltlmort, 9. PITCHING (3 daelalons)-lloddlcker. Baltlll'\Ol't , 3•0, 3.07; Cttmem. Boston: 6-0. 2 so. Hau, 0.kland, r I, 7.2• STRIKEOUT~lemena, Bolton, 69, Hurat, Boston, S7, HleUara, MllweukM, 5$, Rllo, 0.kland, SS, Morrla, Detroit, SO SAVE5--4'19ftttll, H.-Von, 10; Aes1, 8altlmort, I ; CamtehO, Ctevetend, 6, ~. .,.._., 61 Hauls. r..... 6. Herl\8f'Oer, 0.lrolt, 6, Jemea, Cllkffo, 6 NdeNll LMtUe l'Tllnutll W__.Y'I CO-> IA TTING C6l el btls)-Rev, Plltst>ur911. 3S9, G1larraoa, MonlrH I, .JSS, Gwvnn, San 0'-9o, .»3, Su, o.deln, .lSl1 8rOC>ks, Mon1r .. 1, .l39 RUNS.--W Clerk, San Fr•nclsco, 24, Gwvnn. San 0'-90, 23, Gladden, Sa11 FrenclKO, 22; L-rd, San Frenclsco, 21, 6 ere tied with 20 Rll-t..-rd, San Frenclac:o, 26, ~ DMeeri. 1'1 ScMlldt, PTllta<Ml- llflie, 25, 8 r001C1, MonlrH I. 24, Certtr, N- Vork, 12, Rev, PllllOurOll, 22 HITS-Owynn, Sen Olaoo. 47, Rev Plll•bur911. 42, Su, o..an. 411 Leonard. San FrenclKo, 40, l rOOk•, MontrH I. J9 OOUILEs.-+itrnendtz New York, 11, Haves. Plllltdellll'tl•, 10, RRevnolds Pit· tat>urgll, 10, 1 ere tied wit" 9 TRIPL.Es-&rC>OIU, Monlrul, 3. COl- tmtn. SI Loula, 3, Reina•. Montrul, l, 6 art tied wltll 2 HOME RUNS.--Oawson, MonlrH I, I, Me""811, o..an. 11 BrOOlts, MonlrH I, 1, G Oevla, Hoollon, 7, Mu<T>ttv, Alle nte, 1 STOLEN llASEs.-o-an, Oed99n, IS; Dori n. Hov•ton, 13, COiemen. SI Louts. 12, R•lnes. Montreal. 12; E Devi•. Clnclnnell. 11 PITCHING (3 deelalons>-Oerllnv. N- Vork, l-0, 4 41, Fernandti, N-York, 4·0 2 21, L.CO\s, San Frencl.to, 4-0, 1 n . McOow... N-Yori<, 3-0, l.ll. Tlbl>s. MontrH I. 3·0, I 14 STRIKEOUTS-Scott, HOO\IPll, S9, V...,..,IH!le, o.deln, SS1 Z. Sml"'· Allenle, SS, Wiid\, Dedeerl, .,, 54.ltdttt., Clllce90, •S SAVES-0 Srnllh, Hooston, 9; Gona111. San Olffo, 6, Oro•co, New York. 6, RHrdon, MontrH I, 6, Beller. Chlc•uo. s. Bt0rosl1n, Phlledelpnle, S. COLLEG,E STANDINGS PCAA IFIMI) c-----w L T UC Santi lerl>lrt II l 0 NtYtde·Lel Veoes 14 1 0 Cet Stele Futterton 12 9 6 Fresno St••• 11 t o UC lrvlna 9 11 O P•cllk 1 14 0 San JoM Stitt 7 14 0 Long Bite" Stitt S 16 0 W l T 44 11 0 32 22 0 36 21 0 ,. 27 I 70 16 2 17 26 0 22 26 0 I~ l3 I PacHtc· 10 Southern c~ ovwa1 UCLA Sl•l'lford Arl11>11• Arlron• Stett USC Ce1tforn11 W L T WL T 21 9 0 39 21 0 11 12 0 JS 21 0 IS 12 0 37 II 0 11 16 0 34 2S 0 ,, 11 0 26 27 0 10 10 0 31 2S 0 C9"lmUftlfY c ..... SOUTHt..ANO f"OLL (f'INll) ..... ~ I Colttot oi C•nvon• 2.~CMal l R1ncllo Senflego ' Sen Oleo<> Mew S S•n Bernardino Valley 6 LA Hert>or 7 LA llell•v lilt ) LPllCI Buell Cltv 9 Tall 10 Cltrua 11.cerd !lb. l3·S 137 JO·I 122 21-• 109 >G-6 90 l3·9 71 27-11 SS 27-10 36 19·12 36 24· 12 :M 2'~ 10 31 ---~--=------ \ In your face! Umpire a., Ll...t (~~ a hand In the face from Rictcewood HJCh. m. uelatant bueball coach Paat Ferken da.rtni a tournament aame Tuesday In Jlfonid&e. The action followed a ~ment be- tween the two after Ferken • eject.ton for que.dontnc the umpire'• ball-atrlke sone. RJctcewood 109t. 'M' • • I I • • SOFTBALL cernrnunnv ~ ALL·SOUTH COAST COHFl!RllNCll Finl TMm Moil VekltOlt Ptavar-l.aure J11uen, R•ncllO S.nllego PllCl'ltr of v .. r-Klm Merlln, R•ncno Sanll'9Q ..... .... v.r. kftMf c:au. ...... P-t(ltT! Martin, R S.nll•oo P-Anl\fll• Gonrelft, Fvt1trt1>11 C-Joette Wiikerson. CvPl'•H C-<i•ll RusHlt, GOl<Mn West 11-Sandv Merllnaz, R. Senlle go tF-Leur• Jenien, R Sant1190 tF-<erte Wllll•ms, Fullerton IF-Rt91M Merctilonnt, GWC IF-Kerri Ne kamaru. CvPl'tn IF-Keren ZuPtn, CvP!'eu OF-Audre Jflotve, Cerritos OF-&erbere Plells, FutlerlPll OF-te:elll Wlnkltr, Golden West OF-Kim MoudV. Cve>r•n Ulll-LIM Montes, Ml SAC O~Nls Sison, Fullerton SECOND TEAM So 10-1 Fr 1·4 So. 272 So .. 216 Fr .. l11 ~. 333 !lo. 22s So 316 Fr 417 So 25' Fr 500 Fr 306 Fr 109 Fr '°4 So 213 Fr 311 P-Stte>h•nll Rowtell, GWC Fr S·2 P-Tool Tucker, CerrOos So l -4 C-l.tstle C,,uren. Fullerton So 219 C-S11errl O'Connor. Cerrito\ Fr 198 IB-<ller kllmllt, Cypress Fr 261 IF-Sheri Veloz, Cerritos So 268 IF-Sandri Wiiiiams, Fullerton Fr .261 IF-Dana R•mos, Goldi" WHI So 111 tF~Harrl•ll Whitt, Or1ne1t Co•SI Fr 333 IF-< K•lthu•wthf, R Sanliego Fr 114 OF-Liz Cervenres. Futtertoo Fr 313 OF-Donne C1me>ena. GWC So Ill OF-Oane Cerllon, Ora1191 Coest Fr ttS OF-Leslfe O•vlon, Cerritos Fr 2'4 Ulll-L K1tenuewtlle, R S.nt1•90 So 27' OH-Vandv Wilkerson, Cerritos Fr ?•2 REGIONAL TDURNAM8 NT ( 11 G4lldlft West) SeNns.Y't Fln1 R.mcl 10 e m -Cllaff•v vs. San Oleo<> Mew 10 a m . -Cerritos vs P•saden• NC>OO -Re,,cllO Sa"llll90 vs. LA Pierce Noon -Taft vs Palomar Note -Losers l>l•v et 1 P m •nd winners ptay el 4 P.m .. wllll loH r's br•Cktl gemt\ at 6 and 8 end a wlnMf''S brecto.11 111me at I F ina l round on Sundev Hkllfl Kftoot ntt*lrtel (f'lntl) CIF 4·A "a' Scl'IMI, ... ..,_ Rt<erd I. 1'.untaln II...,, SUftMt 21-4 1 Gahr. Sen G1br1•I llalltY 71 0 l. 8 cl1411, SUftMf 22 • S 4 C vPrtss, Empire • ,13-S S Rlgtttlll, Norrllern 23·3 6 Ktnnedv, EmPlte 21·6 1 Oo' PUIC>IOs, Cllennet 22·3 I. llurt>enk. Foolllllt 21 -2 9. Newbury Perk, Mermonte 21-7 10 St J0'8Ph, Angelus 16·7·1 Oltttrs Et Oor•dO, 19·5, <><-View, U· 101 BurrOVQ"S (Burl>lnlt.). te-•. Metw Del.. 11·6· 11 Rolllno Hiiis, 19·J. Menne, 12·12' El Modtn•. 14-1, Wtt1m1Mtw, 17•fl C•nvon !Anaheim) lS-10 CIF J-A I. WMdbl1dllt, SM View 17 ·l 2 L• Mired•, Svtlur't>en 11·3 3 Gerden Grov•, Garden Grov• 11-4 4 CreKallta ll1ltev, Pecllk 19 4 S SUMv Hlh\, Freeway 13-3 ' Nori,, Torrtnc•. OcH n 17-S 7 Wt1lern. Ora1191 14-11 I HH Wiison, Slerre 11·7 9 Sev•nne, Or•nH 11·6 10 ll•lencla, Or•1191 13·8 Other•: Workm•"· 17-6; Mevletr, 13·7, Wl lnul, IS-•, FvtlerlPll, 13· 10, Torrtnc•. 1'·S; I OIH Grandt, 10-e CIF 2·A I Chtrter O.k. Montvlew D -1 2 CorOM, tvv 19-2 3 Et Toro, Sout" Cout 19'-S 4. San Bernardino, S.11 AnclrH s 21 ·0 S. C"lno, Htei.ndl 11· S 6. El Monie, Min ion 11 att.v 10-2 1. Quer1l HlN1\ Golden 11·1 • I Alem•rlY, M n FtrntnclO Vt lltv 19·2 9 Arrovo. Min ion V1llaY 17-1 10 Merv Stir, Camino RMI 11·2 Others LHUN Hiiis, 11·9, Indio. 19·3. L• wne. \S-3; Olemond lar, IS·4, AIUMI, 19·S NBA ftLA YOffffS c ..... 1ce.,... ( ... , .. _) WESTaRN CONf'8RUKa ......... n. ......... Uktrs 119, Hou,ton 107 HOUllPll 112 Ullera 102 (Serles toed, 1-1) Friday - L ...... , •• HOU\lon, •.30 p.m !wnd1v -Lekers •I Houston. 11.30 Pm Weanaaaav -Houston 11 Lakers. I.JO pm Frldev, Mey 23 -L•k•n at Houston, T8A Ctt nKtsservl Mondav. Mev 16 -Hoo$11>11 11 Lekers, noon (If naceuervl EASTaltN CONF8R .. .C8 9"1M YI. MlwlWM Bostoo 12t, MllweukM 96 tao.ton letd\ ,.,1 .. : 1-0) Tonlg,,t -Mllweuk" •1 8ost1>11, S Pm SaturdaY -Boslon et Mllweukff, 11 a m Sundev -8oll1>11 et MltweukH. 12.30 pm weanet<lev -Mllw•vi<M •• 8oat1>11. TBA (If nKt1servl Frldlv, Mev 23 -Boston •• MltweullH, TBA (If neau•rvl Sunda y, Mev 25 -MllW•ukH e t Bo\IPll, 10 a.m (If ,_."""' All llmtl POT. VOLL•YaALL USVA~ .... (at WkNl!I, KM.I llevrnonct Construction <Ora"" County) de4. Ar"*' Fon:ies, 1S·7, IS-6. Reyrnonct Construction (Or"•nee Countv) Oi'f Gee>rW Meson Unlversllv, lS-7, lHS. 15-3 OMO ... fttlllM NEWl"ORT LAHDtNG -3-4 anoltrt 3' send t>en. n cellco t>en , I lltllbut, 16 sculPln, 4 rock fl•ll, 12 madttrel DAVEY'S LOCKl!R (......_, ... di) -116 a1191tr1 II be rrecuda, ~ bonito, 3e vtllo""''"· 11 rock coc:t. I ll•llbul, ?IS calico ban, 42 send t>eu , 3'e mackerel, 9 blue HfCll, SO wllltt 11111, J6 ICVIPln, 2 lllMPShead. DANA WHARF -70 •nvter1 1'5 bau . I 11e1111u1, 13-4 me<lltral, 10 KUl!lln. •••• ••••• AUTO It.ACING ...,. <•• ......,,,..., waONUOAY'S TOii "al!OS Jim Crtwlord 214.5'2 Tom Snavt 212 414 'A J Fov1 20t 497 K1vln C09a11 209.253 IObl>V ltel'lat 207 "' Gerv B•ll.,,heu,..., 104 4fl Rich V091tr 103.2S2 Sttvt ChelMV 200.'31 lndY 500 llMUP The t•nt1llv1, N 'tll l lineup for the Me'f 2S lndtenaPOtla SOii, lilllng «Ktver, ~ towr1, cer number, chenla-englnt 1nd foVf · l•P evtr•9' ~ In mlteJ per nour bestd on quellflcetlons last S.turdlv end Sunelav Cr-rOOkle, lddlllonal -llflclltlona tnla Sat· urd•v end ~y) ROW 1 1 Rick Mhn . lallarsfleld. No 4, Mercll-Coaworlh, 216.111. 2 OIMV SUlllven, Loulsvlllt, No 1. MerCll•CO\wor111, 21S-lt2 3 MlctlMI Andrtlll, Nn ertt,,, Pa , No ''· Marcn-Cosworltl, 21' m •ow 2 4. llobbv R•llel, OUblln, Ohio, No. 3, Mardl·Coswort,., 213.SSO. s. Merlo Andrtfll, Nlltrlfll, Pl., No 7, Lole·CO\wor'lll, 212.300. 6. Al Unaar, AlbvQuerque, No II. P9"\l>.•·Ct11vro1t1, 212.295 ROW J 1 Kevin Cooen, Reoonoo 8t1ch. No 1 Merch·Couvorth, 211 m I Tom Snave . Peradlw ll1ttav. Aru No ll, Merctl-CO\WPrlh, 211171 9 Roti.r10 Guerrero, C<*>mbla No S March·CO\wortll, 111 S16 ROW 4 10. Al UnMT Jr . Albu<lueroue No 30 L011·CO\worth, 21 1 SJl II. Ed Plmm, Dublin, Oruo, No 66, MarCll·Coawortll, 21017' 12. Emerton FllllPt ldl, Brull, No 40, Mercll•COIWOf'lll. 210.237 ROW S 13. JoMnv Rutherford, Fon Worth. No 21, Merch·Cosworlll, 210 no " r-R•n<llf Lenler, O•vla, Fla , No 17 MerCll-COtwor11't, 20t 964 IS. PenchO Certer, &rownat>urg, lnc:t , No IS, Lolt ·Coaworth, 20t 63S ROW 6 16 r ·Rooano M«eno, Brazu No 9. LOlll·Co.wOf'"', 20t .. ,. 11 r-JllCCIUtt Vllltneuv•. C•neda, No 11, Mercll-CO\wor-tll, 209.397 11 Denny Oneal1, Santa Ana, No 2S, MerCll·lulck, 209.151. •ow 1 lf J~ Gan.a. Mu lco, No. SS. March-CO\wortll, M .m 70. Tonv 8tlltnheusen. lndl•nallOlls, No. 16, Merch-Co1worth, 208.933. 21 Arlt Luvtnctvk. HOiiand, No 61, LP11-Co1worth, 207.111 ROW I 22 Otnnla Firestone, Lo\ Altmlto1. No 36. LOlll·Cosworth, 207.471 23 Geoff l rebh•m. Aullrelie, No I, LOlll-Cotwortn, 207 Ol2 2• A J Fovt. Houa•on. No 14, Merch- Coswortll, 21l.212 ROW f 2S. R•ul Bonet, ererff, No 22. Lole- Coaworth, 711.202 26 Scott lrevton, COldw•ter. Mic'rt • No 71, Merctl·l ulck, M .07' 17. r-Ptih Kr"'"'. tndlanaoolf•. No. 42, 19U Mercti-CO\wortll, 107 941 •ow 10 21. Chip Ga11tnl, PlttaOUrell. No. St. Marell·Cotworth, 207 5'0 NOTE: AYtr'9e IOI' flr1t 21 quaH• fler..-21U S1 mpn (a ver"' for llfll 21 In , 1tlS-20I .,,, fWUCMmC(. Hltll lcMlt C.IJI 4·A Pl.AYO,,. ( ............. ,,..., S.nte Banlert at Rollll\o Hllli ,.._ 11 \/Illa Park L89IM8 -..di a l HwvefCI INvtrlv Hlllt 11 Wftli.tla ~ Var4M et C:.-.. Mw Thc!YMnd Oek• at Ulft •""' Foothll a t luene Palm Sflflnel at Mlrala,. .. MHL "-AYOf'ffl c. ...... ..... ( ...... ..,..., WALas COM ...... NCa NtwYn R....-n n.*""- Montrtel t, NY ltnMM I MonfrMI 6, NY hneen 2 MontrNI 4. NY R.,,..,.. 3 Cot) NY lttnMrl 7, MontrHl 0 MontrH I 3, NV Rt llOerl I (MOnlrMI wins Mflts, 4·1) C'"-W9lt..L CONf'•R&HC• St. Lwll YI. Caleal"f SI. Louis 3, CelOtrv 2 C•l9•rv I, SI. Louis 2 CalOtrv S, St. Lout' J )' Loula S, C..IOtrv 2 Calffrv 4, St. Louis 2 St Louis '· Ceteerv S (ot) WednHdtv'• Kor-Calgary 2. SI Lou!\ I CCtlffrv wlni Mfia, 1·3) STANLaY CUP FINAU l lNstef-) ~ ... ~ Frldlv-Motltrtel et Caloary Sundav-MontrH l el Cel9erY Tueldev-<•19•rY et Montrnl Tllurt<l1v, Mev n-<1111erv 11 MontrMI S.turdlv. Mev 2.-MontrHI •I CeJeary (JI ne<:flHTV) Mond1v. Mey 26-C•lll•rv •I Montr"t (If '*-Ut rvl Waelntsdav, Mey 2t-MontrMI t i CelQery '" necau•rv> • w.....-.,.,~ .. IASl.ALt.. MwrlC.lll L-.ue BALTIMORE OftlOLEs-Ptac9d JKlllt Gurlerrtz, '"°'"'OP· on the 1ht U·clav dlubled retro-actlvl 10 Mev 11 Rtcalled Ru Hudler, lnfltlder, trom Rochftter of fhe tnternetlonel LH9UI. CHICAGO WHITE SOX-Act!Wltd Grt11 W•llltr, firsr boam1n, lrom Iha 21- oev dlMiOltd llst C»tlotled erven Ultle, 1~. to autfalo °' !tie Atnel'Ull A•· socle tlon CLEVELAND INOtAM~ Emit C•maCllO, Plleher, Oft Ille lS•dtY dl..-cl 1111 Racatted Reoole Riiier, pl1c:t., trom MtlM of the lnltf'11tlloNI LMOUt SEATTLE MARINERs-PIKaCI Denny h rllouK, ..cond beHmAn. on Ille IS--dlv dlHOlad list Actlvetao EClwln N~. ottdl· tr Recetled H1rold Revnolda, lllfltldar, from Cetoerv of tttt Ptcltlc Coast LH llVt S.nt Jerry Rffd. t>ltcMI', to Celllerv. l'OOTaAU NdtMI F ..... L....- RAMs-R .... Md 1 111 8el11, ~llW Untmen. RAIOERS.-Tradtd en undlKIOMCI Iv· ture draH ctlole• to Ille San F renc:IKO 4ttn '°' Eert c-. 119111 end DETROIT LIONS-Welvtd RHH McCaK, ttotit end, I nd Oen IUlll, llntCiac:kff Slontd Olis Gren I, wide re - ceiver, kott Barrowa, guerd. Mllell Ce11t11an. now l•ckle. Ferrell Wlllon, Ctnltr. NIO Genclteno, 111ec .. klclltr. Klflh 80.lev, offensive linemen, Scoll Hiiimen, delenalv• Ind, 1nc1 Ken Luckett, wtetv NEW ORLEANS SAINTS-Signed Jett !>anchez, safetv, Grell Lo«>trCI, center, T o . llrl11os, linebecker, 8 1M 8Htlea •nd Sid C"•mbtra, IKkles United Statft 1'""'941 L.Mtlllf JACKSONVILLE IULLS.-SIOned Mike HHtev, wide rec1lvtr, to 1 lllrM·v•ar con1rect COLL.llGll FRESNO STATE-N•mad Gary Cun· r1lnot1tm 11111t11c dlr.ctor ILLINOIS-Announceo 1"81 "'""V 811tle, torw•rd, wl" Iran,,.,. from Northern '"'"°'' ST BONAVENTURE-Ne"*' 1111 Wllllmort esslat•nl be\lltlbeM Coac:h TULSA-Nt mtd John Benn etllltllc di· rtc:lor VANOERBIL T-Announcea 11181 lol>Ov WestbrOOk•, forwerd, wH dl1mlsstd from acllOOI ave to ooor orldn. Pieced ~ Ntwrntll, tennis coach. on admlnl•trellw IMve, N•med S.m leker euoct•t• allllttle cllr.clor lor tlnanclal ctweloomtflt. ) OrengeCOMtOAILYPtLOT~.-11.~ • ==:::::;:::::==========================================::Z:~--...... ~· The Bahia club bets on Calcutta It seems the Bahia Corinthian Yacht Oub has come up with somet~ina new in yacht racing. BethnJ on a yacht race? Well, maybe Calcutta strle. The event is the Duel an the Sun CalC\ltta Auction and Regatta June 14, which will feature 12 ~irs of match racers between boats of equal rttina. They will race boat-for-boat apinst each other -winner take all. At101t l.ociuEY A n., ceremony . Lido late Yaclat Clab offtcen two-block tile flaC• at tile clab'• ()peDiDC Day cenaoalee. Prom left are Dennie Plckena, commodore; Jloler Roueet. Tice commodore; and Mart llanaon, rear commodore. * Safe Boating week i begins on Julle . l : State Sen. Marian Bergeson of Ncwpoft Bea£h bas aatced to bt the sra.ftd ! masball of the Safe Boatina Weck pa rack June I 1n Newport Harbor. The parade is jointly sponsored by the Balboa Power Squadron. a unit of the U.S. Power Squadrons, and the U.S Coast Guard Auiuhary. Berseson will bt aboard Rolan Kcister's 41-foot powerboat Misty. the lead boat in the paradt. Newport Beach Mayor Phil Maurer and Costa Mesa Mayor Nonna Hcrtzoa have also been 1nv11ed to be aboard the lead boat in the colorful parade. Boats from all of the local yacht clubs are expected to form the P9rade. The parade will commence at l p.m. with a Newport Hatbor Purol fireboat leadina the way. Startin& point will be at the Harbor Dept. Before the parade bc&Jns the Coast Guard Au11liary wiJJ be cooductint free Courtesy Marine Exammations at the Harbor Oepartmtnt bqinnina at 9 a.m. The winnin, bid holder will reap the proceeds o the combined auction amounts minus a percentage for the Corinthian Youth Foundation, a non-profit foundation to promote yachtina education for interested youna sailors. The regatta will be prccceded by the Calcutta auction Fnday night, June 13, at 7:30 p.m. The Calcutta will aJlow biddina on your favorite of the 12 paired boats. In order to part1c1pate, an entry blank should bt filled out at BCYC, l~I Bayside Drive by both skippers pnor to June 6. Both skippers and crews should plan to attend the sluppers meeting and aucuon on Friday night, June 13. Afterwards the prospective per- formance boats will be auctioned off to the highest bidder. Classes announced for Pan Am GameS Racinf will be! in pairs like the America s Cup or the Congressional C'uo. Persons wishing to participate and destring more information may call chairman Carolyn Nelson Hardy 644-9530. ' . The. Pan American Yachtina Orpnizatfon (PA YO) and PAX-Jn- d1anapohs, Inc .. have announced the yachtina classes that will participate in the 1987 Pan Amcncan Games. The yachting venue is to be a1 Michipo City. Ind. 1n the sadboard class. A full team will consm of 13 sailors. "fhis. seven-event plan was adopcd by the PA YO executive committee at a meeting in January. but not announced pen(lina a request for consideration from the J-24 Class. The request was given careful consideration by the five- m~~ber PAY<? executive commutcc, which by majority vote adopted 1he ongmal plan wtthout change. The classes chosen arc Laser, Division II Sailboard (to be selected) Snipe Lightning, Star and Soling. There will be a separate event for men and ~ome~ Mothers' Spring Regatta set Newport Harbor Yacht Club will lead off the weekend yachting activity today (Thursday) with the Mothers' Sabot Spring Invitational Regatta sailed over bay courses. On Saturday NHYC will agaim claim the spotlight in competitive sailing with the fifth race of its Ahmanson Series for lntcrnauonal Offshore Ruic ratings and the Dickson Series for the Performance Handicap Racing Fleet. Small boat sailors will sec action Saturday in Balboa Yacht Club's Herb Tobin Kids Regatta, and Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club will host its Lido-14 Open Invitational Regatta. It will be a busy weekend at Dana Point with three yacht clubs holding individual Opening Day ceremonies on Sunday and combining for a colorful Opening Day parade. The clubs arc Dana Point Yacht Club, c.apistrano Bay Yacht Club. and Dana West Yacht Club. In addition DPYC will stage its May Flower Regatta for one-design boats on Saturday and Capo BYC will conduct th'c second race of its Ocean Racing Series for PHRF yachts on Saturday. In other Southern California Yachting Associauon areas: Los Aa1ele1 -Loa1 Beacla CabrUlo Beula Yaclat C1•b -Cabrillo Series No. 3 (PBRF), s..tar, S..1Mra Califon.la Cal-to Claam- ploulllp, Sahl,..,, Suday. Hudq&oll llanHr v.~, Cl.b -TOVD&mUt of Clwnp6oa1 (Sa .. h ). Saa. .... ,, Saday. Master Chorale grows up By CAROL HUMPHREYS Dlllf .... C.. , ...... "This 1s a new era. After per- forming fo r years in churches and h1&h schools, this year we wtll be a part of the opening night at The Center. The ChoraJc is ready," an- nounced Dr. M11rlce Allard, director of the Master Chorale of Orange County to the 300-plus gathered to celebrate the Chorale's 30th an- niversary. "I called every organization around for input on how to do an auction. We've never done one before. It's a sell-out. We didn't ellpcct such a turnout. At the last minute we had to rcarranae the din in& room and change the decorations. commented benefit chairman Bobble Beat. (Hubby P11l is prez of the Board and emceed the evening.) Los Aa1eles Yacbt Club -Macbo lavltatloul Recaua (Elclaell1-ZZ), Sa .. rclay, Suclay. Stal Beacla Yaclat C1•b -lstlamH Race (PHRF, Catallu-%7), Saturday, Saclay. Suta MOilica Bay California Yacht Club -Overton-Tanner Walsh Scries(IOR, PHRF, MORC) Saturday. King Harbor Yacht Oub-Little Boat Regatta (one- design). Saturday, Sunday; Point Dume Race (Spinnaker Series No. 4) Saturday. Del Rey yacht Club -Sunday Skippers Race (Tannenberg Series). Sunday. San Dteco Coronado Yacht Club -Around Los Coronados Race (handicap), Saturday. San Dieso Cruiser Association -USCGA Blue Water Series (predicted log), Saturday. Silver Gate Yacht Club -Thunderbird Series, Saturday. Sunday. Coronado Cays Yacht Club -Multiclass lnvita- t1onal Regatta. Saturday, Sunday. • Conez Racing Asociation -Opening Day Regatta, Sunday. Mission Bay Yacht Club -One Day Regatta, Sunday. Oceanside Yacht Club-Yearly Series. Sunday. San Diego Yacht Club -Opening Day; Openina Day Race (invitationaJ), Sunday. _ Nortla u41 lalu4 Santa Barbara Sailing Club -Hardway Rqatta, Saturday. 0 Durty Nelly's" OPEN FOR LUNCH & DINNER Monday thru Friday 11 AM to 9 PM The Pacific Ballroom of the New- portcr Inn provided the setting for the well orchestrated auction (although r:::=====================;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;:--t very crowded, but then they aJways arc) of over 300 silent and live;. items. Auctioneer Ju ae.tl1 was assisted by four bouncy Ram's chccrteadcrs who bounded between the beautifully decorated tables (by CMrUe Pup) cncourqing bids on such items as a mystery train ride, SO pounds of Muican shrimp, a visit to the set of "Dynasty," and an ciaht-wcck-old cocker spaniel puppy. It wu a fun auction and the result of obvious hard work by Carol Dia•, Fru Wlaemu, Pat EwaJ4, Oretc!:laen Lawreace, ltallaleea l"yHrs .. , nee Clark Aallata ltjtRlff, Dona Bmce u4 Gayle Aaderaoa. Proceeds should be SS0.000. Dinner entertainment was enthusiastically performed by The C'alifornians ... 20 perky sinacrs from within the Master Chorale whose repertoire includes chamber music to popular and patriotic selections. Under the direction of Oarln Cauey, 1t was announced that the lfOUp has been invited to perform It the White House. The pla f undra1scr was titled · WONDERFUL .. and 1t a~pcars that 1t 1s for the 11 S-mcmber ensemble. the oldest cont1nu1n1 pcrfonnina ans orpn11~11on 1n tht> county They arc cumntly scheduled for four 1n· auauraJ pcrformancn th!! stason at the Oranac County Ptrfonn1na An! Center .. after JO years .. the Master Chortle hi' found a home P•,.nnl 11 e41&ed by Dally Pllol IJk e41llor Vl4• Dea•. Oak & Brass Promotions' ANTllUB snow &SALB Thursday May 15 -Sunday May 18 FEATURING antique furniture, unusual lamps, vintage, glass, unique coOe~tebles. dolls. books. art. orlentalla. silver& paper items. FREE •dml11lon W1N S2,000 IED9'00M SET FREE parking COME IN FOR YOUR ENTRY FORM DRAWING SUNDA Y MAY 1IAT2P.M. ~ Huntinqj"ol) ~~ Center<!) o...·----~--·"'"----· .. ·---·-·--................ ....._.,. ,.,... ............ ' ()p4tn ,,_..kdaY9 1 O I / Saturd~y 10 ft and Sunday 12 • ~ - A •ln&ln& celebration Celebration la tile offtclal name of tile 1roap of yoatll •1.naen wlao entertained at 8ablA CorlDtlalan ~acbt Clab'• Open.In& Day for tile tlalrd malCJlt year. The talented yoanpten, cllreCted by Karen Bael, ba•e &one OD to •I.DC before \ tbwncla la Orua&e Coalaty a.ad were claoeen to reprHent tile Ualted 8tatee ba tile Imactnatlon Celebration IAter- national, wbere tlley eba.red tile atace wltll Burl In.. \ I ' M OrMQeCout DAILY PllOT/Thurlday, May 15, 1988 4 mu DOI.IT SllJ!O SU" I'("" "U CLOSE HllCE" (I) 11s no tlCKAaO rt YOll "JO JO DA91CEI YOUI LlfE IS CALUllC" 6 00. 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I W .. .._..I SISfOS" I ·~ UO (l'C Ill ·0011 a our•• 10. iertU" IJO lt U 111 STADIUm a S carrraasc ... ,., at l :SS/I Miiiion Ways To D ie (A) ll 6 :45 ... rrTY IN PNIK fN·ll) 7 :00 a. t ·OO UI lllli!\ml!t l!rt1 S11flym DA,_SJtOUSL Y CLO•t•t s 1 Ac •d•my Aw•rds OutlQ HO fl'O•tl) OUT Of' A f'atc:A ~) •t I : 30 I Police Ac•Omy SHOWS AT Ill(~) •t 6·30 6:15 .. t ·30 IO IO OAM<:Ea (a) SHOWS AT 2 :00 4 :00 6 .00 1 :00 10·00 SHOaT caacurT c•• 1 103:205:307:411 &. t :SO •LUE CrTY (a) 1:45 J 45 S :4S 7:45 .. t :4$ THIE lllOtll£ V PfT (f'O) SHOWS AT I U 3 U S SS 7 ,55 &. t SI ~DIOCNJ 1,35 3 :35 s,n 1 35 &. t ·U A merlun JOOO (~ · 1 3) •LU• CITY cat Plus CO·Htl Wllnen (A) IOIOD~•C•) Plus Co·Hlt Ja19ed Edte (A) DOMl•OUTIN ~aLV HILLS l•t Tiie Color Purple (P~·I l) ~ ...... " cPO-• n ,..,,. •.ck to Ill• lfuture (PGI calTTatS lflia-tat Plu• In Tiie $11adows of Kthm•nl.,o (A) DAIVl~NS D~ l ;llWllNyi / 7.ll WbtMlt I UtMltt 12 f REE Ufllttl fhtt41 "'SWEET LIBERTY' IS A SWEETHEART OF A MOVIE.'' -Gene Shalu, THE TODAY SHOW ----STARTS TOMORROW---- IOUIA l"AllK UAMoYfft llS2-4'"3 IOINA ~AAll COSTA MESA Edwwdl T_.c.n... TSl-41 .. E. TC>ftO E""'dd JToro 511·"°° l'ldflc'a e.-Pan Or~ 821-40'70 fill WITH Fill l~UI I M l ?0 ~ 40 I 00 10 10 BlUE CITY 1111 I (I 7)0 4J0 6)0 8)0 10 Jt ~~· °''. 101 .ii~ w•o 20 OOllT STtttO OAVIO IOWll A.UOlUTt llGfNNltS "°" l i 1 17 JO ? 50 S 10 I lO 9 SO CRITTERS (l"O-UI ' 00 ) 00 s 00 1 ()() 9 00 10 so 1?1310• tZll/, Kully fl 011 A1nt NO RnRIAT, NO SURRENDER ll"Ol 11n 2ls •l5 6 35 a Js 10 l S . DANGllOUSL Y CLOSE 1111 17 SO 1 SS 4 SS 6 SS 9 00 II 00 OOUT SfllllOtHAN ..._ AT CLOSE ltANGI 1•1 17 lO J 00 s JO • 00 10 lO _,...,.ON llACH MIU.o. Yl&JO Edl9• Owllr c... l ..... v-. ,..,, 1414710 ..... LA KAMA ICWPCMT a.ACH Nllt. faeliell S.-• i........,,.., c-.. •1.oa:J ~ LA~ OllAMCll l"lclllc'I ~ 5.n-1'11 SIMill!9 Dt II m.1110 LA MIRADA ITM~AUT....., SHOttT CIRCUIT ll"OI 12 SS ) 10 S » 1 d 9 SO OOUT ITUtlO HAN..,.. AT CLOSE ltANGE <Ill 11 •S ) IS S d I IS 10 45 FIRE WITH fill (l"O-U I I 00 ) 20 ~ .I() 8 00 10 I) !>aturelll'f 17 4S l OS \ 7S ' 4' tO I\ BlUE CITY 1•1 I 00 1 50 • 40 6 7S 10 OO!l I 007 50• A06 758 10 10 00 5ot. P,.vlew 8:00 PRETTY IN PINK Cl"O-lll ,, so 4 so 8 so LUCAS Cl"O-U) 7 d 6 •S 10 <15 GUNG HOt (l"O-U) 17 lO 4 JO. JO l'OUCI ACAOIMT 3: UOt IN TRAINING lllOI , "° 6 "° 10 40 GATEWAY DOI.IT ITIMO DANGHOUSl T CLOSI 1•1 I lO ) .I() S .I() 7 50 10 I() DOI.IT l'rUIO llte;MMO NIOll JO JO DANCEi, YOUI llFl IS CALLING <Ill ' 00 • 00 6 00 8 00 10 00 LAST RISOltT c•1 I S0 • )0 ~ lO 8 JO 10 )0 LEGEND ll"OI , 00 s )0 9.00 SAT ONLY 420 9SS CRITTERS cl"O-u1 1 so 7 70 10 so ~A r onlv 1 lS 6 I ~ ~"' Prl'v••w I 00 VIOUTS All 11.UI ,,...,j, • 10 . 40 COlOI "'"ll ,,..,,. I JO S 50 10 10 118 WY •M• MIU• MGffT LA9T THURSDAY 2 ADULTS '. "; PRICE OF 1 For The ••••on ANAHEIM BUENA PARK 111•111! !Hl!Lt1un II ftl:f! hn Ule!Ul 010 lu•ul• W ti ll•tft CINMI IOl#e IN Ml, I(... CIHI '' .;-M "'.. •r lll"(N'· LAST lllOIT 191 HO lmlAT, HO MUNDll DAHGHOUSL T ClOSI 1111 ________ c,._1 AMHICA 3000'"'"' OUNG HOI I'°'''' MONIY '" CN I '""'eum ..... SHOttT CllCUIT ,,,. lltON IAOll , ... ,,, rlll WTTH .... C,.UI JOY OP SIX c11 J ... ca1n11$ , .... u, Pll1TY IN '9NK 1110o ta) aLUI CfTY ,., IN THI SHADOW Of KJLIMANJAAO 1•1 Lo HABRA .. ~ .... : d.11 ! Gr-r.J ' . lftW 9'/nlW IHOaT CllCUIT 1,.1 UtON IAOll <N-t a1 HIWAY 39 • 'l"T • CllllNI '°""' " au K-. '""'~ IHOtn CflCUIT ''°' llK>N IAOll flflO.UI LAST USO.T 1•1 DOWN AHO OUT IN llVHL Y Milli 11> NO lmlAT, HO SUlllNDU 1'91 THI WT DUOOH {,.111 MONll' '" ('IOI OUNO HOt ,,._,,l .. -. RUFFELL'S ll>HOLSTERY INC. * U "A wtllll For The ~· (19811 (Pitt 2 o1 2) Pwt• Str ... Alc:N;d WldrnlR. I UM. AMENCAN 8m.E MOM REM. "°"-£ MOVIE **~"Some Klnd Of Htro" (1te2: Rictl#d Pryor, Mlt90' Klddlr. ... ---..... .,_.., Ul-Sllt Tm ...... ... , ..... ... .,. ... NOW PLAYING mw..tUmSTC. .__..a.r ....... IMA ·-_ .... _ ---11· .. ~u. 111•1•1----Ujl-(-~ f11•1tU4• (11'11&6•11 -·-... -( __ ,_ "-'"-f114)1)! ... 11WlllUO -·---I-,_ -c..----(114)-1111 (11t)-- ---17\41...., .,_ =,:c.. --.-0i-.-C1Mll11 .. -·--~o.· 014 ' mflm1Ul·J5'l E.-e-.Tm ..,. ....... •D111com ......,.. u ..... -'ACflC LA mM>A tM-2• -CUllll MMJ. '37-t340 ~au OIWAa/SO CAl -lMUIA ltiS M.l IM cm COfTO 71M&ll Ut-llll -···-1'1.f771 -a.1111..CDnll Somethjng wonderful has happened ... No. 5 is alive. THE BEST OF THE BEST W OEPUIJS A • ..,.., llDIDll _,. A llYSCITifU • • JI al ll1Y HlG ....... fms • arr WITTll rr. CASI IJrO EPPS.J PmJll•mSl•lSf ... l llCIEllYJIYDT ANIAlllll~PClll .... :::: __ ._, ___ _ 111111- ~ ... ~ . '-"-•--,..,, =-= ;;;;;'.. •U-0-......_ .... ..... ...... ._ ..... ,., ...... Ui\---HIMI • ., 0.. ca. ... .,.,.. • _..,. m •• ..... -...... __ ...,. =· . ..._ .......... ... :s.,c.. .. ................... •I CALL 842-5878 '. . .. t ~~ . ,;...-; ; ..-.;. f ~~{ . .;.-.': .. -· l-. ~ ~~ , :1$-'',·-,·~· ·~~· ..... ~ ,. ......... )4 ..... " / !... .¥ ~: R&'M~" Ill ·'-• ~. • let u. Help y .. Sell Y •• Preptttrl c. Cla1111W, 642-5678 for Inf ormatlon & surprisingly low cost. BY PLACING AN AD IN THE DAILY PILOT' CLA IFIED PAGE R&'Mtt(" I ' t • PRIVATE PARTY RATE (No Cancellaoon) 4 line, 5 tim(I minimum •.60 p«"t lmo·Eumple: 4 tin • 5 daya11208 • Ralf! do.t no1 applf 10 (.()'II\ nal 1u.iun1 .. Au1--U•f , O...tlnA ur Ru! uttlf • NOCANtELLATlO OR CHA, r.!\c>ll(t>tlwtAdt.1"'n C111t-•u~.a. r. tt. rJ A111011n• • fott MOftt; rn.TAIU CAU. 642-5678 I LOST IY OWB llT ,..._,_, PUelD M •II TIE euma1. \ . , .. • • ~ CoMt DAILY ptLOT/ Thuraday, May 15, 1tee Al! ..._ 1111 ..._. Int ._.al llM l•nl I' m111H•.. 1111 ... ,t..-/ll•n= Aa• "e... II• '~iiii= ULDf/Tlf/T AUTOa.TAILJNG ......... f /P.11111 •a91ftlft-INCL&iD f06t d ~ ........ . ,-•••n1111 I -·~ ........ 0.-Mell ... -..WOf'Mn,,., ....... lft~Wll'fm .eme1,,u...-110. ~ .. WATa DilJWjWf>PMTMINT -lllillll• ..._OOIM'llfflon,,..IM ..... ~ ........ ~ .... fof...._ ~.21-11 cinMw .... "E""OlRATO" 170. FM>NTI009Clft0ftllet4 lld Uftl'S--Ul.D of*I ..,.,.... Ito• op.. ......... ..._7'41 bO*, ....... 4 ,,_.. 7B-1A1 11 .... 1... ~ ..... 00f1un1ty tor o.,...,. --~~ ........ 146-"100 F09' iAll • JOHN ~wt,M•t minded, .cro1111 *'"" -·· ·-..... -... WAYNI TINHl8 CUJI ... n.-........... ..... ~town• ... ..._,_,,~ 11 .... 14111 mm.It•-member1f1iP 1780 eon..'°' ~/WOtt...... '~CA .-itlllloo..i lnoofM.... :r"ec::.....,.. ._,., Ot""9 • *""' *' "°"' '9iOt Paula ~411 b09t ~. •c:Nnl9 * 11.._aoo ~~~o:; 3000COtonedet~ F0tAnlr!W:o-c-.MOfn. ~ '°C::-~-Q, ~ <WiAAiiOUEITAUT· orvt*t02~' 8MI 11MIM101 fot fUrther lnto/-.ipt. STY~~ ::. ~ = ~ = wt1 w=. ~· ~ ~r:n: MOORINO • Mewpor! 1111!!~1!!!1!!!1!! =.... L.a Pl.II ~ dee. M6oft MeM enc.. ...,,. 754-10:SS ~ btWft 7AM4'M '200 ot>o. en-e232. H.,bor. Cll= H 1 z 11. 7212 ~ 8t V.,._lmmed Op.n•19 Ltvht .-.mbly ~er -..on· thru ,r1, '1t4 I, ~ iiA64 TIN-~· .... I X2~ P.O.lclll BIO HYnt1n9'onltw:ih rent/comm.' Yvonne .....-ctl No tllll*1efioe Fruit It. l•nt• Ana . MIS CLue.Femlly mem-7141882°L2 ' ... , .. 111 CoeteMeea,CAt2'29 ta-1212 ...._100S '*· 14""*1 In penon. 60-1511 Mr9fllp. Tran•t.,•bl• _E_w._7_1_4'--~-.,...-.- NOW HWNClll Attn: l1ft'I GlJ•FMn J14-M1.,Jlll llLLING CL.ERK 1316 Logan Ave. C.M. lnm W M60, 13W121 8 L 12: J $&'.:'~' A l MTI llTIY II.Ill Nopnonu•ptew. 'lllftllm'T Pre f Medlcal/Medlc•r• MAINTENANCE Pwt ttme w~. Need INr1) r ... II f• 1111 3333 w 'coAST HWY NB 1~~~~~~~~1 1mmec1. opening. Good -.p, 900Ut8 .. ~.... fota.tbo9 F'unZoM. t7+ ,.....,.. '*:.FfT tor ITXABXMB pooblH 842....e... M Mon-;l'I Towe.tlnmitang...... ::;ren:..~= lngtotreln.561-1• g:' m.22c::-r:. :.:.am=. At<C ALSO COlllE,wANTE~ To lk'Y Boat ,..,., ~ Offtoe 11-/W INNIUl'ate wlfollowllig &. CASHIER M•turt, P.n Jtmmy ~ 1o.m 0t aa.tno FAH TO 0000 HOME. w/aflore mooring on _. Input end ._, Gm 9hop, J .W Alrpo(t. uwtence Cal -. time ...... ~~ 8pm at Fun Zone Mama 861-0140/54e-2141. . I • I b o • I I I • n d · cMtea. ~Ice on Muet bt fl9x & tvell _.. ' .... , nMlnt 9'019 LH. . .. ....J.1.AW (818~-02.20 CoMect ~ IY9 S4. ~ .,.,.. -. ndel ... e.n.. Tu. Jardine 873-3310 N lch negot. c.11 *" M5-111 . -•llHIL T.eenwtcetlng .... ---.... ,_.. -.._end Clfowttl poMno-UWFriMtl62•8111 Cl .... A::t:uull ---.~......_~=rd m+NlbAL~..-11yourbu9tnMemovkl01oa ..., .......... ,__ llM ..., ... , -·-,.._.,. ~-::::!:" a 1111170 .... p1M9: -t1ict wn. diet ,_toutlon?AnnouncetM ...,._ . ......,..., . ....aYltllltllf, F0t Flonet. PfT Penn, Per9o1,.,.."'" •111 .... bole-. .,,.POc tool9, Dofi mo¥elnct...iflecl ~.... Htvtiquetty to *Mbllll* Nwptlctl .... ~714& ~·~~ce":n',::~ .. llMl.MJ 53W221,2l3/432-3413 .., adte J!J.,f'tfA ,.::!~°:E:r. *Ill PlllTlll* --11••111 (7t4)!7a..2550 Eneroettc ~ needed ftta I i.INll Uft .... Tr flCt eo..."°....:..'&~ 7to-2G8MkkwJoMph ParadlM C•fe. too-D ~~::=.: 1._25.For~on ~~~:,.MMe~ BOIEMUXA/Xke SHI'• C-e 1114 (714)142-4321 NEW TO ORANGE COi NewpOf1 CerMr Or. N.8. ~ to llNJT 11, LMtMl'WW. ~ioe eo.t PublWMnG Co. btec1 M All PIC*9/9hoa. i ·~PER iRilt. 9ecof'M Mfg't ... BARTENDER FEMALE & 700 Udo P*1c Or, Neiw-C>Uy C.it Vince 54M122 • .... ........ ~ d9worrMd WNte 9lumlfun w/..,. PfTIHIUMHCESEC Computer8'aphone8~ WATRESSES flelllble port9Mcti.CA.t2M3 . ..11... P9MMnt pN>N vo6oe a 1175·17 window• 1100. C•lll•-------tf1P1e wttt, 111.000/obo 2Wf ,.,.,., ~ ~ ~~ .. I "°'"'good tlp9. dinner NIT·'fm -muet, no~,.. FOR SALE: A.t<C CttOW • (714~2741 t52-"'135or7 ... 1170 . ...-.nc:ie-.pcnf Mkb 1~ .llaltJobel houM,oneblcfrommeln AfTER From •your hof'M. phone qunct. ldMI kit tiotn.-~ Ador9b69, ~to , DATSUN 240Z. '13 New ,.. ea.a41. • No ...... Ot WkndJ beldl. Broedwey .., ' wc:tt localV· M/Hr m•k•,.. high IChOOI good flomel 733--1157 S60e ~~~ ::, ICtn red pM!tt SK ml on rblt ... ... ........ .. TlmlnO ~I Grtli. 251 Btoadw•y. scunn1 Mlwy. A9pfy A.T.I. 3348 ..,.,,., 00-. ttucMma Newpor19wh. • 117&00' .ig, a/C, llhp96tna, nu CAM cxwww '* 2 a. ... ,penon.tthgood MR.AKE.NS L.aguMBwtl487-3012 'l""'-CahueflOa Blvd w .... & moonllghtn Hours: LOVEABLE BALL or turt INrP.~ .. 1 ' • tlf•IMl9,lmm9Ccond. dr v..a p/1plbp1Wilc ....... ~ = ~~ 109m. Ev. a.ti , -JOBS Suite 5A, LA. Ce toOll. Mondl)'·F'"rld9Y 5:30prn HlmeleyMI. Seel pt CFA , $3500 080. 831-7915. 9*eo. 1 ownr, wnog oart. :::. 5*-t1S7 Ad 5 0883 HoWI I -PUTl-IP Plllll 10 9:00pm, S•turd•Y reg, 9 .... .,_ M HOLIDAY AAMILER 78 ,.... llllll-1 '12 xt mec:tl 531-4114.,. apm MAlDTATE . NIT·YmULD ~f~~ r•DN Tuee-Fft..Set. Alt Ot '*"1 :~.:o)~· :1: l1So,FUOO.S4Mi32. ~~=.!n~~. Aad,mlntcond,18K+ml . ••• • l•JllD o.tgrw l.Jng9rte. The In-onty1 AC>P1Y In penon be-UW\ P'ev bee*oround halpfUI. bonUMe. Prim• dMk & STANDARD POODLES SI00(),485-2827. WK,111-712-2233 JIM CLICK ~C/210:::0::0. =~·1~ ....,,2.-.-PM MOf(Y P~Ym~eeo ~=·.;:~·~: ~iEr~L~~~l Li9 ;11 ~'llldDI 'DI/RENAULT Country arH. h · R E&ALES& ~NTALS COOKS. FOOD SER-PRIZIS Placentia. CM 92127 F0t Int.,.._ C911 Mr. ese-01401546-2841. 1~ Auto,a/c.dWl, llnt JEEP petlenced only. C•ll ·-·-•lllJ VERS,BUSERS,&HOS.T-_._:..__ .... , Mick Mon .-Frl. •t . _ _.H1 ,_........___ lllllYl.IUI t7,000,54t-14t0,Ted. ~ 0 " 711 .. 190 0t wrtt. P.O _,_, ESSES. Chlll • Rea-r....-...... e 4 2 • 4 3 3 3 b wt n •.-. ... ..-ta ILL 111111 EXECVTIVE LUXURY ~ ~~·"~r.:--v~LA~R~·~1~· ~~~~~H~/ TRfS ~=·t:;_t~1:'~~ 95~P•"'t.;.~20.:;,,78•tt•r ... , ••HILi MB Z ·es 300SD . ___._.._,, NEE~D 'd a 0U1ootna ........... th 9PPf'Ox. 7pm. W* ,,...,,, . ....,..... -• .,.. ' sf(U@M Xlfo Di PW6! DOMESTIC a FOREIGN :it•''*='":' c:ie:: IRVINE AUTO ~~·~ito Ret ... ITlll&al parton:x':o wori tn IM.YPUT :=,r:~\W, HMO T91e!Nrtletln0 :.~1~_L .... f:.OO~~ lllllYTIYITI p•rf:':t cond ition. CENTER ...._7622 Newport BHch Drug f•moue roadlfde rea-...... .,. • dltlon.241-1511 188818EACH8lVD. S21.000.7:Z0..90'1. 714-951-3144 StOfe, •xp pref. pit, IMll'Wlt. Mua1 be hontet, 11 you.,.. IOc:iking for .xtr• PIT HOU8EKI ~~~NGSun f1d.,... llett1 ILL I ..._ l 1•/Ml..... MERCEDES 3I08l '13 800-428-7485 HIBl/1'NT 1t-30 tire'*'..-. tot truatwo~ h•rd Ot llJ(e FM ;,,un• nn ._t, ........ ...... dMn/wvtced IOt< tor M110111CM.-1meetin•1t Info c•ll Mr. So•ltt wor1!lna,._~ ......_ CdM ~~"'°":e M9Qlc exper •;::.J::ferred, NO SELLING! 2 ca.tt• ... t ftttl lrtft/J~_ S:-blkw/Qnl'/ln1 ~!'=======~ corp .• ,,.,.. ofc. In 175-0150, t-Spm, M-F. 1400 E. 49':';aeo'' Mountain, Knott• Berry ~ :r"cten~~ .. XNTl&Ji eRiMYWOOO ... cM phone, Juet *iu oo. ~~ ::-!J Retail Fwm, 0t wtn Prtz. and Ou•llfled VALET with ~oure S:~8:oo~: Upright Pteno, Medi,.. .. '11-llB Pf"lptl'ty, 81M112. IWIJt\l-B~ 't oomed a 1:.r-1c ~ ......, PANTRY MAN A..,dl, Call u. nowl We needed oood d!MnQ re-Sat. 9:ooem-1:00pm. F0t ftnlelllng and tuning. It 00.,,.. with bucket r.::=::=:::=:::=::;t .... ~ :.. .. ......,,,....,:-;;,o -,,..;.;;.= AMSNft .___,-"'T., -.Ftf.PIT.PoYU+-................ Mlc .. t ___ IMU71L -·---[IDO QDO©fil t<9wtn _,._.. =-~llmt poe1tton9; FRONT DESK Cl.ERK i4~~.B. or .V. 75&-027o Uk f0t Seen. 8 4 2 • U 3 3 b wt n .. ,....... ur.. and yout'I tot Im-ll"'SI 1 'ff min exp, ftex lhlfl• LI. umTUT 8:00•m-3:00pm. After 1700/010 260-7014 medlet• deftvery. llOTGlll _.,., .-HOSTESS m.Tlft 111 Mm rop Producer nMdl ,.._ 5:30pm &42-54178. wtidy a/ 640-5"434 (Stu 211n cs.r• 6211> WllT &dtlne.,... Ofb. UUI.... Coron9 det Mer. PCH. A9-llsttint w/2-3 ~ R.E. T~4'tlng .... 1 10 .,.....,,.... G4'9et ver-~*-to wor1! • o.y Shift ..,... now1875.4'4541. Expwlenoe. a... ..-y I""'-lliiU 1119 ORANGE COAST PORSCHE m..:arr-F/P tlm9 fluJbt9 ~.,..en-STOREROOM CLERK FLOWER SHOP + comml9elona. Call 1J.. Ill MHQI 9SRl1M@ C&JNT'f .Mp/AeMutt <.Htv~~lH courllQed to~· Full Tirne wwited mature penon 3 Neon 131-12M -· .ullll"I 2524 Harbor CoetaMeM Hitt. .. , Quatuv Wllf We offer uoetlent ben-d9Y WMk ...... t_. ·~~~\·? Wo<k from ho!M. ChooM -ltl Mii s.1 .. a S.1vlo # ..... ' em. promotk>M from NIGHT AUDfTOR phone and .,.... no.. I . r • : own houri. No ..-na. Mllt\A'~Efot 1 S*'· wtthin, and.,.. owt'y fOt 1 yr min hot• •>CP etq> wor1!, &42-41H.t z For more Info c•ll llf-m&.·1"1111 A.a ..... , •rllftl#I lfOrHI :,t 00_ M! be~ thoH qu•llfled •nd 4 night•'*' work ..., d'r &42·5:._8 ,:..tt; 5:30 pm ll&Y 11-111 h M a.an IMI "'" lnwordprocmlng,oom-lnt•ested tn • retllll ce-HOUSEMAN f/T-..maf lllfll 1iirillft'D only. ery. Feetur1ng IUllSIDll9 °'.. 'l1 llla111l-I putera. llte bookk.-ping. r.... MUlt ep.-Englleh Agglw motlv.t~ S*'· Wholeeale roduce 12 um •u: SWorda. oolna. flM • -• r.-445 E Co .. t Hwv Newporo fketh &nploy9r .-y mqet or Apply In penon Mon-Fri, eon to rMk• ~. In tdn6ght 10~_,. mointng optic• gunemlth on Authentle & In ad oond ttmefle'ltngtunton•ch Oem-Spm, •t the follow-MAID oc ., .. , Br•ndon ~911)' benefit• with Now hlf'lnO fOt MM*' premlaH. o.c F•lr-S13,000 552-3138 673-etoe t•k• ch~ per•on. Ing loeatlon: Night Shift IMW5ee growo1. F•mtty m•n ~~~!;· ~=: ground, Cott• M .... TRIUMPH TR3, mect\. IClrlt, g;~ijijij=~~~ PIMMnt ,.., 0 .C IAmYllll Mutt ep.-Engtteh FIT-Help M•n-oe edult preferred. 557-1358 9l1Ce 1 ~•bt9. tdMI Ent• •t o.t• 5. body rough but re.torable -*Fllllll 'll* Alri>Oft. but rtght penon 7227 EdlnOW Ave. MAID 9UtO cerrlerl lor the 0 c 2nd job Apply St9dtum off Arlington. IMnY ..,.,. pert• 12000 c:outcl wor1! from ho!M. Huntington Beech, CA. Dey Shttt Reg later, 2•m-11 •m ,11111"91 onv.tn ·11._lre 1501 w FIRM 913-7241 en lpm. S•b•• brn/cork Int .. s.t, open. 751-t. 100. Equal Opportunity Pteue c:all f0t.,, .ppt. wltd~twltenda. $5/hr+ Run .,.,,.,, computerind K•t•H•. Of•nOe· Aftw TrU1prtatiea a t:a:::&J tlM bWltlfUI oond .• .=.:.: ' .....a..-•--•;fr.... ~ t>etWMni-.4 gu ~. oppty tot r .. t.ur•nt office. F/C !i-30PM _ ••• ~ 1 ~werranty ~ pm. edvMOerl'lent, xh ben· bkpg payroll,pereonnet, · · ... A~--• Till .,., (21v,..,..) HIS llTllL ULll eflte, need ~.t>t9 typing, tome aupv exp.-. WANTE~Men & Women ti, ...,..., 121,IM bAIVEM Futt-Tlmeopptyfot,..... Y~tft~ car, Ina, gd driving rec, FutgrO'MngCo.edv.op. over 111 w/dep«ld. car & .,..,........ M•S?lll Croee country no exp Dept. Tr•lnee. lnat•tl --------c•ll 7 14-751-4155, port.H8111•S1500mo. prootorlneur.fotflome Exoelenteondttton.teao ••Tl nee ,.,y, c.ltt lie. req, ti.tttlwatc:l'I bwida, 991. "'-al SS31 before 11.m. Collec1 213 924-e423 dettvefy of The ~ O.B.O. 650-3621Id\5pm SIMPLY THE BEST ~ Vecti Hl31 wor1!. etc. Some ..._I _ti ~ Eern l400-S.... S.W. l9Mlna 100! Quall St., N.B. ...... u.. CM. ti, eicp helpful. Wll trlllt\. seoo mo fcW p. T wty AM ..... ..... fill E~ oEUV£RY'" 833-9300 Hf'ly + bene. Applylnptl', 1111-M. HIHL MOTOR ROUTE In. 851-"'156 7.11.,.,, to 12() VikiAG SF, f/g. ~ 1540 JAMBOREE AO. * ~UGEOT * •T lllY&I flTTll eon. Kki! Jewe6en, 2300 Hours 3pm-lpm Hunt-9PPIY OMC del, AP. red.,, HEWPOAT BEACH * MASTERATI * Expetlen<:e necetHry. H.,bor 81Yd.#lll, CM. tngton 8dl 538-1441 WAREHOUSE & SALES OMn, .. MWet.c '85. M Ad...,ttoFlllNon ~ *ALFA ROMEO* e31-m1 Available In Irvine area. ~ F•enera•'"'" ,,.. 1140,ooo. Mwt ,.a <>Pen 1 o.v. • w.-* SAAb • BfT1"EA• ----------Wood roof conditioning. To wor1! fOt MW CdM ~ 3 tO · 0 CO 8C -handle varied dutlM .. 13 HERITAGE H~ BUICK DEALER IN ORANGE COUNTY We Offer: •New Car Sales •Used Car Sales •Service •Lwinc •ExteUent Financmc ·.~ .. , -· . .. Sil IALll111111&1'1 AMAllll $ OO $600 N II t •mbltloue person to thl9W.-1873-1874 6406444 ·~--==-> * rm * flame ret.,dtng CO, high pr9IUI ~-F/ Ing. 3-4 hours a day. Mon. Good opty 845-ell7 AFT,._ ....... ~ ... T h--• ... -..... -.,.-... ~--·--. I ' .-&e oornmlel6otl9.CoeetRoof for lnforn\•tlon c•ll · .....,...._ wn ....... ~ ~'"'" ,......- DYNAMIC ..... progrwn. S•vwa inc. 1se..2200. Shoehwi.l .t 91wsoo thru Friday afternoon. Sat. •••• • IAMI d11. io•d•d. A11t1ng HEW' USED BMW s1 * 752-0900 • [filo QIJO@fil Telem•rketlng. Unltd 4341 IMrc:tl-211. NB. ····-& Sun. morn1'ng. Call Exp'd onto/ FIT Ot PIT. $159,000/ppM• 4900 Lm ---poeentMI 873-6428 Mille/ Ult LAlguM N!Qu.I. 495..a338 Ctwt. barrel bee*, '39, VOLUME 8Al£8 SAAB 1918 IOOS. New, 8heri. 873-3082 8111 ua.a •llWlll BHutiru1 Cott• ...... 642-4333, ask for Kirk. 19ft. a11or1g.OYW1s,ooo. SERVICE a LEASING fully !oeded. t>tue. ,.._ m' Harbor 11...t BIKINI SHOP FIT' PIT count• ..... .,, complex, mt1ture coupl9 •muu•M IUtl reelOf to ,,..., cond. 3870 N. Cherry Ave. . eume .... Phone mom-C.M. 97~2500 In Newport 8-:11 ~ , .. .ii htrdw•r• •tor•. w/pr9Ylou1 ex.perteno9, ORANGE COAST $27,500. 8141 Wwmlngton LONG BEACH Ing Md ew. 875-7187. pit retail ..._ ctertc S.. Stev9 Md gd re4 to oo-m9nage &adpll Mll NHYC opening dey w4n-(No. Cherry ult~) WI LIAll 2C::::.r:J ~;:3~~:.Vt.:~· ~~ ~ =. Oaily Pilat sttlNWXv ams ,,.,, 986-1333· T~?J!~: Ill 111111 If you•re loolclng for a job, cla11lfled has news for you. have m.intenanoe bed<· 330 w. Bay St. DIVORCE FORCES SALE _..... OPEN SEVEN DAVS • lllllLI ground, 11000/mo, Incl 100 YR OLD-Solld oek Ciu.tc 19&131 ft on 50 ft j________ -••K. - fr .. -c>t. Newport VMlllQt Costa Mesa, CA hand carwd w1maict11ng moortng. &42-9237. ..,._ ..... Apt. 714-5S7-0075, _. bench. Mua1 ... to tap-........ G G f0t Vtrglni., •ft 12:00. Pf«19t•. flex, MM217. Lll IMta 7114 N••• •port• 13881 Hert>or ""'"'• · · 114-2100 &nliul!t Mil XJnt.tll~·~.·~.118 •4ulp111•nt f '"' llft.lllm 1 15,600. 120-1818 TOP Ill Piii UI Hl-1111 •OOLF INSTRUCTION• FOt p~ Lwn to dtM 30-50 yda Mef cede9 9efg "·--Palatial Fualtut Hit f•rther, 150. RMulte If 111&111111 -.-!!J _ guer. Celt 8141 921-1718 TopMefoede9Prto.Pllld ====miiiiiiiiiiiii BUILD OR REPAIR DOORS OALOREll luf IMtr. IWll ~ I llf fWiW between ..,,,._7M\. CALL PETER or RAY $2.40 per day W•llt . dOOfl, wtndowe.1 $uppty·Rep91r K.C TREESERVICE frMMtlwltguer7~·1537 LIS Ml-1111 1111111111 ....... Tl ptitloa, cov.rs. remodell C.it Bob ~9119¥99 Top. Trim. Removal. au.I. DAN SALYER PAINTNG 8Mut1tut brw beby bed s ...... needto .... haW2 tli8I .... . Thet'• All you pay tot Uc/Int 8Wlner M4-Se4ll llltctdcal Serl. Uc/Ina. fr• eet. Uc #425924 wl m•ttreH. P•rfect bclaU, ll000.132-8707. 213 0t 714937.2333 3 ..__ 30 ,._ "**'1um 989-8283 or 536-MM ....... 2017 .-.. onto/ ·1 --· -1 Oocn-Motdlnge-Bey Pllllll ILllTm Cell Anytime~ cond, ....., IOW mo. HOBIE CAT 11' w/trtr In 1N Wlndowa-Cornp191. e Puloe n.,.,..., __... fr -Clean Upe•T,.. Topping EXTERIOR rv...,,RTS eo.t ~ S400 '300. ....... KITE 12· wit.,,, 8oat1 and blk• WICI SERVICE Addhlona Qua1tty WOt11 ..._..,,....,.,., •-•· ShaplnQ-RemoYtng-Haul ~.-c Al9o MW wht c:tleet of 5 .--. '" ChWICelere you'Mflndwtiet ~Wldcott11gee -• t 47744&Pu548 aaeo ' U25S13 "6-7401 Mll<E850-3213 . Olffb.llt/Ex1.0uf8pec:Mlty dr•wera S150. Phone S300. Mu.t Nit nowl you neeclatthtprloeyou ttlethingtlhatmekuum- --------RESIO/COMM'l/IND 28 NG Ucl2M597 831·'29$ CeVllMgh (213)320-2230 842..aeo7 wanttopaywhenyourMd merf\JnCMtbefoufldlfl DIRECTORY Plus Sm.ii R9rnodet ~ Do my own wor1! Uc L.ANOSCAPt by J.mte MAGIC BRUSH PAINTING or (213)533-U12 SABOTS 2 rece rigged, ct&lllfled dally. _ei_Ullfled __ . ----- AddltlOnl. w .... Docn. ~78041 Al MM 12e . #487831· ,,.. ... lmat• Int/Ext. Tu-coet. P.int & ,,..., mMta ~ booml ----------------M2-1lll, 11111, m -L .. vw M-•ge. 54t-1885 Apr. Acoult. ceitlng. Ru9h FlNE FURNITURE fOt N6e. excln't cond. 1400.e • --------------- HOME REPAIR SERVICE ~:'::;::r~: llallUf )Obe. 4~994/4M-8937 ~-1 ~~:: "6-1903 eft 2:30. Aft Phailee. Res*r. ~ Fr .. 991., He'd. 831-2345 liiOCkW;I;, bfldlwofit. PAINTER NEEDS WORKI * * MOVING* * lfttlilliilcai,...L Your model. AddhlOnl. Goard ···~ conctete. Comp ptitloe. Int/Ext, celllnge. reftn cab. Uk• ,,... 8'JC9' Englllh •• , ... Service Olrec1ory Work. 8y Lie. Contr.ctOt. II •un•H 15 yrs tXptl'. 4146-4834 (26) )'I'S eicp., work gullf. wool bit eel rug new -~t•tlW Fr• .. 1. (714) 554-2893 Ill llEI WILLI 0.¥19 PM!tlng "4-3137 • ' ' New fWllng I I •0t BRICKWORK. Smalt t<>be. ct19"'Pfl!IM v.t¥ef 9trato 9P0'1ln0 go0ct• eqUlp-1•2-4J 1 llf, • Oocn-Res*r-Alt«9tlont Cuetom Gtw & Mirror N9wpon, eo.t• M .... STEVES Property M91nt. lounger rec:tyner Chr, 2 9rt ment, belOw wholW:le. (•------• CU>!Mt•Panel·Lodl..tc wortl w9fta llldlng door9 lrvlM. Ref'e. 976-3175 Int/Ext paint, lpr9Y/roll & deco, luclte & chrome Gotdenweet SWllP W... SS '{fltllP. J«rye.42-0587 .. c. A:1 OlaM. 543-1607 STUCCO MASONRY-TILE gen'I m.im. 122-1473 =~;_, Bd~~er ~~·= 8Pfa9 J-31 & 32 S.l AlwtlW c.ui... CUJtb ... In. No Job to 9"1.it. Alt type9. TOP QUALITY PAINTING bdrm .... nnut ~ TWO 350 Mwty,..,...,,.. ~~D mm jn;t;Gik)f; Fr .. •t. Lio. 831-2345 Int/Ext refs, frM .... ofc dHk. M•gn•vox glnea. New lhefta & . ·A* Int/Ext P.,ttng RepM Wo<k & CIMntng. FEPfC ATES TrM trim .......... •-1121 Qt-1111 stereo credenu, mite l?"OSIL From • 'II, 36ft Ucl211597 131·9295 MS IMt.it•tlona.136-47~ Dump N"9. C.M./N.B. ~ tbta. ltimp9, China, pe&nt· ~. &42·9237. ic== ..:=::= ., ... JlmWhyte.&42,7208 *A-1--1r P•Jtdml Ing &u~lt1hog r •Ph• IU,./ ... b /I• --tJ.,_._ •GEN. HOME REPAIRS CLEAN' EXPERT FXATHIRd iNTERlORS ........ oat .. _ a IPICIAL OARAGI SALi RA n .......... r.. ort\ •• :;;. w pa;, P.int. Ofyftll. Cerl)entry Over25~•x:perience HANGING/STRIPPING Queen .. Bed, br'end rm ONLY ~/llne. CALL 642 .. 5671. mmflxi'Oohny 11te No tot> too trNll ... c.Owy&45-527'1PTL Uc T-118,428 130-1353 VISA-MC873-1512 new. etllt pedlflOed. Pd cH&CiA.i ."'&;upto ~ ~ 8-:11 toe.175. AN9. Mtdl-V, 536-0553 ••HANDYMAN** .. ABC MOVING•• AHOYS WALLCOVERtNG M35, Mutt eeJ4 1325 30' ..-1.iec. pvt en- HEUPfX 175-4449 ST. CL.AIR CONSTRUCT. Large Ot email. I do It 11111 Outdt l C«Mul T131041 lnetallltlon ' Atmov.. 080 (213)616-24()1 tr•nc•. 8ec~/prko Cetta ... 1114 ...... .... • •• ..._1 Compeete eoncr..ew0t1c P.i531-ss7tor1vem911 toRATES.552~10 int P.intino.5'8-t013 ._11r 11u All l250moM2-1vm911 AvMdf'TWWWNI ,;z;1mwww ~ L AN9 . .._ ... ~1 you Buv • 11NSTALL nanm-.im wa11p11per ~, • ;;whit. WiBBIAd cHOICI sup MUST 00rt •· "°"' Q'9lom moc111 ~ ' 1ne.fp,-::::. elMal~ ... Lt. Bee. LI. ~~-1...-11 --.. Remove. All type9. comm I DAE88 -9 NeYer Up to 45 ft end..,. ... up Furn. --. .,, obtecta. hOme. f'.rld9Y Noono-9. 110.00, lrywi 4'2·1145. -ntN'ittElHINd Gar. Opnra. WL ~e4 OfwigeCo. C>riQlnel 1 r..id'I. J09 '46-5180 been m . 1150' ore.. to 24 tt.' In .,,, fl'tendty dothnt. ~·book.. 8at t-I. 2S e.ocut Dr SERVICE:. ttvoougl1fy Mn• Home~ Student ~-Tneured Wegaluhd hang taoet'* on.. Cell~ ai1c:tto1eoe.1S1.....,. from l.1 to $2500, Sat' SOutt\. 754M041 ~ll""""'W'~!"!'!"IP"-clMn houM. 540-0857 ment/repelr, etc, OUltom UC T 12~.&41..a427 Hqtltrtp. Mvtce to the ~ 1-tpm, 2711 a.net-a.n... a LiiW at own CALL TOOAYll &llFllLlll NABERS CADl.LAC LARGEST SELECTION of let• modet, low.,..... C.-.C. In Orw199 Countyt a.. U9 toct.yt U0-1100 2tOO twbor ltvd. C08TAME8A ... IU. .... USED CAM & TAUCK8 COME INOA CALL FOA ,_..,..IL o.uuo ...a 11211 BEACHBLVD. HUNTIHGTON BEAc.i Ml ... ltl• 1111 DOOQE AtRE8 '11. 4 doof, Otto· owner. 40K ml, 21 mPQ. exc.tlent cond. 13500. 846-tto9 eft ' ... ..,,.. ... _ .. ... V.-0-. latlt09 THEODOR I ROBINS FORD .11,.. ttARf\c Hl II.I"' fl f11\fAi~l\A ~1, ll) JOHSOI I SOI 01111• Co11fl' of'"' l11col1 lrrttr, '"''' ,~ .. '"" , .. '"'"' uln "mtt & luu•t 2'15 Nar11of llY• ....,.,,,.,:-=,.,,.,....,~=:--:------::::: ftf1WI carpentry, fUlty NEW Wer9'1ouM 8t0f1IQ9 etay. 830-0730 piper Or, MeN v--. get f'M09. good oond . ... ~lmm'llD HOUSECLEANERS: I _. eqlllpwood9hop87~I083 WI Ma• DtN. TA8LL. 4 cNn, 1 1 190 . ..,. lNdc budt.e~~~~~~~~ clMnyourhouM~etc .. ,. ._ PJeeM, a ii bl xtr•leef,rwbletopoof . .-.MOpr.131 .. 102 OLD8 ·11 ~ £0 ..... .._ fWl.ce11°'*'YS 155 la.U.. ~ i.11raf111-1• Openln1• Now "v• • • table. 2 r.~: .. book-... preme,bllldc,a•.Bwv! w-......... . •=• Houw:telilllng. cerpeta , LTHmtiNG . uaViNd By,,,·'°' pleoe.14e.-*5 •Allptumtitnga~ ~ ~'UN 1nttu1v!Oeded Mlrtteond ........ a:e.&'9 uphdlt.y,wtndowa,MC. 0.,1109lYwdClnupe • ..i.1~1 OUTES H•t. 110·1190. 134 l'umltu,., pteifttt, toyt, ts~ 487..S...a.tei T• ...... vern11t1. Klrby9 M.,t.131-5272 Jon 84M1t2 uun DAAIH8CLEAA''°"'l11 CAR R Cebftlol.,...,C.M.'"& 1Mc.2112Pof1~ ---·-----==, 1 rd. .... M7-2418 HllUl!nQ. Mo-A-a..n.. Photoor•phy-We3dln11• Fauoee., Dl9poMI • ......,, Sat 8 to 4 . ...._,. IATVADAY •to a. Your flrat nat liiiJ!i=~~ M9..... 1$9. 7 c.y;:·~ r•t• =·P~r~7~7 ~7 UC. 722-IOll L NO JUNK Ger1lll9 U.. llDB• UU ,..-' . •••ll•I c.i1 eany, 122-ee13 · • ,..., E•rn Extr• C••h r=-.cc:::r:-o:;:. =:5~7~~2 yourflrattob, -.......... _ .:-·cs. aood ,...., own ColegeltUdentw/$atl\ldl I~ ltntet l'D:"illT""fMIP*ld For 0.lltt•"' Of Thie P•pef t .. 0 ..... 1 yr+· ciAA'"PH'tCi '7.n.. M9t1&. 2•1-M53 1ow rat•. prompt.Tt1nc emvxia;;v; w:;; ey'°""aoc1ey.-::w ., :.,::·~ ":C::: IAf.MAV 11 iAw-.PM yourflrat car, NIWPOflT • .,...111 CNli 1tlee you.Court.75t-1818 tncer.&ttte=tor roof Mlguer.722·7...,7 fan, d!IM9. ,_,...., s,:-1:,t~•c!..ie: S ~ J;acr..ena. 1 Li...., ... tt1eefder1y <11• 2009 ••••hll,../Hllil•• HUNTINGTON BEACH ~ ~·-= ....._ ·= 1190• your flrat home wJOet -,......,. lowfyR••1•-eer.. ' .. a:i FOUNT•1Nv•LLEY --.., ........ 110 0etdM " I 101Al1TY . U.llllftlltm HometwtM~ w1wc11.1•••a " " . :--=.=.£:: V9CWl'ftlt5.oit.,.,,..._ claa11fled'1 ......... -~· Al~ofrM'IOdell°" ftld KatttyM0-4101 ;::~·~=· INDEPENDENT Gtr1un.11no booh. ~~IMcta::-ad· ,...tt1 1e•4'7•. MO-fHI Tope>ed/rernowd. ~ flla. p11toft. 11n1c-t1neo. a -· ....... SM_.. your ftrat nN&..., ,... • ' .. IT, C'-Alf' CONeTMJCT. up, ,.. ....,.. 7514411 NP & dott*l8. D>, •. ~ Unct at. ea -. • •• mei• "-·1 . .....,.t. ,..,,. to Tree1Trtm1aw..p oomcit W-• Deliver 1 day a week No w 'NSal ...... iif!iiiliiim-.,..!Piii choice . ........ :.:.~~~rw.'4M131v-t~~ *r!cs:f"* 'L ' ~~MUllT...= -...... "91;oodtl ~ P--. pftcea. 642-2m *~eiq>:~... COii ecting, no SOiiciting. 0..... t ecc LEM99, : ~·--i;:· EXP"OGAAO€Nel 10,... ,,. ... LOW MTUI Must have de'pendable car, cempln:.n,c:. blk:. • .,.,..fWtdyf ... 1 N.a..CCSM--.Q*"Y Uft1ft .. 1'11M truck or station wagon and :O·...,.,,, 11~' Y9"CI .... ,... ,....., kt lnfO ..... Oii 11th tam 14 ,, w Ctn-I 1 a ntll..... AON'SOA.AOEHIHO 113-1m0111M.24I Ltd.c.11(714> .... .., Insurance · · · M24411 trel, W,,,.,.,111ttet04. _._,. Hllt~....cotn-FINE lllAtHTIHO It)' Noh-Pwtl: ~ ~ l:S~i!;iiiiiiii;;i~-~~·& ~t-M7~ CU L.AWN&!IMCE •dllnOt.1fYBo4~ Wu1teowtlfl,,.,..,.,.,. 11 --fUI' _,. MOW• EOG! TW1CI MO. CUltomtrt.. UC. 2'°"4. Newpot1 .,._ 720-9101 '20-129. 641-1722 Thef*·Youl """'114 WI CLEAN WtHOOWi l'VLL 81.AV. LANOeCAPe A.A.A. PA1HTIHO 1n11b1 Commerctau......,.,.,..,, Ask for JoAnne CranMI No Joe).2 Ila Of 2 .... LOW!ST P'C*fl* ptle9. 14tcwy UC>• f-411tOfY MO l!!!!!!!!!!!~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!J!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"~1 ~ ,,_ .. ~72 Id\ fpTI 10 Step hr\llOI M2-3235 c.tH WlndOwl ...._1'124 CALL 842-1444 BUY throu1h classified • J ' \ Cal a Daly Plot AD-VIS<I 642-5678 ' . THE COUNTY OF ORANGE ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT AGENCY I ANNOUNCES A PUBLIC HEARING SQuth Laguna Specific Plan/LCP " ! Date: Tuesday ~e 3, 1088 Time: 1 :30 or soon after Location: Planning commlaalon Hearing Room 1 O Civic Center Plaza, Santa Ana ,.. '""'....-.-..cute Jlllll/10 •• • _,,,.~,.., ....... 1.mnt •lui ~ "7 UM 1Mr4 of 1"'9Hlton for tht 1111tft00f90rn .. -11tt1 et lelllll ...._. TM l,.eUtc Jlaft~ .,.. 9f lt1M11J •'°f" .. 1117 \M lolld ef l11119nl-• Oii ArfU •• 1't>. "" -~Ill ........ " ......... OH JlM ... u ... u_ en4 ~11"1 ~ et •-IKU-UJ) •114 UH •lM (Uli-UI f .. a ,OfllOll of \M Let-WlfMl Jla ...... C:a.Mltf Ana O, M4 taelllllMl Hfl-l'IU to Ula LM4 0• llaf11letl-cdleJtH et tile 9'NUle t~. 111'9{.•u O.J _, O.kl'I, 1-•~ -tllwffterlr .r u.. J,11tueent• ., c.- veu., .. ,ftelr 1114 heSUc felet'l4 Drh•, U• .. tlfMt .. 1.1 _,,_ o.Mtty atel .. lltlel .... S.• °'911 1..-. !tie a"Uoet1t PfOfOM• W _,., Ule L8M OH PlM .._,.,, .. U ell.., C-1111ltf C-.JOltl (J.21 -· lll e•lU• to \lie ...-..ual .. fltlal 9114 ... II·~· ~ ·-Cflellf9 n .... t -l•J.8 el a modtftceUOll to the ... " apae. M4 rHl .. 11Uel IOM ~rf1 ~It• ISP, ... ,t .. !ltlel l i ... le Peallt' to lfllt, .... l .. lltlal AlUIC .... Mllltlfeall,.t ... t• .. •ltneU9'1 of ...,. e,.oa ., .. '° fCC, •rrofHelCM1el-C:-rdd C....hr. • &.oc•l COe•t•l Jtotr ... er• •t•tvtorlly ••.-pt ftmt C1QA re.-lr..at1u "'111181\t to lecUOft 21010.t, DhltlOft U Of U.. hllllc .. _,_ c:e6J • ., .. •1•11 1s.12 •• -r.ci b7 rr••lo.illy """'•• rt ... 1 n .. >U 8114 ,._"'· Md propoeed MdeM• 1111 JIU•Ul. t'lwff 4oo-t1U ere"" Ult et Ult .,., Jrojeot Jlell!llftf Dl•lttOfl, 12 Civic C•nter flt••• ~ 2JI, len\AI an.. Mde!ld ... 1111 JllS•l6l l• alto •••llebl• tot pvblle , .. , .. et Or1111t1 Clllwlty Lli.terr. Dene •191111 ar8JICJI. Jll41 WltlMl ao.d, t.et1111e •lt111tl. All ,.,_ •ltber t ... rt111 or oppoel111 tM• ptopoeel en lmrlted to 'Hffftt U..lr •l.,.. i.etor• tile f l•11nl111 COlllll••lOfl. It t1 r•~•ttd Ultt ·~ wrltt•t1 n•pona• i.e 1\ltalttld to Ult PleM1"9 C:-lttlon et leut U M8u tc'-to U. ~Ul"f .. U. U rou ct1eU...,. u. ectlOft t.1••11 °" Ull• fCopoell 111 -rt, ,_. _, -. U•lto4 to rel•lnt Cll'llf u.o.. ,, .... , 1'DV oc -•lM rel ... •t \M .-uo Merl"' .. eerl-.. l11 Ult• 90\t ce, CK t11 wrltte11 oorrff,_._ .. u .. , .. to tM -.1r-11t1l .. ~11t ... ner et, or "'°' to, ta. 1111bUo llnrl ... d!GI PIW fuU.r l11fo,..UOfl, -tact hUlclt 1'-'" 111 U. hoject tlaMl .. Dl•lelon at IJ4-ttSt. Now la tho •••t•n to mello t.19 t.vdt1. Soll the•• unn .. 4o4 howaohol411 werot, out· ...... cloth•• or toy trudu lty edvortl1ln9 yovr ,.,. ... ••lo to4ttyf Onty A04 ,.., HM (4 llno minimum) D1i1J Pilot Cl111.ifi1d 1 '---__ 1_4__;;2-;....._11_11 __ _ ~ eo.t DAIL V PtLOT /ThurecMy, -11. ,._ ..... i 1110 OranQ9 Cout OAJLY PILOT/ Thur9day, May 15. 118e THE .''j--=i t ' BEST CAR BUYS ·-:;1~~h~~~ are at the dealers listed ' =;j on th is page 0 STERLING MOTORS WEST Chevrolet e Porsche e Audi CCI E. Ctast lwy.~ lew,.ri hHll lll-0100 Highest Quality Sales & Service EARLE IKE VOLVO EI) .,,. J\l\'d'' a hlll'l' inH·nton .,,-Alv.d'' J1,~nunt rnn:' SAL ES • 5EAVl\E • L 8\SIN G • PARTS • BODY SHOP 19fa) Harhor BhJ .. C1l,t.1 Mc'ci 71 4 6H-KXKO EXECUTIVE LEASE PROGRAM SALES/LEASING Payless Newport 3700 NEWPORT BLVD. 714-873-8907 1·80CM33-7483 ~o•~vo · HIGH VOLUME DISCOUNT DEALER Dl~ ol [)((UUN(( SALES. LEASING PARTS & SERVICE 28802 Marguerite Parkway • Mission Viejo, CA 92692 (714)582-2880 (7 14)364-1210 FOR MORE AUTO DEALS SEE FRIDAY'S AUTO PILOT G CONNELL CHEVROLET 2121 lwMr lh~ •• Ottta Itta Over 23 Years Serving Orange County Sales • 8ervlce • Leasing 541-1200 S,ecill Parts U.. 54&.MIO MONDAY-FRIDAY 8:30 AM -9:00 PM SATURDAY 8:30 AM -8:00 PM SUNDAV 10:00 AM -5:00 PM 0 THEODORE ROBINS 'FORD o &)~iih t.A)unty--®S.lti-BIWER ~@IT@oo@ • VOLKSWAGENllSUZU BUICK Laius JAGUAR ISUZU TED 10~ FORD/ISUZU Your full servi<'t ford & hutu dealer U.S.A. 's 1t 1 Thunderbird Retail Dealer Modern Sales Service. Parts, Body, Paint & Tire Oepts Compehl1ve Rares On Lease & Daily Rentals 2010 llarlter llt~., Cetta Itta 142-0010 tr 140-1211 o SADDLEBACK Sales Leasi ng & Service Parts IRVINE AUTO CENTER 1-800-831 -3377 714-380-1200 JIM C L ICK AUDI/RENAULT/JEEP $ ~ ,,. WE'RE OUT TO BE # 1 ! IRVINE AUTO CENTER 41 Auto Center Dr. Irvine (71 4) 951 3144 . (800 ) 428·7485 ~ 0 CREVIER BMW ~ \,II SALES • SERVICE • LEASING ~ "Where Professional Attitude Prevails" Spec:lellzlng In Europeen 0.llvery. Excellent S.lec:llon of Hew end cerefully prepered UNd BMW'• always 1n stock 835-3171 208 W. 1st St., Santa Ana Corne1 of Broadway & Isl St Closed Sundays GSTERLING SALES -SHVICE -LEASlllC -PARTS Overseas Delivery Spec1a1tsts OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK BMW -ROLLS ROYCE 1540 Jamboree Rd. Newport Beach 640-6444 G JIM SLEMONS IMPORTS 1301 Ou•ll St. -New C•r Loc•tlon 1001 Ou•ll SI. -ReNle Dl~l•lon 0 World 's Largest Selection of 0 Mercedes Benz A. 833-9300 Slits · Ltui1' · ,1rt1 · Stmct · IMy Sllof EARLE/KE TOYOTA - A • Gr~ Selection • Low Pric•• w • Eaay Financing • No Gimmicks SALES • SERVICE • LEA.SINO • PARTS • BODY SHOP 1966 Harbot BJvd .. C09ta Mesa 7141646- CALIF'S "1 & LARGEST VOLKSWAGEN DEALER NEED WE SAY MORE? Parts Open M-Sat 8 • 5 30 Sat 9 • 4 p m Service m-Fri 7.30 -6 pm 11711 BEACH BLVD HUNTINGTON BEACH 714/ 842-2000 0 NABERS C ADILLAC @ 2100 lllRIOR ILYD., COSTA IESI (714) 140-1100 (213) lll-1211 • Best Prices • Convenient Location Pacific Ocean 11 BARWICK NISSAN WE LEASE All MAKES & MODELS CALL US FOR FLEET PRICES Just a Short Drive Away .. 3337!) Camino Capistrano 493-3375 SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO 831 -1375 o COMMONWEALTH VOLKSWAGEN &);.. 'FAMILY STORE SINCE '53' ~Sales -Service· Leaaing Me ·OllO 0 the PROFESSIONAL APPROA CH 71 4 -979-2500 2925 Harbor B oulevard • Costa Mesa. CA • 0 HOUSE OF IMPORTS • Ease of Ownership terms • Lease convenlenoe-12· 72 mo • Select from 100+ new and pre-owned • Delivery 1n Europe option dl•I Merced•• 714/213 637-2333 Santa An• (5) FrMway (,!. e .. ch In Buena Perk G UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE HONDA 2880 Harbor Blvd. Coata Meaa 540-0713 3 Bk>Cks So of 405 Fwy. G 808 LONGPRE OrMgt County s Old•n & u.rg•ir PontOtc De.itlenhlp "t llff<h INd. & the Galn:len Grow 'rtt'Wflt f714 892-Mll f714J 686-.ZllOO we puform •II Ponti•< wArrAnty work. regard~ ot wtie,. you or1g1n111y purchlsed your car. OP• llCHIDAY svnMNOI UNTIL .... P•. .. actt llMt. a a.trden Gl'9W Pwf· ~ ..... c.1 ......... • ales • ervice • Leasing EA '}' to Fl.'VD ... EA Y to DEAL WITH :.? bib 11orth of 'ant• Ana Frttw11y on &aeh Blvd. 6211 BF.AC H BLVD. BUENA PARK ( 714) 521-3 110 ( 2 13) 921-8681 • a l1latJlCll a maJOl PONTIAC Wt Sell bcitltltlt a l1latJlCll PONTIAC FIEllll SUBARU SLASHES e PRICES! e ON ALL 1986 MODELS Ull)(R NN ~TAlfCCS W{ Wl1 NOT 8E UNDERSOLD' ---·--- SUBARU 24IO Hatt>or Bhd. Costa Mna Newport Btldl 714/549-4300 714/549-4300 8 ORANGE COAST JEEP /RENAULT # 1 /1 TH W11t 111 #n JH, Salls For I Y1in oe:n~e • SM.ES -,.,. ".2~to t : ~~~~:~~ -s4i:m • ACCESSORIES DEPT C) ~ r-CAMPBEi I ~NISSAN~ lf}Of • • Low Prices • No Gimmicks • Great Selection • Friendly People • Excellent Service 1883' 8eodl '°"le¥ord c1141 u 2.n1 1 H\lftf~ton S.OCh (213) S92·14t3 v Excetlence In Salea Service & Leasing v Orange County's No. 1 No Haple Dealerll WE HAVE MAXEY DISCOUNTSlll (714) 147-1555 18881 BMch Blvd .• Huntington Bch. -~ ORANG CO\Sf • 25~ FAIR 1 T H URS DAY, MAY 15, 1986 .. County snubs firefi hters May OK overtime curbs, hire part-time h elp regardless of b reakdown in talks been at the bargaining table with the county personnel department since September, trying to work out an acceptable way to implement Fair Labor Standards Act provisions aov- eming overtime. firefighters may volunteer to work extra hours but they arc paid straight time for the duty. With the implementation of the Fair Labor Standards Act, the county would have to pay those firefighters overtime. By LISA MAHONEY Of .. 0.-, ......... Orange County may try to force a new overtime policy on firefighters now that contract negotiations have completely broken down. "We believe we do have the right to Andrlja Artako'ric, a former Sarfalde Colony re.tdent. la aentenced to death for ordert.na the mawacrea of hun!reda of thouaanda of people darlnCWorld War U. A4. Coast Huntington district using lottery money to hire more teachers, reduce ctass sizes./ A3 Controversy ensues over White House "support" for Rep. Badham In his contested primary./ A3 Nation NASA Is hoping to put a scaled-down space sta- tion Into orbit sometime In the 1990s./A5 Student mountain climbers perish when caught In a snow storm on Mount Hood./ A5 World Gorbachev addresses the Soviet public on the Chernobyl disaster. says nine have died ./ A4 Sports Dodgers benefit from five St. Louis errors to beat Cardinals, 8-3./81 Race driver Marlo An- drettl hospltallzed after crash during Indy 500 practice run./82 modify poltc1es and we're looking closely at that," said county nego- tiator Dick Thornburgh· following a failed mediation session Wedncsdax. "We know that if we do, they II probably fight 1t all the way." Orange County firefighters have Legless walker crosses country By Uae Aa1ociate4 Prets WASHINGTON-BOb Wieland, a legless Vietnam veteran, ended his 2, 7S"4-mile ''Walk for Hunger" across the United States Wednesday as he began it -on his hands. When the former Laguna Hills resident amved in the nation's capi- tal. he met with President Reagan at the White House - a session the veteran said brought tears to the president's eyes-and was greeted at the Capitol by House Spe~er Thomas P. O'Neill. O'Neill, O.Mass .. called Wieland "a man of great courage and fortitude and stamina." Wieland began bis 44-month odesscy on Sept. 8. 1982. setttng out from Knott's Berry Farm after train- ing for 18 months. Wednesday. on a streetcorner in d,owntown Washington, D.C.. the veteran strap ped his torso mto a thick leather seat and slipped his heavily- calloused hands into the pads he calls his "running hoes." Swinging forward on two power- fully muscled arms. he took a "step" of three feet. rested mo mentanly o n his buttocks and reached forward for another steP. in the last mile of a 3V1- ycar. 4.9 million-step journey. Surrounded by reporters and pho- tographers. he reached the Vietnam Veteran's Memorial a t a normal walking pace. He swung down the path along the memorial's black granite walls and found the name of Jerome D. Lubeno, the man he was trying to save when he lost his legs. Wieland, 40. was a combat medic with the U.S. Army's 25th Infantry 01V1s1on On June 14, 1969. attempt- ing to aid Lubeno. who had stepped on a booby trao. Wiland himself tnpped over an Simm mortar round. "My legs went o ne way and I went another." he said. After surgery. 50 ptnlS of blood and a bout with malana. Wieland weighed 87 pounds. He had once A 1985 court decision extends the act to public agencies like county governments as of April 15. As a result. the county must pay time-and-a-half to employees who work past their regular shifts. Under existing county policies, • To save oniwage costs, the county has proPQted using part-time em- ployees to cover for sick or vacation- ing firefi&hters. But F'ire Fiahters Local I 0 14, which represents about 450 Orange stood 6 feet tall and weighed 200 Bob Wieland, ahown here jaat before llett:lnC oat from pounds Nine mches remamed o fh1s Oranee County on hla crotM1-coa.ntry ••walk for Hunaer:· (P lea8e 8ee LEGLESS/A2) arrived In the nation'• capital Wednesday. County firtfi&hten. engme~rate thetr opposition to the captains and paramed1cs.~on't go proposed overtlme pollC')'. alona with the policy change. It would Local IO 14 Presidrnt Larry Simcoe affect those in the firefighter category said the t>icketcrs arc wot'Tied about only. their safety and tM public•, 1( pert· After the county declared ncgo-time workers arc used 1n emCf'ltDC)' uations at an impasse la11 week, the s1tuauons. local orpnizcd a protest outs.idc the F1refi&hters don't feel afe worta!'- county Hall of Admirustration. with part-timers because they don t Between 150 and 200 Orange rccewc the daily train.ins Deeded lO County fircfi&}lters and their families become an mtearal part of an em~ picketed outside a Board of Super-ency team, Simcoe sawS. visors meetmg Tuesday to demon-(Pleue Me l'Dt.Ef'IGllT&ll/A2) Nuclear fallo.ut in Southland skies detected EPA says trace levels pu-se n o st nifican t- public h ealth t hreat LOS ANGELES (AP)-Radiation from the Chernobyl nuclear accident has been detected in the skies above Los Angeles, but the levels arc too low to ~ harmful, the Environmental Protection A&ency said. Air paniculatc data released by the EPA in San FranciSClO found that low- level traces of iodine 131 were detcct.ed Wednesday above six cities. which were Los Angeles; Olympia. Wash.: Boise. Idaho: El Paso. Texas: Jacksonv1llc. Fla. and Chatlottc.t N.C. A similarly small amount 01 wc:b radiation fronrt~ Sovtcr"111Jck:u--- reactor accident was detec1Cd ova Las Veps.. Nev .• last week. the EPA ·· said. Levels of rad1at1on seen abroad and in rainwater and \Ur samples taken in the United States dun~ the put week have led the federal lDlef'altDCY task fortt monitorin& fallout U> conclude that radiation from the Soviet Union poses no .._...6cant threat to human health in dte United States. an EPA statement said. Trace elements of iodine 131 measured above the six cities raf\lt$ (Pleue ..., P' ALLOUT I A2) Teacher's Day a morale booster ... By G. JEANETTE A VENT ... 0..., ........ Banners. brunches, and balloons arejust 1 sampling ofthe many ways school diStricts and parent-teacher orpni.zations celebrated the founh annual 0.y of the Teacher Wcdncs- day. Proclaimed in 1982 by Gov George Dcuk.mejian, Day of the Teacher should rank right behind Mother's and Father's Day in signifi- cance. said Robert Peterson. super- intendent of the Orange Count} Department of Education. Teachers arc more than JUSt lec- turers or dispensers of 1nformat1on. said Ric Stephenson. president of of the Capistrano Unified Education Association. "Teachers go beyond sterile relationships and instead strive to ignite a spark of enthusiasm or a burst of creatwit}'. . .. To recognize its teachers. the Capistrano Unified School 01 tnct took out full-page ads tn local newspapers. said Sharon Tanner. assistant to Supenntendent Jerome HB science teacher named OC's best, just loves the job By ROBERT BARKER With a background m seneral science and biology, Marine View School teacher Jay DuVal probably could make a lot more money in the private sector. A.nd after 23J·cars tn Huntington Beach's Ocean 1cw School Dtstnct, he might have abandoned the classroom long ago for a prestige JOb in the adm1n1strat1on. But DuVal loves being a teacher (Pleue 1ee SCDtNClt/ A.2) Thornsle) The Parent Faculty G uild at Capistrano's Moulton Elementary (Plea8e eee TltACIUR '8/ A2) INDEX Advice and Games Boating AB BS A3 Newport woman turns 102 with honors Bulletin Board Business Classlfled Comics Death Notices Entertainment Opinion Paparazzi Police Log Public Notices Sports Television A6-7 87-9 A9 89 A10 A10 BS A3 84, 9-10 B1-4 B6 By SUSAN HOWLETT Ol IM Delly "!lot lleff The American flag waved with special purpose over the nation's Capitol Wednesday It was fl}'ing 1n honor of Newpon Beach resident Tillie Fionna. who celebrated her I 02nd b1nhday with a gathering of fnends and government representa- tives. "I asked Tillie how she felt this morntng, and she said Tm glad to be an)whcre :11 102.'" said Newport Convalescent Center spokesman Jim New Nordstrom -store marks first step of expansion The OJ?Cnina this week of the new S29.S million Nordstrom bu1ld1na at South Coast Plata marks the first installment of an c'pansion program that will nearly double the mall's me by Novem~r Talung 'hapc across from the mall on Bear treet 1s an annc:t that w\ll brina two more department ~ores and 60 pcc1alty ,ho~ to the Co ta Mesa shoppina center Additionally, the 'hell of the old Nordstrom bu1ld1na 1 being tran,. formed 1ntoa three-level mall ar~ for at least 30 more 5hops, while Bull- ock's has ~un od~1na 92,000 "IU&re feet to 1t.s store. hoppcn will ct their first taste of the plaza's new amuenct when thC' doors to thr h1ger and ~ttcr Nor TONY SAAVEDRA Focus ON THE Nn-w s dstrom tort open fnday morning at 10 The new 224. 7S~~quare-foot bu1ldina 1& nearly tw1cc the 'ltl<' of the onginal store and will ht-come the laraest of the I b Norchtrom 'llle'l m Cahfom1a (Pleaee lee NORDSTROM/ A2) ) Gill. Fionna wa~ flanked by Newpon Beach Mayor Phil Maurer, Orange County 5th Distnct Supervisor Tom Rile\.. and representatives from the offi ces of Rep. Robert E. Badham. state Sens. Marian Bergeson and Ed Ro~ce. and Assemblyman Gil f-erguson. he smiled and talked w1th her 76- yl'ar-old daughter. Natalie during the afternoon celebrauon. The Oa& flown tn Washington. D C. for Fionna's binhday was a aift . -- from Badham. who said he arranged it in commemoration of her special day. The eldest of eight children. Fionna was born in the city of Oakaville. Ill.. 1n 1884. he mamed her husband. James. when she was 18 years old. He died when he was tn his 90s. Seventy-five years ago. she came to California where she owned and operated three family restaurants in Ventura. Los Angeles and the San Fernando Valley. her sister said ..,.._ ...... o....-... Mark Lawtclll. left, and manacer Tom 8ro~ make nre e•erythjn& la ln order lD the men'• aport.wear Cleputment for the openlnc of the new PtoTdatro~ a t 8oath Cout Plua. ' \ At the age of 60. shl' retired from the restaurant business and began running an orchard and turkey farm tn Nonhern ('altforn1a .. , was a httlc womed about her:· her daughter said. ""t 70. 'lhe was carrytng big pa1 Is of food to spread out to the chickens.·· And Fionna sttll looks good at more than a century. he doc~ \lo!Ork with her hands. and 1s 'illll ahlr to communicate despite a stroke that 1mpa1rcd her heanng and spct>ch a (Pleue eee BIRTHDAY / A 2 ) Tillie Florina Badham calls for helicopter probe Prompted by latest Super Stallion c rash that killed 4 Marine By AN HOWLETT Of ... Oell9 ,... """ Followmg 11 crash last wt.·ck that loll~ four Tustin-based Manne\ and a ~ncs of other accitknts rrlatina to the a1rc:ran. Rep Robtn S..dham t'.alled for a congrt 1onal in- ve t1µt1on ot the-Cl t-5 'L ~upcr tallton helicopter\ In a letter to Le A pin. chairman ot the Houtc Armed Services ( omm11- ltt, Badham ta1d he is concerned with the safety of the hehcoptel"\ , Fnda 's era h. dunna a Mannt" Corps 1ra1n1ng 01ght 1n the M\Cn ncu 1-.ent) nine Palm\ lollrd lour men \ from the Manne Cori>s' Tu.sttn besc II was the ~•-<th maJOr crash of the CH-SW tn the past two yea" "I hehe' e that an tnvc t1pt1on 1 .ippropnate and net.-c sary as th~ \llfel\ o f the CH-53E au'Craf\ ha' comt" into qucsuon." Badham said ·· 11 1\ e'\~nual that all pcn1ncnt facts regarding the a1rwonh1ne of the a1rcrnn he maJe public " Tht" 1nt1tal 1n.,.csu,at1on of the crnc;h re.,.calcd "pilot em>r" bad cau'iCd tht latest 1cc1dtnt. but the ""orlona order of the bd1coptcr's 01ght<ontml \"stem hn come mto quec;uon BadhAm \aid p~hm1nary findlnp 1nd1c.1uc the May 9 crash was no• related to any previous mtshapa, but an ID\iC \1 tion into tM accidtnta hould b( t'onductcd to make surt. 'In order to en urt tht '!fcty ~the (Pleue ... BA DllAllJ A2) I I 0nin0e eo.t DAILY PILOT/ Thurlday, May 15, 1988 Drug suspeCt' s identity am ystery I J PAUL A.ICIUPLEY ............. An a1Jqtd drua runner who used the aliues of dead people and as su.speaed ofbuyina and 1ellina drugs thro\llh '-'Se_ofa peeer, faced anaian- ment today tn Una Beach M11nicipaJ Court. , Po~~ce . say the suspect, whose 1dent1ty ts unknown, worked and !i. ved out ofbis car and storage garages 1n H untinaton Beach and West- minster. He was arrested Monday by Cali· fomia Hi&hway Patrol officers after alle&edly brandishina a weapon on the San Diego Freeway. CHP officer Raul Martinez. from the patrol's Westminster head- Quartel"5, spotted the suspect's vehicle in the northbound lanes near Golden West Street after heanng a broadcast about the incident. Mlninez stopped the suspect at 7th Stttet in Lona Beach and tound a chp for a .38Ckafiber sem1-autorttat1c on him, said Capt. Ken Rude. A subsequent sc.arch of the car revealed a cache of cocaine, 1nclud1ng 74 on~vam bindles and 11 quarter- ouncc bandies. Rude said. The suspect was carrymg a valid California dnver's license in the name of Michael Rogers. Officers also found four birth and two death certificates for difftrcnt people. and business cards for two storage $1rages in Hunti.naton Beach and a third in Westminster. After obtaining search warrants, officers inspected the garages and found three-quarters of a pound of cocaine. 14 handauns and rifles of different ly~s. 12 homemade silencers and S7,800 in cash. According to invest1gaung officer Sid Parsley. the suspect would a~· sume the 1dcnt1ly ofa dead person by obwn1"g that person's binh ano death records. ..You so to a ·aravcyard and find someone about the same :.ae." ParsJcy wd. For instanC'C, Mike Roacfl was bom in prin&Jield. Ill. in 1950 and died I 1h yeaN 1ater. The suspect was able to obtain a copy of Rogers' birth C'Cr1ificate. have at notoriicd. walk into a Department of Motor Vehicles office and receive a valid driver's license. The suspect carried a paaer that recorded 30 phone calls after his arrest. · Officers returned several telephone calls. and teamed the suspect used the ~trce1 name of"John." Martinez rtturned one call, telling the woman he wanted to talk to John. "She said,· Forget John. John's dead.· meamng he was in jail," Martinez said. TEACHER'S DAY A MORALE BOOSTER •.. Prom Al School served a luncheon to its teachers, said pnnc1pal John W. Hopkins. At Laguna Beach High School, the AS$0Ciated Student Body provided truts and refreshments in the teacher's lounge throughout the day. said Judy Chrispens. acting district superintendent. C'hnspcns. who 1s also princa~I of El Morro Elementary School, said her school displayed balloons and ban- ners for teachers. .. Teachers came in Wednesday morning and they were so surpnsed and happy." In the NewPort·Mesa Umfied School Distnct. 'upenntenden1 John W Nicoll said the district ordered special key nngs with the distnct's insignia. Each year. it's something different, said Nicoll ... Last year. we gave a gold apple on tie tacks and lapel pins." SCIENCE TEACHER ... At . Edison High School in Hunt- ington Beach, "students have been- putting little presents in the teachers' mail boxes all week," said Chris Giliscn. assistant principal. On Mon- day, 11 was an apple, on Tuesday a lapel pin wtlh an apple and a ribbon, and on Wednesdy a continental break.fast sponsored by the Parent Academic Bo16ter Oub. be said. From Al and he's a highly acclaimed one. He was honored as Orange Coun- ty's science teacher of the year last weekend b) the Orange County Department of Education It was the fourth ttme he has received the award. And he was one of the thousands of teachers honored Wednesday 1n Day of the Teacher observances through- out the state. DuVal, 45, received handwntten cards and oatmeal cookies from his seventh-and eighth-grade G1fied and Talented Education (GATE) students and a fret lunch from the Parent Teachers Organ1zat1on. He took the lunch into his classroom and spent the lunch break visiting with a reporter and talk1n~ over science projects Wlth his pupils. Marine View students are fresh from wrnnang first place in theJumor high school d1v1s1on of the Orange County Science and Eng.meenng Fair DuVal had been a teacher at Circle View previously and his pupils there had won top Orange County awards BIRTHDAY ... From Al year ago. ··she looks at me and asks. 'ho" come you have so many wnnkles.' .. said daughter Natalie. "As you see. she hardly has any wnnkles. ·· Natalie ts the onl) laving member of Fionna's 1mmed1ate family. Her brother. Robert. died when he was 5 and a second brother. Raymond. died at 76. She has great granddaughters Lon Whistler and Pamela Boone: great grandson Kirt. great.. great grandchildren Katlyn, Kelby. Jourdan, Ashley. Sarah and Kristen. who was born JUSt a week before Fionna's 102nd btrthda>- Natalle cred1tSjUSt ptain hard work with Fionna's long hfe She said long years of working have kept her mother young at 102 "She worked very hard being the olde~t of eight children," Nata he said, .. I thank 1hat'~ It She's tembly pleased. and she seems to be "'Cf} happy .. the three previous years. The) enter such projects as How Taste Can A.fleet Your Personaht) and The EfTects of Air Polluuon on the Growth of Molds "I could make more 10 pn'\ate mdustt)," OuVal said ... but I really enjoy the kids. .··1 receive lots of grat1fica11on from witnessing a stuQent learn a concept -I really hke 10 sec the light bulb turn on. "It would be nice tu earn mort money. but teachmg as my chosen profession. I was warned against 11 - my mother was a teacher. But you don't mind your parents." He's also taught industnal ans and photography and physical education He's the current coach of the boys' seventh-grade softball team. which has its first game today w11h Park View Du Val rece1"ed a bachelor of ans degree an science and btolog}' from Nebraska State Teachers College 10 Peru. Neb .. and a master's degree from Pepperdme Manlyn ~ocllcr, principal at Spring View Elementary School in the Ocean View School District. took a direct approach. "I and several parents fixed teachers a breakfast of French toast. sausage. coffee and juice." In addition, each teacher received a button with a red heart and a red and white apple on it, she said. "We think it's a VC!J appropriate celebration, because it s one of the very few times we recognize the teacher." said Dale Coogan, Ocean View superintendent. According to county super- intendent Peterson, the spark behind the Day of the Teacher was Newpon Beach resident Galal Kernahan. who patterned his idea after a similar day celebrated in Mexico. The 60-ycar· old planner with the county Com- munity Development Council in- itiated the idea, said Peterson. and Sen. Joseph Montoya (0..EI Monte) and the Association of Mexican- Amenc.a n Educators sponsored the bill. LEGLESS WALKER ... From Al nght leg. fi'\e inches ofh1s left He beg.an his rehab1htat1on pro· gram unable to hft five pounds and culminated it 1n 1977 by bench pressmg 303 pounds. He earned degrees in physical educauon and recreauon and served on the faculty of the Cal State Los Angeles. In 1981 . now a born-again C'hns- t1an, he decided to make the tnp. inspired by a verse fro m the Book of Romans. "We then that arc strong. ought to bear -the infirm1t1cs of 1hc weak." At a rate of three to five miles a day. he crossed Cahforn1a. Anzona, New Mexico. Texas, Oklahoma, M1ssoun. lllino1s, Indiana. Ohio. West Vir- ginia, Pennsylvanrn and Maryla nd He spent his mghts m the homes of vol unteer sponsors Pro1ect coord1 nator Marc;hall Cardiff. a Costa Mesa res1dcn1. left his JOb as a salesman when Wieland was traveling through La Cruces. N.M .. two years ago He helps Wieland map routes and handle pubhc1ty on the treak to fight world hunger. Wieland's "Spirit of Amenca" organ1za11on is based in Laguna Hills. where Margeret Harvey handles let- ters and donations for the fund. Donations can be sent to Spint of Amcnca -Walk for Hunger. Boll 2686. Laguna Hills. CA. 92563. Wieland had hoped to raise $25 million. to be distributed to organiza- tions hke the Red Cross and Salva- tion Army, by persuading people to sponsor each of his steps for $5 each. So far. he's raised $305,000. The worst times during his trek came 10 the Anzona desert in the summer of 1983 when the rcflC<'t1vc heat from the asphalt soared above I 00 degrees. he said. "There were many times I didn't think he'd make it through that desert:· said his father. Bill Wieland. a Milwaukee real estate broker. "But, he encouraged you " BADHAM CALLS FOR SAFETY PROBE .•. From Al against S1korsk} Aircraft. maker of the copter He made the tape in 1984, the lawyer told reporters. pres1dent1al helicopters, there are 59 of the Manne helicopters sull in c;erv1te. •On March 24, 1984, a two-cog.inc CH-530 Sea Stallion crashed into a ---~---------""-- Afternoon sun to break through Night end morning tow cloud• thr°"Otl Friday wlll btMk to ~ly tunny attemoone 0¥9f the Or11nge Coast, the National WMthtr strvto. Mid High• wtff r•no-from th• up.,_ 801 at the ~ to lhe mld-709 Inland. Ovemlght 1oW1 wttl be In the nttct SO.. Sk• 0'4' loc•I m04.1ntaln1 wlll be moatly clMt With local northw.t wtnda blowtng 15 to 25 mph. Aelot1 hlgM wlll be 88 to 78, With Iowa from 38 to 48. · Weet to aouthweet wlnd1 wlll btow 15 to 25 mpf\ In tM nonMln d...-ta, with UPI* deeert high• from 84 to 94 end low.r deMrt high• from 94 to 102. Over lnMt coa1tal wat«I wtl9t to touthweat wind• wlll blow 10 to 1e lcnot1 thl• att«noon and evening over a aouth to eouth'"'I ••I of 2 to 3 fMt. U.S . Temps Louw.otle 75 ... ~ .. 70 MWNIMCfl 19 1' HIO"e. iow. ttvOllQlt • p"' w~ ~ .. 81 SN>w4'f• .. ............. .. 50 Al«lerly.H y ,. 41 Mplil.31 ..... 1S 42 _.,. -,.,_. ~ us 0-00 "' CO..-'• ~Que " 63 ~ .. 15 .. 51New~ 17 • """"""'• 49 M .... YOftl <:try .. S2 Calif. Tempe '1oc*ton IO .. 4ttefli. 11 12 HotfcA V• 57 ... T.,_V..., IS ao •--City 61 50 Ollw-City n 61 Au!Mltt 71 72 C>maN 79 " HIOM, IOM WOUQll 6 p.111 WecllM hllimor. IO S2 OrlMdo ... 12 =:v111itrt 11 • Extended =:-...... 57 40~ ... 51 ......, • .. 51 .. 61 PMMla M 17 .... ow ... 17 ---... 52 ==rc 74 S3 ._,,,_, " •• llOIM 58 2t .o.. 12 37 llO'-ra 3-4 MOMly ~ de)4 .,., deer .......... loeton 12 47 Pr~ ... " ~ .. 4t atlOllll .... nlglll _, ~ ~ luflelo ea ~ ::::rClty 64 51 lllylM 97 " _... ................. IO luttnQIOll. VI 11 51 .. CIAwrOl!y 70 &7 71. L-6' IO IO. V,,.,, ....... ft 10 If. c.,., " at Aerlo 71 " ""91l• 151 .. LoM51 I067 cn.tlwlon.8 c 75 .. AlcMloncl 57 51 ,,_ .. 61 °"4wtott•,N C ... S5 Stlout. 12 S3 L--.. ... ... ~ .. .. S...L.M•Clty 611 .. Longe-ti t7 ~ Surf Report ~~tl 17 5& Sen 4ntonlo eo 74 ~ 70 75 \ 5" len Juwl.P fl 13 et 13 " ClewlMd n 67 s.ni. 59 41 MonrO'lle 1t 54 LOCATIOll -... ~.s,c. 13 '13 St~ .. 15 MOii .... 72 17 zwne...., N aw ColumC.U.,Olllo 78 11 ..;;;;a IO so MonMrey 12 112 ~~ 2~ IW eon--d.HH. 75 42 SP<*-57 30 ,., WlleOn 76 49 ~9Mdl S-4 llW 0.-FtWOftll 79 198~-76 51 ,.._.... 97 '" ... oi.eo County 2-a saw ~on 17 5i T~t Ptrabg 1111 .. ~._,,, .. 17 Olllloolc tor Fl1dey. Ut11e cMnoe. o.n-74 44 Topeke n 51 71 60 O.MoiMI n 47 T-92 S3 Ont.no 74 81 °"''°" 79 51 Tulle IO 93 Pelr!!Sprlngt ., ea Tldea EIPMO .. 12 WMNngton.o c 69 51 P-..deM 1111 53 FWl>wlltl 51 3e Wldllta 71 51 P-Aof>IM 15 45 Fergo 15 SS Wllk-8at•• 17 .. ~ 70 SS tOOAt f'leottell 70 3S Aed!IMI 13 67 Flrwthlgll 1t:63L/ll. 4 4 Grind._,..,. 70 61 "9dwooO City 10 51 Arwt IOW •.u e.111. o.a Or•F-49 ~ Smog Report s.cran-o a 52 8-!ClhW\ ""P""' J.4 ~o.HC 57 a... a ... s-.dlOW ~lp.111. " HIW'llord 75 H Sen 8ernatel4n0 71 57 ,...., Helene 50 31 PolutMI etendard ino.. ~I 0-100 SenGaottel '2 M ,.,. Ngll t:ll &.l'I\. 4.2 Honolulu ... 71 OOod: 10o-200~ ..,...... a...oi.go 17 5t f1rlt low 10-.N LM. oa ~on IO .. peocil9; ~ ~ tor 1111: SMFrwia-.. 52 8-ldHgll •• P.lft. J7 llldlwWIPC* 75 10 aoo.600 l\elWctou.. T~ 11 lor Ille Sen.IGM 74 60 S-...low 10'410.111 u -**-...... " ..~dey'tCllON SanteAN 70 57 JI-. ~2 42 Sent.I~ ., 6' ......... IOdlr M 1:11 L"' ..0 .. ~City n S3 =c-t .. 50 Senl•Cf\.11 71 60 =•7i4IOA'. 1.MV-e-., M 0.-. County --... _ 50 SMl.IMlft. 17 51 .... ~.11:0t&.l'l\.Md .... unt.Aodl t7 If ~Loe Angela._ ..• 50 SMtat.IOl*a ... M • ''°" Ll'll. • NORDSTROM OPENING BIGGER STORE ••• From Al South Coast Plaza was the first dise out of the old store and into the shopping center 10 the state to new one. suc.cessfully woo the family-run fashion retailer. After opening here in May 1978, Nordstrom quickJy be- came a victim of its own success. Customers and employees found themselves competing with the man- nequins and merchandise for elbow room, ·said company spokeswoman Theresa Clark. "It was so crowded and inconve- nient," Clark Cllplained. "Now cus- tomers will have a greater selection and the space they deserve." That populanty seems to be spreadin_J throughout the 45-store chain winding through the western states. Seven more stores arc sched- uled to open within the next two years, including one in Santa Ana and another 1n the Washington. D.C.. area -the company's first foray into the eastern market. A series ofchanty benefits was held at the new Costa Mesa store during the past few days ta~cted at introduc- ing arts patrons. business leaders and society circles to the new facility. To keep from losing too many valuable business hours, Clark said the move to the recently finished building Wlll be done overnight, beginning Thursday at 6 p.m. Roughly 1,000 employees. from salespeople to administrators, will roll up their sleeves. loosen their white collars and help carry merchan- ''It's gotta ti( done an less than 16 hours, so we need everybody who's available to help," Clark said. During the move. South Coast Plaza workers will erect a special walkway to take customers from the main mall area through the old store and into the new one. Later this month. work will begin on a plan to convert the vacated building into 130,000 square feet of leasable space for new retail shops. James Henwood, South Coast Plaza manager, wd the structure will basically be gutted and rebuilt. with 50 percent of the space expected to be occupied by November. Henwood said he doesn't yet know how much the renovation will cost. One of the main challcn~es faced by mall planners was how to incorporate the three-story building into a two- story shopping center. An architectural model shows an escalator enclosed in a glass atrium taking shorpers from the plaza's second lcve up to the new third-story area. Several skylights will combine with the glass<ovcred escalator to give the new mall space a "light and airy fechng," Henwood said. Another escalator well in the center of the building will take customers through the three levels, while bridget wilJ be built attaching the structure with a parking garage as well as with the new Nordstrom store. Henwood said three major tenants have already been signed for the new area, including Perkins·Shearer clothing and high-end luggaae retailer Louis Vuitton. Mall-owner C.J. Seaerstrom &. Sons also unveiled plans for a around- levcl pedestrian walkway from the Orange County Performing Arts Center across Bristol Street, through the north end of South Coast Plaza to the Robinson'~Broadway annCll under constniction on Bear Street. Company spokesman Tom Santley said the landscaped walkway or "promenade" may have canopies io some areas, some benches and trellises. "The idea is to make it like a European walkway," SantJey said, adding that pedestrian bridges over Bristol and Bear streets arc not included in current plans for the walkway. FALLOUT ••. From Al from .016 to 1.6 picocurics. Such a measurement is a trillionth of a curie the unit used to define the quantity of radioactivity emitted by radioactive matenals. FIREFIGHTER TALKS BREAK DOWN •.. From Al He quesuoncd whether part-time firefighters could be counted on 10 an emergency and suggested they might panic and walk away from a colleague an danger. Smee pan-lime firefighters would ti( called in only on an as-needed basis. "there's no contmu1ty, no way to develop their skills." ~mcoe said. Thornburgh said county nego- tiators were prepared to address safet y concerns Wednesday, but fire· fighters weren't tnlerested. Instead. local representatives stood firm on their demand that the county allow them to give up sleep umc in return for a full y paid benefit package, he sa.td. rffirefightcrs were to give up some paid sleep time, 11 would reduce county overtime payments substan- tially and pennit full-time firefighters to keep workins eJttra shifts. But a fully paid medical. dental and op-. tometnc plan is too much of a tradcoff, Thornburgh said. He accused fircfigbtersof crcatinaa "bosus" safety issue to get public sentJmenl on their side when what they are rcaJly trying to do is get more overtime and benefits. "They want what they can get for their existing e m ployees,'' Thornburgh said. Simcoe, the local president, djd not return a telephone call requesting co~ment on Wednesday's mediation session. surrounding community and to ensure the safety of the crews who fly the CH-53E aircraft, we must seek out and make known all of the facts relaung to the CH-53E mishaps which have occurred.'' Badham said. "Only in this way· will we be able to reinsllll confidence in the local com- munaty and among the Manne crews that the CH-53E is a safe aircraft which poses no ha.Lard to their safet) dunng normal operations.·· Arnette. a helicopter crew chief. said on the tape that he had found crucial bolts loose when new Super Stallions arrived from the manufac. turer. He descnbed findang broken parts on the ground , the loss of which. 1f undiscovered. could have led to failure of the main rotor an 01ght moun~1n1nKorea.k1lliq~~o~c. lj~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ • On April 14, 1984, a Ch-53A 11 One of the Mannes who died 1n the fiery helicopter crash Friday left b(h1nd a tape recording describing mechanical defects in the aircraft he flew and doubts about the wisdom of those planning some of his training missions. "We had problems. there's no doubtabout 1t," says a voice on a tape attnbuted to Sgt Dulles Arnette According to the Associated Press. the tape was played Monday by Mark P. Robinson, an attorney rep- resenting the fam1hC$ of two of four Marines killed an the crash of a CH-SJE Super Stallion helicopter 1n June 1984. Robinson said Arnette, upset at the dea~h of a fnend an the ocean crash off San Clemente Island. had agreed to te5tify in a lawsuit MAIN OFFIC! .)JO w .. 1 .. y St Cot!I Un. C 4 He also spoke of failures an a component of the tall rolor called the VISCOUS damper. Arnette said he also objected to bcang ordered to fl y m1ss1ons al ~a in newl}' delivered Sea • tall1ons carry- ing unfamiliar equipment Badham said he (lue t1oned the operational record of the uper Stallion at the regular Procurement . and M1htaf) Nuclear Systems Sub- comm111ec heanngs on naval avia- tion last month He said he made "panicular reference to the tail rotor problem" 1he Mannes took action to correct on the aircraft last winter. Since 1984. 66 servicemen have died in the CH-5JE and the smaller CH-53E A and 0 Sea tallioM. lnclud1ng the Manne One fleet of crashed during a trainin~ exercise in Nevada One man was killed. • On June I. 1984, a CH-53E crashed into the ocean ofT San Clemente Island. Four were killed. • On Nov. 19. 1984, a CH-53E \truck the ground m Camp Lejeune. N.C Six were killed. • On Feb. 7. 1985. the crew csc.aped unhanncd when a CH-53E from Tustin hit the ground. • On May 6. 1985. a C'H-530 fell into the Sea of Japan after apparent transm1ss1on failure. There were 17 people killed. • On July 12, 1985, four people were killed when a CH-53D crashed at Olunawa dunnga trainangexcrcisc. • On Aug. 25. 1985, a CH-53E from El Toro crashed in a vacant field in Laguna Hills. One man was killed. •On May 9. 1986. four were killed and one inJ ured in a CH-S3E crash near Twentyni ne Palm . ,...,aoetr ... Bo•·~ Cot••u"" c" 92 2e 0.-i.cl-8'12 Sl71 ~ 6 9<)10! .. I 642 4l2• Justcall 642-6086 uonoe, '"''" 11 '°" oo t-ol MW 10<>' P<IPf!'t l)l' ~ lOO"I ce t o.t<)<e 7 t 'f Cepy<JQl'll •NJ 0<•"9' Coett Pu01 •'"''9 Con()9"1 "'<> -91or... -lltp"9 td•IGr• "'•""' O' •<!•"" .. ,,_It _..,, ,..., 0. 'iP<IOM<eG •·l"Out tO«·• De' -ol covrn;M - l«onll 00tt• oe1' •' Cot•• u-ca , ..,,~ • f~ 144 IOOI wtlK' Pl.,,. 1>y r•"~' ·~ l~ "'<II''"'• °" 1700-""'r • What do you hke about the Dally Pilot? What don't you like? Call the number above and your messa.ge wtll be recorded, transcnbed and de· livered to the appropnale editor The same 24-hour answenna service may be used to record letters 10 the ed11or on any topic Contnbutors to our Letters column mus1 include their name and telephone number for venficauon Tells U\ what's on your mind I f"<I '°"" 'OQy c.. -90 "'°"" •--0 ,..,..,., ti ""' 00 "(II et•.. .;o., <OCI• o., • a m u w•-•o •,.. • ..., '°" cc"' • "'.,.._"' Clrculatlon Tel~• Mo.< Or~CCV't, ....... ......... Smooth Sailing Blue skies. the wind at your back. and a casual outfit from Phelps-..tS good as it grts! Picture yourself m the outfit 'ihown . .a reversible baseball jaclcet by f'Cn-el Recd-~ersuckcr stripe to solid in 3 pring colors, S 110 00. worn ovu a cotton pique knit ~hin by Gordon, S 35 00, with plutcd white demm slJad<.'i by Rivu Ciry, $45 00. 1 he boat shcxs are by Colt-Haan, $6900 Jusi a sampling of the Cun thin ava1l~ble .it Phelp ! \ ( ''""""'"Jl l1olJ11 .... In c;...iJ liblt f I 'I 11 II'~ •H I w•h1 .. r1 l•l•n.I ~t ... P''" ""' h 1iltl l'IH 11lt14 \