HomeMy WebLinkAbout1986-05-27 - Orange Coast Pilot-..
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I HAZY 10-
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,OMcUTa ON Al , '
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TUESDAY, MAY 27, 1986
. .
Beaches jammed ove.r ·hf;>liday .. . , ..
Only one county road fatality reported
as Oran Coast springs into summer
By STEVE MARBLE
a.ad PAUL ARCHIPLEY
Of ... Delly .........
The long, summery Memorial Day
weekend -marreq only by the
violent deaths of two Orange Coast
residents -brought thousands of
d NEWSLINE
Joyner homers
Wally Joyner'• .two-ran
'homer ln the nlntb
propelled the An&ela to
an 8-7 Tictory over the
New York Yinkeea Mon-
day. Bl.
California
Organizers of the Hands
Across America human
chain say they will spend
the summer oollectlng
the money raised to
provide food and shelter
for the needy./ A4
Nation
A blbllography of porn to
be released by a federal
·task force is obscene, the
ACLU says.I.AS
A Wyoming prison inmate
says his grandfather suc-
cessfully broke out of
Alcatraz prison./ AS
Wo~
Caller threatens to kill all
American hostages held
In Lebanon./ A4
At least 500 are feared
dead after a double-
decker ferry boat is top-
pled by high winds.IM
Sports
lndlanapolis 500 washed
out again, reset for Satur-
day./81
people together at beaches, parks and
at services honoring those who gave
their Jives for their country.
Tens of thousands flocked to the
sand during the three-day weekend
that marks the unofficial start of the
summer season.
At Ncwoort Beach alone, an esti-
Schools
weigh
transit
charges
Fees for busing to
HB events would
rais~ 120, 000-
By ROBERT BARKER
OflND..., ...... ..,.
Officials will consider recommen-
dations tonight to charge students for
bus transportation to athletic and
:>ther extra-curricular events in the
Huntington ~ch Union High
School District.
The fee would raise about $120,000
but is ellpected to draw protests from
sport boosters from schools in Hunt-
ington Beach, Fountain Valley and
Westminster.
Recommendations by Super-
intendent Marie Ono call for a fee of
\25 per extra curricular activity with
a maximum charge of$75 per family.
There would be waivers for fa milies
who couldn't afford the charge. The
fees would raise about $20,000 at tbc
six schools that field athletic teams.
Laguna Beach Unifi_~t ofs=
trict, which charges S35 for athletes
and Irvine Unified, which levies a
$25-pcr-sport fee, are others impos-
ing similar charges in Orange County.
Huntington Beach Trustee Jerry
Sullivan said today the district is
being "downsized" and there's less
money to go around because of
declining enrollment. "The lcgaJ
counsel says it's OK. I think we have
to do it. The users have to be the
payers."
Marina High School Principal Ira
Toibin said his school pays about
$35.000 for transportation to extra-
curricular events. ·
And if there is to be a transpor-
tation charge, he'd be able to spend
moce money on textbooks and other
academic items.
But Toi bin said "he has a problem"
with asking parents to pay more
money than they already do.
"We're asking them to s~nd a lot
out of their pockets," he said. Toi bin
said schools basically supply "the
bats and balls" and families are asked
to raise about$ I 00 for equipment for
each younfSter on sport teams.
Tonights meeting is scheduled at 7
o'clock at district headquarters at
10251 Y'8rktown Ave.
mated 330,000 sun seekers made the
beach pilgrimage during the long
weekend.
Others spent at least part of the day visitin~ the graves of loved ones and
attending MemoriaJ Day services,
such as the 32nd annual Decoration
Day services at Harbor Lawn Mem-
orial Park in Costa Mesa.
Municipal Court Judge Selim
Franklin and Costa Mesa Mayor
Norma Hertzog were among the
participants in ceremonies honoring
Addltlonlll llt#norlal Day COVWllflfl on A3
America's war dead.
There was a dark side to the
weekend, too. .
A Huntington Beach woman was
one of two people killed and four
injured Sunday in a boat collision on
La.kc Havasu, accordi ng to Anzona
authorities. ·
Molly Lynn Roberts, 30. was killed
wh'en 1wo speedboats colJidcd. in-
vestigators said. A San Bernardino
woman was kiJlcd and four Riverside
Coun ty residents injured in lhe
ni&hmme accident.
ihe operator of one of the out-
boards -identified as Carl Bruce
Hacker. 28, of Anaheim -was
arrested on suspicion of operating a
Delly .......... ..,""' Dt ......
Air Force Tech. s,i. Dehi.n Chublck carries
the fl&& durlnC Memorial Day 9el"ricea
Monday at Harbor Lawn Memorlal Park ln
Co.ta Mesa. The Decoration Day and Floral
Wreath Presentation wu the S2nd annual
aerrice aponaored by vpterana' organlza-
tlona ln Co.ta Meaa In honor of America'•
war dead.
boat whale under lhe innuencc of
alcohol. according to a Mojave Coun-
ty Shenfi's Depart ment spokesman.
A Costa Mesa man identifted as
Reynald Dazza. 27. was killed earty
Saturday when he was thrown from
hts motorcycle on the Corona del Mar
Freeway near Bear Street and lheo
struck by a second motorcyclist,
officers reported.
His was the only fatal accident on
e-0unty freeways durin' the three-day
(Pleue ~HOLIDAY I A2)
Attacks
on gays
linked to
AIDS fear
Laguna reports
'gay bashings'
average 1 a month
From staff aad wl re reperts
Hostility unJcashcd by the AIDS
epidemic has brought an increase in
unprovQked att.ackJ on homORxuals,
police and bomosexual-fi&bts ac-
tivists an Orange County say.
The statistics underplay the severi-
ty of the problem. some say, becauae
many homose-xuals arc reluciant to
repon "gay bash.ing• to the police.
"The gays are disproportionatety
packed on," said Tim Miller, a ~lice
officer in Laguna Beach, which is
noted for its large gay population.
Police in Laguna say they receive
an average o( one , report of' p y-
ba.shinga month, but say that number
ts significant in a population of
18,()()().
The Gay and Lesbian Community
Center of Oranic County ~ts be--
twttn two and six p y-bastun.a reports
each month. about doubie the
number rcc.ieived six months qo.
A oationaJ survey by the National
Gay and Lesbian Task Fonie in
Wasbmgton, D.C.. tallied 2,°'42
physical and vcrbaJ assaults on
homosexuals in 44 cities in l 98S.
"You have to figure this is just the
tip of the iceberg," said Kevin Bcnill.
coordinator of the task force's viol-
ence-documentation project.
In a 1984 survey of2, l 00 homosex-
ua1s in eight major cities, he said, one
an five gay men and one in I 0 lesbian
women said they had been beaten.
Forty percent said they had been
threatened with violence and 9o
percent said they had been taunted
because of their sexual orientation.
Gay activists blame public fear of
acquired immune deficiency syn-
drome an part for the reported
increase an violence. The incurable
djscase, which attacks the body's
immune system, is prevalent amo ng
homosexuals.
Enc Rofes, execuuvc director of
the Los Angeles Gay and Lesbian
Community Services Center in Hol-
lywood. tells of an attack last year in
which youths threw aetd in the face of
(Plea11e .ee GA TS/ A2) Celtics are now a game
up on Houston In NBA
finals./81
INDEX
Advice and Games
Births
A8
A6
A3
Irvine reviews leaner budget for 1987
Bulletin Board
Business
Classified
Comics
Death Notices
Entertainment
Opinion
Pollce Log
Public Notices
Sports
Televlslon
Weather
85-8
89-10
A9
84
A7
A10
A3
B4
8 1-4
A7
A2
But offic ia ls say no layoffs or tax h ikes
--------n eeded to balance spending package
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN
Of IM 0.-., ..... 9Wf
Irvine officials are reviewing a
budget that calls for "belt-tightening''
over the coming fiscal year but no
employee layoffs or raJt iricreascs.
The Irvine Finance Comm1ss1on
began studying the proposed budget
last week. The proposal, which covers
the fiscal year that begins July I. will
be the subject of a City Council
hearing on June 18.
" ... It is my view that 1986-87 will
find the cit¥ of Irvi ne in a period of
belt-tighten mg." Assist.ant City Man-
ager Paul Brady Jr. said in a recent
report on the proposed finance plan.
'Barrel Organ Bernie' the
last of the street grind·ers
Street ente rtaine r from En gland brings
fits mus ic to Laguna Beach or summe£_
past back to a 11\rgc group of senior
citizens.
"Someday My Pnnce will Come"
and "Thanks for the Mcmorie " were
1ust two of ttac tunes Gaugh played for
lhc noontime crowd at the Com·
munity Cenler.
By LAURA MERK
Of ... Dllly .........
The almos t forgotten skill of barrel
orga_n grindin& is alive and well with
Englishman Bernard Gaugh, who
carrie1 on the family profc sion that
dates back nearly 100 years.
Gau'1' is visiting the United St.ates
from hu home in Manchester. Ena·
l'l!.d, where he makes ht hvi na as a
strttt cn1cna1ncr.
His is nearly a lost an. Wtth Gau.ah
visitana in the state his brother Phil
IS the only Street annder in a.II of Great
Britain today.
Known as "Baml Orpn Bernie,"
Gaugh. 46, brightened the day of
about I 00 senior citizens this Wttk at
the T.LC. Lunch Provam in Laauna
Beach.
Dressed 10 a colorful costume with
a red scarf. Gaugh smiled, un&.
danetd inU broudlt a little b11 of the
I •
"I tend to thank they love 1t, .. he
said with a radiant smile.
Th~ BarTCI Orpn is a larse piano-
look1tl11nstrumcnt that he pushes on
a handmade red, wooden c.tn. Much Mee a music bole, a tarae bl""I dotted
with 40,000 carefully pla~ pins
rotate and plucks hammers that
pound the piano stnfli.'I. The orpn 1
cranked by hand.
"A much tighter budget '>'-tit have to
ellist, and the Finance C'omm1ss1on
and the City Council must make
some tough budget decisions."
But an a meeting with reporters. he
added, "The city 1s not an any
financial problems."
The fina nce plan propo)cd bx the
city staff calls for a $37 9 mtlhon
operations budget to -co' er day-to-
day city O\)Crations and a S 14. Q
million capital 1mproH~ments pro-
gram for construct a on ot parks. public
building$, bicycle 1ra1I~. traffic sig-
nals. strttts and other pro1ects
LAURA
MERK
PEOPLE IN THE NEWS
The ruult i!I an inv1t1ng. resound-
ing tune.
It was what Oau1h's fath('r dad to
put food on the table and what h1~
father's father dad . Ga ugh 's I I -year·
old ~n Aaron may even follow the
family trad111on. 1f he docs, Gau_gh
may hand down the family Bam-1
Orpn built 1n 1892
laJuna Beach tt 1dent Dolores
Kusun is hosuna Gaua,h an h('r home
for the summer. he met thr enter·
t.aincr on her way to ouch a plane tn
F.nlland (Pl eue .ee L A 8T/A2)
'j
Also proposed as a $438 million
special funds budget. This refers to
money generated by assessments and
services such as refuse collection.
hghttng, traffic im provements, park
de velopment and the new Irv ine
C1v1c Center In most cases. these
funds can onl y he channeled to the
projects or ser' ices for which th ey arc
collected.
Th e Cit)' c;tafT has proposed no
increases an Irvine"; 8 percent trans1·
ent occupancy or bed tax. collectt>d
from visitors at local hotels. The cit)
has the authont) to bcgm charging .
utaltt). entertainment or business
license ta:i1es. bur no such charscs are
proposed b) the staff.
The final decision. however. rests
'with 1he Cat\ Council. Staff members
said 1ha1 1(the council wants more
amb111ou~ projects or services than
1hosc now proposed. new or increued
taxes could generate the funds to pay
for them
Council members have said local
park improvements are a high pn-
onl)' Th(' proposed budget allocates
$1 -, malhon for three park pro1ects:
(Pleue eee IRVIN&/ A2)
Laguna co~n·cn finds
$25,000 in its tight
budget for playhouse
By LAURA MERK
Of IM Delly NM .....
Oaa.gina deep 1010 11" c;hallo"
mun1c1pal pod.et\, the Laguna Beach
City Co uncil found S2S.OOO tn m
squeeky-tlght proposed budget to
expand the Moulton lommunll)
Playhouse
The cny·~ donation, \\oh1ch wtll be
spread over the nex1 thl'('(' yea~. wns
the laraest budget changr made
dunn& hetinngs last w('('l on the
proposed t 98f>..8 7 hudat't
ihe c-itf!'t S 17 m1lll(ln hudaet
proposal 1~ SI O malhon \h' of la~t
year·~ $27 m1lhon \pend an& plan
Much ol last year·s revenues were
generated from bonds sold to con.-
c;truct a water rtscrvo1r, sewers and
'itorm drains for the Kaufman &ftd
Broad housing develpmcnt 10
!'\vcamore Halls.
•\bout 5 percent of the 1986-87
budget will ao toward h.abtlaty in·
\uranct and related costs such a
attorney's fee claim' adjustai and
coun co ts
C'aty-Manqer Ken Frank told the
,'<>uncal at budget heannas lut week
1ha1 thr cat)' may 10 wtthout in-
\Urnnt'C nt't year unlcs$ ttJOan other
(Pleaee eee LAGUNA/ A2)
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Al * Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/ Tu.day, May 27, 18M
LAST ••.
From Al
.. l htard the 8aml Orpn and I
said, 'Where is that sound comina
fromr " she said. So he followed the
musk and imply stood 10 awe. she
lllld.
"It bnna back memorie :· for so
many older peo{>IC, Kustin said. "My
father used to bnna me to Los Anaeles
and listen 10 them play tht small
hurdy-au1d1es." ~he said.
Few working Barrel Organ arc left
1oday and most sit m museum's and
private collections. Gaufth said.
There are few people who pfay them.
The o~n is capable of playma 10
tunes. W11h each new tune the barrel
moves 1/4 inch an the pins are in place
for another o;ong.
An ex.penenced Barrel Organist
can repin the organ himself. selecting
Lhe tunes he wishes to play.
Gaugh •~n·t 'iure how long he will
~lay tn the United States bu1 hopes to
1ravel the country playing his street
piano
Mass casualty
drills scheduled
Deir .... ,.._~ MINNI(....._
En&ll•bman Bernard Gaqh I• •pendlnC the •ummer In
Laaun• Beach with hi• barrel oraan.
Orange County fire and medical services arc conducting mass ca~ually
drills today, Wednesday and Thursday 1n pans of the county.
This year's version of the annual eme~ency preparedness test involves a
fict1t1ous 7.5 eanhquake that collapses a building leaving 30 "dead" victims at
each site.
The firs! dnll was held at Carbon Canyon Regional Park m Brea today.
Wednesday's pract1cr will be at 1he Net 6 Joml Powers Training Cenler of
the Huntington Beach Fire Departmenl. Thursday's will take place at a
warehouse at 19000Jamborec Boulevard an Irvine. Both begin at 9:30 a.m.
Funhcr information 1s avajlable from Marilee Miller at 834-6447.
Bail hearing resumes for pair
charged in mercenary bombing
LO\ ANGELES (AP> -A ball
hearing resumed today for two Dana
Point women who allegedly hired a
team of Alabama mrrcenanes 10
m11m1dat1: formtr emplo)ees ofthe1r
nurser' and elementary schools.
The h1:anng was continued last
Wednc\da) after the daughter of one
of the defendants. Charlotte Wyckoff.
urged l ' .S Magistrate Volney Brown
lo keep her mother 1n Jail The
daughter. Shark~ Wnght. 2M. tcst1fied
c;he "wouldn'1 tK: .iround" 1r her
mother and the other woman Leta
Hamilton. were reka!.ed
Pro!>ecutors alleg(• Wyckoff. 51 .
and Hamilton, 39, hired 1he operator
or an Alabama paramiliiary 1raining
camp and thrte pan-time instructor\
to can) out firebombangs last sum-
mer.
A second bail heanng also sched-
uled late today afternoon for Franklin
Camper, 39. director of the
Mercenary School in Dolom11e. Ala.
and Paul Joh nson. 42. before U.S
Dlslrict Judge Stephen V Wilson an
Los Angeles.
Cars belonging to two leachers who
had worked for the two women were
destroyed in bombings last Aug. 13
No injuries were reported.
Prosecutors said Wyckoff and
Hamilton plotted a harrassment ca m-
pa1l(n to intimidate the teachers
be1.au~e of complaints they had filed
w11h ~late agencies about the 1wo
women and their schools.
(. ampt·r. Johnson and Paul La Rosa
C uneo. 22. were arraigned last week
1n Birmingham on similar charges. A
tcderal mag.istrate 1n Birmingham set
bail for all thret after a heanng last
Wednesday. but prosecu1ors an Los
..\ngeles asked a federal JUdge m Los
Angeles to revoke bail and 1ransfer all
three defendants 10 Los Angeles
IRVINE REVIEWS LEANER BUDGET ...
From Al
work on the first phase of Wandro"'
Part... npan\aon ol athlet1c fieldo; at
Heritage Park and dec,1gn work on
e\pans1on of Har' ard Athleuc Park
.\.ss1stan1 ( 1t} Manager Brad) said
no programs v.ould be ehm1natcd
under the propo<;cd budget. He said at
also call'> for a net anc rease of one
c:m plo\ce poc;111un th1.• o;econd lowest
workforce ancrcase an lhe Cit\ 's t 'i-
>ear h1stor) -
Brady said belt-taghtenang 1s
needed lx•cause althnu~h the n tv'c,
re,enues contanUl' to grow. 1hey are
not increasing at the pace ol previous
>Cars
For ei1ample. over the past four
vears Irvine's sales tax revenues have
Increased at an average 19 percent.
Next year's increase is expected 10 be
11 percent Also, occupancy al local
hotels 1s expected to be lower 1han
earheres11mates. lead10i to lower bed
tax rC'.'vcnues than anticipated.
The 1986-87 budget earmarks 28
percenl of lhe opera1ions budge! or
$10. 7 m1llton tor public safety ser-
.. ices. an 8 percent mcrca<;e O\ er the
current ~ear.
Another 24 percent or $9.8 million
would be alloca1ed to maintenance of
publicly owned land and factlties.
including parks. streets and build-
ings.
C'ommun11y Services, wtuch Jn·
eludes cullural, athletJc and rec-
reation programs, would receive I I
percent of the operations budget or
S4.3 million.
GAYS UNDER INCREASING ATTACK .••
From Al
a v.oman "'ho Y..Or lo.ed at lhe <.enter
Her auarktr'> taunted her about
""orlo.1ng "llh \I()~ \lt11 ms. Roles
\aid
V. l'rnn Kuhn. dire{ tor of the
Orang1· ( uunt) (1a~ and Lesbian
tenter \;lid he ha\ bt.·cn taunled
""hlle ""alktng 1n Laguna Beach. and
ret:entl\. c,a"' th1<, spray-pamted m-
'>t'rlPll<>n .. Burn .\I()\ .. 1ct1ms ..
'r uu d11 feel thrc.Hcned.'' c,a 1d
t-..uhn "'r ou qu1lken ~ou r pace··
Jan-.\ u't 1 n F-oul·her 28 an
Anaheim songwnter, told ol watching
helplesslcy as a man was bea1en by
nearly a dozen laughing teen-ager~
outside a Garden Grove books1ore tn
December.
"One of1hc attackers looked al me
anctch1ded loudly, 'This 1s where the
gays hang out 1sn't 1t? Why don't your
gay fnends come to help you fighl'1' ..
Foucher ~1d.
"When I came home. I felt \Cl angl)
I couldn't sleep. It could JU'il as easily
have been me." Foucher said
.\lthough he filed a repon on the
tncidcnt with a gay-rights orga01La·
taon. he said he d1dn'1 contact police
because he d1dn'11hmk 11 would have
done any good.
Police 1n Orange Counly say they
treat gay-bashing reports seriously,
bul some ac1iv1sts believe otherwise.
"Soc1c t) does not feel the gays are
'-'Onh anything ... said Allan Yates.
director of the gay-nghts center an
Long Beach. "There's not a sense of
outrage. There's a sense of, 'Oh well.
he got what he deserved anyway.'"
LAGUNA COUNCIL REVIEWS BUDGET ...
From Al
l 1t1e\ 1n tormang 1t' 11\.\n 1n\uranu·
, om pan\
"1 hl· offer y,.111 tx ndtl ulou\ ·· he
'aid of the ratcc; 1n,urancc compan1l''>
.trl' off en ni;t
fhl· lit ) h.1d ong1 nall\ h11rx:d 10
h1n· three pol"e ofliccrs in the
-11rmng \ear w11h income generated
trom propcrt .. ta\ rc,enuc\ from 1he
'\Hamon· II 111' tic" l'lopment But
Fr:ink \.lid lOn.,truct1on has hccn
.. tower than n.pci.tcJ and the Cll) ma)
uni) h:.t H' thl' funt.h to hire one ofliH•r
1n Januar. I YIP and another at the
end of 1he0 fhl al 'c.:ir
f\.\O offill'r!> were hired In JanU.H}
and Fran lo. hope:' 10 hire a total of five
to form a new beat IO clamp down on
Jrunkcn dn,1:rs on Laguna Canyon
Road and patrol ~Ha morr Hills
~1 th the recent chm1nat1on of the
lire lh1d'' pos1t1on. the city plan!> 10
sa vc Sti0.000 tn <>alar) cos ls for the
coming w ar Former Police C h1el
'\le1I Purcell took on thl.' 111lc of
J1rec1or of puh'11. \Jf1.·ty when the
hangc '-'a'i rnadc
Frank said one o(lht.• moo;I cxc111ng
de,elopmrnl\ 1n the upcoming year
.... 111 be the rnr1\trul·t1on of Moulton
MAIN OFFICE
Meadows Park The city 1s wa1t1ng for
the count) to accept the dcd11.at1on of
the 10-atr(' c,11e 1n the Ali so V1eJu
Grrenbelt Once 11 accepl\ the la nd.
adjacent to the planned lJ."> htncs\
Center in \outh Laguna. 11 will
transfer 1t to Laguna Beach. I rank
said
"It will be the first play area an <\r< h
Beach Heights "low the kids pla) in
narrow slrects There is no sthoo l or
playfield area The neighborhood
doesn't ha .. e an}lhingat all." he said
<)ome de1enora1cd 'itreet'i 1n
Laguna Beach will finally get re-
surfaced nc:itt year with 'iome ad-
d111onal money from the 'itate gas tax
fund
Even lhnul(h kw fund'i were ava1l-
ahle. < oum·tlman Roberl Gentr.
made a p1t <:h tor hmng a part-11me
planner to fina~h the t lly's plan
go.,,rrn1ng h1~1oncal buildings.
··with interest rate~ down I'd hale
10 sec the h1o;1onc (areas) replaced by
more antcM1vc uses." Gentry said
I he council agreed to consider 1f
lunds ""tre a\atlable
Aftrr rectnl complaints aboul 11-
hrn ~11ual ac11v1t} 10 Heisler Park,
Frank direc ted an intense 1wo-week.
round the clock pat rol of the area. The
\tudy will determine the ex1en1 of the
ac11v1ty and hopefully discourage the
men from returning 1n 1he fu1urc.
Frank said.
New lighl'i for the park arc also
budgrted for ncitl year
Residents will also he faced w11h a
SI increase 1n monlhl) <oewer rates
dnd Frank sau.l rate\ wall go even
higher.
Several organ11at1oni. made picas
tor financial support from lhc city. ~ave OurShorec; received Sl,000 lo
lOn11nue effons 10 slop offshore 011
drilling.
Several cap11al improvements will
be made around 1he c11y 1h1s year.
1nclud1ng the preparation of archi1cc-
1ural plans for the future rrnova1ton
ol ( 11y Hall. construction of a dam
near 1he old sewer treatment plant to
'itop lhe runoff of water onto Main
Reach. new c11y 1rccs, design of a new
park at Alla Laguna Boulevard and
con\truction of a <1torm drain on
lo""er Park A venue between Gltn-
neyrc and Blumonl Streets
The counc1l 1'i expected to approve
thr budget June 17 .
Delly Piiot
O.Uvery
I• Ou•r•nteed
~ '141t ,, 1 h If f'f'llll JI)
Justcall 642-6086 'I•~ •N' tAt*" f>'f' \ v: r f'l"I r •fll t•' • • , ..
·~ "~ C«"• ., ('Ml!' ..... ...,
''" M• .11 •1 • "
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don't you like? Call 1hc number above and yo ur
mes$3&t wtll be record~. transcribed and dr-
ltveted 10 the appropnatc editor. • ••t l ', ,. .... .,
VOL. 71, NO. 147
I
Thr \ame 24-hour answenna ~rv1cc may ~
used to record ltttcn 10 the editor on any topic
Con1nbutors to our U-11ers column must 1ncludr
1hc1r name and telephone number for vcnfkat1on.
Tell us whal's on yo ur mind
(
Clr~uletlon
Telephone•
Hazy, hot weather for Coast
A hiOh*PfeNUr• dome pertced OYW South«n CaMfomla wtll
bring mort hOt ..ethtr end huy eunthlne, 1'111i.v.d only by low
cloud• and log ere.ping In from the co.et.
Tht Foree.it f0t 8 pm EDT, Wtd , May 28
The coettal night and morning tog could extand u much a•
15 ml'" Inland af tll'Mt. according to the Na11ona1 w .. ther Serva. Tem~atur• wlll go up 10 tht upper 60a and low 70. at
the beachee Wednesday and 1n10 lhe 80I to !OW« tot Inland.
Along the Orange Cout th«• wot be ntght and morning low
cloud• and tog, ~extending Into the vilteyt. Othetw!M fair
through WedMtday whh huy tunehlM. High• al the bMChea In the upper 60a to tow 701. Ch'«nlght low. In the SO.. High• In the
va1i.v1 In the 801 10 lower 90t. Overnight lowt In the mid 50t to
lowet80s.
-Or'-" .. 17 U.S. Temps -"°''City 71 57
HOrlolls Va 71 " Ol<1""°"'41 Chy 71 H .. L.9 ~ 71 17
Allltitly,N Y 80 17 O<leMO " 70 :=ciw ... S3 ~ 71 M
66 .. ~· ICM n
Andlof"llQt " 42 13 11
0
~"<>•••• ":::'.t: Allenla ., .. p M-u •t Ille-w .. ,,.. S...Ct N044 U $ 0.00 OI C--ct At111111c City ., 51 l'ClftleNl.Or• 7• 51 ,..,...,, ,. .. Pr~ .. 44
lleltlmor• 80 M Rapid Olly 15 •• Calif. Temps a1oc:111on 11 u ... ~ 77 ... ~ to ao TWW. Vllh)' 71 S6 loelon 56 •1 RlollmOnd " H T0t1-76 11 tu""° t2 61 St Loult 12 57 :\': IOw lor 2• hOUt9 etlCllng II 5 a m .,_...,.Vii 12 M CUC* 70 )9 Sen Ullt• CHy 11 91 -~ 93 It CNwtea•on S C 71 74 Sen Antonio 71 97 8-•ooo 103 71 Cftattaelon,W \la 7t 11 S..111• .. 52 IMutnoftl t2 : Tides Clwiolla.NC 75 .. 8"'-1 IO 15 ~ N 44 SCIOll-.. N ~ ..
~ 64 S4 T.,..,,_ 81 .. 11¥"-103 ..
Clnelnn•lt 73 62 T-SIPlrabQ 82 12 C.la!INI .. IO TOOA'f c...,..ano 81 12 Tucaotl 100 67 euralla 13 M~IOW IN pm 21
Columbu•.ONo 78 12 TulM 77 se ''""° 87 66
Oalla1-F1 Worth •• I• WuNnQton O.C 80 58 l..ancMI• ... IM ...... ...
Olyton n 12 Wlcltlt• 75 M lOflOllMc:ll 71 13 """ lllgll 12·4f a.m 51
o.n-.. 41 Wllll-1141•• 78 12 ~c::r Tl 11 """'low lt61t-m oe
Dae.._ .. 5t t3 12 9-ldlllgll J 4apm a1
O.trOll 80 ., MOIWCl'M " 57 S-.OIOw l'Otp"' 1t
Oulvlll 7S 44 Smog Report ~ 70 $ol
EtPuo M ., Ml Wiiton re .. ""' .... ~ .. ''!J'"·,.. Elle 92 .. ..._,... 10& T1 W~al 44alft. _....,.
Ftlrl>enh 57 ,. PollutMt tl6nel.,CI lndtJC IPtll 0. 100 Ntwpor1 hactl 72 M al1Npin,
F•go 80 51 eooct: 100-200 unhMltllM IOt Mneillw O.lanel 13 N Moon Mlt 1ocsay M "'° e.lft, ,._
f'laotta" 83 47 people, 200-300 unltMhl'tflll tor ... OnlarlO 97 57 w~ .. 12:n 1.111.. n ...
Gtal'CI Aap+Ot 71 51 :I00-500 llGarOOua Ar•l llOW• .. PailftSpflngt 1()4 ~ l9M' .. 1~4 1 a.m Thuraday o, .. ,,. ... 81 51 100.'(a ptll lorec.1 ~la~ PMedena 92 ........ .. 50 Clay' • .,,..,._ Oii Puo~ 15 62 -17 72 ----15 51
Hou9ton 12 70 Seel e.ect> 10 MecAnhut llMI 1a.59 Fled 811111 81 es Surf Report lnOlllMPOMI .. 13 ll"Ma.S~v..., 1a.15 RadWOOCI C.ly 1t 57
JKllae>n.MIM 11 .. Lequna 8eecn 1a..2 Sact-•o 81 se
Jacuonvllle 81 .. Loe Angtiee Alfpon 67·42 8""'-71 S3 LOCATIC* taa MAN
JunHu 63 47 San llefn.,Cllno 89 57 Hunt1ng1on a-ctl 2-3 lllif
1<anM1C11y 74 M SanOabtlel es 5t Al-.i.ny, lllewpot1 1·2 ...
lM\/~ 102 7) Extended Sen Dleoo 70 u 40lfl 8trwt. ~ 1·2 ,..,
San f rancaaco .. M 22nd St•• ....._, i tw Loule"*a .. .,
11 SI 8e11>o41Wed0e 2 fllf ~ 71 12 SenJOee
~ 13 71 Nigh! Md~ low --!he Sent• /11\9 7$ IO i..ouna llMdl I 2 ....
11 51 coeal, ~ .,, Thuraday lltlrougll Senl• 8erl*• 17 66 Sen C--•• .. .., eooct
Mj)IMll PM 74 SI leturd.my a.cir-. Ngllta 1710 72 ~ Sente Cna 17 4a Wat• 1-0 13
Motllle .. 71 5210 u v...,., lllgN Ill eo. end IOww Sellll Mana 77 41 S... dlrecllon w .. 1 N_,,,.. 10 M eo. l-52 10 eo Sanla Monie• u '°Sou•-
Rising ocean levels could
endanger drinking water
By PAUL RAEBURN
U~lclltof
PHILADELPHIA (AP) -The
world's oceans could rise 2 feel 10 11
feet an 1hc next 100 years. ravaging
coastlines worldwide and con-
1am1natrng dnnking water supplies
wt1h salt water. researchers say.
A sea le\ cl nse of as little as 2.4 feel
al 1hc mouth of 1he Delaware could
contam1na1e Phi ladelphia's dnnkmg
water, said James Tilus, spokesman
for the Environmental Protection
Agency, which issued a report on the
threat Monday.
He released the report dunng the
annual meeting of the Amencan
Association for the Advancement of
12capturedin
Catalina rald
By lbe Associated Press
A VA LON -A ratd of four
Catalina Island homes prompted by
neighbors' complaints aboul alleged
drug dealing led to 12 arrests and 1he
seizure of small amounts of cocaine
and marijuana. officials said.
Those arrested after the Sunday
afternoon raid ranged in age from 18
to 38 years old, Los Angeles County
'ihenffs Deputy Sam Jones said.
They were booked for invcstiga11on
of possession of cocaine for safe and
were to be brought to the Los Angeles
county Jail by the U.S. Coasl Guard.
Deputy Drew Basey said today.
.\n undercover 1nvest1gation began
1wo weeks ago after complaanls of
drug dealing at Avalon homes. busi-
nesses and in public areas, and ended
w11h Sunday's raid, Jones said. Two
ounces of cocaine and four ounces of
marijuana were se11ed.
Science. al a s)mpo.,1um on nse~ 1n
sea level.
John Kraft. a geologist at the
l.m1versi1y ofDclaware. rcponed that
the Delaware coaslhne north of
Rehoboth Beach 1~ mo\'tng west at
about 20 feel a year as erosion cames
sand off the beach
"There 1s a dnvmg mechanism that
we believe to be sea level nse.'' hr
said.
Kraft noted that lhc sea level ofT
Delaware had been ming at about
five inches per ccnlul) until the past
50 to 100 years, when 1t began nsang
more than 1w1ce as fast. al a rate of
some 14 mchcs per cen lul)
He noted that predicuons of sea
level nse vary widely. and he said th al
~ome cxpens even believe we are at
1he peak ofa cycle. and that sea levtls
will beg.in to drop
Nevenheless. he said. "perhaps 80
percent of the world's coasts arc
undcrgomg rapid erosion rates."
S1ephen Leatherman of lhc Uni-
' crsity of Maryland noted that the
coas1hne at lhe reson town of Ocean
Cil). Md .. could be pushed back by as
much as 89 feet by 1hc year 2000 1f
high estimates of St'a level nse arc
accurate.
The force behtnd the ancreasmgly
rapid nsc m sea level ra1es ts believed
to be the so-called greenhouse cffecl,
according to the EPA report
Increasing concentrations of
carbon d1ox1dc and olher gases
enlarge the atmosphere's ab1h1y 10
retain heat from 1he sun -as a
greenhouse does. The process 1s
expected to raise the Earth's surface
temperature by several degrees dur-
ing the next centur)
Carbon d1ox1dc 1s a byproducl of
the burning of coal.
HOLIDAY WEEKEND ...
From Al
hohda). accordmg to Cahlorn1a
Highwa } Patrol spoke~man Paul
Caldwell He said there was only one
fatal car accident on country frecwa)s
las1 year dunng the Memonal 0a}
break.
A final count 'ihowed 123 mo1ons1s
were arresltd on o;usp1c1on of drunk-
en driving on counly freeways during
a period from 6 p.m. Friday to
midntght Monday, Caldwell said.
By contrast, 138 drunken dnvcr<,
were arrested dunng the same period
last year. he said.
Allhough lhc beach was dearly 1he
draw10g card of the weekend. 1he air
tempera lure at Ncwpon Beach never
cracked the 65-degrce mark and the
ocean stayed at a bmk 59 degree~.
according to lifCJuards.
Ltfeguardc; cia1d th('v nullt'd aho111
I
three dozen swimmers from the
waves at local beaches. No senous
1njunes were reponcd.
A 16-ycar-old Ana~ youth set
off a bnef wa ve of pantc at Hunt-
ington St.ale Beach when he stopped
brea1hing after being buned an sand
by fnends. according to a lifeguard.
The teen began breathing on his
own. however. before paramedics gol
him 10 Hoag Memorial Hospital 10
Newport Beach.
The sun never did break lhrough a
persistent layer of clouds Monday but
90.000 people spread oul 1owcls in
Ncwpon Beach ;ust the same.
About 45,000 beachgocrs v1s111ng
the one-mile stnp of ctly sand 1n
H unungton Beach and another
65,000 at s1a1e parks m Huntington .
Storekeeper Jamie
Goldenberg is wear 1ng
a bold stripe sundress.
with a suggestion of
nostalgia Available 1n
red and pink $80 00
WESTCLIFF PLAZA.
NEWPORT BEACH, CA
(714) 942 .. 1os1
'
l
•
Orange Coelt DAILY PILOT/Tueedey, May 27. 1911 • Al
.
Bike tour slated
at Newport park
Vietnam war dead paid trib tes
All bicycle riders are invited 10 the second
ann.u.al.Newpon Beach Bike Tour. to be held Sunday
bqinru na at l 0:30 a.m. at the city's East Bluff Park.
. The tour is free and open to all qcs. Bicyclisu
wtll n~ from the park down Jamboree Road, up ack ~Y ~nve and return ~o East Bluff' Park for a total of
t ut mi.lea: The even~ 1s sponsored by the Newport
Beach B,1cycle Trails Advisory Committee and
information may be obtained by calling the
chairman, Raymond Melissa, at 6S0-1000.
CHOC .eeklng label•
Childrens Hospital of Orange County is collccti~g.labels from Hei!U Baby Food as part of the
fund ra1sm4 for the Children's Miracle Network
Telethon this weekend. The Heinz Co. will gi ve six
cents for every label received. labels should be sent
to CHOC's director of community relations at PO
Box 1747, Orange 92668.
JewialJ workalJop ln LB
"What makes a Jew a Jew?" is the question
posed by a workshop scheduled Saturday and
Sunday at the Jewish Community Center of South ~e County, 298 . Broadway, Laguna Beach. R~bb1 Allen Krause will lead the seminar, which is
pnccd for S 12.50 for center members and SIS for
non-members. Call the center at 497-2070 or
8 33-10 I 7 for details.
Reaganlaucts·boys
who fought terrible -
and vi cious wa r'
By tile Auoclatt d Preu
The sacnfices of those who served 1n
Vietnam held a spectal place as Amenca
marked the day $Cl aside. as President
Reagan put 1t, "to remember fallen
heroes."
Arkansas broke ground for a new
Vietnam memorial Monday while Ten-
nessee unveiled its memonal; I 10 new
names were added to the nauonal mem-
orial in Washinaton; Dayton, Ohio. dedi-
cated a Vietnam veterans memorial park,
and Reagan paid 1nbute to "boys who
fought a terrible and vicious war."
Memonal Day's role as the unofficial
start of summer was not forgotten. etther,
as m1lhons of Amencans took to the
highwa ys, the p1cn1c grounds and the
beaches.
But rain forced the postponement of the
Indianapolis 500 car race for a second ume
Monday, with the cry. ··Gentlemen, start
your engines," now scheduled to ring out
Saturday.
Reagan pla~d a wreath ofnowers at the
Tomb of the Unknown Sold1er at Arling-
ton National Cemetery in Virg1n1a. .. ,. , ..... Genealogy falr slated
The Orange County chapter of the California
Genealogical Society will host a genealogy fair
Saturday from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the West Anaheim Uni~. Me~hodist Church, 2045 W. Ball Road.
Adm1ss1on 1s SI per person and $2.50 for a family.
Call Nancy Carlberg at 772-2849.for details.
"Today as the day we set aside to
remember fallen heroes and to pray that no
heroes w11l ever have to die for us again "
he said. And he singled out the troops that
fought in Vietnam.
Allee Brlnon wlpea a tear while mltinC the tnTe
of her huaband, A:le&, an Army •eteran of World
War D, the Korean War and the Vietnam War, at
the Fort 811• !'f atlonal Cemetery.
"They we re quite a group, the boys of
Vie tnam. bo ys who fought a tcmble and
vicious war without enough support from
home, boys who were dodging bullets
while we debated the effi cacy of the
battle," he said.
umbrellas as officials unveiled a statue of
three iofantrymen. It is the first statue
featunng a black man to be dedicated on
state propert).
In Washington, at the granite wall of
58.022 names of those who died sn the
Vietnam War, 450 family members at-
tended a ceremony to mark the inscription
of 110 more as 2,000 others looked on.
early last month. •
His mother. Allee Beecham, was invited
to pan1c1pate in the Memonal Day parade :o
m Dearborn, a predominantly white
Detroit suburb ·~ Chauffeuring achool set
"Executive Chauffeuring School," a tw<>-<iay
workshop, will be offered Saturday and June 7 from
9 a.m. to 5 p.m. in Room 8102 of lt-vine Valley CoU~e. Part1c1pants must be 25 years old and have
a vahd California driver's license, a good driving
record and a well.groomed appearance. The fee is
S2SO. and further information is available at
559-3333.
Arkansas Gov. Bill Clanton. presiding at
the ceremony in Little Rock breaking
ground for a Vietnam memorial, said the
war had touched "tens of thousands of
families and fncnds throughout this
State."
Ron Bart. 37. whose legs were am-
putated after he stepped on a land msne in
Vietnam in 1971, said the Nashville
ceremon) Stirred some unpleasan1
memones.
Those 110 -97 who died outside the
war zone and 13 who died later of war
wounds -had not been included at fint,
but relatives and fnends worked to right
wh at they considered a wrong.
About 1.000 veterans of every war since
World War I marched sn a New Yol'k City~
parade that ended with a wreath-laying al 4
the Soldiers and Sailors Monument.
And an Nashville, Tenn., about 300
veterans and their famahes huddled under
"The look on the faces of the thr"
soldiers on the statue arc vet) scnous looks
and they seemed womed as af they were
afraid of the future," he said. ''This 1s long
overdue."
In Michigan, one of the most recent
servicemen to die abroad was re-
membered: U.S. Army Sgt. Kenoeth Ford,
killed an the disco bombing tn West Bcrhn
Man) of the 300 people at ccremontes at
Fon Campbell, K) .. were rclauves of
vactams of the a1rhner crash at Gandtt.
Newfoundland. which claimed the hves of
248 'loOld1crs from the base an December.
Democrat. to lnatall
The Democratic Women of Orange County wlll
hold their 1986 installation of officers ceremony
Saturday at noon at the Revere House, 900 W. I st
St., Tustin. The guest of honor will be State Sen.
Diane Watson. The cost of lunch is SI 7. 50 per
person and reservations may be obtained by calling
894-6267.
Klddle Kamp Day planned
Sunday will be "camp day" for the Gao Israel
Kiddie Kamp of the Cha bad ofl rvine Jewish Ceo ter,
4872 Roy~ Road. Irving. The camp is designed for
pre-school children from 21.ll to 6 years of age. Call
Rabbi Alter Tenenbaum at 786-5000 for more
infonnatton.
Author guest speaker
Tom Peters, co-author of best-selling business
books "In Search of uccllencc" and "A Passion for
Excellenc~ ... will speak at a luncheon to benefit
public television station KOCE Monday at the
Irvine Marriott Hotel. Tickets arc SI 00 for
an di vi duals and S 1,000 for corporate tables seating
I 0. The noon luncheon will be followed by Peters'
address at I p.m. and a question and answer forum.
An Invitation:
Attention Mgantratlon preeld4tnta and eec-
retat .... W• WMI IO help make your upcoming
eYenta, mMtlnga, aemlna,. and tundralNra sue-.
oeeetul. Send bflef announoementa lneludlng time,
pl.a, coet (If any) and a phone number fOf
eddltlonel Information to· Bl.lfletln Boerd, D-'ly
Pltot. P.O. Box 15'0, Coeta M .... 92821.
Reports of )'OUf c:lllb Of Ofganlzatlon'a ectMti.
-Mk• com~nlty Mrvtce protect• or electk>n of
otncera -~ be directed to the Community
Newt EdltOt' at the same eddr .... Non-retumeble
bladl end ..,... photogrllPha ., • .-come.
Tuesday, May 27
California Memorial Day
focuses on feeding needy
and military reunions
By KATHLEEN BOHLAND
A111cla...,,.,_..,..._.
Cahfom1ans observed Memonal Da'r
with military reunions and observances al
cemetenes, and by helping the needy or
just ta.Jung the day off to relax at beaches
and reson areas.
Five thousand Skid Row residents ate
free lunches an Los Angeles. The lunch.
sponsored b) representau,es of LIFE
(Love Is Feeding Everybody), the
Brotherhood Crusade and the Nauonal
Council of Negro Women, was held at
noon al Main and Winston streets in SkJd
Row.
In Westwood, about 1.000 people at-
tended the traditional 97th Memorial Day
program at the Los Angeles National
Cemetery, where 75,000 Americans are
buried. Gov. George Deukmejian spoke,
urging Americans to avoid buckling under
to terrorism.
"Time after time, history shows that
tyrants are tempted by weakness." Deu-
kmejian said. "That is why we must keep
America strong, determjned and vtgilant."
Roger Mahony, archbishop of the
Roman Catholic church's Los Angeles
archdiocese. led a prayer service at the
Eugene A. Obregon Park in East Los
AnJ.elcs, named for a man who lost his hfe
while saving another an the Korean War.
"We shall honor all of Amenca's
veterans and remember their famala es.
many of immigrant stock. who sacnficc for
the freedom all Amencans enJOy, ..
Mahon)' said.
On Los Angeles· Skid Row hnes swept
around the block as the need) crowded
toward table\ of bread, chicken and
cookies.
government 1s callous. I thmk. the govern··
ment and governmental offic1als have
been dist.ant," said actress Valene Harper.·
who formed LIFE sn 1983 with actor'
Dennis Weavn-Harper served food at the
lum:h.
The t.ahforn1a Highway Patrol said •
there '4ere 39 traffic fatalities between 6
p.m Fnday and 6 a.m Monday. as
compared wtlh 42 dunng the same penod
last ~car Drunk dnvmg arrc:\ts for the 60
hours totaled :?.266. which was 125 fewer
than last year
At NalJonal Cemetery al the U.S. Arm)
Prcs1d10 1n San Francisco. a rcprcsentalJve
of the American Gold Star Mothers laid a
wreath at the tomb of an unknown solider
and a breeze blew small United States flaa
placed by Boy Scouts in front of each of the
30,000 gravesates of veterans and theif
dependents, said Pres1d10 spokesmao Jim
Symmonds.
The Prcs1d10 ceremonies also featured a
eulogy for the 248 members of the IOlst
Airborne who died an a Gander, New-
foundland, plane crash Lt Col. Harry E
Rothman of the uni t's home base at Fon
Campbell. Ky .. delivered 1he tnbute.
At Forest Lawn cemetery 10 Glendale.
Anny Reserve MaJ Gen Danjcl Helix
addressed abou1 400 "eterans and their
families. delivering Reaµn's Memonal
Da)' proclamauon
•7 p.m., HutlJaston Beacla Union Hlgb School
Ol1trlct, district board room, I 0251 Yorktown Ave. Preaident Rea&an pay• tribute to the nation'• war dead by placing a
wreath at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier ln Arlington National
Cemetery.
··1 don't think people are hungr) and
homeless because the Amcncan people
don't ha-.c a hean. or because the
Other Memonal [)a, ccremonie~ were
held at cemetenes and· parks throughout
1he state. including a g.athenng sn memot)
of black war dead at Lincoln Mc:monal
Park sn Compton. service~ spon!>Orcd b)"
the Amencan Legion hononng deceased
('ntenamers at Hollywood Memonal Part<
and the Amencan Veterans· Memonal
A.)SOCaation·s 48th annual ceremony 1r
l oma V1~ta Memonal Park in Fullerton
Po ucE Loe
Four bodies found at plane
crash site near Prado Dam
CHINO (AP) -San Bernardino
County authon ues fo und four people
dead an the wreckage of a single-
eng1ne plane early today in the hills
near Prado Dam, 40 miles WC1t of Los
Angeles. •
Shenffs deputies were notified of
the crash around 6:30 a.m .. spokes-
man Jim Bryant said. Heavy fog
hampered search efforts and
grounded the department's rescue
helicopter. he added.
CoetaMeu
A knife-wielding btlnd11 escaped
wath $180 Monday night after threat-
ening an attendant at the Texaco
station. 2050 Harbor Blvd. Pohcc
said the b.'indat damanded cacoh about
10:30 pm. and then poked the
auendant with the knife when she
"'Cfuscd to comply. The employee wa~
not hurt The robber then ambbed the
money from the ca h reaister and ran • • • • A wtnd wtna was broken for entry
to a car 1n the 2800 block of Velasco.
but nothing was rtportcd stolen
between unday and Monday. • • • A manila folder with assoncd
Pipers was rcportcd cotolen from a car
buraJamcd between I 1.m. and I p.m
Monday 1t 114 E. Wilson t Nothina
else was reported mis int. although a
rcarvlcw mirror had been broken off
and stuffed 1n tht-cnaanc compart-
The names of the pilot and passen-
gers were not immediately released
Jim Wall, an investigator for the
National Transportation Safety
Board in Los Angeles, said the plane
was reported to have crashed about 4
a.m .. but he had no further infor·
mat ion.
Bryant said the fou r-scat plane.
leased from Ca.liforna a A v1at1on of
Santa Monica. was retummg to the
Los Angeles area from Vancouver
ment. • • • checkbook and ~ome stereo
knobs1 all valued at $10. were re-
poneo stolen from a car 11 291
Avocado.
Lacuna Beach
The owner of' a car parked und y
at Crystal Cove told pohce that a
vandal had smashed the vehicle's
windshield. cauS1n1 an es11matcd
SlSS damqe. • • • Pohcc arrntcd Jame1 M rv1n
Watlun 36. on su picaon of a.rand
theft. Watkin was arrc5tcd Saturday
at Cre~nt Bay Beach • • • Cash and jewelry -toact her wonh
an estimated SSSO -were \tOlt'n
from a South Coast H•ahway hotel
room. the v1ctim told pohcc Satur·
day • • •
,\
B.C
Au1honues were uncertain which
a1rpon was the pilot's intended
destination California Aviation ha~
fac1ht1C$ at El Monte Airport, but he
might al.so have been headed for
Chino's airport.
Bryant said the wreckage was found
about a half·mile from U.S. 71,
amona halls that rises sharply from
the plam.
Poltcc arrested two motonsts on
suspicion of dnving under the in-
fluen ce of alcohol. Edward Russell
White. 46. of Tustin was arrc 1ed
honly before 2 a.m. unda)' on
South Coa t H1ahway. Douala~
YounaGlad tone, JO,oflaauna Hill
was stopped 11 2:40 a.m. turda>
a Iona the 1200 block of Manne On ve
Hundnfton Beach
An apparent cat buralar cut 1he
front screen door tn the noo block ol
M1s1ral and tole $1 00 1n ca\h and
co1n1 ond S 00 an 1c~clt) • • • A man with an open shirt llnd a
tattoo on has chc t a.rahbcd $40 from a
ho'itC\ at Coco's rc taurant, 6~X6
Bol "C .and Ocd in a blue To}ota • • • i\ thief took a wallet ronta1n1ng
$.4 SO from a laundromat tn the I 000
block of~ach Blvd • • •
Severn! teens dro'e nil without Sandburg." a\ unds\
pn)ing for a pin a at Pinn llut. 17142 • • •
Rench Rl vd. .\ 1%5 v..h1tl' To\ota "1R:! v.,1\
• • • stolen from the 100 b.lock of T Jrcxw < ulpnt'I entered a hnu\t' in the Sunda~
17000 block of Bl uegah' through a
rear locked wrndo", ran'3dt>d the
residence and stoic 1ev..C'lf\
• • •
Buralar\ uo;cd a pn tool tn enter a
home 1n the qooo hlod. of
Candlev.ood and \IOlr a '57-
Magn um gun valued at S loo. Jev..clr.
v:ilued at s q50 and nll\l'l'll.rneous
lie ms v..orth S8 50
• • •
Th1c1,e pned open thl' tront door
at an animal hospital 1n the I SOOO
bl<X k of Golden We-.1 'ltrcea and took
an unknown 1moun1 11f ta\h
• • •
Rurglar., 'ilole a '-Ulll'3'>t' cont.iin1ng
1eM'ln \illuC'd at $5.1100 from a clo~t
1n .1 tiomc in the ~i>o hlock of 6th
trl'Ct
Irvine
\ hr.w. "'•111.•r ,,ahc. '.ilul·d at
S 1.000. w;n Molen lrnm J homl' on
the 17000 block of \.Jn t-...armJn
\\enuc Monda .. • • • A \lt'l'("O v.ao; taken from .in un-
locked 19R~ \cntra 1)3rkcd on the
2300 block ol .\pr1cot Dnve Monda} • • • A \te~o ~u 'itolcn from a Volk~
waatn <. ahnukt parked on the 3 00
hlod. of ~taanoha Monday • • • Thieve\ \ma'ihcd the window of a
'fellow Volk<iwaaen hu Monda' and
\tole the ,ttrco . • • • \ aolf b.lg with a wallet and crtd1t
rud\ v.u 'itokn from l·a1 parkrd at
lh<' ~an Jonqu1n < 1011 ( lub on
• • • A. blue. I 0-\pccd St:h'4snn l c T ou1
b1cvcle v.a\ 5tokn out\1dc a home on
'pring"ood "undJ\ • • • .\ \accum dcancr. 1rk'ls1on and a
fi\'e-gallon l.\31Cr JU& filled \\Ith co1ITT
v.ac; ~tolcrt from a home on and piper
Sunda\ • • • .\ hlut.• < Jdlllal Flt'ctwood
Broup.hJm "11h S ~oo an rolled '°'"' 1n thl' 1runl.. v.a\ \tolcn from the
I 7600 hint. k of "l'tl\tl'r .\ 'C'n11C'
·a1unJa, • • • \ ha~ta 11\-~pcc<l h1tH.k '43~
token lrom t n1Hfi1l\ H 1~h \lhool
o'er the v.rei..cnd • • • i\ I \)R(i F-ord half ton pickup 11 uck
was 'ltolC'n from ·\ult' < l'nacr Ori \.C'
Fndav
Fountain Valley
resident ol the I (l mo hhx I.. of
Farnham rl·pont>d "iondn\ that
someone hrokc 1nt,l h1' \l'llo" lllN ~ord l-1e'ita, p:trh<tl 1n iront ol hi\
home The IO\\ 1n, ludtd \tCrl't' equip
mcnt v.onh SI )0 • • • A C1arden (1rO\t' re\1tlcn1 v.ho
work~ m l nun1am \. allc)' at thl'
Gemco store 17()qq Rrookhur\t St
rtported Monda) that c;omeonc \toll'
Im huraund' I~ ~ To}ot~ '\·C ah
pickup tNt k from the \tort· ~rk1n
lot. The to i wa' esttmatcd :at S 7.900 • • • " re,co1dtnt of the I ti 1<i0 hlock nl
Pondcrosa trttt rt'poned that som('"
ont stoic a camt'ra and J<'wclry fro"'
hrr homt' over th~ v.cr.kcnd. ap-
partntl} ctunng a graduation part}
The los'> v.a'> es11ma1ed at S 1.075. ••• liomcone Jumped up and down on
thl' rnof ol a green 1975 To)'ot3
( omlla hl'longing to a resident of the
I MllO hlr11. I.. of (,la~!> Mount.am, the
re\ldl·nt H'pnr11:d Mondav The dam-
3@.l' "J' ~'11m,11e<l at ssoO. • • • -\ H'\ltklll 111 the 1100(} block or
\.tnt.1 l.u~cn 1a rcponcd Thursd&)'
1hat 'omt·nnl' l•loi.. two n ngs from a
dre,<.t•r dr J''"r .it hl'r home. apparent-
" "hilt , •• nw 1 :trf)('ting was being
an\lallcll T ht· I'"' "a' C'\llmated at
~11000 . . .
l ""¥> a \ltm 11m tool. )()mcon<'
brni..l· mill .i hlul' l\ltl" Volkswagen
lell.i. fl;lrkt"d lmfJ\ on the 12000
blOI. k ol Hntd'llun k" er The loS\
am ludnl ''t'll'll equipment worth $:'\() • • • \ rr•mkn 1 of the 16100 hlod~ of C...trn,1.1 rt'f)(1rtcd Fnday that )Omeone
cn1em1 hie; oncn illrngc and stole a
nl'W l011I \t'I \\Orth S200
~ Be lting by bottle !
e n ds Laguna figh '
l \ t •launa Bea h man ~uff~ttd _.
"'1nor head 1n1urv when he wasstru
b' a boulc..dunna 1 tinC't altC'mlt101t
\fond.a\ n1 ht 1n Hrl'ilt'r Park, poh
1d •
~Ian Zukt'lr ,uflcl"l'd a ~h&ht la~,
1t1on {0 the bl ·~ or h1~ head bu(
rtQu1rcd no med1cal 1tl(nt1on folio":
1na the 1nC1dtnl. :
Pola~ \aid Zukor had an 111umcn(
and c:\chaoicd unpkauntnc wtt't
1'4u men 1n th~ park and "-H'itrucl by
1 honlc ~o arre\U \\-Cl't' m dt. : I •
I
I I
I
l ! f
' '
t
I
I
I
I
' .
J
I
• I
•
A4 * OfangeCout DAILY PILOT/ T\Mday, M1y 27, 1988
.
'Hands'
plans to
.:keep on
~reaching
Will take summer
to collect money
for the homeless
By tbe A11oclated Pre11
C1t10g increased awareness of the
plight of the hungry and homeless.
organizers of the Hands Across
America human chain say they will
spend the summer collecttng the
mone) raised to provide food and
shelter for the need>
Organizers of the event stuck to
' their target ofS50 m1lhon or more to
help the hungry and homeless but
, said 11 ma) take all summc:r to count
., donattons.
"The moncy raised served the least
1mponant goal." ch1eforgan1Ler Ken
Kragen said in Nl·w York Monday.
Hc1shtcncd awareness about the
plight of the needy "'as the chief goal.
he: said.
"Sudden!) hungc.-r and home-
lessness ha' c become a maJor issue in
1h1s countr) ... he declared
Up to se"en m1lhon people Joined
Hands Across .\menca's fragmented
chain Sunda) as 11 stretched across
the nation and abroad.
Organ11ers in states and locahucs
C')t1mated more than 4 Q m 1ll1on
Amc:ncans clasped hands in the hne
from California to New York unday.
while m1lhons more part1c1pated 1n
related e' c nts 1n stall'!> and countnes
off the 16-statc route
"There were not JU'it e'en Is on the
ltnc. there v.ere e'entc; with C\Cf't ~talc in the l 1n1on.'' Kragen .-.aid ·
He said a staffer told him the
number of panic1pan1s 0 ' erall was
, bet\.\>ecn SI\ m1ll1on and ~e,en
• m1ll1on Spokeswoman Susan Sui.!.
• said Bermuda. Japan. Canada. South
Korea and We\I German-. had
• events
Today the appro\lmateh ~50 staff
worlo.ers of Hands A.cross A.merica
begin the task of counting and
collccttng mone~ pledged G rants will
be awarded in September ~1d Roger
( arnck'. C al1fom1a director fo r
Hands
In ( ahfom1a. where Hand~ h1d
hoped for JI 7,000 part1c1pants. an
' estimated 400.000 to 450.000 people
1oined in. (amck sa1d.
..
"We will meet and surpass our Roal
1n Cahfom 1a." he said.
Attacked by gull
Wendy Clark holda her three-week-old daqhter, Aimee,
wo waa attacked by a pll Sunday at the San Jl'"ranclaco Zoo.
The tot, who wa• attacked at a •nack bar near the petting
zoo, escaped with Kratcbea on the bridge of her n 09e,
forehead and hand.
Crlme-flghtlng chemical linked to cancer
By &be Associated Press
LO .\NGELES-One of the most powerful chemical v.eapons used b)
l·rt minalt!>lS 10 track down wrongdoers 1s backfi nng. according to lab findings
that 1mpltcatc tht' substance as a cause of bladder cancer. The.-weapon 1s
ben11dinc. o ner wiped or sprayed liberally on walls. floors and other surfaces to
highlight tl'lltak bloodstains that could lead to a murderer or buttress a
prosecutor"s case 1n court. Benzidine use has been cut drasticall y since federal
health authon11c~ clamped restrictions on it) handling more than a dec-ade ago.
But cancer 1sn ·1 believed to appear until 15 years after exposure. and many of
the appro~1ma1d~ 3.000 active and n:t1red cnminaltsts 1n the country say the-.
arc "'~rncd oml· are already blaming benz1d1ne fo r their cancers.
Slain woman may be serlal killer's victim
LOS -\NCJELES -Investigators from a task force looking into a senes of
prostitute sla~ ings were trying to determine 1f a woman whose body was found
at an elemental) ~hool was a victim of the killer The woman's identity and
details about her death were unavailable. but police said she was black. as were
most '1ct1ms of the serial killer. Her body was found at the 68th Street
Ekmentary School shonly after 3 p.m. Monday. said Sgt. Ronald Spurlock. As
man) as 16 women. most of them prostitutes and all but two of them black.
haw been killed since September 1983.
Caller threaten& death of
all hostages in Lebanon
BEIRUT (AP) -An anonymous caller claim1n1 to
speak for the Islamic Jihad terrorist group threatened
toda)' to kill all Amencan hostaaes as well as four
kidnapped Frcnchmen and one Briton. a Christian radio
station reported.
When asked who the Bnton was, the caller said
"Collen," the radio said . . .
Alec Collett, 63, a New-York based ~nttsh wnter,
was kidnapped on Beirut's southern outsk1ns March 2S,
1985. . &".
..
There were doubts about the authenticity of the
cla im, which came a day after another telephone caller
claiming to speak for Islamic Jihad said two French
hosta1cs would be freed Monday. They were not.
Among the other Amerie;an hostages 1s •.ormer
Huntington Beach resident Davi~ Ja~bse!'• 54. du"CCtor ...
of the American University Hospital 1n Beirut.
The Revolutionary Organization of ~1ahst
Moslems claimed !t han~ Collett on A~nl 1.7 in
retaliation forthe Bnt1sh-supported U.S. bombinJratdon
Libya two d-ays earlier. The group released a videotape
showing a man purponed to be Collett dan"ina from a
gallows. Collen's body was not found: and some officials
doubted the clai m that he had been killed.
Today's call -like Monday's -was received by the
Chnstian-controlled Voice of Lebanon. which speaks for
President Amin Gemayel's Phalange Party. Islamic
J ihad. or Islamic Holy War. isan extremist Shitte Moslem
group that is said to have ties to Iran. All previous claims
supposedly made on bc:half of Islamic Jihad to Christian
radio stations have proven wrong.
The anonymous caller told the Voice of Lebanon the
hostages' bodies would be left in west Beirut.
Today's caller did not identify the American and
French hostages. . . . • . .
Police said 12 pa&rols were searching west Beirut for
bodies. None was found immediately, police said.
The Voice of Lebanon said the caller. speaking in a
Palestinian accent, made the following statement at I :30
p.m. (3:30 a.m. PDT):
The caller did not use Islamic Jihad s trad1ttonal
Koranic introducuon. "In the name of God. the men:iful,
be compassionate," the radio said.
A news editor at the radio station. who spoke on
cond1uon of anonymity. said he decided .to incorpora~c
the claim in a regular newsc.ast rather tha_n issue a b~l~ettn
to underscore the station's doubt about its authenticity. "The: execution of all American hostaJes plus four
Frc:nchmen and a Briton is under way. Their bodies will
be dumped in a wc:st Bcirutstrcctat 2 p.m. (4 a.m. PDT)."
The editor said the voice and accent of today's caller
differed from that of Monday's caller.
500lost
in ferry
accident
DHAKA. Bangladesh (AP) -
G rieving relatives crowded the banks
of the Meghna River today as rescue
workers continued to search for
victims of a double-deck ferry that
eapsiLed in a storm with about 1.000
people on board. More than 500
people were feared dead.
Officials toda) said 69 more bodies
had been found 1n the ferry's hull.
raising the known death toll to 149.
However. reporters on the scene put
the number of bodies recovered at
about 240.
They said their count included
bodies fo und by local people but not
yet reported to the offi cials.
Mainul Hasan, a reporter for the
dail) htcfaq. and Abu Taher of the
Da1n1k Bangla also said at least 500
people were missing and feared dead.
based on interviews with officials and
sun 1' or-; .
The ferry Sham1a went down 1n a
s1orm 10 the Meghna River in the
Bansal district Sunday night 135
miles south of Dhaka. its destination.
Rescue work was 101errupted by a
sc ere storm Monday night that
swept the coast with wind gusts of
more than 60 mph and cut off
communications with Moulvirhat.
according to officials 1n Dhaka.
President Hussain Muhammad
Ershad vts1ted the disaster area
Monda) and personally supervised
rescue operations fo r a time He
ordered that the sinking be 1n-
vest1gated. and that all double-deck
river ferries in the country be taken
out of service tcmporanly.
Another double-deck river launch
capsized April 20 in a storm o n the
Dhalcswari River I 0 miles south of
Dhaka. killing 200 people by official
count and more than 500according10
unofficial estimates.
Dr. Akram Hussain. secretary of
pons and shipping. said many of the
approximately 100 double-deck fer-
nes had structural defects and the
JOvernment would have them exam-
ined by experts from the University
of Engineering and Technology in
Dhaka.
Hasan said witnesses and survivors
in Moulvirhat told him the current
washed many bodies away. He re-
ported to luefaq that the storm
continued for more than an hour and
ma ny people who tned to Jump free of
the Sham1a were blown from the
decks by the high winds.
The New Nation. an Engl1sh-
la ng~age daily. today q uo ted
survivors as saying many passengers
wanted to get off at Moul v1rhat
because of increasingly bad weather.
but were no t allowed.
Fiji Islands shaken by
two major earthquakes
WASHI NGTON (A P) -Two powc:rful earthquakes rocked the
area of the F1j1 Islands in the western Pacific Ocean. the U.S. Gcolog1cal
Surve) announced Monday
There were no immediate repons of damage 1n the isolated area,
said Don F1ley. a spokesman for the USGS. He said the agency could
not 1mmed1ately pinpoint the exact epicenter of the quakes. which
happene earl y Tuesday morning local time
The first quake. at 7:41 a.m. local time ( 11 ·41 a.m. PDT Monday)
registered 6. 7 on the Ri chter scale and the second quake. 25 minutes
later. had a preliminary reading of7.2, Finley said.
The second quake was the most powerful registered anywhere 1n
the world since last September. when temblors of8. I and 7.5 devasted
pans of Mexico.
The Richter scale 1s a gauge of energ) released by a quake, as
measured by the ground motio n recorded on a seismograph. The
second quake released five times more energ} than the first quake.
Finle) said.
The two quakes were recorded b} a USGS monitonng station 1n
Golden. Colo.
U.S. blc;»cks co111pro111ise
over hu1nan rights pact
By tbe A1soclated Preas
BERN. Swuzerland -The United States. which failed to obtain an
agreement that could have made it c:as1er for Soviet Jews to emigrate, blocked
approval of a compromise human nshts document supported by 34 other
countries from both East and West. Michael Novak. the U.S. chief delegate to
a six-week conference held under the auspices of the: 1975 Helsi nki agreement
on human rights. told reponers Monday that the compromise was not strong
enough to offset what he said was a decline m Soviet bloc compliance Wlth its
previous commitments. He did not elaborate. but the Untied States
unsuccessful had sought a passage that would have cased restrictions on travel
by ethnic m1non11es. a provision that could have applied to emigration by
Soviet Jews.
Wlfe pilots chopper, rescues Parls convlct
PA RIS -The woman who flew a rented helicopter into Pans' La Sante
pnson and plucked a pnsoner from a rooftop is the escapee's wife, police said
today In a spectacular pnson escape Monday morning. Michel Vaujour. who
was servi ng 18 years for armed robbery and attempted murder. made his founh
prison escape aboard the helicopter. The aircraft later was abandoned in a
nearby soccer field. Police identified the pilot as Nadine Bourp1n, who
mamed Vau1our 1n 1979 while he was serving an earlier sentence in Chalons-
sur-Mame Using the name Lena R1gon, the woman rented the whiteAllouette
helicopter 1n St Cyr L'Ecole, outside Pans. The couple have a 5-ycar-<>ld
daughter. Her brother. Gilles Bourpin. died dunng a bloody, July 5. 1983
hold-up of an armored car in Tours. He was killed whc:n the small truck bc:mg
used by the robbers exploded.
Soviets claim their dairy products safe
MOSCOW -A government newspaper has cnllcized U.S. Embassy tests
that found increased levels of radiation in milk sold in Moscow. and insisted
that dairy products for sale in the Soviet capital are safe. A leading Soviet
nuclear scie ntist said Monday that the accident at the Chernobyl nuclear power
plant on April 26. which spread radiation over much of the Soviet Union and
Europe, had killed 19 people. including two workers who died at the scene. The
last report from a Soviet official had indicated last weelc that the death toll was
15 In an article today headlined "A Stonn 1n a G lass of Milk," Sov1etskaya
Ross1ya. the government newspaper of the Russian Republic. suggested that
the embassy n:pon over the weekend was part of a U.S. campaign to spread
false rumors and fears about the accident more than 400 miles south of
Moscow. It also seemed intended to counter reports on Moscow milk that
might have reached Soviets throuah radio broadcasts from the West. The
newspaper said U.S. officials may have released the infonnation in hopes it
wo uld be broadcast back to the Soviet Union and generate fear.
Daily Pilot Salutes
LIONS CLUB .
$1-MILLION
FISH FRY & CARNIVAL
Official Program Tabloid
Thursday • May 29
Local charities have received over $1-
mllllon from this annual benefit hosted by
the Costa Mesa-Newport Harbor Lions Club.
Ruling may save millio~s Checklist
of dollars in phone bills of porno pollutes WASHINGTON (AP) -The Su·
prcme Court, in a (ederal-state dis-
pute over rqulatory powers, an-
nounced a rulina today that may save
consumers millions or dollars in
monthly phone bills.
By a 5·2 vote, the court barred the
Federal Communications Com-
mission from imposing on the states
an equipment depreciation fonnula
ajmed ~t promoting more rapid
modcmu.atJon.
"We conclude that (redcral law)
represents a bar to federal pre-
emption of state refulation over
depreciation of dua jurisdktaon
property for intrastate rate-making
purposes, " said Justice William J.
Brennan for the court.
pu&l jurisdjction property refers to
equipment used by phone companies
for both an-state and out-or-state
service.
The decision ts expected to affect
most phone companies in the nation,
sa~i!ll phone users potentaally
millions of dollars in hiaher rates. ~
The court rejec~ the arau'ments of
26 phone companies includina AT~T! su~ported by the Reaaan
admin1strat1on, that the FCC's de-
preciatio!l fonnula should apply in·
dustry-Wlde.
Today's decision struck down a
1984 ruling by the 4th U.S. Circuit Co~rt o( Appeals in Richmond, Va ..
wh1cb upheld the FCC's authonty.
The Supreme Coun ruJin1 does not
bar tb_e . FCC from enforcing its
dcprec1a\Jon formula for equipment ~sed by pbon~ companies solely for interstate service.
The formula 1s intended to
promote modernization by givina
phone companjes financial incentive
to develop and install new equip-
ment, administration lawyers said. Jn
effect, phone companies would be
able to recover their investments
more quickly through rate hikes.
Appeals re_/ected
for nuke plants
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Su-
preme Court today rejected appeals
by public utiHtycompanicueek.ing to
recover from consumers the costs of
nuclear power plants never com·
plcted or shut down after completion.
The court, for varyina reasons, let
stand rulings apinst operators of the
Three Mile Island plant in Har-
risburg. Pa., and the nevcr~ompletcd
Bailly plant near Chesterton, Ind.
In the caJe ofThree Mite Island. the
site in 1979 of the nation's worst
nuclear accident, the Pennsylvania
Public Utllity Commission demcd
the full amount of rate increases
sought by the plant operators.
Inflation's return expected
as falling oil prices stabilize
WASHINGTON (AP) -Consumers. wbo have
enjoyed a spring in which prices have actually dropped
steadil1. should soon be facing the return of an old
nemesis: inflation.
But the price increases, which arc expected to return
as droppina 011 prices stabilize. should only be in the 5
percent per year range, some economists sa y.
"People hearing about the overall decline in prices
have been lulled into contentment, believing that
inflation is a problem of the past," said Michael Evans,
head of a Washington-based economic consulting finn.
"They don't realize that outside of energy, prices have
been nsing."
So far this year consumers have been basking in the
biggest price decline an 37 years. From February through
April. prices tumbled at an annual rate of 4.3 percent, the
biggest decline since early 1949.
Gypsies tell
their story
of Holocaust
CHICAGO (AP)-More than 700
Gypsies devoted their Memorial Day
weekend to electing delegates to
advi~ the U.S. Holocaust Memorial
Council in makini sure the 500.000
Gypsies who died an Naz.i concentra·
tion camps are not forgotten.
James Marks, a Gypsy leader from
Spokane, Wash.. said that while
Jewish deaths in the World War II
camps arc remembered. the ex-
termination of more than half a
million Gypsies ts not.
"We want to have our story told."
Marks said 1n an interview late
Monday. "We are entitled to at.
"We still mourn our dead." he
added. ''They should have a little
respect and a little recognit1on."
The credit for this three-month spell of deflation goes
largely to the sharp plunge in energy prices. Gasoline
prices tumbled 26. S percent during those months to levels
last seen in mid-1979.
But oil prices, which dipped as low as $10 per barrel
on the spot market, now have stabilized around S 16 per
barrel. That is still well below the $28 per barrel price that
prevailed only a short time ago. but many economists
believe that the slide in energy prices is at an end.
Donald Ratajczak. director of the economic fore-
castina project at Georgia State University, predicted
gasoHnc pnces at the pump will nsc S to 7 cents a gallon
soon as motorists take to the road for summer vacations.
Without the cushion of falling gasoline costs,
consumer prices will stan moving upward in the months
ahead, analysts believe. But they should not approach the
double-digit inflation days of the 1970s.
debate
WA HINOTON (AP) -A gov-
ernment report cont1in1na suually
explicit descriptions or pomoit'lphy
amounts to a bibliOIJ'lphy of adult
movies and literature that wall add
little to the debate over sexual
material. the American Cavil
Liberties Uruon said.
"The explicit nature or several
sections should auarantcc: that this
report will be one of tbc hottest-
selhng F.ovcrnmcnt pubhcauons •n
history,• ACLU attorney Barry Lyon
said Monday.
He sajd the rcpon by the Attorney
General's Commission on Porno-
araphy "ts not 10101 to contnbute
very much to public debate on this
issue ... This repon is not likely to do
much but pollute the debate over
sexual material in our society ...
The document con tams what Lynn
called ~ "checklist of pornography"
-alr,>habetized lists of 2,325 maga-
zine titles, 725 books and 2.370 films.
aloni with hundreds of i;>ages of
detailed description of movie scenes
and photographs.
For example. 38 entries beginning
with the word "Anal" arc included in
tlle magazine list in the commission's
final report.
Also included were scene-by-scene
descnptions of films such as "The
Devil in Miss Jones," "Debbie Docs
Dallas.," and "Biker Slave Garis."
The I I-member comm1ss1on. after
a yearlong study, has sent •ts repon to
the printer. It has not been released to
the pubhc tn its final form.
Commission spokeswoman Dee
Kuhn said Monday that hstang
pornographic matenals was pan of
the panel's m1ss1on .
"They were a fact-finding com-
mission. This 1s pan of the fact
finding." she said.
White House: Free markets
would ease African woes
a, u.e Anedaa.11 Pres•
W ASKINGTON -The Reapn ad.m1n1ruatJon, mark.in• the opealal of
a spcc1al U.N. session on Africa's economic phpt, says the adoption o(
democratic, free-market poljcie would help case the contineot•s woes.
"Africans have demonstrated that they can dramaucally tn<:n!att food
production. and today larat surpluses an coarse ara1ns uist in numerous
African countries," said a statement issued by White Hou.st spokamao I.arty
Spekcs. "Yet bunaer pel'$iltl 1n areas where economic incentives and
marketing netwotlts arc weak. where rains were apin inadequarc and where
civil strife prevails." Dunna the meetma. the African nations Wert reported
ready to seek an increa.sc ofS90 billion 1n aid and debt rch~ over five yean.
Home pJJoae bll& to go up $ J Srmdlly
WASHINGTON -It wlll cost consumers SI more each month to Mve a
phone in their homes staning Sunday'. They have been parinaa SI +month (cc
per phone line for the put year. Now the ch11Je wll be $2. The money
reimburses telephone companies for pan of the several dolla.n they spend
monthly for the copper ware that runs from the telephone central office to
customen· homes. The charge, ordered by the Federal Commuoicataons
Commission. wul show up on bills as the ··federal subscnbcr hnc c~:·
Coppola'• 110n killed ln boat:lng accldeJJt
EDGEWATER. Md. -The $On of director Franas Ford C-Oppola w&j
killed and the son of actor Ryan O'Neal was sli.K.htly injured in a Memorial Day
boating accident on the South River, officials said today. A hospnal
spokeswoman said Gian Carlo Cop~la. 23 , died ofa severe bead injury. An
autopsy was planned. Griffin Patnck O'Neal. 27, declined treatment for a
shoulder inJury. Authonties said Monday that a runabout carryinJ two men
cut between a tow boat and a disabled vessel near Annapohs, snappcna the tow
line which struck O'NeaJ's companion. throwing ham to the deck.
Cave ezplorer freed after .even JJoun
SHELBYVILLE. Tenn. -A teen-age cave explorer rescued seven hours
after he slipped down a J()..foot cave shaft was hosp1tah2cd in stable condition
today, authorities said. About 50 shenffs deputies. cavil defense workers and
volunteen were hampered by wastc-<leep water and mud but manaaed to pull
Robert Scott Allen from the cave about 9 p.m. Monday, said Tony Barrett.
Bedford County deputy. Allen. 18, suffered a head laceration and leg inJuries
Holiday trafflc toll nearly 400
CHICAGO -Nearly 400 people had been killed in traffic-related
accidents by early today as the three-day Memonal Day weekend came to a
close. California had reported 39 fatahtacs over the three-day holtday weekend,
more than any other state. It was followed by Aonda with 27 and Tcu.s wnh
22. No fatalities were reported m Montana, Rhode Island, Vermont or the
District of Columbia. The death toll for last year's three-day Memorial Day
weekend was 41 I.
HING
~ E!
\Vhenever
you need· us,
well always
be there. In 1980, the 66-member council
was created by then-President Jimmy
Carter. Its purpose is to plan per-
manent memorials to the victims of
Nazi death camps.
President Reagan. who now would
make any appointments. has ex-
pressed sympathy for the Gypsy
losses and said he would consider
appointing Gypsies to vacant council
scats.
Earn an extra
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financial need H1gh-m tcrr c chcLk-
mg and saV'lngs l.ompctitl\'C loarr
programs. Ta -..;--.;avmg .mJ rct1 remenr
plans. lnsur,mu· M.1101 L rcdtt c.1rcb
Real estate cn·1Lc"' l l 'twcmcnt
24-Hour banking AnJ mt 1rc
But be c of .. 111. \ t.1U c.m he -.,urc <'I I thi~. We'll alway be there.
A.a Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/ Tue.day, May 21, 198&
Convict claims
his 'granddad got
Out of Alcatraz
. raises Eastwood
~scape movie as
...,.,,...--'pretty accurate'
RAWLINS. Wyo.(AP)-Clart'nce
A..ogJen says federal officials are
mistaken tf they think that all thret:
men who busted out of Alcatra1 m
I 962 died tn the chill waters of
Nt>rthem Caltfom1a.
Anglen, h1msdfa pnson inmate 1n
Wyoming, says one of the three was
his grandfather, who died a free m:tn
10 Iowa more than a decade later.
"Two of the gu:rs did d1e The) were
Cften b) harks... said Clarence
Anglen. "My grandfather had two
tees ofh1s nght foot bitten off. but he
~dett."
Jf his account 1s true. 11 means his
grandfather, Clarence Anglen, was
tfle only man ever to escape from tht"
fortress-like island.
-Joseph Dossett. a National Park
Service employee who gives regular
tours of Alcatraz Island. which no
longer holds pnsoners. said Clarence
Aingl1n, hts brother, John, and Frank
Moms were able to widen an air vent
10 their cell to gain access to a ut1htv
comdor.
The three climbed the plumbing
pJpes to the roof and chm bed through
f.nces to reach the rocky western
shore of the island tn San Francisco
Qay. Ustnga how-to article m Popular
Mechanics magazine. thC) assembled
amt\. using an accord1an-hke musical
1dstrument to 1ntlate the craft, Bossen
~d
SCHOOL NOTES
"They hopped on that raft and
disappeared forever," he said.
Pieces of the raf\ were recove~
later, some miles away. Rossen said
federal authorities determined the
thrtt died by drownmg in the treach-
erous tides in San Franc1!1Co Bay or
were eaten by sharks.
Clarence Anglen, serving a I ()..year
sentence for anned robbery at the
Wyoming State Penitentiary, said 10 a
copynght interview earlier this week
in the RawLins Dally Times that his
grandfather reached Iowa and
changed the spelling of the family
name.
··1 remember when we were kids.
grandpa would disappear. When I'd
ask why, my part'nts would tell me
that he was off on a drunk. But he was
actually in the hills hiding out." the
inmate said. "Relatives 1n (local law
enforcement) would tip him
beforehand. When they brought out
the person who thought they saw
grandpa. my folks would tell him he
was crazy and that no one like that
lived with us."
Anglen, scheduled to be released
this summer. said he did not find out
about his grandfather's criminal his-
tory until he was released from the
Utah State Penitentiary in 1975 and
told the older man about scrvtng
ttme.
"I guess tt must run in the family."
the old man said. Anglen said thars
"'hen his grandfather explatned that
he had cscaoed from Alcatraz.
.\nglen sa1d a Chnt Eastwood
movie called "Escape from Alcatraz"
was an accurate portrayal of the
incident.
\
ACTOR BURT LANCASTER
REMINDS W>U ...
''TmNK BEFORE YOU ACT-
DON'T GET AIDS!''
'"'·•••~\I .. _·~ "\\.u' , •• ,,, .. • •I u ~· t M n '\ t••• t •It flH 'f'\ , 1ti.1 ... ,..,. \,t •ttt•
Promoting AIDS awareness .VI I 1t 1t1
Actor Burt Lancuter joined forcee with AID FOR AIDS, Inc.,
a non-profit ortanbation, to produce thla poeter. The aim of
the poater t. to lncreaae AIDS awareneea amont h.J.Ch·rlak aroupe.
Anne Frank diaries
declared authentic,
published in Holland
AMSTERDAM, Netherlands (AP)
-More than 40 years af\er I 5-year-
old Anne Frank died in a Nazi
concentration camp, a definitive
version of her diaries have been
published -complete with a scien-
tific endorsement that she really
wrote them.
The 714-pagc volume was com-
piled by Dutch War Documentation
Institute researchers and pubLished
this week by the state. It contatns
transcripts of every surviving scrap of
paper written by the Netherlands'
most famous diarist, and rebuts
claims the diaries arc a fake.
The diaries arc on two school
notebooks as well as loose-leaf pages
and cover the years 1942-1944. They
describe the Jewish tccn-ager's feel-
ings of cmerJcnt womanhood. as well
as observations about the cramped
everyday life of 12 people in hidinj
from the Nazis in Gennan...occupicd
Amsterdam.
The original I 94 7 Dutch editjon of
the diary, which has been translated
into 29 languages, was compiled from
two different manuscripts, an original
version and an edited one.
Those manuscripts were cut, edited
and spliced tosether by the onginal
Dutch pubtisbmg house and by her
father, Ono Frank, who died in I 980.
He was the only member of his famil y
to survive the Holocaust.
Io that version, the publishing
house omitted several scxuaJJy ex-
pLicit passages. according 10 Gerrold
Van der Stroom, one of the new
volume's C<litors. But those passages
were included in some of the publish·
cd translatjons .
"They were pretty harmless pieces
of text, on the beginning of her
menstruation and she fondling her
breasts." Van der Stroom told the
Associated Press. Other passages om1tted in the
original Dutch publication concerned
"minor incidents'' cut for spaoe
reasons, according to Van der
Stroom. Both diary manuscripts ap-
pear in the definitive version .
Still omitted from the diary, bow·
ever, arc some of Anne's observa·
tions. The book's forward says some
of the omitted mate,-ial is about her
mother and "unspecified details"
deleted at the request of Otto Frank's
second wife, Elfriede Frank-
Markovitz. Also left out are the full namC1 of
people mentioned in the diaries who
declined to be identified. They are
represented only by initials.
Born in 1929 m the German city of
Frankfurt. Anne came to the Nether-
lands when her family fled the Nazis
in 1933 only to be caught up in the
Nazi persecution during the occupa-
tion of the Netherlands.
She died in the Bcrgen-Bclsen
camp in March 1945, a month before
its liberation by Allied troops.
Her handwnttcn manuscripts, left
behind in the canal-side apartment in
which the family llid, were be-
queathed to the War Documentation
Institute by Otto Frank.
"We think th.is editionlis the final
word on the authenticicy of Anne
Frank's diary," Van der Stroom said
He was referring to several claims
that Anne Frank's diary is a hoax, the
first of which, by a Danish Literary
criuc. was published in 1957.
Van der Stroom said an analysis of
the paper. ink, and glue, as well as a
grapholC>gJcal study of the hand-
wnttng "present irrefutable proof'
that the manuscripts were written by
Anne Frank.
Countystudentsjoin'Teenwork '86' conference
High school students from Orange Count)' were selected to participate in
''Teenwork '86.'' a statewide conference designed to reduce the increastng
number of alcohol-mvolved traffic colli sions among young adults. The
conference was held recentl) in Anaheim.
Actor Judd Nelson and producer Daniel Sladek ol Young Artists United
belped kick off the conference in a presentation March 24. Nelson. actor 1n
"The Breakfast Club" and "St Elmo's Fire," commended the students on their
enthusiasm and commumcnt to the issues of dnnlcing and do\ 1ng.
Part1c1pants. mostl) o;ophomores and JUniors. "'ere selected lor
part1c1pa11on on specific cntt"na tncludtng their interest 1n organmng new <or
1mprov10g ex1sung) dnnktng dn\ rng prevenuon programs for \Oung adult~ 1n
their school or comm unit\ ·
pectfic topics CO\Cred b} the conference incl uded problem 1den11ficat1on
local planning. networlung. and implementation ofprevenll\'C or alternative
programs Pon\Or\ for the conference tncluded a vanet~ of<;tate, local. pnvatc
and non-profit organi1at1onc,
This
Norman R~kweU
print is FREE
at all
American Savings
branches while
supply lasts.
Dnving-under-the-influence 1s the lead mg cause of death for young people
16-24 years of age. The death rate for this age gr9UP bas incr~ased, making the
16-24 }ear olds the only age group whose mortality rate has nsen in the past 20
;ears. "Teenworlc '86" is an a~temp~ to reverse this trend in California.
Local students and advisors tnclude: Bob Bums. adult advisor and
students Lisa Anne R~ss1, Ocean View H i~ School; M ichelle Rainer and Na
Yung Kan~. Edison High School; and Don Dennis and Pohiwa Estrclka, Los
Amigos Htgh Schoo; Sally Wamck. adult advisor and Ed Juline. Huntington
Beach H 1gh School.
Phi Beta Kappa member
'\nnctte Ikeda of Costa Mesa. 1s among the 16 seniors at Scnpps College tn
Claremont recently in1uated into the Scnpps chapter of Phi Beta Kappa, the
national honor society.
The students were chosen on the basis of their high academic performance
M ort• lhan a 4uarcer of a century
before Norman RockweU :,old his first
Lllustration t0 the Saturda) Evening Post.
Amencan Savings opened its first Wnil)
savings account
So"'. more than 100 ye2rs after the
American Savings family began serving
families like yours, we are proud to
salute the artist who portrayed the
Amencan Camtl) the wa) 1t was for so
much of our first cenrury of service.
Beginning Monday, May llth, every
American avmgs office throughout CalJ.
fornia will be offering FREE. full-color,
I Ix 14 " collector's edition prints of some
of Rockwell's most famous paintings.
These prints, faithfull y reproduced
from the pages of the Saturday Evening
Post, will be offered monthly, while sup-
plies last. And, we will offer a new print
each month, so you can collect an entire
series of six, just for stopping by. Limit
one per person, please.
We know you'll enjoy these prints
bectuse they are so reminiscent of the
family phocos carefully contained In all
of our family albums.
Norman Rockwell built his rep-
utadon by creatJng ordinary people with
extraordinary care. Al American
Savings. we understand that philosophy
We've built our business on it.
American Savings-the family
SllVln~ place!
~·-c I ~rl,hl c urlh .. ubllihl~ J.umpen. ,,., ~ Accounts Insured up to s 100,000.
CO TA MESA/SANTA ANA
N29 S Bristol. 92 "'04
'ar ~unflower) n .. ) 9"'9 9800
flt 'NTINGTON BEACH
"'H~O F.dingtr Ave , 9264"'
(at Huntington Cfnter)
(114J 848 2222
LAGUNA HILLS
24085 El Thro Rd . 92653
(at Paseo de Valencia)
(714) 770-2816
SEAL BEACH
801 Padflc Coast Hwy, 90740
(at Main)
(213) 594-8855
GARDEN GROVE
12141 Garden Grnw Blvd C)~fw ~
(at Harbor Blvd )
Cl .. ) SH 8690
HUNTINGTON HAJlBO~
16911 Algonquin St • 92649
(in Huntington Harbour
Shopping <:enter)
('"Ii) 8i6 3355
ORANGE
19()5 N Tustin Ave , 92665
(north of Taft)
(114) 9"'4 -1620
TUSTIN
641 E. First St • 92680
(at Newport Ave )
(714) 832 2581
MERICAN SAVINGS
• AND LOAN ASSOCIATION
and educational breadth in the liberal arts.
Scripps College, an mdependent, hberal ans college for women, has a total
enrollment of 602 students.
Christ College dean's list ,
Christ College Irvine has announced the students who have been Pt'accd
on the dean's ltst of winter quarter 1985-86.
These outstandmg students arc John Ahlers, Jennifer Andreas. Nina
A!ldrcas, Debra Armstrong. Chnsttne Arnold, K.tmberly Baldwin. Karen
Bibeau. Craig Blackbum. Deborah ~lau, Deborah Boettcher, Steven Borst.
V1ctona Brewer. Gregory Brose, Chnsttna Brown, Vickie Bucsking. Deanna
Burke. Leah Busch. LcW\s Busch, Allen Clapp, K.tm Coderre. Tracey Davies,
Karl Eckhoff, Sandra Edmunds and Sylvia Eggers.
Gregg Fanselau, Jennifer Gilliland, Dcnrus Grice, M1k1 Hashimoto
Pamela Hentz, Holly Howe, Kerstin Humke, Janette Huntsinger, Man-Ho
Hur. John Jameson, Mark Jurkowsky, Erika Kacstlc. Sara KJein, Jamie
Knowles, Wendy Koester. Paula Kohl. K.tmberly Koppe, Joanne Krafft. Tere~ Ku~, Jan McCumber, Valerie Meyer. Paul Micger, Dennis Mifflin.
Kuniko Miyoke, Judith Mueller, Steven Mueller Debbie Murray Meg Nitz
Jill Njaa, Katy Njaa, Thomas Norris, Jan Novak. Michael O'teary Conni~ O'~eal, Jennifer Overton, David Pocrschkc. Lisa Poyer.. John 'Raasch.
Michelle Raasch, Marty Rasmussen, Kim Raymond Marty Recd Greg
Robertson and Laurie Robinson. · '
. Kenneth Samples, Cynthia Sarafolean, Ten Sathoff, Ltsa Schilbe, Judy
Schmncrcr, Tamara Schwartz, John Shimkus, Russ Smith Alan Stadelman
Jonathan Stanfel, Michael Steidley, Lisa Stewart, Tom St~eve, Joy Stuewe?:
Sandra Thompson, Glenn Wa~er, Roben Wallace, Mark Warpness James
Webb, Julie Welch, Sherrin Wiegman and Allen Yount. ' .
Christ College tr:vine i.s a four-year !-iberal Arts college affiliated with the
Lutheran Church-M1ssoun Synod, ofTenng 22 majors and 24 minors within its
general liberal arts, pre-professional and profcSSJonal church work programs.
FOUNT AJN VAL.LEY REGIONAL
HOSPITAL
Aprtl 4
JoAnn and Robert Rash, Hunungton
Beach, gjrl
Lynne and James Donald. Hunt·
·~on Beach, boy
Michelle and James Reese. Hunt-
ington Beach, girl
Ofelia and Edward Palomares, Costa
Mesa. boy
April 5
Rajeswari Murah and Murali Ramal-
ingam. Irvine. boy
Norma and Geoffrey Orr, Cost.a
Mesa, girl
Brenda Vigil and Steven Kelly, Cost.a
Mesa, girl
Dawn and Leon Thomas. Irvine, boy
Martha and Richard Madsen. Irvine,
boy
. April I
Kim and Gary Bontn , Huntington
Beach. girl
April 7
Oanb Hoang Thi Huynh and Thtn
Quang Ha. Huntington Beach. boy
Josephine Cordova and Gilbert
Ayala, Costa Mesa, girl
April 8
Monica and Ralph Samsal. Costa
Mesa, girl
Angela and William Meers, Hunt-
1ngton Beach, girl
Renee and Kenneth Gibb, Costa
Mesa, boy
Cathy and John Robinson, Hunt-
ington Beach, boy
Julie and Matthew Franks, Costa
Mesa, boy
April t
Jeannie Marie Elliot and Jeffrey
Llyngaaps, Cdaosta•Medsa.Rboy a uz osa s an afael Teran. ~
Fountain Valley, girl '
Aprtl 10
Lynda and Robert Face, Costa Mesa.
boy
Theresa and Robert Duffy, Fountain
Valley, boy
Carmen and Scott Sidlow, Hunt-
ington Beach. boy
April 11
Kimberly Wener and Dale Wade,
Costa Mesa, girl
Annabelle and Wilham ScgeUcen
Huntington Bcach. gJrl '
Margaret and Stephen Davidson,
Huntington Beach, boy
Linda and Robert Rocha, Hunt-
mgton Beach, girl
Margaret and Clark Lewis, Irvine boy •
Aprll 1%
Tern Fagan and Kyle Hennessey.
Huntmgton Beach, boy
'-.~~~~~~!!~~~~ Aprtl l2 fl Holly and Robert Cornelius. Irvine . I . ~~tascha and Thaddeus O'Barr 111
Huntington Beach, boy '
Aprtl 14
Rose and Carl Youngberg. Hunt-
ington Bcach1 boy ~heri and William Avery Jr , Hunt-
ington Beach, boy
Aprll 15
Kimberly and Lawrcn~ Halliekl, Costa Mesa. ajrl
Orange Coast DAILY PILOTfTunday, May 27, 1988 A7
1 TV Lis TIN GS
(C)MOYIE
• •• "Anlln'a Rainbow" (19681
Silverman sees success for Rivers
By FRED ROTHENBERG can imagine he·ll qukkly become the Rivers' show will be whispers in the John Sisk, seruor vice president at
mascot of Rivers· show. wind. the J. Walter Thompson advertisiog
NEW YORK -Fi ve months
before Joan R1 vers even opens her big
mouth on her own talk show, she's
already a big success for her new
employer, the embryonic Fox Broad-
casting Network.
So far. FBN only has Murdoch'ss1x It must be no ted that in her two agency, said "if there's one plaoe TV
sta)i_ons in New York, Chicago, Los seasons as sole substitute host on needs good programming, n's in late
Angeles. Washington. Dallas and "The Tonight Show." Ri vers was night. Advert1sers arc looking to
Houston, reaching 21 percent of successful on Carson's show. in reach more women in that time
America's homes with television. No Carson's time slot on Carson's period.'
So says Fred Salvennan, fonner
president of NBC who knows some-
thing about late-night telev1s1on
When he had N BC and Johnn)'
Carson. his late-night schedule
worked wonders. When he then
became an independent producer and
created .. Thicke of the Night," his
late-night program went nowhere.
affiliates have been announced yet. network. with Carson's habit viewers. Sisk noted that Rivers' competi-
and industry observers say attracting Cao we talk. she aslced. But talk is t1on isn't ooly "The Torught Show,''
independent stations -the 250 not cheap. T his fall. Rivers esscottally CBS' late-night movie and ABC's
already affiliated with ABC. CBS or wall have to attract late-night au-"Nightline," it's syndicated shows,
N BC -will be a difficult task. d1ences on her own. including "Night Life," stamng
··1 wouldn't bet against n. but 1t Davtd Brenner, another "Tonight
Independent stations program depends on how deep Mr. Murdoch's Show" alumnus. Brenner's program
their enttre schedules. T hey pay for pockets arc.·· C'ervmi said. "Rt~t has a head start on Rivers' show with
the shows, usually a hodgepodge of now, there aren't enough advertising 100 stauons signed fo r the fall,
sports. movies, network reruns and dollar; to go around for the three according to the distributor. K..iog
first-run syndicated series, and keep existing networks." World Productions.
Silverman says Rivers has stirred almost all the advertising revenue. r---------------r---------------1 The gamble is finding and financing
propa~ming to fill the schedule a nd
entice viewers.
public awareness
and station auen-
tion. which is one
reason Fox Inc. re-
portedly is paying
her $10 million
over three years.
Rupert Murdoch's
dream of turning
his six TV stations
., and his Fox movie
Ivers studio into a fourth
network depends o n the Fox Broad-
casting Network signing e nough
quality independent stations to at-
tract widespread national audiences
and widescale advertiser support.
"When you're trying to launch a
network, you really need to signal to
potential affiliates and advertisers
that you·rc comm1tled." Silvennan
said. "This s1~nmg shows the world
that this 1s a b1g-t1me operation. Joan
certainly has familiarity and ex·
pcrience with the latc·ntght audience.
Whether the show succeeds or fails.
it's already a resounding success."
Fox hopes to gain promotional
value out of Rivers' program, "The
Late Show Stamng Joan Rivers,''
which 1s scheduled to start in Septem-
ber. If you think NBC plugs its series
and miniseries oo "The Tonight
Show:· wait until FBN·s stars start
parading across Rivers' couch.
The fledgling FBN. which hopes to
introduce at least one night o f
regularly scheduled pnme-t1mc pro-
gramming ne"<t year, has announced
its first scnes. "Down and Out in
Beverly Hills." FBN mentioned no
cast members. except for Mike, the
nt'urollc dog from the ·•Down and
Out in Beverly Hills" movte, so you
On the other hand, the 200-plus
stations each affiliated Wl th ABC.
CBS or NBC get programmmg from
the big-daddy network. The
networks. in tum, pay the stations for
taking the sh ows and keep most of the
commercial time. In a normal pnme-
t1me hour, NBC gets six minutes of
advertising. the affiliate gets three.
"The affiliate is willing to take that
position," said Tony Cervm1. NBC-s
vice president for affiliate relattons.
"because of the totality of service a
network provides: news. sports.
entertainment. advert1s1ng a nd
promotion. That's a nice. big pack·
age."
And don't underesumate the value
of promoting "The Tonight Show"
on an earher NBC senes. such as the
top-rated "Cosby Show." With fewer
stations and a much smaller reach.
FBN·s on-a ir plugs for guests on Miss
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STADIUm rl
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IS A SWEETHEART
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A PARAMOUNI PICTURf ft
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BAl'tOAtN MATtNIEIE.S MONDAY THRU SATURDAY IST 2 PERFORMANCES
'P~rl•]•ll
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11 )0 !-)0 4:)0 •·40 •to 10 .U
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CINEMAS 891 OS6l
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UNIVERSITY
11~·81111
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VIEJO MALL
364 6270
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..
We48el4ay, May U
ARIES (March 21 -April 19): Powers of persuas1on are hel&htened. but
you will meet sales resistance. Ker. is to bring source materiaf up to date.
You'll be asked questions. there will be some delay but eventually you will
emerae victorious.
TAURUS (Apnl 20..May 20): Focus on excitement of di~ovel').
flination, creatjv1ty. change, travel and vanety of expenenccs. Long-distance
call is featured and future prospects arc clanfied.
GEMINI (May 21 -J une 20): What appeared Qu t of reach w1ll "suddenly"
become avatlable. Be aware, alert.
remain optim1st1c and keep the fa tth.
You are going places. literally and in
every other sense. Sagittarian will play
key role. SYDNEY CANCER (Jone :? 1-J uly 22): Define
terms. be reahsuc. steer clear of schemes Q MARR and self-deception. You'll get facts
regarding money. investments. taXes. •••••••••••••• license reqUJrements. Long-standing
debt will be repaid.
LEO(July 23-Au~. 22): You're in a pos1t.1on to dnve hard bai:gain .. Know
it, proceed accordingJy Focus on legal affairs. intensified relat1on~h1p and
power play which works to your advantage C'ancrr. C'apncorn natives play
significant roles.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept 22): What appeared to be a loss 1s due to be
recovered. Personal honzons broaden. you'll see beyond the 1mmed1ate.and
perceive your own potential. Pro1ect can now be completed Focus on unique
commurucatJon.
UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22)· Emphasis on 1nd1v1duahty, creat1v1t).
intensified romance. Lunar. numerical cycles highlight charisma. vanct~.
physical attraction. ability to im pri nt your own style Leo. Aquarius play
roles.
SCORPIO (Oct 23-Nov 21 ) You're drav.n m two d1rec11ons -your
search for identity will be completed Empha'IJ'i on 1.:onfidence. secunt)'.
reassurance from lo' rd one lntu1110n 1s sharp!\. honed. Cancer. Aquanus
figure prom10ently. .
SAGITTARIUS (No' 22-l>ec ~I 1· Your most dcs.1rable qualities surge
to forefront. Emphasis on h.umor. travel. commun1ca11on. ab1hty to perceive
future trends. Populanty increases. you 'll be called upon to make personal
appearances.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan 19). ( hl·ck details read betw~n lanes.
realize that what apprared to be lost has onl) been misplaced. Income
potenual mcreases. C)cle mo,es up. )ou'll be at "nght'' place. Tauru,.
Scorpio play key roles
AQUARIUS (Jan :!0-Feb. 18). Obstacles are rcmo..,ed. )OU expenence
euphonc feeling resulung from greater freedom of thought. action. Roman<:e
plays ma1or role Gain 1nd1cated via wnttcn word. Virgo, Sagittarius figure 1n
scenano.
PISCES (Feb I ~-March .20): MaJor domestic adJU'ltment is fea tured
Family member reveal-; secret .\mends are made for recent disagreement
You'll receive gift "hu.h represents "peace offcnng ··Taurus. Libra, Scorpio
nati ves pla} roles
IF MAY ts IS YOUR BIRTHDAY recent penod of "depression .. comes
to an end. You'll travel this )Car. popul anty increases. you'll add to wardrobe,
you'll become more aware of ph)sical appearance or body 1ma&c. You are
versatile. onginal. inventi ve. sensual. and you can be self-indulgent. Leo.
Aquanus play 1mpona nt roles 1n your fi fe You arc romantic. creat1Vl'.
obstinate. You posse<.'> "inner \ISIOn" and courage ol conv1ct1ons. In Jul}.
you make ne" -;tan fcatunng mone" and lo' e.
A platinum mine right
here in Orange County
In California·, \anta Ana 1c; the
fourth largest mine in the world. so to
speak. ThouJh 11\ not a minc
exactl y. Gem101 Industries there re-
trieves platinum out o l the cataly11C'
conveners of wrecked cars
You 've read that alligators swallov.
rock'> to balance their bod ies wit h
their 1a1lc;. Rut did \Ou knov. that
cormorants o;wallov. stonec; so the)
can d1H~ more dcepl ~·· And that <,ea
hon' 'iwallo\4 rock\ for rea~ons un-
clear'•
Q \\.hat v..is thl' la\I \.\onl 'pokl'n
by Napoleon Bonapanc"
~. Joseph10c
Orchids arc hl'-l'\Ual
You ncH·r nn•d more than tour
colors to produte a llat mJp on "'h11 h
no two bordenn11 1 ountm·<, hJ \.l' lhl·
<>ame color
() \\.here d ie.I thc \tom· lctml' tr om
to make Eg)pt '\ph1n\'
A II was then: 111 platt" gl•c dog1'"
thinlo.. And the; thank further th.in
con'>t.ant v.1nd~ crudn.l 11 11110 'hJf)I.
mo,tl>. that th1 hum.in '1 ulptor' fu't
hni'>hed II otl
JJpan srx·nd, .J 1hird J \ mu1.h p<•r
person d'> cl1.11.''> lhl· I n11cd \tatl''i 11n
health um~ Bui J.qianc'>c ltfe eitpc1.-
1ann 1~ a u 1unk three ..,cars longer.
t l\hcrmcn hated \tarfoh When
PEOPLE
---
L.M.
Bo YD
they found them 10 thrar nets. they cut
them into pieces and threw them
back Each piece made a new starfi~h.
The fishermen didn't know.
Rines are manufactured 10 fit
'>mall medium a'erage body builds.
1nexactl) The <,hooters ad1ust But
the pnzc winners say they can
improve their ~core<. immensel y by
getting their n tlc ~tocks cut perfectl y
10 size. The\ S3) 11\ important. 1 hey
l:lll 11 "gunfit ·
.\ ndn·"' J.t\ I.. <.1111 111\ 1 tcd t'" cry
hod~ to h" 1n.wgurat1on. .\bout
20.000 people shov.cd up He ..aid.
.. Dear me I didn't mean cver;bodv,"
or "'ord\ tn th:11 cfTect And he
C\caped through :i n:ar window
lnmall"' nt J pnson in England
v.erc: in 11tcd lo fun her their edut.a·
t1on V.llh lO!TC\f)(lO dcncc COUr!.CS
Two \tgnt.4d up for "\(,-affold Con-
~truct ton . r hn v.r n1 II\ er the \.\all
on their h11m1•v.ork
L.M. Boyd
columalst.
/'I syndic• tecJ
What women do
just to save face
There 1s nothma th.at bn ngs me to a
dead stop hkc a picture page in a
magazine headlined, 'MAKE-
OVERS.' The "before" picture 1s 10
black and white and shows a woman
with hmp hair. no makeup and a
pained look on her face indicating the
transmission fell out of her car -on
her foot. ln the "after" picture. she 1s
shown in color, with a new hair style,
new lip line and a look usuaUy
ttSCrved for a woman who has JU'lt
i.mclled laundry with a fabnc soften-
er
l hvc the fantasy that if I :t'ere to be
made over. a few bangs. a little
shadow under my cheekbones and a
trace of lip gloss could get me all the
work Jaclyn Smtth turns down
Come on now. don't tell me vou
haven't stretched out on your bacic in
bed and held a mirror up to your face
to sec how you'd look with no
wnnkles. Or that you haven't rrar-
ranged your chin with transparent
tape to your neck. We've all locked
the bathroom door and put chewing
gum between the spaces of our teeth
to make them look hlo..e the) ·\,e been
capped.
The only tb1n$ great about being on
nationaUy televised shows 1s the tnp
to makeup. They're like art1sb who
take away your father's nose and gi ve
you one hkc Joan Collms. take away
your Margaret Hamilton look-alike
hps and glve you full ones hkc Sophia
Loren. They can gi ve )OU Hepburn
cheekbones and a Linda Evans chin
1ust with contour and shading
The reaJ downer 1s when you hnve
to wash it off. No one will ever know
the nights I cn ed as I watched m1t
entire face disappear down the drain
1n a rush of brown water and suds.
I want to believe that a makeovrr
takes absolutely no d1sc1phne or
sacnfice on my pan. I hate the article~
on entena10ers who say that a
beautiful body, good skin and fat .
shiny hair 1s a hfrtime commitment
to cxerc1~ and good diet.
I'll never forget what my s1ster-1n-
law said once. It was on her 40th
birthday. She was in a ph1losoph1cal
mood and was looking for the
meaning of life. Finally, she broke the
silence and said ... l am so bored w11h
diet10g and counting calones and
feelinggu1lty for no1 exercising. I have
JUSt figured out 1hat for the rest of m)
hfe. ( can never enJOY an Oreo
cookie ··
We both sat there and thought
aoout 1t. She was nght. That's why I
have to believe that with a bnght scarf
and a few plucked brows, my mother
would not recog01Le me.
The other day I read an an1cle that
was talk10g about models. They ~1d
Chnst1e Bnnkle)' was great to work
with. She even _got up ao ex tra hour
early so the puffi ness of ~lecp would
diminish
Given that equas1on, 11 means only
one th ing. I can get no more than
three hours sleep a night
Texas doctor offers
some tart medicine
DEAR 4-NN LAN DERS 1 ell
.. 1ck of Getting Kicked Around In
Philadelphia" that she should move:
to Garland. Texas. I am a phys1c1an
who promises that I will ne ver go to a
mceung, never eat lunch. never
deltver babies and ne ve r see emerg-
encies. I will sit by the phone in m)
office 24 hours a day waiting an case
she calls.
I swear I will not serve on any
hospital committees or boards. My
wife must go to the movies alone. 'lhc
must eat out alone and go on vacation
by herself so I can be on hand and
rush right over 1f .. Ph1ladelph1a ..
needs me.
I think 11 1s temble tor a doctor to
take lime out to attend medical
meetings in an effort to keep up with
the progress made in the field No
phys ician should leave the Un11ed
ANN
I.ANDERS
Europe and Afnca. The sight of that
proud nag ga\,c us comfort. con
fidence and pmk
I sti ll love to d1\play that tattered.
weather-weary old fl ag on holidays It 1~ hkc a member of the famal} It has
earned the nght to wa' c proud I) O\<cr
m) home
I can well afford a ncv. flag but I
don't WA"'IT Jnother Oag I want
THAT flag because 11 has special
meaning. That nag has guts. That flag
hrought my dear ones home. Just c;1gn
WllOS~ HAMP
!\ ort h ·South
d•·11ls
'11l111•ral>ll'
NORTH
+92
84
JG
+AKl09tlr.:S
WEST
+K1 06~4
AK J 6
EAST
• Q ·' x 7 . Q 7 :l
H
•• 17 2
Q9ff:J 2 •H
SOl'TH
• :J
lO 9 6 2
AK 107-.1
+Q·•
Tl I\' h1dtl rni.:
\\ 1''11
Wt-iot North
1 • a •
Ea ... 1 3 . ~Olllh
:J N f
Pa""
Pa'ts
Pa!O'
• •
Op1·n1n~ lc '.td K111.I( .. 1
Al !lupl1n 1l l' hnd~1·. II \1111 1h111h
t Ill' t1ppor11•11t., < .u1 I 111ak1• 1111•11
• 111111 ;111 and ilrt' n·a,11n.tl11\ '""
I h.11 ~ 11111 'ld1· c .111 l h11l a 11\ 111~111•1
"111111111 ...i1t11·rm.I( <II lt·.11 11 '' 1 1~1t1
let "'11 It• !ell th1• pftt, -.C CIH' \t lllft
lt1•1 l111cl)tc• or 11·.1111 pla\ 1111\\ c•\ c·r
II 1 ... 11s11all~ I e1rn·1 t I ll Llh• 11111 llC
'Ill a nt c• by h11ld1 11~ 0111• n1111" '1111
,1rt• \\ 111111~ to rl'>k ,1 .,111,dl 111" le•
pr1111•11 a~air1'1 a l''"'1hl1• l;r r~···
'" 1n).t .1).t;11n .. 1 v1111
·1111 ... cl1 .. t1 I .11111· Ill' Ill I lac-\\1•1•1\I~
11·.1m ~:11111' lwld .11 \, w '111 h ' r c"
IHl\\11 ( ,1\c•11d1'h ('l11lt \1trll1 '
)lllllJ' Cl\l'll":Cfl \I, .... Jtll't'Oljlfl\1' .JICd
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).tr.ull 111 1111 ..,,. ...ti11r1•.., \\!tu ha'
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0 ~~rronoe eHflll ' c• th~
·~' K'O"b f'J w •j1 h" o..-. 'O' t'),,... to • i ... D ,. "" _.,
T U R I~ S E
I I 11 I 1·
S I W S S
I I 1 I I
T E P T Y
1~ I I I
I S U N Q Y
'~ •;1~ I
! • A', .".f ~
Wl .. t'
I u• \l•'.il 01(1
CHARLES
GOREN
OMAR
SHARIF
1.11..,•·d 111., p.11I111·r compt•I 1t1vt.•ly
\tt•·r ..,nuth Hila H1111tl of ~l'W
'11rlo. 111.ut. 1111· "11111111g d1•1 1 ... 1un to
h11l 1li 11·1· 1111 1111 11111 Alc11•r dN'Hkd
Ill' "''" hh·h 111 l 11ul 111 ... parlnt<r
"11 h ... ••nw ... ti .. 11111•'' 111 d1amonch.
... o lw t1111k \\Ir.ii lw r hou~ht w a ... a
.... IC rtf lc I' ,II f11Cll 'flOICft "I
\.., rlw , .1 r<t ... 111·. lhal mntrf\C't
\\ ·"' 11111• 1c 1 .. 111 , p1·c I w 1th I rumps
,p1 111111j.! "' .. 111\ the· 11111) to ... Prs
\\ 011 Id lt.1\ 1· h1•1•n 11rw t ru 111 p uni> d I·
.1111011d .11111 11111· • luh Hur /l.oorth,
( 'l.t1rt• I ctr 11,1\ 111 \1•\\ York WtM•ly
1•ll•1 11•cl 10 1.11.1• 11111'11111\'1n..,uranc•t•
ol lu·r 11\\ 11 11\ h1dd111~ four no
lfll lll p
\11rl h ...; .. 111 It cl1d ha\ 1• 11•11 r ri d <'>
".11l,1hlt' I 111111111 11at1·l~ E.1 ... t
\\ 1 '' \\<'II .chlo lo 11'1•1 Ill 111111
1r11 l. ... 1ir ... 1 \\, • ..,, l'h1l1p \larl)'l1 11f
\o•\\ ) 111 I. 1i.1of .1 11a1 111 al ll'ad uf
lh1· i..111).! 111 lw.111\ .end t·:a ... t ..,I~
11 ,1Jfo·d Ill' 1·11• n111.11t1 ·11tt·11t "1th tlw
..,.., 1•11 \ 11111 lw.1 rl to 1111' q111•1•11
,111d .1 lw.1rl li,1• I. .... ·.1lt-d d1·1 lan·r '
1.111· .11 1lr• , .trh••,1 11prH1r lunit)'
WOIO
OUH
., ,. • ~ ... l .-.t' j
I,. '1
tatcs to share knowledge w11h ml
leagues in other parts oft he world If a
fo reign physician has discovered a
new medication or a new method ot
treatment that can help me be a better
physician. he can come here.
ml' -ANOTHFR MISSIS IPPI ,---------------------------.
r vow to become ignorant and inept
so that l can better serve th at
Phlladelphia reader and all the others
who shareherv1ew.-J.V . M.D. IN
GARLAND, TEXAS.
DEAR J.V.: Beaatlful! If yoa de-
cide to retire from medicine please
consider writing as a carttr. Your
letter cracked me up . • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: I agree
with "Lover Of Old Glory" regarding
the disrespectful uses of our flag as
bedspreads, wall-hangm~ and cur-
ta10c;. However. I beg to differ w11h his
v1rws on destroy10g tattered. old
flags
Dunng World War 11 our flag was
displ ayed in front of our home for
three years while my husband fought
in the Pacific and m) brother. three
mu''"" and m) uncle fought in
P~ l RIOT.
DEAR PATRIOT: I CllD understand
your strong feelings about THAT flag,
but U has eamed the rtgbt to be a
family heirloom llDd handed down to
your children and their children.
Please don't let It fly un til It Is
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
nothing but a rag. Put It away as you ACROSS
would any family treasure and buy a
new flag to display oo holidays.
S5 Dessert
56 Appra1s1tl
61 Eyes
PREVIOUS PUZZLE SOLVED
• • • DEAR ANN LANDERS· When
you defended motherhood and po1n1
ed out tts d1flicul11es )'OU $aid." All we
can do 1s set firm gu1dehnes. bt'
consistent, 1ns1'il on honesty. respect
the child's bcc;t effon s. give uncond1-
t1onal love. and keep ever;th1ng
crossed you ha vc two of "
I respectfu ll) poin t out that at all
mothers followed the last part of)'our
ad' ice they would not ha ve an) more
ch1ldren.-(AREFULREADER IN
W VA.
DEAR RE ADER: Right you are.
How that got by me 111 never know.
Tbanks for the nifty ('atcb.
1 Hemingway
10 fans
5 Sink
10 Fungus
14 Seth's kin
15 Of pllch
16 Glazing piece
17 AC conduc1or
19 Bankrupl
20 Wrestle
21 Pen parl
22 Leftovers
23 Go
25 Pigtail
26 Raise -
30 Numerical
pretht
3 1 Cont~t
34 Possessor
36 Fur source
38 Support
39 NCOs
42 Augment
43 Shoe
6:> Ag11a1or
64 Over htll and
65 Attack
66 01strcbu1e
67 Did hkew1se
68 Quadrupeds
69 Plunder
DOWN
I ln1ernat1ona1
treaty
2 Ben
Ad hem
3 Energizes
4 Swiss range
5 Main
6 Base
24 Emerged
25 Womes
26 Approaches
27 Ac11ve
28 Numb
46 Looked alter
48 F1nctces s1 Tunnels
52 Stump
53 MIKer
'Beaver' stumps for March of Dimes makrngs
44 Steeple
45 Straw breed
47 Pe1ro1
49 Asian we1gt11
50 Heat source
51 Deadens
7 Gale-.
crashers
8 Sault S1e 9 Common
man
10 Germtnale
1 t Al rccan land ot old
12 Entity
29 Meshwork
3 I Pe1111on
32 Metric unit
33 A Forel
35 EpoKy
54 Deadfall
SS Tower c11y
5 7 Drive down
58 Highway for
Hadr11n
59 Thank-you
60 Zane
By the Auocla&ed Prus -NA~H V JL Lt:. '-Jerr)'
Matbers, better known a~ "th<•
Beaver:· ha'> launched a ICH.1t)
publicity campaign for the March
of Dimes.
The former child ~tar ot telc
v1s1on·s "U:a ve It To Beaver ..
now 38. kicked ofT the tour a~ co-
cha1rma n of the annual fund-
nus1ng dnve with a v1s1 t to the
Vanderbilt ( h1ldrcn'<1 Hoc;p1tal
Mathen 'kltd he became in -
volved with the chant) bccau~·
h1~ w1tc. Rhonda. was bom
premature When c;he became
p~gnant. the couple realt1ed
comphcat1on\ could occur be·
cauo;c of her earl y b1nh "For
seven month,, my Wlfe had to
like drugs that could affect thC'
baby," Mathe" id "The child .
our daughter Gretchen. 1s 7
months old now. but we didn't
know until she was b<>rn 1f there
would be problems or not. ..
Borowiu encore
BERUN -Piano v1nuo-.o
Vl1dlmlr Horowtu. ove r-
whelmed by the rnthus1a.suc tt·
ception Bcrhncl"'i pve his fint
concen hert" in 54 yean. has
decided to ai ve a second concen
here .
Jerry Mathen
"Horowttz electnfied Berlin
and Bcrhn electnfied Horowau.''
said spoke11man Ulnch Eckhardt.
cal11n1 the e:ittcnded v1!Jt a "!nap
decision" by the &n1st.
Horow1u., 81 , played bcfo~
2,000 fans, 1nclud1n1 West Ott·
VladlmJ.r Borowtta
man President Richard von
We1Zsaecker. He had earlier play·
ed 1n Hambura. The pianist. who
normally playcs only on Sunday~
q1Ud to play the second concc-n
on Saturday in the Berhn
Ph1lhannOl'llC haU. Eckhardt SAJd
Pope tour set
VA TJCAN CITY -Pope John
Paul ll will v1s1t 11 c1t1es 10 seven
days when he v1s1ts Colombia an
July. the Vatican has announced.
Before retummg to Rome. the
pope also will make a seven-hour
stop on the C'Jlnbbean island of St
Lucia, according to the oflic1al
itinerary.
During his tour, the pope 1
scheduled to visit Armero. whert
about 23.000 people were killed
... last November when the town
was W1ped out by a mud fid e
Aquino visit
TOK YO -Ph1hpe1nc Prn1-
dent Coraion Aqal110 s daughter
Kris has amvcd m Japan Tuel.-
day to promott' travel lO her
country. which ha1' fallen off in
the past few year-,
Miss Aquino •ho was bnngm&
1 messqe from her mother for
Prime M 1 n 1~te r Yasuhiro
Nakasone. ad M1kr Harcsco. a
commercial counselor at the
Philippine Embassy
The I S·)'car-old envoy ha~ an
apJ)01ntment co meet Tokyo Gov
Shun1cru u1uk1 dunna her m .-
d&)' "people-to-peo ple" v1~11. he
said. '
53 Arouse
13 Sawbucks
18 House wcng
37 GOOdy
40 Furrow
4 1 Appropnate 63 Galosh part
I ...
Of'MQe eo.t DAILY PfLOTli~, Mlly 27, 1... M~
--------------------------------------------------------------------· by Bii Keane
wpJ picked a flower that's only
half done."
BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP)
l '
"Put 'em up, end I'll SHOW you If I'm
chicken or not."
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson DENNIS THE MENACE
S·27 ~·--·-~"'°
"The U.F.0 . sighted earlier has
disappeared from the radar screen."
GARFIELD
IT'S FOR OOR SCHOOL
PAPER'S SWIMSUIT ISSUE ..
PUT 'EM ON .. l1LL BET
'(00\.L LOOK GREAT ..
WOULD YOO LIKE A DRINK OF WATER, OPIE?
-----
TUMBLEWEEDS
HEY, SWE£15! KIN VA
FIX OP' Mv' COUSIN Wl'TH ONE
1.N YE~ Gl~l-F~IEN"5!!
DRABBLE
ROSE 18 ROSE
'g) JG.) 00 W1J Uk£ eEJNG-A ~GKYr
'
by Hank Ketcham
l
J
1
'
by Charles M. Schulz
by Jim Davis
by Tom K. Ryan
by Kevin Fagan
51\CK OUT '<OUR ~O
ANO ~
~11u..1
by Pat Brady
BLOOll COU1'TT
U.8.ACRES
IT'~ Gf.TTINO R£APY 10 MATCH, aOOKf~ I l WONP£R IF' IT WIU &£ A 80Y .__,,.._ __ OR A GtAL 1
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
SHOE
IOJP rr f/ N..NC6T. Hi'T'. 1.WIMG ~ M I~~ Fi~?.. '™~~Qtf&~~ ENTIQfU<IN . -6NiS ~~ 1"" a: J\St' KM ~!' -...-..-. ,.,. ~ ~~ UTni ~IS. .._ _____ __
JUDGE PARKER
DOONltSBURY
1111~7>£
816 {)EAL,
PWE? fTU..
MJASH Off. '--~~
,,
by Berke Breathed
by Jim Davt8 1
by Lynn Johnston
by Jeff MacNally
by Harold Le Ooux
by Tom Batiuk
by Gary Trudeau
/
Irvine donation
limitat ion law
needs revision
Since regulation of campaipi contributions has
become a separate industry in this country, one of our
dearest democratic slogans needs revision. It should
read: One man. one vote. one buck.
Had it been sufficientJy well known m 1981 , it might
have provided guidance to the framers of an outrageo~s
ly chauvinistic ordinance in Irvine that treats f!lai:r!ed
couples as a single person for the purposes of ltmitrng
campaign donations. The ordinance n~w permits an
individual or a married couple to contnbute no more
than $283.47 to any candidate for City Council.
One candidate in this year's City Council election
recently sued the city, claiming the limit on contribu-
tions by couples is unconstitutional.
His argument is compelling. As it now stands, the
ordinance seems to discriminate against one half of any
married pair who might want to donate to the same
candidate. lfthe same two people were li ving in the same
household-but out of wedlock-the ordinance would
allow the m to give a City Council candidate $566. 94.
A lot ofcouples may be$lad to have the ordinance to
hide behind when fund-raising politicians come calling,
but the law capriciously places stricter limits on some
folks than on others. That's unfair.
And, it is one of those foolish laws that attacks the
institution of marriage, which is a key element in the
process that creates the family units from which this
nation draws its strength.
The Irvine campaign contribution ordinance
should be amended to treat married people the same way
1t treats single people -as individuals with freedom of
choice.
And while they're at it, they ought to change that
si lly $283.47 lim it, which grew out of an ori~inal $250
limit adjusted each year to the Consumer Pnce Index.
It's no easier to wnte a check for a rounder figure, but it's
easier to write news stories when the reporter doesn't
have to explain where that odd number came from.
Opinions expressed 1n l h1s space are those ot the Daily Pilot Other views
expressed on this page ere tho~ ol lheu authors and artists Reader
comment 1s invited The Daily Piiot PO Box 1560 Costa Mesa 92626 Phone
6•2-6086
Tactics Rosenberg uses
elicit doubts froID reader
To the Editor
In rd'erence to the anidr :ihout
'\;athan Ro:!>enbcrg 1n the May I:?
1~sue of the Pilot !"Rosenberg banm·r
c1t campaign headquarter\ called ml'>·
lead1ns") If ~r Rosenberg 1s '><>
~had\ 1n his campaign tor ( ongre'>' I
shudder to think hov. d1')honest ht:
may be in ollice
I tcel thc1t honi:<\ty and intcgnt'I' Jrc
the most important attnbutl''> Im
anyone "'hn <,eek" to rcprt·,cnt thl'
people 1n an dcctcd puhlil olfo c I
think thJt voter\ 'hould even put
their pan) '>el'ond to voting in a
person whu would shameless ly allow
h1mselfto be dl·ccpt1 'cty represented.
To me. that'~ a <:harJctcr trait that
takes precedenn· O\l'r anything else a
person can claim tor himself I don't
think there is any d1\agrcement about
the 1mponantc of l..L·ep1ng dishonest
rharactl·r. out ot the government.
H \ROI r> H K.\TES. M.D.
'll'""porl Beach
Motorist objects to citation
r II thl" I <lllor
I hr rt'H'nUl"" mu't h<-lo"' in 1111
l111nt1n~1on Reath Pol!lc I kp.111
nwnt n1llcr" a<; 11 appt•;ir, onll .1~11n
th..11 our lav. cntort"cmt•nt ollitl"f\
rnu\t he forLed to mt>t't their quota ul
ILkt't\ and random!\ &ti•<' 1na p-
prnpnate ticket\ IP the moton\t\ o n
Pa<.1fit C oa'>t ll1gh-wa>
I wa-. one 'Ut"h lutk\ rt·c1p1l·n1 l.t\t
11,onth
'-"hilt• heading north on the PC II
1rip ht•tv.cen (,olden V. t•,1
flouk .. ard and V.arncr .\"cnut• I "·t'
l11 rtt'd to rt•ll\t mlO lht left IJnl' to
• \01d an Ala\1..an moton\I cntt·nn(l.
1hr nght lane Jltcr JU'il hJ\ inp.
rt'll'l \.Cd htr II< kt•t
Traveling at 55 mph, tht• r>o\lnl
\fWt'd limit. and approaching ..in
upgrade a gardening trut k \lowed till'
traffic to a ma1umum of SCJ mph J ht·
offi<cr then pulkd me 11\.Cr for
traveling too doo,eh
\if, spe1.·dumc:tcr read SO mph \h
Qll<''>t1on is. 1f1 n tact thev arc lit kr11nr,
k1r illegal moving violation~ v.h ~
wa\n't the dt1\.('r of the truck t1ckt·tetl
for dnving tou \lowly'>
\\ J lrl'Qucnt tra' elcr 111 PC H I am
lon<;tantl-. .inno,ed h' tht· numt·rou~
m11to11<.t., dn \ 1 ng 4()-..i 'I mph 1 n ho th
l;.inc-. ,10"10g tht traflit dov.n and
treating u1ngcst1on When· arc the
oflit:er' thl·n''
Or wht"n <;omeone ridn my hump-
er gornF 10 mph or motonc;tc; con-
'"tcnth thangc lane' v.1thout \1gnal -
ing or motcm st\ ndc thl' nght
'lwuldt•r lo turn nght on V. arn1•r
\\l·nm where Jr!' tht· otli1.t'rs
th1·n'
I do n111 oh1ect tn mo1on'>tS who
'111latl' till' law\ being ticketed. hut I
do nhJt.'ct to rne1v1ng one un1ustly
rhl\ IU\I pt.•rpctuate'> the ncga11ve
'>lCr<.'ol'v J'W n f police offi cers.
Nc~t time the officers arc gi ven
nnt1n· for not meeting thrir quotas.
lt-t tht•m U'M.' oh1ect1 V<.' oh'!Crvations
.ind aw:anJ rt•al violator\.
In c1 jXl\lt1 ve light let me tatc that
the offiter '>pared me the courtesy of
not !.ay1ng "ha.,.c-a nice day" after
handing mt" the tit kct
'i ff PH <\NIF (if OR DANO
\os1a Me$3
Seeking fairness in lawsuits
fu lhi: Editor
I am a rctm:d "1C'w \ ork att11111C'~
.\\ I recall. w<" had no \UCh 1h1n1 it'>
pun111\(' damage Ont)" the ~cnc:rn
men1 could 1mpo\C h nc<,
.\ 10101nt and ~veral l1:\h1hl\ -"
OAANGF COAST
Daily Pilat
~-.. Clily o!lfle-•ll w S.,. It a ...... •oar-C:OI :'°"-10 llo• I I """"
11 not fair that one \hould P3) 10 tht'
extent nf re poM1h1llt) 'l Or is 11 too
much trouble: to d1 ~0\cr "who done ,,., ..
R E:.l I IOTT DAVIS
l~guna Niguel
K-Wlttm.f
,,Mt! Z>nl
Edit0t
TOfll Tel1
Ul t'llQW'IQ fdttOt o...,....,
City EdotOI
r .... c._...
,....,. fo.tor c,... .....
Spc11u EOrtor
P\ll)hthei
...........,c~
Co111rOllttr
~L.~ Pr~l'hQn ~
TWFJK..-.
°'C\MlllQtl U~
Hew9Ntt«r _,
Merloll19"Q Director
c::T.!o~0t
· 'CounUes like Lake. Solano and San Luls Obispo a.re nowentertngthe
top l 0 In growth for the flrst t1me In the.Jr history. ''
California's inland areas
generatingmost growth
Taking pressure
of development off
traditional leaders
There 1s good news for almost
('.'very part of Cahforn1a 1n two new
forecasts that show lhe state wtll most
likely gain about 6.7 milhon n<.'w
residents in the next I 5 years.
That wtll maintain Its statore as the
nation's largest state, even increasing
the California margm over other fast-
growing areas like Texas, Colorado.
Aonda and Anzona.
And it should ensure against any
sudden drop in either real estate
pn ces or sales. as any population
increase of 25 percent or more can't
help but escalate demand for both
nev. housing and hvrng quarters in
establtshcd areas
"It's not JUSt people.~ sa1d Nester
TertcckyJ, author of one population
study for the National Planning
Association. "Money is moving (to
California). too." That money creates
JObs, which may accelerate the popu-
lation growth beyond even the fore-
cast levels.
For man} Californians who take
overall growth for granted. the big
question about the new wave of
1mm1grants isn't whether they'll
come. but where they'll land .
And the answer most Likely 1s that
large numbers will go to the place:.
which have led the population and
economic growth of the last five
years: inland regions.
When the Palo Alto-based Center
THOMAS
Euas
for the Continuing Study of lhe
California Economy last listed the
state's 10 fastest growing counties of
the I 980s, only fo ur had any
beachfront and only three were
among the top 10 in population
San Luis Obispo came out on top.
wt th increases of I 8.1 percent in
populauon, 36.5 percent in personal
income and 21 . 7 percent in JObs since
1980 That surprised some local
businessmen, who hadn't nouced lhe
prohfera11on of new small businesses
1n their midst.
Mostly rural Lake County, between
San Francisco and Redding, was m
second place. with increases of about
28 percent in all three categones.
while Placer County northeast of
Sacramento was third.
Notably absent from lhe hst were
traditional growth leaders hke Los
Angeles and Oran~e counties and all
but two of the eight counties with
some shorehoe on either the an
Francisco or San Pablo bays.
That squares wtth most forecasts of
the last decade. which almost always
have noted the saturation of Los
Angeles. San Franc1sco. San Mateo
and Alameda counties and predicted
that growth would come in outlyi ng
regions.
It bas. The biggest increases in
population in southern California
have come in counties like Riverside,
Kem and San Bernardino. where
empty land is plentiful and not yet
nearly as expensive as in the bigcioes.
But counties like Ventura. San
Diego and Santa Cruz, which began
the decade with vast open spaces,
have been growing at least as fast as
forec.ast, with newcomers noting both
their salubnous ch mates and the fact
that real estate costs there were far less
lhan in more developed areas. The
price gap has narrowed now between
those three counties and the older
areas closer to Califomja's urban
cores.
And when the narrowing began,
home buyers soon looked even
farther fro m the central cities. So d id
corporate moguls concerned over the
difficulties of newly recruited em-
ployees who wanted to buy homes.
That's why counties hke L..a.ke,
Solano and San Luis Obispo arc now
entenng the top JO in growth for the
flrst time in their history.
Chances are good such inland areas
wtll stay on the high~growth list for
years to come. Their available land
and easy freeway connections to the
older centers make them logical
places to locate new plants.
And that's not bad for anyone. It
wlll take some of lhe development
pressure off the older areas, make
home o wnership possible for millions
of new Cahforn1ans and help lhe state
remam relauvely recession-proof by
diversifying Its economic base.
Tbomas EUH l• • Sue. Moaic•-
based colamal1I oa 1ute 11 .. e•.
-171$1i@fijt.Ui ~ tj ;i;Jiiij.i;f.iu:1.i .. ---------------
Small depositors deserve
good treatmen t from banks
Pending bill would prevent banks from
reserving personalized service to rte~
WASHINGTON -Except for
bemg ncher. bankers are hkc most
Amencans: They want the govern-
ment to butt out of their business -
unless they need the government's
help.
Rep. Mary Rose Oakar, D-Oh10.
has stirred outrage in bank
boardrooms across the country wtth
her qwxot1c nouon that bankers owe
the general pubhc something in
return for the protection they get from
the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.
"'lflhc federal govemmeni 1s going
to (insure banks) it has a nght to
expect lhat these institutions wall
serve all consumers, no matter bow
m uch or how little they have to
deposit," Oakar told our associate
Stewan Hams.
This dangerously populist idea 1s
anathema lo the bankers, of cour~.
They'd much prefer to deal only with
fellow membcn of the M1lltona1res
Club -or lft least charge the
troublesome peasants hefty fees for
the bother of handling their piddling
accounts.
That's why the bankers arc choking
on their panatelas over Oakar's
proposed FinandaJ Services Access
Act, now before I.he Ho use Bank.mg
Committee The bill would require
federally insured banks to o ffer
aooounts with no scrvtct charges and
no mm1mum-balan~ requirement to
customm with less than $1 ,000 1n
their accounts, these customers
would p:t I 0 free transactJons per
monlh.
The bill would also mp in the bud a
particularly nasty bit of discnm1na·
tion btina adopted by many ~nks
rtlCfitina small depositors to auto-
matic teller machines and ~rvina
personalized services for wealthy
patr0ns.
The bankers claim the bill rtp-
~nts a rtturn to unnecessary 1ov-
emment rttul,tttOn. 8c\lde5, I
spokesman for theAmencan Banke~
As.soaation satd, more than half 1he
banli m 1hc country offer no-mils
checking accounts with service
charges of$3 a month or less. Another
way of putt mg it, of course, would be
that nearly halflhe banks do not.
The bankers claim they must be left
free to carve out lheir chosen niche m
the market. just liJce the airlines. But
Oakar and banking committee chair-
man Fernand St Germain, D-R.I.. see
the bankers all racing to carve out lhc
same lucrative niche: affluent cus-
tomers. At the same time, they arc
trying to term mate -or "demar\cet."
in the industry's euphemism - small
accounts.
· Committee investigators have
already found some big-name banks
that favor high-:rollcrs over ho1 polloi.
For example:
•Bank of Amenca replaced 120
branch offices with teller machines -
at the same lime 1t offered such
lagniappes as pnvatc mcettng rooms.
tax shelter plans and SI 00,000 loans
to customers with a net worth of SI
m1lhon or more. The bank insists 1t 1s
still committed to the ave!l'JC saver.
•Wells Fargo Bank ofC.hfom1a 1s
being sued by a consumer group,
which charges that customers mus1
own a credit card to open an account.
The bank says 1tjust requires 1dentifi-
c.at1on -hke a credit card.
•Calhng 1t an "'expcnment" when
1t b ckfired. Citibank 1n New York
ordered many customen Wlth less
than SS,000 in thClr account to use
teller mactunes. Cnt1cam forocd
C1t1bank to back off. but this p1on-
ecnna effon at "demarketan, .. ~mall
customers "suggested that behav1or
patterns c.an be altered," accordif\I to
a study by the Research Council of
Washinaton.
The study compiled a 8anken' hit
hst of least wanted customers wort-
1n1 middle-class consumen nruaaJ·
1na to make cods meet and likely to
overextend their crtdJt, youna fam1l·
1cs wtth htlle upward mob1ltt) poten
tial, transients, and those who cam
less than S 18.000 a yur
RANK HAS ITS PRIVILEOES;
When the Ptntaaon ~ntly firushcd
'
JACK
ANDEi SO ii
and JOSEPH SPEAR
~
Juggling its bst of those who enjoy
parkingj>rivileges, the Inspector Gen-
eral's office ended up with only 134
free spaces. Beyond that., the slots 'o
for $60 a month. So who was first 1n
line for a coveted free space? Why,
Inspector General Joseph Sberick1 of
course. followed by his deeut1es,
assistants and top senior officials .
Only after the panJandrums got the
pick of the lots did tbe handicapped
employees get to choose their slots.
And even further down the l~ne were
those conscientious workers who use
vans and carpools to save fuel and
money.
CONFlDENTIAL FILE: Italy has
turned down a secret U.S. request to
stauon its counter-terronsm Delta
Force in Sicily as a base apinst
terronsm. accordms to Pentagon
sources They are stall SCArchina for
some kind of a permanent base in
Europe so that the Ion& trip from the
United States to a terrorist hot spot
could be eliminated.
MINI-EDITORIAL: The Office of
Government Ethics and its djrector,
David H. Martm, have come under
fire recently for allqedly f.a.tlina to
monitor the behavior of fedCT'IJ
offiClals as d1h1ently as they s.hould.
Rep. Gerry Silcorikt. D-M1nn .. re·
cently chlf1cd Maron. for cumple,
of wa1tm1 too lo~ before rec-
ommend1na an 1nvest_1poon of ror·
mer White Ho~ official Michael
Deaver. We have known Manin, a
former U.S. pro5CCUtor and chief
counsel to the Sec:rct Service, for
more than two decades and can st.ate.
without hesitation or raervauon,
that be 1s a man of courqe. c:haractcr
and intepity. Whatever the rQIOOS
for b1s actJons, you can mt IS$Ured
has motives arc honest.
J•d ......,... °' J...,,t s,e.r .,., ·~t-'*.,..,.,..
~
r lfOIU.8 a 1.u
ool••-W
Sr AR CHLICHT
WALT£1
Bu1nuc1S
Finding
proper
location
for UCI
Last week l promised to "lay out
the story" of how UC Irvine aot to
where it is now.
A recent repon in the ~
County Register p.ve the credit to a
former president of the Irvine Co.,
but actually Joan Irvine Smith,
aJone, is soleiy responsible for brina-
ing the U niversity ofCalifomia to its
present location on what was once a
part of the Irvine Ranch.
Dr. Oark Kerr, president of lhe
statewide Univemty of California,
was much impressed with architect
Bill Pereira's study and report on a
new university site. Particularly with
BiU's projection of residential srowth
o n the Oranac Coast, which was most
impressive.
The site Oark Kerr favored is the
area now occupied by Pacific View
Mortuary. In fact. without that lo-
cation, ( do ubt even Clark Kerr's
persuasive ability would have suc-
occded in pcrsuadinJ the UC rcsehts
to allow the university to come hCT'C.
Joan was determined to brina it
here. So was I, of course, but lhe
agreement of the Irvine Co. board to
seU the location to Pacific View
Mortuary made that pretty tough.
I told you last year about the way
the owners of Pacific View buried the
bodies of two indiacnts on the land in
o rder to make it "hallowed" ground.
I also told you I was on my way to a
meeting in Washington, D.C., at the.
time and the editor was away; but we
had an ente!l>risina reporter named
Bill Beeler. Bill knew I would st.and
behind birz:i. tso be went out to what is
now John wayne Airport and rented
a helicopter and pilot. He then flew
over the ground and took photo-
graphs.
There's every reason why the
Resister reporter who wrote the story
about UC Irvine's origins miaht have
been confused by the information in
the newspaper's files.
I k:new and liked R.G. Hoyles. the
owner of Freedom Newspapers.
which includes the Orange County
RCJister. My Liking for him was ;;:r ~nonal, however. I dis-
Vlolently with bis opposition
to public education.
In fact, I doubt if I would have
developed such a close association u
I had with Brick Power were it not for
wanting to "Pia).' down" the part
played by the Daily Pilot newspaper.
You know the old adage, "let sleeping
dop lie." and that applied to the
Register.
One day Oark Kerr telephoned me
and said ··There's another Cal alum-
nus who wants to work on bringina
the university to lhe Orange Coast"
··Who is he?" I asked.
"H is name is Brick Power, Oass of
1917."
I groaned a little. thinking "Oh,
God, another old alum set in his
ways." But 1 said, "rll iiik to him."
A couple of days later. In walked
Brick Power. I couldn't have been
more wr':.:&!n my concern.
After ·na to him for a few
minutes I realized be was Just what I
needed as a cohort, p&rtJcularly 10
deal with the Register.
I explained to him be would have to
"carry the ball" but that I would be
the quarterback. and I wanted bis
assurance that he would do exactly
what we jointly decided.
He did. And out of that association
arcw a close ftiendahip that laated
until his death. I called him "Uncle
Brick" nd he always caJJcd me "my bo .. XiJ of this explains. probably, why
in the files of the Resister, it appears
that it was the-then president of the
Irvine Co. who was responsible for
brin&ina the univenity to Oranae
County. No such thin&.
Joan and I both thouabt scl1ina to a
cemetery the prefemd tite for a
campus mi&bt eliminate the poui·
bility of the university co~ here.
Clatk Km always rcfe to the
site u bavina a "nobility of view."
That it did.
Finally, Bill Pereira reconciled
Kerr to a different site, one cas-ble of
better dcvcl~eol
However, before Joan knew that
would eventually come about, she
went to work with typical ent:J'IY. She
offered the cemetery people a dif-
fel"Ult site down the coast with an
equally noble view. She off'md. at her
own exptntt, to build the noceaary
roads and to pipe the water there. he
WU turned down/
Tbt next act in the drama wu Blll
Pettira'a &Item.ate lite, which is
where the uruvenity ii now.
And that 11ory b equally dramattc.
So, iryou'rc 1tm with me. ro liC1 Lnto
that next wee
ffa/Ur ........ ,, ... PlllH'• ,.,., .. ,.. ... .
\
Celtics get
their guards
up, 112-110
Ainge. Johnson spark Boston · to opening victory over Houston
BOSTON (AP) -Boston guards Danny Ainge and
Dcnni!I Johnson often play a subordinate role 1n an
offense dominated by big men.
.. I kind of get lost in the shuffie," Ainge said before
Boston's 112-100 victory over Houston Monday 1n the
opener of the NBA championship series. 'Tm the fif\h
option and we have so many guys who can score so easily
that we don·t get to that point."
But Ainge and Johnson, both averaging about 16
points per game in the playoffs. combined for 22 1n the
last 9.18 of the third quancr against the Rockets. They led
a 27-1 I spun by the Celtics that gave them a 91-76 lead at
the end of the penod
Johnson finished w1th 19 points and Ainge 18, as
the) again finished behind frontcoun stars Roben Pansh,
Larr) Bird and Kevin Mc Hale in the sconngcolumn. The
7-foot Parish had 23 points and the 6-9 Bird and 6-11
McHalc 21 each.
.. Our st) le 1!1 lO take what the defense gives us,'' Ainge
said. "In the first half, they were playing I-on-I against
Roben Mc Hale and Larry. so we kept going at them. In
the second half. when they doubled down low. that
opened up the outside shots for myself and D.J."
A1ngC' !laid the Celtics would continue to stress the
frontcourt on offense
.. If the> stay I-on-I. then we will go msidc," the 6-5
guard said. ··That's where we will keep gomg and going.
The) can't stop all our big men."
Johnson said there 1s no secret strategy to the Boston
auac"-.
"Ever since I've been in Boston. everyone seems
surprised when the Celtics guards score some points," he
said. "But it's the way we play. We have a lot of strength
up front and that's where we push the ball.
.. Danny and I push the ball up the coun and get the
ball inside to the big men. When the other team doubles
up. we take the shots."
An&el• ahortatop Dick Schofield 1eu bl.a
throw off to firat after aYoldln& the •llcliDC
* llllJ Pllll TUESDAY, MAY 27. 1986
Newport'• White ouated In FrencJH>pen tennla tournament. 82.
Bulgarlen wom•n equela world high Jump merk et M 1JJ.112.
.,._..,t a••
Bobby Meacham In Monday'• 8-7 Yictory
o•er the Yankeee.
Halos limp!
home with.
I
8 -7 victory ~
---· Joyner 's hom er lifts Angels; f
Detroit to in vade Wed nesday . . --,
NEW YORK (AP) -Rookie Wall~ Joyner finally'
got hts maJor lcague-lca~in 16th home run of the season. ,
This tame. 1t came an a cct spot. •
Joyner connected or a two-run homer w1tb two outs,
m the ninth annana Monday. ltfuna the An&els over the
New York Yankees 8-7.
The victory broke the Angels' fivc.pmc losina streak :
and ended the Yankees' five-game winning stnna.
._week ago Sunday in Detroit. Joyner hit a home run •
in the th a rd tnmng, But that blow, which would have been
16th, was lost when the game was rained out.
"It doesn't matter now because th1sonewas placed 1n
a better spot," said the 23-)ear-old Joyner. whose pme-:
wmning homer came apmst Dave R1ghem.
"This takes a lot ofthe sting out of an ugly four days," '
Angels' Manager Gene Mauch said. ··The thmg I like ~
about Wally. he functions as well an the ninth ashed~ m ,
the first."
R1ghclll got the first two outs 1n the ninth inning on :
only two_pitches before Bnan Downing singled. Joyner
fouled off a slider by the left-handed Rig.hem. 4--2, and •
then homered. It was only the third time that the Angels •
had beaten a left-handed pitcher 1n 14 dcccsaons this ;
season
"l don't know him really well," said Righettt. who
was 2--0 with five saves in his previous 10 outings. "I '
threw him two hard breakmg baJls. Obv1ously, his second •
one hung up there a long time." •
The Angels take a day off today, then begin a
homcstand Wednesday C\Cning. beginning wtth two •
games wt th Detroit. followed by three wtlh Balumoreand
three with the Yankees .
Wtnncr Mike WttL 4-4, pitched 81/J innmgs, givmg •
up I 0 hats. while walkina six and stnkmg out caaht. Terry •
(Pleue eee AJlfO&LS/BSJ , .
For the Lakers: Dawn of a new era? Re!Qlie:
Wi][fate As the Lakers' lamcnt builds tn our
town. the theme will be constructed
around the theory that the Lakers met
their demise by acun~ the1rage.
This was made v1s1ble by the team
that put the Lakers away. The
Houston Rockets are a )Oung team
and, therefore. a team in the NBA
senes wherein the Lakers were sup-
posed to meet the Boston Celtics in a
classic rematch.
In thewecks-1ndeed months-
tocome. we will hear considerable
about Kareem Abdul-Jabbar We will
hear a nood of words and opinions as
to whether he will continue m this
game.
Kareem played ver) well over the
tonuous season but he 1s 40 years old.
Kareem slowed a half a step in the
pla}ofTs Th1smayhavcbccnbccause
he 1s40 years old.
After the Rockets took a 3-1 lead m
the Western Conference final series.
Kareem said, "They (the Rockets) are
playing with the edge we should
have."
That was almost conceding. That
was the son ofthmg that escapes the
hpsofa man 40yearsold.
Jabbarw1ll stan by saying he will
play another season.To show us the
back of his neck would be to walk
awa} from many milhons till. he 1s
40.
Kareem'sage 1s onl> pan of the
Lakers' problems. They do not have
youth on the bench. Kareem does not
have a young understudy The Lakers
are weak at power fof"ard and they
have no high dran cho1ceo;other than
their own.
Dawn ofa new era. as they say in
the newspapers?
Well. the Lake rs were defend mg
champions of the NBA. They had
won 12 conserut1ve Western Con-
ference playoffsenesand made 1t to
the NBA final senes the last four. and
ft ve u mes in the last six years.
The last time the Lakers failed to
make the magic circle was m 1981
when the Rockets -then led by
Moses Malone -upset them in the
first round scnes The Lake rs seemed
to be a much bettertcam that time,
too
The Lakers were cenainly not
supposed to lose th1sone to the
Rockets. The lesson here being that 11
sometimes takes adramaur turn of
events to properly indicate 111e hand-
wnting that has been on the wall all
Buo
Tucu1
SPORTS COLUMNIST
along
In shon. there may have been a
changmgoftheguard last Wednesday
night at the Forum 1n Inglewood.
lakers forward Kun Ramb1s said
11: "Houston may be on the verge of
becoming the most dom1naung team
in the league.··
Does this mean the Rockets have a
big chance against the Celtics? Ram-
b1s d1d not say. But the Celt1csdo not
have any guys who are 40 years old.
LakersCoach Pat Riley started the
post moncms rather gallantl) "All
we can do 1s be ph1losoph1cal Go
back. with ourfam1hcs and shake out
the webs and move on with our
hves."
Riley had firmly predicted a Lakers
victory in the fifth game He said the
characterofhas team would be
enough. R1leywasconfidcntenough
to use cltches
"The opera 1s never over unul lhe
fat lady sings.·· he said. "Do not throw
din in our face )Ct."
Sadly, when the fat lady Y>as tuning
up Wednesday afternoon. she was
holding a sho' el
~1/,7Nt13fiN Greatest spectacle in raining·
AT MARINA . for the lnd1anapolts Motor Speedway. said in Rutherford said. "Theweatherdoesn'tlookgood."
Da"c Thomp!>on ha!I resigned as
head football coach at Manna High
for the 'IC<:ond tame 1n three weeks.
Principal Ira Tn1hin announced
today
Thomp'lon who ha~ guided
Manna to a ';M-'2-4 record in eight
)Ca~. announced ht~ rcs1gnauon
Ma> S. citing "a lack of admmas-
trall ve backing."
.\I that time To1btn said he had not
acceptC'd the res1gna11on
Then on Ma) 14, l hompson ~1d
··some of the issue'> have been
resolved" and that he was returning
as Manna's coach
"I'm excited, I'm glad they didn't
accept my resignation right away,"
said Thompson at the ume. "I can set'
my being here for another I 0 years.·•
Thompson had complained about
fac1htesand ta IT problems, and 1t was
thought that most of those issues had
been rc'>ol ved.
But To1b1n said Thompson re-
peated his desire "to take ome lime
off' .ind accepted his res1gnat1on
Thur')(la}
Athletic Directer Andy Donegan as
expected to take over as football
coach on an intrnm basis next
season. To1b1n said
Thompson will remain at Manna
as a sc ience or ph-.1;1cal education
teacher, To1b1n said
McEnroe
is a father
CiANT ·\ MONICA (AP)
Tenn1<> \tar John Mcl:nroc 1s the
father of an 8-pound. I I -ounce
OO) ~cv1n John Mc[nroc. afler
actre!>' T .uum O'Nt'al iJ"l' b1nh
at '' John·~ llosp11at
Mother and bab) went home 1n
good hC'alth Monthly after the
b1nh rnda)
The cuu(llc whn ha\C truvtled
together un the tcnn" c1rcu1t, at
lir\t denied rumor1 that M1'1<1
O'"leal.12. was pregnant But In t
Oetcmhcr. Mt'EnrO<' acknowl·
t'died the prl'gnnnl) and said the
couole planned to wed
"l'rn riro\ld of 1t:· he ~1d ofthC'
1mpend1na h1r1h
He \.ud motht'r .ind b by
would tra'C'I with him on tht•
tcnn1 ur<'ull "I'm not i01n1 to
lcht them.''
Indy 500 wash cd OU t again: explaining the deCISIOn to go Saturday "You can't expect people to come back in the
Th '11 j S-t d There was a 50 percent of rain toda). 40 middle of the week, but they will come back 1fthey ey llJ.ry to run t a ur ay percent on Wednesday and a chance of showers as have a chance." added George Smder. who wtll be ~ well on Thursday. Fnda)' and Saturday arc dnving m his 21st Indy "Saturday 1s the only fair
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) -The lnd1anapohs
500. the greatest spectacle in raining 1f not racing.
was postponed Monday for the second straight day
and rescheduled for Saturda) It's the longe~t dela}
an the 70-ycar ha story of the race.
The announcement came almost lour hours
after day-long rams washed out Monday'!. attempt
10 run the race. the nchesl 1n the world with the
fastest field ever
The race 1s scheduled to stan at I I a m EST
Saturday, and ABC' spokeo;man Irv Brodsky said
the network would try again to televise 1t lt"Ve for
the first lime.
"We've got bad weather forecast for the next
two or three days, and we wan ted to take a better
chance on good weather cond1t1ons for the race."
A.I Bloc~ker. vice pres1dt'nt for communications
Callf omla Cup Serie•
expected to be panly sunny. thing to do."
Saturday also gives the speedway a chance to Car-owner Pat Patnck said the weather had
clean up mud and debns and possibly lure back .. ruined 1t for everybody We're ready to go. But for
many of the more than 350.000 people who stayed the benefit of fans, T'd like to see ll on Saturda) "
away Monday after Sunda) 's ongmal past-One factor that may ha\ e influenced the
ponement. dec1s1on 1s the una,a1lab1ltt> of many volunteers
Speedway officials said there would be no who Lake time away from their regular JObs dunng
practice before the race. though some dnvers had May to work the race. If the race were run on a
said it would have been Wlse for safety purposes to weekday. there might not be enough people to
let dnvers readjust to the 200 mph speeds after a handle secunty. maintenance and traffic control
mne-day layoff ..\ss1stant safet) director Leonard Birdwell
Saturda) was the popular choice among the said safety patrols nonnall> conmt of 224 people
dnversand racing teams. who had been scheduled "i\t head count today (~onda)'). we had 110
to race in the Miller Amencan 200 at Milwaukee infield (people). If 1t does go tomorrow (today),
on Sunday. That race now will be rescheduled a we're looking at 45 men . but we won't have a big
week later, June 8. crowd anyway "
"That's the only thing left reasonabl) avail-The last time thC' l'ace was postponed by rain
able at this point," three-ume Indy winner Joh nm (Ple&K eee INDY /82)
TbNe of the altraUabt dl•placement
••mul•" (left) drl•e for tile windward mark
ln the Ont race at the CalUomJa Cap Serl•
at Marlna Del Rey thu put weekend. At
rlCbt, Bob Moore'• Pandemoolam of
Balboa YC lead• Dlck Pennln1ton '•
Cheetah to leeward mark, which Pan·
demoabun won. Blond.le. akJppered by Pat
Pan-all of Loot Bacb YC. wu the o•erall
winner, repeatln1 •75 win.
treat him ;
kindly?
By JORN NELSON ,,, ...........
Tbe cruel realization had dawned.
and Regajc Jackson was scared.
Has teammate for the pest four
years. an almost certain Hall of
Farner and seven-tame battin~m
p1on, Rod Carew, was out of ball
at the age of 40. a free a,cnt whom no
one wanted.
.. It scared the hell out of me."
Jackson said. "Sure did."
Only a few months you~&e;r than
Carew. Jackson was bc&Jnmng to
ANALYSIS
realize that he too may be los1n1
control ofh1s own destjny -that he
was close to the monality threshold
baseball imposes.
"I want to play next year, too. but if
I'm a bum the rest of the season. I've
got to accept my fate," Jackson said.
"People always told me it would be a
tough emouonal change. You accept
the physical change. You can't lose
weight easily anymore. your body
gets old. But m your mind. you stay
young.
"The last two years, I've had to try
to prepare myself to severe the
emotional lies wnh baseball m 1987."
With his 537 career home runs.
s1Ath on the all-lime hst. Jackson
needs 36 morc to pass Harmon
Killebrew andJOm Hank Aaron, Babe
Ruth. Willie Mays and Frank Ro~
mson as one of the top five slugcn of
all time Yet he realizes that at this'
stage ofh1s carttr. he must constantly
(Pleue eee ll&OOIS/82)
I ·-
nm
•
~ .S.clJ aqadm c,..._
S1an·uPt for several 1qua11u c&a.cs bnna
offered 1hu summer by the LaJuna Beach ReaulJon Department will bqjn Monday,
June 2 11 Laauna Beach Ht&h Swimmana ksJOni for adults and children will
be held 10 four I <kl.us sen1001 btlinn•oa
Mooday,June 23,JuJy7,July21 andAua.4. The
ftt for the cluses. which are 2S minuies each, is
$15. Rccttauonal swimmana 1s also offered 11 the
l.quna Hiah pool weekday• from 12:.J0.2 4S
p.m. for SO cent
Sea L1on1 swim team will conunue Monday
throuah Fnday eveninp from S 30-6.30 for a
$20 ftt and Master swimmana will be Monday. Wednesday and Fnday nights from 6:30-7, for
SIOamonth. The Lafeauards' Ocean Awartncss for youth
will bqin Monday. June 23 Mermaids (1Jrls S..11) will be held Mondays
and Wednesdays euher from I ~noon or 1-l
p.m.
Sea Cubs (boys 8-11) will be Tuesdays and
Thursdays a11hc same time as the Menna.ads. Junior Lifeauards, a co-ed prasram for lief
12-15 will be held Fridays from IOa m.10 3 Th<' fcc for the five-week session 1s SH
Bc.tch Aqu.aucs, a new proaram for ctuldrcn
gradt>s 1·6. will teach basic oceanogr&phy and safe beach swimming techniques for a $35 fcc,
which includes five sc:Mions.
The first-through-third grade sessions wall be the wet>ks of July 7 and July 21 and the founh·
through-sixth &n\de sessions wtll be tht' wccks of Jul) 14 and July 28. Classn arc held 1n the
af\emoons from 4:.J0.6 Other ac11v111es include ~hm & Swim exercise
for women on Tuesday and Thursday nights
from 6:3~7:30 a1 tht' Laguna High pool Four week sessions begin June 24 and fol) 22 and the
f('e IS S1 S<-uba d1' mg. windsurfing and sa1hng arr also
a'a1lablr Prc-rcgis1ra11on 1s rrqu1rcd for all classes
For information phonr 497. n 11 . l')(ICOSIOO
WI
SPORTS BREAK
Rain tires next
for Indy drivers?
Not very likely
From AP dispatches
l~DIA.N.\POLJ\ -Sure. rain tires .
could be used 1n the Indianapolis 500 The
problem 1s the onl) -.uppl11:r of tires for
Ind\ car racing {an't find a dri' er cr31) enough to test
them
.. That's the JoJ...e around (1ood}'car. because of the
obvious inherent danger.'' Dave Hedench. Goodyear's
public relauons director for racing. saad Monda). the
second da} of rain at the Speedwa)
Rain tires arc u..ed on Indy cars on road carcum hut
onh '>lick. treadlcc;c; tires are u'>ed in O\al-tracJ... racing.
I he big danger in dnving in the rain on the 0' als i!.
not keeping the 200-mph race cars on the track.
Hedemh said. The deep-groovt'd tires already 1n use on
road courses could lessen that hazard But the fine spra>
k1<:ked up b}' the spannang ures reduce '1s1b1h1y to near
zero for all but 1he front-running cars
"What happens 1~. 1f you've ever seen a road race in
the rain. grooved 11res kick that water up in a roostertall
spra> .. said Hedench "On a road course. such as a
Formula One ran· where the} do use rain tires. cars
bewme spread out on the track. running a long wa}
behind each other c,o they can gain '1sib1ht> However.
on a road cour\e. the~ ·re not going wnstanll) at 200
mile., an hour
.. Su while 11 'A ()Uld be techn1call) poS'>lblc for
C1ood)car to build a rain ure that wo uld go around the
">pcedwa) at close 10 1<XJ mile\ an hour. the driver!.
'-'Ould haH a hard time telhng "-here to turn left On a
road rnur\c. 1 f) ou miss a turn. the l hances are )OU run
1111 111 \Orne gra\~ or catch fencing or 11re harrier\ ~t
lndianapohs ~nu run into a concre te wan ··
Quote of the day
Charlie Fox, former maior kaguc mana&l'T
anti nu" a ~l.UUt for the ( h1rng11 ( ub~. on II) 1ng
ltll hoti\C b\.'t"'ccn the Ne" York Mets and the "it
l ou1\C ardanal\ 1n the "-at1onal l l•ague ta'>t ran~
·11 , a tough l.ku<,1on and there·~ no chance the
\1e1' will '>lamrx·de 11 I he' \J\ the Cardinal'
need p1tl h1ng "-ell the~ nt't'dl·d 11 las1 }Car 100.
and the~ "on th<· pennant ·
Canadiens • fans whoop it up
\I()'\ TR~ \l -Hu ndm.I., of ~
thou'>ant..I<. 11f \tarr;·c)t·d \1<mtrealers '
1ammed down1 o"'n street' and surged
fo~ard to d J'>P thl' hand!I of lht·sr l.i1anle~
(up heroes Mond.1~ during a 'lltor. parade for the
( anad1t'n'>
\l..1pping '>l hool '-"Ort. and other mundane
aCll\ 111e'I hrn\lcrou'> u~lchrant' llnl'd the route in hot,
\UIHl\ weather. prl'\'\1ng lo™Jrd J'> t ar\ t arn ing the
pla )CfS Ua'A-led h\
fhe adoring lf<l"-d got rnort: dl'n\e a'i tht· p<1rade
looped around \te-(.athenne \trcet to the I orum and
even the molornl.k police e~or1 rnuldn't keep 11 back
Bulgarian woman goes 6 -9 1/2
Vlf"l"\IA \ustna -Bu lgarian high m
1umpcr \teflca 11.m ladinu' a equaled the
women's world high Jump rcrnrd w11h a
leap of 6 feet . 91'1 anche'> at a meet \unda:,-10
~ofia, the offi cial Bulgarian new., agency RT A reponed.
Ko'\tad1nova cleared the height on h~r second
auempt. equaling the mark held h) L)udmila
Andono"a of Bulgaria
OCC 6Jrla Y'OllqlMJI ctUJJp
A ,Jirfs v~lleyball camp (or tqina'iaa, 111~
mediate and acfvan«d pla_yenqn 11-19wtU be
hotted by Oranae Cout C~ Friday l.hrou&)l Sunday, Aua,. 1-3. an Pctenoa Gym.
0CC COKh Jane Hii,tndOtf will d1rect the camp, wbJCb will feature ttthnlca.1 $kJll 1n1truc-uon from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m each day.
For informauon phone 67J..731S
~· lf'6DeJ 5k, Jo~ rua• Entry forms att now available for the c1&)lth annual Mooartb Bank S and IOk Run 1n the
Pults Fnday, JuJy 4 11 CrownVaJlcy
Communny Parle 1n t..g\lna N11uel. bqinntna 11 7 a.m.
Over 150 troph•« will be awarded and tbt'rc
will be a drawina for pnzts and merchandise af\ertbe~
Fonns may be obtamed al thr South Coast
YMCA. the Laauna NlfUcl Athlrt1c Oub and 11
most local spon1ng &oods stores For infonnauon phone 8111 Pascual at
831-6618.
Soccer playen needed
The San Juan Soccer Club is now seeking bo) s ages I~ I I 10 fill five roster openings for 11s newly-formed tum.
Fonnformauon pbonccoach Tom Brabcck al 493-9399 or team man.ager Wendy Poiner at 492-3374.
Canyons wins baseball title
LONG BEACH -College of the a
Canyons scored two runs on a wild pitch
and an error in the top of the l 0th inning
Monda) for a 7-5 \.ICtory over Rancho
Santiago 1n 1he champ1onsh1p game of the st.ate
commun11y college baseball champ1onsh1ps al Blair
Fu.~ld.
Canyons, which 1s located an Valencia. has now
won three state championships since 198 l. The
Cougars finished their season with a 38-6 record
Rant ho Santiago finished 34-10
Earlier Monday at Blair Field. Canyons nipped
Rancho Sanuago 7-6 to force the second game. Rancho
San11ago began the day unbeaten an the double-
ehminat1on tournament while Canyons had lost once.
In the second game. Rancho Santiago pitcher
"'-a} ne G1lhs, who relieved starter David Salcido an the
fir!lt inning when Canyons scored four runs. heaved a
"'Id pitch to allow the go-ahead run 10 score an the I 0th
and the second run scored when catcher Ron Terrill
threw "'ildl) to third base
Ex-miler Ferguson dies
RANCHO MIRAGE -Richard m
Kirwan Ferguson. a native of Canada who
finished third 1n the "Miracle Mile" in
1954. has died of cancer at the Eisenhower
Medical Center. a hospital spokesperson said Monday
Ferguson was 54
Ferguson, who died Saturday. finished behind
Roger Bannister and John Lan~y 1n the mile run dunng
a track meet 32 years ago at Vancouver. B.C. While
Bannister and Landy became the first athletes ever lo
run the mile 1n faster than four minutes an the same
race. Ferguson was timed 1n 4:04.6.
Fer~uson and has wife. Tildie. moved to Palm
Sprangs in 1980 Ferguson was the owner of K w1k Kopy
Printing an Palm ~pnngs and Palm Descn.
Jersey Derby to Snow Chief
CHERRY HI LL. N.J . -Preakne'is ~
winner SnowCh1ef ma1n1ained h1i.cla1m as
the nation's top 3-year-old colt. s<:onng a
front-running victory over Mogambo 1n
the SI mallton Jerse) Derby at Garden State Park on
Monda>
Ridden by Alex Sohs. Snow C h1cf1ook the lead as
the I 0-horse field passed the wire the first ume and
ne,er gave 1t up 1n winning by two length!>. The son of
Rellected Glory covered the 11/•-mik t•vent in 2.03.
three-fifths of a second ofT the stai...e, record set by
Spend a Buck last 'year
Flying Pidgeon wins by a neck
INGLEWOOD -Flying Pidgeon ~
Oew West to challenge davortd thorou~h-
bred foe5 Monday and scored a surprise.
using a strong stretch dnve to wsn the
SJ00,000 Hollywood Invitational by a neck over Oahar
at Hollywood Park
A 7-1 ou1s1dcr in the betting. Fl)ang Pidgeon
traveled the 11• male<. over Hollywood Park's turf
course an 2 ~7
Television, radio
TELEVISION
4 JO p m -BASEBALL· Dodger\ at New
York Met<., Channel 11.
RADIO
4· 30 p.m -BASEBALL: Dodger!> at New
York Mets. KABC (790).
"-Tlood Sllootial Camp
A b<etbell &hoot.int camp will be boned by
iTnowned &hoot.ina C01cb Des Flood and
Wtttem Hilb coach 01"1 Hottman thia 1um~ mer.
The~ ,..,11 be two KU1ons o( the camp, July
7·11andJ'"y14-lhtan Anaheim loamon lobe announced
The camp 11 open 10 Junior luah. htlh Khool and colJtte playera.
Pncic of the camp is SI SO for one aeuion and Sl7S for bolb 1CSSiona.. Enrollment 1.1 limi~.
For more mfonnation, wnte 10 Dea Aood at
P.O. Bol 2787, Anab~m. 92804 or phone 827-9927.
Some of top buketbaJJ playen who have learned sbootina techniques from Flood tndudc
Johnny . Roaers of UC' Irvine, Tom Lewis of USC. Mike MatcbelJ of Fresno State and Man
Bttu.,,..saen of Nottt Dame, •Iona with many
past and pttWnt ht&)\ .cbool standoul.$..
ltule buketball camp
The second annual Larry Sundennan E.agk
basketball camp will be held from June 23-Juty I at Estancia High.
The camp, sponsored by the Costa Mesa Recrea11on Department, will run from 12 JO. l p.m. Mondly through Fnday
Boys entenna third through 10th gradt's and
llflS en1cnn1 thtrd th rough 12th grad1:1 arc eligible to pan1cipale.
Fee for the seven-day clinic 1s $80.
lns1rucuon will include fundamentals, a daily fuJI court 32-manute game, au«t speakers from
area b1&)l schools and colleges, and shoo11ng contests. Each pan1cipa1c will rccc1vt' a T-sh1n
Sunderman. a fonncr EstanCJa High boys
coach. as currently thr Orange Coast Collegr women's coach.
For more infonnauon, phone Trudy Nuzum
of the Costa Mesa LeisUtt Services at 7S4-5300.
Two would-be lndlanapolla 600 fan• turn
to their veralon of Indiana aurflng on Mon-
Goll toumameam
vi.c. Fenap•• c.1e1mcy Oattk
Entnn arc still be•na aootpted for lhe V1nc;e f~mo SP«aal Olympics Cclebnty Oolf
Oauie 10 be hdd TUHday, June 3, at the Los
Coyo1ts Country Club 1n Buena Patt.
Pttsent and fonner Rams 1nclud1na Eric Oicltcnon, Nolan Cromwell and Jack Youna-
blood as well aJ former boxen JefTY Quarry and
Carlos PaJomino and the Ram cheerleaders will J01n Fempmo, now of the Green Bay Packers,
at the event Tbr $200 fee includes a pos1o1oumamen1 luau
fcaturina the Tutt Polynesian show and a prc-1oumamen1 drivilll uhibttion and clinic by
Mike Austin, the 198.4 Ca.ltfomaa Golfer of the
Year and the the record holder for the lonacst
dnve hat 1n compcteuve aolf Pnzes 1nclud1na aarlane tackets wall aJso be 11vcn away and hole-an-one pnzes such as a 1986
Cadillac and a 1986 Stanon Turbo automobile
will be offered.
Proceeds from the event will ao to the Spec1aJ
Ol)'mp1cs for mentally retarded athleles
For1nfonna11on phone 962-3662 or96 l-673)
IAtenaJ Ho.ae tou·eey
.Entncs are being accepted unlll Sunday for
the inaugural Interval House GolfToumament,
Monday, June 16, al SeachfTCountry Club. The SI SO fee includes green fees, can, bo~
lunch. good1e bag. trophies. a chance to win door
pnzes and an awards dinner
A holt'-tn-one con lest will also offer a new car
10 thr winnt'r Funds from the tourney, which will bcain with
a shotgun Stan at 11 a.m .. Will ao to the fnterv1tl
House shcllen. which provide housing. counsel-
ing and other scrv1c.es 10 v1c11ms of family
'10ltncr
T cc plaquesare available for $200 and donors wall receive an engraved plaque 1n apprecaahon
For entry apphcat1ons and 1nformat1on phone
Carol Hubbard al 8~3837 or Nenie Sames :u
(213) S92-2960.
,.,....,., ...
day acroea a large puddle of rain water
which formed along the lnalde fence.
INDY RACE SET FOR SATURDAY ... From Bl
was in 1973 when 11 took three days to
get 1t run. The race was eventually run
on Wednesday 1ha1 year. with a crowd
estimated at no more than 30.000.
network would go li ve for a aturday
race.
on but "we don't have any concerns
or an}' desires at this lime to close the
track.''
The wet weather Monday cast a pall
over the sprawling speedway.
Empty beer cans, mildewing boxes
of chicken bones and other refuse
from the biggest rain-soaked p1cn1c 1n
racing were strewn across the
mudhole that just two days before
was a gleaming. grassy mecca of
racing.
Not even the trucks, vans and tars
that circled the 21/J·male oval Sunday
in a vain effort to dry the trac:k
between rainstorms made it onto the
soaked asphalt Monday
One of the biggest losers an 1he raan
was ABC. After being on the air for
five hours. 43 minutes on Sunday
with interviews and taped highlights
of previous Indy races, the network
decided Monday to go on the air only
with bnef penod1e updates on the
s1tuat1on until the rainout was an-
nounced.
Al first . Brodsky llald ABC' would
not cover the race Ii ve beyond
Monday. but would show 11 later on
tape Later. as ABC and race officials
huddled over the prospect of continu-
ing bad weather, Brodsky said he
couldn't speculate whether the
Only a few of the JJ drivers who
comprise the fastest field 1n auto
racing history even made 11 to the
speedway garage art'a on Monday.
Danny Sullivan. the defending
champion. remained holed up in his
room at the nearby Speedway Motel.
A call awakened him at 10:20 a.m ..
JUSt 40 minutes before the scheduled
sum of the race.
"I woke up early, took a look out
the window and saw the weather,"
Sullivan said. "Roger (Penske) called
and said 'Just slay in your room
There's no sense even leaving.'
"I didn't want to take a chance
working out, then finding out that I'd
have to dnve later. I'll do the whole
(90-minute workout) program later
today. It's really strange sleeping this
late. I JUSI laid down and dozed ofT."
With ltule else to occupy people's
time. rumors swept across the-ram-
soaked track Monday.
One repon said the Indiana Board
of Health was considering closing the
'lpeedway until the weekend because
the mass of garbage on the grounds
mtiht bnng out rats.
C>r Ted Danielson, assistant com·
missioner for health maintenance,
said routine inspections were going
There were also reports sn 1973 that
the track would be closed for health
reasons.
There were even hanls Monday that
the world's nchest and most pres-
llgjous race might be canceled.
Actually, the only event canceled
was the victory dinner. which nor-
mally is held the night afler the race
REGGIE •. \.
From Bl
prove himself.
Jackson already as two yean past
what many thouaflt would be his end.
Injured and playin8 in only 116
games. Jackson hit JUSt 14 homers
and drove in 49 runs in I 983. But, in
1984, he rebounded with 2S homers,
surpassing 1he 500 career mark. and
81 RBI. And he drove in 8S runs-with
27 homers last season.
Playing well apin this year (seven
homers. 18 RBI and a .319 averqe in
11 3 at-bats). Jackson says he feels
relaxed and capable of accep11n1 any
ad1ustments that his aae and the p me
demand.
Newport's White upset in French Open tourney
.. They had to doubt me last year. 1
was disappointed that they did. but t
was iettina pretty close to 40,"
Jackson, "'ho turned 40 on May I 8.
\atd. "I was mad at them, but they had
some reasons to doubt. But, hey, f ve
me some credit for beina Reg1e. P.\RJ~ (AP)-f ourth-'i<'eded Claudia
Kohde·Kil\<:h ofWe<st (iermany led a parade of
top-ranked women into the \eCond round of the
f rc:nl h Open today with a 6-4 fl I victor} over
\mc:m.i·~ Lon McNeil
J he onll seeded player 10 lo\C a\ the ~cond day o play on Roland Garros' red clay
court\ commenced was Newport Beach rt51·
dent Ann<' White. stedcd I Sth "ihe lo1t to
uura G1ldcme111er of Peru. 6-1 . 6-3
M.in1na Navrattlova. the top-~ded
woman. be&an play later aptnsl Italy'' Anna-
Mana C ccch1n1. Fif\h·seedcd Hana Man-
dhkova of C1cchoslovak1a opened apinst
Yuaoilav1a·, Sabnna Ooles.
Two h1V\·stedcd men. Sweden's Mats
W1landcr(No 2)and P1ns1an f1vontc Yann1ck
Noah rNo 4l. also opened play, W1lander
...
aga1nc;1 Racl'cirdo Acuna of Chile and Noah
aa,a1nst Frenchman Tank Benhabtles.
Other seeded players postm1 early v1c·
iuno tt>da) included No. 8 Manuela Maleeva
of Bulgana. 6-l. 6-2 over Katenna Skronska of
( rC'Choslo,ak1n . and Amencan Kathy Rinaldi.
No 7. who beat another U.S. player. Hu Na.
6 I 6-3 .
Maleeva ·s ~•Ster. unseeded Katerina
Malce,a. also won. ~at1n1 Amencan Terry
Holladay 6-2. 6-3
White, whose ch1ef cla1m to fame perhap"
has been her appearanct 1n a chna1ng white
body s.u1t at last year's Wimbledon· cham·
p1onsh1ps, appeared to ~ chmbana back into
her match ap1nit G11dcme1ster when disaster
<struck
l Jp a krv1ce brtak at 2-1 and \Crv1na at •
30.30. White thouaht ihe had an ace. but the
Judae rul<'d the ball out White then double-
faulted
Kohde-.Kllsch had httle trouble w11h
McNeil, despite h11t1 na on JU St 64 percent of her
first serve~. She outSC'orcd the 22-year-old from
Housto n 64-47 and broke her servr four times.
10 just once for McNeil
On Monday. as the two-week 1ournamcnt
~n. Ivon Lcndl. the men's top ~. easily
dereated We!tt Germanf'i Michael Westphal
6-1. 6-3. 6-4
(hns Fvert Lloyd. the women·, second
seed. al'o moved into the ~ond round w11h a
center coun v1etory over French Junior
champion Ceca le Calmettc. 6--0. 6-1 And third·
seeded leffi GrafofWcs1 Germany. a 16-year-
old who ha' won four toumament1 1n a row.
took her 21st consecutive match wuh a 6-1 . 6--0
' 1ctol) over Andru Beuner
"I thank I'm pl1yin& very well," Graf said.
I think I have a aood chance. not to win. but to
reach the quaners I'm feeling very well."
Dons Becker. the men's No 3 seed. beet
Fran<'c's Jerome Poucr 6--0. 6-3. 6-0, and
ukova. the v.omen's Stll1h Sttd. defeated Sa~n• 1mmond of haly. 6-4. 6.2
Th~ only Sttd to IOK wu Amcncan KAthy
Jordan. No 11. who WllS upset by fellow
.\mcncan C'arr11llc 8enJ1m1n 1·6. 6-2. 6-l
Amonf the winners Monday was Carltna
Bu'l\<'11 of( anada. the 13th women's seed. who
was makina her lint tournament apparancc
i•n<'c her father, John. di.Cd of cancer tns than
t~o v.rcks aao he beat Catherine ranv1er of
Fnmcc 7-S. 6-'
....
It ustd to bother Jackson that his
even1ual role an the American Leque
would be as a dcs1anated hitter. N"ow
that this fate has overtaken him. he is
making that adJUStmcnt 11 well.
"I guess God 1s watchina over m~
makina sure my attitude s\lys In the
n"1t spot," Jackson wd. .. Your
mind hes a lot to do "'1th tC. I'm not
th1nkm1 about why I'm noa playina
more. "'hY I'm no1 dOtfll l.his or thlt
"At 40. you've 101 to play whm
you fit in. You don't deal anymore.
You're JUJt hoptna to tct into lbc
pmc. whether it's u a DK. 1 role
player or a manqtti&t chanar late 1n
the a,amc I know I'm not aoina to
catch many fl y ba.llunymort,"
•
~ AMERICAN LEAGUE
._L,___ --
Texas stays
afloat at top
of ALWeSt
In cavlglia awakens
~lth a homer . triple
to lead Rangers, 7-2
From AP dJ1patcbes
ARLINGTON, T.:xas -Pete ln -
cav1gha. who had struck out 1n 10 ot
has previous 12 plate appt"arances.
drove 1n three run~ with a homer and
tnpk Monday night a' the I exa\
Ranaers beat the Chicago White 'iox
7-2 .
By wanning, the Rangen ma1n-
1a1ned their half-game lead over the
Angels an the Amcncan League West.
Gary Ward also drove an three runs
with a single and double.
A.l\er sinking out has first tnp
against former Ranger Dave
Schmidt, 0-2. lncavaglia hit his ninth
home run of the 'leawn with one out
in the fourth inning to give Texas a
1-0 lead.
Wath the score lied 1-1 and the
bases loaded and two out in the fifth
lncav1gl1a swung at a wild pitch for a
strikeout, but made 11 safely to first
and Orlando Mercado scored to make
it 2-1 . Ward followed with a two-run
single as the Rangers chased Schmidt,
who was making has first stan of the
season after 13 relief appearances.
The Whale Sox chased Texas
starter Jose Guzman. 4-5. an the sax th
when they scored a run on a pair of
walks and Tim Huleu's infield hit but
Greg Hams worked out of a bascs-
loaded. no-out Jam to squelch the
rally
CHICAc;Q
T 0418\n )ti
Hui.II 10 llalnat rt GWatkr lo Fltlo. c 88onlllell Kittle dn Guinan n
C.11991$ cf Halr$1on H
T...is
* TlEXAS
e1Hllb4 4 0 0 0 McD.,..lcf 4 0 l l Flettllr n S 0 l I 08rletl lt> S 0 l 0 lllCVOlla rl S 0 I 0 GWrlglll rl 2 0 0 0 Ward If 3 l 0 0 Petlork dll 4 0 3 0 Harr all ?I> 2100 ~ceooc 1 0 0 0 8UKllla3b lS l t l Tehb
Score bv lftlllMl
•b, 111>1 s, 2 0
3 0 l 0
2 , 0 0
' 2 2 l 0 0 0 0
' 0 3 l '0 0 0
'0 l 0 4 l I 0
' 0 1 0 ,.711 6
Olkll.. 000 011 000-2 THU 000 1>0 lOll-7 Getn4 Wlnnlno lt8t -Nona E-Gulllan DP-<llkaoo 1, TuH l L08-<111ceoo 12, TuH ' 28-Fletchar. Ward, 8~1\ele. Herrell 38-tllCnlotla Hlt-lncevl9Jla (9) SB-Wero \Sl. Canoe!Oll (131, McDowell 110). Gu•llen (31 S-TOllHon. FlalCller
CNceee ScM\ldt L 0·2 Al..,, Clarll Tan•
4 '1 3 ' 11 ) 1
l, l '
4
1 , I 4
0 0 I 1
Guzm.nW,4 S S S 2 S Harri\ S.7 4 ' O 0 O Gurmen ollcf'le<I to 7 t>eller\ In ,,.,. \l•ln WP-Scnmk!I P8-Fl\lo. Umolra\-Homa, Ford F1r\I Garcia, Sec·
OM, KoK, Tlllrd, Reed T-3 17 A-16,619
RedSoi6,
Indlans3
CLEVELAND-Don Baylor hit a
two-run homer and Bill Buckner
added a solo shot a!> the iioston Red
Sox beat the Cleveland I nd1anc; 5-3
for the1re1ghth vu.:tory in the last nine
games-
Starter Bruce Hurst. 4-3. hm1tcd
Cleveland to three run!> on seven hits
through SI'< 1nn1ngs He struck out
seven and raised h1!> Amencan
League-leading total to 84. three more
than teammate Roger Clemens
Bob tank). the litth Red Sox
patcher. got the la~t tour outs for h1'>
eighth S3\.C
Hurst g1,cn a 4-0 lead after four
innings. lcn with runners on ~ond
and third with none out 1n the
!>t'.venth. Tim l ollar ga' c up a
!>iCnfice 0} to Brett Butler that made
at 4-3 beorc tcY.an ended the inning.
The Red Sox added an insurance
run in the eighth when reliever Re~ae
Ratter hat Marc Sullivan wr th a pitch
with the bta'>CS loadt•d
aonoN
8arrtll 21> 8090\ )I>
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Brewen4,
RoyaJaO
l<ANSAS CITY, Mo. -Danny
Darwin. making his first st.art of the
season after 12 rchef ap_pt"aranccs.
patched a four-hatter at the Kansas
City Royals, a team which tra-
d1t1onally gives him fi ts. and led the
Milwaukee Brewers to a 4-0 victory.
Darwin. 3-1. entered the game with
a 1-6 lifetime r\.-cord against Kansas
City but did not allow a hit uotal
George Brett's two-out double an the
fourth. The veteran right-hander
struck out five and walked three.
It was a continuation of offensive
ineptitude for the Royals, who scored
only two runs in a 17-inning victory
the previous day over Chicago.
The Brewers nicked C harlie
Leibrandt, 4-3, for a run in the fi rs t
innina ':"hen Rand)'. Ready doubled,
took third on Cecal Cooper's single
and scored on a double by Dale
Sveum.
* MILWAUKIE£ KANSAS CITY
Gantnr 21>
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Second, Coonav, Tlllrd, Palermo T-2:21 A-40,037
Marlnen7,
Oriole. 6
SEATTLE -Harold Reynolds
drove in thrcc·runs with three hits.
incl uding a pair of doubles. and Jim
PTcslcy hit a two-run homer to lead
the Seattle Mariners oveT Baltimore
7~6. ending the Onolcs' fivc-pme
winning streak.
Reynolds. hittingj ust .16 7 since has
May 14 recall from Oass AAA
Calgary, had an RBI double an the
third and had a two-run double wtth
the bases loaded in the sixth. He also
stoic two bases as the Mariners broke
a three-pme losing streak.
Mark Langston. J-4, pitched the
first six innings, giving up nine hits
and three runs. Matt Young worked
the final two innings for bis fi rst save,
giving up a run in the ninth on an RBI
single by Mike Young.
The Mariners built a 7-1 lead
against Storm Davis. 4-3. and then
held on despite 11.etting outhit 15-10.
Seattle took a 3-0 lead in the third.
Spike Owen led off with a triple and
scored on Reynolds' double. Johnny
Moses then tnplcd into the righ t-field
com er and scored on the play when
first baseman Eddie Murray mishan-
dled Lee Lacy's relay.
Dave Henderson singled and
scored on Presley's sixth homer to
give Seattle a 5-0 lead an the fo unh
Balta more scored in the sixth on an
RBI single by Juan Bonilla before the
Manners added two runs m the
bottom of the sixth. Singles by
Henderson and Presley. a sacrifice
2hd an intentional walk to Bob
Kearney loaded the bases. and Re-
)'nolds doubled off the nght-field wall
for a 7-I lead. • IALTIMORIE HATT'-•
S,.,.lbv ct Lacv rt
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Seattle'• Harold Reynolcb la
taaed out at home by Or-
loftil catcher Rick Dempeey.
DETROIT -Dave Collins !>1ngled
in Tom Brookens with the winning
run in the 10th inning as the Detroit
Tigers defeated the Oakland A's 5--4
The Tigers. who scored twice an tht'
bottom of the ninth to force extra
innings, got stan ed an inning later
when Pat Sheridan singled and
Brookens walked on a 1~2 pttch.
Shcndan was thrown out at third
when Lou Whitaker attempted to
bunt the ru nnerc; along, but C'olhn~
fo llowed with has game-winning h11 to
right
Withe Hemande1. 2-2. picked up
the victor) with two innings of relief
work wh1lt' Jay Howell. 0-4. took the
loss.
The Tiger\ tied the game in the
bottom of the ninth on a two-run
double b> John Grubb. Whitaker
singled w11h one out. went to third on
a double by Collins and both runners
came home on Cirubb's double off
Howell. the fifth Oakland patcher.
OAKLAND
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OW.it 000 010 012 1-S Ona out w,.,.n winning run scor.o G•m• Wlnnlno R81 -COlllM l2l L08--0.ki.no 7 Derro11 14 18-Javl~ COC1in1, Grubt> MA-COl4!\ 161 S8-MDavit 141
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McC~rld Tll•rd, Oenklno*' T-3 41 A-?2,906
Twlns9,
Blue Jays l
MINNEAPOLI S-Mark Ponugal
pitched eight strong innings and
broke has personal seven-game losing
streak and Kent Hrbek hit two home
runs. leading the Minnesota Twins
past the Toronto Blue Jays 9-1.
Kirby Puckett also hat a two-run
homer in Mi nnesota's 13-hit attack.
Puckett. who drove in three runs and
scored three ttmes. and Mickey
Hatcher each had three hats.
Portugal. 1-5. gave up nine h11s and
recorded his second major-league
victor) and his first since he beat
Boston last Aug. 31 . Portugal. who
struck out three and walked three.
pttched eight scoreless innings but
lost has shutout on Jesse Barfield's
10th homer leading off the nan th.
Ponugal allowed a single and a
walk after Barfield'~ homer. and
reliever Keath Atherton got the final
three outs. Do}lc o\kxandcr, '·2.
took thc loss. giving up c;1x run~ on
eight hm 1n 6 1-3 inn1n~s.
Puckett gave the Twins a 3-0 lead
when he rnnnectcd for ht'i 14th
homer 1n the fift h after Cireg Gagne
drew a one-out walk. Al Wood~. who
hit a sacrifice flv in the third. followed
with a <ilngle but 'itrainl·d ht!> right
hamstnng on thl' pla) and mu:hcd
firc;t by crawling lhc final 50 IL-et to
fir'lt bac;c
TORONTO
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ANGELSRALLYTONIPYANKEES,8-7. • •
From Bl
Fanter &Ot the last two OUt\ fot ht\ til"tt ~ve in lht"
o\menclln Le. aue <iince I 976
fhe '\ ank«\ had taken a 7-6 lead an the c1 hth on an
RBI <;1na.Je by Don Matunal> Bobb Meacham was hat a
pa tch wtth one out took 'iC ond on a grounder and ~orro
on Mamn&ly'~ oppo 11r·ficld blooper to IC'f\
Ro n Haney'! two-run homer, ha ~cond of the
~n, hOrd th<' Yanket into a 6-6 t1C' 1n 1hr st\Cnth
Hl'i\t')' homrrt<tanera s1nalrb)' Make l.Jsler. who had hit
a thrtt·run homer an thr fin.I inning
Tl\e \n&r1' overcame n 4-I dclk1t w1th a li\t··run
ntll) an lht' \l\lh lfl•nst lour pall ht'r--{ 1.H) l>cll•~ t~ oil
with a sanalt ap1n t J~ Nacl.ru and-Ruppert Jon'-''
walkW. Rcu1e Jackson then dre"' " v.alk from .\I
Holland. loadana lhr basts
George Htndnck. who hat a solo homer an the <Aonti
1nn1n .. ptttcd Bnan f isher w1th a t"A-o-run Jou hie do~n
the thtrd·baw hnc. DouJ t)c( in~ followed ....,uh anothl'r
1~0-run double, and Old. hofield added a ucnfict n,
ofT Bob h1rlcy
H as~y·!i RBI for<'C'llUI h d &JH'n the \ ankt'n a 4· I
lead an the third
Rookie slanis door
Astros · Deshaies
puts a lid on Cards.
whiffs I 0 batters
From AP dl1pa&ebc1
ST LOU IS -Denny Walhn&
drove tn two ru ni, wi th a sroundcr and
a single and Terry Puhl had three hits
Monday nalht. teadana the Houston
Am<» to a 4-l tnumph over tht St.
LOUIS ( ardin11I~ ror rookie Jim
Dcshaae~· OrM ma,or-lcaaue v1ctol"} Dcsha1e~. I· I. mak1n1 has fifth
c,areer 1;13n, struck out 10 and walked
three before g1v101 way to Frank
D1Pino after a leadon walk to Ozzie
m1th in the e1g.hth inning. D1P1no
recorded h1i ~ond SOtve with two
hatless innings.
o\fler the Cardinals took a 1-0 lead
an the second inning when Terry
Pendleton smgled and Make Heath
doubled ham home. De haaes !>titled
down and reu~d 11 con~cut1ve
batters.
The left·hander struck out tt'te side
an the first inning and later fanned
three in a row when he got Tomm)'
Herr to end the third in ning and Jack
Clark and Tito Landrum to 'ltan the
fourth
HOUSTON
Doran ?o Pu111r1 Crur W HalCl'lar If WaHlno 31>
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ST. LOUIS
COiemen If
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T-143 A-20 099
Padres 9,
Ezpos6
MONTREAL Hot-hilling
Kevin McReynolds drove 10 three
runs with a tnple and a two-run single
and Graig Nettles and Steve Garvey
hat consecutive home runs an the
ninth 1nn1ng to back Dave
Dravecky's nine-hit p11ch1ng as the
San Diego Padres defeated the Mon-
treal Expos 9-6
Dra\eCk), 5-3. allowed only five
h11s after the second inning an
wanning his third straight st.an. Five
of the Montreal runs were unearned
as a result of two errors by San Diego
third baseman Nettles. However.
Nettles contributed an RBI single in
the second inning as well as his eighth
home run of the season 1n the ni nth.
Costa Mesa .. .,. ....
17ltl & Somo""° ..... 1i9ley
I ;!ti ' Mt.non o-tle't ehlll ...._f*1 & Albet1 • Clrda K
t40!'bo< & Wilton 165' Scinto Ano
Newport & 0.1 Mo•
Sutlllo-r & fo'""''" c.t..' HQrt>of & Adom• w .. ~1ttl & N.wport ~lay !>•
0.My't Horbof & C.•la•
17tt.&Newport
Hen•hew't Uoitlv•
Hewbo1 & War Hllttaren li~u., fSQ 17tt. Ma ........
17tt. " Fvlt.rto.. Merle c.te.fl ....
17ltl& f.nM ltth ~lemtVf'el't
19!!1&"·-........
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~.,...._.
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The Padr~. whu blew ii S-1 le d
when the Expos scored rour ume\ 1n
the ~cond inning.
Tim Flannery and Tony Gwynn
opened the inning ag.un t rookie
reliever Jeff Panell (}.I with a walk
and a single. re,pt't"tavely. and aq-
vanccd on McReynolds' 0} ball
TerT) Kennedy'' grounder ~ored
Flanner; w1th the go-ahead run and
Nettles singled Gwynn home
McReynolds. who 1s h1111ng 447 in
has last 38 at-bats, dad much of Lhe
early damage for San Diego He
tnpled home one of the Padres' two
tuns in the first inning. sconns on a
grounder by Kennedy and delivered
a two-run single in a three-run second
that chased Montreal starter Ja}
Ttbbs.
• SAN OIEc;Q
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Umotrn-o~. Wenclll\ladt Flrll , Tata Crewtord, Second, C Wiiiiams. Third T-2 41 A-11.62'
Braves 9,
PJrates 4
PITTSBURGH -Ted Sammon'
hit a t1e-break1ng ..acnfice 11, and
Dale Murph)' hned a two-run '>1ngh.•
as the o\tlanta Bra' ec; tu med tour
e1ghth-1nnmg Pittsburgh error\ 1010
five runs and an 9-4 \ICto"
The victory was Atlanta's ninth 10
11s last 11 games and mar~ed Brave\
Manager Chuck Tanner's return to
Pittsburgh. where he managed for
nine seasons unul being fired la~t
October. The Pirates made SL'< error\.
three by shortstop Samm) Khahfa
and lost their fifi h strnaght game
W11h the Pirates leading 4-l on
homers b> JU Reynold$ and Tony
Pena. Khaltfa th~w wildly o n Gerald
Perry's rouune srounder to start tht .
ea&hth and relieveT Bob Walt ~ked
Ken Obc'rkfell.
* ATLANTA .11TTsautlOH .. , ....
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G•~ WIM•l>O lt8t -S.mmont c I) ii E-n. •'• J 8ra.m W41111. It Revno!OI ,. OP-At .. nta l L08-.Allent• lO P1llSl>urtn 6 111-•arn.ra1 Olla<"kl.. Maull! H•-tt lte-tnO<cls .,, T P9ne m. Vlr .. (6) SI-Mor-• St S-lall·ard SF-Slmmotl\ Ramoret
... JN JOJC>f>ntll McM.Jr•rv Annmc11r w 1 1 Ga roar
~lttMv•9'1
I~ H ••R .. SO
l
2
s ' • ' l 0 0 0 0 '~
0 0 0 I O t
2 0 0 0 ,
llllQOa<I 7 • ) ) ' • Wali. L 1 l ? 3 1 S 0 J 0 '
C•mnts 0 0 0 0 I 0
Guentt I I ) l I I I I Clamenl\ DllChecl IO I O.lltr I,, Illa ••11 • Urno1r•~-Mome, Ov>ek . Flr\I, Runoa Sec·; """ Pell~ Tnlfo El'I04'1 • T-1 S7 A-14 102 I
Cubs 9,
Reds6
CHIC .\GO -Jod)' Davis hat a
three-run homer and p11chcr Dennn1
fa·kersle> had 1 two-run shot to lead
the Chicago Cubs toa 9'"6 victory over
C 1nc1nna11. snapping the Reds' four-
game v.o1nnin& streak.
Da' 1\' eighth homer of lhe season
capped a li\c·run first inninJ.
Ltkersle} 's bla5t. ht$ second ttus
~al>On and third of his career.
lina~hcd a four-run third after Cincin-
nati 11ed 11 with five runs an the
second
CtNCINNA Tl
Miiner cl ltOHll> Po•tr 0 vanal>lor. P•rkl!' rf
E'•1"" 11 8etl JI> CnCDcn 21> St11wM n 80<11 c Soroo Tarrv o Jlowdll on Pr•ta o
Onie< 2t> Tet9R
* CMICAGO
H r lllll
4 I I I
3 l 1 l
0 0 0 0 l 0 1 1
S I 7 l
f 0 I 0
) 0 0 0
l l l 0
• 0 0 0
• 0 I 0
0 0 0 0
0 l 0 0
I 0 0 0
0 0 0 0
I \ 0 0
0vns1oni1 LOPI'" SndDf'O 21>
Mofelnd rf
Ovr'llm II>
M4Jtpftry c USmltllo J0."'11 c Traio 31> Eck•nlv o Frei.., o
Dll'n.r cf
ll •I• T ..... SCerellv ....._
lll>r"lll s 0 1 0 3 I 2 0
4 1 , 0
l I 0 0
3 1 I t
1 I 0 0
0 0 0 0
4 I I lo
• l l t
l I l 1
0 0 0 0
l 0 0 0
n'''
Clfldllrletl OSI -•1-6 ~ 594 -__ ,
Gama W•M•flil A81 -Tnllo {I) OP-C.nc1nna1 1 Cnte.aoo' Loe-<tnc.nnetl
1 C~aoo 4 78-JI-TrtflO. OumfOfl Hllt-J Dav., It Par_., 1101 E~er~ C1l .. S8-l.0Hi •
c lflcllwlietl Ttrrv LO·
Pr•c• Powtw" °"" ..
)
J
' ' ' ) 0
0 0
' 4 0 I
0 0
I
I ,
Ec"aniev w 7 l 1 I s ~ ' • F•11•~ 0 0 0 0 I 0 LtSmol'1 S,7 1 1 I I 2 2 Ecfltrll4!\f ottcnao 10 2 Dallar\ In 1119 1111 Fru 1er 011cnao to 1 baller In ~• 1111 Urnolr11-Hom4!, Froammlno, F1r11, ~r111,
S.Cond De vii, Tt'llrd. IC it>ler T-? 47 A-7S,723
TOMORROW'S
RESULTS
TONIGHT
Orange County's only stoclc market
closing prices will be available in the
Doily Pilot at the following selected
stores and news rocks.
Why wait until tomorrow when you can
find ovt tonight on the strtHJt no later
than 6:00 pm.
Store owners who want the late stock
editions call ... Single Copy Sales
Dir«tor a1 642-4321 .
Corona del Mar . ......_ .
~u c-~wy
o..i.... •
SOii ~ s.o.. looqu.n ..... C-"-u.t-s ...
'-'!Ny l Mor,_. ...
• N.wpener '"" alft ~· hett lombot .. & lloc:\. ao,. • o...-•\Mt'* Stet•
(OOll !Ny ' Orct.Jd
Laguna Beach
• •'..nhMaftet
9-.octwoy & "-" • Olde I(
81~ Cle. • ..,,,.
COCKt """" • ''"'° • McCcallit Dr119 St ...
79lfot .. 1
• 76wft c_,......,, l•d
Newport hach
..-...a.yov~ '°<•ftt C-1 Hw., ~"'--" -& lolbo.> ll¥d
MlftVN IClft\ '10<: ... tlo s.,.,. .....
'-*awey
~· '°"'~., ........ "
eolboo ltvd ' »ti ~ s,....-~ 3l11 & hlboo tMf us ,...,Offk. • ......,.. ''°<•*" ,_. ~
Me<'ww 4-tlaft>OO It
Huntington Beach . ...,....
~'""""-· 0r.,.. .. ,
... ....., ... ,0o ... ~
ll •tin<M MGniat .. ~,~
J.n •• " ......... ,
llol1o O..Co & Hetl
~ .... ~Gold-9&W-
l \Idly Mo.ii-'°"° Oleo & He-I """. ~.,. W-r & 'oc•lo< ( OOJt "'-•o...,.
Golo.nwe.t & Wom•" s...o. .. ~-&clho Clloc:o & w-• 7 ,.._
Oc>io.n-t & M<f~ us .... ,QHtc. 6741 WorMr
O!+I & 'ocifl< Coo.i ~.., v ....
\p~doleAEd ..... w .. n .. c.m .. Uq ....
WOf,,., & ~doi.
Irvine .......
~c+. & Jomborw c-. Comf"'•&MckA,..._
IC!fflbo<'w & 1£,.IOI
0.l'ny'• ... 'OI , Scnv ......
"'""-•...ct. ~ ..
~,..,..._,,..,
t...w..&~ ,...,. WeyM A..,_, ""-'_... u.itt-5-.
Met.ata.&u... ........
,.._vte Klftt ,,_,......,
..._.\Mt_
,._ & ""'-' ., .........
.. ii.lo! & ~ Ano
• Shwe-
... ~ & ,,,.. ... ,,._
~-----------------------------------------------------="-------------
..
~ t I . . • •
MAJOtt UAGU• ST ANOINOS A~l .. 911e
Ttxu
A"91B
O•ktefl<I
K•n••' Cllv Chlc•go MinM\Ota
!>Hiiie
WUT 01\/ISION
W L Pct. n 21 sn n n $00
21 14 .. ,
10 23 <16S
II 74 •29 11 77 3t6
16 79 l56
EAST 01\/ISION
29 u
21 16 2S 17 n 10 ,, Jl
11 JO
G8
2 ,
) ,
s•' 1
I > 31.,
6 1 1
1
8o'1on
New Vork
8allll'n()(I
MllweukH
Clevela"<I
Oetroo
Toronto 20 1~ , .. 10
~Y'\ Sc_,
Aneet\ I Ntw Y Ori• 1
Detroit S, 0.klencl • 10 1M•llO'
Bolton S Cleve•enci J
Monnuota • Toronto t
Saani. 1 8att1mort • Tnat 1 Cn·cago 7
Miiwaukee 4 Kan'" C t\ 0
Tecla\t'\ Ganw\
BOl•on Browr1 1 11 at C•t•t•eno I ~•talon
2 31. "
Toronto '"'" J-31 .or M•Mf\Ola t81.11Cntr O·l) n
Cn.caoo (Oot\on 7 41 al T •••' Ho"on 7 2t
MllwaukH •H•Ovtra ' •r at 1t.anH\ C11v
IJaCk'on 7-0) n
Onlv oemin \Cilf<luled WadMMlll\t'' Gama1
Oetroll el .A~' n
B•ll1more at Oakland
8ol1ori at Cteve1at10
Clllcaoo at Tex&\ n
MllwaukM al K """'' C •tv ,., Toron10 at Mlnnl\ole. n
New York at Seatlla n
Hattonal LMOU•
WEST 011/ISION w '1ou1ton ,,
San F•anc•\CO 74
Atlente 73 San O•ev<> 71
Oodeefl 17
Cil1C•Mat 16
EAST 01\/ISION
Ne .. Yori. 27
1\1\Dl'lrf!• 24
CrhC400 ,,
\I Lou•\ •• P 11\buro" IS
Dni·•Ot 0" • I\
MeNSIY'\ S<Of'et
Altanta 9 P tt\burgto 4
Cn•(aoo 9 c.nc•M•• 6
HOu\lon 4 St L·•U·\ I S.n 0•190 9 MOl11•U I 6
On1• Otml\ \Cnt!Oull!O
Toda\t'\ G.,,,.,
L
18 19
10 20
77
14
11 ,,
1• 74 n
7•
Pct G8
51' ssa
~· I ,
~ ' l SOC> 1 ' 400 6 '
111
S9S . ' 41S 11 1
400 ,,
J9S 17
JU '2 ')
D~n •Wtir" J J at New "f •• (,oooe11
1 ~
(inr ,.,""' 81own1nw t ~ ot (n1t'&OO ' "'
7 l Sao 0·~0 1 Haw~'"' I l 41 Mv "<!O
tjh•f!tl'I ) ] I " s,,,, Frant' vo t fc. r1J11.uw ~ f 1 "' orhlt1C'Ut11Dtt'"
l'<vdlon 2 lt " Atlanta Srn11r 1 4 •' 1>111\Du•oh Rtu\c Ill'
I )I n HOu\tO~ li neol>f'r I ''~· \I I U•"' •CI• 0 ''
w....-'l'•G•mti ~ ti New Yorll, n
Hou\tOI' et SI LOYIS
Clnci~tl a1 Chlogo
S.n 01eoo et MOlltrMJ, " S.n Francl\co at Pnll~onla n
Allanre el Pilt\bl/(Oh n
AM•IUCAN LE AGU~
A,,...s I, Yanlc"' 7
CAL.1 .. 0AHl.A NIW YORK
''""Ill Perri' cl • 1 I o Burletn on I 0 0 0
RJonHll 2100
Oowt1lng 11 2 1 I 0
Jovntr 10 } 1 2 7 RJCk\n on 1 I o o
Miiier cl I 0 I 0
Htndrcl< rt ) 1 1 l
OeCnn Jo 4 t 1 7
Wilfong 111 2 0 0 0
Grlcll 20 2 0 7 0
!>CMlfldO ) 0 1 1
Boot1e c 4 0 1 0
Grtll•v cl
RnolPh ?D MtllQIV lb
PHQUt 11 E"'" rt RHnd•n ct
He\\t\/ dh
w1n111ao11
POllUIO lb l(o.n<k on
Wvr1t>11•• 1
Mtcllm \\
aD r II bi
s 0 ' 0 , 2 ' 0 l 1 I I
• 0 0 0
I > l J
1 0 I 0
I I 1 l
1000
• 0 0 0
' 0 ' 0 ~ 0 l 0
J l I 0
Total\ n I ,, • Ttt•h u 1 'I ,
Calltomi• 010 OOS 001-1
Haw Yon JOI 000 210-t
Ge,,,. Winn.nu R81 -Jovnf'• *• OP-<:ahlornoa 1 Ntw Yor• I LOB Ce '
lorn a 6 New Yor~ 10 28-Henor•<' Ot>C •n<ei
M•l>t' HR-£Hle• !) Hrl!dricl< 161 HUHv
21 JO•"f!' t1> SB -Pell \ 2 I S Pa.oua
~F-Scl!Qht•d
IP H R ER 88 SO
Caltfomla I I • • MW•ll WI I I I J 10
For~r•r ~ l l I 0 0 0 0
New VOl'lc I 7 0 JN•e~ro ~ I J A
HOiten() 0 0 I ' I 0
!' lhef 0 1 I 0 0
Sn1rlh 11) 0 0 0 I
I l 2 I 0 0 R·gntll· L • 7
Ho1tano p1rc11eo 10 1 oauer '" tnf 6th F """
011c11ed to 2 ballet\ +n '"' W• HBP Meo~"•"' 1bv M Wllll WP-M Wiii
umo1fH-Honne ~a'' ~ ·~' ~chulO!~ !>~
01\d M O'' t\01"' T ,,,ro MC It.tan
T J04 A lO HS
A"91f av•r•l'f~
ITr.reutfl Mandav'' Gamel 8ATTING
A8 It H HA ltBI ,.cl
Nor•on " ) 6 0 4 ll3
J .. cu o1 '1) 71 l6 1 .. )19
Jovner 181 JJ ~7 16 ., llS
Gr.rtt n ll 1) 7 4 31S
OOw"' "''.> I~ 2'1 .. s 24 '" 8"'r .,\O" 97 11 ,. I 9 2'7
S.1'01 t'ld IOS 14 1'I • ,, 776
w 1tono 100 tJ 77 , I] 710
Hf"0'·'• •u t7 1S 6 ,. 2"6
J01"f'\ 11)7 1• 1S 7 16 ,.~
BOO<tf' 23 u 29 1 17 1Jt
Pit••~ 14 1 1~ l7 2 IS n r
OtC ~"' 164 16 31 s 74 21•
M .1 r ir •l • 9 0 ) 20'
ro1al\ 1Sl2 ,,. 00 S4 114 211
,.ITCHING
IP H 88 so W LERA
w .u '" 08 ,, 61 4 4 ) 20
CO•Cl'" 7S 18 9 14 0 I 360
Mc Ca\• 60 60 77 se J·) 44&
S•a•nr S4~ S9 II 24 •·3 461
R'omctro•C"' so ' .. lS 7S ) I H S
~~r-st~r 11 • n 1 ll 3 I H9
MOO"P 19 ,. 9 IS I l s 71
Brvoen 2• ' 13 16 19 7· I s~
Su II on 19 SJ • 21 7 • 1 J9
Cano~1ar1" , 6 ' 0 00 1800
Tofall ltS 3'S lS4 1'4n-n 4.fl
Sav•• Moort 7 Cort:>fll • Fonrer
Community cllh"9
STATE CHAMPIONSHI,.
11t Blalr Field, L-llMdlJ
"il!'llf' ot Cenvon\ 1 1 llancr.o Sanlleoo 6 S
C•"•O"' •1n1\llO •• lt & Rancno ~ant•IOO •'
l• 0
Hltfl ..mMI
Clfl Sll'M'1NAU
IT .. 'l'•O..-.u:m ••• Simi Vallev 12S·l l "' E.•p.,ran11 17l l 11 11
Cal Stale Fuu.tton
FOl'ltane 111 11 ., El Ooraoo 1n SI at
Fullerton Cotiev. l ·A
Nto Mna OJ ., .. , lomPOC 111·11 •I CAorlllO
H191'l
El Stoundo 126·$ II W\ Wt\lff'n (74•41 al
C.ithar S••c!lum
2•.A •• ,,,,. (,0 , ., Mlu1on VltlO 11• ,I et vc
1rv1,..
Sauvu• ( II t 1 • • Monlclalr t 23· $J et Vpleno
Memottel Ptr~
Swlm MMtef~
(at MlnMll Vletll
SUNO.AY'S RISULTS
MMol
100 ,no meo -1 .Alex B•~M Laurentian
u 2 04 74 ' Darren Waro. Fullerton, 2 0617. 3
Mall MCClull<ev Mlu1on Voeto. ?'(II t9
100 tr-1 Matt BIOfto• GOIOtn Bear. SI 16 , RtnoY Ever•tt ConcOfd PleUtftl HIM," ll. l
Vl<ll"''"' Cernv Manta AquahC S2 39
700 o-eut-1 Steve Benriev GOiden W8'1,
7 ?l 41 7 ,.,u B1umann. Laurentia n U . 7 24 01.
J Jonn Motte• SoC•I 2 27 11 1 S00 tr-l Jeff Kolloff. tnou\Jrv HIN\,
IS J17'I 1 Oen Joroen~. Sen OleGO IS '3 90, J 11.rtur WOtOel MIUIOn Vi.to 15 Sl 12
•OO tree relav-1 Mtn lon \/WIG '.A· ILoe>eJ
Marcn1 McCtu'"'" Wo1oa1J J.34 st. 2 Sanlt
Claro l 31 to l Min ion Vleto 8' l.J9 90 w-?00 1no meo -1 Kethv Smtrh, Stenlor<I,
2 21 9t 2 Amv ~aw Minion Vleio. 2:23 16. l
Le u•a wan,., Concoro P1euan1 HI" 2.23 IS
100 tre-1, Connie Va n Btntum. G()lden
&ear S6 63. 2 Laura Wel~er. Concord Pita.en•
Hill V 17, 3 Aimee 8trilns. Stanfold, S7.39
700 11.-eut-l Amv Snaw. Min ton VlalO. 7 )6 61 2 Hi•oto.o NagHakl. Gokltn Bear 7 31 6J,
J Katnv Sml1n, Stentoro, 140 91 1.SOO ,,_, OtbOle B•l>•Shoff Min ion
\/1e10 16 33 tM, 2 Janet Ev•"'· FuJi.flon,
16 lS 12 3 LH llt Oelafl<I. una 16 S2 42
400 tree reiav-1 M1u1on V1t to 'A !Winn
Cairn\ Carolin 8aOH"<>lfl 4 01 99, 2 Rl•erllOe
A 4 OJ 63 ) Paramu' ~f!<I Wave 4-00 91
~ • • .. "
HIGH SCHOOL SOFTBALL
CIF Mmlftnals
ITO.S.V"s Gemes ll:ISI
4-A
Ctr,.10, • 11·11 v• Fovntaon ll•ltv ('4-41 at
Go1oen Weil C OlleQt
Oownev t21 3) v' St JO\tP" 1 IV 1 IJ er Otl
Vft•I• Perk La-ewooo
l ·A
Woeclbr1691 120·3) ., ve1enc1a 116-81 "' Et
Oo•ado HIGil
Sonora !IS· 111 vs Crescenra va11ev 127·~1 01 C.1onetra Park GlenOele
1·.A
C"•rrer Oa• 176· II '" Arrovo I 11 11 I •t Mounla1t1 View
Corona 122-2) " El Toro 172-~I a1 Al1cra
Par~ M inion V 1eio
ct(_ > .
NaA ftLAYOf'f'S a..t.ft 112. Hwa• 100
"OUST~ -Me(rav 10-1• 0·110, Olaluwon
14·?3 5·t 33, S.mt110f1 I I) 0 0 2, llOYd 2·S H 4, ltakl 1·'5 1·2 16, ,..,.,,.,. 4•t 0-0 t , WIOQln'
l ·I 0·0 6, Leavell ,.. 1·2 •• Ehlo 1-1 0-0 2,
McDowell 0.-1 1·11, Herrl• 0-1 0-0 o, Wallen O·O
0·0 o. Total\ •S-'5 ,. 1' 100
M>S TON -McHei. •· 12 s-a 21, llro •• ,. S-4 n . Parlsl'I 11-11 1·3 ?l, o. JOllnlOfl 6•12 6·10 19,
Ainge 9· 16 O•O II, W•llOll 5•S 0-0 10, Slehtlno 0· 1
0 0 0, Kitt O·O 0-0 0, Thlrdklll 0-1 0 0 0, Vlnc.nt
0 0 0 0 0 Total• 47 t4 l7 17 m k-llY Que,,.,..
Hou•lon 1t 31 17 24-100
Bo•lon l4 27 JO 11-111
Thr"·oolnt ooet~Laav.it, 0 JOllll\Oft
Foui.t:i out-None. ll•OOUndi-Hou'1on s.. (Ola-
1uwon 12), 8ollon 50 (0 JohnlOfl Ill At·
•l•ll-tiouSton 27 (Rel(J I), &o\lon 3S (9Jrd 13)
Total IOUls-Houiton It, Botton 17 T ecllnl·
ce l•-Wloolt1\, Houiton 11teoal deltnH
A-14 t90
NIA P LAYOFFS
ChamjMonsNo ..n.t
t•nt·.,·S-l
HOUSTON \IS. M>STON
(Al .. me, tfl CMnrMI 11
Monoev -80\lon IU. Hou•ton 100 18oston
IHO\ serif\ 1 01
Tnuodav -Mouiton at Bo\lon, 6 o.m
sundav -80\ton •' Hou\lon, 12 lO Pm Tundav Jufte l -8o'1on •t Houtton, 6 om
Tnuf\dav June ~ -8o\ton al Houiron , 6
o m II nec:enarv
Sunoav. June a -Hou\ton al 80\tot1. 10 • m
II neceu.,v
We<1ne1oav, Jun• 11 -Hou\lon at Bolton, 6
p m II necanerv
All limes POT
T•NNIS
F~Ooen
t•t ~em>
TODAY'S IUUUL.TS
W.,._., ''"' RWIW llMlel Claudia Kohde·Kilt<ll (WMI Gefmenvl o.t
LO<I McN•ll (Us) .... •·I, l•ur• Glldemelst«
(Peru) def .Anne While CU S J, 6· 1 6·3, Manuele
Mtleev• (8u1Qarl•l dtf l(a~lna saronlka
IC JKllOllOVAkla). •·I. •-?. l(athv ltlnaldl IU.S)
Oef Hu Nt IU S) 6· I, 6·), Kel«lna Malftve 18utoerlal dfl Tarry HOlladav IU S ), 6·2. 6-3
MONDA Y'S ltlWL. T1
Maft'\ ""' ..... llMlel Ivan Ltftdl (CraetlO~Vtlclal cMf MlcllMI
We\Jpllal lWtll Germenv>. 6·1, 6·3, 6·4, Bol'I•
Btcktr IWrHI Gtr""-nvJ def Womt Poll«
(France I 6·0 6·3 6·0. Gulllefmo Vita\ (ArlMf!·
llnt J Oti Peoro Rebolledo tCnllel. 6· I, 6· I, 6·•,
Jottan Kr~ (US I dtf Cerio\ l(lrmeyr (8rarll),
6-1 1 •• •·2
W.,._., Flril Rauftd ilMlel
Cnrl\ Everl LIOvd IU S) o.I Cacti. Calmelte tFrenctl, 6·1), 6·1, Steffi Graf (Wnt G«"menv)
Ot l AnOrta 8ei1ner (W8'1 Gennenvl. 6·1, 6·0,
Camille 8enlemtn <U S.l Clef. Kathy Jordan
tu s I 1·6, 6-1, 6·3, Helene Sult.ova ICztdlO•lo·
nlual clef Saolna Simmonch (llalvl. 6·4, 6·?. Gebrltia S.t>allnl (Arotf'lllnt), def Elluko
(Jee>an), 6 1, 6· 1, Catarina L.JndQvl\I (Swtde<l) det Grace Kim IU s >. 6·1. 4•1; Carlino Benell
CCanedel o.i Ct1nerlne Tanvler !France), 7·S, •·l
.......... ..-.n
""°"°AM HS.ULn
(»ti .. "·*" .......... "'"""9) fl•ST llACI. 1Yt mllM
llem Two Cl i.dll
RHl99e (Ollnrnl
&en\ldQI (Het'ntndell
TllM: 1~
,., 3.20 t.60
3.20 uo
4.00
Al'° lll•n~ V•llant Gw~. lOM, 80ld lallw UP. Hurr~M J.49(,
SICOMO lllACI. • turtonoi Frewra (Ollvarnl
S.t>uctn !SltYtns)
Walch 'N Win ISl'loemaktrl
TllM. 1 IH
IS40 •.O 0 0
•00 HO
'20
AIM> Ran; llllcla On, &Old D•v• AKtlOfl, Native
Realltv, Mldnl9ht Nollofl, PrlOe Of Trov, Crltltl
TrOPlc, Miami GIOrY, Ullle Tyrdant, 8tue EY41d
Gotlt.
'2 DAIL. Y OOUILI l•·•I H id MS 40
THlllD llACa. 1 m11a
Blate Fi.me OCMMll
w1111oone
LtJCllV ltoom (Sltvtll•)
Tirna 1:>6.l
17 40 •.20 3 IO
3.10 2 ao 300
Al\o lllan· PardOmO, Ol.rnoncts For 0..11,
Jau OrehHtra, TUf'n To L..W. 8old StnalrH , Petrov
$1 IX.ACTA 13·•) NICI U6.40
'OUltTH ltACI. • fUf'loneS Rell Darin (o.lehWt•I
lank Ma__. (Blad!) Ohdeland Girt (Pedrota)
Tlm41· 1:12.1
/40 uo 310 a 60 s.ao
1.00
Abo ltan· Abova Tn. 1t .. t. Our Coouattt ,
CuddllllQ, SUA And Creltv, Maok In Mu$da,
VlctOf'le Po<t, II Nol Now Wtltn.
U IX.ACTA (3·6) oald l129 SO
""" llACI. One mlla Tourlsmo (Toro) 19.00 6.00 UO
Arewel'lavlnotunyet ISl'tOtmalltr I S.20 3.10
8ollon ISOlol 00
Tlma: 1:35.•.
Alto Ran: Beau's LHdaf, JelllnO HOme,
CtllM F0< P1usa.
U EXACTA 14·2) oald 1240.50 SIXTH ltACa. W• mile$ on lul'f
Crony (sr-mallet') 1S40 1.20 UO
Tio Nino (Ollvar••I 7 60 6 00
KlllV91en (Toro) 7 00
Tlrna: 2:02.0
Alto R•n: ,..,, ... E•loc, TM THltl'. Ihm·
oour, ltOM Carnine, lrlancnon. U I XACTA (2·3) o.ld U71.50
SIVINTI4 llACll. One mUe
F0<sYtlle eov IB~l 23.20 uo J 60
Envlro (Valanwtlal • 20 3.00
Malltl'V (Hwnandezl UO
Tinw I :34. 1
Al$0 It•" Motl O.twmlned, lord P•nct'IO,
Car alas. U EXACT.A 16-1) NICI \241 00
PICK SlX (4•3·3·1•211 Hid 21 wlnnen lflvt
llOrsei) s 11, 532 20
Totfl Ntl Carrvovar for WtOnHClav
U79,19S.13
EIGHTH ltACE. ·~ mllel on lurf. F1Ylng Pldoton (Sotol 16 40 l.40 2.10
Oenar (S'-1\aktr) 120 2.10
Both Ends 8urnl1111 IOeltllOuuaval 7 10
TI/T\41: 7:27
Alto Ran Talalleno, Slrawbel'rv Road, F•l>-
blanl.
'5 EXACTA (4·1) oakl an.so
NINTH ltACI. I 1/.t mltn on turl
Rell\tan IOtlallOun•Y•l 26.20 UO 7.20
Roo.r1kv (KHMI) UO 4.20
Vloorous Vigor' (\/a lanauelal HO
Time: 2:01J
AIM> ltan: 8olrd Mtelln11, Tutu Flvar, Alli.cl
Command«. Penaance, Bedouin, Cwro Plnlo.
'5 IXACTA l•·Sl oel<I 13400
Allandence: Jl,S50
·~ .. ·~ (et Wtl'lfWWtll, I,..._.) 1111 (~ .... ,
w R09tl' Davi\, tSl. 114 13· 70·61 70
O.• $mvlh, t.U.431
NlcK F1ld0, t 1'.9'1
.,
Phllll> WeUon, S 13.'IO
Sam Torra~•. '13,.-0 1"
Gordon Brand, S 10.)1•
G Ttvlor, •10,174
Sandv I.vie. 17, 170 M~LHn, 17,170
11n woo1narn. '', 170
70--72·71· ..
.. 7•·7•·~
11·7t·7'·•S
7•·71-71· ..
1• 14·10-.. 1 I 11·74·70
., 71.71 ...
n -11 -n -11
7•·70•U·7t
WMlllMtr~ •A.1•••1.1. .American LMGVa
ANGELS-Welvtd I( .. For.ell, pltdl«, for
tilt ouroose of 11lvl119 film 1115 uncondlllontt
r elta.a PUf'cllHed the con tr act of Cllvdl Flnltv.
oltcher, from Qued•Clti.t of IM Mldwttl
l HGut CLEVELAND INOIAN~ Turner Giii,
ihor'htoo, to • conlracl wltn WetarlOO of the
Mldwl\I Lffllut.
MINNESOTA TWINS-Placed Mllt'tl kla5,
c11C11tr, on tllt IS·<lav dlwibled 1111. lllec.alled Jeff Rffd, cat~, from Toledo of ,,,. lnte<Mllonal
LHOut. SEATTLE MARINER5-4tKelltd John
MO\H, O<Jtflelder. from CalGarv of tn. Pec"Jc
Coa\t LHGUf Ootion.d IYat) Ctlclaron, OUI·
fleklt r to C1111arv NaMMI L.MIUf
PITTSBUltGH Pllt.ATEs-Purclla~ IM
con1rec1 ot Barrv '°"°'· outfleldfl'. ff"om Hewell 01 111e Pacllk Coait Lae11ue.
ST lOUIS CAltDIN.Als-PIKtd ltldlv HorlOf\, oltd11r on lht IS·dav dl..-CS Qsl •
Recalled Par Pafrv. oltclltr, from Loul••llle of
the .Amerlc•n Auocla llon SAN FR.ANCISCO GIANTS--OOllontd I red
Gulden UIChtr to PN>tnl• of lht Pacific Coast
League Reollad M iki Aldrtlt, outlletdtr' from
Pl'lotnla aAMtlTaAL.L
NtlleMI .. "" .... -~ BOSTON CEL TICS-SIGMd Scott Wedtnan,
lorw.,d to • mulll·vear con1ract
FOOTaALl
........ , ..... L.Mwe
PITTS8UltGH STEELEltS-.Announced !Mt
Oavkl WOOtl/!aV, -rleniack, dkl nol r~l to a
llwt dav mlnl·catnCt Sl9Md JJ. Brtnnan, wlda recievar. Nick Mullantv. -rd, and Erk
Wvcoff, runntl\O l>aell.
HOCKEY
NalteMI Htdlev ~
DETROIT RED WINGS-.Announc90 I""' wllt move ttialr training camP to Fllnt·~ IMA
Soort\ Arena 11111 tall
\/ANCOUVER CANUCKS-SIGMd Petri
Skrlko, forw1r<1, to • mulll vN r contract
· COLLEGE
1'LA8AMA-.Announceo Ille rn lgnatlon of
Jonn Mllcnelt, "•cl< coecn 8UF FALO-N•f'!led eo Wrlcmt let hoctle\t
coecfl IOAHO-Announctd the reslgnallon of Pat
Dobrall, women'' O.•ktlb&ll coach
Ml.IC NOTICE f't&IC NOTICE · MllC NOTICE Ml.IC NOTICE PtllJC *>TICE
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
BEFORE THE CITY COUNCIL
OF THE CITY OF FOUNTAIN VALLEY
A budge1 neartng w ill be held on June 3 1986. for all m terested c111zens of tne City o f Fountain
Valley Tne to11ow1ng budget is proposed lor fiscal year 1986-87
C ATEGORY
General Go11ernmen1
Development Services
Public Safety
Recreation Services
Publlc Works
TOTAL OF
GENERAL FUNDS s 1.227,508
2 86.296
7,980.555
655,041
4,246. 127
REVENUE S HARING
FUNDS s .().
.().
136,484
-0-
.().
The meeting wtll be held at 8 pm In the C ity Council Chambers, 10200 Slater Avenue. Fountain
Valley, Calitorn1a. for the purpose of discussion of the proposed bodget and use of Revenue Sharing
Funds
The proposed budget may be ewamlned on weekdays at the o ttlce ot tne Fiscal Ser111ces Manager
Said Mlewtlf be made, bu1 de< wlll enter lnlo lh• K 8111 It_, •hip, 13142 Winthrop• MeM. CA t2127
wttl'IOut CO¥enant or --propoeed contr9Ct " the MOTICI OF ..cnnoua., II... 8nlt. Santa Ana. CA t2706 Thie butl-19 oon-
ranty. expreee Of~ ... -II ...,ded to IUCl'I ~unoltl OF NAm 8TA,_-, Thie bullMM I• con· ducted try: 1 llmlttd pertns·
;atdtno tit.le po 11111 Ion, or bidder In the ewnt of fllur• LMTID The fo1oMne .,....,. .,.. ducMd try: a llrnftecl penner-lf"P
enc:umiwenoee, to pey the to eriter IMO e-'d contract. '~ doing bullneM • ...,_ 1f110 Jim Bltrett, GenlrW Plr1·
remaining ptindpal IUm ot Md! MCUftty w4ll be fOf· Notice it hereby QIYW\ ~ ~ 651 f ... Propertlll LJlnfted, I ner
tM no19'•1 MCUt'9CI by Mid ""1ed pvrtUent to See1ion 16035.5 P.ntoenter DrM. fkMe 120. CaMornle l.lmlt9d Pwmer-Thie 11atement WM fled
deed ol Tn.llt, with lnt«Wllt E.llCtl bidder lflal be I of the Callfomle Ccfl>or· Santa Ana, Celfofnll t210I lhlp, 9y. M1e Mch!IOh, .tt'1 the County a.tl of Of·
.. In Mid note P'O"lded. Id-11 c:. n I . d c: 0 n tr.ct 0 r ltlonl Code by PIUI M. VJH. lne., • CeltorM oor· Qenlt'll Panner ... County on Mey •• 11M venc.. " llnf, under the pucaiant to the ~ Cohen u 0.-11 Pertner of potMlon, 56' Pwtioenw Thie ~ .. lllld ,_
1erm1 of Mid Died of '""'· and Prot11110"1 Code and Uf91rw:, ltd~ a Cellfornla Dnw, Suite 120, Sln'9 AM. .-.. County a.tl ol Of· PubllNd °'MOii C011t r ... chargea, and ~ be MceNed In the folowlrlo flmftld pet1Mr'lhlp, that llld c.lltOfnla 92100 1t101 County on Mey I. tMI Diiiy Plot May 20, 27. Nlre
of the Trwl• and of the c:l-"lcatlon: Oenerlll BIM-limited pet1nlf'lfllp hu been Thia bWI-It ~ ,_. 3, 10, 1tee
11'\dtt oreeted by Mid Died 1ng ContractOf-B. dlaeolYld effllettYe febNary ducted 1:1y: • ~ Publllhed 0ninoa c.. noe
of Truel The DISTRICT reeerwe 28. 19M, pureuant to the VM, Inc., ly. Vicki J . Hll, Diiiy Piiot May 1!. 20. 27. l---------
Sald .-. wtlf be lle6d on: the r1gh1 to reject lll:r'f °' .. term• and provlllonl of th.i P111kte11t June S. 1Me "8JC M)TIC(
Thureday. June tt, tH&, et bldl Of to Wel\lll eny Ir· cert.in Agreement ot 0.. Thie ....,,_,, WM lllld T188 1--..;..;;~ .... .-..-..--. __
t:30 pm In the loC>by to the regulelttlee In Ill'/ bide Of In IOlutlon ~Ive Febnlary wttti tM Coumy a.tl of Of• ACTmOUe aiH•M
lldlng 1oce1.ct I I 80 I Ille btddlng 28, 1Ne. and ,,,., •II• Mkl ange County on-·· 11M MAm STA,,_.,
South L..-Street, Or~. P\nuant to the prOYtelof'tl date of dlelolUtlon no per-,_,. fltalC M>TICE The tOllOMl'O .,....,. ..
Calttomla 92MS. l · of Section t773 of the l.lbOf eon will hi.,.. euthoftt)' to Publlltled 0r9"09 COllt d 1 butl-11 Ae-
Al Ille time of the lnftlll Code of the S tate of C.... Incur any obilgltlont on Diiiy Plot May 20. 27, June K 21111 ° ng :
pubtlcatlon ol lhl1 notice, fomla, the DISTRICT hal Gt>-beflllf of Mid pert'*9fllp. 3, tO. 1tee PtCTrTIOUI MllMH ~IX.~~.,-between 8 a m and 5 p m
All interested citizens will have the opportunity 10 give written and or al comm'ent
and handicapped persons are encouraged to attend and comment
the total emount of the~ talned from the DnctOf of DATED: Apr'll 8, 19M _ T~7 NAMI STATW....,. oup ,,__, • Senior citizens !>.id belenca of the obll· tM Depat1ment of lndUltr111 unT'flAC, LTO -,: ,..... The 1o11ow1ng P9ftonl 1111 eriue 0-2, Coata ......, CA
gallon MOUred by the aboW R1letfon1 the general Iii. c.Mft, ~ ,.._ "8JC llJT1C( doing .buelneM u : THE ~M Flnenclel Corpor-
CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF FOUNT AIN VALLEY. Evelyn McClendon, City Clerk
deecl'lbed deed ol 1N81 and prevefflng Ille of per diem Publllhed Orange CoMt !ATI!RY, 2413 South Fair-ltlon, a Ctllfomla oorpor-
M tlmated ooeta, expeneea, wag" and the ~~ Dilly Piiot Mey 27, 1H& vwC ..... 9Un271L R, Senta Anl, ltlon, 3t51 AJtrfttt 0-2,
an d edv a nce1 11 pr9119111ng rite tot,_.., T-215 MAmlTA,_-, -· '" Coeta..._,CAnt2t
P d 0 C 0 I Pll 1 M 14:? 1 171,881 89. and O\lertlme WOf'k In the lo-The ---.. _ .. Hw Yung Ahn. 2307 Thie bualMll l9 oon-ubllshe range oasl a1 y o 11 I• P<IMfbte that 11 the cellty In wnk:tl ... WOf1' le to • P1&)C NOTICE doing ·;;;;;;....-.;:1nan Dtiptlne Pl.c., Fullerton, duc1*t by:•""'*'.,.,,,,.,.
111-1C NOTICE P\8.IC *>TICE P\B.IC *>TICE P\ll.IC fl>TIC[ tl!M of Ille tt1e ~bid be pertonnec1 for eect1 craft .. -Thompeon Enterpr11 ... Celllf. 92933 1t11p ,.~ -------------------mey be JeM thin the total Of type of WOltl• needed to "' 4702•2 VII LI ~ Of-Kyung Hee Ahn, 2387 WCM Flnenclel Corpor· NOTICE~ . c:omplet-or c:otrect· 11 -...S on ,w to lie • NOTICE OF lndebtednell due ueculle the contrllCt .. Theel STA,_., Oii ~CA tteet Oephne ~. Fulfer1on. ltton 8radl9y G WNt'9d
._._._..... I'"'., I" T.. b fl I tJP"'rttteft re1p1nM II -·1---•a•• II ~ the _._...._. ..-t•.,.. on Ille It the CMS-dAMllCll n Oii • ---• Ceill. 92933 p _.:...... t • , '""•' -• _... :::, laid O:.C, :,"T'n:t~~ tNe-'-'"" ~.... opening bid· rrwy t:;";;'. TAICT omoe 1ocetec1 at 5060 U. Oii PtCmtOUe ',_,_..., Thi• bu11n-11 con-r;;:-' -...nent _ fled .';:!iA) reuon of• brMCh or oetlUlt A lettw Of,._.. Giii WW WHrTVHANNA talnld by c:alMng the fo41ow-8atTanca. !Mne, Ca. 9 2714. ai••M MAm ducted by-hueOand and wh wttti the County a.tl of Of· /flltCMEU In Ille obllgatlone eec:ured ftOt .-.-. ~ ,.. .,,.. ,....,,.... Ing t~ numberl on CopMil mey .,. obtained on The foftowl.., pereon• Hie Yuno AM. KY\fllQ ..... County on ~ 10
a No. O... 1n1r1by heretofore H · """""' n IP I 119 _.. 1111 T .a ..... *1Gt the dlY ~the Mir. {714) reQUel1. A copy of tMee he¥9 abendcM IN '* ol Ahn = ' T. . eculed and deliv.ld to the In ,,,..-..... t.ftl ff rou UNIT CO. H ~7 Of(213)027-4Mll. rat• lhall be~ at the the flC:tltl~I 8u8'neH Thie lt1t.....,t WM fllld ,.._
T 0 ~v~? ~PANY under nld • Wfltten D«> •-t ttie OMf1 to._ row SUPERIOR TITLE SER-Oeted: Mey t9, 1tee Job Ille. Him e: FIVE SEASONS with the County Clertt of Or· PublllNd Or'lnQ9 COMll
u duty appotnled Trvat11 lartt,!Oof Default end 0.. -· ICE,INC.udufy~ed IUNNOlt TTTU ...... ftlhall bemendetcwyupon i!.TEAERS, 1827 Units.:. = Coooty on Mey 2t, DlllyPllo4Meyl, Q ,2'0,21,
und« Ille followln9 ck· mand lor Sile end wrttten N rou do net ... ,_ n.iat11 under the fOllowlng ~ IMC.,• Mid T,_..., the CONTRACTOR to WflOnl Ana, C~OS Ave ' t l'm7ll ttee
ecrlb«I deed of lt\111 WILL notice of bf each end ol -.0-n lfl 1-Ofl *-· ,_ M9f dllc:ttbed deed of tn.iet ., T. 0 . llJWICa C~ the COtltrlici II ewerded, and The FlctlUoue au.u-T113
SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION non to cal.Ill the under• .... It. -. IN row Will SELl AT PUBLIC ,AWt,..-:-1:::••111. ~~.:Ji C~C~~ Name,....,.,_,llOlboW"' D~M~?~
TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER Signed to NII MIO P<OC*tY ...... ,...._, Md ..,.... AUCTION TO THE HIGHEST ~ t .... ..,,,_ • lllld In Or r-.-. 7 9M ' ' P\aJC ll)TIC( FOR CASH AND/OR THE '•o Nttef)' Mid ot>llgetlonl,.,,,...., ............... BIDDER fOR CASH ,...,,.I01 ... UW11k. llopeynoU ... tNntheeetd ~....,_ .. ,on TIN 10. 1 '1
CASHIERS OR CERTIFIED and ther•rt• tM under· ,_..,.., • .,.. froM .... ANO/OR THE CASHIERS Or.... CA -(114) epeclfled r1t• to .. wor1t.. Dec~~ !....:.!n,~e 0.-T214 MOTa cw
CHECKS SPECIFIED IN tlgnld c.ueld Mid no11C9 of -'-OR CERTlflEO CHECKS m-4?00 ~by ltlem In the ••• wood °' --CA neee MOH ...01119 am
c1v1L cooE SECTION brMch and ot 111ect1on 10 be "*-.. ...., ..... ,. SPECIFIED IN CIVIL cooe TAC 1,... ec:utton of the contract. Thli ~ ... con-P\aJC NOTICE "8JC M)TIC( NottoellhertOyahenlNt
2924h(paylblell ll'lelimeof record~ FEBRUARY 10, ..,..._..._YIN INJ went SECTION 2924h (paylOle at Publl9hed ~ CoMt Ho bidder may wttNtr9111 ~ed by en~ the undellllaMd w1I not be
Mle In lawful money of the 1980 u IMlr No M-054298 eo Giii .. 9ttomef rttM the time ot .... In l..tul Deity Piiot Mey 2 • June 3, eny bid for • pertod of~ Thll ltltement .. • lllld K -relPOl...,.. lot,,,., cleb4ll 0t
Ul'ltld S••t•) •II right title of Offlclll Record• In the of· -::.~do"°' llftOWft mOM)' of tM United St•I•) 10, 19M five (46) daY'I after the wtth the County Cllrtc of Of. '1Cnnou9 ..,..... llablltlel oontraot.d by,,,.,..
end lntefHI conveyed to nc. of the Rac:o4'der of Or-.,. ,JOUINJml .. ell right, trtte end lnl•eet T212 •1f«theopenlngof blcM. enoeCounty M 7 l tee MAlmeTA~ one°"'8rttlen~.on «
end now held by 11 undef enr. County, ~ ,.._.,., _.....et con¥9Y9d to and now held A peyment bond end I ~ ; ey C0Mt The~.,....,..,.. leAm ITA.,_..,. eft• "* dmte.
Mid Olld of Trull In the aid .... ~II be mlde, but .......... oMoe ( ...... lft by It undef Mid Deed of DI-•c llnTIC[ performance bond wllf be Piiot M :'oio:1 June doing bullnell •: TEAL The folowtno l*90nl.,.. o.tect "* '"" day of
t1 without 1 ...,_ the pMn9 Motl). Tfll91 In the pre>perty herein-ruuu nu required Pf'°' to uecutlon Deity WI • • PR0Hft'TIE8 LIMITED A dolna ~ •· NEW• Mey, 1MI
prop•rtY h•reln• ., d•· COll9nef'I °' ~ ctt te -bed· of the COt11'ec:t and IMll l>e 3, 10, 1H& CALl'O"NIA l lMIT!O POR'T!fll ONE. a ca..o,.,,.. --.... .,_., .... ~~STOA ANDREW~-=~;:~=-~·~·:: .............. ::.: ...
111~=R. WILLIAM R. c~~:,.. In the form ... forth In tM T2()1 PA"THEfllSHIP. tH42 Umlted Partnenhlp..I. 170 °""""--..... ....
JOHN MICHELI erlCUmbrencel. 10 pey the .... Yltecl ..... WI .,... WHITE. J ACQUELINE J CAU.IMO '°" -· contrlCI documenb,. P\8.JC ll)TIC( Wlnthrop9 Strwt, 8anta !all hwnteentfl 1:1tt..e, c.... ...... CA..,
BENEFICIARY AMERI· remelnlr19 pnnctpel eum of ctt • DIAi CAUNDANOI WHITE School Ollt~: lrvtne Uni-Purwant to ~Ion 45e0 AN. CA '2705 Coeta Mell, CAllfornla PubllNd Oranoe C..
CAN GUARANTEE MORT-Iha note(•)~ by laid per• pteunter 11119 BENEFICIARY. UNION fled ot the Oove11"'*'' Code of ·-a.tt9 Mofel.on. 13142 12117 DllY Piiot Mav 20. 21, 27.
OA.OE CORPORATION deed of Truet. with Int ... ~ ...... a ..... FEDERAL SAWlfOS ANO Bid ~· 2 o'clodt the St•1• of Celltomla. ttle f'ICTmOUI .,..... Wlnttltop9 ltreet, 8eflt• """'..,.,.,, 170EM!1e¥-t tee
RkordedAugut12 1t85 u ln Nldnot•prOYIOld .0-.,eneOfleeteOOfte.. LOAN ASSOCIATION pm oftM10thdeyof~ contract wlll cont1ln NAmlTA~ AM.CA'27'06 enteenth ltrHt, Co1ta T20S
u lnllr No ss.2ee54o ot vlrlCM, " llflY, under' the UM Cleft.• -..... Recorded FEBRUARY 21. 10ee . ' prOYlllont permlttlno lhe TM fCllowlng pereone.,.. TNa bu91neee le oon-
Offlclel ~di In Ille office twm1 Of Mid Died of INl1 ......... M le ......... 1te() U IMtr Ho. 31848 In ~of Bid Reollpt: 5050 I UC:C Ulful bidder to doing bueineee M: 98C duc1ed by: alf'nl*t ~·
Of IM Rac:o4'der of Orange ,.., c:Nlrgel. and •JIP9Nll pntioclon: Ml ,.,, ..... 8ooll 13515 pege 1 t72 of Bananc:a. lrvtne, CA. 8271' IUbetltut• MCUlll'-lot~ HOSltlTAL PUACHA81HQ -
County of 11'\e Trua111 end of the eecttte • ~ ..._ .,_ OtTlclal Recorde In the offtoe Proj•c:t ldentlflc1tton moneye wtt"'*d by the AGENCY I 8 ) NUASINO 9ecte .. MoF-.•-IOI.,,
Mid deed of truat 0.-INtll et•ted by Mid Died cu"'f"' o on IH fer-of the Recordet ol Orange Name: NORTHWOOD I\/ TRICT 10 eneur• P•r· HOME PUACHASIHG Thie ........... WM fled eenbee the tolloWlng of Trust "'• 1 d. d. I ••••••• County ELEMENTARY SCHOOL 1~ under the con-AGENCY 4000 Metro-wtttl the County Oen! of Or·
PARCEL 1 AN UN-Said .... wlll.,. Mid on •1P•••11 II........... Mid deed of ln.191 • P'-Plllllll .,.. on Ille: tr-:; --... ., A. po4tlal1 Or ' Orenoe. CA -.eoumyonMeyl. , ..
OIV10£D 1118TH INTEREST TUESDAY, JUNE 17 1tee, .,_ le Oettl ........... • ICflbel Ille folowlng• Denlellen/AllOde1ee, 3848 _, ...... -t2918 ,_
ICUILns ..
IN AND TO lOT t OF TRACT It 1 30 Pm In the lobby lo oeee. Loi Ill al Tr9CI HO 10613. Campue Dr.. Suite 210. ~-:t,,., ~ C<*f Bergen 8rVMW1g Dfuo Pvblllhed 0r9"09 COMll NO 11433. AS PER MAP ll'le building located II 801 II__, "',........ • In the City of Colla Mele, In Newport B .. c:ll, C 1 . T. Compeny, Clllfomlaoorpor. Delly Plot M9Y 1S, 20, 27,
AECOROED IN 800f< 489. Souttl L.9Wle Sl'91t, Orange ,.., ............. ,... the County of Oranoe. St ... 82080-Phon• (7 ,., ~ Piiot May 1 . 20• 27• atlon. 4000 ~Or. June3, 1MI
PAGES 23 ANO 24 Of' MIS-CAilfOfnle 92M8 ............. r \e ,_.... of Celltomla. •per m-s>,.. 152-1575 1 Of1n9t, CA t2tM T117
CELLANEOUS MAPS , IN "' the time ol the lnltlal .............. .., ..... ~ded In eooa ...... PIQel NOTICE IS HEREBY TlllO TNI bullnea 19 con----------
THE OFFICE Of THE public.lion of Ihle notlOI, f etr1e OHH de H 45tfvough47Jnduelve.~ GIVEN 11111 11'19 11>0Ye-duetedby:eoorporlltlon "8JCll)TIC(
COUNTY AECOROER OF the total wnount ol the un-propl1 •11• • ..,... ... ceMneoue M11e>e. In the of· '*'*' Scfloot Dlltrtcrt fOf rta.JC NOTICE a.oen ~ DNo ---------
81\ID COUNTY paid balance of the obll-.... ..:=...,_•le..-. flee of the County Recorder Otano-County, CaHfomia, eompeny E1N1y C1eco s.c;. ACnnout lllll•M
EXCEPT THEREFROM C'1 MCured by the~ ..,_ te• llMll of Nld County licilng by end ttwougtl he PtCTmOUe MWM ~ ' ' NAm ITAW
EACH ANO All Of' THE lbed deed of lt'Ult and ........ ,__ .. ..... YOU ARE IN DEFAULT ~ Boetd, ,_.. liAlm tTA,_.,,. Thil 1tMement Wll flied The fo1owtne.,....,. ..
UNITS SHOWN ANO OE-llllmated OOlt•. pPtll\MI, ......... I 1111 ..... UNDER A DEED M TfllU8T eft• ,....,.,., to .. "DI$-Tfie followlng per'IOne •• wtth IM ~ Oen! of Or· dolnl bullnHI H : Al
FINED ON CONDOMINIUM ancledvlnoellaset,271.4'. INF••··--....... _ DATED 2/20180. UNI.US TflllCr', wtll reolfYe up to, dOlng bulllMM •. INT!A-1n9tCoumyonMey7, 1MI BAL OA INN: •> THl
PL.AN RECOAD£0 AUGUST It 11 polllbte that 11 the eoe . • • '' •t•• .... YOU TAKE ACTION TO but not lat• thin the~ MARK. •27 Cetallna, Hew-,__ aAL.aOA INH, 10IJ Mlln
20 1tet IN 8()()1( 14188, time of .... tM OC*11nC1 l>'d .._ •-........ • ,.._ PfllOTECT YOUR PAOP-1tatec1 time ...ied bide for ~ e.ct't, CA t2M3 P\lbllehed Orantt ..co.t 8.,_ 1e1boa C1MotM
PAGES 143 TO 170, IN-may be 1111 than the total ............. 111f11 • • ERTY, IT MAY 8! SOLD AT the ,._,d Ot 1 contract lot JOhrt 8 . CUii)', .. lboW De1fv P110t Ml)' 20. 27, June 9*1 '
llOllSOIPES ....
LIUftl ·-Fii
llYIOE
UIES
Piii
CLUSIVE ANt> RE-RI!-~lednell due .... ....._ .. .,.. ..... A PUBLIC 8.ALE. " YOU the 1boW ptof1C1 Thie bullne11 le GOn• 3, 10, lH& 8Al.IOA IMPfllOY!·
CORDED OCTOBER 2, It 1velleble IM expected =. .. _... . ..._ ..... NEED AN EXPLANATION 96dl lfllill be reQllved Jn duOted by: en lndMdual T208 MIHTS, LTD .. a ~ l•••••••••I tHt. IH 8001< 14243, openlr19 bid mey ti. ob-). OF THE NATURE OF THE the ptaoe 1etentlfted abo¥e JoM 8. Dulay llmlted pertnenHp, 1112 ,.....--------__.. ________ _
PAGES 311 TO 405 IN-1a1neo by ca111ng the tottow-e.. .... G1U11 PROCUD1NG AOAfHST and 1t1a11 be oS*led ind rt111 11t•t'"*'1 "' llled P\llJC NOTICE ,... Avenue. ..,... no.
CLUSIVE Of! Off!CIAI. Rf· Ing telle>hOM numw. on The name end lddf'9I of YOU YOU SHOULD CON-publlcty r9td ~ It the with the County Clettl of Or· Coete ~CA... Classified ··~· COROS Of! 8AIH COUHTY. lhedey~theNle (4 15) tM COUl"I II: (~ noml>fe Y TACt A LAWYER. above •1t1ted time 1nd lnQI County on Apt• 24, IC_. Thie t)ueiMel la oon-
PAACEL 2: UNIT I , AS 94~18 di,.cclon de ~ •t. 3118 Klondlke, Ooata pi.oe. t9M ,_,410 fltCTmOUllll••N OUOMclby:alllftlllldpartner. news you ft SHOWN AHO OU'IN!:D ON Delee! Mey 13, 1tff MUNICIPAL COURT OF Meea. Ctllfomle 1'*-.. be • 1100.00 NAm STA,_., INp •• •
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YOU ARE IH DU AULT Pubftll*S Orenoa CoN1 wt1"°"1 .,, ettomey, .. (El '" the ~tloo• ..cured &di bldOet Wiii IUOmlt. The flDlow!l'I .,....,. .. "w lrown Co • tnc. ~ , ...
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YOU TAKE ACTION TO 1213 ~def del'Mlldllltl, o widll ... 18d • wrttt.en 0.0. lilt of IN Pf~ 1UbOOno-or-. eo.ta ..._ t2121 CA t2tlO 1---------
PROT!:CT YOUfll PAOP· ' "8JC M)TIC( def ~ .,_ no lltaUofl of Oefalft and 0.. tl9etCW9 on tNI ~ • 0.WS Allin Vkiklt'I. M3 Thie bull'*" .. GOn>-PmlJC ll)TI:(
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HCED AH EXPLANATION rcnAC** .IUOICW., :'!11 d •• :.... ....., --Clon to '*--o. llMlr-Pr'.-C. Act. Gofer,.,..lt Thie ~ ta OM-'4.YI 9rown Co., Inc.., nt1 PICTm!Oue • 1111•
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(
Orange Cout DAILY PILOTIT.-.dfrf, Mey21, 1tee •
COMPLETE NYSE COMPOSITE TRAN8ACTION8, 81
Lenders' offers of cut-rate credit cards spread
But ow -interest plastic generally h as
strings attached; tighter requirem en ts
I 0 percent range (or fiAed·riue home
monpaes, I l.7percent for48-montb
auto loans and 15.6 percent for a 24-
month unse<;urcd pcnonal loan, the
newslener said. Those rates generally
are several percentage points lower
than they were six months ago,
havma folJowed a drop in open
market interest rates since then.
By BILL MENEZES
NEW YORK -Complaints by
consumers and politicians over credit
card interest rates that arc far above
the rates on mortgages and other
loans seem to have borne fnm, with
spreading offers of cut-rate cards.
But .low-interest plastic generally
bas stnngs attached.
While many lenders arc lowenng
interest on bank cards such as Visa
and MasterCard, the changes often
also may bring h1ftter fees.I shortening
of the "aracc penod" bcrore interest ~cs ~e effect or tightening of
credit requll'Cments.
SMALL BUSINESS
Here's
latest
on tax
rules
RALPH
Scorr
Here's some information on
what's been happening with taxes:
•The Tax Coun has just decided
that shareholders of old AT&T stock
did oot have dividend income of 39
cents on each share when AT&.Twas
broken up. Taxpayers who reported
this amount as income on their tax
returns can now get refunds.
•The Internal Revenue Service
interest rate on overdue refunds and
late taxes drops from 10 percent to 9
percent on July I.
•President Reagan signed the
Consolidated Omnibus Reconcili·
ation Act into law on April 7.
Provisions with some general
interest include extension of the 16-
cents..a-pack cigarette tax, changes in
the coverage employer group health
insurance plans must provide to be
deductible, and clarification on
when January Social Security checks
are to be reported as income when
they arc actually received in Oeccm·
ber of the preceding year.
•We may not have heard the last
on auto rccordkccping require-
ments. The IRS re«ntly issued
clarificat1on stating that contem-
poraneous logs are not required to
prove business usage. Deductions
may be substantiated with either
adequate records or sufficient writ·
ten or oral evidence.
Because the examples of what
consututes adequate substantiation
are all in written fonn. such as
account books, dianes. and tnp
sheets, taJtpayers are left with the
impression that written evidence is
still the best way to go.
"By eliminating the 8f8ce P,eriod
we're able to lower the rate,' said
Mare Chodorow, a sPokcsman for
Goldome, wbich this past week bqan
offering a Visa card with a 13.9
percent annual interest rate, com-
pared with the 18 percent on its
regular Visa.
Others have cut intCTCSt rates, but
only for balances over a cenajn
amount, say S l ,SOO.
The inlCt'est rate on bank cards
averaged 18.91 percent in the May 14
survey of SO large banks and thrifts in
five major markets by the'Banlc. Rate
Monitor newsletter.
By comparison, rates hover in the
Sounds reasonable
A recent survey by the Baftk Credit
Card Observer newsletter indicated
that amona 8S bfnk:s nationwide the
annual percent.ace rate on Visa and
MastetCard ranscd from a low of 10.S
percent to a tUgli of 21 percent.
Many card issuers have taken
advantaae of the disparity and of
publicitr over by congressional
proposals to limit credit card rates,
says John Crothers Pollock ID. pub-
lisher of the monthly newsletter.
Pollock contended that although
recent surveys by th~ publication
Wbat look like rowa of m1nl OJ"ina aaacen are actually
elementa for atereo headphonee. 'fheae unita, being ln-
•pected by Jan Seymore, a technician at Kou Corp., ln
Milwaukee, Wla.. hou.e the diaphragm and voice coll•
which 'fibrate to produce aound .
indicated most consumert knew lit lie
about wide variances in card rates,
responses to cut-rate card offel'1
showed low rates were important to
them.
uonal. but Home Plan believed it
could use the fall in rates to widen ita
card base.
Goldome1 the nauon's bi.,cst mutual
uvinas oank. its cut·rate .. Cos-
tSaver" Visa carnet no grace pcnod,
meanin• that interest beaina ~
cumulat101 once a tranJICtion ia
posted wtth the card company. While
Goldome'a fCfulat Visa bu a b1aher
interest rate, It canics a 30-4S day
8l'ICC period.
"Customers are not apathetic.'' he
said. "They arc indeed interest rate
sensitive. Our 1urvey indicated that
40 percent would use cards more
often ii rates were lowered to the 12
percent found in Arkansas."
"Our cost of money bas dropped,
we should be ~ssina that on to the
consumer," said McCleary. "We're a
small association, but we're com-
petitive."
Competitive pressures also may
plax a role.
• Its an effort across the board for
banks to &bow their customer$ they
care," said Pollock.. "It's not an effort
to seek out~f-state customers, but to
keep their own customers."
At the same ume, Home Plan's
low-rate card is available only for
customers with proven credit ratinp
and minimum annual incom" of
SI S1000 for individuals and $24,000
for JOint accounts. Others may have
to settle for the thrift's standard banJc
cards. at 17.9 percent interest.
Resoonse to the CottSaver bas
been .ro-utstandint." Cbodorow said.
with Ooldome receivin& hundreds of tc~one apPlic:atlom followina the
initial adverusina about tbe card lut
Monday 10 Syn.cute, N.Y. Tbe
response was so .,eat. the buk
decided not to wait a month as
orWnal!Y planned before beainnina a
nauonal ad campaip.. John McCleary, president of Home
Plan Savings in Des Moines, Iowa.
said bis thrift's offer of a 12. 9 percent
annual rate on one type of Vasa and
MasterCard was not strictly promo-
Like other 10stitullons. Home Plan
imposed the income reqwrcments to
help cut credit losses, a factor many
tssuen say is the main reason card
rates remain high.
Chodorow said the.card was aimed
at cardholders wbo typic::ally did not
In the case of Buffalo, N.Y.-bued (PSeue w CARD8/86)
Thirty years celebrated
at Ford Aeronutronics
Newport division has earned
234 pat ents fo r defen se work
• Beach Campus could climb as high as 7,200-double the
current number of workers-by the end of the century.
He predicted si&nificant srowth in the number of
production and enainecrin& positions.
By JIM HATHCOCK
...., .... C.1 9 •1 I
Ford Aerospace and Commurucauons Aero-
nuttonics Division was honored by civic leaders,
aovernmeot officials, senior Ford executives and hun-
dreds of employees at the Newport Beach Campus last
week for its major contributions to the nation's space and
defense programs.
Over the past 26 years the di~sion bas earned 234
patents for innovative pr<>gJ"ams including the Shillelagh,
Chaparral, Sidewinder, Pave Knife and Pave Tack
defense systems.
"Aeronutronic's 30-ycar history of performance is an
important foundation for the future,' said Donald B.
Rassier president of Ford Aerospace. ''Part of Ford
Aerospace's IODJ·term strategy is to expand its presence
and leadership in the tactical weapons arena to become
the la.raest producer of short-r1D4e tactical missiles."
The division ranks as the maJOr producer of guidance
and control sections for the combat-proven Sidewinder
air-to-air infrared missile system. Ford Aerospace has
produced or upgraded more than 100,000 Sidewinders.
"Aeronutronic is an example of free enterprise
arowth and success in a hi&hJy competitive industry," said
Robert 0 . Cue Jr., Aeronutronic general manager. "And
this is just the beginning -we already have ambitious
plans as we enter the second 30 yea.rs."
Case predicted that if all goes according to the
division's 10-year plan, employment at the Newport
"Out enpneers have advanced degnllCS in many
cases. We find that we arc anractina younger eoainccn to
our Newport Beach location from all over the country
be<::ausc of the climate and lifestyle."
Skilled assemblers also are vital to the propam but
scarce in the Orange County labor market bc<:aute of the
unique tcchni(\UCS used by Forc1. However, Cuc said the
company provuSes a great deal of on-the-job trairuq.
Aerooutromc Division is strivina to maintaln its
leadership by condU;ClinJ onaoin& advanced reteareb and
development aimed at unprovina teeker tcchnoloCY for
target acquisition by tactical missile systems. Such
prop-ams include development and utilization of ad·
vanoed detectors. cbarJe-coupled devices., focal pJanc
arrays and diaital imaaina proocuina technologies.
Electro-optical applications cover missile guidance, niaht
vision, laser radar, target tracking and fire control. Case
said.
The division develops and produces electro-optical
systems for battlefield surveillance, target acquisition and
tracking and la5ef' designation for accurate weapon
delivery. An advanced system which is smaller and lighter
than the F/A-18 FLIT currently in service with the U.S.
Acct will better enable pilots to accurately locate and
track tar&ets for weapon delivery by the Navy's newest
fighter /ettack ai.rcn.ft.
The divison developed and produces missile control
valves for lona·ranie stratqlC missiles and 2Smm
ammunition for the U .S. Army's Infantry and Cavalry
FiJhting vehicles. the U.S. Manne Corps Harrier aircraft
and the U.S. Navy's Sea Spectre patrol boats.
Johnson&Johnson won't
halt sale of spermicides
NEWARK, N.J. (AP) -Johnson &. Johnson.
ordered to pay $4. 7 million in damages to a woman who
clainred the company's contraceptive gel caused severe
binh defects in her daughter, says it will not remove such
products from the market.
The company, which has sold the products for more
than 40 years. said last week that it is appealing the award.
"Johnson & Johnson bas no intention ofhalti°' the
sale of its spermicide birth-control products." J&J said in
a statement from its New Brunswick headquaners.
Analysts said the company dominates the spermicide
market, but revenues from contnceptivc creams and ~Is
arc small compared to overall J&J sales and dropping
them would have bad little fi.na.ncia.Limp-()~
company.
But the Planned Parenthood Federation of America
said it would be a tragedy, espeCJally among teen-agers, 1f
the spennicides were no longer available. About 3.4
million women use spermicides.
Two weeks ago. a federal appeals court in Atlanta
upheld the $4. 7 million award to a Nashville, Tenn.,
college professor whose daughter was born in 1981 with
one arm, a deformed hand, a cleft palate and a bhnd eye.
The woman -who used the contnccptive gel
produced by a J&.J subsidiary, Ortho Pbannaceuucal
Corp., before and after she became pregnant -said that
the company should have warned consumers about the
potential for birth defects.
She said studies had suggested a lmk between the
product and birth defects.
But Planned Parenthood said "there really 1s no
association between the spermmde and harm to the
developtna f ctus."
Susan Yates, a Planned ~nthood spokeswoman m
New York, said spermicides. sold over-the-counter, arc
tbemost-uled form of birth contrOI a:mOQileen-agen.
lflbe product were talccn otfthe mark~t. she said, the
number of unintentional pregnancies would incrcasc
because manyi teen-agers would decide not to use any
birth control mstead of switching to another form.
J&.J sa.id 1ts spcrm1etde sales last year made up about
S30 million of its $6 billion in overall sales. The company
declined to release profit figures. but analysts said it was
a.round $3 million -or less than the Tennessee award. •Many homeowners have re-
financed mortgages because interest
rates have dropped lower than
they've been in years. The points
charged for refinancing may be tax
deductible.
The tax code isn't clear on this
point, and the IRS says it's studying
the issue. Be sure you pay any points
separately. do not have them in-
cluded as part of the loan amount or
pay them out of an account with the
same lender
NBC will accept 15-second commercials
Ralph Scott 11 a cer1lfled ptibllc
accoutant wltb offices ill Newport
Beac~.
Joining two rival networks in allowing
bombardment of more product spiels
NEW YORK (AP) -NBC' has second commercials. meaning that
announced that it will JOID ABC and '1ewers will ~ bombarded by more
CBS 1n acctptmg all forms of IS· product messages in the same
The Great
amount of time.
NBC, unwdhng to give its nval
networks an advenising advantage.
will allow what the industry calls
isolated IS-second commercials this
fall. Earlier this month. ABC an-
nounced it would stan accepting 15·
second ads in &ptember CBS staned
perm1tt1Qg all fonns of I S-sccond ads
last year.
NBC has resisted the honer ads for
several reasons. includina concerns
that the commercial brcaJcs would
overflow with potentially confl1ctma
ads and that NBC would have more
bookkeeping work. In add111on. some
NBC affihates feared that the cheapcT
ads might take business away from
toe.al stations
tn a st.a1,.ment last Fnday, P>er
Mapes. president of the NBC tel~
V1S1on network. said the dcc1s1on was
made to stay competitive with the
other networks and because of "the
(Pleue eee DIP A CT {88)
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Larger deposit.\ an<l longer tenn~ mean
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FSTE --·-----·-
----~---~--------------------------------------------------------------------
.. Cout DAILY PILOT/ Tu.day, Mey 2], 1988
Planning a family? Considering the pros and cons of
pregnancy and parenthood? This free seminar can help
answer your questions.
-Seminar Topi~ and Speikers -
Maximizing Fertility
Getting in Shape for Pregnancy
MJdlad T. Ranchi, M.D.
Oblcetrks md Gyneaqy
Susan Krohofeldt, PT
Phy9all Therapy
Combining Motherhood and Fatherhood
with Other Careers
George Jayatllilka, M.D.
Pediabics
Thursday, May 29 7 p.m. -9: 30 p.m.
Cl~ size is limited.
Please call for reservations.
(7 14) 895-6636 ext. 62 7
.___-.,,..,..,,.,.........,,""'="='=-----"J l I 0
.._ ___ .....;.;.;~=~ .._ _ __.ID
~;:::======~ ::::==~' D ~~~~~--ID ~~n
•:=t:. _=,=.== .. =====--~rutJj
~ c • r .... ,""'''""' 10-. •'"·"" ~ "' ,,,, ... , , .... ,, -
MEMORIAL HEALTH CENTER
OF HUNTINGTON BEACH
Community Education, Room 203
7677 Center Avenue, Huntington Beach
This health education program ls offered frtt of
charge as a community servl ce.
IMPACT •••
homBa
fact that 1M ~ority of NBC af-
filiates CUJ"Teotly accept I S-1ec:ond
isolated commercials.••
With tbe networks avefllina 611>
minutes of commercial time in each
hour of prime time, viewers have
been ablorbina national pitches for
hairspray. motor oil and other prod-
ucts 10 mostly JO..tecond doses.
For some time, au three networks
have accepted I s-seoond ads durina
their short newsbreak sqments. Last
year, CBS aUowed I S..second ads,
without aoy restrictions, while NBC
and ABC aa:epted back·t~back IS..
second COJnmercials, but only for
products from the same company.
ThecbaDJ.e io NBCs policy, as well
as ABCs. will aUow two companies to
advertise in the same JO.second
space.
.. This will brina more advertisers
into TV," said John Sisk. senior vice
president and director o( neaotiating
at the J. Walter Thompson ad -.ency.
"It's good for the smaller-budget
advertisers who only could atrord
newspaper advertising before."
GM delaying
shift layoffs
inVanNuys
LOS ANGELES (AP)-In a m ove
that will Jive baJfits worken at a Van
Nuys auembll' plant three more
weeks on the JOb, General Moton
Corp. has postponed the indefinite
layoffs of its second shift until July 7.
The company bad planned to
furlough its 2, l 90 second-shift
worken indefinitely beginning June
9, while keeping the day shift on the
job.
The Van Nuys ~lant has about
5,200 workers, ma.king it one of the
largest employers in the San Fernan-
do Valley.
Under the revised plan announced
last Thursday, the company will lay
off both shifts for one week on June 9
to instaU $2 million in new paint-
sprayina equipment, then have them
all return to work.
The second shift will then be
furloughed indefinitely beginning
July 7 to reduce inventories of the cars produced by the plant -the
slow-seUing Chevrolet Camaro and
'---------------------------------------------------------------------.., Pontiac Firebird.
e nt1mber one
managed savings and
loan in the nation
is located
inNe ortB
and sta sa.
forhrs magazinP. t hP in lPrnationall~· respected business publicat ion, rated
Columh ia Savings numhrr one of alJ savings and loa ns in its Yardsticks of
managrm('nt fH 1rfon11arH·f1•
\Vhich is not su rpri si ng. Columbi a has long been kn ovvn fo r solid and effici ent
managPment. For P\amp1P. Columbia's administrative cos ts are far b low the other
major sa\i ngs and loan ">. And nu-oan and invrstme nt strategies ar among the most
successful in thr indu~lt'\.
Thf' rPsult is profil. Profit I hat c<111 hr passed along t.o you in the form of high rates
on savings. And low rntPs on loans.
Bring profitahlP kP(lps Columbia st rong. too. Over three tim es a strong as the
gnvPrnmrnt requirrs . And. of c·ours<\ yo ur savings are federally insured to $100,000.
So 'visit f'o lum hia Sming~· ~Pwport Brach or Costa Mesa branc h today, or call
our Co nve nien C'r Ban king numtwr: l-800-6G2 RANK. And find out what th e numb er
nnP managPC) savings and loa n in thP nation can do fo r you. ..
COi I 'MBIA
SAVINGS A NO LOAN ASSOCIATION
One of America's largest qav1ngs and loan U SO<'iations.
~GECO TY
SEWP011' BEACH "''"wpton f,.ntrr r>r and ~nl.A Ro'ill (iii 1ii-II11'.l:ll
COSTA MESA llarhor Roulr\aNI anti" tl"in ( 71411 .. 11> 71 11
OTHE LOCATIONS
BP.VEW·OORENY 11<120 !ll·v1•rly Houlrvsrd. ( 21.1 l li:l lllllO
RMl l.Y Hrtt..c; Wihhln• lloulrvard anil Robtrt.'lnn, (~1;1)f\Fii 1,:,0:1
BMILY BlLUJ Willlhll1' Boull'vanl and C'amdl'n (11:1) ICfil! Oftfll
81.ENTWOOD JllUO San VlcPntP Boulf'vard, (:ll!l) R:lfi iR2~
KAST LOS ANG ELM 2!lt>I F.ai t l~t '\trt'f'I < !11).!AA 01~
LA MIRADA lm~rial llwy 111d ' nt" l1rrtrvlf"'· <21 ll U 17fii
PALM DESEIT Hidtwl0'11 II ~nd 7.J, C 619 >.WO l!ill
..
.\NAREIM 910 S. Rmokllu,.,t nr.ar Rall and Bmokho,.,t , (il4) 77fi ilOI
l.AK! FOIMT l..ake> fM'f'~I Orhf' and Rorknr111. (il4 ) i70 IK)Sfi
PAl,M SPRINGS 211 Ea..'t Palm Canyon Drive, (619) 322 2200
SAN'TA MONI A 3021 Wll!hlrt Boulevard, (213) !!2G S&92
TAKZANA ll!M4 \'tntura Bhd , \\Ct tor Rt Nia Rlvd ,(HIA):\44 4MM
TRJIJ)' PAJllAX "~~11th Falrru Avl"nUI', (21:l) 9'.i? 421ti
WHITITEI 16141 EMt Whlturr 8oul.-vud (21J ) IUl'i 27111
WJLJIKIU·PAIUAX ~ WiJ•hln' Blvd '4ucuaJ Bfon,.nt I.tr,. BJcl•. I ~11l 11 Ii mo ..
GUY KERNER RILEY
Investment firms
name councils
Keltla A. Guy, vace president 9fE.F. Hatton'• Costa Mesa office.
bas been named to Hutton's 1986 Directors' Advisory Councd,
limited to the firm's top 40 account executives. Council mem~rs
meet annually to exchange ide~s and adv1se Hutton seruor
management on the reta1l 10vcstment business. • • • Newport Beach resident James Kelly, senior vice president of
investments fo r Prudentlal·Bacbe SecllrUlea, bas been elected to the
firm's 1986 Chairman's Council. The council's 90 members are
selected annually from among the firm's 5.000 account executives. • • • Carolyn Kerner, sales associate at Ce1tury U Beaclaalde
Realtors in Huntington Beach, has been honored as one of the top.
producing 276 sales associates in the Century 21 system. Ke rner
received the 1986 Centunon Award for producing gross closed
comm1ss1ons in excess ofS 150,000. • • • • Tim RUey has JOined Martetmg Dtrectloaa, I.De. as scmor
account executive. He comes to the Newport Beach firm from a
position as account executive at PbUJpa·Ramaey, I.De. in San Diego. • • • Brtu J . Ha.aratty has been appointed to the newly created
position of director o( professional computer-aided dcsign/drafUng
and manufacturing software systems for Ma.aafactariac ud
Con111tltl1 Services Inc. of Irvine. Hanratty has been with MCS for
10 years. Todd A. CollLD1 has been promoted to professional
computer-aided design/drafting and manufactunng systems man-
ager for the firm. He has been with M CS for five years. • • • Mlclaael J . Kaitter, founder and president of Kaltter &
A11oclate1, a Newport Beach architectural and planning firm. is one
HANRATl'Y COLLINS KNITTER
offiveOrangeCounty architects named to the nme-member Meet the
Ex~rts architectural workshop slated fo r the June Pacific Coast
Budders Conference in San Francisco. He 1s one of the youngest
architects ever chosen for the workshop, whose participants arc
picked based on their knowledge of cost-cutting methods and
industry trends. Others include: Aram 8111eaJu of A.ram 811aeaJu
& A11oclatea; Jame1 Cooney ofRlclaardaon, Nagy, Martin; Pkil Hove,
Derkas Groap; all of Newport Beach. and Kermit Dortaa, Kermit
Dor111 ArclaJt«t1 of Corona del Mar. Newport Beach architect
Artltar DuJellu ofDaoiellaD ArcbJtechlre u d PlaDD.lag in Newport
Beach is organizer of the thrce-dav workshop. . ' . Ira Poormud has been promoted to corporate scmor executive
vice president at Leiglttoo a.ad A11odate1, IDc., an Irvine-based
geotechnical consulting firm. Poormand brings 20 years of
experience in civil engineering to his new post. • • • Laguna Niguel resident Kelly Ale11udro has joined Com·
mercial Broilers, I.De. of EJ Toro as a sales and leasing agent.
specializing in restaurants. She was formerly general manager of
POORMAND ALESSANDRO OSHINSltV
Garcia'• of Scottsdale in San Oie2o . • l •
Pai l Oski.Daky has been named scmor copywnter for 8.J.
Stewart AdvertblDg and Pabllc Relatlons, IDc. ofNewport Beach. He
has been in the ad vertising field si nee I 968. • • • Willie A. BerwLD has been named prOJCCt engineer of the central
division of Irvine-based Nexa1 Development Corp. The Costa Mesa
resident had been regional project manager for Brtclaard Ma.nag~
meot, I.De. of San Diego. • • • Newport Beach nauve James H. Hart, vice president and co-
founder of Star Software System of Torrance. has been honored as
Outstandmg Entrepreneur Alumnus oft he Y car by the University of
Southern California.
REFI NOW
Y 041r Home 1, Y 041t
lest lnveitment
108/o 15-YEAR
FIXED
OWNER OCC
APt 10 45
FIXED
OWNER OCC
APR 10 S7
714-9S6-050I
VANGUARD MOITGAOI
COIPOIATION
IVU IT APf'CMNTMINT
OlllCl llNOH A M()ITQ.AOf ltOQa
CARDS •••
FromB5
pay their entire account balance each
month, which he said covered about
70 percent of the bank's cardholders.
"This card has no ~cc period, but
you save si~ to eight percentage
points off your interest rates," he
added.
Another strateay was announced
by San Francisco-based Wells Farao
Bank. the nation's 10th largest. which
will cut the rate on its MasterCard
and Vasa accounts from 20 percent to
17 percent, but only for customers
who have held the cards with Wells
Fargo for fi ve years or more.
Aside from Wells Fargo, the rate
changes generally are bemg made by
smaller institutions.
rve opened my own
new Allstate office.
For • lone WDe.. I've b.11 lll"Yinc yoo.r
~ oetda from our ,.,u1ar Allltate office.
,., ,..---
Now Allat.te bu liven a the opportunity to
ope11 ftl1 own tep&l"lt.t offic». couveiUent to you.
$amt food values ID in.sur&DCI!
Same helpful aemct.
And my vah.t fritad.t will
find lh1t I'm JUtl u eay to
rt.te.b and l.&lk t.o
So calJ ED(! .. 0t COrDf IJl 1
Allstate·
·.
•Home
• Ufe
•Auto Loan•
•Car
• Boat
• RV'e
• Buaineu
Orange CoMt DAILY PllOT/T~, Mey 27, 1-.,
Ber-sheyfighting bitter battle over bonboas
Tiny company wants liquor metsqc to children. But Ermatk Joe., the &mall Pocono retail wine and liquor sales to Stalb-Nn stores. A debate '"The me of candy t.ba& COGWDI liquor H• in~
Mountains compeny wbicb i1 lobbyina (or the bill so it over aboliahina the Liquor Control Boud monopol y bu stores. movie bouaa and other mail outlets nam clirectty filling allowed tn chocolates can build aQndy factory employina 110 people, says the raaedTbfo! Y~·u·ftA .uu ..... by ., __ ................. --· a =~t=e~!=~:a.-=idand could bave famous , chocolate maker just WIJ\ll lo dump on a .. IClllla VH .......... IWlJMU& -vUIU ......... --on .... HARRISBURG~ Pa. (AP) - A small candy competitor. section of a 1909 food law to allow the manutilctwe of Sitko called tbe Id mis ... diJll becall8e &matt a. ·
oompeny iJ flab•~ ... aiant Henhey f,....,.· Corp. ll'I. a bt't•·r 1 • 0a-..1... • . candy with an alcohol content o( up to 6 pm:ent by said 1t would aaiee '° ld1 tbe candy oaly ill liquot llOftll.
J bo .:;-1 . ~ "" " t s a vw and Goliath situation," said Jaruna volume. Sbe also aid Hetlbey may have more tban the public
ball e ov~ 0 . na, u State qialaton coo ider whether Sitko, an Ennark official. The Hou1e puled the bill J 33-67 with aupponm unerat aC bean. Half ofEmwt't propoeed product Ji.De
to allow liquor lD chocolate. "Our position is that any amount of alcohol bu the U)'llll it would be vinually lmpouiblc (or someone to Ft would be non-&lcobolic chocolate, the II.id. ~ weeks after the •lite House approved a bill potential for harm to children," QOUnt.eted Henhey druAk 00 the candy. The Senate oould consider the bill Log di~i~ aoy fltll~ltioa a.bat Hmbey, witb pcnn1tbftl the manufacture of aloobolic candy Hershey spokesman John Lona. "Consumption by younasten next week. oearly S2 billion 10 wortdwide .i. 1ut )'elf, feen
placed Wse adt in 32 Pennsylvania newspape;.. for two shouldn't be cncouraaed, and th.at'• what we (eel the The Hershey Ida which ca.tried the beadlinc .. No com~tion &olD the uPlfatt cbocolatier.
days lut week ur:aina the Senate to kill the bill. manufacture of alcoboMilled candy would do." Liquor in Chocolate,:. laid the lesitlation ''sends the Our estimates o( tbe total potential mmtel ol tbe ...
The ads uid alcohol in candy sends the wrong Pennsylvania is one of ooly two states that limita wrona 1ipaJ to the youth of our nateand America.'' product are not w,e. It'• not a competitioe itlUe."
How to
regain
excess
taxes
There are several sources of re-
ceipts which are not taxable on your
federal income tax return. If you have
questions, seek professional as-
sistance. Remember you can amend
your f~ral income ~ return for
three pnor yean to ~ID any excess
wcs you may have paid. A few of the
more common ones mistakenly re-
ported by taxpaycn as income arc:
•Gifts and inheritances. If these
were subject to tu, they should have
been fully wed before you received
your portion.
•Clilld support. Child support is
distinguished from alimony which is
taxable.
•AwardsforpcnonaJiajury.Thc
personal injury portion 1s non-W-
able, but money recei ved as punitive
dam~ is taxable.
•Di vidends received on life in-
surance policies which arc not yet
paid up.
•Ga.in on the sale of a personal
residence by taxpayers age SS and
older.
•Gain on the sale of your personal
residence if replaced within certain
ti me and money limits.
•Life insurance proceeds.
•Death benefits of up to SS,000
received from an employer on the
death of an employee.
Benefits paid to you under work-
man's compensation for an industrial
accident •Interest you receive on state and
municipal bonds.
•Money you borrow or the princ -
pal portion of money repaid to you
which you previously loaned ouL
•Income tu refunds to the extent
not previously taken as a tu deduc-
tion. Ral.. Seot1 11 a ~rtlfle4 pebUc
accoatu& wl~ offices la Newport
BeaeL
Government
won'tblock
takeover bid
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Jus-
tice Department's antitrust division
has announced it won't stand in the
way of Burroughs C-0rp.'s attempt to
take over Sperry Corp. Federal anbUUSt lawycn have
"carefully examined" the potential
impact of a Burroughs' purc.basc of
Sperry stock and .. concluded that the
acquisition raised no antitrust prob-
lems " a statement issued Friday by
the J~stice Department said. Burro~s offered to buy Sperry for
$4.06 billion on May S in a btd to
CTCale the world's second-biggest
computer company. but Sperry 1s
rcsistin& the move.
The Justice Department's state-
ment said that if Burroughs fiJes a
motion in U.S. District Court in
Detroit seeking the court's approval
of the proposed acquisition, the
department wouJd support the mo-
tton.
Burrou&hs is subject to a 1913
consent cfecrcc which provides that
the company may not acquire a
controllin& interest in. the stock of ~y
company enpaed m oompet1tt~n
with Burrou,ahs, 'fV!thout first obtam-
mg the approval of the court.
The department concluded that
neither current antitrust law nor the
1913 decree should prevent the
acquisition. the statement said .. The Justice Department said 1t
arrived at its decision after undcr-
tak:ina "a normal menJcr review."
Burrouahs Cbainnan W. Michael
Blumenthal bas said the merger
wouJd increue competition in the
industry by creatina~ st.r0naer ri ~l to Intc~tional Busmess1 Machines
Corp. and the c!lleflina Japanese
computer companies.
However, Spe~ directors have
iaflorcd Burrou&hs offer, and Bur-
rouatis responded on May 8 by
launchina a hostile tender offer for
Sperry stock on May 8 at the same
price, $70 a share. or $4.06 billion.
Sperry called the tender offer
"wholly inadequate" and took de-
fenstvc stepa. includina a tender offer
to buy 29.S llUllion shares of its o~
stock ID cue Burrouahs succeeded 10
pinina control oflhe compeny. That
wouJd benefit Sperry shattholden
and saddle BWTOuahs wtlh extra deb\.
A weckaa<> BurrouahsofTetedS7Sa
sbart for Sperry. or s;4.3S billion, but
Spmy's directon icnom.'I the sweet·
eMd offer. Bvm>uabJ returned to its
hostile tender offer at tb'e $7().per-
ahart~ce. That offer u{>ires at midn t., New York City umc. on
June .
.-~~~.......:...:..:.::~~~~_:..~~~~~~~·-=-~~~~~~~~~...:....::....::..........:..;.___::..._~~~~~~~~~~~~..;;._~~~~~..;_;~~~~~__;~~~~~~
lirc-d of heing nid.clcd <m<l <l1~~ to dealh by
yourchcd..i ng. account?lben open an Advantage
Chcc~ing account at Great Amencan . It \ a no-
non~nsc account with lime and monc}' \Uving
a<l\'antagc-. that really add up.
No monthly fees.
No transaction charges.
With AdvantagcChcd ,mg. all )OU ha-..c to do
i'i keep a low $3(X) minimum ht~aocc. And you'll
get unlim ited chel'.kwri ting. Unl im1tetl tl~posit'.
And all ~in<lsofadditional ~rv1ccs. At no charge.
Compare your checking account
with Advantage Checking. ·
Advantage Your
Featu~ Checking Bank
Minimum balance S300
Number of check.' \OU Cdn unlimited
write no charge
Max imum number of dtJ>O"ll'i unlimited
no charge
ATM ~ unlimited
no charge•
Automatic pa) mcnl\ 10 I RA ~C'i-00 chargc
Automatic pa)'ment on kwin ve-.·no charge
Automatk dcpo<;it'I )~nochargc
Transfer funds yes-no cha~
Balantt Inquiry h) 1elephone ~-no charge
"' llourTtllc" <;J\ll\,\11 \1""''"''~ ( llOH \!\cl""'~
n1~""'11' \:m ll1t ~-' "" •II
Added Pdsscard convenience.
When you open your account. you'll rcce1\te a
Chcd.ing Pa.,-.canJ. That plug' you into
Grea1 Amencan\cxten~ive nctworl. of 24-Hour
Teller;;. So you can make dep<NL\. Withdra"'
cash. Or ju-.t chcc"-. your balance . Anyt ime. At
O\tcr ICX) California location".
Your P.J.\.-.canl " aJso good for m-.tant ca.-.h .11
over 2.SCX> STAR SYSTEM '" ATM~ thruughoul
the We.,t. More than 10.(XXJCIRRLTS k ATM-.
acm'' the U.S . and Canada.
Another plus.
Transfer money by phone.
Advantage Chl.--cking\ low minimum balance
let-, you 11u1ke money hy keeping more of your
fund\ in a Great American~' mg-. or moncy-
marl..et account. And a.'i you 1~'t..'<l 1t. you can
tram fer money from ''iving' to chec"-. mg -and
bac~ again -by phone Ju\t h~ pu-.hmg a fe-w
bunon~. And still. no charge
Open your account
today.
Stop by the Great Artl(.!ncan offa.t· Ill your
neighborhood. You can open .m Ath· antagc
Checking a<.x.·oum in Jll'-t 41 k~ minute-.. And
when you do. enter the Great ~mcncan/PSA
facape to Expo Swee~lake-.. It \ fnx·'
Great American
Your advantage~
Enter now!
The Great American/PSA
"Escape-to-~"
SweepstakeS
Win one of five/reetours for two
ro Expo '86 in Vancouver. 8.C.
E:..M.·h winner Jn<l a gu~'' will fl~ /rf'<' IO
Bellingham. "-'J'hinglon. w11h.1ll 1he
\.·om Ion nt PSA\ I + ~ -.catmµ on one ,,f the
worh.J\ ncwc,1 ict llct't' You 'll he met ill lht.'
.urpon h~ the E-.XPO hprec..-.fln<lJnvcn
Jcm-., 1hc honkr 11110 Bnt"h Columh1J
Snon. ~ou 'n: 111 Va111.0U'l'I JI J Jdu:\e hotel
whcl\· lnJginjl '' /r1 ·1 Im lwll nighh A/rn
nun Hour nt thl' 1.11). 1w11 fl'C't' multi <la)
r:.xro P.1'-.c' .• mJ )Our f11'1 return l11gh1
"1th fXiA l\lUOd OUI th(.'<., .... ('Cp,1.t~l'' pr11c
pa1.~.1)'!e f nh:r ,11 am (in:.11 Amcm .. in
nll 1n• "hen: ~nu' 1111 m.h nmplctl'
~"l'l'r"'·'~c' n1k' "'' pul\ ha-.c.: '' 1\l~c'"'n
~.
Catch Our mile
CRRUS. ~
•••Orange Coast OAJLY PILOT/ Tueaday, May27, 1988 I: G i ldilMM1hl l:fuiH!iiif.iiit
TIElllY'I DLlllH PllOll
OIY ,., ~~ ..... , Cllt
UUllO l"'lt It 17t l JJ\'r
usw"1"•111'40u It+'" l~~·'t:; H 1 + '" '.!' . 20
di S.S I
8~ I lf
HtT;:JI. ~ ~fM~, I)
"': = . m~l:I t 11 I:~ .. ,
. -~-v -, ..... u V.W. I v~Lpl) .. ~~110U
~~F:. It Va!O . I v~ , ~I"'&~,.. J' I Vt . I I ~=I · Vt f ~= t I
v ., ij ' VOl'lltCI VultUA 2 .. -w--=~~rll~, I W• '~n
:" ~.. 21 =·'. 17 Weill!' \· ~ We r . =~ t Watle t J ==~ i I WeYOitfl WMnU .,.. ..... "' ""'
Stock prices increase
NEW YORK (AP) -Stock pncc!o rose on
Wall Street Tuesday. boosted mainly by expecta-
tions of lower interest rates and a stronger
economy 10 the second half of the year.
It was the firtt day oftradmg sinc.c fnday. The
market was closed Monday for the Memorial Da>
holiday.
Analysts suggested that the market appeared
to be moving out of us recent pcnod of
consohdat1on and correc11on.
The lack of heavy volume may also have
indicated that many investors were reluctant to
commit themselves -or simply that some trader~
were late in returning from 1he1r holidays, the)
added.
The analysts said that 1he economy's sluggish
performance so far this year. 1ogethcr with
conttnu1ng low 1nOat1on and the weakened dollar,
has led many 10 speculate 1hat the Federal Rescr"c
Board will cut interest rates, perhaps by fall .
This hai. fueled the latest rally, along with
investor ant1c1pat1on of a stronger U.S. et.".Qnomy
in the second half of the year, they said.
WHAT AMEX Om I WHAT NYSE Om
NEW YORK (AP) Mav 27
adv~~ U~•noecs Totel IUUft Ntw hloh'
Ntwlow'
AMEX LEADERS
NEW YORK (A~) -SeM, 4 p.m. one.
end Mt · c:he"" .. "'-• rMtt tdl'it Amet1Cen St.dr Exc:hen91 luues,
trtdlr• natlonellv et mero ftlen s . Nern.
Wicke' UnlvRtirci FtAustPr n l.orlfnerTet n BAT Ind WengLet>B AmE>1PFFdwt HornHer ~8i!~S~pfv
v 1.rr,. m~ l.s: 14 ,
NEW YORK !AP) Mn '11 Prtv de{:
,m
' NYSE LEADERS
METALS QuoTES
nTrn Ull Stk IMUS Tr111n Ulll' 65 Siii 11,091,600
NEW YORK (API Spol l\Of'lle0tou1 """'_, ~
T._a"l'
AlvlftlNHll • 62 2& c.nt1 '* pe;jnO. NY Comn apct month c;IOMd Fri c...-. 8a-et\o\ c:.enta a poun4 U 6 O.tln•l>Ont c..,., e' eo cenla -POUnd NY c-. ej)OI mnnlll c:IOMd Fr1
LHd 19-10 «*Ill 1 pound
Z:lftc 3$ C*llJ • pound oerMlr9d
Tl" $3 4902 (-1111 w..-oompo.11e P<IC><I I* ID I tllH• S6 10!1-ouncre Hendy & Hermen ~ JS 148PlfltoYounot,NYComt• tpOIMOlllll
tlO-' ~rl
.._...,., SUO 00-S216 00 P« 74 ~ n--Y0t~
l'lellfwwl "' t S 00 So41fl 00 ~toe; ,.,.,c;/'t.,.I 1r0y
ounc. NY
Stock market•
were cloaed Monday
thz.euthrzntic ongn10l.
~ bruxh 414 R>e>'\10no\ord17\ .. /&t'i PjJ'1Q
Met'MX>ti VI\ \o9Z-1001 "'46bMxxi bl-.d • (I~~· ~7 ~
po ro 5Z~~th lolr4ow ,8l8/ -9~~~
mon th~ fh I '\ to9. "°""'rdlly IO t.o 6 t. 8Ut'tdoy noon to~
· GfW9I CoMt DAILY PILOT ff~, ..., 21, 1•
CALL 642-5678 IF CALUNQ FROM NORTH ORANQI
IF CAWNQ FROM SOUTH ORANQI
540-1220
411 llGO
........ IMt C.11.... JIM Cetta... MM lat..... ... ltal1h tt lhrt l 1•11• Lfl ri.21,l,111.h11~I Cl1d1~ IW
····-UMIY ., .... Del_ II'· . -11& iiN n: c;w..,.....• 1111 - . . -I • - - - --.. 2081 Senta AN. ena. La Petto endtl P•tlo. 9.,.,.. dl•tl-... • ..... -LI • MA&. ~Tl
2 untt• __, ohenMt, 0.. (218)141.,.1M °' 1121No'pettl64-r,:r wHher. coin lndrr. "'°''1to.fwad,l'4•1~;;miiiilili=l llll. IPCMTM ... I.IP Gf..e ...,_ -(114)MMOli3 1721/mo ~1 Nloonclo,d/W,w ,pool,1• • WQ ,. ...,. tat• ltd
Pf1o8d Ofhtt M Ir..... New 2 1ft1W bdrme. 2._, 21" 2be wlpOOf, MWfy ' I 4 2 51 m O + ~-11t11 , ' LMie Cll1 Gmlt. °'9!119
IN, a. up. 1w,' 1..;. 2 ., tl'Clf gs. ,.... pelnted end CC»t'd, no ....... ..... IMI eeo..t014 °' 111..a11a. F• ADS g:.w..r~~ CHntrr er••· b·
down, trpa. btt-N & 4 etyte. No '•t llH ~-:::1; MOO s:;;-'00991&oid ™ ~ 10 rent. ptMlle (llN)C)UCTI......, ;'~., 0:.. ~ ~~-Prtoed M u..at1 «472..US tor-~amoUr Hllltot'lc bMtt, '-Nie nonemour IK f1EE .... ..._ c.... ..._, -.ooo. .... ....... 21Mle2 ..... ae. Townhollee. ~ .. oft~ Ol'IJ.CNldOK.C...,.., ~ CAllTI cesns r. •:cs· 2b• u~ unit etory Towntlome All Double ow-oe. '•tlO. COiie iMS/mo 4M-el07 ~ 546-7111. Cal: ..::C~~ U: amenlttee. 11210/mo. = ':*,:·~~..eo'r,-•• ,.1 llMii M SECLUDED. troploal, ar11t1t. ettlhttHtlo .., ~ ._. -.. 2bd 2M. fr1* & P'W' VIiie ,._.. t7~12 1 _ beem1, frpto. tennl•, .. ..,. INiur9 ..,... tor ._, ,If, ...... ....._
:-.-. °:~ °"' ..... ,. 1'p?!=. 2:'A.~•~o~ &1~~ .. ?'.. :r=-r.=z-~o..fl1Md ~·=.•v.=-a .... Z. .. ' •· OoMl'I • • E...ede 2br 2M ebocM petlO pOOf cMttd ' ._,.,"' ' ..,...... ........... .,._a = ............
down 2':"i~=· o!: "''"' kkSe ok MOO'• S75C)NO PETS 722~1 Incl. NO PETS 54Ml5
5
...... tr ... L.o8t: iiOO .... tor °""--··· JC'IM ••• z I ..., tooect0n Wtnter/eUmmer manyothlrtavtlebte 18r Ver....._ PenttlcMe. 2741 ...... Mctoe.IMICIMc. cadone & ... -II :...,...Cal ~~ Priced et Kldel~~·.t ,_ U:~'f!.2d~n!r~to. ~Gd~.~.Z: ......... :';.~.:..":~ at..-.or•Wlllh ~=--=1 1111' I:~
• -lot 1126 .. 634M1IO No pelt Meo N/Mlkra 975-4912 VIiie Aentell Storeoe ti/tty. -I.iiil-HI. No ~··· ~ ~~.. { 11 .. r::':r .... le.t My... 790-1418 or 4M2s7529 28r 1a. . Al,._..,_ C.M . ...._51,1 10-7pm ..,_... _.1211..... ..,..,... C1111 tor _.1-.i·iiijiiiiif-
*P!NTM>GE COVE• ...._ ~.~. ,,.. crpt E. SIDE C.M. We. C119M. flllHll lt1tltH ~--1......, llr ..... M 2llr 2la CondollN. CMr -.;;aliB.JIH eome vtew. 8tepe to bel\. tingle. (10x20) on prv .. C.. ..._ ._.-~~~,------I ,... & 1tfMma. New 1807 W. l8lboa &Ml. ...,, IOng term 9'«9, ----------UNIOUE ()pportJ to own. decor. W/d ... .,.,. 2 * .. 1Plltm11 a.tty 720-8042 10-5. '"'"'°· In-MOO. A N e w b • I I n -::., ..... ._, ..::. ..-.aw.abe,aoo• .. w/tJ91fW. tit mo + FMtumg bMutltul ieno. ••Bn1nd new 2• 21a. RENT.atHOLEGAAAOE ntne ... leNtl* ._, ._..•wClioes_...._ _. .. ;..':::, Cll
home In IN 8lufft AHO llOOMG.&45-3115 ~. 8809, poot/1P9-Choice arM. Garage. MOIM0,2M4LASAU.E. lo-. Join MW U pto-:z:.1::• oo•,uter • ........, ., .... ,. ~'tO ... ~ benefltl= of ........ Petlo/dedll. Geregee °' Peuo. ltOO No pet• CALL AnEA 5PM grwn. 1*911eMc* eo.n. pnir ~ ~=· au"'• t•: McO•tt••• tale ten-Y cerporta.Sony,nopete 790-1713ore57-111e ae.2144 munllr Hoepltel. 91CP · ......., 1111-a--.,
orOMlnQ • 12 .U., 21M 18drm N20 I 77o-3162. I " ... Awe, CM-.
enc1 oer•. poot. clublhae. 11" 2 B d r m 1 IA 8 • EnlOY the Lwtury of tM -~ IHI • -r::-· eundk•. MHK IJ ... • ::i:...,. "*'-1715 2Bdrm 2e. 1795 bMUtlfUI eurr~ of ENcIBiib itoMXdi· ..... • for _, CNI•-·' "' 111 I •• ,, O::,:,~~e~~2,:,u . :ete'=orm.~ 825Center8t 142s1424 •1111111111 Apcix.20.SO'CMloc.2.3 ....... •II =.:,,~'-:r. ldaHa•d .. MlllM.
. . .,. & ,.,.,., rm. 8"""J ... H . 1 BR mot* hofM In In 8 ~ Condo with eutoe °' ? 4M2-23IO dy, E;t:llO:d •™ IMd to F/tlme. C•I wt .. ~ we IMO • ..... CMtt kitchen w/br .. kfut ... .W adH ..... No ..... ~~· 2 car 99'809 evlWt<nd 97~ and ..em ~ ooeott 175-7114.,._,1-12 "" ,.ar .an.ii «* In
.....
nc>c* 41 11 .. .,. __. .,..,., _. • wuhopener.Seoguardad.... w/-..-.... ... --. C.-Mw ., ..... .. I• 1,.~ =.::· c:ii GU pd. 140 Cabtltlo, getaL W/d hlu.419, From • ....... ftf4 ...t; -.;;:..; ';''" prv o.n. Off. ~ ptlof'9 ...,....... ...... tor
_ _,,[iii(i@"'NiW ... "''.Ub ... .:.;:;:;,;1 T. r r y • 4. -1 '1 7 1 75-MtO, 973-7797 11395. c.1114• 0508 dWWWRUM ™-home. Fot mote.,...,~ and 10 -... ,.... IMllUrtly ........ ......
2" BA COHDO-eonu. rm. 541-tt23 e¥ea. • '550 South COMt Ptaa • •t _.. home 2eu 1450/wk 213-<te1-4163, 8Nly. .,., . ...,. •.eo "'· Cll Ptof ......... -. ~ e/c, MCUr1tJ ll'Y9Ml'ft, *>"" .,.. tBdrm, e1r. terlC9d "'"' ._., + 10c8nt9 ml . ...._ .... tor ...._ Ml-.eo72 carot. to ... alof'I wlaleMe
..... petlo ' deck, ,,. ..... .... IHI pOOf, carport. No pMe. Lrg 3BR 2~'AIA -~._2 R8vl""""'*. 957-t071. .... I •• -and ........... ....... Pltlnt new cerpet 2 c:. 64&-8791 C¥ ger, • ......... ••• ~ '*""-~
g'irage, s 11 a' 000 IQdelpeit ~ Oloee 5 rm ctOM to . t13"1mo. c..-dal .-...u .,__ •ti -,,..,,. ....... a. lc8r '° 154-1W197 .. 207t. • garden epot gs' ywd ttOOsH50. 2bd, 1b•. TSL MOMT 842-1803 u. ...... .,.... ..... ... •.• 1000/ ... ...
MC50huny539-e111 comptetety~ad.on NEWPORTMARINAAPTS -RlrmmHS:imo Fua nm. n Pwt nm. doe contact 1reH
,_,,. --... ~ , .
·~I . ~ .. associated
""
.,.,........ .......... ~...--
:(-; ~ t. %< "•1-1 -..0..... Aot C09t ~ .. !!!!' near Whittler. •B•yfront 28, 2B• l.U.../Ollllt a.t <*' eoon, I'm loc*MI for Temporary Job•. In ' • r HI ' f• •-•-lJll = .....,..._ ... tor mor9 d8ta. ' ' ft8 a meture, Hp, flt Mllllion Y1i810 llMne ._------~----...;,;,;;~ ... IWI 2111 Den. Mlcto, =·end babr•ltaer I'm flH · •1111111 I LiS6 11r i; Wki:. GaCiLt 11"9 + .... IPIW/lllW ger. Pvt*~*t5 8RJGHi'AWWWi'Ok wndw l · ... le neg. ll'ECEPTIONISTl·Or"1 ~c.-:..._. ..
IN) llUtl f• W. lntral 1112 to bey, pOOf. Aaduoed to --.. AWlll lmmadl-Vaulted celllng1, prvt 143 eq ft •ltitowet ...., ~ c:.1117..,...75. c:l9nte. ""'1 i-.. bu9J t.M8 oflDe. 111-11'0 --------l_ ...... .._ __ .....;;;,;;,;;iiiii 1eK. .,._ on.. ~ ...., .. 75 722-1721 b•lcony. redKorated 2Bdr~~ il:!n Sorry, PCH Po•t Office l pNnea, -.1.!IO. -..... JC... ••• ....SpNnttaao. 700 • ~ "95. 2151 Pec:Hlc Ave no. 1 &-5 Mar-*'•Mtle..,...2147 llllllWWIW
-LMge 4ldrm ae. .. Udo P.nc Of#4. llCMl73 ·~ .... 1111 a 3 1 -e 1 0 7 pm 0 r NEWPORT PIER AREAi LM In/out.~~ ~~
..... 1112 ecutlv• home. Good Letl•Lll 1411 IXVh'6NTHMiden. 8M-Oe65.Nopete S2~ to bel\, 1ge 3bd, ._i.-.,!U~.....w =.~w " e111tta-~orm-:--~1!: MID6iMI• t M&lile.. °"'°"' In"' •• ~ ecMlory& ......... .... -:;;r.;;:;;;r;;;---1 e.c:uaey loc:atlon Wood frplc. 2 8'>C parti'g MC. CLEAN a St1ARP 2 BR ~· pl!~ ............ ,...,. -_... Sia 2fO..... .,,. .. v. ..... ta..26-10.llO ..aftll&lr dec:alng l8adl to. a 11P8 i.r....:-:... ftet lot. bid~. S18SO/mo rr. opt9 & df'Sl9, O/W, gar: S1 mo. e . 2WEc.tHwJl7M800 ~~,546.o~ V_,,, • ~~ fZ: ~~~"': ,own: ._ .,.._ ~5 ~;~o:! ~~~.d:C M::npete. SM01mo . ..,.~ 1•....... .. .. n. am£A NEEDED: for 10 °!!~:.;:i:r,
Qu •Ma•_.
PIQC 1t~:ue•
End Unft _.....,..edge p1s1ncee l much morel (714)M2sS7241115,000. bldg l2t00/mo yr Very cute, Ut5 + depo9lt On NB WeWftoi1t •'*"'· mo gllrl. A8l8ibe. ~ 1CMtey toucft. •r
w/M bey *-_ An Only 1221.000. Waterfront Homee ~ &et Cotta Me9a ,,.,... Cell 931-5775 greet epece. c:llelts•io. ,...., 5 deJ week. H9 ·
eteo•nt l dl•Unctlv• ~. ....... U1·1• pM28f1Ba,v8UttedQel-ctOMtot/AINhert)O(ec-~7344 CLEN<S-A9,INl,ooprl
8P•• ...... w/claML._.,_
to Tiie ~CC& .•••• .. .,re.-, ..
ackit home M63 400 Inge In IMng rm, dining IHll hi ltl= tlon, w/WNte pMIJng m1i1C dllttclll 16-t.00.
I •
. I... Traditional ·~1"-.6.-Beautlful ~ Newport rm a kl1Chen. 8ngl OW· 831-1410 ......... • •• I R ...... .,...... Knotla Condo 2Bdrm. age S750/mo. Avi 111. T..CT-..•re... 640-ANYTIME ealty 2~ .. "'*'"* ... Celt 8t*YI a. e1w111 FURN StObio t •• ,..,... uP1,.11NcEo "°""' 4llOOc..,.,124
-.~--ne.otOll
7W•~
•• ,.,_ 631-7370 ..... llH l11o01mo722-147i c •• 9!931s12te SIOO/mo, 11t&1Mt.a~ ':er~:..-=· ~~&to=: Newport -~
s.. the-. of Orange LLnlu•l lr•n CLEAN 3bcl. 21>a. Hwt>or ~:o'50-~~ ywd. ComerofW..-&IMM ....._.1t,Newportlk:t\. LlllLHllHJl'f lfj':o."'""' ....... : ... .:.••:.,......,
eo.t ffom • dek.lx• C... ... llM F.t rr. Wlent ~ H.hnd9l LM 11200 mo: VIEW SUITE f I I FOf .._..., C.... ._,. .,.. condo~ PCH. Wlllk Info ~lt4 ._.My gwdhfeterpd. NO PETSi Ml-l111illllf Pe'/ w ~. X.. llO knut~of lllL or
to the 0099I °' ~ *lrNWl9rl'MleonCit ~2318or5413M. llJM. a.tall M•I l&11he 11• pnir but not,..._...,., OONt 11000/lt!O. '°"' own communtty -...C. ..._ ... fem""· llDil WU. 1111 . •EASTSIOE 280fllM* OCEAN WEZE oomm w1-. _. llk8ll. ..o700 PoOt. llP8' ~ ~ tonMI ... 11•.llOO. = ,.,,. " rn EXE-CUTIVE HOME Qaniae .... ywd. .... n• FOf ._.the: llllM111/aD .., Jonee. 71M112. 1111n-bdrm 2 ~ laundry By Owner ta1-4SH fncd + Yw1y 31A+den 1717 W.tmlneter IC -. HIUI Need si.-. _. • prof'I -tiiiiiiiiiim-•••-•
room flrepiace. 2' buk: ':t ~ ovetiook1ng the bedc bey MH/mo. 720-9422 Corona del M• women Plol-~iel 9'dQ l ,.._ .-.. & ._, .._ ... f.111 8fNll wt~ ... -.
balc:onl••· '275 ooo. •t 1n•IWI 53M1tt ~ ..._ • et In e..tbluft.,... AVfiA. e.t9'de unfum 181 1Ba. went• to ehar• dea9* oaptJ-:....1nc.ee1-tm ,... P90I* ..._ l..., '*'...,...,,..,.....,._ Medi~ ==-=v Owner ..woua. ' New duplex nr M... '"""' ._ Juty 1 et 12500/mo. Gar· houM, pool, with couple. -·1 motMllkln ,,_"'*tor Good ptlof'9 ¥Okie wMh wlexoet twMnf, !Miii\
AOGER IAOWN V•de. 1139,tOO Firm. STEPS TO BEACH dner lnduded .. ,,_. l ::~1,,::tJ~ ~ S1500/mo. 973-2982 Small Offtce 9Pec89 tor color&htMownOllt. PIT ~ Ilk .. ..,.,_. ..... pt'°"9 Wllcle _.
Pnn. only. 1ff.llOIO 3BR. 18A. "" rm. dining c:Nldfen OK 975--9111 Dr. Calt £..,.. ~ Fem. nHr So Coa•t rant. e..t 171h St. Fua FIT. HM'I Co. .. tnln. ance. c.11751.-U ~to do 5 '*'It•
tnlM 1144 $,'215"rm;,~92~'-v:~:,HOME E-ekle 2Br 1Ba. rrp1c, :=::.fwy:'~ :t:~Up.Alk ~~d: FIND :,i=~ UOCA::aooaRT rn «Mttooklng IN bedc bey beM'lcell,gtr.2per80nl. '325mo.55&.t737 ...... '"'"' (213)~7 ..,..., ..........
Model: 2bd, +•tudr. 1n Ea9tbluft .,.._ AWlll No pell M804700 + ~~~r -•I I I
OrMt appurtenenoee. f•lanla lift JufJ 1 81 12500/mo. Gar~ laat. MC 1225 850-1791 ..... /...... 1711 1711 Youd0n'tknow~you'r9 . • ;::9"[..,.. '4 TllHr
7~9 9100
------·--· 1158,0~ owner.&;;"'°"' i rm COfldO ~ Included. P9ta & EASTSIOESHAAP&dean -.. .ull' :-?.:C:heWntreed through cbss1f1ed "CAU.Ma..aeio
· 7 ,,..., ktldl oerden atyte dllldran Ot< 975--9111 28r, 118. eiow, 9'de 1111 • 91111. .. -.1 · LllUllilJ IMI fncd rd aa!O 53M1t1 Expwtve pool hm Sbe ywd, 1 e« encl~. No ~~:".:,new -;:f· 281 18a. ~ 9-aoe -_______ .., _______ ...._ _____ _
---
~. 10i;. Agent• gourmet kltch garage pet• t 7110tmo. tt50 Nwpt. Blvd CM &:e-1...: mu. depreciation.
EJ Nigl* CC pool ..,._ "~-Ml · 1825 kldt d•ttll1 FURN 1bd, utll peld. S500 ' S11,400 lncoffte. Cwt
aaun•, t1aOI( in' up-.,..._ ... 2111 53M191 Agt ,_ mo. $250 MC. $99 Haml-1U I Ill a... Chuc:k or Llr Jon••
Wll:J •• 111' gradea. 4t5-tol4 9¥91. 2 ii6M86Ci MfA FfMi! H V HMS lrnmaC Monaco ton, CM or call tee 1711 3029 w. Pectrlc eoeet Hwy 63 M2te Of ~5743 "' • .... 1111 PLACE: FAONT UNIT. 2br den comm poot Gordon or Mike. Newpor1Bwtl AafrtgT'/ 1'111,111•1!1'1 QoM to 11111 llllO/mo. webo/grdM Incl, adult,,: 112&+w119g1.r:.o~. RffMMC R
For.wt oceen vtewel Two * 117111 ---711M170 or e73-45M .,,.r ~· 8V9ll &-t ~ Fll!ld !..:!':;: !:9't>o!: • Bdrm 2 '*" + den, .. 11111 11400, e1&-335-t110 ~!91: lntih tt lbat ~--------.;.,,..;;, .....
room. Cornet toc:atlon. Frend\ doors & lkyllt•. CdM hm wlfrl* a gs 5 rm 819-340-2513 fAaY IPllfmTI · 1714 ....-1 flMM&il
11t .... ' .. . •
lne6de .. ..,.... c:ot'"iec:u ••borete petlo/declce. nr p19r1 S1SO °' e11Qent UOO ISLE. Yrty ...... ao-kllna dear\ woe ept9 _ _._~
untta. l2el.OOO. 780-0353 3br 2be kJde/peta tf200 a.atmlng 38R 1b&. eV8ll lot ,.._with 1 or 2 The --
........ Snow9dunderwlth ltufl? othen et 53M1to Be9t NOW, nopeta.S1800mo cMdren. Nwparti. Heat l11••••l1t1M .. lellll~llM.. ..tuldll ...
Dig youtMH out wtth 1 ~ Alty ... 41t 3400 own/btu peld. No p«a. For the ~lbte For &; i;;g; es;;; xp: -=~~~~~~~lled~ed~. ~~~~ ~ ... 'IU f • .... 2Bdrm 1'Ae.th 1720 Roommate. * 1-57771t prowcl FadltlJ Approll :; ...... • ... ~I 2Bdrm 2Bath 1740 E SIDE CM CONDO eoo eq ft ;Urch ... iiRXJUi wmr S . ~ · OIMr9 ev.-. 399 W. Wiiton 831·5583 Fl..,, .. ..,,,. to lhr, 35+ L111Vlo6d """'°""'*•
Sell y .. ,,.,,,.,,
Cll CIM111W,
642-5671
for information
& surprisingly
low cost.
BY PLACI G A AD
I THE DAILY PILOT'
LA ... IFIED PAGE
1e. Opa. TMe fire, ~. -ctOM to bNCtl. 2bd. 11hb&. frplc:. emkr for SllOOO & tMe fl'lel
dflle, w/d hkup, gs SIOO fllmlf 8f IL •FREE CABLE TV. ~Br ok. 5 min lo bctl, $337 .50 ..... •t a.y Street~
+ MC. Mult etend cndtt .JI~.. l 281, 28a G•den ti. + 12 utll, &-01, 145-3379. ptng Center, 2052 ....,.
..,, No pet8 770-N21 l11-4111 tr llM1tl Pool. rec room 25--Mother or 1 n/11mkr .,,, port Blvd. I 11. CM
A mutt tor your bUdg9tl "55. 710 W 18th St 28 Condo Cott Miu 92927. Contact Jtrn et
Undet 1700 3bt 2ba + Luxury for !Ma i1095 p.:.,, or t.,np ok•l250 .;. (805)949-5722, After
more 53Mtt1 AQt ,_ ~ d!~ .. r,ot a"°": INLY BllllD 111. iut. ~ 5pm (805)164M058
BRAND NEW 3Bt 2'Mta. Z't-1191 Agt ~ g Xtr.lgSbd. 1Y.be.cerport F n/emkr .nr 28r TwM9e !lt!!z ft Leu ltlt
1450 Sq. Ft. 2 ml 10 beh. Noe • ,_den -..... HH wtetp:r~2 rr•· nr SC Pfau *300/mo + -"'~ -.. Obi gs llP8 fncd yd -••r-• • · ·~ utlll Oya 841-e&eO --• S1150 P9. «* 642-a41 .-2brg1r&moret700 POOL-PRIVATE PATIO X2711 Eve 432·7803 TOI 110K/up, no cndlt" kkt8 at 53M 191 AGt • New dtw, fl'ple ger · Oan1eor1 AMoe. en-7311
EASTSIDE2bd. 1b&. lerae VILLA 8AL80A CONDO X-LG 1• Ssa5. '2ar a;·s. F to lhr 3bt C.M. home.I;:::========::;
ywd, QU181t, prMte, * Prof decor compl tum EASTSIOE 557·2841 1175/mo. + Mllstanoe
pet8. saso. et1-61&9. 29A 2be LAldentFIVDR for Fem. teacher In
E. 810! CM Poot/-. ~ vu of SHARP AND CLEAN GAR-whl<:hr. N/amltr 145-2357 ~-2 .._. OEN APT. 18R, ttOYe l ---w--bt, 2be hrne, oc .. nlbayll~ht1/ LM refrlger•tor no pet• M8tur• prof'I peraon. n-upr •• frplc, ell ~. S18001mo. 582s8492 1520/mo 54.1377 · amkr M/F to lhWe exct qUllllfY ttwougtlzOUt. gr1 evlWt<nd 771 29 · Ftv Vt't .,...850--0213 or
loc. n..peta, SHO/mo, ~a.. MESA PINES 2950 Hwta 982·2~21bet11pm.
751-3191. ~·· 2BR 18a W/Glf S750 TOP AREA Quiet No Pett MIF quiet B•ck Bey
BMut ~~~:=decor 111•11 Ptalatall **Ms-3115•• ~w='-.'13~annw!
q>t, )'fd, Qdnr, ~ 1117 WI ..... &-utfl. 145-5123 Nan.
111151mo. l51-SIM. DtiOX PEN. 1 Gd ..,.. want • M1ect1on of greet MtF to INN 2 bd e.t9'de
part f\lm .... 75 +25 utl. ltvtng? We can ort.r Wt'f-Coeta Miu dup6aa. Gars
· 549178 tNna from• amall ept to •1• private y•rd • 4 bdrm hOuee. If IOok· 5 7-3. 242
Nwpt Penln Mr 28a. ger, In CM, NB. or HB ------· ----lndfy, ftptc:. Yrty 11300. ~ of ua nnt tor th8t NR BACK BAY tum. rm,
VIiia Rent• 97M912 c:hOICe of lde8l ltVlng. PV1 be. gar .. pOOf for F
PJNINSULA POINT. 2 TSL MOMT M2·HI03 non amkr $375+ StOO & .. .._ 1 .. _ --.a.. ...... Utll Incl. &41-e423 """"'• ..... ----·.. ...... WllllAll ftJ.All etepe to~ & the bey. lecMtor aaaimo
llOOlmo. yrty. l73-lff& 1 IA 1 beth M24/mo LIW W Ill llU Pool/..,._ no pete
. ..,., ..... ...
iCOti WWW. , ... GS· 14M122 83Mt17 SAVE :rM:tt=. ~mo. lut. ltac• 2'41 UJI fo $1350•
Ill-RIMI 1 ' 2Bt lultury Apt• In 14 ... 11 ............
ell Pl•n•. Poole, tennl•, latt ., tt IHI
...... pond9l 0.. '°'
280-C Del Met. 11R. get'•
age. carpe41 end ltCW.. V~ntsmove In nowl
157S/Mo. 751--t557
CO«*lnQ l hMtlng oeld. .. ............ .
From Sen Otego 'rwr. •• h north on 8HCh to • M001 stO·month
McF•dden. ••et on also av11lable
Mcfadden. 15555 Hunts • Furnished/
lngton V-. Ln unfurnished ...... ,.
C..11 ... ... c... ... • Fitness centers.
tennis. swimming
765-Crochel most
Popular top to wear with
tworvthrng Use synthetic
worstoo Oreal wtth alorta
n1 pants Drree11on1 IC>f
M1 ses t 0-16 1nct
PRI VATE PARTY RATE (No Cancrllation)
4 line, S 11me minimum •NEW F~ ONLY S 11
98 page, f\.111 color cet.
lot ofCreftt -patterns
book• suppl s Cfhel, crou at tch needlepoint.
I ICh hootc QUiiiing !Ind
mot•
• 60 prr ltnf'·Eumpl~: 4 linei. 5 day~• 12°0
• Ralf' '""'' rt04 •1>1••• to I''''"'"''' 1al trf0tJnl• "t1lnf1w•ltU , Rn.111•11 ot H,..I t •lllP
• '"I <\" f I I ,\TIO'' Utl 1 114 \<.f' .-nu tti.. 1d hau1111 I tttltllll<'I • '""f'C"'"'l.k>
'"' I~ lull amnunt
A A f T S
I
FU
SUCCESSFUL
CITllltl
How much wilt your ""' or daughter know about bvlineu wtt.,,
applying for their first full.fime job? P*rty, if ha or she hal ewr
been o new'f>Oper carrier. Th rough route uperien<• he or sh.
1s already a lop oheod of their cloumattl. While they oll
master ideal, the boy or girl with a MW1paper route i• oble to
pvt them to procticol use. 8ui1neu? Carriers learn th• basic
leom the bo$K principles from the first day of rtorttng to defiwr
newlp()pen They bvy at wholesale, Mii at retail. make
collectioM, keep their own boolu, and deal with people face to
face. Com ers quickly find out that "profit" and ''Ion" or•
more than textbook terms.
The benefits of managing a newipoper rout9 ore on eqvotton
for o future succeu ful cititen. /It, great number of todoy'i
prominent ITWtn and women s1o,,.d their public careen as
newspaper co mers And they a ll ¥Ouch that a ~ rou1e
gives o boy or girl o head s1ort on the future.
8ovs 11\d g11ls I 0 veor\ ond oldflt whO mov be •l'llerested in rou1e
....0,1 \hould coo1oc1 1he bo11\i P•lot crrculoltOI\ deportn>ent 01
641 •333
Diiiy ~ION DEPT
330 WEST IAY ST P 0 . IOX 1560
COSTA MESA, CALIF 92626 ,-----------------,
I
I Yei, my son/doughter would lil• l
1nformcmon on o Dotty Pilot route I
HIS/HER NAME IS I _____ ,
I
AOO RESS•----------1
I CITV ________ ZIP __ ,
I
PHON~-------ACE __ I
' PARENT'S I
SICNATUR.""---------' L----------------J
810 Orange Cou• DAILY PILOT/ Tc.lelday. May 27, 1N6
., ...... ... , ............ . ,, o eo11 rseo
Coeta MeM. CA 92829
Attn Tim Q~an
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in the
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
MOTOR ROUTE
Available in Irvine area.
$300 to $600. No collect-
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thru Friday afternoon. Sat.
& Sun. morning. Call
642-4333, ask for Kirk.
ORANGE COAST
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330 W. Bay St
Costa Mesa, CA
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25~ HAZY
TUESDAY, MAY 27, 1986
Coast aystar et of attacks
IiiCident a month reported In Laguna;
AIDS fear blamed for jump in assaults
By tlae A11oclated Pre11
Hostility unleashed by the AIDS
epidemic has brouaht an increase in
unprovoked attacks on homosexuals,
police and homosexual-right.s ac-
tivists in Oranae County say.
The statistfo1 underplay the severi-
Joyner hoinera
Wally Joyner'• two-nm
homer In tile ninth
propelled the Ancel• to
an 8-7 Ylctory o•er the
New York Y~eee llon-
clay. Bl.
California
Lawyers offer free ser-
vices to man battling to
keep his 12-foot flagpole
In place./ A4
Nation
A bibliography of porno
to be released by a feder-
al task force Is obscene,
theACLU saya./M-
Reagan Is getting ready
to visit with the president
of Honduras./ A4
World
France, West Germany
and the Vatican are re-
portedly about to back a
new peace effort In Leba-
non./ AS
At least 400 are feared
dead after a double-
decker ferry boat Is top-
pled by high winds./ A5
Sports
lndlanapolls 500 washed
out again, reset for Satur-
day./81
Celtics are now a game
up on Houston In NBA
flnals./81
INDEX
Advice and Games
Births
Bulletin Board
Business
Classified
Comics
Death Notices
Entertainment
Opinion
Police Log
Public Notices
Sports
Television
Weather
A8
A6
A3
BS-8
89-10
A9
B ..
A7
A10
A3
B4
81-4
A7
A2
ty of the problem, some say, because
many homosexuals are reluctant to
report ''gay bashing" to the police.
"The gays are disproportionately
picked on; said Tim Miller, a police
officer in t..guna Beach, a town noted
for its larae gay population.
Beach
crowds
search
for sun
By PAUL ARCHJPLEY
Ot ... O.., ..........
Oranae Coast residents joined
thousands across the nation Monday
in Memorial Day services honoring
the servicemen and women who gave
their lives for their country.
At Harbor Lawn Memorial Park
and Mt. Olive Cemetery, Costa Mesa
veterans' aroups sponsored the 32nd
annual Decoration Day services.
Among the participants were Costa
Mesa Mayor Norma Hertzog and
Harbor Municipal Court Judge Selim
Franklin.
Many spent at least part of their day
visitina and tending the graves of
loved ones, but thousands more
jammed local parks and beaches to
cap off the holiday weekend. At least
one local resident was k.illed while
vacationing over the three-day hol-
iday.
Newport Beach drew the largest
Orange Coast crowds, with an esti-•
mated 90,000 gazing skyward for an
elusive sun.
"It's been a btg weekend," said
lifeguard Gordon Reed, "one of our
biges~ considering it's not even
sunny.'
Nearly 300,000 visited Newport's bacm during The ong wee eno
that's considered the unofficial start
of summer.
Laguna Beach lifeguard Karen
Koster said Sunday was like a normal
summer day.
"Most people arc starting to pack
up," she wd Monday afternoon,
"because it's not getting sunny."
City beach lifeguard Steve Reuter
said Huntington's one-mile strip
attracted 45,000 paJeskins. while
Bolsa Chica and Huntinston State
beacbcshosted another 63,000, life-
guards reported.
"J thought yesterday would be the
big day, but we're packed today." said
Huntington State Beach lifeguard
supervisor Steven Hicks.
Seal Beach welcomed another
25,000. lifeguard chief Tim Dorsey
said. "There's not a parlung spot left
in SeaJ Beach," he said.
Lifeguards pulled out about three
dozen swimmers at IOC'-al beaches,
wtth surfaveragjng I to 3 feet.
Inland, where the sun did shtne,
thousands more enjoyed picnics and
warm temperatures.
A Fountain Valley Mile Square
(Pleue eee CROWDS/A2)
Police in Laguna say they receive
an averaae of one report of py-
bashing •month, but say that number
is siJDificant in a population of
18,000.
The Gay and Lesbian Community
Center of Oranae Counir aets be-
tween two and six py-ba.sh1na reports
each month, about double the
number received six months aao.
A national survey by the National
Gay and Lesbian Task Force in
Washinaton, D.C., tallied 2,042
physical and verbel assaults on
bomoeexuall in 4-i citiet in 198$.
.. You have to fiaure th11 ii just lbe
tip of the icebera,'' said Kevin Berrill.
coordinator of the wk force's viol-
ence-documentation project.
In a 1984 aurvey of 2, I 00 homosex·
uals in eiaht major cities, be said, one
in five py men and one in 10 lesbian
women said they bad been beaten.
Forty percent said they had been
thrutcned with violence and 90
perecnl said they bad been taunted
becaUJC oft.heir 1exual orientation.
Gay activists blame public fear of
acquired immune deficiency syn-
drome in part for the reportd
increue in violence. The tncurable
diseue, which attacks the body's
immune system. is prevalent among
homosexuals.
Eric Rofcs, executtve director of
the Los Anaelcs Gay and l..esb11n
...., ........... ., ""'0. ......
Air Force Tech. S(t. Del'riD Cbablck carrlea
the flaC d111'iq llemorlal 0.J Mmcea
llonday at llattior Lawn Memorial Park lD
Coeta 11 ... Tbe Decoradon Day and Ploral
Wreath PreMDtadon wu the S2nd annaal
memce mpon.eored by •eteran•' oraanisa-
dpna lD Coeta 11 .. In honor of America'•
war dead.
Community Services Center in H<*
lywood, tells of an anack last year in
wbjcb youths threw acid in thc face of
a woman wbo worked at the ccnter.
Her attackcn taunted her about
worlo.na with AJDS victuns, Rofet
satd.
Werner Kuhn, director of the
Oranae County Gay and Labi.an
Center, said be baa beeo taunted
while walking in Lquna Beach. and
(Pl-..e Ne AMAOLT9/ A.2)
Backers
estimate
5million
in chain
More than 400,000
held hands in state.
local director says
By &M Aal0Ciate4 hen
Of the estimated 7 million t>COplo
worldwide who participeu:d to the
Kands Across American chain. a
hefty 400.000 to 450,000 el lllem
Joined hands in California, tbe at111e•1
project director said Monday.
"We may have a laid-beck W. in
Califorrua, but we bit the su=a in a
bia way," said Roaer Carrick. the
state's project director. "It wu a real
tribute to California's ability '°'--
dehver the b1f numbers and put on
the bi.a event.·
At a Holl~ news conference
where be was joined by A.rehbilbop
Roger Mahony, leader of the Loa
Angeles Archdiocese, the nation'•
tarsest. Camck sa1d an estimated $2
million to S3 mtlllon would be ruted
10 C.alifornta to help the bomcletl.
"What excites me the most it that
we dO not have 10 tht.s cou~ a cue
of 'compassion fataaue1 • the
an:hbisbop_said sa-Yioa tnc fund
raisina and volunteer enthuaiaam
created by Hands Aaou America
"may only be the tip of the •c:ebers. ..
Up to 7 mitJion people joined
Hands Across America's ttqmenu:d
chain as 1t stretched across the nation
and abroad. its chief orpnizcr said
Monday, and be ursed participants to
"rolJ up your sleeves" and keep
wor1c1nf for the needy.
Officials stuck to their taraet f11ure
of raising S50 million or more to help
the hunary and homeless but said 1t
may take all summer to count
donations.
Orgamzcrs m st.a tcs and localities
esumatcd upwards of 4.9 million
Amencans clasped hands m the line
from California to New York on
Sunday, while millions more partici-
pated m related events m states and
countnes off the 16-statc route.
"There were not JUSt events o n the
hne. there were events wtth every
state m the U ru on," orpnizer Ken
Kragcn said Monday. He said a
staffer told him the number o1
paruC1pants overall was between 6
m1ll1on and 7 m1lhon.
That included people "aJI the way
(Pleue eee BACK&aS/ A2)
Nation pays tribute to its war dead
Fallen Vietnam soldiers special focus~
of ceremonies, 110 names added to wall
By MARY MacVEAN
A 11111111 • ,,,_ ..,_,
Fresh from the Jubilance of its
coast-to-coast hand-holdmg fest,
America honored its servicemen and
women Monday with MemotiaJ Day
parades and speeches that paid
s~ial tribute to those who served in
Vietnam.
The three-day weekend also
marked the unofficial start of sum-
mer, and millions of people revved up
their enajnes and made their way to
picnics and parties.
Rain in (ndianapohs wa hed out
for a second day the 10th runnina of
the Indy SOO. and 1t was re heduled
for Saturday. But sunshtne was fore-
cast for ocean beaches on both coasts.
It was no holiday for Lou1S11na's
Legislature, which 1s struggling to
trim a projected $800 m1lhon budget
deficit and worked Monday.
"Today 1s the day we set aside to
remember fallen heroes and to pray
that no heroes will ever have to die for
us apin." President Reagan said
Monday 1n a spctth at Arhngton
Nauonal Cemetery 1n V1rgin1a
hononng the I 2 million people who
have died 1n the country's wars
Rcapn placed a wreath of nu~err;
1n front of the Tomb of the Unknown
Soldier and stood at attention as a
Manne bugler played taps And hke
many others, he spoke of the coun-
try's .. forgoncn .. veterans:
"They were qutte a group, the boys
of Vietnam. boys who fo~t a
temblc and v1etous war wtthout
enough support from home, boys
who "'ere dodJJn& bullets while we
deb3ted the efficacy of the battle."
In Washington. at the black if"IDlle
wall of 58.022 of names of those who
d1t-J 1n the Vietnam War. 450
tam1hcs members attended a cer-
emony to mark lhc inscnpt1on of 110
morr Two thousand other people
(Pleue eee NATION/A2)
'
'Barrel Organ Bernie' the
last of the street grinders l.Auu
MEii
Laguna council finds
$25,000 in its tight
budget for playhouse
Street entertainer from England brtngs-
his music to Laguna Beach for summer
By LAURA MERK
Of ............
The almost foraotten skJll of baml
oraan annd1n111 alive and well with
En1h11\man Bernard Oauah. who
camcs on the family profcsaion that
date back ncarty I 00 years. Oau~ is v1 1t1na the United States
from his home 1n ManchC1ter. Eng-
land, where he makes his liv1na as a
.street entertainer
His ts neatly a lost an. With Gauah
t
v1sitln1 in the state" bis brother Phil
is the only Jtreet arindcr 1n all of Great
Bntain today.
Known 11 ~ml Orpn Bcmie,"
Oauab. ~. briahtcned the day of
about l 00 tenior citizens this wtek at
the T.L. . Lunch Pro&ram 1n Laauna
Beach.
Drestcd in a colorful coatume with
a IW tcarf. Gauah m1lod, Ill'\&.
danced and btouaht a little bit of the
past back to a larse aroup of senior
citizens.
"Someday My Prince wdl Come"
and "Thanks for the Memoncs" were
1ust two of the tunes Oauah played for
the noontime crowd at the Com-
munity Ccntc:r.
••J tend \0 think they love u,'' be
said with 1 radiant smile.
The Barrel Orpn ia a ~ ptane>-
lookin& inttrumcnt lbat he pushes on
a handmade IW, YtOOden can. Much
like 1 music bo-., a lats barrel dotted
W1th ~000 uttf\llfY pllCCd pin
rotata ud plucb hammen that
pound the pa.ano stnnp. Tbe orpn ta
cranked by hand ·
P 10 P11 1N JHt H1w s
The result is an tnvthl'\I. rttound·
1n, tune.
t was what Gau&h's father did to
put food on the table and wttat h11
father's father dtd Gauah's 11.year·
old son Baron may even follow the
ramaty tradition tr he docs, Oauah
may hand down the family 8atT'CI
OIJln built an 1892
L.lfUDa ~ach re ·•dent Dolores
Ku tin 11 b ttna Oauah 1n her home
for the umma She met the enter·
ta1ner on her way to c tch a plane in
Engl.Ind (1'1_.. ... LAIT/A2)
By LAURA M RI.
Of .............. 1>tJ11na dttp 1n10 its &hallo~
mun1c1pal pocket\, tht Laauna Bc:-a h
City Council found $25.000 in 1t~
squcck)'·ttiht propo~ bud&t't to
u pend the Moulton ( ommun1t)
Playhouse
The Ctty's donation which will be
PC'Cld over the next three yea"' \lo.U
the laracst budaet <'h•n madt'
dunna hcattn la t ""~ on the
propotcd 19 6-87 b~t The c1ty'a S 17 m1lhon hudgt',t
proposal 11 SI 0 mil lion shy of 11\t
)Cir'' sn m1llton prnd1na plan
3.
Much ot IHt >car's rc"cnua were
eneratC'd from bonds '°ld to con-
\truCl I w~er ~r;o1r, Kwef1 and
\torm drains for the Kaufman and
Broad hou'1nl develpment 1n
'\)\:&more Htll\
"bout 5 pcrttnt of the 19 6-87
budget wtll So toward habtltty in-
surance and ~lated coats 1uc.h
attorney's fet"S, d1.1m' 1d1ustcra and
coun costs
Ctt Man K.rn Franlt told the
counC'tl at bud l hcan last wee
that the city may 10 without ln-
•unn< e next year uni at JOtns other
(Pl_.. eee LAGUNA/ )
~
I.
\
Orange Cout OAILV PILOT/ Tuaday, May 27, 1988 ·-----
LAST ..•
From Al
·•1 beard the Barrcl Organ Qnd I
wd. 'Where ts th•t sound comina
fn>m'r •• she said. o she followed the
music and imply stood m awe, he
~d.
.. It bnnas back memone$." ror so
ipany older people, Kusun 511d. "My
father used to bnna me to Los Angeles
•nd li sten to them play the ~mall
burdy-aurdic , " she said
Few workana &rrc:I Organ arc ten
tOday and most sat an museum's and
private collections. Gau&h said.
There are few people who pray them.
The o~n 1s capable of playing 10
tune . With each new tune the barrel
Q'loves 1/4 inch an the pins ;ire an place
for another song.
An expenenced Barrel Organist can repin the organ h1msetr. selec11ng
the tunes he WlShe~ to pla)
Gaugh isn't sure how long he will
stay m the United tates but hopes to
cravel the countr) playing has street
piano.
°"" ........... lllr ...... ll ....
Entliahman Bernard GaUCb ta apendlng the aummer ln
Laeun• Beach with h1a barrel organ.
NATION PAYS TRIBUTE T OW AR DEAD ••.
f'rom Al
observed from behind a bamcr.
Those 110 -97 who died outsadc
the war zone and 13 who died later of
war wounds -had not been ancluded
at first. but their relauves and fnends
worked to nght what they considered
a wrong.
Gov. 8111 Clanton. pres1d1ng at a
ceremony at the Arkansas C'apllol
breaking ground for a Vietnam vet-
erans memorial. said the war had
touched .. tens of thousands of famil-
ies and fnends throughout th as state.··
A Vietnam Veterans Memonal
Park was dedicated an Dayton. OhlO.
And in Nashville, Tenn .. about 300
veterans and their families huddled
under umbrella~ as officials unvei led
a statue oFthree infantrymen 10 battle
po~s. It 1s the first statue featunng a
black man to be dedicated on state
propeny.
Two piece' of the Nash' allc: statue
had been broken tn vandals officials
disco' ered. ~ banner attached to the
statue Monda} morn mg called for an
end to armed l I S mtervcnuon an
other countne' sculptor '\Ian i e
Qure ..aid
Va~ President C1l·orge Bush '1stt-
ang hi'> home on the Maanc l·oast
~poke at Kennebunkport Square.
calling on '\ml'ncani; to remcmhcr
those who ~ned \O "that all ol U\ 1n
this ha stone to'' n can I.no" the tull
blessings of frced11rr1 ·
About 1.000 H·teran" ol t'' cn war
since World War I man:hl·d 10 c.1 1'l'"'
York \11~ parade that lulm1natco
wtth a "reath-l:n1ng at thc ~old1er\
and Sailor'> Monument
.\lso in New York. s" wreath!> were
to be to!>~d from the lJ Intrepid
into the Hudson R1Hr to com-
memorate thl' war dead of the tin•
branches of the armed ~rvices and of
the Intrepid The townspeople of
·c11uatc Ma'is. scattered no .... ers oil
the coast 10 honor the men and
women "ho died at sea
Though the Untted States as at
peace. ll S soldiers went to their
gra .. es in c,erv1ce of their counlT)
dunng 1he past year The mother of
~nn~ Sgt t-..enneth T Ford. who died
in the Apnl terronst bombing of a
West Berlin disco. rode in a parade 1n
Dearborn. Mich
Allee Beecham of Detroit was
a kcd t11 pan1c1pate because her 21-
vear-old son wa!> among the most
recent \Cr\ ICC'men to dtC for hJS
coun111 ..aid the parade'<; chairman
Cohn Mc<,ee
Mrs. Beecham had said earlier that
her attendance would have nothang to
do with Dearborn'!. ban on non-
residents using most of its parks
omc cavil rights group'> have com-
plaaned the predominantly white
suburb's park han -was mcanrto keep
black people out of the parks. Mr;.
Beecham 1<:. black
Man) of the 1(Xl people at cer-
emonies at f on ( ampbell I\.~ .. v.crl'
v.1dov.s ol v1lt1m'> ot the a1rl1ner
cra<,h at ( 1andcr Ne" foundland.
v.hach cla1mnJ thl· ll\e\ uf ~48
soldiers from the ha~ 1n lxu~mber
\unda\ ·.,celebration'> were mosth
given over to H and~ Across Arncnca.
which brought ou' nearly 5 million
people of all kinds to be pan of the
snakang.. sangmg hoc throu_gh 16 state~ Organazer'l hoped to raise $50
million or more for the homeless and
hunP.')'.
While the purpose was senous. the
e,·ent v.as mort' hke a na11onw1de
pan}. with balloons. music. dancang.
cheering and li\t~ weddings.
I went)-three m1ll1on Amencans
were expected to take advantage or
lo"' gas pnces and get in cars dunng
the hohda) weekend. the Washing-
ton-based U.S. Travel Data Center
~ad. That would be a 4 percent
increase o'er l 9!S5
The National Safet} Council esti-
mates that 400 to 500 people could
die on the nation's highways between
Fnday and Monday nights.
California beaches were crov.ded
over lhe weekend. and hundrt'ds of
beachcombers and clam d1uer.. v1s-
11ed Puget Sound beaches in Wash-
ington to lake advantage of the lowest
tides in 13 years. Ten thou~nd
people \pent the hohda) at Alum
Creek State Park an Ohio.
"This as one of the three big
weekends. Memo!lal Day. the Founh
of Jul) and Labor Day ... This season
so far has been pretty bus}." said
Richard Da\ 1es. parks director for
.\rkansas. v.h1ch expected 400.000
peoplc at at' 44 state parks.
Dav1cll. ho"'e' er. planned to Jvo1d
the crov.d!> and tale has fam1I>
fish ml!
Ex-Green Beret, 2 others arrested in sale of bombs
~AN ~'\T0"-10 T"a\ 1•\PI -
Federal agentc, arrested a lorml·r
Green Beret ma1or and two other
people after tht' agent'\ po'>e<l as
terronsts tf)ing to hu' homhs po\\t'r-
ful enough to dl'\lro, a l3r an oflit1al
said
James .\l!lcn P.Hton .n the for-
mer Green 8C'n't wa'> arre'>tl.'d ~atur
da} at a shcipping mall alter he
dela·.ered 18 oomh\ LO t\\O Federal
agents posang as Me\lcan terronw,,
said Roben Rowe of the Bureau ol
~lcohol. Tobacco and Fa rearms.
At Paxton's home in Round Rock
01heragentsarrested h1<; wire. Fram·1<,
.. Frank.ie" Paxton. 15 and Daniel
Thomas Nicewander. ~~.of Phoen"·
i\n1 . Rowe said.
The three were \Chcdulcd to be
arraigned before a U.S mag.mrate
T ucsda~. Ro"'e said. addang that thc
arre'its culminated a ·monthlong 1n-
vesu1tauon
Pa"<ton was charged with 18 counts
of possession. manufacture and sale
of explosive devices. Rowe said. Mrs .
Paxton was charged with possession
and sale of an explos1 ve device. Her
arrest stems from the sale of a pipe
bomb May 6 to an undercover agent
near her home. Rowe said.
ASSA UL TS ON GAYS I NCREASING ...
From Al
recent I\ g\\ thl\ 'pra .. ·paintl'd' in·
scnpt1nn "'Rurn \ID"i \'ICllm'> ··
"You do kd thn·atcnnl ·· c;aid
Kuhn "'l ou quill.en \our pJll'
Jan-.\u<,lln ~OUlhl·r. 2X an
.\nahe1m songv.n1n told ofwa1rh1ng
helple'isle~ as a man v.ac, beaten b)
nearl~ a do1en laughing ll'en-agl'r.
outside a C1ardcn C 1ro' l honk \tort' 1 n
December
"One of the allttd.er., 11101..l•d .11 me
and rh1ded Joudl\, "Th1\ 1\ v.hcrl· thl· ga~., hangout 1\n.-t 1t? Why don't your
ga} lnend' lOnu: to help vou fight""'
foucha \did
.. ~hen I lame homl' I felt so angf)
I couldn l \lccp It could JU'>l as ca'>tl~
have been me: .. rouchcr \aid
Althul}gh he lilcd a repon un lhl.'
1nc1dent "''th a gay-nght'i organ11a-
t1on. he c,a1d he didn't contact police.·
because he didn't thank 1t would have
done any good.
Pohce in Orange County say they
1reat ga~-bashing rcpons seriously,
but some activist'> believe otherw1~.
··~oc1rt) docs not feel the gays arc
\\onh anything." c;aid Allan Yates.
director ot the ga)-nghts center 10
Long Reach .. There·s not a sense of
outrage There's a '>ense of. 'Oh well.
he got what he descr"ed anyway,..
LAGUNA COUNCIL REVIEWS BUDGET ...
From Al
Cltle\ In lorm1ny II\ uv.n 1n\ura11u·
co m pa°'
'The <11lcr "'" h1.· ndll\lli>u\, lw
said of the rain 10\uranll'\11mpan1c'
are ullcrin~
The Cll) had or1g1nalh hoped to
hare 1hrl'l' polill ulfi<.l'r' 1n thl'
coming \CJr \\llh 1nl11mc generated
from prorx-n' t," rt'\l'nu1.·' from lhl'
...,)camnrr H 111, <11 H'lnpmcnt Rut
Frank \3Ht 1 on,1111111011 ha\ hcl·n
c;lowerth.rn e\111.·1. tn.l .ind tht• 1. 1 t) m.H
onl) have thl' lun11\ 111 h1rl· """ olfo t'r
in JanuaT) I 41<' 111d anuthl·r .-11 th1·
end of the li\t;il 't'ar
Two oflic.:er' \\1·11.· hired 1n JJnuar"
and Frank hoJ')l'' 111 h11c .1 tntal ot 11' e
lo form a ncv. tw.11 111 ( l<1mfl do"n un
drunken dnH·r' 111 I ·l!'llna < an\on
Road and patrol \\1 .trtH 1n 11111\
With the ren·n1ll11111n.1t111n111 the
fire chief'> po-.1t111n 1h1.· t 1t\ plc1n' to
save S60.000 in \JIJI'\ u>\l\ lor lht•
coming )car I ornwr Poh1.c < had
Neal Purcell toll~ on th1· lltk nl
d1rrctor of puhh1. ,,1fr1, when till'
change wa\ made
Frank ~ad one of 1t.c mmt t'\nl1np.
development'> an thl uprnm1ng \Car
will be the con-;tnH 11on ol \.1oulton
MAIN OFFICE
)Jr ..atri.I .,,., • ••~ a
.V4 ~IJ ~ A ,114 '4•U A ~Ir I
c... ... •.,eos g,1..,111 D<N"-'"~'II'• t-•1 •l)
\.1 cado"' l'ark. I hn 11-. 1\ wa1t1n~ tor
the tounl' 10 Jtlcpt th1.· dcd1Lal11>n ol
the t 1).acrl \JI( in lhl \ll\o \ ll'Jo
( 1rccnhelt On<."e 11 acc1.·rw, thl· land
.1cl1accnt 111 lht• plannnl I \ f 11nn'>
( cnl<,>r 1n \outh Laguna. 1l "Ill
1ranc,te1 11 lo I aguna fkath Frank
\aid
It ..... 111 tx· tht: f1r~t pl.t\ ,1rca in \nh
Heath Height' '\ouw 1hr kids pl.t \ in
nJrrnw 'ilH'l'I' I here 1\ no \Chool or
pla\ field c.trcil f ht· nl•1ghborho11<.I
1loc<,n't haH' .in) th1ng .t1 ,111 "hl' '><IHI
\ome 1.kll.'norated \lrt'l.'I\ ar1
l .Jguna Bl'<Kh wall fin.ill) gel H'
'>urlau~d nnt \t'ar with soml' <ul
d111unal monn from thr state ga\ la\
lund
t 'l'n though fev. lund'i v.cre av,111·
c1hll' ( ounc 1lm11n Rohen Gen Ir)
madl' a prtth lor hiring a pan-t1ntl'
planner to fin1'ih the Cll} 'c; plan
goH•man@ h1'\tornal hu1ld1ngs
"With 1ntl'fl''' rate\ down I'd h.lll
to sec thr hl\toric !areas) replaced O>
morr 1n1t.·n""" uw~" Cic.•ntrv .-.aid r ht l<>unc.tl agreed tn rnn~adcr 1r
lund'i were a'atlahlc
\lter recent ll)mplaant\ about 1l-
llt11 'iCxual attl\ •t) 1n Hc1\ler Park
I
I
WE'RE LISTENING
Frank d1re<.tcd an 1n1cn\e IWO·W<.'Ck,
round the dock patrol of the area The
\IUd\ will determine the extent of the
act1\ It} and hopctully discourage the
men from returning in the fu1ure.
I rank ~1d
New lights for the park are also
hudgeted lor next }Car
Residents .... 111 al'><J be laced with a
~I inuca<,e 10 monthl}' sewer rates
and Frank \a1d ratei; wall go even
higher
Sc\Cral organ1tallon' made pleas
tor financral suppon from the c1 1y
-,3' c Our ~hore\ rece1' ed S 1,000 to
w ntinue elTorts to c;top olTc;horc oil
dnlhng
\cveral capital improvements wall
hl-made around 1hc cit) this }'Car,
including the preparation ofarchatec·
1ural plans for the tuture renovation
of City Hall. construction of a dam
nrar the old sewer treatment plant to
.,1op the runofl ol water onto Main
Beach. new city trec'i, des1g.n of a new
park al l\Jta lajuna Boulevard and
lUn!>truCtlOO oF a 'itOrm drain 00
lo .... cr Park A.'cnuc between Glen•
ne}re and 81umont ~treets
The counc1l 1!i expected to approve
the budget June I 7
Dally Piiot
O.tfwery
la Ouaranteed
I Just cal l 642-6086
V 1ilr r $11 tt r , ¥
r ..... "°""' , .. ,... rt,
• :JO "' c•• o.ro-• ' ' ,.
1Mll rilY' 'l')t "'" 0. """ ... ..,
What do )OU like about the 0111) Pilot" What
don't )OU lilce" Call the number above and your
me~uge Wlll be recorded. transcnbed :and dc-
hvert"d to the appropnatc ed11or
S•'l'l•• 41ncl ~t H
..OU OC "<.<I •.:..._. rW
XI> Gy 7 .. ~ t• !MllClf• •tn •l"IJ y"W ,_
-P!J
,,,. Or• -,-,. ,,., Aio' • ,, "'""""'"'"' omo-r"!',e w-.. Nor.__"'-.. """"""''<l"" ""'Cl<•? "1 .1ow
fhe ..amc 24-hour answenna service ma) bC'
used to record letten to tht editor on an) top"
( ontnbutnn to our Ltttm column must 1nl ludc
their name and telephone number for venliat1on
Cfreufetlon
Telephone• '°"""'". ,., ..... ..,,,""' •.• 1.-.lllN~ t,l!l'>CaJ I.,,,..'°. rno.1 ,. ~ ... ·"9 ~1'0<' ,. 0ut.1W b""' , •"Cl..,,.,.,, T•• p. Put.14'-"'0 r! 'Al >)O ''"' ,.,,,,,,_ ~o 111. • ,.. ··-~ .,,,....q1r.1• Tells u\ what', on your mind
VOL 71, HO. 1•7
. . . . ..
-
Hazy afternoons to continue
Huy l1*nOont wMI oonttnu. tht°"Ofl Wedneeday a... ...
Orange COMt fottowlnO night end morning IOw ctoudl, the
NttlOMI WMther s.rvloe Mld.
HIQha tOday wlN rat1g9 from tht UPS* eo. at the bMcMt to
the mid to UPS* 70. Inland. Ovwnlght IOwt wtll be 87 to 82.
t..ocel mountlllha wtll be fair, wtth r..ott hlQha In the upper
70. to mid eoe, end owmlght Iowa trom ,,.., 4l> to the SO..
Hot. eunny WMther In the deMf1a wltl eccomp.ny gutty
eftemoon end evening wind• .outhwttt to 25 mph.
High• In the upper deMtta wt.II be in the mid 90• to nMr 100,
with lows In the mid 50t to mid eoe.
Hight In the lower deMttt wtll range from 102 to 110, with
Iowa In the mid 80t to low 70..
Ovw ~ coeetal wetera, light wind• wtU b6ow --1 to
aouth'"'t e to 16 knota thla afternoon end evening, with • aouthweat aweU of 2 to S t .. t.
Further out, mo.tty notthweat wind• 8 to 16 knot• wlll blow
through tonight with combined .... of 4 to 7 t .. t. a...~.~ A. fl'IONlS ~ ~ 'Ts-sTI ~ w.,m _ Coeo..,...
U.S . T empe
<;l\Ow•t• RMI F1ut••s Snow Oc.ciuo.o...,, S1alo0'\My ...
~ .,...,._.. s.,,. .... ~ u~ o.o. ""c~'"·
81 87 Hl(jlle. 10W9 ltlfougll 6 P t11 Moncley J.cklOll,MIM .. Le ~ 6S .. AlllenY.N Y IO .. ~City 74 ...
Albuquerque 14 &1 102 10
Calif. Tem1>9 ,_ 71 11
Y .... ll'f a ..
LMV-O-AINl1llO .. 60 Lmi. llodl 11 81
Ardtof11Q9 &S 43 ~ • 16
AllMI• 17 14 LubtlOCk 12 fi1
A11Mtl0 City 65 58 ~ 71 87
A~ln 7t .. Mi.N9Mdl 83 79
Blltllnof• IO 17 M~ 77 M ~ n ... Mllweull• ll 11
&llmwCI< 71 46 Mc*-&t PMll 74 54 ... t5 IO NWMh 70 65 eoeton 5e 62 .... on-. as 10 · aunt11o t2 &3 ..... YOt11Clty 78 58 Burllng1on. Vt 12 50 fllOrlolk, Ve 78 57 c.,., 70 M OklMIOIN City 11 51
C'*'-lon.8C 71 n OrMtle 71 60 CNtlotte.N C 75 .. Or1Mdo ti 17 =~ .. 11 37 PNI illlll.W 1t M .. S4 ..._... ICM 71 ClnclnMIJ 13 67 ~Or• 13 54 ~ • 11 53 74 83
Columble.S C .. 70 ~ .. &3 Oolumou..ONo 11 ff ::retly ,. 93
Conootd.HH 78 50 '6 ..
DlllM-FIW-91 83 ~ IO 41
09yton n 61 ~ 82 5e Den.-.. 42 St LOU1a 72 82 O..M<*IM • 53 Seit Lak• City 81 60
o.lroll IO 64 Sen M1onl0 78 .. El Pao 16 eo Sen Juel\,P A .. 74
Felfbenka M 46 S.ttl• .. 82
Ferge> IO 46 8'w9Wl;IOt1 eo .. FleOtlell 13 42 SlouxFlllle IM 51
Grand~ 78 54 Spoil-.. 541
Gr .. tFde ., 54 ~-12 60 Gr-.bofo.N C 72 81 Tempe.&t Ptr1DQ 12 10 Hertford 71 .. Topell1 74 50 ..._ .. .. T-100 ..
HOnoklll.I 17 70 TulM n 57 HouMon 12 17 W~.OC IO IO
lldMM111411 88 5e WlcHt• TS ..
......., t:l 12 It.tended ..,__ IOI 71
---.i t2 u IWIOP .. .. ....,_. ... :::z.-----91y1,,. 103 ..
C..llne • IO =-~~~ £ ...... " ..
F-17 • ~--... y=-llllOllftd ~ ... ... lows IOI.~ u '° ~ 71 " 7t 11 Surf Report ~ ~
MonnWle H 17
MoflW9Y 70 .. LOCA1'Clll -.. Ml Wlllotl 71 ... ,._..,.. w IW ....... 106 n ........... i..a w g:.c9w;ll 72 .. =.._, M IW n ..
Ont.no 17 f7 ... ~ t..a IW
p·~ 104 11 w• 11119t.U111e...._
p~ 12 &7 ,._~ M aa Ttdee ..._...,. es " Aedalft t 1 a
Aed.-ICll) 7t ..,
TODAY a.er-to t1 61 ...,_ 71 ~ ,.... 7-.2t Lift. ·U ..,,......,cllno .. 61 =~-2::all p.Jll u
Sen~ es .. a:apl'll. 2.1
S..°"90 10 12 .... 904'., Sen~ .. ..
Sen"-7t .. ,.,. '!WI 1~Lm. 41
Sent• Alie 1& IO """'" 1:30 Lift. .OA ._ ....... 97 .. '-'dl!WI 3:.ap.1'11. u
Sent• 0\11 17 41 9-MllOw l!Otp.m. 2.t
l eni.Men. n 41 8Un ,... tOCley • &·44 a.I'll. _. .. SM\eMonlce 17 to 9t°'*1on 11 • :z::•1:Np.111
T 8'loe Vllll9y 71 • .... ..., .. ~ Liii.
BACKERS SAY 5 MILLION IN CHAIN •••
From Al
to Alaska and Hawaii" and m several
foreig.n countries. "We figure there
was I mill.ion people just in the U.S.
who were not ob the hne, but
anvolved in some way," said Kragen.
Kragcn and spokeswoman Susan
Suss said Bermuda, -Japan. Canada.
South Korea and West Germany had
events.
Whether or not Hands Across
America alters the phght of the
hungry and homeless. it provided a
boo'lt to the spirits of tho~ who took
pan
"This sounds corny. but there was a
feeling an the air knowing that people
were hnked up 4.000 miles across
<\mcrica;· said Phillip T. Zeni. who
hel~ organize acitviues at Arkansas
Children's Hospital in little Rock..
where 15 patients. many in wheel·
chairs or casts. who joined hands in
the lobby.
"There were people out there with
tears an their eyes; there were people
out there laughios at the top of their
lungs," he said. "It was wonderful.
just wonderful."
But now the party atmosphere
needs to give way to solid work.,
K.ragen.
"Nobody's off the hook just be-
cause we did something terrific
yesterday and called a lot of attention
to the issues. We haven't by any
means solved them. and no one
would pretend that we have, .. said
Kragen.
Earlier Monday, he urged people to
.. roll up your sleeves and go out to
work 10 your community."
K.ragen said par.ic1pants should
volunteer with food banks, and
contact elected officials about the
problems of the homeless and
hungry.
"The pendulum needs to swing
back now from mCP,-events to local
community action. K.ragen said.
There were gaps large and small
throughout the · 4, I 52-mile line, cs.
pecially in the deserts of the South-
west and even in urban areas once
·thought ccnain to be full. Organizers
had estimated 5.4 million people
would be needed to complete the line.
"The connection that was most
import.ant was made," said Krqen.
"The ph)'1ical connection was no-
where near as important u the
connection between the issues of
hunger and homelessness. That line
was connected in spirit. and I defy
anybody to teU me it wasn't"
"I tbmk it's just incredible, and I
hope this fcehna carries on," said
Jones, who anchored the western end
of the line at the Queen Mary. "I wish
everyone would set the spirit There is
a real need."
Six-year-old Amy Sherwood of
Brooklyn, whose mother is on welfare
and whose father bas disa~
anchored New York's end o(the line:
Jn between were people of all kinds.
Hands Across America took a
break Memorial Day, closin& ill
national headquarters and 67 offices
in 16 states and the District of
Columbia. "They were the true heroes of this
event," Kragen said. "They should
feel good for the rest of their lives that
they made it happen."
CROWDS TURN OUT, SUN ST A YS HOME •••
From Al
Park spokeswoman said more than
1,000 cars passed through the gate
there ... It's extremely busy," she said.
Despite the huge crowds, local
parks and beaches reported few
problems.
"I'm sure there's gonna be a lot of
arrests." Seal Beach lifeguard Dorsey
said Monday afternoon. "When
people come after 2 o'clock., anythfog
can happen."
But police up and down the coast
reponed a quiet weekend.
Folks who stayed close to home
enjoyed a relatively trouble-free hol·
1da). butat least one Orange Coast
resident who went away for the
weekend met tragedy.
Molly Lynn Roberts, 30, of Hunt·
1ngton Beach. was killed along with a
~an Bernardino woman Sunday
when the boat they were riding an
colhded with another vessel in Lake
Havasu, Anzona.
Roberts and Karen Butcher. 20.
were killed and five other passengers
were injured when their 21-foot boat
was hit by a 19-foot craft being
operated by a man police said had
been dnnkmg.
The Anaheim man piloting the
boat. identified as Carl Bruce Hacker,
was chaJled with operating a water-
craft while under the influence of
alcohol.
Hacker and his three passengers
were thrown from their boat and not
injured. said a Mohave County
Sheriffs Dcpanment spokesman.
Elsewhere, rowdy panics resulted
in broken windows at county fire
station 14 an Silverado Canyon and
earned six illegal aliens in Laguna
Beach a Lnp back to Mexico.
According to a Cal1fom1a Highway
Patrol spokesman, Silverado resi-
dents complained about drunken
youths. Sheriffs department officers
0 ft I L
responded and found wmdows
broken at the fire headquarters but no
suspects.
Jo Laguna Beach police received
an early momin' cah complaining of
noise at the Hamilton House, 1435 N.
Coast Highway.
Officers found four men in the
room and spotted the jeans of one
hangina from the drop ceiling, said
dispatcher Sharon Shryne.
When the man refused to come
down, officers fired a taser gun. A
second man came down voluntarily.
Police also found a loaded handgun
hidden in the ceiling.
All six men were turned over to
immiv.ation authorities.
Whtie 375 traffic deaths where
reported nationwide by 9 p.m., Or-
ange County C1Caped with a few
fender benders and smooth sailing on
most freeways, the highway patrol
reported.
Storekeeper Jamie
Goldenberg 1s weanng
a bold stripe sundress,
with a suggestion of
nostalgia Available 1n
red and pink $80.00
WESTCUFF PLAZA.
NEWPORT BEACH, CA
(7Mt M2-70l1
\