HomeMy WebLinkAbout1986-06-02 - Orange Coast Pilot•
t
Replaced
laraell Attorney Oeaeral
Tltahak Zamler la re-
placecl after deman~
an ID•eettaation f tile coantrr•• fo,...ecret tn-
teW,ence acency. A•.
Na don
Weinberger voices ,
doubts about extending
antl-baJllatlc mlaalle trea-
ty./ Al .
Coast
Costa Mesa considers
action to clear a con-
e-ated lntersecffon.rA3
California
The driver of a bus that
1-t111WHJ~UDJw arJver ~ klll-
lng 18, had had his llcens
e suspended./ M
Sports
Doug Corbett fllpa o"er
the Angela' vlctory over
Baltlmore./81
~ome job action will happen tf county-
oes no_t resume contract negottattons -... ----
By STEVE MARBLE
Of .. Olltr ........
Oranac County Sheritrs deputies
-threatenina to strike over staJlcd
contract talks-wdl bqjn some fonn
of job action by nud-week 1f neao-
tiahons with the county are not
resumed. a spokesman wd today.
"Either they convince us that they
are ~n_ous about returruna to the
barp101n1 table or somethinJ else
will happen." 111d spokesman Robtrt
Macl...eod.
A walkout is one of the powble
courses of action, said MacLeod,
manaacr of the Association ofOranac
County Shen(fs deputies. -
County neaotaaton were not•vail-
ablc to respond th1t mormna.
The anociati~!'J. which ancludcl
about 800 of the MJ theritrs deputies
in the county, ded&ttid u impeue
last week m contract talks with the
county.
No new talks~ Khcdwcd.
The dj1pute cent.en on 1>9Y and
btnefits. Ckput.tet want a~.I percent
pay il'ICreUe and 2.3 percent boost in
btnefits in the fim year oh awo-year
contract. County a.dmjni1traton
have offered deputitt a ~.I ~nt
PILhike. ... He laid sanitation wor\cn m Loi '
l)\c cumnt coniraa for deputiea Anatl wet t year and that 1
upuu July l · . strike later wai uphtld by the court .
·--rhe DC>iSJ1>1lity or a 11nke !'r. heritrs ~ti \'Oted oYa"-sherifr~ deputies ia of concern to u.s, • whelm1naJy fnda_y to a~l~ a
John Sibley, county director of em:• walkout or other Conn of Job acuo .
ployec ~lations. 11Jd late lut week. ,The final vote, co d~ ~ .
.. But J don•t think our deput.iet phone •. showed 435 ~ . fa\'onnJ
would stnke illep.lly. They're too JOb act.a.on and~ a&)tt 10 oppos.a-
conlcieotiout for that." t19n, aaad Mac . .
A strike by public employees i' He 111d tht vote should carry a
illeul if it pments a threat to public "ationa m " to county DetC>-
healtb and safety, said Sibley. u.aion
Macleod clisqreed. (Pl-... .. D£P01'11t9/ A2)
Cla~mby
assessor
foe ruled
false
Election commission
disallows statement
about Proposition 13
By LISA MAHONEY ... ..., ....... .. •..
LC:tten KDt to Orarip County
voten by A r's cand1date David
~olbert conwn fal.s;e and au$leadi1J1
Icy L. Jacobs.. the F11t Campaian
Practices CommiSlion has ruled. •
Holbert, a deputy assest0t, hu
cha~ ur politic:al maili"P that his
bos dad not IU~l'tiProposi.Uoo 13.
But the commission ruled S.tu.rday
that Holbert lacked the proof t.o 11y
Jacobs. was an opponent of the J 971
tu·limitjna measure. ·
The Houston Rockets fi-
nally llft off with win over
Celtlcs./81
INDEX
Traditional wedding . ..., .... ,.... .. '--....
Groom Preecba Kemplmook and brtde N~o Mlnamlara Featlnl ID Bantlneton Beacla. The 8a.n4a7 f.Uftl pres--
are wed ID a tradltlOnal Japaneee ceremony bJ Dr. Jtn. ented bJ tlae Stster Cit, Aeeoclatlon and tile CltJ Coanc;ll
l._oJ1l 11.atnoka, npt. at tbe aecond annul Caltva.1· IDcladed mute. dane. and ablblta at tile et.SC center.
Commi ioDCf'I said a 1971 news-
""~ article siatma the Ailc:laor'a Off ace did not su~ Proposition l 3
was not enou&)t for Holben t.o bue hit
attack. . z Jacobs ·tOJd \he com mi • OD 1.1\a l
Oranee Counly t.hc first t.o
implement Proposition . tl"s Advice and Games A 10 . .
Bulletin Board A3
Bu.tnen A7-8
Clualf led 85-7
Comics A11
Sumiier, LaRouche-del>ate Views
prov1 · ns. ""
'"There wasn't enOUlb evtdenoe to
state black and whjte that Mr. J-=obe
did not support Proposition 13, ••
commission• spokeswoman Suza.ane
SluDSky sa.td Death Notices 87
Entertalnmen• . A9
Opinion A12
Police Log A3
Public Notices 87-8
Sports 81-5
T etevlslon A9
Weather A2
By PAULARCBIPLEY
Ofa.DlllJ .......
Bruce Sumner, a wnte-in candidate
for the 40th Congressional D1stnct
Democratic nomination, faced ultra-
conserv-ative Lyndon LaRouche in a
satellite-linkup debate today that
focused on two versions of the
LaRouche philosoj>hy.
LaRouche pro11ered a m<>:<Jcrate
version ofh1s views on domcstJc ana
international issues while Suinner
pa~ a radical and bi.ta~ outhne
of laRouche's views.
The pair agreed to the debat~ after
Sumner challenaed laRouche disci-
ple Art Hoff man, the only Demo-
cratic candidate in the 40th district
whose name will appear on Twesday's
ballot
Sumner, chairman of the Orange
County Democratic Party, said de·
batmJ Hoffman would be a waste of
tame since he was merely a mouth-
piece for the LaRouche philosophy.
Althou&h LaRouche rejected
Sumner's propolcd debate topic on
l.aRouche s riaht to participate in the
Democratic Party, Sumner focused
on that issue throu..,out the half-
hour discussion on natjonal and
.antcmattonaJ issues.
Sumner. s1tt1na 10 the Bonneville
Studios in Los Anaeles •. 11jd, "I
contend that · trre LaRouche
philosophy is bizarre, danserous. and
a threat to the United Statca."
Sumner araucd that placma dozen a
of LaRouchc candidates on ballots
(Pleue M8 ~Ulll'fBR/ A2)
fhrou&}lout b.is campaian, Holbert
has called facObi an enemy of
Propos1t1on 13. He has also criticized
has boss for bis operation of the
Assessor's Office and caJled ham
unqualified and incompetent. 1
Holbert had written tha~ the
Assessor's Office was ~P heavy with
unproductJvc. and often abtent ld-
(Pleue eee rAL8&/A2)
~r~~~:;r~~~~~~ct ~motional pitch on drugs prompts students' reform
1na to students across the country fdr-_,When half oftheJuruor h1ah school town Kenney \aid 1t was a small pn~
30 years. In frank and de1Cnp11ve students wanted to speak with him . to pa) By PAUL ARCHJPLEY or .. ~,.....,,
Fewer thalf half of Ora nae C. ounty's
f'CllStercd voters will exercise their
franchise Tuesday, Registrar of
Voters Al Olson predicted
Too many unopposed candidates
and too few controversial ballot
measures wlll keep away 52 percent of
the county's 1.03 million voters,
(Pleue He LOW I A2)
By LAURA MERlt or .. ~,... ....
Moved by David Toma's emo-
tional and shockma delivery of fact\
about the effects of alcohol and drua
abuse, about 200 of the 450 Thurston
Middle School children pthered an
counschng sessions with him late last
week.
But parents were also Jarred b) h1\
speech Wednesday 01aht. Over t .OOQ
of them attended ioma,s talk to
Newport trolley,
shop own~rs· gird
for tourist blitz
Terrorism abroad ts
expected to result in
more local vacations .
C1uldren •~ p21n1 out school
windows, merchants art pohshina
countertOJH and police officers art
actuna ready to walk the beat -1f1
almost summer in Newport Beach. ,
For beach business, it's the time to
maJce a ruJ profit. For beach m1-
dents. 1t'1 the ume to make room for
crowda. conaeslion and tourists.
The threat of terronsm has soured
many Amencan on European travel
this summer and with cheap gasoline.
many fam1ht1 a~ reportedly plan-
nina a domest1c vacat•on in lead of
tta\'elin abr d.
Nina lia. manaaina director of
the Newport Beach Convention IL
V11iton Burau. wd at looks like a
healthy tounst 1easofl in the popular
Ora Coast Clty.
0 1've had a 1u~ of c:aJls an tht list
couplcofWtt' ,_. Bali uid .. My~t
fcthna tha1 we w1ll • lot more
v1siton thit ynr.''
Litt ye r, the m~ot botela an
Ne rpon lk&ch aros n rty $350
riulhon. a rd1 to R rd Li hn,
c ccutive d1rtt1or of th Ncwpon . .
Susu
HowLm ·
Focus ON THE NEws
Beach Chamber of CommCTCe.
The Newport Beith Mamou, Mer-
iditn Hotel, Ncwportcr Reton,
Balboe Bay Oub, heraton Hotel and
new four Scatons Hotel promitc to
draw even more people to New:pon
Beach tbiJ 1ummcr, luchn uid.
'1be ~or corporation like the
Sheraton and Marriott have •
~ matket1na team· .. luehn
said ... ney·re dl~uippcd W1th a
aood matkctina force. •
Bua some of the protpeetive tour·
asts who tcle"hone the Ncwpon
h Convention A Va1 ton Bureau
are not a re that all of the hotel and
motels an Newpon -o.cept the
Balboa 1n!2 -~t dutttly on the
h. 8alfi 11id.
........ U1118&•/ A2)
. \
adults where he stressed that parents
bt committed to the children and use
firm d1sc1phne
And C1ay P1varoff. the mother of
clemcntary-a1e children who ar-
ranged for Toma's v1s1t, satd the
parents plan to lobby the school
board to restrict students from mov-
101 on and ofT carT)pus dunng school
hours
Toma as a former New York city
narcotics officer who has been lectur-
Utlks he t~lls the kids about the organizers knew his messqe had hit .. "If -.e can sa ve one kid from aoina
u1hness of J&il and_Junk1es Students home down the path, it's wonh 1t and at
appear moved by his horror stones of "It was spontaneous combustion \aves soe1cty money." Yid Kenney.
the streets apm," said PtvarofT who is a pharm.acut Wlth the Care
He spoke to JUntor and senior high La&una Beach Councilman Dan Umt Hospital of ()riA
school students at Laauna Beach Kenney antroduccd Toma to the "Yeah. it's a lot of money. but the
H1&h School on Wednesday About 1.200 or more parents Wednesda., messaac needs to act out"
200 high school students stayed after night. Despite cnt1c1sm received b) Toma rcpnmanded parents for
school to speak to Toma about their the council for ats S l ,OOOcontnbullon allow10.,.0e1r cl\aldren to dress what
own problems wnb druas to the $6.000cost ofbnnpna Toma to (Pleaee eee DRUG/ A2)'
•
Most OCC graduates
continue studies
at four-Year colleges
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN °' .. ~ ........
A profile ofOrJnac Coast C ollcte''
t 986 graduatma class indicate~ 8 'l
percent will be contmuma their
studies at four-year coll~ and
un1vers1ties
State teai Laton have kept a closr
eye on such transfer figures becau\C of
cnt1c1sm that community collegc'I arc
not focusma enouah attention on
pTCpanna students ' for four-year
educations
But for the past ~1x yea.rs, Ora.nsc < oa!lt < Cllk&e hu transferred more
student-. 10 the Un1vers1ty of C.h-
fom 11 and California State Univcr-
\1t-.. "'t<'m'> than an)' other com-
miin1t} rnllcgc 1n 1he state. OCC
offi cial\ u1d
The ~hool'\ transfer record has
tx~n altnhuted to ats tarse enrol*
lment. 1t\ locatiun 1n an affluent area
and m tracoers and counsclon who
encourage continued education.
Thr transfer rat~ Jgr:_ lh4t ~l.1s 1. of (PJeue eee 1108T OCC/A.2)
Laguna council to weigh.
open space preservation
BJ LAURA MER.It °' ... ~ ........
The Laguna Be h Ctty Council
will ·con"dcr rtt0nimendat1on on
how to maintain and ptttttvt open
space an the city and u ycamorc
Hill at a pubhC' meet1nt Tuc9da~
n1&ht .The M nnana C'omm1 ion and thc-
Open ~pace 'ubc.ommnttt ha~c re·
ccntly htfd puhlk hcannp on the
maner
tn a rtpon to t council. the
comm1 ion recommendrd~t hhsh·
'
1n1 a non-profit open pace con·
t"ancy board to encou the
dtd1cat1on of land, raise money to
pun:hatc land and adv11e the etty.
It also su ti the city c:tta~ a
"Open Space Conservancy Fund"
Pf('1fically for the ~al1 of
open PICC land
"lthouah in ncral
with the otbct rncm~
m1 ion Wayne ~tenon bm1t
letter that outhned hi one co
with tht rcoommcndatio '
( . LAG
'.
.,
A2 * Otenge CoU\ DAI~'( PILOT/ Monday, June 2, 1988
" Actlvt tSnydeicbeglns ·
fast to pressure Reagan ·
WASH LNG TON (AP)-Charaint
lh ltcaJan admini tration with dc-
layina SS million earmark for lhe
~nov11ion of a bomtl shchtr,
LOW COUNTY VOTER EXPECTED •.•
l'romAl · .,
E>bonu1d.
~ ThO'Se who 'otc m one of the ~un.Y. 2,0711'f"'Clnttt wilt fl11d the ~tlina booths open from 7 a.m. to 8 t.m.
But the Dtmocnuc Drlmary pill
veteran Assemblyman JlJchard Rob-
inson, f).Gardcn ~. J&Jinst Ot·
ange C oun>y Supcnor Coun Judie
David Carttr.
RcpubliQns enjoy a lopsided edge lo rq1 tration with S50,92S to the Both savor the opportunity to take bcmocrau' 371 ,60S And a handful Doman on m 1 ra~ county district
list themselv~ a Peace ana· Frtt-where the Democrats have a rc&is-
Oo'm, Amcncart Independent an.d trat1on edge.
Libenarian pany ml'mbcrr.. · ., But Robinwn and Caner have
• The GOP's dominance alons the turned anc~sio&)y nasty to each
coast 1s even ~ter In s1A Orangl' othcr l!I election day aJ)proache~.
Coast c1t1es. Republicans outnumber Voters also will havc choices in the
l)(omocrus I SJ, 152 to 86.S4 I 2~d. 4th and Sth Superv1sonal d1~-
0b$Crvers bchl've turnout here trict<i.
\:ould be h1ghcr whl'n.: hotly contested Second Distnct Supervisor Har-
J:>nmar} race~ 1n the 40th and 38th nc:ll Wi~er faces a minor challe!'Je < on~s1onal dt<itnc.ts h1Avc gencr-by David M~lov1ch. a medical
ated interest operations supervisor Bui Tom Riley of the 5th is 1n a toughccr race
In the 40th, Republican incumbent agarnst college professor and former ~ohcn Badhnm faces a stiff challenge Laguna Beach Mayor Jon Brand and
from management consultant bu'IJOC'>sm:sn Kennelh Palmer Prall.
Nathan Rosenberg. In the 4th Anaheim Mayor Don
Rosenberg's campatf>n has focu!lcd Roth Orange Mayor Jim Beam
on Badham's absent~1sm from Con:· former Congressman Jerry Pattc:rso~
gress, world travels and pc~nal u~ and Manuel P Mendez. are runnina
of c.ampa1gn funds. for the seat to be vacated by Super·
lladham has messed Ro~nhcrg's visor Ralpll Oark.
lad of political expenencc and c.;on-In contested nonpartisan races,
11astet.l 1t wnh his status as a leading Orange County Auessor Bradley
\ cteran in the House of Represent.a-Jacobs finds himself facing the big.
11\.CS. spending challenge of Deputy
Thc Democrat\ l1kcw1sc arc waging As.$essor David Holbert. County
.:i heated campaign an the 40th Clerk Gary Granv1Ue is pitted against
D1'.)tn<:t. where county part~ (hair-Deputy County Clerk Marshall Nor-
:_man Bruce Sumner 1s. runnmg as a ns; Deputy District Auomey A.C.
,.wntMrr C"andrdate 11gamsr-ArrHo1f-Novlclc Ftaking on 20.year veteran
o)'nan.i;i a follower of ultra-con-D.A. Cecil Hides, and Public Adm1n-~cna11vc and uhra-controvcrs1al 1strator Wilham Baker 1s'challengcd
.l.\ndon l.aRouche by bus1nessmao-attorney Victor
~ ~umncr has spcnt b111 campaign Hobbs.
"¥a1hng against LaRouche and teach-Recorder Lee Branch must fend off
mg voter'> how 10 correctly wnte m his two challenaers -auditor-director
•}'lame and punlh their ballots. Larry Bales and business executJve
;• Hoffmann has fauhfully followed Gerg Winterbottom.
.the LaRouche tactic of maligning Shcntf-Coroncr Brad Gates also
.,:Ppponenh with wild allegations. He ,faces two who want his JOb -~a\ accu!>ed Sumner, a former as-
~embl)man and Judge. of mob con-
municipal counjud&e Bobby Yount-
bJood and Sheriffs Patrol I'· Linda
LeaCalhpn.
Three Supcnor Court races arc
contested u well. Deputy Distnct
Attorney Joseph Banll&. Deputy DA
·William Bcdswortb and anomcy Roben Gallivan ue vyina in Office
No.$.
Municipal Coun Judae David Bn~kner and Deputy DA Anthony
lt1<'kaucka1 opposeone another in
Offioc N~t l S, and Supenor Coun
Judae WHiiom McDonald as
challen&ed b~ attor'1fY James Edward
Wilkosfci in Office No. 17
Voten livmg in the Harbor Mu·
nicipal Court d11trict will choose
between incumbent Judge Brian
Caner and Deputy DA Rohen
Thomu Ill for Office No. I.
Irvine voters also havc more to
consider on their ballots as they
ch00te two City Council members
whose election~ could determine the
city's future growth policies.
Voters also will determine 1f ooun·
cil memben should ~limited to two
consecutive tenns and whether
voten should directly elect their
mayors rather than leave that job to
their council.
Other candidates arc takina a free
nde through the primary WlthQut
competition .
In the 6.,9\h Assembly District.
incumbent Nolan FriueUe. R-Hunt-
1ngton Beach, and Democrat J ack
Baldwin oflrvine ari unopposed. .
And in the 70tb Asxmbly Distnct.
incumbent Republican Gil ferguiOn
and Democrat Geoffrey Gray arc
unopposed.
Non-partisan officeholders seek.ing
confirmation without opposition are
Auditor Steven Lewil, Treasurer-Tax
Collector Robert Citron and county
schools Supenntendcnt Robert
Peterson.
.pelt1om and drug traffickmg.
~ In the 3kth <. ungress1onal D1stnct,
"1'cpubl1can Rcp Ruben Doman l!I
i.Jinopposcd 1n lhl' primaf)
DRUG-USE HIT ••.
..
.. Coast colleges
;to choose aide
'By MADGE HAMMONl> °'""' ,... c .... ...,........
r A new \. 1tt l hantdlor of hu'>tnt'.)\
..affairs 1\ expcllcd to be -,clectcd lur
the Coast ( ommun1ty C ollegc D1\-
1nct this week
The board ol 1rustcl"\ which meet'>
1n regular scss11>n Wctlne-.da) wa\ to
meet tn closed '>C'>\1on al Ip rn to<la ..
to consider <:and1date'> for the pos-
11100
Thl' nc"" v1u chancellor will take
over dulll'\ prn 1uu\IV performed h>
Lee A. \tcven,, who 1s on leave of
ab~nce. a d1c;tnct ~pokesman !>aid
Stevens left the presidency of
(widen We!lt ( ollege to become
cxecull\.C vice chancellor of fiscal
a flairs. the former title of the po<s1t1on ,
after Correllan Thompson. who had
held the JOh man) vt-ars. retired.
From.Al
he' called ··mappropnately for
school." And thcn he u~cd them to
listen and talk wi.th their children,
help 11\em build a spintual lifc bX
"believing there 1s a higher powcr.'
aod finally touch and hug them
regularly an a show of support.
Accord1nf to P1varon. about 25
high schoo students also made a
o,urpri~ VISl t with the JUntOr high
children Wednesday to .talk about
their own expcnencet. w1th-Orugs.
Two high school girls talked about
the prc~surcs of usins drup and said
they were former acid and cocaine
users, said Pi.varon:
But what was more inspiring she
said is when a varsity football player
who had lip cancer from chewing
tobacco con"1nccd fivt' 7oung
chewers to.throw their cans o snuff
over the cliff.
"He stlnTCI up a rat's nest. Now he
can go home. and we have to go to
work," said P1varoff ofToma.
LAGUNA OPEN SPAC·E ••.
From Al
He rnntendc; an <>pen 'ipace (on-
~enans.y Board <.ould not !unction
wtthO'UI a reliable '>ourtc of income
an.d prof)Osed that a portion ol
'iycamure Hills he sold for an inn or
1.:untefencc lt:nter
The land for the lcntcr would be
lea..ed from 1hc city by a pnvak
develor>1:r v.h1k the land around thl' ·
c·c·ntl'r W(iuld remain public. He
sugge'lted the leac,c fee and maJOnty of
the brd tax would to to the Open
Space Conscrvanc> Fund to buy
more open space land in and around
Laguna Beach
The council will consider the
recommendat1om and receive sug-
gestions from audience at the 7· 30
p.m meeting at the Cit~ ( ounc1l
Chambers. 550 Forest Ave
MOST OCC GRADS FURTHER EDUCATION •..
From Al
I 'JX6 1\ almo\I 4 1x-1u·nt Jh<1vt' la\I
\car·., hgurc. ()( { oflic1als said
d1a.,..1ng 1,
U.S. Tempe
•• ~.~.~. "'ONTI .'llQI~~~ W•m -COIO....,.
Sl'lowttl lil11t1 F1utt1H SllOw Oc:c~ed ._ SllllOIWlfYa..
,..__. W•-"'""t NOAA U a Deol ol 0-'9
fVlllOAY am•'"· 107un.
1 1e11n1
7:*9p'"
~ ~
74 It . ..
• II .... ,. 41
10 eo . ..
0.4 ... u ...
SUMNER, LaROUGHE DEBATE VIEW ...
From Al .
na11onw1dc as Dcmoctats was .. a
fraud," and noted that fraud was
mtcns1fied wi th five laRouchc can·
d1dates runnmg forstatt and national
offi~s as Republicans.
Sumner Quoted eJttens1vely f..Om
LaRouche publications in which the
Leesburg. Va., announ<led prcsiden-
ttal cand1dat.c alleged Oreat Britain•s
monarchy wu enpged in inter·
national drua trade and Israel 1s ruJed
by Britain as "a zombie nation ...
LaRouche, spe~ing from a studio
an Washington, D.C .. focused on U.S.
economy and worscmna poverty
here.
"The U.S. economy 111 morally and
economically a !lhambles,"
LaRouche said.
He said the nation 1s becoming an
"economic scrapheap, and tt 1s be-
coming morally weak as well.';
"If Gramm-Rudman it continued
and th1~ msane tax refonn bill 1s
passed. wc could have an economic
blowout by this fall .. " he said.
Sumner said LaRouche deserves to
be heard. but argued he ha' no place
DEPUTIES .••
From Al .
"We assume they read the news-
papers-and saw the vote... said
Mad.cod. "We're sttll wa1ung to hear
from them."
rounty negotiators \aid ~eput1es
are bcmg unrealistic an their contract
demands while the a'sociation said
they county has yet to "get scnous"
about negotiating. ·
in either of the t\\'O leadina political "I an11c1patcd he would try to loot
patties. I • like a moderate. •That's• the decep.
laRouche char&ed that Sumner's tion," Sumner said. ref~nces were wen out of context Sumner and laRouchc split the
and "prba&e... . $6,000 cost of the debate which may
.. He chOIC to use this type oflyinA never be seen, smcc no network had
rather than f~ the 11sues, agreed to televise 1t.
LaRouchc said. However, network. representatives
Sumner said after the debate that attended the debate. and Sumner
everylhina he quoted came directly expressed hope that they would
from LaRouche publications. broadcast excerpts.
C~argeagalnstaccusedspydropped
BALTIMORE (AP) -Former
National Security Agency worker
Ronald W. Pelton took the witness
stand today to answer charges that hG
sold cnt1caJ U.S. intelhsencc secrets
to the Soviet Uoion. after a federal
JUd&e dismissed one of six espionage
and conspiracy charges again$t him ...
Pelton, 44, still faces hfe in pnsoo tf
convicted on five remainmg charges
that for $35,000 be sold the Soviets
secrets gained dunna his ~4-year
career as a Russian communications
specialist for the super-secret agency.
Pelton testified that he asked for an
attorney and auarantees that he
would not be prosecuted before
making 1nenminating statements to
FBI agents before his arrest last
November.
FALSE CLAIM •..
From Al
mmtstrators and managers with httle
or no knowledge of proper appraisal
methods. Cronyism, inefficiency and
waste arc rampant."
"This isn't campaign rhetoric. It',
JUM hes.~ said Jacobs who has been
the county assessor for 10 years.
Jacobs said he has faith m the
voters to know \he difference between
the truth and the "pile of political
prbage that 1$ beina thrown at me."
Last week, Jacobs accused Holben
of trying to buy lhe assessor's job by
d~mp1n1 more than $210,000 of bis
own money into his carnpaian.
Holbert denied the charge. The
$210,000 was spent for three couo~
t~de maiJinp necessary to ~t his
viC"'Jis across to OranJe County s 1.03
million votcn, he said.
Jacobs has spent a little more than
$24,000 on the campaign. \\ edncsdav I 276 \tudent~ gradu-
awd 1n cen·mon1n at LcBard
~tc1d1um 11n thl' < <J\ta Mna u1mpu\
•S rx·rcrnt will go 1u private
lUllegt'\
• fhl· remaining I £i pcru~nl had not
dcudcd on 11.hH h '>thool thc)' would
iramfcr to .11 tltl· 11mc thq "'tn:
\Ur\l'\,l'd
1n <:11IC'> \uc has ~an ta Ana. Irvine and
Orange Another 37 graduates live
outside Orange County, and nine live
out~1de the state. 1-:::=============:;::;==================.:===========:;,; The largest groupofOCCgraduatcs
\n C)(C nr><1rt pro,1dcd thc
lollr1w1n11 1nlorn1Jl111n on thl 11/Xf
gratluatc., .
•I .llf1 I \lU(knl\ lll k' rx·ru:nt plan
to tran\kr to Jt1ur·)l'ar \t hool'>,
•f17 JX rtcnl ol thnt• 11.111 attend C al ·~1;11t· larrrpu..,1., I he lc;id1 ng rec1p1
,:nl\ art C .11 ..,IJlr · I ong Realh
ret c1' rng 17 S < J( < gr.iduall''>. and
( .11 \1.ih' F ullcrt11n rcll:n 1ng 2 ~'J
,
• \lm11\I 12 f)l'ILenl of lh1· ()( (
lr.trt\lcr\ will g11 t11 I C l ·inl('lU\t'\ I C
tt¥HW • ., 1tw kad1n~ de .. 11n11t111n
• 177 planned to take lull-time JOO\
,tftn graduation
I hr profrlt' of<>< C \ ( la'>' of I 'IX<i
,tl\o 1nd1rntt·d 70 pcrn.:nt live in thc
the c1gh 1 < 1t1ec, located w1th1n the
l <>il\t < omrnun1t) ( ollegt: Dt<ilrttl
Huntington Heath wa\ home c11:,. to
thr largc\t number of()(< graduate<,
f14lS) follownl h} C mta Me')() 1232)
and Nc11.pon fil'a<.h I I 2f»
"-it·:irlv ;o j'X'Ttcnt ·11vr in Orange
< ount\ hu1outs1dl'1h1: < oa'>t 01i.tnct
'292) came from the college's busi-
ness education d1v1\1on , followed by
technology ( 146) and social sciences
(I 09)
A breakdown of sex and ethnic
backiruund tnd1cated 51 4 percent of
OCT s 1986 graduates were women
and 7 3 2 percent were ( auc:as1an
Asians made up 6.4 pcrcent of the
graduates. followed by H 1span1cs, at
3.2 percent
The profil<" also dc.-term1ncd that 77
percent of the graduates arc older
than 2 1
BUMPER ~ROP OF TOURISTS DUE ...
From Al
r hn npn 1 1ha1 1hn t an rnakt
arrangement\ 111 \la] nght on tht
llca(h · Halle; \aid What I tell 1hcm
" that thn tan ''a> very clo'ol: and
1rll them ahnut ;ill the things there an
l•J tJo hen: "
I ht• tlilng·tfang-dan_g of thrCl' old
f.l\hmnC'd trolley\ will add ;i \pet 1;11
to111 Ii 10 lht· 1oummcr \Cavin 111
N<·wpon lkaLh
I he· trolley\, which hcgan a 11nr
\t .11 lr\I on C...unda), wilt travel th<'
{ 11,1~1 Highway bctwet"n tht' Balho.1
l'c·11111\ula and Fashion (\land
I h<' rrolle> cxpenmcnt 1~ ex petted
111 1 rl\t the city about SHH 000
nt1•1rd1ng to Nt'wpon Beach C ti}
\.fanager Rohen Wynn. It will cmt ~IJ
1·n1• t11 111!c the lfl·\CBI 'huttle\
MAIN OFFICE ..... _(,.
...... 9. 1 #' , • A_lj( fl ~.-w • f,/f 1 4
\11othcr attr.:il t1on thl\ ..,car I'> the
rl'n11\ation of Balboa, 1ndudtng the
h1'>tonc Balhoa I un Zone
I he Fun Zone· once de1cnorat1ng
1n10 a local e)nore, now '>mtles
through a m1l11on-dollar facelift The
f crr1' ·wheel \pin\ next to the water
and ''dewalk \!rollers are ahle to
hrow~ by m·11. \hops and bay\1d<"
rc\taurant"
A(cording to Newpon Beath
pt1licc rc(cirth the city'!\ winter
r><1pulat1on of almo\t 70,0<X> balloon\
to about 200 ooo on a trp1cal \um mer
clay. Tho"K ddd111ona 1 l0,000 vis-
itor\ typ1rnll} flock to the Balboa
Penan<>ula. uowd1ng the \1Jewalks.
pier\ and ho;ar<lwalk while ral"\ c1rcll'
for precmu' park1np 5pa<.:eis
On a bu'>) \um mer day the Balboa
Island f crry totl's more than 1,600
cars between the pcnin'iula and the
island
Bui mo!lt of the merchants at the
beach don't St.-cm to mind -they
await the traditional beach mobs with
\m1hng anticipation. After all. sum-
mer crowds are also summer cus·
to mers
Owners of ,.tore,, bars and rc1-
Uluranta on thl' pen1n!iula and Balboa
!\land PY ule!\ double or tnple
during summer
"Fifty percent of my bu1mess l!t
done dunng those three months,"
said one shop owner. "For every S 100
I make tn January. I make SSOO an
July."
Delly Pflot
Deftv.ty
la Owwantffd
~1·'•101r II yOU Or.
~ ~-.1111• --4 414'14< .. 64. 4.U Justcall 642-6086 ~ r::..· :~~~or~~
VOL. 7t, NO. 152
'·
/ ..
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don t you hlcc'> OlU the number above and your
m('UIJC Wlll be recorded, transcribed and de
liv~ to tM appropriate editor
The 'llmt 24·hour answerina scrv1et may IM'
u~d to record lcucn to the t'dttor on any topic
C ontnbuton to our Letten column must includc
their name and tcl~phone number for vc:nfia11on.
Tclfi ui what'\ on your miod
-~ COil)I .... !» ~.., .
111...,., •nG ~, " '°" Clo fOI •111(.,... "°'" ~ 11y I• m ~· M!Ot•
40 I ff\ •llCI '""' C'Xly ,.;i, 1>9~•ll
Clroula1Jon
T1t1phone1
Mo.a Or•~~fy .r.,..n ..,....
I·
I
~"HOUR ACC•ss 7 DAYS
. [ID M 00@[1=,ffe\ (ffi ALARMED UNITS
, NO SECURITY DEPOSIT REQUIRED
STAY ONE YEAR-12th. M~NTH FREE
645-2711
• 17th ITAEET /Elf· /TOA AGE
670 WEST 17TH STREET, COSTA MESA, eA
J •
.
DOI orchestra
plans concert
The UC Irvine Chamber Orthestta. conduc1cd
by lC'Dhln Etd~. will per(onn Tbuilday at 8 p.m. ln the Fi~ Ans C.On«rt IWJ on the UCI campus.
Selections to be praentcd include the
"Bra*1tb'!IJ ~~nceto No. l" by Bach, ~Symphony
No. S tn B Flat by Schubert and .. Five Piec:et for ~trina ~bettra" by Paul Hindemith. Tic.km at SS ·~ tcn1;rai admission and S• for student.I and senior citizens are available by caJUn1 the box ofBce at 856-6616.
Streu .embJar •lated
Educator, wntcr and theolo&ian Or. Luci.en de
la Fuente will speak on "SUCClCSS Without Strett" at
Tuetday afternoon'• meetina of \be Retired Federal
Employees Association at the Mercury Saviop and
Loan buildina. 23021 Lake Center Drive, El Toro.
J~•erclH open IJoa.e
Jazurcise instructor Lynn Chaldu will hold an
open house Saturday from 9 to 11 a.m. at the Boys
Club, 108S Laguna Canyon Road, f.Aauna Be'M:b.
Participants should wear exercise shoes and brina a
mat. Admiwon i1 free and further information is
avaJlable at 499-1213.
Soap actbJg .emlnar
Saddle~clc Coll~ Community ServioeJ will
present a pfOlrlm on• Actin1 for the Solpt" for the
next three Thursdays in Room 804 of El Toro Hiah
School. Actor-director Robert Conrad will present
the ~m and t~e cost j1 S42. Call S824646 for
additional information. ·
Cupen P~k program• .et
The volunteers of Caspers Wilderness Park wiJJ
hold their next mcetinc Saturday at 9:30 Lm. at
M1u1on San Juan Capistrano. Cbapman CoUqc
professor Nick Maplousas, head of the
arcbeoJosical project al the mlmon1wiU be the pest
1peaker and a tour will follow al 11 a.m.
Amf6a. meet In BjXoR>
The Amip de la Conjna dQcents will hold their reautar mon~mcetina Saturday at 9 a.m. in Old St George'1 ission Church at Heritqe Hill
Historical P 2SlSLSerrano Road, El Toro. A
potluck ludQbeOn wdl follow the sewon, at which
oew offioen will be 1nJtalled.
Swap meet aid.a clbJlc
A community swap meet to benefit the Laauna
Beach Co.mm unit¥ Oinic will be held Saturd4y from
8 a.m. to 4 p.m. 1n the parking lot of the La&una
Beach Unified School District. 62S Park Ave.
Admission for shoppen is S 1 per family and those
wishm& to sell rtems can rent a space for S 12 for the
day. Call Kevin lnon at 832-3298 for reterVatJons . ..
We'61Jt control cl ... .et
•
Alex Lassen, 8, (above) swmas his 8-year old
partner, Heather Bctonte, at Carden Christian
School's 2nd annual square dance and chili supper
a fund-raiser held last week for the C<>sta Mesa
school.
Above right, Sarah Proffilt and Katie
0•0onnell. both 4112, get into step while (below)
partncn Benjamin Walker, S, arid James Stites. 6
clap their bands. -'1
1-
It looks like a 11andotr between 8-year-olds
Heather Betonte and Alex Lassen (below right) to
see who's goina to ask whom to dance. Friends since
they w~ 3 years old. the young couple later aot into
the swing ofthinp. --
The annual event ii sponsored by tbe puetl1I
club and children ranaiDI iD qt from 3 to 14 danced
with classmates, moms and dads. and siblinp..
A course in weiabl control will meet Saturday
from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. ID Room SjM 313 of
Saddleback Colleae in Mission Viejo. J>sychol<>sist
Arthur Lanae wiO conduct tbe proiram which is
prices at $30. Call 582--4646 for furtb~ i~onnaiion.
Blood drive ln Watmlnster
Sunflower-Greenville traffic signal U~ge~
The Humana Hospital-Westminster Volunteer
Guild and the American Red Cross will co-sponsor a
blood drive at the bos1>1tal next Monday from I 0: f S
a.m. lo 3 p.m. CaJI the hospllal al 896-9244 or the
volunteer gift shop, 893-4S4 l. ext. 5460, for pre·
rqlSltallOn.
By TONY SAAVEDRA
Jam Willems has spent more than 12
years trying to convince Costa Mesa
officials of the danger at a busy m tersecuon
n~r his home and out~1de his Chnsuan-
oriented gift storr
freeways and onto Sunflower.
It would also hamper the ab1hty of
residents to act into their neighborhoods
on the ·south SJde of Sunflower and the
ab1hty of customers to get into businesses
on the nonh side. which cros!CS the Santa
Ana border
··1t's not fCttin& harder (to cross
Sunflower), Its ðn& impossible," he
Miid Saturday ... We've had a lot ofvcry.
very close calls.··
into his store the preVIOUS year.
Willems isn't the only one mad about
the lltu.alJon. he Slid. Tem_pcn hive Oared
when driven held up traffic to makt a left
tum or darted 1n front of speedina can.
Willems has finally succeeded -'°"of
He wanted the city to install traffic signals
at the comers of Sunflower A venue and
Greenville Street to make at easier for
motonsts -1nclodin1 customers at has
Maranatha Y1llqc -to mak.e left turn'>
from the 1ntersect1on
Mc ell.pects the traffic to become even
IT)Orc snarled once the new South Coac;t
Plaza annex opens 1n the fall .
One of those clo~calls btt pretty clote to
home. Willems awoke one momin1 10
June 1984 to find a fallen motorcycle and
an injured dnver m his front yard on
Sunflower Avenue.
He said a drunken dnver also plowed
~vou see people Jivin& people the
middle tin&er all tile ume. One time tbil
,uy opcnca the window and shouted It
somebody." Willems said.
Monday.Jane2
• 6:30 p.m .. Cetta Meu City Coactl. City
Council Chambers, 77 Fair Dnve.
• 6:30 p.m., lrvble FJauce C.mml11loa, Cny
Council Cbambcn, 17200 Jamboree Blvd.
• 7·30 p.m., Batial'OD Badl City CoancU.
Caty Council Chambers, rooo Ml.fn St.
Willems was also fearful of the potential
hazard to pcdcstnana tryrng to cross the
street. made rncreaSJng)y busy by the emefiCn~ of bu<Jmcss parks and new
shopping areas 1n north Cosu Mesa
Irvine teen-ager raped wh ile her
parents are in other part of house
Rock Hudson's h ome
for sale at $2.95M·
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The house ID
which actor Rock Hud10rt hvcd a.nddied IS
up for sale. Tueeday,June3 Instead, the city Traffic Comm1ss1on -
convinced of the potential danger -,.,
recommending tonight that the <. 1t)'
Council re1tnct left turns m the 1ntcr-
sect1on
An Irvine teen·a&rr was raped in her
home Sunday while her unsuspcctmg
parents were 1n anothrr part of the ho~.
according to pohcc
After thr attack, the v1ct1m ·s parents
heard her screams. The suspect e~ped by
Jumping over a back fence The ask1rt1 pncc for the hillioi> Mcditer·
ranean-style mansion, with its 20-car
counyard, pnvat.e theater, pool and trop-
ical forest. 1s $2 9S million.
• 7:30 p.m., lrvlae Vlllfled Sdool Dlltrkt
Board of Eclacafloa, Adm1nistrat1on Center, SOSO
Barranca Pky. Willems said the ~ulatton would do
little to improve the bhnd curvec; and the
1ncreasin11. traffic moving ofT the Jammed
The 14-year-old v1ct1m was raped at
kn1fepo1tlt in her first-floor bedroom after
thl· a\satlant apparently entered the home
1hrou1th an unlocked back door. Shull \aid
Pohcc dcscnbed the suspect as a white
male. about 27-28 yea~ old. 6 feet tall and
180 pounds He had brown hair, blue eyrs
and a light moustache
The mansion sits on an acre of pnme
hilltop land JUSt nonh of ~vcrlv H1ll1.
Po ucr Loe •
One dead, another hurt in:
weekend area Shootings
By PAUL ABClllPLEY °' .............
One man wu killed and another
e1aped serious iryury this weekend
in unrelated shoot1na incidents in the
Oranp: Coast.
Killed Saturday durina what pohce
called a "pme of modified Ru ian
Roulette" was °a:?. Hirozo
Napta, 22. of Lona .
Randy OouaJu Keller, 29, of
Huntm .. on Beacb is ban& held in
connectton with the homicide In·
vcstiptlon.
Huntinaton Beach s,t. Lui• Ochoa
said the 1flootina at Kellef 1 home at
19362 Olana tocik ~ while Keller
and Napta. who were friends, played
with Keller'• pe.nially IOlded ~
volver.
Just after 9 p.m., Nu ~~und the 1un u) Kcllct'a homo. y point·
cd 1t at keller in a room and
. Rmadap;n a.eta
A woman in the 21000 block of
Brookhurst Stn:et awoke '° nnd a at.rar)IO man 1n th« houee. ff• ran out the door after
takina S9l from a man'• wallet. • • • A~ ~C?I val~ at $500 ••• 11ok'n from
\he IOOO block of ~~ur.r.
Someone 1tolc tidcU to a Nttl
l>'amond ConCICf1 vall*l at SI l6 and S4S
h from a houM tn th« 9000 block of
Mon i.e c.atlo ' • • • Cul?itt broke Into 1 I 97l f'oriJ Pin lo an
1 Jllrt'ina lot tt Ontral Pat\ al'd tole S 12
puJled the triger, Ochoa Mid. When Sunday at thr1r home at 274 Camella
the JUn didn't ditcharsc. Napll -Costa M~ pohce mid.
banded it to Keller. A neighbor called pol ace JUSt after 1
Keller alle8cdly poi';'ted theJun at a.m. compla1n1ng of the noise. and
Napta. puUect the lriger an shot respond1na officen warned the cou-
him in tho race, Ochot 11.id pie to quiet down ~ thlrd P,t110n at the home, who Pohcc said the couple had a h1\tory
pol?CC declined to identity, calltd of eH .. •ng in loud aroumcnts pohc:e and peramedlcs. . ._.. . •
N1Pta wu rushed to Fountain After polK'C left. C1corac Laramet
Valley Resional Hos1>1tal wbtte he 1t.1ned to leave JU" befort 4 1.m
wu pronounced dead on amval w~en h11 wife alleicdly shot at him
Ochoa said. • ' with I 38-cahbcr rcvotver
Kdlerwu booked tnto Huntiqton She m11xd. and as the couple
Belch dty jail where beil was set at strugJed for the 1un 1t went ofTapin.
S2'°,000. stnk.ina and passing through tht
In another shootina. a Costa Mna hJ.llband's buttocks
woman was booked into Onnse Ocorae laramcr wa-, taken to
County Jail on chl.r&Ca of attempted Co ta Mesa Medical C rnter Ho~p1tal
murder after allctcdly shootin1 her whnc he was treattd and rclea~
husband in the buttocks. Patncia Laramtt ..-as taktn 10 the
~ David Laramee, •l. •!td Ota County Jail's -omen'!! fac1h·
Pauida C. Laramee, ~.. fttt tn· tiC1 -here she is bet held on Paed in • heated arawncnt early S2'°.000 beiJ. a jaii'spokcsman ~1d
ft'Um a pu.tM, ooocen val% SlS. wnaLt valued 11 SIO and ho111c kC")'I
and 1dent1ffcat1on rr:'
Thievn amathod a Mndow to 1 car
perked at Safari Sam't at 411 Ohvt and tole a SlOO l1tttO and UOO in m1'"
allaneous item• • • • A man weanna a blue
Ot!la dotha ran Lh
cout1& at E4non H iah • ! • RWdcntJ rnutMG fo t ti 1n the
20000 btoclC' °' round that th1tves had •tolen m1ecellancou1 1ttms
vaJUfd 11 SUOO
• ..... f
alle)'
CoetaMeaa
"S4~ battery was reponed Jtolen lrom
C h1ef Au lo Pans. 80' \\. 19th \t
\a1urd1)' A man reporttdly walked ~
hind the cashier, ara~ the battery and
ran ou1 lhe door • • • Fender1 worth ~SO wert l"fponed
\tolen fmm 1 Vcspe scooter puked 11 the
Me'8 Verde Shopp1na Center. 2101
Harbor Blvd bct~n 12.45 pm and I
pm Saturday ••• A wallet w11 repo~ •tolen from an
unlocked I01.:ltcr 11 Family F1tnm (enter
11100 Adams Ave. bctwttn S JS pm and
ti pm Thunday. The Ion was es11maicd
11 S60 . . . .. .\ \lcrto was Polen from a l-.r perktd 11
\t•ulh Coa~I Plaza between noon 1nd I '\O
p m Sunda) The Ion wu VI 11 $~()() ' . lmne
T wo1irh~ 11cket\ valutd 11SI7Q, ... ere
\lnlrn from 1 motel room on the 111700
l"llndt of MacArthur Bou~vard ~turd•>
n11h1 • • • J wn hu:ydt1 a ( olumbta black BM X
.... 11h )elluw tnm and a bla<'k Huft)
1 hallenccr. wre tolcn Saturday from Ir, me Lann • • • \ I ~7 ~ uranic Chevorl<i van was stokn
loia!urtla) from I.be 2400 block o( Alton
f•arli'"''I\
Lacuna 8eacb
A nna val~ at S 1,000 was 1tolc'n from
a hnmc on Canyon Ana Dnve. thc vte11m
1old poh« Sunday.
Po ha anuted Oilbcno D. R1m1~r. 2~1 an,1 JMC ManinCJ Mva, 26, for all o
uuult and betttty The two~ &NQ\cd
Sunda n1aht on Glenney~ tterl A '1c11m ,..._, trated II &he e for m ON
rut\ ' . . . . ' " c tJar Way ru1dent rrrontd • ~an C\unday •llh 1 lnu e111rva1t'd al
• • • Poh(Y arrntt:d 1hrtt motorml "iunda)
•
on ,u,p1c1on of dnv1n1 under llu" tn·
nuence of alcohol Pttcr San11110 Jr 27.
wu stopped 11 l4S pm on Nonh Coast
Hqhway Jeffrey Jon Wilham' 19. of
l~una Beach was arrcsttd at J a m on S1
_.,nn \ Dnve and Browncrof\ Road
Thomu Edwud Pntt, is. of Hun11n1tnn
Beach was 'topped 11 2 10 1 m on "1onh
Coast H1ahwa)' 11 Emerald Ba)
Newport Beach
_., bural•ri in the I SOO hlock ot l 1ncoln
l.anc netted It S.4SO "'J""elr} Pohcr said
two handauns al.a wtre .iolen . • • • " buralar who apparent!) rntettd
1hrou1h an unlocked door -.clocttd
S11,600 in 1ewclry from a home 1n 1hc
2000 hlock of East Bayftonl · • • • .\ v.oman losl more than UOO when 'ht
""•' .,nock'11 O"t'' and robbed near the San., of _.,mcnca auto teller 1n Wntchff
Pl•t• • • • ... ~UI $2,6(10 In Jt'wt'lty WU ~f\td
mmm110cr 1 buraJar} 1n the 600 bloc .. of
'l<'a,hotT . ' . A I ~8 S Ford Bronco -.aa ~poned itolen
from Fifth Str«t and Frmlcaf • • • A ma.onr,-\Aw waa "'l)Onedly takrn
from 1 flatbed truck 1n the SOO block of
Oninar It *" ..-orth S 1.200. • • • _., 19SO f·onl pickup &ruelt wu atokn
from the BOO hlcxk of West I 'th ttttt
Fou.otaln Valley
A resident of ukc El11norc rePoned
liiunday 1h1t her oranat 1976 foyo\I Corolla was \lolcn whale 11 wu parked an
f-oun111n Valley on the I 5900blockofLOI
Altos The loss wu es11m11ed at Sl.000 . . .
A mn:han1c at the Founwn BO.I
bowhna allc} ~ Saturday lb.at ~mconc attempted to steal h11 blue 1912
To'VOll 4X4 truck •h1lc 1t -aa parked oa u Hacienda Avenue. Just east of
Bmokhut.\1 1 <ltrttl The llucf broltc a
w1ndov. tO enter thrn removed ip.ilion
('Qu1pmcn1 bul wu unable to steal tbe
vehicle Damqe was cattmated at SI SO. • • • A rc~1deni nf Hunlif\l\Oft Beach \o6d
pohce her wallet was stolen Scturday aftcT
\he tmen, left 1t on a couater at
Hununacon Valley Sch..-inn. 8966 Wanwr
"~e The 101, 1nclud1na cuh and credit
card' was au mated at S 120. • • • BuraJan smuhcd al•ss near tbc door to
huraJanu Alie\ Cat and Dos Groo= lfll~\8rookhu~' t tbcowner
S..iurd•) The intruder \tole S21 4 rom a
ca•h rq111cr • • • Pry1n1 OJ>("n a wtndWtn& to enter.
huriJan ranaackcd a blue 1984 Hood.a < 1v1< parked in an apanmcnt carpon on
1he IOIOO hltxk of LA Alameda. Tl'C to.,
11\\:lud1na \lettO equtpmcnt., tapca and
cln1h1ni. ""*' rs11m1tcd at SS20
Bandit hits golf pro shop
A man Wlth a revolver tuc:ked in l1is
W1111tt.nd and a bro9fn be ball cap
on his ~ad cscaptd with S l ,200
unday after hold1na up the pros.hop
at nJuan Hill CountryOub1nSan J~n Capi ctano. authoritin ~
poncd
The bandit, ilight an t~nld and
thout}\t to be in h1\ mid·.30:\. stmlltd
into the C"ountry cluh·, pm\hopabout
7 4S am and ordem1 I.he lone clerk
•
·charter bus dr er in crash
killing 18 had lost -icense
LOS ANGELES (AP) -~c a,er of J,..oungc Car Toun loc. of pecdiqatlcastfourtimeslf!tbep.st
drivtf'of, our bus that plunscd mto Culver City two y~ may have nwnwned.two
an acy 'tivcr, lullin1 at least 18 She said Klimcck was arTHtcd.. driver's hcensn under sbptly dif·
pa.•n.aien, was fired last year by leavma the busloed of skien tcmpor-fcrcnt names. · anothe-r ucursion com~ after arily $tranded on U.S. l9S near ·•we·re investiptina that possi·
authorities 1topped hts IOI buit, lndcptndence, 180milesnorlbofl.ot bility.'' Aviles 1id. ...
and arTeSted b1m for drivma with a A~lcs and on the same hi&hway The chartered bus was carrytng
suspended license, 1t was reported whC'rc a Swhne Sightsceang Tours elderly Santa Monica residents home
bus driven by Khmcck en.shed last from a four-day trip to Ren~ and.1..a.ic: cbart.cT bus cornpeny that bad Friday. Tahoe iD NeVlda when 1t skiddfid Olq~ driver Emst Khmcck for "lt is automatically a.rounds for acrou U.S. 39' and plunpd into the ~ut months fired ham in March termination," Mintz said. "Anydriv· iq-Walker R.ivtf'. lnvnuptors have
8' a ett\i..s tour bus wautopped by er who goes out on a trip with tatd the bus may have been s~n ...
ifomi.a 1-0lll.way Patrol offi~n on warn.nu on his hocruc, be knows be Tbm: of the 22 who were tnJun:d..
return lea-oh weekend ski lnJ> to couJd be taken into custody and he's iocludi~ K1imcck.. have been ro-
mmotlr Lakes. a eompany official jc.ooerdiz!n.& the cbarur." leased ftOm bospjtals io Nevada and
d. • CHP Officer E. Aviles, who u California. Durinabisnto-daystayat t ""The man was on a tnp to wotkina out or_ a tempo~ry CHP the Washoe Medical Center in Reno,
kammotb and was pulled ofT b> the command post 1n rural Bnd.&Cl>Ort, KJimcck. whose last known address fHP for Witinnts and for.speeding." south of the crash she, a&1d that was 10 Glendale, refused to discuss
id Debra R Mmtz &encral man-Kl1mcck.. 47. who was cited for the accident with reporters
l !'ollshows
Denate front
{runners tied
I .
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The
latest Cahfomta PoU shows Ed ~h.au and Bruce Herschensohn
locked atop the field in a Re-
IJcan Senate pnmary election
Jed u a "phenomenal" rcgJonal
Anti-abortion protesters
pray for justic~'s death
By the A11oclated Pre,1 ,,
LOS ANGELES-Ant1..abortion protesters, calling for the ouster of U.S .
Supreme Court Justice William Brennan, also said they would "pray for the
death of baby-loller Brennan." The congreption of the Fundamentalist
Baptist Tabernacle of Los ~les m~l in a special session Sunday to pray for
Brennan's removal from oftlce. At Loyola-Marymount Uw School, where
Brennan was commencement spca.ker Sunday, a .plane carrying a banner paid
for ))y the fundamentalist church flew over during bis address. Brennan was
one of seven justices who approved the 1973 U.S. Supreme Coun decision
legal1L1ng abortion m the United States. E
ucl between voter preferences m
onhern and Southern C.ltfom1a.
In the survey compiled by pollster
crvin Field durina the week prcced-~:~~~~b·~ P~~~r:;c~~~ • Strl:agfellow salt Jnterveatlon weJglJed
frOf"I 26 percent of the voters WASHING TON -The Supreme Courtaarced toclay toeonsider bamni
•uryeyed, more than double ~e a group of Californians from takma full part m. a !Jwsuit seeking t~ force
bWllbcr polled by anyone else tn the businesses to clean up the state's Stnngfel~ow ~ad Pits. Tbe OQ_urt _will h~
F';jo-candtdate race. arguments by industry and Reagan admm1st.ratJon lawyers that people ltvmg
HeTschensohn, a Los Angeles tele-near the Glen Avon. Cahf., pits~ the nauon's larscst hazardous waste dump
r\ commentator and staunch -cannot rntervene m the case. Federal and state regulators sued in 1983
scrVauve, leads Z~hau by 34 seeking to force some 30 firms to clean up waste at Stringfellow. Area residents
nt to 21 percent tn Southern sought tOJOID the case to have a say 10 how the cleanup would 111&conducted and
orn1a. accordma to the poll. who would pay for the efTon
t Zschau, a congressman from Los
tos tn th~ San FranCJsco Bay area ·
d the most 1tt>cra1 carut1date 10 the 50 000 H1 l cs cheer arclJbislJon eld, mamt.a1ns what Field terms a • spa:a r
'rcmarkabler' Jead of 29 perc~nt to 7 LOS ANGELES -About 50,000 Hispanic Catholics filled Dodgc-r
cent oveJ'! t-ferschensohn 10 North-Stadium for a celebration of music and religion -and the kickoff of a church
m Cahfom1a. , effon to reach out to the Hispanic community. The occasion Sunday was the
"In its 40-year h1s~ory. the Calt-offictal proclamation by Archbishop Roger M. Mahony ofhjs five-year plan to ~mia Poll has never before 5.hown deal with the social problems of Hispanics in the archdiocese ofLos Angeles.
ch an extremely unbalanted sec-The fiesta, dubQcd Celebracion '86, featured performances by folk dancers and
onal d1stnbutton of preferences as by Mexican smgmg star Lola Belt.ran, and a videotaped address by Pope John
xists between Herschensohn and Paul II. \1ex1can flags and colorful pansh banners sprouted from the st.ands.
schau dunns the final week of the Mahoney. 50, was grec\c(i with chants of"Rogeho, Rogelio," as he approached
mpa1g.n " Field \31d the Oov.er-bedecked alter to address the crowd tn Spamsh
, Won •" -n l I'
L ---~
Japan halts
parl ia111ent;
elections set
TOK YO (AP) -Pnme M1ru.ster
Yasuh1ro Nakasone's government
dissolved the lower house of parlia-
ment today and set new elections for Ju~ 6 dunng a special session that
...-..s boycotted by the sovemmeot's
opponents.
Opponents claim Nakasone's
reasons for calhna the special session,
to rcct1fy yarying voter--seat ratios
around the country, arc a pretext for
holdina elections at a time that will
strenstheo the rulinJ Liberal Dem~
cratic Party's stronghold on the Diet,
or parbament.
At the end of the last rqularscssion
on Mar. 22, the Diet enacted a law to
red1stnbule lower house seats to
reflect postwar demop11phic chanaes.
Leaders of the aovemina party say an
election 1s necessary to correct tbe
present imbalance ·
But 1ralso has been widely reported
that after strenJthenma his party's
control of parliament, Nakasone
hopes to change pany bylaws that
would prtvent him from seeking a
third two-year tenn as party presi-
dent.
Because the Liberal Democratic
Party also 1~ tht govemjng party, its
presidency cames with it the job of
Japan's prime minister. Nakasone's
current Lenn ends m November. _
Japan Sonalt•t Pany chairman
Masash1 Ishibashi and other opposi-
tion party leaders ca~ the d1ssolu-
t1on of the lower house "outrageous"
and all oppos1t1on members
boycotted a formal mecung ·
Israelis deny spying,
oust attorliey general
who asked for probe
JERUSALEM (AP) -The Israeli
C'.abiQet, t'acina cntia1m for pouiblc inttlliam~ blunders.. replaced the ~ attorney aeneral t¥bo souabt a crimi-
nal probe of Shin Bet secret service official~ and denied reports it had a
l&rat" U.S. py..nctwork. •
Yiuhak Zam1r, the attorney gen-
eral wbo waa replaced Sunday, hid
i nstructcd police lO in vetlillte aJleP-
. tions that Shin Bet chief.Avraham
Shalom suborned Witnesxs and
withheld document& from com·
missions investiptina thc-Apnl 1984
daths of .. o Paleniotan bu' bi-· acurs.
J . ~ Tbea~ntmcntofTe1 Aviv JU Yoscfffarisb to the attorney sen s
post will ta.kc effect Wedncsdar, a
government statement said. Cab•oet
Secretary Youi Beilin said Harish's
appomtment was unrelated to the
pendina invesuption of the Shm 8e't
chief.
Zam11 who ukcd last f ebruary lb
leave the post be bad betd for more
.. than 1even.years. was quo~ by flrael
Radio as 11y1o1 he was relieved that a
replacement bad been found
lsrael also deiljcd ocw_,. report
allCJIDi it ran a spy operauon tn the
Umted States far broader 1n ICOpc
than reported m Novem~ when
Jonathan Jay Pollard, a civilian U.S.
Navy mtell11ence analyst, was
charsed with selling secret documents
to Israel .
A Fore1&n Ministry '!~tement , is-
sued Sunday said re~rts conce,mma
extensive Israeli spy1ng actJ v1ty LO thC
Unned States ... are enurely base-
less" The statement called the Pollard
case .. an unauthorized deVl&tion
from lsraers clear~t po~cy of not
conducting any spy operatJons what·
soever" apmst its Amencan ally
M8rcos backers routed
as Manila panel seated
By th AllOdaied Prus
MANILA -~ constJtut1onal comm1ss1on assembled. today after not
police Wied clubs and tear aas to clear 3,000 supporters ofFerdinand E. ~.rcoa.
and heard President Corazon Aquino appeal for a document est.ablishmg a
"full-blown democratic republic." In a bnef address to the 48-membcr
comm1ss1on she appointed. Actuino pledged not to interfere as 1t works on a
permanent rcplacemelll to a 1973 charter that allowed Marcos to rule with
autbonWWl powers. "You arc here today vested with flJll authority ~d
complete independence to wnte our c0unll)''s new const1tu_t1on," Aq~no $8.ld at~e National Assembly. ~·Nobody, not even I your president. can tntcrfcrc
with, or overrule you, 10 this great wk "
' Slz nim.-peri•II m Dubll:a convent ~
DU BUN, lreland -A pre-dawn fire ra~ through a convent bwldm& in
central Dublin today, lollJng SIX Roman C.thohc nuns who found t.hcmstlves
trapped after being awakened by a .. blazmg inf emo," a witness said. Fifteen
nuns escaped unharmed. The v1ctirns, rangina m age from 60 to 83, were asleep
in a dormitory on the top floor of the four-story Loreto Secondary School when
the fire broke out, said Sister Patnc18 Murray, a scmor staff nun. Three nu~s
escaped from the dormitory, she said, adding that "when they looked back 1t
was a blazin& inferno. The convent overlooks St. Stephen's Green. a
fashionable Dublin square surrounded by several government min1stnes and
one of the city's top hotels, the Shelbouflle.
Sov1e~ •or..t to seal Chernobyl reactor
MOSCOW -Army workers blasted a tunnel through to the Chernobyl
nuclear power plant's stricken reactor and tnst.alled pipes through wh1ca they
will pour the cement that will entomb the reactor for centunes, a military
newspaper said. The workers cauuously set explos1 ve charges to avoid shak.ina
the reactor and worked qwckly to ltmit their exposure to radiation. . ~~~~~~~~~--,-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-=-~~~~~~~~~~~~
' .
Re -Elect
RIAN CARTER
...
Count on him to make the RIGHT d ecisio n s
Judge Brian Carter believes that honest citizens deserve
justice and protection from violent criminals.
You can count on Judge Carter's support for: * The death penalty * Ousting California Supreme Court Chief
Justice Rose Brrd * Stiffer sentencing for repeat criminals * Mandatory jail terms, where appropriate, for
drunk drivers including first time offend ers * Tougher laws to deter narcotics and drug abuse
Decorated veteran of WW II combat---25 year resident of Newport B~ach--
experienced engineer, business executive, lawyer. Judge---actl.ve In the
Episcopal Church and Masonic Orders
WE NEED TOUGH EXPERIENCED HAR'O:.WORKING JUDGES LIKE BRIAN CARTER
JOIN THE MANY PEOPLE WHO HAVE ENDORSED JUDGE CARTER INCLUDING:
Senator Marian Bergeson
Senator John Seymour
Auemblyman Gii Ferguson
Aasemblyman Nolan Frizzelle
Supervisor Tom Riiey
Orange County Mar1hal JamH Byham
California Republican A11embly
Newport Harbor Bar A11oclntlon
Orange County Women lawyers A11oclatlon
Orange County Deputy Marahal1 A11oclatlon
(p1rt11l ll1t)
BRIAN R. GARTER
Judge of Harbor Municipal Court
P;.i1d pol1t1cttl ac1vP-rt1c;P-m1>nt-Comm1ttce to 1ota1n Jud.go Brian Carter
(·
'
.
INCUMBENT · REPUBtlCAN
President Ronald Reagan says:
..The Board of Equalization is the State's most important taxation board and
we need qualified people on this board ... Errne Dronenburg 1s definitely
qualified and will bring important new tax reform ideas to the state."
~ Governor George Deukmejlan says:
Min the area of finance al)d taxation. Ernie
Dronenburg's expertise has made him an
efficient and effective member of the State
Board of Equalization. I have found Ernie
to be a good f nend and strong ally We
need his continued efforts and
representation on the Board
The Regl•t•r of Orange County
edltortal aays:
"Dronenburg .unusual among state
ott1~als in that he seems to have some
genuine concern for the taxpayer."
---He's Saved us· Millions! ---
FR•ENos OF DRONENBURG -David A. Hawkins, CPA. Treas
1629 Columbia Street • $an Diego, California 92101
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•
81 A.a.da ... PNa Al attorney ICnCT'I), Lyncb estab-
NEW YORK do-li&beid a comumer buruu and turned
· u.-. r:m. ---:.poruwear the Office toward What he paa:ivOd l1IDef a~· 1 ......., a fuhlon maverick were the~ of Che day:
d~ a trip from Ta.as to CaJi,.
(ornia. He was on a bus with otbcn of the 17-mcmber band, OfficiaJj laid.
He di4ld of beart and IUD& failure
and preliminary autopsy results in·
dicated heroin may have been in-
volved. authorities said.
8taDt aaa YaJd•• C&a11tt
LOS ANOELF.S -Otcar...uu.iDt who believed that clotba ~ not envirooment.i control. air and water ~taken too llerioualy, died Friday of pollution and aoite abatement. viral enceohalitia. He wu 46.
He bad been ill for eeveral months. · ...__ ___ 11a-JUener
tunt m&ll y akima Canutt.. bl:oncO
ridtt wbo doubled b JobD Wayne in
ctoZeU 'of mo~ bai clieid or utW'al He appeared pe1e and punt at the ua ~ -·1 .
faabion, rr..iance and cosmetic in· KINGMAN, Ariz. -Barry
dustriea AJ.DS benefit on April 30. He Kiener, a ~niat with drummer
wu botpitalized a week later im-Buddy Rieb s band. He wu 30.
mediately aft.er unveilina bia fall KiCJlcr, of Rocbeater, N.Y., died · collcction.
Odd pro JolannJ' SIU
MILWAUKEE -Jobooy Siek.
wbo played for the Cb.iQIO Beatl ud
wucaptain of the Marquette \l Giver·
CHICI. lio'WU 89. • Canun bepn hia tilm eaRCr ldlftl in the tittt ti.lent w.una in the
1920s. Ho wu comidcred a i*>oeer
1tuot dintc1or. who ~
Amanda Manoaue, Ellis'
spokeswoman said he deaiped most
of biJ last co~on from his 'Man·
hattan home.
Laurence C. Leeds Jr., ch.airman of
Manhattan lndustriea, the companv
that fiDaDCial1 1*:kcd Ellis, said ~
work '"will ~ carried on by the
talen1ed ~ team that worked so
cloaelt 'With him durina the put
years. ' He bepn bis career u a sportswear
bu)'er for a Richm<!Dd, VL, depart.
ment store, but dec:id~~ve desipina a try when he · he
could make better clothea than thoee
be wu beiJlapaid to buy.
The line of deaianer sporuwear
under the Portfolio fabel, wu so ;di
received that Manhattan Industries
put up money to beck him. Perry Ellil
lntemational wu launched in 1978.
Since then, E1lia won ei&bt Coty.
Awards. liven by fuhion media and
merchancliten, and three American
Sporuwear awards, aiven by his
peen.
Perry Ellia lntemational was ex·
pected to reap S260 million in
wholesale volume in 1986, said
company President Robert
McDonald.
BroaCJat TOdka to U.8.
FARMINGTON, Conn. -John
G. Martin, the man who introduced
vodka to the American public. He
wu80.
-Matlin WV praidettt-of -G.F .
.Heublein .. tnd Brothen, bued in Hartfordi Conn., in 1939 when lhe
compan}' acquired the riabts to
SmimoffVodka. Heublein promoted
vodka u a mixer for cocktaik,
developina such drinks u the Mos-
cow Mule, the Bloody Mary, the
Screwdriver and the Vodka GiinleL
Martin wu cbai.nnan ohhe company
from 1961 until be retired in 1966.
Heublein was acquired by R.J. Ro-
ynolds Industries lnc. in 1982.
I
Acbw Larene Tattle
LOS ANGELES -Lurene Tuttle,
an actress whose radio and television
career spanned a half century, at the
aaeof79. .
Miu Tuttle bepn her radio career
in the 1930s on such. comedy classics u .. Duffy's Tavern .. and "The Great
Gilderlleeve ... She played "Junior'•
·mother" on Red Skelton'• radio
ICriea and Sam SE*ie's teefttary on
.. Sam SJ*Sc" in the 1940&.
Her television credits included
"Life With .f'atber," in 195-3, the first
live color aeries orisi~ from
Hollywood. She also IP in the
TV aeries' "Father of Bride" in
1961 and "Julia" in 1968. Miss
Tuttle's film credits included "The
Fortune Cookie" and "Psycho."
B•ded cout aurTeya
W ASHINOTON -H. Arnold
Karo a fonner director of the U.S. Coast and Geodetic Survey, at age 82.
Karo was transferred from the
Survey to the Army Air Force during
World War 11, when be was com·
mandina officer of the Air Force
Aeronautical Chart Center in St.
Louis. Karo directed the Survey1 which provides coastal ~ ano
charts for the nation, from I 9SS to
l 96S. He was also deputy adminis-
trator of the Nationaf Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration's pre-
decessor aacncy, the En~nme?tal
Science Services AdmirustratJon,
from 1965 until bis retinment in
1967.
Es-attorney 1eneral
SAN FRANOSCO -T!Jom~
Connor Lynch, a former Califorrua
attorney aeneral who was the only
Democrat to win statewide office
durin& the Reapn sweep in 1966, of
cancer. He was 83 years old.
Lynch who also was a San F'ran-
cisoo d.ilirict attorney, retired in early
1970 after 37 ~ of public service
when be decided not to seek n>
election for atatewide office.
Clarification
The Doonesbury comic strip pub-
li&bed on April 16 in the-Daily Pilot
included a reference to Jo~n. Ho~n ~ona th<>te Reqa.o edmin.istratJon
oftic:ials who have, acc:ordina to the
strip, .. left office amidst charles of
unethical behavior or criminal
wronadoinJ." The John Horton ~
femd to m the Doonesbury stnp ~ from his potition with ~e
U.S. Environmental Protection
'4,ency. tha -lt bu come to o.ur attention t tn
198.4 another John Horton ~
his ~ition u the a~·· nabo.nal
intelligence officer for Laun Amenca.
We are certainly una~ that the
CIA John Horton bas ever been cbarlcd with unethical behavior or
crimlnal wn)nadoina. and be bas
adviled Univei'lal Praa Syndlcate,
which diltributea Doonesbury, that
bit · tJon &om the CIA wu due
to pro • onal di1ferc:nale with the DiteetOr of Cenital lntcll nee. Tbe
rd in the Doo atnp
publiahed April t 6 was to the John
Honon wbo resianed &om the EPA.
and oot the f oho Horton •ho
rnianed &om the C1A.
Garry TrucSdu. Univmal Prell
Syndicate and th•• newspa~r rqJtt
any confusion cauted by the fact .that
there have been two Reqan adm~
tration official named Tobn Horton.
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Catch Our Smile
•
Tomlin,
Hirsch
topTony ,
Weil'.lberger: SA~T II can't
.super~ede Star Wars plan
winners
NiW YOll(AP)-Lily T~mli~
wbo all alone plays the hU&e cast of
"The Search for Silos of Intelligent
Life m the Universe." and Judd
Htncb. who's SI and plays a spunky
&UY 30 years older in "rm Not
Rappaport," are the toast of the town
u Tony awant-winncrs lor 'best
actress and .ctor on Broadway.
Bcmadette Peters.. who also holds
the siqe alooe IJl the first b&l.f of
"Sona It Dance" -danoen perform
the 1CCOnd half -and Georae Rose,
the muter of ceremonies of "The
Mystery of Edwin Orood," also won
Tonys Sunday night for best actress
and actor in music.a.ls.
Peten Uianked her mother for
1n11sona she had talent Rose thanked
WASHINGTON (AP) -While
ident Reaaan says he may violate
he SALT fl arms ~ment, otMr
dministration officials ~ voicina
up~n for the 1972 Anu-Ballistic
rcaty, e +cn· thoqtr on~.
D efeo se Secretary Cupar·
Weinberaer, says the ABM pact bctler
oot &e.t in the waf of "SW Wan."
Weinberaer said Sunday that "ex·
tendina the ABM treaty o r doina
anythina that would prevent '°qur
doma all the t binp we need to do to
develop a Stralqic Deft nse Initiative
is somethin1 o bVlousJy we would be
"cry much opposed to."
Weinberier'srcmarks, made on the CBS propam "face the Nation,"
came five days aller Reapn said the
United States by the end of the year
mi&ht uceed the limtts 1et by the
1919 SALT II treaty in response to
Soviet v1olat1ons of the accord
The defense secretary stopped
shon of callina for abrogation of the
ABM treaty, which is due for review
by U.S. and Soviet neaotiators next
year, but his remark appeared hosule
to ' reported Soviet offer to bc&Jn
rcducinastratqjc nuclear forces 1fthe
United States a.,ccd to abide by the
ABM treaty for I S to 20 years.
keqan and Secretary of State
~fie Shultz declined to comment
on the repon of the Sovtet offer,
earned in Sunday's editions of the
New York Times, and WeinbcrJer
said be had not read the Russian
proposal. .
Reapn, rctumina from bis week-
end retreat at Camp David, Md.,
refused to answer questions about thc
reported offer.
Shultz, appearing on NBC's "Meet
the Press." said the Soviet a broke tht Strat~c Arms L1m1tauon T~ty b~
encoding·messages from mi Jiles on
test nights and by deployina about 70
SS-25s
Despite Soviet warnings that Rt--
agan 's remarks on SALT n jeop-
ardized chances fora summit mee11na
this rear, Shultz said he was stJll
ho!X'ft'l ;·We feel that it's very important to
have this meeting." he said. "We
think that important thinp can be
done there that can be beneficial to us
and the Soviet Union, and we •~
prepared to do the hard work neceu-
ary to malce 1t a wonbwhHe meetJna.
In a statement earned Saturday b}'
the official Tass news agentj, the
Soviets accused Rea,pn of des1toying
the arms treaty system by h1s dec1s1on
to no longer be bound by SALT II.
"fellow acolytes of the th~p1anic k -&!T~~f.f:~E~~g~ =~~!t~p~~ .. ':.~0!:~:::~: ~r~~~~aut's se~~~~ .. ~~mm~~!':~~~"Y
book Charles Dickens was writing penecadon of Orthodoz Jen in Iarael. They o to · and confirmed Che report of his· arrest but ·denied being
when b~ died. The play has five the prlntlnC of •UU•d•e bathlnt •alt ada In Jeraaalem. KEALAK.EKUA, Hawaii -Friends and relatives of intoxicated. Rostenkowsk1, 58, told sheriffs depuues he
prepared endings, and the audience at sf)ace shuttle a stronaut Ellison Onizuka have pthercd for had been rctumina from a reunion at St. John's Military
each performance chooses which will a wake in a Buddhist temple near where he spent his Academy 1n Delafield.
be perl'ormed. childhood. Burial was scheduled today at the National
Tomhn, in her acceptance speech Main question in_ phone strike: Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific near Honolulu for
thanked the peorle "who gave us a Onizuka, one of the astronauts killed in the explosion of Cable mononnlles tar.deted
pretty good dea on the Plymouth How long can either side last? the shuttle Challenaer. The Kona Honpaoji Mission was r-a· Theater," and playwright Jaoe · • filled for Sunday's half-hour memorial service. WASHINGTON -The Supreme Court ra.tsed the
Wqner The Tony Awards show was poss1bihty today 1hat communiues may be barred from
broadcast from the MinskoffTbcater WASHrNGTON (AP) -A stnke wcll-sust.ained." COJldre&eJD. an faces dnmk rap granting exclusive cable television franchises. In a
by CBS-TV. agauut Amencan Telephone & Tele-Asked 1f the federal '9vemmenJ is e · unanimous ruling, the court sa1d cable franchise act.1v1ucs
Hu'SCh, who said his speech was graph Co. by its biggest union likely to intcr\'ene in the.strike, B\vck RACINE. Wis. -Rep. Dan Roslenkowsla, ctwrman "plainly 1mphcate First Amendment interests" that
JOUll to make the ceremony run past probably will not have much effect sa1d, "I think not ... .I don 'tthink we'd oflbe House Ways and Means Committee, was arrested on protect free exprc1s1on. But the court stopped short of ·
its scheduled two hoW"S. mSlsted that 1tnmediately, Labor Secretary Wil· serve any useful purpose by mter-drunken drivi, charges and released after posting ruhng that a cable telev1s1on company has a c.onstituuonal
Ocavon Little, who plays his "Rap-liam Brock said today. veninJ...,. This is a healthy collective $497.50 bond. aw eofon:ement offici&ls said today. nght to operate in a particular c.ommunity. The court !?".Po.I"!" park-bench pat, also over 80, "It probably will not have too bargainina pr:ocess. The two sides Rostenkowski, 0-ILL, was arrested about I; IS a.m. Sunday ordered further heanngs in a dispute between the oty of
j)in him on stage. much effect in ~Mnerm and tlie nave lo settle Chell' own-differences. m Bot1~cine -County Sbenff's Department Los Anieles and a company thaT was deme<t a-rtanctuse
"Sweet Cbanty," which slatTed question will be, how long ~neither We don't have any wisdom in officials said. there. The cable case has potentially far-reachmg
Gwen Verdon 1n 1966 and Debbie side last," Brock said on NBC-TV's government to tell one side they've Lt. James lvanoski said RostenkowsJci failed a field importance. But today's dcc1s1on left unanswered what
Allen now, was named Ous season's "Today" sbow. ''But at the moment I got to do this or that. We don't have sobnety tcs.l a nd declined to take a brcathalyzer test. A pOwer communities have to award exclusive cable TV
best revival imagine the services will be fairly thc authority, nor should we." hearing date wa<1 vt for June 16. he said .. Rostenkowsk1 licenses. =-..-......--------------------------:-----------------....:.....--------..:._ __________________________________________ _:_ ____ ~------------~ . .
~ .
Dare to be More Sex and the
single girl·
polf updated
WASHINGTON (AP) -Four out
of five s1nglt' Amencan women in
their 20s have had sex, one-thud of
them get pregnant at least once, and
40 percent of those abort lhetr first
preananc1es, a federal study shows
One-third have lived with a man,
and one-sixth hab11uaJly engage in sex
wnhout cont.racepuvcs, according to
the study, the first federal survey to·
focus solely on the sexual habits of
women 1n their 20s
The survey was funded by the
National Institutes of Hcahh and 1t
was scheduled to be presented to an
advisory panel today by Wendy
Baldwm, chtef of the demografhic
and behavtoral sciences branch'o the
National Institute of Child Health
and Human Development.
Full disclosures by
U.S. bankasought
WASHINGTON (AP)-lnterest-
beanng checlung accounts can cost as
much as $210 annually after interest
payments. while charges for bounced
checks rose 5 ~ percent in the past
year, according to a consumer coal1-
t1on that wants new laws fol'Ctfli
-banks to rurry disclose the terms and
charges for their accounts.
"Fees and charges will continue to
increase unless Congress gives con·
sumers the tools they need to identify
less costly accounts." Alan Fox,
leg.islat1ve director of the Consumer
Federation of Amen~. said Sunday
1n reporting a national survey of
charges at 225 banks and savings
ins11tut1ons, conducted by the feder·
at1on. San Francisco Consumer Ac·
lion and 20 other local consumer·
interest groups.
Fox said full disclosure of all
account fees and condiuons 1s vttaJ to
consumers' ab1hty to shop for bank
accounts, but such information is not
readily available at bank branches or
by tclcphone and 1s rarely included in
ad vertm ng.
Bodies sought after
Pennaylvania flood•
1.
t
.. . . ..
ETNA. Pa. (AP) -Stunned home-
owners and weary recovery worken
cleared dcbns and looked for more
bodies as the 1ovemor of Penn·
sylvan11 asked for a federal disaster ;r-
dcclarat1on in P1ttsbWJh's northern l
suburbs. where flash noo<11na killed at , .
least cnaht P.!!OPle and caused more
than S2'0 m1llron damaie.
11 mq ta(. l J mg nK:otmP. "' per c1qare1te by flC method
I f
SURGEON GEN tRAL'S WARNING: Smoking
Causes Luog Cancer. Heart Disease,
Emphysema. An~ May Complicate Pregnancy.
J . .. .
Vol~ntecr firefi&htcrs, under the
d1rect1on of local polioe sloged
throu&h stinking nver mud over the w~kcnd, looldnJ for bodies. DQss
sniffed mounds o debris for thc Kent
of humans
RUFFELL'S
lJ>HOLSTERY INC •
... , ...... c.... ....
am -•• .. cona m•
The Pros · Smee 195 7
~.,
Rat
111·7740 ..,Old ............ ....... 1-.....c.
-1
"Duty Nellj'1"
OPEN FOR LUNCH & DINNER
Monday thtu f riday
11 AM to 9 PM
e S7·19Sl
'
dcdUCCJO!l.
2. You notdoduct
... ,
(
TWA ~ues agency.for coupons -! --
~ELES (AJY}-Tram World Airlinm bu
filed suit •Alt Premier Travd. a San Dqo crave!
qency, alle1an1 tbe~bouahtdilCOuntcoupons &om
TWA travelen and resold them to iu own c:ustomen.
ln tbe lawsuit, filed in £eden.I court bete lut
Wedoetd1y, TWA •p ~ n::1eD.ina of dimt coupons
is lllinst Frequent fliabt Boout ~rules, whicb
prorubit ttaaarcrrina coupou to I.bird parties.
The suit aUep bo&den of c:oupon.s trud'emid their
tickets to ~or a relatedllltftCY, Coupion Bink. and
thote .,eoCies trauferred tbem to customers. Eric Fulla
and JeffRooney, who lflduatc:d from UC San Dieso law
IChool lut weei, ue principab in both ciompuies.
.. Al this point in time ft have no comment." Mark
B4tj1ki1n, an aaent for Premier Travel, said TbW'lday.
ApPOtnted C®nty Clerk
leat fell Gery hH trena-
formed, aluggaah end
uncerang bureeuct'9Cy
into en energetic end
cer1ng public
agency
COMMITHl
lOREfA1N
GARY GRANVIL\ F.
10 •• 1:141
Gary h111 brought e repu·
talion ol unqu•t•oned
1ntegr11.y r.o the County
• Cler11·a oft1ce
The only cend1dete for
County Cieri! with damon-
atreble e•per1ence 1n •
mel')eQement.. computers.
budgeta encl superv1a1on
the only cend1dete who
hold• college degr.-
' VOTE
JUNE3
A produce. ol the free
enterpr1M Syt1tem thet
rewerd' 1nit1et1ve end
herd work. Gery bel1evH
the eeme work ethic cen
and should be epplMtd t.o
/public service
•· . ~ ,. ... . ··--t \-# . '
~~-~;tf>t& _ ~ . ~
Included emong those encklrs ng Gery G•env1lle • cend1
dacy ere Stec. netof' Mel"len St\ertH Bred
Geta. Su~..ar Tom Rilev. Judge H Werren Knight
(R1q. Judge Byron I( McM1llen (Rec.), SuQervisor Ralph
Clerk. Meyor Jim m. St•&.e S.netor Paul Cerpenter,
Supervu1or Brue. N tande. Meyer Joyce R1aner, end
otl'leNL
Al8o endorsed by Bu1ld1og lnduatry As901:1atJOn, P
Oft1c ,.. R erch Anoc .. uon of C1hforn1A Ora"Q9
County Centrel Labor Counc I. AFVCIO
t
•
•'
..
..
0.. ~-.... W•I C,,.
' 'if\i -
t n II
•
' I ------------------
NYSE COMPO SITE TRAN SACTIONS
IUUY'I DLISI PllDEI
Stock prices take spill
NEW YORK (AP) -Stock pnces took a ~111
today in a late ~uoff' annbutcd partly to nsina
interest rates.
After rising last week. open-market money
rates chmbcd apm today. pusbtng pricn of lona-
tcnn_aovemment bonds down about $20 for every
S 1.000 in face value.
Fe.an of h!Jhcr mtet'C'5t rates apparently tl90
touchtd off selling of stock-index futu~ contraelS.
And as pnc:es of those contracts slumped. they
triaercd computenzcd program trades by Wall
Street profes11onals, bu} mg Lhe!uturcs and selling
"baskets" of1nd1v1dual stodcs
, WHAT AMEX Om WHAT NYSE Orn
NEW YORK (AP) Jun 2 T1 7:~
AMEX LEADERS
Go LD QuoTE s
METAL S Quor Es
NEW YORI( (AP) J~l2
6
Pl'll't
a:dT:::' ¥=r.=s ==··
Dow JoNES AvERAG ES
NASDAQ SUMMARY
T~ 1\:X)tt ties
i
Ex-Chiefs of staff offer inside View
BJ aOB.BJ\T IAJ\a
'lei I ,,,_....,
NEW YORK -Richard Nixon
bas lately boen heralded IS lbo
comeb9ck pollticlu of'tbe year, if not
of all time. for breakio• out of bis Wate~te doshoote. So tt'• only fair
th.It hia oJd top a de, H.R ... Bob"
Haldeman, should have a Utile como-t.ct of bit own. •
Haldeman is one of eiaht fonnct
White Hou.sc cbicft of 11aft', wbo
appear on ''T~::d;,Five Ycan oftbe
Presidency" T y niaht and next
Tuaday on public television (KOCE, Qiannel SO. at lO p.m.).
The apociaJl. moderated by John Cbancdfor of NBC News. wu taped
·~-..... --·e=------.-... IWilLidi ·--=-...,. =.--=--~ -•ftlill9 ==-::.--=.--. ~ ==--== =~"::I.:" ·::=..--( :~-= )(...:-.. J .. _ '
~ . .
in January ·at the lJn \'Cnity of Tony Pritins. he bri.np a whiff of dem.Lndl, Id 1111 •Y. t.biiD IO deal witb ~ at Saa ~. wbete tbe Spiro "J. Mnft'I &Jory dAys be than in•~ tbat tMa ~-ii
former tactotums perucipetcd in an upbraldsaianeeUza ~ uin1of &M White Houac is ob1ell0d wt
academic •rmPOSium. . lhe media. lttUni all th1I out"
lb aroup included Gen. Andrew. And h ICOl'aa . po nta. Tl\e White House J)rest corpe. be
Ooodputcr &om thCI l!J n.bowcr In the qmeot ~hicb will air nen adds. ii .. 10 tlm to 50 times too administratioa. Ted. Sottn11en from week. Oiancellor asts wbctber the bi&.'•
the Kennedy administtatioo, HatTY White House is excet1ivcly ~ · _.ChlnccUor · ya be wonia aboUt
McPhcrion from the Johnson adm in-cupicd with the evenina news and the White House tende11CY to=
ilttation, Alexander ~ from the what the anchormen are •Yina. :.~=:~ ... af:!;fJ!9day1'l; l&stdayaof'theNilonlldmin1stratioo, The obleslion. Haldeman ro-............. _ wbicb bC ditmkaet Donald Runufcld and Rep. Richard sponds1 runs both ways. ...._._ Ii Chene~. R-Wyo., from the Ford "I think there it an obsession from cen:aJ-box =• unsuitable or
admiruatration and Jack Watson outside -from lhe press corps that tetj0
1rll!JOdli
1
.dn' · 't do~oa· .~vow from the earter administration. cbvers the White Houte-with every ..... .... ... 1 . -1
Haldeman stands out, and not aspect of •bat's happenina in ~ · producer would." Haldernu •YI-'"J
simply 11 lhe only convtctcd felon on White Houte, that causes tfie WbJte th n.k it thoWd bo UI> not)'~ ...
staae. T eosely aeruaJ in the style of Houte to have to react to those The audienoe applauds Haldeman.
.... _.
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DINNER NIGHTLY
6:00 P.M. to Midnight
Mondays & TuBBdays:
Two Dinner• for • 16.96
Wednesdays:
6 Courie Italian Dinner •9.96
ne>o Newport Boulevard• Ne~pon Beach• 6'76·2968
.,
LUXUIW f .. MHS
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0rMge Coelt DAILY PILOT/ Monday, June I. 1088
~.rmn.• ~ (Marcb 21·ADril 19): Whit 1eemcd a stalemate ca.a. oow be
retolvod-tn your favor. f erm1 wiU be clarified. you•o aet the fuodifta. rou11 locate article t.bst twd been loet. miasina or stolen. Piacea, ... Virao fi&Ul'e
promineotly
\
"1'AUJtlJS (April 20-May 20): Make lhts your power·(>laY day. Luna~-. numa~ 0011)Ctde with intensified love relationship,~ to ttit
6Mar.ial · . You11. have more responsibility, and you'll successfully
meet • •
GBIONJ (Ma) 21.J une 20): Key
kno•~ ~ bccx>me aware of •em·
tual values. t bad been Pl'OlUbttcd
will DOW become &Vail.able. l°>opularity
i.Dcft8les. )'OU1l be invited to pres-• tiaious 90Ci.a1 affair.
is enliahtenment -you pin
SYDllEY
CA.NCD {June 21.JuJy 2~): F~us Ou•RR on c•cdk1>oc. creauvtty1 p1onccnna ""'
spint, fresh mn. Scenario hi1hhsbts •••••••••••• lov~ speculation, outstandina per-
formance. ability to transform wiahes into realities.. Leo plays paramo1,mt
role.
LEO (July 2l-Aua. 22.r. Family dispute is .cttled.re"llDJon takes place.
sense of purpose~ restored. You'll 1ensc pulse of public, you'U be rn demand.
you could be_ asked to appear before the media. lntwtion rinp true -follow
fint lmpresslODS. w
VIRGO (Aug. n-SepL 22): Good lunar aspect ooin.cides .with
commurucation. travel, long-range prospcctS. Answers to questions will be
obt.amcd -people prcvtously indifferent couJd now become C1lthusiastic
allies Gemini tigurcs prominently. ,.
UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Mass of red tape WJI! be u~tall,l)ed 7* you'll get
facts conccminJ mon~y. paYID:enu, coUecuons, mhentance. Ota docJ? for
uuormation, reject the superficial, take puter charge of your own desuny.
SCORPIO (Q::t. 23-Nov. 21): Break from. past ts tmmmcnt. Scenario
hi&hhgbt pcatd""°frcedom 'of thou&)ll, action. focus on c1:&5h of ideas..
partnership, manta! status. DWotUe wtth member of opposite sex proves
stimulating. provides enlightenment.
!AGmARlUS(Nov. 22-Dec. 21 >: ~ Rildy for cbansc.of pj&s. po.in.ltd
questions, challenge-s, employment opportumtJes. Significant domcsnc
adJustmcnt is also featured. Be dlplomanc, but don't abandon pnnciples.
Libra native plays paramount role.
c!u>RJCORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Favo~blc 'moon aspect coincides witll
phys1caJ attraction, chansma. children. clandestine meeting for purpose of
1nteonfied romantic rclauonsh1p. You'll gam inform,ation from unusual
source. lmprint own style.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20..Feb. 18): Define terms, accept challenge, rcalizt
you arc being "tested." Long-standing transaction can now be completed -
you'll emerge with a very good deal Emphasis on safety, se<:urity, family
relauonships.
PISCES (Feb 19-March 20): What seemed a pcrplexins problem couJd
be transformed into reason for celebration. K~p plans fleiublc and options
open. Short trip may be necessary, involves relauvc who wants to confide
"secret." Aries play~ role.
IF JUNE S IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you're due to make nlaJOr domestic
adjustment that could include actual change of residence or mantal status.
You arc dynanuc. creauvc, possess strong intellectual cunos1ty. You tend to
scatter your forces, you have excellent sense of humor and arc very much
aware of body 1magc. Ge~ Sqittarius play' important roles in your life.
You could be bilingual and ambidextrous. Social activhics multiply m June
September and November will be memorable for you m 1986.
Pig claims the prize
as barnyard genius
Q. Is there any baTnyard animal
smarter than a pig?
A. Not unless there's a dolphin or a
chimp out there. The p11 as smarter
than all but the hued man, and come
Saturday night you might even Jose a
bet on that.
Those who study race relauoosfind
th1s cu nous: In 1910. only 60 percent
of all whnc Amcncans were nauvc
born. but 99 2 pcrc.cnt of all black
Amencans were native born.
Am told JUSt about everybody m
France now uses the Enahsh word
"5oftware." Hates 1t maybe. But uses
ll.
If the env1ronmentahst m your
family would hke to write an essay.
ask sa1d worthy to explain tJus clatm
of the scholars: When a plant becom-
es cxunct, another 10 to 30 reliant
plants hkew1sc become extinct.
Q On an oll rig at sea. I'm told. it's
ca,icr to &ct wluskcy than a Coke
True'>
A Sounds likely. There's no place
to store all those cans and bottles,
when they're full. when they're
empty
L.M.
Bovo
A Janitor camcs keys. ngbt? Sup-
posedly, so did the Roman &odJanus.
a key m each hand, one to the future,
one to the past. Our word "janitor"
comes from the name of that god
"Janus"
A sex chaDje wtthout surgery _:..
that's what Egyptian Q\lccn Hat-
shepsut underwent. Whal she did,
actually, was t\avc hel'IClf offiCl.alJy
declared a man so she could ruJe as
pharaoh.
To old tamers in Japan, it's good
luck. not bad luck. to spill salt
A small car's Hrcs last loneer than a
bag car's tires.
L.M. Boyd 11 • 1yodlcated
colllllJIU• c.
Business booming
at Bom beck HiltOn ANSWER TO WEEKLY BlllDGE QUIZ
If forei&n· travel continue. to de-
cline, the Bombeck Hilton should do
a bumperbusineutbis~. The U.S.
dollar 11 strona. ,~sh "is apoken
fluen6y and wildlife ti io abun~oc:c
... especially under the sink. E111
BOllECI I hate to panic you, but this is the
year when Amcncans are playin&
mus1ca1 beds with their relatives.
This 11 the year Marprct and Dwayne
and their five boys are headed for the
bome of her third cousin in Anaheim t<l1. the vmton become defensive.
who lives .in a ono-bedroom condo We have had a auest who said, "What
near Disneyland. Thia is the year Iris do you call that thit\s?''
and Paul's 36-footRV breaks down in "'We call it the Grand Canyon," we
her s11ter's dnveway in Columbus, st:t proudly.
Oh10, while they send out for a part He retaliates, "M y God. it I didn't
that is made only in La.Oya. know bener I'd swear that was the
Americans will trade a view of th~ land.fill where we dump off our grass
Arch of Triumt>h in Paris for · the clippinp back bome."
Golden Arches Ul a South Carolina We became very soft on conducted
suburb, and a shoppin& spree to tours the year we took a couple to an
Hamxl's m London for a tnp to the historic pre.Columbian ruin eeveral
Hardware store m Cuyahop Falls, tho!fsands of years old only to have
Obfo. our auest chew on a piece of arus and
The blendina of two families under observe, "Looks like you're aoina to
one roofis never what you expect it to miss 'Jeopardy' this afternoon,
be, no matter bow much you plan or Tootie."
love your guests. "W~ have so much l7hc Bombeck. Hilton has hosted
to catch up on" takes about 15 some pretty memorable guests. There
mmutes, tops. Then you an: discuss-was the kid who bounoed a ball for
mg gas mil~ lawn diseases and five solid days apinst the side of the
people who died whom you pretend hou1e. He didn't even take time out to
you ve heard of. cat. He could do it with one hand.
Sleeping arrangements arc always There was the aucst who was in the
nnuncd.. If you pve up your own bed, aaralina OJympics Hall of Fame. He
you secretly bate them for ta.king it. If C.OUld PJjle and spit for boun at a
you make your children Jive up their time, be&i~ before the sun went
beds, they will lose their will to live. If up. That was his best time.
you put your guests on sofas in the Andwho~~f~1rtii:::U7'wbo hv1ng-room.-that look in thetr-~yes ttt-~ · · ~
the morning will haunt you for the touched a clean one because she
rest of your life. didn't know where it belonged.
Everyone is proud of their state, but Americans are visiting at home to
showing visitors about wean thm. avoid the violence ofoverseas travel.
Besides, ifyou do too much of a bard Don't oount on it.
PatieDt saYS medics
really out for ~lood
DEAR ANN LANDERS: How
strong is lhe AMA lobby with you?
Are you brave enough to expose a
perfectly legal, nanonal doctor's
scam? Check th1s one out with your -
MD authbntics.
Pat1cni goes to the doctor's office.
A1111
::>l.uDERS
Q.l -Nett.her vulnerable, as South ') you hold·
•854 QAJ632 •AQ1052
The bidding has proceeded
South We.t Nortb Ea•t
l ~ Pu1 1 t Pu•
2 • Pus 2 NT Pu•
?
What do you bid now''
A.-Wlth your d1qtrlbution, no
trump doesn't look appeallrtg a.11 a
resting place. Therefore, you
should simply continue to describe
your hand, and three clubs serves
the purpose nicely Three spades is
worth ConsJdenng. but you don't re·
ally want to support o suit that
partner has not rebid with only
three low C1rl'd!!
Q .2-As South. vulnerable, you
hold
•AK.JS IQ7 10 Al092 •KJ98
Your right-hand opponent opens
the bidding with one Rpade Whal
action do you take?
A.-Back m the Old Country they
dispensed good advice When the
opponents bid your best suit, pass.
You can't double or bid no trump
with your singleton heart, and to
overcall with two of a minor on a
"'._eak four-card '>llit asks for
trouble.
Q.3-A!S South. vulnerable, you
hold:
+A8 (/K7& -. -/dUf768 .X8
Your raght·hand opponent opens
the b1ddtnJ( with one spade. What
action do you take?
A.-lf you have a gambling disposi·
t10n, you might try three no tru.mp
but we would prefn that you held a
seventh diamond, or the Jack as
well, for 11uch action Our choice
would be to double, intendmg to re-
move any bad partner might make
to no trump at the same level That
lDllitel> ham ta go on t6 game 1f he
has a smatteran~ of \ alues
Q.4-Both vulnerable. as South
you hold:
~QJ109761S2 ~93 ~76
The bidding has pro<'eeded
North 'Ealt South
l • I ?
What do you bad now'>
A.-You have a hand of great of·
fensave power put httlc or no de·
fen"<' Therefore. w e would make at
as difficult as possabl .. for the oppo-
CHARLES
GOREN
OMAR
SHARIF
nents t9 get together. Our choice ls a
leap to four hearts-the same bid
we would have made had there been
no interference
Q.6-As South, vulner able, you
hold:
•AQ766 9 9 OJ3 •109742
The bidding has proceeded
North Eut South Wnt
1 Q Pu1 1 • Pu•
2 NT Pua 3 • Pue
3 NT Pa.H ?
What action do you tllke''
A.-Don't rep'e8t your story. Your
bid or three clubs told partner that
you hold m ne or ten black cards and
would prefer a swt contract to no
trump. Despite that, partner chose
to bid three no trump. Since he
know5your hattd \1\!hil~you know"
llttle about his. it would be foolhar-
dy to question has Judgment by bid·
ding again.
Q.6-,Both vulnerable , a.s South
you hold
•83 995 OJ6 •AQ107'32
The baddmg has proceeded
North Eut South
l NT Dble ?
What action do you take?
A.-Strange 3.9 1t mig~t 'leem. Wt>
suggest you bad three no trump!
Your hand rates to produce seven
tricks, and you hope partner can
come up with two more before the
opponents get five. Then Isn't re-
double better" Yes, if you are going
to play there But the odds are that
the qpponents have some contract,
probably in a major, and perhaps
even a profitable sacrifice against
three no trump Your bid makes it
more difficult for them to lO<'alle
th!1r best spot
Doctor's nurse draws the patient's
blood for the needed (or unneeded)
lab test panels. Doctor charges the
pauent $40. Lat.er a commercial lab
servu:c picb up the blood specimen.
pcrf orms the test, and charges the
doctor aboUl $I 0. Where docs the$ 30
profit go~ Where do you lhink? R1ght
in the doi;tor's pocket! Most pauents
arc unawa;c or this money-making
scheme that doctors now use to beef
up their s:hnnking incomes.
When will patients become con-
sumers and start asking questions?
h's time they started to shop around
for the best buy in health ca.re.
Doctors have become slick busmcss
eQtreprcneun. Patients should st.af11
becoming lmowlcdaable consumers.
-DlSGUSTEDWlTH DOCTORS.
were so favoTCd. Nor an)' of the
grandchildren. Also, none of the flock
of veat-grandchildrcn. Evidently
dimples arc not hereditary.
In the picture that heads your
column, you seem to have one of
these beaut')' spots in each check. fess
up, dearie, do yuh, huh? Where dld
you get them? -NO DIMPLES IN
DIS FAMILY.
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
DEAR DISQVSTED: So die doctor
cw1n $40 to do a lab teat wlllcl1
coata $10 u4 yn aat. "Wlltre don
die'" profit 10?"
WM pays die doetor'a oltlce reat,
telet>'oae aDd Upt bW? Wk pays Ida
aann ad die reeepUoaJat? Wllo r:JI for die med.Jcal aappUes Ile uea
Ida office? Wllo keeps 8P Ge car ~
drives from tile llospltal te Ida office?
Most lmportu&, wlto pays for Ida
malpractice la1aruee. J •011't Deed
a.DJ belp from die AMA to auwer tklt
qanUoa. A moroa I am not. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: I've read
your column for years. EnJoyed the
meatloaf episode, lived lhrQuah th~
discussion about the COTTCct way to
hang the bathroom usue and com-
ments conccrnmg the toilet !Cat -up
or down?
But I have never nouccd any
discussion about dimples. Webster's
Dictionary defines them this way:
"Dimple; a small hollow spot or dent
in the check or chin." My mother had
a beautiful dimple 10 each check.
Hwever, none of her four cb.Udrcn
DEAR N.D,: 1 plead pllty at ·
c1Lar&e4. Dimples are 1Dclee4 Httid.I·
ta.ry. I sot diem from my fat.Iler.
Altlloap J llave bffD aCC81ed of
11~1 Oii eoUar b9ttou.
De best example of lderlled
dimples I now l1 la IUrk Doa&faa'
family. IUrk w a marvelou dimple
la llil dlla. Rb soe MJcllael blllertted
tllat mun .. dollar beHty mark ud
Mlcllae1'1 beby aoe llaa It coo. Be said
ll wa1 die tee0acl t.lllq Ile looke4 for
wllea die baby W&I aeuvered, ud
1ve uoap, tllere It was. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: Whale
going througb mJ mother's personal
papers I found th11gem. (Mom was 93
and sharp as a tack.) Please print at,
Ann. It certainly speaks to the
problem of our times -E.E.K. In
Akron •
DEAR il,: Rlcltt yoa are. Here It
It: .
A dJ1puded 1cboottea~a laud·
eel ID lter retlpatloa wtdl die follow-:S. commnt: "ID oar S*blic 1ellool1
y, die teadlen an afraW of ...
prtadp<, tile prt.clpaJ1 are afraid
of die aapert.telldata, th Hper-
latadata are afraJd of tile bMnl
memben, die board mtmben are
alrald of tile parents, die parna. are
afraid of tile c'11drn ud die d.UdreD
are afraid of 80body."
AC ROH .
l lnvulon
S Cocktail ~y1tem1
9 Llllet
14 Besides
1S l<ey
16 Animated
17 Strong beefs
18 A1trlngen1
19 Reception
20 Cavil
21 Co1aet1
23 Peddle
24 Propoaltlon
26 Kiin product
28 Land of -
29 Scales
33 Playing card
36 Two-fisted
37 Whole
38 Accounts
39 Oolu11on
40 Foroe
41 Atber1•
roaource
42 Protrude
"3 Hereditary
factor• « Suppoaes
46 -....ion
4 7 Obeonled
48 Leyefl
S2 Dependenl
SS Some plcklet
S7 S1ntul
S8 "Helf --
60 Germen1
61 Informal
ferewell
62 Hit hard
63 Haul
64 Cheete
{JS Detoated 86 Acoelerated
67 Heunta
DOWN
1 Redound
2 Moslem God
3 French river
4 Oeepalre
5 Phoned
6 Retlglorl
7 Fruit
8 Likeness
9 -ammoniac
10 Grid group
1 t Impart
12 Drier
13 Kernel
22 Foo11$h
25 C.~er
27 Time of year
PMVIOOI PUZZLE &°'-WO
29 Thumpa
30 Speclte
31 Nine: prof.
32 Solidifies
33 "Hold ltl"
~ Braoe
35 Hebllo
38 CurMB
39 wuangry
40 Alt gone
42 Bribe
"3 Femme->
45 Quiet
.,. I
•e Co<rod9d
•8 Oh1c
49 Get out or the
w1y of
SO Giant
51 Cnttcl% ..
52 Between B C
end Ore
53 Cairo denc.r
54 Choot on
one'a teem
58 Circuit
59 T·man
Iacocca had neglected an old flame
By tlae Aatodate41 Preti
NEW YORK -Chrysler
chat..nnan Lee lacocca. who led
efforts to restore the Statue of
Liberty, says he was red-faced
when be realized he hadn't visited
the monument smcc he was a
cb.Ud.
lacooc:a aaid despite numerous
tnps to New York City, be never
even took either of bu daushten
to the statue, and that he only
returned to the 11te in 19821 after
Pra:ident Re.apo asked him to
lead the ratotation efforta.
''Tbe answer wu sjmple and it wu embunuio&." Jacooca said
"The Statue of' Liberty didn't
mean the same t.hina to me that it
did to my father." lac:ooc:a aaid b.Ja
father, an ammiirant from Italy.
took him to the statue when be
WU ' )Un old.
lmmona treated
RANCHO MIRAGE -Ac-
1JUS ' it t>ctna treated for &Jcohotism at the Betty
Ford Center and expect.I to be
reluod this w.:ick.
aaeot OeofTrcy Barr. "'-Sbo'a doui1
sreat... &bu.lam. 11·1 the peal.ell
upcnmce of her life."
Banc d immoru deddcd on
btt OWD IO'ICCk treatment It the Beuy Font Cuter. am
recently •pPCIJtld in tho ~I
vt11on miruserics "North and
South Books I and 11'' u Clarissa
Main.
Welch •a.ln&
LOS ANGELES -Actress
~Ml Weld, teitifyina in her
SI 0 million lawsuit ~nst MOM
and othen involved 1n the movie
"C.annery Row," said sh~ wu
devastated and believed ber
movie career was over when ahe
WU fired from the 1980 film.
Welch claims she wu ~ustly
fired wben the was replacedln the
Iced female role by O.ra WJ.pr.
She sa.id the rejcaod the ol'lly
roles offered ber in lhe an )'CUI
e.inc:c then -pans U I Nazi and a
vampire -bccaute they were not
appropriate for her.
Althou&h ahe bu fou.od uccas
OD the Broad::ru:ae and put>: lishod a belt · ia Wutr.,,and nan boot, Welch tcsti&ea tb.at
her bean belonp to mo ·
\
' t
•
TB&
FAMILY
CIRCUS
by Bii Keane
"I r~ally don't care about a moment
of silence In school, but I'd like to
have one here occasionally."
MARllADUKE by Brad Anderson
.,, __ ,..,.,,.._ ...
"Sure I'd rather have you on my lap, but
you know how he Is when I wake him upl"
•
PEANUTS
GARFIELD
DRABBLlt
ROS& 18 ROSlt
'
I
,.Bl __ O_O_BO_...R_O_S_b_y..,.Vl-r-g-11 -Pa_rt ... c .... h-(V_l ... P-..) BLOOll COU!CT'I'
c:
0 0 ... he'• got • bullt.fn one."
• 1ooess1 Al.WAYS SHOW UP WHEN~
EATING eEc.AUSe "'rOU'Rf ~AYS EATINe.'
IH FACT, 11"5 LOOKIN6
BETTER 8V tME MINUTE ..
U.8. ACIUt8
AIU«
M/lllllW 1 '\
I NU.
\
::-'Cf ~ --, . , '
AMO ! FEU. OUrrE. PfCOIJO
Of-l'ME FPCf IHAT 61NC.£ I'VE
BEEM PRl~IPAL ..•
DOONESBURY
by Pat Brady '
' ' l
f
l ' [,
I
by Jiff MacNaJty
by Harold Le Ooux
,
by Tom Batluk
by Gary Tru~eau
"
..
•
. ' r
Orange co.t DAILY PlLOT / Mond91, J\lne 2. 'f 980
Fo~ deµiocracy
to work, people
havetovote
Tomorrow is election day in Calfornia. As we do
just prior to every primary and general election, the
Daily Pilot urges you to vote.
But this year, we have the benefit of a recent
example to drive home the point that effective
democracy depends upon participation by the majority
in the electoral process.
In the last local elections, in November 1985,
several school board races were decided because the low
voter turnout -only l l .8 percent countywide -
allowed small but highly motivated special interest
groups to dictate the outcome.
In the Huntington Beach Union High School
District, the Saddlcback Community College District
and the Coast Community College District, teachers'
unions hit the streets, mobilized a corps of voters and
placed enough of their candidates in trustees' seats to
control all three boards. .......
Having teachers -or candidates who are beholden
to teachers' organizations -making policy that directly
affects teachers creates an uncomfonably close rela-
tionship that may not promise bad government, bull
certainly doesn't bold out the best prospects for good
government.
The opportunity for conflicts and biased decision-
making are too apparent.
But the teachers are not to be chastised for learning
to be effective ·politicians. Nor is any other ~oup -
Lyndon ~9ucbc's National Democratic Policy Com-
mittee, for example -that might turn a low voter
turnout to its advantage.
Rather, the blame for failures in the elective process
should be placed squarely upon those qualified voters
who shirk their democrauc duty.
As George Bernard Shaw pointed out: "Democracy
is a device that insures we shall be governed no better than we deserve.,.
Piease vote.
Opinion• expre.aed In this apaoe are thoae of the Dally Piiot 01hef views
expfeSMd on this pege are thoee of th4Mr authOrS and ar11sts. Read«
comment ls Invited. The Dally Piiot. PO Box 1560, Costa Mesa. 92626 Phone
642-6086. .
Crown House will not be
horror sozne anticipate
To lhe Editor:
( would like to d.Jspcl tile rumors
that have been started regarding the
Crown House. a Scruor CitJzen
Complex in Corona del Mar that was
recently approved by the CoastAI
Comm•ssion.
It is not a high-nse. nor a mid-rise
or low-nse. Jt is a large project.
The south wing roof is the same
height as tbe eiustins Ming Dynasty
roof. The main roof 1s 81h feet higher
than the e"Xisting roof and approx-
imately 9 feet lower than the Five
Crowns. The roof next to the Hazel
rnidential homes is 24 f~t Jugh
where the allowable height 1s 24/28
fttt.
The structure will not ca$Cade
down Buck Gully and cause massive
dcstrucuon to the slope and the tide
pools at Little Corona.
The structure will not extend past
the e~sting park.mg lot fence. Large
amounts of earth will have to be
excavated to allow for underground
parking. Adequate prov1s1on for de-
~ltation and preventJOn of runoff
dunng construction will be made.
Since the existing site is c-0mpletely
paved or built on, there wtll be no
more new runoff ttran-thc existing
cond1t1on.
It will not cause massive traffic and
parlanir problems.
Prolessional traffic experts, as well
as coastal and city planning staff. are
satisfied that the traffic generallon is
half of what exists today, and that
there will be adequate parking for
residents, guests, and staff. The
majority of the Coastal Commission
and City Council concurred.
The proJeCt will not expand to
additional properties down Hazel
and require Poppy to be widened and
street trees removed.
All traffic will enter and exit from
Coast Highway. No traffic or parking
will be directed to Hazel or Poppy.
If employees park in the street, the
city will ~vokc the use permit.
h 1s not a convalescent hospital.
We have designed a pleasant living
environment for healthy people in
their 70s and 80s. in a boarding
house/retirement resort atmosphere.
where they will receive meals, maid
!lervtcc, org.amzed act1vitJes, as well
as van and hmousmc ~rvicc.
And that's the way 1t ut
RON YEO
Architect
Corona del Mar
Some patrolmen capricious
To the Editor:
On Monday nigtTt, April 28, at I I
p.m there was a good example of the
mahcc and incompetence of highway
traffic law enforcement.
I approached Harbor Boulevard
from the east on the San Diego
Fr~ay. There had been a coUmon
and the five Janes were Justifiably
blocked. But many of us wanted to
use the offramp, which was not
hlocJc.ed except for the malice and
capnce <>f one CHP officer
He alone was at fault. After waiting
an line for llCveral minutes, I walked to
the head vehicle and asked the driver
why he did oot proceed. He had some
choice four-letter words for the of
ficcr I then a11ked the cop why wt
could not use the.offramp.
He.gruffly said, "Get back 1n your
vehicle." J protested again and was
ordered apm to return to my car. The
cop then began to aJlow the long line
to exit.
What he needed was .a bust m the
nose. We arc prohibited from assault-
ing officcn and from defending
our5elvcs when they assault us So we
have to put up with this malice.
incompetence, and arropnce. If we
complain to their superiors, they sue
us for malice. Our onJy recourse is to
call pubhc attention to the malice and
incompetence of so-called traffic law
enforcement.
ARTHUR ANDERSON
Costa Mesa
Editorial view from a dlstance
To tht' Editor l
Would the editor of the Datly Pilot
wnte that same· May 13 editonal
reprd.ing the Lions Park situation tf
he lived nearthere? You can bet your
OAANOE COAST
Daily Pilat
~ _.,oeyoi o .. v-•t lJO"' liay St ec.t• W-AOO.-cor :-u "' eci.o ·~. r.,.. ••.....
• ,
'
baa over the Statue of l.tberty's head
that he wouldn't.
~zw Edllor , ... , ...
M•MQlllll Editor 0........,
City fdltOf
TMtC...
N9ws £dllor
Ct.tllMff 9'#11 Editor
THELMA KJMBALL
Cm.taMesa
..... 7*17~
(;l)r'llrollif
~LC.....
P~llOn Mlneglf
TenJ._..
OrcullltJOn ~ .....-·•1•• M•l'lltctrlQ Dnclor ...., .....
Clalillliiio Dnctor
·'Finance Minister Jesus Silva Herzq/lliild MeXJco woWd not tie a 'd.J_~--~
board1 fordrogs llthere were no 'sWlminJngpool"-theUnlted Sli es.
JACK AlQ>Ba801' aa4 DALS V Alf ATTA , colamalata
-~ 11111•"' •• , ...
What price tag will court ·
put on pain and suffering?
Irvine doctor asks
$20 million after
his wife miscarries
1 was reading my paper the other
day, and noted that a Fountain Valley
physician hat! been arrested for
drunken dnvmg.
He was stopped on Jan. 7 at I :30
a.m. He exited the San Diego freeway
at Culver, where be was pulled over
by a California Highway Patrohpan
and asked if he had been drinking.
He said that he ''did not drink
alcohol and that he did not drink any
alcohol 1n that night in specific." He
also said that he had been married the
day before, and "did not even dnnk
alcohol at his•own wedding."
According to a claim filed by th~
man. the officer then administered a
field sobriety test, told the man that
he smeUed alcohol on his breath and
said that the man msplayed "severe
nystagmus," involuntary eye move-
ments sometimes associated with
drunkenness.
The physician was then handcuffed
and taken to Orange County Jail.
He was permitted to phone his wife
and told her that he would be released
at about 6:30 a.m.
Instead, sars his claim, he was not
released unti 9:30 a.m
When h~ amved home, he f>und
that his wife. who was two months
pregnant, was bleeding. He took her
lo an obstetrician who detcnnaned
that she had miscarried.
.BILL
HARVEY
The doctor is oow suin~ the city of
Irvine, the state or California, the
California Highway Patrol, the Coun-
ty of Orange and the state Depart.
ment of Transportation.
He says that his wife's miscarriage
was brought on by his arrest, and the
friJ!lt and anxiety associated with his
being ~leased three hours later than
he told her that he would be.
The city oflrvine is included in the
claim because of the design of an
intersection off the freeway that
caused the doctor lo stop bis car twice
and led to Ills being pulled over by the
C HP officer.
There appear to be a lot of
unanswered questions here. Was the
doctor drunk~ Did the CHP officer
make a mistake? Was the miscarriage
really brought on by his arrest? Was
the intersection really poorly de-
signed? All of these things will be
determined by a court oflaw latcT, but
there is one question for which there
is an answer now
How much'!
The doctor 1s suing for $20 million.
T also note¢. on the same page of my ·
newspaper, a headline that said
"Stanton shooting scttl~'
The story was about a Stanton
woman whose 5-year-old son was
shot to death by a policeman on
March 3, I 983. the policeman was
there to checjc out a report that it had
been scvcta.J days since the boy bad
been seen.
He went into the darkened apart-
ment and found a door that bad been
ti"ed shut. He untied and opened the
door, looked into the darkened room
and saw a shadow holding what
appeared to be a gun pointed at him.
He fired.
Tbe shadow was the boy, and what
ap~ t(fbe a 1un was a toy gun the
boy was playing with.
His mother, unable to afford a baby
sitter, put tbc boy in the bedroom
with a television set, and tied the door
shut from the outside so the boy
couldn't get out while she went off to
work. Perhaps you remember the
story. It 1s truly tragic.
There arc no questions left in· the
Stanton case. The mother 4id leave
the boy alone and she did tic tile door
shut. The policeman did shoot the
boy. The woman has 'moved to
Chicag6' and the policeman pas
resigned from the Police Department
The city of Stanton settJed with the
woman for $395.000.
You know, there's been an awful lot
of tallc about pain and suffering -
and bow much it's worth -lately.
Maybe we've got something to go on
here.
ff you're a mother in Stanton. it's
worth $395,000. '
If you're a doctorin Irvine. can it be
worth $20 miltion?
Colamol1t Bm Baney Uvn la
Huu.,too Beacb.
~11u1muar,u1~1;,J,fi!·'~·nn1.1
Official's attack on Mexico
not only unwise but wroi:J_g
--Charges Mexican officials are corrupt
i:ot borne out by 2~yearTnv~stigat1on
WASHINGTON -Relations be-
tween the United States and Mexico
have been badly straaned by the
recent accusations -both unWlse
and unprovable -made against
Mexican officialdom by U.S. Cus-
toms Commissioner William von
Raab.
At a Senate heanng. von Raab
blurted out the charge that "mu'live"
official corruption ex.asted "way up
and down the ladder" in Mexico. and
suggested that this was the major
reason the Umted States has been
unable to solve its drug-traffic pro~
lems Von Raab presented no proof of
his charges.
We have critic12ed the Mexican
government many times in the past.
but von Raab's intemperate remarks
were out ofhne and 1n some cases just
plain wrong. We say this on the basis
of information Dale Van Att.a
gathered on two recent trips to
Mexico City, where he spoke with
critics of the government a5 well a.~
officials. He also received a special brie~ng from Drug Enforcement
Administration sourcet.
The confhct has been budding ever
sanoc DEA mvcstiptor Enrique
Camarena was murdcn:d an Mexico
1n February 1985, while he was
worlcina with Mexican drua qents.
The invesllpllon of the murder
teemed slow, but Mexican police
bc:pn to round up suspceu.
U.S. rru ttation over the PTOtVC•~
of the investiptJon led to a mid.Apnl
mcetina 1n Cancun, Me.too. It wa9
.attended by Attorney Georral Edwin
Meese his Mexican counterpert and sevmi other hi&h offic•als from both
couotnes Von Rub didn't show up,
but sent a subordinate. 11ic ~ was amacablc, and Meese exp
appttCtatioo for Meitioo·s efTortJ to
cur'b the dru& tra.ffic.
But Mexican officials weft shocked
to n:cei ~ a mCS1a&C from von Raab
aayina. as two Mexican cabinet of-
ficials dqcnbcd It, that U VOi)
Rub wu QOnOCmcd, ..U Mcuc:an
officiali wc~corrupt., and wcttsuahy
until proven mnocent. This not only
smacks of racism, but it is demon-
strably inaccurate.
Our own investigation over the last
two years has made it clear that there
JACK
AIDEISOI
and JOSEPH SPEAR
are many Mexican officials who arc 'De~ent officials, to their credit,
not only honest. but who arc diligent-dcctded that it was costing too much
ly trying to curtail the drug traffic at to maintain the palatial Victorian
considerable personal risk. As Mex-rcsidenoc of the tJ.S. consuJ-aeneraJ
icanand U.S. sources point out, more in Sydney, Australia -rouahly
than 150 Mexican drug enforcement $50,000 a year. The mansion ovcr-
offic1als have been killed since 1976. looking Sydney Harbor is worth
Thirty-four were kiJJed in I 984 aad 54 about $4 million.i surely more modest
last year trying· to keep drugs from dias could be round. So an inter-
cntcring the United States. national real eitate firm was hired,
Senior Mexican officials repeatedJy and it e.pUld that the $4 million
point out that if there were no r.roperty was a bit extravagant. Aa an
lucrative U.S. markets for illeaaJ •approP-flatc" substitute, they rec-
drup, and no corrupt officials on this ommenacd a residence costina -are
side of the border, \here would be few you rady? -SI million. Could we
drug problems in Mexico. Finance try a.gain, ma_}'be?
Minister Jesus Silva Herzog said UNDER THE DOME: The Re-
Mexico would not be a "djving apn ad.miniat:ration's crackdown on
board" for drugs if there were no aovemment employees wbo leak
"swimmina pool'' -the United classified information to the press bu
States. spread to Capitol Hill. Staffers on the
Silva Herzog was perturbed by von House foreian Aft&in Committee -
Raab's rhetorical shotaun blast at the which has Iona. been one of the more
Senate hcanni. He recalled that h11 open souroesof1nformatioo in Wub-
customsch1efhad asked von Raab for initon, repon that mysterious
specifics on charges the U.S. official stranpn are vtaitina their oftioes
had made 1n an earlier tele~. but that each cvenin&. The pl&inclothes v~
von Raab never responded. iton ask if the file c:abineu containina
Mexicans also resent the Wasbina· classified material have been locked
ton myth that M~ico isn't beari.f\i its up for the even.in&, and then ask tbc
sbatt of the drua traffic burden. They staft'en to make sure. Tho sWiera
note that as a pm:ieni.ae of the don't know if the mm are aecurily
natJonaJ budact. the Me~ican j~llcc auanb or spookl -and appe.rentJy
depltlmeot alone spends three llmes haven't lholl&ht to ask.
more on~ enforcement eac~ year MlNl-EOCTORIAL: lo a Uttle-
tha.n the enure budsc.t of the DEA: noticed cue that daervcd wider
As for U .S. compla.ints t.ha~ ~I.CO attention.a federaljudaein Maryland
has been 1s 1Jow to tnvcstlpte the • tJuew out an indictment .,inst a
CAnarena murder, the Mu.ic:ana oorpotate defendant bccaUIC be
reoall that it took the U.S. f>vern· fowtd • the prosecutor and ' two
men• 1wo years to extnd.Jtc the 14temAJ Revenue Service qenu had
former Me.uco City police chief on altered documcnu t0 make the aov·
comaptlon ch~. In JS month~ cmment'1cas.e1ll'OT1 andtM9Ued
Melian autbonties bavcjailed most about lt in ooun.. ·~judfe wu
of the Camvcna IU$pecU. outrqDd. and so are we. Tho o<ldl are
In short, von Raab <>!'Cl the tou,h cnouah •hm you're ftihtina
Mc11ca ns an apology. the aovcnuncnt. oven· when every·
WATCH ON WASTE: Try' to thtna'• olt the DP4tldll\Jp •
aavc money ca.a be a tncJcy businca J• AlltH,.... m Dale Vu .tri.
when you·~ not utcd to iL tatt .,. 1ya4,late1 i..
DAN
WALTERS
Davis
works
on his
image
But symbols that
he used as Brown
aide may now fail
SACRAMENTO -When Gray
Davis was functioning as then-Oov.
Jerry Brown's chief of staff in the late
1970s, be also served as Brown's in-
house image-maker, a kind of acc-
retary of symbolism. -
Durin& the early days of the Brown
administration, when things were
aoing swimmingly, Davis would let it
be known that be, and not Brown, was
responsible for the most conspicuous
symbols of the youna administration,
such as riding in a car-pool Plymouth
and doing away with sta~pplied
briefcases for bureaucrats.
Davis also carefully acted u the
governor's chief media spokeiman,
thus assuri.114 him.self of copious
amounts of air time and newspaper
space for the day when, it was evident
even then, be would pursue his own
political career. .
Given tb.tt background, it's not
surprising that the Capitol"s skeptical press corps wua little wary of Davis'
mitial -and, as it turns out, only -
major effort after becomin& a state
assemblyman in 1982.
Davis. then onJy recently married
and having no children himself,
volunteemi to be the political cham-
pion of missina children.
At the time, the subject of mis.siQs
children was of intense media interest
throughout the United States. Sen·
sational television movies and check-
out-counter tabloids had created the
impression that there was an
epidemic of kidnappinJ and cbild-
stcaling -an imprcssJon later re-
futed , by careful journalistic in-
vestigation.
Anyway, at the ti.me it was a bot
topic, and Davis plunged into it with
a seri~ of bills and other maneuvers.
One of bis prosrams was to plaoe the
pictures of missing children on milk
cartons. \.. ..
Davis made~ that the mWna
children campaigii devices featured
his name and face prominently, and
that provoked questions about his
sincerity. With his ambition for
statewide office drlppina from every
pore, reporters would wonder aloud
whether the missing children cam-
paign was just somethina to boost bis
statewide name identification and
thus bis political prospects.
Davis would Jive flat assurances
that bis efforts on behalf of missing
-children wen: utterly siooeTC and bad ·
oo political overtones.
But this year, when the office of
state controller fell suddenly vacant,
Davis dcclarcd_hl.L . .auulidacy~
mediately. In fact. be seems to have
had advance notice from the incum-
bent, Ken Cory, with whom be .bu
had a longstandmg political alliance.
And lo and behold, Davis is
running for controller not on any
record or platform dealing with state
finances, but as the man who has,. it
would seem from his televinon
commercials, sinalc-bandcdly
rescued countless children from the
clutches of evil kidnapen.
But in~ his second plunae into
statewide politics (he ran for state
treasurer 10 1974), Davis also has
made himself a t.&r&Ct.
If Divis thouabt he would have a
lock on the Democratic nomination
(Cory announced bis rc~mcnt just
one day befo~ the filing deadline), he
wuwrona.
Two other state leaislaton, As-
aemblyman Alister McAlister and
state Sen. John Garamendi, quickly
filed, and have devoted their cam·
paians to linkinf Davis to Jerry
Brown and Chief ustioc Rose Bird.
While Davis is spendina his
million-dollar-plus campeian wat
chest on commcrtials that lhow bim
with formerly missina children.. Gar-
amendi is matchin' him ad-for-ed
with spou lba t rather snidely portrary
him u a continuation of the Brown rqime.
lt'a a hiah·rilk •trate&Y for Oar-a.mcnd.i, who bas appealed to C$$Cn-
tiall y the same libetaJ conltituency u
Davis. Within that blac. Brown ia not
n.eca.urily an unpopular fisu~
Oara.mend.i ia aamblina that there
are coouah moderate-to-con-
aitrvadve Democrats tom.ab an anti--
Brown, anU..Bitd appeal aucocstM.
But io doina tO ho runs into the
CQJlStituency'lllO beinli~tivaced by McAUJta. a batdwor · ~t
Uf09t COOJU'Vltive Dcmocnt lr'om
Fremont •bo suffen fn th ntt f'rom
a lick of money, dcl.paie '°lfitJcaJ
su;pon from Assembly Spea.icr
Willie Brown's circle.
Tbc.0.vit-Ovamddi oon
evolved 1Qto a bjpty in~ duel
that the polls •1 is too cloeo &o ca1L
It' abO an indifta test of whctbtt
Jerry Brown is a political pariah
within bit own ~·
Du Waltus a 1 f#
eel...in.
; . . ..
..
(1
Hlt'aaprlnglline,thlamustbepreploolll1l11•1oa,:lltlltn
Juen a.mue1 homera to lead the Phi._.,_. the Pache.-.
. .
C~rbett_flippant -----. __
over Ang~ls! Win
practice tbla week, u are moet of the other
~ coacbea. A tbree-puUcdea oo aprlq&
Reliever imitates
gymnast tn·7.-4
sptktn ofOrtoles
BJ C8JUS MONA.BAN ...,,_C.:Oe J 0 1
New v ort Yatlbes (WbillOG
4-1).at.u.b( to '-4).
Time: 1:35.
TV: Channel 5. l.adio: kMPC (? 10). .
Tuesday's pme: New Yott
Y&rWa at AqeJs, 7:35 p. .
Getting ready for Septem~r _
Coeta lleK lllCll football co.acb Tom
Baldwin (abffe) and Woodbrldfe'• Gene
Nojl are paum, their teema ~ aprlDC football beClna on pace 82. ·
.-::---~----""-:"--:-:-~---:--------c-i-~~--·~· ......... ---• ..... .-~--....
Rockets
hold off
Celtics
HOUSTON (AP) -The Boston
Celtics' plans for a J..-0 lead in the
NBA finals were foiled by a relative
mid&et in a forest ofskyacnpcrs.
Mitchell Wigins, a 6-3 reterVe
at least o foot taller and tapped
Disputed grand slam
among Pittsburgh's
arsenal In 12-3 win suard,=amonaa swirl of playen
inare dforthewinrungbasketin PllTSBURGH (AP) -Nauonal
the Houston Rockets' 106-104 vie-Leaaue umpire Lee Wever says you
tory Sunday that cut Boston's le.ad in can't call 'em if you don't see 'cm.
TonflJit'•...,,,,. .
~ (R ~l) at PhiJa..
del~!Rawlcy 6:4). .
1ime: '4:35.
TV: None.
Radio: KA.BC (790).
. . the bett-of-seven championship Jim Morrison drove in seven runs
Tucsda.,&:~ same: DodFn Philadel '4:35 p.m.
He's serving an amateur term $cries to 2-1. with a much-disputed pand sJam.
"[saw an openina. saw the ball and triple and double as the Pittsburah
..incw where it was coming," Wigins Pirates battered the Los AllJC~
said. "lf (7-4) Ralph Sampson had Do.d&cn 12-3 Sunday behind Rick
been there, he probably would have RhOdcn's seven-bitter.
)
around him. I don't think I l)UIC!d •
him. I don't want to say much about it
because I've been in a slump . all season and l just want to enjoy this." But HB' s Ed Andrews plays
racquetball with flair of a pro
By RICHARD DUNN
Dli9r .... C.118' I flPI
Ed Andrews, a legend on the racquetball court who
won bis sixth national title recently 10 Houston, will
always remam an amateur, althouah his crcdib1ltty
classifies hlm as a top professional
The HuntJ~ton Beach resident., who has ac-
com lishcd coo in the sport to enter the Hall of Fame
-1r racquetball one -w done for his sport what
Pete Rose has done for baseball.
Andrews, 29, doesn't want to foreao bis amateur
status because be wishes to remam on the U.S. National
team, which he bas been a member of for the past thrtt
years.
His attitude toward racquetball changed when he
suUtcd brina.ma home pnzcs ... and mooey.
"l have what they call amateur ehgibihty, ··Andrews
explained. 'The money I make as a ~~ets signed over to
the AARA (American Amateur uctball Associa-
tion). t tum an expenic reports and they reimburse m°'
The reason I do that 1s because I want to play on the
national team.
"The money you.make lS.ll't wonb givma up the
travel, and I want to travel. We've been to four other
countncs (Mexico, Canada, Japan and England) already
and this ~um mer we're supposed to go to Switzerland."
So the travel keeps Andrews an amateur. "lt's a good
mcenuve," be said.
Andrews, who was born and nused 1n San Diego. also
won the A.ARAsin$)cscrown an 1980, '81 and '8.S. He won
the .World Games m Santa Barbara 10 1982 and was the
Ektelon Tournament singles champion in l 98L~
Andrews captured his fourth U.S. national cham-
pionship in the last seven years recently with a I S-12. IS-7
victory over Andy Roberts of Memphis. The No. I teed an
the tournament, Andrews drew a first round bye, then
aotten a dunk instead of a tip like I Morrison's fifth-inmna homer off
did." reliever Tom Nicdenfucr ma.de it 9-2
The Rockets rallied from an eight-and touched off a l~minute a.rsu-
point deficit in the last three minutes · ment in which ~n Mana&er
to win their fint game of the· series. Tom Lasorda atfUcd with Weyer that
Twice before at Boston Garden, the Morrison pas.1Cd runner Tony Pena
Rockets had wilted in I.he second half. whde rounding fint base.
This ume it was Boston as the Pena was standing a few feet off
Celtics scored only two points m the first, watching the ball fall into the
final three minutes. A rebound basket -left-field seau as Morrison •. runnina
by Kevin McHale had given the as be kept an eye on bit dnvc.
Celucsa 102-94 lcad with 3'12 minutes ap~ to pass bun. Mormon.
to play. -qw~kly retreated and retouched first
Seven-foot Ak:eem Ola1uwon, who as ~ fint ba.seal&n Grca Brock
scored 23 points, then started the and thud ~mari~ Bill Madlock
comeback with a three-point play, Qca.an screaming at first base u.mp1re
mwna the score l 02-97 with 3:06 Weyer and Lasorda charged out of the
left. A hook shot by Sam peon, who led dugout
Monison would 1-ve been pvcn
credit for a sinaJe ifbe had been called
out, but the three nmoen would have.
been permitted to IOOre.
"What difference is one run?".
Madlock asked. "So it's 11-3 in.stead
of l ~3. But what can you do? l,
respect them (the urnptrCS) more
when they tell the truth. If be d.idn',,
sec it. that's 1t."
Evert Lloyd ·~
lasemlsof
Frencb. Opeii
-------. defeated five other opponents before turning back
Roberts in the title match of the men's open division.
the Rockets with 24 points and 22 Lasorda vehemently araued with
n:bounds; a layup by Wigjns and two Weyer. but the umpires re~ to
free throws by Ol~uwon gave the change the call after huddliq tn
Rockets a l 03-102 lead with J :07 lef\. p~atc for about .two mmutcs. Tele· PARIS (AP) -Defending women's
champion Chris Evert Uoyd re-
bounded from a slua:isb start to
defeat l 8-ycar-0ld Carlfoa Bassett of
Canada, S-7, 6-2, 6-1 today and
advance to the semifinals of tht
French Open.
I .
Andrews and Fountain Valley's Mark Martino won
the AARA national doubles title m 1982 and '83, as well.
He also took third in the 1985 World Games.
He admits he's aettin& "a httlc old" to play, and
"some of the ruys I'm spottm~ arc seven or eight years
younaer than am," but the ultimate ct\allengc -to win
the open division title next year at the age of 30-is ~till
ahead.
The World Champ1onsh1ps in Montreal -the Super
Bowl of raoq~bell -1s 10 August And before that 1sa
tuneup 1n Dallas this month for a tournament But it all
sccms so dts1-Pt from when Andrews wu"just start mg to
play to act in shape and work out "It was somethm& to do," he says about hlS 1nibatJon
to the sport when he was 21 "Mc and my mom used to
play all the time
"The btahcst dlv1S1on there 1s 10 the nationals 1s the
open dlvi11on. and I've won 1t four limes, which 1s more
than anyone cite. And I've only entered the tournament
four times."
His pcnonal aJory. however. can never be replaced
Wlth what be pinJ as a member of the nauonal team
'"There arc so many more opportu01t1es to pJay on the
national tcam,"hewd. "I'd have to be crazy not todo1t "
A comer jumper by Danny Ainge vision 1eplays we1e not available of
. I d 104-1 03 the play. ~ve Boston •ts tast ~ at 1 Weyer said as the ball was lutto left,
with ~5 acco.nds ~mam1ng. he started towards se<:ond base.
O~uwo~ 1 missed hook shot "They said ldorrison passed tum
bo,unccd, high above the nm.. but but you have to sec it to call it." Weyer
W1ggin1. ~r urned leap ttppcd said. ·~If I'd seen it, I would have
the ball tn with 3 se<:onds left. called 1t. J don't know 1f he went by
"We were 10101 mside to either him or not.
Ralph or Ak.ccm," Wigms sa1d "Everybody saw 1t except the auy
"DJ . (Dennis Johnson) relaxed on who was supP<>tecf to sec it." 1..asorda
the off side. l saw a crack of dayhght said
and upped the shot 1nsunct1vely It Madlock wd Momson "had a
must have been the first time DJ sheepish look on his face" as he
didn't box m~ out all day, but it felt retreated to first, but neither Mor-aood·" nson nor Pena would admit after-
Wtaams wd the Rockets shocked wards that the umpires m~scd the
Boston with their hahtnma come-call
back. ··He touched me but he never
"We p ve ourselves a chance when passed me," Pena said. "He 1f did it.
Ralph and Akeem kept aettma de-I'd say the truth. He didn't do 1t ..
fens1vc ret>ounds" W1111ns wd "I "ldon'thavem~tosayaboutit,"
saw the look of "fear on the Cclucs' Momson said. "I think l went up tht
faces." ba~hnc more than I did run
She wtll play the winner of a match
later lD the day between t.bi.rd...secdcd
Steffi Graf, a 16-year-old"&om West
Germany, and fiftb«eded Hana
Mandhkova of Crechoslovati:L
lo the men's field today~ the lone
renwmna French cntJ)', ci&btb-teed!
cd Henn Leconte defcatcc1 19-ycar.
old Horacio de la Pena of Arlentina.;
6-1. 6-2, 6-l 1n a fourtti round ma ,
Bwett., the 13th leed. used lobl
and drop shots to keep the ~
seeded Lloyd off balance as she woo
the first set a marathon that lasted
more than one hour.
But the cxpcnence the 31-)ar-OIQ
Flondtan has 9CQUired in more than a
(Pl--... f'UlfCB/BI)
Tinley escape~ pressure, fie~d for triathlon win
BJ BARRY PAUL&.NER lot more than normal;' said the veteran rompct1tor who put Banks away on foot ...,,..,.c.., s • 1 won 12 events tD 198:> aJonc. "If Danny wouldn't have been there, I would ha've
Scott Tinley, the 198STnathltteoftheYcarandlast .. [wanted to win bctt .. bc1na raised in Oranac had1substantJallcadmthtb1keandlwouldhavcbKked
year's lrQnman winne~, finished first arnona the 897 County," said Tinley, who arcw up in Fullerton and La ofTa bit," said Tinley of the unexpected competition from
entrants at Sunday's inauauraJ. Ora.nie County Per-Habra. ••rve l the last three weeks in a row la~fweck the up.and-comma 24-year-<>ld Un1ven.uy of l1linois
formina Arts Center Triathlon in Mission Viejo. to win by Just 1il seconds. and it's been frustt1Ufl&. I nc:cded a senior. · ·nm Challenge Cup and $3,000 fint place pnzc money. win for my confidence. Second place would have bttn a ''l'te never been this competcb~ with him bdem."'
But ~tn!ey, 'Nbo completed the coursc-:-a. UK.(q.9 real <ti~ppointmcnt," be said 'II.id Bank~ who 1wam for the lllJn1 and bas onty
miles) SW1m m the 77~ waterofl..ake ~1won V1e10. Tinley, the prohibitive ~-racefavonte. was pu~bed tnathalonma for two yean "t'm JUSt honored to be
a 3SK (21. 7 m~les) bike lea and a. I OK (6 2 mi~) run over by Ba until the ftrst half-m1le of the Nn ponion. with him." Banks added. .
billy !OM1s-1n 1:45:30. pve tumsel(httle ume to S1vor Banks broke away in the 1w1mm1oa lea. romans out The top wo~en tiDJshef was C.Ollcen Cannon
t.be Vlctory before ~mountina tus b,1kc and .rctum.1ftJ to of the watcuccond to Tinley's fourth. Lcuca.d1a, t'Om1na 10. llth overall with a t:S7·43 ·
thoroedsfora60-mtlcndcb&c1Ctoh homctrrEnci.01 . However. and Tinley were tint and third, t6takctheS1.SOOwinner'scheck .
. Deina~ fc:atuttd n~me in the prc·rare publicity and tupcctively. after 1 mooth tran lion to the bike as they Elame Altruz from La J,olla was the wo n's numcr.
bav1na ~n1 nd 1n h11 lat three triatblo~s (over too\ to. bill of · Vt~ovttmuch ofthe 19 4 up finisbiq1n l:S9.17. · .
the previo three Wttkcnd ) m t race a bit more Olymp1ccouttC. Gordon Duff. a tifcaua.rd from HuntJnatoo ttcacJa;;1
imponant atc0rd1n1 to Tinley, who finisMd l:3S ah d Tinley moved. into the lead at the top of the fint wastbefintOra.narCountyfiniwr. ~l)ILOeeotJlJ'a
of Danny nb. uphill sttttch on Olympiad Road but Banks came back tn 1 ·"8·49 for 11:vcnth ~. "Tb~ qµitc a bit of pre I.I~ on m (tn y,1n). A and the two rode th~ las1 four m1~ tottthct btfo~ Tinley · (Pi ... • • TBLOff
l
•
..
t
~ I I
t
I I
* C>tW1Qi Cout DAILY PILOT/ MQf'WSay, June 2, •
In the spri•g,
a young .man's
fancy turils ...
to footb&ll?
New league. new dreams
or some area prep teams
By ROGER CARLSON
Ot .. .._,.. ...
Late May and early-June. It's a u.me when finak,
proms and a quick CUt tO tbe beac~ ~uppermost ID lhc
minds of many ht&b school students.
But despite the fact there is sti~ a summer standJna
between spnna practice and tbc fall, ume !leems to be of
the euence for UranfC Coast ~ prep football hopefuls
-especially tho5e 10 the newly-formed Pacific Coast
Leque, as well as lrvme of the South Coast Leagu~ and
Mater Dei of tbc Angelus Leque.
The PCL bas brouaht t<>1Ctber s1x of the smaller
schools in Orange County,·on an enrollment and success
level, 'and lhey'U be duelin& for the right to send three
teams to the CIF Dcsen-Mouotain playoffs.
From the Sea View Leque ~Costa Mesa. Laguna
Beach and Woodbridge. From the South Coast Leque
comes Laguna Hills. From an at-1.arse berth in its first year
wilh .enion 1s Trabuco Hills. And, from the Ccnt\lry
Leque. comes Orange Hiab r a acbool with a long-
st.andtDf tradition against Costa Mesa and Laguna Beach
lrv10e, meanwhile, continues tn the South Coast
~. where the competition includes El Toro,
Capistrano Valley. Mission Viejo, Dana ffills and San
Ocmcntc.
Mater Dci's presence 10 the Angelus League finds
itself &P.inst long-tiimc rivals Servile, ,St. Paul, Bishop
Amat. Bishop Montgomery _and newcomer St. Bernard.
The first glance at tbc PCL mjabt gi vc the 1mprcss1on
it's a league othavc-nots, tbetr recent records indtcatmg
so The fact is. however, th.at each of the six have been
locked mto leagues with schools sometimes Utrcc and
foar umes their sue m cnrollmcnL
In 1985 Costa Mesa was 3-7, and so was Laguna
Beach, although the Artists would have been 6-4 and
possibly belt~ th!1n that if not for forfeitures caused by
adnunistrat1vc mistakes.
Laguna Hills and Orange were both 0-10. Trabuco
Hills, without seniors, .competed as a junior varsity and
went 2-8. Weodbrid,e, •hltou&h an fact a small schoof,
appears to be on the hi&b road, coming off a 6-3-2 season
Wllh an abundaJ\c;e or power commg up from the co-
champ1onsh1p sophomore teafJ\.
Irvine 1s considcr!ld to have one of its largest, tf not
largest, teams in school hlstory. Mater Dc1, with the
departure of two-year startmg quarterback Todd
MarinoVlch to Capo Valley, 1s 1n the process offind1ng the
nght combination to shore up its loss.
Herc's a look at each of the PCL schools, as well as
Irvine and Matc'r Dc1, as they conunue spnn~c;tice
Irvine Vaqueros
It
lrvme High's Terry BeDJaan has 50 out for spnng
practloc and although the numbers arc shm as far as
returning starters ( .. Four and a half'), there just might be
considerable reason loropum1sm m the Vaqueros' camp.
"I've never had big kids. but we're starting to get them
Tbc 10th grade class 1s pretty big," said Henigan
Amona the rctumrna seniors are offensive tackle Jeff
Kemper (6-41/i, 230) and runnmg baclc Ron GoolllD ( 5-1 O.
175). Mart Beta.Ip.a, a 5-10, 170-pound defensive back,
was a part-time stancr as a
sopho more, and two other
sophomores Jolla.Dy Kana and
Georae goatuet help project the
strength of the sophomore class
Kane (6-1 . 230) 1s an offensive
guard, Kou1ures (5-9. 160) 1s a
defensive back ... Another stand-
out with two years left: D&DDy 1-cb
(5-9, 175), a defensive end; Terry
Ralunat11lla, a freshman standout
. on the baseball team (shortstop)
Beatca.n . will be looked at as a running 6ack-
defcns1vc back. lf...he doesn't sti ck he'll go to the
sophomores as a quarterback U01vers1t~ High runnmg
back Craig Belle'• lmle brother. Mike, 1s scheduled to
begin his freshman year at Irvine "Ht's the 100-metcr
eight grade distnct winner and in our weight room all the
umc," said Hcnipn. "He's probably as strong as most of
our varsity kids. · At 160 pounds, he 1s benching in the
neighborhood of290 pounds Irvine's varsity will consist
of some 14 scmors and 36 1uniors. Henigan 's staff loses
Dllllr .......... '-......
Woodbrlctae'• Dand ToW'D8eiid catcbea a
pua during aprtna practice recently.
Bob Ftillt and John Selbe Selbe took the head coaching
JOb at Cypress High (Hc01gan's former school). Remain-
mg are Barry Scbale.nbug (offenSJve line and acfcnsivc
ends). Saverlo Brenner (hnes); l\Jcb AJderaoa
(linebackers and running backs); Jim BllrtOD (defensive
backs and wide receivers). Expect no c:hanges, Henigan is
· stnctly a Delaware wi11ged· T and 50-!cad coach. Spring
practice con\61\ues until June I 0
The 1986 schedule: Sopt 12-at University (Irvine);
Sept 18-Wcstmmstcr (home), Sept. 25-at Tusun; Oct.
4-at Saddlebaclc (Santa Ana Bowl): Oct. 1~ Villa Park
(home); Oct. 17-M1ss1on Viejo (home); Oct. 24-at
Dana Hills. Oct 30 -al El Toro (MV); Nov. 6-San
Ocmcnte (home), Nov 14-at Capistrano Valley.
Orange Panthers
· Aft¥ a six-year absence, Mark McMahon returns to
the Panthers as they Joan the newly-formed Pacific Coast
uague .. He has 56 out as Orange tncs to reverse a long
losmg trend, including a 1-10 record in 1985 ... Among 10
rctummg staners arc quarterback Mike Stodl (6-0, 180),
center-defensive tackle Steve Riddle (6-3, 220).
linebacker-wingback eui1 Macias (6-0, 220), two-way
tackle Chris Dunbam (6-0: 200). running back EnaJe
Va1q11ei (5-8, 150) and All-Century League fqllback-
hncbackcr Paul Maond (5-9. 185), who earned those
honors as a sophomore . Also returning: Steve Gldd.lDg1,
a 6-0. 185-pound guard and lincbaclccr, Robbie Glover, a
6-0, 165-pound db-rb and two-way tackle Frau
Preleulk (6-2 2 I 0) ... Assisting McMahon, who was
Orange's coach 10 I 977· 79, arc Jim Prelesntk (offensive
coordinator), Ed O'Keefe (defensive coordinator); Scott
WUson (defensive backs), and Cltack Neamaa (receivers).
Wilson played under McMahon at Villa Park in I 982
when the Spanans recorded nine shutouts ... Spnng
practice ends Fnday ... Orange's home turf1s El Modena
High, but the Panthers arc working on eventually movma
to Chapman College for home games r •. McMahon spent
the last five years at Villa Park, with the cxccpuon of the
'81 season at Anaheim, almost cnurcly as an offensive
coordinator ... On the new league, "Anytime you can'
create an attnude that this 1s something nF,w and different
and an opportunity to tum thmgs arourtd, that's good.
When you don't have to play El Modena, Foothill and
Santa Ana ."The Panthers wtll feature a winged-T, as
McMahon did while a1 Villa Park and Anaheim with 172-
pound offensive hnes on the way to basically 500
seaM>ns.
The 1986 schedule· Sept 12-at Santiago (Garden
Grove); Sept. 18-Norco (home), Sept 26--at Katclla
(Cik>VCT tidium), Oct. >-Val t'ut (11 a odtu),
Ckt. IG-Canyon(home)k~ 17-Wood~(borM), Oct. 2..._..t Lquna · (Mission Vie.JO)~ Oc'\.
JO-Tnbuco Hills (home), Nov. 7-at Laauna Beach:
Nov. 14-Cos&a Meta (homo).
·Co.ta Mesa llaatanga ·
C.oecb 'ha BUI his third )nr at Mesa
and the numbers have iDCRUcd to 40 on d.e varsity and <tO on tb aopb &eam ••• 8ald • la spliuioa pncticc
into a onday· Wednaday-frida)' ay1tem for the vanity.
and"fuC'::t lbunday ror \be ioDhomon &earn, with &be • vanity hand11na·t»0lti •• :--Amoq-a&ldwm'a mm
" C.lld l>ecbr', dcfcmivc c:oordtnator. Dlq Brww..·
oflm ve line; JeM CarMJ;-lelOOOdat'",-; Jt. 8 11971 eo.P-!!omore line coach; Alf.~elr. spedt1 tcamaana line~; ind Pe Sadia;
qua.rtcrba<:b ... Three of Mesa's ~es will be at Oran., Cout COlle&e .•• Spnna practice will
continue until the end of tchool in
June . . • Amooa the ltlndoutJ
retuf11iaa: lld1b S,..,...._ the
tineMckcr who missed ~~Cl
with a btokeo ann is up io 6-0-20$.
Kc wu ICCOnd io ~ in the shot _e~~ ~ third in thedrieu. ... TJler
.,IUdftU (~ 160) baa added 20
pounds with the weiabts. He'll 8a14wtA
wntinue at runnina back and coroerbeck ... M.lb 8ldJe,
who cauaht nine puses for I SJ yards qailllt Estancia in the ICUOn-finate, returns.. He went 6-S in the bi&bjwn'pat
l1'ie CJF 3-A prelims ... Hile Cnwe (5-1 l, 110), 1 two-
year starter at wide ~ver and de(ensivc beck. is at
quarterback in Mesa•a pro offense •.•
Mlke DaJ, a 6-0, 2SO-pound auard and two year
starter, continues to be impressive ..• No ~ arc
planned for Mesa '1 SO defense ... Baldwin '1 fil'lt year at
Mesa fou.nd the Mustangs p>ina 0-9-1. The •35 team was
3-7.
Tbe 1986 schedule: Sept. 12-Estancia (at New_port
Harbor), Sept. 19-at Santiago (Garden·Grove), SCpl
26-Rancho Alamitos (Newport Harbor), Oct. 3-New-
port Harbor (at OCC), Oct. l 0--Corona del Mat (at NH).
Oct. 17-1..aguna Halls (al OCC), Oct. 24-at Laauna
Beach, Oct. 31-Woodbridge (at OCC), Nov. 6-at
Trabuco Hills (MiSSJon Viejo), Nov. 13-at Oranae (El
Modena).
Trabuco Billa Muatanga .
They easily qualify as the Pacific Coast League's
mystery team -even their coach, Jim Banett, doesn't
feel be bu a handle on bis team despite the fact be bas had
them for a year ... "Probably about half of last year's
startets will play," said Barnett u be pushed his squad
lhrouglt-.Rng practi()O ... we·~ tenina lBMfeB..U the
ume and ~ have biab hopes for ~ bunch of ,Lbcm,"
continued the fonner LoDJ Beach Poly~ ...
"Eventually I t1unk our ennre accondaty and off'cnsjvc
Linc will be revamped. •We have to depend on them
(transfers)." ... The Muft.ano went 2-8asajuruor varsity
team ID 1985 without benefit Of I seruor OD the SQuad.
thus Bamcn bas everyone back ... Among his top players
arc quarterback Bren Miller (6-1, 160) and tailback Ray
Wallen (5-9, 170) in a pro offense setup ... Jeff Dooley,
a 6-1 , 165-po~nd receiver, is Miller's favorite target ...
'
Dtftminly BUI Maprr (S-1. 190) hOWI prom' It
'lioeblcl.cr 11 well u acfcnsiv~ end lrlP G~ (6-}t 2.20) who 'doubles at offensive sUatd ••• Ba.melt • Ila
conmu of am OlebJ (Unebeckm~ AMJ ~· ...... (ddeoaivc bacb) o.., Mft'fff (de1msive Un ). ...
Orell fofTensive tlne) and Mile RM (quatte1'becu) · ·•
Dickey comet f'rom El Toro. Rae " & fonncr qu.artetblck •.. BameU. who ~ ~oty·~ coach. for 0Ye ~aid h '• reuonably happy with bis team• speed,
but in temu of abler lir.c the Muatan&S ari down.. •
The 1986 acbcdule: Sept. 12-&>utbcm ~lif OrDLI Oiriltian (home>: SepL 19-et Dana Hills; :Sept.
1"7-Rim of &he World (bo~~ ~t17B~CRidaccteSt); Oct. IG-tt Mt ; '""'"' :-....,.. .... 8cech (home)· Oct. 2.._WoodbridF (at lmnc); Oct.
»-Oranle (at Fl Modena); ~ov. 6 ~ta M~ Chome); rfov. 1 l-at t..aauna i-OUs (at MiS?ton Vie)~). buco HillJ• home pmca are played at Ml ion V1eJo
.) .
Woodbridge Warrion
Remember those 60-1 lonpbou io the Sea View
l.eque rue a~ aac>? Well, aftiT pabbi QI~ CJF ~ntral . CorifCTCDCe paayoff berth in '85, in addillon to a co-
cl:iampiomhip on the sophomore levd with Saddlebatk.
Woodbnds is the early favorite for Paa.fie Cout Leaaue
booot1 ... Coach GeM N•Jl'• Warriorutarted May 12 lnn
didn •t operate u a complete unit until th<: selCOJ'.!d or 1:hlrd
week ofsprina practice ..... We're cx~mennna with a
• few new lhinp." said Noii. "some play ut of the
droDback and ~ action." . . .
DcfC1111vdy, w blidac rcmai111
io a 4-4 ••. 1be 1ta.ff.reOW.n1 intact
with IJrt &anti &Ad Tom I.a .....
co-defensive ooordioato" Rid
GO.. (tight ends and defensive
liae) and Dave C.Wea (wide re-
oeiven ·and defensive ends) ...
Amona the retumina starters:
Linemeb DaTY c.lila (S.9, 20S)
and Job ~ (6-1. 220);
quarterback Joa.a Yukovtcai; _
wlbackDavh1Towuad(6-0, 185); ft..,.
wide receiver Marc Fert11, the son of funner USC
quarterbllck Crata.Fenq ... Itel .. Ra4ov~. 6-5, 220,
ma mo e from defooaive end to dcfen.sive tack.le. Paal
returns lo the secondary, as does Townsend
and urkovich. TownKnd it movina'from free to stron&
safety. The Warrion number SO strong. A newcomer of
note: defensive back Denid Odam, up from the
sophomores ... Noji plans no spnng pme.
The 1986 schedulc: Sept. 11-San Oemente (home);
Sept. 19-La QWnta (home); Sept. 16-at Un1vcnjty
(lrvinc); Oct. 3-Corona del Mar (home); ~·9 at
Estancia (Ncwpon "Harbor); Oct. l 7--at (El
Modena); Oct. 24-trabuco HjU1 (home); Oct. 1 t
Costa Mesa (Orange Coast)· Nov. 7-1...quna Hills
(home); Nov. t 4-at Laguna Beadr.{AtH10nle·pme'l"at
Irvine "lfagb).
Laguna Beach Artlata
Ced.rid Bmmu is conductin& aprin& practtct at
Laauoa Beach, but be dechnes to name any of his 1laff.
because as he puu ic "Whal I say now may not be true
in August." ... The Artists will defend with a 4-3 setup,
(Pleue eee SPRING FOOTBALL/BS)
Tommie Smith
barred-for year
SANT A MONICA (AP) -Tom-
mie Smith, wbo was banished from
the 1968 Olympic GarnC1 for raising a
&loved fist for black power on the
awards stand, bas been barred from
coacrung the Santa Monica College
track team for a year for allowing an
meJiaible athlete to compete.
Gentry Im.poster takes
show on the road, air
"l think the college has handled 1t
thenlht way," said Smrth, who won
an Of ympic gold medal at Mexico
City then ga vc his black power salute.
"It was the wrong th1na to do and l got
caught."
The athlete who was inch&iblc,
tnplc Jumper Delane Olden, was not
entirely cleared throuf.h the verifi-
cation process for cliJlbihty.· It was
revealed that, although he competed
as a freshman this year for Santa
Momca. Olden had competed in two
meets for Pasadena City College the
previous year.
"l tried to help the kid, l ended up
hurting him and other students."
Smith said.
From AP di1patclael
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio - A man cwmin& to be a
runnina beck for the Olicago Bean appeared on a local
teJcvisioo talk s~ow, got bis picture taken with the mayor,
saane<t dozens of autoaraphs and man•F"' to borrow
hundreds of dollars before the scam was diJcovered.
Police have been unable to locate the man, who posed as runruna
back DenrusGentry for several weeksdurinaApriland May. Poli<%say
they want to talk with the impostor, but no criminal complaint has been
ftlod.
The unpostor surfaced in Younaslown on April 13 when be
telephoned Nathan Oark., president of People ftailying Around
'Younptown -PRAY -and offered his help. The group is attempting
to mold a coalition· of churches. busfocascs, civic aroups, labor and
aovcrnment to stimulate ccopomic recovery in the city.
The man identified himself as Gentry and said be had learned
about PRAY from Garcia Lane, a Younptown native who plays
defensive back for the K.anw City Chiefs.
"He knew mo~ about the team (the Bears) than a sports fan
would," Clark said.
Quote of the clay
France's Yau.lck Noala1 on his laser treatment to a foot fn~ury that caused him to wtthdraw from the French Open: "I
think the treatment WIS very aood. When the doctor used it, I
didn't realize be was burnin& me. He told me to tell 'him if it was
too hot, but it didn't feel th.at bot to me."
Norman wins Kemper In •udden death
$500,000 K.emper()pen golf tournament in Be&heada, Md. Founder
John Gardner
Endorses
Jon Brand
Gre1 Normu sank a two-foot putt for par on the sixth !I
playoff bole Sunday to defeat Larry M1.le and win the
Norman's final putt was merely a formality after Mize put
rus approach shot into the water aod tbco dropped his next shot into
another water b.azard on tbc other tide of the peen. Norman earned
• $90,000 and Mize collected $54,000 after the lonaest playoff on the pro
tour since the 1983 Pb<M!oix ~ went eiabt extra holes ... Halfway
toward a arand slam of women 1101.f 1 four ~or events this year, Pat
'BrdleJ said h would be difficult but not impo11ible. "It's a touah
chance, but if I'm halfway I'll aive it my best to brin& it all the way
throuab," Bradle.Y said after caplurin& her 1COOnd consecutive m~or.
tbe $300,000 LPGA Championship, at the Jack Nicklaus Spons Center
in Mason. Ohio.
Bell, Stuck, Holbert win at Le Mana
LE MANS, France -World endurance champions •
Derck Bell of Bri&ain and West Ocrman Hans Stuck. Ilona . tor
•
with American Al Holbert, won the S4th Le Mans 24-Hour
classic Sunday io a race marred by the death of Au1tnan
driver 1o Gartner.
Shonly before the halfway point. about 3: IS a.m. local time
Sunday, Gartoe,.1 Poncbe c::ruhed at 1 hiah speed, turned over and
bunt into flame , iQjurina him falally. The caU.C of the 1«1dent wu
nol known.
It was the fourth Le Mana victor;r for Bcll, who said it was "one of
my best races here, in a fanwtic car. Tbc triumph wu the ltCOnd for
Holbert and the fim for Stuck
Jon BrJ11d has served his comnuity as Mayor of Lafllla Beach, President of the C~vic Learue and President of the Greenbelt. Loulalana St., Okl•homa St. adYaDce
Comments Brand: "I have taught at Orange Coast College for over twenty years. The
initial growth that helped our community is now hurting us; too many cars, too much
commercial development, too much crowding, just too much. It is time for new,
energetic leadership in the Fifth District.''
Paid for by Vote
The Brand Committee
1368 Cerritos Et Jon Brand
Laguna Beach, CA for County Supervisor
OMAHA, Neb.-Jefl'Yuttin went 4 for4, hat his I Otb' a
home run of the ICUOD and drove in five runs io lead
Louisia.oa St.ate to an 8--4 victory over Maine Sunday in ao
elimination pme at the NCAA Cott* World SeriC!I..
In the teCOnd climinauon round pm Rob Walton and Gordie
Dillard combined for a aeven-hit sbuiout u founh-ranked Oklahoma
State stopped lndiana State, 4-0;
Televblon, radio
TELEVWON
7:l0f..m. -B.SDALL: New York Yankees at An&cl
Channel .
IUDIO ·•;JO p.m. -B £B&U.• Ood&en at Pb ladclpbia, KA
(790)
7;30 p.m. -BAIEBAU.: New York Yanktts at ta.
KMPC (7l0). •
• I
·~
r
SPRING FOOTBALL FOR AREA PREPS ••• ~ n .~
but H~,man aivea the oRen.e no pen;cular dcf'emive tine; Jim Oodo••klt runnioa backs; Jim Welcla, norimenc: t~. 11.auna, .. h'1 JU & buic football w1th linebackers; lay McCarty, oncntive Une. AU arc walk-on
va .ou! ICta and runnina and throwiq." •.. Amoq the. a J~nts ., • Wein~ still hu hopes of lddin1 to ht1
AttiAll !!. IQ'lid. which belan 1priq_practice on May r, are 11atr,· which includes on-c.mpus coaches at the lower ~ View Leaaw nmnini back-linebacker JtutMtl lcvc11 .•• "It was a ruJ touah auuation last year," S&1d
T .. 41, all·leaaue choice Seaa W~. "The school tw never bad a ~ •!n>na MIMMJ at defhlivc laC.k.le and r,:n and we were down 1 lirtle, and the South Coast
center, aJl-lequo aarery ant wu very suona." ... A mona a tumoul oearina .SO:'
Dldenoa, halfback WY MeJen. Unebacker-auard (S-11 , 170) RM B~. defensiYc
6-41 216-pound Pele SmJ-. at u,ht tack.Jc (6-1, 220) David Betalaanlt and offen11ve alW<!
eno (he'll be a Junior) and Duo9 (~. I 9S) Oony Petter The Hawks are switchina to a
Dondl at wide receiver. Todd it shortpua~,cmcandWtlobetaeri1takin&•loo.k1tlut
5-1 l th. 210 . • . Sprina practice year'• qua ck., Pat BactMy, and aft• Lel&1*, who
continues until the end of the school 11 up frOm the sophomore team ... :rhe Hawks lia"e eaht
lcar, but with no spring pme . . . rctumina 11.1rters.. two on defentc, aix on 9ffen~~ 6ut
We're just findina the riaht at-Weioberltr wd ·•That's strctchin& it. Two or three we~
•• ---...;: titude to play the ,.m,e and tryiq to pan-timers." ... Tbe defense rcnial1111iabte with an even
--·create some habits that it takes to front ... Sprina practice W\ll continue five days a week
etay succeufully," said the second-year Hardman. with the sprinf, aame June 13 00 the Hawks' campus .•.
We're just doina a ltttlc billy stuff now andJ>layin& it by On the PCL • I think we'll be compctibvc. Pretty much
ear. They 1eem to think there .-a parity m the (new) everyone ts in the same boat. Woodbridae is a rolid lcaaue now," adds Hardman. "I auesa that's jud&ed by pf'Olt&m."
enrollment. Suppo5Cdly we're all 1n the same nei&h-The 1986 schedule: Sept. t 2-at Dana Hills; Sept
borhood and everyone seems to have 1 S0-50 chance. 18-Estlncia (home); Sept. 26-at San Oeniente; Oct W~'reJustsettinaourown bou.ae in order." ... Hardman 2-Univenity (bome);"'Oet. IO-M1u1on VieJo (home);
wd be has 40-SO players out for •Print practtc.e. Oct. 17-at Costa Mesa (OCC)· Oct. 25--0ranJC (home);
Hardman'• fint year produced a 3-7 record. reversed Oct. 31-La:auna Beach (bome\;Nov. 7-at Woodbndge
becawe of three forfeit lo~ due of an administrative (lkine); Nov. 13-Trabuco ff ills (homo). (All home
en-or. games at Mission Viejo Kiah).
The 1986 schedule: Sept. 12-at El Seaundo; ~-
19-La Scma (bome); Sept. 26-DanaHills(home);Ocl. Mater Del .. o·narc""'-3--at Valley Christian; Oct. 10-at San Ocmcnte; Oct. 1U! .u.
17-at Trabuco Hills (Mission VieJo); Oct. 24-Costa
Mesa (home); Oct. 31-at Laauna Hills (Mission Viejo),
Nov. 1--0ran&e (home); Nov 14-Woodbndgc: (home).
Laguna Hilla Hawb
After servmg u an aide at Servile Hi&h. Paul
Weinberaer isn 'l used to 0-10 seasons. In fact be'U tell
you. "f do not thin.le anybody 1s used &o that." ... He
t>e&ins bis second season at ~na Hilk with a staff
composed of Jolla TFJ•, defensive backs; Tom Garcia.
C'laack Gallo rctwns for b1s third year as the
Monarchs' coach. but the focal pomt lS on who isn't
rctumma (QB Tom Marinovacb transferred to ~po
Valley) and who'll replace him .. Working at that spot an
sprina practtcc as '85 backup Mllle CVtals (pronounced
Curtis), 6-1; 170, along with 6-3, 175-pound Maril
Ram1tack, a converted flank~r and also a strong
candidate to assume the point on the basketball team ...
Arnona the standouts rcturnina are center Paul De Bono
( 6-4, 260); receiver Jtm O'Brlee, ( 6-l , 180, and 5 7
receptions as a Junior), Toay Rocee(6-3, 210)at ughtend,
Matt Spence ( 6-0, 190); a second team All-Angelus League
ANGELS·TOP ORIOLES ...
From Bl
Howell doubled home two more.
.. You do bear down a ltttle more
when they walk someone to get to
you," wd Grich. "You're more
determined to make it hurt. .
"I talQd to (Orioles' Maeaser) Earl
Weaver Friday and be asked me bow
I was doina and I said OK. but I
wasn't dnving in runs," said Grich." l
wu thinkm& about that con venation
on my way to the plate. I'm sure Earl
was thinlrina about it, too, and that's
why he walked Hendrick to get to
me." ·
For that reason and perhaps the
,CdM, Estancia,
Me.sa alums run
About 400 persons watched or took
part in the Newport-Mesa Unified
School Dtstnct alumni track and field
meet Saturday at Newport HaTbor
Ht&h.
Graduates of Corona del Mar,
Costa Mesa, Newport Harbor and
Estancia competed in what or-
pniz.en hope to be the first of an
annual alumni meet.
Corona del Mar grads captul'Cd the
400 meter f:.~(, in a quick 45.8;whale
Estancia's es finished second and
Newport's alums were third.
fact Hendnck hit a home run tn the
second innina (e11:tend1ng his hilling
~trcak to.six pines).
Even with the five runs the Angels
scored in the eighth, the three runs the
.orioie.-j()Wn..lhc. runth c-OUJd nfl~IA
been pmc winnen 1f Wau bad ~
bailed himself out of a Jam lD the
fourth.
He gave up one-out smglcs to
Murray and Beniquez. walked Young
and went 3-0 to Shelby
He threw two fastballs to run the
count to 3-2, before lhro"'.)ng one of
his patented curve baits, which
Shelby beat into the ground. Witt
fielded and got a force play at home.
"I knew the ball was my play and
that I was going to go to home with the
ball." said Win. "Tb.at was the pivot.al
play of the game. Tb.at is the 1nnmg
I'm either goina to fet knocked out or
go on and do well.'
ANORL NOTSS -Oftplte lht Nin of t
Nrtllll'f -•ltd ~. ow. OtClillcel
wn baCk In "" llne-1<9 SA#ldlav, "'°"911 at ~ltd l'llttw O.Clneet recel'led • cortboN
OIOI •• nP«ttd, bur .. n ,... COYld 119 baCk lfl 1111 1'"9uP T~v • lefor• IClfll9tll'1 oama
aoalnsl Int Yef!k-· ...... .MdlMll wlM be
CM'ttanltd wllll • .._ honoflnt his 537111 l'IOme run bv Mktl.W MM99, Ille men M PHMd I«
No. ' on '"' al-tltne ht •. TM ••v ht ha• bMll 111111no and NVllll IN lltid, W... ~ has
Deefl tavor.btv ~eel lo Illa Yana ... • flrsr
bat«Nll and 1"5 AL. MVP 0. _.....,. Wllh
l'MlllnltY In tor ~....,,,. ....... ....,, ,, '"'
11a11111c111 br•l\down on "" two ltv'OUOfl S.tur • ClaY's .. ,,.. CEedl met1 hM Nved Ill .. 41 ol "'' ._,,., ""*) Ave #MttlnlltY • .m, Jovner, .lOS, home runs· ~ 16, Malllnlfv 7, lt8t:
JOVMt ''· Malllnelv 3', "''' Malllnotv "· Jovner 60, lotW belts JOVMt \ 1', Mal!IMIV 103;
.. Or9nge Comt OAlLY PILOT /Mond9y, June 2. 1911 i* 81
.....................
Coeta Maa lllCb ~ lllke Crow
(rlfld) pttchee oal fo II.Ike BsJpenld •
selection 11 a aopbomore; and the only reiwn.iaa
defensjve sta.'1ef, Jeb ~. a 6-2., 18S..-pouoder
mo vi na from free to stron1 ailety ... Oallo bas 88 out for
the vanity, 145 in the tow propam. ~·u finiSh up
June 5 with a Scattet.SiJvcrOamc at the Santa Ana Bowl
with the sopbomoret aoioa at S and the vanity at 6;30
The Monarcht will retum to the Santa Ao.a Bowl au tunes
10 the fall, u well u two appc:aran<ltl at Oranie Coast
Collqc. Gallo lost unat&.Dt Tim Tt•, who left to uai.lt
former Mater Dei Coach WaYM Ccdru at Rubidoux ..
. but be replacled bim with former Servitc offensive
coordinator BM ·M.QfteW. Mayfield is the l'C(:eiven
coach and is joined by long-timeGalloaides Pat Calla•••
(defensh'e coordinator and e.saistaot. head coach) and
Dave R l .. (offensive coordinator and oO"msive llne).
as well u BarU&u (outs1de li.oebacken); ~ Scklf
(seco , Denb Marplay (defensive lane); Erk ToGe1
(backfield ; &J)d Cral& Wlulqlteff, (ofl'cm.ive l.tne). All
·a.re on-campus teachCT1.
The 1986 scheduJe: Sept. 12-et Fountatn V&lley
(OCC); Sept. 18-Sanll Ana Valley (at Santa Ana Bowl);
Sept. 26-SantaAn.a(atSantaA.na Bowl); Oct. 2-Editoo
(San.ta A.na Bowl); Oct. 10-at Huntiqton Beach (OCC);
Oct. l 7-at St. &ma.rd; Oct. 25-St. Paul (Santa Ana
Bowl), I p.m.; Oct. 31-at Bishop Amat; Nov. 6-Bishop
Montgontery (Santa Ao.a Bowl); Nov. I 3-at Servtte
(Sanl8 Ana Bow~).
MV TRIATHLON •••
h'Omlll
ln aaesroupdimions, Paul Kahkr, u On.oat Cout ~student from HuntiDcloo Beacli. won tliie 20.24 d.Jviaion wttb a time of 2:02: 1 (2.ftb overall).. • Also, Carter Brown, a m1ddJo.dist1noc: ruADCr (or
Corona del Mar Kiah. pined ICOO:pd-placc boD9R in tho
1S-l9 diviaion ~'t overall). N~ ~ 's Andrew Millet . ( l 7t.b overall in
1:57:33). CJcorae Yates of Corona del Mar(3111 overall io
2:04:04) and Scott Cb.eeaemao ofHuoti.Qlton Beach (~th
overall at 2:04:37) were amona the l)rofessionaJ com-
peti.ton. ·
The race raised S64,000 for the Performi.na Ans
Center.
INTO
The mile relay team out of Harbor
took first place in 4:01.3, whale the
Eqle alumni were a respectable
second (4:03.6) and Corona del Mar
was thLrd.
.. ,, • .,... "'"' 1N11'"9lv n. NYne1 n. 11uoo1ne _.cen1aw Jovner 519, Malllnolv Sii Mattlno·
tv. '#hO -"" ltlS Gold GloYt, NI vet lo
make an err« In 19", Wfllll Jovner "'' medt
·llVM.
CLASSIC CAR DISPLAY
The Daily PilB has a new way to
turn your Hidden Treasures into CASH
with a $7.60 Classified Ad.
FROM THE FAMOUS
CONCANNON'S HORSEl.FSS STABLE, INC.
.
TUESDAY·SUNDAY, JUNE 3rd · JUNE 8th
MISSIOII VIEJO MALL
DAILY
DINNER SPECIALS
, All dally dinner specials served with
soup, salad, choice of potato
and dessert.
Monday (Served 3-10 p m )
Fried Chicken
(Half-a-chicken)
Tuesday (Served 3-10 p m )
$3.35 -.
Brochettes of Beef $3.95
Wednesday (Served 3-10 p m.)
Teriyaki Steak $4.55
re ayme t
4 Lines..-7 Days---$7.60
No changes In copy or cancellation. ,
Private parties only. No Commercial, Real Estate or Employment Ads.
There is no price limit to what you can advertis~.
If you need to sell your car, boat, couch, high chair or any unused
merchandise-call the ·Daily Pilot Classified staff or use the coupon
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AD COPY : 4 line minirfrum, approximately 4 wor:ds per line.
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' EXPIRATION DATE:_
Are you a subscriber to the Doily Pilot? circle ont YES I NO
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•
..
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NATtOlfAL UIAGUa ........ 11.~
LOtAN9tl.... ~ .. ,.... ..'"" •Otl ....,... ''T' •••• ~tf •••
" Angel, Dodger schedules ~ ., .
MA.IOtl L&AGU• ITAHDUtOS ~L.-..
'4 e Gt. IOMICf U I e
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wen DfYUIOtt
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CIMCMo 1' " ., 411) ~·· It . )0 -$\'a S..llte " 31 -6
•AST DfVISM>M
ea.ion JJ 15 • New Yon ll 11 W 1~
lelllrnor9 • It SH ·~ MhW!l.. ,. 2l $ 11 I"'
~ 1• t• .SOI f
o.tn111 ,, n . • ' TorOl'ltO t) 21 4'0 II
.... .,,, $CiWel
_,.. 1. lklfimon •
Clllw!Md f, Mllw.uk" 1
Clllc.Ho 6, TOt"OlllO • Bolloft 6, ~,. ,
K811H1 Cttv 5:.tTexu 3 Hew Yori! 1, Utlk .. ncl I
S..1111 f, Detroit I
T"9ya GtilNt
Hew Yoni (Wiii~ 4 1) al Melfa (S .. lon ... ,,,,
Mlnnftora '81Vllvtn 4 •I •• Toronto (C .. ncv
$ J), n
Clevellncl IHNton 1·•1 •I &otron lloyO 6·31,
n
Teu1 IHouotl 1·1) et Clllea9o (Cow...., 1·11,
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• tl-4t ltevnolclt, S.11, lthOOlft. ltoc*, lrMm.
»--NtorrlMfl Hlt~rocti 1Sl1 ~ (I), $N001 (7) Sa--<>ullcM Cn J ~,,..,_,Owt--, "" . 1f' HlllU Nto .... ~
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N'""""' t ·J 2 J ) 2 1
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ltlloden W,4-J t J I •
UITIPlr.-+iome, MotltNUe, Flrtl, Wtver;
S.Cond, R-.!; Tlllrd, 8r~telldlt
T-l'°'-A~,5)0 "·
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(I f Ol'MM. Na)
SW.Y"• SC.. Loultl. St•lt e. ~ 4
Olltellome Stai. •· 1""'-na Start O T....,..,..,_
LoVOlt·~I U•IJ) n Arl1-l4'·lll .,.....,,.o-
....... Roytb, 11:35 ,. ........... 1:06
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•
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a.iclF It .... 1 35 ~ltMl.3 . .lS
2
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I
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12
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DMlwt et IB-. 2 40
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21
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Detroit <,._try •·•I 11 O.k .. no ICodlroll J-6>. ,, Ml~t. Fla. (a ·Ul YL Flotldll Sre lt Ul·lll • 1 I 10 11 12
HOU a Ion
......... LM9Ue wan DfVWON
W L ··~
21 19 S9'
26 " 531 ) S.n F rencltto
Ati.nre 2S 23 '21 3'" s.n Dla9o o..rs Cinclnn.aJI
,. 2• 500 • ...,
13 77 "° , . ., 11 77 400,
N-Yortt
MonlrMI
Pf\)~
C11tc.oo
F'111a1>urol\
SI t.OUll
lAST DfVIMOft
31 IJ
2' 20 11 , ••
20 2'
II 2S ti '7
SUftd9V'I ~ F'ttt11>uro11 12 o.dlw\ J
l"tlti.cM4t>llte "· S«t o~ s !It Loult 2. Clncln!\811 I
ClllUllO 7, Alt.lite 3
~,, Fr•l'ICIKO 7. New Yor-J
Houtron I, Monlreel •
TMIV'I Geme\
70S
S6.s
461 us
419
400
' 10•.,
12
171.>,
l)\'1
~ Ul.e..l.u 2·lLaJ PbllaQW>nla !Rawi.v 'o. n S.n Diego (HOVI 2· 11 ., Ntw Yor• Gooo.n
'21 n C~ CS<lrcllflt 3·61 11 C1nc1nn•ll
I G ulllcl<,J011 • 4) n
F'llt\l>Urllh CR~ l·•I er Ala.nl• tF'a•me<
)•41. n
SI LOUii Ill.Id« •·JI a l HoWIOll I~
I II. n
AMERICAN L•AGUIE
...., 7. °"'*' 4
II.AL TIMOR• CAUl"ORNIA
•rllbl aorllbl W1001ns 2b
LKV r1
All>ll911 n
Murrav 11> o,.,.,. dll
8~QUf)I>
MAVonoll
~d
ltevforO c ~1-tt Of! T.._..
S 0 l 0 F'1lll1 d 4 I I 0
S .0 1 o Jovn« II> 4 7 2 1
1010 Oown!netf 4 111
•010 O.Cnc1dll •010
4010 ~dlr1 )211
4 I 2 0 Grleh 7b ' 1 2 2 )112 SchofllOu )JOIO
• 1 2 2 JKHowl ll> l 0 1 1
3000 8oonec lOOO
0 I 0
)6 4 11 4 T...,t
kar• t>v '"'*'-' n 110 1
......._. 001 ooo m -4
c:..MwNa ,010 001 QS.-7
Gpme Wlnnlf'IO 1181 -Jovner t71
O~alllmo.-e I (a1tforr11a 2 LO&-.. 111
more 9. Ce1ttor11I• S 2&-Grlell, Oownlno
JKHO"fell Hllt-HenOrk:k (1), Sftd)y 2 13)
Jovn«t17l.MA YounoUI S-JIC Howell
llJ H It •Ill ea SO ......._..
1\1\CGrlfO( L •· 4 &o<OI '
~
7
I ' I
MWlll W.S·• 10 4 I
Cortltll S.S I I 0 0 1 0
McGr-P•lcr.d to l l>allen II• ,,,. '"' M
h ilt pitched IO 4 ~11 .. l In lhe '"' Umlllr.s-+fomt, CoClll Flrt l, Mc(Mllland
Second Denio lnoar. ThirO 1tt111., T-24' A_.7.4
Narron
lack ion
JOVMf
Downlno
Grlcl'I
8urlfton
Hen<!r O
oNlttono
Sc"OI~
J-
Petl••
'>.C111•n &oon• How_.
orn.,,
T .... 1
.,,....WA9"
(lllrwtlll SUftd9V'1 __ ,
llATTING
AIS It H HR ..... <1
11 l • 0 m n JI 1
201 ls n 11
169 lO so s 17 ll 16 ,
10s u >0 1
IOI 11 2' 1
106 IS ?to 1
121 16 )7 s 110 17 ,, ,
ISi 17 >7 1
179 IA .0 S
137 " tt 2
6 0 I 0
~) • ' 0 1"4 :Ml ... S7
!JfTCHING
4 333
ti 311
47 .)QI ,. 294
• 2"
10 2t6
17 17'1
13 264 .. , ..
16 74S
11 23.4 ,, m
., , 11
, 161
l 209 m 2'7
t!J H 911 SO W·L EllA
Niii I• 11 JO 69 S 4 3 31
Cort>all 16 1t 1 14 0 I l 46
FIKl\el' 2 ., l 0 2 0·0 ) 16
M<CHl<llt 69 'J 61 )0 '3 4 l 319
ltor"Mr1k• SI'' 51 77 7S l 1 4 lO ~·••on 60 '> ~ n 7S 4 4 4 61
I" OUI.. 18 I) 7• ] 14 ) 1 4 t1
8 rv04t!I 21 h 2S 17 22 7 I • t 4
M<>Or• 19 14 t U 1 l HI
\ullon 4'1"'1 61 t 26 7 S 1 OS
F noev I 2 ) I O· 0 II 00
Ca"Clel•rla 2 4 1 0 0-0 11 00
/)Iller\ 11 74 10 I) 0-1 t SJ
Tt1111t UO 441 172 .. '4-2S Ul
\•vet Moore 7, CC>ftlllf $. Font .. I, Other1
NIA ~LA~l'P:S
.. ._ ... 106, C.rlla 104
90STON ( lM) -lk'd 10.U S-S U. McHall
12· 1' •-6 21, F'wl\l't l · 15 2·11, Alnoe 6· 11 0-0 lJ,
~ 6·11 t-1 20, Walton S-7 0-0 10, Kitt 0-0
0-0 0 $lctllkl9 0-1 0-0 0, Thlrdll,. H 0-0 0
Total1 42-M l't-71 I~
HOUSTON llt61 -MCCrav •·I •·• 12, 0..11.twon 7·11 f·ll 23. ·~"'9t0/I t ·14 .,_11 24,
LIOvO S· 14 4·6 14, lltkl 7· 16 S· S 20, Peteoen 0-0
0-0 0, Wloolnt 4·S 0-1 I, McOow .. 0-0 0-0 0,
LMvell 2·6 1-1 STole/1 3111 2't·lt"106
Sc-. bV Qu41,_,
~ron 2't JO 2S »-lOI
Hou11on 33 2't 11 26-106
Tllret·POlnt 00.11-Alnoe. lltlO Fouteo
our-NON llet>ound1-8o1ton S7 (81rO UI.
~~ ~ m •u11u-ao.•on 21
!Bird 11), Houtlon 2t IRtlO t i Total
tools-tlcKlon 27 HOUtlOll t) Ttcllnl·
c..1-+tou1lon Co.tfl Fllcl!, Klla, ao.1on 1-.i
Clefwlw.. Alltndanee 16,016
NIA PL.A YOflflS
OWNIMlllNI» .....-. , ... , .. _,
HOUSTON VS. IOlTOM
• (,,, 99IM' "' ClwtMlf 1)
Boilon 112, Houtlon 100
Boiton 111, Houttoo ts
Houston 106, to.ton IOI I 8011on ~ Ml'lft.
2 1)
T~v -Boi~ at H0\.11lon, 6 Pm
T~v -llo11on •t Houlton, • Pm
Sundev, Juoe I -Houtron ar &otton, 10 • m
Ot ,_...,.rvl w~v June 11 -t10u11on •1 BoilOll, 6
o m (If MClft'6NI
All llmet F'OT
T•NtHS
~°"" Cet~)
TOOAY'S ••SULTS ,,_... '-"" .... s-....
fltnrl LtcOnlt (Fr•n«) dtf Hortelo di ..
F'.ne (AroenllMI. 6·1, 6·2 ... , w_., ou.,...... Mlltltl
'""" E...,, LIC>yO (U s I .,.. C•rlino 8auall !US I, S-7, 6·2. 6 I
W NDA Y't •nuL TS ,,_.., nir.I 111.-ld ~
8orl1 e.cklf' IW.st G .. rNnv) def Ellor
TallK'-IU.S ), 6-3, 6·l , S·1 6·•
Mttrla '~ •--.~ J~n Kriek (US l dtf Y•Mlc:St No.II
<France>. dtfeuo, Anclr.s Gomer 1Ecu.6orl dtf
Utf SrentvnO !Sweden), J S, 1·6 11 4), 4·6. 3·6.
6·4, Guillermo Vllat tAr.-ntl"8), dtf. Guv
For~t (Fr4nc11 t.·7, 3·6, 4 6, 6-1, I-lo, lv•n
Lendt ICl~t.lovel<le) dtf Oamlr l<lf'tlic
(We11 GartNnvl •·I, 6 7, •·• w.._., ,_,.. Ill_.., Sir-.
Martina Nnrallle>va IU S I dtf IAIKa Gar
rona lllelV) .. 1, 6·2, NtMy Joe F .. Mndll (U S I
def Ctei.c1i. KOfldt·K•tdl (W.st Glf'rNnvl, 7·6
7 S Kattly .. !Nldf IU S I dtf Catarina Llndovlsl
(Swedlft), 6·•, retired, .....,,. Sukcwa IC1ec.l'lo-
•10vaklal. dtf Kalt1'1na Mllltva 18UIO•r1a ) 3-• 6-4 6·1
WMd GUii NCC«
~V'•kw.1 8•ull 1 \oa1n O
Fr•nca 1 C•"8da 0
TM11¥"aG-
Group A -l•I P~ Ma•kol -Arvenllna
VI Soultl KOl'H
GrOUP C -(al L~ Ma•ICOI Soviet Union
YI H~N
GrOUP F -(al Monrerre., Ma•lcol -..,,._lld .. , Morocco
..... II .. Jeys. 10-35
Pvataat ....... 1:05
H•wMCI hr'll
SUNDAY'S •HULTS Ulat .. '1·•¥ llWIU ..... Ud ,_..,..) ,.ST ltACe. I~ mlltl
8outlclno 8ull-(Ken!)
Sir Siar ISlbllle)
Mark In Ttte Sb IMcHerouel
T~ 150.4
J•COMD ••c• Oo.e mUe
HO 00
S.00
ltefutlecl (0...houu..,.•I
8111lkln CSlbltll)
SareMnl Gtraro csrevenu
Time 1;37
1290 140 S:IO
1400 •to uo
U DAILY DOUaL• 12· 111 NIO I l1J 40
Tl4•D lllACa. 6 tur~1
T°"ltt Envov IMcCarronl
AP9f'lfllncl IOllver.sl
PeQu1 ( Slt>Ule)
Tlmt 110•
•40 3 20 300 ) 60 3.00 soo
n axACTA 11·31 oeld ll•to
,OUttTH •Ac•. One mlla
T .... ~edl (F'tncev)
Oouble Deficit ( SttYlnt)
FltlhOl'PI Merlntr I ToroJ
Time 13'1
720 uo llO
)40 JOO uo
U •XACTA CH I o.IO 15250
"l'TH •AC•. 1 II 1' mttet on tilt"
F'al'1l APC*M (Toro) l 00 2 20
lalde IMcCarron) 7 40
Flvlno Girt ISte~•l
Timi 141.2
U •XACTA ll·SI oelO J1' '°
2 10
2 10
210
MXTii RAC•. 6 turlonQs
The GrMI $Nr11 tPncvl
811nl<.,.a (Sltv8"1)
Norquln (Solo)
S60 400 )60
440 310
1100
Time 1:10.•
U UC.ACTA l•HO) oelO '5200
S•VaNTH ltAC•. I'"' mttet on tur1
Iron LNdtr (Toro) 11 40 6 00 3 90
Nonno IMcH.,Out) ) 20 12 40
S\ICCftlful lldder (Oelal'IOutM'fl) ) 90
Timi IAA
U •XACTA 13·1) PllO 1117.00 n l'tCK sue 111 or s-1-1 Of 3·4·l > 11etc1
IS.1" 60 to 33 wl/INno lk:Ufl 16 hortn)
ConlOlellon Piek Sis petcl 11'3 to IO 113 tlekel• IS
l'IOnK)
•IOKTM •ACa. Ona mite F'reclslofllat CMcCerron)
Suoer Diamond (Plncav Jr I
$kvw•llltr (Sltvtfla)
Time 1.33.3
U IXACTA (1 4) t>alO IS~50
NINTH •AC•. One mitt
Ko*"-r• (F'tnuvl
Ulll!Nte Pltewre (V•lef'lzuetel
Jon 0 lltectt I
Time 1;l6 1
U aXACTA 11 II P41tcl 157 50
"'"~ )1,GCM
3: JOO 240
120 J eo uo
t.00 llO HO uo 290
S>O
Misc.
M11.-Vtele Tr1d1Mn
NO DMStOH
Mell
1 Scoll Tlntev, l.4UO, 2 Oennv llenti.1,
I 44 •S. 3 Emilio De Soro, 1.A7•. • lloei.rt llltlodteu I 47 1J, 5 Mitri< Mont_,....,, t 47 3',
6 St•~ MC.Mu<6o. 1 4' Cl, 1 Goraon Duff
1 ., 49, I T onv A<ltlf I 4f S1. ' G•rv Petlf'tOn.
I SO-ll. 10 Mll<t F loo, l SO-S7 w-t Cot+Mn Cannon, I S7 '3, 2. Elaine At1ru1 I~ 17, ) Lii Vllel, 1 St 57. 4 F'•uta NewburV
Fruter, 2 .. 1:241, S Linda Ja.,...1, 2-oH7, 4 ROClln
Oavl1, 21ll 031 1 Cerol K-. 2 1U2, I Vldtlt
M«r•. 2.1S:Cl2.' Oon111 Lte Cl\adwkk, 1.lS.51.
-m.1;.1u111;u19.1mrx.t1i~.1r-:-----------------
·ouL T SOFTBALL
Cttv ef N....n ... di
WOMSN
MeftcleY'• • · l Lo.-....
' I t! C:W-Oel Mllr Hi.fl)
Jt11Q11 Ou11aw1
"'nclenr ~r1,....
Mull'I WMCM
ioe•1 aer ~ Gr11
81aC~ll\
&a,.,.....uoes
MMll9V'l C·J L .. _
lat •eltl!IUff, H..,,... Hltfl)
~11r1a1 C:.lrt1
Anc110r1
Eaav Sit~
ColumOle Aneta
luffalO Clllelia T"' MlsOI\
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13 ltaUI BoeMI, l ra1M, Ho n, LOla·Cos•
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(14), ..... 112.
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112
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Cotwortll, 161 i.ot, 15t m , t!Klrlcal (10),
la..t6'
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C01wortfl. 16'1 i.Pt, 142 41$3, runnlno 1171
•.362 It R·lto«Nrto Mor-. lrHI, Ho t, Lolt
Cotworttt, 1511 .. ,,., 144 131 atotlMd Oii court.I
()2), 112..)00
20 It JKCIUff V'MtntUYt, C..Mdl, Ho 11. Mtrct1·Co1-1t1, 154 leDt, 160«11, 9l'9lne 1151.
ltl,612
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2l 0-V OnMla, S.nte AIWI, No 25, M¥Cfl
luldl, lM ..... 1.._..,, '9ftltloft (16), 17',712
2• A J l'OV1, HO\llton, No 141, Mtf'dl
C:O.wort11; IU left, 16t 191, l>r•kM encl Dll aHll (JI), ,,,, 12
JS llldl V0911f',·l~a. No 6, MMdl•
Cotwor1fl, IJ2 IM6, 1711 .. , cr•tlt (t7), Jt0,5'2
2' GtorM Wdtf, ~. No. '4
l#Mdl Co.worm. 110 a-, 14020. lenltton 1311, .... 162
11 JoMnv F'.,_, lrOWMllurf, Ind, Ho ts,
IMrdl-COIWOt'lfl, 100 ..... 19• a., CV lolnt .no
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21 TOllV ... I~, ~'• No 16, Mtrcll•Cosworffl, 11 ...,., llU .. , Ylllve (181.
117,712.
2f Jim Crtwford, koti.nd, No. Jl, Merell•
lutdl. 10 llM, IM"'· lle9d M.ul (U). lt$,W
)I) koll lleY'IOfl, Ctldwtt9', ~.No 11,
M«Cfl·lutdl, " ""· Wfllt, ·~ 113), J11,2'2.
Jl lt·"'9 I("'"", 1Mt9MMll1, Ho 0 , 1'1•
M#(fl· C:O.worltl. " .... ' 117 1 ". tnelflt. (2•>. ••tt 12 Mllrlo An*tttl, N.awtttt. ,. , No 2,
LAlll·C"wwltl, 1' -.. IOOKJ. """"' IJO), sn ,012
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..... Helll'ner. Mer'tlur >C•4TJ, .. '-'• .... • La L.lftdlt¥, , __ ......... l ""'
Mlllr, c.n.-o, ...... '3..... ""' ,,.,...... ' ,.,,....., • -..: .,. ,,-Mlllt ,,,,_, C..,, .. ._., U.M t. ,._ ~
HttMln *IX T"1111 a II.a J kflMldlr, ~ ........... ..
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M&M
100-1 l•lll1c10etu (COront ._Mitt), \06, 2 Oemar1 (CdM), IOA; ). $._... (CilM), ID.I
no-1 a.lllldoGlu (CdM), 24.1; 2. , .... ICCIMI. JU ; ). Vendlll ('"""-1 Hw11orl, 2U ...._1. ~ (NH), 5'.l, 2. Sc:Mltl (NH), J71. > w.,_.-fCdMl. 1U
--1 Turn« (NH), i'a.l; 7 ltWNY (fljH),
2 l9J, 3 kfw'lllll Clhl~). tj:t
~I Voune ICollll MIMI. Ul.1,. t
Ho'Qnl CCN\I, .-.Jt I; J ~(NH), ~
2·..nn-1 YOUlll (CM), .. ~. 2 Tur"tr
INH), ""-•· l V11\$1041 (NH), lHI 7 130 Ht+-1 t<•v (NH), 1S7; 2. "'-'Ce IEI, lU , 3 Ev~J (NH), 16.1
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416, 3 lhr1111 (El. CU.
400 r ... r-1. C~ dll AA¥. UI. 2. Ellencla, 47J; l. .....,_, Her1)or, •J Mlle ,...,....1 ,.....,_, Htlrt>or, •:Ol.J, 2.
Est•ncS., 4'036, J CofOM dll MM, 4-.l.
HJ-1 Olouln (E), 6-3, 2 IC. Connell (NH), t •t;) Hamedll (CM), K
F'V-1 fJ COlllltll (CdM), ...a: , ~
ICM), 1·6, l HW'rlt ((M), 1·6.
LJ-1 S....i (CdM). 20-~. 2 ~(CM)
10-J'lt, l ()twin (I!), 20-1'°'
T >-1 Swett ICdM), 44·~. 2 Key (NH),
4H, l awn.. IE), 40-10.
OT-I l(tflet.lt (NH), I.,...., 2. Curr•let1
INH), 1"·71h , l 9'eu• (NH), 1$M
IP-1 ICUNMOI lHH), $3•t\'), 1 lrHH
(NH), SHO, 3 KOhlUI (NH), •l\OJ
~ • • • •
IOPTaALL H~~Senlel'L.._.,.
• DMtMft
Hunlln!x>n hacll 12, Wf\lllltr l
C'Mte Maw 13, Founl•ln Ve...., )
C· I DMllell ~ Cotti 111\eW ll, Lot Alwnltot 10
$enra AM Jl, INllll s
Wntmtntltl' 14, HuntlntllOft 8M<1' 1
C·20........ Ore,_ 13 ....,._, a.icfl s
Fulltrton 11. AllMelm 10
v erdlln Gr.ow II , Mluloft Vleto O
WATallt .-OLO
...._NJfteNI T..,....,..lt
(•f Mei ...... flrwot)
fou.Tlt ltOUtte>
UnOld Slllet
Aualrtlle
A~ 11, U.S.' 302.-t
u.s teor!N ..... ._
Moucrle•tr 1, p ~
klW'OtOlr I, J C.mClbll o..,.._...
ttttv 7, SHln 1 Y~vi. t, Fr•nc:• 6
, • 1 2-11 ,, .,.,..,. '· I, Herrlt 1,
l"tt'TH ltOUND
y.._.*l.U.S...7
YU9otlav1e 2 l 0 .....
United Sl1tt1 t 2 ' 1-7 us acorlne· lto«»ert1011 2. P C4lmltutl 1 J
C•mooett l, ~ 1.::;:r I, E¥tM I '.
SNln 10, Autlf .... 6 """ •. ''ellet 7 ,.!MAL STAMDIMGI
I lt•tv 4+1, 2 Yl.ltlOW¥r., >-1·1; J s..tn,
l 0-J. 4 Autlfell4t, l •)•I; S. Uftlllld SIOlft, 1·4-41 • Frenm, ... ,.,
•
..
;
I
(
-.;:.a
,
.sa~uel coliects 4 RBI
inPbillies' 16~5win
''°m AP Glplta" . . Jn the American r --··· . PHILADELPHIA -Juan Samuel a.. --t ---~:.""Un"--•-Yaa ... 1, 4'• 1: Dive W1nfield'1
h t a ... :;....,,.. ..... dou .. •-nd l h -· • • ..,,... .. ~ .... u two-ND bomo brotc a I· I he in the 1 wi_........ ~· IO o ome RoserOcmen1woohilninth1•-i•ht · th run and Oleoo .Wilson and Darren game lJ\d Don Bavlor and ~~~t six ionioa, leadina New Yotk ud
Oaollon each .hit lhree-run ~omen, -~vans hit home runs ..,. • .,. pilebcr. T1Unmy Jahn.over Oakl•rut
poweril'.ll Pb1ladelphta . P,&St, San w.Jte Sn t, BJ .. ,.~,•: W&""'"' MarlMn.t, Tlpn 1: Jim Prealey •
Di ... l~S. f'or the Phillies sixth Tolleson hit 1 lhrec.-... ::'hom-a'n--d hit a three.run bOmct to cap a five-• s•-•..t.t vtetory ·.... "' run seveQJ.b lMlna a Scanle com· u....,_. : Grq Walker added a two.run shot as ~~ h · ~~.N=l ~ rmes: Chicqo1oappeda 1even-pme losina ~t.1 t ~ aweep apinst
bcCa th• Nl.:1 fi nepper streak by ~t.ina Toronto ......._ t , llnwen 1: Rookie Andy . roe J 0
1 int. rune-same lteyaJs I , Rupn i· Lonnie Allan10n'1 two--run tnp broke 1 6-6 /
wtnnerd an lenfoa Davis hom~ ~mitb'1 two-run tn~le with two outs tic in the seventh innhia. • •--and rove an ur runs, leaWna in. the seventh inruna pve Kansas * va.&D a.uaue
Hou1ton over Montreal. City 1 ~3 lead ind paced th R al ~ '· "'-' 1 * ~l,Beid.al:DannyCox.,an otatTeus. e 0 >: 1 ot1ftorT MATTU ..., s. 4 nin. i Is-same Wtnoer wt season. won his .,.... ..,... toS1'0M -IOTA
fimaameoftheyearWJthrctiefbeJp c.7,t..._, ~· .. " ~· ~g; ..,, .. ,. ~;~~ flucM!tcf ~t~~
fromToddWorrelJasSi.Louis edaed ATLANTA CHKAOO ..... "' ~:1: AO.-MI• , 111 ao..a-.. u 5'NIY• .... Cmcinnati. •ro1 .. ,.... D•Evnt 111 ••to OTiwn&• • • • o ludlnt 11> • • o o ..,,,_lb i 1 t t
Glaab 1, Mm I: Mike Krukow =~ ::~: =~u g~: ~ii>• :::: J:::.11,. :n: l':";'111 ~~H t=:v" ::::
pitched 7!h Itron& inninp and Dan ,Mw''1frld ) 1 I 0 UMllll 2 JI. TrMVnlM • 0 t. ~..-v• • '2, .. .,..,., • I I I ~~~-; : : :
Gladden had th.rec bats and drove m Homer lb • 2 2 t .,.,_a • 1 J 2 sneri.n cf • 1 t 1 o-i u : : : : =: ~ t 1 • • ~~·;.;· 1 1 0 0
two runs u San Frana1CO beat the ~.:!'" ~ ~ 21 ~ ==-~ ~:: ~ ~· ~ ~ ~ ~ ~=:c • "1 L-" !: l: w~,. 1 1 1 o m11tak~plqued Mets 7·3. Vlf .. c • o 1 o °""""ti. o 1 o o T..... M •ti 1 T..... • '1J' QulnoMu • 1 1 o Aeed c > o 1 •
C.bt 1. Bnvet I: Gary Matthews· • =:.211 ~ii: ~;t,\. : : : : a... ._." ......... • •1-1 =:: ~:::
w1nd·blown" tw<>-.ru~ triple capped a hllclct 11t1 1 o • o HoffmM P , o o • ....,.. w 112 •-• t..eu11nr • ' .._, th~run unt lD.ll1nl and -llyoe w..-o P o o o o Geme WlnnlM H1 -MoMt m T..... •• • • • T.... • ~ t >
Sandberl bad three hits and drove in T..... »..!,! ~ !::. , " 7 • • u::g:.~:..-· ,.,•-;::.; ~. ..._ ._." ......_ ,,. • -.,_,
two runs as Ch1c:aao beat Atlanta .... •tt • en-• K..,.,..,, ll'nlMIY. •~ Hlt-0 ~ ~• • • • •t 111-J" * Olk.eel m -n.-1 (I I. ~-.., (7), Slwldell (JI S..._.rtnOlclt 1 0-WllllllN aa1 -.. vtor m --....... 16, -.-...... S 0-WtMlne aai -MOr91Md Cl) (10), SNrlfwa (1) E~. ~-I, MilWleiloee l ~ r---D,._Allenta 3, ChlcaM 2 Lo.-Al*lle 4, If' M a •• .. 10 L.09-tlo&klfl S, Mlmetole 6. ...........
SAN Dt•.O • "Mtt..A Clllc.Ho 4. 2& llOfl*, Trlllc» ~ Met· a.... Puc:Mll, Lvw, hn"elf. ~ ~
•rll.. Mrlltll tllew' Hit~ (fl. T-LA·• S t 4 C 2 3 Hlt-a.vior (Ill. Ow. E-l•l. Hf1l9lt ('IOI
ltoY'ter 2b > 0 I 0 S'-If S 2 2 0 If' M a n M 10 Gerl I 2•3 S S S I 0 ......,.,...,
E ncore salls to win
in ~nge1m8.n .Sen.es
Waltrip captures
Riverside race • f
Wei* • I 0 0 0 ltOMlc:* d S 2 2 1 A._. Sdl«rer I 1-3 I O O O I • M • •• •• SO
1..efNr1l P • • o o "'""* 1' ' 3 2 • lStnlll'I L.H 1 ' s s , o s.tee ..._ RIVERSIDE (Al>) -DarrdJ throu&b turn 6 wbcn be 1eceiwd
Kennc1YP4'1 I I I 0 Atutvo1' l 10 I Wwd f 3 1 1 2 I ~-1 _jl:J t 0 0 f 2 Ca.n-W.M I 7 1 J I •_ WaJ~' Wd two ~s ~~mE 1z(rocahiJftitcrew1Ut G#\'M rl • I 2 I kN'ftdl Jb I 1 0 • Olk.eel ~ s.2 J 2-1 3 I I r .-l s~ • I I ~ lfiiD ..... ru .... """' -
w•Vldd 4 I l 2 khulb 3 O 1 O HoflmenW.2·1 t I 3 J 1 7 T-lllldled 10 3 beltan In !he 6tn n t -... .._""" Ii) f wv-d 1oeo Hevnll>-n21 wfl'-Hoffman HaP-ttmiaidabvTenane. Por1u99L.H 1 1-3 •' • • ..s mottofthoBudweieer-400N miJeofracinaorwa!CbRidmM..s
Gervn lb a o 1 o GWllton rt • 2 3 s umolfH 11oma, cw1111em.; Fini. umo1r" 11ome. SfUod\, ir1u1. Morrtton, P•t,'!!...., llOme K. • ..:;~ ,,},,,, o,....!...,• .. _o stock car race. lead a slow --A. I.bro ..... the McCllenP 0 0 0 0 0.ullOll( J, 2 3 Wendel•ledt; s.conct. Te la, TI!lrd, Crew1of'd s-.ci, ~_,. TNrd. c~. .._ '> • ...... ... --B t _...... th·-... __ ft la .... -...... lotO,., I 0 0 0 Jeltt.. 1 I 0 I ,....,-of A-ll,SlS T-2'.53 A-tMI Oftd, P...,.,.,.,, Tllk'd, llrlftlunen u ono. ...... R>\I W1 .... UUIJI YC p
Mert1111" > • 1 o Certton P > 1 1 o * T-t:JO A-14,6il. males to 10 in Sund~y's race, and the ~eny (Labon.le) &!Ml Jtidtmood
8odlv c • I 2. MThmo"' I 0 0 0 * y.-... 1, ••• ' * other became I 1Dlil-lccond Uower bad lbt oc1 -.. LI
F'-IW'Y" , 1 1 o ~ p , o o o c...... i. .-1 .... voa• oA«LAtto ~ r ; 1..;1~~--.... Y ~ -oau. wa..-lD 4 0 0 0 lluekerp 0 O O O STL.OUtS CIMOMMATI MrU• .. ,.... ...... t,.,.....,.. 7 ute -0 IOme uuuor .,.m. lDe. They WCr'e ~OD DeW tires.
HaWkllltP I 0 0 0 .. ,..... .., ..... ltHllCbnd u I 0 ~lb • 0 I 0 MILWAUK•• -Q.AIY•LAWO I ered a few lap1 eatticr. That udl fasseroo~tira.anddlu ~l~rdP n n :nd" n:: =l>d n n ltndlDtlttl 5 I 1.1 OH•Jb '°I. Molllordtl -tr~~ &utterd 1~~-= ac:adeot li~ted Tim Richmond'• last Imel (dcr all~ tat. QG
,.... ~ t 11 s T..... M 161S II VenSIVll rt .. I 0 Pet'lcer rl .. 0 0 =: ~ n ~ 'c:.:!1: : J n Oentnt ft> s I 11 FfW'CO.. s 2J I Olevrolet Just enoufh to allow the 74th lal)) WU just lolls CIMMIP ..
s.'*91 1an a....._._• --, ~~lb ~ g n =:-" ! : : : ,.._If 10 oo Ktwmnc1t1 >0 ot =::,11
111 ~ n ~ ~':,. n:; Wa.Jtrip to roar put lD a dcridina ~~ttjp Wd oft.be wild fimlla~t.'9
l'tlllla •Ma U 1 ta 1311.,_1' HMlfl c • 0 l 0 Cnc.cnn •2 O 2 f ~°::'l : ~: ~ ='9u" 4 O t I s-a. S l J 0 MH411f 4 I 1 0 spnnl. ~ race D ~
Geme WIMlno ••1 -G. Wiiton (JI OSmltll.. • I 2 0 Sllwl" l 0 1 • WWWd rf ' I 7 7 .. "" c ; : ~ : ... " 3 I I 0 CCutll llf\ I •• 0 When T CIT)'. ubonte'I Cir was .tioaa1 ltOc:k can. 1..0:-~~ ~~; ~:• ~ 0
0 ~ 01 :ca : : ; : PeW\AOlb J 1 2 1 Jevl«d Joo o ~=~ ~: ~ ~ ~:.:,W.. : ~;: wrecked in the next.t().last lap,~ .. , ovt-dfua tiiJn IO tbc _ ..
lloanlcU, Semuel, ~ .. mery. H•-Mctt9YllOldi PPwrv P I 0 0 0 Web/Io 2 O O O ~ .. c ! : : : Mannno d S 0 I I JKObv l9 l 1 1 2 ~~ 'VaVed the ~Jlow cautJOn Wal~· said i:J( bil ~ dMb 10
< 101. o W1lton <•>. s.mu.i c21. ONtocl m Wotrtl4 o o o o o Perft on o o ' o T.... 17 7 11 , T_. u " 1 a.mue12t> 3 1 2.. o ,..., which meant the final lap on the the ow 0. wari.Qa at. tbe ~ ~~ < 111• Ha.,.. 161 SF-Heve.. ~=:,, ~ :1 : ._.. .,. ..._. T.-42 7 1, 7 ~ c a.4 911~ ~ nine.turn coune would be mean. tini liDe ai ICivenide Imautioul
T..... >1 J t 1 T..... » I I 1 ::,v:-:: = :::~ Sc-. lr¥ ..._ • m&Jds. Raceway. -• MllUUIO
11-l s •• J 0
2 2-J t 2 2 ' l I • 3 l I 0
1 20003
San "" ..._. Game W11Wn11 Hi -W1nfltild CJ>. ~ :: : :~:~ Waltnp said be wu about lhree car --We De¥C1' tow:Nd tt was .._.. =.. ;: : ==~ ~ortt~~~ k.-~. Gwiw WllWnt 1tat -.,...,_ rn. lensth• belund Raclunood. toiaa ~ .. Waltn-p aid ot tbe dud wt i~ ~ 1t11-Co• <II E••· It. Henelenofl, M. o.w. Hlt-WWltlll c~~~"12.~ ~· it:.__mood,, &ho driYIJll & Clana*t
J LO~I ~:~~~~.~·~I (I), P90llarulo (lO) Slt-4t.Heftdertoll 2 cm. 2....-G•"'-, sawoaoer 2, Ho0Ht 1ldr Moaieearto:•tjustincbed . •Ube se-<o1emen J 1211. o . .,,. ... m . ...,., 191 PeGllarulo m s-eatM. .f-0:.~u .. to >t-AlleMon s~ m. Frel'ICO m. c. FRENCH · line. We could bave crasbod. b9l Ti •
P. M • •• U IO .... y_.. Moofe <21 5-ikiller • • • bdd bit line." • ~~,,)-0 • ' 1 1 ' 7 ...... • " • D .. fO From B l T="-about 08il -=o.d -
1 1 > J 2 I
* ...,... .........
_,.,,..AL MOUITOM
WoNfrdlf
WtC>tlwCf
OewlOft rt
Wallec:ll lb
I( rftd'IC Jll
G...,.,o lb
Lew 2b
Newrnnu
Fltreef'ld c
Meslltltl. MCGfl9"p
W""""'Pll llobel'NP
ll•lnet Ph
lur1l• p
JT~Pfl , .....
Mrllllt
4 I I 0
3 It 0 . , , ' 2 0 I 0
2 • 1 0
•• 1 0 • 0 0.
l 0 I 0 • 0 1 •
0 0 0 0 0000
I 0 0 0
0 0 0 0
I 0 0 0
0000
I 0 0 0
Ooren2b
... ,dlerd
Cn.alf
Welk«d
GOevla lit .... ,., G-• OSmlltl• ....... c n-u
Kerle4cl P
W .. lnolb
I("""' p
CRenlch u
)) 4 t 4 T ..... ._.. ..........
•r111111 • 2 2 ~ s l 1 0
4 I > 2 0 1 0 0 , 2 2 .
4 0 I 0
4 I I 0
0000 2 0 0.
3 0 0 0
0 0 0 0
I 0 I I , ... 0
1 I 1 I
M Ill I
,...,... -.., --· HeutM ., -.,._,
Oeme Wlnnlne 1ta1 -Cru1 (3)
OP-+lou"on I Loe-Monlr ... s . ..._ton '· 2~en. Newmen, Hele:ller, 0 Devis.
J&-Wotllfor4. Hit-<; Devit (t i, Oewt0n 2 111)
S~ 161 ~ .. II SF-<; Devis
• HllUMSO ,_.,....
ltl.M.a
Cex W,I·•
~
Worrel $.7
CllldllMtl
S ' I I 0 0 1 )•) I 0 0 I 0
2 l·l I 0 0 l t
Web/IL,0-1 7 1 2 2 l l
Franco 2 2 G O O O
Hl,._J Clel1< 11\1 WelUI. IK-<u. Frenco umcwr .. ~. M¥tll; Finl, Dev~ •
Second, Klllllr, Tl*d, Fr_,..
T-2.SI A-16.1'5
.... , ....
GleOCMtl d
WC!erfl lb arantv c
~d ll
CO.~ri Qulnofts )b
ltT"-"' 1b
Ur!Oe " Krukow P
Jllobn.MI p
T"*
* ~7,IMtlJ
e9rll.,
4 I l 2
4 0 I 0 s 1 0 0
S 1 I I
, 0 0 ' S 0 I 11 • 1 0 0 s 2 2 0
J I 2 0 1 0 0 0
M•W YotlK
•rlllll
Oviwr.d J 0 0 0
ICkrm 2b 4 1 I 0 HrMdl Ill J I 2 0
Teultl lb I I I 0
Kn19111 lb 4 I I 2
MWllen" 4 0 I 0
Heeort 4 000
HJolltll t.• 0 0 0 0
Sentena" ~ 0 I 0 ..._,nc 4 000
Ow11noP 1000
Foti« ell 1 0 0 0
A9Ulera o 0 0 0 0
Milo.I flfl I I 0 I
H"-'-1> 0 0 I 0
• 7 II 4 T..... _M I 1 !
5ar'lllY....... ' -~~ i• m __ , .._Yen -tn Ill-I E-..-. O...~. Haet'll 2. eaaman
1..09-Sen Frenclsco 11, New Yor1t S.
1~. Teufel H•-«:nltflt (1)
.._,.. I 00002 of "'7 • 0~ s s 1 1 2 , ~u-1 ! ~ ; ~ ~ ~ decadenearthetoJ)ofwomeo's&.ennis =with~~~~~
L.._ L~I I 3 2 2 0 O ca..-.. ShOW'CJd in the last~ IC1S. 6--• ._... .a..... • ...... ..tO oox1er 3 3 • 2 1 2 ~~ttl •,_, :3 ~ ; .. , didn't~ my best int.be first iwtunh.uuwotl~IPftlltbJabou\ ..
•K-ooi1er a.11e1w,...• 1 1 1 1 • 2 set.," Uoyd · ... was nervous and three feet. * Unwlr'e.-..ome. McCov. Flt-II, Scott; Third, C.med'IO s 1 2 J 1 o o o I "A ., n • w-. ~ lllldleel 10 s _.._ "' ,.... slh. tentabvc. ru~eT """' m t.belCCrlOnd tel,
T-2 ss •.....a.1n cenc11om ..nci.ci ,. 2 ._..,.. .,. ,.... '"' I knew 1 would wm tbt match. ..
w... s.x l!..,. Jevs 4 ~ ~. :;..~· Merr11, s.c-~ playina in her 6nt tour·
C"ICAOO TOltOffTO ond, Handr'V, TNns, c--. n&ment SlDCC the death of ba father
T-3!2:> a -12.111 last month, aa.i4 abe bad little le.ft after
Tolfton ll
Hulett )II
a.lftet" Fltll ell l(;hlttlf
C......cf GWelV lb
•llonlll 1b NldlMcf
lltlnner c
Gullletl H
en.a 1b
Halntnflfl
J-p T.-
•rlltll st,,
l 0, 0
• 1 0 0
'0 0 0 > 0 I 0 0 0 0 0
I l I t
l 0. 0
l 0 0 0
• 1 1 0
0 0 0 0 J I I 0 I 0 0 0
0000
Gerd a1b
MllM'dll MoMOYd ... ,,
L.-ct\ lb
JotlMft"' &Mert111 c
8entalel rt
Wlllttc ~lb '°'" Jb Fernndt »
M 4 t S Telllb ._.. .........
Mrll ..
S 1 I 0
4 I 2 0
• 0 2 0 J I 1 I
J 0 0. 0 0 0 I
0110
• I I 2 • 0 0 0
0000
J 0 0 0
'0 ' 0
M 4 I 4
CNa99 ----~ T....... lfl -ta-4 Game Wlnnlne lt81 -TOllMOfl (I). E-Uecl'I, W!\111, Crut. OP-TotonlO I
Loe--c:Nc.e9o 4, Toronto I 2~e•cle,
ftXAI
fl'lat<Plr"
Wtfdir
C>arlen lb
lncvtlle rt
Slerre d
Peclot1t dll
Harrell 2b
ltuac:Nelb
Merc:edoc
GWrtllt Pll
the fint let.
ltWllll s *..._. 1 "lputeverythiqlhadintothefim
' KAMSAScrrr 1e1andLwauo11.ad.. .. lbcraid.. .. Mv
•r11t11 a1111 r 11• lep started to cramp and I couJda't ! ~ ~ ~ =.~ . : : ~; . pl&y_JOme of &be 90ii>Ut and ibc • o 1 o ~rt o o 1 o · staned to play a little~ ...
3> ', ~ ~ ~ ~ : : J ~ U:~cn,:ecs·· thtqulb the teCOnd
4 0 0 0 Orte dtl > O 2 I Jet. Bassett In the fint. thud
4 0 I 0 Mdt• 9fl 1 0 0 0 and (ifth ~Cl. ~ : ~ : t:;, Ill • O I O Bassett S attempts to keep l;ICJ)'d OD
I 0 0 0 ~" t : ~ : the baseline with lobl weUtoed ID
PrYOt 11> • t 1 • the third set. and the dckodin& =~u ~ ~:: champion displayed the steadtoess
Tetlh M , • > T..... M s l I $ that bu been her lrldemart. MOYUll rn.. s-.. .,. ...._ • • __ , Bassett back and forth with "-• °" ... ,,. 2lJl-1 aroundstrotes and c:aprtaliz:ana on the Game~ 1taa - L Smllfl (II teen~·s own errors.
-·
..
HelA .. llL,3-4
McGltMll •oo.oe 11ur11a
J
I
2 ,
1 s . s 0
0 0 0 •
1 0 0 I s ) , ,
~ <•>. i.-d m. °""-' c1i. I Uribe-Cl ) s.-Kruhw, GllHNlft. Sf=-C Deva.
2 If' M••RUto
MoN/O't, Tollfton Hlt-TollelOft m. G Wlllller
(S), a.t"fleld 1121 S&--Hulell (I), CMlealoll 1241.
Fernatldtt < 111, .. .._ Ill s-4 &onllle, Hullll
SF-JGMtoft, ... !-A Seluer, L StNlh. at.II MarC.00 LI d bf'OL n-~ • · .... DP-Teau 1 L.Oa-T•u• '· K-• citv " O)' .. e ~n s IC:TVe tn ~
28-1..ew. "-'""· one. PNo<, Sler'r• ~ tint and fifth pmes. Buxtt broke
smn11. 81Mea1e111 H1t-SWr1 111. erett m back 1n the third pme and bad break I
0 ......
1(-W,f·) '°' 4 6 4 4 I 2
l(erfeld 2 2 0 0 0 I
OSmltll I 0 0 0 0 2 K~ PlttqCI to I belier In "'9 1lfl Hl~i.f W K-aK-teerleld. Umlllr•• 11ome. w .. 1. Finl, a Wiiiem,,
Sec~, ltlotllr/, Tlllrd, I.
T ..:..+.JI. A-1U2S
Mal• U IO
Cllloee S..~rMdlce
Krukow W,7·l
JltOOlftlOll
1 M 7 3
12-3 0 0 J 1 2 DotlOll W.J·S 71-J 1
M 0 I 1-l I
J ) ,
0 0 0 : se-wMson 1111 ~ 14 ll u •• so point an the fourth, but abe netted an 0 0 I McKeon
1 T ... , easy volley lookina at an open court NIWYM O.,.,_ L.6-1 S 6 S • 2
A«llWI 2 4 t 0 t Nlamem 2 I o o o o
W~llne. J ltOOIMotl
UrNlrH I tome, ltUMe, f!lr1f, PellON, *•
oncl, E noel. Tl'llrd, o.Mutll
T-2.SI A-4t,041.
.Je""" I t 1 T.,...
Kl'Y L.J·• 6 M 6 ) J
Aa. 12-l 1 J 0
C:..... I 10 0 ~ •• I lome, lt'eml9an. Hlr..ctlDtdl, Second, ltoe, Thlfd, a.rne11
T-J-01 A-31.l0'2.
•
Gutmen LA·• ' 1·3 I ' ' 1 4 and ID di~t kicked the ball h:1-I 4 MWltlleml l?-J-l I I I 3 --..-...
0 I ~ °" U\to the au OVCT the red clay of' o 1 Lebrndl w .s-3 t • J > , 1 Roland Garrot' ccotCT court. Uoyd
Finl, Utnplrft ti-. ~rde, Finl, KC*, S.C fou&)lt off &DOI.ha break p()lnl &nd Oftd, lteed, TllWd, Ferd T~l A-.41,ftl won the pme.
CALL 842-5678 IF CAWNG FROM NORTH ORANGE
IF CALI.ING FROM SOUTH ORANGE
I LOST MY owa BUT
FOU• HIM AFTER I
PLACED All AD Ill THE
CLASSIFIEDS.
Sel Y .. Pt1f1ot,I e. ........
Mt-5671
for Information
& s~rprlslngly
low cost.
• •
\
1111 11tn-. lbd, din, ., ... Monico
~ UAI. ..._, ....a•
l . -
Tradltlo~
ty
63i.'7170
..
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)
•
•
..
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t
I •
'
1'
le
a .
• 6
id ,,
.,
• f
-.
• .#Orange Cou1 DAIL y PILOT I MQfld~. June a. t9ff
~ ... IMcll 2141 AcAI 363 . 2ba .
1pactou1, aparkltng
clMll. OcMll vu, frptc, no p9ta. 1 1350 mo. LMM.
Sat/Sun 714 41M-2049 Of
818 284-5285 wkdays
...... 1 lill1 llSO e:;;;;sa; 2L. gllr'ege +
lt01'9Qe. Avan lmmed._
ate!)'. $875. 722-4729
i"'fld IMcla ii it 2 +&n'. 2 stry twnhme.
OcMl'I vu. Xlnt cond.
Nwpt Tarr 1990/mo
875-4912 VIiia Aantala
~· Elita 2Br. o-r-oe. new
decor, mlrron, all blllna.
yrty. Only I 1300 ._
mom 111-aao -----~
•SEAWINO 48r 2._.Ba,
ftm rm, entry kltch, din
rm Hr poolltennla. GrMt
llta vu. grdnr. A"1 711
12300/mo. 640-4288
38 R 2'A be, NewpOl't Cr .. t
Condo. Walk to bMCh.
poolltennl•/2 car gar
$1325. 213/427-1136
BAYFRONT 28R/den,
trplc. 2 lpC ~·g, MC.
bldg $1850/mo yr.
BAVFRONT 28R/dan,
· trplc, 2 1pC P*lfk'g, MC
bktg. 12 100/mo yr.
• Waterlront Hom.a Inc .,,_,_
Ul'FltlT /Pier I Fleet
8r1nd new c•n•lfront
4BR/3ba. f1m rm home
w/..-ytNno. Pier/float '°" 2~· b04ita 13500/mo Jeff &tery Ahr 875-9111
llllUYN ....
2BA 2'1i8a. Oen Ol'I golf
eourM. Next to tennll court. l 1895J 59-0079
NEW FOR ONLY $1
96-page full-color C11t.a·
log of Crafts panerns
books supplies crewer.
cross stitch.. needlep<>int.
latch hook Quirting. and
more
c
RE-ELECT·
BRADLEY L. JACOBS
ORANGE COUNTY ASSESSOR.
Upholding the Spirit of
Proposition 13
D First Assessor In C11ifor1i1 to roll ~1ok t•••s after Pro,. 13
D Saved T111111ers over $11 million. I
D Protects 19r111•r1J 1w11rs frem unfair and 1•rbitr1rr t111s.
0 lan1111 an 1fftci11t anti cost 1ff1ctive
1
D1p1rtm1nt--t1vin1
t1111111rs •illio1s of dollars. ,. 1 We wish to Thank 1our
Neighbors who Help 'upport
The Campalgn J
Carl Karcher
Lyn and Tim Carlyle
F redenck Port
Tom Kemp
Annette Gude
Allee .and Jay Rocha
Robert E. Thomas
Judy B. Rosener ~
Jill and Steve Forbath
Dr. Dorothy Terman
Marlene and donald Kral
Beverly Nestande
Richard J. O'Netl
Ludie and David Hen ley
Bob Clifford
Jeanette and Jim Krembas
Murray Corwin
Marion Knott
' .4 f
-~--~ -------~-~
\
• l '1 I ) . "
\
t
FU
SU.CCESSFUL
CllllEW
How much will your son or daughter know about busineu when
applying for their first full·time job? Pi.nty, if he o r ihe hos ever
been a newspoper carrier. Through rovte e~perience he or she
is already a lop ahead of their claumotes. 'WhiJe they QJI
master id.Gs, the boy or girl with a newspaper route is obJe to
pvt them to practical use. Bvsineis? Ca rriers learn the boSK
leom the basic principles from the firit doy of starting to deliver
newspapers. They buy ot wholesale, sell at retail, make
collections. keep their own books, and deal with people foce to
face. Corrien quickly find out that "profit'' and "loss" are
more thon textbook terms
The benefits of managing a newspaper route are an equation
for a futvre succeuhil citi~en. A great number of today's
prominent men and women started their public careers as
newspaper carriers And tftey ol~h that a newspaper route
give-s a boy or girl o head start on the futvre
Boys and girls I 0 years and older who may be interested 1n route
work should conract the Doily Pilot circulatron deportment ot
642 4333
Daily ?!!!!ION DEPT.
330 WEST BAY ST. P.O. BOX 1.560
COST A .MESA, CALIF. 92626 ,-----------------, I Yes, my son/dought.r would like I
1nfonnotion on a Doily Pilot route. I
HISJHER NAME 1s. ______ I
I
~--------1
I ________ ZIP __ ,
I
PHON.__ ____ --_AGE~l I
I
PARENT~ l I SIGNATUR I
~----~-----------~
l l
AvaJlable In lrvlne area.
$300 to $800. No collect-
lng. 3-4 ho4rs a day. Mon:
thru Frrday afternoon. Sat.
& Sun. morning. Call
~2-4333, ask for Kirk.
' ORANGE COAST
DlllJPllat
33l~N. Bay S t.
Costa Mesa, CA
E•rn Extr• C••h
For De/Ivery Of Thi• Paper
HUNTINGTON BEACH
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
INDEPENDENT
Deliver .1 day a week. No
collecting, no soliciting.
Must have dependable car,
truck_ or station wagon and
insurance.
CALL 842-1444
Ask for JoAnne Craney
. . •• l
•U.S.A.
BUICK I
DEALER ·
"
••a&.-1..mCAMI. TRUCICa
CC.. .. °" CALL'°" .... 1811 DeeltO
196 ILlf 18111 IMCH aw.
HUNlMITON 1MCH ..,...,. ••• 1
,
' )
·r
' 'f
' 'I~ .
ooDil ·14 DeJtOM .e Tlfto. ...... ..__,.
., .............. 4 ....,. __ ,,,, ·------
p~-
:AIL~ C.1 I , ..... ,
s~:..::Z. ... ,.,...,. ........,.,.
• d
I ,,.
l a
It
I)
•
.. tt
y,
·re
1IC
2) -
l
IO-
h• to
he
•• d ..
of
:nt m·
\2) -l
~ _,
me ..
m's
l'bo .. a
J
•
.
81 Or_,. Cout DAil. Y PJLOT I Monday, JUne t. UNl8
. .
0 NABERS 'CADlbl.-AC -~ ~
2100 UllOI ILYI., cosn IEU ..
(11 4) 140-1100 (21J) 111-1211
• Best Prices • Convenient Location
• Great Location • Super Service
• Courteous & Knowled able Sales People
0 STERLING MOTORS WEST
Chevrolet • Porach• • Audi
44(aE. hast hy., 11.,.rt leaoll llMIOO
Highest Quality Sales & Service
.
0 THEODORE ROBINS
FORD ·
U.S.A. 's # 1 Thunderbird R_etall Dealer
Modern Sales. Serv1ee. Parts. Body, Plfflt & Tire Oepts
Competitive Rates On Lease & Daily Rentals
2GIO ..,._, lh4., o.tta 1111
142-0010"148-1111
o SADDLEBACll
Sales
Leasing & Service
Pans
IRVINE AUTO CENTER
1-aoo-a31.33n 714-380-1200
$JIM CLICK AUDI/RENAULT/JEEP • ~· WE'RE OUT TO BE # 1 I
IRVINE AUTO CENTER
41 Auto Center Or. Irvine
714 951 -3144.. 800 428-7485
~ 0 CREVIER BMW Jf\ ~ SALES • SERVICE • LEASING 'i;IJ1
"Where Professions/ Attitude Prevails"
l.,.c:leUzlng In Europeen Deft.efy. lz~t 1.-:tlon of
.... end c.r•fully prepet9d UMCf llMW'I llwlys In ltOCI<
835-3171
208 W. 1at St., S•nt• Ana
Comer of Broadway & 1st S1 Ck>Md Sundays
GSTERLING
ruu -SEmCE -lWllC -PUTS
Overaeu Denvery Specialists
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
BMW -ROLLS ROYCE
1540 Jamboree Rd.
N wport Beach 840-8444
8 JIM SLEMONS IMPORTS
1301 0111111 Bl. -#Mw Car Location
1001 Quall Bl. -R ... hl Dl~l•lon
World's Largest Selection of 0
Mercedes &mz .A.
833-9300
Wes • ltuilC · P.U · Stn6ct · W, S..,
EARLE/KE
JOYOTA -
I
SALES•LEASING Tu.mm ro YCUI . NIDS Bf ElrtJt
HARBOR SUBARU
13161 twt8Clt Bl.VD. 6ARO£N GIOVE
714-554-2800 213-590-0259
tm. lll*.f1I
7:311 Ml • tJI Piii
UH Ml · 2 Piii PARTS•SERVICE
EARLE IKE
VOLVO
A ,..... Always a huge inventory
W ,..... Alwa~ discoun1 prices
.A l :... • ':>ERvtGE • LEASING • PARTS • BODY SHO
1960 Harbor Blvd .. Co~ta Me<Mi 714/6 31-8880
VOLKSWAGEN/ISUZU
CALIF'S 111 1 LARGEST VOLKIWAGEN DEALER
NEED WE SAY MORE?
Pana O~ M-Sat 8 • 5.30 Sat 9 -4 pm
Servk:e m-Frt 7 30 • 6 p m
ta711 ll&!ACH al.VD HUNTINGTON HACH
714/ 142-2000 . • BUENA
' PAR~
WE LEA
CALL US FOR FLEET PRICES
Justo Short Drive Away ...
33375 Camino Capistrano 493-3375
SA N JUAN CAPISTRANO 131-1 375
o COMMONWEAL TH
VOLK$WAGEN
' ------------
'
--he Best Car
Buys in Orange
County are at
the dealers listed
on this page . No1:vo ®.
HIGH VOLUME DISCOUNT DEALER LJ<Z.c
SALES, LEASING PARTS & SERVICE
28802 Marguerite Parkway • Mission Viejo, CA 92692
(714) 582-2880 (714) 364-1210
0
Che P~OFESSIONAL APP~OACH
71 4 -979-2i500
2925 Harbor Boulevard
G UNIVERSITY OLOSMOBILE
HONDA
2880 Harbor Blvd.
Coat. M-540-0713
3 ~· So of .as Fwy.
• Ea1e or Own«ahlp term•
• Lease convenlence-12-72 mo
• Select from 100+ new and P<•owned
• Delivery In Euro\>e option
dl•I Merced4ta
714/213137-2333
S•nt• An• (5) FrMw•r ei
S.11eh In Buena Park
<.... G CONNELL CHEVROLET
2121 larMr lh•., htt1 lesa
Over 23 Years Serving Orange County
Sales • Service • Leasing
546-1200 S,.ml Pw U.. 541-MH
MONDAY-FRIDAY 8:30 AM -9:QO PM
SATURDAY 8:30 AM~ 8:00 PM
SUNDAY 10:00 AM -6:00 PM
G> TED 10~ FORD/ISUZU
1
( Your full 1ervice ford & lausu dealer
• Sales • Service • Leaaing
EASY to FIND ... EASY to DEAL WITH
2 blh north of S.nt• An• Fr~w•r oa &.cb Blvd.
6211 BEACH BLVD. BUENA PARK
( 7 14) 521-3110 ( 213) 921-8681 • a~
PONTIAC
• TRAHS AM
• FttlE 8ltlO
• !IOOO STl
• PAlltSU.N:
• BOfft Yll.LE
• GRAND PRIX
• ~ COfMRTl8l[
• T 1000
• GRANO AM
We Sell EldttllHt
amagoi
PONTIAC
1:e!
Cost• Mna Newport BelCh
714/549-4300
a rncv01
SUBARU
SLASHES
e PRICES! e
ON ALL
1988
MODELS
IHlCR Mtt ~ANCES
WE Wll
NOT BE lHlERSOl01 ---·---
SUBARU
24IO ...... lln.
Costl Mna 9'ewpart Blldl
714/549-4300
G ORANGE COAST JEEP /RENAULT
#1 I# Th Wnt F1r
l1rt IHI s.111 111 I Ytlf'I
(' 0J)ln2e. SALES -~ Loa'"St • sERv1ce
..-L--HH MAQOO\"f> • LEASING ' 54;,8023 • ACCESSORIES DEPT
0 f C" CAMPBfl I NISSAN/~ 11K>i
-r---';;;;---.r-•_Ore.::.,;,;;eo.;;;.t Se*tien
nt Servtc.
~a.act\
(211) "2·1463 .
...,.. Excellence In Sa Service & LeuJng
...,.. Orange Cour'\ty'a No. 1 No H Dealerll
we HAVE MAXEY DISCOUNTSlll
(714) 147-1555
18881 Beach Blvd., Huntington Bch.
,
MONDAY, JUNE 2, 1986
Uow voter tu .........
OC registrar predicts 48% primary vote;
turnout may be slightly higher on coast
By PAUL ARCBIPLEY measum wiJI keep away S2 percent of °' .. ...,,......,, · the 'CO\l.!lty'a 1.03 million voten,
Olson said. -
Fewer than half of Orange County's Those wbo do vote at one of the
reaistered voters will exe~se their county's 2,077 p~ts wiU find the
franch11e Tuesday, . Reautrar of polling bootht open from 7 a.m. to 8 Voters~ Olson predicted. _ ...p. --
. -T~ unoppo candidates Republicans enjoy a lopsided ed&e
and too few controversial. ballot in rq:istrati9n with SS0,92S to tfie
Rep la
Janell A~.JZ General Tltdak er . re-
placed after demandtn1
an ID•M~~~ the country•• ID-
tellllence aaency. A.ft.
Nation
AT&T phone strike di~
rupts some long-dlstanoe
services, but big test
comes t~ay./ Al
Democrats' 37J,60S. Another hand-
ful list themselves as ·Pea<ie and
Freedom, American Independent
and Llbenarian party members.
Tbe GOP's dominance alona the
coast is even greater. lo six Orange
Coast cities, Republicans outnuinber
-BemocratslSl,lS2 to 86,S41.
Observers believe turnout here
could be higher where hotly contested
primary races in the 40th and 38th
€~ienal dtstflett ha+e gcuer-
ated interest.
In the 40th, Republican incumbent
Bob Bidham faces a stiff challensc
from mana1ement consultant
Nathan Rosenbe~
Rosenberg's well-organized cam-
pai&J' bas focused attention on Badh\P'l'• absenteeism from Con-aresa, world jaunts and 'penonal use
of campaign funds. ·
Badham has· stressed. that Rose.-
nber& lacks ~ijtical experience and
that be is a lt!*din• veteran in the House: --
The Democrats likewise are wqing
a heated campa.ian in the, 40th
25~-
Di1lriC1, where county part~ <;b.iir-
man Bruce Swnoer i1 runruna as a writ~in candidate apjnst Alt Hoff'·
man, a follower of ultra-<lOnlCt'Vative
and ultra-controversial Lyndon
LaRouche. .
. Sum~er has •pent bis campeisn
time ra1li1'& apinst laRoucbe aod
teachina v61en bow to correctly write
in bis name and punch their ballots.
Hoffman has faith Uy followut
ouc e taebc of malipiog
opponents with wild aIJeaations
apinst Sumner of mob connections
aod drua ttltf'ICk:lQI.
In Uie 38th Co iooal ~
Republican Rc9~ben Doman ia
unoppoted in the primary.
But the Democratio jJrimary pill
veteran AssembJ)'ml.ft Ridwd Jt.ob.;
inion, O.Oarden Orove, apinst Or· ·anar County Superior CoUn I ..
David Caner. ·~
Both :=1o~=~ to cake on the. . • ._ '9ft __ __
coun1y district where the Democtats
have a rqisttation edae. •
(Pleue ... LOW/~).
Marr, 22,~
dies in.-
revolver
game
~At.ft. AR.ClltPLEY .
Of Olllf .......
e JlWl.-"5 killed and anoma'.
~ped serious injury in UDtdate4 ~nd &hootina incidents in the
~~urday dwina what polico
called a .. ~ of modified Russian
Roulette' was = Hirozo Napta, 22, of Lona
Randy Doualu Keller, 29, of
HuntiJ>cton Beach is ~ bdd in
connectJon. with the bomici.de in-
vestiption.
World -Traditional wedding .., ........ .,'-.....
A-ccordin& to Hantinaton Be8c'b
police Sit. Luis Ochoa, the sh ·
aJ KeUef1 bome at 19362 OlanaOC:,,
pllce while Keller and N111ta. w!Mf
were friends, played with a pm1jally
loaded revolver belooaio& to K.dler. El Salvador's president
calls fbr r"1ewed talks
with rebels.IM
Sparta
Doug Corbett flips over
the Angels' victory over
Baltlmore. /81
EnteJtalnment
Views from White House
Inner circles are offered
on public televlsJon by
former chiefs of staff J Al
INDEX
Advice and Games
Bulletin Board
Business
Classlfled
Co mica
Death Notices
Entertainment
Opinion
Police Log
Public Notices
Sports
Television
Weather
A10
A3
A7-8
BS-7
A11
B7
A9
A12
A3
87-8
81-5
A9
A2
Groom Preecba ICemplmook and bride 1'ortko Mtnamtan "J:i;-1 ln .eantt.naton Beach. Tbe SundaJ fe8tlftl pre.-
are wed ID a trad.ldcmal Japu1eee ceremony by Dr. Re•. e by the Stet.er City Amodadon and the City Coa.llcil Sox.a _MAD1loka, rJlbt, at tho eeeond annual Caltaral lnchaded maaic, dance and ablbita at the ct'ric center. Just after 9 p.m., N:eound the po in Keller' a home. y point·
ed it at Kd1er in a m and
Most Orange Coast students to go on pulled tbe triger, Ochoa laid.
When the gun didn't dilclws.:
Napta banded it to Kella. ~ ~y pointed the gun at N.,_ta.
pul!ed _the triger a.od shot the VlCtim
111 the face, Oclloa said. By PHIL SNEIDERMAN
OfllleDlllJ .........
A profile of Orange Coast ColJege's
1986 graduating class indicates 83
pen::ent wiU be continuing their
studies at four-y~r colleges and
universities.
State legislators have kept a close
eye on such transfer fiaures because of
criticism that community colleaes are
not focusing enough attention on
prcparjna students for four-year
educations.
But fo' the past six years, Orante
Coast College has transferred more
students to the University of Cali-
fornia and California State Univer-
sity systems than any other oom-
mu11ity college in the state, OCC
officials said.
The school's transfer record has
been attributed to its large enrol-
lment, its location 1n an affluent area
and its teachers and counse)ors who
encouraae continued education.
The transfer rate for the class of
1986 is almost 4 percent above last
year's figure, OCC officials said.
On Wednesday, 1,276 students
graduated ip ceremonies at LeBard
Stadium on the Costa Mesa campus.
An OCC rePort provided the
followina information on the 1986
ara<fuates:
• 1,061 students, or 83 percent
plan to transfer to four-year schools;
• 67 percent of these will attend Cal
State campuses. The leadina recipi-
ents are Cal State Lona Beach,
receiving 37j OCC graduates, and
Cal State Fullerton, reccivtn& 229;
•Almost 12 percent of the OCC
(Pleue ... ORANG&LA2)
A third penon at the home. who
. polioe declined to identify, called
police and panmedics.
Napta-was nasbed to Fountain
Valley Hospital where be was pro.-
nounced dead on arrival, Ochoa said.
Keller was booked into Hunti.Qlton
Beach city Jail where bail was set at
S2SO.OOO.
(Pl--Me WOMAK/ A.2)
Emotional anti-drug pitchjars students, parents
By LAURA MERlt
Of .. ~ .......
Moved by David Toma's emo-
tional and shocking delivery ~bout
the effects of alcohol and drug abuse,
about 200 of the 4SO ThurstOf
Middle School children groupe(i
together in counseling sessions with
him late last week.
But parents were also jarred by bi's
speech Wednesday niahL Over l ,000
parents attended Toma's talk to
adults where be stressed that parents
be committed to the children and use
firm discipline.
And Gay Pivaroff, the mother of
elementary-age children who ar-
ranged for Toma's visit, said the
parents plan to lobby the school
board to restnct students from mov-
ing on and off campus during school
hours.
Toma is a former New York city
narcotics officer who has been lectur-ing~ students across the country for
the last 30 years. In frank and
descriptive· talks he tells the kids
about the ugliness of 1ail and Junkies
Students appear moved by his horror
-stories of the streets.
He spoke to junior and senior high
school students at Laguna Beach
High School on Wednesday. About
200 high school students stayed after
school to speak to Toma at>our their
own problems with drugs. night. ~p1te. cnticism ~i.ved . by
When half of the junior high school the counctl fonts S l ,OOO~ntnbutlon
students wanted to speak with him. . ro the $6,000 cos! ofbnnsma Toma. to
organizers lcnew he had got his town, Kenney said 1t was a small pnce
message across. to ,pa.Y· . .
"It was spontaneous combustion lfwe can sav~ ?ne kid fu?m ~
apm," said Gay Pivaroff, a parent of down th~ path its ~o~ 1t and it
elementary-qe cbi!dtcn who ar-saves society mo~y, a:aid Kenney,
ranged for Toma's visit wh'? 1s a J?harmaCtSt with the Care
Laguna 8eacb Councilman Dan Unit HMptial ofOranse.
Kenney mtroduccd Toma to the "Yeah. 1t•n lot 9f money, but the
1,200 or more parents Wednesday . (Pleue eee DRUG/A2)
N ewpo"rt girding
for bigJnvasion of
summer tourists
Laguna council
reviewing open
space board, fund
By LAURA MERlt
Ot•Dllllr ......... Children arc ~ng out school
windows. merafiants an: ~polisbiq
countettops and police officers are
aetting ready to walk the beat -it's
almost summer in Ne~rt Beach.
For beach business, it s the time to
really malc.e a profit. For beach
residents. it's the! time to malc.e room
for crowds. congestion and, yes.
tourists.
The threat of terrorism has soured
many Americans on European travel
this summer and with cheap psolina
and many families an: reportedly
plannmg a family vacation instead of
travehna abroad.
Nma Balis, manqjng dirm.or of
the Newport Beach Convention &.'
Visitors Bureau, said it looks lib a
healthy tourist season in the popular
Orange Coast city. .
"I've had a IU!JC of calls in the lut
couple of weeks,' Balis said. "My aut
fcehng 1s that we will aet a lot more
v1siton this year."
Last year. the m.;or hotels in
Newport Beach arossed nearly S3SO
million, accordina to Richard Luehrs.
executive dittttor of the Newpon
Beach Chamber of Com~nie.
The Newport Beach Marrion. Mer-
idien Hotel Ncwportcr Resort
Balboa Bay Club. Sheraton Hotel and
new f our StaM>ns Hotel promise to
Susu
Holl.ETT
Fo cus ON THE NEw s
draw even more peop1e to Newport
Beach this summer, Luebn said.
"The major corporatio'ns like the
Sheraton and Marriott have aa· aressivc matketiDf teama," Luebn
said. "They're weu-equipped with a
aood marketina force. •
But some of the prospective tour•
iau Who ieleebone the Newport
Beach Convcnuoo & Visitors Bureau
arc not aware that alt of the hotels and
motelt in Newport -except the
Balboa f nn -m not djrectly on the
~h. Balis 1tid.
'"They c~pcci that they can make amn m n to ttay naht on the
beach," Balis said. ··~t I tell them
is that ~can atty very close, and
tell tlte.m ut ill the thi thcro art
(P...... T/A.2)
·----·------
Falreet of them all
K.rUten llarle Bapel,, 11 month.a. wa...-u prOU.d puata
JerfJ and Cuo1 JlaCWell of ea.ta lleu ponder a famll7
tradldo at the annUl CCiitil lleea Liou' '1.ab ~on
Sanday. Krtaten wu the baby conteet winner ln the 8 to 12
aaont.U ca ory: father J~ won the ume contMt SO yeanaio. .
t
J
The Laguna Beach City Council
will consider recommendations on
how to maintain aod preserve open
space in the city aod the use of
Sycam~ Hills at a public meetJn&
Tuesday ni&hL
The Planning Commission and the
Open Spece subcommittee have re-
cently held public bearinp on the
matter.
ln a report to the council. the
comm1ss1on rccommendedestabliah•
mg a non-profit ~petl .space. ~
sc:rvancy board to enco~ the
ded1cat1on of land, ra11e money to
purchase land and 11ve advise to the
Cit)'
It also 'luggcsts the ctty create a
·•Open Space Conservancy Fund"
spcc1fically for the preservation of
open space land
Although m aeneral aareement
with the other memben, C-0m-
(Pleue ... OPBJlf / A.2}
Irvine teen-ager raped·
while parents in home
An lmnc teen-qer was raped 1n
her home Sunday by an unknown
assailant while her unsuspoctina
parents were in another pen of the
house.
The I 4-year-old victim. w~ott
name was withhdd because of her
aae. was raped at tnifcpo1nt after the
suspect entered the Woodbridar
home. said lrviM police Sgt. Gary
Shull.
The 'u"pect 1pparcntly entered the
home throu&}l an unlocked bac~
door. Shull Yid.
The v1ct1m had a bedroom on lbe
tint floor of the two-1tory home
where she was raped after her
sallapt brandished a k.nire.
After the attack, tbe v1ctun•1
parents heard her ICfeamS. TIM
5uspcct escaped by 1umpi ovu a
back fence. •
Police descnbcd \he a
white male, aboot 27· I .ycan old. 6
feet tall an<l 180 ncb: He hid
brown IWr. blue a 1 t
mou,tacht.
J
• Oi'fnge Coat DAILY PILOT/ Monday. 'June 2, 1~
A queen for Costa Mesa
A royal court beama majeettca117 after lta
cro1"D!Q at tbe lllu Coeta Mesa conte.t-
8unday clartna the final day of tile Flab Fry.
W~nen are. fr0m left: eecond nmner-up
Tyler Whlte. 17: Queen Wendy John80D,
19 : and Ont l'UDller·upJodl Eddy, 21.
Business ma!! fails to get light
at Sunflower, Greenville streets
By TONY SAAVEDRA
Of .. o.tr ..........
Jim Willem~ has spent more than
12 yea.rs tryin& 10 convince Costa
Mesa officials oflhe danger in a bus)
intersection near his home and
outside his Chnsuan--0nented gJfl
store.
Willems has finally succeeded -
sort of. He wanted the city to install
traffic s1.&nals at the comers of
Sunflower Avenue and Greenville
Street lo ma.Jee ll easter for m olonsls
-including customers al his
Maranatha Village -to make left
turns from the 1ntersccuon.
ln\tead the Cit) Traffic Com-
mission -con\i 1nced of the potent1aJ
danger -1s recommending Monday
that the ( 1l) Council restnct left 1ums
1n the interchange
Willems ~1d the regulation would
do htlle 10 improve the 6hnd curves
and the increasing traffic moving off
the Jammed freewa)s and onto
Sunflower r
It would also hamper the ab1luy of
residents to get into their ne1&h-
borhoods on the' south side of
Sunflower and the ab1hty of cus.-
tomcrs to get into businesses on the
nonh side, which crosses the Santa
Ana border.
SunOoWCT). 1t'c; getllnf 1mposs1ble,"
he satd Saturday. ·•we ve had a lot of
very. very close caUs."
One of those clo~ calls hn pretty
close to bome, 1n fact. right on his
frontlawn. Willems awoke one mom-
101 m June .1984 to find a fallen
motorcycle and an mjurcd dnver in
his front ya"d on Sunflo~r A venue
He wd a drunken driver' also
plowed into his store the previous
year.
Willems isn't the only one mad
about the situa uon, be said. Tempers
have Oared toward dnvers holding up
traffic to make a left tum or prccan-
ously dartmg in front of speeding
cars.
-..
U.S. Tempe
._,., loM llv9lo!Qll I 1111t1 ~
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to " to •
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11 .. Wld-. ti to Wiii• ....
tt .. tt .. : :: Eztended
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10I •
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7' u TODAY 74 a l'lrlll IOw l.2tLlft o• .. .. :':1:1' ... 7:01 Lift ,. 11 a 12.U p.m 12 n ... a .. S-.-11111111 T. 14 p.m ...
107 71 YUUOAY
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i
ORANG£ COAST TRANSFER·RA TE HIGH •.•
From Al
transfers will go to UC campuaes. UC
Jrvine 1s the lead.ins destination,
drawing 67.
• ~ percent will 10 to private
colleges,
• The rcmainiDi 16 percent bad
not decided on which school they
would transfer to at the time they
were surveyed;
the eiabt cstiet located withln the
C.OUt Community Collete QiJtnct.
Huotfoston Beach was home city to
the W.St number of-OCC t:raduates -(248). 1ollowed by,.COSta Mesa (232)
and Newport Beach ( 126).
ness educallon division, followed by
technoloSY ( 146) and social 1e1ences
(109).
A breakdown of sex and eth.ntc
back&round indicated 5 t .4 percent of
OCC'1 1986 araduates were women
and 73.2 percent were Cau~n.
A$ians made up 6.4 percent of the
graduates, followed by Hispanics, at Willems was also fearful of the
potential hazard to pedestnans trying
to cross the street, made increasingly
busy, by the emergence of business
,/parks and new shopping... areas in
north Costa Mesa.
He expects the traffic 10 becOme
even more snarled once the new
South Coast Plaza annell opens in the
fall.
"You see people giving people the
middle finger all the tame. One ume
this guy opened the window and
shouted a1 somebody," Willems said.
• I 7 7 planned to take full-time JObs
after graduation.
The profile ofOCCs Cass of 1986
also md1cated 70 percent live in the
Nearly 30 percent live in Oran,ae
County but outside the Cout District
in cities such 11 Santa Ana, Irvine and Orange. Another 37 paduata live
outsideQranaeCounty, and nine live
outside the state.
Thclartest.,oupofOCCpaduates
(292) came from the collcse'• busi-
3.2 percent. ·
The profile also determined that 77
percent of the graduates· arc older
than 21. "h's not gelling harder (to cross
WOMAN HELD ON ATTEMPTED MURDER ... LOW VOTER TURNOUT EXPECTED •..
From Al
In another shooung, a Costa Mesa
woman was booked into Orange
County Jail on charges of attempted
murder after allegedly c;hooting her
husband in the buttocks
George David Laramee. 43, and
Patncia C Laramee, 46, were en-
gaaed in a heated argument earl>
Sunday at their home at 27 4 Camelia
C:osta Mesa police said
A neighbor called police JUSt after 3
am complaining ot the nc11~. and
responding office~ warned the 1.ou-
plc to quiet down
Poiil."C sa1Cflliei.~(iupk had a h1\ton
of engaging in. loud arguments.
After police lcfc , C:ieorgl· Laramel"
staned to lea\e Just bcforl' 4 a.m
when his Y..1fe allt..'iedl)' '>hot at him
W1th a 38-cahbcr revolvrr
She missed. and a\ tht· wuple
struggled for the gun 1t went otT again
sinking and passing through the
huc;band's buttocks
(1eorge Laramee was taken to
C O\ta Mesa Memonal Hospital
where he was treated and released.
Patnc1a Laramee was t.aken to the
Orange ( ount) Jail's women's fac1l1-
11es where !>he 1s being held on
S250,.000 bail a Jatl spokesman said
From Al
But Robinson and Carter have 1strator W11J1am Balcer 1s challenaed challenged by attorney James Edward
turned mcrcas1n&J y nasty against by businessman-attorney Victor Wtlkpskt 10 Office No. 17.
ca.ch other as election day ap-Hobbs. Votcn hvina in the Harbor Mu-
proacbes. Recorder Lee Branch must fend otT mcipal Court district will choose
Voters also will have choices m the two challenien -auditor-dtrCCtor between Judge Bnan C.arter and
2nd and Sth Superv1sonaJ distncts. Larry Bales and busmess e:11ecuuve [)eputy D.A: Robert Thomu Ill for
Second 01$tnCt Su~r ttar-Geri Winterbottom. Office No: 1.
nett Wieder (ace5 a minor cbaJlenge Sheriff-Coroner Brad Gates also Irvine voters also have more to
b)' David Meslov1ch, a modicaJ faces two who want hiSJOb-county consider on their baJlots as they
operations supervisor. But Tom Judge Bobby Younablood and choose two city councilmembcn
Riley of the Sth 1s in a tou&)\er race Sheriffs Patrol Sat. Linda Lea whose elections could determine the
against colleae professor and former Calligan. city's future arowth policies.
Laguna Beach· Mayor Jon Brand and Voters also wtll determine 1f coun-
businessman Kenneth Palmer PratL Tbrcc Supenor Court races arc ctlmemben should be limited to two
DRUG SPEAKER ••• OPEN ln contested nonpartisan races, contested as well. Deputy Distnct consecuuve terms and whether
• • • 0range County Assessor Bradley Attorney Joseph Barilla, Deputy D.A. votcn should directly elect their
From A 1 Jacobs finds himself facing the big-William Beds worth and. attorney mayors rather than leave that JOb to From A l
message needs to get out." he said
Toma repnmanded parent\ for
allowing their th1ldren to dress what
he called .. inappropnatel)' for
school" And then he urged them to
listen and talk with their ch1ldrco
help them build a spmtual hie by
"believing there l'i a higher power ··
and finally touch and hug them
regularly 10 a show nl suppon
Accordinf to P1\aroll. about 25
high schoo students also made a
surpnse v151t with the Junior high
children Wednesda\ lo t.alk ahou1
their own ellpenenccs w11h drugs
Two high ~hools gJrl\ talked ahout
the pressures of using drugs and said
they were former aud and nx:aine
u\Crs, said P1 varofT
But what was more 1n\pmng \he
'31d is when a varsity football player
who had hp cancer from chewing
1abacco conv1n1..ed five )oung
chewers to throw their can\ of \null
over the ch fl ,
··He c;tirrrd up a rat., nec,t Now be
can go home and we ha\l' to go to
work." said P11.aro1T
mission Wayne Peterson submitted a spending challenge of Deputy Robert Gallivan arc vying In Office their council.
I h l d h Assessor David Holbert, County No. 5. Other candidates arc takioa a free
with the recommendat1om v munietpa ourt u e avi nde throu&h the primary etter 1 at out me 15 one concern ("Jerk Ciary Granville 1s p1tteA ~1·nst "6 I C J dg D d
He contends 8 Open Space (on-Deputy County Clerlt Marshal Nor-Brickner and Deputy D.A. Anthony In tt}e.. 69th Assembly Distnct,
!ttrvanC\ Board could not function ns. Deputy District Attorney A.C. Rackauck.as opposcone another in incuf111t>cnt Nolan Frizzelle, R-Hunt-
w11hou1· a reliable source of tncome Novick is takina on 20-year veteran Office No. 15, and Superior Court ington Beach, and Democrat Jack
and propo~d t~l a ponioo ~1~D:A=(:~=~:H=1c:k:s;:a:n:d:h=b:l1:c:A:d:m=1n~·=J:u:d~&~e=:W:i:l:l1:a:m=:M:c:D=o:n:a:ld=:'='~Ba~l~d~~~·n~~~l~~~i~~~~~u~oo~~~~~~·~
Sycamore Hills ~ ~Id for an inn or I ,
conference center
The land tor the center would be
leased from the ut} b} a pn .. ate
developer while the land around 1he
center would remain public He
suggested the lease fee and ma1onty of
the bed tall would to to the Open
Space < on~n.ancy Fund to bu)
more open spa(e land 1n and around
Laauna Beach
The counnl will consider the
recommendations and receive sus-
gec;11ons from audience at the public
hearings whteh begins at 7.30 p.m.
June 3 at the (It) Council Chambers,
'i50 F~t Ave.
~·HOUR ACC••• 7 DA rs
--
NEWPORT GIRDING FOR SEASON ...
From Al
10 do here ·
The clang-clang ol three old-
18sh1oned trolley\ will add a \peual
touch to the c;ummer \t.'a\on 1n
Newport Beach
The trolleys. which began a one-
year test on Sunda)' will travel the
Coast H1ghwa) between the Balboa
Peninsula and Fashion lc,lancl
The trolley expcnmen1 1c; expe,tcd
to cost the city about S88,000
accordina to Ncwpon Bcac:h C II)
Manqer Robcn Wynn It will cost 50
cents to nde the 36-seat 'lhuttlec;
Another attraction th •~ year 1s the
renovation of Balboa. including the
h1Stonc Balboa Fun Zone
MAIN O,FICI
UO .,. .. , !lay 61 et.ti• ....._ C 4
.,.-' .,,,,._ e • •r.eo '• -t.." Jitiifi
~ •"9 641·H71 ~ I ~or,. O•' •32
The Fun lonl' area, on<l' de
tenorating into a local eyesore now
sports a m1llton-dollar facelift The
Fems wheel 'P'"" nc'lt to the water,
and s1de~alk .,trolkr. are able to
brousc b) new i.hup~ <&nd ba)"1de
restaurantc,
i\ccording to Newport Bue h
pohcc rewrd.. lite c:ity\ winter
populauon of almo\t 70.000 balloons
about 200,000 on a typical \ummer
day Those add1t1onal I 30.000
v11,tors typ1lall) flo<.k 10 the Balboa
Peninsula. crowding thr s1dewalkc;,
piers and boardwalk whllr 1..ar\ urde
for precious parking spa1..es
Dunng a hus)' summer day the
Balboa l\land Ferry totes more than
1.600 cars between the peninsula and
the island
But most of the merchants at the
beach don't setm to mind -they
await the trad1t1onal bcacb mobs with
-,m1l11\g anttetpanon. After att. sum-
mer crowds are also summer cus.-
tomers
Owners of stores. ban and re-
tauran ts on ttre peninsula and Balboa
Island say saJes double or triple
dunng the summer months.
.r'F1fty percent of my busme s is
done dunna those three mo nths."
said one shop owner," For every SI 00
l make 10 January, I make SSOO 1n
July"
D1U1 Piiot
Deltvery
It Guaranteed
Cepy1.g'!C lllJ 0r""119 I.........,... .. Co-r~. "'9 -•• ,, .. -··'"""' ..,.Of•• ,,,.., .. (JI .a. .. , ... ,,.,...C• ,,....., ,,,., 1'.)41 ·~Odro<teCI .... h0u1 _.. ~
Just call 642-6086 ·
· What do )'ou likC' al'lout the l>aily Pilot? What
don't you hk~'I Call the num~r above and your
messasr will he-rt'corded. tranKTI~d and de
h"ered to the appropnate editor
1.4 .nee, F'•tOey j y~ "'' ""' ,,... '°"' ~ '" .. '°""'.-~ .. I'"' •no .,.,., eopy .,,,. o.
~
•vO.t ''° '-Mr II
•cal CIO 'IOI •9< -'°"' roe>y 0y 1 • "' , cat .,_.,,.. al~'O'lf-
,..,_ u l)IMl•ge patd •' CMl• ..,..,. "'"''
1Uf'S ,._. IOO ~,.,._ bv •"~'~ :i'~ '''''"'' °' -, , 00 "'°"' .....
YOL n.No.1a
The \lme 24-hour answenna scrv1ee ma> ~
used to rtcord letten to the editor on an) topic
Contnbuton 10 our utten column mutt include
their name and telephone number for vcnfk.at1on.
Tell1 us what's on your mind ~
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ttl •m llnclY()<.11~a-,,,.,. .. .0
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