HomeMy WebLinkAbout1986-06-12 - Orange Coast Pilot-----~ -·-.. ~ ~ . J:---. :_
-THURSDAY, JUNE 12, 1986
New vote tally errors discovered
Workers at 3 polls eitheffailed to count
ofbfoc-ked wrtte-iE ballots in primary
BJ LISA MAHONEY
Of .. 0.-,,... .....
Prcctnct workers at two more
polhn& places wett found Wednesday
to have either discouraged wntc-in
votes or faded to count them in the
Democratic pnmary for the 40th
Cona.ressional District - a discovery
Preeldent Reatan .. ,.
he wanta to build a new
ai-ce aha ttle. Oo•erace
of h.la preaa conference
la on A5.
World
South Africa today de-
clared nationwide state
of emergency and de-
tained hundreds of anti-
apartheid activists./ Al
Sports
I
that has write-an candidate Bruce
Sumner wonderina how widespread
election errors may be. I uCidiy. poll workers an a Costa
Mesa precinct admitted they m1s.-
takenly refused to allow wnte-in
votes for Sumner.
"The more we ,o into it, the more
distressina it is; Sumner, also the
. .,.-~
Democratic Party Cha1rman, said. "I
think we just hit the tip of the
iceberg."
Sumner said he may seek a new
election if a recount of ballots docs
not make him the winner in his batlJe
a1ain1t controversial Lyndon
1..a.R.o.ucbe..!ollo~it-H.oa'mann.-
The repons that have Sumner
worried come from precinct workers
10 Santa Ana and Costa Mesa who say
election officials told them there were
no leaaJ write-in candidates.
A voter in Irvine also said she
Garden of prehistoric wonder
overheard a precinct worker try to
c-0nv1nce a man there was no need to
wnte-in a candidate's name if he bad
already punched the spot next to the
wnte-10 catqory. Both a name and a
punch arc nCCC1sary for wnte-in votes
to be counted Oian~Coonty. Rqistra.r of Voters
AJ Olson said the reJ)tJns were
"isolated instances" and should not
affect the outcome of the election
.. We have write-in counts from
every prectnct Jn the distnct so 1t
doesn ·1 seem to be a widespread
problem," OIM>n 111d "It's not 1m-
po1 1bte; but I doubt n involve. a
llt)le eoouJb number of voten to
affect the final standillJS."
Sumner is not so 1ure.
8cside1 the cu: of punched ballots
w;th no name alleged in Irvine,
Sumner sa d he 11 mvestipuna
another repon that precinct we>tUra
at a founh poll told voters they had
only to write in a candidate's name
and that no machine punch was
necessary.
As or WednC1.day. umner had
reccaved 14.876 votes tD a band count
of bellou compami to I S.131 for
Hoffmann. 01.on said he expected
the fi ii tally to ehanac !IOmewhat u
cleCtioo wo count tom ballots
and otbers n<>t counted oo
election ni&ht.
Sumncr bat sasd he wilJ request a
recount if he is ocn•fied the loser on
June 17.
Sumner entered the 40th Dist.net
ra« as a wria.e-in candidate once
Democratic-Party leaders reahud
(Pleue eee llOJl&/ A2)
Hearing
clears
officer in
lawsuit •
Excessive force,
unlawful arrest
allegations dented
By SUSAN HOWLETT °' .. .., ........
A N~rt Beach police officer bu
been cleared of a $200,000 excessive
foroc lawsuit brouibt in connection
with a 1984 incident at a crowded
West Newport party.
Newport Beach pohcc offioer Mike
Spohn wu clca.n:d at a May 27
arl>itration heanna of cb.argcs made
by Gary Co-.. 24. and Janie
McDonald, 27 ·
The Angels explode for
16 hits to blow by Chi-
cago at wind-swept
Wrlgley Aetd. /C1
Tom Cook, chairman of the lni.ne Roee Parade Float float committee mut now rat.e about 81:10,000 to build the
l>e'Yelopment Committee, dlaplaya a conceptual rendertnc ISIS-foot-tona ft•t, called .. The World of Prehlatortc
of the fl•t dalp for the 1987 Tournamen t of Roea. The Wonden ... Story on A3.
Accordina to Newpon Beach
pohce spokesman Trent Harris.
Spohn was called to break up a party
in the 200 block of Cedar Street at
about I a.m. ScpL 9, 1984, followina
several noise complaints.
When Spohn arrived, he was sur-
rounded by Cox, McDonald and
about -40 other people who were
"scream mg and wh1sthrw," Hams
satd: McDonald told Spohn her
friends were ta yin& at her home for a
slumber party, and that they ..,~not
INDEX .
Advice and Games
Boating
Bulletin Board
Business
Classified
83
81
A3
85-6
C4-6
84 ca
82
Affordable housing push ends
ieaVIDJ. ~
Comics
Death NotJces
Entertainment
Opinion
Paparazzi
Polloe Log
Publlc Notices
Sports
Television
Weather
A8-9
81
A3
C7-8
• C1-4
82
A2
Supervisors' unanimous vote finishes
mandatory program; more study asked
By LISA MAHONEY °' ... 0.-, ..........
Orange County supervlsors
sounded the death knell for the
county's mandatory affordable hous·
ang program Wednesday.
Saying that affordable housing
goals are being not only met but also
e:itceeded m unincorporated areas.
the Board of Supervisors unani-
mously approved an amertdment to
the county's Housing Element. com-
pleting a three-year phaseout of the
mandatory proanm. which was in
place from 1979 to 1983.
Under the amendment. only
plaA~ <:ommUAitiu .trcady com-
mitted to construct affordable hous-
ing must provide low-and moderale·
income uruts. All new housing de-
velopments will be exempt from
mandatory controls. as they have
been since 1983
Wednesday's heanna was attended
b) numerous low<ost housing ad-voc~tes and operators of shelters for
homeless people. They disagreed
w11h the board's claim that the county
1s successfully providing housing for
au segments-ol the communitv.
County statistics show that 35
percent of housm, constructed in
unincorporated areas 1s affordable 10
individuals mak1n' 120 percent or
less than the county s median income
of about S42.000
The county's goal 1s that 2S percent
of all housing built will meet the
affordable standard.
But speakers from such organ1za-
t1ons as the Fair Housing Counctl. the
(Pleue eee AFFORDABLE/ A2)
McDonald was placed under arrest
for d1sturbina the ~ after her
fnends refused to leave and Cox
allqedly crabbed the officer by the
arm as he took McDonald anto
custody.
"He (Cox) slammed the door on
the officer.-Harris saud. Cox was
arrested on susp1c1on of assauJt1na a
police officer. but •he battery chafses
against Cox were later dropped.
Cox and McDonald tiled a lawsuit
an Orange County Superior Court,
(Pleue eee CLEAJt.SD/ A2)
Clty topaycosts w·t 11 INS ·a G t t t• mbeacbaccldeat 1 ness ca S r at S es apo ac ICS
By ROBERT BARltER
Of ... Dellr,... .....
A 24-year-old city lifeguard whose
Jeep ran over a sunbather an Hunt·
inaton Beach has been suspended
while an 1nvest1pllon 1s bean' com-
pleted. Community Services Director
Max Bowman said 1oday.
Trial opens on lawsuit to block INS officials
from questioning Hispanics about citizenship
It also was disclosed that a city
settlement committee has agreed to
pay the medical costs for the victim.
Beverly Cota. 25, ofOranae. wh!le she
11 confined at Pacifica Community
(Pleue eee JEEP I A2)
By lite Auoclated Pre11
A youth told how U.S 1mm1grat1on
agents stopped has soccer pracucc.
and a woman recounted two war-
rantless searches of her home as tnal
began on a challenae to "Gestapo
tactics" used to catch illegal ahens
A federal lawsuit sccks to end ll S
lmm1gra11on and Na1urahzat1on Ser·
After long dream ,
clipper Pilgrim
ready for charter
It has taken 16 years for Dennis and
Betty Holland's drum to come true.
Never mind that their acme 11 a
U.S Coast Guard inspector or that
their rainbow sl~tchei all the way
from the backyard of their Costa
Mesa home to Poru-0-Call in San
Pedro.
They'll gladly take the1rd!ttm.'Wlth
whatever help comes "Y'th i~. I
Once the Coast Guard in pector JIV~ approval to the Ptlaim of
Newport today an San Pedro, the
Hollands Wlll be allowed to offer
chaners.aboard the 118-foot clipper
ship they started buildina in their
backyard in 1970.
"We're really very excited about it
after all the dela)r. and problems we
had over the ytan," Betty Holland
said. "But we're ready to JO."
Sc"tfll times over the past few
)'ears, it looted hke the Hollands'
arum of buildina and ilin1 their
own schooner ..-ould be forever dry'·'
doc.bid
Rp~1
I HYNDMAN !" \
FOCUS ON THE NEWS
years. Then, once completed, he ~tied with Newport Beach city
bfficial over how he could launch at
and whtrc lt could be dO<:k~.
After btina bumptd ltkc an orphan
rrom one borne to another, the
Pllvam of Newpon found ~ pcT-
mancnt resti~ place at Pons..Q..Call.
Buu.Jthou the ship is scaw rthy.
it hu taken t c Hollands mote than
IS month to obtain the nettmry
Coast Ouard approvals to o~ratc •
charter ICJ'Vice aboard lhe chppcT.
"Now. finally, thc}'rc 1Ttdy to -vc
vice practice of stopping and ques-
tioning people about the1rcit1zensh1p
.. talus merely because they appear to
be Hispanic
The suit. filed 1n 1979 by the
National Center for lmm11f8nts'
R 1ghts lnc of Los Angeles, also seek!>
a court order requ1nng the INS to get
search warrants before entenna
homes or oon-pubhc areas of bust-
I
nesscs to search for su'>pected 1llcgal
ahens Arguments rn the class-achon
suit opened Wednesday an U c;
D1stnct Court 1n Los .\ngeles
One wttness. 14-year-old Rudy
Valdez. said 1mm1grauon agen1s
came to ha'i soccer practict n C orona
on Apnl I 0 and ordered 20 playe~ to
'ill on the ground while they were
que'itaoned about 1he1r 1mm1grat1on
'iUllU'i
"I was kind of ~ared. I don't
u'iually take m~ h1rth certificate to
practice.'' said Valde7, who was born
ildina 1hc Pitvam of Newport
Dennis Holland l l du11l naan1 (Pleue ... PILORDl/A2) The Pllcrl• of ftewport I.I ready to curter.
....
an the Un11ed State'i
Peter Schey, eitecuuve director of
lhe 1mm1gran1-;· nghts center, said
more than 20 w1tnesse'i would tesufy
to 'itmalar incidents.
"These arc ( 1cc;tapo tacttes." Schc)'
said "You cannot detain a large
populauon of innocent peoJ?lc Just to
come up wtth a handful of 11legals."
.W1tnes'i V1rg1n1a Zepeda. 29, ~1d
INS agent~ entered her Fullerton
home tWlce 1n I Q79 without per-
m1ss1on or ~arch warrants The
second time. Z<'peda said. she and her
husband woke to find agents taluna
the screens off their windows
The) ordered her husband to let
them in when he came to anvestiptc.
she tesulied
Nellie Zuniga. who works an the
state Department of Motor Vehicles
offict an Santa Ana, descnbed a raid
Sept JO 1n which immivauon agents
combed through waiting hJ\C$ for
people who appeared to~ H1span1c
"When 11 was all ovCT. people were
upset" Zuniga said. "The blacks, the
wh11es. we were all u~t."
3 sentenced for
beach gang rape
blamed on-friend
By STEVE MARBLE .\s time pe51Cd, he 'lid he feal"'d to
OllMMtr,...•..,. peak up Ix-au~ he 1houa.ht has
Thrt't' men who 'itood b) whale a former fnend m11ht s-ttk reven e
fnend WU wrongly COOVICted ,and aptn t htS famll)' .
1tnt to pnson for a 198 I gang rape at · The 4th D1stnc~ C ourt ol Appeal
Huntm11on l\1a1c Beach the) com-rrversed Navarro 'I conv1ct1on last
matted werr ~nlenced Wtdne~a .. to year on a technicality a.nd ordered a
length\ pmon terms ~ond tnal Whtie aw11t1na the tnal. Navarro apttd to help clear h1m~lf ·The men pleaded guilt" to rape and and pther mformahon an\t h1
oral <.Opulalton Ch&Ji~ aner Da-.ad fncnds
Navarro tnckcd them into braaaana "Th~ Oi\tnct ,\ttomcy'\ ofTi«
about tht r:tpe a'> he \l'Cretl\ tape--worked as hard 10 clt"ar him H ther.
rt<:ordcd tht conveNat1on on11nally did to <."Onvact ham,·
Navarro, 2\ \pl"nt more than 1hrtt Navarro, attome> \lu Fo ctte 'tlU~ in pn1on for 1h( cm t before h ad
con' inccJ authont 10 let him In a pica berp1n intended to
pthtr C' adcnct ap1n't tu former the 'acttm anothcr tnal, proteleuton
friend\, Dtput) Dt'itnct Attorney dro~ I:\ cha qa1nst each of ltofTtt~ Rohtn<.on said the <fefendants an CJCChante ror p&ilty 1 h1' tnal, Navarro \le~dfully plen on one ooun1 each of rape 1n
m 1nta1ntd1m 1nnoccncc but rtfu~ concen Wlth othen and oral copula·
10 1mph<':!lt' ha• lnends. fellow mcm-uon m conccn wuh others
ben ofa Santa Fe Spnnp ,trttt uprnor Court J
lht pro~utor \aid Bn.cno on ednesd& •
Na¥trm td ht-WB~ under the David 1 22. and
1mpn-u1on that ht' tncnd would Ram1rci. 2 • 10 I
come foN'IN and <'Om"\ 1 the •TO (Pt ... a
A2 * Orange Cou1 DAILY PfLOT/ Tnurtday, June 12. 1VB8.
Emergency council reports
39 ways to be_at big quake
91 LISA MA.BO Y ...............
Cla1mina that Oran'e County 11
woefully unprepattd to cope Wlth a
mtjor earthquake. a county oomm11-
ttt ha$ developed 39 rccommen-
d.auon intended to change that.
A~rd1na to the Oranae Count)
EmCJ'ltnCY Management Counctl.
geol<>&ists say there 1s a 50-50 chance
of a m~or quake occumng wathan the
neitt 15 ycm.
It could be tomorrow or tt could be
16 years from now. Either wuy. mo\t
Junsd1ctt0ns art not re"4tdv for 1t, the
panel sa\S
In the fim of four repons planned
on the subject of earthquake
preparedness, the council painted a
fn&htcning picture of the devastation
I.hat could be expected from a maJor
eanhquake and suggested 39 ways the
county could get read) for tt.
-'\ maJOr earthqual.e alona etthcr
tht' San ..\ndrea) or tht' Newpon -
tnglewood fault \\OUld devastate
Orange Count)' k1lhng up to 3.200
people and in1unng nearl)' I 0.000
more. according to a council report
1!>sued Tue\da) Free"a~ ovcrpao;se!> would col-
bpse. pans or Pleine Coast Hait-way
would crumble and landslidel v.-ould
block acc.-cu to many hillside att~.
Tnvel would be difficult and
emcrscncy scrv1cci would bt spread
thin
Natural 11s Imes could rupture:
c.au'lina fires: powtt plants and tele-
phone hnC$ would be damqed and
pc-rbapc mopcrable Hua.rdous ma-
tenals sp1Us could further complicate
the d1~ter
If the earthquake occurred along
the Newpon-lnaJewood Fauh, 43 . .S
percent of the county's hospital be<h
v.ould be destroyed. crcaung an
unprecedented medical emergency.
1 n addmon. as many as 89,000 could
be left homeless for a long pc-nod of
time
fhc Emergcnq. Management
( ounc1I 1s made up of ~ven count}
government adm101strators In 1984,
the year after hundreds were in1urcd
and m1lhons wonh of property were
destroyed by an earthquake in Coal-
mp. the group began assessina the
probable impact a ma.Jor earthquake
would have on Orange County. The
Coahngua quake measured 6. 7 on the
Richter scale.
The suggestions range from
prcvcaU\lt meuurcs -such t
1lttnJlhcmna county bwld.ifll' and
nockpihnJ cmnicncy equipment
and supplies -to a public education
prosram to encourage county resi-
dents to be ~rc;d.
Bttwttn the projttted death and
injury toll and the millions -
perhaps billions -in upected prop.
crty dam~e, "there's a lot to be lost ti
we don't enact and implement these
rtcommendation . " satd Paul Hess.
who heaclf The Fu-e Dep&;nment's
emergency manaaement d1v1s1on.
County Supervisor Roacr Stanton
pronused that thc Board of Supcr-
\llSOni would aulhonze the immedi-
ate 1mplementauon of as many of the
39 suagest1ons as is "logically and
fiscally ~s1blc." He caUed the repon
a major step toward effccuve disaster
planning.
The cost of 1mplement1ng ~me of
the suggesllons won't be lcnown for
another six months.
Other phases of the Emergency
Management Council's task are the
development of a sbon-term
rcspon1e plan sbouJd the .. Bia One"
happen 10 the near future and a IOfli·
lerm county response and recovery
plan
JEEP ACCIDENT UNDER-INVESTIGATION ...
From Al
Hospital in Huntington Bea(h
Relames \a\ that Cota '>ulTered
t140 fractured 'enebrae tn the freal.
ac.ctdl"nt Monda' afternoon "hen the
Jeep ran u' er her legs and balk She
ma) be ho'ipltaltLed about 10 da}s
Cota\ mothcr-in-lav., \1cndora
Ptro of Costa \1esa ..aid lhe woman
had ''big·· t1 re traclo.. '> un her ball and
' • was ~till in pain Cota was act1\e
ph)Stcall~ and '' an a' td 1.1.ater and
sno" sl.11:r according to P1t:o
The alc1dent on the ont' mile of
Cit\ beach 'outh ot the pier marks thl"
fir-St p0tent1al tt:'>l ut the ut~ 's sell-
insurance provam <'it\ Attome)'
Gail Hutton said
Officials canceled all ltab1hty in-
surance an Apnl when the premiums
became too high tor limited coverage.
she said
Bowman said mt1l1al repons show
that lifeguard Andrew Wemenberger
was returning to lifeguard bcad-
quaners at about 3 mph tn his Jeep
after a rescue
He was c~mmg from the water's
edge Cota was lying tn a hollow area
on the other side of a berm and
We1ssenbcrgcr d1dn 't see her
Bowman said Wc1sscnberger went
through Clltcns1'e trairuna programs
tn which dnvcrs are asked to stop
their "chicles and look on foot for
bathers before dnv1ng.
Bowman didn't know whether the
procedure was followed Safct) of-ftc~rS and f>ohcc are conducung the
mvest1gat1on, he said.
A smalar accident occurred m
Ncwpon Beach m 1984 when Lon
Sp1ak. 20. ofTustm, was run over b)' a
lifeguard Jeep. Her lawsuit alleging
n~1gence hasn't been settled. of-
ficials said
AFFORDABLE HOUSING PUSH ENDS ...
From Al
League of~ omen \' otrn ot Orange
(aunt., and the rnuntv''> Human Relation~ Comm1'>\ll>n. cnt1c1zed
o;upcrv1w~ tor setting their \lghts tou
low by u'>ing Orange Count\·., un-
U\Uall~ high median inrnmt: as a ·
'>tandard for determining eltgih1ht\
The\o urged the board l<• l.Oncen-
tratc on pro" 1d1ng housing tor peopk
with large families and 'hose on the
lov. end ot the income ~ale and not
"\' upp1es·· wtth S 30J)(Y).S50.000
salane!> "ho can afford to pa\ market
rares.
Several speaker;; related the large
numbt>r; of homelt'~\ peopk 1n the
count) and "deponatton" of Orangl'
( ount)' residents to Riverside and
Los Angeles counties. where housing
1s cheaper. to the dearth of vel! lo"-
1ncomc houstn~ locally .
As a concession to those asking lor
ac11on on the homt'le\!I problem.
<,upen 1sors agreed 10 refer the matter
to the count)\ lnteragenc:. Coordt-
naung Commmec Headed b~ ( oun-
'" A.dm1nistratl\.e Officer l..af"I! Par-
rish the lOmmtttee 1s made up ot
represcntatt' es from the count) 's 26
Cltl('<,
In a related matter. !.upt.•rv1sors al!lo
agreed to continue an incentive
program for dneloperc; with e'\ce<,\
affordable housing credits
Developers ac:qu1rcd the credits b)
lOnstrucung de,elopments of more
than 25 percent affordable untt'i
dunng the )ear\ mandator) control'i
were 1n place
The credits ma\ be e\changcd for
mcentnes hke dens1t\ bonu-;es and
1esser requirements for such item<. as
streets and ut11lt1es
The need for mandaton control\
was ~bated dunng a marathon eight-
h our public heanng in 1 Qts3 Fi ft)·
three speakers spoke for and aga1nc.1
afTordab1htv requirements dunng the
heanng one of the longest in the
histon of the board.
PILGRIM APPROVED FOR CHARTERS ...
From Al
U'> the last 01\. · lktt' Holland \a1d
\.\.cdnes<la> ·The rules and rcgu·
la11ons kept changing on u<1. hut I
lo..nov. they're e'uted ahout U'> operat-
ing.'
The Holland<. 14111 begin olknng
charter tnps to Catalina !\land and uri
and down the coas1 this wC'tlend
Denni\ Holland. v.ho built h1\ ti~t
boat -J lO-foot ketch -a\ a k·cn-
ager. '>taned work on the P1lgnm of
Newport 1n I q10 T hnh1pv.nght had
been dreaming ol huild1ng a dapper
<.hip and immersed h1m'>clftn the Ion:
and legend oftho~· tamuu\ 'cc,c,el~
For 11 year~. Holland lahon·d
through the comtrUltJOn pl.ink h'
plank, a' he and Bell~ rai'K'd threl
daughtl'r\ tn the hull of the I Xth
ccntut) \t) le chpJX'r The\ rt•rHed out
their home on <\anw .\na "llrt'l'I lor
1mome
The m1xkrn dJ\ '\,nah·., .\rk
\.alued at $1 million took Holland
about 30 000 hour\ 111 huild and CO\I
S 150.000 in matenalc.; Rut on No"
IQ 1983. v.hen hr launched tht
P1lg.nm of Nt•v.por1 at thl' Lido
'ihipyard. Holland \a1<l the time and
llHIOl'\ \\tre 1.1.ell·\µl!llt
·on m\ deathbed. I II ht: abll" to
look at pictures afld memone'> not at
m' ched.book." hl' <.aid
To tov. the boat tu ~cwpon
Harbor Holland had tn move the
tenants out of hi' home. demolish ll
and n:mml' tht rubble He then
1.1.orked '~1th ctt\ nffic1ah to drav. up a
route from h1' home to the v.atcr'c.
edge.
.\t 1h1: l.1do \h1p}ard. a cru"d of
m·arl\ ~ 000 pc.·ople cheered and
applaudl'd wht.'n the clipper '>lipped
gra1:etull) into the harbor.
·1 chn<,ten thl'c < ltppt>r ~hooncr
Ptlgnm ol Newport'" &tty Holland
'houtcd lrom atop a plank pen.:hcd
underlhl c.h1p\ how "May fa1r\\tnd\
lollov. ht•r"
But 111.1.as re<l tape. not lair 1.1.1nd\
that lolln"•Cd the Pilgrim around
\:l'\\port Harbor
< 11\ olfiual5 ..aid the P1lgnm v.a\
nol 1,1.dcome al the temporary publtr
Jnd~ at Rhine Wharf in < annn'
Village It 1.1.nuld have to he moved or
Hnlland 14ould be fined
lanntt utalluns at St1 a da\.
Holland pleaded with the (II)' Coun
ct l 1n Februar. 1985 to let him stay
11.1.0 week'> be}ond his month-long
c;ta> so he could ma Le needcd repairs
( ounc1I member'i refused and threat-
ened legal action to spur the move
Holland's fncnd Marlo. Howard
came to his aid ofTenng his pnvate
dock at An '> landing free of charge
But v.hen A.n's Landing was rebuilt
into th<.' current Newpt.m Landing
de\elopment the Pi lg.nm of "lewpon
"'as forced to find another home
Holland set sail in Augu,1 1984 tor
Dana Point Harbor where he docked
outside the Cro"n Point rc\Laurant
Tht're too the hosp1taht> was soon
nhau'>ted and the P1lgnm of New·
pon had to look for nev. a1.commo-
dat1om
The Hollands lound them 1n April
198.S at Ports-0-( all in San Pedro.
.. Thert JUSt wasn't a place big
enough down here to keep her." Betty
Holland said "But we like 11 1n San
Pedro \.\.e thank we'll lca"t 11 there
"We c;un· don't want to move
.l(Ultn."
RAPISTS SENTENCED ... CLEARED ... From Al
C1rcgory Franco. _ft 10 lti qar'
Sentencing for Tomm~ < 1ome1. ~4.
wa'i put off until Jul) 14 <.o probation
authontacs could l'' alua1e t haracter
'itatcment\ gathered ti~ hi\ mother nn
his behalf.
Arthur faqui,el. ~O v.ho ,,1,0
plcadcdgu1lt} 1".t•>hc.·<.entcnccd \u~
8. Robin'>on said Ralph Perl'/ Jr 21
was previously S('nt('nced to 1hree
years· probation hccau~ he c nopcr
ated with authont1c<o
A ~"enth man accuc;ed 1n the raf)(·
Gusta'o 4.gu1rrc. rt'main' at lar~w
Robtn!ron said
~~~~~E Daily Pilat
MAIN OFFICE
VOL 7t, NO. 193
t I ht' mm attalked a young coupk
1n Augu<.t I 9S I at the state park 1n
Huntington Beach The woman wa,
raped repca1edh and her boyfriend
hcaten
Na,arro was arrested later that
morning a\ he slept under a llfeiY§_rd
~rand 1A.liere fa· passed out from
dnnking ~tore the rape tool. place-
.\uthont1e'i c;a1d Navarro's fnend left
him behind to ta kt• the blame for their'
cnme
In an inter.1t·1.1.. Na,arro u1d he
fears repmal ;ind has taken up
n·"Sidcnn· 1r1 a secret location
From Al
alleging unlawful arrest ond un-
necessary force Hams said They
C'ach sought S l<Xl.000 1n damages.
The matter was turned over March
I IS to court-appointed arbitrator W1l-
ltam < rosby for a deC'ls1on. according
to Ru.:hard Murphey. the Irvine
anome' who represented the New-
port Beach Pohce Dt:partment
Murphey, who \<ltd he was pleased
with the dec1s1on. said all claims
against Spohn of exc~1vc force and
unlawful arre~t were denied at the
Orangr ( ounty Supenor Coun hear-
ing.
Dally Piiot
Oetlvery
I• Ouarant-.d
Justcall 642-6086
l,l~y f rl(loy ~ yOV O{I
'IC>! ~ ..... '°"' ~ 11) r. IO 1> .., ca• ti.•Ot• , c .,,
•'>cl ,our COll't • ti.
What do you hke about the Daily Pdot'> Whiu
don't you hkc? c~u the number above and your
menaae will be recorded, transcnbed and de-
livered to thc appropnatc editor
The same 2'4-hour ansv.icnna j(rv1ce may be
u5td to record letters to the editor on an}' topic.
Contnbutors to our utters column mu"' include
their name and telephone number for vcnfic:al1on.
Tells us what's on your mind,
-s,.,.,..,.., -a...-. "
rov "° nc.1 •..: -'°"' COOr by 7 I 1¥ Oe'llQ
, 0 • ... •l'O '°" COP'; ... .,..,.......,,
ClrculaUon
Tetephone1
Morning clouds t(j) hang around
I LOW prtMUre O\W the deeefU end high pr-.,,.. 11 ._ :::.2 wt.II contlnu. Southern Clllfomt•'• pan.n of momlng ~ .ion; the oout end werm t.mpera1uree Inland,
fOfecatttra Mid.
Low cloudt wtll peratat along the ooettaJ ., ... until mid·
morning Frldey. ctearlng for •ft•noon suMhlne, the National
WMther Setvlce Mid.
U.S. Temps
Tides
TOOAY 35tpm I 17pm
nlOAY
:17
3 1
FIRlllllQll 1,401m •>
Fnt low • 14 pm O 4 8-ld.. 4 )3 p"' 4 1 S-.,low 1001 pm 2 7 ..,,, ... ,~ •'05 p'" ,... 'ftdar
11641 am Md-11QM'Ml:06pm
Moen eet1 todey ll1 --. r-.. FllllllY et 11 0$ • m Md Mll llOeftl at 12· 13 a.m
Extended
Public support dwindling
for 55-mph speed limit
By tbe McClatd1y News Suvlee
S .\(RAMENTO -Public S\llJ-
pon for the .55-mph speed hm1t 1s
dwtndhng in C.ahfomia, with two-
thirds of the state's dnvers adm1tung
to frequently breaking the la~ ac-
cording 10 a Cahfom1a Poll releasro
Wednc'ida)
The suf\e) ~hows that half of the
1 O 1 ' Cahfom1ans in ten 1cwed be-
lieve the speed hmtt should be
maintained at .55 mph. whtle 47
percent think 11 o;hould be raised.
Last year. 60 pcrc~IH of those
suf\e~ed felt that the 55-mph speed
hm1t \hould stay in place and 57
percent acknowledged frequently
speeding.
The findings came as no surpnse to
the Cahfom1a H1ghwa) Patrol. which
m February recommended to the
Legislature that the speed limit on
rural interstate freeways be raised 10
65 mph
"The fact that we arc wnting O\.t'r I
mtlhon ttckcts a year for maximum
speed violations is a reasonable
rcflcctt on" that the poll figures are
accurate said CHP spokesman Steve
Kohler
At the same time. however. the poll
showed that substantially more Cah-
fom1ans are weanng seat belts. a
result of the mandatory seat belt use
law that went into effect Jan. 1
Pnor to the law. a quarter of the
dnvers said they never u~d seat
belts. but smce the beginning of the
\Car that nilmbcr has dwindled to 7
i>crcent In addtt1on . .57 percent of
those mtctviewed said they now use
scat belts aJI of the time compared to
3 S pc-rccnt last year.
Whalt' safet) experts e"pect the nse
m seat belt use to help cut down on
traffic •nJuncs and deaths. they also
ha'e predicted an mcrcase m fataJ-
1llt's 1fthe speed hmu 1s ra1sro.
For eumple. a National Academy
of Sciences study in 1984 estimated
that tht' higher speed hm1t on rural
intt'rstatc h1ghwa)s could nuse the
state's death toll by 50 people a year.
But the CHP maintains that added
sea.t belt use could reduce that
number
MORE WRITE-IN VOTE ERRORS TOLD ...
From Al
that J loff mann. the onl) candidate on
the ballot, "'as a follower of
LaRouchc a perennial pres1dent1al
candidate who wants to quarantine
A I OS patients and who believes that
the Queen of England and the
Rockefeller; are traffickm& drugs.
According to an unofficial count
Junc 4. Sumner tnumphed over
Hoffmann b) 1.459 votes, a difficult
achievement for a wntc-m candic;bte
But the unofficial tallies don't take
into account vote!> for Mi ckey Mo•JSe
and mom or those wntc-m spaces
punched but left blank
That's wh> the uno01cial count -
done by a machine on the number of
punchcs next to the wnte-1n slot -
differs from the hand tally
But 11 now appears that some of the
discrepancy in the count may be due
10 the failure of some precmct
workcn to add up the wnte-m votes.
Sumner campaign aide David
Paine said there's no telling how
many votes may have been lost
SPECIAllY FOR DAD
:\NO FOR 'tO U
Just in nme for Fatherc;
Day June 15th. wt'
0rt' offmng
our basic wool &: polyester.
hopsack blaur for ~I iQ 00
Rtgularl> Sl9~00 ~uc ant
mg-colorc; mcludmg the
Classtc: ~avy.
Al">o, from Ma~r. the all
wool Huddcrc;fitld tropical
wors1td <tlack m ttght tradi-
tional colors for SMOO
Regularly S90.00
Now ts the ome to rmu
o~d & yourself to th~
wardrohf ~.-.enoal.5 during
tht entl.tt month of June.
Stt you soon
beUlU!>e vote~ wcre told there wcrc
no legal 1.1.nte-1n cand1datc!I
"There's something going on here
that ~oes beyond superficial prob-
lems. · Paine said Wcdnc~y "It
ma)' be cons1derabl)' more wide-
spread and 1t may in fact cause us to
lose the election 1f we do not prevail
on the recount "
A poll inspector who came forward
Tuesda" revealed that volunteer
workerS at a Costa Mesa precinct on
Senate Street told voters thett would
be no wnte·m ballots allowed
The poll mspcctorsa1d '\he received
a telephone call the day before the
election telhng her there were no legal
wnte-1ns in the campaign aod to
rcJCCl any such rcqut'sts According to
the inspector. the caller was a county
elecuons worker
On \.\. edncsda)' a Santa Ana poll
1nspc-ctor lodged a s1m1lar complaint
with the registrar's office.
Marjorie Wtlltams said she called a
Nf'W SC.Ort Houn· Mon -hi 10-9,
t 10-6. Sun. ll-5
six-c1al telephone number tor prccmct
worker~ three time<, on June 2 and 3
and was told on each occasion that
there were no legal wnte-in can-
didates
W1lllams. a 12-)ear·vt'teran poll
worker. said no one was prevented
from makmg a wnte-m vote for
Sumner. but the votes were not
counted A machtne count shows five
wnte-in votes at the precinct. located
at the Santa Ana Unified School
D1stnct offices.
In the lrvmc instance. Supenor
Court Comm1ss1oner Barbara Evans
"81d she overheard an unidentified
precmct worker argumg with a man
over how to cast a wnte-tn vote.
Evan!I said the worker ms1sted that
a machine punch was all that was
necessary for the vote to be counted.
Evans also said a precmct worker
improperly demonstrated how to cast
a write-in vote to a hnc of waiuna
voters at the -Los NaranJos Elemen-
tary School polling place
• ..
•
ActbJ6 workshop
slated' la IrvbJe
Social studies cl11:ss size cut sought .
Hollywood c:astina director Estelle Tepper will
present a workshop at Irvine VaUey Colleie
Saturday from I 01.m. to 4 p. m.
. The worklhop, "A Day wnh Estelle Tepper,"
will ~ver such topics as audtlloruna for com·
merc1als. dramu and s11uation comedies; finina
your personality to the role; cold readi'!.t
1
1
11
script;
plus an md1vi~uah2cd critique of actina ·
. The fee 1s $6S. For more information, c.all
Irvine Valley College Community Serv1CC1 SS9·3333. •
Gift wrap Idea• offered
Women interested in clever asft wrapping ideas are 10v1ted to attend the Newport Beach Christian
Women's Qub luncheon on Wednesday.
The luncheon will be held from 11 :30 a.m. to
2:00 p.m. at the Airporter Inn Hotel, 18700
MacArthur Blvd., Irvine
Cost 1s $8 Rescrvauons dcadltne is Friday. Call
Lon F1duk at 541-8109. A nursery for pre-school
children 1s provaded.
'f emple Hills electlon set
The monthly mttung of the Temple Hills Com~un11y Assoc1at1on takes place at 8 this
evemng at the home of Jam and Jan Hall, 75S Oak
St., Laguna Beach
Foremost on the agenda will be preparations for
the u~oming Laguna Beach City Council election.
Candidates arc invited 10 present their views. The
meetin& is open 10 all residents.
Health seminar set in Irvine
"New Mind, New Body: Biofeedback and Your
Health" as the title of a one-day seminar offering five
uruts of continuing education for nurses slated
Saturday from 9:30a m. to 3·30 pm. tn room A305
at lrvtoe Valley College
l.nstructor as Linda Summers. Th~ fee as S30.
For 1nfonna11on call 559-3333.
Book.fair and concert seti
A Bookfa1r and Concert is slated Sunday at 2
p.m. at the Ph1hos Foundauon, 1507-F N. Tust.Ln
Ave., Santa Ana
Featured Wlll be the music by Barbara Bleecker
of Munctta and Enc Schneider of Huntington
Beach. Concert-goers will be able to browse through
a selection of metaphysical books.
For 1nfonnat1on call 836-4895.
Support group forming
The Laguna Beach Community Cliruc is
starting a support group for women who want to
work on personal goals.
Sessions begin Monda;, and run for sixweeks.
Pre-group interviews are under way.
For information, call Susan or Gladys,
494-9429 or 831-8143. The cl101c 1s located-at 364
Ocean Ave.
Golf tourney scheduled
Golfers arc invited to part1c1pate m the the
Interval House Golf Tournament Monday at
Seachff Country Oub an Huntington Beach.
Entry fee 1s S 150.
Proceeds wtll be used to equip and mainla.ln the
sheller for v1ct1ms of domestic violence. For
Ulformauon, call Carol Hubbard 840-383 7 or Netue
Barnes, (213) 592-2960. ..
C011•t group plans luncheon
The Oranac County Coast Assoctataon will hold
its general membership luncheon June 20 at the
Newport Beach Country Club, 1600 E. Coast
Highway, NeW{>Ort Beach.
The recepti on will begin at 11 :30. Wlth lunch at
noon. William Ficker.I Carl E. Nettleton and Harry
Monahan will be the reatured speakers.
Tickets are S 11 and the deadline 10 obtain them
1s June 16.
For tickets, mail a check to Orange County
Coast Assoctallon, P 0. Box l 354, Huntington
Beach, C.allf. 92647. Tickets wtll be held at the door.
Thursday, June 12
• 6.30 p.m .. Lapna Beacl1 Board of Adjust·
men&, Cuy Council Chambers, 505 Forest Ave.
Pouc£ Loe
By ROBEJ\T IAftIEft °' .. ..., .......
Teachen arc pre ina for reductions in
the iue of social studies claues on
campust!. in the Huntin11on Beach Union
H11h School 01stm:t.
"There should be 1 lot ofintemcuon on
pohtacal. economic and soc1oloa1caJ i,..
sues." said Ed Pope. head of the Social
Studies IXpanmrnt .at Manna Hi&h
School. "You need to SCl hl there and tear
ideas apart. It's different from tcachana a
sk 1 lls class."
But Pope and others claim that sheer
number of students in each class hinders
that goal.
Eagle Scouts
. Pope. who has pt>ni·h s enlJrc 21-y
tcach1n1 carter at Mannt. applauds the
d1 lnct's efforts 10 date 1n us1na revenue
from the tale louery to reduce clan 11ze throu~out the di tnct.
"Its I.he first Khool board in memory to
take concrete steps to red~t"the m,cs of
classes in all aras," he said. But 10C11I
1tud1e1 da Sitt have always had the most
students and conunue to do so. he a.aid.
Jn May, ll'UlltCJ apprO\'Cd spcndina
$800,000 to hire 2S teachers, most of them
for En,alish classes.
Social stud1« teachen. are askana
trustees to add four teachers at a cost of
about SI 32.000 to reduce the studcnt-
teacher raito to an av,raac of 30.9-10-1.
Foar <>ranae County Boy Scouta have rece!Yed the hiahat award lD
ecoatlna, tlae ~e Award. Doua Ban.later, Jama Coll, Don Duffer
Jr. and IUcb.ard lrkeneff were reco&nbed at ceremonla held at the
Dana Point Youth P'aclllty.
Residents, merchants
differ over parking lot
By SUSAN HOWLETT
Of~.,..., ..... ....,
Some say they're gomg to pave paradise
and put up a parktog lot, but members of
the Newport Beach C11y Council saw 1t
differently when they authonzed ad·
d1t1onal vehicle space in Corona dcl Mar
1h1s week
The residents say it's a park, but the Cit}
Council members say the half-block parcel
of land at Bayside Dnve and Jasmine
A venue 1s simply a portion of city street
nght of way that has always been desig-
nated for parking space
The city landscaped the 'imall area, and
now nearb) homeowners don't want
officials to take awa} the grass and trees to
put an a stnpcd parkmg lot
The C11y Council voted to adopt a
design for the parking lot that would '\ave
all but five or <;1x trees. but SC\cral of the
residents were not happ)' w11h the de-
c1s1on.
.. No matter how (much) you say a
parkmj lot as landscaped beauufully. 11 s
stall ugly." said resident Nancy Phelps
The controversy surrounds a pro-
nounced parking problem that ha<> been an
issue 10 Corona dcl Mar for \cars.
Local residents would rather have a
landscaped greenbelt at Jasm10c and
Ba)sidc. but the merchants ID the con·
dcnsed commumt) welcome the ad-
dmonal parking spaces that pa\ ing lo\Ould
provtde.
"There'~ a d1ffcrcnce·of opm1on on what
that half-blcxk nght of way portion should
he used for," said Nev.port Beach Publu:
Works Director Ben ~olan.
l\lolan c;aad cit~ staff will rt>de~1gn th<.'
land an to a 15-'>pace parking lot Construc-
tton "lll get undt'r "a' 1n ahout a month
he '\Sid
<''>t1matcd a1 $180 • • •
Currently. che 1vtt11t 10C11I 11Ud1cs
size• 34 11udenu pert htt. Atfou-1~
'board red ctioo.s made Lut mocnh Wiii
reduct the size to an av~ ofl2.J..io-I.
In other areas, the infusion of Iott~
money next ~tembct •will cut En&Jish
cla a to 28 tudcnts per tea er. fomsn
Ian~ classe1 to an ave~ o~.,.to-1
and math to an average of 30 9-to-l
Board member Jerry Sulhj•!J· an En17
hlh profHSOr at Cal State Lona J:?Cach, said
Wednesday that Pope ~nd tu• collcaaue J>~Uis Helland madc:-a tensible and
modest requn1 to trus~ Tuesday ni&bt.
"But prcny soon the well runs dry and
you may have to stop the Ooodptn-that
thett can only be so many (classroom cuts)
at a time ...
But ftllow Tl'llltef UDda MoUttoa. wbo ~ • 1n bill~ tt UC Betkdn'. aid
..totally qrca lhat social lwdia dul
ma mould be cuL
.. Es ) euminaoon.s re im~t 10
cnttcal thinlu~.. e d. ''h 1 a ~
talion lo pvc tn.ae or flbt LeltS. but the
really fine ttachcr1 sf to c.t)'I.. They
take volumeaoftimc tocorrcct(becauseof
the numbers of the students.)"
Trustees are «Pttttd to take Klion
June 24' on the request
The district expecu to n:ceive aboUt
S 1.8 million in Jottery money Cor the
CutTCnt school year. int final 1nsullmtot
wall come in Auaust. officials llid.
Irvine's entry
for rose parade·
a beastly sight
Ela borate preh istoric
th eme should lend itself
to exotic arran em en ts
By Pen. SNEIDERMAN
Of .. ~,.. ....
haH been anstAntly forgettable. We were
lookmg for a float that would act publicit}
before, dunna and after the parade. We
wanted someth1n1 peopJe •on't follCL"
He sa1d the dinosaur float will probably
have room for about six bwnan riders,'
thou&h 11 hasn't been dcterm.ined wbo the
passcnaers wi..11 be -or how lhey will be
a111~d .
The lrvme Rose Parade Float Commit· Toda}. the lrvme R09C Parade float'..
tee 1s taking a giant step backward Committee has a de5.11D ready for con-
Backward an ume, that as. struct1on and a membership lisT a~
The commmcc, prepanna Irvine's first proach1n$ 250. One y~r 110. the group
entry an the famed Toumameot of Roses, bard> existed A handful of~idcnts llWbo
1s bankJna on a brontosaurus and other ~anted their cuy to take part in the R0te
exunct creatures to brin& home a pru.c nex.t Parade began meeung last Junt and ·
New Year's Day. -applied 1n Jul) for a place in the l9&7
Tlhs week, th!! committee unveiled a event.
large color rcndenng of its float dcs1g.n,' Tournament of Roses orpni.z.en only
entitled "The World of Prctustonc Won-allow about 60 floats, and competitioa aa
ders." The entry, over 55 feet lonJ. will be keen. Entries are rarely accepted on tbe
constructed by Fiesta Floats of Temple first tr). and u appeared an January that
City It will cost about $120,000. lrvUle would not be in the 1987 parade.
The float committee has the endorse· But space became available, and the lrvtne
ment of Irvine officials. but 1t won't committee learned m March that ill
receive aoy city funding. An ambattous apph~tson bad been4eeepled.
campaign to finance the float throu&h f und-ra1sing for the flo.t is now in b.ilh
membership fees, corporate sponsors and sear On Monday, about 260 people
fund-ra1smg events is under way. atteod.ed an art exh1bit and auction that
The dinosaur design was amona three clcaredaboutS7,SOOforthecommittee.As
prepared by Fiesta Aoats and reviewed by the fint maJor corponnc sponsor, the.
mcmben of the Irvine Rose Parade ll"Vme Marrion donated space, food and
orgaruzaoon. Tom Cook. cbamnan of the auction nems.
float development committee. wd tbe Donna Harwood, a comm ittee
preh1stonc scene was chosen because al spokCS'tlioman, saad other area bw.incsses
would lend itself to exouc floral a~ wdJ be asked to donate sums rangina from
ments and draw lots of eyes to an lrvtne $5,000 to $20,000. More fund-rauiq
entry's first cruise down Colorado events arc on the bonzon as weU. she said.
Boulevard Harwood usd float committee leaden "I think it shows outstanding promax are plcucd with the enlhuSJ.1Stic response
for wmruna an award." Cook saad .. Over froi:n residents mtcrested in sbowcasina
the years, there have been many floats lhat ll"Vlne.
Jail Improvements earn
compliments of monitor
By LISA MAHON£Y
Of ""' Oellr """' ....
A court-appointed Jail morutor bti
issued a highly complimentary report on
cond1t1ons at Orange County's m&Ul Jail
Special Master Lawrenc~ Grossman
prai!Cd ShenfT..Coroner Brad <Ates an the
latest report to US. D1stnct Court Judge
Wilham Gray.
"The sheriff has done 'cry well in
manaasng the popu.lauon at the Central
Jail." Grossman sa.id 10 a June 5 letter 10
the Judge Grossman as charged with Sttin&
that the Shenffs Depanmcnt complies
w11h a federal Judge's orders rcgardma
crov.ding at the maximum sccunty fa·
c1ht\
Gates has kept the inmate count below
ma;it1mum levels ..ct b) the court dunng
Apnl and Ma} provided beds to all
inmates and ensured adcqua1e meal and
\leep time. he said
The Sheriff's Department has also
~sponded to other Judicial orden, 1nclud· ina instalhna more benches in.the bold1n1
cells and reducina the noi&c level i:n the Jail
dunna sleep ume.
Gray, angry that the county bad done
nothma to relieve overcrowding at the
ma1n Jill tn the years since be 1ssuel:i hi~
first orders in 1978. found county super-
' 1sors and Gates m contempt of court in
March 1985
San~ then. the Judge nu twice reduced
the maximum number of inmates that can
be housed at the ma10 Jill. the county's
only maximum security facility
Theja1l may hold up to I .400mmateson
weekdays. 1,450 on weekends and 1.500
on Iona holiday wccltends.
The shcnffhas kept the Jail populaoon
helov. those c~ps b;, transferring non·
'1olent inmates 10 branch Jails and u11n1
C1ta11on-~lcase. dctcnt1on-rcl~ and
ttarh-rcleasc programs
II-vine officers identify
victim found in canyon
\n Ill' Pllk \\a\ apparcntlv u'ICd to
.\ th1ct tncd to U\C an 1g0111on
punch to steal a Honda parked on lh«:
18000 hlock of Mac<\r1hur
Boule\ a rd.
\ uko ca~~nc recorder missing. ••• \n egg. appa~ntl)' thrown from the
By PAUL ARCHIPLEY
Of ... DllllJ .... l t.lt
A man who had bttn shot rcpealcd-
1) 1n the head and whose body was
dumped ID Irvine last "'eek was
1dcnt1ticd Monda~. Irvine police
said
The v1c11m. Ramon ManJarnez
.\ngu1nno.26.ofl901 W Mynlc~t
~jnla Ana had been reported m1ssina hr his wife the \amc day his body wa'i
discovered
She filled out a m1'ls1ng persons
rci>ort at the Santa Ana Police
Department. tclllna 1hcm ~he last saw
Laeun• Beach
An unknown anoni t took ttf use
from a nearby trash can and ianitcd it,
cau 1na a small fire early Thursday
betwetn two bu1ldanas alona the 1100
block of South < ti· ~t H1ahway. The
fire wu quic\d\. n11ngu1 hed with no
s1an1ficant damap<' l'C'ported
• • •
,A. &Ofd Chaan \ll(Ued It SI .(l()() WI\
rcpc?rtc<I ,tolen from a Nor1h (out
H1fhway bu 1nt'S\ Wednc~ay Oc·
tcnptmns of the \U'ip«I' -a man
and 1 woman -were turned o'er 10
police. • • • Toolt were \tolcn from an un:ll·
tended utiluy Hhadr parked Wcdne~y on <)(can \ 'llenuc. rhc
victim told polu:e. 1 hC' lo s v.u
t'U1ma1~ It $236 7!1
' ,
her husband on June 3
Angu11no·s body was found h~ a
cleanup crew the momma of June 5 an
a drainage ditch alon151de Bonita
Canyon Road about a quarter mile
south of MacArthur Boulevard
He died of multiple gun~ho1
wounds to the head. the Orange.'
County coroner reponed
Police declined 10 speculate
whether Anguiano had been killed
where his body was found or taken
then: and dumped after his murder
Irvine police Sat. Dack Bowman
' ~id the v1ct1m's body hadn't been in
Coetalleu .
Cash, keys. and a suitcase, all
totalina $4SO. were reponed stolen
from a Rodcway Inn room at \680
Superior Ave on Monday. Entry was
IJ?elrcnlly throuah a front window. • • • Office equipment valued at S 1.979
wa~ reported stolen from the Help-U· c;e11 office at 183.S Newport Bhd .•
bt-t~n 6 p.m. Monday and 8·45
a.m. Tuesday. • • • A malfunc11on1na car sterta WI"
rtponcd stolen from a vehicle 1n the
2200btock ofWallte'C Strttt be&wC(n
9 30 p.m. T ueM!a~ and 8 4S a m W~ncsd&) fh<' I wa~ stt It S6 • • • Stereo and 1001\ \o\Onh SSOO -.err
repon~ ~tolcn from an unlnc"('(f car
1n an apartment complc" at 2RO
'
the drainage ditch more than I:! to ~4
hours when 11 was discovered
.\ county crew cleanmg debm
alona the roadway spollt'd the bod-r
and flagged down a passing California
Highway Paarol officer
Recau~ the bodv was found w1th1n
lf\1nc CH)' hm11s: the C'HP officn
callttd Irvine police to the scene
A. pohcc spokesman said Wedne\·
day that the ca..e rcmams under
anvcs11ga11on C1t11ens with mfor
mauon should contact lnvc\ttgator
Lanton at th<' Irvine Police Depart·
mrnt
Cabnllo ~t bf1wern Tuesdav and
Wednt9da"
F ountain Valley
A home Wl·dnt'\day on the 16800
block of Mt \'it'tol"\ was burglanzt'tl
W~a-r Tht lo" estimated at
$.3,776, 1ncl11dcd a \'tdco rte'order.
JC~clry and l&mtr.i equipment. • •• An I I th aradc \lUdent at l m
Am11os H11h Slhool reportt'd
Wednesda) that ht\ I 981 lMOll\
pickup wu forct'd ("lptn whale 11 v.~
parked an the ~hool lot. Tht intnukr
took.sttrroand ( e equipment olutJ
at S2SO. • • • \ rc\1drn1 of the Q200 block o( El
C nlonido rrponl"d WC'dne'lda • that
thtt'e II rt, on 1v.0('1tf" 'tA>Cl't' pun~turl'\t
.i hC"r home I he damagt "a'
>
puncture four radial t1rcc; on a I 98'i
Dodge Ram p1d.up lrud;. a rcc;adent
of the I M>OO hind of Mt Pico
reported ~l'dnl'\da' fhc hw. lo\B'i
t''illmated at S!l()O
Irvine
Some JCWl'll"\ "a' c;tnkn from a
part) ~cdnc-.da~ on the 4 '00 hlod
of Rafael ~trcet. • • • .\ warehouse on the I NOO hlod; of
4'k} Park Boulevard wa<1 t'ntcrcd
through an open door and s.i.ooo
lo\Orth ol Jordacht". 1can' wa'i ~tolen . ' . \n eledron1c \Calr \alut'd at
SI . WO wa., \lolen from a bust ness on
the 2000 hhx:k of Maan Street • • • A stt'rco was stolen from an
unlockt'tl vehicle 1n storage on the
16300 hhx I. of ( ons1ruct1on ( 1rcle. • • • '\ gold<olof('d I ~H 2 Vol\ o wa1,
'tolcn from T1mt1crhnc ~ edne\day. ••• \ ~•Iver 1981 Honda ~·cord was
'>tolen from thc4200blcxk of Campus
l>nvl' Wt'dnesday. • • •
Newport Beach
A burglar) was reported al C las\K
• Drapencs an the 3800 blod. ot Bm·h
Street Golf clubs and a camera ~en·
reported massinf • • Vandalism was ~poncd at the cit\
~stroom' located on 15th Strttt • • • A car stereo wa\ t.al.en from J
\ ollts"'agen parked an the 60(1 block
ol ~e"' JXlrt C'entt'r On H It wa'
worth SJSO ••• ~ $300 windsurfer was stolen tr11m
the 800 bloc~ of Wc<1t Bay Strl't't
Huntincton 8ea.cb
Th1cvc'I who entered throuah 1
front window ransacked a house 1n
the 800 block of Palm A venue They
stole a camera. Jewelry and a v1dt'u
cu~llc recorder Wlth a tot.al 1M of s l . .5<>0 • • • \ ~s1dent ~tumcd home 1n the
19000 block of Occidental une and
found the front door open and 1 S300
Allens nabbed m tomato nelds
in northern San Diego CoWJty .
f.N( lNIT \~ f P) -l \ 8<1r11er
T'Atrol 11 cnh condm 11n \Wt"\'P
thrlluah th•~ ~o ''•I comanun1t) m
nonht"rn San f)t<'QO Counh ruundt'\I
up I'\ .. 1llc 1 ahen\ Imm ~fr~1co an
tht' third \Ut h raall in lhc put t'A<o
month\
Ronkr Patrol \f)(1J..l"'IOUn Id
l~<'ltt '3td the ahcns wett anntcd Wedn~) at ~vcral tomato nmchc
and alona Encanatas Boulc,ard
"'ht('h he dC5Cnbtd as a 'ta ang area
for undocumentt'd wor\m looku1
for 1ohs A total of I'\ a ent\ -thiu
nding thl'C'C-whcel 1111 tcmun \'Ch1d
._ partt~ 1J)ltc11 an th(' utund·up,
P\C'atl f.atd
roof. splac;hcd on the pauo of Park
\I ic" School. I b666 Tunstall. where
paH·nt'i, teachers and pupils gathered
for an outdoor award'\ ceremony
:-..:otxxh "as hit. said a 'i{'hool officul
\\ho cailcd the affair the h1ghhght ot
th<.' 'ear • • • \ ho\ ~a"i taken an custcxh at the
Target 'ito~ at 9882 .\dams -4' ,.,
~hen he allcgedl} tncd to c;tcal a
c.1lculator and mtSttllaneous items • • • fh1e' ~., 'ltolc a $75 plant and a
SI 70 .;hore power cord from a boat at
Paradi<.c \ achts ltd at Peter'!i. Land·
ang. I MOO Pacific ( oast Highway • • • Burglar\ stole two wetsuits and
fin<>. tool~ and a \latehoard fTom a11
unlocked rt'"d \olk\wagcn Jetta at thr
Gnnder ~'ltaurant i)n Pantie ( 0:.,1
Highway
HB rob ber uses
drive-up window
An armtd robber held up a '1n't
through restaurant W~ncsda' ~
C1P1nt with an unknov.n amoont ~'
cash. Hunon ton Beach roltl'C' rt
ported
The su pect rode hi! blue motor·
cycle up lo the dri" t'·up win do., at the
Jack·ln·the-Bout 16H I Beach 81-3
at 7:J.S 1 m.
He brandi hed a hands\1n and 'old
ma Robert Lam of W -
mtnst.er to h.and o" er mone)
The ro then ~ away, bead
1n1 l()Uth on ch Boulevard •
The U pcC1 'I delcribed U I
"'hate m 2S > "old. S-f'ttt 11-mchcs II
Tax bill wins ~OK Youth gets • share of loot of Senate, minus trom skyjack
IRA deductions PORTLAND, Ore. CAP) -A 14-
year-old boy who found $6,000 of the
loot from "D.B." Cooper's celebrated
skyjKkinf says he's un.bappy he b3d
to_uilit Wlth an insurance company,
and plans to sen his share bill by bill as
souvenirs.
W ASHJNGTON (AP) -Land-
mark tax overhaul ICfislatton has
cleared a ~or hurdle an the Scnatr
with sponsors of the measure turning
aside a scnes of amendments aimed
at restonna tax-deductible lnd1V1duaJ
Retirement Accounts for all workers.
"Clearly, we're not going to have
anl otaJOr change m the outline of the
btl , " said Sen. Bob Packwood, R-
Orc., the Senate Finance Committee
chamnan
Meanwhile, President Reagan·con-
unued to lead the chcenng for the bill
as he opened a nauonall} broadcast
news conference Wedn~ay night
sayina the measure before the Senate
was "one of the besl poven) pro-
grams, one of the best Job-creation
pr~ms and one of the best pro-
fam 1 I y bills this countf) has ever seen.
all rolled into one " ·
The adnumstral.lon suppart5 the
measure approved by the Senate
Finance Comm11tcc. including Its
proposal to eliminate full I RA deduc-
tions for mani Amencans
Across the Capitol. House Speaker
Thomas P O'Neill Jr D-Mass said
today that the IR.\ deduction has
primanly benefited onh upper an~
come people
"It's a mighty loophole tor the
wealthy of A.menca. there's no ques-
uon about 1t." O'Neill said
O'Neill suggestro 1hat some c.hange
an the tax rules should macie to
encourage lower mcome taxpa}ers to
maJce IRA contnbuttons
companies doina bustness in coun-
tnes that support international ter-
rorism It was aimed primarily at
Libya.
Also among the pending amend-
ments was one by Sen. Gordon
Humphrey, R-N.H .• that would re-
move uu-cxempt status from or-
ganizations that perform or finance
abon1ons.
The president told Re~ubltcan
congressional leaders earlier tlus
week that whtJe he is opposed to
abonaons. he also is opposed to
attachlDg the amendment to the tax
bill.
Asked ifhe conceded 1t would be an
uphill battle to garn apf.roval of the
amendment on 1h1s b1l , Humphrey
said. "I don't need to concede 11, it's
obvious •• He added that he may not
formally offer the amendment until
next week.
Senate leaders have said the re-
mainlDg amendments to the tax bill
hkely have less chance of passage than
those on lnd1v1dual Retirement Ac-
counts.
Packwood and Senate MaJonty
Leader Bob Dole, R-Kan., arc trying
to fend off all major amendments to
the bill The) had warned their
colleagues 1hat the delicate package
could fall apart 1f there were any
successful efforts to retam the deduc-
tion for IRA contnbut1ons.
Instead, supportc:~ of the bill threw
thetr support behtnd a non-btnding
resolution that expressed a desire for
taH:teduct1ble I RA.'s to be allowed
for as many workers as possible.
A.lthough 1t wa!. approved 96-4, tHere
1s no assurance 11 will be earned out
Brian ln.,am of El Reno, Okla.,
selected $3,000 wonh of tattereid $20
bills Wednesday as his share of the
loot from the l 971 hijackina. lnaram
found nearly $6,000 sul years ago on a
famtly picruc at a Vancouver, Wasb.i
beach. The money bas been in F8
custody ever since. •
Under a federal court order, Brian
spltts with Globe Indemnity Co.,
which insured Northwest Orient Air-
lines. Dan Cooper, who was never
cauaht, jumped from a Northwest
Orient jct on Thanksgiving eve 1971
with a $200,000 ransom.
The FBI is keeping 14 biUs in case it
ever prosecutes the ca.5e.
Brian wd he wantec1 to use
proceeds to finance college educa-tions for himaclf, his 9·ycar-<>ld
brother and his 4-year--0ld sister.
U La ... 1•1
Brian ln&J'&ID, 14, with eome
of the $2l> bllla from the D.B .
Cooper akyjackln& he14 by
the FBI •lnce he fOand them
myeanago.
Army plans s moking c ra ckdow n
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
Anny has a new message for its
soldiers and civilian employees: 1f
) ou cao stop smoking, do; 1f you
can't, watch out where you light up.
The Army, in the toughest such
dtrcctivc yet promulgated by a m1h-
taf) service, said Wednesday It soon
will crack down on smolang ID its
offices and bases and ban smoklDg
1ns1de vehicles or aircraft.
The directive takes effect Jul y 7 and
illo"ws local commanders to go even
fanher ID restricung smolung. Maj.
Bruce Bell. an Army spokesman, said
Wednesday the general who com-
mands Fon Jackson, S.C , already has
used his local autbonty to ban all
smolong by recruits uridergo1ng basic
tratning at the base.
The new policy "essentially re-
verses our entire orientation," Bell
said "Instead ofsaymg that smolung
1s allowed except where specafically
prohibited. this says smoking as
proh1b1ted except for certatn excep-
tions. ·•
With the fight on IRAs out of the
way the Scna1e moved on today to
other amendments, includ1Dg a move
-by Sen Charles E Grassle}. R -Iowa
to dem foreign ta>. credtts to U S
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--.-.-...::=-~~~~~~~~~~~~-
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IMOP THUUDAY 10·tJ-
Co.m.merce workers fired
for leaking laformatlo:a
By tbe Aat0ela&e4 Presa
W ASIUNOTON -The 1ovemment wd today 1t had. fl~ thrct"
employees of the Commerce Department following an 10vesu11uon tnto
improper leaks of sensitive ecooom1c data. Co,nmercc Secretary ~alcol.m BaJd~ said that two of the employees bad "scd the data for perM>nal manciaJ
p.in while the third 1ndtv1dual passed the advance infonnauon on to aomeone
else who used it for profit. Baldrige refused to release the names of the three
individu•ls. who all work for the department's Bureau of Economic Analysis
He sa1d that d1smissaJ letters were being scot to the lhrce today and that they
would have 30 days to file appeals of the d1sm1ssal acuons.
Former ha.tage Weir to bead church
MINNEAPOLIS -The Rev BenJamm Weir, a former m1ss1onal): ~eld
hostage in Lebanon for 16 months says his election as leacter of the 3.1 million-
member Presbytenan Church (U.S.A.) 1s evidence of the church's concern wn~
world affairs. "I am aware that we hve ma complex world and my church IS
realizing that in my election," Wear said Wednesday after his clcctaon as
moderator of the denommauon formed wh~n Nonhem and Southern
brancbe, merged 10 1983. Wei.r. 62: defeated two other candidates, wmn1ng on
the firs( ba1Jot with 356 votes
Integratlon a !allure, say wbltes
CLEVELAND -Residents of an aJl-wh1te ne1gb~rhod ~here a .simmcrilla racial dispu.~pted int~ gunfire that wounded eight people and
forced a black family to flee say the only way to avoid more trouble is to keep
blacks out. "Don't expcnment,'' said Alan Marvin, 17. a high school stu~n~.
"Don't put them on the street anymore. It Just won't worlc out. I don't think it
would work for any blacks." Morvan, one of eight while residents of the
nCJghborhood wounded by shotgun blasts Tuesday night, wd he was a
spectator and hadn't harassed anyone. None was senously wounded. pohoc
said
Navy to keep carriers ln Mldeast
WASHING TON -The Reagan adm1mstrat1on sttll war} of L1byan-
sponsorcd tcrronsm, has given the Navy new orders to keep two aircraft
earners in the Mediterranean indefinitely. Pentagon sources said. ln the
meantime, the United States has asked Egypt to allow the nuclear-powered
carrier Enterpnsc to pass through the Suez Canal from the Mediterranean into
the Indian Ocean, added the sources. wbo agreed to discuss the matter only if
not identified. The Enterpnsc wu moved to the Mediterranean at\er the
Amencan born bang raids over Libya on Apnl 15 to keep two carriers there. The
Untted States hopes Egypt will allow the Enterpnsc back through the Suez
Canal late next week. The earner Forrestal will J01n the Amenca ID the
Mediterranean late this week, the sources said Wednesday.
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Reag•n urges construction
.of new shuttle, arms control
W ASHJNGTON (AP) -Pret1dent Reapn says he
wa nts to ao forward Wlth construction of a new space
shuttle to replace the Cballenier, wh~ lou he blames on
.. a ca relessness" that arcw out of NASA's Iona record of success.
At bis nauonally broadcast news conference Wcdnes.-
day n1Jht. Reapn said he was still studyinf. the Roaers
comm1n1on report on the shuttle diSlller, 'But I don't
believe that there was any deliberate or criminal intent in
any way on the part of anyone" involved in the launch
that took the lives of the seven Challenser crew members.
Reapn said he hasn't decided how to finance a
replacement for the lost spactCT'lf\ and 1s still tryana to
detennine whether to use unmanned rockets to launch
some of the satellites that had been scheduled for shuttle
nights that have been delar,ed by the Jan. 28 explosion.
He added1 however. ' I think we should ao forward
with another snuttle "
Dunna a sometimes confusana half hour of questions
and answers, the president paid a rare public compliment
to Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, whom he called "the
first Soviet leader to my knowledae that bas ever
vol untanly spoken of reducing nuclear weapons."
··w e wa nt to follow up on that," Reapn said.
explaining his dcc1s1on to abandon U.S. compliance with
the hmats of the unratificd. expired SALT II weapons treaty.
Wutt several months before. the present U.S.
weapons modernization schedule would put the United
S_tates over the SALT II numencal limits, Reagan said.
"We're aoina to see if we cannot persuade them to join in
the thil\ll tbey'rc talkina about: arms mtuction."
He also confirmed lhe Sovieu put a new arms control
proposal on the ncaotiatina table in Geneva on
Wednesday but refuted to dit.close anythina <?f its
contents. sayina he would respect the confidentiality of
those weapons talks.
The president also expressed confidence that he and
Gorbachev would meet later this year. despii.c the failure
of the two sides to qree on a date.
"I still believe that he wanu a summit and I want a
summ11: I belaeve it's ioina to takt;place," Reapn said.
The president appeared baffled when a rcponer
asked 1f U.S.-Sov1et relatJons and the chances for a
summit miiht be affected by a speech Reqan made two
days before in which he lumped Gorbachev with Cuba's
Fidel Castro, Libya's Moammar Gadhafi and Yauer
Arafat of the Palestine Liberation Orpn1zation as friends
of the Sandinista reaime in N1cara,1ua. "I didn't think I lumped him 1n with them, .. Reapn
said of the Soviet leader. "I must ha ve have •oofed some
place because bcheve me, I don't put him m the same
category."
Jn a speech Monday defendma his proposal to arm
Nicaraauan rebels, Reagan told a Georaetown Univenity
audience, "Just as the men and women of the resistance
have decided what they must do, so. too, have Gqrbachev,
Castro, A~fat and Gaahafi ... The CommunlSU have
made their dec1S1on; the resistance has made its decision.
Now we must make ours." o
Presiden t
mixes replies
on abortion
WASHINGTON (AP) -Presi-
dent Reapn offered answcrs to some
questions be wa n't asked at his news
conference and be confessed he was
bellled by another.
As the ca.mens whirred in the ·East
Room durtna Wednesday's tclevUed
session, Rcapn called on a repo~r
who in a boomina voice asked about
that day's S... Supn:me Court de-
cision Ul>holdtna a woman's naht to
an abortion.
Reapn. with 1 qulZZlcal look on his
face, appamitly did not understand
the ret>orters qucsllon.
"Now wan a minute, hit me apin
here," Reagan wd, addina he was
still contemplatina a prior question.
The reponcr repealed h11 questJon,
askina 1f Reapn mtcodcd to lake
another case to the Supreme Court to
funhcr test the abortion Jaw.
Reagan launched rnto a defense of
bis administration's adopuon of the
so-<:alled "Baby Doe .. ~auons for
handteapped infants, wruch had been
struck down by the court S-3 ~arlier in
the week.
Food stamp bureaucracy hit; ~utrltlon defended
W ASHlNGTON (AP) -Presi-
dent Reqan 1s still convinced that
ignorance, not lack of food, is to
blame for anyone who goes hungry or
undernourished in the United States.
"It is difficult to believe that people
arc starving in this country because
food 1sn'tavailable," hcsa1d Wednes-
day niaht at his nationally broadcast
news conference.
.. I tbmk that an many instances the
people JU.St don't know ... where or
bow to ao about n," he said. "At the
same time, I find 1t difficult also to
find any cases of starvation and
undernounsbment."
He defended rus adm1nistrat1on's
decision to cut out a publtc infor-
mation program for the food stamp
P.rOIJ1lltl, saying it amounted to
'literally go1na door-to-door, knock·
ang on the door to tell people bow to
become cligJble or, 'Have you gotten
your food stamps today?"' ·
"Most people arc aware of food
st.amps .. .," he said. "We thought 11
was a waste. We'd rather buy more
food stamps ... than pay for the
bureaucracy to do a thing of this
kind."
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Rcapn sulTcd a controveny last
month by telling students a few days
before the "Hands Across America"
demonstration that no one was
.. goina hungry in America simply by
reason of denial, or lack of ability to
feed them. It is by people not knoWllla
where or how to get this help."
After a family d1scuss1on, Rcq.an
decided to join the "Hands Across
Amenca" chain to raise money for
Amenca's hungry and homeless.
Organizers altered the route to send
the line across the White House lawn
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S.election will vary by store Nd matl phone
spec1al or C 0 D oraers please Robrnson·s
Summer Sa1e ends une 22
ER .
R
LE
1son's
,•
-----------------------------------------=---=--==--~~~~~----
' '
••
.. •
Botha declares state of emergency
JOHANNESBURG, South Afnca
1AP)-South Africa today declared a
nationwide state of e mersency and
detained hundreds of anti~apartheid
.1ct1~tSts pnor to Monday's 10th
,1nn1,ersary of the Soweto upnsm.a.
Premlent P. W Botha's office an-
nounced he imposed the state of
• utergenL). which took effect al one
1ninu1epaslm1dnight(3:01 pm PDT
W1."dnesda}) and covered the enu~
l OUnlr}. Botha was t9 address Parha·
ment late this afternoon
fhc: ne"' \tale of ernergenC) was the
~{1,ernmem's most wtde-rangina at-
te mpt 10 quell black unrest, which has
la1med more than 1,600 hves tn antt-
1panhe1d v1olenoc since September
11H!4. .\ seven-month-long state of
nmgenq lifted March 7 covered
ess than half the nauon Dunng that
,,ate ol emergency, 8,000 people were
'a~ld without ch~rge.
Under the emergenc) powers, pub-
t'>hcll thts altemoon in a go~ernment
•art•ttc:. pohce can instruct an)one
,u.,pc:...ted ol "cndangenng public
1rJcr" to leaH~ an area. If the o rder t'>
lot 1mmed1:udy obeyed, pohle c.in
1~d w hatevcr fon .. e thev (·onstder ·nclt''>~r) under the circumstances ··
Police now also have the power the
make arrests without warrants, im-
pose curfews, seize property and ban
Journalists from areas of unrest.
Botha declared the state otcmerg-
ency after proposaJs 10 ireally in-
crease security powers faile4 10 win
approvaJ from the tricameral Parlia-
ment because of objections by 1he
lndian and m1xed-raet chambers.
The Azanian People's Orpniza-
uon, a black movement whose of-
fic1aJs were detained toda). reacted 10
the state of emergency dedarauon b)
ul"Jlng blacks "not to be tnt1m1ated b)
these totahtanan measures " Thc-
group said blacks should stage stnkes
to mark the anniversaf) of the June
16, I 976 nots tn Soweto
The Soweto uprising 'iC't on a challl
of violence nationwide that persisted
for more than a )ear and claimed at
least S 7 S h ves The nots are seen b)
ann-apanhe1d leaders as a tumtng
point m the struggle lO free South
.\fncan's 24 million \Otelcs~ blacks
lrom domtnat1on b) the countr) ·., S
m1lhon whttes
.\lso tod•n. South Afnca\ c.urren-c~. the rand· plunged to 'S 80 cents
lrom 37 10 late Wednesda~
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Crossroads women protest
security force, arean:ested
JOHANNESBURG, South Afnca (AP) --Dozens of women from
Crossroads were arrested today at the gates of Parliament in Cape Town while
protesting security force operations tn their battle-tom black .shantytowns.
The women. some wtth cbiJdrcn bundled on their ~. &&lhered at an
Anahcan cathedral tnen marched to Parliament. They earned placards
denouncmg the secunty forces and accu~1na them of siding with v1gdantes 10
factional fighting at Crossroads. the com pie~ of squatter camps outside Cape
Town.
At least 21 people have been lulled and about 200 wounded since Monda)
tn battles betw~n thousands of anti-apartheid black m1htants who call
themselves "comrades." and black vigilantes. Previous reports pui the toll at
17, but the number mcrcased as more deaths were confirmed
The Red('ross estimat~d today that as ma~y as 19.000 pCople have been
burned out of their shac~ either from th ts weeks fighting or a series of clashes
last month tn which vigilant~ set fire to neighborhoods controlled b} the
militants.
Anglican Bishop Desmond Tutu. the 1984 Nobel Peace Pnze winner and
archbishop-elect ofOtpe Town, conferred v.1th vigilante leaders 1n Crossroad~
on Wednesday and said he hoped to arrange peace tAJks bftween them and
leaders ofthci militants.
<.apt. Ja/\ Cal au. a pohce spokesman 1n (ape Town. srud no fighting wa<;
reponed at Crossroads this morning. He also said he had no detail~ on thr
arrests outside Parhament.
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White House says Soviet
spy plane over Nicaragua
8)' &Ile A1ll0Cia&ff Pre11
WASHINGTON -The White House is UfJln& a quick House vote on its
SI 00 m1ll1on Contra aid proposal whale say1n1 a Soviet reconna1Ssance
airplane flew over N1cara1ua recently. Announcement of the flight came
Wednesday afternoon. hours before President Rcapn told a nation~lly
broadcast news conference he wants a speedy vote on his plan to provide
money to the U S-backed Contra rebels fighting the lcfhst N1caraauan
Sandinista government ..
Dlvenlon of Contra ald reJH!rted
WASHINGTON -Congrcss1onaJ invesuptors say millions of dollars of
U S non-lethal aid intended for Nicaraguan rebels was diverted to offshore
bank accounts. the Honduran mLlit.ary and md1v1duaJs m the United States.
The General Accounttna Office, Congress' mvesttptave arm, testified
Wednesday that ns review of subpoenaed bank records showed only a smaJI
fracuon of the money aomg to suppliers who sold food, med1c1nc and clothina
to the U .S.-backed Contra rebels. In one example cited by GAO. a rebel broker
received $3.3 million from the U.S. government to pay for supplies listed in
invoices that the rebelspvc the State Department. But bank records show only
S 150,000 went to those suppliers in Central Amenca, wt th the rest gomg to
tnd1viduals and corporat1oos tn the United States
Panama'• mllltary cldef llnked to drugs
NEW YORK -The commander of Panama's mt htar) 1s mvolved in drug
trafficlang. running guns to terronsts. selling 1nformat1on to Cuba and money·
laundenng, The New York Times and NBC reported today Gen. Manuel
Antonio Nonega, head of the Central Amencan natton's armed forces, ts
widely viewed as the strongman ofh1s country. which occupies an important
position in U.S. security plans The Times quoted U.S. offic1aJs as saying that
Nonega's w1lltngncss to allow U.S military and intelligence units freedom of
operation tn Panama had caused them to d isregard has suspeci.activitte~.
Libya 'could be forced Into Soviet camp'
TRIPOU. Libya -Col Moammar Gadhafi says funhcr U.S attacks on
L1b)a could force his country fully tnto the So1;1et camp. "We are scnously
cons1denng alliance with the SoYlet Union and the socialist system so that
balance 1s achieved," Gadhafi said in a speech broadcast late Wednesday to
mark. the ouster of U .S forces 16 years a~o "We adhered to neutrahty. but we
found that 1t 1s useless," said Gadhafi. Libya aJread)' has strong economic tics
wnh the Soviets and receives most m1litary hardware from the Soviet U01on.
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B~by Jesse appears
to accept new heart
LOMA LINDA (AP) -Beating
I 00 to l 20 limes a minute, the
transplanted heart that gave Baby
Jesse a second chance to hvc has a
nonnal rhythm and he's recovering
normally, a hospital spokeswoman
said.
Jesse Dean Sepulveda, who un-
knowinaJy set off a funous debate
over mcd1ca.l -ethtt..-s, ~ st~
during his first day after surgery and
showed no signs of re1ectang his new
heart, Gracie Garnder, a
spokeswoman for Loma Linda Uni-
vers1t)' Medical Center. said Wednes-
day.
Jesse was bom with a fatall y
defective heart 18 days aeo and
received the hean of a bram-dcad
Michigan child Tuesday m a four-
hour operation at the hospital
Immediately after the operation,
the baby was "soft and pink "
according to Chief Surgeon LeoniJd
Balley. addmg that Jesse's color was
better after the operation. Chest ~
rays taken Wednesday showed that
fluid was clearing from Jesse's lungs
-another good Sl&n.
•
Family agonizes
over anonymity
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) -The
family of a baby with a fatal heart
disease whose name was ahead of
Baby Jesse's on a nationW1dc orpn-
rccipient list is agonizing that their
decis1on to stay anonymous may
have been wrong, officials say.
"They may feel the reason they arc
not being chosen is because they
didn't have someone call directly
about them, or they haven't been on
the news, they haven't been in the
newspaper and maybe they need to do
that to get a transplant," Nan
Hamlyn, who coordinates the Uni-
versity ofLouisviUe's orpn-procurc-
ment agency, said Wednesday.
The J.-week-old anfant bas been on
the nationwide orpn-donor network
since May 30, before Baby Jesse's
name was added. Both babies were
born May 25.
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Or.nge Coos1 OAILY PILOTIThureday, June 12, 1988 * A7
•
Machine Inadequate monltorhlg cited
decodes DNA in accident at San Onofre plant
t t 8y Ch Aleoe-lat.ed Prat
S TUC ure SAN DIEGO -A November accident at the o Onofre nuclear po
Pl•f!t was appare~tly due to in dcquactet in the mon1tonn1 of fety-relatcd
equipment and failure to propetly ddrns key fety probl m 1Cc:Ordi"' PASADEN>.. (AP) -RC$C1rch
into the causes of inherited di1e&SC$
and canceT waU be bolsteted by a new
machine that quickly and cheaply
decodes the structure of DNA
m~lcc:Wes. the blueprints for all life,
SCleOtlSU say.
The automated ONA sequ_cru:uor
the Nuclear Rqulatory Com mi 1on. The in~ipuoa found thiu vtolauon
of federal reaulations which, if upheld by comm ion otricial1. cou1d lead to'
fines apinst SoufJ?crn California f.dison Co., tht plant operator. 'Ibeiu11.1.1.D1?-=--
W11l also be takeo Ullo consideration by the NR when 1t decides on Edison s reqµnt lo restart the Unit I reactor, which was hut down after the Nov. 21
accident and can't be restarted without NRC permission.
--t--=-scquenator also might help re-
searchers develop a vacaoe to pre-
vent AIDS, said Dr. Leroy Hood, the
biolotist whose efforts to bwid the
new machine were outlined m today's
issue of the Bnllsh journal Nature.
Tiafllc reporter Brace Wayne-baned
-li ,, Ill
Back Jn hoapltal
Donna Aahlock, 15, wbo re-
cetftd tbe heart of a woald-
be ~end ln January. la
back at San Pra.ncbco'• Pa-
clflc Preabyterlan Boepltal
beln& treated for orcan rejec-
tion for the 11eeond time
alnce March.
SONY
Ench Bloch, director of the Na-
tiooaJ Science Foundation, beraJdcd
the invention of the machtne by
Hood and other scientJsu at the
C.hfomia. !nstttute ofTechnoloSY as
an important step toward under-
standing "the complexities of life
proc;esscs and human disease."
"It's a very baa deal," said Dr.
James Brown, molecular b1osciences
director for the fcderaJ agency. "This
accomplishment reflects the arrival
of bioloay into the big time -an
ability to tackle larie scale problems"
of dia&nOSlD& and treating ditea!e.
LOS ANGELES-Squadrons of helicopters, small p1anesaod World War
II aircraft staaed an airborne tribute during burial servtces for 11rbo~ radio
traffic reporter Bruce Wayne, whote 25-yearcarccrended in a fiery plane crash ~une 4. More lb.an 25 airCraft rose from behind !M HolJywood Hills and flew
an rruss~na-man fonnattons tn a mi.dday, I 5-m1nute display at Forest Lawn
Memonal Park o~ Wednesda)'.. Pilotina the planes were colleagues from
Southern Cahforru.a radto stations, along with la"' enforcement and fire
offieta11; Wayne, 52, d1ed when hu sinaJe~n&ine Qssna plane bit a parked
lraller na near Fullerton Municipal Airpon as he was bqinnina his day as
station I<Fl-AM's "Eye in the Sky."
Con~cted Long Beac.IJ official dlea
LONG BEACH-Former councilman James Wilson, wbo was sentenced
to three years in pn~n last moolh for acceptmg bribes from fmwork.s kin& W.
Patnck Monarty, died today, a hospital spokeswoman said. Wilson SS who
was free on bail pendina an appeal ofh1s conv1ct1on. was ta.ken by reseue ~uad
to St. Mary Medical Center m full arrest from an apparent heart attack, hospital
spokeswoman Barbara Oale wd Walson amved at the hospitaJ shortly after
I :30 a.m. and died just before 3 a. m.
,,
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t
Fitness center
will be valuable
I ~w~~~~:?.~to~~<~r~sof
opinion over the proposal to build thl' U.S. Physical
:Fllness Academy in Aliso VieJO a debate.
It's been more hke a conversation. Most people.
·public and pn\'ate, support the con'-ept and are
:unembarrassed by the pnde they feel at having Orange
·Count\-selected as the site
· ln'1t1all}. some environmentalists uttered muted
oppos1t1on to the plan on the grounds that the academy
will be built on sreenbelt property they would prefer lo
see remain pnstme.
1 "Our position is that nothing 1s better than
'.somethins:· Laguna Greenbelt Vice President Elizabeth
,Brown said last year when the $50 milhon project was
•announced. But Brown's organization was more
1mterested in negottat1on than confrontation. As protec-
ltors of the environment, members hoped to participate
tn the planning.
It was a foregone conclusion that the propert}
would be developed. The Mission VteJO Co. gave the
iland to Orange County to mitigate the effects of
1construc11on of the 20.000-umt -\hso Viejo communll} I It was intended that the propcrt} would be used for a
commercial deH•lopment that would help to finance
:park imprmements
Given the opponunlt} to become home to a h1gh-
v1S1b1hty project with former Rams and Washington
Redskins coach George .\lien. "'ho 1s also chairman of
the President's Council on Ph)s1cal Fitness, the county
!was more than happy to forego park improvements. l The fitness center -v.1th an csttmate.d 150
employees lots of\. lSllors and students and a physical
~plant that includes tennis coun s, running tracks. soccer
i fields. b1cvcle trails. a medical and research center. a
llibraf) an·d classrooms for teaching nutntion and a
Greek mouf -will be spectacular
But at least one skeptic. count} Planning (om-
m1ss1oner Dou~as Leavenwonh. thinh It will be a wh11e
•elephant. Voting against the the center Tuesday,
Leavenworth said the nauon's schools are the proper
venue for learning good fitness habns. not a spec1ah1cd
academy that will be built on land that 1s rent-free for at
least ti .. e )ears.
He added that tt 1s the proper role of the nation 'c;
colleges to provide future teachers with the instruction
the} need to help children become phys1call} fit.
That. we think. 1~ a narrow view of physical fitness
Jn an mcreasmgJy stressful society, physical fitness 1s
synonymous with personal success A healthy person 1s
generally a more producuve person m the long term, a
person who is better able to cope with problems and
contnbute to his community. Fatness m ttself may be a
shallow goal, but as part ofa program that contnbutes to
a healthy and strong nat10n, it is lofty and noble.
Lea'"enworth's assessment of the role of colleges in
promoting fitness ma} be 1deahst1call} proper. but 1t 1s
not reahst1c. Not all gym teachers and track coaches have
the ab1ht; or the access to current methods to krcp pan'
v.1th the research in fitness
The fitnes') academ~ will make an important
contnhut1on to the future of Amenca. If 1t 1s successful
it should hr a model for manv more litnes5 acadcm1l''>
around the nation. -
Opinion' ei<pres~ 1n trus <ipac.e arl'I those of the Daily P1101 Otner views
expressed on this page ar@ tho e ol their authors and <1r1tsts Reader
comment is invited TM Daily Pilot PO Box 1560. Costa Mesa 92626 Phone
642 6086
Thanks to Sergio Avila
for cleanup o£Back Bay
rothe Editor •
¥.'e wi\h 10 '>d\ l h.111k vou" let
~tg.10 A\ 1la. 1w.rwr 111 [ l K<H1t h1tu
M'tx1can Re'>laur:i n1 .. f11r 11rgan111ng
the ver; ~UC(."('\\IUI dt:' in 1p ol 1hc:
R k Ba) Ma) I"
rg10 n01 1111}\ \11\fMll h1•d l\.\O
d · ers in a car 111 l<lke a\\urtnJ u1l<l
erages to th1' 1x:<1plc pKkin1it up
tr h,hu1hcan<lJ1""'1k linda."'11h
~ eral of hi\ c111plm·1·1·., .. crvn1
hu drNh of dcll1111u~ tiumlu\, ch1J)"
fruit to all the PLLrlll IPJnh \.\hl·n
tr work wa!> dom·
his " thl' '"'<'< ond \Cat that M 1
la ha~ pm' 11kcl thi, <1111~tan<l1ng
ice 111 11ur l nmrnunit,. In 1hn·
ium t111n \\1th thl· 'kt1nup. hc madl· .1
ltl'Ol'rC1U\ll11n1111on 111 Whittler ¥hool
in < 11\t,1 '\.Jr,,1 \11 that the t:h1ldrt•n
ttwrt' rna\ h:-t\l' lht• npportunn~ ol
attcnd1n~· llw outdoor edulallonal
provrarn ;n.11l;1hk 1hrough the Or
angt• < 1111nt' lkpartmcnt of Edura
uon I hn ll>!llhildrt•n lrom Whittler
~h1111ll;:i1111 h\hu\101111n1ndeaninJ!
t ht BM ~ 11,1\
II \t'l'lllnl 111 "' th.11 t''l'l)One who
ht·l111:tl haJ .1 lot ol lun. We did,
l''flCll.111\ "'twn "' found '"ml'
"111-.1,un·' ·In tal..t homt•
f R \'\i ROHll't'iON
l 11cml\ ol Nl·\.\f'l(1n H:I\
COMMENTARY
Caltf ornla Is spending more than ever before for
spending It wisely.
ALICE J . OOl'fZALE8 Dlrector
Department of A&IDI
I ON THE RIGH T
"-------
WILLIAM F.
Bue KLEY
Fidel's a
modern
version
of Hitler
Why then is world
so appalled by Nazi
past of Waldheim?
State with most seniors
striving to care for them
On I.he same da)" that Kurt
Waldheim was elected president of
A.ustna Ricardo Montero Duque
am\ed in Mu1m1 -after 25 years 10
Fidel Castro's pnsons. How did he gel
out'' Well . Sen Edward Kennedy
arranged ll He asked Fidel Castro
and Fidel gave a se1gneunal responSt'
That morning. Ronald Radosh. a
professor ol h1stor)-at C It)" Un1ver-
s11~ of New York. reviewed for The
New York f1mes a book by a
sometime fello"" pnsoner of Montero
DuQut:. the d11Terence being tha1
A.rmando Valladares ""as 10 pnson
onlv 12 \car'>. not 25 And howd1d he
get ·out'1 President Francois Miller·
rand asked 1-tdel ( amo to let him
out. and hdel ga'c a se1gneunal
rcspon-.e.
8} ALICE J. c.oNZALES
o\mcrn'iln' arl.' gro~rng oldt•r C ah
ll1rn1an) ;m: growm1.1 older More
peopk ari: growingoldl·r faster than al
an) ntht·r ume li1mpk demographic
fal'l'>. hut 1h1\ l'\ier-hurgl'Oning aging
population pose\ t•normou\
lhalknge!> to our PohlllJl. l·conomrc.
and \OUal S1rUl lure!>
\l.1th morl' than 4 m1ll11•n seniors
l alrf11r01J\ 'l'n1or populatwn e,.
n·ed' am l1lhl'f \IJll' 111 lhc nation
lncrcac;ing longl'' It} and .i delltning
h1rth rate ha' c mcrca..cd the ral10 of
the tiO ~car'> nf age and older
population tar hqond that nl an}
other age group B) thl· \t·ar 21120. one
out ofe,er. lour ( ahlom1an\ \\Ill he
mer tiO ~ear" ol agl
(Jro'>'1h 1n the agin~ population I'>
part1cularl) dramaltl tor thl.' mrnont}
pQpulat1on 1n ( aliforn1a In the nc\t
:!5 \C'arc, the numbcrofhlack\ovl.'r65
)ear!> of age 10 Cahforn1a w11l 1ncreasc
b) more than 117 percent It · 1s
estimated Lht· number of H1 ... pan1cs
65 \ear!> of ii&t: or older will increase
h} more th.in I JOO pcrcl'nt The
numhcr 1' \t11l nn·rdcd b\ the
inl'rca'e prcd1ctl.'d for the ·\\1an
population H~ the )Car :!ll:!O. a more
than I ,.:>DO per(t:nl inul·a~c: 11.111 ouur
in the .\s1an \C..'n1or populJt1on
Thi.' cmcrgl.'nlt: of an aged popu·
la11on ts a rclall\l.'I~ n·ceot
phcnoml·non 'i1ncc lht• turn of the
ll'ntun. tremcndc~' Jl'h1n l'ments
ha't' bl'l'n made 1n >\lpon1ogdcath
Th<.' rnmhmatton I a dl'CT'C'3\I.' 10
munJhl\ rates and an lnl rl·a~' 1n hfr
t'\pt:llanq ha\t.· rl'\ultl·d in an aging
C\p)o\IOn
...\t the beginning 111 the t l'nlury.
,1dult\ gl.'nerall\ d1nl from alule
d1~a\l''> lnflul·n1a .rnd r>nl·umon1a
wen: thl' pnmar. l..1llt·" F·c"" <tdults
!>un 1' ed ep1sodl'\ ,,, thl'\e Jl'lca<oc~ to
need long-term l<m· liir l hrnn1c
11lnc,.,t • ., Toda\ lkath Imm .in\ one
of thl.'\l' d1\t:a\C\ "r;Hl '
Our \OCll'I' " "'1tnt:\\1ng J dra-
mat1l ~h1h in thl' larc nl·cds of our
c,cn1or population Tlw mt1\Cml'nl
from 3lUle to< hr11n1l dl\l.'a<>e'> 1n the
\en1or Population has furcc<l our
health lare structures in partKular 10
radicall} alter the deli ven 111 \t:n llC'l
to senior!>
Earl)" 10 1984. Cwv (1rnrgl· Deu-
1.mejian recognized that growth of
\uch magnitude an the aging popu
lallon required a ne" '1"11•n 111
hdping older C'ahfom1an'
Seniors want 10 remain rndqwn.
dent. to ltve in their n"' n homl'<.
rather than be placed unnc<.T'>\anl) in
iJn 1n~t1tut1onal care \el1rng. f 0
allomph'>h that gual a foundation
for a rnmmunm -ba..ed .,, \tern of
long-term care was construe ied calkd
the Governor's Seniors' ln111at1"t: for
< ahfom1ans
The (10\Cmor"" \en1or!>' ln1t1a1IH
for Caltforn1ans 1!> motivated O} a
\Ingle. unif)ing goal: to improve the
quaht} of ltfe for l"ahfom1a·., more
th<rn four m1lhon scnror.,
l 11s a communlly-ba~d. long-lt't m
care model that ha" hc:en "'alt hl·d
doscl) b} other 'tatl·~ Im 11 rl"P·
resents a s1gn1ficant comm11mcn1 of
'ilate resources
C'ahforn1a 1s spendtng mon· than
e'er before for 'i<.'r'-1ces to ">en 1ors and
r,pending 11 w1<;el~ In the past three
)Cars benefits for the elderh. hhnd
and d1'.>3bled rncrea~d b'r more than
20 percent More than · llJ m1llton
meals will be ~n cd 10 seniors this
)"Car. an 1ncrea\C of moH· than )2
percent
Oeukme1ian al\o enacted a nur<;1ng
home reform package tha1 included
$87 million add111onal dollar\ to
1ncreao;e the numhcr <11 in'ipector\ 10
check these fauli11e~ and rncrcascd
staffing 10 thl· faul111e'i to Lare tor
seniors
A $50 m1lhon hond mea\un· l1a\
been approvl'd wh1l'h \\Ill !>l'rVl' to
C'<pand the scn1c1r 1rntl'r net'>'111li. rn
the stall'
The Jn-Home ">upport1' l' Ser' Ill'\
Program pla)S an inponant part in
helping seniors 'ta' in their home\.
Since 1982. the program ha'I ht'cn
1cnreased by morl' than 40 J>l'rccnt
Under the C10\.ernor"., ~l'n11H,·
l01t1atl\ e for Cahlorn1ans. not onh
has a rommunit)·based, long-ttrm
rare ~yste-m been c~tabhshed that
help'> Sl'ntor'> h\C" 1n d1gn1t~ and
rl'\JX'CI. but also rl·prl.'<;('ll1'i a Co')t·
cfTt·tt1ve altemati\t: to IO'>lltu110nal,
lon!l·lerm care
F-or e\ample 1n ( alllorn1a mufl
than S2 m1ll1on l'ach Ja\ 1c, ~pe-ol on
Ml'd1-C al funds to pay fl>r long-term
l'ar~ 1n \kllll.'d nur'i1ng fol 1l111cs B)
prm 1d1ng opllon<i 10 oldl·r (ah·
forn1ans to help tht'm n.•ma1n al
homl', ( altl11rn1ans \Jvt' ta\ dollar\
thal "ould ha' c: uthl'fv.:l\l' been
dirn tcd to 1ns11tut1onal-ha\cd rnre
\t•n111r\ want what all ut u\ want tor
our'l'h c' a -.c.·n'>l' of indepcndenu\
l 11dqx nJt.'nll' prm 1dcs a ~l'nse ol
d1gn1t) l ndl'r C1m DeukmcJ1an ,
L1l!lorn1<1 ha\ e'tabl1shed programc;
Ill a'>!>ure-thl' 1ndl'f)tndrnn of our
r,en 111r\
( >ur parents and grandparcnt\
'hould bt• ahk to ll\t: their h'-CS \\.1th
lht' respect and d1gn11' the\ de..ene
(m,crnmcnt ha., an 1nlrea\lngrok
in c,cr' ing 1hc long·ll'rm cart• ncedo; ol
our ')en1or population b' providing
'1abk options to 10-.titut1onal fac1h
tics Sl•rv1u~'> tu \COIOr\ \\.Ill continur
to undergo dramat1t change as 1h~
aging populauon gro'>'s California
has •~ken tht' 1n111at1\'e Ht 1he-fl11t1on
10 de'"clop a compktt' ~oord10a1cd
communll\·hased \}\ll'm uf long·
term care
In the pa\t 10 )Cars. laltforn1a h..i!>
returned 10 1t\ hl\tOfll pos1t1on a!> the
leadership state in tht· nauon "Jo
where is th1., more true 1han tn the
efforts undertaken 1n \ahfom1a to
serve the state's seniors.
Cahforn1aM a~ lmng longer, hy
mg to an age where society I!> forced w
confront nl'w que\llons in volv1ng our
older population The actions taken
1n ( ahforn1a d1spla~ a high regard
and commitment lo c,cn1ors. an
undero;tanding of what lhl.' 1mpl1ca-
t1or,<, of thl.' aging explosion hold~ for
puhhl pohc)
Alice J. Gon111Je1 11 tbe dJrtttor of
tbe C•IJ/ornl• Dep•rtment of A~Jng.
f-or \omc rca!>On Professor Radosh
announces tha1 "1t has taken us 2S
>tar'> to find out the temblc rcahty-
Mr < astro ha<. created a new despot·
1.,m that has 1nst11uuonalizcd tonurc
a'I a mechanism of \OC'lal con trot:· It
1s not clear wh) It took "us" 25 years
to find out that Castro has been
s~\h:maticall~ tonunng people
Some of "uc;" ha\C known this for
ahout 24 }Cars repQrt1ng on such
torture regular!~
But back 10 Mr Valladares' book.
which 1s called. "Apinst All Hoix
The Pmon Memo1~ of Armando
\ alladarc" • \ nlladart'i was a young
cmplo)t.~ ot the Postal Savings Bank
1n ( uha \\hen Castro t·amc 10 power
and he exprts\Cd m1sg1vmg'I about
the t0mmun11at1on of Cuba, and wa\
therelorc arrl''ited That was when 11
heg.an
In prison he "'as tonurcd Herc 1!>
ho" Profr\\or Rado!>h paraphrase'>
life in the pn.-.on of Fidel Castro "Mr
\ alladarcs and other pnwne~ who
rcfu'>ed 'pohtKal rehab1htat1on' were
forced to hn· rn the greatest heat and
1he dampl.''>I cold without clothes
The) ~ere rc~ularl~ beaten, shot at
and sometime\ lolled. the) were
thrown into punishment cells, 1nclud-
ing the dreaded 'drawer cells,' special
I) lonc;tructed unit'> that make South
Vietnam\ infamous uger cages seem
like home} quartt'rs"
He tned oncl.' to escape. but
unsuccessful(.,. Rctnhut1on was
swift Wcquoic now directly from the
author "Guards returned us to the
cells and stnpped us again The)
didn't close the cell door, and tha1
detail caught m} a1tent1on I was ~1ttmgon the floor. outside I heard the
.. 01ce., of sev·tral approaching '1uld1ers
-11111:11:rar.1:1 ~ i;J;taa.1a.i11:1.1---------------the:} were going to ~ttle arcounts
with u!>, collect what we OWl'd them
for having tncd lo escape They
were anned with thick twisted clcctnc
cable\ and truncheom. \uddenly.
('vcryth1ng was a whirl -m' head
spun around in temble \'Crt1go The}
beat me as I la} on the floor One'of
them pulled at m)" arm to turn me
over and e:itPo..C ffi)' bal'k so he could
beat me more easily And the cable~
fell more directly on me The beating
felt a~ 1fthe} werl' branding me with a
red-hot branding iron hu1 then
Key personnel in defense
procurement unqualified
\l. .\~HI NCJ fON -While the
S640 t01let seat\ and S7.400 coffee
makl'" nle thl' public the really
c;cnous waste tn the Pentagon 1'1 1n till'
lc'>s dramat1l area of mult1b1llton
dollar weapon c,ystem\
\<, the late <;en. berett D1rlsen
hscn ed ..ardon1call> "A h1lhon
:re a billion there. an<J prctjy soon
\Ou're talking ahout real money "
.\\part of our contmumg watC'h on
go,ernment ~a.,te, ""c hav<' worked
\\.Ith \en Wilham Roth, R-Dcl.,
JACK
ANDEISOll
and JOSEPH SPEAR
1nOuences" hke Congrcs'I
rl'lt:nll) appointed prognrm man-suddenl} I npencnced the most
ager\, the C1AO found that "few intense. untx.·arable, and brutal pain
po'>sessed the desired mix of rx-of my life One of the guards had
penence and training." Jumped w11h all h" weight on m}
Another reason that the llCst and broken. throbbing kg "
the bnghte'it may not wind up 1n Back to Profes'lor Radosh "That
procurement 11. that "promotion op-treatment wa' typical. In the punish-
ponunittts in acqu1s111on{art') not as ment cells. pnsonel'\ wert kept an
great as in operattonal fields ... The total darkne'is Guards dumped
perception among career military bucket<; of unne and feces ewer th<'
officers 1s that "advancement poten-pn,oner\ who warded ofT rat!> and
t1al 1s limited" rn !rocuremcnt, roachec; a~ the} tned to o;lecp Fungus
rnmpared to comman positions 1n grew on Mr Valladares because he
opcra11onal unite; was not allowed to wuh ofT the filth
-----~~ .\lr~~a,&&.ncc-in4-ui emem l.:er.----.ing t~L:e astronauts t:llmpctcncc in tht: Defense Dcpart-u D · ml·nt \1 Roth'<; request. the General
The report devo1es much of 1t,
cnt1c1sm toward the "pr~m man
ager?" -usuafly m1Titary o~rs or
middle rank. The GAO 1nvest1 .. tors
found that many of them arc simply
not equipped by back&tound, trainmg
or 1ncen11ve to tackle the mtncate
oroblem~ of weopon~ procurement
l M-{;~(} ~~ted 1n ttrhtt -l'irfH-n WH tmpcm1~ Gtterd l."tm·
study that descnhed lhe Pcnt.11on·~ stantly woke the mrn with long pole'
rontrncting officer... generally as to insu~ they got no rc~t.
T the f d1tor
J'ongre,.,man l\it<lham h.i' 1n
tllfted 3 hill tn ( nngr~'' tn erl'~l .a
menumrnt t<i the• t.kad \h1111k
adronauh
tto\l m111 h tx·ttcr 11 '>'<•Uld he 11 tlw
monc-~ "·" U\l'<.l lo t'\tahll'h '>< hol.11 "~P" at (':1d1 of th1· ;£\trtinaut"' h111 h
• ..
t ORANGF COAST
'l hool' 111 1 olkttl''
\l.(.' '>J>l'Od .,.., fllUl h Ctthtng lhlOI!\
1n \ton1· <tnd 1110 li11k etching an
cduc.1111111 1r1t11 tlw 11w1th of our
\(\IJth
1(-~
r.,~
J Y., RFlD
C u~ta Mt~
:~ Daily Pilat 'rMll Zlftl .._.,., CltvtCttf9'19'1
~. r :l•' 'l' Cot>rrQl1f>!
I;
" , "" .... lto+rl .... •• Jlllllllot-•l~W
ll•y 111 f"(Mll -•i»-•
• •ete1')tlOO<!C• q 9t:• I~ C<isl• YHO l e;.e.2t •
' .
T.,,. Tait
t.411n/io!OQ [OJlor Doti,...,
Oly EcWw
T-CW!tn
N.-t f-"(lj!Ot
Cr ... llteff
SOOri• Eoroi
~LCentNll
P1odt.JcUon Mt,_gtll
T9fTJ Kendle r; ......... 1~"'11MQ9'
Hewetd~ M111~llllf'IO [)roe rot
P9oo~ ....... r.1e"'7WJ<1 Olr«lor
r
Acco11n11ng Office conducted a thrct-
H';u \tud' of 17 ma1or weapon
\\\tem\ Our associate l urctte
L agntldo ha\ reviewed lhC' un-
rrlca"<·d. I 'SO-r>ag<.' findmgc;
The ma1n11utk of the prohlcm of
Pentagon prcx IHl·mC'nt 1\ laid out at
the ~tan Nearl~ I 00 ma1or weapon
"}'item\ art' 1n "anou~ staacs of
development and production Nott"S
the report: "Tht cosu to a('Q1.11rc thrm
may c.11cecd $ 7 so billion 01"1Cn1tina
com dunna their u~ful hfc will be
con,rdrrabl}' more Mo~t of these
ruturc co~t• ore pn"dctrrm1nc:d by
ha\1l dc'i1Jn dec1\1on\ madt dunng
early program r>ha\C,
I he CiAO aud1toM C'ondudcd.
C'\\Cnttally. 1ha1 the 'Y\tem.u~lf as"
fault fnr ~tr.rvapnt weapon pro·
gram' fhe rcpon UIC'\ inadCQUllt
dtrcc:11on from the top. lac k ()/'
ac:-rn11ntub1hty, poorl) trained and
mot1\atrd perwnnel 1n ke> po!>1t1on'i
-and coun1rmrod4c11ve "l"\tr.mal
By contrast of cou~. the def en~
contractOI"'$ they're up •aam~t an11n
their bc1t people to the negot1at10M,
w the Pcntaaon's proaram managen
arc often badly o'ermat('hed.
fhc report quotes former Deputy
Defense Sccrttal')' Da vid Padcard,
hel'd of a comm11 ion that made a
recent study of Pcntaaon procure·
mcnt "M~or weapon system~ arc
lOnlpfc!(, They rtqu1re advanCt'd
•ed1nolot~· We unfortunately have a
system whcrt we do not train and put
the ben manaicmcnt people in
charse oft~ p«>s11m~." ·
The GAU audllol'\ aa~ ymg.
"Qualified pro1ram manage" re-
quire appropnate c"penen~. train· ina and rducat1on. fnd man}' do not
hlVr it. In it~ .r~nminttion of l.$
"overloaded. untrained and 1nexpcn-Valladares speculate, that when
rnced " the truth ., known about C :mro'\
Somewha1 \urpmungl )', the GAO pohllcal pn<ioncn. "mankind r,111
auditors named their own boss -feel the re'"·ul'lton 11 fell when the
CongttSs -a!> one of the "c"temal cnme~ of IO,tahn wert brouiht to
influences that comphcate\ the sy-;. hJht. • f'rolt'l'IOr Rado1h evaluates
tcm After m ma Spet'ific 1nstan~s tn this: "It 1!> not too tough 8 judament,"
which ·-c on&!'CSS provided design l he world 1s aOame ll Austna'<;
dirtct1on," "Conarc'is cut funds" and havm1 elected as prcs1dcnt a man
"Consre\'I limited the wc11ht of the ,usp«ted of having ooopuated with
m1'silc" the GAO rtport ol>~rve,: a German N111i war criminal in
"Whtn c'ternal manaacm~nt )"uao~ta' ia Joyarsaao. Mucb oftf\at
d1r«t'I a ~pectfk de~11n solution to world IC\'tpts Fidel C'utro Mth
met't a mtli1al) t.-apab1hty. the pro-~~uanimity: some of the world, with
1ram mnnagl'rcannot be held accoun-en thusiasm. To do so 11 the
tabk 1f that design solution doci. not equivalent ofwa1un1 ur_H1l evCt)' JC'A
worl .. was killed by H1tkr before disco,-cr-
l he (I '\O audito" asked Pentagon U\j the CV ti~ or Nazism':' Diplomats
and 1ndui.ll} offic:ials about the who p~nt thctr acdcntaal to F1~I
prohkm of e-.:temal influence Ca tro hould SP'nd 1hc evtnins ·•c 1cner11ly, they bcheve that the before radmf Valladares· book. The
cond111ons .. will get worse:· thl' man they wil mt.et, the governor of •
report stal('S Cubla, 1$ W Hitler <>uiltn of &Oday. J•~t Aod ud J ~ .~ar Wl1m B• ll~J' 11 • 1yttdktllt4
tre •Y•'k•IH tel•m•l•I•. colemollt.
eferan organlzatlons
need yoµnger JD.embers
To the Editor; h Th1s is an open letter to all Korean many more t at art thcTC to help you
and Vietnam veterans. If you need it.
On the 'flil'j out for dinner 1 noticed Join a veteranaroupofyourchoice.
a bumper suck.er on the car ahead of We could use your support as well to
me. It id "I am a Vietnam veteran help f&&ht to keep our veteran benefits
and proud of it." from beina cut back.
To that I say .. Good for you." I feel We WW 11 vets are gettma older
aJI you Korean and Vietnam vets and we need you youna vets to keep
should be proud that your country our veterans aroups aoing.
needed you and you were ther.e to Stand up and be counted, you vets,
Krvc. both male and female, and joill"Up: _
-Thete-~ IO muy -~ ~BEIISTOCK , _ _..""""'
ganizationa such as the /WV, VFW, 1WV Post 595 Harry Hoff
DAV, Purple Heart. POW Vcu and Costa Mesa
Times editor
protests stozy
about staffer
To the Editor
I was disappointed to see your
usually responsible newspaper
provide a forum for the reckless
remarks of Con_arcssman Robert E.
Badham and Orange County Re-
publican Party Chairman Thomas A.
Fuentes.
In a page 1 story on May 20, Pilot
reporter Paul Arch1plcy wrote that
Badham "said he heard" that Los
Angeles Times staff wntcr Jeffrey A.
Perlman had been taken off partisan
politics stones because of a baas
apinst Republicans.
Fuentes was qpoted as saying. "We
understood he (Perlman) was no
longer doing partisan pieces because
of a lack of objectivity."
Badham's and Fuentes' comments
were pure hearsay and LOtally er-
roneous. In fact. the very article on
which their remarks were based was a
profile of a pamsan candidate -in
this case, Badham -wntten by
Perlman. For tbc Pilot to allow
Badham and Fuentes to make such an
unsubstantiated allegation 1s 11'-
rcsponsiblc.
Perlman was never removed from
full-time political coverage and, in
fact. 1s currently following three
partisan races. He continues to be a
valuable member of our team cover-
ing the '86 campalpt. In add1tton to
those rcspons1bilittcs, Perlman also
recently was named as our edition's
first Urban Affairs Writer -further
testimony to his sic.ill and antegnt~ as
a JOumalast.
ROBERT MAGNUSON
Managmg Editor
Los Angeles Tames
Orange County Edataon
fjiiiiiiiimijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
OLES
CORDLESS
WINDOW AIR CONDITIONERS
A. SIESTA 7800 •TU (ITllOlll
Easy ready
mount anstalla·
tton Automatic
2, 1911
3·SPEED CEILING FAIS
A. FLUSHmOUIT
42 II. CEIUll FAI
Balanced cane blades 3
speed l'evefS1ble L1ta 1at
adaptable UL ~OYed
. -.
I
j Reagan's ·
all pollcles
puzzling
3/8 jlt. DRILL
SCREWDRIVER ~ ...... _.._...,. .• <thermostat
To the Editor·
Citizens of Laguna Beach!
Did you nouce (I) that the adminis-
tration has been selling oil from the
Elk Hills 011 reserve for $6.30 a barrel
and at the same time is paying $12.60
a barrel to pump ou into the Strategic
Petroleum Reserve'>
This is taking place when, due to
the oil glut, we have an opportunit y to
buy imported oil at rock-bottom
pnccs and thus save the 011 for which
our reserve was established
(2) That the admm1strat1on bas
proposed this year to sell Elk Halls
and Teapot Dome to pnvatc industry
for $3.6 bilhon although there is one
estimate that Elk Hills alone 1s worth
$4.4 b1U1on'>
How does this Jibe with the
purported uracnt need to dnll 011 off
our Southern California coast (and
rum our beaches)? Or the wise
management of our national re-
sources?
EVELYN GAYMAN
Laguna Beach
Callfornlans
love T-shirts
To the Editor.
The lady who 1s socpnccmed about
the Hands Across Amcnca T-shirts
and the cost sure!}' knows people paid
three times what the}' cost 10 make.
Doesn't she know Calaforn1ans arc
obsessed with T-shirts and bumper
stickers and this was a great op-
portunity to say it aJI?
People lake to let everyone know all
their activ1t1es from their sex laves to
how many Porschcs they own all
on eathera T-shirt ora sllckcr~ and if1t
aivcs them such harmless pleasure,
let's humor them.
I'm sure the money was well spent
for the cause and 1fthc T-shirts shnnk
-not to worry -there'll be a good
reason for another one an no tame.
B.D. KINGSBURY
Newport Beach
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STiil
STOftHOUR!
MONDAY•llRIDAY 1:50-9:00
SATiltDAY a:.50-6.-00
SUNDAY 1:00-S:IO
1 IAN, ANANDO VAll.IY
I URBANK (2 13) 1411..eet
NOR'Tti HOLl 'YWOOO (111) 7-:r!IMO NOATHAIOGf(llll ~ I R SEOA tlll1:M4~2e1 • WOOOl.AND HlllS(l 1113'7 &O
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Orange Cou1 DAILY PILOT I Thuraday. June 12, 19 8
The
For
Dads 'n' 6rads
See the World thru Our Eyes
left to ri~lil I 1·rr1 itrllrot, L1f{~.t \fodnil'J,, N11nr1 l.oyK t>ndHJI
f 'ro111 f,,r;,
' ' '' I '
came to Le M1d1
and brought us GOLD
because we hold
what others often only promise!
So come find out
what this GOLD 1s1atl about.
Try Chef Walter's spnngl-umc fare
and prove that you're a connoisseur'
-our Spnng Gounnet Festival starts Apnl 17-
~unda) Brunch
Dinners. Banquets
Busmess Lunches
675-4904
3421 V 1a Lido, !'iewpon Beach
-~~ :~ J
..
-*""~ Don't mis.s your chance to
WIN $25,000!
HaJlmark Summer Stripe Game
Collect and Win Game Pieces are inside
specially marked packages of Hallmark Summer
Strip Collection Partyware.
It'• all hapJ)f'nin11: at:
~R
~ ..,1f
/ _f ...
3445 Via Lido. Newport Beach • Ph 675-0150
" run hov nl" ''""" Votd "'""" pmlul>ntd Mu\I hr ~ to play C 1omt rnda I ]J II /NII
" •hrn \UpPllM '<houttt'd f Of (rtt samt plC"<tJruki ttnd M'lf ~rt\ac'd llamped
rn-rlopt 111 Hallmuk l11m~ OMPI \ .. 1111n P ll llm h l40, Ntwio,..n. (, Ofl.47().()J.4{)
•1916 H1llmark C 1rdt Inc
/ifCf{.• 1-u-.tom filllnf{ a {1J •orlte rw.tomer.
We're
EXPANDING
to bring you a Bigger
Better BIDTIQUE.
Come see the excitement!
at
New bpo,....., s.,,..,,... K.vrt
........ Merdwo...ti.. .....,,,,.. o.a-,
3467 Via Lido
Via Lido Plaza
673-4510
.. June Wedding Headquarters"
3441 Via Lido 675-2425
WE WINE YOU, WE DINE YOU, DRESS YOU UP
AND TAKE YOU TO A SHOW. Washington Cleaners
Optical Fashion-Center
A Kline Kreations-
~hop in thP relax(•d tr .rnquil dlmosphere of V4AL..k P~A
Choc olatier
Le Midi Restaurant
Security Pacific Bank
Marbles Beauty Salon
Via lido Drugs
Edwards Lido Theatre
Video Zone
Bldwell's Boutique
D K. McDonald1s
Hughes Market
The Corner Table
Charlie's Locker ..
Optical Fashion Center
By K•ren Lrsrad
"&em8 is believing." 1s an old uymg &em!? roday
is •lso part of an over•// fashion look-where you gee
your eyewe•r 1s 1mparranc. If you 're look mg for a
friendly, homey armosphere, an expert sra([ and• /irr/e
poodle by che name of G1G1 ro grttr you ar rhe door,
you may be looking for Opc1cal Fashion Cenrer
Newparr, /ocared tr 3417 Via Lido m Vta Lido Plaz.a,
Newport Beach.
In 1981 Ziggy Modnick moved co Newparr Beach
and purchased Opcica/ Fashion Newport. With hun he
-brough 3' years of expe,,ence, 27 of which he spent as
rhe head of rhe opc1cal dep.rrmen'r ar' K•1ser
Permanence Hosp1t•l m LA.
Modnick realizes rh~ 1mparrance gla~s pl•y 111
people's lives tod~y "Eyewear is nor 1usc for ~emg, · he
says. "It's co make you beautiful now "
And make you beauriful is exacry whac Modruck
and his staff are cramed co do. Nancy Coykendall and
Terri Mcilroy, both qualified opticians, assisc Modnick
in coordmanng eyewear with skm tone, wardrobe and
life scyle
To help m•ke your choice, Modnick has on display
an enormous ~Jeer ion of che I.test frames from Europe
and the US His own lab on th~ prem1~s •ssures you of
rhe finest ftntshed producr and the fastest service. He
also d~s his own t111tmg so customers know the flghc
amount and proper shade for them is guaranteed.
As •n extra ~rv1ce, Modnick offers, by
•ppamcment, image consultant Diane Traeli -Maltman
and esthetici•n Terry French to help coord111ate your
wardrobe and make-up
It is exactly this unique brand of ded1c•t1on and
servlCe to his customers that Modntek was wrtrren
abouc 111 last I:kcembers issue of Optical M.gazine
lO/lO Modntck was honored as one of the "best and
the bnghtesr" throughout che U.S. 111 his field
In r.cr, Modmck d~s such a gre•t 1ob chat
customers, such as Ele•nor Donahue of "Father Knows
Best" fame, won 'c /er wyone else fit her family for
glasses.j~y Bishop •nd his wife, Silvia. have also been
seeing Modnick for years.
Today 11111 world where everyone 1s ma rush,
Opc1cal Fashion Newport is u.ruque. Ziggy Modnick
and his sea(( sci/I rake nme to make you special After
•II. ~emg 1s more than 1usc believing le 's also to make
you beautiful.
Serving the
Lido Co011Dunity
Sinee ~I935
Lido Realty
(714) 673-7300
33 7 7 Via Lido
Newport Beach,
WI HA YI THI HITI
WHlll YOU WAllT THIM*
~
OCCDN -i
\
lailyPllll THURSOAY,JUNE12, l
LANDERl83
SCRAMt!T8M
Off & Pun-ning: San Felipe to La Paz
By ALMON LOCKABEY
o.9J ............
San Fehpe to La Paz (548 statute males) an I 0 hours or lets?
That wtll be the goal of John Connor of Costa Mesa and Norm Gentry,
Honolulu. Saturday when they blast off from San Felipe at S· 30a m in offshore
. r&CIOJ boats
It will be the fifth assault an 16 years on the Sea of Cortez course, but the
first ume two haah-powercd craft have competed t<>ðer lo ptcvious
attempts to 5et an elapsed lime record it has been d.nver against lime
The present re<:ord was set ao September, 1984 when John Baker ran the
course non-stop, wuh refueling at sea, in 15 hour~ and 54 minutes. He was at
the helm of an 18-foot Avon Seander wt th a sut&)e Suiulu outboard en11ne.
Olher assaults on the sometimes tutbulant auJf were:
Apnl, 1972. Bob Sinclair an a t9-foot Marieholm with a sinale Volvo
inboard-outboard, 52 hours. 5 I minutes.
May. 1978. Betty Cook of Costa Me54, 29-foot Scarab with twm Mercur)
outboards. 17 hours, 15 minutes
May, 1983, Bob Nordskog, 39-foot Cigarette with twin turbo Y-81nboard·
outboards, 31 hours, 16 minutes.
The current assault was spearheaded by Connor. who had been Cook's
throttleman an her 1978 run, the only run accomplished in a 24-hour time
frame until Baker became the first non-stop contender by refueltna at sea.
Cal-20 race to be
hosted by ABYC
By ALMON LOCKABEY
~ ..... hetlnt•-
Alamltos Bay Yacht ( lub, Long
Beach, will be host to the 251h Cal-20
nauonal champ1onsh1ps dunng the
week of July 7-12
ABYC's Fourth of July Regatta.
1mmed1atcly preceding the Cal-20
nationals will gt"e competitors a
chance to tune-u{> before the more
'ICnous racing begins Sixt) boats arc
expected to compelt:
The nat1onab will consist of fleet
races, the Junior champ1onsh1p, an
ehmanauon ~nes. and hnally the St>.·
race champ1onsh1p-consolat1on
~nes
The (al-20 was the mo-st popular
boat from the design board of (
Wilham Lapworth of Newport Beach
who also designed the famed cruising-
racing Cal-40
It has been popular as both a one-
des1gn kcelboat whose owners active·
ly compete on the club-level. pnnc1-
pall> because ofit.s stnct adherence to
the one-design measurement rule, its
affordabthty, and the number of
boals -nearly 2,000 -thaf were
produced dunog the '60s and early
'70s All of them were produced by
Jensen Manne of Newport Beach.
The Cal-20 1s a clas11c yacht. a low-
tech taClng machine by today's stan-
dards, but equally popular as a day.
sailer or an overnight coastal cruiser
The Cal-20's one-design trad1t1on
fmpltes that success on the race
course depends on the skill of \he
skipper and crew rather lhan by an
expensive senes of evoluttonary
mod1ficat1ons in pursuit of'°'nate-of-
the-an."
Other attempts an the Sea of Co~t had come oil-course to shore for
refuehna and repairs.
Connor will be d.nvinaa JO.foot Wdlcraft excahbur catamaran powered
by twin 57S-hp Mcrcruiser V-8 inboard-outboards with a totaJ of I UO hp.
Potential top soecd of the Wellcran is IOS mph.
Gentry wait be at the helm of a 4'6-foo1 Gentry Scarab de~ V powered by
twin Gentry turbo V-8 anboard-outboards with a total of 1,600 hp. and a
potential 90 mph top speed.
Start time wall be S:30 Lm. at San Felipe's commercial harbor when
honorary starter Baker (the current record bolder) flags lhe contenders away .
The race 1s sanctioned and wtll be officially limed hy the Amencan Power
Boat Associatton (APBA) and bu 1everal aoals·
To detennane lbe w1nnin1 boat.
To break the exist1n1 elapsed t1me r«<>rd.
To reduce that record to 10 hours or less.
To set the stage for an annual series of BaJa Offshore 500 races.
Connor said both boats will refuel at the villace ofMulcie. 330 mLles down
course, wh~re Connor wall take on 300 aallons and Gentry 750 pllons. M~or sponsors of the event include Mercury Manne. Wellcraft Manne,
Scarab Performance Craft Mitsubishi Electric, El Pres1dcnte Hotels, Castel~
Hotels of Mexico. and the Mexican Department of Toumm
Connor said results of the race would be forthcoming as soon as possible
after its conclusion. Betty Cook and John Con.nor
A Cal-20 off Newport Beach
Boat head legtslation ·
passes state Senat.e
By ALMON LOCIABEY
~,... ..........
State legislation which would re-
quire that pnvate and pubbc mannas
such as Newpon Beach, Hunungton
Harbour, and Dana Potnt be
equipped with vessel pumpout faetli-
ues for manne sanit.auon devices has
passed the state Senate.
However, 1t dad not pass wtthout a
scnes of important amendments
so~t by RccreauonaJ Boaters of
Cahfom1a. aJona wtth olher boating
interests
As onginally introduced by Sen
Robert Presley (D-R1vers1de). the
measure contained a number of
proposals conccm1ng manne san1-
tat1on devices and pumpout fac1hues
which were of great concern to
RBOC.
tnstallauon aod use of mannc sani-
tation dev1ocs aboard vessels.
Nqouauons and discussion• on
SB 2562 led to the removal of these
prov1s1ons and lhe creatJon of an
efficient statutory mechanism for the
provlSlon of vessel pumpout faeth-
ttcs, according to John Robinson.
president of RBOC
As amended. the ball would require
vessel temunaJs, defined to 1nclud.t
such s~ ' side mstaltauons as
mannas and and ocean terminals
providing moorina. doclcina.
bert.hina and other fa<:1ht1cs. to be
cqwppcd WJth pumpout fa.ctlatteS for
the transfer and disposal of sewaae
from manne sanitation devtc:es.
No West Coast yachts on Sardinia team
For instance, the bill would have
increased state boat ~Stratton fees
and deposited the funds in a "vessel
san1tat1on improvement account."
The monies were to be made avail-
able for local assmancc grants for the
construction and 1ns1allauon of sew-
age pumpout fac1ht1es a.nd for law
enforcement
Cum:nt federaJ laws ~ould con-
tmue in effect wh1ch aovem the
deSllfl, manufa.cturc. mstallalioo &Dd
use of ~nttation d.evicea _.itbin
vessels. allow loc:al agency rqulatioo
of vessel SC'Wa&C dischars,es, and
permit complete prohibition by states
• of $CWa&C discharges into particular
~aten..
The 1986 U <). Sardinia Cup team haft been named by the U n1ted States
Yacht Racmg Union. and for the first tune 1n several years a West Coast yacht
failed to make the team
Sailing for the U.S 1n 1he b1enn1aJ 1ntemat1onal ~nes 1n ltaly will be
Midnight Tiger. a Dobroth-42 rating 31 7, owned by Walter Hanson. Westpon ,
Conn .. Slap Sliding Away a Graham-Schlageter-40 rating 30 5. owned b) John
Malec and Bill Walter, Chicago Ill . and Abracadabra. a Joubert-"-hveh-42
rating 32.8, owned b) James Andrews, Columbus. Ga
Selection of the team was made on the boats' performances at the Brenton
Reef Scncs held off Newport, R.I . May I~ 17 The evern was hosted by Ida
Lewis Yacht Club and organ12ed by USYRlJ spec1ficall) to detemune the lJ .S.
Sard1n1a Cup team. Ehg1b1IHy was hm1ted to yachts rating between 30.0 and 40
under the lnternattonal Offshore Rule -the same rat1n1 thal will apply to the
Sard1n1a Cup
The Sardinia Cup, scheduled for Sept :! 14 olT the Italian island of
Sardinia, will be hosted by the Yacht Club (ona Smeralda an Pono C:ervo.
In addition. the measure would
have opened the door for numerous
and confl1c11ng state and local rqu-
lauons on the design. manufacture,
The bill wouJd spec1tically exempt
from its provision• small craft
launching fac1hues dock.ages adj ..
cent to and 11ervma private ~
denccs.
SB 2562 ts next scheduled to be
heard an the Assembly Commtttce on
Water, Parks and Wildlife.
Duel in Sun starts Saturday Secrecy about R 1 unveiling
SAUSALl fO. Cahf (AP)-The oew, revoluuona~
Amenca's Cup yalht RI was unveiled on Tuesday -al
least some of 1 I.
the history of the Amenca's Cup The boa1 is "laster,
much faster. tn all cond111ons." he said.
The 65-foot, 60,000 pound boat with a 90-foot masi
hasn't been completely assembled. But Meldner said the
speed potcnttal has been measured under tests in a
computer. a W1nd tunnel, a tow tank and v.1th a 40-perccnt
stale model.
Bahia C onnth1an Yacht Club will
fea ture match racing Saturday wuh
.. its Duel mthe Sun challenge match
wt th Calcutta belting on the w1!lners
Ocean racers wall have their da~
Saturday and Sunday in lhc m.th and
seventh races of Newpon Harbor
Yacht Club"s Ahmanson and
Dickson Scnes and the founh and
fifth races of Balboa Yacht Club's 66
Scncs. The Ahmano;on Scncs 1s for
lntemauonaJ Offshore Rule ratings.
the Dickson for Performance Hand1-
Lap Racing Flee!. and the 66 Scnes is
for both IOR and PHRF
Women sa1lor'i will take to the
water 5aturday and Sund&) at Dana
Point Yach! Club with a con11nuauon
of the Dana Belles Scnes.
PAPARAZZI
Midweek summer saahng wall be 1n
full swing after the weekend with Lido
Isle Yacht Club's Tuesday Twihghts,
South Shore Yacht Club·s Wedncs-
da) H1bach1 Scnes. Balboa Yacht
Club's Wednesday Tw1hahts and
Thursda> Beer Cans, NHYC's Thurs-
da} Tw1h~ts. and Dana Point Yach!
Club's Thirsty Thursday races
In other Southern California
't achting Assoetat1on areas
Loi AD1ele1 -Long Beach
Long Beach Yacht Club
( ataltna Island Scnes No 1-4
CIO R.PHRF). Saturday Sunda)
Santa Moalca Bay
Cahfom1a Yacht Club -Buo)
Mania (Overton Scne'i No 4 IOR
Tanner-Walsh Scne'> No. 4, PHRF
MORC'), Saturday.
Redondo Beach Yacht Club -
Redondo Beach Tnanale Scne<i 'lo.:!
(PHRF). Saturday.
Santa Monica Yacht Club -CJUy!.
and Dolls race (PHRF). Sunda)
Sa.a Dle10
San Diego Yacht Club -Fra1ee
Series (MORC. PHRF), Saturda}.
Sunday. Coronado Islands flK'O.-
(IOR). Saturday
Coronado Yacht Club -Summer
Regatta, Saturday.
Santa Clara Racina Assoc1atton -
Spnna Scnes (one-design), Saturday.
Salver Gate Yacht Club -01~
Brow Series (SDHF). Sunday
Cortes Racing Assoc1at1on
Sabot Summer Scncs. Sunda>
The boat was displayed at a crowded news
conference, but only the part from lhe water lane up was
~hown The bottom of the white-hulled vessel was
covered wnh a giant blue tarp.
"The wraps come off on Feb 15. 1987" said Tom
Blackaller, the Golden Gate Challenge sk1pper. rcfemng
to the final day of the Cur races an Australia.
Ron Young. genera manager of the Golden Gale
Challenae,. wd secrecy was nttded ~the design had
not been patented
Blackaller said the boat cost S3 5 mtllton 1n
engineenng fees. plus S 1.2 m1lhon m building costs
The yacht, built an Mamaroneck, N \ and brought
here by truck. was dubbed "The Spar Wars Machine" b>
Its seven-man design team Heiner Meldner took time off
from hi'> Job as a "Star Wars" phys1c1st at la"A-rcnce
Lt\.ermore Nauonal Laboratory to head the team
He \atd the R I was "faster than any 12-meter boat" 1n
"This boat has differences hterall> everywhere," he
said. "They arc very subtle but 1he sum Iota.I adds up to a
substanttally different boat."
Blackaller said he hopes to sail the boat several days
after it's given a ncv. name when 1t 1s chnstened on June
24 at the San Francisco Munac1pa.I Harbor He said he wilt ,
be able to tell then how 1t competes Wlth the alummuni
USA. the Golden Gate syndicate's other boat lauoched
last Februar)
One of the two "e'sels will be shipped to Penh
Australia. where Cup tnals start 1n October.
The challengers are after a 27-tnch-hagh. 8-pound
silver um lost to the Australians b~ the New York Yacbt
Club 1n 1983 after the longest winning streak 1n history -
132 year-;
Orangewood celebration a ball for all
By VIDA DEAN
Of .... Oelly ..........
"You Light l p My Life:·
"You filled up-\,be purse."
These were two of the happiest 'IOunds supporters ofOrangcwoo<l
( h1ldttn's Foundation heard Saturdayneninaat the lrvane Hilton
The touching_rc:nd1t1on oft he "hJht" sona by the M 1tchell Boys ( ho1r was
oe0icated1o wnT8De.aDl:yon anoEIJubetb Tierney, c0<ha1rpcrsons for the
Orange Blossom Ball.
On stage to accept bouquet<;, the two women an nounccd thev had
exceeded the SI 00,000 *oal
"We had a sellout, said Lyon "We filled 62 tables. Wnh all of the
inv1tat1onseverybodygets these days,~ arc apprcc1at1ve. Last year at 1hc tir~t
ball, we made on I> $50,000
William Lyon, chairman of the foundation board. presented the co-chairs
with their bouquetsand to WlUlam Steiner, cxecuu ve duutor, be handed ouf\
wordsofpra1~ "lfSteanerwa, 1n the Air Force I could act ham the
d1st10au1shC'd scrv1cccross for the work hed1d on the ball," said thercttred AF
general . . The black ucafTa1rwasacclcbrat1on of this past year -mov1n11nto
Oranacwood Children's Home and 1tsded1cauon by GovernorGeor1•
Deulrmejlan. "h 's only the be1ginning,'0 !>aid W1ll1am L)on The foundation
will address a broader rangeofassues anvolvingchtldrcn locating foster
homes and child abuse prcvenuon"
"l never thought they'd do 1t when l wasdoing.i stor) on the home," said
emcee Boyd Harvey, KNX Radio "But. 1 didn't reckon "'1th Kathryn
Tlsomp1on and{',cn Lyon."
Thecrowdof600bc&an 1mv1ngat the hotel at ti 30p m. tor 1he ~1al hour
to fill thecomdorand spill out into the lobby Man) were rcmembenng last
year when the Orange Blossom Ball was moved 10 thc then ne-w ho1el at 1he last
minute to accommodate guests and entertainment -the Osmond Brothers
and Ray Antboay
This year they were an for another entertainment treat -Grammy winner
Jaclr Joaesaccompan1ed by the Homes Sav1ngsof Amenca Big Band was on
stage But, Jones as no ta sinacrto stay on ,tage. He was ouund m 1 ngh ng a far
as the make cord would allow. Hts audience responded'
Pnorto the show, 1uestsd1ned on a medic~ of scnfood, medal hons of vet.I
Wlth oranae and peppercorn sauce and Sc" ilk Or.ingc ice cream. at tables
centered wtlh carousel hones, baJloons and flower\ Oran~e blossoms, Iona considered wcddana flowers. w~rc absent, but 1n a
\Cnsc the· wedding'' wen! on wath the mamage or a aood 11mc and• good cau
-Orangewood.
lair and Clftdy AriDStroDf aniH wltb
Jim and Beftrly Peten.
oeora ud Judi Ar0109 wtt.b Bob Llnta
and Sa.d Brterley.
.,.., .... ,__ .... ~
Wllltam ud WWa Dean
Lyon. £11.&abetb and Tom Tterney.
'
Oranoe Co t DAIL y PILOT I Thurlday, Juno 12, 1988
Revised figures give CBS news
another week at top of Nielsens
, TV Lis llNGs
N ·W YORK (AP) -The rt'\.Ord
breall;ini victory of "NBC Niihtly
Newt" th1t >uppostdl) snapped th
212-weck tnna of wins bv "(. BS
Evening News" didn't reall ·happen,
the A.( Nielsen Co. "aid alter
announcin& rt'vi')Cd Haure!>.
fi ntShes tor ··ce Evenma Ncv.ll"
t•n,kd II 21 '\ week
l.ast wttk, "N1&htl)' News," with
l 1>m Broknw-, had 1 10.4 rattnf. Dnn
Rather's "( BS EvcnlDJ New\' hid ii
10 I ·\BC s "World News Tonight,"
with r ,·tcr knnang.<., averaged a 10 0
Ntcl~n reponed the change 1n tht•
new\ natinp for tht w('ek ol Mav
26-30, ~tablishmg a tie bctwttn th~·
nval network ncw'IC&\tc; 1n\.tcad of a
llllrTO\\ win by "NB( Nightly Nt w)"
But N1cl\Cn also !i.41d chat "Nightly
New~" did beat "CBS t vening New!>"
the followm& week JunC' ~-6 Thul>
the marathon strcalr.. of first-place
John P1mhna. \t"ntOr vice presi-
dent at N1cl~n. said the ratmgs
\Cf\.11..t' reduced N8C1. performance
by ont'-lt'nlh ofa potnl for the week c>I
Ma) ~6 1PVtng both the NBC 111d
C BS ncw~~ts a 9.9 rat1na. D1mhn&
!>aid the adjustment wa\ made al\er
Nael!.Cn examined a <\Ceond 'tl ol
ra1in1t5 figures and found that
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581-5880
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'l\, 1.15 ltJS
WMAR-T\', the NBC affihate 1n
Balta more. did not carry "NBC Niaht-
1> News" on May 29, u N1el\Cn ltad
bt:ht'\.Cd,
When a Baltamort' Ottole al\er-
noon baseball game ran over, the
)tatJon Cilrried local news in th<'
network new5 tame slot, said Amie
Kletot'r. prt'\tdcnt of general manager
of WMAR.
k. le1ncr called It • a JOumalmtc
deus10n" and said that the busmcss
rc3ht> that WMAR get\ commercial
re venue-. from local news. not
netwo rk nr w., ·•wasn't even p:in of
thedc<1'>100 It nevcr,ame into play'
'" anotht'r unu1.ual raungs event
NBC's "'Fam1I} fies" ed&ed its run-
ningmate. "The Cosb) Show." for the
first time kadina the nt'lwork t0 a
pnme·llffiC rat tog~ VIClory ll\ wt'll lnc;t
week
1...t'd b} 1h fhur~ay comedies.
1,nctudmg J lir'it~ver No I rankmg
lor "Fam1l} Ties." NBC averaged a
I 3 0 pnmc:-time rating to (BS' 12 b
and .i\BC'\ 11 . I (Ea'h ratmgs point
equals 859 000 homes with tcle·
\l"ilOn }
Net"Work researcher-s credited
'J>eetal cin·umstances for the ratings
rt•,crc;als in both pnme time Jod
dinnertime nc~ s
< BS said that two pnme-timc
l\at1onal Basketball As~1at1on
broadcasts cau~ pre~mp11on'i or
ti me shaft s for "CBS Fvenmg News··
in 20 West ( oast markets.
'The two basketball games explain
11 all · said DaY1d Poltrack. (BS' .. ,cc
pre!>1dcnt lor research
(C)MAXTRAX
INDEP9IBT HEWS
-7:»-
• 2 ON ntE TOWN
uourty Nelly' ••
OPEN FOR LUNCH & DINNER
\ionday thru Frida\
11 AM to 9 PM
LUXURY THUTltfS
WALK-INS * T8~v.1,:~~U.R\ ~-~~ * "6enofed blt I DRIVE -INS :~:~c_:
<; f,UIJ;43i 4'1¥Ju ij;I 4 Jt3:.~:i1.=:"'"')
S MK.E: SN:a> f"8· 1 ~ SHOWS AT
1 00 .. 9 ·15
1 OIUrl OUT OF AFIUC:A (PG) SHOWS AT
' 15 &. e JO
IO IO DANar:• (11) I ,35 Plua Money Pit (POI ,,45
GUllG HO INl·1S)
1 10 Ptua "••lllf
In Pink '"'° 1 l) •It 20
CEnTURY c1neDOmE l':1 614 HSJ Clupm•n
& S•n11 An• l .. v
n••as suaLUR"S DAY C)l'p' (f'G.1~
(12.45) (l 001 S IS 1 35 &. • $0
SHOtlT Ct•CUfT (It) SHOWS AT (I 10) () 10) 5 25 7 40 .. 1·0
SWl£ET L1•1tTY f'N) AT (1 20) (l 30) ~ 40
1 50 &. I 0 00
l'OI.. ff.llQ&JST ti ... 1 > SHOWS AT (1 001 (l 15 5 10 1 ,4s a. 10 05
TOI" euae .-OJ S H OWS AT (12 5)
12 401 s os·1 JO t ·S5
In 70 MM
CO••A flt) (1 30) (l ,40) s so. 00 ~ 10.IO /ln70 MM
No PUHi
·o~ •u .. l::IJ~Cl(]~[)I ,. AM•· ~.~~.~~~ ~ rw r • rw ROOM
JTADIUm 0
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cotUlA "'' Ptu1 Co-Hll
Tl'lt Protectors (A I No Paue1
SWirr uaunv f"GJ
P1u1 Pretty In Ptnk IPO 1 ll
IO _, DANCE• (It) Ptua Co·l"eature
Jake $pHd (PG I 3)
00..&0UTIM
eEV'SllL Y ... LL.SJ•> Tiie Color l"urple (P ·1 l)
s
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'Top Gun' shoots
'Cobra' off mark
lint I' 'A OOD( \P)-fhc Na''
lhhm' of r11p (1un" took ,um and
hla\tl·d \,l,t''>ll'f \tallonr'\ "( obra''
out 111 thl· tor w ot 10 thi'> wcrkl•nd'~
~'' 111l 1c(" v.:ar\
~1.1llonc\ '111knlc 1:p1c dropped to
1hird pla1..1: in 11\ thml "'eek while tht'
\t'.l und \pot \\>en1 to th(' newly
rdca~d "Ra1.1. J>ca l · starnna
mu'>dt:ma n \rnold \ch'-"arzcncggcr
,,, an undl'fl'O' t•r I HI agent.
I c .ro.,.,c., tor lh1· wt.•cl..cnd'!> top
w' 1:n lilmr, hov.:c\cr. were running
.1t•out 20 percent hch1nc1 lhc !.<'cond
\\t'l'~t.·nd of June JQH)
Top C 1un." "hit h had debuted in
the tor \f>Ol 1n Ma' but then lo~t
ground tn "( ubra," \U fgt'd bad with
a gro\\ ol Sx.2 m1ll100 ::Raw Deal"
I pulled 1n ·S5 4 m11l1C1n and · ( obra"
gr<>\'>Cd s ~ m11l1on
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A PARAMOUNJ ~CTUR[ ,,
--• ·-"t.: •
PG
NOW PLAYING
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COii & llllA ll(WPOll1' MACl4 011Mm
, ... ...,Sl)p .)!< fC'orO'I~ ~
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NOW PLAYING
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AR.IU (Marcb 21~April 19): Tub that bad been "pushed aaide" wilJ
now surface. Means it 11 dcadhnc time1 and responsibilities increase You do
babevc I "sea-et a1Jy ·" Romance will not ~absent, either But JOb can no lonaer postponed
Dads have a way
of enriching lives Both vulntrable. South dull
NORTH
•86
a HOLDING
TAURUS (Apnl 20-.May 20). Favorable lunar. numencal cycles ltiahliaht
cScreauvity, vanety, chansma, physical attraction. Suddenly you are noticed•
enano a~nta excitement of discovery, ability to danoc to your own tune
Love relauon!b1p 1ntens1fies
GEMINJ (May 21-Junc 20). New approach &Cts JOb done. Study Aries
message foy valuable hmt. Accent on
land, home, older famtly members.
Lona-range prospects come mto sharp,
clear focus. State case tn fortbngbt
manner SYDNEY
0MARR CANCER (June 21-Jul} 22): Fam-
ily rewuon ts h1&hliabted -puzzle
pieces fall into place. Questions will be
answered. dilemma will be resolved
Short tnp may be ncccs!Utry if mission 1s to be completed. Sagittanan plays
key role. •
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Elements of t1minJ. luck ndc Wlth you Lost
aruclc can be loated, money comes from surpnsc ~urcc. You'll have rare
opportunity to correct recent mmake. Gemini, Sagitt4nus natives play ·•unusual roles."
VIRGO (A°'. 23-Scpt 22): Moon tn your sign spoth&hts t1m1ng.
chansma, COrrtttJudamcnt, ab1hty to perceive future trends. Take mitiat1vc
1mpnnt your own styfe, realize that some plans arc subJCCl to sudden change.
Scorpio plays key role. ,,
Every year when I sit down to wnt.c
a Father's Day column, J am
challen&ed to capture in words what a
father 1s and whit he does that earns
b1m the t1Uc
Oeorie Washinaton never had a
child, yet he was the father of his
country. James Madison bad no
chtldren and he was the father of the
ConstJtutJon.
"Our Father who art in heaven"
never fathered a child, nor did Father
Flanapn who founded Bots Town.
Not to mention Father Chnstmu
(a.k.a. Santa Claus) who never bad a
child of his own. t read somewhere
that the t1tle of"Father" was IJVCo to
men who estabhshed some1hln1 im-
portant or occupied an unusual place
in history.
Important? How important 1s a
hfetime of saying. "listen to your
mother!," "Hang up the phone
NOW!," "I &ive you two minutes to
settle down, then I'm coming up!" Is
1t significant enough to untie wet
shocstnnas or get I C'all every time a
car in the famil)' breaks down?
How unusual as it to be the only
man 10 a roomful of women at a
school play at 3 in the afternoon? Do
LIBRA (&pt 23-0ct 22) D1vers1fy. reach beyond 1hc immediate, you gctmedalsforbe1ngthconeinthc
realize that you arc irowing more popular. Powers of pcrsuas100 arc family who drops people off at the
he1itltened, WlSh can be transformed mto rcahty Cycle high for money. door and parks the car and who runs
achievement and love. _out. in lht ram in the middle of the
night to roll lhc car windows up in the
SCORPIO (Oct 23-Nov 21): Family "ahcrcat1on" will be qu1c~ cars? ..
settled Focus on harmony, design, music, flowers, spcaal v1s1t' and lol~ ls 11 JUSt the strength of be1n& the
relauonsh1p. Profit indicated as result of business or career act1v11y one everyone turns to when they can't
SAOlTT ARIUS (Nov. 22-Dcc. 21 ): lnd1v1dual in position ofauthority •~
w1lhn1 to help 1fyou perfett tcchniques. Know it. stnvc for quahty and get nd
of superfluous material. Many answers arc found behmd scenes
CAPRICORN (De<:. 22-Jan. 19). Good lunar aspect cotoctdcs wtth
ph1losophlcal concepts. communacauon. possible JOumey. You'll recei ve
additional assignment, and chance for financial reward will be cons1derabl}
increased. Romance mtens1fies
unscrew the peanut butter?
How monumental can it be to
stand out in the darkness on Hal-
loween behind a bush and waJt for
your kids to get a pillow case full of
candy bars that will tum into monu-
mental cavities you'll end up paying
for'> Do you cam a place m history for
E111
BOllECll
talunaovcr when "Mom" II Sick and
you tum out a pony tail that looks tikc
an unmade bed and laundry that is all
blue?
What's s0 spcctal about "hstemna"
to someone talk about their problems
and not haV1na the answers">
<:'A1'74
0 643
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WEST EAST
•ti •K8
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OUTS
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The btdding:
Soutb Wut North Ea.at
lt Pua INT Pua
4 • Pua Pa•• Pu•
Opening lead Queen of <;J
Fathers arc an enigma. Generally,
they don't bake cookies, sew on
buttons, take splinters out of hands,
kiss anything to make 1t well, or dress
dolls when they sit around naked. You may not agrff with all Mar·
They work spht stuf\.s 10 a family, shall Miles has to say on bridge the·
comma and going Wlth the rqulanty ory, but you pay attenllon Has
ofa sunrise or a sunset. It is rare that ideas on the play of the cards. 1n
an adopted child will ever go 10 sca.rch particular. ;&re well worth careful
of a father.. only the mother who study
pve them life And yet ... once you have had a In a recent article an the AC'BL
father as a part of your hfc you will Bulletin, he discussed conrealmf'nt
never be the same again. They brina or your holding. Thl-s hand h1gh-
to 1t another view of yourself that you Hghts what he had an mind Playing
cannot see tbrouah a mother's eyes. in a pa1r'I tournament, South dt>
Maybe it as because she 1s so close. A dares four spades after a routine
bloody nose doesn't ~m as tragic, • auction and West leads the top of
screwmg up seems ordinary, mtStakcs his heart sequence
not as earth-shalang. . Obviously, you have only thrf'f' ~ybe fatherhood has nothang to lo~rs so 1t as a que•nion of your do wtth a b1ol0&1cal funcuon. Maybe ' • it's a generic term for someone who best hne tor an overtrlck. Should
enriches, makes a difference to lives you use your two entnes to dummy
they touch, and arc sorely massed had for trump or diamond r1n~ses?
they never been \files argues convincingly that the
Hans Chnsttan Andersen, the diamond finesses are superior The
father of children's literature. did all trump finesse won't help If the suit
of that. He never married He never
had a child
CHARLES
GOREii
OIUR
SHARIF
breaks f--0. and you have a betc.r
chan~ of dropplna a 1m&let.on
king In spade. than 1n daamoncil.
And 1f the diamond flO('SSe losea.
you rrught !till be able to pick up
lhe kmg of trumps with onr
fines~.
Howtver, Milea point." out that it
maghl be fauu to lead a diamond to
the Ja~k at trfck two. If the cards
arP as shown m the diagram, an ex·
pert defender could hold up tht'
king, tempting you to repHt the di·
amond finesse and ao low your
overtr1<'k tr, instead, you lead a dl·
amond to the queen, ll llj almost 1m·
possiblf' for Wt-st to duck with the
king, alnct> it might be givtng you a ·
rnck and the contract With the di·
amond situation r~lv~. you
know whether to UM your rem11n-
1ng entry to the table to reJ>4"&l the
diamond finesse or to 11wtuh to the
spade finesse The rule. Play the
higher. or highest. or l"QU&l" If you
don't want the opponents tO
duck
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20.Feb. 18): You get ··final answer" regardin& posSJble
inheritance. Focus on basic requirements. mclud1ng necessary license and
taxes. What was formidable opposition 1s due to melt Anes. Libra figure
prommently
PISCES (Feb 19-March 20). Go slow, he low, play wa1ung pmc. Light
Wlll be shed on areas previously dark. If patient. you make significant
progress. Otherwise, steps will be repeated. Leo. Gemmi, Aquanus figure
prominently
Feud could foul up
family functions
0 Reorro~ lette•1 of the
lour 11e•o"'bi.d WOtdt be
._ •o for.., lav< ""'P'• ..o<d• I COYPUC I l 11 I I
.... ....
IF JUNE ts IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you arc dynamic. active. creauve.
rebellious, and you seldom do one thmg at a time. You could be
ambidextrous, you have knack for languages, you create your own lite
patterns-mostly out of necessity You could have been separated from one
or both parcnls at relatively early age. Taurus. Leo, Scorpio people play
important roles 1n your hfc. Lifestyle could undergo transformauon m June.
You break from past this year, October will be cspcctally s1gn1ficant.
Little book of puzzles
started something big
Never can tell what m11ht start a
fortune. That renowned pubhshing
firm Simon & Schuster got off the
ground m t 924 with a liuJe book of
crossword punle\
Who sets kicked out ofh1gh school?
Thrtt tames as many students from
one-parent families as from two-
parcn1 families. That much 1s known.
at any rate.
Why don't you wallpaper 1hc 1 nside
of your bathtub? Many do, many do
They epoxy down the vmyl sheet,
then 8JVC it I 0 coats of waterproof
varnish
How ..-.ell we dctecl odon. we
animals. depends on the length of our
noses Our olfactory membranes are
only a sax th as long as bloodhounds'
Q In what countl"} now arc the best
math students''
A Japan. By far. Tests prove 1t.
Q Most people 10 th1' country
~leep 1n double bed\. nght'>
A. Most, ye~. 41 percent In queen
Sile, 31 percent In krng. 2 1 percent.
In Single, 6 percenl Adds up to 99
Where the missing I percent sleep
hasn't been ptnncd down by the
stat1st1culns, but there are a whole lot
L.M.
BOYD
of mat and cot and bunk sleepers. too.
Q. What's normal
temperature of a whale?
A 98 degrees F .. about.
The collc&e-educated white woman
who hasn't mamcd by a&e 35 prot>-
abl) won't ever get mamed. More
spcc1fically. 19 out of20 ~uch women
won't ever get ma med Our Love and
War man 1s not fond of treating real
people as though they were mere
stausucs. so he objects. He thanks
most of those 19 out of 20 don't 1ell
everythana to the researchers, and
know exactly what they're doing.
Some near-sighted people also ~uf
fcr from a sort of night· bhndne<i!>
And 99 out of 100 so affi1cted are
males.
L.M. Boyd Is • syadk•t~d
col•mDl1t.
DEAR ANN LANDERS· My hus-
band and brother-an-law had a huge
fight, and now they refuse to be in the
same room together.
My family has always gathered for_
all major occasions and wt have one
comina up soon. I feel that my parents
should not be hurt because of this
falling out and the two battling boys
ought to be c1v1l to one another when
they are thrown together Un-
fortunately, my husband refuses to go
anywhere "Bud" mlght tum up.
Should I stay home with my
husband or attend the family gather-
ings alone? Either way 1t Wlll be
obvious to my parents that there 1s a
problem. My husband reads you
every day and maybe if you put this in
your column you could save us from
more pain and further arguments -
NAME WITHHELD ON RE-
QUEST
DEAR N.W.: Go 10 tbe family 1et-
to1etber1. Wby 1tay Mme and ml11
tlae hut becaate your ll•tbud 11 a
sordaead?
lf uyoae 1ak1, "Wbere'a tlae
weirdo?" uy, "He d1cba't feel llke
com1D1.'' No detaJl1 0ttd be given. la
time be may arow •P and decide to
rejoln tbe hmaa race. • • •
DEAR ANN LANDERS· I have
been wanting to write to you about
this problem for several weeks be-
cause 1t 1s apparent to me lhat l
cannot help myself
About three months ago this very
11.ood-lookm$ guy (I guess he is about
}5) moved an next door to us. The
problem began a month ago
My husband works the second shift
six days a week and I am at home
alone. I watch a lot of TV to kill tame.
The houses arc close t<>ðer and 1f
someone has their shades up. you can
sec everything that goes on.
At about the same time every night,
this hunk starts to undress in front of
the window. What scares me is that (
look forward to watching him parade
around to ht'i tiny b1km1 bnefs
Lately 1 have been fantasmng
A1111
l.uDERS
about this auy a lot. I can't stop
thmlong about hH body. Our mar-
nage h·as been temfic and I have no
complaints about our sex ltfc. If my
husband should find out that I am
lusting after the auy next door. tt
could mean trouble. What do you
suggest? -THE W INDOW
WATCHER
DEAR W.W.: Somehow yoa mRtt
break tbla cycle of voye•rt•m before
It 1•t• 1oa Into teriou trooble.
lntte family or frie11d1 over -or
make plea to 10 oat. Have yoa
considered taeklna or tapln1 your
wtpdow 1taade 10 you won't be
tempted? My 1ageatloas are 1ot.a1
to ttqtlire a lot of willpower, bat
11nle11 J08 set CODtrol of tbe tltutiOD,
yoa stand to lose • creat deal. • •• DEAR ANN LANDERS: I dis-
agree Wlth your suggestion that wt
have laws against college hanng in
every state instead of only 26.
Do we need laws for EVERY-
THING? A young man who ts smart
enough to get into collcae 5hould be
smart enough to know better than to
~ump from a second-story Wlndow
into a haystack or take part to the
crazy stunts you described
Please. Ann, no more laws' Let's
teach o ur children to use the bnuns
God pve them -SOUTHERN
CAL.
DEAR S. CAL.: Do yoa ban aay
Idea llow muy God-pven brat.at
cute to faacCIOD wlao peer preaaan
take• over -or wi.n kids 1et •ruk?
I bdlen taaaJn1 11loald be lllqal ill
every state ud 1ttff peaaltlea Im·
poeed oa anyone caapc breakla1 tbl1
law. Deatll 11 too dear a price to pay
for tlae lmpet1101tty of yoatb.
Danny Kaye wears Brooklyn crown
By Ute A1toel1ted Pttt1
NEW YORK -01nay Kaye
wu crowned this yc.:1r's King of
Brooklyn be(orc nearly 200,000
people who came lo praiK, thank
and knock the borouah at the
fourth annual "Welcome Back to
Brooklyn" festival.
"t felt ltke I wu 12 ycan old au
over apin when I u~ to come
to this patt of Brooklyn to 9eC how
the rich ptople hved," said Kaye.
a native of the boroJatr .... dunna
fcst1v1t1es last weekend alona
Prospect Park when he was
crowned hy Borouah Pre 1dent
Howard uolden. -.i-.~,-----
Also on hand wt'ttauthorluae Danny Kare 1 1
A1lmov, formttbox1namampiott--nierr: wa\ a suaac u this
Fl•1• PatttrHG, actor Jack momin& that l take elocution
otlfonl and theatncal producrr leuon1 because I peak
Jotepb Papp, •II of whom arcw up Brooklyncr,c," Golden id. "I
1n Brooklyn. · · prom•~ I Mii f\ll'~er take tho
Yupp1 and Manbatt.an rcfu-le son ••
JCCS ,lpptd dalQUiri,, whale
othm sampled ca cream,,
Nuhan '1 hotdoas and~
ebeetee1kc.
Royal record
LONDON -
QU•D llotber ltllllabet.h
Ellt.aM"' has hved lonaer than
anyone °fllbo <JCrvcd as Bnta1n's
qu~ now that 'he has reached
the qe of8$ years1and 304 da)'I
The Gutont1s Book ofRerorcb
said lhc quttn mothn-$Ul"paned
the prtVlous record-holder, hn
late mother-in-law Q.eea Mary,
on unda)' Queen M'ry died 1n
I 9S3 at qc RS and 303 days
•
Queen Mary wiu the widow of
lCJq Geor1• V, wbo died to 1936.
The queen mother. Wldow o(
1tll1 Ge.re VI who died 1n t 9S2,
live 1n Oarence Hou~ nur her
dauahter, QMeta EltulMtll D at
Buc\ingham Palace. and 1 still
aoina stro!'4 with • proaram of
rquJar offic11I enpaemcnt
Famous for her hats, flowered
drn~ and sm1le1 the queen
mother V1Sllt'd an 1ndu,tnal es~
tale and a ho,p1tal in northeast
EnaJand on Tucsdiy. a ballet in
London Wcdn~~ a prden
part) in London y. and ti to
meet 9Chooltcachcn Fnday and
attend her ctauahtcr'5 official
birthday ceremony 1n London on
Saturday.
Ne~t Wtt the queen mothtt
v.ill be at the A ot rac:n for four d•~· .
Guinness said the quttn ""'ho
laved tk Ion was tbe ~ Grandmother of tam, n
Sawana., 27th dau&hter of n
Moflakut.whod1ed"in 19~Sat
QJ year\ and l month
I JUTSO I
Downtown 1ranic 11 always a
r__,N.,..._.0._..H...,....P_Y.._..-41 .. '::! snar1ed·UP mess Running onto
I , J I I _ ~ lat• tor the third llm9 1n one
. _ . . week my co-worker gasped
'"Th11 city 1s 22 milet long and .... ,-T_O_M_R_R _E_....,, ,~, -Wide
I I I I ~ 1s O CO"'P•'• ,.,. '"'"'~ • Quoted
. • . • • • • br I fling n tl>e ,.., .. "9 WO<dl ._......___.__...___.___..___. yOv d•••locl frOITI Uep No l ti.low
& fll1•.t t.uM8H£0 lfllfl!S IN
l,..fSE SQU,t.PfS
A vNSO,t.1¥181£ .A80 •f f PEPS ., Tu GET ,t.NSwt•
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
AC AO SS
1 Ftsh
5 Vocalist
10 Blackleg
14 Fish sauce
15 ··can't you
take ?
16 Manage
17 A Roosevelt
18 Aesull Of a
move
20 Ring
22 Islet
23 Harasses
2.t Happy time
26 School prom
27 Frets
30 Shooting
34 Antelopes
35 Sob
36 Notnmo
37 -V8H
38 Fussy per!lon
40 Herb genu6
4 1 Native suit
42 Mercy
43 Deviated
45 Having m•d•
a will
4 7 Agncultural
mach1ne1
48 Part1c:S.
49 -code
50 M•re
53 Fru11
54 Sense
58 Roues
61 MOYnta1n
lake
62 Periods
63 &teem
84 'Well. W911'
85 Tumor
66 Get the belier
of
67 Light shafts
DOWN
1 Luxuriate
2 Hale or Ladd
3 Ofled
4 Cheating
5 Shoe color
6 Throws <>YI
7 "Nevert"
8 'You're on'
9 Rublous
10 Handwntlng
11 College gal
12 Batlllca area
13 Mrs. Truman
19 Babble
21 Acr.age
25 BrHlhef
PREVIOUI NZZLE IOl VED
26 Bui
27 Pay up
28 Sman set
29Gtassp~
30 Owned
31 Harden
32 Saltpeter
33 ftower1.
informal
35 Acquire
39 Hwy
•O Kind ot gun
42 T rOll41f I kin
44 Onenl
46 Most doc11e
47 G1ngef
49 Trlvlal
"50 Ext•r;,li1nat9d
5 1 Milan money
52 Steel beam
53 Doggy n•~
SS lltad, e g
56 Server
fl7 01scon11nues
59 Pet ma•blci
60 Foe in ptoc.
THE
FAMILY
CIRCUS
by 8 11 Keane
"Don t plant anything rn fair
territory. Mommy •
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson
.. ,, ...
"Excuse me. Marjorie. I think I hear my
phone ringing!'"
PEANUTS
GARFIELD
TUMBLEWEEDS
DRABBLE
IT'5 TL4RE£ A.M ,NCQMI.
~AT AR£ '40lJ
OOtNG UP?
ROSE IS ROSE
'(OU KNOW WHAT
S~E SAID? SHE
SAID ''THANlo..? MISTER
~ --
t •l
1'M TR'-11"'6 TO ~ltJl~
M"' le.RM PAPE.S(, OADI
IT '!> LAff. I
BIO GEORGE
;:;---"I -----
"It all started with my bulldlng ahlpa In
bottles; then, one day, I ellmlnated the
shlp-bulldlng part."
0
BLOOM COUNTY
U.S. ACRES
b 12.
llJW, (MT )a,' Mr,.....
1111 ~ wrs. t«laMJ( M4f"
/WI 1N'MRf,,,. HfMlll(1
71ltr NU MlbHTElf MM 111 MO A MAI/ 11HJ I# .,,_ ""'11 • lfiAT1tlrt" l'Jlrtt«P Qtl £/IC/(
wrRJCI( ~
./
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
SHOE
1WE ~W ...
GEE WHI! ~ llS NOT PATRIOflC TO GO TO BtO BE~ l 'THEY PLAY-rnE SCAA S.OAANGLEO ~fR ~. I :
i
by Charles M. Schulz iJ
IM ONL'T TWO MONTHS
OLDER THAN S~E 15 AND
SHE (ALL5 ME 1'MrSTf.R' .~
I WALll.ED ACROSS THE
STREET WITH A GIRL
ONCE. AND S~E SAID
''SO LON6 NOODLE NECK'. '
[(
by Jim Davis
WE."Rf. PRflTY
TERRIFIC
AU RIGHT
by Tom K. Ryan
~E CHfAPERiO
HAVE ME Rt:=IVOJEC?,
iHANHIM.
iERM PA.PE.I< 11 BUT
~~OE.DA.
~~A.GOI
by Kevin Fagan
t by Pat Brady
•.
JUDGE PARKER
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
BROTHER ... ARE.
~E. 806S EVER
AN~I~ OUf HE.RE 100A£.> I
THIRD 8A5E
(Dl(:.H OR NOT" ...
00
DOONESBURY
1 !JO.Ir f!ET n;
zt.»IK.. NI'(. ON
tAllTH Pi»W
f 'lttJ "'41/T A
• 71Tl£7 I
•
fi'aJTS, JfR I
/JCJN6 ~
CAUFORHIA,
!~/EVER.
HAJ)AJIY!
~i
3 4
iME PflOUD ..
5 a 5
by Berke Breathed
by Jim Davis
by Lynn Johnston
Na.U,Ol>Sf~~o
l'M f\a:xx> ~\~D
AND WeRe. HA\Jt~
A~L _,,~eRSftliON ~
by Jeff MacNally
by Tom Batluk
IF iHl5 GETS A~ !1'5 iHE OLD ~, 1'M L.EAIJIN& ! 'tNFIEL.0 FL<i RUL.E.' !
0
0
by Garry Trudeau
.
'1ttCIOIJ9.
..
,, .. ,
'
0r8nge Cout OA LY P LOT /Thu
COMPLETE NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS,
;
Industry-school lirt'k Cited
By G. Jonetk An al °' .. .,.., ......... L
Beverly Mc< lure Ila$ iucivtd the 1986 Robert 8
MOOfc Award from the Oransc County lndu try
Eductatton C'ounCll.
Mc( lure the director of lrviDc's Toaelhcr lndunry
Educatton program. accepted the award Ian week for htr
work an helping Irvine students cstabltsh 1 cl0te workana
rclataons~ip wath arc1 bu inctsc'S and industry. The
program 1s affiltated with the Oratcr Irvine Industrial league.
NYSE UPs & DowNs
HEW YORK (APJ -Thi folowlf)O Hat IMwa lhl NeW Yon $tock E•chanet Jt0Ck1 end werrenta ltlet heve DOM uo the most and· csown the most beMld on
percent of ehal)9e ~rdleu of vorume for Wtdntadav .
The award as prcseoted taeh y~r to an Oran
County leader who h s ""otked h11rd to fcn~r cooperauon
and communicauon between the county"• indU"Slrial and
educattonal qmcnt1. a«Otdina to Jim C:ameu.. potn-
man for Oran Coe t Col1*.
The 11ttard 11 named in honor of Robn't 8. foor-c.
""ho ~f'lcd as president ofOCC for II yeaB and also
~•dent of the Industry Education Council.
Thccouncllwasformcdin 19S7bybu ines 1ndu1tt)'..
and cdut1t1onal leaders to improve the quahty of
malhmtatics and science instruction 1n county K'hool-
I:
I ·
l 1 1 1 . t
L
Fot:O......M
ACTIQH c.a
A DA&.YN.Or
~WllOa
'42M71
1~~-....~-~-~---~-....~
~ i\.ntl~~e Sale ••• Antlqu~ Sale ••• i\.ntlque alt! !
4 Liquidation Sale § ~ Lt'••• expire•, we•• t rel•eta•tly ••-•f-r e.tlre ...U.Htl-9f... { .
~ COU~I:::~=~~SJ:i ~w:::;UES l
4 Sale Begins Everytbl;; ;.::;.:e I
#: Wetl.,.l•ae 11 .......... s ••. ,..l•ae I~ &t 50~•75% Off ' ~ ~~::;or;·;arbor Imports § ~ 412 31st Street. Newport Beaeb 67 5· 7784 ~ ~ "In Tiie C•-ery l'lll•6e,. ~
~-~~c:>~~~c:>~~c:>~~~~~~eo""'.,. •:
• ..
NY SE COMPOSITE TRAN SACTIONS
Tllllllf'I OLlllll Pl•I
Market closing mixed
NFW YORK (APl -St~ces closed
mixed Thursday. capping a dull tradins session
that market analysts attributed to un~rta1nty over
the economy and a bit of profit-taking among the
blue chip!> Some ~1d the market was sull rccovenng
from tht• record 45.75 point drop Monday m the
Do"' Jones mdustnal average. which made many
tn\estors nervous although the corTCCllon was
considered l~ely technical in nature.
Other'> said Wall Street was ha ving a mixed
rcal·t10n to Commerce Drpartment reports that ~howed retail sales fell 0. I percent tn May and
capital 1n' e~tment plans will decline 1 3 percent
th1<1 )ear
Tht• reports compounded cv1denc.e that
,(uggishness per•;ists. especially in the consumer-
~pendmg area which account!> for two-thirds of
overall economic actl\ tty.
Some investors believed this pointed to lower
..:orporate profits and cashed in on their stocks.
"'h1le others thought 1t would hkely mean dcchncs
1n interest rates thereby makmg stocks more
attract 1 \.t
'"It's hard to discern a trend," said John J
Smith. an analy•u at the Nc·w York brokerage firm
I ahnest<x k & C o
WHAT AMEX DID WHAT NYSE Orn
NEW YORK (AP) Jun 12 Prtv
Advanctd T~, "~ 0
¥ncha"9ed otal lfiSUIS ~ewh ohs # aw lowi •
I, AMEX LEADERS
NEW YORI<. IAf'I -~··· 4 Pm ThurMlav orfce and net chanve of the 10 m o I I
active A"'*rlcan Stock Exehanoe Issues, tradlno na llona ltv a I more than 11. Name Wick as Horn Har HOfnHt_r wt 8er"en8run Lorlm41rTa1 n C11~111llln WlcltnptA
Intl 8nk119t PhllLgOlt
W1n11L1b8
. GoLo QuorEs
L ----
NEW YORI< (AP) Jun 12 Prev
Adv~nced Tl l o.c1 ned ¥~,,r:',
~ew ~;ti• tt 9W WI
NYSE LEADER S
:, METALS QUOTES
i-.._ NASDAQ SUMMARY
ftom U'8'Z. Roh:zrL Tollx::U ~u~n
~ud10 sn~nnil voll.«y thcz.
world~ f'ma.st. hendelZWn tt~
o!wey~ U"WZ puRzct. 91ft,
ond el~5 t.hrl ~rgz.~t,
912la.ct.1on
nlWf O! t brt4Ch ,_.~ QisetJion "l;lrd, 1i't/fii'I ro?0
~ Vll~ IOOl 114DtMXXi bNd. 2l~~ 3i27:,
pcieojiino Sl~aouU\leN2'4 ,81S/30't 9"~
m:m th ru fh \0 tn9. _,.,t.4itdlrt 10 to6 t 9Unday noon to ~
f
THURSO~X, JUNE 12, 1986
The Dodger• clalm Mother 1-tun victory from the ll1de. C2.
Big Bear Uk• h•• •gold mine of •locked ralnboW troUI. C4.
Red Sox star considered serious threat
to succeed where Brett, Carew failed
BuD
TUCIEI
..
Tobe perfectly candid, I have
never seen the Abommable Snow-man of the Himalayas or the Loch
Ness Monster
Neatherbaveleversecna 400
hitter.
However, I am informed by Angels
coach and baseball histonan James
Reese that a .400 bitter did indeed
exist. His name was Ted W11liaths
and he accomplished the. 400 feat an
the year ofourlandlord 1941.
Since then, the .400 tbinJ has been
a veryelusivegoal although a few
JUYS have made rather gutsy stabs at
1t. Most recent were Rod Carew and
•
Georee Brett.
Much is sttll to be detemuned on
theareensward in 1986, but mention
ts bein& made tn the same breath of a
youllJ man named Wue Boag.s and
the magic ftaurc of .400. Boas is a
memberofthe Boston RedSOx who are also beans menuoncd as con-
tenders forthechampionshipofthe
American League Ea.sL
Authoriues of the same note that
~bas bit better than .360 in two
ofbis last three seasons. In 1985, he deliv~Ted a total of240 ht ts and this is
impressive.
Prep spring practices winding down
SPO RTS COLUMNIST
and down, much in the manner of
lineman facinaa field goal kicker. The
umpires held a meeunaandcon-
cluded all of this was ill•l and
ordered the Twins to desist.
It 1s signaficant that 1t was Ted
Wilhams who inspired the first
baseball shift which was by no means
It'• puelntdrllla (aboYe) at ltdlaon, ranntn' 4rl11a (below)
at UnlYenlty, catchJ.ni drllla ~&: rtcht) at Ocean View and a lot of attendon d Khool • rtni football,
which conclude. till.a ':!:f. n enZ It.a pracdce
aeealona Saturday wltb &a.ma at 11 a.mJ~homoree) and 1 (ftftlty). UnlYenity cloeee wttb a ap •ame Friday,
and at Ocean View, tbe Aeah•wb conclude with 1amee
Saturday at 12 :30 and 2 :30. '
Barons' Doyle-fin 1amona eroug
Disappointments fade with -
all-state baseball honors
By JOSEPH DUDEVOIR
Dolly .... c.r..1" I .. I .
If you're Jim Doyle, you know that )te&t
upcctations can tum into bta disappointments.
But like Fountain Valley Hi&h's seruor third
baseman, you also know that aooa thinas come to
those who wait.
Doyle d1dn 't have to wall too Iona for the good
thinp .. To name a few: hittina .400 last year and
bc•na named first team All Sun1et Le 1 third
baseman, play1na for the Barons' F I 98S
champion hip &.cam; bci colll'ted by USC for a
bescball scbola~ip earlier this year.
.. Then it ~med like someone pulltd the rua
out from under the kid," says Baron ba~hall coach
Tom OcKru1 .
Doyle saw thas yeah Fountain Valley team
mi~s the playoffs Wlth a fourth-place finish.
Hes.aw his USC bid all but vanish with TroJao
baseball coach Rod Dcdeaull's retirement Doyle
also saw his scholarship to Oral Roberts take a bad
1um when the school's coacbina staff quit two days aao
And then probabll the most i:-mful ofall thc
disappointments for Doyle came when he wa
snubbed in the fU"St-tcam All Swuet ~e
lcctions thit year.
"I bad a lot of disappoinunents this year," says
Doyle. "l don't know what bawcncd with the all
leaauc sclcct1ons. but that bothered me. cspccianr,
since I made it la t year. It hurt to mi it this time. •
On h1a collcttt: plans that have fallen throuah,
he says. "'t wanted to ao to USC real bad when the
year staned. I had been talki"I to Rod Oedcau~.
but since he h quit, I haven't heard anythina
from them.
"And with Oral Robert'\, I couldn't bchcve at
when I heard what happened there."
.
But thtnp have packed up considerably for
Doyle as of late. He was selected to play in the
Oranae County pme, picked for a spot on the
Southern California team and then the b1gje: He
was chosen to play on the All-Cahfom11 team,
which wtll leave Friday to play five pmcs in
Oklahoma. ·
"I never expected that. It wasa niet surprise,"
says Doyle. "!have to fed 1ood apout makin& a
team liic that with all those ueat ~yers."
That bas to make one wonder ~ Doyle wa
second team all-lcquc. and no other playcn from
the Sun t Leque earned the honon Doyle ha .
Should there ht a recount of the ballots cast by the
leque's coeehcs?.
"The way the scl«tion proces wor~s." ~id
DeKraai ••is that four infielders art cbo n. They
are not sen by po 1tion, JU t as infitlders.
"Last year y,orkcd to Jimmy's advantaae
btaause thttt were four third baseman that were
(P1eue DOTL&/Ci}
to be the last. Williams. knovin
poetiaally as the ''Splendid Spli o ter" .
becauseof'bi lean build. was a
dedicated pull hitter.
The Williams shuffle went like this:
The third baseman moved bebmd
second. Thcshortstopwenttoa
location between second and first
The leCOnd baseman went to abort
right and the fim baseman played the
line.
Thas was ioienious. to be su.re, but
it did not always work.. At 39,
Williams won the battina cham-
pionship with an averaaeof.388.
Williams' history shows little 10-
dtcauons of the pressure assoaated
withemersinaua .400h1tter. Recent
studies, on the other hand, show great
emotional strain on the pert of the
.-400 campaignen. •
Rod Ca.reW became~ and
ddmsive, oot to menuoo im~t.,
witb thOK punuina him durina the
crucial days. Brettdevdoped 1nenl
ailrnetits, bcmorrboidl included.
No preuurc is yet applied to Boas
whi<:h is demonstrated wbm Wadtis
asked wbetherheaivesanythoU&}lt to
hitting.400. He does not squander
words with bis reply.
"No," he says. .
Still, it w1U be of interest to note the
reaction of Boas ifhe is involved in a
late purswt of.lOO.
Amvinaat the ball park everyday,
Carew and Brett selected a place to
hide.
Williams selected a beL
Angels take on
Royals tonigJit
Jones. Downtng-
lead 12-11 victory
over White Sox
The Anaels couldn't have picked a
better time to set their hittin& in gear.
After outsluaina the au~
White Sox. 12-1 lis Wednesday tn
Chicago, the Anae s . open a sevcn-
pme bomcstand toni&Jit against de-
fending AL West champion Kansas
City .
After four games Wlth the Royals,
the Angels take on the first place
Texas Ranim Monday throuah
Wednesday.
Angels ccnterfielder Gary Petus
sa.rs be did a lot of prayana during the
Wln the White Sox Wednesday in a
game marked by a stiff breeze and I 0
extra-base bits amo~ a total of 30.
"When the wind is blowina out.,
you better do a lot of praying and
somehow hope the Wlnd does not
blow you into obhvton," said Pettis.
who had three hits and a couple of key
bunt singles.
Angels' manager Gene Mauch said
he was surprised no one was hurt as
the brisk 18 m pb brcc:ze sent balls hit
to the outfield either over the fence or
up for arabs. .
"Comiskey Parle is dangerous terri-
tory when the wind 1s blowtna."
MauCb said. "There 1s no place to
hide the ball Usually, you can hide it
Tozd6bt'• 1ame
Kansas City (Jackson l-l) at
U.eb (Wilt 6-4).
Time: 7:3S.
TV: Channel S. Radao:K.MPC(710~
Friday's pme: Kansas City at
Anaels. 7:3S p.m.
in center field. But that wasa•t the
case."
Bnan Down1na's tw°"run homer
dun"' a three-run ~th provided
the Anaets with their victory marlin.
The Anaieh not only bad bomen
from Ruppert Jones off Wbite Sox
lo5C1' Richard Douon. ~ and Brie
Downinaoft'reliever8ill Dawley. bUt
three tnples.
"It looked like there was a wind
tunnel 10 naht<enter 6dd... aid
Chicago manaaer Tony LaRussa.
You needed about five p1ys out
there."
The White Sox lost despite scorina
five runs in the ninth innin1on a two-
run home run by Harold Baines, 1us
ninth, and three-run shot by Tim
Hulett. bis third. The runs wen: a season hiah for Sox.
"lt wu just tbat land of day out
there where we feU short," LaR
said. "It was a frustratinaaftemoon."
Downin(s homer, his sixth of the
year, was bis I .300th career biL
Harbor hosts U.S.,
Yugoslav poloists
'84 Olym pic champs
challenge Americans
ln four-game serie~
Yugoslavia. the 1984 Olympic
Games champion by virtue of a tie
with the United States, atded by an
overall goal differential, wtll be at
Newport Harbor Htgh Saturday. June
21 for the second of a four-game senes
with the U.S. National team.
"These matches have bcc1l m the
making for a year," saad U.S. Coach
Bill Barnett. "We've been look.ma
forward to this for a long ume. We
anucapate good mternattonal training
and matches. This will be arcat
picparat1on for the World Cham-
pionships 1n August m Madnd."
The set begins Wednesday at l 'C'
San Diego Wlth a 7:30 match follow-
ina a 6 o'clock game between the
Sunset San D1cgo Oub and Newport
Water Polo Foundation
Three mJhts later the scene shifts to
Newport Harbor where 17..and-
unden from Corona del Mar High vie
apinst a s1m1lar vaup from Newport
Harbor Hl&h at 5:30. followed by the
YQgoslavs and Amencans at 7.
The followtng nl&ht (June 22) the
senes moves to Loni Beach's Bt-1
mont Plaza (7~30). The scnes con·
eludes at use June 25 (3 p.m .).
Barnett satd w matches arc 1rn·
portant because of the U.S. playerc;
who are not able to compete oversea\'
wtth the NatJonal Team at nme'I
because of 1ob obhgat1ons.
"It's very important because we
have several players, who, because of
work comnutments, can't compete in
Europe Wlth the team on occasion."
said Barnett.
The U S has met the Y uaoslavians
on one other occasion Stnce its silver
medal finish at the Olympic Games,
los1n1 an 8-7 decision at the Sn
Nation Tournament an Marseilles.
France. June I
U.S. team members include Olym-
pian and aaptain Terry Schroeder of
Santa Barbara., as well as I 9S.
Olympians Peter Campbell, Jody
Campbell, Doug Burke, Kevtn Rot>-
eruon and goalie Craig Wilson.
C ampbcll 1s a product of Univer-
s•l) High and UC lrvme. and Rob-
ertson prepped at Newport Harbor
~fore starring at UC Berkeley
Other team members include
Jamie Bcreeson (formerly of Newport
Harbor Hi&b). Orea Boyer. Jeff
Campbell (Peter's younger brother).
Shaun C1ary. Peter Cutino Jr .• Mike
E"ans. Mike Gner (another Newport
Harbor product), C'harhe Hams,
Doug Kimbell, Mark Maizell (Irvine
rc~1dcnt). Alan Mouchawar. Michael
Spicer and John Varps (Corona del
Mar Hlah's coach).
The final pme at l 'SC wdl ~
televised by Pnme Ticket Wltb a one-
da) delay for the cable telcasL
Tacket pnces for the first thrtt
games arc $6 for adults and S4 for
students Tickets for the game at US<
art pnced at SS and S '\
FV's Schrader
in golf fln&ls
Fountain Valley Hi&h scnior Scon
SchRder·s next a 1gnmcnt is at
~bble Beach Saturday at the State
fihlls an golf followina Monday's
fourth place finish at at the Southern
C.alifom1a Golf As~auon tour-
namenL
Schrader fa haon«l 174-73-14711
Lakeside Country Oub in Toluca
La.ke. four trokcs off the lcadcr'i
pace, but enouah to he-come one o( 16
talc finalists
A t~rcc-year nandout at Fountaln
Valley, Schrader•~ the Sunset
and lfi DtifllltOft Beach Di trict
thamS»on
hradcr, an II-year-old ri&ht·
bander, is h dcd for Lona Beach
tatc followina aradual1on from
Fountain Valley.
'
~--
C2 * Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/ Thurtday, June 12, 1088
Dodgers nip Reds
in 11 innings, 5-4
LOS ANOELES (AP) -The
€inctnoau Reda' rant stop of the
ICUOn in Dodca Stadium proved 10
be a fru muna th.reo-day layover
filled with lo ses.
The Reda dropped a 5-4, 11-annana
decision to Los Anaclci Wedneaday
01aht for their thud one-run loss in
lhl'Cl'ni,Jhts. It wa1 the ~nd night in
a row the dec1dina run came in the
Dodaers' final at-bat
The latot loss came one night after
the Do<taen scored a disputed run an
the ninth 1nnin1 to slJp out wuh a 1-0
victor) and two ruabts after they had
taken a 6-S decision
However, Reds player-manaae•
Pete Ro~ discounted an\' notion~
that the Reds arc 'inakcb11 in Dodger
Stadium.
"(Tuesday) nipat's game ~as a
trcak," Rose wd "Tonight, the>
didn't beat us, ""e beat ou~lvcs I
think we know that You've got to
execute, that's what 11 all boih down to ..
The 11th 1nnmg Wc:dne~a~ night
wa.s a perfect example. \.\1th two out!>
Enc Oa\ is mispla)ed a single b~
"-'fanano Duncan. allowing Duncan
to take second ba~ After Ste\e ~x
was 1ntent1onaJlv walked. franklin
Toda7'•1ame
None KhcduJcd..
FRIDA Y'S GAM.E
DodJert (Valeruuda 8-4) at
San D1rao (Thurmond 3-4).
Time: 7:0S p.m.
TV. Channel 11.
Radio: KABC (790).
Stubbs h11 a s1naJe otr left-hander
John Franco. 0-l. up the middle to
!)Core Dunaan with the game-wanner.
"It's a pme of mches," Rose: s~ud.
"If the ball Bo (Diaz) hits gOC5 a little
ten. we've got two runs, or one run. at
least, and a runner on third."
The balJ Ro~ spoke of came 1n the
Reds' baJf of the ninth inning.
W 1th Buddy Bell on third and Dave
Conception on second, Diaz
grounded a ball into the hole that
Duncan came up wnh and threw him
out. Bell scored on the play to 11e the
µme: 4-4 and ~nd 11 into Cittra
toning!>
Dave Parker had hit his I lth homer
of the s.eason m the SC\enth annmg lo
offset a fiflh-mn1ng homer b> Alex
Trevino
DOYLE ..•
J'romCl
cbmen all IClll'J • Thi) umc, un·
fortunately, they were all ahorULOJ)\. ••
The choi<les were: Al Rodnqun
(Westminster), Mike: Fyhne (Oocan
Vaew), Steve 'Mullen (Fouown Val-
ley) and Joe A versa (Edison).
"If you pick.ed by J>O$lUOD, there
would be no doubt that Jimmy would
be selected as the No. I third baseman
m Southern California," says
OcK.ru1.
"He &ot my fint-team vote, but I ~n't say what the othe1' c ches'
rcasonina wu I lnow thia. he came
only one vote shon of mak1n1 it"
As far as Mullen bein& pick.ed over
Doyle. DcKru.i says Mullen wu
voted the Barons' MVP by the playcn.
them$Clves.
"I hit h1a)ler ( 366) than any of
tho..eotherauy,," ..al5 Doyle. "It wu
JUSt the way it went guess."
But alona with the tnp to Okla·
homa, Doyle also seems to have most
of has college selecuon worries behmd
him, so th mas arc taJc.inga tum for the
better
'Tm prcttr sure I'm eoao1 to go to Pcpperdine,' he says ... , want to
maJOr 1n pre med or spon.s medmnc
and ltcep playing bueball. It looks
hke ru be able to keep doina that ..
CHARGE IT (lllOST SJOfllD) 1tad1e lhaek Dad's Day is June 15th!
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One goal reached,
all others missed
as Lieberman plays
From AP dbpeldes
SPRINGFIELD, Mus. -Altho.uah m
she didn't score a point and was a little
di11ppo1nted in ber perfonnance, Nancy
Lieberman became the r1r1t woman to play
t11 a rqular seuon men's profe1siol'lal bastctball pme.
Playing behind ~rdt Michael AdamJ and Oltver
Lee, who finished with 29 points each, Lltbmnan saw
little time on the court. But she wu the center of
attent1on as the Spnnaficld Fame opened the Umted
St.ates Basketball Lea,ue season Tuesday by downana
Staten Island, 122-J 0 .
"I'm just aJad its over," she said. "The next step is
pulling the ball in the hoop."
Since s1111ing with the Fame two w~k.s ago,
Lieberman ha! been averaaing a dozen antervieW& a day
and she ad matted to bcana a ltttle tense dunn& her debut
performance an the aty where basketball was invented.
··1 was aln&ht until I sot to the arena tonaa)lt and
then 1t bit me tfiat history was be1n1 made," ahe sa1d.
Lieberman went into the pme vith 3:40 !cf\ in the
first baJf and tbe Fame leadin& S4-40 Double-teamed
every umc she touched the ball, she dttw praise from
Fame Coach Henry Bibby fora neatpassinSJdcthat was
dropped by Jerome Hand.
but her one sconng opponunuy ended 1n a
turnover when sbe declined Staten Island'• invitation
to try dnvina the lane and tried unsucessfuJly to pass
off. On defense she was called for a pushing foul on 6-4
Mark Glass.
"My personal performance bas got to be better,"
said Lieberman after spendan& the rest of the game on
the bench. "It wasn't fun when Marie (Glass) went by
me ''
The former Old Dominion and Olympic star s111d
she wasn't discouraged by herlack of playina time. "I've
sat an other (amateur men's) summer leagues," sheurd.
"I'm a winner and a team player and the imponant
thma is we won tonight. There are 33 pmea to go.·•
Quote of the day
Detroit Red Wings aeneraJ manager Jlmmy
Develluo after finng Brad Park as coach and
director of player personnel· "We were like oil
and water, which don't mix. We weren't on the
same wave-length on the way a hockey club
should be run."
Ar edge teatlflea at USFL trial
NEW YORK (AP) -Roone Arlcdje, EE
former president of A. BC Sports, derucd •II• Wednesday that the NFL had expressed
unhappiness with his network's USFL
contract and said that the baseball comm1u1oner's
office was more upset than NFL Comm1ss1oner Ptte
Rozelle
Earlier, the NFL introduced documents at the
football antitrust tnal to support its contention that the
newer league's desire to bnng about a mel'ler was
responsible for USFL's problems, rather than anything
the NFL did.
Arledge, tesufyang an the USFL's SI 5 b1lhon sull,
engaged an conunucd repartee with USFL attome)
Harvey Myerson. At issue was whether the NFL and
Rozelle had ever expressed their dtsplcasurt' with the
networlt when It provided the new league w11h a
contract for spnng play or pressured it not to givt· the
USFL a contract for its sw11ch to the fall .
· Thal has been the mam theme of the tnal -
Myerson muntaining there was pressure, the league
and network offictaJs denying 1t. It is also the maJor
point of the sun -one of its maan demands 1s that the
NFL be barred from one of the three major network!>
Otten signs contract with Cuba
Bnan Otten, a two-year starter for m
Southern Cal CoUC!ft's baseball team who
bad an overall record of 26-11, has signed
with the Chic.ago Cubs as a f rce agent.
A riaht-handcd submanne-stylc patcher, he went
18-S with a 2.61 ERA as a Junior, then put together a
2.12 ERA as a senior on the way to an 8-6 mark.
Otten, a product of Canyon High an Anaheim,
leaves today for Mesa, Ariz. for a short instructional
camp, then goes to Ckneva, N.Y. (Oan A).
As a Junior he earned first team NAIA All-Amenca
hon on.
Pro bewcb ft1lleyball toarner
The top beach volleybltl playen 1n the nation
will be vyina for the S 14,000 1n prize money Saturday and Sunday, June 21-22, at the 32nd
annual Pro Beach Volleyball Tournament 11
Lquna Bcadl'a Mam Belch
Sin110 Smith and Randy Stokloa wdl be &Otnl for thc11 fifth s\tallht tourney title ~nst auch
notables as Olymplln Karch Kiraly, U.S
national team member Rack Luytics, and the
I 98S World Champion team of Tim Hovland and Mike Dodd. DOdd wu also the top money
winner 10 beach volleyball in 198S
Actaon bqinsSaturday1Junc 21at9 a.m and
8 a.m. on Sunday, Ju~ 2.i.
Junior 1oll leuon• Golf leuons for juniors. ties 6-17, ,,..ill be
offered this IWl'lmct at Meadowlark GolfC-0ursc
in Huntinston ~acb.
Each acu1on wtll mttl on T~y and
Thunday niJbta for two ~u
Senion I will run June 17-26. SJS>n II wall be
July J.TTinoihc linaT acsdon will be July 29
Au_J. 6 (lhe only Wcdnctday se ion).
Each meetina will IHt appnmmatcly two
houn
Cost for the pt'Olt'lm It $30 per Junior or S SO for two or three JWUOrt of Ult same fam1I>
A tournament and awards pttM!'ntat1on fur
putmpenta wiJJ be held Thunday, Au& 7 for anformauon phone 8'6-1364.
aam.• ...-.m1 t:to•or.
Sn.ion uckct.a for the 1916 Ram1' 11 borne
pma f iiKliadina uhibiUoM) ~ no• on sale 11
Anaheim Stadium and at the Ramt' uckct offi«
II 10271 w. Pico 81\ld, In Loe An I
The pricll for the 11-pme pee 1nclud11l4
matcb·UP' watb lb.o Da1Lu Cowbo~s. the Miami
Oolpb 111 Uid Lbc San frann~o •'krl arc SlJO,
StM and SI 10 -For i.Qfbrmauon pboot tbt Ana.hetm 11cktt o~ ac 937"6?67 « the Loi ~ offia: al
(213) 2779'741. 8olb arc oPtD 4 a.m.·5 pm M · y frid.ay
Race car owner Trueman dlea
AMUN. Ohio -Jame R. Trueman, Ill the owner of the car Bobby Rahal drove to
victory this year in the lndianapoli1 SOO,
died Wednesday nia)lt •t h11 home in
ctntral Ohio. He wu 51.
Trueman, who built one of lhe nation'a larant
molel ch.ams and pined equal fame as a raoe-<:ar owner and dnver, h11d been suffering from cancer for about
two ~cars
Trueman wu president and owner of Red Roof
·Inns Inc .• which operates over I SO motel• in 30 states.
He also was a domUlAJlt f11ure an Amcncan auto racini.
with over 2S years of motor racma expenencc.
Even though he owned the: car lhat Rahal raced lo
victory in the fnd1anapoh!I SOO on Ml) 30, Trueman
wu unable to pan1c1pate in a victory parade in
Columbus bccnse of hu. 111 hcalt.h . Rahal is from
Columbus, and Amlin as a Columbu~ suburb.
Rahal had dedicated the: race to Trueman and
when he won there was :in emotional 'IOCne in the
victory circle between the driver and owner.
0'Th1!1 one was for Jim Trueman," Rahal lltd
1mmcdtately aner the race. "This IS the one J can gjve
him. I think everybody know!> I love him. I felt a areat
sense of well-being and a part1<:ular satasfacuon for all
the thinas Jim ha~ don<' for me over the years. If
anything can repay him, maybe this can."
3 testify in point-shaving caae
NEW ORLEANS -Fonner Tulane m
Un1vers1t) basketball star John ''Hot Rod"
W1lhams was an essential pan of a point-
wvana scheme last year, tn on It almost
from the outset and was amu&ed by hts pan in ftxina 1
pme, witnesses said Wednesday
The witnesses were lhrce East Coast fraternity brothe~ testifying 1n a plea bargain in Williams' tnal on
sports bnbef) charges -Gary Kranz of New Rochelle,
NY, Mark Olcnsky of Fair Lawn, N.J., and David
RothenbcrJ of Wil1on. Conn All were Tulane students
at the time of the conspiracy 1n February, 198S, but
none competed athlctacally for the school.
They te!>tificd that Kranz madt the an1taal cont.act
with the txlsketball team by supply1na forwardJ Clyde
Eads and Jon Johnson with cocame in return for stolen
basketball equipment -sneakers, shorts, tank-top
jer')Cys and wh1t t' wannup suits inscnbcd ··Roll On
Wave "
UCI signs distance runner
Scott LaForcc, one of the SUlle's top m
distance runners from Loe. (1atos Hi&h
School, ha\ signed a letter of intent to JOtn
the UC Irvine traclc and cro'~ country
teams
· ' 1-Laforcc finished S<"venth Ul-the l ,200 meters with
a ume of9'.03.88 at last wttk's state charnp1onsh1ps He
has a top l ..SUO-mcter 11me of 3:54 22 and a mile
clock.Jng of 4'.17 89 .-
He wu the Central ( oast cross country champion
thtc. year w1th a lime of 14· 51
Laforce was named Most Oustandto& Athlete at
Los Gatos this year.
··Scott is one of the outstanding distance runners m
the state." UCI track-crOS!> country director Vince
O'Boyle said He 1s a great add1t1on to our program. I
feel that he 1s going to tit in well and Qecome an
outstanding college runner "
IOC makes progress on sites
LAlJSANNE. Sv.1tzc:rland -0~} -• pie official\ said toda) that "cons1de le ·
progress" had been made toward a ·
ment on placing at least two lull l'vcnts n
Nonh Korea as pan of the I 988 Summer Games
awarded to Seoul.
· International Olympic ( omm1ttee president Juan
Antonio Samaranch said that, under the IOC plan,
table ~nnas and archery toumament'i would be held 1n
the North.
In add1t1on, he said. the proposal con tams plans to
hold pan of the cycling and \OCcer tournaments as well
as cultural programs an "lonh Korea.
Television, rad.Jo
TELEVISION
7 30 p m. -BASEBALL· Kan'3' Ci ty at
An1els Channel S
10 pm. -WRESTLING < hannel 56
11 )0 p m -GOLF· U S Open highlights,
Channel 1
RADIO
7·30 p.m. -BASEBALL Kansa'i City at
Angels, KMPC (710)
We.t Cout Pa.al"I Scbool
The: 1986 Wm Coas1 Pasttna School, ftatur· 1n1 inruucuo1un vanoua football 1kill p<>11llons.
wall beheld Monday lhro~ f'nday,Junc 23-27,
11 SaddJebaclt Collqc 10 M1umn VieJo.
Quarterbacks, rtee1vm, tiaht enda and run-
n1n1 backs will undcrao fundamenltll dnJI&, anta
on stttnath, flex1bdlty, q11ity and atutudc, •
clasuoom mcetmp on PISSIDJ pmc tbrory, non-contact ecnmmqJna and vtdco tape evaJu. attons from t ,...:30 p.m, daily.
H tab 1ehoo~ collqe and pro coaches will be on
hand to offer in1lNCt1on for SI 2S per camper,
Enrollment ii limited and may be 1ttaJncd by
mailtnt 1n applic:auon lo 8111 Cunerw, Saddle. back \oil~. 28000 Marauen1e Parkway Mission ViCJO, 29692 •
A S50 non refundable depu~11 "rtqu1rcd w11h all 1pphcat1on1.
for 1oforma11on phone SaddleNick Coll~ at Sll .... ,4S.
OCC .a.nuner aoccer camp
A ,um mer IOCXttcamp lur airla qn 12·20 wilt
tic hosttd by Oranae Co1u1 Coll* Fnda)' throu&)I Sunda), Auau,t 8·10, from Cf 1 m. 10 -4 p.m. rach da)'.
OCC wom~·, rnech Barbara Bond and
Edi.on Htah co cu.t'h Rc:ntt Nadon wtll co-direct the c:1mp
Nadon.a forrne-,OC:Cpta)a-, ..-. namtd Cit' •·A C:QaC.h of the Year (alona wat.h Ed''°" co.
COK.b Collttn Silva) 1h11 PHI SUk>n al\e1
au1dl1'1l Che ClwJtn to 1 CJF (,A co-
champlonsh1p
Dnllt and video tape R'Vitw1 will br utnJ to
1n1trua playcA on pmc •kill•
F1e1 ani I SO 1n advance and Sn afltr Au1
Incl with lh '" • -mp T 1n Fot inronna11oa phone 412·S
12, 1eee *ca
..
Even rain delay can't cool off Cle1nens
Boston pitcher. with some help, runs
his season record to 11-0 with 4-fift-te_r_
From AP .Upektan
Even a l~na ram delay and a lack of
ovcipowenna ituff~ouldn'l cootuff
Roaer Clemens. the hottest pitcher 1n b scba11
"He wasn't overpowenng. (But)
when you're aoma &ood.. evcrythin•
falls naht for you, and it 11 for him "'
Toronto'• Dane lora sauJ after a 3:2
los'I to Clemens and the Boston Red
Sox Wedne~ay niaht
Clemens' victory, fastuoned after a
rain delay of nearly three hours a1 the
stan, raised h11 record to 11 -0
Clemens wotked eight annin1s before
Bob Stanley came on an the ninth for
has 10th save.
"I got tJred, it's one o'clock ID the
momma. that's all the~ as to 1t,"
Clemens said of his failure to com-
plete the game "But 1t was wonh the
wait."
"He wu very hittable ton1ah1."
lora 11.id ofOemens. "The bl.II Rance
hit (into a stiff b1tttc to nabt m the ~i~th witfi two on), any other niaht -
1t s a home run"
Elsewhere ID the Amencan Lca1ue:
R.u1er1 t, Twla1 %: Oddtbc
McDowell's thrte--run homer 10 the
16th inoina hfted Texas to victory
over Minnesota in the lon&est aame
ever played in lhe Metrodome.
Mitch Walhams. f>.I, pttcbed the
finaJ three 1Dn1ogs for the Ran&en to
ae1 tbe victory. Rangers staner
Charlie Hou&h worked 13 IDntnJS.
the longest p11china stint ID the major
leaaues this year and the IOnactt in
Rang.er history. Hough pvc up C1aht
hits and only one bit over the final "1/1
innings
while Darnell Coles went 4-for.j to
lead Detroit over the Yankees, only
the third tnumph 1n the TiJen' last 12
pm es.
Winner Frank Tanana. 6-4. allow-
ed three runs on seven hJts over the
first seven inninp, wh.lJe WilJic
Hernandez finaahcd up for his 10th
save. Ron Guidry, 4-6, ablorb1na has
fit\b straifbt defeat, gave up sax runs
on nine hats in seven innings.
1adlu1 7, A'• •: Carmen Castillo
and Tony Bema.zard both hlt two-run
homers m the fifth inning as
Cleveland beat Oak.land and sent the
A's to their ei&hth straight loss and
.,1 the vactory. alJowioa four runs on
riaht bita m 1i1 il'lninp. ancludma
homen ~ Dave Kinpnan and
Alfredo Ontnn. Scott ailct •sutch.ed
three sco I iomn for bit fifth save.
Mariaen U, Royall Z: John Motet
had three hi ta and drove in three runs
as SeanJe collected a 1Ca10n-bigh IS hiu in routina the mi r.ake-p ed , Royals.
lo the Nauonal lequt
Brevet t, Glut• 1: Ou1e Vu11I
lined a two-out home run m lhe 10th
innina for Atlanta apJnst San Fran-
cisco.
Padret 11, A1tr" 7: Garry
Templeton lined a two-run double an
the e1ghth inning. key\na 1 four·run
outburst that pvt n Diego ats
victory over Houston, snapping the
A~tros' four-aame winnina streak.
The Padtts had 5quandered a 1.1
* AMeateAN LEAGU8 Or1*I 4, .,....,.. l
9ALTIMCMt.• MllWAUK•IE
nrlllll ••S.111 S 1 I 0 Feto.r r1 ) 1 0 0
l 1 1 I YOUf>I ct 4 0 1 0
IC'Ad bcfo~ Tempt ton'• loaded
hit down the nsJ'lt fic:ld line b1okc a
7.7 ticofffranti OiPino, 1·2. •
~t• 5, Plllll a: RI)' Knight hit
has ciahth hom run and drove lD two
runs atona with Ouy Cantt to lead
the Meu ovtt Pbil&dctphia. Ron
Oarlina. 7·2, was the w1nntt with
rcltcf help from three pitc~n. JC$SC
Oro1Co JQt w bm two outs t'or has
l l th •vc, pnct\ln& for the 11llth
straiaht pme.
Plnla 6, 1 I: P1u:her Rick
Rhoden hit a two-run •Hnf)e 10
PittsburJh'• thnx-n.in fourth 1Dnin1
and won hi~ founh straigh1 dcc1s1on .. Tieen t, Yank .. 1
M•W YOtlK OS'ftOtf
It lldlOll 7tl
Mr"81Vlll
ltHl\CI.,. cf
Wlnt'tlelr1
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WVMfff'C P"eV'ulo lb
M«Jtrn '' T-.b
.Orlllll
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• 0 0 0 T rlll'!lml u
) 1 1 0 G!DMln r1 ) 1 t 1 LNPwV!c
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Berr91t2b
lkl90t JI> IUCIUW Ii.
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ltlcelf
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0001 'ii D 16 I
Clemens, a. 23-year-old naht·hanct..
er surrendered an RBI double to
Rance Mulliniks ID the first IDnJn&,
thl'n retired 16 consecutive batten
before Tony Fernandez doubled m
the sixth.
Ortoln 4, Brewer• I: Mike Bod-
dacker allowed six hats 1n seven
mninp, improvma has record to 8-1
w1th rchef help from Don Aase. who
picked up his 17th save.
Balumore took a 3-1 lead ID the
third inning on run·sconng s1nJics by
Juan Bonilla, Cal Rtpken and Eddie
Murray off staner Danny Darwsn.
3·3, and widened u to 4-1 in the saitth
on Tom O'MaUcy's RBI double
.. I 0th strataht on the road, match ma a
club record.
Shetl>v cf
J9onltl 2b
ltlokltl" MAKreV 111
si-tt dll Owvern Mio.Yono If
OMellv lb
o.t1\P1YC
T .....
• 0 2 1 '-lll l 1 2 1
l I t I ()gqvfe II 4 0 2 1
4 0 0 0 ltobid• "" ) 0 0 •
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o-... •1 • nx-t Geme WlM•,,. lt91 -WNt•• ,., E~m. 1Mnlnelv. ~ Yoo. 1.
OveraJI. Oemens allowed Just four
hats. struck out Sill and walked two
before Stanley pitched 1h<. ninth.
Stanley gave up Toronto's las1 run on
an RBI ingle by Cliff Johnson.
Boston snapped a 1-1 lie an the
founh on Don BaylOf'\ two-run
homer off Doyle Alexander, 4·3. who
pitched a ,1x-h1ller
* NATIONAL LEAGUE
Bre'IM 2.. GM!nta 1
ATLANTA SAN ,lltANCISCO
MO<_ rt
C>oeAll lll
MurPhY ct
Hofnef' ID
GPwrv"
Heroer If
ATllOm• n
Virgil C
Hubtwd 11>
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1t1m1n ll>
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4 I I I
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2 1 1 I
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1 0 0 0
0 0 0 0
Ml4nckl t1
Aldtelt 111
C8rown 3D
Leonerd~
C01v1s ct
8renlv c
RTl'loln 2D
Uribe u
G1rre11, p
LenCtlt Ofl
M1nlOI' p
JS 1S1 Tftels
kw• l>Y lnfllnet
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AllllnCll IOI IOO IOO 1-2
SM l'reMhCI 100 IOO 000 •-I
G•rne Wln~·no R8t -v1rgll 'll
E--ttuOOerO 2 L08-Attent1 3 Sen Fr•n·
Cl\C.O I 2B-Mald0nldo 2. C 01v•s HR-Pllomer
II> Vlrgll 191 SB-< 8rown 161 ATllOmll 11)
If" H It •11t 9B SO
Aa.nt.
Pe~ • 1 0 s 1
o.dmon 0 0 0 0 0
GerberW 2-1 0 0 0 0 3
tell I" rllldi.<I
G1rretll 9 0 4
Monton .2·4 I 0 0
WP-Pelmet 1
Umplrel-HC>ml. Klt><er Flrll. 8onln, !>IC
pnd, Fro.ming, Thlro H•lllon
T-2 50 A_, 149
•
M9ts S, PNnet J
~HILADIElf"MIA HIW YOttK
Stone If
Aguevo Pfl
Ro.nkk ct
Simuel 211
GWlllOll r1
Hevft Ill
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r.-.u1.e P
krvndlph
HuOIOft pr
T"'91s
ab rllOI
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1 0 0 0
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1 0 ' 0 0000
MWll•ncf
Teufet 111
MHchll 11>
Nlemennp
M£0,o;l\p
Or~P
Certer c
Slrwlltv rf
F0tler If
Ovkllr• d
Knight ll>
S.n11ne u
01rt1no o
kHrnOI Ill
ll l I l T9'1111
k-llY ""*'-"
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) 0 2 0
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4 I 1 1
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u ~ 12 4
...... dlllltlll 00 I 100 000-l .... v.... 111 000 oo.-s
G1me wonning RBI -C1rrer !61
E-J-411 ~•tcl>ell OP.....PlllllOl'Phll 1, Ne•
Yoo. 1 LOB -PlllllOelOfl•I 7 New Y«~ 9
28-Mllc!*I 2. RoenlCkt HR-kro•glll Ill,
Hevft (4) S8-M W~lOll 2 111) ~oen•Cll•
SF-Certtr If" H It lllt 99 SO
~ ......
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Hunw 11) ) 0 0 0
Tet<utvt 2 I 0 0 0
Mew Ywll
Oerllng W 1 2 6 • J l 2 ' N-nn 1 3 I 0 0 0 0
McOwN 11 ) 1 0 0 I 1 , ) 0 0 0 0 0 Oroscos.11
H8P-Stone llv O•rllng umolro -Home.
H•rv1v. Flrll St1llO S«ond Ponclno, TlllrO
Grl9Q
T-300 A-21 IJO
The Brewen cut the pP to 4-2 1n
1he sixth on Ben Qal1V1e s RBI s1Dgle.
Milwaukee added a run in the seventh
on Jun Gantner's RBI single.
Tl1ers t, Yankee. 3: Lou Whitaker
had three hats and drove in two runs
HOUSTON
Ooren211
Cltenlds u
Cru1 Ii
G01vis lb
&end
W1t11nV 311
Pull! r1
OIPlno o
A•hl>vc
W11ktr pr
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SAH DIEGO
ltot.rlt lb
GwvMri wvnned
Mcltvtcl ct
Gerwv 111
Mar'll111 tt
Krl.lk" locfty' c •
Ronter311
Tmollnn
H1wk1'1s o
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Mc.<.llW\ 0
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JJ 11 12 10
HIVttefl 100 002 400-7
"" Oleee 02l .. ... -11 G1m1 Wlnnl119 RBI -TlmNlon (2)
E-ttovtltr 2. leml)leton OP-Hou•lon 1
S.n OltQO 1 L09-+l0U1ton 6. Sin Dll90 l
2B-vnne. lloellv lemc>lelon 3B-ftof)erll
HR-8ocllv (4) W1ll1no 111 S8-0or1n (16),
It ol>lrll I 10 > 5-Mad<llll, R obe<l •, McC uli.r'
SF-Welll119
If" H .. Ellt 99 SO
Hevll9'1
Madden
AnCIW~
OIP no L l ·2
Sell Ole99
?ll6SSI
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, l 4 • J
Hlwklnl 6 3 3 4 l
Hovr O 2 4 2 0
MCCl!en W,2· 1 3 1 0 0 0 3
Hovt ollcheG 10 • t>ell•n In Ille 71h
HBP-&1u llV H1.wkl111 WP-Maddtn
Umplret-Home. Enoe! Fittl Quiel S.C· ono Runoe Third. P1110ne
T-241 A-ll ...
* Ptretet S, Cubs J
CHICAGO f"ITT$9UlltGH
~Yd
llo•leY If
SMl>r• 20
MO<etnO rf
Ourllm 111
Cev311
JOevl1 c
Sl>tfer u
Hotfmeno
GMll'lwl>fl
B1-.<P
Frencn P'I
Fonteno• o
lbrllbl
S 0 I 0
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4 I 1 I
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l 0 1 0
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0 0 0 0
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0 0 0 0
Bondl ct
AlmOnlf
Rev 2tl
Morrl.,. 30
8rell\'\ 111
M8rownrf
Clmnts 111
W•lkP MOl11Ph
OROOl\11 o
Orlll c
&elllerO u
RllOdln o
Orwlek r1
1S l 111 TetMs
k-bv~
nrllbl
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11 s 11 •
c111ea.. eoo 001 101-1 ~lthllvl'lll 001 -lh-5 G1me Wlnn1119 RBI -8ondl (I) E-Cev 80Jtev OP-ClllUGO 1, Plll11><1ron 1
L09-<:llic.GO 13, PllltllUfV'I S 2&-J Devit 2,
Of'tl1, MO<lllnO 3&-&ondt Hlt-Cev <SI
~Hoffmen B11111ro SF-Mofelend
If" H llt •11t 99 SO
Olk.I ..
Hoffme" L,2 2 ' • • 0
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Fonlenot 1 0 0 0
~"'*'""
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C1mn11 ' 1·3 2 ' I ' Welk l l·J 0 0 0 1
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HBP-8ondl llv Hotfm1n
Uml)lrH--ttome, Wever. Flnt, RenM<t, !>IC
onCI, MonllOUI, TlllrO, Oer~11g
T-3'°2 A-12.70'2
DAILY
DINNER SPECIALS
..
All dally dinner specials served with
soup, salad, choice of potato
and dessert.
Thursday (Served 3-10 p.m )
Top Sirloin Steak $4.65
Friday (Served 3-10 p m )
New York .Steak
COSTAMUA .
3125 lialbOf a1 S O f rwy
$5.25
The Jossn1 streak 11 the A's lonaest
SIDCC they drop~d nlDe ~tra1ght tn
August 1984. With their 10th stra1ght
road loss, the A's tied a club record set
1n May 1981.
Cleveland starter Ken Schrom. 5·2,
* • ..... 4, C.r6wb 1
MONTR•AL JTL.OUIS
,,,_mn2b
Wet>tl.,rf
Reines If
8rootu n
W1llacll lb
G111rro 111
Lew lb
Wlnohmcf Wonttrd r1
Fll1Qltld c
Hfflletll p
Krlldlc Pr!
C1nc1M1 Pf
ltMrdOn P
811rdll pn
Rol>ef'"O Tltllh
llbrll_,
J 1 2 0
4 I 0 0
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l 0 0 I
2 0 1 0
4000
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2 0 I 0
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I 0 I 0
0000
0000
1 0 0 0
0 0 0 0
coi.m.ntt
Pndltn 3b
H«r 2tl
JClartl 111
LallOl'm r1
WOO' .. O
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Beroer o
HHlllC
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lS ,., J
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E-+4ftkeln D~I LOUlt' LO&-MolllrMI
10. St Loult 4 28-J Clerk 1, C>Quendo, lltelltft
3B-Ve11Slvlll. S&-Plneltelon 11 ll, ()Querido (7)
S-Newmen, L1v111i.r1 SF-WohlfOf'd. I~ H 11t allt 99 SO
4 0 I 0 Sveum lb 4 0 0 0
4 0 1 1 Gentnr 2b • 0 2 1
4 I 0 0 5chr4*1r c 4 0 0 0
H 4 I 4 Tltlb 1.1 l I )
SUNlrY...._ .....,_.. ea •1 •-• MlwMllll.. * •1 19-l Gtme Winning RBI -ltl1Mce11 16)
E-S..-n OP-ee111m0t1 I, Mllweuk .. I,
L09-91111mor'I 6, Mllw1ull11 6 2a--c-2,
Oollvle, OMeltev, ltllft !.1-f'llcler t 111
S-Coooer If" H It alt 99 SO
BoddkQfW,1·1
...... s.11 MlwMlll ..
• J J , )
2 0 0 0 2
Derwin L.J·3 9 I • l 2 S Umolr~. Brernioen, Firtt, B•"'lll,
Second, Hlrtntlldl, Tlllrd, Ito.
T-220 A-14,J69
* Mertnen 12. 1t.vm 1
SIA1"TLI KANSAS CITY
Mrlllll lllrlllll
ltl"llllds 2tl
MoMld AO.vlt It>
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v-c
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6 2 l 2 Wll\oll cf 4 0 8 0
6 2 l 3 LSmllh If 4 0 0 0
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2 0 0 0 °"''di! 4 1 2 0 5121 WllOe2b 4132 s 0 1 0 hlbonl 111 • 0 0 0 s 2 1 1 Br-w r1 J o o o
S 1 I 0 ~O c 3 0 1 0
3 2 2 2 AS.leir u 3 0 I 0 ?010 MeltMPll 1000
4 2 1 1
•1 12 11 12 T .. 111 JJ 2.,
Sare "" '""'""' *"' •n • •-n
"-• CltV - ---2
O.trOll 2 l09-NHI Ylf1t 6, Detroit I 29-«
Hend«M)ll. SMrldl11, Lii Parrl&ll, '°""''ulo Hlt-Wlnfleld Oil, S&-WNI..._, 1 W ,
BrOOllem (7), COin m rMeec.Nm
"' itt H aaa N SO .... v ....
Gvlclrv L 4-t t 6 ! 4
Wl\HM)ll ) J l 2
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l-NIW,t-4 1 1 ) J 2
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H9f'o-e«r• &v M«MllCIU
Umolr-+iCHM, P.Wmo First. 8rln~me11.
S.COnd. Coonev. Trwrd K11..-
T-H7 A-26 25'
* Indians 7, A'I 4
OAK LA HO CLaVaLANO
Pf\ll~d
0Hln2.ll
L1ntlro 311
C1n1«0" Knpmn Of!
1oc111e 111
MOe•.osri
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a.mi:ro211
c.t'I• 111
Thrlltllelll ~· Jec:olW lD Frenco ..
CCHI rf ....._(
ll • t 4 Tellllla Screw...._
11tr11•
S I I 0 s 1 ' 2 4000
J I 1 I •1~· 4 I 1 0
• 1 1 I
4 I 4 4
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>67111
o.lrlalld * -,.,_. ~ -.., 1111-1 A .. n_ wte on c.tc:Mr a.!Tle'a lntertwet1ee
G1rne WIMlll9 R•I -ilwnelMd (JI
E-M Devit, C111M1CO, Bertie Loe-<>.lllllnd
6. Ctev111nd 1 2&-0 Hll :Se-tluller
HR~ln(lmln 114), CC.tllllo 121. 9erne11rd tJI.
Griffin (I) S&-4'rellCO Ill S,-<eM«O ~
HHketll
R11r0011 W.6·3
ltol>lroe S,I
• 1
s , 1 0 S Geme WIMll19 lt81 -0 ~'°" 131 o.~
LnofrO L I 6
811r •
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I~ H It llllt N SO
I 1 I 0 I E-Wll10n, Brell 2 L Smllfl O..-.S.11111 'l
4 2·l ' , ) 4 4 0 I 1 0 0 0 0
StLIUlt
0 LO&-SMllll f , K1nses C•tv 7 7~ 1
Presllrv, WNI• 38-<>wen Hit-White 17) l•l 0
2 , I I
0 • 0 0
l 1 0 0 Cox S S l l 4 4
01vlev 1 2·3 1 0 0 2 2
Worrell 2 l • 3 1 0 0 O l Berger L,0·2 1·3 1 I 1 0 1
PPerrv 2-l 0 O O I O
Coa Oltclled to S lllller• In lhe Mt! HBP-W~ 11'1 Cox IK-+llSlll!ft Um
0<res-+1orne, Wftl. Finl o.Mutll, !o«ono
ltl-V, Tlllrd, Pu\11
T-l 06 A-31.t26
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·:variable
SM~
MoroenW,4 •
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WP-1..•-UmOtrft-Home. O.-Ok•"91r, Flor,
Secona, COllle, TMG McOlllenO
T-249 A_.,427
Remember June
15th
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Speed
Moto-Tool Kit
A greet gfft tOr the hobbytst In
your famlly. eon. with
~you need to get
Witted. Model #3701
7'' Vise Grip
Mede or high grade quality aloy S1eel.
heat trMted for maximum toughnea
Bright nld<le plated ftniah Model # R7.
Old T imer
Pocket Knife sa.••
STANLEY
z:rwdrtver
ContUll four
acrewdrt...rs with ntckle
plat9d, ~ r-.iant
bera. Tlpe ground for
MOUN flt In 11Cr9W lk>t
Model #83-32it
25' Powerlock 4 27
Tape •
Yellow ftnlal'I 1" wtdl \\
btllde. Modol #33-425 l 12.22 ~~ ..
18Plece
Socket Set
High qualty,
reuonably pf1oed fuSl
fOf o.t. Model
#tse.983. 8.37
4.'4 9.7•
Or~ltal Sander
l~Jtili•Z11.
71/• " Clrcular
Saw
Modlll •Wf».7"•
166.9 8
P~ aam3"x3''"· Model IS.500
43.26
Power
Mitre Saw
Pef n• ient cmt Mrnn.m
turntable brliklng
system MOOll fl TS-251 U 59.98
Big Champ
Pller
Ful 2·· peralll JtlW operq
Model ti 4300
6 .90
llttl
Champ
Diagonal
Cutter
MAJOtt l.lf'AGU• STANDfMGS
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BoslOll l T 0<onto 7
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National LMeu-
WEST DIVIOON w L Pct GB
141)1)\10,..... J) I• Sl9
,an F re!'l<AHO JI 16 ~· Alll OI• 19 ,. S09 4
0.0.Wl ?9 J 4'l ~ ~
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Cine·"'"•'' --.., lJ •00 to
EAST DIVISION
N•" Yori. v le 1Cff
Mon•'•• ' ,. ~ a
Pr eo~•Oh a ,6 1'I 47) I)
P lf\Ctu'W" 7• )() «• 1• J
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,,,. l'O<• ~ P•l •~Ot 1 J
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MCJ~11u 4 St Louil l 10 "" n11\
TMllv'\ GMM !>er Franc·"~ ,..,.,.,,,..., I J .,, H 'l'
><t•"&Oele1 0 I
AMERICAN LEAGUE
An991' 12, Wtttt. Sox 11
CALIFO~HIA CHICAGO
P•t••\ t
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MAJOA LEAGUE LEADERS
Amenun LMoue
C°Tlv'eu9fl WMMtd!IY'l G-1
8A TTING ( 121 e t1>11") 8o99l ISoSlon 319.
Yo1;n1 Mttweukff l63 Pucketr M<-wte,
3S9 Oo .,. M lweukff ll6 S.• TOl'onto llS
llUNS-R H•~"°" Ne"' Voo. s.J
Puc:1o.e11 M1nne•o•• SO P!\1ll•P• 0..•1ana d , 8el1 ~ Toronto 40, McOow .. T ... , .0
1181-<:en~o Oett.lend 57, Mettlnolv New
l'ort. 49 ~. A"991l. 471 Bevtor 80llon 43
.,,~men Oett.lend '3
HITS-Pix .. 111 M1nnelOle '3. BCX.11\ 80\
ti)<! 11. Memnv v New Voo 80 Bet! T0<onto
7S R>e1 Bollon IS
DOUBLES-8oool, Bo\100 II Mell1nQlv
Ntw Yor>. 11 Rk:t l!lo\lon 17, W,,11•. Ken"'
Cit• 11 Ow Even' 8ollon, 16, l •w Ken"'
C11v 16 R Het>Oer\0<1 N•w York 16
TRIPLES Hui.11 (Pht•vo. 5. o-.-.. S.•11 .. ,
) r .. '<"-' Tuu • L•• KeMu Cltv 4 It.
ere 1..0 ••lt'I J
HOME lh,1,.;-,,._, A"lllS, la, Ce nwc:o
Oallle nd 16 Bel11-'<1, Toronlo ts l!leYIO(.
l!I0\1011 Is. Pu<l<tll Mlnntlot•. 1 s
HOLEN 8ASES R Hendef'Mlll, Ntw Vorlr.,
;ia Ctl>Q_,, C"ic•oo. 1'. W!99tn• Be•tlmore
" MOMtOv fOfO"IO 16 Rtvnold\ S.ellle IS.
.,.., \()(I • rlW\ '''" IS PITCHING 11 OK1•1011ll-<temenl l!lollon
t 1 O 278 Bo<1<11chr 8et11mor1 I · I l SS.
w111oam\ Tl••• 6 1 I n. HH• Oekle"'3 7·2,
H t
STRll< EOUTS-<l1t~l 80\lon 104 Hur\t
8o••on 19 ~H""'•&... N weukff IS Rllo.
0 •• •'IC 12 Mo<r·s Ottro11 n SA\/£ S AH• BeolltnQ(I 11 RIQ~llt New
1(.r. IJ H .. rr' Tl'•H 11 HeH••rwMI Otiron
10. '.>tonte> Bo•lon 10
National LNGIH
IT'llrW1!fl WedntMeV'I Gamnl
BA Ti N\, t1t a• r..•'1-Kn•o'>t New Yor•.
))9 G""'"" Sen D•fl'O 33S 8rooll\ MOl\tru1
lll 11.. P•ll\OurQt J1l Su, ~ • .J22.
lluN~-<ort•r New York 31 RalM" Mon·
tree 'It G"'•"" San Oleoo 37 A Rtvnotos
P 11,0 ... •~'1 )1 S 11rt •-will\ l"
RB -8•00'>\ MOt\trH '3 ~""91,
Oecleen, 41: Pe••er Ctroe1nnell, 41 xnm1dt
Pn •de !>tie • • CD•• ' San F re nc•\CO, 40
Ca•!e• Nww l'Ofll .0
"11 T~-<. .. vnn. '.lo O•tOO, 1S, S1na1Mtr11
(t· (IQ? ,, Su.~\."· Raine\ MofnrH I,
.. l.eoMrd. S.11 ,,elldK.e, '1.
ooua1.1.-. •e'lllOldl P11t'°""11f\, "' ~ ..... l'hllldllllflle1 11; Ountltft. C:f\lcffo. "' ••Inn. Molltrffl. h , S Ille llecl wllll 14
HIPl.Es-<:lll9me11, SI 1.0\ll•. •·McGee, SI
L-• 5 M«--. Allellte, J; trOOll•. Molltr .. 1.
4 ,.,.,,,.,., Clnclnllell. •. ltei.... Mofll ...... '-HOME ltUNs-MenW. ~ IS1
trOOk•. Montrql, I), ,._,,.,., Ctnctnnell. 13,
Ottwt0n. ~. tt; 0 Oevts, Houston, It, oer..-... s.n Di.oo, 12
$TOLEN tASU-Coleme11, SI 1.oult, U.
Duotceft. OM111r'1, 11# lte~. MOlllrMI U.
Oore11 HoultOfl, 16, 4 111• tied wltll IS
PITCHING (1 dkbloMl-Goodln. ,.._
Vorll, 1 -7, t 11, Det1111Q, ~ Vorlt, 7·t, 3'3,
0141da, New YOO., 1-1. 2 Sl, 1(-r. ~tlOl'I,
10 l, 2 ,,; FetMnde&. 1"w York, •·2, J.'4
S Tiil llCEOUTS-Scoll, Houl1011 11 S,
V~, DM91n, '6J Wtk.tl,, ~ "'
P•'"*· Atlallla n, l Smtih, Attallle. 7•
SAVES.-0 Sm.Ill Hout1C11\, It •eardon.
Motllreel, 14, Otcnco, New York. 11, Frenco.
Clncll\Nll, '· O.O•HCMI. San Dleoo, '· Worr ... St Louil, 9
NHL •w•nta
Hen Mern«lel Troo1w Cmoll valuatlle olar
.. I -Wevrie Gret11tv (EdmOl'llOl'I Ollanl
Frank .I ~· TrOOllv (be'' defellsive tor· wardl -Trov Murr•v (Chicago Bleck HaWka)
C•lder Memorl•I TrOClhv (bell rOOlli.) -
Gerv Sut9" IC•11M1rv Fialnftl
V111na Trocin., (Oftl goetlel\O«I -JoM
Vano1Hbr0Ull (N-VO<" ••-•I L•dv Bvnv ~lat TrOPl'tv CaOllltv com
DI~ with tPOrtvnanllllP) -Mltlt Boslv (Ntw
'l'ort. l•landenl
Coach of '"' vur -Gllt<I Sather CEOtnonlon O•lenl
SOCCER
W.nd C110
WEDNHDAV'S SCOtltES
(•t MIX!u Qty)
~~co I lreq 0
8e1Q•um 2 Par1111uav 2
(at ~y, Mealu)
Morocco l , Por1uoa1 I
E l'IQllnd l . Poland 0
°"" ... flsNne DAVEY'S LOO<Elll (~ &Mdt) 4
ooel\ 710 •"Iller\ 10 barr•cude, I vel\Owl•ll. SI
rock llUI, l '>tlilbut. 2 .. calko ban 122 land
De\\ 9t mackerel, S \Culoln
NE~T LANDING -• boall 16 •noten
I 1>11rrecude 10 oon 10. 46 wrid beu, 231 cat.co
l>aU >-' \Cu•oin 11) mec"9"11 12 Olue -ell. 4
(0Ckltll'I
DAHA WHAltl' 1 l>Oell, 133 eng~\ 750
0.U, 67 C>arreCUdl JS wMefltll 22t mackerel 91 rOCklllll
TllNttft w..,... ............. , ................. , s.c... .... .....
P.m SIVlwr CUS.) dllf ,._. Ftndlea IU.S.I,
6·), 7 6. Melluele ,_,.._.,. l~i.I 4llf Lori
McN.U CU SI, 7·6. , .. , ' 4, EtMlko IMUt
IJeHnl def. Jo Dul'lt Clfllellll, '"'· •-•, •-•. Elltabelfl Smvtlt IA11itr•llel d4rf SYIVla Haneke
(W .. I GermMVI. • • •·2; AM HenflcllUOll (US I dllf ltOOlll Wtllte CU I .I, 3·•, .... 6•2,
Ei-lte!NICtl (Souffl Africa) d4rf Kale GotNlerl
(US), 6· I, 2-. ... 4, -'-V •Vl'M (~If·) dllf ~ Matcarll\ <US.I, 6·2. 1·S, Clal'dla Monteiro
(8razlll oaf OtbC>l4t ~· (U.S ), • '· 6•1
"'*"·~ (atL ...... l ,Int._....,.....
Glef1n Lavtndadlw IU SI dlrf AllOllrl Jarrva
<Swtdelll, 7·6, 3·6, 6· I leC*ldltMIN~ Andrew Celli. (&Tlleln) «* ltunelf Slt"N>Mlll
INew ZMlalld), 7·6, •·2, Peul AMK-IU S)
oaf 0v1.io Van It~ ($oultl Afrlcel, 6-l
•7 6·3, Jimmy COIW'Ort <U SI def Ptlar
F11tml119 IU S ), ... 3, 6·2, lklrb hct.w (Wftt
Germenvl def Alldfel CIM-SnoltOY (USSlltl, .... 6·2. RtmHll KrlN\Mn (lndle) def Brad Giibert
IU S l, 1 S, 6·1, ltOC>eft Saouao IU S l oaf
SloboGan ZlvoOllOvldl (Vuoo\levla). 6·4. 6 l
WednesdaV'I .,_Madlem
BASltALL
Amer1uft~
CLEVELAND INOIANs-f"lececl Pat how
ttnl l>alltman, Oii Ille ls.-day dlMbled Nll
MILWAUKEE BREWElt$-Actlvalecl 8111v
Jo ROl>ldova, 1101 l>ll&emllll, eno Outrlg,,ted tl>t
contre<:I of RelldV Rudy, lnflelo«. to Ven
couver ot 11111 Pacific Coell Lea-.
Ne-..iL.Meue
HOUSTON ASTRC>S-Hameo Garv Tuel<
mal\99« of Columbut ~ !tie Sou111et11 L .. tue
PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES-Announced
lhal Oeve RIJciltr. Pit~. !'lad eorMd 10 rtPOrl
10 Porlleno of ti.. PecJflc Coelt Luoue
FOOTaAl.L
Na1'eMI ......... LMtUll
GREEN BA V PACKEltS-Announced tllat
L vllfl Olektv ouan~ wll ~ • ''" •oen• HOCKEY
NalleMI Hedin LMtue
MONTIU!Al CllNAOIENS-Stoned Gailoo
G1nvrH. Oeftnt.emen, 10 • lwo-vear contract
ST LOUIS ILUEs-E•lend90 ll>t contrach
of Barciav Plae>« e u 11tan1 coach, •llO BOC>
~._., eul\lanl to tile director of llOckev
Ollllf'lllO<ll
COLLIGE
DAYTON-Named Sue Remu v llffd
wome•n oultetl>llM toaell
GEORGIA TECH-H•med Strn .. McGr-
ecltdemk c.ounMIO<
LOYOLA-Named Thamel M Brennen ol·
rKt« of a trn.tlo
OHIO STATE-Slilnlld Earl Bruce. toolbell
c:oach. to • lhrM vHr contrect
Horse racing results
L.s Alt mltol
WEDNESDAY'S RESUl TS
C)4111 of S2-daY ouarlltf "6Ue "'"""91
FIRST RA CE 110 verd\
Go Cnllo IH•rl• 11 40 1 40
Mant'\v\ Rta\O"' '(" I 00
~"-AON re \ Jet C.e•t • J ..,., 0 '6 91
U l!XACTA s-2 Oa 0 "2 20
SECOHD RACE. lllO ter~
8eM•·nofv fOdrlel<.sl'f') 6 00 )00
xoll weoo tCeroo1e1 , A()
S.11e•t P•114t C Edwa•dl
) xi
t 00
170
I 00
'40 1 to
HOIVWoed Par11
WEDNESDAY'S ltESUL TS
<l 7"' .. 61 • dn "'-"evthOred t'Me11n9 l
FIRST ltACE. 6 tur10n11'
Anlloue Leet rOllvere\J
O••l"l'O<IO o .. , Pfr,<•vi
soo 340 280
140 lOO
Vt•Y Mucn T~ L•dv Ce\18ncl"I
Tme 1111
SIO
SECOND RACE. 6 lurlOnQl
Sir Eooer Allan IPncvl
Olemolld Culler 10rt"81
01""''11ve•v Don (MCC:arronJ
100 •60 310
2660 11 IO
'IO
Fa"'1111t Pat11
WlONlSOA Y'S llllSUL TS
(11111 .. SS·dtv l'lameu mMl!flel
FIRST ••CE. One mite oece
Demie n tWlllle m\I • 00 3 60 2 40
T~ Como.1111\ GOIO I Kuel>ler I J IO 2 10
Mollllf'tY Mire~ IVeA1ndl110llaml 2 40
Timt 21!04
l2 lXACTA IS·tl Paid Sl760
SECOND lllACE. One mile oac•
Enforce CPerktrl UO 2 40 2 20
AtnllNI Fro11 ($1Mt"l l 00 2 .0
SPIC9 Runrier C Plano> l IO OotlOf'I L I 6 3 l ) I 1 " . ~) . •")-.. T me 0 1108 T me 111 1 n DAIL y ooua LE 1 10 P••O U• ?O Time ?"02 I ~ 'lmdt 1 l I )
M l'ton 7 3 '1
Oewtev 7 1
1 0 2
0
0
M(Keo<' D•ttl\11<1 •o I Oellt< in I~ 911,
HBP-~ '"'• bv Fo•\lt• NP Mc(.,.. •II
Umo•rtl-Hcrr .. fO<d F "' l'<l'<M morrri
l:O\C. Tn ra (';llfc e
T-l 6 A 14 11
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Dodflen S, Rtds •
CINCINNA Tl LOS ANGElE\
~ ,. .. ,.
110,t to
EDev 111
VtneOI@ ti
~Rc.On•n n
Pt •el lb
P•'"'f'( '' l!lt1 )O
('IC"" " 80ez c
Oto••~· lb uullC~ \n c
!tr11w l! u
Fren(O O
T-1
-y a '· :)a. 7t!
Sll.lbO\ I
¥edl<• lb
Hc.tWt'llf1
Me•''"'"' 6kun• r.n
lfe<ICll!I•, v
·~arv·~a •t
Broe• It
lt•vmoc i;>Wllm\<I
W•t~h r•
Antle\n lCI
41 411 4 TMM•
~<tf'• by.,..,.,_
100 100
000 111
lb r II bo
~ I I 0
J I ' 0 4 I J )
• o a 0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0
I 0 0 0
0 c 0 0
0 0
0 0
\ 7 1 I
~ 'l • 1
) 0 0 0
~ o ' a 4J \ 17 ~
IOI 00 4
000 01-~
Two 01,h <N'itt "' nnH1v 'U" \C:t.;r tt<l
(>am•""'""'"' 1191 -:,1,DC, '•
E-Trt••"<I °"'''~ GJ ''"'"' .... 11 #P
l De• ' OP-<. r ""•' I 06 nr """ I \ A"ll" H II 18 '!>• • A 0.-•"1" Hfl S•uOO\
Ill T•P•" I'•••~• ll ~II llPneOff' I' ,r B•
CtnclnN" r~ ~' \!~ D "' '•onco L 0
Liil A ...... ,
Wfl~P'i
HIJ.Nl!ll
le1"08trij N I )
IP H R ER 1111 SO
0
1
0 I I
0 0 0 0
Uf""\01rf'\ ...,. ~,.,.,. 11 a ' ''' (1' , ,J,., "<
n(J ( -IY Afr.\ 'T" WP •,. \l,.cJI
T-JOI A 1'I ~
U EXACTA , 10 l'A.0 SI& 90
THIRD ltACE lSO ••«h F • 11.vt~m Ftv fC.ercte 1 20 ~ 00 J 00
E•cluS•Yf' FttH" fT(t•'·"~' • 10 3 00
Strait Ceu tLent vl HO
Time 0 11 16
U EXACTA J ~ Dad l ll?O
FOURTH AACE. l~ 1erO\
T dv 8 C.ev fRu•r i ~ bO 1t0 )40
~ova F u n N Go IEONI•~· HO ) 60
llecf fou fl\e(f fCr119111• • 40 r,,..,. 0 18 IS
""™RACE uo ... "' 1v nd• II•• Lew' 7 40 )')0 HO
8u~\ .Ator••l'lovOl'll C.•teg• 1 o/) 1 •0
O• " Cn ll IMa•t• 280
Timi' 046 40
\1 EJl(ACTo\ (8 41 oe•d \IY 00
SIXTH RACE 1~ y .. rrl\ w.n__, .... , Leci.ev ) 6<l J lj() '"" E<rt•ll•d<. Lltw I ~ 70 l 6() " '• V '~'· 'Ctarc • 0 0
Sl EJl(ACTA y 9 D••O l 8 1(;
SEVl!HTH RACE 110 yMd\
F-1-nt M1r tipv tOdrrfll \l'M no 2 40 7'0
0 {~PY\ 1 "'k•eiooi .._.,,, 110 j (JG
N "O L~d,. M~,,., l ()r,
'2 E.XACTA 6 5 r.o a "' 40 EIGHTH RACE HO 1t1•d•
Mou (,to" C.o Twr (.,tr1t •O HO '40
~MO••n M~nu M•1-., J 20 J {JU
Would I "'°"' fO C,;.,ri:ta l •O
12 EXACTA b \ Pe 0 SU e.Q
NINTH RACE 400 tlli'O\ ., ,, ,,,.,.,.,, '=•'Q(,l• I~ t
D 1111 "II"•' vo" L•"~f efl MP r..>11,, (,,ft
,, E.KACTA 9 /1 lltl•<l '1100
12 l'l(tt ~t.X \ • 10 "' ' ~ 6 91 ''" <l "011 .0
10 0;. .,.,~ t1r>••\ hl1 ,,,,,,., Pc.-S1•
Co•'o"' nr o• a ss. to 1 ti• • c•••1 1 v~ " .,,.,
TC HTH RACE ~SO •ll•l!l
P f'\l'Ot •r M trr.fl
F • '' • Mon•v C.reao.r 1
B·~ R•d Re,.-,fT'•• If d•""~'
S7 Et ACTA 4 91 oe ll ''~I)()
loJOp <l• Cf! )760
1 •1J l ?Q I 00
400 HO
I 00
THllllD llACI 6 fu(lon9\ e ...... , Actl0<1 1e1eo 1
Mleml Kid !S!even•'
Slle re>a ' GolO IOelanouua ve> Tl~ I 112
HO 280 280 UO HO
• 80
'2 EXACTA I 11 oe•d Jl9l0
FOURTH lllACE OM mi.a pee•
Pert N' ~ucv IPn<:yl "'° 110 s 00
3 00 ao
3 00
Sero GOiden 1va .. n1~)
Mu•ll t81e0)
Time I.JI
U EXACT.\ 6 41 oe o 113 00
FIFTH RAClt 6 IL1•ton1ll
MA• Suo,..me ((a.tenon
un1ver\etly ISltVen\)
ColfH Roll !Valfl\1ue1a 1
Time 1 11 4
1~20 160 soo
160 4 10
280
\S EXACTA 1 ., D•ld U/I SO
SIXTH ltACE 6 lur_g,
E l>'daunn cs-ma1rer1
te .. tv •OelallOulUvtl
Go Swllllv CMcCa rron)
T me 110
&10 170 740
•10 )00 no
U EXACTA II ti Pa id "4980
SEVENTH RACE I 11 I• m1tel °" tun
RP• •01 nv Black 110 l 60 l 00
l. ••O From Al•• r S11oeme1<tr I ~ 6(). 4 lO
C•eme1tce1 · Sle•enll 4 20
Tome 1413 is EXACT A (4 • ll Paid "°so
U PICI( SIX 110·11·•·7 1·4) 1>11id l91,7ll 40 IO
0t1• w1nn11>Q 11ci.e1 (ll ~ '-Mll Conto1atton Pica
~ " O••d isn 60 to IS'! w•nn•"9 tlCl<•h tllve
"OrlH
l!IGHTH AACf: One m •t oec1
!>outna•n Hek> 1v1n1elal 6 80 3 .0 2 IO ~"••' Hero rp1ncav 1 3 lttJ 3 60 ~or wir.e l!lov I Blee~ l 4 00
T me IJ5 l
U IXACTA {6 0 Pt ld ... QO
NINTH ltAC•. I mrtel
"-'"•'" Tnr., CMcCrron!
E •••no rca"'"°"' (,ell•nt Minded IPeller\on)
r1,.,, 1 so•
11?0 570 uo
1110 • '° H O
SS EXACT.\ If ), oe•d i tll SO
n DAIL y DOUBLE Is 4' oe•d 112 00
"1 EXACTA 14· IJ pa td U l 40
THIRD lllACE. OM mlla oece
Miu Laurette IVllndno11ml 1 80 2 40 2 40
Purl>le 1111111n !Plano) ll 00 UO
Watch TM Rtte>lay IK...Olerl ll 40
T·me 2 03 2
ll EXACT A 11-SI e>eld M l 40
FoutlTH •ACI. One mite oece
Breena Bernum I Pierce) 11 60
Mell"• Kim IKueOlerl
H•rrieu Huuv ISlee!hl
Time 2«1
FIFTH •ACE One m114 !rot
620 440
HO 780
3.20
WeU'ut (FIKOI lS 40 II 00 S 40
Qulc~ Toro CSllvei 6 00 4 20
Trytl (Wllllem\I l 40
Time 20.C 7
'5 IXACTA 12·f l 1>eld UJS SO
SIXn4 lllACf: One mite oeca
,..-r1ect Anoel (Grul'ldv) 16 40 I 20 S 10
ClllUIC SP•rll cP .. rCAl • '° l 80 Remot1 Coo1r04 IKlu ) l 60
'5 axACTll IS I) P•ld l l7400
SEV•NTH RACE One mite Paet
Cllarrned O\;ar-IOMll'llltf' )0 40 1' 40 S 60
Ovnamllt Cir• CBerna11 44 00 9 60
Sllvffle N OHi IGrunov I t 00
SS IXACTA t3 4) oeld ... 07• 00
EIGHTH •11c1. On• mite DllCt
Sllm And None CHvmanl 12 40
Or LvOI• (V1llal1dlnvllam)
Mon1<enl1 Dream CK~I
U aXACTA Cl 21 Pl od \IQ 10
NINTH lllACI!. One mlla oece
''° 320 560 uo
4 00
Ant• H•ncv CMlll<alll 'to l 80 , '°
Tim• Bell Ever CHettvl 3 60 2.IO
Flemecrtsl IVellel'ldlovllaml 3 20
U l!XACTA I' 71 1>al0 UJ60 n "1CK SIX l-2-s 3 • ,, Pakl "471 00 lo 11
winning hcklll !fou• llOnell Cerrvovlf' 11•.mo1
TENTH ••c•. ~ mlle Peet
Sun Uo Warr IOI !Slvm•ll 11 70 ~ 60 l 60
llowen CrHt IKueoi.1 4 00 2 ID
Run l!IHI• CH•"vl ''° SJ IXACTo\ II 4l oeid US SO
Alllndance 11S9
CALL 642-5678 IF CALLING FROM NORTH ORANGE
IF CALLING FROM SOUTH ORANGE
54Q..1220
411-UOO
lol ...... ,., lalt
...... 1 .. " Lwll IA2
Pot of gold waits
at Big Bear Lake
Rainbow trout are
plenti ul during
summer months
Fresh watcran&Jers from Oranae
Coun\y don't have to make the l<)nii
scven°hourdnve to f~h the wnter'i or
the Hi&h Sierra m ordertOiCt 1n \Oml·
good rarnbow trout fishing 1n an
a1pme1ethna .
An easy two-hourdnve to Bia Hear
Lake w1U produc.e &ood action on
rainbow trout, largemouth bassand
bluegil for the kids.
Bll &.ar is a large lake, surrounded
by t.a.11 pine trees and tts blue waters
arcatttact1ve Tbe lake 1s hca v1l}'
stocked on a weekly basts and
produces some &real trout fhhtng tor
those trolling or still fishing off rock)'
potntsDrovergravel bottomsdunng
the summer months.
All kinds of rental boats arr
available at Pleasure Pomt Manna
and accordina to Preston Pn varofl .
manaaer ofPlcasun Pomt, fhhing 1s
currently as good as 1t hM been tn
years.
Private boat$can also be launched
rorthose who want to haul their own
cartopperortnulerable boat to the
lake. Trout seem to be active tn must
open arcasofB1g Bear during the
earl y morning hour~. while bass to
four pounds are h1ttingSm1thwtck
surfa« plugs and Rebel lures an
weedy coves as the ~un ~ls over thr
dam
Arrowhead Lake 1s aJso located tn
the San Bernardino Moun Lams on
Highway 18. Arrowhead 1s a pnvatc
lake, BUT the general angling public
can fish the lake 1f they rent a boat
from Arrowhead Manna. (714)
: SOCCER
I. -~---
J11
NIEMIEC
Ou1000Rs
H 7-8451. The marina hasa complete h~e nfrent.:al skiffs and the fishina
near <ihOrt." run be great,
.\rrowhead 1~ one of the few lakes an
\out hem Cahfomta that offers
'>mallmoulh bass fi•hmg. Thu lake 1s
full of ~mall mouths 1n add1t1on to
rainbow trout, Kok.an« salmon,
rrapil1t'. largemouth bass and blue&tl
There arc mo~ pnvatcdockson
.\rrowhcad than there an: in Ne!'J>Orl
BJ\ and th•~ 1s where the best fisbtng t.ik·e~ place I 1.,hrng between docks
and underover-hanging lrCC$ with
Rebel crank baits wt th an orange
underside will most always produce
lot\ orawon from the feisty
\mallmouth!I
\ilverwood Lake, locatedofT
I ntl·restate 1-15, 1<i the newe~t oftbe
lake!> 1n the ~n Bernardino Moun-
1a1n!>. This lake 1sgood forb1a
\lnper'i largemouth ba'ls and brown
trout
.\II thrcl' of the previous mentioned
lake\atlratt ~peed boats, sailboats
and "ater sktersdunng m1d~y
hour.. and anglers should seek out
protected coves to get away from the
wave action .\II lakes have a speed
lim11 area po~ted for the anglers tn
'mallerboali.and these waters are
rt~pectcd h} those an speedier crafts
The be!>l hours to fish are at sunmc
and thela\t hour or daylight
Morocco surprises
Portugal, advances
MEXICO Cl I' <AP)-\iorocco.
a rank outsider when 11 came here.
stunned Portugal 3-1 Wedne~ay.
hccoming the fir<ll Afnc.-in team ever
to advance past the lirst round c1r1he
World Cup
The Moroccans won C1roup F
while England finished second thank<.
to a 3-0 romp past Poland a<; C1al")
Lineker scored three goals
Also advancing on the buste'it da>
of the month-long tournament wa<.
Belgium. which ued Paragua) 2·2 to
secure third place 1n Group B
"Morocco ha'I made world soccer
h1stol)." Jose Fana Morocco'\ Brn-
111!an coach, said "For us. 1t I'> the
..amc a~ tf we had won th l' World
t up•·
"In Morocco there are good players
who could play on an) team m the
world.· Fana said.
Portuguese Coach Jo<ie Torre\
lauded the Moroccans.
"Morocco will be a sensallon in 1h1s
World Cup /ust as Portugal wa'> in
1966, and ..end m~ rnngratula·
t1on!>." Torres ~nd. ..The> have
players of great duss "
Ho'il Mex1Co !>el on more cel-
cbrauon~ here when 11 beat Iraq 1-0 to
clinch the Group B lltlc Pohcc
estimated about 5.000 people had
gathered by late afternoon near thl'
Monument of Independence on Re-
forma Boulevard where they chanted
along with a cheerleader
They waved \mall paper flag!>,
shook tambourines. tossed paper into
the air and danced to music that
bhred from nearb} loudspeaker..
The number ol revelers wa~ e\pcc;tcd
to increase !>Ub\tan11all ) later
Wednesday night.
The Mex1c.an'I st.aged a lacklu'>tcr
performance m edging Iraq 1-0 on a
second-half goal b} fernando
Quirarte. The triumph meant Mexico
will stay here to play Sunday against a
third-place team
Iraq, a newcomer to the tour-
nament, finished 0.3. Alsoeltminaled
~llh Yv cdncsday's dc .. clopment'l was
Hung.at)
Belgium earned a date wllh the
so .. 1et Union an the second round b~
l}mg Paragua) at Toluca. Tb(
Belgians got one of the four third·
place berths awarded for the next
round with a 1-1-l record
The Paragua)'ans. who got a pair of
goals from former C osmo'I forwaro
Roberto ( abanas. will play England
here next Wednesday.
Belg.tum twice lo~t leads aga1n5t
Paragua} which, li ke Mexico
al read} had chncbed a ~pot m Round
2. That annoyed goaltc Jean-Mane
PfafTbutd1dn't ~em todmurbC'oach
Guy Thy' very much
"We need a lot more character."
PfalT ~1d '"
Schwartz tries
to extend streak
Speedwa} monorc)'Ch'lt Bobby
\c;hwart1 o f Cosl.3 Mc<1a wtll try to
e.\tend his ~lreak of recent v1ctone1
f'nda} night at the Orange Count)
Fairground~ 10 Costa Mc'la
Schwart1, 29, cu lminated an im-
pressive stnng or wins 1n featured
scra1ch main\ last week. taking the
checkered flag at < osta Mesa for h1'l
founh strat~ht tnumph
\l. hwart,r\ teat seemed even more
unltk<'I)' 10 !hat he had failed to
advance out of ht\ scratch or hand1·
cap heat ran•\ the previous week at
the fatr~rnund~
fnday'\ racing wtll be a tune-up for
~hwart1'\ return to the American
Final. Saturdav June W. al Long
Beach VeteLins Stadium (the fint
quaHfy1na round toward\ the World
Championsh1~).
Gates will open at 6:JO p.m. Fnday.
with the first race 'ICheduled for 8
Parlung and programs arc free.
IT'S HARD TO BEUEVE LIFE
WAS ONCE so DRURY um 1
FOUllD MY DRUM HOME JUST
BY LOOOll Ill THE DAILY
PILOT'S CLASSIFIEDS.
J I
WOODLAND VILLA
APA8TMINTI
COIM a tllJOY our prdtll sty\t IPI' Quifl comlotlat:.11 k
tlou to ftmt•'1 & So ~sl Plaza wllil• Of!IJ 111111ult.i to
bHcll Gt111" ., HO Pt TS Pl LASl
....... AJ •LA ... Y•DD ...
•ACllllCNI 'l•S.'SIS , • •ea-. .. •
1--•· '7ie.6760
Ml, ea&T a .. , WAI& 8ICI.. ...........
ta •&•A•P IT Jlt ''"
'
E•rn Exlr• C•h
For Delivery 01 Th,. P•I»'
HUNTINGTON BEACH
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
INDEPENDENT
Deliver 1 day a week. N
collecting. no soliciting.
Must have dependable car,
truck or station wagon and
insurance
CALL 842-1444
Ask for JoAnne Craney
J \
-
C8 * Or9nge Co t DAILY PILOT/ Ttiunday. J""9 12, 1986
lwnl IUI llMtlJ H• ..... llM hn.ltan 1111 NI I hhule ....... It....... 1ate1 ...... II• Aa• ........ I A1• hMttM ISll
f3i&ff1ViCA8HIEA fllTlllt... WIMDllU'8111 .._,._ ACA .. ..ooct IHAnUPHo919 ..... j...._ffO, i&r&;;; DATSON '11 2008X. Xll'\t TIYIT&llllW'TI '°' ... ~ ..... lltcwa, ""41 ParHlmtt Vtoto Cam Malntenanc9~-"fl ('Mlnlut flnWI) H T.V. "'Ip, I ...,, ~ AKC. hOfM "" I oond.(114)187-7'ao c-n• .......... trane-lla\19 e1uen11ve cHh camere' •·:-er'iet1ce. tieevy llrtfflQ & me1 de-01bllT9t ~fK1 . T.Y l>fO, t sn oor no • ._ WMka Old-«ds now. ' • port tpeClll
handllng end euttomer s.nct reeurn. to Ad II ~ retpOl'lllblllty. nffda wOt1c 8ell for then 1'If4*.11tt cond, Pwtl&ttt~.-1eOll7 c,-=-~c.tl. '1!AMNIOIOT8 "11'41512 ~ ~ NII 20t, clo C>ally Pilot. PO drMng r.oord ,._ S1t 1SO, NO-u.M malce ofW, 71CM1441. IL.l<Y " ...__ llMd\ """"° Tllfln TIRo, '15 81"' ~11~;:T~ e E~fl 11 ' Bolt 1580, Cotta ~ quired. In HewpGt1 lwtt DI~ .... round tab6e ~A 1" AKC M111t $3CIO. FeflWe .,,..... Aed wl1an, 1,tOO .,,._,
-------· _ 12t2t .,.. xtnt OClmPlflY ben-wl4ch91raM$. TabtetoP Good cond, metchlf'9 8250.t....,takW!g• 11U llUD lfTvMcull.teGOndltton. lHlOOORE
JJMCLICK
I rJl/RENAULT
JEEP son "-.~SHOP IN HB PIT r ... --.. ~ AetlNd alltt CBS Maoatn.. ftCMt 1100 Al In OOod drape a t 2 0 0 • poelta ... 2-0IQI llde bat'-, rNr beet CLlHTI '7' ..._t'" pef'90n p1t 3 day 0 K~~· ttreln (714)720Ql1 condll.IOn .... 1.2111 bedapwta, 11110W9 at, Uij 111,aoo~....a211 IOOOt< orto mt.~ DtY IRVINE AUTO
wtc "':'.:: = ~ Sun-M~ RB. -W:., ..,f ,i.,a.t ..... DINING TAIU 2 ~ l7MUI • ~= ~~~ ~~ CENTER
ROBINS
FORD
~.;....... ..... 2,...... storageCO US.'111'4;-llH •1•·•·t1town~--7 R XLS 1&5? I .._ 114--aJ 1•000 714-951-314 .. ..... -... -1175 Wood deek 125 Good cond matct11na OULAIMN8Pf JU-. ,.r• c, • °""ml ..
FIT ... ElP MANAGE REPAIR/MAINTANENCE Mat\n m= M MUST SELL. 79-54W d r a pee I 2 0 0 , SIO MUSIC OOMPUTIA 1171 itZ & ik ToP Of ...... LL7~uy~~lNG TOYOTA Oe1c1 'T4 pa111 800-428-7 485
;i •r.o ua• 10 • 11 v o
(0\1A M i'A •,4/ Cl\llO
Adult llUto own.re tor CM of Golt Carta. up pref w4IMa IM-ln mnlnO-Kl~ .. w R••o ~ pllOWI SH, Organ, ,.., tUIK, ... ... UM. .... '"'· -t. tor .... !I ..,_ ltW-1"--------..DC Ae;tat•, 2etn-11atn MAINTENANCE/PORTER e..ctt .,.. l)t'tfera~ "V ., u.. • 875-0558 pender p.a tor men paint, nine grt11tt D111o f1AT •ee 8P\'Of.A eonv,
wtufyl/wkend•. S5/t11+ lncludee w'Mlk..nda SalartS105perday.Only eota, en.tr wtottomM, thMIOO"**Pfogram brek•Sl75."4t-4144 tmmac lnakllt & OU1. All ~. ,n.., ~··,_.~ -.-.. ,.1 GM allowance, ops>tll tor p,_.. call tor an appt 1n1., .. 1ed party .,,..0 coff• & 2 end tablel WllTll NtllnOt ,.. HOO 11f1oe '*Xlfdt nay aaraoed ...-• -.. --• s-
advainoement, a11· ben-bet#Mnt~ ~II 1-tl19326-5306 w~.dlf'lroom.Hew£nGylo5>41dle lrlUanloa. for both tr:soo, 'IM~1id,ldntoonct e.toff9r~50.~ . 6S1-1272 PlllHrlng, p/locka,
... -fum atrlvea 1122 • INke ~t u89d In X'lnt con-714-4H-481t,...,., SMO. 14 Honda 1e58 1 .. -------..i plWlndowt. auto, loaded ... ,,, need ~ UUU UY.... Retired Artzon• couple on.r ~229.,,.. csmon 87$-t071 w1euepen1ton, pipe, ._. ...... • SOUTtl"COUNTY lie# tKC!148
cat,lnlUnlnee.oooddrlv &-45-5000X-s21 wanlloHOUSESIT Aug M Mayer980-4351d9yl • :l .... 1!;fi;t111 meny xtrH SfOOO. 1"5 _ n-.1-,.._t VOLKSWAG~N , ••••• lftOraccwd, 714.:'751-41&$ & Juty Local refs, non---.,,...,...,,"""=-=-== -WROUGHT IAON eeo.t121ot17~ _....., .,..,, ""' .. , ....-
before t1am •PPfl/UllJYO amllra (eQ2) 584-1409 LEATHER SOFA Tlble l chelra.. 8 oel! HUUful MOND c:ond • 1 'f' ...-r. evall., A C TS AND CHAIR ct\alrl mapte tiutcti call ORGAN Slngle Key YAMAHA RIVA CV-50 ..._,purotiae.(OOlt17) ISUZU * 111111 * . ~~1GP~~f~.~M llmhdlM USED-ODCOND AnM 08'Me38 • OrgM Wla SeJ cM to Soooter,r.ooncs·~· 111.-·
E1tab Security Firm __ _ Lil~ NH GREAT PRICE ' dMth $15, 142-2141 thru Ill . AW 9', M•IMHI = C:!it°' ~ ~~~f°' 16&1Ntl8Ue VICtOA MUST SELL C.a ten Mll llttcl4 ... 1200 ml. ssoo. l42..ee12 •1111
welcome Call (213) reoetvlng ctlecillng c»-VICTORLA & RECORDS PLe:i~so o:iB@ 111 PROGRXM xsm:r-: 8RXNO m &at:J!!ffl!l.,__,,!fJI 1()()1 au.. It., N.B
255--01&e col1ec1 Of appt lf119tlM, inll9ntoriel. 10.. s270 Gae IOO S20 ALL E.lCCELLENT CON-W/2 aupptementel Pf~ .._, bite. Lend ~ lllllf"'[Dlill 133-930()
JACK OF ALL key 1lllll1, and aom• Patti 759-9392 OITIONI RCA 25" Con-grema and tloc* .. bfand One. Paid 5350. Wll '-ke • .._ HONDA '7t CIVIC. MOYlna
TRADES ne.vy titting, full ume 90le color TV Rattan '*'· S450 retail, Mtllng S21SO obo. $46-5"5. ~ --out of mte.. S 1400. Oood
MAC GREGOR YACHTS * * * group Dining rm Mt 5225• Co6Mn 131" 1414· B O y S V A R S I T Y lllBJ c:oncl Ca11 f« apc>t. to._
1831 PLACENTIA. CM llllU UY OLll QIAUn Capt•ln table w/8 ct'lra. SCHWINN BIKE (yellow ~~-~ & FORl!IGN (714) ... 2--0132
5-45-5000 x 521 Rec:1wooc1 •b coff tble. fret t• '" MU 145; Good c:onc1. IUllT TIYITI HONDA ·eo CIVIC 1300 W -.10 Am.Ill oak rocilei. 497·2175 FID lliiia Call 720-3912 1eaa1 BEACH BLVD ox, 5 epd, ale S23H.
Hourly ~=r· Call Telemarleetlng Have wunatand9. table, SOFA SLEEPER S171S Ad0f'abl9. bit & wht 19() MANS Sc:mw4nn Conttnen-11•/Ml-1111 Aunt Jdnt, QrMt MPO
S ••• 11!• 1111 cupt>o#da and dr....,1 Blond hotctt. MagnavoJ1 W 15th St, 143 646-7232 tel Tote bt19. 8C)Ot( rldt, _. 54()..()4HI or 062-4475 UfllUlll llDUI UI • in pine o.Mta. writing 1ter90 conao6a, mu91 ... 11 vaiu. S2tll. NMda "'-· • .... J lrtft/...... JAGUAR • ._.. DA SEDAN f /T11+PM4-lt21 I •WHUUIU tabl9,chalr1&bend'IM1n 73 1-eo7s nUllii~fllfn. MllontyS100.831·1275 tl3e BHutlful alvtgold,
oa11 & w11nut SALE SAT TWIN BEAVTYREST Mat-Med hair s5.4-oe 8..,,..,_ n Stene aectna1ft BOOOt 'U PWR RXU 88 w/ctiewotet eno a trw, UllT. llPEIYllll EMrO-tle l*>P'e ~ JUNE 14 10 to 4pm, 801 tress & bo• eprtngt S75 1 ' ' 2.8 ltr eng, 5 911, pe, pb: eleo,aunroof. IOole• or-et
N>t Maintenance bptr I to conduct a Matketlng Rembrandt (oft Van MCt'I Dou!* heedbcwd FIR iiliiii,... .... am/fm CW, newtna, ltlt a ". prectlcal, MOOO. ~.!':'ihbe~:·:~ I ~:,U!~ P~~u.!i~ g~angtt ~~1•>.(7 ~:yu~~7~~~ $5 242 Ftow« St C.M. ....._.171 '1llml "* l1IDI cond. lo ml. MM223. tln'n, 714.-846-2907.
aupervl1lon. p~rwork It Stllt•l l8fflYt4 Trad9 w .. come ~:!:t~.C~~~. TABLE NEEDS LOVING HOME on and •P:::.:,~~·1 1140. .. .... S DORllll J=~=• ·~~1;:;
and commun1c111on PIMsant phOne voice a * * * ••e.llent cond, wu S500 Springer mlx;ed puppy YOUR F Int 3300 ml EPA/DOT Salary commenaurate1 j mu1t. no e11perlenoe ,. S80 S4 WMMCS, wN1e a llwr ZENITH TV 19 In. Excellent IMMEDIATE DELIVERY certa. EuropNn wheell,
with ablllty & experienc41 Quired Ideal lor home-asking ' 0-0842· Very hellthy. S.6-5158 condition. Only $49. (Slkl 211n1s.r; 5271) hMdllght WI.,.,_, anrf,
TSL MGMT 642-16031 makera, high IChOOI Antiques W&IT Tl am 5-42-1770. ..... many 11trH. Per fact , ..... TIIE senlOfl collage 1tudentl ira-ft•( •••• nu BOYS bdf furn ... ()(pc. ottl r--1.... ORANGE COAST cond st ..... 875-1581 _,. & moonllghtaral Houra 15191"' -.. L .. bunk · 1 red n .... Tru~tiea
Newpor'I 8Mctl Approa. Monday-Frldey 5 30pm Vfery fl~:uellty .eo:= drsrs/hutch':'C:: ~r' I ltai~nt '°47 2524 H=~ Mela KARMAN GHIA '74, all
12 hr1/Wk, lle1tlble. to run to 9 OOpm Saturday rom YHt r crm unit pc atand loP AE§fXDRANt Staint;;S .. ti, al Jill ...... 2• "" mechenlcal, orig
pe>et909. Must have car 9 OOam to 1 OOpm Star1 Furniture. lampa, clock~ SS lor ~ 536-09U St_. New ~ S 12 FT. SEARS OAME -• ownr 1st $1850 Cuti IN U.S.A.
$4/Hr Call 752-8522 Jan at $• OO thour plus & small tteml MOYlng Q t ....,._.....,. , .... _?-& FISHER NEW. ALL --'-S g«a ltl 536-0tl7 Mvat Mlllll San Clemente •:·-tll IS em .......... ._., w '"'-· • 1.-. Ate> TRYING HAROCR Par1 ttme t>Onu,.. Priv•t• desk & I •96-1187 ..uoi; u"u fir• An.Mia dlmenelon• AL u M I N u M s 3 5 o ,x,.,. 'tovof A SR5 f-.... MASEAATI Bl TURBO 'M Ytrf'-'--Oltrts phone, casual attire _ BASKET I UPRIGHT 4h.x12ft . ...&-2191 775-5724 °' 642-8171 """" '"""' s.v.ra1 to ChooM. TO 8£ :: I •J-a Home wa<kars welcome AHliUc" IOll FUSCHIAS S2 95-Se 95. 5 epd, am/Im i.,. player, Beecll lmport1. 752--0900 • SALES
NO SELLINOt 2 Clerks =~e/n~~o~~~r~az -fin antJ&Hll 4 color1 WlncJv•ne1. fttl A biaab IMt Ari':~HY l~~~:t:,~: = ru~~ ~~ri--· MAZDA 828 1912 apor1 • SERVICE
llMded ro verity lele-9.3 Sat at 642-5678 LES 111-11.. Mu1t Miit 731~75 AEXdlE Xkc p IN Ttt• 12950 080 575-83941 coupe. 41.000 ml. "* • PARTS
phoM order• Hourly •• IH IYW (l/ll ll~ F/7 mo, w/Pape!'a. lhow !!!! ta • blue automillc AC Hours 5·30pm-900pm _ uu••llOll_. • quallty, 1250/obo. aft 11,_. '87 FORD F100 W1351 55250 CallM6-lt1spp' • LEA81NQ
Sat 9·00am-1 OOpm For TtRlm REPAJI _ ,._ •wm• Tlci(eta fOf NI• Paci 5pm 556-2724. ..,.r__ B/M ahltt. auto. ahell, · 1 ARCrsT 1NvtrWJR•
lnl«v19W call lreoe alter Leading pest contrOl com-Lrg Deluxe Many eictru Amphlth 538-2829 COCKER PUPPY p Wlflll l&J ll&T BlaVJ>Uf\kl 1tw90, 40K MBZ ·es 300 TO WAGON. ~ rttl VllSTtOA 1
5 30pm 642-5678_ panu needs termite ranaJr Sacrtflal $195 720-3912 DES ION ER COAT-NEW 1 .,KC all · ... artyt White wtth b111» trim end ml 12700 obO 831-tle 12 Blk/tan, full c:f\rome whla,
' ...... REFR GERATOR co 0'· " .. ,o • Surrey loP Full C0¥9r Snrf & radl Exd cond OUY MOO(l & COlOfl Plltt RH• Ptr111 techn~n. some carpen· F~EEZER 11~CMOITTYAOKNE 642-9880 aft 8 pm xlnt c:ond s9ooo. 873-7eoo '7L9,...!0J~T. A,, ~K. -~ $2UOO P P 780-3193 CALL TOD .a Y
Monday 1 vn to appro• tr, e1tpeflerlee needed, ""',. COCKER SPANIEL AKC .,.-----=:---'="'='"~~= ~.., ,_, " ..,,... ·-~
8 30pm Tues 1 lam 10 study 1ob -lr•ln. call S85 OOIOBO S200, 846-&488 20 ft WELLCRAFT/STEP paint, Jllnt c:ond M..-t .... Jll IL 'jtlllTH U!UNTY
1iil1 1 fif i\( H B l V[J
HlJtn 1r~t . T (IN Hf A CH
Mr Charlel 432--0838 497-3329 Bl.at Male 7 wtll, xii LIFT 125 .....,, .... ....__....._ Mel $2400 obO 831-3147 aciprox 7pm Wiii traJn flne/pHonallty, MeH • ,. •2¥ ooo"'...., • ..._ Oarll blu•, auto, air,
Apply Pafln~ver. 1660 W&ml WShr Oryr $100 N ,...C ELECTRIC Hoapttal Bed Verd9 CM 979-0359 Loh0Ur1 .• t • YIU cauette,2topa,S15.500.
P1acentla, CM Men & womwi ovw 18 edger pulhmowr S 15, pwr S500 WhMl<:halr, Ilka •• ~...;.. -ID 75Me52 VW OXR 'if CAMPER Calf alt 9Pm 714/82e-5843
" ..... ...a.1.-1...... v........ ..... ,. .. ,. ..... ·Kc -• wk• H-......... c OMC . Exc.llent condition, rune ' ~ (714) 842-2000
CAO CIMMARON '13
SNRF. AND ALL ~S
M-495. OWNER
722-9730
NABERS
CADILLAC
LARGEST SELECTION
of lal• model. low mlteeoe
Cad1ttec:. In Orange
COUntyl S.. U1 today!
&•0-1100
2SOO Harbor Blvd
COSTA MESA
CADILLAC ·n s.dan cS9
VIiie Vlnyl roof, 1111 alee
good rubw Xln1 cond
$1100 5-45--0302
CADILLAC '7e ' dr, IMth
lnl.,, exe91tent c:ond full
pc>wef. Fllnj, 7 tK ml
$2800. 549-2•&6
CADILLAC ·eo Eldor•do
Blamu. stalnlMI ,,_.,
gas power midnight
blue lthr tnl. Jtlnt cond.
64K ml. $7695 M-F a.s
(71')999-1923 Ev/Wknd
(7 14)371-0531
CADILLAC ·93 El OOfldO
lmmaculat• condition
Slmualtad convwt roof
Loaded with all x·1ru
•8,900 ml garage 11ep1
S 1' 500 Call Al
Domenico. 951-48 7'
evea, 752--85211 days
CADILLAC 93 F~
9rough•m d'Eteoance
Loaded, clean, 1t. 700
ml S 1 t.900 5-40--0220 w/d-d car & rvoof of edger d1hw1hr S 100 "4IW S300 844-4995 --·-22 ti SUPER SPORT 250 MBZ '71 2200 4 ~
-VTt9ll •• 1nsur for home dellvan. _ .,....,..,0 '"0 _ "' " .,. .... .,..., hip heYY eng .... 25K ml on .,. __._.. fW m ... Llhlng required Full Time I -., ~· MC/termt e61--0ee7 . · perfectly, S3000 firm. .,.., -,..,., • Call &"45·78l l ot The Regtster N-. Faraitart Hit Flatt•n your atomachl Same u N9wpof1 Harbor 831-2799 •no. 14950. 478-3200 Cuatom Wtleela 1ter.o WE Ill 11.L 1&111
- --paper Earn $400·$600 Neve< do 11t-up1 again. LHASA APSO. Partkx>lor. patrol boa ti. Midship Oya, Ev/wttnd 7SO-S7e5 e>Cc.llent cond . wM• USED CARS & TRUCKS
11 you'r•loolclng tore car mo for PIT early AM hrs, I llf flllnlll( Elec muW. stlmulatlon blk/wMe, t w'Mikl. AKC conaole. for wateralll, Aatl .. ", . UC #213HH129 COME IN OR CALL FOR
cluatlled hunewator you 751-4155 7 11•m US lll-1 1H mach $75 Ron 496-4805 Home bred end lovable. ~~no~~·& V~ Clanin IMS M~t~/per!, :,.,.~~!g Hiii FllEI &PPWUL
p._••••••-•••••••ial*FllllnllE UU* LADIES Clothlng,Caltan1 MC or tenna 861--0&e7 w/boat. S7500, 875-1909 1A5 CHM UXtlAO PWf ownr, S18,000 Dl' O.LILLO
Living rm bdrm Wheel-ate sz 10· t2. boya Mate. tong haired tlQef 2r Scoty Sportftttler, Fly 11eer1n9, S1WI' wlndowl. 8.J3..9078 E~ 487-18 7 OlfYllUT MOTOR ROUTE h & 1 722• 7....... clothlng dreu/apor1 tabby kitten 846-427:1' Br...,, _,.0 -.... p..u...... Reas. Orig owner, Ew. MERCEDES BENZ 450 SL 18211 BEACH BLVD c •Jr -m SC ----H 14-18, •n-... ,. 4..... -· -· ..,..., •. ...._ .. , .... NU1 nu. 752 ........ NTI GTO B"'·c -" ·-.,...,_ ...... PERSIAN KITTENS C.F A Loran, twn 350s, .. JC1rea _,~ ~,. -195-4 -8-Ytlfu.I Botti HU N N """ H
Available in Irvine area.
$300 to $600 No collect-
ing. 3-4 hours a day. Mon.
thru Friday afternoon Sat.
& Sun. morning. Call
642-4333, ask for Kirk
40~~1v1::i r= ~~ Old c11ru1 Fruit Labela Reg11tered TOf119 Re01 S15K PP 536-3008 Aattl 1_....... topa, chrome whMl1 141-tOtls MWH1
trtm. C091 $885. Mii $350 CALL s75-9 t59 :=.--964-r~ Champ BOSTON WHALER 20' XCF'XAOUto e:;5;4~~5~~ CHEVROLET '83
A~:I~~~ Oak furniture A:i~A::1:h~:tln~~ RARE SH AR PE I ~.~ 1~tr~: ~:~ ~'":'m~ MITSUBISHI '85 P U VW BUS '89 • Rebullt e~ c;:,N~~~~ft!::
roll top dealt 54. round tem c:omplel• wllllt9r1 & WRINKLED PUPPIES, 9 N B lollp 759-1ees. 752--0900 w/camper. lo ml . atweo. dullport ;:· bed :,.:,nk, auto, am/Im c:ua, 1111,
table & quillty maple fire AnMlle, dlmaflslon1 week• old lnv.atment, C&Metta 5 IC)d Tall• depend• ·new ea. crvtM $8600 &41-5387 items Merilyn 831_126& ~ttJc1~ 846-2791 quallty, hHlth and CHRYLSER 24' M5 HP AUDI '74 Recent eng. OV9f p~ta. 875-8770 $1395/obo, 759-8477 ---·-----
tempera.dent HOUH· nu od, 200 ml range, X.lt fOf work, MW carb, MW VOLVO '73 nmnlng con-Clm OAllUll 'II
day1 645-1915 evea R TO R TAPE RECORDER broken, ~ota. Pinkie hu fl-"lng/1ldlng, trailer, hd 11.,90 eyatem, new bat-llST SILL dltlon good llr• 11.,90 Auto, A/C, Phwtndow1,
B-EAUTIFUL PECAN Wood $100, ClaHICal guitar agent Wiii air on St9Vetl radio. S15K, 494-5195. tery Auto, Kint tranap. VW 'ff Bue, lookl good, $450/0BO 831•1·272 blacil 1LUP821
ORANGE COAST
Oaily Pilat
dining room table with 3 $200, S<:tiwtnn S~burban Spellberg, Amazing HOBIE 15 ft, ... aklff, car 1895 5-46-5220 run1 Qoodl Mutt ... to Piii
leafs. 8 chairs cu1tom 10-speed man • bike Storta thta lall Aleo ri.w Yamah• 40, NII COV9f. -wn llllfUI appr. 842-2511 Ht 108. VOL VO '77 244DL, 5 IC>d.
p.O & matching hutch S200 495-6379 her brother and mt.a X'lni eond. Malle Ofl• DEUVERY DEPARTMENT PEUGEOT EXECUTIVE anrf, air ale am/Im
S 1050 850-7362 You don 1 know wtlat you re S 1000 to $3000 Wiii 842-528& ewnlnga and CARS • 19 8 5 G L ~~ ~7~9~9c:oncS THlODORl
ROBINS mlulng 11 you h•ven treed bargain or I rad• up 673--07eo d.. McLAREN'S BMW MODELS -Low mu... _
II you're not marthlng ro the claul1*1 l1tely 673-3562 NWt91 10 c:t1ooM from VOLVO '79 WAGON
clualfiee!tune,youmaybe ..... lllnliTI M-Ft1119,S-Stlll6 Starling at $9495 Air auto, MINT COND
330 W. Bay St.
Costa Mesa, CA
FORD
7060 HAl801 ll90
CO!ITA MESA 647 0010 paying pric. that are out of Pr~ reduetlon $1,000 ~ 126 S. Eudld St (387387). Beec:f1 Import•. Sell or trllde fOf van '!::=~!!!!!!!!J!!J!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~':'ep=======-we• k 111 IO Id or Fullerton, CA 752--0900 &42-4610 _:: withdrawn, 34' Owena, 714-880e300 CHEVY '81 CHEVETTE
TIS gu, MS-e600. 213-891'8701 YW ... FUTIAOI Standfrd tran1 em redlo.
FU
SUCCESSFUL
CITIZEN
How much ..,.,11 yO\H \Ofl 01 doughier know oboul busine\S when
opplying t or th,.., I.rs• lull 1.m,. 1ob? Plenty, 1f he or \he hos ever
been o new1~oper corr er Through route experience hf' or \he
1s already a lop ohr ad of their classmates While they oll
mos1er 1deos thr boy or girl with a newspaper route 1s able lo
put them to p roct1col U\" 8u'9nes~? Carriers learn the basic
learn the bos1c pr1nc1plr\ from the first day of starting to deliver
newspapers Tiley buy ot wholesale, sell at rrtoil. make
collect1ons, keep thr ir own hook \ and deol with people face to
foce (omen qwckly find out that "profit' and "lou" ore
more !hon textbool.. rern1s
The benef1h of monog1ng o n.-wspoper route ore on equation
for a future sucr,.nful c;1l11f'n A great number of todoy'\
prominent men ond .... om,.n Uorted their public careen o\
newspaper corril"n And th,.y oll vouch thot o newspaper route
gives o boy or girl a hl"od \tort on th~ future.
8ovs orr1 o.r1~ , • • ' I I" ,,.,~ "1(1~· t"' ir11ero\t"d n route
"'"'l ~t uula L.OnIOi...l •IL u' • f IOI l..11(.Ulolion dOIJOt lm!Jlll OI
642 4 lJJ
Daily !!!!!,ON DEPT
'.l30 WES T BA Y ST P 0 BOX 1S60
C05TA Mf5A CALIF 92626
J.. ·-----------------, l Ye\ my \on/daughter would l1k• I
rntormation on o Daily Pilot ro
1
ute I
HIS H~F.R NAME IS I ___ ,
' ---1
I ___ ZIP __ ,
I
PHON--~~--~-AC.E...._I
PARENT'S
SIGNATUR
I
' I L----------------~
-=11 INb Tilt 11"' WG New paint, c:1u1c:ti. t><aic•. 58K m1 000<1 cond111on .. LAROE SELECTION OF Int., •moo cert $1300 St850 080 546-8571 1111 UL 21 NEW & useo BMW'S! .. ,... 77S-75e3 775'87&6 1t• 18
With Newport Mooring. i..111111... WllJ P~ 11..mg. Furling VOlUME SALES
Genoa. $29,500 Of bflng SERVICE & LEASING
otlw (714) 774--1317 3870 N. Cherry Aw.
2 BEGINNER SABOTS LONG BEACH
wtth tral6erl $450 MCtl. u (No Cherry alt-'05)
II 873-5103 (l1•)111-11N . T rede-1ne Wek:ome
~IH'K HI
AUDI
l Ht \ll!Oll I
H11h .. 1 0"•11t~
... 1 ........ ~ ...
lrllU#I #OTO.I wur
vw ·99 2K on rbl1 eng .
new tires. brallea, ate
Xlnt In/out S2050 OBO
7eG-257e
VW '79 Rabb« Jtlnt Cond,
ate whit•. new t1re1.
t~. 35mpg, S2000
Diana 7e6-S718 sP1c1AL GAIAGI SALi 1An 77 isLANOER 38 Lo.dad oPEN sEVEN oAYs
R.c IUM!y, hlng mut,dal, (•-------· u~ t ( ,. • ., ""'~ fW 'If IOfllOOI ONLY ~ /llne. CALL 642-5671. tNk/lnt. lhoWer, tMll & --------N•wpori Buel. Many 1ttru, gd cond, call
hOlly IOle 988-5902 pp Sl'llUlll '°' d9taJl1 964-5323
lalMI blaa• llOI Cetta... 1124 BUY 114 partnerat11p 'M IMWG 67S-o9oo vw ·82 vANAOON. 9
• GARAGE SALE * no llBAll iiLii ISLAdNDl~~~I ~ PORSCHE '82 911 SC Pua. V9n, beige, • tpd, SAT & SUN 8-? con ............... -,..,... SIMPLY THE BEST peff cond. MK ml .
CORVETTE CONV 'es
RED ON RED, 100 MILES,
ALL OPTIONS
CALL CUTTER LEASING
702-736-0555
NIUCILT'IO
Sun rool, 1tar90
l/1n • 3042t4
IHll
THI ODORE
ROBINS
FORD
2060 HAUOI Ill VD
COSlA MlSA 0'1 0010 218 AMETHYST BALBOA Fr.ezer•. mite . .wrythlng Harbor $7,500 +ueume s .... -SeMoe . Leealng Targa A.ct w/lan ... ther. S5600 OBO 844-7365
ISLAND Desks. ciualc ooear 861 Hamllton. 9111 $400 mo 714 78&-2713. EUROPEAN DELIVERY lo ml. ale, p/w, crulM, ------, •• , .... 'la
Pin Ball machlM. glrl1 and 8112, tam. 3pm E·-R· ICSON 33, loaded. 15-40 JAMBOREE RO. tler90, CllflOfd, full pollah VW '8& RABBIT CONV .. t ....._... IM 7'1 & 8'1 MUST SEEi LOADED! ONLY 3000 ml ... u o. 1--·-· cru • Pi t bedrm s.t, trvndle bed. Ftaataia apotlMI. tr~ wtnn.r, NEWPORT BEACH ,23 900 pp 780-3193 Triple white NEED TO pl wff\dows, p/lockl
motOfcyctea gu dryer y-n.. '1 "4 great tor race/crulM, Adjaelnt to Faiatllon lllend • SE s s 3 V11t1• 15878& ... :.. • ateepe 7 Save $20K PP ()perl~ OeY9. Week RED SCIROCCO ·e I . LL FA Tl 1 .OOO Obo • SAT ONLY 9-4 Wuher & 2 wataf b939. furn. 68by &40-0300, 164--0818pm ~.. 55,000 ml. good oon-952-4135 -....
Dryer ster90, eewlng ltema mlac 9973 Mlei dltlon Run1 gr•all 1 JUST OFF THE BOAT
mech & cabinet, patio BroOkhurst/Werner ERICSON 35, N .. port $4200 Call 87S-7880 ·vw '86 RABBIT CONV
lurnllure & much mo<•I Sat1Kdey 9-3 Sllp, fulty equtpt, 'i'J. ~.Of Richard .... ve meaa LOADEDI Triple whit•
207 CRYSTAL AVE fuN ln1«•t (S7K to S20K a.. ti 95 35 GIGANTIC HUGE OAR· + loan). 759-098S * PEUGEOT * 1 o er 2-' 1
THEODORE
ROBINS FORD
2060 HAlllOI llVO
COSTA MHA 642 0010 C11t1 .... I l 24 hAOUGE .. SmuALE.,. ~~~·.ng In .. • MASTERA Tl * vw CONVERTIBLE '82 .,.. ...,.., LAID #11UI *ALFA ROMEO* Rune OOO<I. need• tome 3 Family Garage Sa' Sat· SAT & SUNDAY. 8-5. Good c:ondl11on. Oony Incl. *SAAB* BITTER• body WOf'll. S1200/0BO FORD 'U FAIR' .. urday 8am 1978 Tuatln 15939 Overton, Fountain '895 CALL 875-tl9M • ~~ S.0-1482 enar Spm dur-2e9 ......i ..,.NE
Ave HorH Hddla, Valley. cronroad1 ire WO =• ll•uldD~ Ing wk, s.t/Sun all day -d .... I ne1 · very good lurnlture. •le Brookhurlt & Edlnoet of -I con t on St 200 Of hull # 1050el gel h -. I I "' llPll IM 'l 1 5-48-8523
3FAMILY SALE laat. lack I c=.s1,o0o, 875-0558. _...,•II ~ * 752~ * Good traNpe>rtatlon, Fiii ,12 .. ---c 10111es. 1oo11 furniture 6608(£ kit&;;; gaa Pl••:--_.. .. , s 1500, 11s..1128. eve ,.. ... ••
2515 Elden SI CM SAT rangtt beige top, puffman Lm 1• • tn1er ... WI WSI Brown. good ltanapor·
JUN'E " 9.,,, •ll•vatory 23 In Int ..n. Ul-1HI n ... dlf.i. W. IAlll lattl ..... tlc 13'1 talion car S750 754-1959
5' to S100 Lota of thing• 98&-2510 MELCRAFT-SABOT --... u BUICK ·75 Apoflo New , .... ., ~·u Old & new HMhld llemt, clothes glanware & UT•YlsllAllll1 EJtc.llentcondltlon,reedy trana. xlnl body. gd Conv, SllOOO BO
much morel Saturday 9-5 ANTIQUES, DISHES IOf raca/pleeaure, M&O, ....., ...... tran1portatlon S 1200 M2..e&98
2669 Santa Ana Ave BICYCLES, & LOTS Of 5-45-07211145-0792. 13161 Harbor Bfvd, G.G. OBO Call 5-45-0073
Cli"ANT HOME SAle,-JUNK! 17892 SAMPSON * ... W j UllT1 114•2100
Ell9f)'thlng goeat Fri-Sat. lmat .. INTERNATIONAL 14
2191 Orange Ave a1 ... ,.ULI 2 Mllna/3Jlba/2Splnn 8UBURU 'l54wNdr .• alc,
22nd St Be therel Pll Trailer, MOO. M6-4e00 Mff, am/tm atereo, good
--Jun. 14 & 15th 1c>am-'Pm , cond .• MIOO. Mk '« King llH hHdboarcJ, Smt appll, dlthel, '1C, PRINDLE CAT 18 Ken, $46-2497
1amP9. plctur .. & Ju1*. lempe delll a chair XLT cond, Wit,_ & ca1 , • •
292 Joann St otl Wiiton/ cto1fle9 2-5000 BTU wen.'. box, CO\W, x;trs, gear, BMW 320 i..Graphfte, tow S~~U Q..., 81 5 epd,
Cotgate S.t 8-2 dow aic, blk•. hda of '2300. Iv mag. 751o-f155. ml, fully to.dee!,,,.._... 'I"',.._ control~~/lonFM ----c .......... •1.... to ~· .... 450, ~e. good ......... t . MINIATURE DOLL HSE H ................ ...1!· ii,...., FrenkS.U.ml: aneom. U ,000/bHI offer. Dolls/furn Deetc t>oott-•taro. Iota of other'a ....,, 1 la ,.. · l60-t2t9
ac:H•. turnltur•. etc Sierra Bravo (Oro En-BMW '78 530I
2973 Redwood Aw oft trance) Turtle Roell, 1678 , fa511p Vl, Auto, aM, altoyS. ucec>-
Harborl9aker Sat a.m lrvlne 954-7471 approx SOO tire, h50. Ilona! oond. '5500/obo,
MOVINGEVERYTHING ltgtrt ~ ~;:-~.~l'!O condition. 576-8lN ~ M2-11M.
GOES1 'rom aJU 10, MW -ye DMW " s20i wedding dr.... e4ee1rlc .,. ULIJ JUNE 14 & 15. MARINE 8unroot, ale, em/fm, fWl'll
typewriter quall1y Sofa, taDIM, wall unite, SWAP MEET TONS OF tlr• •. etc., $4IOO.
turnlture, aota/IOYeMet lotdup bk:yde, Kenwood MA Al NE GEAR. NM· (714) 111-1800.
Ilka new. 2 1WfV91 rock-turn tabte, stereo ~bl-PORT TOWBOAT CO BMW 'IO B20I IO ml wtlt er•. a pair of gOld 1tv1ng Ml, atl.ldent "-k. hutcti, 30th & wi. Way ortg OMV .,.P.na,'~ ========
room cha1ra. ltareo """-p4ctur•. mudl morel LANCER 31' .eAANO NEW alf, s epc1.' tat eeeao Clilih TOP ... Piii I apealc•a, reclilW & Saturday I 8unay orlty Main 100% 11b 1~ llb g9"1 ltf IM-Oll1
t>ookcaM noor lamp 20e P~t<WY P'otnt " 's1000 ·,... ..·, --------~~ table a hanging lampa: East. NB 71•-613.-730I ~~ 131-4523 ........ BUG vw '13 X'lnt cond Meloedellenz
large mil'ror. deV911POf'!. MOVING SALl!.I • 8un root, C9la,,... eno --n 1&11
amall teblea All ,.... Two 8-...dlaPI pltleWOod u,.1 I ..... _ -4 nu urw 11995 obo. Top MelotdeePrleelPald
pt'!c*i 2&9 E lay 81 aof•. ctielrt. table, TIU 491 '892 Leur1e CAll PITEA Of RA v
S•t 9-5 Ofl Santa Ana dr .... meny mlac 11ema 30• 90Tr SlJD OATIUN '71240Z. OWt _. •••• ,.
AW In Coeta Meat. Sat June 1-4. Mpm, AvatlltlM " 2 · r &5000 lnvHtad, Price ...._
-••• • -1742 Pon M~ Circle, '°' ~ .. ..._'!."', l"9 HUO !11ce1 cond. .... .... ...... 9M6o ti Ford I MtcArtflut, .,,_...,.a '40-1090 2'3ot714137.a333
Sat. Jun• 14 t ·6 720·1714 eso.30n --------Bedroom furniture. CHOtCE ILIP _ Wt:IOei. DATSUN 72 2'4Z
daka. bat & 11~,,..,, .. a.. a onty. Op to 46' 'aide Oe """'-OOod. MeOa ~
e1tetnc • o .. ~ t~ BOHR &Id I eccw. up 10 24' 1n "" tNndly WOltl. MOO
drop In eleetl'tc reno-1 S t75 Couch/lo ..... t andlof109, 131-MIO. l50-0llO --~ new f'looda ~ ~ S150 Moe ..iv f:ftl.,-,.=.,,..-=-.,...---,,.---~~-----tab* 141 M4lgllllan It.. '75 a. •oo&a W -MOOA1NG tor .... ,..,,.. DATIUN'ISIODZXn.-Mf'lhlC). iernu.. C.tllne ,,., bled! ., .... '-ttler,
MOWfO SAll!.1 a.w. IMdt. -.. 0. lelen4. Up to 10 ft IOKml WM. f\i1IY f
hi M PM S20. NO Aefrto t71 '4 .... 5040 loedad,111.000tlrm (714t 114/Ml ..... ttld;, watet lllla.. men'1 Poet wtlt twtn bed frwne ~71
... tun. plc;t~ .... 171 S.ereoCONoleUO WIU Ul!Ofl TOYOTA • ., CieafNd.a,
1ort9d btlclc1, mlac V~ Vee & pedt CAL U 'O" DOCK Haw ~ ~ ""1 fU1V IOeded, ~dill ~good• S100 20511 TOMW,nt SPACE.c.IHJ144 llOll &o .. 7~adt00 moo.t, 0\1 Cond Miao
3023 Kllfyt)rooll• LMe 8ri91ql/Wamer 5&7· 14811 wneo-34oe0 111 Mii. 142·5171 oao Mutt ... t44:0t01
•
IN
ORANGE COUNTY
9791500
-~~~-~~~
..
Ford Clasate'72 hrdtop,
compl meeh hlatory, Oflg owner. ()fig p1lnt. apectal
oPW• wtndowa fS.40.()094
FORD MUST ANG •i7
289 anglM. 83,000 orig
ml. nMd1 co1m•t1c1.
S1650/0bO, 754-1950
FORD MUSTANG 'M-
Convertlble, baby blu..
with wtttte, factory air,
100% r•tored. c.11 Tim
702-736-0555
LINCOLN '83 ConUnental,
1how room condition
37K ml, bf.ck, lo9ded
11 t ,"5 454.()435
OLOSMO I.I '11
CUTLAIS SUPAlMI
BROUOHM .. Alr, crulH,
Witt ~ atclOIObO,
1).159-1305, E-64e-t731
Aak for M*•
Pl YMOUTH '14 VOY•
AOl!A auto. ale, Ml
wndwl, petf cond 271('
ml SI000.144·1*
PL VMOVTH Ct4AMP' 'IO
Auto. e/C ern/fm, Dir mi.
USOO/obo, .. •ur .. p ...
•·7M1. aN 1:30 pm
PONTIAC WIQOn '13 I .S. , Ptl I Pll, pod
oond. In end out.
MOOO/obo 72'·151e
let U1 lltl• YM
Siu Y • Preptttrl
Cal ClaialflN,
642-5671
T
°' • I • '
• I •
....
6 a : 1 2
MW puAu41rll to OMC1ofTNll,111kt OM C111 Trute In tt. 0... 01 ftutt, tO•Wll: "CC&--"lreoordrldlneoo. Qllllon '~ll1"'9PfOP-MOTICllTO TUITINA\/CH tUIT 0 , 9'tCt ~ 1eepo111M to~ edlllMjo
,. .... Aeootded on ,,.,,.. Doc»-propll'ty -....t In Mild • t37.1ft.IO. 116'1, ...... S32. lndueMt. ttW to ... IOld ..... t..an-CMDfTGg Of IAHT A AHA. CALlfONM oontrect ~ . "11\11be~14*'
..,nca Of ..... "° ~10 Of Of-County. C.JM'"'6 ..... TM ........ ., undlr Mid °'"°"' ....... ot Or-.. .. ...... IS ii ..... •• ....1'1WllllP ta10I Ind .,. t e11, * bell _,., ... aibtfllt, tfle OOHTAACTOA .. wtiom
,...,.,.... AilCOtdi lhiciHll:ieol lnalMlinCI~ DiedolTl'UIC,...,..otoru11-County. c.llfornle. • """.,....lnd-.•w•,. (leea 1101-1101 MnacllimatiyM"tcndttor Gn ltl9 lol'l'll ......_,With lhuomrtietll.....__.
VOU Aftf 1H AUU n. Aecordef' of er.,.. "P~L 1: eautedandde1'41'edtotfle nesed to 11'19"'*8 ptoP-llPntallWlnNlf~ U.CC) INllle...._11,·1 .. wtlidl the CICll"ltf8C;t ~ e upon •nr IWContrMtot
UHO(A A DEED Of TIUn County Ca11fom1e ...etecr LOT 2.0 Of' TMCT 12011, ~-a WffttM 0.0. et'1J "'1ln0 In thif ,_,,. Clll ol tfle Notloe ol .... II Nottoa 11 Nr.oy ....,., to II the tMlr-. *1 ~ bt of the Pl~ D111Sluboon• wider Mii CONTRACT°'
OATID tl2t/H UNl.taa by: T(Mv AHOAEW CON· IN THI! CITY CW COSTA llratlOn ol o.r.-and 0. Cllfl'FORO 8ADCOOK. Jll ~71.to oredlto,. ol the wltllln tri. oon~mmallon Clalt tractOf'I on tNI Pfotect M IO~not-t1w1ntt.Mld
VOU TAKI ACTION TO ROVllll. MllM\ef'ftedl'Nll Mf&A. COUNTY CW 0,._ ~for ...... and wl'lltwt AHO Tl!AYI. I.. 8A8COCK. TM ~. 0£ER-NrMd tra1111flliort 1"-l • IC*olfled.-.. required oY "'-8ubiiltt1"8 llC*lflldtlt•to .. wontwl
PROTECT YOUR l'ROP· WILL IELL AT PUBLIC AHO STATI °' CALJ. No(toe °' o.tNt and a.o-WILL SELL AT PV8LIC '16.D COMMU~ITY Al· ..,.. nnMt 11 lll:IOut to IMI 0.1ed.J June 4, ,... and hbCOtlttacttne ,arr ~by u.n In the ...
ERTY,ITMAY IEIOl.OAT AUCTIOHTOTHEHJOH!ST f'Of\NIA. Al P'eA MAP Af· tlontoW TN111ldlillgoed AUCTIOHTOTH HIQH T IOCIATION, undef Mid mM1 on ,.,...w property ,_fl....._, T,.._ l'rlll:ll099 Act Oowirvner4 eouuoftoltMoon"9Ct.
A PUeUC SALL "' YOU ••DOER f'Of' CASH (pe)'-OON>lD IN 800K 111, _,., ..., Notice of 0. etOOfJll FOA CASH (Olly-c~ '*9t0f0tw DecutllCI ,. ... ..,.., ct..orlC>ed ..... Code lect>oft '100 -teQ No tliddet ,,_ ......
NE!D AN ECF't.ANA TION ble ., llme OI .... .,.; lewM ,A.OH 18 ANO ,, °' Mii-fMM and £lcUon to ... to abta at time ol .... In ~ and .....,., '° Ole uncll!W• TN Nmee Ind ~ ,,.. ......... ,,.".. !ech IMctdef mmt IUbmlt .,,, bid for.,,._. of~·
OF THE NATVA OF TH '"°""of IN United SW.) CELLANEOUS MAPI. IN lie recorded In tne oountr moMY of the United 8tai.t) ttaned • wrttten Oecllwatlon eddr-. o1 tlle tnwnotd ,.,_ with ..ch bid owtlflad Ot fM ()I) deye after Ole deiil
PAOCUOINQS AQAINST at THE HORTH FRONT EN-THE Off'ICl Of' TH! wtltft the r ... Pf'oPWIY II al the OU\IMM front .ntr9Cl o(Oefaull Ind Demand IOf trstMiiOla ere· PAU&.: R ~ OtW\09 Coiit tullltr'a CNCl peyable 10 MflOt ti.°'*""' Of BIA
YOU. YOU SHOUl.O c~ TAANCf TO THE COUNTY COUNTY RECORDER Of' IOcated. IO IN ~lno locatM at 8ala. enCI. written NoUoe of ICRl8HEA, 1lt8 IC E. Id-OIJly Pllol June 12, 1Ne the DtSTRICT or • btd bond A ptl)'fMftt bond -a
T ~CT A LAWVER COURTHOUSE 700 CIVIC SAID OOUHTY. CAtlOMllA MNSRAL 4l50 VON KA.AMAN, OAON o.tault and o.ctlon IO... tnoat. leilte Ana, CA H7Ge TIIM3 In U. form M1 lonll Ill thif petlo1111111ioe bond .. be On 717/M at 10 00 AM , ClNTER ORiVE WEST, PA..cEL :1 lllORTOAOI llRVICI, IUILOINQ, NIWl'OAT Tiie undet'a!OMCI cauMd l'fl9 tocatlon In Cellfornea contract c:tocum9'1t• In an required ,not to.....,..,..
Celltorn1•Gelwll ~SANTA ANA. CA all '1Qllt. A NON·EXCLUSIVI INC.. ............... BEACH. CALIFORNIA all Mid Nottm of Oet..-and of &he c:HM ueouthie omoe PlBJC llJTlC( amount not i... '""' 10%of Ol IM conlred Ind .......
Service .. the duly ap-title end "'' ... ' oonwyed EASEMENT Of use ANO .......... cter. CA -. tlgtll. lltle ind lntweat con-E*11on to ... to be ,.. or oMctoal ~ olftoe IN maxltnum M\OUl\l of bid In ''"' fOtm ... tor1tl In ttw
poinl.cl TNll• under and to anct now l'l4lkl by It under ENJOYMENT ANO °' IN-,._ (119) 41'Ml70, -~to, Ind now Mid by h, corded In the county .... °'the In.tended trant,.,... la: NOT1CI TO u I guarani• tll•I tM bid-oontr.a dooUmenta.
OAf.SS ANO EGRESS IH ............ 8f lilatr L ll(ld4lf utd OECl.AMTION the r..i Pf'oPWIY la IOoa1ed t3 Mderd Or1Ye &MIN CA C~ORI ct.r wlll enter lftto ,,_. ~ to 8ectlOn 4MO
ANO LOTS A, •• c. o. I ............. ........., 0' COVENANTS. CON DATU>: Mey 21, 1911 H714' • • CALUMO ~ -· ptoPOMd oontrtiet " IM of '"" 00...tll'Mllt Code of ANO F, (COMMON AREA) Pvb!Wled Orllf9' C9Mt OITIONS ANO R£8TAIC-0 It IU MW A I. 0 AM D A.II ott1tr ~ MIMI ~ Dlltrlet IMM Uni• 1MM 11 -ded to ad! tN Stet. ol Caltomia. Ole ---10f SAIDTAACTNO 12078, Deity Pilot .lutle 5 12. 18, TIONS In the proPef'lY llt~ M8NIC1t. • .._..., 4* and addr-uaed by 1tie tied~ Dlatrlc1 ~. lnltla..,_,t ollailure oontreot wlll contalft
AS SET FORTH IH THe 1Nt a1ec1 In M6d County and V• ~ ..... •· trMilf•« w11111n the pest Bid ~ 10 o'olodl to enter Into Nici oontrect. pr~ permitting ttw
DECLARATION°' ESTA8-TI\974' St•I• deeellbed .. lot 1 ~ ....... c ........ lh,... ~.,.. l215 Eut •m ofthe20thclayofJuna llldl MCUrlty wtll be tor· •UCCHllul blCld•r to MC CLUSltEY at Laguna Presby-LISHMENT Of' COVE-Unit 1, Treat 888~ • ,. ... ('714) .. ,....,, a, Pomon1 Avwiue, Unit E. 19M ' '91ted eubstlMe eecurtti. tor eny
JiUl\t."li C Me Cluskey ten.an Church Rev NANTS, CONDITIONS ANO f'tlll.JC NOTIC[ COfded In &OOll 351. P:fi: ..,_........_ Santa Ana.CA Pt .. otBld,...pt 5050 Elldl blOder ehall be• ~wlUNldbylheOtS-• .. ~-~ M J Tank rsl f RESTRICTIONS RE · 30-31 lnclu•h1• ot 11-Pvbllehed Orange CoMI The n4llMe and bu*"-8&franc:a.1Mne CA HT1" llcenHd oontractor TAIC to en•ut• per· Sr,.,_..., away ay erry e ey o CORDED JUN£ 2t, t tM AS K •12 l'*'aneoua Mepe Ottlclal Daily PllOI June 5, 12. 19, addr ... of Iha lfaMW... ProJ•ct ld~nuticatton 1 to IN ~ fom*'°9 under tN o.-30. 1986 SW"Vlvf'd by Carn1tmg In IJeu of I N s TR u MEN T N 0 MOTICI ~ Aeootdl of Oranoe County. '~ .... ERIC IOGUSCH. 40 Name: u~ ,.,.. ProteMlone Code and t1act.
1wosuns.Jamt'SC Me Clow~rs contnbuuons 14-293761 OF OFFICIAL TltUITU'alAU CA Tflt75 ~yon.PhlltipeRwlctl, Clauroom uc.n.d In Iha lollowtnG OoO..•••""""*',.• ....... ., A. c I k J f be d t.o th A£ c 0 R 0 s . 0 RAN 0 E ..... , .. _ The ll1'991 aodlW and CA 91718 Place Plan• .,. on " clualllc.tlon1· GENERA[ • ......, c.r.r • us e) r 0 I may ma t' . e COUNTY, CALIFORNIA. •AKOCK other common ~tlon, PUBLIC NOTICE The prop«ty pentnent tMne Unified 8chool Ole-BUILDING CoHrRACTOR -Pvbllihed Orano-CoMt
Sonora, C".a and John Laguna Presbytenan The atr•t add,.... and YOU ARE IN DEFAULT II 1111y, of the fMI Pf°'*1Y 11er.io 11 deecnbed 1n gen. trtcl, 1010 Barranca 1 Deity PllOt June I , 12, 11M
8 Mt: Cluskt>)' of l.a l Church 41 5 Forest other common dealgnatlon, UNDER THE DECLAR-deaerlt>ed above la KJMl'7 era! u · Stodl In Trede. FIA· Perl<llray. tntne, CA 92714' The DISTRICT ,...,._ ThlM
Mirada t...'A 3 grand-Avt' Laguna Beach II eny of Iha ,.., P1'°'*1Y ATIOH OF COHVEHANTS. purpot'led 10 be 28 Wltd-'1CTTT10UI ..,..... lllfH, Equipment and NOTICE IS HEREBY tile ngtll to refeel 9'\y Ot -·--------
• • ... ' dHCrlbed above 11 CONDITIONS ANO RE· "-ll'Ylne, Celltomle N~ ITAftmlff Ooodwtl of a bertain Game GIVEN thet tht et>ove· bide or to w*"9 any It· 111111-M" NOTICE
children Laura, Jubt> CA 92651 purponed 10 be 939-CI STRICTIONS, AS ANNEXED Th• underalgn•d dll The lollowlng per'90nl.,. Aoom AmUMIMt'lt Com-n9'Md School Oletr1c1 tor regularlti. tn any bid• or In 1--~------&nd Andrt>W ' s.is~r 19TH ST • COSTA MESA. TO THE SUBJECT PROP-elallns 111'1)' llablllty 104' any dOlnO bull-•• Plll'IY bullneM and,. located Orange County Cllllfotnla. the bidding ,tCTTnOUt ..,... ..
Mary Ot>war J1m1 CA92827 ERTY,UNLESSYOUTAKE lnciof'reotnea ol Ille ltrMl UNIQUE EATERY, 3178 at 1511 #C, E Edtngllt, acting by anct 'tllrougfl IQ P\nuanttothaprOYleiOnl NAmlfATUmlff
came from lrt•land in ,.c.IC ¥1111 T'* underllgMCI Trv•t• ACTION TO PROTECT addrea and Ott!« common Pullman #1:15, Coet• Mee&. Sant• Ana. CA The bu9I-Oovemlng loerd. n.r.fn. of Seetlon 1n3 ol the Labot The lolloWlftO "'90M.,.
. dleelalms eny lleblllty 104' *'Y YOUR PROPERTY, IT MAV dee!On•llon. If any. llhown caltl 92e2e -name llMd by the Nici after referr.cl to u 'DIS-Code of the Slate °' Cal-doing~ ... lWti He wa.s a longl mAL ,AM lnCOrrectneee of the weet BE SOLD AT A PUBLIC tlefeln Lorr91ne Young 26().41 trwteroraUMdlocatlonla TRICr·. d,....... uc> to. lom&a theOISTRICTlluot>-aARYG OIALAHOCOM-tanlt'n~1dt·n1 of Glen-c.nec.,y•Mortue.ty Mldr-end otflerconvnon SALE IF YOU NEEDANEX· SaldMlawlltbemade but Lindi Vllta. L.eguna H1119, GAME ROOM AMUSE-t>utnollmetthen!Mabove-\alnecl from IN DnclOt ot PANY 4'001 A lln:fl SI
dalt' and Laguna Chtle*. ~tOly deeiOfl•llOn, It eny, eflown PLANA TION OF THE wtlho\11 ~' Of _,. Callt 92e.S3 MEHT COMPANY •t•led time Meled bide'°' the o.p.rtment of lnctu.trllll ~ 8"ctl Celtf .-
&•ath Ht• ..;d.'> m 3500Pecttk:V...Orlve '*'s~~Mlewtll..._ ede but NPRAOTCUEEAD~NGO ~G .. TINHSTE ran~,H~r:u.:.~r:; Joe W. Young. 2504'1 S9ld bulll tranalet II In· IN awwd or a contract fOf Ral1tlon1 the general Gery Gene Olai. SU ~ 9w:t1 """ ... m • " " g., ng una. P-1 • Linda Vi.ta. Laguna Hllll, tended lo be c:-..mmated tlle abovoe project Pf'evalllng rat• of per dtetn MllfOfd Dr ccwona del Ms good health UJ.1 untJI 8"-2700 wttnout eov.nent 04' WIN-YOU YOU SHOULD CON-9ft0Umtnnc.. 10 pay the C&llf 9~3 •t Ille offtoe of ACTION 8ldt lhall be rec:eNed In WllQN •nd th• g-•I Cell! 92e:15 .
his death from a raniy ~orlm~,,. TACT A LAWYER remaining prindpel""" 01 Thi• bulJlnna 11 eon -ESCROW, INC 800 Not1h the p1.ce ldenlllled at>ove, pr...,alllng 111te tor 1'lolldey Thll buelnes• I• con·
l k H . re gerd1ng tllle. poeu• on. or On June 28. 1988 et 10 00 Iha llel\ MCUred by Mid r... ducted by hustMlnd and wife Tu•hn AV9nUe Suite G and lh9ll be ooened and and cw.time WOfll In IM fo. ducted by an lndMdual ". ro t' i:. w 1 • HAMOR LAWN-eneumbranoee. to pay the AM the i.w omc:. of Pf'operly. woll lnter-1 there-Lorrelne Young Sant• AM, cai11om1a. Or~ publicly reed aloud •I the cality In wNcfl thla wont le to o Dial f r.tnll.:. Jll'd rrom d llT. ouw remaining Pfln(;lpal .um of G ~EE NW A L D • n d on, .. provided In aald Thl9 statement wu llled ange County on 04' atter abov•·ll•l•d Um• and be performed 104' MCtl craft T::f11ti1emer1t 'WM Ned ">lrok~ lll I ~115 Hl• Mortuwy • c.m.tery the not• MC:Ured by Mid RESNICK al duly appointed CC&Aa. llOvanc419, It enl; wtlh the County Clerk ol Or· June 30, 1088 Thia bulll ptac:e 04' type of worker needed 10 wtth the County e19rt1 ot Or-
"" ~ dCIJVe tn lhl' Ma Ct'em9tory Deed of Truat. with lnter•t -oent 104' the DEERFIELD under the terms ol u 1nge County on M9Y l8 tranai.r la eubject 10 Cllll-There wlll be 11 $50 00 ct.-••ecu1• the contrect TheN County on Mey 13 • . d h Li 1e2s lJlillr"A... ''*eon ... P<~ In Mid COMMUNITY AS SOCIA-CC&Ra ..... ch.,gee, and 1988 • loml• Unitonn Cornmeraat poeit required lor MCll-' of ,., .. .,.on Ille •I tlle DIS-= .
S(JnS an l t' ' guna not.. edvane.. II 110)'. TION under and putllUenl 10 •XPINM of the T~I-and ....., Code Section 8108 bid documenta 10 guaran1• TRICT office loc.eted •15050 ,... Pn-sbyt.enan Chureh Cost•Meee underlhe lerm1 oltha0eed the DECLARATION OF oflhetrvataerMledbyMid PublWled Orenge CoM1 The~andaddr_.ot lleifreturnlngoodcondltlOn 9.,ranc;a Parllway, lnllne, Pvbllehed Orange COMC
J\.11 murJdl t rv1ee S40-S5So4 of Trull ,_ matgee and CONVENANTS CON -CCIRa Oelly PllOt M1y 2:1 29 June the per•on with whom within 10 da)'91ner the bid CA 92714' CopM ITl9)' be Olllly Piiot MIY 29 June 5
Jurii lo at "< OO p M ••P«l ... of lhe TNal• and OITIONS A.ND RESTAIC· The totel amount of the S, 12 1988 ' ' ctlllma mey be tiled I• AC-opening defa obi~ Ol'l teQUM1 A copy 12 19 l9&8 ' '
ol IM tru•U erMled by aald T I 0 N s ( h. r • In 111'. r unp1ld balene. ot the obit-Th-11:18 TION ESCROW INC • 800 N EllCl'I bid mull eonlonn ol 1'-rat• lhell be poet· •
0 NABERS CADILLAC
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2010 Harlttr llY4., C11t1 1111
642-0010 or 640-121 1
o SADDLEBACK
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1-800-831-3377 714-380-1200
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714) 951 31 44 • (800) 428 7485
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835-3171
208 W. 1st St., Santa Ana
Ct>rnm of Broadway .\ 1st St Closeo Sundays
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1540 Jamboree Rd.
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1301 Quall SI. -New Car Location
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Q SALES• LEASING TAlOOD TO YWt flIDS BY EXPERTS
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.-s MON-f11
730 AM ~ 30 rtil
SAT9AM 2 PM PARTS•SERVICE
ARLEIKE
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28802 Marguerite Parkway • Mission Vle10. CA 92692
(7 14) 582-2880 (7 14) 364-1210
.VER ~@TI@oo@
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0
t.he PROFESSIONAL APPROACH
71 4-979-2500
2925 Harbor B oule vard
• Costa Mesa. CA •
G UNIVERSITY 01.:.DSMOBll.:.£
HONDA
2880 Harbor Blvd.
Coat• MeN 540-0713
3 Blocka So. o140S Fwy.
808 LONGPRE
Orange County'i Oldest & urges1 Pontiac ~~lenhlp
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f7t4 892 .... 11 J7t4J 61 .. 2SOO
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( 7 14) 521-3 l 10 ( 2) 3 ) 921-8681
0
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'18881 BiaCh Blvct., Huntington Bch.
THURSDAY, JUNE 12, 1986
More ~ . . ~ wr1te--in errors surfa
Workers at 3 polls either failed tocount
or locked write-in ballots in primary -
~uht of ballots does not make him
the winner in his battle apinst
controversial Lyndon Lallouche fol-
lower Art Hoffmann.
By LISA MAHONEY °' ... ...., .........
Precinct worken at two more
poUina plaoes were found Wednesday
to have either discourqed write~m
vota or to have failed to count them
in the Democratic primary for the
o40th Conaress1onal Di1tnct -a
discovery that has wnte-10 candidate
Coast
Sports advocates,
eenlora clash over design
of a park In lrvtne that the
city has no money to
develop./ A3
California
Scientlata unveil a new
machine to analyze DNA
that promises big ad-
vances In research Into
genetic diseases./ M
Nation
The Supreme Court reaf-
firms abortion right.I A4
A government audit finds
evidence that funds In-
tended for the Contras
were diverted./ Al
Sports
The Angels explode for
16 hits to blow by Chi-
cago at wind-swept
Wrlgley Fleld. /C1
t:Sruce Sumner wondenna how wid~
spread election erron may be.
Tuesday. poll worken in a Costa
Mesa precinct admitted they m1s-tak~nly refused to allow wnte-m
votes.
Sumner campaign aide David
Paine said the attorney and former
Judge may seek a new election if a
The rcporta that have Sumner
worried come from precinct worken
in Irvine, Santa Ana and Cotta Mesa.
who say election officials told them
there were no lepJ write-in can-
didates.
But Oranse County Rqistrar of
Voten Al Olson characterized tbose
reports as "isolated instances .. that
should not affect the outcome of the
Tom Cook, cbaJ.rman of the float de.lain com.mlttee. dlapla,.
a conceptual rendertnc of what 1"fue'• Ont Roee Pa.ra4e
election.
.. We have write-m counts from
every piu1nct in the district so it
doesn't seem to be a widespread
problem," Olson wd. "It's not im-
possible, but I doubt it involves a
lal'JC enou&h numbtr of voters to
affect the final stalldinp."
As of Wednesday, Sumner had
received 14,876 votes in a hand count
of ballots compared to I S, 138 for
Hoffmann. Olson said be expected
the final tally to chanae somewhat u
election worken count tom ballots
and othen uncounted on elect.on
ni&ht, but thcdifTercnce wiU probably
not be enou&h to declarc Sumner the
winner in the nd COWlt.
Sumner has aaid he will request a
recount if b.e is certified the lo1tr on
June 17.
Sumner, chairman of Lbe Dcmo-
cra tic Pany and a former st.at-c
assemblyman, entered the 40th d1s.-
trict tacie as a write-in candidate once
patty leaders realized that Hoffmann
was a followeT of LaAouche. a
perennial presidential candidate who
............................
entry eboald look like. Tbe committee now m118t rabe'
$120.000 to blllld the Ooat.
House
price
controls
ending .
Supervisors leav1n
affordable houstn
up to market forces
By USA MAHONEY
OfllleOlllt ........
Orange County 1uperv1son
'°unded the death k.AelJ Gw \be
county's mandatory affordable ous,.
in& program Wednesday.
Say&na that affordable houli.aa
pis arc oot only bcina met
exceeded in unincorporated
the Board of Supervisors unani-
mously a~ved an amcndme:at to
the Hous1na Element. complctiDa a
three-year phaseout of the mandatory
ptOIJ'atn, wtiich was in place &om
1979 to 1983 .
INDEX
Advice and Games 83
Boating 81
Bulletin Board A3
Irvine's Rose P.a~ade entry beastly
Under the amendment, oAly
planned communities already oom-
m1tted to construct affordable bous-
1na must provide low-and modt:rate·
income u.nits. All new h~ dc-
velo1>menu ..-ill bt ttcrnP1 from
mandatory cont.ro\s.. as they ve
been since 1983.
Wednesday's hearina OD the HOUJ.-
lnl Element was attended by nwner-
ous low-.cost bousina advoc:aies and
operators of homeless shelters 9tbo
took issue with the board's claim that
the county 1s ucc:ieufully provid.ina
housina for all seamenu of the
community
Business 85-6
Claulfled ~
Comics a.
Death Notices C8
Entertainment 82
Oplplon A8-9
Paparazzi 81
Police Log A3
Public Notices C7-8
Sports C1-4
T elevlslon 82
Weather A2
Teachers seek
lower class size
ln social studies
By ROBERT BARKER °' ... ...., .........
Teachers arc pressing for reduc-
tions in the size of social studies
classes on campuses 1n the Hunt-
IOJtOn Beach Union High School
D1stnct.
"There should be a lo t of inter-
raction on political, economic and
soc1ol0JJcal issues," said Ed Pope,
head of the social studies department
at Marina High School. "You need to
act in there and tear ideas apart. It's
different from teaching a skills class "
But Pope and others claim that
(Pleue eee TEACBltRS/ A2)
Prehistoric theme said to lend itself to
exotic, eye-catching floral arrangement
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN
Of ... ~ ........
The Irvine Rose Parade Float
Committee 1s taking a giant step
backward
Backward in ume. that is.
TJie committee prcpanng Irvine's
first entry m the famed Tournament
of Roses, 11 banlong on a bron-
tosaurus and other extinct creatures
to bring home a prize next New Y car's
Day.
This week. the committee unveiled
a larie color rendering of us float
desian. entitled "World of Prchistonc
Wonders." The entry, over SS feet
long. will be constructed by Fiesta
Jail report praises
sheriff's progress
Court monitor says
Gate· s doing very well
in reducing crowding
By USA MAHONEY °' ... ~ .........
A-court-appointed jail mom tor has
issued a hif111Y complimentary report
on cond1t1ons at Orange County's
mainJlll.
Special master Lawrence
Grossman praised Sheriff-Coroner
Brad Gates 1n the latest ofh1s periodic
reports to U.S. District Court Judge
Wilham Gray
"The shenff has done very well in
man81Jng the population at the
Central Jail." Grossman s1ud in a
June S letterto the Judie. Grossman is
charaed with sce1na that the Shenfl's
Department oomplies with a federal
judae's orders rcaarding crowding at
the maximum security facility.
Gates has kept the inmate count
below maximum levels set b.j the
court durinaApnl and May, provided
(Pleue Me .JAIL/ A2)
After longjourney,
Pilgrim ready for
first charter cruise
I
It has taken 16 yean for Den!11S and
Bcuy Moti.nd~dreem te eo~
Never mmd lhat their aenie IS a
ll S Coasl Guard inspector or that
their nunbow mctchcd all the way
from the backyard of their Costa Mc~ home to Ports-0-Call 1n San
Pedro.
They'll aladly take their dream with
wha1cvcr help comes with it.
Once 1hr Coast Guard ins~tor
11vn his final approval to thc-f>itsrim
o f Newport tod•> in San Pedro. lhe
Holtlnds will be allo wed 10 offer charter~ aboard the 118-foot chppcr
ship they started bu1ldir11 1n their
backyard'Th I Q70
"We're rt'all) Hr) ellcitcd about it
aflcr all 1he dcla}s and problems t
h3d O\er the )Can," S&Yl,. Betty
Holland "But we're ready to 10."
Sc'cral 11mes over the past few
)l'an 1t looked hkc the Hollands'
dn.·am of bu1ld1n1 and sa1lina 1heir
own hooncr would be fore\ er di')·
J ocked.
ROBERT
HYNDMAN
FOCUS ON THE NEWS
years. 1 hen. once complcttd. he
wttstlcd with Newpon Beach city
official o"cr how he could launc-h It
and where ii could be docked.
\ftcr btina bumped like an orphan
from one home to another. the
P1l1nm of Ncwpon found a per·
m1ncn1 rt t1na place at Pon ..()..Call
1n San Pedro.
Bui althouah the U\1p 11 scawonhy.
11 ha taken the Holland morc than a
>cat-and·a-half to obtain th ncttn-
•ry Coast Guan.I approvals to Optrttt
u charter ~rvicc aboard tht dipper.
Floats of Temple City. h will cost
about S 120,000.
The float committee has the en-
doncment of Irvine officials, but u
won't receive any city fundina. An
ambitious campai&n to finance the
float throu&h membership fees. cor-
porate sponsors and fund-raising
evenu is under way.
The dinosaur dnian was among
three prepared by Fiesta Aoats and
reviewed by memben of the Irvine
rose parade orpniz.ation. Tom Cook,
chairman of the float development
committee, said the prchistonc scene
was chosen because 1t would lend
itself to exotic floral arranacments
and draw lots of eyes to an Irvine
entry's first cnusc down Colorado
Boulevard.
. uf think It shows OUlStandmg
promise for winning an award," Cook
said. "Over the years, there have been
many floats that have been instantly
foriettable. We were look1n1 for a
float that would act pubhc1ty before.
durina and after the parade. We
(Pleue .ee IRVDU/ A2)
Baby Jesse pulls
throU.gh transplant
operatlonjust fine
LOMA LINDA (AP) - A sleepy Baby Jesse, showin$ no s1gn'I of
rejecting a heart transplanted from a brain-dead M1ch1gan infant,
opened his eyes Wednesday when his father told him he loved him
"To my amazement, he looked far better than I expected." ~1d
Jesse Sepulveda. the 26-year-old father "and probably better than
anybody expected."
Jesse's case has raised questions of medical ethics since 1t fi rst was
made public by a clerayman and a right-to-hfe actlVI St who accused
doctors of rejectm' his parenu' plea for a transplant because they arc
youna and unmamed ·
Jesse Dean Sepulveda, who was 17 days old W('dnesday. faces a
(PleaM Me BABY/ A2)
Count) statistics show that 3S
percent of housing constructed in
unincorporated areas 1s affordable to
1nd1v1duals makin' 120 pen::ent or
less than the county s median mcome
of about $42.000.
(Pleue eee A7l"ORDABLS/ A2)
Evidence
tampering
alleged in
murder case
From ttaff and wire reportt ·
\.\N BERNARDINO-A defense
attorney IK'CU9Cd ,he111frs detectives
of tampenna with evidence 1n a 81g
Bear Lake murder ca~ to prove that
his chent intended to kill a Costa
Mt'~ man
"When there was evtdcnct that was
inconsistent with their preconcc1vcd
theory, they intentionally conceal('d
and intentionally tarm~rcd with the
(Pleue Me EVID&llfe&/ A.2)
Arbitrator rules
for Newport cop
in brutality suit
By SUSAN HOWLE'M'
Of .. ~ .........
A Newport Beach police otlict'r has
~n cleared of a $200.000 eitccss1ve
fortt laMu1t brouaht in conn«uon
with a 1984 1nc1dent at a crowded
West Nt'wport part)
Newport Beach police officer Mike
Spohn wn cleared at a May 27
arbitration hcanna of chara~ made
by Gary Cox 24 and Janit'
McDonald. 27.
AccordlJ\I to Newpon Re h
pohct spokct.man ffl'nt Hams.
Spohn was called to d1«.penc a pany 1n tht 200 block., of ,Cedar Strttl at
about I a.m ~pt. 9. 1984. followina
several noise ~mpla1nt~
• • tor dtnurnina lf\c peace ancr l\('f
fnend s rcfustd to leavt and Cox
allqcdly irtbbcd the officer b,Y the
arm as ht tool McDonald into
cuitody.
"He (Co') 'lammt'd tht door on
the offi ct'r," Ham, allcted Co11. was
a!TC\ted 00 SU\plCion of H~U.ltlOI I
pohcc officer. but the Nllery cbarJct
ap1nst Co' "'(re later dropped
Co• and McDonald filed a lawsuit
1n Oranit County Supenor ('c')\an.
all nt Ynlawful em=sl an<t un~
ncus ry furcc.. Ham• Yid. They
each souaht $1 00,000 1n d.amqcs.
The ancr turned ovu Marth
I a to roun-e~intcd arbitrator WiJ.
ham Cro$by fou decu1on. acwrdtn
to Richard Murphey, the lrvift~
attorney who tt ntcd tht N~-
pun Beac h PohC'C mcnt
Murphey, wu Olc;a1:ed
with thc_oeci i "d &ll _d&im
a1nst pohn of ex force nd
unta• ful arrc I rued 1ll
Bu1ldin1 1hc P1lanm of Newron
took Dcnn11 tfollanJ I J chJlltnaina
.. '
(Pl tee PILORDl/A2) Tbe Plllrl• of Newport l9 ready to cbarter.
)
When he amved, he .,.,., 'ur-
roundtd by Cox. McDonald and
about 40 other people "'ho wcrc
" ream1na and wb1nhn " Harris
said. McDonald told .pohn her
friend wttT stayina at her home for 1
slumber party, end 1hat the) wett not
ltav1n1.
McDonald wH ~I ced undtr amsi
Oran ('"o\Jnty rt
in .
t
•
Al ~Couto I YPILOT/~,June 12.1088'
TEACHERS SEEK SMALLER CLASSES •••
rnllllA.l
tbttrtt"mben hinder that oaL
· Pope. •bo :pent his entire 21-
ttaebina C&tCCt at Manna. a~ flaudt the clilUict'• dloru to dice in · revenue from the state lottery to
clua size •"'-··'"'"'out the d' ............. ... ,. the fint ICbooJ board tn
,-iqi .. WY' 10 Ille concrete steps to
t 1ite1 of cl.asset 1n all
he said. But IOcial studies
have alwa)'I had tile moat
11Udents and continue to do so, he
Mid.
la May, trustcel approved spend-
"wSI00'-000 to hire 25 teachers, most ottbem 1or EnaJiab classes.
Social studies teachers are askma
trustees to add four teachers at a cost
"'' about S 132.000 to redu~ the
atudent-teadtu rauo to 30 9. Cur·
rcntly, thcaver"esociahtudiesda s aizc it ).4 st~nu per teacllCT. ACTOss.-
thc--bo&td rcducoons made last
month will reduce the aitc to 32.).1.
ln other areas. the tnfu ion oflottcry
money ncllt September wlll cut
l!l'l<th classes to 28 students per
teacher. forc1an tanauaae etas~.
30.).J and math, 30.9-1.
Board member Jerry Sulhvan. an
Enjlish professor at Cal State Lona
Beach said Wednesday that Pope and
h11 coiteaaue Phyllis Helland made a
sensible and modest reQuest to
trustees Tuesday niiht
"But pretty soon the well runs dry
and you may have to stop the
floodptes-that there can only be so
many (cla sroom cuts) af a time:·
But fellow Trustee Linda Moullo'?t
who M&JOred in hlJtory al U\,.;
Bcrk.tley. laid sbc .. totally qrecs"
that aocial 1tud1cs clan sizes should
be cut.
"Es.say examination• arc impon-
an t to cnuca.l think.ins.•• she sakl ... 1t•1
a temptation to &ive tNe or faltc tats.
but the really fine tcachcn slick to
cuays. They take volumes of time to
comet (because of the numben of the
students.)"
Trustees are expected to take act.ion
June 24 on the request.
The district expects to rettave
about S 1.8 m1lhon in lottery money
for the current school year. The final
installment wall come in Auaust,
officials said
BABY JESSE ACCEPTING NEW HEART •.•
ham Al
hfelona battJe apinst his own body s
att.cmpll to attack and
reject the donor heart implanted
Tuesday m a four-hour operation
at Loma Landa University Medical
Center, said Sandra
Nebllen-Ca.nnarclla. PhD . an 1m-
munolosiat specaalizmg 1n
tiuue-typina. .. My feelina 1s that 1t 1s one of the
best matches we've done so far," she
said, referrina to four previous baby-
to-babL heart transplants done at
Loma ·nda.
Chief suraeon Leonard Bailey said
earlier Wednesday that reJe<'t1on
would be unlikely for two to three
weeb, if at all. He wd Jesse was beina kept asleep on a respirator and
wouldn't receive nutn11on for
another four days, although he's
rctt1v1ng fluids intravcnousJ}
The father said lie visited the baby
T ucsday niaht after suricry and qa1 n
bnefly Wednesday mommi.
"I was telling him bow much I
loved him when be opened bis eyes,"
he said. "It was a real touching
moment."
The baby's mother, Deana BmkJey,
17, was absent Wednesday, but her
stepfather, Steven McCarthy, made a
brief statement for her, explainina
.. she is JUSt exhausted." He expressed
her patitude to the hospital and
media.
There was no post--0perauve bleed-
ing. and Jesse's vital signs were all
excellent more than 12 hours af\er the
operation, said Or. Bruce Branson.
chatnnan of Loma Linda's depart-
ment of surgery.
However, doctors acknowlcd&td
that Jesse's case opened a host of
questJons focus1na on medical etbtcs
and dec151ons that determine who
m1&ht hve and who mi&bl die.
Branson said Loma Linda's doc-
tors were unaware that another infant
1n Lou1sv1Uc, Ky., also was m desper-
ate need of a donor heart.
He said he had no information on
the other infant and oouldn•t say if
there m1Jht have been a tissue match
between Baby C.a.tvin in Louisville
and Jesse's donor, Frank Edward
C'lemenshaw IV. That baby was
declared brain-dead after his deli very
by Cacd(.ean section the same day
Jes~ was born, Ma.yJS.
"The availability of this donor
uime to us in an unexpectedly rapid
way." Branson sau1.
JAIL MONITOR PRAISES SHERIFF ...
h'omAl •
beds to all inmates and en)ured
adequate meal and sleep 11me
The Shenffs Dcpanment has also
responded to other Jud1c1al orde~.
including 1nstalhng more benches m
the holding cells and reduc 1ng 1he
noise level 1n the Jail dunng sleep
time.
In add1t1on. mod1fica11ons have
been made in the way inmates arc
eroccssed for coun appearances,
Grossman said.
A jajJ advocate had complained
that pnsoners were bean' roused
early, then herded to wa1t1ng areas
where they had no place to s11 before
being transferred to coun
While some problems !>till C:\1\1,
Grossman said he 1s sausfied that Jail
officials will eventually provide seat-
ing for coun-bound pnsoners.
Gray, angry that the county had
done nothing to relieve ovcrcrowdmg
at the main Jail 1n the years since he
issued hts first orders in 1978. found
county supervisors and Gates m
contempt of coun 1n March 1985.
Smee then. the Judge has twice
reduced the maximum number of
inmates that can be housed at the
main Jail. the county's only maiu·
mum security fac1hty.
Tbe jail may hold up to 1.400
prisoners on weekdays. 1,450 on
weekends and 1,500 on long holiday
weekends.
The shen ff has kept the Jail popu-
lation below those caps by trans-
femng non-violent prisoners to
branch Jails and using citallon-re-
leasc. detention-release and carly-
relcase programs.
Smee Apnl 25. 975 individuals
have been given misdemeanor cita-
tions instead of being booked into
Jail. At least 450 accused of more
scnous cnmes were released on
reduced or no bail. Another 1,400
inmates were let go up to five days
before their sentences were up, ac-
cording to Grossman's letter.
He said the jail population aver-
aged 1.365 inmates dunng Apnl and
1,303 dunng May.
AFFORDABLE HOUSE PROGRAM ENDING ..•
f'romAl
The county's goal 1s that 25 percent
of all housing built be affordable
But speakers from such organ11a-
11onsas the Fau Housing Council the ~e of Women Vottrs of Orange
County and the county's own Hum an
Relations Commission cn11c1zed
supervisors for setting their sights 100
low by using Orange County's un-
usually htah med1an income as a
standard for determining ehgib1lny
They uraed the board to concen-
trate on providing housing for people
w1th large fam1l1cs and those on the
low end of the income scale and not
"Yuppies" Wlth $30.000-$50,000
salaries who can afford to pay market
rates.
Several speakers related the large
numbers of homeles~ peopte 1n the
count) and "deportation'' of Orange
Count) residents to R1.,.ers1de and
Los Angeles counlles. where housing
1s cheaper. to the dcanh of .. cry low·
income housin~ locall>
i\s a concession to those asking fo r
acuon on the homeless · problesii. · ·
\Upervisors agreed to refer the matter
to the county's lnteragency (oord1-
na11ng Committee. Headed by (oun-
ty Administrative Officer Larry Par-
nsh. the: comm11tee is made up ol
representatives from the county'~ 1.b
c1t1es.
In a related matter. supcrv1~ori. al~u
agreed 10 con11n~ an 1nct'nllvl·
program for developers with t'>.Ct''I'
affordable housing credit<.
Developers acquired the credits by
co nstructing developments of more
than 25 percent affordable units
dunng the years mandatory controls
were in place
The credits ma ) be exchanged for
ince'rif1ves ltke density bonuses and
lesser requirements for such items as
streets and ut1ht1es
The need for mandatory controls
was bitterly debated dunng a mara-
thon eight hour and 1 S-m mute pubhc
heanng 1n I 98l Fifty-three speakers
spoke both for and against af-
fordab1lt ty requucments dunng the
protracted heanng. one of the longest
1n the history of the board.
MORE WRITE-IN ERRORS SURF ACE .•.
From Al
done by a machine that count\ the
number of punches nut to the wn1e-
1n slot -differs from the hand tall>
But 11 now appears that some ol the
discrepancy 1n the count ma} be due
10 the failure of some precinct
workers to add up the wnte·tn votes
And Sumner campaign aide DaHd
Paine ~1d there'"> no telling ho"'
man} votes may ha"e been lost
because voters were told there were
no legal wnte-m candidates
"There's something going on here
that f.OCS beyond superficial prob--
lems, ' Paine \Std Wednesday
.. We're talking about reall y discn-
franch1S1n& voter\
"It may be con">1dcrably more
widespread and 11 ma~ in fact cause us
to lose theclcc11on 1fwe do not prevail
on the recount " he \Std
;\poll inspector ~ho came forward
Tuesda) re .,.ealed that volunteer
workers at a Costa Me\a preornct
polling station on 'ienate \trect told
"oters there wou Id be no wn te-in
ballots allowed
r he pol1 1mpector s~ud she rec:e1 .. ed
a tekphont' call the da) befo re the
election telling hc:r there we: re no lega l
write-in.-. 1n. the campaign and to
disallow any !>Ulh requests Acwrd-
ing IC\ the 1n!>pcctor. the caller wa'> a
count) elect10m worker
On Wedne~ay. a Santa Ana poll
1n-;pector lodged a similar complam1
with the registrar's office:
Maf)onc Williams o;a1d she called a
special telephone number for precinct
workers three limes on June 2 and 3
and was told on each occasion that
there were no legal wnte-in can-
didates W1lhams. a 12-year-veteran poll
~orker said no one was prevented
from making a wnte-1n vote for
\umncr. but that such votes were not
counted A machme count shows five
wnte-1n votes at the precinct. located
at the Santa Ana Umfied School
D1s1nct offices. A
Details were sketchy 1n a third
instance. but Paine said an Irvine
precinct apparently did not allow
wntc·in votes and refused to provide
pencils to people who wanted to write
in Sumner'~ name.
''Obviously. we have some prob--
lcms." Paine s~ud.
IRVINE TO OFFER PREHISTORIC FLOAT •••
~romAl
wanted something people won't for-
get."
He said the dinosaur fl oat will
probably have room tor about six
buman nders though 11 hasn't been
determmed who the pas~n$ers will
be -or how they w1ll be attired
Today, the lr..1ne Rost Parade
Aoat Committee has a design ready
for construction and a membenh1p
hst approaching 2SO One year ago
the aroup barely emtcd A handful of
residents who wanted then city to
takt pan in the ro~ parade hcg;an
mcetana last Junt' and applied m July
for a place in the 1987 evenL
Tournament of Roses organ11cr,
only allow about 60 floau. and
compet1hon 1s keen. Entncs art rare I)
'b~":s~E Daily Pilat
MAIN Of,.C!
UO .,,_,,_, le)' '' Co.la ..._ C" .... llOdr_ lo• l !lt() ........... ~ 918J!o
accepted on the fir'it try. and 11
appeared m Januaf) that Irvine
would not be 1n the 1987 parade But
space became available and tht'
Ir.int' comm1ltct learned 1n Man.:h
that tts apphcallon had been ac-
cepted.
t-und-ra1<isng for the float 1\ now 1n
h1ah gear On Monday, about 260
people attended an art cxh1b1t and
auction that cleared about $7,500 for
the comm1tttt. As the fi,-,t maJor
corporate 'iponsor. the Irvine Mar-
rion dOnated space. food and auction
11ems.
Donna Harwood. a commJtttt
spokeswoman. said other area bu11
ncsses will be asked to donate sum,
ran&Jfli trom SS.000 to $20,000. More
fund-n11s1n& events are on the
honzon as well. she said.
Harwood said float committee
leader'i are pleased with the
cnthu'i1ast1c response from residents
interested 1n showcasing Irvine.
\ant.a Ana 1s expected to be the only
other Oranae County city represented
in the 1987 Tournament ofRoscs.
Ahhouah theorgan11erscould have
aimed for a less expensive, less
elaborate float than the prehistoric
$<ene. Harwood said the sroup chose
to ,hoot for an award-winner.
"When we started out." she a.aid,
"wt' decided we wanted to make 1 '~temcnt t~at's befittina of Irvine."
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-Of COC>'r'ieM -
VOL. 71, NO. 111
r
What do you hke about the Daily Ptlot? What
don't you like? C&ll the numbfr above and ~our
mwqe will be recorded, t,.nscribed and dc-
hvft'Cd to lM appropriate edttor.
The same 24-bour an.sv.-enna ~rv1c:c may be
utcd to record letlCrl to tbe editor on any topic.
C.Ontnbuiort to our Letttn mn mull uK.hade
their name and telephone nwn~r for vcnflc:auon.
Tells us what's on )Our mind, ,
( - -
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PILGRIM READY TO CHARTER •.•
From Al
"Now. finally. they're ready to 11ve
us the last OK." ~tty Holland said
Wednesday. "The rules and reau-
lations kept chan11n1 on us. but I
know they re excited about us operat-
ing:·
The Hollands will begm offenna
chaner tnps 10 Catalina Island and up
and down the coast this weekend.
Dennis Holland. who built his first
boat -a 30-foot ketch -as a tccn-
agl·r. s1aned work on the P1larim of
Nc.,.,pon 1n 1970. The shi pwright had
bcl·n dreaming of bu1ldma a clipper
<,h1pand 1mmer5ed h1msclftn the lore
and kgend of those famous ve~ls.
For 13 )Cars. Holland labored
through the construction. plank by
plank as ht' and Be11y raised three
daughters 1n the hull of the I 8th-
ccntuf) st}lc clipper Their home on
\Jnta Ana Street was rented out fof
1momc
The modern-day Noah's Ark.
'alucd at SI m1lhon. took Holland
Jbout 30.000 houn to build and cost
S 150.000 1n materials. But on Nov.
IQ 1983. when he launched the
Pilgrim of Newport at the Lido
Shipyard. Holland said the time and
money were well-spent.
"On my deathbed. I'll be able to
look at pictures and memdnes. not at
my checkbook." he said.
To tow the boat to Newpon
Harbor. Holland had to move the
tenants out of hi s home. demolish 1t
and move the rubble out of the way.
He then worked with city officials to
draw up a route from his home to the
water's edge.
At the Lido Shipyard. a crowd of
nearly 4.000 people cheered and
applauded when the clipper shpped
gracefully into the harbor. "I chnsten
thee Clipper Schooner Pilarim of
Ncwpon!" ~tty Holland shouted
from atop a plank perched under the
ship's bow "May fair winds follow
her."
But 1t was red tape. not fair winds.
that followed the P1lanm around
Ncwpon Harbor.
City officials said the P1lgnm was
not welcome at the temporary public
dock at Rhine Wharf 1n Cannery
V1lla1e. It would have to be moved or
Holland would be fined.
Facing c1tat1ons at $17 a day.
Holland pleaded with the City Coun·
c1I in Feburary 1985 to let him stay
two wcck!I beyond his month-long
~tay so ht' could make needed repa1n.
Counl·11 members refused and threat-
ened legal action to spur the move.
Holland's friend. Mark Howard.
came to his aid. ofTerina his private
dock at Art's Landing free of charge.
But when An's Landina was rebuilt
1n10 the current Newport Landing
development. the Pilgrim of Newpon
was forced to find another new home.
Holland sci sail in Auaust 1984 for
Dana Point Harbor. where he docked
outside the Crown Point restaurant.
There 100. the hospitality was soon
exhausted and the P1lanm of New-
port had 10 look for new accommo-
da11ons.
The Hollands found them in April
1985 at Pons-0-Call in San Pedro.
"There JUSt wasn't a pla« b11
cnouah down here to keep her." &tty
Holland said. "But we hke it 1n San
Pedro. We think we'll leave it there
"We sure don'1 want to move
aaa1n."
EVIDENCE TAMPERING ALLEGED •••
From Al
ev1denc~." sa1d Alan Spears, the
attorney for Danny Floyd W1l-
hamson. 38.
Williamson. an ex~nv1ct who has
already served terms for murder and
robbery. 1s charged with fint-dearee
murder and attempted robbery in 1ast
July's slaymiofRoss Howe, 31.
The onellme Norwalk resident
faces a possible death sentence 1f
convicted on both charges.
Spears acknowledaed that Wil-
hamson shot and killed Howe
through the windshield of Howe's
truck, but he maintained that bis
chent was drunk and didn't mean to
kill Howe
"It would have been a remark.able
shot for a sober marksman," Spears
said after making his openina arau-
ments Tuesday in Williamson's
murder Lnal m Supenor Court.
To prove that Williamson aimed at
Howe, mvestiptors failed to report a
bullet hole in the dasJ\board of
SPECIAllY FOR DAD
AND FOR YOU
Just m time for Fathers
Dsy. June 15th. ~re olftrin3
our buic wool & polycsw.
hopMck bWa for SH9.00.
Regularly Sl95.00 Six aat-
mg colors including the
Classic Navy
Abo, from Majer. tht all
wool Huddenfield cropia1
v.oorsted tlack in ci.3bt md •
tionaJ colon for S69.00.
Regularly $90.00.
Now ls che dme to trttt
Dad 6r youndf to Ihde
wardn* C1K11dals during
lht cndtt month of June
Stt you soon.
Howe's truck and intentiorullly
moved a visor in the truck's cab that
also had been pierced by a bullet, aa1d
Spean.
The prosecution's balHstios theory
did not allow for tbc possible deOcc.-
lion or ricochet or the bullet that
struck Howe in the chest, the defense
attorney told !urors.
0epuWstrict Attorney Ray-
mond t dismissed Spea.n• al-
leptions o oonspiracy..t sayina that
every purported flaw 01 the sheriff's
investipllon can be ellpl.atned.
"Any mistake becomes a con-
SPltllCY to the defense," Ha.iaht wd.
Althouah be UJUed ap.inst &Jvina
Williamson a tint-deartt murder
conviction, Spean c.a.lled bis client ''a
very seasoned and very inept crimi-
nal."
Williamson already has pleaded
guilty to six criminal characs related
to the July 27 sbootina.
Haiabt 111d witneues would testify
NfWS4oft Houra: Moa.-ft1. 10-9.
s.i 10-6, Su.a. u-'
\
·-
that Williamson confronted Howe
with a pistol as Howe walked out of
Heart's Deli near Big Bear Lake and
then followed Howe to bis truck.
When Howe alammed his truck
door and bepn to leave, Williamson
pointed his aun at the truck and fired
once Ha.aabt said. A~r the ahooti~ ~illiamson fled
m h11 car down H.iabway 18, then
accosted a family whote car was
disabled on the road and fired at but
missed a Bia Bear couple that stopped
to help the family, invest.iptors have
said.
He led sheriff's deputies on a 2~
minute chue, then wrecked his car
and wu captured.
He pleaded Juill:)' last week to six
charica involvtnl his assaults on the
two families and his attempted cs--
cape.
At the time of the shootina. Howe
was vacationina in big Bear with
friends.
a t I