HomeMy WebLinkAbout1986-07-08 - Orange Coast PilotI
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TUESDAY, JULY 8, 1986
6.0 earthquake rattles Coast
Early-morning tremor a rea's strOiigest
in 7 years, centered in Palm ~prtngs ------
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN
Of ... 0-. ........
Oranae Coast residents were rock-
ed out ofthc1r sleep early today by an
earthquake descnbcd as the stronsest
to hit Southern C.aliforn1a in seven years.
Jackie Joyner of tbe
U.8 . became tbe Ont
beptatblcte to ehatter
tbe 7 .000-polnt burler
in brealrtnt tbe world
record at tlse Goodwill
Gamea In Moecow. Bl.
World
Newly deployed Syrian
troops In Lebanon will try
to free American, French
and British hostages./ M
Entertainment
Crosby, Hope and the
Andrews Sisters live
again at Saddleback Col-
lege.Jae
Business'
The quake tfia&ered rockshdcs,
shattered windows and knocked out
power in lhe Palm Sprin'5 area, but
no 1eriou1 damage or in.Juries were
reported early today in Oranac Coun-
ty.
The earthq ua ke. reported at 2:21
a.m.. measured 6.0 on the Richter
acale and was cen1trcd 12 miles
nonbwcst of Palm Spri~ said
Dennis Meredith o f the C&lifomia
Institute of TccbnolOI)'. Power fall-
um and other damage were confined
mostly to tHe vcater Palm Sprinas
area, authonties said
··A 6.0 earthquake is tellina us the
earth i1 stm movina. and that anyone
who thinks we're not aoina to have to
think about more earthquakes in the
future is sadly miS1aken." said John
Coil, a swcturat cnatnccr based la
Santa Ana.
Oranae County Shenfrs Lt. Rich·
ard Olson 1a1d the earty-mornina
tremors prompted a dclu&e or calls to
lhe county's cmeraency 9 1 l line for
about 30 mmutes after the quake
subsided.
But 1nit1al repons from police and
fire offictals in Orange County in-
dicated no one was hurt and no
buildi np were scnously dama~ by
the earth movement. The movement
did tnaer tome buralar alanns,
however.
Spobsman for Southtm Cali-
fornia Edison Co. and Southtrn
California Gas Co. reponed no utiHty
problem s in Oranae County in con·
ncct1on with the quatt.
But im mediately south of Orange
County, an inspection was conducted
at the San Onofre NuclearGencratma
StatJon.
Edison spokesman Bob Knuch
said a "post-quake check" was con-
°""' .... ,.._., ...... I[ ......
Stock market sends the
Dow Jones average to a
record point loss In sell-
ing Monday./ A8
Tbe Cblna BOUM. a Newport Barbor landauu'k, la ID da.n&er of belnc demollah ed ln fa•or of modern boaatna.
INDEX
Advice and Games
Bulletin Board
Business
Classlfled
Comics
Death Notices
Entertainment
Opinion
Ponce Log
Publlc Notices
Sports
Television
Weather
B7
A3
A8-10
B9-10
88
84
86
A6
A3
B4
B 1-5
AS
A2
.
Famed·China H_ouse ~aycrumble
By STEVE MARBLE
Oftlle.,_.,,... .....
A colorful. pagoda-style house that
has stood as a landmark at the
entrance to Newpon Ha rbor for fi ve
decades may be demo lished to make
way for a pair of modem residences.
Known as the China House be·
cause of its Oriental theme. the home
was constructed in 1929 for a wealthy
Pasadena family. The fa mily has been
attempting to sell the house for three
years.
Now the China House 1s being sold
for an estimated S 1.35 million to a
business owned by credit dentist R F
Beauchamp, said a real estate broker
fa m1har with the transaction.
The house 1s in a small inlet called
China Cove, which was named after
the pink-hued la ndmark.
An application that wi ll permtt
demohuon of the home and allow
construction of two houses will be
reviewed by the city Planning Com·
mission Thursday.
More than one person has ex·
pressed displeasure. even shock at the
proposal
"To a lot ofpeopk 1t would be like
npping down the Balboa Pavilion or
even the Statue of Liberty." said
Kathryn Clare. a Corona del Mar
resident who said she has a framed
photograph of the house when 11 was
the only structure in the area.
"It's a landmark in a c11 ~ that
doesn't have that man ~ landmarl.s."
she said.
Roben Blake a developer in Cor-
ona dcl Mar. said the hou..e 1\ a
'i} mbol to every boater who ha!.
entered Newport Harbor
"Without landmarks like this -...e
become JUSI hke eH~I') ~t~r bus}
metropolitan area We lo'>t' th.ti
charm that makes Newport lkal h a
spec1aJ place .. Blake ..aid
•
Gerald Thompson, who lives next
door to the Chana House, said he and
other residents of China ('ovc have
even considered pooling resources to
purchase the home.
"We don't want to lose our sym-
bol." Thompson said. ''But by the
\lime token 11 doesn·1 really make
sense 10 bu} 11 JUSt to preserve 11 as a
monument."
Thompson said he feel~ sympath}
for the owners who ha'>e hoped to
find a bu) er who woulq be interested
in l.eeping the hou~ an tact
.. But nobod) e-.er made a decent
(Plea.e eee CllD'fA/ A2)
ducted at Nuclear PoWcr Unit No. 3.
No da m was found and &be unil
was contlftuina io operate todly. Tbe
plant's 1wo other units ~re ou1 of
serv1ct for repein arid refueli.,.
Knuch u1d the nucltal' P!an• 11
dcsipcd to 'Mt.bl1and sipufica.ritfy
stronacr jolts th.an today•• Quake.
The tremors did dam11t an Edison
substation in Delen Hot Springs,
uultty official said, ladi:na. to •
power ouiaae aft'ec:Una 80,000 cut-
(Pleue ... 80AD/A2J
Triangle
project
wins OK
in Mesa
Council narrowly
backs downtown
development plan
By G. JEANE'ME AVENT
a.., ... c. ••• , ......
After more than t~o hours of
emotional pubhc lcst1mony and
council debate Mondaf ntghl. the
CllSta Mesa City Counci voted l-2 to
approve a $32 mlllton mixed-use
project for a downtown area known as
The Tnangle.
Under a plan proposed by the Mola
Development Corp. of Hunungton
Beach. the 4. 5 acres bordered by 19th
SU'CCt, Newport Boulevard and
Harbor Boulevard wilt house a 150-
room hotel. 58.000 squatt feet of
commercial space and 150 apart-
ments
The de1<elopment suit faces a
heanna w1th the council members.
meeting as the Cost.a Mesa Re·
development Agency The agreement
stipulates that Mola must bu)' out
ex1st1nJ property owners 1n the bus1·
ness tnanglc
In approving L'te project. the coun·
c1I rejected a Plann1na Comm1sSJon
request that the hotel component be
deleted from the plan. AccordtnJ to
R Michael Robinson. lhe city's
senior planner the plannina com-
missioners were concerned about the
overall density of the project and the
mixture of rcs1denual. commerical
and hotel space. ·
Vice Mayor Mary Hornbuckle said
she was vottng against tht proJCCI not
on the basis of its use but because of
m densll) The concept of apart·
ment!I built over stores 1s not new. she
~Id.
"We kind of forget because we hvc
out here how. the rest of the countr)
looks." said Hornbuckle. However.
\ht ..aid "I thin~ ll's too soon for a
(Pleue eee TIUA1'GLlt/ A2)
Clark keeps reins
to transit board Man shot by cop seeks $2·0 million
Founh D1stnct Supervisor Ralph
Clark wa\ re-elected chairman of the
Orange County Transit D1stnct for
the 13th time Monday
Clark. retiring from the board of
supervisors in January, has earned
the moniker "Mr. Orange County
Transpona11on" for his involvement
with transportation matters.
Fellow Transi t District board
members have elected Clark chair·
man 13 ttmes since he joined the
board in 1971 He has been Its
chairman conunuously since 1973.
Clark wa'i a fou nd1na member of
the Oran'e County T ransportation
Commission Sapel'Yiaor Ralph Clark
By ROBERT BARKER
Ofltleo.lfr ..........
Police Sgt. Ed Deuel. the City ol
Huntington Beach and the County of
Orange were sued for $20 million
Monday by a Fountain Valley man
who wa'I shot in the face while
burglanzing a van.
Randy Lee Howe charged that
Deuel used an unlawful amount of
force when he shot Howe while
investigating the burglary at an apart·
ment complex last September. Howe
later pleaded guilty to misdemeanor
burglary charges. accordtng to his
Society's discards find a
place in·Goodwill trailer
Pat McGovern· s job is accepting things
other peopl e don 't want to throw away
By G. JEANETl'E A VENT
o.llr ..... C..11 '" ',....,
Admit 11. Almost everyone has
trouble throwina th1nas away
Thert's the tarnished tennis
trophy. the tie you didn't want for
C'hnstmasand the too-t1ah1 dress that
you're sure you'll ~ueeze into some
day
Finall) at '°me point. the closc1
JCls too full. the pra1e o verflows and
in a frtnzy, evtrvth1ng fOC o ut the
door and into the wait1n1 arms of
Goodwill -or Pat McGovern. to be
t'\aC t.
M1:Ciovrm 1\ a donation attendant
at the Goodw1ll tra1ltr in the NauaJC\
park1n1 lot near 17th trttt and
lrvint A \ltnue in C 0<1ta Me'\11 l\ht
and anothtr attendant work nt the
station seven days a week. every day
of the year except Thanksg1vina and
Chnstmas. She is responsib1le for
accepting donations and absolvina
the au11t of a throwaway society.
"My parents were aoina to throw
these out. I hate to sec books~own
away -especially hardback , "
'41Y5 a young woman lookina up t
McGovern 1n her trailer
McGovern nods and returns an
e:\pcnenc:ed "Do you want a rctt1pt., ..
The scene 1s repeated over and
ap1n each day IH the 24 Attended
Donation tatloM throughout Or·
anae County. Goodw1ll lndustncs of
Orange County wa modeled in 192•
after the tint Goodwill, which wu
founded in Bo\ton in I Q02 It pro-
ceues four m1ll1 nn pound\ ot gcxxt'
'
G. JEANETTE
AVENT
PEOPLE IN THE NEWS
each )Car. said Andrea Pronk. a
Goodwill poke woman Sale5 of
recycled aoods contnbutc 80 pcfC'Cnt
of Goodwill's budaet for the rchab1h·
tation of the .,_,,,<ticappcd. Pronk
said
McGovern. a five-year veteran
who~ mother also worked for
Goodwill. has 1otten to know th~
rhythms of the business
"It'' ~•'iOnal I c.an be busy and act
01n\'wherr from 12 to 30 donation.. a
(Pleaee tee DISCARDS/ A2)
I
f
attome1 Joh(l N f-1ood
~ pohce spokeswom an said at the
time of the burglar) that Deuel. who
had shot and l.1lkd a robbery 'iuspect
live month\ earlier. ordered Howe
and a c;econd man to freeie
Deuel fired a !>Ingle ~hot when
Howe appeared to reach for his
waistband, the \poke\woman !>aid
Howe and the ..ernnd man wen.· both
found to be unarmed. Police
theonred Deuel helicved Howe wa<,
reaching fo r a wc.-apon. e'plaining a
small radio 1n Ho....,l··~ pocket ma'
have created a hulge 'i1mtlar to a
weapon
But when Flood filed a S:!O m1lhon
claim against Deuel and the cit\ on
Dec 16, he claimed the Cit) wa\
negligent in entru'lt1ng Deuel with a
deudl) weapon. "knowing hi\
propem111 to 'ihoot and/or kill
pt·oplc ·· .
Deuc.-1 shot and killed un armt'd
robber 1n Apnl 1985 1n a shootout
out'\1de the Things for Your Htad
\hop at 410 Pacific Coast H1ghwa' 1n
downtown Huntington Beach
Deuel. whose hfe apparent!\ wa<;
c;aved h> a bullttproof vtst rece1vtd
an award for valor for the downtown
shooting.
~ .......... .,o.-1111 ........
Pat McGo•ern baa a bln fol' e•erythtn1, lncludlna atuffed
anlmal1. at her Coata Meu Goodwill booth.
..
Tht Orange ( ounty D1stnct 1\1·
toml"\ ·,Office tn\ esllgated thc Howl'
shooting and declared that Deuel was
JU!otl litd
Howc''i teeth were shattered b}
Deuel\ bullet and his tongue was
~v~red and partially paralyzed. ac·
cording to Flood. He said Howe
required a tracheotomy to hreathe.
Flood also charged that Howr
rece1-.rd "barbanc" treatment at the
Orange C. ount~ Jail Ward at tht U(
If' ine Medical (enter when h1!. arms
and legs allegedly v.ere chained to a
bed e-.en though "ht couldn't brrathc
or c;....,allo-... "
Three die
in traffic
accidents
By RO BERT HYNDMAN
Of .... 0..,,... .....
Three pt'ople Wl're killed and three
othl'r\ were in1un·d an separate traffil
llCl ident'i Monda~ night. the Cah·
fomia H1ahwa>' Patrol rtporttd
In onr arc1dent shortly after m1d-
n1aht. :!to \l"ar-0ld Wilham Watts of
Huntina111n Bc-ach and a pa~n&er.
27-\.car-old R1t.·hard Duncan of
Fountain Valle) were killed when
Wam' I Q!IO Toyota Cchca collided
with another car on Pacific Coast
H1ahwa) 1n South Laauna
"le11ht1 Watts nor Duncan wu
v.~anna a scat htlt. acrord1n1 to< HP
offictr Riek Matthew->' ITpon.
Wam wa\ 1r1vehn& ~uth on C out
Hi&hwa\ near Vl\t.a del Sol when h~
apparent I) lo t control of h1' car. u1d
C Hr \poke man ~tn Daily
.\lthouah lht pttd hmi1 on the rt d
I\ 4~ mph \\ratts was behc,cJ U> have
hct-n trnvthna at about 6~ mph
(Pleue Me CRASHU/ A2l
•
'oc.
Spira ing cost of insurance
,
leaves OC Without cover~ge-Fairweathe
Felr w..ther wu expected to continue In Southern
California for the next few ct.ye, brot<en onlY by night and
morning low c!Oud• •'°"G t"-COMt and tome high cloudlnen ov.,. the aouthem mountain• and d9Mrta. 81 LISA MARONEY
Ot .. DlllJ ........
The County of Oranae will forgo
excess liability coveraae this year and
invest the S7SO,OOO premium it
would have paid an insurance earner,
the county's risk manager said.
The Orange County Transit Dis-
trict also will ao without insurance
during 1986-87 fiscal year. ,
The high cost of excess liability
insuranQC prompted the county's
deasion to "go bare." risk manager
Maria Bastanchury said. "llhe protec-
tion is just so expensive for the
limited coverage we get," she said.
Cal Meeks, director of finance and
administration for the transit district,
agreed. The best offer the district
could find this year would have
provided one-third less coverage at
an 18 percent increase an price.
Like governmental agencies
throughout California, both entities
were taken by surprise last year by
skyrocketing insurance premiums
and dwindling coverage. '
During fiscal year 1985-86, Orange
County paid $500.000 for SS million
in insurance coverage that takes effect
after the county pays out the first $5
million per claim.
Only the year before. the county
had paJd a $55,000 premium for
coverage that began after $3 million.
Bastanchury said. The same coverage
would have rost about S7S0,000 this
year. 8astanchury said.
And since no sinale settlement out
of the $8 million to $10 million in
claims paid by the county each year
has ever breached the deductible.
paying such a premium is j ust not
prudent. she said. ·
"If you think about it, we would
have to have an incredible claim to
collect on it," Bastanchury said.
"With as high as a deductible we've
been running. you're pretty much
self-insured anyway."
Unlike some small cities which can
be financially shaken by one or more
large settlements in the course of a
year. Orange Gounty has the re-
sources to be sucoessfully self-in-
sured, Bastanchury said.
Some S 15.4 milhon wilJ be set aside
for settlements in 1986-87, she said .
At any g.i ven time. the county has
about 900 open claims. she said.
Claims against the county range
from demands to replace a Jail
inmate's lost sneakers to charges that
fau!tY road design led to a fatal tratlic
accident.
The highest claim the county has
ever pa id was $2 million,
Bastanchury said.
With excess liabjjjty insurance.
''what you're really paying for is to
handle the unforscen catastrophic
event." she said. And the odds of a
m~or · tenJement are so slim 1bat,
with premiums an cxoess of the hatf-
miU1on mark. it makes more sense to
invest the money. Butanchury said.
Similar rcasonins_ went into the
transit district's dec1$ion to become
oomplctcJy self insµ~ Meeks said.
Durina l 984-8S. the distric:.t paid
$88,000 for coverage ~hich bepn
after a $7S,OOO self-insured deduc·
tible. The next year, the district was
slammed with a n unprecedented
premium increase along with a de-
crease in coveraite.
During 1985-86, the transit district
paid $412,SOO for $20 million in
coverage. which began after it paid
the first SS million per claim. The best
offer to be found this year was
_$483.SOO for S 10 million with the
same $5 million deductible. Meeks
said.
The distnct pays about SS00,000 to
$600,000 in claims a year. Over the
past five years, only five have
exceeded SI 00.000. he Sllld.
Most claims arc for injunes suf-
fered by people wbo faJI down while
in a bus or getting on or off it. Bus
accidents also spa~ claims, Meeks
said.
The district maintains a SS million
reserve fund in addition to setting
money aside for each of its estimated
275 open claims. he said.
TRIANGLE PROJECT OK'D IN MESA •..
From Al
project hke this. lt'!> much too urban
for this area."
Councilman Dave Wheeler said.
"It's time forthec1ty of Cost.a Mesa to
get out of the commercial develop-
ment industry. We ought to give the
private sector a chance (to redevelop
the area). l don't thank we should take
people's propert) JUSt because we
want another pretl) building."
Councilman Donn Hall said. "One
of m y biggest problems 1s govern-
ment getting involved in the real
estate business. One of the toughest
things for me is to condemn some-
body's property.'·
Hall said if Mola is not able to buy
out all the owners and has to come
back to the council asking for con·
demnation proceedings. "we may
have a problem."
Hall said he favors the project on
the whole. "When the (neighboring)
Courtyards was proposed, it was too
dense, (but) people seem to like it
now."
Mayor Norma Hertzog said, "This
1s the fourth or fifth time I've been
involved in a redevelopment prOJeCt
and they're painful.'' She said
although it's new to Costa Mesa. "the
whole idea of a m ixed use has been
tried."
Hertzog said she believes the
residential component will mitigate
an increase in traffic. "There would
be far more traffic 1f we had an all
commercial project. ~
Councilwoman Arlene Schafer said
she believes the Mola development
"is a good. comfortable project. We
need the prOJCCt as much as the
project needs us," she S!"1d.
CHINA HOUSE MAY BE DEMOLISHED ...
From Al
offer." Thompson said. "It's such a · 'had an exclusive listing on the home
unique house and 1t would be a shame for a year.
to lose it. But what can vou do"" The house actually sits on four lots.
The house. decorated w11h or-two of which are underwater, Cote
namental dragons and a bnghtl) said. It was constructed on solia
colored bndge that leads to its own bedrockandoutcroppingsofrocksjut
pnvate beach. went on the market in into several room of the three-story
1983 for $2. 7 5 million. said Bill Cote. house.
owner of a Newport Beach real estate The third story 1s detached from
firm. the rest of the house and can only be
"I 1 was built for a wealth\ a11orney entered via an outdoor staircase. Cote
from Pasadena who JU St happened to said he v.as told 11 was built for the-
like Onental themes," said Cote. who family's children and intentionally
cut off so the children would not
bother their.parents.
An elevator connects the first and
second floors. The rooms are decor-
ated with Oriental artwork and the
floors are hardwood.
Still. the house is tiny and con~ins
only three bedrooms and a kitchen so
small it seems 10 have been ao
afterthough. Cote said.
"It's reall> onl) a beach cottage."
Thompson said "But it's an onl)-
one~-a-kind beach cottage."
DISCARn·s FIND A HOME AT GOODWILL •..
From Al
dav."
The pace gets hectic in spnng when
people do their spnng cleaning. Just
before school starts as another bus}'
time, she sa)s And between
Thanksgiving and Januar). "every-
thin,g breaks loose " People clean out
their closets to make room for
Christmas. she says . .._
As she works and talks. an older
man pulls up to the side of the trailer
and hauls out an eiterc1se slant board.
"Do you take these"" he ask!.
tenati vely .
"We surf""' do'" McGovern calls
back.
More confident no"'. the man
proudly announces each item he
unloads.
Despite its torn cond1t1on. McGo\ -
em passes no Judgment on the 'ilant
board or anything else the man take'>
out. "We're not allowed not to take
1t." she says. "It's against polic) ..
There's a place for each donauon
Between donors. McGovern sorts the
merchandise into v.1re cages. tote
boxes and barrels. lnto the clothing
cage go adult pants. skirts, dresses.
blouses and shirts. Hangers are re-
served for finer ladies· and men's
wear, she says. Sheets. pajamas and
blankets are stored in a large tole box
Shoes. slippers, roller skates. cowbo\
boots. rain boots and any oth,er lond
of boots go into a shoe ba!'fcl. She
pairs the shoes with rubber band<; or
ties them by their laces to keep them
together.
Garments with holes 1n them end
up in a ra$ bag.
"One time we go1 .a pair of pants
with one of the legs cut out ... -;he says
with a laugh At the Santa <\na
processing plant. rags are baled and
sold as salvage.
Since Goodwill opened 11s ancnd-
ed donation st.auons. they get bener
donations, she says. "We get stuff
from Nordstrom. the Broadway and
!imall 5pec1alty shops.
Before. when the chan1y had "the
hllk houses." people would steal. c;he
says. "They would stack their kids
MAIN OFFICE
))I) """' 9•1 ~· <•<I~ ......... • "'' •<kl••" Bo• !>6C .<J<tt• .,..,.,. C..A ~iS)f
inside and kids would grab things."
<\ middle-aged woman unloads
se-veral bags of clothing. "11 's cleaned
and pressed." she ~) s
"She's a regular." McGovern. ~aid
Y.1th a smile.
McGovern. "ho has worked as a
nurse's aide and a hotel room attend-
ant. said the JOb. which starts off at
minimum wage. has its ups and
downs The work 1s dusty. she sa)S.
and pulling down.the trailer's heav1.
roll-up door can be a chore 1f t~
v. heels aren't workrng ngh l.
.\nd then. there are the scams One
man came up to her. demanding a
receipt for merchandise-he said he
donated 1n Corona del Mar. McGu\ -
ern pohtel) ewlained that receipts
are issued onl) where the donatrnn 1s
made.
"I didn't tell him we didn't have a
loca11on 1n Corona Del Mar ··
But McGovern says she likes the
independence of the JOb. "You don't
have people telling )OU what to do."
..\ young man backs up to the trailer
in a 'an. ''Here's an eight-track
pla)er. a pool suck so another guy
can grow up to be Minnesota Fats or
something." He looks up from his
unloadmg "Do vou remember me''"
"No ·· McGovern. replies mauer-
of-facth
.. , wac; here two weeks ·ago .. he
savs .
·MrGo-..ern look!> at him for a
moment .. Wasn't }'Our s1ste(s name
Bronw)n'1"
"Yes ... he -.a)s with a wide gnn.
"Do vou want a receipt'?'.
He's In a hurry. but McGovern says
she alway~ 1nes lo ask. Most don't,
she said. except at certain tames oft he
year "hen the)'n: thinking of tax
writeofTs "It's lxttcr to be safe than
c;orr)." she says
Aftt>r the last per<>on has left.
McGovern tallies up the number of
donors for the day and closes the big
door The next da~ starts a holiday
weekend. It'll be slow and she can do
her sorting. she sa)s, as the steel lock
clicks into place
CRASHES KILL THREE ...
From Al
The car strut k a guardrail, lhen
veered into the north lanes where 1t
collided w1 th a 1986 Toyota pickup
truck dnven by 20-year-old Robert
Reynolds of Orange. Dally said
Reynolds sufTered moderate in-
1unec; and was treated at M1ss1on
Communll) Hospital in M1ss1on
VieJO.
Another of Watts' passengers. 28-
year-old Willy Barron of Capistrano
Beach, also was taken to Mission
Community Hospital with moderate
inJunes. She was listed today in falf
condition al the hospital's intensive
care unit.
In a separate accident. 17-year·old
Jason Brett Lance of Laguna Hills was
killed when he lost control ofh1s 1982
Datsun 280Z and crashed on Oso
Parkway in Laguna Hill~.
Has passenger. Enc M. Jacobson.
17. of La$una Halls. escaped with
moderate anjunes. He was treated at
Mission Community Hosp11al fol-
lowing the 10:25 p.m accident and
was released ·
According to officer Roland
Barry's report. Lance and Jacobson
were traveling west on Oso near West
Haven Dnvc in excess of 100 mph
when Lance lost control of the car and
u swerved to the left
Lance apparently ovcrcorrccted
the steering, sending the car into the
curb where it struck a sign and
overturned. Daily said.
The two youths, who were not
wean ng seat belts, were thrown
through the T-top of 1he car as 11
turned over.
Delly Piiot
Dell very
I• QuerentNd
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M<>llday Ftl(Mly 11 yo" t)c
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!> JO 0 "' CA~ i.t0<e 1 0 "'
•nc:I y<M COJly Oft~ ~ ,,..._.a Cooy"Q"' 1993 Ot•"O<' C.oHt Put>o •~"'9 Comp1r1 No
~ t10'.a tflultretlOf"ll .0•0t1.e1 mana;o or aov*'l•M
!Nr'll ,,.,"1 ~ay be el>'OOUCed ''"''¢';! ~ ·t• ~·
,,,_.,,. a' cooy•IQl'I Cl"'""'
5,...-: rtJ i•j,t pot!~ i.•• 0 •' Vt1A U• ~ •' f "' •
PS •• 81)() s .... rrM.' [ r "')t' t' ~ "'' # ' c, -rH"f.t'\!" °' ....... s 7 00 IT'lt',,., .. ..
VOL. 79, NO. 1&1
r
What do you like about the Daily Pilot? What
don't you like? CaU the number above and your
messaae will be recorded. tr1nscnbed and de·
livered to the appropnate editor .
The Yme 24-hour answenna service may be
ust:d to record letters to the editor on any topic
Contnbutors to our Lettert column must include
their name and telephone number for venfkauon.
Tells us what's on your mind.
( (
Saturo.ty 111a !lutlcMv II
you do nat '"'.,,,. yCM coov by ' • "' tell O.l(lf• tO • ITI ana YOUI CoPy ... l>f!-""
Clroul•tlon
T•lephonff '
"4')<11
0••"11" (.oor•t, •••8' tcJ..m
Along the Orenge Cout It wlll be fair Wedneaday but IOme
low ctovd• along the cout during late nlQht and early morning
hou,... HIQh• at tti. belchee Wedneeday 72 to 75. Lowa tonight eo to 84. Hlgh1 In the valleys Wedneeday &e to 99. Lowa tonight 68 to83.
From Point Conception to the Mexl~ Border -In'*
watera: Light vana~ wind• night and morn.Ing hours becoming
WMt to eouthwat 10 to 16 knot• during Wedneeday afternoon.
U.S. Temps
to 10 .. 77 H 71 :: ~}
80 13
102 ...
88 .. 11 se
75 57
" 78 u 51 as 48 e. 78
83 le ....
75 52
... 81
SI 80
80 73 ee 78
100 81 95 n 118 1IO
... 7•
11 ee
l!/JJ1!th... 6_, ~-~~ ,fllONTI:
'9~~~ W11m-COld._.
SllOwt ra Allin n.imta Snow OCcWed..,... S1111onaty Ay
NellelfW W•"* ~ NOAA U S Ceo! ol C:O-.c.e
Calif. Temps Tldea
HIQll, low, IO< 24 llOur9 endlnQ al 5 Liii a.lcenlleld 111 115 Seooncl 1ow furel(a 82 5" 9-.:1 l\lgfl ,,_ 83 87
L.aMUI• .. 118 Loe~ 81 83 Oeldend 70 55 PMO Roblee I& $t
'*lwOOO City 78 S8 ·--•o 80 .U
TOOA't • 11 p.m.
IO'Hp.m
•DNHOAY 6;6' ......
12.Hpm.
4:51 p.m
10'111 p.111.
27
10
-0.5
3.7 u u
Salin• 7o 5" 1un .,... lodey et 1:07 p.m., rtMe lllfl Olego 14 85 w,....__.-11 5:<19 a.m. and ........... 8911 Franc:ieCO 89 5e ---· e.nta Bwbara 74 52 811:07 Pm
StO<*IOl't 88 811 Moon aeta todev at 9:•2 p.m . n.e
Hlgll, IOw tor 2• llCMt ending Al 5 p.m W«IMadey at 1:87 Lm arlCI Mii al APPie Vfl#I( 93 57 10. 18 p.m
Batato.it " 64 BIOS-75 45 8i9hop lfl 5,
Blythe 1oe 11 -----------catlll!!• 10 se ~!:°' ~ :; Surf report
MOl'tt•ey 70 115 Newpot1 8Mct1 71 81 LOCATIC* llDDl"I C •
Onlarlo 80 81 "°" Palm Sp(lnQI 107 71 Hurrtlngton e.dl 14 l1llr
Paeedetle 98 5e Rlwr Jiany. HeWpol1 1-3 ttlit ~ 82 57 40ttl ,.,..., ~ 14 llir s .... e..n..dtM .. eo 22nc11tree1, ~ 1-3 111r
San Oebr1e1 17 117 llalOoe Wedge 2-3 hlir
SM JON 11 57. U1Qu!1t l..cil 1 C>OOf
Senta Ana IO 8 I Sen '*"-!e 1·2 poor
&ante Cruz N 52 WatwT..,-,p"'7
TllllOe v.-, 14 31 Swell OINcflOn: loutll v_.,,,.. Vly 12 se ~
fi!!~KE HITS ORANGE COAST ...
tomers. Edison spokesman Bob Hull
said electricity was restored to almost
all of these customers by 8 a.m.
But he said customers in the Palm
Springs-San Bernardino area were
being asked to curtail use of air
conditioners and other appliances
because of a strain on the system.
Temperatures in the Palm Spnngs
area. however, were expected to peak
at 109 degrees today.
Today's earthquake was the largest
in Southern California since 1979,
when a quake in the Imperial Valley
hit 6.6 on the open-ended Richter
scale. A quake registering 6.S killed 65
people in the San Fernando Valley 1n
February 1971 .
Today's quake was felt from San
Diego to the San Fernando Valley in
Los Angeles. 120 miles north. Radio
stations in Lake Havasu. Anz .. and
Las Vegas reported the quake was felt
there as well.
"A lot of people were JUSt pouring
out of my apartment complex into the
parkinit lot and the street to get away
from the buildin$," said Jack
Kowalec, assistant cuy editor of the
Desert Sun newspaper in Palm
Springs. "There was a little bit of
panic, a Little bit of hysteria."
Several minor inJuries were re-
ported in that area, and damage
estimates were expected to mount as
businesses opened and took stock of
broken windows, cracked ·walls and
merchandise dumped from the
shelves.
Among those reported injured was
a prisoner at a Riverside County
ho nor facility, said Riverside County
shenfrs Sgt. David Duncan.
.. Apparently, when the earthquake
went off he was sleeping and u
startled ham. so he )Umped through a
window and cut his hand." Duncan
said.
Some rockshdes were reported on
Riverside County roads. 1nclud1ng
the Ortega Highway, leading to Or-
ange County
Structural engineer Coil of Santa
Ana said Oran e County I'> mort"
likely 10 suffer damage in a quake
associated with the Newport-In-
glewood Fault. which runs through
the Costa Mesa-Newport Beach area.
Today's quake was attributed to the
San Andreas Fault.
"This was Mother Nature telling us
she's still out there," Coil said. "But
these small quakes are welcome to
some extent."
lie said that smaller quakes relieve
underground tension that migb\..
otherwise continue to build toward a
more powerful earthquake. Coil said
smaller quakes also remind Cali-
fornians of the need to build struc-
tures capable of withstanding strong
earth tremors.
Gerard Pardoen, associate
professor of civil en&incering at UC
Irvine. said he's anxious to see how
today's quake affected the new San
Bernardino county building in
Rancho Cucamonga, which was con-
structed with "rubber bumpers" to
absorb ground movement.
Begins Wednesday ,July 9 at 10 a.m.
Sew up big savings.
•
FiahiotConteat
set In lruDttiigton
The annual fishinf contest for boys and airl
from 6 to l ~years old Wl 11 be held July lo at the end
of the HuntJnaton Beach Pier from 9 to 11:30 &.m.
Co Co-sP,Onsore~ by the Tackle 8ox and lhe city•a
mm11n1ty Services Department, the event will
offer hundreds of prizes. &Jona with special awards to
the best Huck Fmn and Becky Thatcher costumes
Children should rqister at ute Tackle 8ox prior to the contest.
Pilot columnl•t to •peak
, Jim Wood, founder of Unique Homes m
Corona. del ~o.r and a weekly columnist for the
Dally Pilot, wt11 speak at a pubhc meeting Thursday
at 8 a.m. at the Costa Mesa Community Center I 84S
Puk Ave., Costa Mesa. Wood will offer an an'alysis
of the Orange Coast area.
Single• night at theater
A special performance of the musical revu~
''Jum pin', Jive and Jitterbu'" at Sadd1eback Coll~e
1s scheduled for JuJy 18 in the ooll~e's Studio
Theater as part' of the Community Service Depart-
ment's "Solo Fli_ght" pro~m for single adults. The
fee 1s $8 and reg1strauon information is available at
582-4646.
CPR classes at ha.pltal
Saddleback Community Hospital in Laguna
Hills 1s offering four-hour Heartsaver classes
designed to help people offer fast, effective first aid
in ca~s of hart attack, drowning or other emergency
s1tuauons. Classes are held from 5 to 9 p.m. on the
second Wednesday of each month at the hospital,
24451 Health Center Drive. The cost is $5 and
further information 1s available at 770-3725.
Fitness program offered
A ~ogram for those who want to firm and
condittofllfleir bodies without the muscular stress of
aerobic exercise is bein~ offered at the Dana Point
Youth and Group Facility in Dana Point fllarbor
near the Manne Institute. Body in Motion insures
progress with regular fitness testing and personal
feedback re~rts. Call Maureen Stevens at 496-4095
for further information.
Drug abuse film slated
St. Joseph Hospital of Orange will sponsor a
film festival for fa mily and friends of alcohol and
drug abusers on" Medical Aspects of Co-Dependen-
cy" Thursday from noon to I p.m. or from 7:30 to
8:30 p.m. The program is free and will be held in the
Sister Elizabeth Building at the hospital. Call
771-8040 for more informat ion.
Travel films planned ··· ·
The Newport Beach Pubhc Library's Manners
Branch. 2005 Dover Drive. w11l hold a special
'"Vacauon Getaway" matinee J uly 19 at 2 p.m. The
prosram will feature three films -"Brake Free,"
"Windfl1ght" and '"The Al ps ... The public 1s invited
to the 50-mmute event and admission is free. Call
644-31 4 7 for more information.
Reunion scheduled
The Class of 1966 from Sunny Hills High
School in· Vullenon has sched uled its 20-year
reunion for July 19 and is looking for classmates who
ma} have gotten out ef touch. Members of tha t class
should contact Sunny Htlls High School Class of'66
Reun10n Committee al 312 Carma Ave., Placentia
926 70, or call 524-8426 after 5 p.m.
An Invitation
Attention organization presidents on!-1 secretoriet: We
wont to help make your upcoming event\, mffting1, seminars
~d fundroiwrs wccft1ful. Send brief onnovnc:ementl
induding time, ploce, cost (if ony) ood o phone nvmber for
·· odditionol information to: Bulletin Boord, Dolly Pilot, P.O.
Box 1 S60. Co1to ~. 92626. .
Repom of your club or orgoni1otion's activities -wch
os community '4tl'Vlce projects or eledion of officen -
should be directed to the community newt editor crt ftle 1ame
odd_reu. Non-mvmoble block ond white photogroph1 are
wekome.
Tuesday, July 8
• 6:30 p.m., Irvine City Council. City Council
Chambers. 17200 Jamboree Blvd. ·
• 7 p.m., Huntln1ion Beacb Union High Scbool
District. District Education Center board room.
10251 Yorktown Ave.
• 7 p.m .• Huntington Beacb City Scbool District
. D1str1ct Education Center. 20451 Craimer Lane.
PoucE Loe
B~atyards expect to see pal
By PAUL AJlClllPLEY
.... DlllW ........
Oran~ Coast boatyard ope111tOr$ won•t
be surprased if a chemical in paints used on
boat bottoms is banned.
Mo~ than 20 year1 qo the chemical
tribut,Ylttn. or TBT. was discovered to bt
effc:ct1 vc at kccpi na hulls clean of barnacles
and alpc for lonaer periods than reaular
cC'>pper-based paints.
But a scientist at Scripps Institution of
Occanoaraphy says the chemical could bt
po1sonin1 marine life and recommends
that it be banned on pleasure craft.
Boatxard operators aren't certain what
that will mean to their businesses. b.ut
thC'y've St"Cn 1mi 1ar acuons an \he put.
"I think thc~'s some lfUtb co that. 11·1
probably tox 1c, •• Atd Pete tcwan of South
Coast Boat YanS Int. in Newport Btach. "'But most of the th1nas in pe1nt are. The
bottom paint isn't a sood tbint. a.nyway."
Slcwan said thcJovemmeni has banned
other paint inare<Sients in the past. like
cenain leads and arsrnic, so rcmovu~a
TBT wouldn't be a surprisr.
He estim.ated only 20 percent of the
paints used on boat bouomscontain TBT.
Nevertheless, it's ,cnerally the best paints
that have TBT in them.
Paul Coleman of Larson Shipyard in
Newport !!.each said paints with TBT are
tou&her and last looser.
"They're not a~ vy prrttniqe, ..
Colctnan said ... , think i.hey•tt \dCd a
binder:·
The ht&h l arade of paint uttd at
Latson lw 3.4 l)Cf'CCnt TBT. 6'7.6 peft'enl
cupn:>us oxide and l 9 percent inen
inJfCdi.tnts, he said.
'People who plan eucndcd tnpt or who ·
want to minimiu upkeep ask for pajntJ
containina T8T, Coleman said.
Wanner water conditions in recent
years also have incteased its use.
.. Si11ce EJ Nino we've had a lot of pttn
arowth and shell arowth, and have sold
more TBT," he u id.
If TBT were ttmoved from painu.
ownel'1 would M\'I: so dr)' d04111cir ~
for tTpai mote often. he said.
Antidpatint a tf>vcmment ben. Ce>i-
emaa 11 coMickriDJ usiq ~ tldle s*•tt
that conwe ~T.
"I WU talkida lO m wife .........
what's in 110d, bttaUJit -we miaht not be able 10 ,et n anymore ... be said.
That's lbe pl of Edward Ooktbera ••
Scripps. He·s asktd the eovemmenl for an
immedia1e ban. ·
Ht said TBT is the m06t poi.onous
substance ever intentionally put in coastal
watcr5, and levels measumt in Southern·
California cnarinn far C'Xceed wbafs saf't
for orpnasms like mUJK.ls and o ystm.
Too many people
blamed for unrest
on Balboa ·Fourth
By STEVE MARBLE
OflMDelly ..........
For Johnny Z, the Newpon Beach police
ruined the best party he's auended this
summer.
''This cop puts his billy club under my
chin and there's this other cop standing
there and I say, 'He can't do that, can he?'
And he says, 'He's doing It.' "
Johnny Z. who said he has abandoned
his true name for the summer, was one of
dozens of revelers on 1he streets 1n West
Newport on July 4th when pohce decla red
an unlawful assembly for the entire area.
know about everybody else but I aot o ut"
Several people satd the police seemed to
'Jhow great re-stramt as they were taunted
and jeered by party-minded youths.
For the most part, the West Newport
neighborhood along Balboa Boulevard
and Seashore On ve looked none 1he-worsc
for wear tht' day after the long Fourth of
July weekend.
He wasn't arrested, but the street party
he was attending was cut off. Police said
·\they were pelted with rodes, bottles and
firec rackers in one of the most v10lent
Fourth of July episodes m years.
A shoppmg center at the 10t<"rsect1on of
Balboa and 32nd Stttet, where much of the
disturbance was centered, was jammed
with kids on skateboards, young men
carrying surfboards and bathing sun-clad
women.
Bumper stickers proclaiming '"Work 1~
For Those Who Don't Know How to Surf"
were plastered on <;everal cars. A drug store
was advert1S1ng a special on thong.s.
A happy 102nd
Harriet Morton, celebrated her 102nd birthday last week at the Park
Superior Convaleaent Hoapltal ln Newport Beach. About 30 patlenta
and a .handful of relatives joined ln the featlvlttea which included
balloona, cake and lee cream and a alnging telegram. Morton, wbo
hu outlived her four children, bad attended an lndependence Day
barbeque before her party and wu •till going atrong at the end of the
day. Helpln& her celebrate 18 hoapltal volunteer Florence Carneal.
Portable school plans
opposed in Huntington
By ROBERT BARK.~R $90.000 pro1ec1. She said '>he will appear at
Of u.. Delly""' ltafl tonight's school d 1Mnct board meeung and
Hun tington Bcacry City School Distm t a11cmpt to convince trustees to change
plans lo locate three portable school their minds
buildings at Sl'wers Middle St:hool haH' School officials are addmg 1hc Portable
come under fi re. buildings -three on the cast -;1de of the
Susan Comennsk), who lives cas1 of the school next to 1he homes and two bu1ld1ngs
school on Cohasset! Lane. claims 1ha1 1hc on the west side -to accommodate
portable bu1ldmgs will block her ~cenic siudents transferring from Gisler School
views and will put ch1ldrl·n next 10 h<,'r next Septem ber.
house all da) long. Otlinals closed (11~ler in June 1n a cost-
The move w11l"rcducc the value ot her Sa\lng move and hecau<,e of dechmng
two-story $200,000 houo;e b' $10.()()(J 10 enroll men I. Sowers. localed al 9JOO In·
SI 5.000. she said · d1anapohs .\ve. will hou~c appro,1matel)
I. I SO pupils next fall (omennsk} also da1m\ that d1,1nct
offictals have been "overbearing .. because
they allegedly d1dn '1 consult ne1ghhors
before embarking on the apprwornatel~
Superintendent of Schools Diana Peter'
said lack of space a1 1hc '>l'hool prnh1b1t'
the relocation of the portahk building\
"There were Just way too many people."
said Michelle Turner. a Balboa resident
"There's no way you're not going to have
problems.·•
"I'm not sure l'.d call it a riot. I saw some
fights and 1t was prett} 1ammed." said
Brad Jorrey, a Fullerton resident sta} mg
wtth a relati ve 1n Balboa.
.. h looked pretty intense when the police
came down the street. They had on
hel mets. the whole bll." he said. '"l don't
"The kids come down here to part>
That's the way it's always been," said an
employee at one shop in the center ... ,
don't th ink they mean any harm. They 1ust
get earned away sometimes.''
Many said the) were unaware there had
been any problem!>
"We just got here.'' said one man·
admonishing his two young l htldrco 10 tw
careful in the surf. "We alway!> !>ta~ home
on the Fourth."
Two Coast entries
drop out of bike race
By PAUL ARCHIPLE Y
Of IM Delly Not It.ell
T"o of three Orange ( oas1 b1cycl1sts
were forced out of the .. Race Across
l\Menca .. Monday. as 1he 1hird pedaled
through Flagstaff JUSt three hours behind
the leader
Matt Beerer of Huntington Beach was
averagmg 17.5 mph tn the 3.100-mile race
from Huntmgton Beach 10 l\1lanuc City.
'>a id spokeswoman Kathleen Burke.
Beerer. 23. was in fourth place overall.
c;he said. ·
The race began Sunday with 26 entrants.
including six women, vymg.for a p1ect' of
1he $25.000 purse offered by McDonald's.
1 he race sponsor
Leading 1he pack was Pele Penseyres tif
Fallbrook who had passed through
Flagstaff Monda) afternoon and wa~
headed along Interstate 40
He was averaging 18 3 mph 1n the race
Aurke said
The 43-year-old Penseyres wa!> the 1984
"inner of the longest non-stop bicycle race
in the world
The race 1s considered non-'>top because
nders travel as long as thl'Y can. \top and
'>leep for bnef period~. then continue i.a1d
race d1rec1or John Manno
The world record ~t last year 1s nine
days. two hours and s1~ minutes. he <;a1d
But the race came to an abrupt hall for
1wo other Orange Coast men when 1he1r
support vehicles faJled them. Burke said.
Cun Eu!). 37. ofHunungton Beach qu11
JUSI before 7 a .m. Monda' due 111
mt'l"han1cal problems. Burke r,a1d 'ihc
couldn't pro' 1de more detail~.
Dennis Bock. 1l<. of Co-;1a Ml·sa.
dropped out in I ndu' when h11; suppon 'an
hroke down. she ...i1d ·
..He had no sponsor!I, and had '>pent a Im
gct11ng his van going before the ralc." \he
~Id
"He delayed calling ui. bctau'>l" llc hnl)l'd
IO get the van fi1(ed . but there "l'rl' '>l'rtOU'>
mcchamcal problems.
"He wa<, absolutt-1\ hearthm~en
Burke said. ·
Leading l~t: "orr:icn Monda~ 'Aa\ \hcHl\
Ha)den-Clilion ol l rrecnsboro N ( '!he
was r1ghth OYerall. Burke said
San Diego mayor takes oath of office
\.\ '-f)J EGO I.\ Pl -St·ek1ng 10 pul lhc
lit~ s '"<>}'car'> of pol1t1cal turmoil hch1 nd .
l\1aureen O"Connor spoke of restoring
l"<1mmun1t) '>Plflt a~ \he .... ac; , .... orn in ab
1h1• l'lt\ ·c; fir'>! \\Oman ma\ or.
The 1A.1nd·Y.h1pped ba~·s11.k 1n.111p,LirJ
11on Monda\ C\ t:ning caml" morl· than
three: vl'ars alter C )'( onnor fir..1 ran h1r 1tw
cit~ 's "top elt:c1ed office 'hi· 111'1 10 R•1tH'r
Hedgel·ocl 10 I ~8.\
Assault charges dropped
against ex-pitcher Odom
••• ( ulpnt\ ~tole 1v.o fire e\t1ngu1sher<,
and food :tftt"r enlcnng the (i1rl<, and
Bo~~< luh al 9141 P11>nl'1·r through a
s1Jc v.1ndo"
Coat.a Meaa
R1no<.ulars and a tonl bm. all ">Hirth
$100. were reported <;tolen from ,,
home 1n the l 7CXl blocl of Pomona
o\\cnue between 11:50 pm "iund.i\
and 7 2'\ a.m Monda}'
trom ltWI) Sk) Park Blvd oq·r 1he
v. eek end A. w1ndo" was sma\hl·d I\~
gain t:nlt)
Laguna Beach
The owner of a wh1tt' 1984 A.ud1
_.1100s reponed 1he car stolen Mon·
da' nn South ( ·oast H ighway • • •
•\ndrea'> reponed \unda) thal 'ornl'
one entt-r~d h1~ open garage .ind \tole
two sunhoards and a men\, 1A.l"l"u11
The loo;s wa!> estimated <11 \ 1,11 • • • .\ Hunt10g1on lkad1 rr'1J1·111 ll'
ported ~unda\ that hi\ n·J I llS i
lo\.ota (el1rn wa<, \1okn \\hilr par~etl 1n a Fountain \'allC\ apart·
ment tarport on the I ,nllO hlc1CI.. of
'Ylodoc Ttw 111.,, \\ii' l''t1matl·d 11
SR.000
By PAUL ARCHIPLEY
Of _O..,Notl._.,
Charges of assault wi lh a deadly
\.\capon were dropped aga inst former
ma1or kaguc pitcher John Odom
Monda}. and 1hc ease will be d1s-
m1,~l·d if hl' continues to receive
wun,l'ling. h1'> attorney said
Odo111 loown as "Blue Moon"
< >dmn \\.hen ht pitched for the
1);1kli1nd .\\ in the 1970s. was
l h.11ged loll11w111g a Dec. I 0 nightlong
'tanJofl ""1th I ounlatn Valle) pohce
"'h1·11 hl' alll'gedl} held his wife 1n
1lw11 honll' al gunpo1n1. \ s~ .\ T un11 waited outside
< >dnm«, fountain Valley apanment
Newport Beach
A. ... and.ii damagrd 14 care; parked
on 1he 1600 block of Dove Street by
o,prnying a black. oily substance on
cal h vehicle Many of the cars were
l''\JX'n\IVC 1mpon model~ •\n CStl·
mall' of damage'> ha' not becn
u imp1kd • • • ·\ 1h1t'I entt'rcd ao unlocked re!.1·
dl."1KC on the 2900 block of Wc~t
<lt:e:.1nfion1 and stoic about $1t)O 1n
rn<;h. I ht' rc~udc-nt we\ sitting on ·a
tronl pm1 hat the t1mt' of the bur&lary • • • Neorlv s~ 000 lt'I Vitko equ1pmen1
wa\ -;1olen Imm John < reel \d\ot.'rtl'i·
1ng. I IOI R.1\\ldl D11H'
for six hours before toss10g 1n tear gas
canisters to flush him out.
Odom was despondent over losing
h1sJobat Xerox in Irvine last year and
not being able to find a new JOb, his
wife Gayle said.
He lost his job shon l} after tx-ing
arrested on suspicion o f sel li ng a
small amount of cocaine. charge'\ he
denies.
He'll return to court Jul) 21 to lacc
those charges.
"He feels al least he has half his
troubles bchmd him ... said a11orney
Stephen DeSalcs. "I'm delighted w11h
the result."
DeSalcs said Odom was innocent
• • • A rock was thrown through a
. window of the Boys and Girls Cl ub.
2555 Vista dcl Oro. • • • A b_u_rglor ransacked a residence on
the 1900 block of Vista ctcl Oro and
'itolc two gallon Jugs cont1un10g a total
of S200 in co ms.
Huntlntton Beach
Thieves stoic a pur~ from lht'
floorboards of a 1980 Plymouth
parked at Central Rap\l~t Prc\Chool.
5172 Mc Fadden A vc fhe pur'c
contained$ l ~cash. a check mndc out
to the vu um for SI ~o and 1lkn11fi
cat10n papc.•f"I
nf lhC C1Ka1nt: l'harges and W8'i
op11m1stll the former ballplayer
would"'" that 1·ao,c
.. lie rl'ally d1dn·t do 1t. and I thin~
Wl' can proH' 11 II> a tun ... OcSales
..aid
Wc'itm1nster Murnnpal ( ourt
Judgl' William MO< k \'«" 'k!l1sfied
v.1th 1h1.· progrl'')\ or .1 l oun'>chng
program Od11m l'nll'n'd c:arlter 1h1'I
year
Odom wa" dtrel ll'd to con11rHH'
w11h coun~ling. If hl' ;n 01d\ further
offenses. thl' entire case that included
charges of assault. rl''1'\l1ngarrec;t anJ
three other m1c;deml'am11 lOUnl'i
wuuld be d1sm1sscd. Mod <,aid
• • • Bul"jllars. poss1bl}' U\1ng .1 r·•" ~e\
c;tole S225 from a church nl11l"e •H \\
W1llnd''>. 18631 < hapcl • • • Som~onc 'it Ole a $2(10 gra~ \drn inn
rnotocrosc; bicycle 'alued a1 $2hll
from an unlocked llarage 1n thr t><)(lO
block of Star'ih1ne • • • Th1eve, \tole a S2.400 watch Imm
1ht· kitchen wbk ;lfkr l'Oll'rtng .1
home in the 200 hl<)('K of r-rnnkl111t
1hrnu~h un unhl<."kl·d do01 • • • Hurglat' prn·ll opc.·n 41 front J1\Cll .11
R.~n \1ct.tl I \tiOI lnc111c.tf\ .lnlt
rook nrnne\ Imm iht l)l"ll\ 1.1,h
ll1:t\\1·1
• • • ..\ lash register was stolen from
Spectrum Graph1cc,. BJ f 111h \t
between Thursda) 6:30 pm and
Monc1ay al Q a.m Entry wac, made b~
ga1111ng acce~smg 10 an at11l door :ind
kicking out the dry wall • • • Power tools worth S 1.000 "t:rl'
reported ~tolen from •\rdco ~ood·
working. 18'5 Wh1ll1t•r .\vc. be-
tween 8 a m. Thur!>da\ ;inc.I noon
Frida} ••• Pr) marks wc1c found on a rear
door at 01opath ( 11 , l 101 Harhm
HI\ d . b<.•tween I 0 pm Thur,da} and
1 .1.m tonda)
Irvine
.\ mulc \ll\fX'C.'I wac, arrc-;tcd l uco;-
da\ at appro,1matcl)' I a.m on
Mac <\nhur Boule .. ud and the lian
Diego Frel"wa y for po<i<1es<o1on ot
hermn. opJUm ,rnd 1.·oc111n1· • • • ~ll'reo un1l'I valul'd a1 It''' than
SWO were c,tokn from two rnmpan~
vt'IH< k\ o\C'r the wcckcnd at 16 7R I
\.1 tlhkt'll \ Vl'
• • • \ llhran wn'>lru1 llnn \Ill' at t 4 '"I
\air \\t' wn\ rnn'alk1·d n\l'r thl"
ho lid a' "l't'kl· nd • • • \11 IBM l11mputl'r nw111tur and
p11n11·1 \,1t111ll .11 \·i ono "l'll' \llll1·11
.\ bru'ih fi re that 1gn1ted ne\t to a
Rlucb1rd Canyon Dnve home wa\
qu1l kl\ e\ t1ngu1shed by firefighter-;
Monda) • • • .\ 16-~ear-old ~irl was reported
m1'>~1ng Monday from her Hcrmo\a
Wa, home She was la<;t seen Thur>·
\!;\\ • • • l'olu:e arrc'iled Ronald Lari, ll<. on
\U'iPICIOO of hatlef) Earl W3'i nrre'>tcd
\hmda\ e' cning on Park and Fore~t
a\CnUC'i
Fountain Valley
<her the hohday weekend. some
one entered the unoccupied Gia!>'
Port ronstrutt10n site at nnso Mt
Laniley and ~tolr aluminum "1n
dow~ and door frames wonh S2.SOO ••• <\resident of the 16600 block of\an
• • • fhl' u"' m·r rcponl·d l\lrn1d,I\ 1li.1t
\llmt•onc hruke a lion 1 "1 ndu" tu
burglanie Barn r-nit·rpn!-l'\. I!<' I~
"'ard St Thr 1mrulll·r \lolc power
1ools worth \hi'\ .ind l.1u,t·d \IOO
damage ...
\omcom pm•d thr dno1 I<' htenk
1ntothe:-.ulurl·< 11111·1,,h1lpat IMX4
Brookhur'>t \I ll\ l·t 1ht• ""l'<'lend 1 he
hurglar tonk ci 111111\\'\ tr.n d'n1ain1ng
ahout Sllkl
• • • \ u11ht.,. lrull.. parkt.•d ll'l'' lhc
"'l't.'kt•nd at Stainles\ \lt•d \peual-
1t1c'>. 11 lnO l ondM wa<, hury,la111e<l .
I he los'.'i induded weldmg and '>tercn
equipment "or\h $700
Allen smuggllng rlD.g broken
\<\N DIEC.O (-\P) -I h1nv-1wo
~oplc are in cu\tod't, chargt"d "llh
n)O\p1ral¥ 1n the alle~ OJ>('rat1on of
.1n 111ten \mugghng nng that thr
Ronkr Patrol '-'\\'> traMponrd ac.
n1.\m a' I 000 undo\ umentt'd ahrM
·' Wl'C'~ 1011) th<' l ln11cd ~tntC'>
I ht· nn1t whit h hAd bct'n 11mk1
10\l \ll1t:11mn '11'ln' r t'hllll\r\. 'Al\\
h111~,·11 ll\t'I the \WC'kt'ntl llo1dn
PJlml ~pokesman l d PH·.111 •><ud
Monda\
The rini "hllh llpentteJ oul ol
l 11uana. Mc>.1l o .ind f <.(.ond1do.
l hargcd \ \ttfl lo $40tl Jll.'r Jhl·n P'\c-Jltt
\..tld
\hro' \l.Crc llHl\ rd 11u1 of l 1Ju,rna
JCrn'ic. tht' ~1rtkr to thl" I n1wd \tnt~'
and fMtht't 11111th 111 < .1hfc,1n1~.
P\Nll 'Jill
Marcos rebellion fizzles;
four generals Surrender
MANILA (AP)-A revolt led b)' a
pro-Marcos pohtac1an and backed by
rour aenerals collapsed at dawn today
when the rebels abandoned a luitut)
hotel they hod occupied for nearly 40
hourb and surrendered
Deposed President Ferdinand E.
Marcos. who!.e name was invoked by
the leaders of the '>hon-lived re-
belhon. said from his Hawa11an exile
that he had nothing 10 do w11h the
challenge 10 the goHrnment of Presi-
dent Corazon Aquino. Justice M1n1s-
tcr Neptah Cionzalcs said he was told
10 file charges against Anuro Tolen-
tino. thC' 7S-\-ear-old former running
mate of Marcos Tolcn1tno laum:ht•d
Syrian troops said
poised for attempt
to rescue hostages
BEIRl l f (.\Pl -lhc newspaper
An-NahJr n:pont•d toda> that newt}
deplo:,.ed s~ nan troop\ will try to free
A.men can. French and British
hostage\ held h\-'ih11tt· Moslem and
Palest1n1an 1ermn'>t'> 1n l ebanon.
The nl'""'papn report co1nnded
w11h a den\wn 10 deploy Lebanese
and Synan .-.old1l·r., at Beirut a1rpon
1n an at1cmp110 end Moslem m1liuas'
control oH·r the faulit} and con\ inn·
Wc'\tCrn airline\ to rc,ume 01ght\
.\n-'liahar quotl'd Jn un1den111il·d
oflinal as sa)ing the 'nnan arm\·.,
return to west lk1rut was aimed
pant~ at lr~ing the foreign captl\e\
and destro~ing terron\t ha<,cs in
L ehanon b\ nn1 October
F1\e .\mern.am -1ndud1ng for-
mer Hunt1ngtun Bcarh rt.'\1c.Jent
Da' 1d Jaloh..en -an: ml\~1ng 1n
I t."banon J' "ell a' \l'\ t•n
hrnlhmrn l\\O Briton\ one ltal1..1n
onl· ln,hman and onl' <;outh 1'.orean
the rcbethon SuncUy by prochumina
h1msclf "actma president."
Gontalesd1d notelaboruteon what
charges might be filed. He met for two
hours today at Philippine navy heud-
quarters w11h Tolentino and three
military leaders who had backed the
revolt. No arrests were made
Tolentino refused to talk to re-
porters. His se-cretary. Edith
Macaraig. said Tolentino had called
three umes since Monda> night to
g1,e her messages and instruction'
··Hr sounded depressed," she said
Meanwhile. about 500 Marlo~
~upportrrl> gathered near the Manila
Hott•I where the abortt\l" rcbcll1on
took place. Trunch~on-wu:ldmg not
police d1 persed the demonstrators.
and two people were arrc ted.
I he rebel~ pve up 10 hOUI"$ before
the expm111on of a 24-hour deadline
!>Ct by Aquino for their surrender. By
then. about 1,000 soldiers loyal to the
government had surrounded the
hotel from a distance.
\qu1no said in a statement she had
.1llowed the grace period because -we
don't want to make a martyr out of
him ( l olent1no)"
"My ~upporters want me to show
lirmness and to arrest ~ople hke
these who fight me," said Aquino.
··Rut my fe-ehng 1s that I should not go
.ilkr follo""ers but should look at the
motive~ of the leaders."
Jordan seals offices
of PLO. ousts leader
.\M~I .\"' Jordan I .\Pl -')uldtl·r~
<1rmed with machine gun\ rlO'>\'d
mo~t Palestine L1bcra11on Organ11a-
11on ollicl''> 1n .\mman tuday and thl'
top offiual of thr Pl 0 faction A 1-
Fatah 1n Jure.Jan -.aid he had bc:cn
given ~8 hour'> to lea""° thl· tuuntf)
~unthn thl· gu\t·rnment ordered
tht' closing ol thr 25 ollin•'> ol Al-
Fatah. thl' Jumin.int laumn 1n the
PLO and thl· om· kd h\ PLO
( ha1rman \ a<,\a .\rJfot ·
T hr action ""a'> thl' toughl'\t t.1i,.,cn
h~ Jordan again'>t thl' PL<> no"
ba~d 1n Tun1s1a <,1nll' Jn Jlhame
bet-ween King Hu\\c1n and \ralat
crumbled 1n in F-ehruan O\cr d1l-
ferences 1n ho"" 10 pur,ut· rx-.1u· v.11h
l'irad
The king \e\l·rcc.J iht· \l'<lf·old
.1lhancc Feb I Y d.11m1ng \r,tl.11
reneged on pmmt\C' 111 aul'l"ll I '-I
t'Ond1tions tor dd\ anung thl 1x-.1u·
effort
The doors to ·\ralJI 'pn\Jll' olli1.1.·
hutld1ng were !">caled with wax, and
<,ome offic:es belonging to non-Fatah
group'i also were St'aled.
llclmct\'d soldiers carrying
truncheon!> and submachine guns
turned hatk \.-ts1tors and workers
Imm the Palestine National Council
hutldtnt4. the PLO news agency and
other olfaes while soldiers nearby
manned larger machine iuns
mounted 1in pickup trucks. Business
Jppearcd to be normal at the PLO
building housing charitable and econ-
11m1r alTa1r'>
T hl· top-ranking Al-Fatah official
"' Jordan Khalil Wazir. said an an
1ntl'n 1c" that he had been given 48
hour\ to lea\e the country. Waz1r.
.\ralat' chief m1htal") deputy. 1s the
mn~l 1nOuent1al PLO figurC' in Jor-
JJn
~ a11r \aid he did not know where
he would go. and said no other PLO
olliual had \-C t been expelled.
Pay now.
Pay.later.
I
l)n1g~. alcohol. pill~ or
cocaine may n1akc you t<.:cl like
a n1illion . l Jnf(>rtunatc:h : they'll . ,
also cost you a lot. Becau~c
a chetnical tk."11endency can
roh·you of your health, your
job, your financial future, y< >ur
hon1e and vour t~u11ih: And ; ,
<>nee th<-1,'re gone, you 'I I pay t( >r
\·our n1istak-<:s. ()Yer and <>Yer.
But \\'C: can help. ( 1l'l1l'~i~
i~ a medically b~L~d progran1
that lead~ to the l'ft<:cthl.· t rcat -
111ent <>f chcn1ical dcpcndcnc)
It pn>\idcs C<>n1prehen~i\c
• • p • 1npat1ent or outpaticnt care
\vi th the fuJI ~upport of ~>uth
( :oa.~t Medical ( :cntcr's rc-
~ourccs ~m<l fitcilitic~. All
treatn1cnt i~ confidential and
care i~ covered by Ill< >St 111aj< >r
health plan~.
For n1orc i nh >rn1at ion on
ho\\· \\'C can hclp. call c;cne~r~
and n1akc th<.: \vi '-,C~t i nv<:~t
n1ent vou'll evcr n1akc in \our . ' futurc.
~l=·~·=,.=11hl:1>1v:\l:41lu=~ll =•nlt=f ~-~-~3=====!1
GENESIS
'-l< >l It/} ( <><IC..../ .\ 1< '( /1< < 1/ ( ( '111< 'f
Pope visits Waldheim tali:es office,
St. Lucia, assails anti-Semitism
flies back
to Vatican
CASTRIES, St. Luc1a(AP)-Pope
John Paul II thrilled the 1itfut.bitants
of this lu h volcanic 1sfond'-by
speaking in the local French patois as
he said Ma"is during a stopover while
en route from Colombia to Rome.
After spending seven hours on this
eastern Caribbean island where Col-
umbus landed 1n I 502. the pope was
seen off Monday night from
Hewanorra lntemauonal Airport by
Prime Minister Jotul Compton.
"Your holiness has hown by this
v1s1t that no country 1s too small or
area 100 remote. no JOurncy too
arduous for your concern and your
auenuon." Compton said.
The pope came to St. Lucia from
the steamy city of Barranquilla,
('olombia. where he urged that South
American country's guerrillas to lay
down their arms and heed a govern-
ment truce pla~ in exchange for
pan1c1pauon in tt\e political system.
It was the final stop on John Paul's
seven-day p1lgr1mage to
predominantly Roman Catholic Col-
omt>1a. which took him from the
Laun Amencan nation's cities to a
poor fishing village on the Pacific
coast. The pope arnved in Rome at
I :40 p. m today aboard a Boeing 747
and was Oown to the Vatican by
hehcopter.
Nicara~uan s rap
U.S. aid to Contras
By lite A11octaled Preti
VIENNA Austna -Kun Waldheim, who 11> ccused of h1dina a Nazi
pa t. took offi~ •~ pre ident or Au•tria today and condemned anti~Scmiti~m
by declaring "Never Agam" to the persecution of Jews. "Tht 'Never Again;
sworn atop the rubble of the Second World War by AustnaJU, refe~d then and
refers today not only to the horrors of the HolOC4ust but also to the fnahtcoina
frame of mind that caused it: antt-Semiusm,'' Waldheim said in has inauaural
speech to Parliament after bcinasworn in. "It must, therefore. be our mtenhon
that is renewed every day. to consider and treat each ~four fellow c1t1tens. as
brother and sister -rcgardlcs of which race, whtch rchg1on and which
conv1ct1on he holds," he said.
Japaneae leader say• be'll •tep down
TOK YO -Prime Minister Yasuh1ro Nakasone. who led hi• pany to a
huge election victory th15 week. says he will abide by pany rules requinng him
to step down in <Xtober. but some analysts predict he will rcmam in office after
then. "I think there 1s a poss1bil1ty that he may serve a third tenn,'' Finance
Minister Noboru Takeshita, a boss in Nakasone's Liberal Democratic Pany
and his possible successor. was quoted as saying 1n today's Asahi Sh1mbun
newspaper. Under thlrutes. the LOP president cannot serve more than two
two-year terms. The JOb camcs with 1t the pnme minister's portfolio
Nakasone has been m office for 317 years In Sunday's election. Nakasone's
Liberal Democrats scored the large~t victory of any pan> 1n Japan's postwar
history.
Prices rise 40~cent In Meilco
MEXICO CITY -Consu er pnces soared 40.6 percent in the first half of
the year, giving new support to nalysts' p~1c11ons tha.t Me~1co's !nfi.ation for
the year will be the highest since 1982. The Bank of Mexico .. the nation sc~ntral
bank. said Monday that consumer pnces rose 6.4 percent in June. the biggest
jump since the 8.8 percent increase in January. Prices wer~ up 5.~ perce!'l in
May. Higher costs for a wide range of goods and strv1ces. including tomllas,
meat. eggs, rent and medicine, contributed to the June advance. the report said.
Zulu battle Jcllls 31 ln South Africa
JOHANNESBURG -Two nval Zulu factions battled with homemade
guns. spears and clubs in the remote hills of Natal Provm~. k1lhng at least 31
people. police said today The fighting stemmed from generations-old
ani mosity between rural factions 1n the Valley of 1.000 Hills north of the Indian
Ocean pon city of Durban. 'iatd Natal pohce spokesman Capt. Winston
Hcunis. Such grudge battles have broken out penod1cally over the years
sometimes leaving scores dead. and are not considered part of the ant1-
aparthc1d violence that ha\ <Xcurred dall} m South Africa for 22 month\,
leaving more than 2.000 dead MANAGUA. N1cara~ua (AP) -
Six oppos1t1on political panics
charged that u.s m11itary aid for Ru· nnlng of the bulls ln'ures 20peonle Contra rebels fighting the leftist '.I r
Sandinista government will cause
"more violence and pain for
Nicaraguans"
In a 101nt statement 1s~ued Mon-
day. 1he part1e'i also repeated an
earlier call to the Sand1nistas to open
talk<i with political opponents.
although they said the Contras 'ihould
he harred from any such talks,
PAM PLONA. Spain -The second running of the bulls 1n the San Fermin
festival ended today "Ith more than 20 people knocked down b> the bulls.
mdudmg one American. police ssud The bulls ran the half-mile from the
conals to the bullnng in under four minutes with more than 1.000 people
rushing ahead. police said ln"l1de the nng. one bull tossed Fred Shields. 34. of
Hermosa Beach. Calif. who broke his collar bone when he landed. Others
rect:l\ed treatment for cuts and bru1l">C\. police said. The bull running. pan of
the nucous festival honoring the cit y\ patron saint. San Fermin. began
Sunda) and continues through July 14 Ernest Hemingway immortalized the
cerem"ony with his 192<'1 no, cl. "The Sun Al!>O Rises." The parties' statement was prompt-
l'd by the June 25 vote in the U.S.
1-tOU!>e ofReprcscntauves supponing U,danda BCb. 001 ralded,• Seven Slain . President Reagan's plan to send S 100 a ·
milhon 1n mostly militaf) aid 10 the KAMPl\LA. Uganda -Al lea\t seven people were killed when
( ·ontra'i The mea<;ure now goe' to the un1dent1fied gunmen raided a government polit1cal education school outside
)cnate where 1t 1!> believed a<>'iurcd of Kampala. people entenng the cap11al said The government made no official
passage statement on the report. hut the tra\ clcr'i said Monda} that the atlal·k occurred
<;incc 1hl· Hou\C \lltc NKaragua·-. Sunda} night at Wak1so. 10 mile~ nonhwest of Kampala The ideological
leader., ha H" Llo,cd tht· onl~ oppos1-school at Wak1so 1s one of several President Yo""en Muscven1 established after
1111n nc"'PilfX'r 1ndclin11el~ barr_o4-~nai RfSi$+M~ ~ -·-·
om· Human < .itholll pnest "ho ha\ 1 -. ca awareness
'n11u1cd the go1.crnment from re-classes at the sch s The 1dent1t o the\ 1ct1m\ in ")unda) n1ght'<i reponed
turning home and expelled a bishop. attack were unknown
Her brother had Duchenne M~ular Dys-
trophy. Which means that though she
herself is unaffected by the disease, she
could be ca rrying it in her genes.
And if she is, there's a one-in-four
chance her child will inherit Duchenne.
One of the most common and devastat-
ing forms of muscular dystrophy, Duchen-
ne is usually passed from mother to child
by a defective gene. The task of MDA
researchers is to find that gene. And right
now they're so close that MDA is pouring
all possible resources into the quest.
Once the gene for Duchenne is ident-
ified, ca rriers can be identified, too-with
100°/o certainty. And the first major step
toward finding a cure will have been taken .
J ' '
Mu~cular Dys trophy Association
Jerr y lewis, National Chairman
--
.
Top court action t~ugh~ns
California death sentences
AN FRAN t ·o (AP) -More
death sentences could be upheld in
California 11 a tt1ult of the U.
Supreme Court's refusal to con 1dcr a
death penalty appeal tn a n Dicao
mutilation murder, accordir\J to law-
yers on both sides.
The refusal ame Monday in the
case of Bernard Hamilton, which was
returned to 1hc Cahfomia Supreme
Coun for reconsideration. It followed
last week's rulin• by the U.S. court
that made 11 easier for a reviewing
court to uphold 1he results of a 1riaJ an
which Jury instruc1ions were faulty
If the ruhnf rcs\llts 1n the state
coun's chan11n1 115 standard of
rev1ew1na death penally trials on the
cruciaJ issue of intent to kill, about SO
pcndin& appeals would be affected,
and t least 1evera1 mon: death
sentences would be affatmed. said
state A iltant Attomc¥ OeneraJ E.d-
ward O'Brien, hi\ ofTaco s coordinator
of death penalty cases.
"It opens tbe potential for the
California Supreme Court to broaden
the e~ccptions" to its rule of auto-
matic reversal on the i:ntent-to-klll
issue, said Chief Aul tant State
Public Defender Monia KnoK. She c~utioned that she had not read the
U.S. Supreme Coun's latcst rulinp.
The next move 1s up to the state
coun, which must decide whether the
U .S court's decision on jury instruv
uons •PP.lies to death pcn<)'. te-
vcrsals ltke Ham1lton•s and, 1f so,
whether to reinstate his death
sentence.
Hamilton wu tcntcnttd to death
for the robbery. ~dnappina and
mutdcr of Eleanore Buchanan, 24.
the mother of a l-wttlc-old infant.
Her· body. with it1 head and hands
cut off, wa found near San Diego in
May 1979. Hamilton was arrested
eight days later in Oklahoma
Last December. the state Supreme
Court upheld his convi~tions but
ovcnumed the dt.ath scnten~ on a
S-2 vote because theJUt)' had not been
asked to find that the lulHna was
intentional.
The coun said Hamilton was
entitled to a retrial on the issue of
intent to kill, which it had ~viou ly
ruled was required by Cahfomia law
for a sentence of deiah or life without
parole.
Zschau returns
from Israel with
new perspective
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Con-
gressman Ed Zschau said he returned
from a four-day tour of Israel with
new insa&ht into the U.S role in the:
Duke asks relief from
55 mph speed limit
Middle east, but Democratic Sen.
Alan Cranston wasn't impressed and
suggested his Republican challenger
do some more traveling.
"My d1scuss1ons with leaders
throu&hout Israel led me to conclude
that U.S. peace efforts an the Middle
East can be improved,'' Lschau said
Monday at a news conference.
Dunng his v1s1t, which ended
Fnday. the congrec;sman from
Sunnyvale said he gained a new
perspective on l!Kael.
"Before my tnp I believed that
peace 1s best pursued by encouraging
face-to-face negot1at1ons between Is-
rael and Arab states." he said. adding
he returns with "new insight 10 bring
Israel's Arab neighbors to the peace
table "
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo.
(AP) -Californta Gov. George
Deukmc:Jian is asking the Western
Governor's Conference to help per-
suade the fcd~Jovemmcnt to relax
the 55 mph s limit.
Republican Deukmc:Jian in-
troduced a resolution Monday saying
the governors suppon "allowmg
c;tates the flex1b1hty to increase the
maximum speed limit on selected
rural freeways where safety would not
be significantly reduced."
The 12 governors, whose states also
contain long stretches of uncrowded
freeways. were expected 10 adopt the
resoluuon.
Dcukmc:Jtan acknowledged that
dnvers are 1gnonng the nationwide
55-milcs-per-hour speed hmat, begun
in I 974 to conserve fuel "1n a greater
proponaon than when 11 was first put
into effect."
Harbors back to norDlal
as contract ends· strike
By tbe Auoclated Pren
LOS ANGELES -The normal pace: of Los Angeles and Long Beach
harbors resumed Monda}' after office workers reached tentat1 ve agreement and
later raufied a con'tract settlement with nine of 10 shipping and stovedonng
companies that had been c;truck The c;u-day stnke b} members of the
International Longshoremen'<> and Warehousemen's Union Local 63 was
supported b) more than 4,000 dock workers. The office workers' packet ended
at I a m., allowing the dock workers to get back on the JOb A rauficauon
vote Monda}' night was 140-' tn fa, o r of the <ieltlement, said union spokesman
Jerry Rich. Ht S<11d there IA-3'> a lo" turno ut because man\ memhers '"'·re on
vacauon and d1dn'1 lnow there wa<., a \Oil'
SAG, AFTRA nearer to strlke
LOS ANGELES -The western .4:g1on boards of the ~reen .\rtors (Ju1ld
and Amencan Fcderauon of Telcv1saon and Radio Artists rejected film and
telev1s1on producers' last offer and \.Oted to sttk strike authonzat1on from
members However. the .. ote late Monday represents 9nly half the consensus
necessary, said Mark Locher, a SAG spokesman. The unions' eastern region
boards would have 10 vote the same way at their meeting Thursday before the
stnkc authonzauon quesuon can be presented to the membership. "Basicall y.
the ncgotiaung team came hack to the boards of directors of. SAG and
AFTRA's western region to repon. The (Joint) board voted unanamousl} to
endorse the ncgouators' pmtaon and reject management's final offer and 10
conduct a stnke authonzauon vote among membership,'' Locher said
Gay teen convicted In Uzi slaying
COS ANGELES -A Judge ha'> agreed 10 recommend that a teen-ager
convicted of killing a neighbor with a rented Uzi sem1-au1oma11c nfle he
allowed to serve has pn<>on ..entence at 1hc California Men's Colony because of
its large homosexual population Van Nuys Superior Court Judge J.ames
Albracht wd Monday he would make the rccommendauon to the Cahlor'lta
Depanment of Corrections an the ca<>C of Roben Roscnkrant~. 19
Roscnkrantt was convicted of second-<legrc:c murder nearl) a year alter he
gunned down ~tephcn Redman 17 who had taunted ham about h1\ ho~scxuahty Albracht 1mpo~d a 17-}'ear to life pnson sentence on
RosenkrantL, giving ham credit for 524 da}!I ser"ed. That includes the lime he\
been in custod}' and good lime credit The second-degree con"acuon rnmed a
15-ycar sentence and two years were added for lhe use of a firearm 1n the
comm1ss1 on ofa felon.,.
JUDSON SCHOOL
College Preparatory and Saale Skllla
Boarding Grades 3-12
___ ADMISSIONS_
REPRESENTATIVE
"I think we have to be realistic and
practical about 11," Deukmejian told
re pone rs.
Federal officials noticed that 1he
highway death rate fell with the speed
limit, and have been reluctant to raise
ti.
Polls show that whale a majonty of
Cahfom1ans still favor 55 miles an
hour. suppon has been erodin&, and
74 percent of all motorists admit to
exceeding the hm11 on occasion on
uncrowded roads.
Cahfom1a 1s 1n danger of losing as
much as $30 mtlhon under a federal
formula that penalizes states an which
lc'is than 50 percent of the motonsts
are found to be complying with the
national speed hm11.
Last ¥Car, 49.7 percent of Calt-
fomaa's dnvcrs exceeded the hm11.
accordanJ to sensor cables buned
under h1&Jlways.
3mg
~CoutOAILYptLOTIT.,...,'4/#J I. ..
-12:00-~EYE OH HOU.YWOOO Ol:M!11't MEN(
JOHN MC:lAUOtUtl ONE ON
0 ENTERTANEfT TOMOHT e 100cwa
-12:30-~ M0HT WITH DAVID
1 r~
t "The YCWIQ ..._... ( 1978) JICklt
Chln,WtilPtl
i~NEWS ** ~ "The Bounty Min" ( 1872) Clint w .... Alctwd BIMfllrt
-2:25-
MOYIE
••• 1M tail Ewnt" (1f71) 81r-
brl ~. Rylrl O'Neil
I GET SMART • MOYIE
NEW UTBW:Y: AN * *'" ''Thi o.y ~ ~ Kid INTAOOUC110H TO COMM9'8 Cl.ny'' ( 1871) P.-Oum. Bin Mur·
-ts-
0 ... AfAL PEOP\.E phy GD PRAIBEntELOfl> ________________________ ~
Smg
Now is lowest.
· SMALL CLASSES
Strong Mollv1tlon1I Support
Catch-Up Oppor1unities
Develop Reading 1nd
Math Skills
Improve Stud Habits
Out1t1ndlno Curriculum. lntem1Uon1llv Known. Co·Ed.
"Outdoor Adventure" Weekend• In apect•cul1r Southwest
Sports Incl Football Aiding Soccer Tennis. Golf. Skiing.
HENRY c. WtCK Ill, YALE a A., OIAECTOA, lo• 1se1. Scott•d•le. A.1.15252
C.t•loo • 902·141-1731 • TELEX M~
BUS Y S TUD ENTS ARE GOOD S TUDCNTS
By U.S. Gov't. tes ting n1ethod.
SURG EON GENERAL'S WARNING Smoking
By Pregnant Women May Result 1n Feral
ln1ury, Premature Birth . A·nd Low Birth Weight.
NO\ Ill L WI
son PACK 100 rn 1 R \41 ~mo
~v ppr c•Qa•ellt b~ 11 rnr ~ !1
I I
8 I
I ., • I
II
Grand Jury's
reports serve
useful purpose
Once agam. an Orange County Grand Jury has
completed its term. After a year of hard work, after
sacrificing time that might have been spent in more
pleasurable pursuits. a dedicated crew of citizen
watchdogs will pass the mantle to a!l equally dedicat~d
panel of earnest toilers who, ltke their predecessors, will
work themselves into a lather figuring out first what to
investigate and later what they have found.
Last year's Grand J UfJ was a fiesty group willing -
maybe even anxious ....... to challenge the powers of the
county. Among other cntic1sms, several of the jurors
called for a complete overhaul of the county's system of
government. For. their t~ouble. the Jurors w~r~ tabbed
bunglers in a public reaction by one of the administrators
they found lacking. This year's Grand Jury, perhaps
seeing that the 1984-85 team didn't catch any bees with
tts vi negar. tned to spread a little honey around. The
panel issued 13 of the most polite reports observers were
able to remember.
It remains to be seen 1f the1r findings will be taken to
heart. but the odds are not in the Grand Jury's favor.
More Grand Jury reports are ignored than are read in
Orange County. For example. the 1982-83 panel found
that the county should stop studyi ng potential sues for a
new county airport and pick one.
Only for the sake of the journahsuc pnnc1ple of
backgrounding. we pause here to pomt out that the
county 1s still looking for a new a1rpon sne.
But that finding ma> also be ind1ca11vc of win
Grand Jury reports are not met with instant action. seli-
flagellau on and cncs of. "They're nght~ lt''i ~o obv iou">1
Wh) didn't wr thmk of that before?"
They're not always 'Worth the paper they're printed
on
Grand Juries are composed of 19 usuall y nice.
usually bright, almost always srncere people who have
virtuall y no expertise in the spec1alities they investtgate.
The concept provides an 10\aluable opportunity for a
select group of people to learn a lot about c..neral specific
government fun ctions. but 1t offers 't:'r) httk that 1~
tangible -or even notable.
But when a Grand Juf) 1s nght, 1t 1s undeniabl)
nght. lt was 1984-85 Grand Jury. after all. that
discovered that the county supervisors deserved a pa>
increase. ;That Grand Jury also recommended more self-
insurance for the county and placement of emergency
telephones along the freewa ys. Both ideas were taken
seriously.
There are probably tour things that c.:ould hl' done
v.-tth the current Grand Juf) system·
•The Grand Juf) could be given authont) to sec
that Jts reports were implemented by agencies found to
be offending the scns1b1h.t1es of the watc;hdogs.
•The Grand Jur) could be disbanded on the
grounds that parakeets arc not as popular as tht) onll'
were. so there 1s less need for all those report<; to lin l' the
bottoms of bird cages· /
•The Grand Jur) should'l>e given \Oml' d1rccnon.
m the form a special prosecutor-type person l hargcd
wtth setting the agenda and presenting the evidence. or
•The Grand Jury system could be left alone.
We don't think the Grand J Uf) should he
disbanded. The mere ex1stance of a watchdog organin1-
t1on that has the ab1ltty to cmbarass a malfunctton1ng
bureauLracy wnh ns reports makes tt too valuable to Jo
away ~1th. And. although we would hkc to see more.:
attention paid to the seri ous findings of Grand J uric">. ""l'
fear the consequcncel\ of investing them with thl·
authority to give orders to professional admin1stratrnc.,
Ltkl'w1se we fear the pol1t1c11atton oft he pmtt1011 of
a ··c..f)Cetal prosclulOr" who m1ght lead the (,rand Jur)
into areas des1gf1ed to find evidence that '-'OUld he
pnmanly for the political benefi t of fey,
Borrowing, then. lrom the widely rcgardt.>d ha\k1.·1-
ball philosopher who satd. "No harm. no foul " ""1.:
endorse the ex 1sting Grand Jury system as a ">Ou al as">l'l
The problems of the systems stem from 1tc., inherent
weakness. Those could be corrected if the Supcrvtc..orc.,
would lend their authonty lo the findings of the ( 1rand
Jury and become the enforcement arm ot thl'.' panel
Opinions expressed in ltus space ere those ot Ille D1111y P1tot Other v•Pw<.
expressea on this page are those ol their authors end artists Re1Jd1>1
comment is 1nv1ted The Daily Pilot PO Boir 1560 Costa Mesa 926~6 Ph ON~
642-6086
--'llM"'llml-------
By the A11oclatt'd Prest
r oda\ I\ r ue<;<Ja ... Jul) x. thl· I li41h
d.n ut I ~Xt> f here are l ?/\ dt1\\ It'll 111
1hc -.car
T;>d3\ ·., h1ghltgh1 in h1\tnr'
On Jul\ H. IKl<i the l 1ht'n-. H1·ll 1n
f'htladelph1a lracked a\ 11 "'"' rnn11.
for 1hc luncrJI for C hid h1\l1u· John
"1ar'lhall
On ttm da tc
In 16h 1 King Charle\ II 111 1 ngl.1nd
grantt·d a' hancr to Kho<lt· hland
In I 77t! a< nl John "ll\11n ~·" l' lhl
tir'>I puhltt reading of the l>c.·d dr.Hlun
ol lndcrx-nlkme 111 a (r<1'-"d ~tlh~rt·d
.11 lndef')('ndcnl<' \(1uar<" 1n I h1l,1dcl ·
ph1a
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
r
In I XX'I rhl' V. .111 \IHTI l1111rn<1 I
\\.,1, til\I puhh\hcd
In 1'114, Prc,Hknl \\ 111tlro.,.,
\\ 11\on rcn•t\t'd .1 111nwll11ou\ .,.,t'f
omc in Nl''-" °'I' tirk C 11\ ,ll1n h"
rctum from thr Vt·r,a1llr' P l·;H t"
C onfcrcnu· in I ramc
In 1•1<it1 < 1en !>uugla\ "1al \rthur
\'"' named commandN in·th1d ol
I n11ed Na11om lnrce'> 1n Korea
In 11/59 Ma1 Dale R But'i ol
lmpcnal Rrach < ahf and Ma \lcr
~111 ( hc~ter \1 o, nand ol < uppcra'>
(mt• ll''3\ hct:amcthefll\l ·\mt'n-
\ .10 '"ldtl"f\ 111 he-lo.1llrd dunng the
\ 1ctn<1lll 'A Jr
Ker9fl Wlttm ..
,,.,,1111 .. 1
E 11
Tom Tett
,.,.,.rllQ"lg [I'
Daft l'enley
l ,., f 1'•1
Tom Cleftlft ,....., r ,,, 'rl
c, ... ....,
S00<11 Fili• •
.__.,,c"~
G•>l'ltr()U!tt
~L.CefltNI
Prr.odo(trQn M•l'l•QIW
T9'TJK ....
Ci! CUllll IOt\ Ma"lll09< ............. ...,.
...... 11.itng [)tft(l(lr
':T!c,-=:-°'
·'Like (Senators) Kuchel and Cranston. Rep4bllcan(Sen .) Wilson
knowswherehlsbreadtsbutteredand whohemuMpleli!ielfhe' to
wtna econdslxyearsln Washington .... "
TllOllA8 SLJAa ooJwmollt
J1c1
AIDEISOI
PR firm
hired
in wake·
, of TMI
' '''JOl L~ ! ... ~·
Sen. Wilson: Minding the
store while mining votes
Seized on foreign
trade as the major
issue of his tenure
Pete \\-11,on l'>n ·1 up tor re-t.>lel\11111
th1'i ~l'df hut he lo.no"'" hc'll tx· in 1hc
run ol ht'> pol111rnl Ilk two \Car ... Imm
Olli.I.
\ml 1111 one n·ml'mtx·r'i tx·ttcr than
V. il'ion the I alt' of the last four men
.... ho haH· \di in the U S Senate '>l'al
ht• no'"' m.:rup1e'>. For Pierre Salinger
C •t·orge \lurph\ John Tunne\ and
~I Ha,alo.a1.1.a thl' \llll'r"' 'crd1t1
""•" th\." .\dmc \her onl tam or part
•>I a wrm t'Jt h \\J\ unrrrcm11n111u\I\
dUOlll\'d
\\ ht•thl·r Repuhhran' or I kmo-
lr<lt'. and tht" roll 1ndude<, IY.U ol
el'l h -t hl' l''\-sena tor!> all hat! one
tailing !'font· paid much at1entt0n w < altlorn1a'\concerns For mo'itofthl'
la'>t ~O 'ear\ 1t\ almost tx·en a ... ti
( ahlo1"n1a "'ere a onl"·'>cnat11r <;l:tll"
Y.llh tir\I Republican Thoma\
Kulhl·I and then Demoaal .\Ian
l ran .. 1on known a!> the onl \ <;cna10r
from "'horn lonstllul'nl\ "'l'rc hkel)'
111 ~l·t '>Cf\ Ill' and rC\Ult\
:-..l'llht•r Ku rhd nor< ran'>ton could
l"\l"r tx· .1, fla\h\ a' .1 ".lurph' or .1
I unnl'\
\nd l urn·nt 11u 11p.1nt V.11\on "r111
glamour hm
Hui l1kl· Kulhcl <Jnd ( ran\tun,
l<qlUhltt.in V.tl\on knu'-"'> whl·rc ht\
hrcad '' huuercd and who he mu'it
plt",1\e ti hl· \ lo "'tn a .. econd \t \)'ear'>
1n ~ .1\htng1on ,ind 1hc plum a'>\lgn-
mrnh th.II ll'>U31h go \\Ith 'iUCh
wn111nl\
\.111 tor ~ tl\on the fate of every one
111 < r,1n,ton''> Rl'pu bhcan opponents
It ~ h." no 1h:~ire to look up on 1he day
THOMAS
EuAs
alter 1he California pnmary and sec
major Re'pubhcan donors ltke de-
veloper Ray Watt, vintner frncst
Gallo. executives Ballard Smith and
Howard Allen or Leva Straus~ chair-
man Peter Haas ·among the sup-
porters of his Democratic rival .\II
Me ( rans1on contnbutor'i this 'tear
')n Wilson has wntten no books
"h1h: tn the Senate. a~ Tunne\ did
"'or has he crusaded for an tdeu
logical cause with no economtt 'alue
a\ Hayakawa did when campaigning
to have English established a\ Ameri-
ca\ \Ole offi cial language.
Instead, Wilson mind' the store
Hts l.'ffons produced maJOr add111ons
10 the federal wilderness system tn
C altlorn1a. while also making more
timberland available for logging. He'<;
alwa) s vocal!) opposed when inlenor
sccretanes declare 1he1r 1n1ent1on lo
dnll more 011 "'dis ofTC ·a1tforn1a
hcaches
Bul mo'it ol all. Wilson has seaied
on foreign trade a~ the trademark
1\sue of his tenure.
'T"e been ou1spoken 1n m) cnt1-
c1..,m of (Reagan .,.adm1n1\tral1on)
trade policy." Wilson said. "I share
the concept of free trade, hul the
admm1s1rat1on 1<; not tough enough in
a-;senmg the rights of .\mencans
ec;pec1all:r farmers. 1n trading hoth
here and abroad ··
So Wilson has tacked a scnc' ol
amendments onlo tht' ~nail'.' "l'f·
s1on ofthc annual Farm Bill in l'al'h of
the la!>t fe'.\ \C.H\
Each amendmen1 aims al 1ncreas-
1ng markets for California crops or
helping farmers who are at a disad-
vantage because of foreign govern-
ment policies. Where the Food for
Peace program didn't include fruns.
nu:s and most vegetables among
foods donated to poor countnes.
Wilson got them added 10 1he hst of
eligible nems. Pre<;to. a new market
for many farmers.
Then he pushed through S 110
m1ll lon in aid for farmen adversely
affected by European Common Mar-
kel trade policies . .a measure that
parucularl.Y helps growers of ra1S1ns.
walnuts. citrus. wine and canned
frun ·
.\nd to make sure farmers knew he
...,as on their '>tde. Wilson st.aged
heanngs where farmers could <;ound
off and hear htm s)'mpath1ze.
"We ha"e failed to demand and
attain the same kind ofhberal access
10 foreign markets that we afford our
1rading partners here," he said.
The message and ns messenger lack
p1zza12. but when tho!e ideas are
applied to 01her major California
business. execuuves take note. The)'
don't care 1f Wilson isn't as flashy as
Tunney, Murphy or Salinger or an
interesting character ltke Hay.akawa.
None of those ex-senators demon-
•mated much interest m the fortunes
of businessmen and farmers.
One result 1s that Wilson already
ha.-. more campaign money banked
than any ( altfornia polttacian except
Cranston and Gov George Deu-
kmejian. both of whom are running
hard nght now
.\not her result may be that his seat
stops seeming like the third base
pos111on on the Los Angeles Dodgers,
"here a new incumbent seems to hold
forth almoc;t every season:
Thomas EllH 11 • Sa.au Moolc•-
based colamolst oo 1t•t~ l.IH~L
Cham hers select deserving
crop of outstanding citizens
Newport· s Jerry Stewart, Costa Mesa· s
Pat and Lou Dinger deserving of praise
I ""'l' 111 \1111 who have read
\l".trd1l111.h1lor1hclastcoupkol yea~
"ill rt' ml· miler tha1 at the hottom of
·ad1 u1lumn the editor pub th1\
t 'plan<11111n
~alter Rurroughc; '" the l>atly
1'!101·, lounll1ng publtsher."
"fxplanatton Pfui~·· <;norts my
go11<.I lm·nd -<>O good I won't even
g" t: h1\ name "That'\ jUSt his excuse
for puhlt,h1ng vour dnHI Why don't
\.OU ~11 had to playing golf and quit
"""'''"8 Hiur time., ..
\\ell OK' Drivel or not. I did learn
.1 lllnP, time: ago that a publt'ihCr -e'\
or <i<"ll'e -\hould nnl be 1enlou'i of
.. 1.ill mcmber'l
··11 JU\I ain'1 1t111n ' · my favontc:
lino!\!)(' 11r>erator used to ~y. r h.at\ the ('aw '-"Ith Tony Saavedra
.. of the I >atl} Pilot staff" and me.
I on~ co' cred a \tor} l h:id my mind
\Ct on llllt'd .. r op volunteer hono~
hccomt' a lam1l) afTatr "
< omml'nl One ot the kw vcl)
gond, 1h1ng"i obout C hambe~ of
( nm mace " thal, regardlcs\ of what
\.nu think nt thcar accomphshment'i
a<, far a\ th<' hu'itnC\\ ot their -.everal
~omm u n1t1e\ arc concerned. there ,.,
one th1na the~ do we-II They p1ck the
out'itand1ng c111:1cn<i of 1he y<'ar -
one mnn and one woman
I don't know who the oumandina
male c1ll1en '" this year 1n Ncwpon
Reach No mailer I and a lot of other
old·ttmer~ wc~ completely dehJhted
"'uh the I. d\. -Jerry Co;1ewart. CM"
T Dunun <1cwart, that 1s )
Nov.. Ju\t a week or so aao, 1he
C 0<11a Mt•<1a ( hamher of Commtrlc
really made ~I.tr mark\ for tt!.tll when
11 packed the man and woman of lhe
•
"ear In fact. thechamberoutd1d ll~elf
ihas 11me \!tembers packed a hu~band
and wife, Pat and Lou Drnger
lffor no other reason, Lou Dinger l'i
tops tn my book for this: He''> kept a
<ier1es of old cars that Mrs B. and I
have owned 1n perfect running con-
d111on.
But, of course, he wasn't honored
for that reason. He was honored for
some of the good work lhat he has
done. particularly recentl:r And
there's ~n a lot of tl.
One of the fovonte chan11es he ~upports 1s SOS. I've been told half a
dozen names that this SOS stands tor,
one betn& "Share Our Sclveo; .. -hut
that makes no difference. Ltd by Lou,
OS maintains a warchou'IC of food,
dothmg and medicine for people of
1h1s area who arc in dire need . II also
r('cru1t'I a s1afT of doctors who look
tlfler people that haven't other mean\
of medical ~rv1cc
Rut that's only pan of 11
.\\I remember, 1n the d.l\\ Y.hfn I
.... a .. 11el) much :roungcr 1h;H1 I am
now. Lou was strong 1n ·· ~ou1ina" -
encourn&.1na l..1d~ 10 he .1c11"l" 1n 1hc
Ro) <icout~ of Amenca If I'm not
m1'taken (which. bcltevc 11 or not. I
~1mct1mc:'> am), hoth he and "Pat
helped the Girl Scout\ and the Girls
( lub and most ever) other organ11a-
1ion which needed help.
One th1na I ouah1 to remcmher
better. because I was made an "anael"
for 1n oiiµn11a11on called C h1ld
Ciu1dancc Center "h1ch Pat rnn
11nue\ to 1u1dc
.\1 the t elcbrat1on for Lou 11nd Pal
lhrrt' \\e~ a lot ol d1sltngu1'1hed
r>rl\n&l' C oa1ot people
\101 1hc lea\t wa\ a tru<' prrachc-r.
;
\
WALTER
BUllOUGHS
Dr. John C'. Huffman,tthe Pastor of
St. Andrews Presbyterian Church.
Pat and Lou were particularly
pleased that among the guests was
Jerry Stewart. Newport Beach 's
Woman of the Year.
Actually, Mrs. Stewart could well
have taken honors from the Cost.a
Mesa Chamber of Commerce, also.
For. you may remember, she worked
ltke a Trojan to defeat town lot 011
dnlltng even before Costa Mesa was
1n'°orpora1ed
Prouder of her than anyone was her
husband T. Duncan Stewart, the poet
laureate of the Orange Coast, and a
celebraled fidCJler, 100 •
I haven'1 told you much abo1rt tht
senes of honors thal have been
heaped upon the good people of 1he
Orange Coast
Rut don't for a minute imagine that
1h1'i old man d~~n·1 apptte1ate the
fine things that have been done for the
en11re Orange C oast by Pat and Lou
Dinger and by Jerry and Duncan
tewan Because the th1n15 they have
done have been so unsc:Hish and so
marvelous - at least that's the way I
look at 11 -that I don't think one can
he too efTus1ve 1n hi praise of any of
them.
Harry Welch, of whom I have
wnucn several time\, would have
been pleased by the \tlcct1on of all 1he
honortes And'° should all of us
Me. part1cular1>
Walttr B•ttHlb 11 ft«> Pllot'1
/ot10dJ111 pab/Jsb~r.
Workers at p lant
taught proper way
to a n swer queries
WASHINGTON -The Soviets
have been cnt1c1zed -rightly -for
their reluctance to level with their
own people and the rest of the world
about the Chernobyl nuclear disaster
Maybe they should have hired the
public relauons consultant that two
U.S. federaJ agencies retained after
the Three Mile Island nuclear acci-
dent of 1979
The Energy Department and the
Nuclear Regulatory Comm1ss1on
share reg ulatory responsibility for the
plant outside Harrisburg, Pa . that
ca me dangerously close to a
mehdown. The agencies were
evidently dissatisfied with the stauc
they go1 from the media and from
Congress 1mmed1ately following 1he
accident .
So 1n 1982. the two agencies laid
outSIO,OOOfora "Witness and Media
Skills Clinic" tha1 would teach their
people how to do a better JOb of
a nswering questions from
bothersome reporters and members
of Congress.
The three-day session. attended b)
federal officials and personnel from a
pnvate Three Mile Island contractor .
was held at the Marriott Hotel 1n
Hamsburg. Our associate Corky
Johnson has teamed that the Dallas.-
based consulting firm that ran the
seminar. Commumcat1ons Counsel
of Am~nc.a.. bas since conducted
s1m1lar courses for l!'V'etal -e.her-
contractors that hold federal nuclear
energy contracts.
The aim of the seminar was clearl}
to make the federal rc~ulatory agen·
c1es look good. even 1f that meant
co' enng up the senousness of the
s11ua11on According to vanous
memos and course notes. the training
sessions included·
•··cold Turke:r Man1-Heanng.s
With }Our 1eamma1es. )'Ou will re-
spond to cross-examination by an
attorney and members of another
panel, defending your company
against some of the charges expected
to come fro m the opponents."
e ··M1ke-tn-thc-Mouth lnterv1ew!I.
On-camern(we)w11lconducta J-to 5-
minute "benchmark' interview wtth
you. U~ your interview as a 1001 to
improve a 'second take' tomorrow
and to track yo ur pro~ss."
•"Avo1d1n$ Traps 1n Media Inter-
views. Adapttn' the cross-uamin-
auon model to 1nterv1ew s1tuauons
'Bridge' to publtc benefits and to your
game plan."
The consultants coached regu-
latory officials 10 detail on "com-
posure le<:hn1ques" 10 withstand lhe
ngors of congressional heanngs. ··Ac-
cept that you arc up11ght," the agency
bureaucrats were advised "Lean
away from the battleconfrontal1on
slightly. Straighten spine, shoulders.
back. Breathe!"
If despite proper posture and
breathing, the questioning seemed to
~_going downhill, the Seminar par-
t1c1pants were taught to watch for
certain "alarm responses," which
include breaking out an a cold sweat,
quivenna voice and irregular breath-
ing. To make sure these dreadful
symptoms were easily rccogn1zable,
the seminar sessions were
videotaped.
Some "Coaching Steps" for 1he
scm1nanans included this succinct
PR gem: "(Give) impression tha1
thinas arc aoina well. ... Avoid
embarrassment. Avoid traps. Be
careful you don't trap your'ICl f What
posujo;jo ypu want pubhc to hear>"
They re also 1old h,Qw to "handle
questions r which I ijon't want 10
give the wer but I sttll want 10 look
good." and were given this K.rcmhn-
style wam1na: "Control wha1 JOC'i
into the record or the minds of tht
ltstene~."
One star pupil was a TMl contrac-
tor executive, who acknowledged in a
seminar test paper that TMI rad1at1on
dcteclon had malfunctioned and
were potentially danacrous If t.alking
to the manufacturer, he would say the
devices had been "very m11llead1ng."
he wrote But "1f cn t1c 1\ an anti·
nuke" he would say that "these art
rad1a\Jon monitors, not safety-related
equ1~ment, and therefore are not
requited to operate correctly under
•cc1dent condittons."
Att you ltsten1ng, Gorbachev?
Footnote: O ne of the con,ultan1s
involved m the cit me said the tra1nina
wa ncet sary becau~ "technical
people do not tell their atory very
well." An Enel'JY Dcpartmt'nt otncl81
at Thrtt Mile Island al'IO claimed the
seminar wa' an dTon to help the
nuclear eneray 'pec1ali\ts com-
municate "so Che averaae pe"°n c-.tn
undentand us "
J•ct Aod~rH• ud Ju ,. tr
•rr •>•tlle11t~ col•m•l•t•
Gramm-Rudman
mling applauded
by cong~es$man
WASHJNOTON (AP)-The con·
aressman whose complaint Jed to a
Supreme Court rulJna stnklna down
the key enfo~ment provision of the
new budget-balancing law 111d today
that Conpess must once mo~ "do
the job that our Founding Fathers set
out for us ... set the prionties of this
countrx-and not leave them up to
some bureaucrat running a com-puter."
On a 7-2 vote, the Supreme Court
said .~onday that the enforoement
provmon of the 1<><alled Gramm.
Rudman Act -the requirement for
~utomauc, across-the-board spend-
ing cuts to meet mandated deficit
taraets -violated' the const1tut1onal-
ly required separation of ~wcrs
between the executive and legislative branches.
The court said the law improperly
empowered an officer of Con.,ess.
1he comptroller general, 10 perfonn
an executive function by ordenng
specific levels of spending cuts to
rheet the annual deficit targets.
Rep. Mike Synar, 0-0kla.. the
chief plaintjfT 1n the case. said today
that the court had, in effect , "put the
monkey back on their (legisla1ors')
backs -and that's exactly the way it
should be .... That's why we go 10 the
ballot box every two years. so that
(the voters)can determine whether or
not they (eel their oon~SSl'flen are
setting the nght prionues."
Scnina those pnont1es. another
congressman said, will create for
President Reagan and Capitol Hall "a
long. hot summer of budge1 battles."
pos ibly incJuchna kirmishes over
h1&hcr taus.
iherc is aareemcnt between Con-
sress and the White House lo stick
with the Stat ute's annual deficit
targets, which arc suppc>scd to lead to
a balanced federal budget by 1991.
Bu' how to act there remains a
problem.
"With the cover of mandatory cuts
rrmovcd, we will sec 1( the president
and Co~ss have 'he auts to make
the 'ou decisions both so t to
aecomp ish by automatic p1lo~ said
Rep. Leon Pancna. ~hf.
·•Both the president and Conarcss
arc in for a Iona. hot summer of
bud&et battles."
AntlClpallng the Supreme Court's
dec1S1on, Congress included an
alternative in the balanoed-budget•
law calhna for a Joint committee of
House and Senate budget writers to
send a package of cuts to each
chamber to meet the deficit target.
Supporters of the law said they
would move quickly to restore the
provision for automatic cuts by
restncung congressional power over
the CometrolleT general, Specifically
by changing how the official could be
removed from office. That would
make the General Accounting Office.
which the comptroller general heads.
more like the Federal Reserve Board
and other government agencies that
operate separate from Congress and
1he Whne House.
But there were legislators. particu-
larly in the House. who said they
would block such a move.
Salty navy cldmiral
Rickover dead at 86
WASHINGTON (.\Pl -Adm.
Hyman G Rickover. the ~h> eng1·
neer who refused to $0 by the book
and goaded the Navy into the nuclear
era. died today He was 86.
The Navy. in a bnef .,tatement. said
that ·Rickover .. died this momang at
approximately 8.45 a m at his homl'."
in Arlington. Va."
Sources, who a .. ked not to be
1dent1fied. said that R 11: kover had
died of apparent natural c-ausc<> and
that the Pentagon had been notified
ofh1s death by his wife
He had been an poor health "'nee
sufTenng a stroke in Jul) 1985 .
In a NavycarttH~ nned six
decades. Racko, er a Russian elnf~.~ ~-....
became one of tht' pr~m1nent mah·
tary leaders ofh1s ume de'lpllt' a style
that enraged tht' Pt'ntagon brass and
the defense industry ( ongress re-
vered him. and twice awardt'd him us
gold medal for exceptional pubhc
service No other c1t1Len except
Zachary Taylor had been honored
more than once
For 30ofhis 60 years on active dut)
befort' Pres1dt'nl Rea~n forced him
to retire on his 82nd birthday 1n 198.:!.
R1ckovt'r was !>kipper of a na'}·
w11h1n-a-navy. the nudear Na' y
Former President ( aner, who onct'
said Rickover had played a grcatl'r
influence on him than anyone except
his parents. toda> called the retired
admiral "one of America-., greatest
c111zcns and pa1nots ··
Rickover had devoted much ofh1s
anent1on following his retirement to
the Center for Excellence in Educa-
tion. which was originally established
uodcr the name of the Ricko ver
Roundat1on.
The center. headquanered in
Leesburg, Va .. outside Wash1ng1on.
bnngs dozens ofh1gh school students
who have displayed talent in the
sc1ence!l IO Washington for a sumn1cr
of ad' a need course work .
AIDS through transfusions
'nearly stopped by tests'
By tbe Auocl1ted Press
WASH IN(, TON -Results of the first ~car of '>trecning blood supplies
for sign'! of AIDS indicate 11 ha'i almo .. t i.topped the spread of the d1sca!.C
through transfusions. but more precise tesb still are needed. expens \a).
Because of the tests. which look for evidence of an11bod1cs to the virus tha\
causes acquired immune deficiency S)ndrome, and screening out high-nsk
donors. blood supplies are much safer than they were a year ago. !lpec1ali!>ts said
Monday "The tests have performed remarkably well." said Or. S. Gerald
~ndler of the Amencan Red Cross ... In a short lime. we were able to hall the
spread of the AIDS virus through blood supplies"
Gas traller deslgn may reduce acc.ldents
WASHINGTON -A new and ..afer gasoline tank trailer design ma>
slowly replace the models current!) calT}•ng the nation's mo'it ha1ardous
cargo. tht' director of a new 'ltud) predicts The current dominant design has a
high center of grav1t). maling It relatl\·el) ca!>y to 11p over The study by the
congressional Ollicc of Technology A~sessment. released Monda). noted that
1.500 truck spills arc renoned to the Transponat1on Department every year
There probabl) arc man~ other spills that do not male 11 into the department's
data base. the report !Ml1d
Court orders trlal for subway gunman
ALBANY N \ -Ne"' York". top coun today ordered Bernhard Goetz
10 stand tnal on charges ofnttcrnptt'd murder and assault 1n the 1984 shootings
of four youths on a Manhat1an 'tubwa) In a 7-0 decision. the ( oun of Appeals
reinstated charge\ thro"'n out b) lo\\oer couns. Goe11 also faces less senous
charge<; of illegal posscs~1on of weapon'i lioct1 has adm111ed shooung the
youths Dec 22. I QR4 af\er one of them approal:hed him for S5
Strike talks break off in Ph.lladelphla
PHILAOFLPHI ·\ Negotiations aimed at endinga stnke by 14,000cit)
workers broke offtoda) lx'twce11 the cit) and the largest of two st riking unions.
and no new talks were .,<·hc-dukd as the walkout entered Its eighth dny with tono;
of rotting garbage p1hng up 1n the 'ltrcet~ 'Tm d1sappo1ntcd because l felt we
had made substantial progrc'i~ over some 16 houN of nego11at1ons," Mayor W.
Walson Goode told reporter<> in his (it) Hall office shortly af\er talk'i brol e oO
at 1 46 a m. "It was my hope that we l·ould hove ended this 'itnkc by noon 1\11
the ingred1t'nts \\Crt' th('rc for a settlement."
East Coast scorch1ng, llttle relief seen
Weather o01cial'I \3\ l11tlc rc.-hef "1n 1ght lrom a ba~1ng h~t wa'e th<it
topplt'd temperature.' rcrnrd'i in at lea\t wvcn '>latt'S. threatened crops in
Maryland and Dcla"arc .ind ~nt children ton "le" Jc~> mun1c1pal pool in
'lh1f\s Both New 'ork c II) and Ph1ladclnh1:1 reported a nc" h1~h temperature
Mondi) of98 dearccs. htauna New 'l'ork\ old mark of 91 ~t 5. \Cars aao and
Ph1ladt'lph1a''> 41·\C'ar-old 97 Downtown .\tlanuc ( 1t} N J reponcd a n~
high of Q8, beauna b~ live degree the m:ord for the dd~ ~t 8b \Cars ag<."'
8alt1morc·., I 02 toppled " h I ·year-old heat record nt 't 7 degree\ The nauon '
cap1U1l reported 11 h1ah ot 118 1y1ng the record -.et 1n I <l.:!~ The Na11onnl
WrathcrSt-rv1n-'1;l1d the til:.nkct of hot mugg) air cov('T('d t~ca'ltcrn \Cllho.H'd
frnm the< irohna' 111 \1•11tht•rn N~" f ngland and httln hangc wnH\pt'( tcd in
the ne' t f<'w da)'
\
Wondering what to do
with your old, retired refrig-
erator that's just gathering
dust and tak1ng up space in
the garage?
If it still works, donate
it to one of the charities
listed below and we'll give
you S25.
This offer is available to all
Edison residential customers
from July 1, to September 30.
1986. YO\} are aJlowed a maxi-
l , , mum of two donations
f J per household or S50 per
' person.
If you have an old,
operable refrigerator you'd
like to donate, call one of the
panicipatjng charities or Edisons
Conservation Action Line toll-free
at 1-800-952-5062. Thanks for
your help. Together we can
brighten the future .
..,rCI
Southern Cahlom1a EdtSOn
THF.SE CHARITIES WOULD APPRECIATE YOlfR REFRIGERATOR DONATION.
Children's Hospital
of Orange County
I 800-8tt l ·;'t )9
Salvatmn Anny r·1 ... ) ~i;R-0311
This Norman
Rockwell print
is FREE
at all American
Savings
branches while
supply l~ts.
Col\Cl'pl -
t"'l-4) --.h .;qxq
I 81111 -i-iX ~22"'
(~omlw1ll ln<lu,tm·-.,
('l-i) q-2 ~MC
( 2 H) II I 2 ( r•q 2
< nsn 'tf~'"'~·"NT\ "'' W.N s nn~1t1I q;~111
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111 'l'fl\(d\l\ IU \(II
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ORA~GE UH ~TY
l>Pseret ln<lustn~~
( ""T-i) Stt5·82 .... l
Disabled Amer~can Veterans
Chari tic~ of Orange County
.et .. ) ~ ... ~-061s .. ~t \'incent de P-aul
('\~) s ...... ))66
Ill 'TI !'\(,"('(l' 11-\IUJOl II
lf>'lll \l~•n•1u1n >;1 'l~h-1\l
·111 •q1o \~-
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'111'\ ~I l11r11 Kd ")~ ''
1 I 11 ··11 ~'!lh
\I\\ l'C 1111 llF \I II
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I 1-t h\J 11.~t'
T he American FanuJy. Ooctor-h~ lht> one
we depended upon In times of emergency. The
one who prescribed sound, simple ways to
keep our family gomg and growing stronger
day by ru.v
Al American Savin~ this month, we're
offerang one of Norman Rockwell's most
beloved work s, "The Doctor and the Doll "
FREE. to customers and friends..
Why' BecauSt' we've got a sound ~d
simple prescnplion for family financial health
that we'd IJke to share. We call il the \1-0nev
\iatrix accounl You'U calJ it terrific!
It's that ounce of pmention ~'Our famll)
nt't'ds to prepare for umes of emergency. That
pound of cure ~ou can depend upon when
\Our familv comes down with a case of the
hudgeUI') blues
\ isit American ~avmgs this month to
pick up your FREE, 11 '"x1'1," full-color, Norman
Rockwell pnnt. while supplies last. It's one or
six we're offering thh ye:ir. CoUect the entire
serie~. b) lllopping m regularly.
While vou're there. ask about the fleXJhle
~one~ Matrix acrount It lets vou St'lect' tht
interest ~te and tenn for highest earnings
lt'!I a \lmple prescription that will keq>
~our ranul} r1rumda1J) fit for years to come-
one that will ft'™ with your famUy da\ bv
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The \tone~ ... atrt'< account, likt our
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Account lnsurt'd up to S 100,000
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~ll l't.11111"1\1 ll\I\ ~ 111
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MERICAN SAVINGS
ANO LOAN ASSOCIATION
COMPLETE NYSE COMPOSITE TRAN8ACTIONS~A10
Market skids to record point loss
By CHET CURRJER "" ...........
NEW YORK -The stock market
took a steep drop Monday. sending
the Dow Jones average to a record
po1n1 loss in selling touched off by
economic womes and bearish state-
ments by some prominent analysts.
The Dow Jone~ avera&e of 30
1ndustnals fell 61.87 to 1.839.00.
exccedma its previous record point
loss of 45 7 5 points on June 9 of th as
}tar
Far greater percentage declines
have occurred an the past, when the
a' crage was at lower levels. Monday's
drop of 3.25 percent was barely one-
lourth the size of the 12. 9 percent loss
the average suffered on Sept. 28,
1929
But that was 'imall consolation to
traderscountmg up their losses after a
decline that extt'ndcd into all maJor
stock group~. ,
Volume on the Nt'w York Stock
Exchange came to 138.23 million
shares. against 108.26 million la t
Thursday.
Analysts said traders returned frum
the long July 4 weekend an an unea'\}
mood over evidence of continuing
weakness in the economy.
A monthly survey conducted by the
Nauonal Assoc1at1on of Purchasing
Management found decline'\ last
month in production. employment
and new orders. The trade group\
composite index recorded ats shnrpc-.1
drop 1n nearly 21h years.
For much of the ume lately.
brokers have been t.alkang of sluggish
business act1v1ty as a plus for the
market. an the sense that at seems to
ancrea~ the likelihood of another' ut
1n the Federal Rescrve's discount
rate
But by Monday observers u1d
concern was mounting that a dis-
count-rate cut bad already been so
widely forecast that the prospect had
been fully taken into account b) the
market.
Adding 10. the market's weaknes$'
was. the new~ th t two well-known
:.analysts -John Mendelson of Dean
Witter Reynolds and Robert
Pn·chtcr. publisher of an investment
ad"1so~ ~rv1ce -had turned
negat1H' on the outlook. for stocks.
four tm1e~ pre' iously since the
~tan of 1986. the Dow has posted
\1ngle-day losses of2 percent or more.
On each of those occasions, the
markl't ~napped back quickly to
move on to new highs. But analysts
sau.l the damage. on first inspection.
loolr..ed a lmle more severe this time.
Prolit-ukang was evident in some
\tcxks that have been strong lately.
1nduJang Federated Department ')tore~. down ~1 83¥4: ITI Corp ..
down ~''•at 5:>; lO\.o.-.::ola, down 2112
at 41 and Ph1hp Moms, down 51/4 at
71
Other losers among the blue chaps
1ndudcd International Business Ma-
chine\, off 31/~ at 1451/4; General
Elcctnc. ofT 31h at 76l/4, and Minne-
sou. Mining & Manufilctunn&, off 4'h
at 108'11.
Radice Corp. was the day's biggest
percentage loser among NYSE issues,
down 2~ at 10 The company ~1d it
had an unexpected loss for the fiscill
year ended June 30
In thr datl} tally on the Big Board,
declining issues outnumbered ad-
vances by nearly 6 to I. The ex-
changc's compo~1te index dropped
4.24 to 140.43
Na11onw1de turnover an NYSE-
l1stcd issues. including trades an those
stoclr..s on regional exchanges and in
the over-the-counter market totaled
162 24 million share')
Standard & Poor'\ index of 400
mdustnals fell 9 S 7 to 2 71 51. and
S&P's 500-stocl. composite index was
down 7. 74 at 244 05
_The NASDAQ composite index for
the over-the-counter market tumbled
10.20 to 400 96. At the American
Stock Exchange, the market value
index closed at 276. 7 I, down 7 .88
Business guide lists county firms
By JIM HATHCOCK
Deity "'°' Con 1 ,,. a MMfll
Orange Count~ 's high-tech busi-
ness network has gamed greater
e'posure w11h Business D1rectones
lnc.'s publicataon of its ti~t ~uthem
California ed1t1on which includes
detail!. on more than :!. 700 com-
panies located 1n Orange Los .\n-
gek'>. Slin Diego and Santa Barbara
counlle\
The \outhcrn C alit0rn1a guide
\en e'i a\ a c;1stL'r publication to the
l'\tabhsheJ Ri ch''> Auc,ine'>'> Guide to
the S1hcon Valle} and mcludes names
of key executives. addresses. phone
numbers. year of establishment for
compan1c-s, product descnpt1ons and
staff sizes
The compan}' opened an ol1ic:c 1n
Costa Mesa last )Car under the
d1rect1on of Man Toledo to fac1htall'
gathenng information on h1gh-tL·c:h
firmc; an the fourcountirs He w 111
O\ersee the company's cffun to
ex.pand the Southern California mar·
keung effon
Banks. an vestment firms. manulal-
turer<i , wholc~lers and dastnbutors
use the darC'ctor to locate sales
opponunille'> m the high-tech market
and JOb ~ekers use at to identify
emplo~ment openings
"Our new Southern California
guide co"ers high-technology com-
panies from San Diego to Santa
Barbara ... '>31d Business Directones·
president Joel Rosenberg. "We have
detailed maps for Los Angeles. San
Diego. !nine, Chatsworth, Torrance.
.\nahc1m, Santa .\na. Fullerton. Or-
ange. Costa Mesa. Santa Barbara and
I 9 other cat1c~"
Companie.; which manufacture
components. equipment or matenals
and provide related sen ices direct I"
applicable to computer aerospace
and other technical mdustnes arc
included in the guide
To asc,urc integral' of the pubh-
~at1on Ru:h's management gathrrs
informa11on on large and small com-
pan1t•s at no co~t to the listed en.Illy.
The direllOr) provide'> update infor-
mation each }'Car and the same
information on d1~ketts
Economists more pessimistic about trade.gap
B} PETER CO\
,., •11•1,...o Writ ..
'\,f~ 't<>R"--l u1 nom1c,t., .m:
gl·t11ng llHHl' f)l'S\lml'>lll ahout lhl'
henetit\ ot th e l hL·apc.:r dollar
\.1o\t npen' '>1111 think the drop in
the dollJr ' 'alut' agaan'>t other rnr-rc nrn~' ,,111 hl'lp '>hnnk the huge L \
tradt: defil 11 Hut mam '>a) tht'
\hnnl.age .,... Ill Ix· <,mailer .ind takt'
ungcr to \hov. up than.the\ prcd1rted
l'arlia th1'> \Car
"The w nsemus ha' \hilted a b11 ·
\Jld Da\ 1d ~ .,..,s t hief linanuJI
t•conom1'il tor Data Resource<; fnc 1n
I e"<an8ton Mac;s "In the pre,a1hng
'1e"' 1Lrn~th1ng "'c're a httlt' tx·h1nd
'ic hedule "
ThL· ~a"' ning trade gap fru~lrate~
f)oll11c1an,. hu!i1ness people and
21 11 • Ol•Cr. « • 4C ' Olr(inl lf 1 1'.. Oovl08
'" t ''I Orie'!Cn •'1 '" Dvn~On l .. l''I OurlrOfl
IS 16 I Ovnltn
11 • 17 > E •IVn ' S 1 Si.. ECOf'LO
l • ' ~1Pt1 4 • ,.. 1<19r8 n n 1ece10
union leader!). "'ho art· "'a1ting 1mp.i-
11enth for 1he result-; ol the sharp
1mpro,emcn1 1n the dollar\ rnm-
pct1t1\ encss
The dollar dipped again Monda'
h1tt1ng a post·'Wurld \.\ar II lo" 111
159 25 Japanese~ en at thl· l lo'>e ul lht·
e"<change market 1n Tok~o
.\cheap dollar is '-''P1x ted io hd p
the L S trade po'>11ton b' maki ng
\menlan goOds le'>" e"<pcn\l\l' O\l'r·
..ea!>. thus encouraging ..alc<i. "'hile at
the same. 11me ra1s1ng the cust ut
foreign goods sold 1n the l n1ted
~tales. cu111ng into bu~1ng b~ ..\nll'n·
cans
Howe' er. the I \ trade tkliut h.i'
been more o;tubbom than prcd1L1cd
and econom1\t~ sa' thae .irt· t\.\o 1..n
rea,ons
Onr 1., 1ha1 Europe.< cntral Amcn-
l..l. the OPEC.. nations and some other
1.n trading partner~ of the United
\talc'> have wcaker-than-c·q>ected
ccunum1c<, and cannot absorb more
\mem:an export!>, even though the
dollar \ \lide had made them better
hargatn<i
\notha rca<,(ln 1s that .\mencan
hu~ l'f\ ha' t' tal.en longer than ex-
pn tt•d \fl \\\Itch from lore1gn 10
dome\lll '>Upphen. Foreign suppher'i
ha\e ,1a~hcd their profit margins to
hang on tu .\mL·ncan customer<..
.. We're stall expecting 1mpro"e-
ment\ 1n trade th1~ year. but they're
going 10 ~slow and -at least for this
)car and ne'tt year -fairly moder-
Jte." '>aid Oav1d Berson, ~n1or
l'tnnoml\I al Whanon Econometnl
ForL·ca~ling .\w.x:1ates 1n Phtladt•l-
ph1a
Thl' J')C\'i1m1\m I\ widespread In
December ( ha\C fconometnn Ac,-
\OC1ates 1n Bala C-\.nW)d, Pa had
bren pred1c11ng the na11on '<,
merchandise trade defiClt thic, )'ear
"'ould be about the sam(' ac; t985's
rt·cord S 148 5 b1lhon No-w II pc~ the
1986 trade gap at about SI tt5 b1ll1on
C 111ng \1m1lar reasons. Wharton
and Oata Re'iourle!> ha' e both added
about S 10 h11l1on to their projections
of the 1<H16 merchandise trade gap
\1nce thl' start ol the year
Morco' er thr trade deficit should
remain abo"c SI 00 b1ll1on a )Car until
.11 ka't I IJ~K or 1989 most forecasters
(PleHe eee TRADE/ A9)
12', 34 , Hll"<lvn ' , '.,. Mo?l
20 20 t Hcllg8 \ 11 '• 2l • Ma•..01
""' 231'1 H.nrdr \I•· sa·. M<Crm
I I~ I& 2 Poul> '
4 • '~ Powell 42 '• tJ P•09ro 10 10 • PoSNC ).._ S" Purl18 > ll l31QMS
Herbalif e to
'!'1i~ ~·:~, ~~ ~~ end battle 2~ 2Si.. ~~H " nr_ 11-.. II "~ H09en 10.,. 10._. Mcf' arl
JJ-.. JJ''I Hldrln ' '• M-O(tf 11"' 11 ... Horl1lh ) • l 1 MedEI I ·~ 10 ... IMS I 7' .. "'· M lcom 19 20 > ISC U • 1• McluW SS "o S6 lnlOlh 1 11 11 , MI018k
16 • 't~ lnl1rn 14 '• IS , In Mllllo< 1
24 ' ••• ,,.~· ~-,... '• , 11... 1n111on
11 • 11 • ' S ' 2S'• Iowa~ MCH>uC
,, • 12•., 0...0<.
2S ' 2t > Olle~Cl'I ., . """ lt•-l1\o 321, ....... ,,.,
H·,H~ n~ ):g~~ with FDA 1:~ '!'~ !T~~ itf."tlr., r.1r". =~• fs~ f• LOS .\NC1HC\(\PI -Hcrbahfc !~' !~': r':::i~Y 1~· 1 .~ International which ha<, been hattl-II • "" lleNUCI
>2 • ~I • 16 • er o ' ~,~ nt ~ ~.~;. 17'• ~ • 1 ll>. ).4 JWP MOOl9P
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b,1
, ~ 8ifi;;' ;~ t about ho~ 11 lahc" and sells 11~ herb-
<J\o "' t•ICoPa ; ";, 1ng regulator\ tor more than a }ear
~' • st • 8~frk \o '-based d1e1 produll\, '' e"<pccted to \o .O F ro
... ~ ... F~t ~ti~ ~~"fn
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lt 1 )I" inAIE \I ''"' ll"t reco " 14 • ron~ 11 , Ill• rt¥,. 1
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t1 " J~Vt 10' > 10"° NO••• 101,, 11 Jo\lvn l1 • l1"' NM•crn 11 • 11 1 Kel•e• 1 1 a NlwkSv
15 ) 15'' K•Men 1 1S • 2S 1 Noa 8 10'• 11 KlvS a 1 St 60 '> Nord\! 1 ll '> lit !':° Kemp 1 l1 l1 , NCerG1 10 ., 10-1(1m1NI 1' '• )0 • NwN(', ll"' 14 '1 KlnQlnl t , 10 Nw11PS a ~ H11; l(IOOf(i ' s. SJ .. NOHll ' , ~ IC""Pf SS > 60 OcH,,_r
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" " • S..gele 11 11 • SEEQ io.. 20 1 s.n-
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'" ~ uvae , u~ 1 .,. settle us d1\pu1e with the Food and
.S • .. UllvH" I••• I~ D Ad h h 1•~ """ UPMP ,,.,, w-. ru~ " m1n1stratmn t 1-. monl .
'3 ., v•r"4n '3" +4~ officials S3}
101\ 11 V-11..n 1) ~'" 1 .. l >·16 v.itro 21•11 ,.., In add111on the ('Om pan~ \a) 'i 11 is 1r~ ,!~ ~~f' " ,,r: ·1' slowly recovering from effects of the u, ll~ == ~·~ u.::!! long-running d1c;pu1c tndudtng a ""' so :r;:.c ~ huge decline 1n ..ak"> defection of 12'-ll'• Wlc•• •~,, many d1stnbutof"i and '\la<ihing of 1t\
32
1
1 33 Wldcm •.-. n" :M''> JP. :l:!b n~ staff n:~ ~'" wo1vT Ii t ~ "We are back on cl '>low growth rate i w~vl 1l"' 1 '" now," Hcrbahfc 'ipokesman John 1,:: "' ~G" n · ,t;} S,l: h d I h .,,,,. v1owF , ,.1 .. ltlti Aycot . saa 1n a tc ep one 1nterv1ew
tt14 4 '" fll:;U• ~ ~:~ (Pleaae eee HERBALIFE/ A9)
The Great American ·6-Month CD
The greater your balance, the greater your rate.
Minimum balance $1,000; rate and yield above are for $50,000 balance.
Five different rate.\ for five different baJaocc levels. There are man)
odler term..., available. from 32 day\ to 10 ye.ar' All tn\Urc<l up to $100.(X))
by an agency of the federal government
"-11h i 111ffl•f"I 'l'f\ llllt C >r.tnjlt I 1lllOI ~
/\rl81Ylm 11111, 1~•11n1.11n \,1114-\
R.ilhoil l•~oc.J ~funllnlfl•.n "'°.._"
Ro ltww fT11111,ul.1 I JtttUnil !if11'.il
krt.1 I .11J1Jnil H111,
( 11p ntnu f4c-,1dl l.ttr\1"41 S1jt1lt'I
I I f1!fl• \11Wilf'1 \~~·
\11111Jrd1 n.n
'C"4p11n Hc:.iedl ~pun ( rn1r1
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~pon lk,d\ l 11111
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Great American
Your advantage bank."'
( h1:r llMl 'u•,1r-.ot \Jlet~ •A,~t~Che-1 ~I I Billion -
---·--c... ,...... ...,... .. llllt Giii
1!J Open your account today.
Call the toU-free RnanciaJ Line now:
t-800-423-BANK.
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f.
CPA group flonors
John McKerren
JobD J. McKerren, a Newport lkach CPA, has been honored by
the Callforal Certlfled Public Accouwt1 Foudatlom for &d11atloa
ud Reaearcb as rcc1p1ent of the 1986 Award for MeritonousSc.rvice.
The award was given an rccognitaon and apprccaatJon for McKerren 's
record as a found.lt1on instructor an continuana education for
members of the profe!>saon McKerrcn is a member and shareholder
of Klug, Henslee 6 Jackson of Newport Beach. He ts a \JC lrvtae.
Extension D1v1S1on. faculty member and member of the Newport
Harbor Arca Chamber of Commerce and the ladaatrtal Leape of
Orange County. • • • Allt11 Goodman of Pacific Auto1ound and Se<:artcy in Costa Mesa
and Norbert Slgllo1 (rigbtl of Lagua Stereo in Laguna Beach
recently attended the Al pane/Lux man national dealer conference in
Nnshvalle, Tenn. • • • Suzan.oe Roberta of Suz&Dllt Robtrta later1or De1lp m Corona
del Mar recently spoke to 500 of Denver's promment women at a
brunch featunng Roberts' "What's Hot. Whut' Not" theme. Robert
has 12 years of 1nteror design inf expenence. • • Kenoetb T. KJebba has J01ned Irvine-based LelgbtoD ud
At1oclatt1, Inc. as project geotcchn1~al engi.necr,. res~nsible (or
direction and coordination of gcotechmcal projects, incudu,gquahty
_,_ \ . ~-·-
Klebba Roberts
control and as~uranc:e ~ebba. previous!) a consultant, ha~ onshore.
offshore. Jungle. desert and arctic t':>..oenence • • • Linda A. Pettit has JOaned "'lewport Beach-based HoHelltold
Bull as ..\TM prOJCCt manager She had managed the A TM
depanmento, of two other financial anslltut1ons • • • William D. Ro11. 11. a commercial saJcs specaahst with the
Newpon Beach office of Scltnelder Co mmerclal Real Estate, has
been named the company's Agent of the Year for 1985. Ross has been
with the Schne1derorganazat1on forn1ne years. He serves as President
o'fthe faecutl\c Assoc1at1on of Orange Count}. • • • Prlscilla Felix of Lake Forest, has been promoted to branch
manager of Security Pacific Bank at ( ·rown Valley Center. Felix is a
nata vc of Albuquerque. New Mexico. ~he began working for the bank
two years ago a~ a loan trainee. • • • • Avco Financial ServlcH recently named Gay Frucl1 senior
\ICe president of field operations Francis wilt work out of Avco's
corporate headquarters an Irvine. • • • Judy Ozlmln1kl has been promoted to assistant vice president
and assistant manager of Landmark Bank's mort&age loan d1Vis1on.
Prior to her promo11on. 071mm\k1 was assistant vice pres1-
dent/busin.es' admin1strat1on at Landmark's Lake Forest/Irvine
office • • • ( orona del Mar resident. Raymond\.\ Haas has been appointed
vice president and senior account officer at Bank of America'•
pn' ate banlc1ng office an Newport Beach A native of Greensoro.
North Carolina. Haas was pres1d('nl and chairman of the board of
Americu lnteratate Bank from November I 972 through August
1984. • • • Sandra L. Profant has Joined the Newport Beach office of
Schneider Commercial Real E1tate as a broker spcc1almng tn office
leasing and in "cstment. Profant was previously with Coldwell
Banker Commercial Real Estate ~he resides an Irvine ••• Fountain Valley general contractor. Prblo & Prllio ha'i
appointed MarleSt. James director of marketing. Prior IOJ0101ng the
firm. St James was wuh Carver Development of Newport Beach. • • • Irvine re'i1dcnt Marlon J. Roblle celebrates 20 years with the New
York Life ln1oranee Company. Robkc 1s a New York Lafe Executive
Council member and a member of thr Malhon Dollar Round Table
~he: works oul Laguna Hills. • • • Grubb & Elli• Commercial 8rokeraJe Servlce1 has appointed
Dick Bentley ofFountam Valley vK:e prcsidcnlJUld saksro~er for
the South Bay office.Bradley will supervise a-30~~11;al~ n0 ·~ · ;.:.
teasing staff He 1s a decorated Vietnam veteran and was awarded
three purple heart awards dunng his m1lilary service. ••• lrwlo Federmu, president and chief executive officer of
Monolltbk Memories, Inc. has been elected to the board of directors
of the Western Digital Corporation. Based in In me. Western Digital
des1gn<1. manufactures and markets propnetaT) board-level
~ubs-.stems and VLSI semiconductor components ~ ...
Costa Mesa marketani consultant. Marla Piscopo recently
returned from North Carolina where she presented a program on
markeung creative services 10 the Raleigh Chapter of the American
Society of Magailne Pbotograpbera Piscopo teaches at Orange Coast
College and serves on the board of directors of the Business
Development Association, Graphic Anasts Guild and Women in
ManaRement.
OTC UPs & OowNs NYSE UPS & DOWNS
NEW YORK (AP) -The followlnii llsl 5hOW\. the Over • the • counter slocka end werr•nll thel h•v• gone \JP lhe most •nd OOW!I IM mo$t t>eMd on c>efcent of dlenoe for Mondev
NEW YORK (AP> -The followloo llsl shOws the New York SIQCk Exctienoe stocks •nd w•rr•nts tl'let rw.ve oon. uP ll'le most fnd oown tl'le most beMd on percent o chanoe reoardlels of vofume tor Mondav. No securltl" trading ti.low d or 1000 Sl'lfl:..'' •r• Included. dltt:ie~ t>!rw~~. c~~~C:Us ·~Tosi:::
price •nd Mondav \J'~l' or bid P!'lc•
i P.:t,E4'Pf' Lal'~ c'ne_ ut"
FlaRock t '·" Up mrmCll 1 ~ UP
l ~~Hou i ~ 8:
mSafetv 7'>J ~ Uo t00Exp P18 11 31/• UP Rossloo un ,~ ''1 UP
i l_Vfn s 11l ~ UP
oaTron l >4 jl4 Uo ~t"rs 6 'h Up
m 1yslcGP 3Ya 111 UP round 'l 1-16 J-16 Up I x 2 • 16 3-16 UP
ewevEI ~ Uo l onllnCre :>/< 1h Up
l v•tron ''• ~ Up
JI a!~k~e ~ H: l ven~ eri 2~ \jp ec:ke,Vl \II UP 1$lr o ~ UP rt• wtr_ 'I• Uo
;
ou~ct.rFlnl 'It Uo c 111Vsn 'It UP sv le wl 11t Up DO NS
LT&!,., _c~ :~ = ll/4 ,,.. -
''• -'h ~ ! -1 -H• . -·~ ,l~ ~ :i " -~ -"• '• -Vt '• -"·
c
~s«:urlll91 tradl~ below 12 are Ind· -v . Net •nd oerceotaoe c.n.~ •re the dU ence ti.tw-.n ll'le pre11 s aoslno pr ct end Mondav's p.m o r I c t
u~s Lui
l
\
J 1
TRM>EG:AP ••• homA8
·~ A m nonty viewpoint -thlt lhe M dap dolla.r wiU actually hurt Amcn--.•...J 1 ca'au.dcpo&iti o,atleasawilbJapan .., !fl lit:~ -i upRllCd by K.cnJch1 Ohme, lft ~ ll)&nlllftl dU'Cietor of lhe JappttO ' ofY'tce or the U consultJoa firm MtKintC)' 4' Co.
' Obmat ~ 1ha1 many PJQducts
impontd from Japao, Juch 11 Vlcfcocas.sct\e n:cordcn. compacl
di~ and ccnain computtt memory
ch1P', •~produced in small nwnben
or not at au an the Uniled Slates.
Obmae contends Americans haw
'no choice but to buy from Japan, and
incc the froducts cost more now
beause o lhe cbeapu dollat, ahe
trade deficit aces up., 001 down. I pen
is America's No. l lrldint partner
after Canada. .. Unlike the 1ovcmmcnt, Amen· can corporations are not terribly
inte~tcdinexPorunaoutoflhe U.S.
Many arc already very suoccuful in
becom101 insiders in the key markets
of the world," Ohmae •l'JUed in a
column in the Wall Street Journal last
week.
Bua mOli other ec:onomilU •YU ir the dollar remaiM aow ror 1oa1 ~ American COGapuuet wil in~est more i1t domadc muufao.
wrina, and otbcf UUODI, wm II Japan, WlU bu Id mOft U.S. lenoriel.
Eventually, t.bal will belp dlie U9dc
P.eh tOoll ~ .ou.r °' nYe ~ \0 "'
into thit maa ud it'• totlll to ..U
four°' nve )Un \0 ... out or •t." w said ~the c.a~ or Japen, AJl\CticUI
should noa count on any bia incteMe lo Japa~ demand f0t taeir P"Qd-
ucu. 111d Muaru Tak.Iii, teniof economi11 at Fuji 8ank Ud. in Nn-
York.
"We JapenC9C bsvc vcry amiJJ room forimporu from tht U.S. Even
if lhere•s a 30 or 40 percent lower
price, nm we prefer the quality of the
(Japanac) f.rodueu," Tak.qi said.
Wharton 1 8e'10n also nous lhat
half of U.S. imports come from
countries whose curreocies have
either weakened or remained Slady
apinst the dollar.
HERE'S YOUR CHANCE TO ATTEND
<"Un.ita <V_an.C!.a!1ftel'!1
Money Management Workshop
e number one *
ds • sand
loan in the· nation
is located
inNe ortB
and Sta sa.
Forbes rpagaz ine, the internati onally re~pected bus ine~s publicath~n . rat~)ct
Co lumbia Savings number one of all savings and loans m its Yardst1rks of
ma nage ment perform ance. . .
\Vh ich is no t surpri sing. Co lumbia has long heen knO\\ n fo r solid and effkwnt
management. For exampl e, Columbi a's admini stratire costs are far hrlO \\ the other
major savings and loans. And our loan and investment strategie s an' amon~ the most
~urcessful in the industn .
The res ult is profi t. Profi t that can he passed along to ~·ou in the form of h~h ratt's
on savings. And low rates on loans.
Being profi table keeps Columbia trong, too. Over three timt>~ a~ strong a~ tlH~
go\ Prnment req uires. And . of course, yo ur savtngs are federally insured to s100.onn.
So visit Colum bia Savi ngs' Newpo rt Beac h or Costa Mesa hranrh to<lay, or rail
our Cmnrn ienre Banking numh er: 1-800-652 BANK. And fi nd out what the number
nn r manag('d savings and loan in th e nation can do fo r you .
SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOClATION
Ont bf Amerk a'R large'it !t&vtng.s and loan u~latJons.
'iE"''POlT RF.AC'R \t>v.poM ( POll'r llr inti Santa Ro~ I ii ~) i liO 1W1l
COSTA MESA Harhor RoulP\lll'll anrl \\'11\un , (ii I) ll Sll 7141
BE\'ERU OOHE'll iMt?O I~"' "rh R-11111'\lnt, I lt.I) !7'1 ltlllll
8E\"BlU' BILL.q \\1hh1rr Hi•Ull'urd aml IMwn ... 1n {!1:1)1\.'li Ii Ill'\
BE\"!RU' HllL~ \\ 11-.h1rr Hou I•·\ otn1 ancl t'1m11t"n I .!1'.l l II\~ llt.nl
BIESTWOOO 1111111l\Jtrt \1rl'nll' Boul"' nt W.11 li~h i 2~
WT LOS A!ltGELES 2:101 ~~~I hi Sl1?11t tit ll ~l\K 111ri11
l.A MllADA lmtll'rlal llv.'\ an1t 'iAnu11.~nrurlr~ (.t llll4 1 17117
PAL\t OE! ER1'111Rh"ll'' lllitnit i~ (Hiii) 1 111 1~11
\
G). ·--LENDER .... -.
ANAJfEfM 1110. Brookh11r11 rtnr Rall and Rl'l•nkhur1t l il4) iii\ 71111
LAU FOUST Lak• rono~I l>rl\t and Rorkneld. I jl4) i71l 9005
PALM . Ptfl<.G 211 Ea.-11 Palm !'a.nwn Ot1vt1, ( ftlll ) 122 ~:lOO
SANTA MOSICA:lO'll \\1bht,,. f\nule'ud (213111211 Jt;ll~
TAIZANA 1811 Sol \'t1nlu,. Rlvd , ~~I of R~a 81vct , (Ill. ) 30 4i.to11
THllD A PMIPAX 145 South Palrtu A'"'"u"· (213) ll \i 4211\
W'RrM'TBR lhlU Et.~t \\ hllllf'r Al•ult\.ard, (2J:l ) ~45 2iHI
Wll. RTIP.·FARF X MIClO Wll,h111! Rl\d . \lutua! 8'\ntftt I.If\> Bide . t 21:1 I ~'.li 21llo
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• I
NYSE CoMPos1 J t T RANSAC r1uNs
..
Market continues retreat
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market
suffered another broad decline Tuesday, but the
blue chips managed a late rally that lifted the Dow
Jones industrial average well above tts lowest
levels of the session.
Most of Tuesday's losses occurred in the
morning. The market staged several unsuccessful
attempts at a rally before buying resumed in
earnest in the final minutes.
The retreat Tuesday on Wall Street came as
investors reeled from ·the shock of Monday's
severe setback. Although analysts had been
predicting th ts year's powerful rall9 would eventu-
ally lose momentum, the magnitude of the
market's reversal on Monday startled investors.
WHAT AMEX Orn I WHAT NYSE Orn
NEW YORK CAP) Jul. II
Todav7 Advanced 9
Declined ~ ¥~fa~,~~s 13
Prev. day 101 m 8l1
Due to transmission problems In
New York, today's 118tlng wlll not
appear In the Dally Piiot.
Newhlohs New lows 25
I AMEX LEADERS NYSE LEADERS
NEW YORK (AP) -Sales, 4 P.m. T d O nd t .. of 1"9 lS ~uesd~Y rw;a ~nd net chanoe of the 10 ~~ ~~ll~~lcte~ v"tk csr~ Exctlenoe
acllve American Stock Excnanoe IUUff, Issues, t rad i ng nationally at tradlno n atlona llv at more more than 11.
than Sl. CM.· ~=~IT\ ~'~' •,~¥.~ ~~· _ ,7,, ~~ry co WanolabB 4. 1 ~ -~ ea$tnAlrl. Commtron 111 h Amer T& T Harley n , co c ~mw~ '" : J~~ +1~ PtlOfirp~~' ~ Lorl~arYie1 n 27t,4 -11n ~frlRoeo ~~Ti~s ln·1 ntt =~:~ ~axt.ffrav · BeroenBrun 17S', 22Ye -1'"-Aetnalfe '• WalMert' P1PslC9 s AssdOGds IC lndust s
v Un: 1,939, 1.6-47, l;~646§· 1, • 1, •
1, l ' 1. • ) 1, ,7 l, • 1, •
l, ' • Goto QuorEs
'
I Dow JONES AvE~AGES
METALS QuorEs
NASDAQ SUMMARY
famous la b<z.1.s ...
~t. brl4ch ~ llt-Ylinn ~1"1tt:11it/6't't ~70
~ V\\~ IOOl IJ.'ll.&tlM:XXi bl-..0 I 21~ ~-327.)
poeodll.rd ~~~lckAow ,818/30't Q~~~
man t.nrufh l0to9. -'OWrdey IOt.oG t 9U1'ldey noon lo~
Rozelle
lays out
his plan
for drugs
Players association
says it won't accept
random drug testing
NEW YORK (AP) - A drug
proaram that includes mandatory
random tcstina for National Football
~ue ~ayers durin4 the season will
beain wtth 1986 training camp phys1-
cafs this month, Commissioner Pete
Rozelle said Monday.
The· National Football League
Players Associat1on in Washinaton
said it will not aoce"pt the program
because it represents an unauthorized
change in the current collective
bargaining agreement.
ihe league and team management
will get involved only when a player is
hospitalized for a substance abuse
problem, according to Rozelle. Any
player requiring hospitalization for
substance abuse will be removed
from the team's roster for JO days and
will receive 50 percent of his {>'lY for
that period. A second hosp1tahz.ation
would mean removal from the roster
for 30 days with no pay. If the player
relapses and tests pos1t1vc again, he
wtll be permanently banned from the
NFL.
"I feel the collcct1ve barpming
a&reement and the by-laws give me
the obhgauon and the authority to
protect the health and welfare of the
players and to preserve the pubhc
confidence in the NFL," Rozelle sa1d.
AP leMrpMlo
Wally only
1-7, but it's
a big, big ~it
Joyner's three-run
triple in 16th tops -
Milwaukee, 3 -1
MILWAUKEE (AP) -Wally Joy-
ner aot only one hit '" ~ven at-bats
during the Angels' l 6-1nmng victory
over the Milwaukee Brewers.
But that one hn secured a 3-1
victory and gave the Angels first place
in the Amenc.an League West. one-
half game ahead of the Tex as Rangers
who lost to New York on Monday
nif!?t. 'Inasmuch as the number of people
we had to use. this was the most
important game to win this season,"
Angels Manager Gene Mauch said.
Joyner's bases-loaded tnple broke a
string of 15 scoreless 1nnmgs and gave
the Angels a 3-0 lead. Doug Corbett
got his seventh save despite allowing
a run in the bottom of the 16th
.. There's not much to sa}' lttook 16
inmng.s to score." said Joyner a
rookie who came through ag;unst
rookie left-handed reliever Dan
Plesac. "With one out I Just needed to
put the ball tn play and not hit 11 at
someone for the run to score. ·
Milwaulr.ee Manager George
Bamberger had a bad feeling with
Joyner at the plate.
.. , could sec him hitting 1t to the
outfield somewhere... Bamberger
said ... He was going to get a piece of 11
some way. He'san outstanding hitter
Aqd• (Caftdetana ().())at Mil·
waukee (Nieves 7~2)
Time: 5.35.
TV: None.
Radjo: KMPC (710).
~cdnctdar's pme: Anstb at
Milwaukee, l:lS a.m. _______ ,
To Mauch, the odds were apin"
the Angels.
"There's no way to explain to
anybody how difficult it is to win
these kind of games on the road ...
Mauch said. "Every time your pitcher aoes out thel'e after the eJahth mnin&.
you've got to hold them two more
times.
"There was great pitch.ingandpat
defense on both sides.." be wd.
Milwaukee staner Bill Wegman
blanked the Anacls on four hits over
11 1nmnas while Califomia·s Mike
Witt scattered seven hits over mne
1nn10gs.
For WtJman. a rookie ngbt-hander
malling his fifth attempt at wtn No 3
this season. 1t was another bard luck
ouung.
··When he docs pitch good, he
doesn't get credit He could be above
SOO," Bamberger said. "Eleven 1n-
n1ngs You can't ask for more than
that" He said he derived hts authonty
from Article 8.13 (A) of the NFL
Const1tut1on and Bylaws and Article
(Pleue tee ROZELLE/82)
A •millng Bobby Grich (right) e.corta Wally
Joyner to the infield after Joyner'• three-
run triple in the 16th inning Monday ni,ht
in Milwaukee. The Ange19 won, 3 -1.
.. When you get him out ~1>. times
the law of averages 1s against you." he
said
Ray Searagc and Mark Ocar each
pitched two hitless inntngs for the
Brewers before Plcsac. S-6. took over
to start the 16th.
Hey Wally you've got company A little ·
relief for Another Joyner makes a big splash as
Jac~ie breaks world heptathlon record
MOSCOW CAP) -Jaclue Joyner
put together a series of remark.able
performances and shattered the
world record 1n the heptathlon b)
more than 200 points with the first
7,000..potnt total 1n history at the
Goodwtll Gamcs~onday. Joyner's pcrfo ance highlighted
another bia day fi r American athletes
at the multi-spor festival. Amencans
took the lead in t e JOld-medal count
from the Soviet Union, 22-21.
Swimmer Scan Killion of Cherry
Hill. N.J., beat former world rccord-
holder Vladimir Salnikov of the
Soviet Union in-the men's 4()()..meter
freest yle, and Angel _Myers of
Americus. Ga .. and Furman Univer-
sity, won her third and fourth..gokj
medals. • "' · "I !!kc.to compete against the1>est. ,m:t when t.perfb·rm. r like to do m) ~ ........ ' be~t." she said
Joyner. the world's third-ranked
heptathletc, certatnl) competed
agamst the best MOE &fJponents
included four of the other top six
heptathletcs. including world rccord-
holder Sabine Pae11 of East Germany
and No. I-ranked Jane Frcdenck of
the U.S
"Coming into this compct111on. I
had set goals for m)self. ··Joyner said
.. I realized that the competition was
out there, but my compelltton was
against the scoreboard. I JUSt concen-
trated on what I had to do ..
Joyner concentrated so well that. 1n
addition to the overall world record.
she set a first-day world record wHh
4, 151 points, a world record 1n the
heptathlon long Jump of 23 feet. "n
Amencan heptathlon record in tf\c
I ()()..meter high hurdles of 12 8 5
seconds and five personal bests.
Shubenkova ol the Soviet l mon
ranked fifth. v.as third w11h 6.631
points.
"l''e got 10 read about 11 to
believe:· said her coach and husband.
Bob Kersce .. , s.av. 11, but I don't
beheve ll )'f't She's an amazmg
athlete. She's very blessed and very
talented."
Paetz. who had set the world record
of 6, 946 points in 1984. placed founh
with 6.456 points. Frcdenck failed to
finish. dropping out after the sixth
event with a back injury.
Joyner is the first American woman
10 hold a ~orld record.in a multi-sp6rt• ..
compct1tton since the late-Babe
D1drjck$0n, .\.he star: of the 1932
·otym~c Games, set the tnathlon
·.mandnore than 50 years ago. The
triathlon then consisted of the I QO.
meter dash. high Jump and Javl"lin
throw.
Joyner's gold medal was one of four
earned b) the l n1ted St.ates 1n the 12·
event track and field provam The
Amencans also collected s1>. gold'i in
eight events on the final day of
swimmmg and finished the compet1-
11on with 15 gold!> and 49 medals. a
tremendous feat for a ··sccond-stnng"
team. The top U S swimmers are
prepanng for the world cham-
p1onsh1ps
Overall, the ~oHets have 69
medals. the l 'n11ed 4:itates 63.
In a stunnmg upset in the pool,
Killion beat Salmkov 1n the men's
400-meter freestyle 1n 3 minutes.
5 I. 91 second 'i.
"I d1dn·1 think I could heat
Salnikov." Killion ~aid. "He 1s the
rtSest distance man around I JUSt
wanted to give him a race. but when I
saw I could win . I JUSI closed my eyes
Runnerup Sybille Thiele of East
Germany. ranked No 6. fin1')hed
second with 6.635 points Natalya
and pressed hard."
Salntko". the former world record-Jackie Joyner acknowleqe. the attention
(Plea•e see GOODWILL/B2) a• •he walk• e.zhau•tedly away following
Put a little romance in your life
Getting knocked down
can be more than simply
knocked off your wheels
By JERRY S0°IFER
AP corrre1pondHt
CORONA (AP) -Ronnie Smith was
knocked on his rear but 1n'ltcad of gernng
mad he fell in love
Smith was playin& shomtop for the
Corona Community Hospital Medic!> in a
slo-p1tch softball gnme aptn'lt the Da. 1ly
Independent Headliners five yea"' ago
Debbie Sklenar. a pasteup an1st for the
Headhners. had reached fir~t ba~ with a
walk The nut batter hit a perfect double
play ball at the second ba'IC'man A'i Sklenar
ran to second. Sm 1th took the 01p ,teppcd
on \he bag and thrtw to fir'it The\ will
nevtr foriet the rt'lt
m1th said 4:iklcnar ran right over him
"That's how we met ' he \lid "\he
didn't shde hke \he was \uppo"Cd to \he
ran naht throuah the M\C and nm nght nn
top of me "
After their coll1~1on . Smith and \klcOJr
bepn d ttna Within '" monthc; he
propostd m maae ond tihe •~~pted
Ronnie and Ot'bh1t:' ha vr ~n m;1rnl'<I
lor tour )Cars and arc e1q>cct1ng their third
child
The c.;mtlh'i an: one of 'icvcral local
lOuples tn ha"e tal..en the 'itcp from the l O-
ed softball diamond to romance and
mamagc
Former Norm ll1gh lao;tptt ch 'ilandout
Juhe Md.aren met hl·r husband to be Jim
Laliberte. when o;he Joined thC' ( orona
Red Sox slo-p1tl·h team
Mitch Llo)'d wa!> met Karen (Ma,<.·11)
Llo)d. an all-leaguC' catcher on the Corona
High varsity 1n I 981. about "" vl·a~ ago
Mitch and Karen celebrated their '>l'(nnd
annl\·Crsary last week
Karen's father, Ken, met h1«i second wile.
Deanna m1th. playing slo-p11ch
Penny Lloyd, Mitch'\ ~1\tcr, met John
Oberdank al a Norco H1Jh ba\ketball
&ame The)' ..iartcd· playina \lo-pitch
together and wound up gellin& mamed
~11..c ( ootcr. 27, and C'1nd) Donctt. l~
h3 \C hct'n bovlnend and g1rlfncnd for thr
la\t \f'\ \C'l\r\ The) \tarted dating when
the\ met at a \lo·pttch pm..-\t'Vt'ral )C31'\
allt-r th<'\ graduated from Nor'o High
\chool
'iln.-11111 h 1r.1m\ arc n>mpo<,ed nl fi\l''
men Jnd Ii' t' wonwn in the 11<.'td 1 hl·
hattina ordn """' •lltl·matt• \C~C\ I hrrc
arc ncarl) 1.000 \l o·ptll h plaH'r\ parllc t·
p.111ng in< or11n.1.Nnn n uH'd kagul'\ ,
\Ian~ ol them heac.l for a p1ua parlor
"hen thC' game 1so"cr "We·d go have hcC'r;
afterthegames We'd s11 atoppos1teendsol
the ta hie "c'd end up 'i1t11ng togC'ther:·
M11ch I loyd said of his coumhtp of
Ma:\ell
Slo-p11ch softball can form the nudcu\ ol
a couplC'·s rcla11onsh1p ··our whok It fc revolves around (\Oft·
hall) ... Mclaran said "We have a lot of
1h1ng!t in common. That's our maJor thing
\\-C' l'nJOY together:·
Debbie Sklcnar's awkwardness at play-
ing sof\ball was the key ingredient to their
collision :u 'it'c-ond base. ··Her lnowledge of
\pons attracted me to her plus her loot..'>."
<;m1th o;a1d ··<;he has a good idea ofwhat''I
going on 1n all 'iflOn'"
"low [)cbt11c. 27 usually watchc\ when
the h1ghl) rnmpe1111H' Smith. 28 plays.
"The kmd of compct1t1on we have r,he
rould get hun out thel'C' .\s agares\1vc a\ v.e
.trt 11 could endanger her \hC' v.ouldn'1 ~
happ~ not dorng well he'\ \Cr, m m·
fll'lll1' <'" he \aid
I JU'il pla\ 1f I'm nct'Jed." l >chh1c \CltJ
··11 the\ 're go1ni to he \hon a ii1rl. then
thl'\ '11 thruv. me 1n thC'f'l' I'm not rnoutth In
pl;n all th\· 11mC' L .1\I ..._.a,o n. I pla~ cd
i.1ga1n\t Ronntc That wa' mo1c fun That
v..1y h1· 1 an't gr t mac.lat ml· v.ht·n I m,ll1• .111
llUI ..
A# .... _._
her 800 meters effort on way to a world'•
record in the women'• heptathlon Monday.
.065 AVERAGE:
NO GAIN IN NFL?
Mi".MPHI\ I enn I .\Pl -Bo Jal l'>on thl
I kl\man Trnph\ \\ innC'r who passed up lo<>thatr'
h1g. mime' 10 pla) manor-league baseball. 1~ h1tt1ne
1u<,t cttl~ hut ht'i ho'i\ ..aid Mone.la\ the right fielder
v.111 c;11ll makl· the grade
"I th ink hC'''i Jone qu11e well ·· '\atd ( •l'"f~l'
L ap1Jt·'· prcc;1dent of th e Ml'mph1s < hick,, a ( la.,,
.\.\ all1h.1tc of the KansJ\ Ctt ) Ro)al\
Jnl'.k\on 'ltgncd with lhC' Royal' and 101ncd tlH
( htd.s la \I month alkr I urning dnwn a n1nt rill t
worth a reported S7 m11lwn with thr l ampa Ba'
Buctam•cr\ nl the N:rnonal f-oothall Leagut who
chO~l' Jar k<;on No I O\erall 1n thl· draft
Jal k\on ha~ pla~ed eight gamC'\ tor the < h1dl \
lour a\ a de!l1gnatcd hitter and lour d\ a nght r.~·h.kr
I hr ti-I 2::!0.pound former running had lrnm
\uhum ha\ s1ruck ou1 14 ume\, ha\ two h1t'iand one
run hattl'd 1n 31 a1-bats. a batting average' of 065
Lap1dl'' said 11 ha'i to be 1.:0n'i1dered th.11
Ja, k\tln 101ncd lhe team without the ~nefit ol
,pnntt lra101na or an~ pr~a'i(m cond1110ning
.. He·\get11ng 1n §hape and domg hie. tine tuning
and pl1~1na iamci. all at the -.ame time. ~h1l h
t'iac,cball pltl\c"' arcn t t'H·r a'li.l·d In do," L aptd<''
\llld.
lacl..\nn wa\ 0-fnr-4 'iunda\ ac. the C hu:I..' IO\I
h : to thr < 1rttn' ilk Rra' c' I k groundt'd 1>ut thm·
llllH'' and c,trul·i. oul um c
1 h" "gmn1t tn takl' "''me 11mC' hut I m \C"t'I08
(Pleue ~ .066/82)
Dodgers
ES (AP)-Only nine
m ave passed since the St.
u1s Cardinals and Los ~Jes
Dodaers played for the National ·
League J)Mnant. Instead of glory.
J.boy'l'Tfay end up this season playing
for pndc
··1 don't see any guys qullttng, ..
Cardmal shortstop Ozzie Smith said
Monday night after Los Angeles
edged Sr Louis. 1-0 on an unearned
run
··A lot of people here have a lot of
pride and 11 takes a lot out of it when
they're not able to do the things
they're capable of doing or the things
they did the previous year."
Tonight'• game
St. Louis CConro) ::!-3) at DM1en
(Welch 4-6)
Time· 7.35.
TV None
Radio· K.ABC (790).
Wednesday's game: St. Louis at
Dodgers, 7 35 p.m.
Both clubs a~ playmg well below
the 500 level The Dodgers arc able 10
use tnJunes as an excuse. The
Cardinals aren't
"We can't hit anybody ..... .St. Louts
Manager Whitey Herzog said after his
offense suffered through its I 0th
shutout and 53rd game of the season
with three or fewer runs. "We don't
even make hard outs. I wish I kne~
what the hell to do about 1t. ..
.\ftcr leading the league in httting a
year ago, the N.L champions have
made an about-face They trail the
leagu<' in team batting and arc
wallow 1ng in their d1v1s1on ::!3 games
1\Ut ot fir'il place with six. days s11ll
rl•ma1n1 n@. betorc the A.II-Star break
., ou look at the stausu~ and we
ha\e [lU\\ that aren't performing h .. c
th\'\ the' 'ihould .\nd when that
happen, lo a whole hncup. you're not
go1ns 1n v. in.' said second baS('man
T omm' Herr whose two-out. fourth·
in ning single off >\lcJandro Pena wa~
the last ( ard1nal h11 of the night.
P<"na I· I made his ~ond stan in
17 month\ ~1nce undergoing
an hro'>'op1c c.urgcf) in Feb~n
I 4X5 10 rC'pa1r lart1lage damage to his
11gh1 '>houlder Thr nght-hander who
had the low1•\t C'amed run average 1n
the "" l tv.o ~ca~ ago. yielded three
wa lk\ and both h1t'i v.h1le ~tnking out
tnur
Turrell plcks
sawlnners
Oa1I \ Pilot handicapper Terry
Tumll and Orange County Fair
racing had something 1n common
Monda\ nir.ht The~ ·b<>th came awa> wmners..
T umll. 1 n h1~· fir\t niaht of
hand1capp1ng for the Daily Pllot,
picked SI\ ~inners.
Mean~h1lr. 1t was a banner
opening night ol ranna at Lu
~lam1to., ra~ cou~ a' ~.16.'.\
fans attended
1 umll'• hand1CaP\ tor 10-
n1ght'c. raC'tnJ can ht-found on
c 8S
Reggie, Wally get
a bead on bertlis
"'With AL All-Stars
ProlD A.P dJ1pacelae1
NEW YORK -Tim Raines of the Ill
Mont.real Expos has moved ahead o(T ony
Oywnn of the San Di~o Padres in the
votin,a for the third stanma Na\Jonal League outfield
posiuon in m~or leque baseball's All-Star Game, the
commiasioner s offi~ announced Monday
In the AL, An&els outfielder Rcwe Jackson has
extended his lead slia}\tly over .Kirby Puckett of the
Minnesota Twins for the third startina spot.
Jackson had less than a 1,000-vote lead over
Puckett after last week's voting, but has increased that
to 7,000.
Rickey Henderson and Dave Wm field of the New
York Yankees are running No. I and No. 2 for the
outfield positions.
Lance Parrish of the Detroit Tigers leads aJI
catchers with 902,925 ballots. Angels rookie fi rst
baseman Wally Joyner has a better than 100,000-vote
advantage over the New York Yankees' Don Mattinaly.
Detroit second bascbman Lou Whitaker has
563,036 ballots, 111 ,6 7 3 more than Kansas City's
Frank While.
Gcorae Brett of Kansas Cit)' leads all third
baseman with 1,140,605 votes as Boston's Wade Boggs
is second with 965.397.
The starting lineup for the National League will be
announced Wednesday at 6 p.m. wnh the Amencan
League starters being announced Thursday at 6 a.m.
Raines trailed Gwynn b)' more than 74,000 votes
after last week's tabulations. but moved ahead of the
Padres' outfielder, 803.829 to 796.057 this week.
New York Mets nght fielder Darryl Strawberry,
who leads all Nauonal Lcauge players with 1,366,374
votes with one more announcement of voting
remaining. 1sahead of Dale Murph~ of Atlanta, who has
1,080,292 votes
Quote of the day
"If 1t was a Jerky-type person. 11 wouldn't
have the same impact. He's going to be all nght.
God takes care of good people·· -Oakland
Athletics outfielder Dasty Baker on the finng of
manager Jackie Moore.
Blas case: 61 subpoenas out
UPPER MARLBORO. Md -The m Prince George's Count) state's attorne)
has JSSued 61 subpoenas and prepared
another I 0 in tbe investigation of the
cocaine death ofUni' ers1ty of.Maryland basketball star
Len Bias. ti was announced Monday.
State's Attorney Anhur Marshall said the wit-
nesses being called range from the state medical
examiner to roommates and fnends of the All-
Amencan
U.S. topple:-Weet Germany
MALAOA, Spam -Cbatlie Smith m and Kenny Smith led the undefeated
United States to an SJ-68 fint·round
victory over West Germany ln the World
Men's BuketMll Champioawps oo Monday.
Charlie Smith, a 6-9 forward from the Univcrs.aty ofPittsbu~1 had2.3 poi.nts, s;vu\a him 53 poinu in the
Americans tnrec V1Ctones.
Kenny Smith1 a auard from tht UnivenJty of
Nonb Carolina, nad 13 poinu and his quicknes
proved deci ive. Three limes be intercepted passes and
went in for the layup Un<X>ntested.
After lead.in& '47-39 at the half, the Amencans.
coached by Lute Olson or the Univenity of Arizona,
took advantaae of cold shootina by the West Oermans.
A steak of eight stnight poi nu •and some flllC
reboundina by David Ro6inson of the U.S. Naval
Academy, helped the U nited States to a 59~ lead.
The Americans then atretchcd the advantage to
69-45 before West Germany's second field goal of the
5CCOnd half with 8:04 lef\. Althou&h West Germany
outscored the Amencans 23-12 fTom then on. the
Americans' lead was too much for the West Germans to
overcome.
Robinson, the top colleae rebounder last season,
ended the game with 16 points and five rebounds. It was
his best aamc of the tournament.
McEnroe geta ready for return
TORONTO -John McEnroe, who ~ has been on a leave of absence from tennis,
confirmed Monday he wm return to
Can~da for the 10th consecutive year and
seek his third strajght Player's International Cham-
pionship, which begms next month at the National
Tennis Center in Toronto.
The American won has second straight Inter-
national at Montreal Last year when he defeated Ivan
Lendl of Czechoslovak1a. He plans to return to the
Nabisco Grand Prix international circuit August 2 for
the Volvo International at Stratton Mountain, Vt ..
before traveling to Toronto.
McEnroe has been away from competitive play
since mid-January when he received pem11ssion from
the Men's ~"ternational Professional Tennis Council to
take an extta ....... J leave of absence because of the birth of
has first child. ~
The $525,000 International begins Aug. 9 and runs
until Aug. 17
ESPN adds to football slate
BRISTOL, Conn. -ESPN has added [!]
the Texas A&M at Texas. Maryland at c II•
Pittsburgh and Michigan at Hawaii games
to us pnme time football telecast schedule,
the sports cable network announced Monday.
TexasA&M-Texas will be played on Thanksg1v1ng
Day . Thursday, Nov. 27, Brigham Young-San Diego
State two days later and Michigan at Hawaii on
Saturday. Dec. 6 Starting limes will be announced at a
later date.
The three JOm three other games previously
announced by ESPN Miami at South Carolina.
Saturday: <\ug. 30: Maryland at Pittsburgh. Monday.
Sept. I; and Texas A&M at Louisiana State. Saturday.
Sept. 13.
ESPN also announced the extension of its contract
to televise Canadian Football League games through
the 1990 season.
Es -Net Rlcharclaon arreated
HACK.ENSACKN.J.-FormerNBA m
All-Star aua.rd .Micheal Ray RichardlOn
was released from Be~n Country jail on
bail Monday ni&bt a~r his amst for . . . dnvina with a revoked h<:entc and thrcattnana has wife
while he was bei!'14held at a poli~ statlon, ICClOrdina to
the New York Daily News.
The paper also repon1 today that Richardson
admitted he bas continued to uae cocaine.
Richudson, the flnt player ever to be banned from
the National Buketball Association for d.rua use, was
released from the jail af\er a friend1 Brenda Dyla, posted
S2,SOO cash baU about 7:30 Monoar evcnina.
The former New Jeney Neta star was arrested
Sundey afternoon by Allandale, N.J. pohoc when he
was found do~ina behind the wheel ofhil car, which was
parked behind a local realty office. The motor was
runnina, police said.
Accord.in& to police, while at the tation, Rich·
ardson "attempted by pby1icaJ menace to put (his wife)
Leah Richardson in fear of imminent serious bodily
irijury" by threatening her verbally and physically.
Authoritjes did not administer a drua test. but
Allandale Police Chief Frank A. Parenti said Rich-
ardson "appeared to be out of it" and that "there was no
smell of booze."
Herzog caught ln a dilemma
LOSANGELES-Selectingjuste1&ht Ill National League All-Star pitchers from a
bumper crop this year is eittrcmely dif.
ficult, Whitey Herzog said Monday.
"There are reaJly 14 or 15 pitchers who deserve to
go to the game," said Herzoa, the manager of the
defending league champion St. Louis Cardinals and
skipper of the NL All-Stan.
The New York Mets alone would seem eligible to
provide the bulk of the NL's pitchlna staff for the July
15 meeting at Houston.
The Mets' Sid Fernandez is 11 -2, Dwight Gooden
as I 0-3, Bob Ojeda 9-2, Ron Darling 8-2 and Roger
McDowell 7-1.
Televialon, radio
TELEVISION
Noon -GOODWILL GAMES: Track and
field, women's volleyball, women's cycling,
women's modem pentathlon (3 hours), Channel 5. ,.
7 p.m. -GOODWILL GAMES: Track and
field, women's volleyball, men's and women's
cycling, men's basketball, men's water polo (3
hours). Channel 5.
7:30 p.m. -HORSE RACING: From
Hollywood Park, Channel 56.
· 11 :30 p.m. -GOODWILL GAMES: High-
lights, Channel 5.
RADIO
5:30 p.m. -BASEBALL. Angels at M1l-
wt4ukee, KMPC (710).
7:30 p.m. -BASEBALL: St. Louis at
Dodgers, KABC (790).
WEDNESDAY'S RADIO
11 :30 a.m. -BASEBALL: Angels at
Milwaukee, KMPC (710}.
Coacbes~et
in line bebind
NFL' s Rozelle
NFL Coaches Don Shula, Sam Wyche and Fon'efl •
Orea endoraed NFL Commissioner Pete .Rozelle's plan
to introduce mandatory random drua tesuna or players.
Officials of professional bueb&ll. ba ketbell and
hockey Jeaaues witbhe~d comment .on Rozelle's plan.
Hany Usher commissioner of the nval USFL, said be
would "have' problems with random mandatory testina
becauae t want to protect the players. I would want to So
over the proposal further." .
And Tony Elliott, the New Orleans Saints n~iackle
who kicked a cocaine habit that nearly ended hts career,
said Rozelle's plan wouldn't ehminate drua uae amons
players. . l'. d "It's a half solution," Elliott said. "I 1~1 th~t ran om
resting could be used positively. but educauon ~s tb~ onll
thing that's going to deter drug us.qr 1n SOCJety 1tsel ,
includina the NFL." . .. Said Shula coach of the M1am1 Dolphins: I was
happy to bear tbAt the comm1ss1oner 1s taking strong steps
to combat drug abuse. In light of the recent deaths of
(basketball star) Len Bias and (~levelan~ Browns
defensive back) Don R~ers, J feel lt is impe_raove that the
National Football Leque does everything in its power lO
restore public confidence in our game and its players.
There can't be anythina more important." "Something has to be done," Wyche1 coach of the
Cincinnati Bengals, said. "Let's use a little common
sense. People arc dying aro~ us. It's not just athletes.
"Enough bas not been e. Something else needs to
be added to the policies that re in place," Wy~he added.
"I think all the effort that could have been made was made
with the NFL Players Association. I think .a firmer
statement had to be made and he (Rozelle) has done
that."
"This is preventative medicine," said Gregg. coach
of the Green Bay Packers. "We're not trying to catch
people. Every time we test I JUSt hope and pray that we
don't have a single guy that's positive on anything but 1t
doesn't always work out that way."
Gregg said he was pleased the testina will be done by
an independent lab. "I am no tonaer a policeman. I'm a
football coach again," Gregg said:-
Elhott said he would comply with Rozelle's plan but
expects NA. players to rebel against it. . .
.065 AVERAGE. • • From Bl
the ball better and rm making better contact." Jackson
said Sunday.
'Tm not womed." Jackson said. "I see myself as a
patient person. Tht coaches are patient wnh me, and
when 11 comes around, it's &oing to come around big."
Jackson J01ned the Chicks amid a media show that
brought in reporters and photographers from around the
country.
His first game attracted 7.026 fans. more than twice
the usual attendance at Chicks games.
Ted Tornow. a C'h 1cks spokesman who travels with
the team. said Jackson~xpects to draw cnuc1sm because
of bis poor batting average. but 1s confident of eventual
success.
ROZELLE UNVEILS NEW DRUG TESTING PROGRAM ...
From Bl
VIII of the ( ollectl\C Bargaining
Agreement
A release from the NFL said \nick
8. 13 (A} SJ\ es Rozelle po~er to
impose d1sc1phne for "conduLt
detnmental to the welfare of the
league or professional football" and
Anicle VIII concern'> "tonduct
detrimental to the mtegnt} of. or
public confidence in. the game of
professional football ..
"l v.ould have much prekrrcd that
management and the pla,crs reach
agreement on.it than.to act 1ndepen-
denth." RoLcllc said at a news
confe.rcnce where he unveiled a
snen-pomt drug program of testing.
education treatment and d1sc1phne.
"'hach would cost an estimated SI
million annuall}
Ro1elle said he no11fied the 28 club
owners Monday by electnc mail.
In a statement, released an Wa sh-
ington. Gene Upshaw. president of
the NFLPA said the union would be
""ilhng to meet with Jack Donlan.
execut1\e director of the NFL Man-
agement C ounc1l. to discuss pos<;1ble
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changes in the current drug-testing
program
"But v.e simply cannot agree that
Rozelle has the authonty to unalat-
erall) change the terms of our
agreement." Upshaw said. "The
agr<.'ement reached in 1982 1s final
and binding on all parties. and 1t~
terms cannot be changed an m1d·term
except on consent."
The NFLPA has scheduled a news
conference at us western office 1n San
Francisco a1 11 a.m PDT Tuesday
"From a medical perspective I
don't know how there can be a
challenge," said Dr. Forest Tennant.
Jr .. a recognazed expen in the field of
chemical-dependency treatment,
who was named by Rozelle as NFL
drug advisor and placed an charae of
the program.
NFL players "fit the target group"
for drugs an age, money and time (the
off-season 1s about six months),
Rozelle said.
"You have to find out 1f there is a
problem before you can stop a major
problem from developing." reasoned
P entagon continues
t o dip into Goodwill
MOSCO\\>(AP)-Asthe compet1-Callahan of the Au Force, from
taon continued toda:r at the Goodwill Danville, Calif .. and the Army's Ruth
Games so did the controversy as three Crowe, of Allandale, Mich., were
more members of the military and already an Moscow when they were
five suppon personnel were banned told they would not be allowed to
b)' the Pentagon. Amencan or-compete. the spokesman said.
gan1zers said The Turner Broadcasting spokes..
There were conn1ctang reports on man said the ban on the U.S. military
how many athletes were involved an boxers applied to Bnan Lonon (106
the ban A Soviet official said the pounds): Kennedy McKinney ( 112
latest announced ban applied to eight pounds). Ronne! Doll ( 125 pounds);
Americans and that a total of lJ Vincent Phillips ( 132 pounds); Derck
boxers were not part1c1patmg. Wilson and Arthur Mamnez (both
But a spokesman for Turner Broad-147 pounds). Anthony Hembrick
cast mg Systems, which is co-sponsor ( 165 pounds); Donald Stephens ( 178
of the games with the Soviets, said pounds) and heavyweight Wesley
toda~ the Defense Department ban Watson . along with coach Hank
applied to nane boxers. a boxing Johnson. manager George Schaefer
coach. a manager and a doctor. as well and Dr Charles Pit lock
as two handball team players and a The USA-Amateur Bolung Feder-
compet1tor in the modern pen-· auon said today that eight substitute
ta th Ion boxers have been chosen to compete.
Five ~upport personnel for the They are to leave today for Moscow.
handball players and pentathlete The federation identified them as
were also barred from taking part 1n Ysa1a Zamud1a, I 06 pounds;
the games. the spokesman said. He An thony Wilson. 118, Tyrone Wash-
asked that his name not be used. ington, 125; Terence Southerland,
Pentathlete Mike Burley, an Army 132: Ernesto Chavez and Ricky
captain from San Antonio, Texas and Royal, 147; Lorenzo Wnght. 165. and
team handball goalkeepers Kathy Michael Simon. 178.
,.. ............
Do,!4 Padilla (rilbt) and Terrence Brahm went 1·2 lD the
men • 5,000 meten at Goodwill Gamea ln Moecow Monday.
GOODWILL GAMES ..•
From Bl
holder in the event, was timed 1n
3.52.00. l;::===========================;i Myers finished as the biggest win-ner in the pool, capturing her third
On Monday, she opened with the
heptathlon world record in the long
iump. tl)rew the Javelin a personal
best 163-4 and completed the run mto
the record books with a 2-minute,
10.02-sccond clocking, her sccond-
fastest ever. in the 800 meters.
Complete Racing Coverage
Entries, Handicaps & R~sults
'~ '" th~ Dail Pilat
'
and fo urth gold medals to go along
with one bronze.
Myers won the women's 100-meter
freestyle in 56.48 and swam a leg on
the winnan& U.S. 400-meter medley
relay team, tamed in 4: 12.54.
The Soviets, featurina their best
swimmers at the games, wound up
with 39 swimming medals, including
13 golds.
Meanwhile. the United States and
Sovtet women' basketball ttams
continued on the road toward a
showdown in Thursday night's final
aame of the round-robin tournament.
each· undefeated team postina us
third victory.
The Amencans. Wlth Cheryl Maller
leadlna the way for the third time,
defeated Czechoslovalaa 78-70. Mill·
er scored 20 points. while 6-8 Anne
Donovan added I,.
The Soviets overpowered Bulpna
82·56[ whale Brazil downed
Yuaos avia 79-65 ll\ the other pme
Joyner ~n btr tcnsallonal series
whh her Amencan record in the
hurdles. She followed with a personaJ
best of 6-2 in the hiah Jump, 48-51/4
inches 1n the ahot put and ~personal
best 23.00 second 1n the 200 meten
"It's reall y goma to be a record to
chase," Kersee wd "I said earher an
the year that I thou&ht she could score
between 7,200 and 7,230 poina, and
she believed at.
"I thank people know that she has
11ven a performance that is com-
parable to any in the world in track and field."
The American•' other v1ctoncs 1n ~
track and field came from the men -
Antonio McKay an the 400 meters in
44.98. Floyd Heard in the 200 1n
20. 12 and Doua Padilla 1n the 5,000 an
13:46.67.
Amons the Soviet winnen 1n tnck
and field were world record-holder
Natalya Lisovskay• in the women'&
shot put at 70. I "1, Gnaory Degtyarcv
tn the decathlon with 8,321 poanu.
Manna Stepnova 1n the women's
400-meter 1ntenned1ate hurdles in
53.81 , and Oahoa Cb1J1tyakova 1n tho
women's Iona jump at 23-1 011.
Ano1her world record·holder,
Steflca Kost1donva of Bulpna, won
the women's high Jump at 6-7•,i,
'
-~':'" ~ ---..
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Parker's belt
propels R·eds
Cincinnati clu s
16 hits to outlast -
NewYork, 7-6
Pro1D AP dl1patd1et
NEW YORK -Dave Parker
broke a 4'-4 tie with a two run homer
1n t~e seventh innina and the C incm-
na11 Reds held on to defeat the New
_ York. Mets, 7-6 Monday ni&ht to
h1&hhah1 NatJonal League ba~ball
action.
The Red~ had 16 hits, ancludma
four by Ron Oe$ter, to wan for lhe s1~th tune .in their l&st CJ&ht gam~.
Tony Perez, barnna for player-
manqer . Pete Rose, led off the ~venth with a smale before Parker hit
a patch from Rancfy Niemann. t-3. for
hs_s I ~th homer of the season. a.iv in$
C1nc1nnat1 a 6-4 lead. Bruce Bc~ny1
then relieved for New York and gave
up a _nother run on a double by Enc
Davis, an infield single by Bo Diaz
and a sacrifice fly by Dave Concep-
c1on.
Ron R obinson, w h o relieved
starter Bill Gulhckson an the sixth
annang. won his seventh dec1s1on
without a loss despite g1 ving up a
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leadoff homer 10 Howard Johnson .
and an RBI sinaJe to Gary Carter in
the seventh.
Elsewhere in the National Leaaue
Monday:
Pirates I, Padre1 1: lo San Di~o Sid Brea m 's three.run h omer o fTR1ch
Gossqe in the top of the 10th inoina
powered Pittsburah past San Dieao.
Tbc victory went to Cec1l10
Ouante, J.I, who p itched the final
two inninp in rchcf of staner Rick
Rhoden, who was b1ddm1 for his
fourth straight complete same.
Rhoden allowed onJy four hits and
SU'\lck out five in the first eiaht
innings.
PlaJIUet 7, Brava S: In Ph1ladcJ.
ph1a. Shane Rawley. backed by Gary
Redus' two home runs and solo shots
by Juan Samuel and John Russell
won his seventh stnught decisio n ~
the Philadelphia beat Atlanta.
A1tros 1%~ ~xpoa J: In Montreal,
G lenn Davis home red twice and
drove m five runs while Mike Scott
allowed four hits a nd struck out seven
in seven innings as H ouston defeated
Montreal
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.......... 210 210 OOx-7
Gemt Winning RBI -Rtdut (21
E-Jo Ruts.II OP-.t.111n1a 1, PlllleotlOfllt I
L08-Allellle 13. Phl .. 0.IPlllt 3 78-C>berkltN.
Virgil. MurPPlv. Horner, G Wll'°'1. HR-Redus 2 13> Samuel (7), Jo Russell m 58-Folev (7), A rnomu m Semuel 120) Grllftv (7)
~-Ro.nl<ltt SF-ScllmlOI , .. H R IR aa $0
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8eclfo\11n S 10 I 0 0 O 0
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H&P-Scllmfdl 10'11 Palmtf), e-.,ic1 COv
lbw .. vl Umplrts-Home Wtvtr. F=1r11, Montegut
Seconc! RIPOlty Third. Bro<klandlr
T-13' A-19.76'
Winfield reaches
2,000-hit plateau
From AP dl1p1 tc.'bcs
A RLI NGTON, Texa'> -Dave
Winfield. who entered 1he game a~ a
pinch h1tt('r, collected 1he 2,000th hit
ot his career and drove in four runs as
the New York Yankees beat the Texas
Range,-., 14-3 Monda) night
The Yankt't'S pounded four Texas
pitchers for 14 hm. including home
runs by Don Ma111ngl) and \IBudell
Washington. and look advantage of
10 wal)(!I 1n making ngh1-handcr
Scott N1el~n·~ maJor-league debut a
SUCCeS!I
N1dscn. l·O welll \CH'n 1nningc;,
* A'I 6, AM Sox 4
OAK LANO BOSTON
PflllllOJ 70
L.1nstro lb
Can,tco II
Knomn dh
Boehl• lb
MO•vls rl Murohv cl
1•¥191' ti Grllfl11n
wmerd c Tlfth
tll rll Ill
4 I I 0 8errtll 70
$ 1 I I BOOGI Jo
$ 1 l 2 Buc1'nr lo
4 1 1 1 Rlct H
l 0 I 0 Btvlor dh
4 I 1 0 OwE vn' r1
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G1me Wlnn'f'9 ltBI Mul'ot\Y (4l
£-<Helman. ltiCe. l uO ll., 01'-0e•letld I
Bot!O<I 1 LOa-<>e1<•tnd ' en~•on 4 29-MurOtlv, Grlffln, Berrtll Hit-C t n'l<n
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w~ $,.,.,,,
umowet-Home F.v•M ftnt Htnd<v \I<
Otld Ce>utlns, Tlllrd \<oil
f-110 A-77 )41
allowcd nine hits. walked one and
~truck out five Two of ttie hits were
~olo homers by Pete lncav1gha. hie;
16th. and Oddibe McDowell. hie;
12th. Al Holland and Dave R1ghett1
each pitched one mnin~
Knuc kleballer Charlie Hough. 8-4.
who had won his last three dec1S10n!>.
lastt'd only 2 2-3 innings. g.ivm~ ups1~
hlls and seven runs while waJkmg sn
Matt1ngl)' hit his 14th home run 1n
1he fi~t inning and WashinJtOn.
\tarting in place of Winfield, h11 hi!>
1h1rd 'imC'Ccommgto the Yanlcet's one
week earlier to·1gn1te a five-run third
* 81u. Java 7, Martnen S
SIAnLI: TOltONTO
MOH\Cf PBredtv If
PrHNIY lb
Ptlelos 10
Tr1eon rt
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Geme W!!lnlno RSI -Btll Ill
E-t<aerntv LOB-S..ttle 7, Toronto 10 11-ae11 ••rflfold Wl\111 Teriebull 1 tore
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Detroit
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Nattenet Lee~
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36 43
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Hou11on 12 Monlrtel 1
Clnclnnell 7 New Y011< ' PPllteOllC>hle 7, Allenl1 3
70S
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413 n
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Plthbu•QPI 3. Sen 01'90 1 ( 10 lnnlngt)
Ontv 11emn Klledultel
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4·4), n
HouSlon (Ryen 4·61 el MonlrNI ITI001 4·4),
n
Clnclnnell IOtnnv S·l l et New York IOertlno •• ,,, n . .l.
Allent• (Mehltr 10·6) 111 Ptlllaci.tolll• c Ruffin
1·0), n
PllltOurgh lfttvlCFlll 4·9) •• S.n Olello (HOVI
)·4) n
Clllce~ IEcaerslev 1-S> 11 Stn Frencltco
tKrukow 10 41. n
W~V's Gtmes SI Louis el ~ (nl
Atlante 11 Plllleeltlllhit
C1nclnne1I at New YO<~
Chlc•OO ti Sen Frtntlt<O
Houslon ti Monlrtll. n
Plll~O\irgl\ 11 S.11 OltQo n
AMERICAN LEA<iUE
Aneeb l, tJrewws l
CALIP'OltNIA MILWAUk1:£
tllrlltll ettrllbl
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SI 1 11 I
Cllffftmie 000 000 000 000 000 i-l
Mlwaulltt 000 000 000 000 000 I -I
Gamt Winning RBI -Jovner ( IOl
E-J HowtH, Sveum OP-<ellfornle 2, Mil·
WtUl<ff J LOB-Celltornle •. Mllwtuilff IS
18-<00Pt<, Manni~ 38-Scllofltld, Jovner SB-Felder ( 161. Yount 191 S-Pttlls, Scl\ofletd
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9
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UmP••H Home McCie lane! F'"' noer. S.Cono Re t•v Tnoro Col>li! T-448 .t.-10 160
1 •
0 2
1 1
1 0
Th e Yankt'l'\ batted around 1n the
1h1rd 1nn1ng and Winfield. mired at
.226. batted for Washington later in
the inning and ll1ed out. But in the
fifth, he got h1~ 2,000th hll with a
tnplc off the top of the nght-field wall
to drive tn Rickey H enderson with
New York'~ eighth run. In his n ext at-
bat. Winfield drove in three runs with
double to cap another five-run
burst 10 the <,1xth mnrng.
M1e ke} Mahler. who relieved
Hough. wa~ touched for four runs and
four h>ts 1n 2 2· l innangs. Jeff Russell
and allowed two run<t and (;reg Hams
allgwed o ne El~ewh('rt• in the Al Monday:
Orlolt18, Roy1l1 I: In Kansas Cit)'.
Floyd Ravford, Cal R1pken and Fred
L)'nn hit home runs. hoost1ng the
Baltimore Onole~ past Kansas City
and handed the '>taggenng world
* Ylnll"s 14, i:tanetn l
NIW YORK TUtAS
Mell• ..... . """"-,, . ,., ... .
Nn.9 u ......
111 • " ,.
M1 " Q ' !11 • • 1 m • 11 t ,,. •• •n 2 ID D It 1 U'I '9 4f I
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.. 11 " 2 212 » • '
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Corllall ~ 30 1> lt 2· 1 ut
Finley IJI..., 1' to 11 1-0 UJ
McCe\11111 I~ 105 '1 111 t-$ 1.S1 For\lf!' 11 :t6 13 n .. , UI
FIW\ar 16 17 7 7 H t.Jt ~non " " " tt 7•J • • Moore 2'l 1' 10 17 M 4M
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Sevn: """'°'' 7, Cot'11ttl 7, Foruer t.
NATION.AL UAGU• ~•.c.....t
ST. LOUtl LOS AN08Lal
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4 0 0 0 Sex 211 • O ) O
3000 Atnelntl'f 4000
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V1n.Slvll c1
Hll'r 21>
LY!lrt c Pllcllfn lb
Forsdl o
McGeePh
Burris p
3 0 0 0 Unelrc If ~ I I 0
4 0 0 0 ~IWI Ill • 0 I 0
4010 Trevlnoc •0 10
lOlO How.llo 0000
l 0 0 0 Hamlin Jb 4 0 1 0
1 0 0 0 lllWllm• cl f 0 I 0
1000 Slll04a\IU 2000 I O O 0 BRusS411 u O O 0 0
0 0 0 0 All'tne o I 0 0 0
Velatltl Oh l 0 t 0
Hafll!V or 0 0 0 0
CC>la1 o 0 0 I 0
C.belt Oh I 0 0 0
NltelnhK 0 0 0 0 0
Tttlll Flmola c 0 O 0 0
21 0 2 0 T.tWa »It I St. Lauls ........... -.. --· ..... --· Gtmt Winni~ R81 -Nona
E-Cotemen, Mellll1tll, Trevlllo, &ea.
OP-SI Louil 2, LO& A,,_., l LO&-SI. Louis s. Lot Anoalfl • SB-Su 1201 !r-Forw:ll, It Wllll.ems
StLWts
Forsch L.6·6 Burris
... H a1a II SO
LMAnl*s
9
0
I
0
0
0
,
0
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Umc>lrtt liome. Froenvnino, F=lrst, Mvlll.
Second. Oevle!ton, Tlllrll Kibler
T-2.33 A-ll,'76
LrTTLE L•AGU• ALL·$TAA.S
Junler °""'*" ~ICT 62 TOUltNAMINT l•t ,._...,. v..,., ... ,
MenllllY'• k-WHlrmnslt< 3, Roblnwooo 2
T .... s~
S om -Huntlntlon Vtllev vs Ocean View
w.-...Y'sGeme S om -Fount1ln Veltev vs S.avlew
Titunol't's Game S om -Rot>lnwooo vs Hunltnolon lleltev·
Octen View IOser
''*Y's Game S om -Wttlmln'11f vl H11nlln111on Vtllev· 0c .. n View winner
SllflWtMV' I G4lfM
10 • m -Lown orac:ktt Pme
2 o m -WIMafs orecket Hme
!NOTE Tournemt11I contlnuet lhrougn J~y 16 or 111
Sen6er' OM5*\
DISTRICT 61 T~NAM•NT
1st JeMMll k . Hltfl. WMtmlMtw) <•ntn11 Md TraU!s strwt1> MenllllY't kart Wttlminstlf' 4 Hunllng1on V111tv J Ct •n• nlng\I
T~s G4lfM
S om -Octen View vs S..vlew W.._.Y'ICO-
S om -Founllln Valltv n RoC>tnwooO ~Y'l~
S om -Hut1tlno1on V111tv "' 0c .. n view S..v1ew IOS¥ ,.,,..,., GM'9
S om -Wes1mlnstt< vs Otten view
S.t vlew winner
Se1UrdlY'a Gt!'lf 10 • m -LCIM's orecken.me 1 D m -WlnMn orac:ktl game
!NOTE TourNtmtfll conllnuti lhfOUOll July 16 or 171
-(._ > .
MEN'S 8 ASk•TBALL
WortdCM~
<•t Madr101 Tl4•0 ltOUHO
Gfwp A SDaln 17 Gr..c:t U
8razll II Ptntm• IS
' Greup. Sovie! Union I 14. lsrH~ 11
urwuev 71 . Austrellt 74
G-C
Un1'1(1 S1a1t1 ti WtSI Gtrmenv 6' 1111v 11, Puerto Rko SS
G-0 Vu1>0tlev•t ~ Ntl,,...lench 74
C1nede 96 .Arc;Htnllne 11
champion their IOth COO<it'CUllVC
defeat
The R oyals. who staggered back
home M o nday from an 0-9 road tnp
and a club record nanc consecutive
losses. dropped eight games below
500at 37-45.
White Sox 4, lodlaDI 3: In Chicago.
Greg Walker's i.acnficc fly 10 the
bottom of the ninth mnang gave th<'
Chicago White SQx a victory over
Cleveland that 'inappcd the Indian!>·
seven-game wmning streak
Juho Cruz opened the ninth w11h a
'iingle ofT Ernie Camacho. 1-2 J ohn
Cangelosi sacnfice-d Cruz 10 second
and Oz11c Guillen \1ngled him 10
th a rd
Harold Baines who c:irher had
three hits. including the 1,000th ofh1\
career. was wal~cd mtentaonally,
filhng the bases before Wilker de·
livered has game-win nm& sacnficc Oy
Blae Jay1 7, Martntrs S: In Tor·
on10. Jimm) Ke~ ~ta l·arC'cr high h\.
* R Hnc!Sn rl
Roenlc~ cl
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2 1 I 1 I I I 0
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W1•dll
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l'•lr~lh )I>
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1 0 I 0 BtnlQUI 10 J 1 0 0 Whitt 20 4 0 0 0
2 0 0 0 Otm1>tv c ) O O 0 BelllOnl lb l I 2 1
' 0 0 0 Mk Vno dtl 4 0 I I Sundbf'llC ) 0 0 0
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Tt•H IOI OIO OOI-l G1mtr Winning It II -"lone
E-Fltl(l\ef. Melllnetv. FltcPllln OP-TtaH
I LO•-New York •• TOH' 18-F'lelcht<, l •
"•flllh lell9', Wonfoelcl, 111-IC~t MtllH>gty
l&-Wlnl•tlcl Hlt -MalltntlY 1 l' .. M<Oow..,
1121 ll'ICIYftlle 1161 C Wa&lllngt~ tll
~ " It llt •• so New Yen
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lalllcWll Ja-$heltlv Hit-lt1v1ord (1) ltl~~
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IU.J.J, 2'.flM; t. PY Sl'"4oft CU.S ), t• i.. l-
Otnffrl PW*OV (UUltJ, HUS, ' ~
,_,.,... (lollfet UM!nl, tmM; 1. C...tlif'lllll
,_.., <~>. ~lJ, I ,,,.,,. la'ldlltdllk (~), 2:til,17; r HOIMt Mt!'*' (Wftl
OlnNfty), 2M s.; 10 ~ ArtlnflN' cw ... ~),2:1110.
400 ff..-1. SMll Klllon IU.S ), J st tl, 2 V1e9lmlr ~cw IUUa), UUO, 3. kott
9rKkett ( U .SJ, l:!U I, t. '-ff ""1or ( USS4t),
UUIJ S. St.ftell U.U (!.asl o.mllfty), J5'•;
"J01w1 Wlc:IMI cu.s.1. >:su1. 1. cciu.r• ~ov IUS5'l), '):SS.12, I. Akllme4 H""4ln (Svfle),
4•16M.
400 ,.,....., rw1e.-1 us~ A ,,_ ~
enell't, Omltrl VMl\ov, Serlltl Getro, Nllloi.1
V9YM't9V), 2-A.0; 2 Soviet Union 8 , 3..0..66, J
UNIM llet .. A IAM't G•. Maril v~.
Chm O'Neil, ,_,. aot11n1on1, l 4!.M, 4 United Stai. I , JM.I>, S. SoYlat Union C, > .. 31,' Wftl Getmany, .. 02
WOMaN
100 lr-1. A"9tl Mven IU SJ, S6A, 2.
"-"'' Cofflll (U.S.), 56.,; :J Pelot Z.tmlne <US I. 5' '7, • ~Jttn Klelott Cbst V.manvl,
S7_..; l ~ HeM lbst Germanv>. 57",'
Yallna OeneleOerov• (USSJt), 51"20, 7 Inna
AIW-• (USSRI, 5141, I Sltcv C..Ulo't
(U.S.), WM, t lrlne Geoon. Soviet UniOn, St..,
700 ll't-1 KelY Oevlet (US), 2.12 49, 2 .Mia Oornwn (U.S ), t-l:UO;) ....,..... Undtr IU SJ, n0t, • Y9'elll OM«ttulo 1ussa1. 1 u:u. s
Talv-Kurnlllove IUSSIU. l 17 62 4 1M .. ltrmann (Wett Germenvl. 2:24 53
400 fr-I IC.elllv HettcN !U.S.), •·11,s); 2.
Ank• Mowll'l9 <East Germany), 4·12 50, 3
Nownl Lunotr 1aomen1a1. 4 12 n , 4 Laslie
Oalenel (U.S.), 4.13.tt, S. Jellt't Ev-CU.$.),
'"16.74, 6 AnMN ~1 (HvnlMlrv>. •:17'1, 7
G<lt ald'tllt' <Eeal ~envl. 4 19 01. I Enlko
Peltnaer IR01T1a11lel, •:20.51. 9 Antoen.t•
Slrumtnllevt 18u1DarleJ._ 4.23.'9, 10. Netllv• Kwmltta (USSR), •:26.16
400 meelltv rllev-1. Unlltcl 51•19' A (uura
Mcl..eM, IC.elhV Smllll, l(tlfy 01¥11\, Angil
Ml/en), •:12.S4; 2. Sovie! Union A, •. 1l 1S; l
Unlleo Slate\ B (8etll Barr. Amv Shew. ~nit
9uCIClemtver K1tllv Coffin), 4·1S3l, • Unllte!
Stalw C (Tori Tr9", Cht1stv Rlc:Mrdwn, Tlt'rl
O'UUOlllln, P•lot Zemlnel. 4 16 6"C, s Bulllarle,
4 11.02, 6 Sovtet Union 8 . 4 11.13
MNer'ft~WOfl
MaN lndlvlduel swimming-I Ve11111ant
Y-a$11vlll (U~R), l,J32, 2 JoM Sc.oil IU S I
1.m . 3 Clw'IUOC'he Ruer (Fr•ncel, 1.m
Team awlmm~l USSR, 3,rn. 2 Unlleo
Stam. J.711, 3 Pofel>d. US7. 4. llatv. 3,•. s
France. U M. ' Hungary. 3.C20. 7 Bulearle.
3,412, a SO.In, J,JIO. 9 Czacllotalvekla. J,J6.4. 10, MaxlGo, 3,lOI, 11 Wesl ~nv. 3.710, 12
F Inland, l , 11'
lnCIMdual sltftditlel (l,flll' 11\At IVtfllJ)-1
\Itel. V11&Pll11111 Y-•sllvlll IUSSRJ, anO teor
511var1S IUSSRI 3.* 3 Germen Yulero ..
IUSSIU, UM
TMm slenell~ ltfler llV.. fYtfll\)-1 USSR, t,"9, l. Poland. t,lN. l H~v. 9,Q!I,
4 Unlltcl 51eta., 9,0'13. S. Czechotlovatr.le, 1.13),
4 "'''" U1S. 7 8ul9•rle, •MO. I Soatn. 1.m.
' MeilGo, l,1$7, 10 WHI Gt<me11v '·"' 11 F=ranct 7 27', 12 Fln19nd. 7,m
v~
WOMaN
Pt<u 3. £1111 Germenv 0 llS·I, IS·7. 16· IO ·Jaoen 3, C1tcll0ll0¥eklt 0 US•6, 1S·4. IS· 10l
North Korte 3, Ulllltd Stelft ' 17 lS, 1S·7, l(>-10, IS·3) .
Sovltl Union J, C1tcnoll011e11le 0 llS·I, IS I, IS Ot ..........
WOMEN Br11M 7', YU90slevle 65
Unlled Sleles 71. CtlCllCKIO ... kle 10
Sovltl Union 12, BulOerle S6
o.... ......
DANA WH .. I' -7 b091s, 220 .,...., M
beu, .. ei.rrecude, I he"boll. 16S mec'trtl, I
s~. I WPllle llff beu
N•Wl'OttT LANDING -4 OOlll, 101
anoltn 1M tenc:t ei.u 7J calico bell. •
DarrKuda, IS bonito, ' ~. I KulPln I
bleck IN oau (rtlHMdl. 2 blue i:i.c11. un mecklt'tt
OAWY'J LOQ<Elt -' boets, 20S •noltfs
'" llerr~ude. 67 llOnllo, 16 vtllowtall, 11 rockflsll, 2 llallout. 113 c:.llco oau, '37 wnd
beu, 66 macke<tl, ll whllt flail, 2 il'lteo$lleed 6
~culoln. 1 mldslllo.
TENNIS
Swtu o-t (et GJtMdl
Mall's l'lnt buncl ~
MlltHI Ptrnfors (Sweden) def ~r~ Ed•
rnondlO" IA.uslrel••I 6·4 6·• Marco Oslc>te
YU90SltV•t def • Ro>t H~lrog ISw•lr•rl..-01,
6 2 6 I
"ltnk1ng out 10 Scatlk batter\ and
Llo)d \.foseb) drove in_ Toron1o·s
final runs with a single and homer as
the Rlue Jays defeated the M ariners
The Manners are runaway lcader<t
1n the Amen c.an League in stnkcouts
having fanned 626 limes. including
20 in a game against Boston·~ Roger
C 11.'mens.
A's 8, Red Sox•: In Boston. mok1('
Jo\( Canseco and veteran Oa'e
Kingman shelled Boston's Roger
\lemrns with consecuuve home run'I
10 the SPllh mning as th e Oakland .\ \
.marked new Manager Ton\
LaRussa·~ debut w1th a "1cton O\.e1
1he Red <;ox
ThC' \'\,~inning for onl)' the thrn.l
time '" their last n road gnmn
handed Clemens a S«ond con-
sccut1\C loss ~1nce he went 14-0 the
fifth bc\I stan in maJor-league h1\
lOr\
* Twlm 10, Tl9en I
Dillion MINN8SOTA
Wnll1kr 11>
Tramm• u Gibson rl
OEv"' 011 Colttlb
Blt'gmn 10
sn«ldn or Lemon,1
COiiin'" l owrv <
tOrll 111 ~ 2 2 1 1 1 , 0
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~ 111 010 --• ~ 10> m oow -1' Ga,.,. Winning RBI -c;._ 151
E-Trt"'"""' ~HM. ~IPl\M OP-0.lrO•I 1 MinntMlll , Loe~ 0.lrolt • MlnM\OIA •O
79-0t E¥attt eeromen vMlll, lruntn\k•
GHM !>uckell, Tr!W'rln'llOI. Colt\ J8-Puck•t1 Hlll-Hftltll l201, WIMlaktr 2 1111 ~8-G•t>MMI
! Ill Trammell (10 Brunensl<v (t i C"""' 1
110 I So-\. tmOft
Dani!
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Umoittt-HO"'I T\<tl•Ga f •\I COOl·r•
~Cl'ld ~ • \•• fn1•d I • "k"'" '-lO'. ,,~,
Mlladl't'• .... ••ctlllm aAMaAU.
~"---KANS.AS CITY ltOYAL.$-Pleead ltUCIY uw,
ou1lltlelt<. on 11'9 IS-day OIUOl9d lltl Senl M1k9
er-«. outtle4d9'. 10 OrNlla ol Iha American An oclellon Recalled Dvrvt Motltv and Mlllt
IC ln99f¥ oulflllelers, lrom Omaha ...-...~
MONTltE.AL E)(POS-f'lececl JOI HftllelPI.
ollCPllr. on Ille IS·clev Ol,.bled bl lttc•lltO Randv SI Clelrt, 1Hl<htr, If-om 1n01a11eoo111 of
ll'lt Amerlce11 Anoclellon SAN DIEGO PAOltEs--0911oned a11nc111
RNdY. lllfltlelef lo Lts Vtoes of ,... P.clfk
Coe11 LtaQut
SAN FRANCl!>CO GIANTs--OolloneG Wlll
Cieri\, fir.I bestmtn 10 ~h« ol Ille P•clllc
Coe1l l.HQut
l'OOT•ALL ............... ~
OE NV~R llllONCO~-Nemeo Kn Oiiton
M>eCltl otf.nJlvt asslslenl
NFL-Named Or Fores• Tannen• drug ad
"''°' NEW YORK JETS-.Ant>OUnCltcl Ille rttt~e·
"""' Oii Or C•I NICN>'H. Item •ntern•sl .... mao
Or L.sltr Plou '""" in1e<nls1 SAN FRANCISCO 4tERS.--Slo'*I Denn•\
Ht"'IO" ~Jive tnO. JOl\n Fevtor ~ ... Mer~ Hermon PIKtillclttr Tooo Roc:N<Os
fllltOaC~t< ttlC! Al WlllO'\ #l(jf •Kt•-
In lo\ing for thC' founh ume 1n the
la\l \I\ gamcc;. Boston·~ Amencan
Leae,uc Ea'it lead was tnmmw to
<te\Cn game-; o'er the New York
't anl-.et''
< le men' allowed ~ven hns and ~'"
run\. o ne unearned. before hcrng
II.milked o ut with no one out m thC'
"11\th lk \truck out ti,e. raa'iang ht~
.\menran league total to 118. but his
ER.\ iumpc-d from :: '\4 to :?. S8. JUSt
behind "viil'>'aukee'\ fC'd Higuera at
~ S7
Twln11 tO. Tli.rs 8· In Minneapoh!>.
Kt•nt Hrhcl-. hit h1\ :?.Oth home run of
th<' \t'J\lln t1nd ..._1rb' Puckeu had a
\mgle douhlc and· tnpk a\ thC'
\11nne'iola h'1n<. ou11a .. 1ed the Oe·
1 rrn t l 1ger'
\11kt• \m1th\On, !I· 7 got thC' victor)
de\p1tc ,1110" 1ng \C'' C'n ruM. mclud-
1ng a pair ul \Olo homC'f'\ 10 Lou
\\ h1ta~n .._<'Ith <\thenon rehevC'd
\m1th\un 1n lhC' T 1gt'r" tour-run
'-<'\Cnth 1nn1ng and t••unc-d h1~ '11'th
'"1\l'
W'"'9 ~-4, lftdlaM 3
CL£VILAN0 CHKAGO
8•rnrra )O
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0..me Wiftn.tto 11111 -C. WllloM CS) t-u•"ton 11,,,,,,.. lOa <~ 6
Cllkteo 10 11 J.cot>v h•-Franco
Hlt-B1•M\ II S-Cano-'\F-Til«nlO'I G W•IUf
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Hl~.ar~ lev Ja'N '
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Olrl•' ftl'efl#b amp ~fl CO.•t •JJOrfll c&IDJM
USC tootb&U k.Jc~o" banquet
rhc: U football K1c:k.o1T Banqu('t, hos1ed
Oeeall.ido trlterlam A fhe-weck IU'CDJth ncJ cond11ion1na pro.
m fOI prl1 only will bt off«Cd by Los Amlios
Scbt 1 sn Fountain Vall"Y bccnnsna
ton tat 6:4S. Los AmlJOi ll loc:atcd 11 tlcil and
Ne-w attticb ~ pr()IJ'lm w1U COSI $20 ~t Jlfl Ind W\11
i.Ddude 1n 1ruc11on on proprr ~iaht 1r11n1na
teehn1qucs and the dtv('lo pmenl of a sound
stm'IJ\h routine.
Otanat Cout Colfqc will bt lnt' 111e or
buketball. volleybail and sont°t youth c.tmfJ'
lhi1 summer
•Pira1t men's basketball C<>Kb Tandy G1lhi
and Ills sufT will o ffer instruction for boys and
&irb qcs 8-1) at the OCC'lym runnu11 Monda~
throu&h Fnday, JuJy M-1 • ffom 1 .... p.m
El> the o ... nic County T fOJan Club, w1tl bt' held
Thurtdley. July 24 at the Irvine Marriott Hotel
\JS( C-0;1ch TN Tollnerwill rev~wh~b&h~
of last ~n and talk about the outloo\ for the
comma 1eawn
Bud Funllo, host of" port talk .. on KABC
n&dlO. wlll be the mlSl('f Of ctrtO\OOICS
Tiit Nike Homy Toed Tritcriu.m. lhc world'a rtm 1oop-fonn•t tnmthloft, fc.tunna "ittoally aJI or the rport'• ~ 120 male and female albJeics. will bt unday, July 27, at 11 a.m. at lbC'
Oc:nns1dC' Muniopal Pler.
Tnalhlon sun Scott Mohna, Mule Allen,
Davc Soon, Scott Tinley, l.Jnda Buchanan,
Colleen C.annon, Juhe Mcm and lrv1nc'1 Janet
Grcanlttf will swim twic.e around the pier. b1kc
five lips around the five--mile c:oune and nan on"
mile.
Workout• wdl bt appro111matcly one hour and
I 5 minutes Iona
The camp wilJ stress ofTen '"e and defensive
1cchn1quci mcludinJ. rebound1n" &hooting and
panina and Wiii mdu<k-full coun scrimmaglna.
Tickets arc $32.SO per plate and the proceed~
will 10 10 1he IOClll 1 ro1an Club. wh1c:h pruvida
scbolanbtp.S 1stance to the school's men's and
women's athletic proarams. For lnfonnauon phone Do1.11 My"~ II
Sl 1-1772
The ftt 1t SS.S and early .i:tJiatration at tht'
OCC Community Service Office ''advised
•A thrtt-dey volleyball camp for &HI$ age\
12· I 9 will bt' dtrC"Ctcd by Pirate womt'n 'i coach
Jane H1i,endorf
The romprtitors wt.II cross the ,uin.fin1ab hne
2S umet dun~~cc In adcht1on to pro race. a cdebnty relay
C'vcnt will also Id bcaJnntf\I at If ·20.
Gan and CoUecton • Sbo•
The camp will be fndJ;y lhtou&h' Sunda)
AuJ. I .J. from 8 a ni 10 4 '<> p.m and the fee·~
$SO in advance
For an formation phone 67J.7315
•()('(" womcn's ~r coach &tbara B<md
11nd Ed1M>n High Co-Coach Rentt Nadon will
lead the first cv('rsocccraimpfor11rlslJC' 1 l-20
Friday through Sunday. Au&, 8·10, from 9 am
I04pm
Pro tennl• tournament
Tickets 1r(' now 11va1Jablc for the cn11ugurol
lhlrtmurx Ral·qu('t Club l enn1s T oumamcn1.
which will fcatu~ lop ph1ycr\ mcluding Vilas
Gcrulo11ts. Roscoe Tinner. V1JllY Amntra.J, Pat
C"h i>nd othcn, Wtdncsday throuJh Sunda)
'\ua b 10, 11 lht' Ncwpanrr Rr~on and John
\\ a}ne Tennis C'lub
Thtte wall also be a bike tour bqlnnina 11 7:3'>
11 des1~ated points in San Dteao. u Jolla,
Escondido 11nd San C1emcnte and 11 wilJ travel to
Oceanside. rhe event is free and the first SOO
partic1pantt will f' a Nike T ..s.hirt Also there w1I bt a iw1m-run·sw1m cvcnt.
befinnm& at 8· }() at I.he pier Part1c1pantt will
swim once around the p1C'r (I k1lome1tr). nm
five miles alona the beach and aptn swim
around the paer
The Cahfomia Gun and C ollcctors' how
5howcas1n1 modcm and anti4ue '-"Capons. will
bt' held Saturday and Sunda> at the Los Angtles
County Fairgrounds an Pomon.a
Apr0fcu1onal sunsmith will alw bt on hand
10 offer free appraisals to v1s1to~ and exb1b1tors.
Ftt for the soccer camp 1s SSO an advance and
tnformauon can be ob~mc4 by pbonana
432-5880
The ci&ht-men pro field will pla) both smgl~
and double\ and a prtM:elcbnl) 1oumamen1
featunnJ Pat Boonr and Wayn(' Rogcr'i 1!t. ~htduled for Fnday, Aug. 8
Entry fee for the swim.run-swim 1s $8 and will
include 1 pair of Nike sandels ·
Admission 1s $4 for adults, $2 for childr<"u
5-ll and free for those undcr five
Tickets UC' pnced at $8 Wednesday and
Thursday. $10 foday, $1 2 Siwrday and $1 ~
Sunda}. Thcy art' ava1lablt' at thC' John Waynt
Tennis Club an Newport Beach
For infonna11on phone Denna~ E. White &.
Assoc:iateut (619) 756-2413.
For informa11on phone C2 I~) 4 30..5112.
For mformat1on phone 644-{)900.
NIUC fl>TlC[ Nit.IC M)TlC[ PlllUC fl)T1C(
CtTYCW all~wtlowtetltobe MCl1al0catadat:2944~'"'Ulllli• ........... wtll be held on JULY 30. ,_,.. I Limited P~. ~ 1e-.
,-ouwrAM YAJ.J.n heard ,....,.... to the ~ dOlpti '8. eoat. Meea, CA ,_.,el~ r '9 ,.._.. 1988 11 9:30 A.M. In ~· N0Tte9 Of eotded June 30, 1t7t In '9Cnnoul MJH•• c~ c:atlon dleol1bed below. '2f28. .... -....... -.... No 3 at 700 CMc c.nt• ""'9Ttr8 I.A.LI 8ocMI 12138, Plge 1170 of ...... ITATW .once DATE: Mon<Sty, J4J1ot 21. The 8u16naea rwne 1-.d r etrea ..... de H 0rtYe W_,, Santa An&. CA On July 14, 1985 at 11-00 Oflldal Aaoord The~.,.,.,,. ..
tNYn'llQ _. IW by N6d tr~ at NkflP ;' ••• 111111 .,... ... 92702 a.m. Flf9t American T1tle In-The atreet llddtete « doing bualneu u :
NOTICE IS HEREBY given TIME: 7:30 p.m. loeatlon II: THE MAIN TEES ... i~ c:,.,........... IF YOU OBJECT to tM -ancia Co.. • Celtfomla other common ~ c R 0 c I( ER/ a IMME R l.
lhatthaettya.11cfthaetty APf>UCATIOH HUMBER: INC. .._ ne~1R11 grwitlng of 1t1e ~.you corpcwatlon • T~. or of Mid OtOOel'tv: Pl.W'POrtltd PAfllTNERSHIP #1, • ~
of Fountlin V.....,, C... CodeAma11dme11t No.-.11 That N6d bl* tr--. II ....... ,_. .. ~ If'°'*' atthar ~at the Suec:eHor Tru•tH or 10 be. 84 Monticello, lrMe. 1om6a 0.-.S P•11..,..,.., lomla, .. ,....... eaaled LOCATIOH:Clty-wtde ln1andad to be eon.,,,,., .................. r-tngandltat9youro1>-fkibatltutedTruat ... ofthal CA. 1741 TUltln Avenue •5.
pr®CJMll untl the "°"' of PROPOSAL: To,..,... lot· mated at the offtce ot: BU"9, 9'i .. I .. llli:Jll tl9't. II M eM-lactlonl or 11i. wntten obtac-c«teln Dead of fruit P · Seid .... wll be mede COatl Mela.. Callfoml1
10:00 A.M. on Friday, Jvly i.tlng Ar1iC11e 839, 138 and ROW ESCROW CO., 2010' ... 1 • 1-111•1 .... lion• with the court baiorw ec:uted by DANNY M. #lthOUt covenant or Wlf· Crocker/Slmmetl Patt·
ti, t9M,flof~Of "30ftheHunting'on8eactt N. Tutttn Aw.. s.nta An-..i ....... ......;.,... the '-Ing. YOur te>PW· MAKOS and MARY JANE rMty,9.q)f ... or~.-narthlp 11, a ~
two(2)buttef1trv11Woper· Ordinance COda and lldd c.tffomlat2705onor atter'__. • 1111918 t •a anciamaybelnpenonorby MAKOS,llu9bendandwtte. 10 title, po1111r'on tor ~ o.n.11 PartnanNp. 1741
8ton In tM lt"•tlCtlcM• of new Arttdt 907 ......., to July 31, 1eae •w.....,.. • .,-. ...,.. your anom.t. and recorded Beptamber cumbrancaa to tatllfy ma Tuatln Aw 15, eo.te
W.,.,_ Aw and EAdd ~ ltllndarct. tor boCt1 fhla Ill* ttanafw la MIC>-1=. .. *-ot.te eel.-IF YOU A. RE A CREDITOR 12. 1983 M IMtrumant No. illipaicl balano1 due on the ....... Cellfornta
Stt9M In lCOOlcMI-wfttl ~and *'IPOl•t '1ct to Callfom6a tMtlbm j t). or a contlngant creditor of 13-398864, of Offtdel ,. ~· Of no4• ---' by SMrry l.. Cfoc:Mr, 1741 the Plana and Speetn-hof9t atab Cornmard1I COda s.ctton C..-. ~ the decHaad, you muat Ille eotdl of Ofanga County. ll9'd Dead of Trutt. to .it. Tuatln A.,._,. •5, Coate c:auon.. EN v IR 0 NM ENT A L 8108. The name and~ of your dalnl wttta the court Of Callfomla. and purwuent to '59, 183 Ila,'*" the folow. ....... CallfomMI Pr~ bkSdar'9 -STAT\JS·T'tlepiopoeadpr~ Thanameandaddrwof the court 11: (B nombra y ~.It 10 tM pareonal IMtoartllnNotlceofDafaltl ing ..um.ted coat•. •· Aotlar1 J . smm.t. 1741
requested to attend • ~ iact II eat~ aqmpt the peraon wltll wllom dlraoclon de la oort• -~Of. r~ttv. appolmed by thereunder recorded Mi ~and ~ tt the Tuatln Avenue 15, Co.ta bid _. ltw'ougll of tha lrom the provtaloM of tM c:ta1me m., be fled 11 BU~ ange County Munlclpal the CCM1 wttn1n four montlll 13, 19M u lnetrument . time of tM lnhlal publlCetton ~. Calloml1
Pfopoeed ~ ett• wtlld'I Callfornla •Environmental ROW ESCROW co.. &01 Couf1, c.ntr .. Dlltrlc:t, 100 lfom the date of flm le-'6-0t81to, of Offtelel ol 11111 Notice ol Sate: Crocker/Slmmerl Part·
wtllbeoonductadbytheett., QualltyAc:t. Plriloanter Dr .. a.ma An-., CMc Cenw DrlW w..,, 1UanOeOfletterwNprovlded oord1 of Mid County, wlll 11.009.00 ~ •1. • Cell1omla
8t 10:00 a.m. on June 2'. ON ALE: A oopy of tM CA 82705 Rel: Eacrow Santa Ana. CA 92701. In Section 700 ol the under ~ punuant lo Mid MOT1CI TO o.n.11 Pan~. Sherry
1.... ~ ordlnanol le on #4893S3F{J) and 1t1e i.t The name, ~ and Probate Coda of CalHornta. Dead ot Truat NII at P'Jbile ~ 0..... L Crocker Pr~ lflall be pt-. lie In the Dlpattmetit of 0.. day floJ flllno clalnw by .,.., ·~ number of pleln--The time for flllng dalm• wtll 1uetlon for Cuti, lawful YOU ARE IN DEFAULT Thill et8t-1 ... llled
ented under eaaled 00"9r ~·t a.w.. cndltOf .,_. be .My '° ""'' attorney, Of plelntlfT not aJll)A prior to lour money of the Unltad Sl•I• UNDER A DEED OF TRU6T, with the CounlJ Cltft( °'Of.
and et\al be 1C001""91.-d AU INTEAEaTED PER-INS wNdl .. the ~ wtthout 1111 attorney. II: (El montlla lrom tN dat• of the of Ama<lea, • c:aahler'• OATI:D MAY 19. 1M1. """' anoe County on June ••
by one of IN tonne of bid-SONS -lnvtted to lln.nd day befoN tM ~ nombra, .. dlrwcdon y .. ,... he9flnO notice above Ch.Ck payable 10 H id LESS YOU TAKE ACTION 1985
dar'• MCIUf1ty reqund In a1'cS Mel1ng and ~ tlon date~ abovoe. m•ro d• telelono d•I YOV MAY EXAMINE the TN9l .. drewn on e etal• Of TO PROTECT YOUR PROP· l'S1W1
'"-8peefflcatlon• All opll1lona or IUbrnlt ~ Deted: June 27. INS ll>ogado.dal darnanOafrt•. 0 Ila k~ by IN COUf1 If you nallonal bal*, t 11at• Of Nd-ERTY. IT MAY BE SOlD AT Put>llahad Ofanoe c:o.t
Pf®OMll .,,... be maltted 10t or aagalfllt ma llOC)lleatlon JACK C. P'Ol.L.EY, ~W. dll demandante que no .,. a per.an lnttreeled In fltal credit urW<>n. or a llata A PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU Daly Plot June 11, 24, J4"'1 Pr~ IOt Protect No. u outlined aoow. AM ac>Pi-CWllRTNIA, Intended llanol •t>ogedo. -~ Rooer1 the aetata. you may Ml'V'l of federal Nvlngt MCI loan NEED AN EXPLANATION 1, 8, 1NS WU574t, Vfiwt A1pelr and eatlona, axlllblta, and c»-Tr..._... & Dlb, 1 law Cofiior.t'lon. upon theaxac:u1or or edmln-aaoclallon domlciled In Ihle Of THE NATURE OF THE T-231
be melad Of~ to M ec:rtptlona of 1t11e propoMi1 Publllhad Ofanga CoMt Attn: Gaor;e L. Roger1. ltttat«, or upon the al· •tale, al the main enlrtllOa PROCEEDING AOAINST
to be In the Mnda of the Qty .,. on 11i. wttll t11e Oftloa of Deify PMot JlJly 8, 1988 17111 Beedl 8IYd , &iltt tomey lor the executor or to Ant American Tiiie In-YOU, YOU SHOULD CON· "8JC M)TIC(
CWtt 8t her ofb In the~ IN Ctty a.11, 2000 Main T24e 103, Huntington Beecfl, CA 9dmlnletrat0f, and Ille with 1Urwic9 Compeny ioe.tad al r ACT A LAWYER
Hall. 10200 sa.1er Avenue. Streat, Huntington Beactt, . 92&47 (71 4) '47-«M 1 ll'le CCM1 wtth p<oof of -· 114 EMt Aftll St,_., In lhe F1ftlT AmNCAll mu It --on or batcn tha hountated. Callfomi., fof 11..-ctton by Nit.JC M>TICE DATE. (Feena) APR 30 vice,, wnnan r~ mt· cttyofSantaAM.c.Momla. ~ CO..AMY, • rteln'°'19WU
At the daalgl.._, time, al 1M publlc. 1Ne · Ing thlt you dealre ~ ell tllat rlgllt, lltle and C .. omk ~ ,_ ...... ITATDmWT
tMda ~ .. be publdy HUMTIMQTOM HACH MOnca Of ~ a. It ... Ca.t. notice ol the ~ of an In-lntereat c:on'.-.yed to and Mndl. ~ <>Mo., Tht ~ l>W1IOl'il -opened, UMlllned and o. cm COUMCL, llJ: Alola AYAIL.AalTYCW 9yTafYtfenl,Deputp ventOtYandlPP< eamentof now held by It under N6d 114._.,_..,_.,..,.. doing bua nu• u .
c:Wed by the Ctty a.11. 86d-11. • ......._, ctty C...-ANNUAL M'TURM Pvbhned Ofanga CoNt eatate ~1 °' of the petl· Deed of TN9t In Iha p<operty Ana, C•arN& .,,..., (114) CARPETS BY MAND, 414-E
derl and the publlc are In-,_.,. (114)...... Puraue nt lo S•etlon Dally Piiot June 24, July 1, 8, tlon1 Of KCOUnta mentioned lltuated In Mid County and ~1 Alton Ave . Santa Ana. CA
wfted lo be ~ at the Dated: Juty 1, 1988 e 104(d) of the Internal Rav· 15, t&M In Section 1200 and 1200.5 of State deeeflbed u : Lot 4 of Dated: July 1, lte& 92107
dec:larallon of ••Id Pvblllhed OfJnQ9 Coaat enueCode.notloelllllareOy T237 tMCaltlomlaProt>at•Coda TraetNo."33.uanownon Pvblllhed ~anoe CoNt Pettr Honeyman In·
Pfopoeala. Dally Piiot JlJly 8, fttt g1ven that the wmua1 return ....,., W..,_, '--PM 1 Mac> thereof recorded In Dally Piiot July e. 15, 22. eorporaled, 27 Ab•to.
Allb6dltoraoatV9d,uam-T251 for the Celandery .,_. 1886 rtllJC M)T1C( a lctlh111r, Attomep tor 8ocMI 398, Pegaa 41 9nd 42 195e Irvine, CA 92720. In·
lned and dacW'9d _.be,... ol THE CREAN FOUN· ~...._..,, 7111 r:11w..-of Mltcellanaoua Mac>e. r• T2S3 eotporeted In State of Cal--terrect by the Qty a.11 to NU M>TIC( DATION, • prtvete loun.. k..,.. A-.........._ CA 11m cords of Orange County lomla
the Qty Engineer and the datlon, 18 av9llable at the ..onca °' Pvl>llthed Ofange Coaat Tht at~ eddr... Of P\llJC M)TlC( • Thia ooalMN I• con-
Ctty AttOf'IWJ fof Cll«:t!lng N0l'IC9 °' lound•llon'• pttnQpel offtoe DIATH °' DaHy Piiot JlJly 7 8, 14, 1NS other common o.gNllon ducted by • corporation and 1'9POrted to tM City ~ HIAMtQ for lnapec:1ion during,.,._, ~ L ROtlQON MT202 of Mid property pufp()t1ed I( alCll P•l•r Honeyman lh·
Couno11 at 1t1 regular INM· CODll .._..,...,,. ~ hOura lrom 8 a.m. AND °' """'°" to be 27 Cembridge. lrvlM, ....._., .... ., corpcwatad, Peter Honey·
Ing on, Auguet' 5, tNS. I MO. "=1' lo 5 p.m. by any ctttnn wt'<> TO ~TD P\llJC fl)T1C[ c~~720. ........ ..... "°'*""' ~!'~t ..._.. l'r or o eommene ng UMCLAeWllD UUI rttweet• 11 within 180 days llTATI NO. A·,,_ _.d .... '"" be mede ,,...... .. .._ atalemant wu ,_,
wortc. Iha oontrector MCI.. I metale. aubetano. NOTIC E IS HEREBY •ft• the data of thla publ-To 1111 hairt, ben«ldariea, NOTICll Of' without covenant Of WW· No A t323«> wttll the County c.rti of Of •
eubcontrectcn .,,.,. OC>leln and hy'Ctocafbon1 of WWJ GIVEN t"-t IN Huntington c:atlon credltora and contingent ~ HEANMO ranty, ·~or lmplled, 11 In the Super1of Couf1 of anga County on .,,._ 10,
• ~ llcer'8a lrom the Ind and c:herKtar, lflCMf. Bw:fl Qty CouncM wlll faold The foundation'•~ cradltcn, and pereona wtlO ~TO PlM••tQ lo tltle, po11111l0t1 °' .,,.. the Stat• of Catlfomle. fof 1985
Qty of Fount.in Valley In IC> petroleum, Oii, !JM, I publlc r-tng In Iha~ offtce la ioe.1ed at BUI~ may be otharwlta lnteraated COl•TilltOM ™ c;umt>rancea IO Mllefy the IM County of °'9nge "1"71
cordanoe wtth the Qty Mu-uphalbum and IM, together ell Cllember at the Hu'lt· ING C, 780 Waat 18tfl Street, In the wtl Mid/°' •late of Of A COMMnONAl. unpaid bl&al'oQe due on the In the Matter of tt1e Estate Publlhad ~anga CoMt
nlelpal Code No VOiume I, with the r1ght to enter upon lngton 9Mcf1 CMc: Canter, Coate Meea. CA tm7. MARJORIE L RORISON UU ~ note or notM MCIUfed by of FREDV£8CI0.0.C 1 UllS. o.lty Ptlot .,,._ 11. 24. J4"'1
Tiiie 5. Cl'lapter 5.04 and Mid land, • ,...,..,., In 2000 Miiin Streat, Hunt· The pttndpel manager of A petition hM ~Ned NO.... Mid Dead of TNl1. to wit. HotloelehanibyQN9ntntt 1 .•. ttee
S 08. dead recorded Baptamber lngton Beactt, C.itfomla. on the loundallon 11 John C. by GAAY L. PA.RSONS In the ~CAM '32.23&.20, ptut the loftow. the uitderllQlted W9 tall at T-230
In lOCOfdanoa """ the 27. llM3,lnboolc 1213,paea the data and et the time In-CrMn Superior Couf1 al Ofenge HC>m) Ing '"911TNitad c:oeta, U · Prtvate .-. to the lligha1t rtaJC M)TIC(
Pf'ovlalonaofSeetlona 1no 140.0ttldalRecordlofNkf dleatadbelowtorecetveMCI Alan N O'Kaln. Eeq., Counly ractUHtlng that NOTICE IS HEREBY penMallndedvtnOMatthe llAdbastbldder.tubtadlo -------.;..;......;..;. __
lo 1790. lnc:luelv9, of the Ofenge CounlJ oonelder the 11ttemanta of Bruck & Perry, A Pro-GARY L. PA~ONS be IP-OIVEN tllat tt1e Huntington time ol tile lnltlal publlcltlon connrmatton Of Mid Su-I(_,
l lbor Code of the Stat• of PARCEL 2. ·'the w.., half 111· parton1 wt1o with 10 be feulonal Corporation, One pointed .. penonai ,..,,_ Beach C!fY Council w111 hold o,!.,_,!h0ta2 Notlo• ol Sale: parlor Couf1, on or after the '9C"'10Ue WU
Cal"°""'' the Qty Coundl of Lot 4e of Fairview Ferma, heard relattv. to the ~ Newport Place. Tenth Aoof. raeantetlve to edmlnl91er the • publlc: he9l1ng In the eoun.. ffVL -nc• TO 18th day of July. 1tM. at me ...... ITATlmN'T
of the Ctty of Fountain V""-'J excac>tlng the w.., 3 ecr• cation "-lbed be6ow Newport BMeh. CA 928eO aatate of the d«»denl ell Chamber at the Hunt· -..=~ --office of Janet Lund. 505 The folowlng partOne -hM by raeolutlon adoC>ted thereof ... lttOWr'I on•~ DATE: Monday, Jvly 21. Pvblllhed Ofenge Cout Tr•• petition requHta lngton 8eactt CMc:tCenter. '""..,......' • ..,..,,.... Ctty Pattcway W , Ofanga, dc*lg bu1lr"1a 11 CON-
the prwvaltng hOurty rate of thereof recorded In boolc 8, tNS Delly Piiot July 8, 1988 euthorfty lo edmlnlat• lhe 2000 M9n Slraet, Hunt· YOU ARE IN DEFAULT CA t2M8 714~4--SSM 80UDATED REALTY 2e
W9get IOf Md! ereft Of type page 71, Ml~laneoua TIMfc T'.30 pm T2~ Mlate under Iha I~ tngton Baac:ta, Call1or!Ma. on UNOER A DEED OF TRUST, r.-.. tnqutrtaa to Fred PINhurl1 Lane ~
of wortunan °' mecNnlc MIPI. racorda of Mid Of-APPUCA~ NUM8£R.
1
dent Admlnl8tratl0n of e. lhe dal• and a11ha llma In-DATED A~2e. I~. Veaolo 5913 Horrell Ad a--. ,,...-,._,_',..__ needed to axecut• Ille oon-~ County Mid ~ UNLESS YOU ~ AC. • .• _.. ............. _ ..,....., wNdl wtl be ded Code Amandm4nt No. Str 18 "'8JC M)TIC( tat• Act dleatad below to reoelv9 and rt"""' TO PROTrf'T YOUR C>eyton, ONo 46428 (579) Wiiiem AOC>1riaon Watran,
trllci . -ng ealeultled to t LOCATION· Qty-wide A r-1nQ on the petition eontlder the 1tetamant1 ol PRvroOPE"TY IT"':•AY BE 83f.f737, County of Of· 2e P1ne11ur9t i..-, ~ to the ~ful bidder. C>Mler tine of Wlleon Street PROPOSAL. To,..,..., ax· IC ..:ta wlll be held on JULY 23, 111 P«'IOOI wf10 with 10 b9 " • '"' anga, State of Ceilff>mla. all Beect1 Callfomla 92et0
Prevailing wage In dual-and to the Nor1h Hne of the j9tlngAnldat33oftMHunl· l'lCTmOUlllU ... U lte& AT 9:30 A.M. In Dept hMrd rl4attve to th9 ~ SOLD AT.A PUBLIC SALE. llMrloht title Md In..,_. of Thli butlneee la c:on
Jloat1on001.:ovldadlorby alleyontheNonh · lnglon Beeeh ~dlnance MAmlTA~ No 3 at 700 CMc Canter e111ondeac:rtbedbelow ~A~~~~iEF~HAN ~~ N6dd.ci1111Satthetlmaof ductedby.anlndMdual • ::. '::"ttte = ~ w~ ;,::n.:: ~: Coda and lldd new Artlc:la . The followlng peraon .. .,. Or1vtl w .... 881111 Ana, CA DATE Monday, July 21, OF TH CEEDINO deeth and .. the right, title Wlllilm R. w.,.,.,
wage datarTnWlatlon lor tM A-0 w.., wu.on 8t'99t, M3 r..ied to Una...illad doing 1:1ue1..-... PHSC 92702 1988 AGAINST OU YOU and 1n1 ... thlit the --Thill 9tatamant -Ned Ofange County., ... pub-Colla ..._, Calllomla U.. and ""me CNc>I• M Flnanel•I. 2082 8uat""1 IF YOU OBJECT to lhe TIME 7 30 p m SHOULD CONT ACT A LAW· of N6d dee 11 t I IS ,,_ ao-with ma County ~ of Of. Hehed by lha u.s 0epat1. Thia ...... IUl>jaCI to CUf· "oan.81 PrOYlalona... Center Drl\19 lrvtne. CA granting of Che petition, you APPUCA TION NUMBER YER quired by operation of .... Of anga County on June 10,
ment of Labof and In no rent tu•. OOY9flanlt. oon-EH VI R 0 NM ENT AL 92715 lholJld either ~ at the Condttlonel UM Permit No NaT AmJllCAll nTLI othtrwllle other than Of In 18M
_,1lhllll11 be..., than the dltlona, reatnctlone, ,__ STATUS: The ptopoeed Pf~ Ponoero11 HomH ol i-tng and 11at• your ot>-Wr25 ·Appeal -··-·-addition to \Mt of N6d ci. nttm 1act II eatagoriealty axampt Soutllem Cellfornla. a Cell· leetlona Of ftle written obtac-LOCATION 17242 Ar~ ...._ CO..AMYl. ~ oaaaed, at tM time of~ Pvtllahld Orange eo.t Mtablllhad federal mini-vallona,r1Qh1•.rtghl•ofWllJ. lrom the provlelona of the lornl• COfporallon 2082 Ilona wttll the courl baiOfe Clrde. R1 . (Low Oenllty =-.,..~In and to II the oerteln real Oelty Piiot June tt; 2.4, .My ""'tt:.~ntractor •hall ~.,,:;. ';',::O..,.. C1lllorn1e Envlronmental Bu1tnaH Center · Drive lhe hearing. Your ~-Aealdenllal Dl11r1et) 114 ._.'""' ......_,...; property tltuated In Ctty of 1. t , 1 ...
Pl'ovlde auctt eom,_,,..11on Th9 lfltma and ~...,.,__ Ouallty A4;t lrvlM. CA t2715 ' tnoe may be In pert0n °' by PROPOSAL: Appeal of "~ c-------(1••) Garden Orove, County o1 T •229 lneur9n09 .. requ.;;ib; thi of Ula are c:ul't "';""~ ON FILE A oopy Of the Thia bualnen '' con-your attorney Pl.nnlng CommlMlon dental ~1,_ _,,,, "' Ofange. Stet• of Cellfomla. , ________ ..;;..;..
, _....._ r ...... of S propoeed Ofdlnanoe II on ducted by a corporation IF YOU ARE A CREDITOR of epptleant'a requaet lo op-partloulattJ daacrtbed M ~ "8JC M)TJC( .... .,.... """"" the tat• of money of the United Statea Ille In the Dapar1mant of 0.. Pondero11 HomH . of or • contingent Q'edltor of erata • a.ge larnlly day eat• Dated June 13, 1985 , Iowa. to-wtl'. 1----------
Caltlornla. ano lhall hecut• of Ameriel or pert eMh and ~11 s.mo.. Southern Celllomla John 1 the d«le11ad, you rnuat !Me home of up to 12 c:Mdran, In Pvbllthad Ofenge Coaat L°' M of TrlC'I No. 1730, ........,.. CCMMT 1 contract°''' oar11ftcat9'• pert credit, thatarmaof IUdl AU INT£AE.8TED PEA-~.Sr Vice Prei.darit & your clalm wtth the CCM1 Of .n exlltlng llngle lemlly Delly PllOl June 24, Juty 1, t , ulhownona Map reoorded CW THI ITATI
gerdlng Mid eompenullon c:radtt to be ecceptabta to SONS -lnvtted to attend S«:fetary praaant 11 to the pareonal home lte& In 8ocM1 &2, Paget 15 lfld 27 CW C~
<aqul<ament9 The Contrae.-lhe per'IOnll ~ N6d Mel1ng and ..... Thia "•lament WU fled r.-it•11ve ~led by E N v I R 0 N M E N T A L T23t of Mitoallaoaout ..... ,... '°" THI COUWTY
'"' ltlall further '9qUI(• .. and IO the 00Uf1; tan paroent opll1lona Of tubtnlt ~ owtth the County CWtt of Of. the c:out1 within four monttle STATUS Cltagor1eally H · corda of Ofange County, CA °' ~
Sut>oontrllciora to tlmllerfy of th9 amount bid lo aocom-ror or ~ the ac>Plleatiol Cou lfom ma dat• of fht i. empt from Iha provlalone of P\lllC M)TJC( more commonly known In the Matter ol IM Appll.-
p<ovtde ~ companNtlon pany the oner and ma tMll-u outlined abov9~.pj; = nty on June 19· auenoe of..,.,. .. provided the Callfomla EnvtronrMntal . u : 10192 Edgewood Lane, cttlon of MARY JUNE
lnaurenoe for all of Iha IUI>-81'01 to be paid on doea of eatlonl •xtllblt• . and • 1 In S.etlon 700 OI th• Ouallty Act f·\C217 Garden Grove. CA MICHKOSl<I, For CMoga Of eontrllcicn' ~ The Merow Tax• rante aper-...-....:.... ... ......:. __, l'S1:ttll p _ ... ~ ,. ........ -· Caill I ON FILE .. of ,..._ ----T ....... -1n ,_ .. Contrllciora and Sut>eon-attng 9nd mal~tanm ... -..,........ vo "-Pf.....-Publlatl9d Ofanga Coa.t r ........ VYU'IO "' om a. : " copy ,,. '""' ..... ..,.... anna"' -· __.. ... 11me lracton lflall fumlth llM ,.. .... .-.-. and IV-'-·-on -~-Ille~ the20000ftloa of Dally Piiot July 1, e. 15, 22, The time fof llllng Cllllln• wlll Pf~ condltlonll UM TMllTD'I IAU lul l'OOMy of tlle lJnl1ed CA.II NO. A,,_ -·r ........ ~ ,.._,....,,,. the -·r ,,_,. Main 1988 001 up4re Pf'lot to foul permtt .. on ni. In •he 0.. On July 29, 1988 ti 11 oo Statea on oonflnnatton of ~TO IHOW
• oartlfleat• of _,_ of lnlur9n09 accapleble lo tM 8tre91 HuntlnOton 8Mc:I\ T244 monthe lrom the dlta of I~ partmenl of o.v.lopmant , m Flrll ArnerteMt Title In-..... or part eMh and W. CAUll pc.
tul>raoetlon under the term• purcn-INll be proret«I Ca11foinia IOI' ~ .,.; "-'lnQ notloe •t>ove ~ Co Callfomle JlnOll IMdenoad by note ... CHAW cw ......
of lhe wortlar'• ~ .. of the date of recording of tha public'. "8JC M)TIC( YOV MAY EXAMINE the ALL INTERESTED PER-~atlon ... \.uec ... Of outed by Mof'lgeoa Of TN9t Ji: tm*' 1~ ":::9 be conaldered :,=:;;:.-r~d~ ~~.!!!>N •• .. ~ Ne lit_,t by the court 11 you SONS -lnvtted to anand SuceeHor TruatH or Deed on ma Pfopert)' to ~E • MA JUNE ""' ... , ... ___ -K •1'1 -• pereon lnt.,...ed In Mid '-'Ing and UJ>f-&itmltuted TNl1 .. , of that M>td, Tan per oant of amount MICHKOSKI, paitltlonar, ,,_ unleal It le made on the of. COllYeYenoe. In<! wry title In-llL ........,., • c...-lha aat8ta, you may aerw opinion• or tubmlt 9'ttdeno1 c«taln Deed of Tl'Ult 0 • bid to be dapoelted wtttl bid ftled • patJtton wfttl tM Cltltl
flclal blank lorm fumlahed -•nee polley ahall be • ,._.. (1'14) ltW OM upon the executor 0< admln-lor or agaln1t the aoollcetlon ecuted by ARTHUR C RITZ, Bide or ottw. to be In wrtt. of Ihle Couf1 fioJ 1111 OIOtr
by the Qty and II IMlde In loeetechocordlng to (;USlom Dated: July 1 ttae (CrT ACM* ~ln lttretor, Of upon the al· .. outllnecl ~. All app11. • elnole men. and '900l'ded 1ng and wlll be reoaNied at Chenglng ~loner'• name
ac:c:ordanc:• wi th th• lntoeal•cn>'<lfPl'oceadlnga. Pvb!Wi.d ofanga CoMt NOTICETODEFENDA : tom.t lor the •JttoutOf Of c:atlonl, exhibit•. and ci. May22, 1M1Mlne1Nmant the etONUld ofb at.,,, rrom MAR Y JUHi!
ptovlalona of Ihle Notice 9nd Bide °' offer. mu.It be In Dally Plot J4J1ot t 1NS [AYlao a ~ y AHY A admlnlatrttO<. and l1i. With tcflptlone of thla Pf~ No 31322. In 8ocM1 14070, ltn'le tfter the llrlt publ-MICHKO$KI lo MARY JUNE lhe Pl'OOONI i"9qUl'9merlt9 """Ing and .... .,. raoalved • T252 GHAFARI and 1 to to Iha oour'I wlttl proof of .., • .,. on Ille wftll the Oftloa of Page 103 I of Oflldal Re-cation hereof and belOf9 MITCHELI..;
MCI condttlon• ... lortll et lhe ofllo1a of Raid & YOU ARE BEING 8UEO vice .• wrmen ~ 1ttl· the City ~. 2000 Main oordt of ~anga County. dtrt• of.... IT 18 ORDERED that ...
under 8ec:11on 2 of IN Specl-~. 1nom.va '°' ma P\llJC M)TJC( BY PLAINTIFF· (A Ud...... Ing that you daelr• ~ traet, Huntington 9Mcfl. CallfomMI. Mid punuent U> Dated Ulla lit day of ,My. l*90nt lnMRMed In tM
l'eatlona. E1dl bldOar ""-' pereonal r~atl¥1, •t d•m•ndando) ROLAND notlel of the lllnO of an In-Cellfomla. fOt ~Ion by lhatoanalnNotloeolo.f9u(t ftae tbow••tltted tnlltter ac>-
be lloari.d In acconMnoe 3800 Ofanga Street, flllwr. K... KALAYJIAN ANO MILDR£0 venlOl'yand IC)pfelilalnenl of the public thereunder reoorded M.dl ,,.,,.. Lund. Anom.t .. ~ belOf9 ltlet Cour1 ..
wttll ~ etat• .._. llde Callfoml1, 92501, Of MOftCe TO KALAY= I CAl.INDA.R wtate ...U Of of the pet1-HllMT1MQTON HACH 29, 1985 .. lnltn.ment No. Law. 505 City P~ W., 9. 15 A.M. on AUOUST 11,
Pur.uant to Calllornla may be fllad With the dal'lt of CMDfTORI °' Y.. tlonl or acoounta mentioned CfTY COUMC&. llJ: AAoea etr t 111104, of ~ Re-Sta. c:an be 900 or 1000, Or· ltM, In Dlpattmet1t 3, tt
GOV91MM!t1 Code Section Iha euparlor COUf1 111 llf'f DAYI .,._ tNa Mll1'l•IA In Section 1200and1200,5 Of 1111. •---;. ~~ Cltltt ,.. _ __, -CA twa Att the ooun~ tooeted at
4580, the contractor wlll be time altar nret publication of IUUt TllAMflP la --111 PM .. • • Iha C.1tforn11 Pro0ai. Code ,._.;-i714)..., = ~ ':,.i;;rt'\~'.: iOr...-Fred v;;; M:.::!.. 700 CMo Cent• Ort'4 Wa9t1 entitled to poet IC>Pfoved thlt notloe and befOl'a mtilt· (~ ~) 107 .,._.,...... ,._,an.. at AAROMI a AARONI, O.led: JtJty 1, 1985 Deed of TNet NII 11 I:* lretor wtth Wiii Annexed Santa Ana, Callfomla. W1C1 MOUf1tlal with ma City Of 111'1 Ing the Nie ' ' • tNe ea.rt. INC A-,_ ......... "'-·~ "-,,.~-J___., Lund ...._ --If ......., ..... IC>Pf0¥ed flnanolal lnatttu-l=or further Information Notlo1 la hereby glv9rl lo A....., er..,_.... Olll .. ..Mr n;o-~ :;::::: ~~-:_~t*'rNS ......,., auetlOn lor e&eti. · awful _ _.. .,....,. -· any, ..,,, .,,.
11on 1n order to heve IN~ and bid fonnl, appty at the credltOf• of the wltllln ,... ...,.... ,_ ,_ .,... ,... .:.. C.... ....__ -cA ~, ~, · T2&0 rnoMy of Iha United Se.tea PvbllaNd Orwioa c:o.t ~Ion fOt d*'01 of name
,..._ funda f'9talned by office of the att,,._ tor -named tt .... Ot(l) tN1t a ....... r•lS --e · ... _-. -Of AITleflc:a, a c:ulller'a Oelly PWot J4Jlo/ 8, 9, 15, t9M lhcMd not be granted. ~ ·-• ""' ........ ,,--It • .._ .. to .._ ._ ........ ....._ I ell.ck payable 10 H id TW24t IT IS ~R OAOt.N.O IM ~ to lnauf• pet· per'IOnll ,._tat,... ,_ ---· --,,..., ----,_ PvC>llah1d "'"'-Coaat ·-.,. lll'!l'llrC of .. IOffl'lanOe of the oontrKt Thtr1ght la......,,., 10 ,._ made on par90MI ~ ............ .._, ,_ Delly Plot ~,-r8 lttt ,.~ ""'""' Truat• dtawn on I .... or ltlet a 0C>PY Ofd1r to
Plana, ~1 and of· lact tl'l'f Ind all bide henllnllfter deiCrttMld -. • • Tw246 K -natlonll '**· • ttne or tads ~= o'::'J:i::
flclal Pf'opoaal form1 IO be DATED June 27 18" The '*'* and ~ I ,.. ...... ,.. '9CTm0Ua ....... ~ .. ~ =:;~ ~ . new...-of Qel*al
uaed floJ btddlno 09" be l)b.. ~ •• ....... • ...... llddl I I I I I of ma Intended , ••• ·--..... ,_ ..., ·-.,. 1111\'llH' MAim ITAW ~ -In 'ti; cln:lulltton PttrMd In oranoa
talned ~ Jt IN Oftloa of MNI ~ t .. ~ tr.,,.,.,on -: LMTING lw 1lle ...._ Md ,_ '"~" """~ The IOllOo#tng petlOl'te .,. ettlt, 9t Iha main entTllnOt "8JC M)llC( County CalltamlA. onot a the Water lupartnMndiant, ... o. DI i111 I. IMAG!.8 MAIN TUI. INC ........ ...., .... .... k... dOlrlQ buelntM • PARK to FlfWt Arnertcan Tltte In-... ;« four •OC ELHI ..
11240 Ward Str.I. f<~ MID a YP. 11r 2H4 ~ #1, eo.ta lftr.., • .._ .._. MOTICSOf AVlNUt AISOCIATU, -enoa~looeted1' K-.... Pf'lot to tM ci... ...
teln y....., et no OOlll. " the Dtw ....... A......,. ....... CA ..... ...... ...... .. DIATM Of' 2tM White llloed. 8una 1&0. t 14 bit Fll'ltl .. ,.... In ma "°~A~.. '°' '*'tncl °" tM ""'*' =and~-=-": :.. ~=-= °'or::=:~~ -;:.. .,. .._ ..... ,. ~ :::',lllGDA,1__ ~ ~ :2~ Olty of Santa Ana. Callfoml1. TIMI~,.,._. we o.ted· Jun 20 1 ...
IW!tbymell,themeilnaand .. , ..... ,CA ... ::;:-.-;;_ ... °'": .. 1• Y• _, w.e TO A.D•lllD wal pertnerWtlp, n».C 1111 that rigttt. tllle Md doing ~MM ... Cel .._,, T. lllMn. It.,
handllnQ dlq1a .,_be l"ubllaNd Ofanot Coaat ;,,_ ~ ........ :-:...::: 19TATl..0.AtmM Tu.Ho AV9nUe, Sama Ana.=~~~=~~·.:.=• .. tM IM•artef
t.200 TM OOlll Of IMllng DellJPlotJ4"'11,1I.19M Al Oltls ....._ ~ ... To a1 .....,._ ~ CA92705 DeedofTrwtlntMproperty c-3 Coau ......_ ~ AoyA.Hoft,tna.,Attori.,I ~ Mndllno .. no4 be ,.. WT24t and addt I I I I I uted ::: :....., ,.::,-:..... : cndtton and oonUngianl Ray ~ l.agune laecll, lltuated In .., County and m2e .. '--· 19CIOt !. lmc*11I
The Ctty t9WWt ma t1CJM ~ _!."'i:"°'..,_.. "':: • .. ~ !!'!!!': (WIMI 11t ::'::4:i ..:::.w:: ~~llllp, ~ '== Sta te dalertbad M· L.ot 42 of Maro a rat I a .Wat a ~· La Mirada, CA l
to= ~:".~;:r -fl!UC M)TJC( PMI .)jW-. known ao \tie o;;.'";' ........ In l'1 .. and/Of _,1-. ot-• lutta 150, lrvlne, CA !~'::!1:i:::::n..: ~~ ~ PubleNd Orqa c..1
~. _, .. air .. ~Of lltandld tt•llfliM If'« -.,._ .............. ~~~MAIM~~ NI.A ·~ t>uetnaea 11 oon-P..-41 to to INJllulM. tnue, iuit• C·I. Coate o.lr Plot"'-2A, -""1 1, I , V..,, c.t. Ml ~ HU.M9Q The IWM(l) and~ .......... .._ • = ..-..:.&. M M0&4"-' N<.A M~ Maciie. ,._ ....... CA ta2t 15, tNe _.o.tad Jl'.N ft .... COOi ~ addr91e of the Intended .. ; Q1A.e CAI~ HAZE.l. MIZEAA dUct..s by i lmned partner corda of ~anot County, Thill bua1nW le ~ c T2M ~ ~ Cc.IC "°· •• b• .... W(•I -JAQ( C. ,.,. ~··•••I•• ••• A petttiofl flee a-.. Mad ""-9r01 Cellfomla. dUCt9d by; a 0011*l ltol1 PCaJC llJTICt
OalyNotNyl, ... T241 r~-r~~~y ~YA~Ute.?..v~ ;....;..:.~-:..a ... z=n~1no. Ltd , t ~=w=s ,~!.i_T:;!,.~.: !n~.r~l~IH~ K._
_________ 10NIH tNt the :-::c I 2 7 1 5 • n d J w u.. _... • -...... ~ ~ tNt ~ ,.,,_ • ::t:., "*-*. w• hl:nUty 9'0TICe °'
"8.JC EfU .._,, 01tJ Couna1t.. ~WlfRfNIA, 18400 Yon Mor .. M 111 ..... ~ ~ ..:::== Tllltl lt1*Mnt ... lllad net al ftoh~ "-::' oC Tllltl .. *"'1rlt ... tied Ma 'nll'I IN11 ~11\e=: 112~ Aw . tMna. CA :e!..!.:..=.'::.:! 1o tdmlnlttar ~.: .. of Mtt1ti.eoun1ya.11of0f· hyd~0c:::on• t>y wti•t· :;.'='1on0.::~~ ,....,~.., ~ COWIT tngton t.dl CMc 0..... Til9t IN ~ ,_. •••rUr ee11 I.a fer• tM ~ = County on June I , ~ ,_,,. luiown tMt 10M TO WHOM IT MAY COH-Of ~ zooo. Main ltrtile. Hunt· nant ,....._, 11 ..-... In •a I '1' e 1 I•. e I e 1 The petition reqvMte "1tll7 tMJ be ......., or wndar Mid "1tll1 CERN•
CCMMT"I °' ~ ._,., CalfcM11111. on oenar91 •al llfoc:a In...., • ;' •1 "...., ..... aull'loftly to ..,.._. tl'9 ~ °' c... llnd, ~ ~. tl'9 fl\lblllflad Or-. eo... NOtlm ta ~ .,__ '° llfW llDI -.. __ Md .. lM ttlN ~ ltld\ne. eqaltsl ••1t, tr.oa -lll _... ....._ .. --~ the ~ ......_ -... .. _ ~1 2• ,.._ ,._. tO dttl Of i.-tl'9 .. _ ~ flllot .lurW 1f. H ,.,.. ,._ ...... -~
...... ~~ ....
1519 Or111ge A---., Oolt.e
....... COUnty Of~ ''*°'~ .... bulk .,......, .. ..,. '° be "*"' to MAKOtA ~. Tt......._...,_~
9ddreae II 2A N. y,., ...... F,__.,, County Of ff91nO.
s'* °' CellfofnlL The P'°'*'Y to be er-,.,._, .. loclNd at 1117
N9wpott ~lh•d. eo.te
Male, County Of Or.,..
8tNOfCiltona
Sa6d PfOPar'Y II dleolt:led ~-M..-ln
and c.;,tl~ C.t./ Mt~
known .. THE NUT I
CRACl<!R CA'E and
located at 1717 ....,.,,,
&oulevwd, Coeta ..... .
County Of Orange. ... Of
Callfomla. The bulk .,...., ... be
conaummMad on « after
the 25ttl -Of NlfL t~
and delrN 'MY be -.. WEUS FARGO BANK. N.A,
Eacfow Dapertment, "9:
&a-ow No. 1112·214. ...
MacAtttluf ~ ... 550, Nftpot1 9-ltl,
of Oflllge, Stat9 Of
lom6at2MO
All delrN muat be ,.
oat-s .. tNa ~by the
24UI <Sey Of .My. 1-. ...-
laee tM bulk.,...., ..
~ tM tr.,..., of
lquor llcanae, In "'*" -. .. Clalml muat be r9CaMd
Pf'lot to \tie csai. on wNdl
the liquor **-..... twred by the Dapartmel .. of
Alcoholk: ....... Control.
So f• • known to ._
lranal.,.., a1I bvtl~ namaa and add! I I I wed
by T~ floJ the OW.
yeetl .... '*'· • ~ "°'"ma~....: none Dated: "'-20, 1 ... fllletthl--., T..-..,_
Pvbllltled Oranoe eoeec
Delly Piiot """1 •. f ...
T247 M!91'
J 0 H N H
ANDERSON, born
August 18, 190~
Paaed away on Ju.ly
~. 1986. John WU
bom m Kankakee.
Illinot.s. He srectuated
from Michigan State
Univentity in 1929.
Moving to Chicqo ln
1930, he found work
In the Investment
bualneaa. Dtfti.na
Wor&d War ll. ~ lier•
ved Ill the United
Stata Cout Ouatd
He mwned to Ch.I.
cqo ln UH8 • a
atockbroker f or
White. Weld. and Co.,
where he nnna1ned
for the next 24 y.n
In 1972, he rwUnd
and moved to l...quna
Beach, California. He
Ls IW'Vived by h1a ..
ter, Helen Lawler
and h1a Mpbewi. Jan
and John Ander.,.n.
and James, Dennia,
and Michwl Lawler
Memorial Miiii will
be held at St.
Catherine'• Church, 99o Temple Ternce,
Laaun• Beach on
Wednaday, July 9, at
10:00 A.M.
HAVAS
HARRIET LEIGH
HAVAS, pHaed
away July 2, 19ee.
Survived by brother
l!!llot Wllllama of
Crawfordfleld, ln·
dlana . N•pbew
Jonathan WlWa.im of
Crawfordflled, In-
d.lan&. Memorial _._
vtc. to be held S.t-
t.6-day, July 19, 11
A.M. at the ff4rtsb-
borhood CoJ\IN1a·
tlonal Church,
J..acu.na Be.ch. Under
the Dl.recUon of Mc
c.onn.icu M«tuary.
Interment private
'ACl'ICVln' ............. 1 c.m ... , • ..,..,
~·Ctr1Mcy "°° ttec-.: y.._ on-. .. ""', ..... 144-2700
f.11•1• of AL.U.~ o ;.;; .....,_to,....... and ,... _., fOOd ... °' • .,. -.. f.,. Adi'nlnlatrat1ot1 of r.. -T ,._. ....... 1r. : •• -r f1ee or "'1 ~ aoo .... o1 ii' 1... • • _., .. , ~ ~ ~!~
NCl..ION,1bA1.80'TOTI8 oonaldlr 1119 ....,.,19 or1 celrl .. IOt•w11.._,... ................. • t*'-Act 1•1 ttle f ...... Mid _., • ,_...., In ' ' T-221 .-~ -.............,
A "-'"a on tM pertltlOn ·-o..cs from w~ C. MAMO • ..:T.:.:.rpal=:.:.,:..°'::..:.•·L.:::======::::
,
I •
~ -___ -. -.. -----.
·a~!!:a-ir-l!!nd.!~~p -,----" ~TERl_,...Y
'" "-,........ ... C.W.) • "City °' UtN 1-.01 m ~ trvu• C"-t <'**9) 111 J TDIBlllT'I ..,... 12LuCllY l'Mrll ,,...., (t) lJ2 ••• ,,_. ICM!tlnOll) "' UllEll t• 11 .,._. ........ ) Ii Nie U• llcllltl 115 SK"--CSIMlt) l It
Offtaage
Falr results
..... ,._ NI 1' ltln9t Loeo C'9ttolll J0t 6 Ctvlt 't "'" CRIM'l\lfU) 116
9UMtta..-.1 . ~INTY Of' ~IASUltl (4•1) SIW9 d .. a IUftft lr COMH!lllOft (,...OH) ll6 or..t ~ .... PW
NIT •ACL )ti v., ........ U.100. Two 8rott·rt1etct Wtll fw tn.-0 lttt1 O(X.DliN I Trlltl A e.tttr Chllencourl) 116 yeera .... ClelmMt lltlcr u,ooo. DEl.IVILlltY (6-ll ..... "" "*"" 4lllCI CM tPllMe "-dro (a&tck) lll WALKl!H ~ov (S-t) T,.... ......... ~--....., ....... ••M.n
l lsr • ...._ tTr .. t1nl 122 milt~ for 19ah wt FUOO t .. 21 Or"'9e IOHorltl Rtllfotd Orl¥9 (Ort ... ) 116 encl worked wtl ti Miile Mli.; ll'004.. ll'OINT (W II tt.-W ..._. ....... , ~::;.°1:-:~=r m :=. ~=T:e:':=A:: dlflnltt .=!:.!,~Ott~t·=v.:m_u~ = !~ •. ':,~-="~T"(Z.,~~-= :r-ir:: =~~~r-ue t-: !-!: :~~~°'* (~) 111 flOUllTM aACL 6 "" ...... fturw '4.000 lhl• bundl, UNFAIR COMNTITIOH (Joi) IN Nit Ill WtMrtllt!I, lltwwt LONGSHOT It°"" y~ C~lc:a.-I i..o ......... -· cer....,, 122 Thr .. .....,.. ... Md -0.lmlnl ~: .,,. lklrow llwaw " • °"' tf '"' s. l\tf~ IO Otfty MAIN AUE'T. Tll'llt tM.IJ ~ =:4; Time (OidwldlMfll Ht l JUllntl Cll'•ll8'10ft 114 COM!Wtllon; KIKAl'OO (4•11 SMtdittt frOtft ...,.,.. •AC.I, 6 Furtofte ll'utM '15,000. AIM ~air MT• luMY, ltut ... R~ •
• •~ •. o1"'"" (ltAM1) '22 2 HNrt Wat Caranwtll Turf ll'tttdlM rntY nt LONGSHOT CROS$ All9wtflC9 Ttv" Yttr$ «*I tll4 Ult, fllltt tllCI "-• ltlllt, AflotW Vtlll, ltl~ oe. ..
-ludOv (Mtltr) 122 >Irle/It lov (ltoc:tltl .i' 116 WITS mare. SCt
fMluth 1•11111 CL.twit) 117 41tomtn Waw (ENlciue1) 119 SIV8ffTit RACI 6 "'~ flur1o1• S7500 1 AffofdMllt Lv1turv (Sltcill 1M 12 ~~~l~llll ~·12..0 ·~ ltTISIOUAL$ (l-1) WOii lt•I Im-5 Prine. Of Word (kott) 11' TIVM Y•tn old and Uo. Cltlmlnt ll'rk:t: i,a,.Qoo. 2 bntOOll ltW¥ (0.tatiouuevtl 116 • M 1
DAY .... ~L. f"IMUr9 rldM ,... Wiii. ll<:lt '£m«tld Cut (L.Mntltl'll "' $21,000. 3 Bold ....... (Petttrton) 116 SICOMO UCL .,. Ytl'ft
ANOTHE,. OUPll C2· ll ~ drtlt for COIN" 7 Joyn Sailor (KMl\tl) 116 l No ll'rnarva!IV91 (ArtQ\lndl) 115 4 EcdWtlut'nP (Orf ... ) 122 f'ht .... 11¥tl (Odl'O.Mtll 540 UO UO ~oO~·~ ... wltll tllla fltld; IANI( ltOl.L • y~ Ttrltr (Ct\laftOll) 116 2 Frtnell Rttlto (IJtctl) (I) 110 ,5 I.~~ "IOwtfc~Ollvarn, ' 11'1'4 H"8 I.tr\ (Hunt) uo uo
L,...,.SHO•·I) lost • 104.llll one In troubled ..... , 'Hien VlctorY ($itlllt) "' l Kev To ll'roml .. (CHIMOnl 115 ...... r~y ~_,.. Wlftfy It•• (LAwl•l uo
"'""' T: AMElttCAN DASH. 10 Youth ll'tttl CStwllntl Ill Utwt9111 (lrlnleartlOffl 115 1 Flttf Rtlll (Pedroaal 116 'Time •MM T~c:! !,.~~.!:. y~: ~ tJ.100. 11 ll'ev Ou! (Gr.= ..... 116 : ::::. s:: a:~I m i ~=~=<',le,,-) ::: 00:."°~~ ~~ 5::~1A"Olll. h<IUtlld
• 1 Chief lttUdtnl (Dldtrlc!Utll) 122 ltOMAN WAVE (2·11 w• Dtdltd In .. •I 1 Hot OtMr1 Nltfll (Pedrotti lll 10 AJS ... T1mt (Solltl '" SCralehed: ,_, ,,.., •en 2TllM To Tlllnk (Uwla) 111 Ct li.til .. rntY lllYW IOOll Otek, YOUNG l "•ncv I tOouelaal llS It.ANGOON ltUIV (4·1) Wtl brad filly frOt'I\ U DACTA 1•·11 paid "100
l Wlllltr Wr•llW (Oarclt) 122 T AltTAR (l · 11 aPMd to fore. IN I•-· HIGH '$Plrlt Stttltr (Ollvarn ) 121 122 DrvMltlt'• barn Hits llOOd Mal and turned In
4FIYlne Enter Cooy (ltul1) 122 VICTORY (6-1) Streldl runner may DI.,.., It IOMln Pellon CP•llWIOft) 113 aoar1tllne l:llA drill July 3, Chance for minor nt•D •AC•. I 1116 mite\ s In Sollcl (TrH•ur•) In loo oalr fatter due to .,...,.,mo -LONG· Abt ...... UPMI; VOt.ANDA (S-U leek on IN dirt and Summw PlevtloV (Ctltenonl uo uo uo
60rtrlltblotsomapaclal (Mtltfl • 122 SHOT· JULINAL 11 CultMH (Ortaoa) (2) 122 rNV 1\8111 den IClff lonlthl; FLEET ltAIN Doc Snow (OrltOI) 2.20 2.60 120
1 AllOllo Jonn (Hunt) "' "''"" ••CL 6 Furlon9s. P\KM; $1,SOO 12 WNdlltllV• (lltdl) 121 llS (4•1) Nice Nlr of Clrllls uu Ind .Sf.l) since..... ,,.... Flett\ ("ltfltl\d91) ,,00 I BtdtboOs <Fltutroa) 121 Two·ytll'-.olcl flllltl. Cltlmlno Prlct 132,000-13 Mt M9t! (Orltot) (I) 11S Ptdroze l\ta toOd ...,. ... iw atvte l..cltd to Timi 1:45.• t Tl~ Tamer CUc:ktvl 122 Slt.000. 14 Miu Marr'-(Otlvarnl Ill 122 ride 111ls oval. LONGSHOT INDIAN FLOWER. Alto Ran. Enlrv Dav, Strt1191 MuK, 8t·
IO Pttclful Nallvt (Wtllltl 122 1 Sfffdl F!K A Slw (Munttll) 111 SOLDIEltS HOPE 12·11 Finl alerter DY TIH'TM ltACI. 16 Miiii ll'urlol 111,000.. IWttft The Ufll.
WINT!lt WRANGLER (2· I) ~ .tlor1 In 2 Ollllomatlc Judge (Sibilla) Ill ,...,_from. swift mar.-nlca work oallwn for Tllr .. YMI'• old. Clelmlnt Price • •MOO·SIO,SOO. :r:~:11~.f:'1c1 "' 00
lt•l·wlmtd IO tOcl -lhtr, CHIEF ltESIDENT 3 DYMWl(I (Mtlw) 11' dtOul, FANCY S ( .. 1) Nlct M lf of N it drib I Badlloe (Sibille) 116
()-1) Didi• • atrone """"· IN SOLID ( .. I) 4 Shn All I Gol (Olivares) Ill c• l) for tllla Don II nny, FltENCH REAL TO 2 Quacks loy (lammarlnol Ill •1 UCAc:TA l•·t) oald •II 00
TrOUIMI In last, deer trip tlV91 11\11 alMd OOOd S ... 1111 toot (Ftrnandtl) 11' 14·11 SCIMd In llolh sltrta, lint Yount tPOrtnllce 3 fMllOw Denc:t (LIPl\aml 114 Note. DMdhHI for, flnl
look. LONGSHOT: APOLLO JOHN. 4 Chief Of The Htwll• tScolll "' CIKY lltck ·~rd. LONGSHOT· KEV TO • 8omtltv llarltndtr (DtltnoulltYel 11' TNOttOUGM"•DS 7 CCK>t OrHm CGtrrlOol 11. PltOMISI! ' S Go Impressive IStwllno) 111
TMlllD llACL ~ Furionos. Puraa. SS 500 I Out Of Darkneu ILlllfltml 11• llOMTH ltACI. 6 Furlongs. PurH: tl0,500 6 JOhn Thi TOU11h (Of'llO•I 116
Thl'M y.., olds •nd uo maidens Cltlmlno p;.lct· 9 Tiil• lld F!K You (DrftOI) 111 TillM YHr old• •n6 uo. Clalmlno Price: Sl2,SOO, 1 Suire Thirteen (Katnel) 114 S12,SOO-IO,SOO 10 Al Fltt IPtdrottl 111 ll0,500 • I Hele Moto IPtdrota) llo
I ,..._ Native (Slbllltl (2) 120 THIS BID Fett YOU (S-2) E•lls epod llNI al 1 Main AsMI (Hlf'llllndtl) lit t Pollet Ptll'\Ull ('aslanon) 11'
2 My Fav1Kll• (Enr1qut1) 11S Hollvwood ll'arll, on Illa dtdlnt and wll tove this · 2 lnltnllonal <Slackl 111 10 11o1K Intent (Gerrldol 114
3 Sl\edow ltun (11mmt1lnol IOI oval, SHES ALL I GOT 14· II ltldtr/Trelntr 3 Min Mufftl (Cltnefo.) 111 AIM .......
4 Pr~ POtnP11Us (Ltmlltrll llS loueh com90·tralnlne we41 fOf' lhb. COPS • Counten Of (lammarlno) 111 11 LIOhtlhtwt yt\Olma IH'9utrtl 116
So.otdtn ~ (Cu ltnonl I~ DltEAM (6·1) Tad West flllt Illa Wr9 won S Strt>IM Princess tBazen) IOI 12 Prewrvetlve tSladl) Ill
6 Comlth 9'ol"9r tPallerlOft) 122 Otlltrn·v«v conttnllou• llHI. LOHG5HOT 6 Pool Polnt,(Slt>llltl 116 llOMSAV BARTENDER (3·1) Hard knodler
7 PltnlV Of Pleewr• IK-*) llS DIPLOMATIC JUDGE. 1 Doll Comoanloo (Scolll (1) '" •l'tOl.llCI IOvt llllM IUf'M•llllS SNtd lo ll04d swav.
I ... ,._,. IFutlOno) llS SIXTM RACI. 4 Furlon9• Punt: $6,000 I Monton Slit lSltfllnol 111 JOHN THE TOUGH t•· I) Caoable runner
',,,., FUdd (Orteoa) llS ThrM Ylar• Old •nd UP. Cltlmlno Prlc.: ss.ooo 9 WalkWI LadY (Katnlf) 116 sllOIJld Hrn • ctltd< wltn IOI> effort; SUITE lOLtave Them Oancln !Cisneros) I Stcrll Scot tEnrlQuta) 109 10 Prllentloua AOMI ILIPhaml 116 THIRTEEN 16·1l 'Cowboy Jack' will Off the Abt • ._. motl out of tnla moun1 In wide OPtn flnate
Hollywood Park
racing entries
H••Md hrtI
w•DMISOAY'S UfTltt•s
IS7ftl .. 67·dllY lflllM4f*N '""""9)
"''"' ~ 2 Ml\. "'"'" ltAC•. 6 Furtonts Pvrat SlS,000 Tllt'M·YH r ·Old• Clalmlno Price $50,000·
MS,000 1 LAna Mtnua (Vtltntutltl 114
2 MtyDtrry's Mtdntas tsi-n.kerl 116
3 End Plav IMcCtrronl 116
4 Suouetn tSttvlMI 116
S EauDtrant'a lmaet !Black> •11•
4 Flttl Albtrl (Sotol I 16
1 Time snare It Hernanoe1 116
SICOHD RAC•. , ..... Miits Pvrt.a Sll,000
Mtldtfl• flMlts and mares lllrH veers otd encl up
Clalmlno Prrc.. S32.000·S21,000
t Nlatar• Ltdv tCe 1anon1 , Teat !loot. Lt dY (Orlav•I
3 Dlmtt91o's WO!'ld lGarrldol
4 Righi Dev (KHMI) s One For AnclrH (Sltvensl
6 Glnl Etooutnt (Slbllttl
1 Tn teroaa (McCarronl
I Snow CrMm IPincavl
t Curvlt StY IHersntv)
10 Snlnlnl <Sieck)
11 Cernc>ll 1So41sl 12 Love Toasl (Stlf'llnt)
J 11' ~120
:11• 114
"' 120
" 117 11• •·109
TMlllD ltAC•. 6 Furtonlll Purse \14,000
Flnlts thrH v11rs Old Clalm•no Price U0,000·
13.S,000
I Marl Sul>l'eme <C•st•nonl 111
2• DMI Em Stralohl (Ollver9') 11S
la Unlvwsalv tSlevensl 11 S
• u1111 Pint tMc:Cerronl 1 IS
S ~y Man IKMl\ltl llS
4 Vtlvelttn CSlbllltl llS
1 C~ ROii (Ve1tn1utlel I IS
I 8ttulanland IMcHarouel 11s
a-Jerrv Fennlno·lralned entrv
"'°"""" RACE. SI) Furronos P\lrat '13,000 Maldtfls two YNrs Old Clalmlng Pnce
U0.000-M5,000
I RallaPOllll IK-*1
2 Ooullll Sont (Vtltnzutlal
3 Eezarl llemmarlnol
4 Jtannts R-(Htrntnclel) (11
S Sla rdust FOiiy (Stevena)
6 AOtnlS HHrl (Olivares)
1 Kines ROYtllY (fl'lncay)
I Pukkt Ouek (Ge rrldol
9 Svnerelsl (Slack)
10 El9"1 la El'IO\lllh ISollsl
11 ltult Thi Night (McCerronl
12 Old SoYrdOUtlh (Catanon
AIMEl9ltllt
1) Dart>v Cnlck (Slbllltl
14 You're Glorious IHernanclezl 121
IS Nantt Jo (Lll)tle m)
~
'
111
111
•· 111 Ill
111
111
111
118
x·l13
'11 Ill
111
1 II
'" 11t.
""'TH RACE. 6 Fl.lf10nln P\Ksa Sl6,000.
Fllll9' •nd mares '"'" YHn Old Incl uo Cltlmlno Price 132,000-SJO,OOO
I 80ld It""*' (Grable I 2 Prt llv Sla N <Caalanon)
l Dell•'• Gold Coln (SI.ck)
• SwMI Winkle IMcCarron)
S Grttn COiten (Stevena>
6 Sweppln Sin ( Slblllal
1 Al'• lllo Time (Valtn1utlal
I lndlan Flower (Oelahoun•v•I
't S Maille <Gerrldol
10 Sudden Stu (Warren)
11 Notre. Mt (Srlnktrnotfl 114
SIXnt ••c•. , ... Mltn. Tun PIKM m.ooo.
Fiiiies lhrM r H rt Old AllOwance
.i HOPllUI Gal !Toro)
2 Mtrtartt llooth (Plnctv)
3 Jacrvn•s Cl\ok:a COllvernl
6 Love
1 Ml Et UM (Valtnz
I Soontrmoon (Katntll 11
t Llllla RI~ ILIPt\aml 11S
'-HVaNTH RACE. 6 Furlone\ Purw '17,000
Mtldtns '"'" vaan Old end up, llftd In
Cellfornla
1 Cnlll HIH <Olivares>
2 Melanlt 'l Pride IVeltnzuel•I
l Mu•cal Kid (Black)
• Con1rav-(Ortav•I
S Oout>lv WIM (Pedroni
' Plalor ICH l•nonl 1 Dowd Canvon (Stevensl
I Cove OI Stnkara (Garrtdol
t StlCkv Tri-(Slbtlltl
10 FeU E•curslon <Kaenell
11 Time F0< Milerto IMcCarron>
17 Prince O' Fire (Plnce11I
atGHTH ltACE. I Mite, Turi Purat· U0.000.
FIOltl I nd merl\ """ Ytarl Old •nd uo Allowance
1 lea SIH ltf (Toro)
2 SwHI DrOI> (Solla)
l Anttrtk:a tOtlanouuav•>
' EloQUICk (~Iler I
S Zeldl IMcCarronl
• 81\ishlnt A• Over IMcHtrCMtl I FOik Art !Plnc:ay)
I Cenvek's Star (Stevens)
NINTH ltAC•. 1 Mite Pvrat S 12,000 Flllln
'""" vHra old. Ctalmlno Price S2S,OOO·sn.soo. I NICllOIOV• (l(ffnell I IS
2 Gotdln Coul IOouolaal I IJ
l Mush I Slack I • • 110
• L• Prtclosa (McCarronl 111
S Pt<t N' Saucy (Plncay) 111
6 Lt P\ltrt• (McCorktel 11S
1 SroottH Pal IOtlanouuevel 1 IS
I Arcllc Lano (Stevens I I 13
9 Dh1ltland Girl (Sterllnol •· 110
ll·dlnOlll apprentice IC)Ckty
11 lteoal Ml" (LtmDtrl) LONGSHOT GO IMPRESSIVE
12 Nol A Straw (Orteoal llST BET: ROMAN LINE (fourth rtKtl. 13 Star lite Clruwett) .... IC. l'LAY: SOMBAY IAltTENOElt
I• Nellvt Confllc1 tScolll t2I I loth rtctl
--------------------~--------------------------------------------~
9'0UllTH RACE. 6 furlon9s
111.V'ntll I Ct stt non)
ICY Toucn tEnr'-1> Enouth Roe»e (Bazan>
Timi No lime
1100 1.40 uo •.40 J 60 1.40
Alto Ren SllOOkumclluek, Sotniill Oen D ,
S.llon lnvov Alm Adlltm. Holhtrn Gr-. Hui CJ(. 8ov Scratdlld Ptovout Youlh Pwlo., Dari"'
Jtf'l'Y, Brians lloy, Run For lluttermflll.
"ll'TH ltAC•. 6 furl0n9l TlaMn SHI ICastanonl 3 IO 2.IO 2Ml
Flrtl Shooter tSltlllltl 3 00 2.10
Make A POCktlfvl (Garrido) l 40
Time 1 I~ l
AIW ltan: Creftv Cra'9 Meyow Dawn, Cnlna
Entrt Y, Catmo ~llc:lllCS Hone
IS •XACTA (S-)) N ici '22.50
Dream match
still in works
-1 · 9.59°&J ~
But Phone Trick.
Melair not expected
to meet until fall
Undefeated Phone T nck. whose
nine-race wtoning streak 1s well into
its second year. may be challenged by
Mela1r. the blazing 3-year-old fill y
who hasn't come close to losing to
five starts. but fans may have to wall
· unttl the fall to see the dream match.
Trainer John Sadler said that
Saratoga's Test Stakes. at seven
furlongs, July 31. is the next stop for
the multiple stakes-w1001ng Melair.
whocaptured Saturday's Stiver
Screen Hand1cap at Hollywood Park.
The 29-year-old trainer also disclosed
that the Breeders' Cup Sprint, ac
Sant.a Anita. Nov. I, is another
poss1bihty.
Super Diamond work• out
Roland Sahm's Super Diamond,
the Belair hero who gave Precisionist
a sttf'f challenge in the Grade I
Cahfom1an, worked six furlongs Sun-
day as he keeps on schedule for a
rematch w1th Fred Hooper's chestnu<
colorbearcr 1n the $500.000 guaran-
teed Hollywood Gold Cup, Sunday.
July 20
Super Diamond covered three-
quarters of a mile 1n I: 12 1/5 on the
main track.
"It was JUSt easy." said assistant
tr.nner Mark McCreary, substituting
for trainer Eddie Grcason, who ·is
vacationing this week to Hawaii and
is no1 expected back at the Inglewood
track until Saturday.
Super Diamond, a 6-year-old son
of Pass The Glass, 1s el\)oying a fine
Hollywood Park campaign. After a
sharp allowance w\n here, Super '
Diamond pushed Prccis1onist to the
hmtt in the Californian before his
success in the Grade III Belair.
•
If y) 've been planning home i~~ovements, special invest,
ments, a vacation or college
ed ucation, now is the time
'
Ask about our
current rates.
phone, call 1-800-551-3333
Mon .,fri. 8a.m. to 8p.m.
·And take advantage of our
low rates while they last.
, .........
tUt Ml Mt
l .. H'TM AAC8. I llt4 m• TMuW (Ftrntlldn) 1110 SM UO
!I ,,.,.. <GrtOta) UO JAi
II• JumtMnf ._, C$ttltllal 2M
Time: IAU. • AIM ltan· Elactrlc ,,,.,.,,..., Tl.RI Tov.
,. ..... ,\' 111#1, ~ Jolla
Scrt!CNO• *"'· .S IXACTA 0 -fl Mlf 5125.0I
NINTH aACa. 4 fur1tnoa
Jhlrt GIMlt (Hllltl
Cuneo llltdll
Chocoltl• Balll COrteoal Tlmt'.1'111
2.at UI 2'11 uo uo uo
Alto ltan· Htrdv Guv. LuclllV LOICeY Scratclltd: Qualllv (IC)
s2 ll'tCIC SOC 110+M·1·21 paid SSSAS2 to 3 winner• hh1 l\Oneal. u Pick S111 Qlll1IOlatloft Nl4 ..... 11 wlMtn (flYI __ ,
TIN'TM UCL I 11 16 m1tn HacN (C.t-) • 4M JA UO
Ctltlc E .... (Ftrlltndtll 6..00 UO
No.trlldtmut (~tbll) uo
Tlmt. 1: .. 1
AIM> ltan: Ctllt.tN DtnQI', Diamonds Dean, Natl¥9 $clell, RuHltl, SttldY ll'tJ\.
Scralehtd: N-12 DAIL y ooueu (2·51 paid S.S.60
U IXACTA (5-t ) paid IJI fO
··~-•.2'3
Fw
The Breeders· Cup Spnnt has been
trainer Richard Mandella's pnmary
objective for Phone Trick all alon •. In
1986, Phone Tnck has started Just
three times. hi s last victory ac·
comphshed in Belmont's Grade JI
True North Hand icap under top
we1&ht of 127 pounds "l d1dn't th1nk they'd let me run for
S 1 m1lhon all by myself," Mandella
sal& "I knew someone would pop up
out of the works."
Mela1rd1dn'tjust pop ur, she burst
onto the scene. w1nnina al of her five
starts at Hollywood Park, includmg
victories to three stakes and a record
for six furlonas at the lnaJewood oval.
Lcf\ 1n the wake of her impressive
HOLL VP ARit N~: Gary Jones
reported that Tvllomu. winner of
the Widener, Talahassee and Oak-
lawn Handicaps, "isgoina~ood now"
and 1s over the brief illness he
contracted af\er a third-place finish in
the May 26 Mctropoht.an Handicap ..
CUrmlD& Sasu. a 4-ycar-old
chestnut fiUy who takes her lessons
from Ro11 Fenterma.ker, has re--
turned to the Idaho trainer's shcdrow
after taluf\4 time off to recover from
anhro9COptc knee suraery ... Job
Hno. raci ng's riche,t equine star
with career caminas of $6,597,947,
conduct hi s second work Monday
toward hrs comeback The move WH
over three furlon~ on.the main track
. Hopefal Word, Rlchrd Mandetla'1
Gold Cup candidate was 1mpre-ss1ve
here 1n n workout the other day, tht-
tnuncr 'U\td "The Gold Cup 1s g01ng
10 ('ome up rcall) 1ouah," Mandrclla
"'1td "He went thrtt..quttne"' thr
otht'r da). and d1d 11 ca\y •
to check out our more afford,
able home equity loans. For
more information follow the
arrow co any conveniently
located Bank of America
branch . Or to apply hy
We ·want the job:
l.urttni r "" whtn"t "' 'luntt
\ !ll•ttlrh \ .Nh&r Ra•t 1 .. 11h.-u1 at111
9.50% ~82%
I
I
I
l~t 11 u.h 1'<'b.11r '"' Y\1ur vanahle ratr l'k..,~ cqu1tY loan''' ~10.\XlOur m.>tt
Ju." arr!v "'' latn 1han Aui,.'U!>t ll, lQNI
lt 'l'UUt bln ts IPf"""'l'd. v1.1u U ~r your
QI~ rtNflf ""hrn ~II"' Y\•Ut lnan
fund limit Mt' ~b~tt l"'t hm l1ffi-r
t:itrtres 8/lllM I '
1lver Screen outma was third-place
finasher Snow Chief. th e s1itth-lead1na
money earner in thorouahbred his·
tory,. · he's awesome," Sadler said. try·
101 to choose &he n&ht supcrlatt ve for Melair ··And ~he·, 1t1tl 1mprov1ng ..
Hollrwood Park ho"ed the 1n·
auaura Brttdcr<1' c·up 1n 1984.
'
.... 11,..., '¥•··· L-~~~ .. ~~--- - - _ _J
Bl Bank of America
~ (.lf !\Ml.JI N'tll. ,.. ~tMJllll ~
"Th mr hawoJ ''" •n ""'f'l('f"lt\"Uf*'\1 J "1 i'('(I } mr..,th ' rul)lr 1111t II n 1 ... uhi.11.11, •rl wldl 1u1un1 •Ill JV\'mmt ""• l\inl. ,,. "l"M'l'1C'• """'\Jr llfilltmC 11nJ ~cs1111\.lrrJ•nn1JJ1lf'"""'1 "''""'~•ki t• Cl"l'\.•Kh k"<'mo .. 1hhrw~l!W'Tlu.nfS:til 11'1 Tht~unlrr .. •tt11.lt...i7'ii.'I rio hi."'' V1Q1Mmn -'Mualf'i'r l•lU~cN aftr.t hH1 ~
)
'
' Forties revue offers fun-filled frenzy
Sheryl Donchey. the how as a the (>('l"\onaae) of Richard Rodgers
aJ1ttenna tribute to an era its ca•t can and Jam Rule, mpcctivcly. who bear
only know from hcar:.ay and old film an 1n1ercsuna physical resemblance
clips. The production spnnts lhrouah to their 'IUbJcc ts.
The Saddlebaclc Company
Theater's "Jumpin'. Jive and Jit-
tctbu1." a tnbute to the music of the
193(); and '40s, should accomphsh
two goals -providin1 a few hours of
JO)'fut nostalgia for those old enough
to ttmcmbcr those days and making
people who weren't around back then
wish they had been.
This hiah·voltagc revue:, which
kicks off the ninth season of summer
stock on the Mission VieJO campus, 1s
paced furiouslr enough to sap the
energy of those in the audience. not to
mention its five performers, who taJce us on a guided tour of American
Toi
TITUS
an astonishingly bnef two nnd a half The ca'lt doesn't skimp on musical
hours, puus1n1 only when ma~s 01atenal, although the promised
(.'Ostume change~ are rettu1rcd. radio comedy ~!Cits are in short
King, whOJUSt finished perform mg )Upply. Just about every sona the
in South Coast Repertory's satincal Andrew~ tno recorded, including the
mu!11cal revue "Tomfoolery." 1s trademark "Boogie Woogu: Bugle
music before, during and after World 1omed by Beth Hansen and Dana Boy," as crowded into tht 'first act as
War 11 with special emphasis on the Mcctary to form a blonde, brunc:ne the three gals takt' turns in the
Andrews Sisters and the: Bob Hope. and rtdhcad recreation of the An· spotl ight.
Bing Crosby "Road" picturc:ii. drews Sister~. who dom1natt' the tir<1t Ont' of the-show's funniest mo-
)-6 TMCll DCUY STOCO TOM~
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12:30, l ·OO. S·lO. HO. 10-15
4 rue. DCUY Sf(J(O
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King (who doubles onstaae) and m1ss1on we get Crosby and Hope, an \ernnd ac:t wh('n Hansen. as Carmen rr;;~~::;;:;~~=:;-r-~-:-~~~,
"Tiil CIEAT IOUSE
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81tf iOIT IW1 "IUllllllC SCAl[t'' (I)
1100. MS. 4·1S
UO U S. IUO
MATTHEW MObEIUCK
"RUTHLESSLY FUNNY
FARCE."
Mld»tll a.,,._1,
O&AHGI cotJNrY UGJ.STla
FERRIS
BUELi ER'S
DAY OFF
One man'1 strugle to ulte It easy.
A PARAMOUNT PICTURE :ft.
RUTHLESS
PEOPLE
f'<l I;) ·U "I:.::"
NOW PLAYING -NOW PLAYING -
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"Exhilarating masterpiece!'
-Davie! Sheenan.
KNBC·TV. LOS ANGELES
"About last night..~
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LUXUltY THfATltfS
TODiv· IMES ON L v * WALK-INS * $2.7 Bar,aln Matinee• eno •d b y ()
S UNDER THIE CHERRY
MOON (f'G-IJ) ( t : I 5)
(3 301 5 ·45 8:(10 10:U
AMERICAN ANTH£11 (PG-IJ) (1 .00) (3 10) s 20 7·30 &. 9:40
w.n Dfltlll9r's THIE GREAT MOUSE
DETECTIVt'. (G) I 1 2 : 4 5)
(2 55) 5 :10 );0~ 9:00
A90UT LAST NIGHT
(R) (12.25) (2:50) s 15 7 ·4 5 &. 10:10
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RUllMlllQ SCARED RUTHti55 flEOfl\.E
OU SHOWS AT (R) SHOWS AT (T2:50) (3· 10) 5 :35 (1:20) (3:30) 5:40
9:00 &.1 0:20 7:5'0&.10:10
FIE:ARIS •UELUERS DAY OP'P' ff'G. 1 J) SHOWS A~ (1:00)
(l :U) !"·307:45 10:05
KARATI[ KID II (f'C)
(12 15) (2:35) 4 :55 7· 15 • 9,35
TOP 9Uft Ol"G)
SHOWS AT
(12·35) (2 :55) 5 15 7:15 &. 9:S5
-CINE·fl OONE-S~AKERS ARE BACK
STADIUm a u' l l/Q !Sm!lt !fn• Suf••"1
ll"AtNCIE. UNDER THI[ s
CHCRRY 1100.. (PG-U)
Also Wlldcah !RI
... '*-Y"s THE
Cl REAT MOUSE DCTECTIVIE: (Q)
Plus Off BUI (l><l)
David 8o91tie
LAlr'9UNTM (PG) Plus Poltertel1t II (PG ·I l)
llUTHLUSPE~
C-Y'1u1l Down• Out In Beverly Hills (A )
Gregory H ines
RU ....... Q SCARED fR) Al•o Wlp Guys (R
R ilph Macch lo
KAAATI!: IUD II ~) Plu• Quicksilver (l>G)
BARGAIN MATINW.•S MONOAY THAU S ATURDAY IST 2 PERFORMANCES
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TOM UUllf
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DUNI ,_.111
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MATTHIW HOOlllCIC
HHIS BUULH'S
DAY OPf IP'O-Ui
11 &O 1 0 4•SO ••U 'OS lt•OS
IOM CIUlll
TOP OUN ll'OI
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CHEIRY MOON (P'O-IJI
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KAIATI IUD
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PllTTY IN "NI( 1_.UJ
lt00Hf1 ~lffltlO
IACIC TO
KHOO&. fK.IJI
J/X _,
Mirando, struu.tcs under the weia)\t
of her fruit-salad beadaear. Rodgers
and Rule perform credibly as tht
renowned ''Rond" duo. with comic
umma that would do credit to their
SUbJCCtS.
Kcep1na thinas Jumping 1n tne
background 1s the stellar lhree-picoc
combo of conductor-pianist Jimmy
Vann. Jim Honeyman on the sax and
clarinet and Irving Davis drumming
up a storm. The arran~ements and
musical direction arc K.;ng's, a splen-
did example of mult1-faceted talent,
wh ile Donchey functions impressive-
ly as stage director.
Transforming the college's small
Studio Theater into a I 940s-vmtage
night club 1s only one of the tasks
performed by Bradley Elsberry, who
ulso designed the ~ts. costumes and
makeup. The theater's wall murals
are especially impressive.
Performances of "Jumpin'. Jive
and Jitterbug" will be given Wednes·
days through Sundays at 8:30 with
weekend matinees at 3:30 unttl Aug.
17 while "Peter Pun" (opening July
I 8land "Ten L1ttk Indians" (Julv 25)
NOWPIAYING -·--.-...... ·-1 .... , ..... c..-...... iioC-..~ Col\IC.... ,.,, .,.. MlllltM1t11•11 U.1'~)
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-NOW PlAYING -
M'"" Br•• Plat•
5z.9 S3J9
IUENA ,.Uk
Pact he: s 8utnA p., Jo.
Om• In 8Z I 407(1
COST• MW
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Diane King
alternate in repenory an the larg~r
Doyle McK1nne) i:heatt'r. Call
582-4656 for resen.auon!I and 11cket
informauon.
BACKSTAGE -The Wh1ttrer-La
Mirada Light Opera Assoc1auon will
open its new production of the
musical comedy "Mame~· Saturday
evening at the La M1radu C:ivic
Theater ... performances will be &JVCn
Thursdays through Saturdays at 8
p.m. until July 26 with matinees Jutx
14, :?O and 26 at 2:30 .. call 994-61 Ju
for reservations ..
RU Ff ELL'S
UPHOLSTERY INC.
.... , ...... c....1n1
1922 Ulltl ILft., COSYI •SA-~llst
,. ... mum!
..JrSllPlr
-Joel Slettl. AIC· TV
4
TOMCAUtea ._: ......... IOP ... GUtEF
w .:&:,
A PARAMOUNJ PICTURl ~~ --_,_... ··-~~
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"A FABULOUS FILM OF R EMARKABLE
ACHIEVEMENT FROM JIM HENSON AND
GEORGE LUCAS '.' -NEW YORK TIMFS
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£0WARDS UflVERSITY
LA IUU (213) 691·0633
AMC FASHION SQUARE
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WTA UA 540· 74U
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El T•I 511·5UO LA lllllh 52J.1611 WHTlllUTEll 891 m~
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A,IUE8 (Marth l l·ApriJ 19): pint1 soar upwarcb -)OU recnvc co~phmenta from ~pie you admtre, _rtlpcc;t and Ytho are inccrt. Foe on
vanety1 e;reativaty, abilhy to commurucate thoughts. COl\Cel)LI in dtama1
entcrta1ou11 fuh1on.
TAVRtJS (April 20..May 20): M~or dome~uc chanatS occur mucb r.o youradv~n~. Empba 11 on &e<.'Unty, propen y, ability 10 recoup r~1u
You arc an pos1uon 1n dnve "hard barp1n." Don't undeterumatc )OUr °""
wonh.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): What appeared to be a sttbeck •1U tn't'nt rcbo14nd11lJ. an your favor Streu ver-· •
satihty, willingness to reach beyond ·
previous expectauons. Rely upon your
own Judament. Relative 1& •unccrc but
possibly misinformed
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Your appeaJ widen~. more people are 1nt~tcd
1n you! "performance." Empluwze mmanve, onginalny, courage or
conv1ct1ons. Member of opposite su 1s faJCanated and makes no secret ol >t
VJRGO (Aug. H-Sept. 22): Light 1s shed on areas pr~v1ou~ly obscured
Emphas11 on new stans, added confidence, ability to choose quality over
quantit)'. Green ligh t flashes for creative endeavor.-Leo. Aquarius pla'
\1gn1ficant roles. ·
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Emphasis on teaching., lc:amang, intu1t1on
~nsc of purpose and direction. You'll be more popular'. clement!> ol timing
and luck contnbute to success. lnd1v1dual who helped 1n past I'> dgatn
available. a vigorous ally ·
SCORPIO (Oct 23-Nov. 21 ): Refuse to be restncted. discouraged b)' one
who lacks fai th Expand act1v1t1es. agrtt to Journey. reahze you arc going to bc
more popular. v1sible Check wardrobe requirements for vacation or hohda\
1aunt.
SAGl'M' ARIUS (No' 11-Dtc 21 )'Stud)' small pnnt. reahznome plan\
arc subject to re' ISIOn Be aware of rent. lea~. ta'< and hcen~ requirement'
Relauve 1s dedicated wall help you achieve goal Srnrp10 figure'>
promanentl>
CAPRICORN (Dec 12-Jan 19) C lanf} concepts. get 1dt:a!I on paper.
emphu1ze communication Cycle also h1ghhghts vacation travi:I. cri:cltl\ al\
change of scene. exciting vancty of e"<pc:nenc~ Gem1n1. Virgo ')ag1ttanu!>
people play roles
AQUARIUS(Jan. 20-Fcb 18) Attention centers around home. marriage.
contracts. special agrttmen~. public appearances Key 1s diplomacy -tum
on charm. utilize sense of drama Money wall come from surpnse source
PISCES(Feb 19-March 20): Define terms. look behind scenes, ma1nt.itn
aura of mystery, glamor. Key 1s to be discreet-It would be m1'itakc to rl'\eal
all plans. Element of 'lurpnse works to your advantage
IF J ULY t IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you understand trends and C)'cle'>.) ou
have ab1ht> to stnke chord of un1,ersal appeal You are a natural
humanitanan, people arc drawn to you with their problems. You often are
better.at aiding others than when 11 comes to helping yourself You arc
romantic. senumental. headstrong, 1mpuls1ve. could ha\C unusual marl on
head or face. Anes. Libra people pla} 1mponant roles in your life In .\ugu~l
)'OU arc likely to travel. }'Ou'll be more popular and perhap!> m:her
Villagers chose the
right man for the job
r
In the small community of Long-
nor 1n StafTord'ih1rc, England, as a
nine-member action commlltcc, or-
ganized to preserve the nght of the
individual to smoke cigarettc'i. cigars
and pipes. The committee's leader 1s
the village undenaker
The dent 1st~ ha\e made their point
in Seattle. ev1dentl) More tooth-
brushes are sold there per rap1ta than
anywhere else 1n the world ·
Your granddad when ~oung pro~
ably never even heard the wnrd 1hat\
now descnbed as the third leading
cau~ of death in the I 'nited ~tatc' -
··trauma
Have \OU read ho" .iutom.1l1l
scrubber\ "ash do"n tht: ne ..... da1n
barns ~Hral limes a da" '1 Such barn'
are far frttr of germs. than 1\ the
I) p1cal hospital, according to tho~
who purpon 10 know Knowledge ol
hospital contam1nat1on 1~ o;pread1ng.
evidently. Home b1nhs nat1onw1de
have tnpled 1n the last live years
Q. We've alway'> heard ahoul
pres1den ual dogs -FDR"s Fala.
Nixon's Checkers. L>ndon John-.on's
Ham and Her Why no cats" Haven't
there been any cats 1n the White
Hou~"
A A few. Abe Lincoln kept cats .. o
PEOPLE
L.M.
Bo YD
dad Tedd> Roosevelt ( alv1n Coohd~e and John F Kenned) \n
old claim 1s dogs are 1dcn11fied with
people .. cats wnh houses M1&ht be.·
something to It E.ach of the
aforementioned feline<> wa' rt"km:·d
to a~ 'the Wh11e House cat
() ~hat creature ha'> the hc-.1 '>l'n'>t'
of )mell'l
A The male Emperor moth un-
douhtedh He can smell thl· \C\
'>t1mulant of the female moth fl l\
miles up.....,and Note that "up .... ind ·
It's the word that mall.cs the fact so
phenomenal.
Wh) an art1final eye made of
pla\lll' "'Ill last shout five time<> ,t'i
long a'> oni: madl' of gla'i\ I do not
kno ..... but that"; the claim uf the
maken of same
L.M. Boyd I• a syodlratrd
columnist
Handicapped kids
need special moms
azm: God bovcnaa
·tck:ciil• ll:is trumc1l
0tt.1~tatlOC\ wtlh put care and
taotl be oblerves, ~
, *"a Is co~ ftOtes an a
derT -Arms.trona. Beth. 101l. Patron
nt. Mallhc'w Forrn:t. ~· da tet. oiattoa at. Cecelia.
-od • Cmit, "" ip:1UOn w nt 1J ve her Gerard lie·, used to
pr0Can1ty ~
finally, ~ pH.~ a !WM lO a.fl
an1tl and imlln. "(11ve htr a b.andi·
appcd ch1Jd ••
The angel 1s cunous .. "' hy tlus
one. God'> She's \0 happy ~
.. E.tactl> ·· smiles God .. Could 1
give a handicapped child to a mother
who d~ not lnow lauahter" That
would ~ cruel "
··But has \he pauence" .. asks the
angel
"I don't "'ant her to have too much
patience or she will drown an a sea of
5elf-p1t) and desp:ur. Once the shock
and rc~ntmcnt wear off. she'll handle
It
"I wliltched her today he has that
feeling of ~It and independence that
IS SO rare and SO necessal) in a
mother 'r OU Stt the child I'm going
to giH her has his own world She has
to make at hvc-in her world and that's
not going to be easy"
Ena
BOll(CI
. . -sut. Lord. I don't think U\e even
behc' es tn you "
God mules.. "No mauer I can fi1t
that. This one ts perfect She has Just
cnouah sclfish~s "
The angel psps ··~ttishne s? Is
that a vutue?"
God nodl "lf she can't scpante
bcnclf from the child occa 1onally.
w 'll never sun ave Yes, here as a
woman whom I will bless wtlh a chdd
l6s than perfect. She doesn't realm~ at
yet. but she 1s to be envied. Sht will
never take for ifanted a "spoken
word · She wall never consider a
"step" ordinary When her child says
"Momma' for the first tame, she will
bc present at a miracle and know at.
When she d~nbes a tree or a sun$Ct
to hc:r bland child, she will sec at as few
people ever see my creations "l wall
permit her to see clearly the things J
sec .. 1&norancc, cruelty prejudice .
and allow her to nse above them She
wall never be alone I will be al her side
evel) minute of every day of her hfe
becau~ she as doing m} work as
surcl) as she 1s here by m} side ..
"-\nd what about her patron
saint"'' asks the angel his pen poised
in midair
God smiles ··A mirror .... ,11 sul-
ficc"
Writer urges all to
be wary of strangers
DFAR .\NN LANDERS. I knew
\Omeda} I would write to you but I
have been saving my letter for the
nght moment The nght moment
came when I read the letter from the
woman who "a'> outra~ed because
you warned people against trusting
strange~ "Where 1s the sp1nt of
g1,ing a helping hand"'' she asked.
.. .\re "'e not our brother's keeper'>"
'r ou refused to change }'Our mind and
I am grateful
I tru•.ted a \tranger He told me his
.....,,fe and daughter had JU St been killed
in an auw accident I re1.:entl} had
been divorced. We both shared
r,adncss We had a bond We were
··good for each other."
A month later he wa~ captured b)
the FBI .\t the umc he was carrying a
letter addressed to me. The FBI came
to m} home wanting to know about
our rclat1on<1h1p. I\ fter i:1uesu oning
ml" they were satis1ted that I was not
1n,ohl"d 1n his "background."
What was h1~ "background'.'" Four
count' of hank robbery. seven counts
of murder Two of the v1ct1ms were
hi\ lt'1cnds. whom he buried after he
killed them. But wait, there as more
.\lier he was taken into custody has
gang showed up at m}' door M> sister
and bro1her-1n-1a .... walked an as they
""''re trvang to ll.1dnap me. The) foiled
tht· aucmpt and probabl) $3ved m)'
hli:.
I nottlied thl· r RI of what hap-
pened 'h nightmare is OH'r hut 11
ha'I left ~ar. 1ha1 .... ,11 tl<' with me
lorC\er
Pica~ luntinue ll• ad,1se against
1 trusting ''ranger\ 't ou pro' 1de ~our
readers" ath rnmmon '>l'nse and wise-
lOUn'>d Don't l'\C'r \top -(OU LO
H.\vf BEEN Nl MRER EIGH'f
( L FW l\TOI\ M .\l"IEl
DEAR COULD HA VE: Thanks for
shartnf your halr-r11l1tng experience.
It sure y support• my contention that
strangers can be dangerous. How sad
that we no longer can be good
samarltaos but, as John F. Kennedy
said, "It's a daogerou1 and untidy
world." • • • IH \R \ 'l\J l \NDERS M)
AMI
UIDEIS
brother and I clo not wear undc~car
\\.e beheve 11 ISJUSt an uncomfonable
custom left over from the olden <la)'~
to protect people against the )Cratch\
stuff that dothes ~ere made Clf then
Mom 'ia)S 1t as unhealth~ to go
w·athout underwear Dad 53)'1 11 l!I
1ndet.ent. What do you sa).· .\nn
Landers'> -BROTHERS IN
GRAND RAPIDS
DEAR GRAND: I 1ay wear ander-
wear lft lbe lfttereat of tood hygiene.
Thia 1oe1 for girl• H well H boys. I
never did car~ for tllat ad where Ml11
WbaJ1ername aay1 nothing comes
between ber and her jean• • • • DEAR .\NN LANDI R\ I hi'> 1\ ·
for the pe~on ..... ho rompla1ncd ahout
e\tens1H' repairs required on major
appliances
I hope you wall tt"ll hrr .ibouf
MAC'.\P (Major 'pphanre (on-
\U mer .\t uon Pand I It "as formed 1 n
IQ70 with the hl·lp or the l n1ted
State\ Offit:e of( on'>umcr .\fTaar\ and
..... e assist comumer.. "ho ha'r prot>-
lcms with their ma1or hou~hold
appliance\
We ha' l" handled more than lb.000
rnmpla1nt' and l!O Jll'rlcnt ul thl'
romplainer<> rl'tl'l\Cd ..amfactllr) rl'·
<,ults Our addrl',., 1\ MA( .\ P ~ll
"'orth \\ all.l·r DnH' ( h1tago. ll oonnn
\h· ¥.clu>ml' \our lx'l'I\ .rnd "'"
make C\CI) cf1on to hl'lp \UU gl't
'>al1~fact1on Pica...: l'nd11~ cl ~II
addrC'>l>CU. \lampl'd l'nvdopt:
ELS I F n rr F RM \ r-. ({ H .\ I K
MAN).
DEAR ELSIE: Thanks for the
Information. I ho~ you are prepared
for a blln ard of letters. You're surr
to get it
EastWood returns 'Heartbreak' fire
By Ule A11oclatcd Prell
C i\RMEL -Cllftt Ea1twood
says people who want him to
chanjle the name of has upcoming
movie, "Hcanbrcak R1d*e." arc
"shoot1n1 from the hip· when
they complain because the hero's
a Manne. not from the Army.
.\ Pentaaon oflicial respond1n&
to requests from Korean War
veterans ca11ed for a cha nae 1n the
mov1e''i name. sayma It wrongly
credit the Mannes for one of the
Army' bloodiest llattlc\ of the
wur.
Eastwood ~1d th•H lhC' chanu:-
ter he ponra)" 1s th111 of a
modem-day &unnery strgcant
aoma throuah the heartbttal of
lo•una 1 woman in his hfe a\ ~
nears the end of has carter with
the MannC's "It'' not • ptnod
picture It'~ today," FastVllood
\lad "The MannM were there
too He fu" happened to ht 1n
the area hert·~ a dual mean1na
1n the Heanbrc k thin,. has hfe a\
oppoW'd to lhe battle.'
Carten buih(
rtllC.AGO -former Prci.1·
Clint &utwood
denJ Jlmmy Carter and hi\ wife.
Roaalyu, mark 40 )Ctr\ ot mar-
naae this week a\ thry be-gin a
week of carpentl) work 011 hou\·
ing for the poor
'Tm not an t"\pcn rarpc.•ntl'f. "'
"ou'll sec lh1s w('Ck, hut I "'ork
well undc'r \Ufl<'r\ l\1on · C 11nc-r
i.a1d Sunday as he toured the
'
Jimmy Carter
{lln\truc11on \Ile, .,..:h1{ h an' ludC'\
tour s1n1le-fam1I } dwelhn&-' in a
\\ e'lt \1dC' ne11hhcirhoo<l
Daua.htcr Amy I K "'" "'ork \\Ith Curter, hi Mr' ( .-nl·r. ~K.
.rnd ahout 70 \ oluntecr' frnm
11,,h1tnt lor tluman1t'f he "31d
iHh'r '" ,m lh<' l'IOarc1 nt Hahllat
a non prnlit. C(ume111l•" ( hn'-
llan housing m1n1'>tr. that huild'
housing for poor
Birthday saddle
WASH INC1TON -I 1r't I.ill\
Nancy Rugan got a LU\torn
made saddle from Pruldl'nt Rt ..
a1an for her 65th h1rthda' and
ellpeCIS to try It OU! when lh1·1 jlO
horseback nd1ng .it tht•ir < al1
forn1a ranch ne"<t month
The pre\ldent 'iurprl\e11 Mr.
Rt•agan. "hoo;e htrthda) "'"' \un d11~. \\hen hl' told her thnl thl'
\addlr will he v.a1t1ni wht:n 1hn
hcgin a thrr<' 'Wl'<.'k ranlh ,a.
l:lllOn
China doll
PU...IN(1 -UZb.o,.,..1teol 71
\ear-.old ( ·ommuni\t Part) Gen·
l·ral ~~tan Hu Yaobaaa. ha'
heen dr'><:nh<-tl an a narc prolile iU
a <il)h\h f.a,h1on t"'P<'rt ~ho "
workin to impro\l' the look\ ol
( hine\C
\c'eing pen pk la' mg h~PP'
lt\C\ am1 ~C'arinll prctt) dnthe'
makt'\ m\ mood JO\ful " l 1 "':"
quo1C'd h\ th<' < h1nA N""' S<-1·
\ ll'( ....... ~ "'"
EST EAST ••t ••
Q J 6 'V A 10 8 7 4 2
0 J7 0 Ql0 53
•AQJ87 ~2 •t0 3
lJTH
•AQJ 8 8 ~
Q9
0 AK 4 2
•KS
Tht> bidding·
VI~ t Orth Eut
3 • Pu. PaH
Pua 4 • Pu1
Pau
Opt>nmjl. lead Jiwk 11f v
Sootb
3 •
hs•
Mul'h uf declarer-pill} tt-t·hnique
cent.-r'\ around keeping the danger
hand nff lead lll•re ' a '\1tuallon
that l'r<>P' up morl' frequt..ntly than
(>Of' would imagine. and the wan·
ning hoe eludes man)
South s f1rs1 problem '' what to
do wllE'n we .. t 's pn•t•mpt geh
pa..,_4'ed around to ham S1n1·e ht•
might not bi> able w l'llrb ha ...
partner'!. enthu .. 1a-.m for ht><trt'I 1f
ht> were to makt' a takeout double,
a bid of three ... padl''> ts prt-ferable.
at thi" vulnerab1hty, 1t mu t show
d ra1r hand !\orth .. four i,pade<t
l'n<t... the aurt1on, and WMt lt•ad-.
lht.· JtHk nf heart-.
Tht• fact that Ml mm·h of !'l.orth·-s
' aluei. are in !warts places the con
tral'l tnJeopardy From the auction
.md the opening lead. It ~m., hkt•
ly We'\t has the ace.queen of rlub'i
and East the ace or heart.." Tht-re
'OT
CHAILES
GotE•
o ...
SUllFF
fo~. declarer ts an dan t o! I mtc
on h rt tnck, onf. diamond and
two d u unlf!'.'ls East can be k pt
oft ll"ad.
If d cta""T puts up one of
dummy's hurt honors at tnck ont',
East will w in and shift to a dub
That will net the deft>nders tht'
rm1t thrt't' tricki., and d~darer wall
eventually have to 'urrendt>r a dta·
mond tndc for down onl'
But set> what happen 1f Jt>-el rer
does not t.:OVt'r the J&Ck Of ht-arts. l{
E&.t overuakt>~ to sWllC'h to a dub.
declarer will get tll'o diamond d1,.
l'<lrds on dummy·, ht>arts Tht>rl"
fore, East must vlay lo~ Hut nu"
declarer c.-an takt• cl ruffinj( ram• ..... ·
for the ace of ht'art-. dlld d1-.t·ard et
dub on the other heart honor artn
dn•" 1ng trump. hm1ung l11'1 l11wr ...
to 111\t' irwk In f'ach ... adP "llll
Fo r lnfol'fllalion about Charh•:-.
Gor•n'a new Dl"W•lf'tter ror
bridge playe N, writ• Goren
Bridge Leu~r. P.O. Box 0 26. Or
lando, Fla. 32802...U21. . ''
'::~~~· S~\\.~~-IJ,i.trs·
wa.4 lly ClA' a. IOUAN
• 1_,o"°" "'"•" ol .... few• tc<O...t>led ..... a. be-'°'" lo '°'"' '°"' """'.. .....dt
I TlXALY
• 11 1 1 r 1
I CAEES \· . t I r I .
I
FRUM E 1 · ·i.ty-~•lheone lbr me . ..,. fie dlll.q1lilt ''He I • 1 1 r 1 Itch Md • ge>9lftl' ......... !\Ide . -. --. and ...... ~ ~
0..0-lfwvgl ... , didn't My he l~ ........... Y _A_..S ... L_A ___ W ........ ~1 -0 -,_-.... --c•--· • _ .....:___. I• I I I I' ~ "--· .......... . . --. ~· 1 .• "9 .......... ""'9 _ ... L.-..J.-~--i.-L.-.--'--' yo ~ ,,_ "" "-3 ... _
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
AC ROSI
1 Pro -
6 Orum sei
11 Account
14 Zones
15 Fastener
16 Vexa11on
t7 Sti11ed
19 Intel gp
20 This Sp
2 1 Foreshow
22 Ene and Aral
24 Damages
26 Most mature
27 Sur
JO Pursuer
32 Allies
33 Grea1er part
34 Drag
37 Unnermed
38 Acting
39 Parent
40 Mouth pref
4 1 Arltst Claude
42 Sad sack
43 WtlChes
45 Night
46 Descendan1s
48 Persuade
49 Local maps
50 Surlell
49
56
52 House base
56 Unit of
reluctance
57 Weather 1lem
60 Adtecllve
SuHht
61 Irregularly
notched
62 Cuban t1Ue
63 Under1ake
64 Was stormy
65 Crustacean
DOWN
1 Languish
2 LOdes' yields
J Straight pref
4 Slec:l dog
S --rule
6 Conveyances
7 SOlemnily
8 Bard ot
9 According 10
10 Designef'
11 - -parade
12 ZOdlac sign
13 Lower a.n1ma1
18 Addltlonal
23 Simulate
25 Dou
26 Pealed
27 And
ltMVIOUI PUZZLE IOl VED
28 Loud sound
29 Formally
JO Shouts
3 1 Search out
33 Dog s treat
35 Unteignec:l
36 Skin
pro1ec11on
J8 Purs oo
39 Vole taker
4 1 Nf'SS•e t" g
42 Length unit
44 Bhghi
45 Tea leaves
reader
46 Boat's pole
47 Net
48 Mount
50 Foul air
5 1 Basilica
prorection
SJ Kind 01 molh
54 Kick up -SS Swasa city
58 Tune
59 Reptile
12 13
·'
)
THE
FAMILY
CIRCUS
by Bii Keane BIO OSOROlt by Vlrgll Partch (VIP)
•
BLOOM COUNTY
U.S. ACRES
"They were lucky in the old days.
Their bathrooms were right out
in the backyard."
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson
---------"-F-is-hl_n_g_fo_r_a __ ••_f_ti_p_r_· _______ ~~
10 JQ:>~~...,
"Now I know how a circus performer must
feel wheri he is about to be shot out of a
cannon."
PEAriUTS
A ~~~" \..\_ \.~ \.\~"
.JJ..i.i-A~E wE DO Nb
IN A SURVIVAL 1..~MP'
J R' ,, .r--. ~')CS.~i!
t/ I ,If)~ l
8
GARFIELD
'ffOl'LE M>J<E MIST~S • .bE'f' ... ONLY
&4LL PLAYERS #AKE ERRORS.''
THAT 5 TME OVMBEST
TMIN6 fVE EVER ~EARD
(( --
by Jim Davis
OM,NO ! ~OH'S
F'OAMIHG AT
TM£ MOUTH!
J QUICK! LfT'~ t MAKf A BAfAt(
FOR tTt
TOO LATE! Lf.1'5
SPLIT UP ANP MOPE ME CiOfS AFT~fl\ YOU!
TUMBLEWEEDS
DRABBLE
, .
...
ROSE IS ROSE
•
-
by Tom K. Ryan
by Kevin Fagan
by Pat Brady
WE JUST gr'Of'PW IN
10 READ C1fXA2 C~1C6 !
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
SHOE
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
DOONESBURY
.....
OFFIC.IA'-5 Of IHE N.R.l .
GAVE IHE GO-AHEAD lb
RESiAR'i IHE PLANT .!
. .,
lHI~ "LITTLE
P\001.i' WE.N"f 10
MARKE.1. TMI~
LITlLE PIOOY
'!>T A&,IU~ HOME. .••
by Jim Davis
by Lynn Johnston
yeffi .
. . 11
()SeD
~Be
MINt=-1.
by Jeff MacNally
... MD AT Ml.( A6E..
~.2~.
by Harold Le Doux
by Tom Batluk
by Garry Trudeau
... .
4 lines,
7 days ..
!!ll!!lllllllllll" ·, 2 b 1~._. 11.-c.... ... c..... 1111 ••••••• •• •••11 liflfiiiil •a, 111119! mllilii._ ....... 11111111111
URM• r;c .rn t-1 ""''· 1 l 2 M. 9' I a'I • 9lo, ·#11111Ht I.I l9'. New "' ,rouND ....... Wiit '" OPPICI~ ... II ttOOO .4000 mo. .._, .._.. ,oc;i, ,. ...... Ito ...... ~ & ~ ~ AM alflleUo tq11lplftt-.t. t x p ft t t , C , M . ---...,.~Afit. ""· .. -.. .... ..,._, n._ ~. • •· , .. -.CoMo • ..,...,., CW.:t''MM/ll(Jf..._. --... .. .. t·t1'1 o•Pottt. Avell now . ....,,.,m.1111 poot,,tptl400+.Ho-. liOUiii W IMlll ... .,. _..,.a, --....., C:&MWB<>moe~ , .. .,_ .... PMh PININ8UlA 009ttet IM *590-.. 71. t7e-1111 c1Nft.M1...al10 w1'libtllllW/IC*ofMIW, n·tM• u::· JHt c-.... "0.., 1%*:...~~ c::a~°'t~~ OCAlfttll'-""Wo tlA ewnmtt ..-ey 400....,.,..._W9'r IU M• nltfttkr 9'lt HI ---.; .... I .... Tt1:.t112 ,_ .. Q!u 111.a.~
&MW•MO,,.._HaoAM "••a.II¥"':~~· ._,...,. ... My •1i Wntd•tlH/mo. 1 '*"" Ajie1111Mnt wilt\ ao.ne. :,"•oCi lttbot '•nln Apt. ~citY1•Pe..,..1e ourttydW91•, c.11 ..... -... 81:".._~,:" ~=-:e-5·:.r,...~ .., lill!L 118 ~HO=:-;: ~ ~ ~ '*'*· ao. to ... =~i:::,1...:--~ .... -=.t.~ .,.._ llri a w ...
DIAOUMll ---M·-'¥ ._. Yrty , ... llbOCle wlow '"*" .Pttlo ._:...,mo: ........ -11 t716Jmo.Mt .. 142 ... _ .. ......._7;.:-··°" Imm••• ........ .., .... , a· ..... M =•foON w°'~= f:&..."'=::W.: .. tt= 2bdnft tQlllPt kltd\ kid PlNlfd~ ;;-:;' W _.._ 21dnn, 09\ l8A. Nied M/P' ,....... to ...__. --~ -::r.-·... .. --1llllL. ... ....
--•• ... """'" :":' "-"' --·-ptlo net t1otl '9nt ~ hndl HR t~ 2 •.•droom, 1 ••th .., lltra' io. ..,0:: ...,. ~ C.M. _. flOUNO.,... ~..,,. ;;;; .. ._ • ,,.,.. •• IU4 =-::::::::---i:.~-::.·.~ .,... .. ,..,,_ ,... ..... ..,...,.,..,. ..,_ + -,. ..,W -,_ -,,.,... __ .,._ace ---• I I l!'!'b•u :=.. ·~:::: ~ ... ·~~.;':. eenMWlil llB w. ~ 'fwO S:.o.a ... -. ,...Ycri*f.tri*.11-* l4Ml1t on1Jlfl•AoProii•~ _,..,.--. ........
-...... _ "'"~ ... .,.. --.... oL ..... Hea .... 7t41-..1~. NolwmClte•,..,,..... 751.fiaO :::!:'~,...---e.:r .. a.. -
.,.., __..., ,.,. -30ll. 311A IWWLY 616 S1000 & t1150 mo. HA 2be ~. pM-__. 3bd IMIW Condo. IUI L08T CAT bi AEWAN>, Ctat ~ M (Tt4) •L 1 • , ........ :,.n,: :::,-.. ..,,.:.. "=:. COM eon.. Gero. ~· w~ "°"* 1ne. "Y ""· swe '*'°• i.N -.. ..,.._ 11111 lncUlld. wtlVcwng '°"' ,... w 640-t100 ........_ ... • a ... .._ ._ • e:-.:i?.~ ~fs't,,~~·,J:.' · 111•1• C*Ptcik-::r::c'..O:: s.i~J'~~ o~e'::':~.0u"• C::.·~~·= -;.s:;;~-=· -:-' ... ":...': -·-----8:~":1..,~22:; ~33or~71. utllllncl.=50.,.. 8ttctl home, ""'"'*'· Woodbridge Anllfttl 2t00H1nor-:!'t.t. .,.. .... _. .... c:,mfrs*~= ~=._•1411/mo. *~!,f._2~= ~ llMIM ::r,14~21/mo, ~=_:t1230 •NIT·11mMN ::;:..:-...-:-:·.!:;
.... 82000/mo yrty. • MaO to... ---Pd ,iiili -8bd. Lo9t JUL y 4-REWA9'0 •11111>9/00..-SH't•r .. p. cilMt ... pa ,.. I
Avt now1 Aet fTS.6364 · ... -1 .... "°'*ovea s•• ~ 1112i.iRMY11 ..,., ~ • .-. m6oro ,,.,., ,..,....., PNlllclo <llMflll • ..... 11 ..... ,,:au•" ...
Pot!_,. Awnue, In the 2fJf 1a.. bit to bdl e1000 *'"" Vttdt O' tux 7t4-147-Ml7/12t-4642 •""*dt~ tMaJmo + Or/Teewlnkle '•rk, Nlf 1m 1.0.I. ~ 31drm, 2 a.th, ut11 pd. Arlt l1Wea 21dnn. 1Ba. New cr.oor. 1i11U1.... 1Ai *"•· Aaz i+MIT7. ~· Pw9 • • I I ft a.i/11 In 11•
rrptc. petlo. 2 cat owaoe. ---dlhalhr, loolctd .... -The ' 2 I I. 91 .. ----No.,.. .1380/mo. 2bd-toWld w/oo.n tl&C>HopeitaM0-2416 Ulm .. HHM Ill• lllll•Hlll L.oet~Hulky V!!_~~ 1 ._ c... 1V ~ 38r tit w/wttttew•ter Mtlwht, ~a -w .,._._ ~ ~Sends seeOwtlkty uS:..0.7' ..... ~... .... S1850/mo. Incl IAllUIHeiP12t1-tm Ed&Wl,ltt-6S27 =· -2. = FWlllll ~"::-a!,..·=:; BLUf'FS. ~"·MA ~....,.11 ut11<714>4fM.tl4 1 Latall ...... BB SREWARO-UOO end..i=.a..y CMMtr, '89" .... a
Augult 15th. '2000/mo. 38A. turn. gf'Mt loo, .. ,,.. Diii Penthouee 111r tum llP'. wW M . Q or Loet...PAAAOTT ~ wilt\ .. '**· MM! ,. c 9W AllO for .... 13«).000. lt'°""9 9'1· l20001mo ... Fetturlng ~ !Ind--dtck1, P•t10'1 neu drlwway to .,.,._ 24• BlulGkt Macaw, June 21. ~ but .. .,... 1:00 .-, MOft • '::" <f4umo dd 1.. llai e1111 M111e llQt 831-Mn tcaipe, •ea.. pooVec>e-~ 1~::0.::0 trailer. 1 ttve In. l200 mo. s I• t • r / Ed• a rd•. c.1 Joen a MM . = =.; ~ · ·
4AAJ.L>. • llUFFS CONDO E-PLAN PaUo/dedca. OtrllOll or . . l.ltvem•atgt111·2713 IM2·23H . ..Jt>.w•-' K.,_..,1/U!.) 3Br 2'~8t FIA, 2200 aq ft carpot1t. Sorry, l'IO petl. SM. ~ In Mdlldtd arattl If tat -LOST~,,.....,,.s.tur-....,.dtlY-~7/...,.5'""'T,_w--..... .. W!lf' No peti, woe. pool 11drm 1110 .,.., PoOI. NC room, .. .._.. rter, bllga, .. 1 cotor, 6'13-8~.94 S1850 mo.~ . 28dnn 1'4Bt 1710 lndry, 11t. !Mt, 1 pereon .,... ..,,,..., lllhcw1hi*,401b1. -------• ffl *7 l c.t ""' C4ll ... 28drm 2a. tne onty. l4001mo. 4IM020 llAdli i•r•o• iii. Nwpt Uc. HBJNB --. Nn-19 · ,.,.,.._..,,.,,... ___ ~......,...,...,,. EJbluff eeA 4--.• frpl, vu ea Cent• St e.2-1424 If rt leMi MU ()Mn. 1 1 w.-11th s100"9wvdl11~ WWW £•I I SCllXI.
Ciiia... 1114 = ~1~ •mT•• !JllF eo.te Mw. Gttwioe #3. LOST Wedding 8tnd1· Bu.y ..... ·~ Oftle •n El BuyU40,000.451-210I 18drm, 1Bt. OtFIQI. WW •••121111•• 9n-1111 Eng~t ring w/S -~~·D)'tlM .,..
48R 28A E/llde. UV yerd, LG 28A tBA conlfder . ~t. Other• ~:'~:~:: ITlllM, 111111 dltmond1. Wedding t-2. Al.o ,._, . 12·1. IUIN
2 C« g9t W/OftfW Wld 0 ~ '500. tee • 141124 e..q eo.te MIM. bend w/3 cl•mondl. ,.. TW!lna 41wpm. Mull bt r&all hk~. Ira den. ao:.. to GAEA":~..!!~ TILllll'f ,.,..... •1 •12111111* . 850-2145 .. di VC1y . btwn Pro. rella'bl• •nd .... """' .., S13(j)/mo • -.. ~..,. ~ pect I~ on t.N ....._ groomed. a-.y com.
..
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1'-.. ,,
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-~
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' f. .
•• .,.... 1 ·.~ .... ,
. .
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Htcd gd c:ond, yd, 'f' ...... ...... RtMg,clltlwMNI :_.~ ...... IHI pot1bctl.917-1145 men1urtt• wl1h H• lll(Y
1111 lltatl r. w. !:-:!~=.!=~~·-= TSL MGMT IM2•1803 •1050imo. ~~430· 28' 2 ..... btttn9. ~. Ind. NO PET9 l4 Stcn~MVnnoro. pertlnot. but .. tNln.
... U'l .. L.U;, Mori 4 ... N8 tM9W pace ok. M50... 1-+..... In Co«• .... for ... ....... Cell Joen 131-1211 ~ l!!ejc.MI 2btCondo.otnt.HIA.ln-*flaf,.* $&00'1 lndda pooV)9cuz TB.lmT 111-W a to oew1. 8ngl Adil 1Mnothlt9'0111ourw. •tr.Im •card •PayNc """'41 WM~R •liiiii'l,...._..., __ .,.f•M-' 16dtlaundry,g.rwlOftfW, 4Br 2Bt. 2 °"' ger, .,a gourmet kit pe11o pret$42Slmo1M2-5002 Limited iptce. C•ll Atadloge. Ale you w.-1W ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil 110 deg YU, OCHft yrd. Peta ott. '800... 53M111 Agt... 1475 ,., Mobll home.. todeyl (811)117-9090 l\epC)y .,, tow. marrtllgt nur,) . ,, :... . . . • brtez... 24 hr HO. 1D.lllllT 111-1111 •EASTBUWF AREA -3Br Blltne, no S*a. Mnn EASTBLUff APT • 38R or pertontl 1ffelrt? •• .. sue 500 Owner Adtta. aw.t. 1M1 New-2BA & 2 cer ca-~ No Peaolof"*'«fleone*9t j'"""llllliiiiiiiiii"---a--•
COLDWC!U BAN~eRO
15a..1i:J7 ' · BEACH HOUSE 2S.. 0-llG' frptc S1350 pot1lltYd646-«)13 pet 1 . S 1100 I mo. LL lalt2t away. cal now 411·1113 HI I 111111 •t fl.II ._.. .......... -0.:--z----ir--"Tlll~ Prv pool lltllnd kite frPc I H . VI fl I A• n ta I 1 144-1010 t-5 M-F only _ Copley Co4ony Ctble •
3bd. 2b.. .,'°°· ·en.ce 175-4912 .. , ........ • · m1 .. , ..... ~ end 8-tdy Vltlon h.. ~ o •• • •·
......... 553-2701152t-7224. NewportT.,.,aoeCondo 1745/mo 2br 1.,.b• En~t=~~": 1719 ~=~ operqfor••••ll._. lfyou .. toclednltor-.:
----4BA + 11p1nowt;S4UOO. ~2BA 1'AIBA,.,.. 3 ·~ 2~ 8t ~19~1rrt0.:;, ='::'':iJ:.~t. ~CANYON EASTln • s1i2W.,.,,..Xw.ivm weight reduction. letn~~~ .. '=' :-:.i.-~ -
... -.1999 ---38A + r9mld kit 9311,llOO lfladed con.ge, lrg ywd. llleCUttty. " 1. 2078 Thurln 1pac:lou1 2Br & Hr Chica. HB. Tobin btdg, Fe6dm.-i And L)'t9 wtll CUl!tomtl'I, tight typeng. MourMlln. Knoft1 9My
... ,, -Both hev. lfg neet ytrdl. No petl. S700/mo +MC pet1. IM&-3715 TSl MGMT IM2-1803 Condo w/frp6c. 2 cw gw upetllitt 3IO tq ft •t loOM a minimum of 12 & Blllngu•I • plua. lt FMn,.,.,,.. Md
.,..... BKR 758-123-4 for llC)pt. dip, 243 E. 22nd Str.tt. .... .. . WIOf*Wlt. Sec guarded S1/lf downltelrt m lq 15 lbl f~ In or-ln....-.CS Clll A .... Ctll w,... Wt
Ttvee bdrm"°'* on~ •Smt BA Unit v.-.... et1t1•o• 2 Bedroom Exec 1BR, Ptl'llY fu.rn. ~tfi=----If.':~~ ~om ft at i1.0&11f. 525-4310 derlY e"'::"'w:: :: 14Mi42. E..o.E. tieYe __.....,"' P"'ltY.,..., In~ Sec bldO·f:l• iv bctl. 1Btlh0upie• yard,,..; s1000AvtnowlHJ2-4667 •--=--=a.II . IM.._nrr ;:. f ·~ Wiii c.w .. H.B. or .v. ~':r'C:T!:; i~~N:t :2~:::::::=: ~t'. 11501mo. Sptclou• 13bdrm 2b• lllll•ll ~~:~~~ ~ i:· 181f w-.etc:M ther• tie~ e1~U!!!i!!
carpet. RV ~ l.ttYI Manage lndda den 2 gar trptc S.UUM clWt lttge Gw-un1\lm, utlll pd, a..751,,.,0 Nwpl Bc:tt. 541-5032 8Qt of ....,"....,.-•
... -· BEAUT. BLUFfS EsPLAN EASTSlDE 2BR 1BA gcurmet191 ~'!_.f~ S1200 din Apta, petlol. dedtt. + 1 1 t & I 1 t • BALBOA ISLAND ~--mun'cr.=~ 38', 2~ FIA. 2200 If. Gwage. cerpett& esr.,... 53M1t ...... -IPL Sorry, no pet. 87M2491M3s3Me. Marine Aw, UIP9tllln ote. _~_ ..... _ .... _ .. ___ _ ~~~~~~~~ End unit on ltV O"'blt. Small yard. $815/mo. 28drm, 18t yeatty rental. 28drm 1Y.&.1h $715 LJll••......, 140 1q ft, parking, ae· 556--0lll A~ AW .... 111111 lD-'285,000ltee. 844 ~. CAll 7eo-a314 1'" btk1 to btteh. Gwtgt 2Bdrm 28ath 1740 -·.--• S250lmo. 875-Mn --204 Mllaport lwlh.
P9rf9Ct b t1r9ee end BEAUTIFUL 1BD CONDO E-e6dllocellfncd5rmhm4 SlllO/mo. Agt 87M173 391 W. WMlon 831-5583 Gorgeou1 ~· 1tndy Jilt Wftlml ~ ._"'
priced right too et In Pf99~.,..., VIie ,.,,, trptc ow '700 swe or(81t).141~72t LMge lBdnn on Vlc1orta. =~::,,. 27~15';/lc , .. allllTD WBXiiYifhtA Foreor.-a.naau. hOfrle. ':i --. an.too. D•llghtful Bel~l=-°'*· peUOkldl53M111 Y...twll... nHr Newport Blvd. mo. Ample pllg, utlte ptild. Fore mo old baby boy. ruu In IMM Heed =My control,...., ~ l#1lt wtttl Sholl Ctll11 4-7 · Agt... ~-Othel'l 8'1911-Spentltng ctwt. crpta, NEWPORTMARINAAPTS 2WEc.tHwyl15-l800 .-encta onty, ~ metUN PltW to IWde Pl••·~ ......... ai
ICl'9lf1I dMdlng ~ BLUFFS BEST BUY ' drp1 atove Quiet $510 •Bay "'9w 28' · 28&. EXEC Offtce Appto1t 108 c a I I T o m phonea. gr.-CU9lOfW'8. ,.... ...... I tr 11 qu•tt•ra. A pletunt Le luJlurloul 4bd 3bt. up. Ftmlly fin• a.br 2b• ... dOM to bMC:t\. No Peta tto'..2010 I W/D l*up micro ,,. tq n +cont rm copW 722-nWIM2-ee27 type 4Swpm, 10-key. --,.,., .... IF ..... woodtY ~ ~ Qr11dtd, lo doWn, owe. gourm.c kit arid ptlo 1.-T lllTIL .. end owaGe Prvi beh'. copy"room kiu:h.n.,.: Mii N/amkr rnt'd. 2t1sOIM ,.,.. -...! 11 ..,._ ~----1111 ...................... l24&K.t. /brdt :,:~,.fth•~ n•ll ,._.,.. &.tl6deeottao-128r& Starttng•U1n5 t~ l reoeptlon...... AECEPTIONIST/~ °" ,_ .,;;;;;t;'ro:-.p.
apeiieM prcipertlee Le. 144-ri 10 .• ownr •· ACJt 11 ...... ti 11M111 !..3!' ·1~~ ~~ Sorry, no pece 7ec>-0919 .,..., ~ lmmed. H&JSEKEEP£A . t:dY to Ytcht U.. ,..._,, .. ,,... twe ,_, ....
HCurlty gttt. pool, NEW 290, 2~ BA _,..... · NEWPORT PIER AREA 831,2345 ~ Room, tioerd & PIT, S.tl8un t-4:30. -....,_oral.,_ C1ftr ~etc. IYOWNER·BESTBVY 2 _, l"""'prvyd I N t Bctl 'lhrlfllllC ,.._,., -· JOYCEDABOLT In a.toouft. V19w, 2300 If e« .-w _.-~. ' 8U 3bd, 2bt liPt Ywty, no Exec Office Spece for u ery. wp addt • · 541 •U
SAllY IHIPLEY guard get• •. 28R 2W. ~~1~~~'. Ca~au 1171 meStiBJllJ pet1. garage •t400 mo l ..... Marty amenltlea. 844-1819 cal DMnn IM2-51SIS· Af'f WAHAGe ,_...
IWc ln9tr ault• 2 mwt>1e .!!JC .......... aYllll nowt 873-M40. $400/mo, negotl•bl•. •-.r--•/ .. •-• 1111 -n·•--IL for 11unn..,c~911 _.. . k~ ,.._,.,,.__,.,._ 3Bf2•Lllll· 2 2er 2 ·-"'"7·""· ........ ,, ••• -I A _ .. .___.~1 ......... _., ... __ ,, ___._. .. _, gounn.c • • ._........,........ "-rm 2 car ~ geraot, _, I ON THE WATER Studio "-,.,,.,_,..., ,~_.., FIT te1rn property CM. Ml.t bt -·-759-9100
IC>& ssn.ooo. 1 ml to bctl. 1450 llf. dbl enCi bade Y9'd VeNcte Betutlf\11 iwg. Apta 1n Apt on Newport -.net. 1 all llT BJIL UlllTllY mgmtl-.>t ,..~ ~ ..,,..,.. & 1n aood ~ ·
CUff'HAVEN BY OWNER gar, fncd yd S1195 Pet ok itorege tvt. Ctoee to quiet nelghbortlood. penon only. Utllt Ind. No -Help buld buey new prac>-neu, herd working. 160-3173. 14tOUI Mii
°'9rmlng 4bd. 2t>e. uft• 142-3M7 or IM2-tee& 1chool1, good are•. PBdoct Spa. No pet1. .... kltch $500. 919-2421 ~~ WI.,_., .,.r_ tloa. Tearn llPPf'C*tl. EJclt dynamic pereon who ,...,. to: ~ .... "'II" l-a-lot betut"'...., 1an6-New EMtllde 3Br 2'MSe 2 1750/mo. tit I IUt, MC 1 rm $8.... Keep reading tlW ed. pay w/benef!U & lncen-111• WOf'klng wtth pubic. Co., 516-0 Jo9nn 11.
___. -.-' "-7 1tory Townl'lome. All & ctMntnQ. 32102 V\t 0. 28drm 28e i780 VERSAILLES 18R Pnttl• 11'1 rMlly lne~ llW bOnut program. 1 'f' exp pref, aome a.t WOf'k. Coata .,._,CA tm7 Wlllft111.all icaped, S3at,OOO . amenltlei. S12501mo. Oll'lt.(213)431-1343 151E211tSt. 5"4&-2408 Quletloc.tlon.AvaNJuly ForDETAllSc.11 mlnexp.ROApm'd.HB --Your deughter'• pr'8y'WI «U-4133 VIII "'-t·"" '"'7 .... ,,2 t. $775/mo, IMM. Agent 83t-&480 .,.. 842-5035 bet t-5 •::-2_--, ...... • Ill H •• -----Totw,... I,.._, -v .,_ Lrg twnh• -3BA 38A. Eutllde 28r 1Bt, beamed 144-721 t '" ...... Au9ty ,.... now :'I lll'I ·--, ,... 1117• lllW _. fncd lo 2 Olll"""• frpk:, OW11oe 0 C. All'PORT AREA DENT AL ASST Needed 2--
modef, 28R +loft, !IBA-3 3Bdrm Monaco, S259,llOO s;::: 1 ='::. y~~I~ ='~~ cu1..:!..ec. PY1 ";iio. taeio-t100-.+ ........ flla...... Atrium offtce, 225-5-45 tq. for Newport 8Mdl Gen. -111T Appfy In peraon ·-. :=-...: ~ = :~ (213)8N-4881 Wl1er & ga9. S72S/mo. $1100/mo. 413-6211 ~ .. lutNo, MC 12]~ ~r:-S&604n54990-S1025 rt .. janltonel, utlllt .... IOt9 Practice. RDA Of' RDA ~~~.:: COllllt Hwy, NB. --
S2t0,000. Agt 840-5&80 llM• lllW _. 54&-t950 OCEAN VIEW-DANA PT -· peta. .....,.. 831-4980 Aoant ol par111ng, 852-93e8. Eltglbla. IM2,5243 ~. _., I ..........
38A Montee E/SIDE 4-PLEX '19'ldJ .-J.,,...... To.._,lmrr I .... etimWL 1112 2:~.~~4M-4524 2:'1::~~'%~2 3~.2;::..T:=: 18Ruppercomer-.>t . ma For Hollttc He9lttl Clntc. :::-~~ ptewolll3i-a44. 60PCEX AOUi +XPt cer garage w/opener Bob Kenn. 537-2270,llgt. $525/mo, 11t +MC. ><~ ~ ~---Ptraonabl•. pro-A "ti;;:J typing. If ...... _.
2-1.1.1,S.ofHwy.gd... IUlltllffll 11050. Over ltrMml & ~484-5195 pu•mm """""*...., • _ _, ..-.onai.tieetth-of1en1ed Int ~ Glone Full-Time 1nc1 .-nd1.
eumable. vr-t owner oe-On thl9 bMutltUI 4 bdrm feMI. No pet• 541-2447 at NII ttrt DELUXE E/llde trg 2BR. Wk ,. .,,... Cs 1 at Belt>oe Zone. lndMduail w1genent of, 714-1549-4242 EOE Good pey. growttl Co. 4
QIPltd or r9ntat, for 0.-PoOI home. tt'1 vacant llH dlw ~--l S1ty47 00,.,, ..... &~ 2274. 207 Palm St 12N.OOO. tloa lklltl c.t1 EltMn ~ ... ..... ~ tll tpm, wtth fr.ah Ptll't lnl6de a VALUE PLUS frldg, ' _.,...'•OU '"' ,.... 173-2943 Owner ~llf IOctttoN. ... ,_.
by owner 1271,500, out& theown«muet .... Artordabtepootldebngak> UXc ARTHUR VICUdt wtr pd, $100. Aduttl. no Nwpt BM!, CM &4&-7445 Cotone ~ Mw t~ be,... (71•)491-.'133 For'"' oo. 'YPnG • '"'*· eon. M*o Wtlll\
875-5715. $299,000. Cell 751-1501 under l400 Ma JtlCUl kit 18', ctwt. quiet, end unit. pet•. year lie !Me Oa&4 SEA 1 •-1.1111 modeled prl~• itor• ........ lllT ::, on compu'9r "*Y 2teo Htrtxw ~ C.W. ·-·T -1m IC>C)ll rdy 2 rent bek:ony. pool,~ tennll .... IL~ FaeNon llland ~ ... ..--. of dertclll .. ·-1 • I L:&: •--1114 -WIH ··-•111* YOl!ybell, aecurlty, M20 &a~ 302eW. Pedflc:Cot91 Hwy lf)e09 S1 75 pet ill. Bkr ._, -. ·--, -.. -_ .. ,.... WLDTITI -754-7535 Wwt:BLI ~ ~TV 87M700 Retlnon'6CI Ent~. hen:! WOf'k· dutlet, NH eumctent Al'td= -11111 Or $825 flat 2tlf 2be ok 4 526-3510 or Newport 8Mdl ,_.,"' Ing. typ!ng 1.JCperlenoe COfTlmUNCatkln lk .. end 11nm 1 di••
... , kld1IC>C)ll~tor111 ~h lltliml'll s147+wtcagl,nodep0alt hJlnt1/Valb ~but not necw--detailed oriented. QOROONMO '(mlY111M,lll~ GW othert53M111 Agt t. LJilel UlcabrandMW Mutnttte1 llllMI rf. Good btnlfttl. F\111 165--1186 ISTOfWJE
4 bdrm, 2 bath home. fo.. 3& 28e Trt-19Y91 Condo. •-•--.a --peld Pool. gwage. 1 Yuallta Int ah 211TBR ~·.unit .......... or part time. 640-2023 _._ 15041 .._~ ~.·~~a··~-c........ d ... ...,.,..-.rm. ~ .... chlld<* No-. --... -..... ..._ -·-• lntna.~ ......... .,. ....... ~--.. _, .. _,. ·-·-r ,....... ., .. 18Runttw/cntryklt +gat l'M&l.U*'l!l•IT For Imel Eiiglntertng of·
831-128' or 148-5743 wa-aa1 w Nr SC Plaza. No pett. LISO: iilW Laroe 2 2Bdrm 18elh 1710 • NEWPORT BEACH• qnra Income $20,3-40 Exp'd In ~ l ...._ ftcl ~front daeilt r=====:::::;~=;-
.............. , -S1250/mo 54M9l5 bedroom Apt end 1 301 Avocado IM2,ta50 100 rt trom Mnd Stet.too Bier 173-5408 pt1one tldll1 w/gd darical 9'>PM1'anot, ltt9 typng, •·~~~!;. ...laA.-1 bedroom Apt., c1oM to Large Bechelor~l with 1br tromS375/wti I p background. 8uay Padl-payrOll.& bllkpg. Nl tmkr ,. Laroe"°'* on owntzed fnatala wtt•. (818) 79s.4400 large petlo, tocM. 2br: from 1425/Wk act at "'"~f etrl<: Prllciloa M~70 req'd. (714)151-9113
-·---•• IOt Vacant & :-'!l; tor J!ll!z 2134 a ha Ptalanla MQ5mo.8! W.19thSt. 875-8127.997-0432zf'n8Q. 1711 Mra.Austen. Ttcb.ical
UITlm-mlm :'~a= eat!:~ §p;;;a;;a6r 2 atry fuM U17 C<>ttaMeu BALBOA PENINUSLA APTMgrCi)ie, 16newcon-l1!;!;=/=0ff;;ict;;;.;";;; 1119 873-1900 kldllpet frplc Get 0004 Large thtrp 28' upetllln. Unique bMdl eott8Qe. doe. 2 ml to bctl In eo.t• Ii -ml!"'!'~!".!!!!'~~~-38drm on lwge corner lot. PoOl l960 S3M111 1 .. 11A11 at>tolutely lmmeculatl, 3 1mmec, avtll now weekly. M .... Rent 11 l1195e:f. WE 111111
lot• Of otk end.~~ t Aot f• Stove,;;i::,•· d=.. no ~. encloeed IOC*· Call 875-4137 Jim 0911 teoolmo. IM2-. &111111• &DI Rtlpldty ~ ltlOP 1'!'1~ . ...._ I!! lot llUk IHI pet• Imo. 87 7 ::,J:':::S =.:• LoYely tumltt'lad 2& 2Bt ulatu luadal Del :*' mottva~ ,,,Z:
Traditional x~~~;:t~. ~:. t:!'. !it ; &n. fl!PiO. SllL. S~1~fu~~. JUiy 19' no P9tL 54M27t !:\:~ult~~ . ...., ti .... )!it ~lot°[.~= I ~ s.:: ,.;. l50-3l17 .
Yltd oe111nga. Pool, epe. 2500 aq ft. New crpt, 2 utlli Ind. Only S3t5 . ._ llST Ill $2500 No pet1 780s0473 Wl'l5eWh.111i&.1'1"'ror time accountTng ciarit •a -m• Realty 551-e4e0 .,.Jwknd9. ltry, 2 cw ger, wetbel mDDT lll-llll 2BR 1BA dthwf btlc: TOI l10Klup, no a-edit OUU. lrlCJUde clrculatlon .. _...
631, 7370 S14001mo. 828 17th St, 5 llltw all bttlnt ss75imo ' Ital ah It l~art "'· no penalty c .. o.. btltlnQ and 1CCOU11t1 pey-Prevlou1 HP pref·d. BY OWNER -Tr1-M oondO. bltta to OCMn. 538-3901 $450 Btlt>oe 18R du9191t ' 2201 P9dllc: 17._. nlton At90C &73 7311 able ~ ••· Mlcroaciope 91tP a ""*
3BR 2'"BA· fem rm, lie. or te0-1911 Stovetl"9fi1Q. utll• paid TSL MGMT a.2•1803 n pertence a ptua. Full time OoNen (114)8~7S I LllUI .... lid Muat IM tt111 Ilk• new 4 t 7 E Bay Aw 1 edult pf F'l,,...,,,kr no pet1, I& CM &ueuc.ftll Immediate oC*'lng. C.. I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii9 unit. Seo 1y1, only Oceenc:toee4brheelnddl No pell 647•1155 POOl·PRIVATE~PATIO hOme, w'ld, lg ytlrd, 1350 telt I..... BB Jerrl J ol\n1on II
mlnute1 to SC Pin. den flyd 99' kldl -.. _ New d/w, lfl*:, gatllOI. +utll & MCUnty c:att M81Y IM2-4321 fOf lnteNtew/ .,._......_ I WMllWllD""' LIT s111.ooo. 176-8087 0( come $925 5SM111 Nwpt P9nln 38' 28e gar, X·LG tBf $685. 28' 1875 blltor9 1pm S40-7155 F60Ab 2 SChntuzar1. appointment Com· '1rseu 11m;w
One of the Mr bulldlble 806-~73 "8t... lndry, "'PIO Yrty Rent• EASTSIOE 557·21M1 ' mele l femM, eo.t. pettltw M6llfY and .. ~, Or eo.t Deity
1ot1 left In L•gun1. Ltit llf lllt l4il t4 VIiia Renttle 115-4112 Stlell> large 1 bectloom, I It • HH M..a 54M24e lent beneftt• % ~Ing for U · 1125.000. cell for ct.taltl. Cot F6A 8Xfi ON Wdf = A;t m . Sbd. PENTHOUSE FOR ONE down11afrt. ·~IOlutely ··•• .an ' parlencad f)SI mner. 85
, ... ,. 1aTH ST. IN COSTA 2bt. ywd, gercSns peld. Magnlftctnt vt9w of ocean lmtnecutete, dlahWMher, lllLf fl.IT wpm, mart! up lklllt
MESA 8011120 A-3 11100 mo +tteurlty & bey. S6401mo Ind utll. ~ lodlable oar-fNU\ ADS S30W BaySt neq ... ary. nawtperu:;
$135.ooo ae1-21aa ' &4&-1088 =~No-trir. :CO.~YdaNlcJ_ ~: UU1W1 eo.taMeM.CAtme ~ ~
Tin It LjUilMI[ IHI 11Ml11 no pet• 54M279 IDE FREE Call Alli.. S~ulm•n
A•-·lfte4 mr,-a;;:-ms;: M1cm. Tm Mlllll *• 11..... ....... M Ill Giirii ~i~t::nt Inter·
-COTE r~,
REALTY
VHIN fplC, g.r.. pet.lo, «**a. Canu ... llu un 28t wlger Cfi>t•. drpa. .... " .. .... Cal: eo.t• u.. ,..., eatat• =··1~f1.':tll ·lflM 842-1818 .:::.=r,~;':'; Sib. ill. ffi)IC. 5 6'1 to blt!M. Fncd[.d w~tlo ti I llHfti le1M1. Mt-1111 ~~~::to~o=~p~rll ....... I 784-Crochet shPP9f' of '";iiiiiii;;:::=:::::;:;;;;;;;;;;;::iiiiiiiJ.........;;;..;;,;;;;;,,_;;...,,~ ~1..et"°· laun rm, owg, 838-<t 120 all !:..fM Some oomputer tJCper onl 33CW.1ey St. I snetland·s~hunky
---
Let U1 Hta, y,.
St11 Y .. p,_,.,.,1
Cel ClaulfW,
642-5671
for Information
& surprisingly
low cost.
1-.... L 1111 ... 140U/mo gerdl'llll' Incl. 587 VlctOfle "C" .. -5 • MontlHO·month llM ............ tll* needed Colt• Meea. CA t:zeM ·1~~ • availl ,.,_ 1 063-6815 _,.,..... yarn PractlC81 a thrifty ....._ • . MESA PINES 2650 ...,... also 1v11l1ble Thia It • .....-.. .. ---'tton s II 2 28r 2Ba Nwpt ..,.,. "'-"· ~ 011oc11ons tor ma e-.-...Ah·t-1:....,._. DE81GN!lll, FURNISHED STUDIO ......, FOUND Auet. T.,.,..,, ap-In an MPtndlno firm.I • l ;.; .. -· ~· .,;,i& TOWNHOUSE • 1BR 1e. IMO • f1.1m11hed/ prox. 2Yf' brn/blk ING-Salary rtng. S1t1000-, I Medium ..,. aroe •r•
t "ri221S -S1IOO Pool & tennle oour11. TOP AREA. Quiet. No Pet• unfurnished gy Vic of ~ Shtok. 120,000/yr 842-SHll 1ncludod
::: Avl now 8314025 11215 Mo. 973-0ltl **541-2447** · F1tne11 centers. EMii Aw." v •1211 ~~°':"1 llftlTlllll I Send 13.25 plu1 7~ FOUND bltck Cocker 2BA, ieroe Y9'd ~PoOI ~ ?.ta.... •it Cella ... 1124 tennis, SW1mmmg Spenlel, tern. nr DouolM •HIDllPll* I Ill.II posltg4t hondhng tor JtC on quiet cudeee:u. Plant Hunt lktl ta~20el •rr -t .... .__. -'-. 1 each pettem Newport ~ti .,.. Models open d11ly 41 6 .. ... .. , ,..... -'i""'· .._
•1,oolmo ... 2..,.7 • WOODLA .... YI AGI S F"' -D ......... :o'l ... ~ manual JM*lng ledger'I Immediate capenlng ""' a I ._ 111
... .,., ...., orry, no pats """ ....-·--& bef* _ !1 ---: ,... CleMlned Advertlllng Llln......, ~ l
Terrtet (Ioctl• •• recs • _. :tena T-= .... ...., ... '> ·a: ·---· A•A•TMlllTI Newpon Beach No coll4W .,,1~ .,1 t1IQ9. eurN: ldWWCflt n.-.,_ _,.,.lON --• CQlY 28r 11t. Qtr, dlW, 880 IM"I AY9nut '3 t..... p 0 SoJI e:t,:::;r-1 ,tn·tliM, _work !::' ==~ c. '::....
w9llt to bdl MOO. ir.. C.. & llllOJ 0111 prden st -L COlllforltblt ~" 111 l&hl FOUND Ctllco Klttwn, 8Mc:h, CA ~~~ = ttf um ,_ ~....._ m,_, I,..._ deM to trwwars I So Coast Plaza odJ nvtes to 16-ncM temalf, IC>Pf'OI a•..t moe lllDIDHI ~. 'pltWrlt phor1lt 1111 1111. ~ ....._
btldl Ca ••• 1111 NO PCTS PHASE Newport 811('h So Old, f\'9e 10 home vcty !J Proe>er1Y ~t Co . voice a lnUM. E.ltul1 ~ *?Uni* ..-.a • •Al · ~AR•l'f..... 110016th StrH t Soneto. rv tel-el20 looklnQforfUl\tmaboc*·I Ml8fY p1u1 oomm...,iin End Unit. a.ut Mt,"'--k"P9f !.llperteoce "' Ctl ~ ~ at ~ == r:· 2: aA-CltlLo•oM :.'~!-:.s.ss1 ~0;;1 '~&!,1t: ~ ~~ eocoun~t·I .. 2-4S2t exi 302.
&2000/mo "'1r720-1412 1 •-. July 4tl'I Cono e n n,., ... __.., ··---• -00.. '760.770 ~ ---1tM ..... tor .... ~ mentblle*ground d ,...., ......... • vvv-....-..,_,. Salary commen1urete lllLf Pait
41r, 2,,.e., fCtm dine. fem US, 19Af 6 MOT WATD mG.. P:oun«S-KEYS -Mt ~ with expertence lend 330W.lily8'
'"'· 7300 elf, Of•lbelt ... ........ '.t."'"(lmfif'l(!o. end, Peclllc COHI ,....,.,,. to TSL UQMT Colta ....... CAt2t2t
NetrPoOIS1700/mo Altr '"""'" Hw y1Tu1 11n Av e t&e E 11th. 9'e 12 A. -----•-•I 72().7432 &42-0~~ Colla M CA t2t27 1--------~-= ____ ......_ _______ _ LAUll IHllUI
.. A p T I c
•
-.
910 • 0r.,. Coest DAILY PILOT I Tuaoay, Jutv '· 1888
Openings Now Available
CAR ROUTES
Earn Extra Cash
For De/Ivery Of This Paper
HUNTINGTON BEACH
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
INDEPENDENT
Deliver 1 day a week . No
collecting . no sol1c1t1ng.
Must have dependable car,
truck or station wagon and
insur'ance
CALL 842 -1444
Ask for JoAnne Craney
$2.40 per day
Th•I'• ALL you pey tor
3 llne., 30 day minimum
In tti.
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
CALL TOOAVll
ISi FOii LOIS
Your
Seir'vlce Olrectory
Aec>reeent•llve
142-4321Hf,301
MOTOR ROUTE
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
ORANGE COAST
Oaily Pilat
330 W. Bay St.
Costa Mesa, CA
Claulfled' 1 got greot sound• for you.
'
'"'" ... ,,,., ""' 40 ( l 0 .. 1 11 ... ~
,.. ..... ,, fl.Kh
67S·•t••
Panel wod.ldscrap
plans to reduce
freeway congestlon
ARC( SI 1HV1 NIOkl
Ofj !Hf WTSl°COAS I
MJIY MOOtl ' ~Cit CAl&I09AY
'-,I JI f H I I\ )t~' 'f
• "" ' I ' ~ • t ,'\ ' I • J ~ w f
t It 1" J ' '~ 1 P 4 I~. ,\ j
I l 1 I. 84 2 2000
IN
ORANGE COUNTY
BUICK ClHruM' '73
!xCllllnl oond, llOO/obo, M~MUITllU
~c11MM111
LAAGEST SElECTIOH
of lat• model, low~ Cedllec» In Or-..
Countyt See"' todeyt
140-11 00
2«>0 HW'bot 8fYd
COSTA.MESA.
CADILLAC '72 Sedan Oe
VMM. \llnyl roof, 11 me
OOod Nbbet. XJnt eond.
1950.&45-0302
CADILLAC 'IM
Conwrtl~f8Ct0ty, CIOI·
iectore. w:rrJi 20 mpg
122.500. '·
THI ODORE
ROBINS
FORD
201>0 ~tARBOI RIVD
CO'>TA Ml\ll. 1'14'/ 0010
CHRYSLER '12 Le a.on
Con¥Wtlble, wNW, Mn
Crou EdHlon. >Ont eond.
1 owner, 22,000 ml,
S7.400. 875-2644
Ol.DI '7t CVTl.A&8 SUPREME. 23K ml. lmmeo lhru/out, tulty equip,
-.... IS.SOO '47·2005
r
\
25¢
) TUESDAY, ~ULY 8, 1986
oD .. toxic boat. paint
Marine chemist calls paint most toxic
substance ever put !n ocean on purpose
From a&aff ucl wire reports ..
A chemical maxed an boat paanlS to
keep hulls clear of barnacles and alpe
as the most toinc substance ever
intentionally placed an the ocean and
should be banned from use on
pleasure craft. according to a marine
Jackie Joyner of the
U.S. became the flrat
heptathlete to ahatter
the 7 .000-polnt barrier
ln brealrl'l the world
record at e Goodwill
Gamea ln Moacow. Bl.
Coast
Artsy summer begins In
Laguna Beach./ A3
California
A U.S. Supreme Court
ruling may mean more
death penalltles will be
upheld In California./ A7
Nation
The Supreme Court
strikes down a key
provision of the balanced
budget law./ A4
Man who killed ferry boat
riders In New York
Har bor says God told him
todolt./A4
E n tertainment
Crosby,Hopeandthe
Andrews Sisters live
again at Saddleback Col-
lege./88
Business
Stock market sends the
Dow Jones average to a
record point loss In sell-
ing Monday./ Al
INDEX
chem 1st.
Edward D. Goldberg of the Scnpps
Institution of Ocean<>Jnlphy said the
levels of tnbutyltin, or TBT,
measured in Southern Cahforn1a
marinas far exceed safe levels fo r
orpnisms such as mussels and oys-ters. ·
Clark re-elected
chairman of OC
T r ansit District
Fourth D1stnc1 Supervisor Ralph
Clark wa~ re-elected chairman of the
Orange County Transit Distract for
the 13th time Monday.
Clark. retiring from the board of
supervisors 11) January. has earned
the moniker ··Mr Orange County
Transponauon" for his involHm,•nt
with transponauon matters.
Fellow I rans11 D1stnc1 board
members have dectcd < larl chair-
man 14 times since he Joined the
board in 1971 He ha\ Ileen II\
chairman continuousl> !.lnet~ 197 ~
Clark was a founding member of
the Orange Count) Transportation
Comm1ss1on and has served on that
board continuously as well
··1f the use 1s continued. if there 1s
more extensive use as barnacles
become resistant to (present levels).
then the impact will be more wtde-
spread an more orpnisms," said
Goldberg, who 1s studyina T BT fo r
the State of Cahfomaa.
More than 20 years ago, the
chemical tributyltin, or TBT, was
discovered to be effective at keeping
hulls clean of barnacles aod alpc for
longer penods than regular coppcr-
bascd paints.
Supervtaor Ralph Clark
F1r\t dccted to the board of
\upcn 1sors in I 970. Clark. 6Q 1s
retiring after li\e terms
Goldbefl 5a1d paints contaanma
TBT are up to 1,000 times more
efTccuve than copper-hued paints
lnsteact of JUSt rcs1slin1 orpn.isms'
ancmpts to attach them1elvcs to the
bottom ofboau, TBT kills orpna ms.
Orange Coa11 boatyard operators
said they won't be surprised 1f the
chemical 1s banned. They're not
ccnain what that wall mean 10 their
businesses, but they've seen similar
actions in the past
"I thmk there's some truth to that.
It's probably toiuc:· said Pete tewart
of South Coa t Boat Yard Inc in Newport Beach. "But most of tbe
thinas an paint arc. The bonom p&Jnt
isn't a good thina. anyway."
tewaft said the a.ovemment has
banned other paint ingredients 1n the
past, like certain leads and arsenic, so
removing TBT wouldn't be a sur-
pnsc.
He esl.lmated only 20 percent oflhe
pafots u~ on boat bottoms con1t1n
TBT.
Neve11he , it's,enerally lhe bm
paints that nave TBT in thnn.
Paul Coleman of Larson Shimrd
in Newport Beach said paints with
TBT arc tou&Jter and last looter.
'"They're not a very heavy per·
centage," Colermn id. .., think
they're used a a binder."
The hi&hcst &radt of paint uitd at
Larson has 3.4 perctnt TBT. 67.6
pcrttnt cuprous o ide and 29 pcrceot
(Pl ..... 8AJll/A2)
Police stunned
by violence of
July 4 revelers
8¥ STEVE MARBLE
Of .. o.llJ .........
Newpon Beach police said Mon·
day they were stunned by the level of
violence and .. blatant disregard for
human life" exhibited by revelers
who poured uno the beach city for the
Founh of July weekend.
Condiuons on the first two days ot
the holiday weekend were n otous. far
surpassing the violence seen in past
years, said a police spok~man who
indicated the confrontation with
police may have been planned.
Several officers were in1ured by
rocks, sand-filled bottles and fire-
crackers.
Officer Stan ·Bressler said a crowd
chanted profanities at him lobbed a ~bottle that hit him in the back. .
.f: One patrolman. Jeff Cantrell. was
taken to the hospital Y)<h.ep,..a M200
firccracker -equal JO a. qbaf1~r .s~ck
of dynamite -e~j)loded near him
..,aiid caused 1emporar. heanng lose;
In all. 159 peopk were arrested
Frida) and early Saturda)-Nine were
booked on felony charges of assault
~llh a deadl)-weapon on a police
officer and another four on suspicion
ofbattel) on a police officer
Police arreslt:d 244 people dunng
the thrcc-da)-holida)-weekend
Newport visitors
describe intense·
scene on Fourth
By STEVE MARBLE
Of ... DlillJ ..... ...,.
For Johnny Z.. the Newpon Beach
pohce ruined the be-st party he'\
attended this summer.
''This cop puts ttis billy club under
my chin and there's this other cop
'ltanding there and I say: 'He can't do
that. can he"' -'nd he says: 'He's doing
II."
Johnny Z who said he has aban-
doned his true name for the summer.
was one 0f dozens of revelen on the
(Pleue .ee RWPORT I A2)
··The thing 1ba1 seemed so cnucal
"'a"' the blatant disregard for human
life -and not JUSt aimed at pohce
officers but fellow part1ers." Officer
Howard E1senberg said.
Pohcc cars were damaged by rocks
as was a shenfrs 1a1l bus borrowed
lrom the county b' pohce as a
(Pleue eee POLICE/ A.2)
CommiSsionadvised to scrap -
plans to ease f\lture b()ttleneck
.Extending Orange Freeway, widening
Santa Ana Freeway may help problem
By LISA MAHONEY
Of .... °""' ......... ~
'The Orange ( ount~ T rari~por
ta11on ( omm1!>c;wn will he urged tu
scrap plane; 10 ea\l' future traflil
congestion in \e\.l'n northeastern
commun1t1e'i rather 1han lea\ing
residents in hmho OH'r wh1c.·h ol a
do1en road construction or 1mpro\.e-
men1 alternat1\t'\ thev might choose
Ba!>ed on a rcC"ommenda11on from
their pohn 1:omm1ttel' 1rampor-
1a11on comm1ss1oner'> 1nformall)
Jgreed in June to dela\ for up to two
'ears a dcc1S1on on hov. 10 rehe\ e an"
an11upa1ed traffic bo11leneck tha1
would he created b\ construi:11ng thl'
propo\ed Foo1h1ll and l::a<,tern frl'e-
"'a's But. alter rea .. se'>sing 1t'> pm1t11>n
\1onda'. 1he pohq rnmmlltel.' dl'-
c1ded to prepare nev. r«·ommt•n ·
datH>n'> that would eliminate most of
the 12 proposed bottleneck alterna-
t1 \.e\
IMtead. the policy comm1ttcc
lavored a c;tud\ that focuses on
m1n1mmng an11c1pa1ed traffic·con-
ges11on and absorbing over1low
. through the planned widening of the
\anta ..\na Freewa) and an expensi ve
extension o( tbe Orange Freewa)
..aid Sharon Greene. transpon.a11on
comm1\s1on staff me~ber
Puhhc oppom1on to the 12 alterna-
11 H'' questions about the efTectiH'-
ne'>'> of some of them and general
pohl' l.."oncerns led to tbe rc~valu-
(Plea.e eee PAl'&L/A2)
Ad vice and Games
Bulletin Board
Business
Classified
87
A3
A8-10
B9-10
B8
Portable classrooms anger Huntington homeowner
Comics
Death Notices
Entertainment
Opinion
Police Log
Public Notices
Sports
Television
Weather
84 ·es
A6
A3
B4
81-5
AS
A2
By ROBERT BARKER
Of !tie °""' "°' tlafl
School Distract piano; to lc.x:ated
three pon.able school buildings at
Sowers Maddie School. next to homcc;
in Huntington Beach. ha~c come
under tire.
Susan Comennsk)'. who 11\.C eac;t
of the c;chool on Cohasseu Lane.
claims that thi: ponable buildings will
block her scenic views and will put
l hlldren next to her house all da>
long.
The mo'e will reduce valuesofher
two-story S200,0(X) house b> SI 0.000
10 SI .S.000, c;he c;a1d, < omenn~k> also claims that dis·
tract onicials ha\ e been "over-
bearing·· because the)-allcgedh
didn't rnnsult neighbors before em-
barking on the approx1ma1el)
S90.000 proJCC'I She said she will
appear at tonight's Hun11ng1on Beach
Pat McGovern collects your
throwaways for a good cause
She brings in 10 to 30 donations a day
manning Costa Mesa· s Goodwill booth
Admit 11 Almost everyone has
trouble throw1na things away There's
the tarnished tennis trophy. the 11e
you didn't want forChnstmasand the
tOO-tl&ht dress that you're sure you'll
squeeze into some day
Finally at some point, the closet
~ts too full. the ~c overflow11 and
1n a frenzy, evcryth1na 'oc out the
door and into the wamna arm, of
C 1oodw1ll ~-or Pat McGovern. to be
e"<8Ct
MrGovem 1s a donation attendant
at the Goodwill trailer an the Nau1les
parkina lot near I 7th Strttt and
trv1ne Avenue She and another
attendant work at the Co ta Mesa
station tc:ven days a \\tek. n'Cry day
of the year c1etpt Thanhg1v1ni and
( hn$tma\ <ihe i~ rcspons1h1le for
acccpt1n~ donatton\ 11nd nh\olving
•
the guilt of a tllrow-away ~oc1ct)-
"My parents were going to throw
these out. I hate 10 sec books thrown
away -especially hardback book'> ...
says a young woman look1na Ufl at
McGovern 1n her trailer
McGovern nods and return~ an
upcnen~. · Do you want a re·
ce1pt?"
The scene 1 repeated ovrr and
again each day at the 2'11 AllC'ndcd
Donation unions throua1'out Or-
anac County Goodwill lndum1e\ of
Orange County was mudclt'd 1n I <114
after the fi~t Goodwill, which wa<,
fo~nded an &\ton m I Q02 It pro·
CC'I~' 4 mil Iron pound'I of &0<xh e11ch
)-ear, said Andrt"a Pronk a <ioodw1ll
o;poke,woman \alc'I of r<'ndcd
gOOth rnntnbutc HO l't'lt\'01 nt
(ioodwlll\ hudllt'I tor thl' ll'h,1h1 h
G. JEA NETTE
AVENT
PEOPLE IN THE NEWS
i.auon of thr handicapped. Pronl
c;a1d
Mc(10\.Cm. a ti\.e-,ear veteran
whose mother also · worke<l for
C1oo<lwtll, has gotten to kno~ thr
rh) 1hm<, of the bu sane
"It\ <1tasonal t can~ bus~ and 1e1
an) whrrt from I., to '<> donat1om a d .. 11
th<' pace get' hectic in !ipnng 'tl<htn
people do 1he1r 'lprina clcanina Ju<,t
hdorr '(hool 'ian 15 anothet bu"
(Pleaae 11et1 MCOOVltRN/ A~)
( 11y School D1s1nr1 hoard ml'Cting
and attempt to ron\ 1nrc tru\tec'i to
change 1hr1r mind'
~hool ofliual'> an· adding lhl'
portable building\ -thrl'e on thl' ea\I
'11de of the M:hool nc\t tn the home!>
and two bulld1ngc; on tht• "°rst '11dr -
to acrnmmoJatl' \tudl.'nl'> tran'>·
femng from Ci1<.lrr \<: hool nr\I
September
Official<> clo\ed (J1'ikr in June 1n j
cost-sa\.tnll'i move and becau..e of
del hninlll'nrollment
~upennl<"nden1 nl '>l·hnoh 1>1an.1
Peter\ said lad, ot \pan· at the \l hu11l
proh1b11s rhe r~lcx,t11nn 111 tht
portable hu1lding'>.
~he also ~1d that the re\ldc:nt' '-'l.fl'
1n' 11ed to partaupate in thl' dt'l l\lon
JI 1"'0 publK heanng'> tn \.1;mh Jnd
.\pnl Officials. in fau ml1\.Cd thl'
buildings fanher a"'a' from thl'
home'> (the closest 1~ ''I h.o.ct Imm
rcs1dent1al walls) after publt1. input
0., ......................
Pat McOo•ern baa a bin for e•erythtna. lnclodtna atuffed
anlmala. at ber Coata Mesa Goodw:ill booth.
\hl' 'ttlld
.\nd 111liu.il' walkt·d the ~hool
ground\ e'plain1ng 1he1r dl'C1s1on to < OITil'rtn\t.., ag.11n 1n Junl'. Pewrs
\did .. V. e hJd nu alternatn e, no
other pla(e 10 @.O 10," '>he said
Aul C omenn,i..' ~ho said she I'> a
n•tm•d l'h.'\.tmal draftsman differed
·· 11 11 '~trl' ,\ ll@.ht. urban \1tua11on I
l nuld <.ee thl• ne1.·d lor th1~ But thl•rt \
1oom tlor tht• ponable bu1hJing!.I all
o'er the '>('h1x1I · )he !Mild
.lCoast
Cyclist . ~/ remains
• 1nrace
8~ PAUL ARCHIPLEV
Oft ... Delty ..........
r ~II Ill thrl'C Or.ingt• ( 001 t
h1l H h\I\ v.l·rr lorcC'd out ol the Race
.\1.rn"' .\Mi:nca ~onda' a'i 1he1h1rd
pcddkd thrOU[th naaslJlff JU'il thrtt
hours behinJ the leader.
Matt Bttn:r of Huntington Reach
~a~ a' cragtng 17 ~mph in tht' J.100.
mile rall' from Huntington Be ch to
o\tlanlll ( It}. \Aid '>poke'l\\oman
K thltt'n Rurlct
8.'"i'rt'r, ~ J ...... ., 1n founh pl~~
OHrall, \ht" ... Id
The race-b(pn unc1a' with 26
entrant.,, 1nclucfin1 ill \I.Omen.") 1n1
for a l'll«t of thr S2S.000 purw
otTertJ h ;t ·Donald\ the raC't
(PIUM Olft/A2)
dudge drops assal:llt
charge against Odom
17 PAUL A1lClllPLEY °' ...........
Charan of assauh wnh a deadly
weapon were dto~ apanst former ~ leque patcher John Odom
Monday, and the cue will be di ..
maatd if he continues to receive
coumclina. bit auomcx said.
Odom, -known as Blue Moon"
Odom when he pitched for the
Oakland A'• in the 1970s, was
cbataed foUowinaa Dec. 10 niahtlona
standoff with Fountain Valley police
when be allqedly held has wife m
their home at 1unpoint. •
A SWAT unit waited outside
Odom's Fountain Valley apartment
for six hours before tossina m ps
canisters to flush him out.
Odom was despondent over losana
his job at Xerox in Irvine last year and
not bcina able to find a new job, his
wife Gayle said.
He lost bis job shortly after beina
arrested on suspicion of sellina a
small amount of t"OCaJnc, cba.raes be
denitt
He'll return to coun on July 21 to
face those charses.
"He feels at least he hat ba.lf hiS
troubles behjnd him," said attorney
Stephen DcSales. "l'm dclia,btcd with
the result."
DcSales said Odom was innocent
of the cocaine charaes and was
Qptimistic the former ballplayer
would win that case.
"He really didn't do at, and I think
we can prove it to a Jury," DcSalcs
said.
Westminster Municipal Court
Judge William Mock was satisfied
wtth the progress of a counseling
program Odom entered earlier this
year.
Odom was directed to continue
with counseling.
BB URGED •••
Prem Al
anen i~nts. he aid.
PeOple who plan extended tnpi or
who want tomlnimla uokttJ)uk for
paints col\tainfoa tTBT·. · coleman
laid.
Warmer waler conditions in n:cent
)'f9.,.alto have i~ted iu ute.
"Since £1 Nino .-e've had a lot of
peen arowth and shell arowth, and
have sold more TBT." he said. rh~ French p>vemment In-l 982
banned TBT-laced painu on pleasure
craft lea than 2S me1ers lon1 after
evidence analyzed over a five-year
period showed that oystm near
heavy concentrations of recreational
boats were ioncreasingly malformed
and bt'C"t'ding poorly.
Similar problems with oysters
prompted the Briush aovcmment to
parti&.lly ban TBT-based paint.
There 1s no immediate threat to
higher orpnisms from TBT. but
Goldbcra com~ his concerns to
those surround1n1 use of the pesticide
DDT in the 1970s. It was not lcJ)own if
DDT harmed humans, but the federal
government banned its use anyway.
ONE COAST CYCLIST REMAINS IN RACE •••
Jl'romAl
Leading the pack was Pete
Penscyres of FallbTook, Calif., who
had passed through Flagstaff Monday
afternoon and was headed along
Interstate 40.
He was averaging 18.3 mph an the
race. Burke said.
The 43-year-old Pcnscyres was the
1984 wanner of the longest non-stop
bicycle race m the world.
The race 1s considered non-stop
because nders travel as long as they
can, stop and sl~p for bnef penods.
then continue. said race director John
Manno
The world record set last year as
nine days. two hours and six minutes,
he said.
But the race came to an abrupt halt
for two other Oranie Coast men when
their support vehicles faded them,
Burke said.
Curt Eury, 37, of Huntington Beach
quit just before 7 a.m. Monday due to
mechanical problems. Burke said.
She couldn't provide more details.
Dennis Bock. 38, of Costa Mesa.
dropped out 1n Indio when has van
broke down. she said
"He had no sponsors. and had
spent a lot gcttin' his van aomg before
the race," she said.
"He delayed calhng us because he
hoped to get the van fued, but there
were serious mechanical problems.
"He was absolutely heartbroken,"
Burke said. •
Leading the women Monday was
Shelby Hayden-Clifton of Green-
sboro. N.C. She was eighth overall,
Burke said.
She estimated the distance between
the leader and the last-pla~ contes-
tant had spread to about 200 m iles
Monday.
MCGOVERN COLLECTS YOUR JUNK •.•
From Al
umc, she says. And between
Thanksgiving and January. "every-
thing breaks loose." People clcarr out
their closets to make room for
Chnstmas. she says.
>\s she works and talks. an older
man pulls up to the side of the trailer
and hauls out an e"<ercase slant board
"Do. you take these'>" he asks
ten a ti vel).
"We surt' do!" McGo..,ern calls
back.
More confident now. the man
proudly announces each 11em he
unloads.
Despite its torn cond1t1on. McGov-
ern passes no Judgment on the slant
board or anything else the man takes
out "We're not allowed not to take
1t.'' she says ··11·s against policy.''
There's a place for each donation
Between donors. McGovern sorts the
merchandise into wire cages. tote
boxes and barrels. Into the clothing
Correction
A. Fnday story an Datebook 1ncor·
rC<'tly lasted the length of the Pageant
of the Masters show in Laguna Beach
The program. featunng live rcc-
reallons of lll.3JOr works of an. runs
for about two hours naghtl}. begin-
ning at 8 30 p.m
The pageant. which runs from July
9 through >\ug. 28. attracts about
250,000 people each summer ,,.
For ticket information. call
494-1145
cage go adult pants, skaru. dresses,
blouses and shirts. Hangers arc re-
served for finer ladies' and men's
wear. she-says. Shecti.. pajamas and
blankets are stored an a large tote bo){.
Shoes. slippers. roller skates, cowboy
boots. ram boots and any other kind
of boot go into a shoe barrel. She pairs
the shoes with rubber bands or ties
them by their laces to keep them
together.
Garments with holes 1n them end
up in a ra~ bag.
"One time we got a pair of pants
wtth one of the legs cut out," she says
w11h a laugh. At the Santa Ana
processing plant. rags arc baled and
sold as salvage.
Since Goodwill opened its attend-
ed donation stations. they get better
donauons. she says "We get stuff
from Nordstrom. the Broadway and
small specialty shops.
Before. when the charity had "the
little houses." people would steal, she
says. "They would stack their kids
inside and kids would grab things.''
A middle-aged woman unloads
several bags of clot hang. "It's cleaned
and pressed." she sa)S.
"She's a regular." McGovern said
with a smile
McGovern. who has worked as a
nu~·s aide and a hotel room attend·
ant. said the JOb. which starts off at
m1n1mum wage. has its ups and
downs. The work 1s dusty, she says,
and pulling down the trailer's heavy,
roll-up door can be a chore af the
wheels aren't working nght.
And then, there arc the scams. One
man came up to her. demanding a
receipt for merchandise he said he
donated in Corona Del Mar. McGov-
ern politely cxplamcd that receipts
arc issued onl) where the donation 1s
made.
"I didn't tell him we didn't have a
locauon an Corona Del Mar."
But McGovern says she likes the
independence of the JOb. "You don't
have people telling you what to do.''
A young man backs up to the trailer
in a van "Here's an cjght-track
player ... a pool stick so another guy
can grow up to be Minnesota Fats or
something.'' He looks up from his
unloading. "Do you remember me?"
"No," McGovern replies matter-
of-factly
"I was here two weeks ago," he
says.
McGovern looks at ham for a
moment. "Wasn't your sister's name
Bro nwyn?"
"Yes," he says with a wide gnn.
"Do you want a receipt?'
He's an a hurry, but McGovern sars
she always tncs to ask. Most don t,
she said, except at certain tames of the
year when they're thinking_of tax
wntc-offs "It's better to be safe than
SOIT)." she says ·
After the last person has left.
McGovern tallies up the number of
donors for the day and closes the bag
door. The next day starts a holiday
weekend. It'll be slow and she can do
her sorting. she says. as the steel lock
chcks into place.
POLICE STUNNED BY JULY 4 VIOLENCE ...
From Al
temporary holding facaht) for tho\C
arrested ·
Vandalism was widespread as res1
dents and shopkeepers rcponed win-
dows smashed .<\ public restroom at
the Balboa Pier received Sl.SOO 1n
damage .
And there as evadepce· th:it some ol
the violence ma) have been planned
Eisenberg said. explaining officer'>
found several stock pales of sand-tilled
bottles
One group of celebrants lhantcd
"Palm Spnngs. Palm Spnngs.' ap-
parent!) referring to a not in that
reson Cit) du rang Easter 'ol.Cek poltce
said
"From what l'H~ been told there,.,
some and1cat1on that some of the
people were there not to oarn hut to
engage in a melee." Eisenberg said.
£,Cf) police officer "able to stand
upright" was placed on duty dunng
the heart of the holiday weekend.
Ea!>enberg said. There are about 145
officers in the department, not count·
1ng reserve officer\ who also were
U'>ed to quell the disturbances.
A.s scheduled. police scaled off
Balboa Boulevard to incoming traffic
al West Coast Highway and again at
32nd Street to the beach. Jt wasn't
necessar) to block Newport
Boulevard
The blockade reduced traffic but
5eemcd to have little impact on the
the number of people who turned out
for Independence Day rites.
"It was a succe!>s an that at really cut
down on the number of cars but it
didn't seem to cut down the crowd.''
Easenbe.rg said.
Seashore Dnve between 32nd and
52nd streets -an area known as
"party animaJ city" to locals -was
declared an unlawful assembly area
shortly after nightfall Friday and
police moved through the street.
dispersing crowds.
More than a dozen people were
arrested on suspicion of inciting a not
or for failing to leave the scene of a
not. Others were arrested for pos-
session of a destructive device. d1s-
order1y conduct and assault.
Of the nine people arrested on
suspaon of assaulting pohce officers,
only two were listed as Newpon
Beach residents · Ebch was he ld on
$25.000 bail
NEWPORT VISITORS DESCRIBE SCENE ...
From Al
streets an West "-e~pon on Jul) 4th
when pohce declared an unla°"'lul
assembly for the entire area
He wasn ·1 arrested but rhe street
party he was attending wa\ cut ofT
Police said they were pelted w11h
roclcs. bottles and firecrackers 1n one
of the most violent Fourth of Jul)
episodes in )ears.
"l here wen~ JUSt wa) too man"
people " said Michelle Turner a
Balboa resident. "There's no wa>
you're not goi ng to have problem<; ..
··rm not sure I'd call at a not I \Cl'ol.
some fights and it was prett.,
1a mmed," said Brad Jorre) a Full
erton resident staying with a rt'lat1 ve
1n Balboa
"It looked pretty intense wh <'n the
MAIN OFFICE
)JO w"' ea, S• c....t•• -c•
polite tame down the street The)'
had un helmets, the whole bit," he
said ··1 don't know about everybod)
else but I got o ut.''
~everal people said the pqhce
seemed to show great restraint as they
were taunted and jeered by party-
minded youth.
For the most part, the West
"'Jewpon neighborhood along Balboa
Boulevard and Seashore Dnvc look·
ed none the worse for wear the day
after the long Fourth of July weekend.
A shopping center at the antcr-
~ct1on of Balboa and 32nd Street,
where much of the disturbance was
centered, was Jammed w1th kids on
\katcboards. young men carrying
surfboards and bathing suit-dad
women.
Bumper stickers proclaamang
"Work as For Those Who Don't
Know How to Surf' were plastered on
several cars. A drug store was
advertising a special on thongs.
"The kids come down here to P.3rtY.
That's the way It's always been, ·said
an employee at one shop in the center.
"I don't thank they mean any harm.
1:'hcy ).ust act earned away some-
times.
Many said they were unaware there
had been any problems.
"We )USt sot here," said one man.
admonishing has two young children
to be careful in the surf. "We always
stay home on the Fourth."
Ma• •OOt-8o• ~ Cot•• ...... C• Jlt>lAt.
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GoPY Dy 7 • m c Deb• 10 • "' •nO .,,,,., OOP'f ...
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Circulation
T1l1pMMI
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Fair skies along.Orange Coast
Sklel wtll be tlllr today Wld Wedn.idey °"' tN orange Coat UOtPt for IOfM Nght through mldmomlng loWCloude tnd
toe.II tog neer the co.ti, tx1endlng Inland M"'9 lat• nlgtlt and
Mtty mom!nQ houri.
HtgM wCll be 10 to ?5 et tN ~ Md 78 to 15 Inland
Lowt wtll be 55 to 15.
t.~ mountlllna wm be meetly clew exQ11Pt fof • few htQh clouda ot/fK tM touthem rangee. Hight wtll renot from 15 co ft,
Iowa 48 to 58.
ltol•t*' lhOwett end thuruMnhowera .,. expect*' In the
tJttreme eutwn deeetta todey. Upper "-1 hlQha wtll be 92 to
102, lowl 80 to 74. Lower deMrt hlgl'le wlll be 10! to ,08, lowl 75
toH.
W•t to eouthwest wlnda 10 to 15 knota wlll bto\"; oY« 1-to
2-foot .... and • 2-foot eouthweet ewett thta anernoon Ind
evening along the Inn« coaatel wetera. . \
U.S. Temps
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PANEL ADVISED TO SCRAP·PLANS-
FromA1
ataon, she said.
Last year. transportauon planners
determined that, while the Eastern
and Foothill freeways might provide
vital alternauves to existing fr~ways.
their construction would create a
traffic bottleneck on surface streets an
parts of Irvine, Orange, Tustin, Villa
Park, Anaheim. Santa Ana and North
Tustin.
Solutions proposed m a con-
troversial bottleneck analysis in·
eluded construction of one or more of
about a dozen possible freeway con-
nectors and ancrial improvements
between the new freeways and the
Garden Grove and Costa Mesa
freeways.
All would have cut through estab-
lished neighborhoods, elimmatang
significant numbers o f homes and
businesses.
Uncertainties about the final align-
ment of one ·of the freeways and
emerging development plans in some
of the seven affected communities
had led to the recommendation to
de'ay.
Residents hving along the routes of
the proposed freeway connectors and
upgraded artenals have staunchly
opposed the bottleneck alternatives
and have an~ly fought against
delay mg a decis100 out orfcar that the
cloud of fu ture road construction
would lower their property values.
Greene said that opposition was an
important factor considered by the
policy commattcc. which as made up
of representatives from the afTected
commurritiesand the county Board of
Supervisors.
But she sa1d members also thought
that many of the soluuons proposed
would not provide the needed traffic
relief while others would simply shift
congestion to the Garden Grove
Freeway.
Committee members also believe
the new f rccways can be realigned to
lessen the bottleneck, Greene said.
Part of the recommendation to be
put before the commission July 28 is
to cncoura c the oint wers a en-
cics responsible for planmna the two
new freeways to reroute parts of the
Eastern Freeway furthcT east and a
section of the Foothill Freeway
funher north "so th~ don't corivcrge
to create a problem,' she said.
The Foothill Freeway will connect
south and central Orange County
while the Eastern Freeway will link
the Santa Ara and Rivenide ~
ways.
Funhcr study will be necessary to
determine 1f Santa Ana Freeway
improvements and an extension of
the Oranae (57) Freeway alona the
Santa Ana River would relieve what-
ever congestion is created by the new
freeways, Greene said.
Widcnmg plans call tor ·the ad-
dition of four to six lanes on the Santa
Ana Freeway and a possible tran-
s11way for car pools and buses.
A study of the Oran~ Freeway
extension conducted earlier this year
concluded that its S8SO million price
tag was too expensJve.
Begins Wednesday ,July 9 at 10 a.m.
' '