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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1986-07-15 - Orange Coast PilotTUESDAY, JULY 15, 1986 Newport Center expansion OK'd Opponents-to seek referendum after NB council backs 300 mt lion project challense in 1982 foroed the Irvine Co. to abandon plans for entaraina the center. "ft may well be worth the effon to turn this over to the electorate and eee what the votm think.'' said Corona del Mar resident Ron Covinaton. who said increased traffic from the development will be intolerable. BJ STEVE MARBLE °' .............. A $300 million expansion of New- port Center with bigh-riae office towers, resjdentiaJ tractsand a battery of restaurants was approved early today by the Newport Beach City Council. Council ) election By G. JEANETl'E A VENT ........ c.. 4 fl 1 City council races 1n five Oranie Coast cities sot off to a quick start Monday. Asoftoday, Huntington Beach bad the most contenders With 12 people picuna up candidate papers. Costa Mesa had the fewest with four. Monday marked the first day of four weeks set aside for residents to file their official papers declaring their candidacies. The filing period closes Aug. 8, but wiU be extended to Aug. 13 if an incumbent decides not to run in the Nov. 4 election. In Huntington Beach. four scat arc up for grabs because the incumbents already have served the maximum two terms allowed. A spokesman for the city clerk's office said 12 people ha vc taken out papers with the intent of filing. They arc Sherwood Bailey, Wes Bannister, Rohen Crawfis, John Erskine. Timothy Klrnk, Elaine Kraft, Tom Livcnaood. Thomas Mays, Richard Rowe. Donald Troy, John Valent.100 and Nonna Vander Molen. Costa Mesa bas two seats open on the council. Arlene Schafer. recently hired as executive director of the Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce wd she will not seek re-election and Mayor Nonna Hertzog has not yet announced. Thus far. Orville Am- burgey, owner of Ambu'lcy's Electnc and former communicatJons director (Pleue Ne COUNCU./ A2) Coast A FaJrvlew Developmen- tal Center administrator has flied an appeal over her dlsmlssal./ A3 Calif om la The only FBI agent con- victed of espionage gets two llfe terms./810 Sports Roger Clemens and Dwight Gooden are to- night's starters at the 57th All-Star Game./81 INDEX Advice and Games Bulletin Board Business Ctasslfled Comics Death Notices Entertainment Opinion Polloe Log Public Notices Sports Television Weather 86 A3 A7-10 B8-10 87 B10 BS A6 A3 810 B1-4 BS A2 The vote culminated a four.year effort by the Irvine Co. to complete tbe circular business and shoppina bub. But opponents of the proposal indicated they may attempt to tum back the expansion scheme by teek- ing a referendum election. A similar The council voted S-2 in favor of the expansion after takjna 47 separate straw votes on various pbucs and clements of the huge plan. Don Strauss and Evelyn Hart cast the o.., .......... ..,DewW .......... Slippery character ezlta ride at new Wild Riven park. Park rides open with big splash It's hke bemg shot from a squirt gun. Atop a five-story hill, human ammunition is loaded feet-first into a padded fiberglass tube. With a acntJe nudge on the shoulder, the nder 1s sent sliding down the pipe with gravity and a steady stream of water acccleratmg the slippery descent. Less than five seconds later, the business end of the barrel spits out the swim-suited daredevil -lefS flying. mouth gaping, eyes bulging and adrenalin pumpinl With such thrills, Wild Rivers, Orange County's only water-theme amusement park, bas wasted little time in attracting visitors since open- ing on the Fourth of July weekend. On a recent weekday afternoon, 3,000 visitors -nearly all of them teen-agers-were lining up for nearly 30 minutes at some rides for a chance to charge down padded fiberglass shde! into a pool of cool water. The rides have Jungle safan-1n- sp1red names like Bombay Blasters. Nairobi Express, Cobras. Pythons. Serengeti Surf Hill and Congo Raver Rapids. You get the idea. Located at the former Lion Coun- try site off lrvtnc Center Dnve an Laguna HiUs, Wild Ravers 1s some- thing like a giant pool party. Everyone walks about in wet swim suits, lining up for rides. eating at the ROBERT HYNDMAN Focus ON THE NEws snack bars or JUSt worung on a tan. M 1ke Hathaway and Matt Mitchell. both 14, took a break from their snow cones to discuss what 1t 1s about Wild Ravers that keeps them coming back day after day. Besides their summer season passcs-$49.95 each-the pairsaad ndes lake Bombay Blasters made it worth the bus tnp frotn Orange. "It's pretty radical because you can't really see where you 're gom~" Hathaway said of the cannon-like water nde. .. It's also pretty fast and you don't get !Ired of at." Mitchell said. Other teen favorites were the ( ongo Raver Rapids, Sweitzer Falls and Serengeti Surf Hill where seven lanes of downhill slides offer an impromptu race course for visitors. Main attractions arc arranged on a (Pleue Me WJLD/A3) diaentina votes. St:rau11 said he could not justify addiJll more than l .S million squaie feet or office, retail and rcsi~ntial bwldi~ when tho city .. already is autrocauna 1n tratJlc." Hart suPPorted most of the in· creased buifdina but took exception to the propoeed cons1J'Uction of a restaurant oo a bluff' overloolcin1 Newport Bay. "We do not bave1to build on every sioale lot IO this city," wd H~ (Pl .... Me NSW'PORT/A.2) Gardner takes on Newwrt Beach BJ STEVE MAULE °' .. ...., ........ John Gardner, the suidins band behjftd the sJOw..,owlh movement in Costa Mesa, bas moved south. "But not too far. Gtrdoer baa taken up reside~ in Newport Beach. And with hit new addrm, be has bqun to partake of the local cuisine. Monday ni&ht. for instance the main coune was &be. Irvine Co. .. I'm proud to say rve Jived bae two months. rm 1 recent immipant ftom ~ ... ACTIVal'/A2) Lightning, thunder sQ.ow ,dazzles Coast residents By LAURA MERI. °' .. ...., ........ Orange County residents up early today witnessed a spectacular liahl show durina a brief thundershower that marked the summer season's first rainfall . Lightnina streaked the skies and temporarily scrambled radio trans- missions as thunder echoed across the countr. According to Grea Cunningham, a hydrographer with the Orancc Coun- ty Environmental Management Agency, Costa Mesa had the most rain on the Orange Coast with only .30 inches. Although a slight sprinkle momentarily moistened celebrations over the I odcpendence Day weekend, Cunningham said the last recorded rain was on April 14. The moisture came from an un- predictable air mass that moved nonh from Mexico. But the weather was expected to clear by the late morning or early afternoon, accord- ing to the National Weather Service. Temperatures were expected to reach 70 to 75 along the beaches and 92 to 100 in the inland valleys today. Tonight at the beaches. temperatures were expected to drop to between 53 and 66. ..., ..................... But on Wednesday the moist air will continue to dampen the area and spread momma f<>& and low clouds. Temperatures Wednesday arc ex- pected to reach 66 to 72 along the beaches. LlahtnlnC Rta the Uy abl.Ue cmtt Opper Newport Bay. Pair of reptiles makes for an interesting day By ROBERT BARKER Ol IM DellJ ...... ..., 8111 and Teri Mac- m1lhan had their quota of c reeping, c rawlin g things in theu Huntington Beach apart- ment Mon- da~ Bill. 26. a (Jencral Tele- phonc ( o em- ployee. was trying to sleep 10 on has last day of va- cation when he heard his wife scream that a snake was in the closet 0.., .... ,....0....--.... M a c - mlllaan fig ured that somehow the reptile mu'it ha'e come from th e apartment do~n<;ta1rs because the tenant there 1s the son of a pet Animal control officer hold• reptile found in apartment. store owner. Macmalhan said .. , went down to chew him out and found (the tenant out, but) the glass m hi s door was broken. I called the pohce and th~ came to investigate. .. They found an alhgator in about two feet of water 1n the bathtub," Macmtllian said. .. , called the landlady and told her 1t was either him or the reptiles ·· Macm11l1an said his Wife ventured across the boa constnctor when she reached down to pick up one ofh1s shirts to wash. .. As far as rm concerned," he wd "every snake 1s a rattlesnake "l went to get my neighbor and we stuck a shovel in there and the snake wrapped itself real t1ght around the handle ··out I can•t figure out how an the hell a snake wound up in my closet. I guess 11 could have crawled up through the heating vent " Macmalhan said he can laugh about at now. "But my little girl (71 i-month-old fan ya) could have crawled 1n there and the boa constnctor could have wrapped around her neck. I was not too overly thnlled.·· County Animal ( ontrol Otlic:er E.D. Snook took the reptile<; to an animal care center in Anaheim Gl'C$ Hackman an instructor for the Regional Occupation Program animal care program, said the boa con!tnctor was onh about three feet long but probably wouldn't ha ve inJurro anyone "because at was JUSt a bab)' •· But the alhgator actual!\ a ca1man. according to Hickman. was a d11Terrnt \torv "It was an aggrr.,.;1' r httlr huggrr I had a real interesting time getting 11 out of thr truck It didn't bile me but at wa<;n 't for lad. of Irving ·· C11y officials ..aid local ordinance prevent the k~pang of dangerou\ ixu 1 n fam1h homes. 'Tm not surc that a boa con'ltnctor 1s classified as danger- ous:· environmental officer ">usan Tulh said "but I th1nl.. an alhga1or 1<;" Authonucs were still unsure this mommg who owned the two rcptales Sumner named official winner in 40th District Hoffmann fails to half certification of write-in can_didate after long recount I By PAUL ARCHJPLEV Ot .. Dellf,... .... Wntc-in cand1date Bruce Sumner became the Democratic nominee 1n the 40th Conpeu1onal 0.stnct Mon· day after h11 opponent failed to block certification of the election by the Reaistrar of Voters. An Hoffmann, a ,upportcr of po ll1ic1l maverick l yndon LaRouchc h 1d '°u1h1 10 pm1«1 h11 .. .;hort-hved VlCtory in the pnmary election by haVlng the results of a tt00unt toucd out Both candidates, their attorneys and a courtroom full of supporten attended a Supcnor Court hcannJ m Santa Ana where Hoffmann toUJht a temporary rc!tra1n1n1 order and m- 'unct1on on grounds of ballot tamper- 1n1 and voter fraud. HofTmann's attorney. Robert Levy, araued that the Wide d1spantv between official precinct returns that pve the victory to Hoffmann and recount totals that put Sumner's name on the Novem~ ballot in- dicated voters had been d1acn- franch1scd "Clearly the d11Tercnce betwten the on11nal canvass and the present re ults are due to newly found ballots," Levy told coun Com- m1SS1oner Ronald Bauer. "In ad<ht1on, there arc massive 1rrqulantie . To allow ~rt1ficat1on 1n the mid!t of th1! failure of due process naht of the cit11ens would be an insult to the c1tJ2enry" .\ttomey Frank Barbaro. who headed Sumner'\ successful rteount challenge. araucd HotTmann's com- plaint was full of allegation'> that lacked an) d1rtet e' 1dcncc. Bauer said he wasn't .. astonished" that most new votes found an a recount would ao to a wnte-m candidate, because \Otc tabulauna mach1nt1 would have accurately counted the bellots for a h,t~ candidate. "The court note thert 1'1 an onao1n1 ~ for challen e1 an the rtt<>Unt,' Bauer added "We don '1 W'( anr defect in that proce'I :· Bauer also said t~ actual num~r of hllllot'I of "my'ltcnou'I onam" wouldn't chanae the outcome. FolloWlna the hcanna. Sumner. a former Judie and the ch&Jnnan of the count) Democratic Party, exprc scd ha\ readines! to bee.in campa1anma against Rep Robert Badham. the five-term incumbent from Ne-wport Beach. "I'm the Democratic nomant'C:· ~umner ..aid "I hope people will!« 1 can gJve the same type of v"orouc; rcp~ntat1on 1n C'onams 1 wt 'lhowcd aaa1nst the LaRouche pcopk ·· li\umner agfttd that the d1spant1c! in thr thr('t' count' <;howt'd elCC110n proctdul't' wtrt flnwrd Hr 'Aid tht- ' u~ of volunteen; and temporary help could be cllpccted to generate d1~ C'f'tpanc1c\ Sumner sugested im- proved tra101n& would improve the ~\'~tern · UV) 'lllld the battle wasn't over. add1na that he wa~ prepared to in111ate a .. vote contest," which would ~u1rc the C0'1rts to analyte all challcnatd votes in w 40th Dtstnct Democratic pnmary. "In the end, I thtnk the t-lcctton Wllt ~ thrown out. .. uvy said The on 01n& bettle for the nom1 - nat1on bttan aftcT Hoffmann became the llnlY Otmocnt1ccand1date to filt (Pl_.. ... SUMlUR./ A2) ' COUNCILCANDmATESF~ING PAPERS ••• ,.,_Al (or the cicy. bas filed. Cny Clerk Eileen Phinney aid. Tb.tte ot.bcn --~ F. Bu&.. di)' pwu~r. Charlene A. Johnto"' ~· or Lori·• Ki&cbm. and Bnan K . Theriot. presj .. det>a or MUIY't of Dallas -ba \"e llktft OUI _papers. fowna10 VaUey has lhrtt open ecau an No\'ember. Mayor Fred Voss and Councilman James Neal have aonouDCCd tbeiJ inteotion to run 'Pin. but incumbent~ NiellC'D has not yrt fikd. In addition to Vos.sand Neal. Laurann Cook. Rohen Hou1e and John Thompson Jr. have also ta.keft out papers, City Clerk Evelyn McClendon said. Three Laguna Beach City CounciJ seats arc open Councilmen Dan Kcn.ncy and Robert Gentry. both environmcntahsts supponed by the Vlli. Laguna and memben of the Laguna Beach Grttnbeh, have an- nounced they wtll seek rc--clcctton. But Bobbie Minlc.m has \aid she will not run again. Lida P. Lenney, a I 9·)'ear resident of Laguna Beach and former teacher at Tor. of the World Elementary Schoo , 1s runnmg for a spot on the council. Maggie Brown Meggs. a wnler for the local newspaper Tides and Times, has taken out papers. and Ricley Slater, a ma1ntenence worker for the Village Mercado and the Orange County Transit DlStnct bus stalJon 1n town. has said he will !>eek office. In Newport Beach seat~ for four of the city's seven d1stncts arc up for grabs. Council cand1dat~ represent d1stncts but att elected at large Jn Distnct I (Balboa) incumbent Donald Strauss has tiled as has Planning Comm1ss1on Chairman James "Buzz" Person. In District 3 (Newport Heights) incumbent Councilwoman Evel)'n DlillrNllt __ .,~ ....... C.O.ta Meaa City Clerk Eileen PhJn.ney recehrea' c~ancll canclldate Orville Amburgey'• papen. Han has afl'flounced she will run. but no one else has yet filed. Councilwoman Jackie Heatht•r trom District 4 (north Newport) ha<i said she will not run. Businessman Clarence J. Turner and JeffWallack. a stockbroker for Dean Willer Re- vnolds Inc.. have expressed an Interest in that slot. In DISlrict 6 (Corona dcl Mar). incumbent Councilman 8111 Agee has announced he Wlll not run. Michael L. Lapin. attorney, Pat Michaels. radio station owner. W1l11am Monroe. publisher, and Philip Sansone Jr .. a director of the Corona del Mar Community Assocaauon. ha\ e all tossed their hats into the n ng NEWPORT CENTER EXPANSION OK'D ... From Al arguing an favor of preserving the bluff as a scenic vista. The expansion plan will add growth to 11 separate parcels of land in and around the center, which sits on a mesa overlooking Corona del Mar and the ocean beyond. Retail outlets and movie theaters will be constructed in Fashion Island, office towers will be added to the e.x1sung row of businesse' 1n the center and a terraced bank of restuarants will he built near the intersecuon of Pacific Coast Highway and Jamboree Road where a filling station once stood Three ind1 v1dual housing develop- ments will be constructed along the penmeters of the cen ter. as will a day care facility The council mandated that 30 percent of the housing units meet low or modcrate·income \tan- dards However. the aflordable housing unm are only guaranteed for I 0 yearc; hecausc of the difficulty 1n sccunng long.term loans for lov. and moderate income residents A.s a tradeofflor building ngh ts. the Irvine ( o must bankroll ahout S4() m1lhon in road improvements. in- cluding the construction uf a nev. thoroughfare that would route traffil around Corona del Mar The plan struck a chord with resident~ a~ 11did1n an earlier publrl forum . "Trame. 1s a g1,en. Wt.· can 't \top tranic any more than we can '>IOP the tHJe." ~1d real estate broker Jim Wood 1n support of the plan "I trust !hie, commun1t'v." he \aid "Thev haven't screwed up }Ct I'm \Ure everything Wiii turn out fine .. Jean Harrington 'laid cit\ leader'> are on the verge of "making a laughing st0t.k" of thcm'>l'i\t:\ by ACTIVIST RELOCATES ... From Al Costa Mesa." said Gardner. prepanng to carve up Lil) leaders for lOn'>1denng e'<pand1ng Newpon Center with offices. re'.ltaurants and res1dencec, , The legal consultant said some an the ut)' seem tu be "grubbing alter commerce lake the City of Industry." Gardner said he It lees Newport Beach a!> 111s and ~·c., no ga1nc, 1n 11nkcr1ng With It •• 1 hate lines I hate crowds." he obsaved For those unfamiliar with Gardner. he earnt·d a reputation in ( usta Mel.a as the mastermind behind a slow.growth group that 1s reshaping pol1t1c\ 111 that Cit) As the chief \trateg1st for the Mesa A<.:t1on homcownerc, coaltt1on. C1ardne1 pla)'ed a large role 1n helpins elect two slow.grov.th ad .. ocates to the C o\ta Mesa City Council and toppling plans for a 32·stof) office Lo"'cr Gardner flexed his muscle in Costa Me..a through a '>ene'> of nn\'>lctters U'>1ng a personal computer to program membership list'> and pruu:'>s mad1nl!. labels Hts newsletters apparent!> dro'c \uter-. tu the poll'> and resident'> ll• public heanngs While C1ardner 1s still active 1n ( osta Me..a he nov. l1\t.·., 1n Do,er \horL·\ C1ardncr al read> 1s affiliated with Nev. port 2!J()I I a t:1t11en 'group If\ 1ng 1 .. fight traffic congestion by putting the brakes to de' dupmcnt The act1v1st sroup has drawn upa traffic. 1n1ttat1\e that memher' hopt: tu 4ualif~ for a 'peC'lal c1tyw1de election 'vkmher'I of the group also have vowed lo \l·ck a u1,v.1t.k rl'ltrl·ndum dec..tHln on th1: expansion ol "iewp<1rt <enter a mml mtnl 1h,1t rn1gh1 g1i hand 1n hand v.ith the uprnm1ng (II} ( ounul elel11on "I like Nev.port lkalh .. C1ardner told rnunl 11 memhtr' t\11 inJ;i, \\ L Tl going to ha\C.' c1 good time 1n th" 111wn ·· appro' 1ng oflilL' IO""l'f\ on <>nl' hand and oppm1ng innca\1:\ 1n Jl'l traffil at John Wa} nc o\1rport on 1h1: other "ihe \a1cl offices feed the need for ad· d1t1onal air traffic ·1 hate ltnl''>, I hat.: lrov.d\ .. -.a1<l John Gardner a fornwr < o\td \lfes.t cllll\l'>l who no"' ll'l'\ 1n "cv.port Heath "I \alut· lhl' l.stk of lr<1""<11ng and the cond11ton'> that hrought ll'l<i'>I ot U'> here .. But Barbara Young a ont.•t1me If\ 1m· Co liit ""ho !11ught \Utlt.''>'- fulh for ;1 dt't llJ'>l' 1n lca't pa} mcnt\ th.it hundrnl\ 111 rc\ldento; had to ma kt' to the de' clopment firm. 'oiled 'u ppurl tor t hc plan "~1: '1h11uld Ix· proud of v.here V.l' Ii H' " 'hl \,Ill.I rh11ugh tht II" 1ne Co ha<, not .1nn11unled .111mctahk for1:xpand1ng the 1l'n1n Pn·.,1clcntJom "Jc1hen \,1111 11 v.111 Ix pha\ed oH·r '>nnal Sister on mission to free hostages .\THEN"> < ireele (A PJ -Thl' 'itster of Tern Antler">n l h1ef Middle Ea\t rnrrewondent tor The Associated PrC\'i arrived 111 ..\then\ today in a bid to win treedom tor her brolh!'r and otht.'r \merKan\ htld hostage an Lehanon Peggy ~a)' told reporter\ at \then' Airport upon her arn.,.al from "it·"" York that '>he< amt· to< 1n·ecc "to tw hnefed on the ho~tage '>1tua1111n· b) Margaret Papandrcou. wife ol < 1ret•k Premier A.ndrca'i Pap<tndreou Bc'>1de<i the 3X·vear-old l\ndl'f\on. the other Amen(ans kidnapped 1n LI:banon arc William Bu<.:kle; 58. a U.S. l:mbassy pollt1cal ofli ccr: the Rev Martin Lawrence Jcncn. SI director of< athollc Relict '>er v1ce'> 1n Lebanon former Huntington Beach resident David Jacobsen. 'i4. adm1n· 1strator of the .<\mencan l 'n1ver\ll) Ho\pttal and Thomas Sutherland 55 acting Dean of Agnculturc a1 thl' American I lnivcrs1ty of Beirut • 'Tm appealing to the captor\ that commun1cat1on be allowed w11h their homes and ramalie'> I have letter<; f11r Terry and the other hm1age.," Mr\ Say !>aid. showing J \heaf o l cnvelopec; Mrs Papandreuu who t'\ .\mcn- can-born. d1scuo;sed the ho'\tage' IJ\I week at a meeting 1n Damasrn\ with ~ynan President I l:1fc1 A\sad \he ~~,.A~~E Da,ily Pilai MAIN OFFICE :llO Wett Ray C,1 t .•.1• *-"" ' '4 Ma· "'°'"' &, "~ 4tt1 v .. ,_. .t °"'' 11 was in fJama\1 U'> "'I th a C1rrek en' delegation "\,fr\ PJpandre<iu I\ the fir't go,ernment pt>r\On lo tn ' ol\<e hn'>dl on a humanitarian ha\1\ \he called me and In\ !led mt· to ( 1rt·ete fur a hncf1ng ·· \lf r' \a\ \a1d T hc.· 4 ~ ear·old Mr!> \a\ from Hc1ta\1.t "'i ..aid she had no plam 111 tra\el 111 I t·ha non and ""uultl lake \.1rs PapanJreou'\ av1ce on further SUMNER ... From Al \umnn annountl't..l h1'i llln[t \h111 wntc rn campaign to \top 11(/fl· mann 'nom1nat1on ·< >n I kt t1on Da\ unotfil 1al n·ttirn' ga \l' 1 he 'u tory 10 Sumner l!u1 lollow1ng tahulat1on of 111J1u.tl return\ Imm the d1s1no' 111'1 rrt.'t In( I\ H1ifTmann Wa'idt:Llaml the· w1nnc1 ">umnt.•r il\ked tor cl re1..uunt ant.J paid \ 5<.>'J per da\ "'er 16 da)' 111 hand counting When wmplctr<l FrnJ.i, \umnrr Jg;11n beLamc thr v. inner R<'l.sll'\r hi'> lh:lllc·ngc wa\ 'iUtlC'\'> tul th1· l•)Unh will repay \umner th<· $8 l)()IJ ui'>t tJ( the rcUJunt moq·, 1n hn etlurt') to re<;l Ul' hrr hrnlha v.hu was kidnapped in lk11u1 11n \Ian h 16 1985 'Tm hoping to get !>Orne gu1d,1mc I fr<irn ht:r on the best wa) of dell\ t'n ng tht'\t' letters." she c;a1d '-f r\ \a) planned to meet w11h Mr\. Pa11andrc11u this nen1ng. atcom· panted h\. < harles L<.'v.1'>. ch1d of the .\P\ \\J\hington hureau Correction \ l \Car-old Hunungton llarhuur man who was arrcc;1cd on '>U\p1t 1on of murder 1n the shotgun dt·ath of a I O\ l\ngcln ""oman wa' 1morrectl) identified b) the I >a1h P1lot in Monda> afternoon's and I uc\da\. morning\ ed1t1on\ fhe correct naml· of tht· \U\pt.'< t v.ho t\ being hrlcl 1n fluntington Ht·ac:h cit) 1a1l v.1th11ut hall "Rnlph N Bruno, poltct• '>atd fhe "1ct1m ""ho wa\ found dead \unda\ on tht· k11rhcn floor when l)Ollll' arnved at Bruno·, fl'\ILknn· at 11,s~2 Tiburon Platt' wa\ identified a\ L1uaane Pcaral loll, 47 ofLo!> ·\ngtlL'\ Reportt·dl~ I ull wd"> Hruno\ 11 H·• n hou'!t'kecpcr fh1· Dail~ Pilot regrct<. the err11r Delly Piiot Dell very I• QuerentMd C.llile<I lat 642 ~78 l)u9or "' & .O••rv I 6A1 "11 ' Justcall 642-6086 M ..-.'141 f ,,.y It y ; JO ot ha..-• fc>.ff f)4~ o.., 11 )fJ() .~ • t•' lf• If ,, COOY''V'°'' '~~, Or• tJ# r c''"' P ;b'!M '"<f r::,..,,,..., .• , , ,, ,,.... "°"..., .-.,.tr•f\Of11 r1 tr,, • na~'ft' r """•" • m.nta ,......, I'\ ma, o. ~"0-lv(111tfl ""tt> "1 te:...,..,, c • '"....,,,.. of CoPYf!QI 1 ..,,. ttt W.CW"d tl•\lli J1ott•1Jf" c "' J •' rt'" V,.\. tUPS , ._. AOtJ f;o11;r'.1 f r1 1 •''~ I' " Oy ...... '1 00 """' .... VOL. 79, NO. 198 What do you like about the Daily Pilot? What don't you ltkc'l Call the number above and your message will be recorded, transcnbed and de· livered to the appropnate editor The same 24-hour answenng scrv1c:~ ma y be u~d to record letten to the editor on any topic. Contnbutors to our Letters column must include their name and telephone number for venficat1on fell~ U!l Whll t 's on your mand •"() y?-JI '•l(•y w,.1 ~ , ... .,~ ••' ,, S•~ • • .,, IJAy t ; JU ,. l)t ~. ,.. , ' f'ft~ '•"' "[_~i., •r .t ! r I rt' W r • .,.....,. •·J Clrculetton Telephone• ..... , 1'1 II" uu I, .... , ..,~ Summer showers to blow away Tht Fortea11/for 8 p.m. EDT. Wed, J-..Jy 1e U.S. Tempe .. Le Ok*'°'"9 Clly T1 13 OmeN ti • Ori.ndo 80 ....... ,...,.,.... 17 47 l'Nletll• :: ~~ =:=r ...... 115 75 Porti.nd.O<e 111 70PY~ 13 70 Rllllllgll : ~ :::'Clly 74 "~ 113 r.2 St LOUle .. ,. t7 71 112 73 ti 70 116 15 71 .. 13 .. .. S6 71 IO .. " " se 112 S4 l- M IO Sell LAl!e City u • 99\ Anlonoo 117 12 S-UMI .. 75 13 72 t6 81 115 711 81 S3 113 74 711 ... 70 15 112 74 80 71 lie 75 115 7t lM 72 113 73 ,. 117 Calif. Temps 91 67 Sht•wepcw1 71 A SCM*-114 98 Syr-71 17 TMIP9-8t PtraOQ 12 70 Topeka 116 73 T-12 68 Tulle IM 116 w-.gton,O c &4 70 W~le 80 13 Wtll<-Berre 71 53 87 611 72 .. .. 52 83 83 .. 12 77 61 111 49 111 48 llO 7S 91 7S 13 70 M n 91 12 60 ~ 119 7S 103 83 Ill 71 87 68 116 711 81 711 f7 59 IO IO t2 71 93 71 M SS 97 711 Smog Report POllVtlll'll etenclaf'O WWM• 11*1 I>-100 good 100-200 -llV lor -ttw people X>G-300 unhMltnful tor alt 300-500 llUerciou. F'wtt ftoute IS lodey 1 I* l«..,..t _,., • previout <l•r••t1-1* s..i 9Mctl 10 ~"'''" Blvd 50-60 •Nine. s~ v .. ...,. 50-83 Lavun• e..cn •2 (for-1 Loa ~ Alroon 42-25 Extended Tides TOOAY 4 43pm ~·' 1207 Lm II 13a m 103'a.m 5;3&p.m II 41 ., to 5.4 011 3.1 22 u Sun NII lodll)' &t 8 05 p,11\.. ,._ WeClneeday at 5 63 I m. end -liOlll' al 1104 pm Moon r-today IJI 2 18 Pl'l'I ..... WeCl....0.y 81 12 31 Lm an<I l'- egeln IJI 3 27 p m. 29 injuries reported Tass notes f S D . g k Nixon vlslt rom an le 0 qua e MOSCOW (AP) -The offi cial news agenC)' Tass mentioned the visit of former President Richard M. N1:0.on for the;. first time today. reporting only that he v1s1 ted the USA and Canada Institute and addressed its staff \AN DIEGO (A P) -Not1ccahle rumbhnghas subsided from the worst recorded earthquake in San Diego County history, but authonlle'l ~Y the m1n1mal damage from the temblor and 1t~ after!>hock~ will t'Onttnue to mount A'i of Monda} evening, the coun· I~ ... Office of Disaster Preparedness reported 29 inJunes. one of them \enous from lhe moderate quake ')unda) morning that measured 5.3 un the Richter Scale. The quake was centered 1n the Pactfit Ocean off Solana Beach in northern San Diego County but was frlt along 150 miles of Cahfom1a Loasthne from 5an Diego to Oxnard ilnd as far east as Yuma. Anz .. 160 mile\ from San Diego .\ftcr 16 aftero;hocks measunng 3.0 11r h1gha on the Richter Scale, \l'1~m1c al't1v1t\ 1n the area fell mu(h lov..er \el\mofog1st Kate Hutton of the California lnsrnute of Tech- noloe~ 1n Pa~dena said Monday evening .. It's slowing down s1gn1ficantly," she said. Of the 29 reported lllJUne\. only 86- }ear-old Anthony P < 1ma was hospi· tahLed Monda). Cima wa'i buried for 12 hours Sunda) heneath ton$ of books that toppled un him 1n his room at a downtown San Diego res1dent1al hotel He v.as listed in senous but stable cond1t1on. Steve Danon. an operations offil'er at the d1sa!>ter pn:paredness center said propcrt~ damage from the qua~e was estimated at$ 720.0<JO "These are stall JUSI real ruugh estimates." Danon \aid A week ago. a quake that s1rud<. 12 miles north""est of Palm \pnng., measured 5 4 on the Ktlhter ~all'. cau\1ng an es11 matct..l $'i "5 m1ll1on damage and lnJUnng 40 people Nncon's spokesman, John Taylor. said 11 had been agreed with the ~ov1e1s that they would report no de1ails of an}' meetings N1.xon holds on what has been dcscnbcd as a private, fact.finding tnp to Moscow. Nixon arrived in Moscow Saturday fur a six-day v1s1t. Nixon also spent 11h hours Tuesday d1scuss1ni Sov1et-Amencan relations with President Andrei A. G romyko an the Kremlin Tuesday, Taylor said. Taylor said he could give no details of the meeting. which he said was a one-on·one conversation wi th only two tran~lators present ""on met for about 15 minutes w11h Georgi A <\rbatov, a top Kremlin adviser. E! Sew up big savings. You can label yourself lucky with savin of up to 70% on our elegant suits, s~rt coats, accessories and sportswetr. or.,. COMI OMV N.Ornt ......... .. Fairview dire~tor appeals di The Newport.COii. Mae YMCA is offeriq a drop.an P!OIJ'lm called .. Summer HaaY. Dtyt .. for children from 7 to 14' ycan 'fhe daily pr°"'m PtOVldes 11uperviaed tnvironmcnt for fun and 1k1U development. , ~ variety of act1Yitiea arc planned each wttk ln a~d1t1on to one or two trips to a perk.. beach or roller nnk. The. cost of the program is based on membertrup 1i.1us. The pr~ houl"I arc 10 a.m to 2 p.m. with'• recrntaon swim acbeduled afterward. Call David Steinh.au1 or Ken McCartney at the Y at M2-9990 for addtuonal information. Confidence .emJ.nar •et A seminar entitled "Professional Self-Pack· aaina" for people who want to prOJect credibility and eelf-confidencc will be offered July 23 at Coastline Communuy Collc&e's Costa Mesa Center 2990 Mesa Verde Drive East. ' Topics will include dressing for success comm~nicating effectively, business etiquette and professional male-female relatio nships. The rcai .. trat1on fee 1s S 18 and those interested shouJd call 241-6186 for further information. Medlcatlon lecture slated The ln temauonal Meditation Society wall sponsor a free introductory lecture on transcen- dental meditation July 23 at the Newport Center Public Library, located at 8S6 San Clemente Dnve m Fashion Island. The session is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. Call 720--0663 for more mformat1on. Toastmasters relocating The Podium Pros Toastmasters Club of Fountain Valley have moved their meeting place to the Pacific Mutual Plaza Building at 17360 Brookhurst St., club president Dr. Michael Valen- tine has announced. The cl ub meets twice monthly on the first and Thursday at 7: 1 S p.m. and new members will be welcomed et the July 24 meeting. C'all Frank Mannino at 962-9743 orC'hris Bacon at 841-2621 for more info rma11on IJ 0 , JltANSTl'E AVENT ........ Cols! $ •111 A b~t1111'1na idm1n1strator at the Fairview Ocvc&opmenw Center hat filed an appeal over beina tired la t wee Nanette Ocrth. dittctor of admini .. trativc 1emcea. was fired last •eek for aJlcdaedly u1in1 11atc employees to do rcmodtliaa work at Oerth·a residence. Gerth was placed on admiru1tt1tive leave in May, pendina an ioveaoption, and then fired Tbunday for allcdaedly usina hospital t'Ct10nnel to work on her home on state time. Chief o( Plut Opetationt Victof Bje.la .. Jae WU dilciplined aad P6icie_d Oft a 6(ktay unpaid lave beclute OW iacidciits oc- curred with hit knowleds. A aix•~r cmplo>'ff, Bjc~ will 6e aJ.lowcd to return to Work Aut. 23. d Hal Briu, the "ntcr'a ptnonnd directot. ~. a 22·yea.t veteran of the a.uite h06pi\al syflem, wu cha~ in a eevcn· l)lle documeftl fiJod With the SCate Pcnoanel eo.td m Loi A~ he had been employed at Fa.l'VJCW, a state hospital for die mentalJy mattled. for nine yean u ha thifd..raokina official. Acoatd.ina &o the advme Klaoa doCu· mcnt, Gen.h broutht 1n 1 F:aitview el«triciu to rq:1a1i tier JUICbfi atove. a bay window and ou.er home wirina in J uJy la1t year and she llted a Fairview atthitect on lllte ume to dnw up a noor Plan of~ rcsidmcc for rcmoddina purpocs earlier thi_!yr.ar. The document also IUtes lh11 Oenh used a state vehidc lO commute lO we>B and 11.0red IOmo of her pmona.J furniture It bet workplace. Oertb '1atte>rney1 Heney Lewin of Lewin and Levin in Torrance, said 1be bu OCTCto ask for freeway tax vote BJ USA MA.BONEY CM .. ...., ........ Oran1e County ~dents may be asked to vote on a uansponation Wt m~ i.D November -the ICCOOd to just over two yean. The Oranie County Tnm'J)OfUtion Commission. 1uthon of the ill-C.lted Proposition A, will press for a ballot meuurc to allow the formation of' a countywide freeway authority that would be financed throu&h Wl increments, much like a redevelopment qcncy. Unlike the failed Proposition A, which sou&ht to raise SS.4 billion tbrouah a 1 percent Ulcrease in the county aaln iu OD' the June, 1984 ballot, the freeway authori ty would not raite toes. Youn& ml ton enjoy the rldea at Wild Rl-.en ln La&una Billa. And money collected wouJd not be used to finance new freeway&, but to im~e and ritaintain exi1tin1 oncs1 comnussion spokesman Tom Fortune II.id. Commim on attorney Clayton Parker said ~ thought the measure could be implemented by a majority of OtaQlle County voters without st.ate leaislation. CHOC plans parties Ch1ldrens Hospital of Orange County and Chief Auto Parts arc organ121ng binhday celebrations for their patients The last Tuesday of each month will be the pany date fo r CHOC-s children who share the same birthday month WILD RIVERS OPENS IN ORANGE COUNTY ee• The auto parts store, a subs1d1ary of Southland C'orporauon. 1<; donating pnzes. snacks and d nnks for the panic~. Hlstory lecture announced Natural history m Orange County wi ll be examined Jul) 24 at a lecture sponsored by the Buena Park Library D1stnct tn its audllonum, 71 SO La Pal ma Ave. Sally Scott will pre~nt a program on "Rocks. From Al man-made hill called Wild Rivers Moun- tain. But across the 20-acre park 1s an area called Explorers' Island where the slides and ndes are downscaled fo r the younger set. The height limit o n slides at Explorers' Island 1s 44 tnches. Herc, parents can sun themselves while their youngsters splash in ponds or noat on inner tubes along a circular nver whose I mph current 1s propelled by underwater Jets. More than 40 water ndes and attractions are available at Wild Rivers. says Steve Luckenbach, the park's marketing direc- tor "Each ride has 1ts own personality," he said. "And almost all the slides have one inch of padding. so they're smooth, fast and safe." Wild Rivers replaced Lion Coun try Safari which closed in late 1984 after 15 }'cars. The park 1s owned by a limited partnership and leases the property from Lion Country on land owned by the Irvine Co. That arrangement led to delays last month 1n opening the park as landowners demanded that addttionaJ insurance cov- erage be carried for the park, but that has been resolved Even so, safety 1s a pnme concern of operators. In add1t1on to the padd.ng on the seamless fiberglass slides, the park has htred numerous employees to guide v1s- 1tors up the stairs and down the slides. making sure the previous rider 1s well out of the pool at the bottom before the nex t one ts sent down from the top. "Sometimes 11 seems like you have to wait too long, but It's worth it," said Chns Hord, 18, of Tustin ··Maybe 1hey .5hould make it even bigger." Commission Executive Oi.rcctor Sia.ft Oftelie set $2S milhon a y~r as the -1 of the ~posed authority. That would be m addition to state and federal biahway aid the county alrcad y reoci ves. Outaoma commission Chairman James Roosevelt unveiled the freeway financina plan beforc bandina the p vel to Harri.ea Wieder on Monday. Dunng his post-Propos1t1on A tenure, Roosevelt led the way ID seek.Ina m. novat1ve methods of payin& for transpor- tation improvements. Bones and< ogstones'' at the 7 p m event, ut1lmng natural artifacts along with maps and diagrams Adults, young adults and supervised children are welcome to attend the free program An Invitation Zschau bids for support of county Republicans Blkewlnner sets record By PAUL ARCHIPLEY Of !MO..,,... ..... He even persuaded the comm1111on to explore the poht1cally touchy possibility of a constitutional amendment to siphon automotive sales taxes from the 1tate'1 general fund into tnnsportauon coffers. Fa1hng to find alhes for that, Rooeevelt said Monday that commi ionen .. should taJlor our approach more for our county." Skepticism about the need for three new freeways and a rapid rail S)'1tem that would be paid for with the penny tu and an unwdli~pess to pay hiJher taxes appeared to contnbute to its defeat. Att.ntion orgoni1otion pre11dents and s.cretories1 We wont to help make your upcoming evenn, mfffino•, Mmlnort ond fundroh•n wccfttfvl. Send brief announcements incklding tllM, plocf, coif (if ony) ond a phone number for odditlonol information tor 8ullehn Boord, Doily Pilot, P.O 8oic 1560, Cotto M.KJ, 92626. By PAUL ARCHIPLEV OflMO.-,ll'tletaWlt Vowing to seize the political center from Alan Cranston "' his quest for the U.S Senate Congressman Ed Zschau courted Orange County Republicans Monday. A two-term congressman considered a moderate. Zschau ma) feel he'll have to work particularly hard 1n Orange County where S5 percent of the voters favored conservative Bruce Herschensohn 1n the June pnmary. .\ cross<ountry b1c:rcl1st shattered the world record Monda> when he rode from Huntington Beach to Atlantic City in eight da>s nine hours and 47 m inutes. Pete Pcnseyres of Fallbrook crossed the finish hnc at the Golden Nugget Hotel at 6 47 PDT said race spokeswoman Kathleen Burke Roosevelt's bnunchlld harbors none of those ltabthtics, but it could be attacked by agenCles that don't want to Jive up tu money He said he was pleased. however. b}' his 'iecond-place ~how1ng and 22 percent of the vote To succeed 1n November, the com- m1ss1on wtll have to work toward a countywtde "consensus that transpor- tation 1s a top pnority," Fortune said. ll9P0rta of your club or orgonl1otlon's octivitift -wch ot commvnrty Mrvice proj«ts or election of officen -, should be directed to ft!. community news editor ot the KJme oddreu Non-retvmoble block and white photogroptu ore -lcome Zschau mingled with ~upporters dunng a fund-raiser at the Santa Ana Country Club in Costa Mesa and picked up a SS,000 check from theconscrva11ve Lincoln C'lub The Silicon Valley entrepreneur vowed he would <>uccecd where Republican predecessors failed I'» retaining Re- publican votes and winning O\er indepen- dents The 46-)ear-old m1ll1ona1re also was buo)ed b> a show of support from the party. including an elecuon night endorse- ment by Herschensohn and last week's endorsemrnt 1n ~anamcnto b> Vice President George Bush The prc,1ous record ol nine da)S, two hours and ~" minutes was set tn I 98S b} Jon Boyer who did commentary for ABC Sports coverage of th1~ year's race Pense)rcs took the lead from fa.,.ontc Mike Secrest on the second da) of the 3, 107-milc "Race Across AMerica" and held 1t the rest of the way Under t.aJt increment financin&. a aov· emment aaency identifies an area ID need of revitalization then sets up an agency to oversee a redevelopment plan. Planned improvements are usuaJly paid for through the Y le of bonds, which are repaid through tax increments. Tuesday, July 16 • 7 30 p. m .. Irvine Unified Sc boo I District Board of Education. Adm1n1stra11on Center, SOSO Barranca Pk y "In the past, .\Ian ( ranston has gotten 20 percent to 30 percent oft he Republican \.Ole," Zschau said. "Thi\ time he won't "We're going 10 se11e the poht1cal center with strong Republican 'iuppon as well as independent suppon An adept fund raiser. 7'ilhau rose from obscunty 1n the primal) with a well- crafted. SJ million media campaign He said he e:itpett' to spend as much as SI 0 million 1n the ran~ againo;t ( ranston. a skilled fund raiser 1n his ov.n right Sometimes at odds with President Rea~n·~ poltc1e~ /schau praised the president'\ emphasis on tree enterpn~ with ~e>vernment \upport Sttrest dropped out Saturday after hitting a pothole and fallmR off his bike In second place Mondav night was Lon Haldeman of llhno1~ who ·was:! 851 mile\ into thr race Increments are created by establishina a base }'Car for property ta.xes that freezes tu income to cities. school districts, wateT d1s1ncts and othu special agencies at the base year level PoucE Loe "We have a message that appeal~ acros<; the poht1cal spectrum. and to yo ung and old. of hope. of opportun1l\, of a future " Teen-age driver arrested (_'8 crash kills passenger /\ A 20-ycar-old M1ss1on Viejo man susp1c1on offelony manslaughter and ping over and pinnmg him undcr- was killed early today when he was felony drunken drivmg., Daily said. neath, Daily said. h rown fr~m a car and was ~rushed Accordina to police, the driver was The three other passen1ers-three when it tipped over on him. the spinninacircles m his car about 1 a m 17-year-olds, includina Bcssc's sister H1gh~y Patrol reported. on the basebell field at Fred Newhart -were weanng seat belts and were David M. Besse died of head D I inJunes at the scene of the accident, Elemen~ry School, La Pill Road n~ar not 1nJured, a1 y said. . said ('HP spokesman Ken Daily. Maraucnte Parkway, M1ss1on V1eJO The dnver. who complained of The dnverofthe vehicle a 17-year· When he attempted to dnve off the back mJunes, was lre.l&ted at UC'I old M1ss1on VieJO resident. was field onto a raised parkina lot, the car Medical Center before bema trans- arrested follQ.Viina -'.he acc1dcn1 on turned sharply, throwina Besse, tip-fcrrcd to Juve nile Hall. i..,una Beach Officcn 1dv1std 1n unclothrd female bcachacxr Monday 11 Brook' <itrcct Be•ch that nude sunba1hin1 was nol allov.cd %e complied with the request to cover up • • • The ownet of 1 red I ~II I Yamaha motorcyde reported 11 \lolcn Monday on Park. Avenue • • • About $ lJ was taken from • pur~ at Lagu na 8e1u:h H11h School. tht' m um told pc>ltct" Mondn I • • Vandall,m 10 thrtt city park1na mete~ cau~d an e,11matl'd SSOO damaac The damaacd mr1ert were d18Covc~d Monday along thC' I 200 block of North Cont H1&}1W1) COllta Mna ~ m•n wu arrC'~ted for shopltft1na four pairs ol L.t.,1·s Jeans and 11 '~•t \h1n valul'd at $93 q5 from th<" \e.trt Dcp1U'\• ment Stolt in lht South < oast Plua Sund•) at about ~ p.m . . ' A woman was cauiht sw1tch1na pn« 1a1• on cloth1n111 thr Nordstrom Oepan- men1 ~torr 1n thr ~uth C oatt Plan "round nnnn Mnndav • • • A S4SO Sony cassette stereo wa~ 11olen from 1 Nissan pickup truck 11 the Allas Chrysler Plymouth dealership at 2929 Harbor Blvd A !Tar, shdina aJus window had bttn broken into ••• A pohce helicopter was used to track 1 moto~yd1st who tncd 10 evade poltce The man wa' pu lled over for pauina stopped Qt'I on the nahl on the Costa Mesa Fruwa~ near Meu Dnve. Unahlr 10 produce • dnvcr'a ltccntc, he sped away while lhc officer was c111ng •nother Cf"h'1 After a chase at ptt<h es11m11ed up to 80 mph, ht' was amucd for dnv1ns with a 5uspcndcd hccn11e. rttklc•" dr1vin1 and 1ryin1 to evade a Poh«' officu Newport Beach Someone stoic a blur \IC'CI 1tvol vC'r valurd at $250 aftt"r entenna a homt in thC' 2200 hlock of Windward 1hrouah an unlocked bad door ••• Vandal\ 'prayl'd corro~1vc m•lennl on a ( hcvrolet C•mero al Newport C entrr causing S 1.cnl 1n damait• • • • Thlt\<e1 stolr • tC'lc ... mon \C'I velurd Ill SHO •fter rntt'nna • homr throuah 1n unll">fkrd w1nJow 1n the 2hl10 hlodr. nf\An ' I Joaquin Hills Road • • • BuraJa~ stole l&Sh ind JC'Well) worth S325 after ·pry1na open 11 hv1na room windov. 1n the 2200 block of Windward Fountain Valley Th11:ves enlert'd a home in lh<' !.)(JOO bloc:k of La < olon1a while owncl"' wert awa)' on a Wt'ekend tnp and 'tole SI l>MJ 1n Jt'Welry • • • ~meont" ,tole a WAllC'I cont11nm1 S 111 from lht' 1opoftht' TV \C'I in •n apartment 1n 1he 17000 hlock of San Mateo • • • Buralal"' t•au~d exten<11vr dlm•lf,C' to a truck wh1IC' \ttahna n h1t·)'c:lt from the trunk at < oco'' rt"\l1uran1. 17 71 Brook hunt .\houl S 700 dam e wn dont to the trunk 1n 1hr thel) of lhe SWI IK· spn'(I h1cyde • • • T v.o Uuntngton Bt'arh 1t'11dent\ lrn tht'tr .._raen11n1 f'l"po"' 11 McOonald' I IN62 Rmokhunt Wht"n lhC'~ rr1umcd tht'Y couldn t finJ lh<'m lmne t hC' pink \hp tu a I "7 ~ \1< 1 pukrJ on lht" ~~00 hlrl\k ol M1chC'l\t1n l>tl\t ,,., \lt11t"n More than 100 m1lrs behind him ...,a, Matt Beerer ol Hun11ng1on Be~ch An ) .,.aluallon o •er the base amount is channeled to the re(evelopment agency, 10 this case. the frcew 1y authonty. . . . \ "'hllc !•Pl/ \1azda parkrd on lhe I 'KOO hlo<k nt C 11llc1tC' .\ \C'nue. wa' \lnlrn and thrn rcrOH'red a \hon ttme later • • • \ whll(' J 411 \ f I)\ Oii ( t"ltU WI\ \lolcn tr om thr 17800 hloc:k of C 1tlle1tr '-\' rnue . . . •\ red b1c~c It• v.a\ stolt"n from a gara&e on 'iandp1pc-r .... \llmeonr \tole a S~"') la"-nmov.er Imm an unloc:kcd g.iragc on P1tr~e • • • \ rrd 10·\f)C.'Cd RoHC' Union bu:ycle "-3\ \IOlen Imm' homt• nn i\shbrook \SI 70lOP'< ma:h~n; "'a' \tolen from a hu\lnrss on th<' I 77110 hhxk of Mitchell • • • '\ \IC'rco mirror\ and window~ were i.llllt'n from .1 tar parked on thC' I 77tXl hloc l of ~h Park Bouk,ard . . . \ S!l l7 St. lilmper \hell "'a\ 'tolen from .i hus1ne\~ on 1 raH'I l~nd Wa\ . . . . T hrce ca\<'\ ol hccr a table and a h1nck \\Crt' "olen from thC' pa110 of a homr on Thunder Run • • • .\bout $500 in dr. ""all and S1 50wonh of tools v.e~ stolen trom 1 homr on th<' Q700 block ot t ult"do Wa\ HuntiJlCton Beach A muscular man behc.,ed 111 he 1n h1\ )Os t'scapcd with about S \0 from lhc ro1oma1 at 'iQU End1naer aftt'r ind1ra1mp thll he had a &un tn I paper bag • • • Thieves \lolr pohcr hld&e\ and pttchl'~ a S2SO m1crow1ve oven and a tile l·ab1ne1 from the communll) ~r\l\e\ h111ldm& at C1olden We~I C ollqt' • • • Buralar\ \tole an IRM '' J)("v.rt1<'r and Marine faces prison for bomber joy riding By Ute A11odated Pren ..\ \.1annl' mcchan1r an u\Cd ol taking a lO-m1nute 10} ndc in an SIR m1 lhon hombt-r face\ m1htary lharacs that (OU Id <;end him to pn\On for lour :rea~ stud Fl foro Mann~< orpc, .\1r Stauon official\ Lance Cpl floward .\ Fo01e Jr facci. live cha~e'i including d1!.0bcy- mg rqulat10M and willful damaal' of government propert}. Sat C ind> Kimball said Monday C"haraes of htl7ard1na " vcc.'lt'l b) 0)101 WtthOUt proper lrt1ntnJ and rnncem for the aircraft'' rnnd1t1on. wrongful ppropnatmn of govern- ment a1n:rt1fl and unlawful entn Rlr,o "('r( lilc-d ap1nc,t him \lthouah hc-" a rcuird·htilJ1na o' 1h,1n ~atlplane pilot, f note " assigned a\ a flight mnhantl at the ha~ and 1s not authon1ed to th m1htal) am raft He 1'\ accu~ of hopp1 n~ a hoard .in .\ 4M Skyhawk bomber h(forr dawn Jul) 4 and taking 11 for J '>Ptn Otlinal\ \ftld f 001<' flew thr plant' ahout ~O mile\ .lnd hunt'\.! the ha~ fivt' time\ hcltirr retum1n1t \J\l"rh· Foote had hope-J to he allt'PINI into the Manne ( li~· fnhc,t('J < umm1c,'l1onina Program w11h thr goal of JOlf\& to flight o;chool Rut 1'c't 4U't nl an aenal embohc,m he \ulkrcd dunng a ihdrr fhPlt 11 42 ~00 f~t. h(' tound out ht' prohahl> wnuldn th( aneptl-d 1111 tl1ah1 '\(hoot. nlfo 1al\ ha' e '41 td I he einhc1h'm I\ \lm1hu tn thr ht·ntl' \uflcred h\ "" r.r' 1v.1> cakul1tors \llued 11 S900 from the .-ahl(' T'v lOmpln). 7462 Talbert Ave. • • • l nknnwn ,uspccts entered 1 vacant homr that wa\ being remodeled in the 600 hlod. ofQ1h \t~t and \lcpt 1n the bed and 3IC' food • • • PuN.'s ot lwo emplo}'ccs i nd store drpo\1ts wrrr \tolcn from the rear of Pa\lrssShocs ll!5QS Beach Blvd Thieves 101 a"'•' "'llh SJQ 5 currcn() $256 m lhecks and Sl4 from thc purses Six held in Balboa riot \n I R·\car-old Cluno resident and live JV'C'ntle'i were arrestw rarly toda\ followed an altcrcat1on on tbe Balboa Pemnsula that was punctu- ated w11h gunfire Newport Beach poltle reported "1oho<h wa\ 1nJurro in the melec at 14th ~trrt't and 'West Oceanfront c"cn thouah ~veral rounds wcrc tired dunn@ the 3·44 a m fight. poltC'e ..atd lc\Stf Rc(laldu 18 and fivr male JU\.COtlc'i Wt'H' arrc<>ted Bl the tcent and Ht lea-;t 1wn mher men we~ t>t1na ~lUJht for 411C'\t1onma today poltor \aid ~~ldo wa\ held on susp1con of \Ontnbu11na 111 th<" dt"hq uenc-y of a minor Pollc1.: 'Ml1d the amup, compn~ of Ch mo and Pomona re\tdenu. trn vekd to Newport flca<'h and f<>f unkttown reason\ b«amc involved 1n a fi&ht One prnon was du~ lWl"f th<" hl"ad wuh a pt pr and anotti. WI.I!> found 1n po \ton of a 'tolen h1t:yclc Officer. \atd the, have )Ct to ton out the di turbant'C or p1npo1n1 a mo11vc ' I A• • Orange Coat DAILY PILOT I T~ay. Jutt 15. 1988 Cranston warns of 'Vietnam rerun' in Nicaragua fight WASHINGTON (AP) -Sen. ~Ian Cranston, 0-Cahf., responding to reports the admm1strat1on plans to resume du'Cct military and political control over anu-govcrnment rebel~ in Nicaragua, caJled on Congress to 1nvcsuptc the Adm1n1s1rat1on'" rcla· tionship with the U S -backed 1n- suriency. "This could be a rerun of Viet- nam." Cranston told a news con- ference. "First Amencan money. then Amcncan advisers, Ulen Amcn- can con1rol of the war. !hen American troops." Cranston's call came in 1he wake of press rcpons that the adm1n1strauon will take over respons1b1ht) for managing the m11ttary operation!> of !he Contra rebels fighting N 1caragua According to the repom, 1he CIA wi ll resume direct day-to-day super- v1s1on of the rcblcls. and the State Department will set overall policy U.S. m1htary personnel also will be playing a more active role in the guemlla campaign to ovenhrow the lefii sl Nicaraguan government. The House approved SI 00 m1lhon 1n mostly military aid to the Contras last month. The rebel aid. attached to a military construction appropna- uons bill, still need!> approval by the Senate. where Sen. John Kerry. D- Mass. 1s expected to lead a filibuster against it. CBS News reported Monday night that despite a two-year ban on U.S. aid to the Contras. retired Air Force general Richard Secord. who 'till does work for the Pentagon. purchased shon takeoff and landmg planes for the N 1cara~uan rebels. CBS obtamed the registration form for one of the planes, dated July 26. 1984, signed by Secord. The planes. which can take off 1n &'i little as 125 feet. were purchased from Maule Air. of Moultne. Ga., accord- ing to CBS. The repon cited source!> close to the Contras as saymg fund for the purchase were provided by Saudi Arabia. Before retinng. Secord was the Pentagon's point man for the sale of Airborne Wammg and Con1rol Sys- tems planes. or A WA( <i. ao Saudi Arabia. at a ume when hl' \\Orkcd closcl) with Manne LI < ol. Oh,er North, a deputy director for poltt1cal- m ilttaf) a.ITairs on President Kt·aga n \ National Secunty Counnl The As!lociated Pre!.\ rcpont•<..I la\! month that during tht• two-H'Jr Congressional ban on U.S aid to tht· rebels. North u!ted outside 1ntcrmedt· anes to oHr~e the Contra war from his Wh11e Hou!.e oflkc ,.,~ Adm. Richard Truly (left), head of the •huttle program, and NASA admtn.ltrator Jamea C. Fletcher announced •pace angency cbangea. Budget outlook' getting wors~' Manion flap perils top court n ominees WA.SHIN(, TON IAP)-President Reagan'<, budgt·t director. vo1c1ng concern over wo~n1ng prOJe<.t1on<> ol government red 1nl... says the fiscal 1987 -;pending pli.111 Congress approved last month fail' to meet a mand<1tnl S 144 b11l1on delirn target That means monc~ bills passed h~ C ongrc\~ m<1' h<: ve toed even 1f the" are within the hm1t\ of the hudgct bluepnnt for the li-;cal vear beg1nn1ng Ckt I Rudgt·I Director Jame'i ( Miller Ill ..aid Monda~. ··Thc:-dcfint 'i1tuat1on. frank!). at th1-;. point. bJ,t'd 11n our latc'>t information and calculat1on<;. looh v.or.-.t·. n111 heller·· Miller told an IO\.lled group ofreponers In 198~ tht· go,ernment ran up a record deficit of $211 9 b11l1on 1 lw adm1n1~tra11on had been pred1ct1ng 1hat 1hc dclint lor llll' ~urrcnt fi\cal year 1986 would be ~202 l'I h1lhon "-11" \11lln ,,11d ··t nlc~' \Ometh1ng happen~. I l'\pn 1 1hc dCfil 11 111 ncred \212 b1ll1on and be 1n the nl'1ghho1hood ol \2211 h1ll1on · l 1kl'" l'>l' "till" .1t 1ual dt·fint we expenence for "87 ~"11 tx· .1 \Cr\ largl· num~r II breaks my heart."" Miller .1ddcd WASHINuTON (AP) -The JUdgesh1p nom10at1on of I nd1ana lawyer Da01el Manion has become so controversial 1t 1s threatening con- firmat1on votes on 1wo 5upreme Coun nominees -Wilham Rehn- quist as chief JUSttce and Antonin Scalia as an associate JUSt1ce Sen. Alan Cranston ~1d Monda} that Democrats may hold up vote\ on the two nom1na11ons. RED BOBBIN FRIENDLY FABRICS! 250 E. 17th Costa Mesa 646-1235 ~· 10-6 Mon-Sat l11 l>1· lw.11d .tlw111 1111 J't•,11 II' 11111 .11 111t,ll111 •I 1 111g '>l11lll1fl1111g l1111d11 If' .111,1111r111 -..11111g '1111w1li1111' i/1//,.1. 1 I \1111,lio\\lllg I 1~1 •111r I 1·111f1C:llt"I of I k11(1'il for e\.1111pl<· Our lll'rt'll l1111111rr11\1 :-i;t\111g.' ..... 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"Instead of saying we will fix things that the Rogers commission felt were wrong, we arc in the pos1t1on of!tllytng we are fixing things the Roger\ commission found wrong." NASA Administrator James C Fletcher told reporters Monday. He and Richard Truly, head of the shuttle program, held a news con- ference hours after Fletcher deli ~cred to the White House a report on actions NASA has taken since the Rogers comm1ss1on made nine maJor recommendations last month The report said space agency engt· ncers are workmg on a completely new design for the booster rockets which caused the Jan. 28 Challenger explosion, as a conllngency tn case no other approach 1s fo und su11ahle for the joint seals on the booster' "We arc going to take a look at designs that assume we can't use the existing base hardware." T ruh <,aid. while conceding a new de\1gn ~ould make it 1mposs1blc to meet a first quarter-1988 launch sch~~lc,. . "The rcas0n we are doing 1t 1s lbat •f we get into testing and we should h~vc a test failure that shows our dcs1an analysis was inadequate, we'd have~ head, start on an alternate approach, Truly said. "However, every~y that''> betn involved in. the red~s1an believes there 1s a design available with the present hardware." Fletcher ~1d the space agency bad re~ponded favorably to each of the recommendat1oos but said "there 1s one negative piece of news that came out after studying the problem tn some depth" He said the Jul) 1987 flight resump11on, which had bee~ NASA's plan when he became adm1n1strator two month!> ago. ··was a httle op- um1s11c 1n view of the extensive tests that have to be done on the solid rocket motors before we feel com- fortable flying again." The interim repon is expected to help the administrat1on decide what 10 do about building a replacement for Challenger The accident left the ~huttle fleet with only three vehicles and unable to launch satellites A replacement for Challenger and enhancing the shuttle spare pans 1n ventof) would cost $2.5 billion. Tanipering scare labeled hoax; suspect arrested By the Associated Press . Officials ..a) a tampering -.care in the M1tlwcst 1n..,olv1ng Jell·O likely was a hoa"< becau<,e the threatened hatrh "'as produced and d1stnbuted in 1984, and offic1aJs an Pennc;>l~an1a ha\l' charged a man 1n a tampcnng scare there. Norman Mark Allen. 21. of HoneM!alc, Pa . was arrested Monday and charged w11h knowing!) commun1ca11 ng fal~ 1nforma11on that a consumer product had been ta1ntl'd. said Wa ynl' Davis. FBI agent 1n charge in Philadelphia. Arraignment was ~hcdulcd 1oda}' Jcll-0 gelatin and instant pudding dry maxes were removed from a Waynt' County. Pa .. supermarket after the store received calls Fnda~ and Saturda) saying the product' were contaminated with cyani.dc llonc'idak· Police Chief Frank Rosier said. Drought grlps Southeastern U.S. Res1den1s of 1hree North< aroltna commun1t1es face Jail for fi ve-minute showers and ltm1t<t on v.alcr u<,e are '>preadtng as the Southrast battles a farm- threatening drought and t·1ght day<, of I ()().degree temperatures blamed for I 0 deaths Desp11e ~altered thunder-;torm\ Monda)' night in Tennessee and SouJh Carolina. forct J\tcro; held out no hope of relteftoda) from what 1n some areac; is 1hc "ors1dr11u1tht1n a Len tun and from record high 1cmpera1urec. Postal officlal 's sentenclng delayed WASlllNUTON -rhc ll.S. atlorney's ollice said 11>da) there will be a two-month delay in the sentencing of the former vice chairman of the U.S Postal Service Board of Governors so that he can supply add111onal details 1n a continuing cnm1nal investigation of the postal service. U S. D1Stric1 Judge George H. Revcrcomb postponed the 'icntencing of Peter Voe;~ on from July 24 to Sept. 22 at the request of U.S. Allorney Joseph d1Uenova The request was made "because we had not had c:-nough ume to 1nterv1ew Mr. Vos~ ... Clendon Lee. a spokesman for d1Genova. said 1n an interview Vos!. pleaded guilty May JO 1oexJ)Cnse account padding and accepting illegal pa) offs in connection with his efforts to steer a contract for mail-sorting equipment fO&MOU INIOUIATION: (>fMge COMt DAILY P9U>T n...,, NII 11, -* M Border tense in Mexican vote protest Sri Lanb rebellion claims 39 deatba Cll;JDAO JUAREZ, Me~tCO (AP) -Riot squads were mob1hud on both tides of the border and U.S. officlals blocked streets in El P&$0 TellU\ ~ members of Mexico's main oppC>llllon party vo~ more disrup- uons lo protest elect1ons lhey claim were fraudulent. About 10,000 supponen of the opposition National Acuon Party took over two Rio Grande bridges linkinaMel!.icowith the United States Monday ni&ht as soldiers canyina shields. tear-gas canisters and batons watched. The U.S. Border Patrol's JO.mem- ber riot squad was placed m down- town El Puo streets, out of · &bt of the bridaes, uid Gustavo de la '1ina, actina qent in cha.rae of the qency. The entin Border Patrol reaular staff of about 100 patrolmen also was mobiliztd "in anticipation of any possible mass entries,0 and blocked off au city streets leldin& to the brid&es, de la Vina told the El Paso Times. The demonstration broke up peacefully after about two hours, but leaders vowed more protests today, includina an attempt to block traffic for five minutes in Juarez and on the mljor intercity biJhway. The opposition party, known by its =.::-:--~-__..,:=:;.._;;::;;....;::==:::•,die Amildltil Pnu amaieur Japnc11 abonomer wat 4'804ed eodly • panath ICTOnym PAN, is seckina COLOMBO, Sri Lanka -At leas. l9 people were uyiq.NariyauHaabunoco,praidtetof'aheTolcwbi .. annulment of July 6 elections to killed in cluhes bttween Tamil rcbtlunchecurity forces. AJtronom;cal Alloclation, wu quoted in an interview choose aovernors and hundreds of t nd uenilla 'd M nda with the Japan Times as 11yiftf that _the C4lmOI l7l6 stateandlocalle,i1latorsin1iutate1. ~~m~ a ~nd dasc;~:,il :urJ·:.r:::, utellite, launched in March, Cbaftted ahitudt' June 21 PAN leaders claim the aovemina eoldiers were slain ~ rebels Mooday in an attack in the from I S6 miles to S.O mile$. aod bu bfOken ioto at lieut 11 lnst1tut1onal Revolutionary Party cu\etll district ofTnJ>COmalee. Oovernment 1t1tementt 21 pieces. ~~~. enaaacd an a massive election :i~~ ~~t ~~·~;~~re~~~ Jlo.t prate.ten eJJd boycott. Results released Monday showed Junius R. Jayewardene meu,.-~n with• Tamil delegation JOHANNESBURG -Sc::aneRd labor uareat and PRl, which hasn't lost a prciidential on bls proJ>91&ls ~o end the VJC?lence that~ taken more tchool boyc:otU penisted today foUowina the fint mus .A or aubernatorial election since its than 4,000 lives since the fiahnna broke out in July 1983. black protests under a month-old state of emeraency, but • 1929 found ing. swept nearly i;ll the SovJet utelllte "1t'fr'ftlode. / the tarae majority of stude~lt and wof'kerl were reported races. The only maJor PAN vtctory -r· back at their classes and JObl. The Labor Mon1tonn1 was in the maypr's race in the city of TOKYO -A Soviet reconnaissance satellite Group, an independentfaci-fiodinabody"saidli&niftcant Ensenada in the state of a.ja Cali-appean to have exploded and iu frqment.s, indudina a labor unrest was reported today only in the Port £1izabeth fomia Norte. nuclear reactor, couJd fall to Earth within a year, an area. .. Everybody ... every person. every family. every group .. .is different. and we all have different health coverage needs. That's why Blue Shield. California's health coverage leader. offers a variety of choices. Blue Shield of California has contracts with more doctors and hospitals than any plan in the country. A choice of deductibles from $250 to If you have to pay for your own coverage, you know how low these monthly rates* are for the Blue Shield Prefe.rred Plan in Orange County. If you're buying for a company, call your agent or return the coupon below to see how much a Preferred Plan can save you . I , • • You're special. You want to decide who your doctor is going to be; you want to decide how much you're going to pay for coverage. and how much you'll pay when you need care. Blue Shield offers these choices. $2 .000. a choice of plans for individuals of all ages. families and groups of all sizes. The Blue Shield choices mean you can select a plan tailored to meet your needs. Discover for yourself how Blue Shield is right for you. S250 Deductible Single Party Under_l_o ___ 1_o...w __ -.i __ 45-S4 t~~s_s_M __ _ $57.25 S81.60 $118.00 S1M.9S Blue Shield. The Choice Is Youn. ~..r.....-----~-·------~ orcMJ: CllP·ll21 Sib lrandlcO (41" +tS-S2'2 I I.Iii ~ (ZJJ)" 64H45S ~ _ .. ,.. I I I I I I I _...,...~. _,..,.... ........... _ ZIP f 1 •• ._ ____ ........ ____ .._......___..._ I ~ m.d me. wHbout I ........ ~--"'!'9' fci ..... lllbmy .... I =-::.:=o.-,;;_=--r:_ -- ---- - - -----..._. _ _J 2 Person Fam ily 3 or Mo,.. Family SSOO Deductible Sfngle Party 2 Person Family 3 or More Family $1000 Deductible Single Party 2 Person Family l or Mo,.. Family S 1500 O.ductible 5'ngle Party 2 Person Family l or Mof'9 Family S2000 o.ductible s.nga. Party 2 Person Family J « Mor• Family S103.45 S144 60 S218 30 S295.75 $141.IO S1M.70 I .. $262.45 t S:M2.55 s.2.65 -~-~~ S76 90 -----+--S105.SO Sl0.35 -----+--S 5 S 75 -----sn.10 .~~~~ ......... ~---~· 123.95 $45.90 --·-164.15 $60.70 S1 12 10 S144.ts $43.30 "4.40 S65 oo S89.45 '-------'~--------...-..___~ S1t.4S S27 35 ~'t'-- U9 50 S56 00 --~--$56.50 $74.20 $92.«> 1 S162 40 S195.3S ...-t S73.80 t $66.15 s 112 85 su~.oo S60 JS S102 00 $121 so ' . j I I S124.2S S220 00 $254.95 S102.9S S175 30 $201.50 $91.15 S154 Hl s1n.1s $84.45 S142 10 $163 15 •These monthly dues are billed quarterly Blue Shield of California (Al lf 1 1l~NIA l'l~Y ,1( IAN<;' C.,( HVIC! ' -!- I Otange Ooel1 OAtLY PILOT/ Tuelday. July 15, 1~6 Let the off enders make a cleanup of the Back Bay Hundreds of volunteers who expected to wo rk like coolies got a break Saturday. They arrived early a~ pre- ordained stations around Newport Harbor equipped with rakes and gloves and enthusiasm. They were issued a day's supply of trash bags and sent off in boats or on foot to clean up the garbage other ~olks had. left be.hind. But they didn't fi nd much to pick up. Smee this was considered a good sign. and since nobody was worn out from overwork and since the party was a ble to start earlier, most volunteers turned to optimism and described their sacks as half-full rather than half-empty. They've been doing this for six years now under the direction of the Newport Harbor Chamber of Com- merce. They organized the first Clean Harbor Day because the precious harbor. the focal point of Newport Beach, was begi nning to look like a water-logged landfill. They've done it every year since because the first effort was a great success and because it continued to be necessary. Saturday. tt wasn't quite so necessary. At the post-clean up gathenng at Bill H amilton\ Canner) restaurant the volunteers were unanimous about two things: (I) the relauve cleanliness of the harbor and beaches and (2) the chill. ··1n addition to reducing the amount of trash, we have increased the public's awareness of the problem," said Bruce Chilcoat of the Clean Harbor Da) organmng committee. And State Sen. Manan Bergeson added that the community commitment was, in her opinion. a factor m her successful effort to wtn an extra one mil hon dollars to augment the restoration of the bay. It was generally agreed by those who observed the harbor from close ran~e Saturday that the residential a reas were pristine, while the tounst area!> showed more evidence of the decline of man in the latter half of the 20th Centuf) By aturda) afternoon. ~ewport Harbor looked pretty much the way it should look all the umc. But C\ er) grim realist knows that b)' Sum.lay night. some areas probably looked hke the place '"here two garbage truck'l crashed. Despite the work of Cit) crews. the aLcumulatcd debns that eludes them makes a cons1derabk mess b\ the ume another Clean Harbor Da\ rolls around · So. the suggestion of one of the \Olunteers seem~ to make sense When a person 1s arrested for a minor offense m Newpon Beach, an offense that would normal!} tn"olve onl) a fine. perhaps a en 1c-minded Judge could sttffen the penalt} by adding four hours of community service to the sentence. Then. once a week or once a month. the offcndcrc; would report to the designated s11es along the harbor and the Back Bay where they would be issued gloves and rakes and bags and sent out to clean up the trash Perhaps the harbor would remain comparat1vl'ly clean year 'round. This 1s not intended to make C lean Harbor Day extinct Hardi) Clean Harbor Day 1s too much I un and too sattsfymg. The -.,oluntcers enjoyed t he morning. The '-"Cather was great, the com pan) was congenial. the '-"Ork wasn't too hard the party was fun. They also came away I.\ Ith a sense of pnde that 1s mev1table when a per\on knO'-"S he or she has done something good. Opinions expressed 1n this space are those of the Daily Pilot Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and artists ReadN comment 1s invited The Dally Piiot PO Box 1560 Costa Mesa 92626 PhonP 642-6086 ' LETTERS --- Merchants, volunteers' Grad Night help lauded To the Editor· 'We wish to expre'>' our <,1nccre thanks to the cntirt commun1I\ for their tremendous \Upport of t1Ur ( rrad Night for the senior'> nt c 1ironJ dd Mar High School More 1han I ~11 llln1mun1t\ merlhantc; pa nu 1 pated \' 11h donJ- t1ons of pn1es. food and m110l'\. <I\ l'r I 50 parents "orkcJ on thl' part\ \ome for ma°' month' \ltnel~ -11n1 l'nu·nr 111 lhl 'l'n111r' .111rndnl 1lw < 1rt1d 'ight 111.1li.1n~ .1 '"fr and rn111,,1hk' .it ti\ tt\ f111 Jll 'AJ· ''""'" ·"'" Irk\ 111 1h,1nk tlw f);11h l'tl111 l1111!\Pll\tll\1'l11\l't,t1tt•of t IH' ' \ ~ 111 I ll1• 'll pporl 111 .ti l t ht'\l' IX'ttpk '' grl•.111" .1ppr1•u,ltl'd < d~ \I> "ilC rill < C>\1\111 111 t 111Pn.1Jd \1ttr ll1gh'\\.ht111I SpruceupMesa Verde, too To the h .l ttnr V. h\ t.:Jn't c "''·' \fr,,1 11,,,,. ,1 cll•an-up Ilk( Nt·..-.port lk.11 h '< k;in Harhor l>a\·1 l''e hccn d111ng a Int of ..-.Jlli.1ng latel> rnainl.,.. 1n the Ml·\d ~ t.'1d1• .trl',1 and the at·t umulat1on of tra'h 1\ unocltt"l>Jtlk \ \.t.'r) \Jd nampk " .\l!am' hetwecn Plau~n 11a and TODAY IN HISTORY By cbt Auortactd Prf!'' J cx.IJ) I\ I 11l'\da~ l11h I' 1h .. I "16th da\ nf I 11Xt. I hcrt• .ir1• 11 'I tl,1\' le-ft In I hl' \l'.Jr F1ltren \Care. .i~o. l'H''>t<ll'nt 1<1d1 OAANGF COAST Daily Pilat f Hro11ld1ur\t \ gone! prun1n11 111 hu\h ., .ind gr11und lll\\'1 \\Ouldn I hurt ·11ht•1 I 11\l,1 \11°\,1 I\ ,1 llll I' olll'•I Ill Ii\\' 1n hul thl\ 1111'\\ ll',111\ tl'lln I\ 1111 II\._., Ull/l'Jl\ ( \ ..... I \( 1\11 I lllM I Bl I >fl'\ I '"' P.11 I kt111 ( 11\t,\ ~I \ \,I .Ht! \J "il\1111 ~U\l\Ull!lll'c1 Ill ,1 nat111nalh h111.1dlJ\t JddrC'" tit.it h1• \'11uld 'l\1t th1· P1•11ple, l<qwhlt1 111 C h1n.1 t11 'l'l'" J "norm.1li1.1t1on 11f r1·l.11111n\ ' '-.;1\on m.1d1• thl' trip th< lo Ihm mg f 1•h111.11 \ ''•"' ll"I [j TOlt> Tiit "• 11:1 iQ F tl I Don,.., .. , 'y \ I " TlltfTI Clllftl" ,,,.., r"' , c, •It lllef'I I !\ f t 111-.... ,, c•u.ircf't"'ltfl (; I 111~~ Cltfltretl P•OO.X I ..,., 0-' f ., " I( endtie " •IAI nn l.IAMQf'' Howerd Mullenefl ·~., ... , rlQ ()>,,.,., , "eot' lllfl'lftl I \ol "'11 CJo•oX:' ''This sergeant truly Idolized Jim Roosevelt. He told how Jim would perchovertheentrancetoacave,llghtdynamltestlcksandthrowthem In the cave. ·• WALTER BUIUl0l1GB8 coJa.malat WALTER Bu11oucHs Another , Roosevelt enters the ring <\s )OU ma)' know I'm not vef) much ofa political party man In fact the pan)' to which I am hsted a!I belonging -Republican -annoy!. me more by some of the stunts they pull than do the Democrats-1fsuch there be tn this arC"a of hide-bound politicos. Among my very favonte J>C'Ople is James Roosevelt. Jim has a last name to eonJure memories. but I know him for a far different reason. Homosexual fighting to become a Big Brother During the early days of World War II when we were doing most all the fighting on the vanous Pacific fronts. Jim was 1n the Manne Corps. and a 'el) tine marine he was. He must ha\e been for he found a place 1n Carlson's Raiders Carlson of the Raiders ran a force of fighting men that weren't at all hke the conventtonal Arm) groups or Air Force or Navy I ne'"er knew the old man but l dtd know -and 'illll !..no..-. very well - his son. The one they call Bones E \el) Manne seems to have an outlandish nickname W11ness our current Fifth D1stnct supervisor who once was Inspector General ol the Manne Corps. He was called Mugg_ f('ar of IJ\\'iUll\ has pre..,cnted the Big Brothers-Big '1sters organ11a- 11ons of se' eral c1t1es from fighting a11cmptc; O} homosexual adults to 1ali.e up maJor role\ 1n the hves of children gro'-"1ng up ""Ith JUSt one parent When a ksb1an motht'r ra1st'd the 1\\Ue 1n Sacramento. for example, the organ17at1on gave in wi thout a figh t nnle a lawsuit was lhreatened <\nd 1n "Ian F rannsco. the issue would be laughl·d out thl' front door Rut not 1n l O'> <\nit·lcs. \.\ht'fc lhl' H1g Arothi:r' organ11at1on doe,n't" th1nli. humo<tnual men make t:oo<l ruk model., for bo~s \.\Ith single motht•r<, I hl' group has rnmc up again\! Richan! "itanlc\ a 15-)ear-old sale\· man \'ho like\ to tinker \.\llh tlasstt c:irc, and 1htnh ht''d do JUSt great as 1hc .,~1..1al p;il ol J latherlcss bo) The .\meman < "II L1hert1es l 'nion agree' ..-.11h him Th1.. n:\ull I\ ,1 pn:cedent-scntng la""'u11 th.It \.\Ill IC'\l the nghl of group'> hl.e the Big Broth1..·r5 and the Ro\ '>rnul\ to ndudl' ga~~ and b1'>e\u31\ JU\I h1..'l UJ\e of their St.'\Ual 011\'nlJtH>n "I \.\nu IJ Ii li.1· to lw 1 udgl'<l on "ho I ,11\1 r.11ht·r thJn \.\h,11 I am." \3}'\ \tJnln \.\h11 applll't..I to th1· program In mid l'IX4 I hmng ,, h11J1 ·month '~ n:t•n1ng prou·" "it.lllln 11wn11oned hi'> b1-;ex- u.1l 11111·nt.1l111n Jnd \.,a., told hr could n11 lunJ.!1'1 h1 111n.,1Jl'r1..·J tor marching "1th ,1 ltltk h111tl1l·r · ·In 11u111r11k\\1onalJudgmen1.1t1'> n11t "'" l11m111111 tol'xpo'\t'a fatherles'> hm 111 ,111 .rltnn,111\C life 'tl)'le at a 110\l' "hen h ,., \lrugg.l1ng w11h his 1"'n 11kn111' \aid Rilhard Klin('. THOMAS ELIAS president ol Blg Brothers of Los "ngelcs "'iince a Big Brother 1s looked to for information on everything from school to sex. we don't belre>ve 11 1s appropriate to match a homosexual or bisexual man with a fatherlc'>s bov" Big Brothers 1s a free sen ice ma11..h1ng careful!} screened men with the 6-to 12-)'ear-old sons of single mothers There are now 850 such matches 1n Los Angeles. about 2.500 1n ( ahforn1a . ..-.11h some 1.500 children on \.\a1t1ng hsts as the group ronstantl\ seek'> more men to panic1- pa1e ~tanlc-. ·s su11 v.as tiled b) the .\( L ll which da1med his reJt"Ct1on b) Big Rrn1her'> was based on "un- founded stcreot' ~'i and ignorance.·· Th" .\( l l ' 'ia1d "Facts about hom0!1C\ual'> do 001 support their fear'\ C 1a\ ml·n arc not chtld mole'iter\. V.1· kno\.\ that contact with ga~ men 1Nill not turn ho~s into homost•>.ual'> .. One .\( L I ol)irn1I aho charged thJt Big Brothl'r\ "turns its back on all thl' fath('rlc" \oung ga) bo)S Big hrothC'r' <,hould he '>('el..1ng out re· spons1blc ga' lnl'l1 \.\hO could offer ga) tel'n-ager'> '>fX't 1al undcr'itanding and hOf>\ · The ACLU does not claim bo>c; should be matched blindly with homosexual men. • They should disclose anything that would be relevant to helptnJ the mother make an infonned decision about whether sht" wants her son to be matched with a parucular 81g Brother:· said Steven Kelber. the lawyer represent in$ Stanley But Kline. an acti ve Big Brother for 14 years. says that "Often the Big Brother 1s the only man in thl' bo'.¥ ·, life or the most s1gn1fican1" I hat gives the organ1za11on "an awe'>ome respons1b1ltt) to the mothers of lhl'w bo) s." he added Stanley's lawsuit charges the Big Brothers poltc) \IOlatcs '>late c t\ll nghts la""s proh1h11ing d1scnm1na· tion on groundc; of '>e\ual onl'ntat1on The .\CLU sa)s 1t fa'"ors allo\.\tng mothers to decide wh('ther a ga) man would be suitable as a Rig Brother for a pan1l'ular lh1ld. but doe'in't want the organ1za11on to "tal..e the deus1on aw at from the mother .. Effects from the ultimate outcoml' of th rs dispute promise to re' erberatc far be)ond both Los Angeles and the Big Brothersorgamzat1on 11sell lfBtg Brothers musl accept gays "hat"\ to predudc gay scoutmaster!> in the Bo} Scouts or Girl Scouts'' The ultimate ou1com(' \.\On 't even be hinted at until this ca'>c reachci; the '!late '\upreme Court. mo!ll l1kel> a matter of at least one year from nov. But the caSl· 1c; a clear demonstration that there's mulh more at stake than iust some possible exccuttons "hen \Oters decide whether to keep f,, e ol the coun\ se~en s1111ngJU'it1cc\ Thomas Elias 11 a Saota Moolea- based columol1t oo state lu ues. Dunng the war. l was not in a fighting outfit. M> JOb was .to make sure the anns and ammun1tton were supplied to various army groups. One da-.. there was a call for all ordnance officers. The reason· We werl" to ha"e a "lecture·· from one of ( arlson's Raiders -a sergeant This c;crgean1 trul> 1dolrzed Jim RooscvC"lt H<.' told how Jim would perch over the l'ntrancc to a cave. hght dynamite sticks and thro"" them tn the cave One of the arm-. "officers" tn 1he group made a snide comment ~aid he "\laturall~ he (meaning Jim Roo~velt I got a cu sh\ assignment "aturalh. 1f\uur father 1s P~srdent of the ( nited States. you can get "'hate,er \'OU want " Dead silence. Then said Sergeant Rubinson, "Sir. I consider that an insult If you'll step outside I'll sho\.\ }OU ho\.\ we deal "'1th )Our son in ( arl'ion·s Raider'>" Mmt of us ..-.ere delighted at \.\-hat looket..I lo be the beginning of a rucku... Then said the lieutC"nant colonel who had made the remark. .. And how 1-, that. please"' "I guess >OU don't kno"' much about ( arlson's Raiders." replied the \ergeant "In the Raider' an enh'>tcd man can lOrrect an officer if he'!I out ofhne You sir, are out ofhne. '>O I'm going 10 beat the hell out of ~ou .. I ha'c heard these '>tones belon.· and l am quite sure the) are correct U.S. officials winning war against child pornography The one thing I'm not sure of 1s that J 1m ROOSC\ cit IS SUSPICIOUS enough ol the mott\.C'> of J>C'Ople to a'otd being "used" b> boiler room OJ>C'r- ator\ and others whose mouves arc not a'\ pmtine pure as are Jim's One thing that dehgh1s me 1s that Jim Roo!>e'"elt 1!. running for (on· gre~s in \ifassalhusem Jim Roose· 'elt 1s James Roose' elt s ~on and he ha~ a lot of our James' t alifomia lnend'> ra1s1ng mone} for him He ,., endeavonng to suc1..eed reunng \\ '"111'(,JO-... -From tht' '',an l1nd1ng' of the .\tturnc) (1l'n 1·1.11'' < 11111 \TI1'\\1on on PornogrJph> ""' m1)lht 1easonabl) lonclud1· thJt 1h1· 11111ntn t\ Jro~ning 1n a ~hm\' \1'a llf "11Ut \1 111.tlh there 1<; !.ume good m·v.' 1111 tlw \uliJt'll. 1..ontaincd in a second. 11'" ,1·n,.11ronal report due for relea\c .,h111 t I\ It 111ndudc~ that child pornn- gr .1pll\ -1h1· most depraved branth 11f 1lw 'mut indu<>try -1<; he1ng \lltu'"lull\ fought and 1c; on thl' d1·1 hn1' I hl' I.tit'" rt'pon I\ the rl·suh of a (\\ol·\<.'ar 1n' 1''>l1ga11on of child p11rn11~r;1ph~ by· the ')enate Per- manrnt \ubcommtttec on ln\C'it1ga- 1111n' < >ur associate V1ck1 Warren ha., ohtJincd a draft oft he repon. wh1th 1\ rt• I\' hl'ing circulated among "iuhcnm · 111111n memhcr; for lommcnt I ht wnate 'ilUO) IS 'iUrC to CdU\l' lnnt111\l·rs} 1n th1'> h1ghl) chargl'<l .1re,1 tx·1..ausc rt Jehunk'> some ol thl' mmt 1. ht•n,hcd notion\ of alarmt'>I\ ''ho lllntcnd that child pomograph> " 1(111\\1 ng h~ h:aps and bound~. and L .Ill 11111\ he \lopped by e'er mon· 11t .1t 11n1an leg1'ilat1on I )1·,p111• the cutc'i)' name 11 ha'> tx·cn ~1' l n h~ hcaJltnc wnt~r~, then:·., nothing hcntgn about ")odd1e porn" ..incl the puhltc by and large kno"' II I(\.\ l'i\Ue\ Lan UIOU'te the hOOl'\I \.\r,1th 1h.1t ta\C\ uf l'h1l<I ah11\t' c1u I ht• \Ul'x•>mm1ttt'c nott:t1 th<tt Olll' "<'ll·pubhu1ed an('\1 of ;1 ditld mok\tcr tan 1n\p1rc litt•f;\11) hun dred'i uf thuu..amh ol k11cr' 10 < nngre\\ demand1n141c.,11on In fatl. thou(lh tht· ~·n.w· 111· '-t''>ltgator\d1'i("O\t'ft"d that 1ht· a1 t10n ( ongre'>'l lOok tv.o H'af\ oljlO h;t\ h;ld il dramat11.: 1mp.11'.t on <:h1ld porno- graph). S1nrl' pa,..age 11t th<' < hlld Protect ton \ct llf I llX4 "hll h outla"'ed d1<.tnhut1nn of all \C'<uall .. l"'Pltl tt m.HC'nal in-..ol\ 1ng 1 hldren. till' 111,11<<' l)(•p;1nm1•nt ha\ wnn 147 VIII' 1~ 11nn' ait.itn\I 1 htl(1 porno gr 1phrr'> I h.11 l11mrare' 111 on!\ ti.S (1111\ 111111n\ IO lhl· prn lt)U\ ti' )C'ilt\ \H11rd1np, 111 the r<'pon < u<.lom' ' ..,tT\ltl' ofllllJI\ ha"e determined. Imm pornogr ... phtC matenal ..e1zed. that hoth lhe quanllt)' and quality of l hlld·rl'latl'd c;mut hcing brought rnto th1· rnuntr) hac; declrnt'd since m1d·l 11lM In add1t1on. tU'itom'i investigator<. v.ho ha\l' the thankless JOb of anah11ntt th1..• \Ct1cd matenals havt" not1red that the numb<.'r of new child pan1upan1' hc1ng photographed has dcd1nl'd Murh of the commerc1all)' produn·d thtld pornography shipped 1n10 the l n1ted 'itates now consists of pho1m reqdC'd from onginals made tn the 11110, During thC' rnursc of its inH''illga- uun, the '>ubcomm1ttee stall inter- ' 1e,,cd more than 200 JX'r'>on ... induding child molc-;ters. '1<:11m!>. la'' (0nlurcemen1 officials and uthl'r npen' \l\othcr myth the Senate 'ilUd) c;h.lltl'red wac; that orgamrcd cnme l'i dct·pl) 10\olved 1n the marketing ot lh1lt.I pornograph) "Then· 1c; \UO\tant1al evidence to show that La < o\J "lO'ltra enme families excn 1..on\lt.lerablc inOuence 1n the pro- Juct1on and d1stnbut1on ol com- mcrnal adult pornograph)." the 1n· 'c~11gators fou nd. and som(' of thr matl·nal 1n .. olved adult~ m41dc llP to look hke under-age model~ Ru1 thl'y <ult.led The dt'>tnhut1on of { h1 ld porno· graph~ in the lJmttd StAtt'i 1'1 lnr~cl) rnrned uut b) 1nd1v1dual pedophiles, "htl produce tht) m:uer1al and trade 1t .1mnng themselves or order 1t thrnl~P' the mail from other coun- trin II\ not h1jlh morl\I pnnC'lplcs. of rnuN.' th11t keep the Mafia out of 1he l hilt.I pomoaniphy trade The main rl'ct,on " that the 1ndu'llt'\ '~ \mall pt>Wtoc~ rnmparrd to 11dull llQmo- jnlph,_ ~t mu'lt. the inH\l1ptor-. calcu- lat<'ll child pomograph) '" a SS m1ll1nn-a • .,.ear hu'l1ne'l'I, while adult '1'1111 aro.,\(.c; \C'f('r.ll h11l1nn dnllar'I 3 H'JI So lht' Mafia,., rnntcnt 10 h:;He l h1IJ pornoarnph\ to the pedophtle\. [., , Spcal.er O'Neill and "'hat could be a better amb111on than that" JACK ANDERSON and DALE VAN ATTA espcc1all> since the crackdown th<H followed passage of the I Q84 la..-. Still another bugbear ol the alarmists wac; shot do..-.n b} the 1n' es11gator'i The <.uppo<;edl\ huge membership of such defenders of child pornography as the Nonh .\mcncan Man-Bo> Love As~ooa­ tron and the Rene Guyon \oc1et} Instead of the 25.000 member~ cited b) wme anti-pornography groups the 1n.,,est1ga1ors esumatcd total membership at around 4CX> This 1s not 10 say 1ha1 there arcn·1 enough pedophile') to provide a .:hild pornography network for '!ale or exchange of filthy matenal Indeed. one truly d1sturb1n& development the mvcsllgators found was the u\c ol "computer bulletin hoard'\" to ex- change names of available <:htldrcn through telephone hookup<>. "There's rtnlly an attitude lhot these are more '3fc." a San Jo~. C.ah f.. l3wman told the 'iubcomm1t- tee. "The ad'j and me'i~g~ are more provoca11vt not ~crctt"e. You can't trnt•e them through lal"' name~ and mu can't tave~rop on computer convl"r~t1on~" Th<' ~ubc..omm11tee \tall rcr- omml"nds add111onal tca1slation lo outlaw child pom<>vapher'i' U\C ol computer bulletin board!. Another recommendation 1~ 1ha1 the ~!.'lie Dcpanment bnna areatcr pre~sure on fore11in gm.ernmenu to 1nh1b1t the production ofc h1ld porno· graph) for e~pon to 1he Untt~ ~tate'I Jack Aod~rt00 end Yao Ana wrttt • 1yndle11 tfll col amo J Herc arc a few of the local spon'iors First and foremo'it arc Bob and Sh1rle)' Hurw111. Boh and has no" deceased brother were m>y personal a11ornC)'S for ycarc;. Another co- sponsor 1s Bob llurw1t1'<; sister Sophie Gendl.'I Dr. (1endel . now delea..cd, was one of the 1nd1v1duals who was active 1n starting Children'<; Ho-;p1tal of Orange Count} 'io nat- ural!) tn me she can do no \.\-rong I also see on the h'>I the name ol 1 om 'J1el~n and \rmand HammC'r Leo ')hap1ro and 'Walter Gerken Qu11e a d1'>tingu1shed hsl. no'l The feature I like best 1s the in,1tat1on It saH "The California Friends of Jim Roo~'eh. Candidate for ( ongrc.. .,, from Massachu'iett'i lnv1tl' you to a Fundra1ser. from 6 u'd<xl.. untd 8 o'clock" r\{ Thi.'. date'' ~edne~a>-Jul\ 16 I won't be here but I'll endea"or to help fundra1se "''th the required check I pan1cularly like the fact that this 1~ not a promotton of a "boiler room " So. we'll see I'll be glad to help io a ~mall wa> a youn& mah cllllcd Jim Rooievt>lt.J hope he wins -1n Mn\~chu~tts. But, by your leave. I'll JU~I iO back tO my Slodi) vo11ng for Republican~ Wahtr 81rrou1bs In chr Pilot'• foandln1 publlsller. Comments The Dally Piiot welcomes your opinions on matters of publlc Interest. Letters and longer artlcles of commentary must be signed. They ehould be typed or clearty written and sent to: LET - TEAS to the EDITOR, Dally Piiot, Box 1560. Costa Mesa . CA. 92~26. ~· r, Convenience of A TMs has checks & balances \ Thank• to the thousands of auto- mated tcUer ma- chin u (ATMs) hummina away around the clock am>ss the United MARY RUDIE ~:!~o ~r:eba:k~ inaatany t1mcofthe ••••••••Iii••• day -or m-"l. Tbete hiab-tech telf-scrv1ce machines work on a set of very low-tech instruct.ions. Insert a ptasuc debit card, punch in a personal 1dcntificatioo number (PIN) known only to you and tlte bank and you 're elecuorucally booked up to the ba:nk.'1 computcn. Tap a few more keys and you can check balances, transfer funds between accounu, make dcposiu, make credit card and loan payments and, best of all, act cash. Confoundin& the skeptics, a peat many consumers like these computerized machines. Last year, some 60,000 A TMs in the United States handled more than 2.3 billion transactions, about 260,000 an hour. Financial industry analysts expect still higher usage as new terminals are installed and machines owned by different institutions arc joined in reaional and limited national networf:S. That's just for starters. A newer and slightly different A TM can sell airline tickets. handle car rentals, provide cash advances and traveler's checks and even let you buy mall order catal<>a items fim viewed on a video .screen. And it won't be Iona before large numbers of retail merchants arc set up to handle electronic payments made with debit cards. Usina a debit card at a store equipped wt th a special cash resister, you could make purchases that debit your bank account or central asset account and credit the retailer automatically. Widely used in France for over a decade. th as technology is fast spreading around the world. Ironically. the machines arc human in at least one respect-they make occasional mistakes. Fortunately for consumers, the Electric Funds Transfer Act sets forth the procedures banks and other financ1al in·stitutions must follow in resolving alleged errors. Let's say your monthly statement shows a $100 withdrawal from an A TM in New York on a day you were in Attanta. To get the ball rolling, you must infonn the bank in writing oft he suspected error within 60 dals from the time it first appeared on your statement. Don t forget to explain why you believe there was an error. what kind ot error, the dollar Amount of the error and the date in question. Your bank must investipte and ttt0lvc the error within 4S daya. Should the inveauptfon take molt than 10 days )'Our ~nk must rccredit your account (or the amount 1n questJon. Good news or bad, you 'II hear from the bank u soon utbeinvestiption is complete. trlhcbankdoean'tMX:ePt your venion, it must ex pl.a.in in wnttnl why it believes no error was made. At the same time. the bank must notify you of any adjustments to your account. You may ask ror cop1es or documents used by the bank to suppon iu case. A TM cards are actually debit cards becaute they can access your aueu and arc covettd by the more stringent requlremenu applyina to .lost debit cards. Of the 120 million debit cards in circulation last year. about S0,000 were reponed lost or stoten. Most of the owners or these cards were protected by sec1ions of the Electronic Funds Transfer Act that trmit consumer liabiJity in sucb cases. But don't confute this law with the one that protects credit card holders-whose loss is limited to $50 per card no matter when it's reponed. Not so with debit cards. To limit losses to SSO, you must notify the financial institution within two business days of learn ins that your card had been lost or stolen. Miss the two-day deadline and your liability jumps to $50. If you wait to notify the bank for more than 60 days after the unauthorized withdrawals first appear on a statement, you leave yourself open to unlimited losses for fraudulent withdrawals made after the 60-day period. As soon as you realize the card is missing, phone the issuer and report it. Many financial anstituuons have set up 24-hour hotlines to handle calls about lost or stolen cards. A TM cards have a high degree of protection. unless a thief knows your personal identification number. So keep your PIN an your head, not wrinen on a slip of paper kept in a wallet or purse. h's also unwise to choose PINs based on anniversaries, birthdates or Social Security numbers -because an entcrpnsing thief might figure them out. The artat benefit of ATMs 1s that they give consumers the ab1hty to make a wade vanety of financial transactions at any ttme of day and at an ever-increasing number of locattons. The precautions nec-essary to owning and using debit cards are a small price to pay for the convenience and flexibility provided by the A TMs they activate. Mary J. Radle 11 vice pretldent & manager, Coatamer IDformatlon Services of MeM'UI Lyncb, Pierce, · Fenner & Smltb Inc. Market slide lengthens By CHET CURRIER ., ............. NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market sustained another broad loss Monday, extending the shde that set an early this month Analysts said a disappointing carn- 1n15 report from lnternauonal Busi- ness Machines and uncertainties about tax reform combined to de- press stock prices. The Dow Jones average of 30 industnals fell 27 98 to I. 793.45. bringing its loss since July 1 to 115.58 points. Volume on the New York Stock Exchange came to 123.1 7 million shares, agamst l 24.47 million Friday. Analysts said investors' con· fidence, already shaken by the mar- ket's poor performance last week, suffered a new setback when IBM reported weaker-than-expected earn- ings for the second quarter The company said us profits came to $2 12 a share, down from $2.30 1n the comparable pcnod last year. stock that can influence sentiment 1n the general market. In add1t1on, brokers said. the company's report Monday morning served to intensify concern about the sluggish suite of the economy and high-technology andus- tncs an particular. Among other computer and tech- nology issues. Hewlett-Packard drop- ped 2•ta to 38: Digiuil Equipment 2Ya 10 86: Data General l/4 to 31 Y4, and Texas Instruments 4111 to 1131/4 Brokers also said and1 v1duals and other taxable investors might be scrambling to sell before a ff ouse- Senate conference committee begins work to reconcile different versions of proposals to overhaul the tax system . A provision in the Senate version calls for ehminataon of the prcfcrcn- taal treatment of long-term gains on investments such as stocks. There has been talk that the committee, assum- ing ll adopts that measure. might make u efTccuve as of the opening of the conference rather than neitt Jan I MARKIT IN BRiii' NYSE Issues Consohdated Trading Mond•y, July 14 Volume Shares 147,684,210 Issues Traded 1,988 Up 874 Unchanged 403 Down 711 NYSE 2.24 S &P Comp 238.11 -4.11" THE BEST in reading enjoyment comes to your Chairman John Akers said the drop reflected the sluggish pace of Nonh American business act1 v1t y "Wuhout an improvement an capital spending an North Amenca, it will be difficult to show eamangs growth an I 986." he added. IBM shares led the acuvc hst and fell 3~ to 139'1•. One exception to the general do""n· trend was elcctnc utility stocks. which have been recommended by some analysts as "defensive" stocks ii a period of continuing weakness develops in the market. The day's only gamers among the IS Big Board volume leaden were Philadelphia Electric. up 1/4 at 21 'I., Texas Utilities. up ~ at 33' a: Dow Jones Ind 1,793 .45 -27 .98 32',. and General Public Ut1h t1es. up ~at 22 • home 1 days a week in the Daily Pilat 642_4321 IBM as of\en cued as a bellwether OTC UPS & DOWNS NEW YORK (APl -The fotlowfng I''' ~ws the Over • the • Coun er J_foeks end werrenl• th•I h•v• vone uo the most end dOw~ tMoht most beHd on tent of ndev ~o MCUrffi:.~. Ing ti.tow 12 or 1000 ts ere Included. 11 end oerc.ntege cnene.~ s ert Ille d enct belw~ tn. orev ous clo• ng ork::• end Mondlv s test or bl orlct I Southern Cahfomia Edtson, up 'h at 't Energy issues were weak as 011 pnces remained under press ure The Great American 6-Month CD The greater your balance, the greater your rate. Minimum balance $1,000; rate and yield above are for SS0,000 balance. Five different rates for five different balance level~. There are many other tenm available, from 32 days to 10 year All in~ up to $100,CXX> by an agency of the federal government. Whh Zl o~ wn'inaOnln Counry: Anehttm Htlb Folmt"Jn v.liey Belho.t l\Llnd Huntln on &e.il Ba.lbcit l'enlnsut.i l41N1 lkadl BM I JlfU"ll Hll Ceplscrw.nu 8e.Mdl "•'"" N1Jlld f. I fom \f ttildon \ 1(jo Mnn•rdl R.I\ ~ Rtiat:h ~ron C mtrr "'--pon 8-ft l)Mer ~ 'Vwpon RMdl I .kin Oranlt' ll:•tl'lla Onm T\i)Cm 111 1 lt'fm n C.. lttnirnlt' \en(. lc'mtnlclA~'t'Tlidll Pim Juan t l pL.Ctano ~bnd •( Ufttf"t '""fd"'-Nf'll"' •~r""""' ~l'liw-W httif'Ol!ftf'Pw 11.Utft'ftl ~rau &tllt!ft'tf\I fhill p" ,..t •"'1 11Wrt'"~ '* "'1'1itf-~ t • WW" •n fMfft"iil"'""f"-.,Jlldr4dAtl\Mll\f<!'\\h' .. \I\ f"hrn1"'"'rA1lftVt "-Mff fllftdl\ ufttr~t ,Nftr litP"""'fW•I \U\~rnho&141_t.r \ 4W1 ••1 I iHf'•"l'"'n,,,,•"""~".,..,,,.,....~,~' ~_,.,., •1~1J lfp1""1Y f"•• ,,.....,.,., • '"''"" -~'""' • N#r.o~r-Mll\ Great American )bur advantage bank: <her lllCIYC'llf\ol \atra~ •A\-.ch(her \II 81lhon FSIJC .............. 1!T Open your account toda . Call the toll-frtt Fi Lint now: 1-300-423-BANK. ' -- • Comm ~rcial l~asing rate near airport picks up Due to 20.ptr- c:cnt vacancy rate in new commercial bwldlnp surround- inaJohn Wayne Air· port. new con truc- tJon bas slowed and attractive lease ralc$ J11 HATHCOCK have kept com-•••••••••••• mercial aaents busy helpina users expand or relocate. If current trends continue, vacancy rates could start dropping by the end of the year. The local market may also be helped by lease conccss1ons by buildang owners and a general reluctance ofmanqcment to move out of Orange County. Though an oversuppl~ of commem al bualdangs still exists, commercial qents arc curTently leasmg nearly as much space and they did last year. bump our toe nationally or intemationatt~:· Shumway's optimistic analysis of the Oraf!Je County commemal real e tate market it multidimensional. .. If you subscribe to the opinion that our aovemment will not allow us to ~ in an election year, we can look forward to another 21'2 years of pretty good arowth." be said. "The window ts here now. After November of 1988, some type of adjustment is going to have to take place. But we have learned to ljye with no inflation. Our cxpectatJons have been toned down from a consumer and manufacturina point of view and we arc much mo~ in tune with the market," Shumway said. The cumulative effects of lower interest rates, lower mtlanon rates and a softentnf commercial real estate market have attracted companies from Los Angeles and encouraged growrng Oranee County comj)lnies to eJtpand current sites or relocate within Orange County. "It is my opinion that the multi.tenant small building market wiU absorb an increase in lease rates before the users incur the upense of movina. rm talkina about the manufacturina tepnent of our ewnomy, not the d istribution. Because of 1t1 lower marsin of profit, distributors can't afford much or an increase. They need cubic feet and rent iOCfQJCt effect their bottom line drastically.·· Shumway explained. ''When that happens, he simply says, ·1can't10 any more.· He'll move to Corona, Chino or look at Ontario or Rancho Cucamonga. "However, the manufacturer may ae<:ept another smaU boost in his lease rates just IO he won't have to move. We have some mal'Jin an areas that have not been tested but the bosses hve here in coastal Orange County and they have the deciding votes. The smaller users are going to be more vulnerable to lease rate increase than larger users." As users move up to newer structures, older buildin&.\ which were originally desi&ned as industrial and R &. D centers with only 10 ptt(lC'Ot om~ space have been uppaded to 50 pm:.eat or even 100 percent office apace. Even after the build.ioa owners invest in uP&rtdina. 1bey can still lease •J*:C for le than many of the larser and newer commerctal buildinp. . "In some submarkets or Oran.ae County, 1t is becomio1 fcuible to take taraer buildinp and m~ke smaller spaces available within them. This is happerung in the arq north of Chipman and Otangewood. There arc numerous aood op(>C?nunities in that area for smaller users '' Shumway wd. Tenants wbo formerly turned up their noses at the low.rise commercial products arc oow secan& the advantqe R &. D sites offer. Shumway said 1f current trends continue, the oversupply of office space will not be lcued at flit as the R & D "Growth in the biomedical field could be tbe salvation for the R &. D product type. Two to five Ye&!' from now it will be a more viable product and exist an sboner supply than it docs today," Shumway said. "We're seein& a pickup since March and ll has steadily risen, lt looks like agents will lease 13 m1lhon square feet of space this year.'' said John Shumway, executive vice president of the Costa Mesa office of Market Profiles. "Overall. af you arc looking long ran'e to the end of 1988, theaencral opinion that I'm heanng1s that we aren't &oing to have a recession in 1986 even though mterest rates may creep up toward the end of the year. Shumway said about 60 perccnt of the commercial space leased this year was for expansion of existing businesses and 40 percent to new companies. Eighty percent of the new busmesses came fTom insjde Orange County and the remam1ng 20 percent moved in from Los Angeles and out of state. The stabilized Orange County market has delayed expansion in the Corona area. Users aren't mov1n& to Riverside and San Bernardino counties in huge numbers, a P.henomenon whacb Shumway sajd suggests the market wlll st ill bear a nother 5 to 15 percent escalation in lease rate-. IBM earnings down 7. 7% in 2nd quarter "forc<:asters used to view 1987 as the beginnrng of the dark days and that may stal happen af we suddenly NEW YORK (AP) -International Business Machines Cory> .. the world's largest computer company, said Monday ats sccond-quaner earnings fell 7. 7 percent from a year earlier despite a 7.3 pcrccnt revenue gain. IBM's profit of $2.12 a share was below the projections of many WaU Street analysts. The average prOJCCtlon was $2.44 a share, acoording to one survey. common stock tumbled S2. I 21h a share to S 141 on the New York Stock Exchange. The d1sappoant1ng results added tQ gloom over the recovery of the computer industry. which has been m a period of sluwsh growth smce late 1984. IBM usually collects about 40 percent of the re\enue and 70 percent of the profit of the entire mdustry Shortly after the figures were released. IBM's Resort C~mmuter Airlines Up to 30 flights dai!Y between Orange County, LAX, Oxnard, Carlsbad and Catalina on a roomy jet-prop aircraft. ~ Joint fares as low as ~when connecting to most major carriers at Los Angeles. Call: 714-546-2444 or your Travel Agent. enun1berone ~ managed savings and loan in the nation is located inNe ortB and sta sa. F()rl11 ·s rnagazirw. t IH 1 inte rn ationally rrspec tc1cHn1siness publi cati on, ratPd { 'ol1 1r11hia Sa\ in.gs num lwr one of all sa\1ngs and loans in its Yard sti cks of r 11; 111<1gP1TH 1n t p('rfo rni ancr. \\ liid1 i~ not ~urprising. Colum bi a has long hc1tln knovv11 fo r solid and pfftcipnt nwn11 .~1·nH·r1t. For Pxamrlf\ Columbia's adn1ini strative costs are far below the oth er major Si t\ ing~ and loans . And our loan and investm ent strategies arc among the mosE "'1wc·1·ssf11l irt th <· industn. Tlw n·"'1t11 '"'profit. Pr:ofit that ca n be passed along to yo u in the fo rm of high rates ort .'-ta\·mg"'· \ nd lo\\ rat P"> on loans. BPing profit a bl<> kre ps Co lumbia strong, too. Over three tim es as strong as the govPrr11111·n1 n·quirPs. And, of rourse , your savings are federally insured to $100,000. S() \'isit ('()l11ml>ia Sm1ngs' \'.rwport Beach or Costa Mesa branch today, or call 0111· ('011\·1·11iP111 ·1· Banking numbrr: 1-800-652 BANK. And fi nd ou t what the number onP nwnagPd "a\ i ng~ and loan in th e nation can do for yo u. SAVINGS ANO LOAN ASSOCIATION One of America's larl(e .. 1 '>3vings and loan association~. ORANGE C<WNTY 'IEWPOllT BEACH """'P"rt c ••nt••r (Ir Arni l\anta Ru .. a, 171 1 l itlel Wiill COSTA ME~A lf1rbor Roul.,,w! 1n1t "'11"'" 1 ii Oh lh ii 11 OT LOCATIONS BEVEW·OOBENY 110211 li1·H·rl1 Aoul,.1ant t 21.1) li I 9\1111 BMILY RlLI,.f.J WiJ,hln· llu11l•·111rrl itnrl R11twrt~111. (.H.llli~i 1no:1 BBVEILY HILLS Wil11h1r1• B1111ll'varrl anti l'1tmd1•n (21.1) !1f1H Ohlll BUNTWOOO 111\40 San Vir1•ntr A11ult>v11.nl, (21!1) H2f\ 71424 MST LOS A.NOELES 2301 F.a.,t 1~1 SlN'f't, (21:1) 21114 lllFill LA MllADA lmJ)l'rlttl llwy anti '-anlA c;mrudr' (''1:1) IM I .171\i PALM OP~qnr flldi11tlt)11 Ill an1174.1~1~i 14n mr ' I Gl . .... -LENDER ANAHEIM 11111 S. RNH•khlll"ll """" Rttll and Rrookhuro (il4) 77fl 7101 LAU f'OR.P .. qt l.akt> f'•1N''t llrtv" and Rorknt>ld. ( 714) i70 IMll\fi PALM SPIJNGS 211 •:a.~t l'aJni can yon Orlvf'. ( f\IU l .l22 2200 SANTA MOHlCA 1021 Wll,hlrt' Roulpvanl (21:1) 1429 ;Ulftl TAWNA 18644 Ven tuna Rivet , Wf'st or Rfo,.•da Rlvrl , ( 11111) 344 411M THllD 6 PAJUAX 146 South f'•l rtu Avenue, (21!1) 9:17 ~21fl WHJmEa 151 41 Eut Whltll11r Ooul('v&nl, (21!l) 946 27111 WILSHIU 1AIDAX AAOO Wll,hll'f' 81vd , Mutual Bfnpnt Wt> fllct«. (21:1)11:17 2130 •1Mlf' ............. .._., .... ('Alfllnll ~ ~ Is your banker invisible when you need him? ta~\\ Next ume Ir~ us t: ~ ·' List American Bank ) Pnoe ., Ampncen Er~ -..... 7~ l O-.p1111" ... 17141 ni 3300 G) ~~~ ..... .,_ ..... Wednesday. July 16 at the .......... ...,., 1fl"llt'111'1utnu AG 7 .. J 840 1321 ....,.,, ... ·~ llQ,Allllu• 81W 17141 7!16 1919 -- ORANGE COUNTY FAIR Costa Mesa Fairgrounds CARNIVAL SPECIAL! Pay One Price ... And Ride All Night! Purchase a $9 W-ist Band on the carn ival midway and ride all the rl~ ... all night long, 9 p.m. to closing ~-- Jan & Dean Concerts 7 and 9 pm (Free with Fair admission) Meet Jan & Dean in autograph session following 9 pm concert COME EARLY .•. STAY'TIL MIDNIGHT \ n . . J ,..... Orange Coal1 DAILY PILOTn~. Nlf 11, ._ 6.55%Ratc llODays 7.10%Rate Lincoln makes it possible with short-term, high-yield, Summer CDs. .. , With sizzling hot rates on"' · .. : 90-day to 180-day deposits 0r $10,000 or more. Compounded daily, so yotj · · hard-earned money grows , ,>< •• faster than a summer lawn ., .. rl~ between mowings. · :.~ .. Insured to $100,000 by the ·~: FSLIC ·· ~ All reasons enough to drop, whatever you're doing (even it ·~ it's nothing) and drop by Lincoln. ~ · And while you're here. ask ~~~ . about our Insured Money ~ Market Accounts. . . .. \ Interest-beartng checking. ~ Full -color picture l.D. cards.: ~~ ... . . . """'"""' =·0 24-hour automatic teller ... M"' eciger Customer Service Repre - machine and more. ... sentatives. All explained clearly and · Lincz0ln's Summer CDs. concisely by our QP.ght and Surefire ways to make this ~ slimmer the he ttest ever~ . Ahd shining examples of what doing business with Uncoln is all abOut. ALHAMISllA BUJtaAJfK f..SCONDJDO HUlE'I LAGUNA HILLS PANOllA.MA CITY SANIA MOMJCA 'l'OllAl'fCE 300 E. Main Sc. 3800 W. \11trdugo Ave U>-'' E. Valley Parkway 1111 S. $(ate St. 23601 .Moulton Pkwy. 14526 Roscoe Blvd. 1460 Fourth St. 211•0 Hawthorne Blvd. (at Chapel Ave.) (at Hollywod Way) AJhlmtR CA 91801 Burbank. CA 91'0' Escondido. CA 92027 (at Steoon) (Moulton Parkway (near Van Nuys Bhtd.) {at Broadway) (at 1brrancc Blvd.) (619) 741·8100 Hemet, CA 92343 Shopping Center) PanoramaClty.CA91402 SontaMon ca. CA Q0401 Totrance. CA 90.503 (018) le9·6343 (&8} 841·3703 A!WIElM HILLS CA.MA1ULLO "91 Sama Ana • 2300 Pondcrosa Dr. Uinyon Rd (at Arncill) (at lmpcrtal Hwy.) Clmar10o. CA 93010 Anahelm Hills. CA 92807 (&OS) 987·0902 (714)9'M·4410 DOWM!Y AICADIA 10033 Paramount Blvd. ~OU M (at Florence Ave.) at Second Ave.) Downey, CA 90240 Arcadia. CA 91006 (213) Q27 2506 (818) •4!S·7080 GLENDALE (714) 652·2761 tquna Hills. CA 92b'3 (616) 894·9394 (213) '-'l·QQ31 (213) 540·4222 100 E. Glenoaks Blvd. HOLL!'WOOD <714> '80·4o50 llOWNG HILLS SHEKM.AM OAKS 105111" (at Brand Blvd) 7050 Hollywood Blvd. LAKEWOOD ESTATES 13701 Riverside Dr 14161 Red Hill Ave. Glendale CA 91207 (near La Brea Ave.) ~247 Hu lbrcbk Ave. 29920 Hawthorne Blvd. (at Woodman Ave.) (next to Stater Bros.) (818) l 41·6306 Hollywood. CA 90028 (l.akew6od Shopp1ns (at Crest) Sherman0aks.CA91403 Tusttn. CA 926a0 GllAMA.DA HILLS (213) 466«0;}11 . Center near \\lards) Rolling Hills Estates. (818) '83·3130 (714) 730·02~ 1~1 Chatswonh St. HUNTIMG?OM Lakewood. CA 90712 CA 90274 SUN CITY WEST LOS (at Zclzah Ave.) · • BEACH (ll3) 630· lt04 <213> 3'n·'J5n 28127 Bradley Rd. AMGEI ES Granada Hills, c.A 91344 700l Edinger Ave "'LOS AlfG!LE.5 SAtCTA AKA Sun City. CA 92381 11~ N tional Blvd. (818) 363·'°41 (at Sher Lane) 6.30 w. Sixth St 1631 N. Bri~tol St. (714) 679·b801 ( t Sawtelle Blvd.) Hunililgton Beach. (at Hope) (at 17th St.) lbs les. CA 900c>4 CA 9lM7 L6J Angeles. CA 90017 Santa Ana. CA Ql100 • • (213) 478·04& (714) 841-1738 (213) 628·4131 (714) .547·0nt r~~ , l \ I l NYSE COMPOSITE T RA N SACTIO N ~ Market keeps tumbling NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market moved broadly lower 1n busy trading Tuesday. In vestors were preoccupied with corporauons rcponing their second quarter results and specu- lation about when earnings will show significant improvements With the economy in worse shape than had been forecast by many analysts, compantcs might not post good profit gains in the near future. The government furnished fresh confirmation Tui:sda) that thC' economy has failed to snap out of 1to;-;Jump. Losers outpaced gainers by about 3 to I on the New York Stock Exchange. , WHAT AMEX Orn , WHAT NYSE Orn NEW YORK (API Jul IS Prev NEW YORK (AP) Jul lS Prh Today dllV T-~ :~ Advanced 143 139 Adv~nced 1 t• Declined m m Oecl ned ¥nchenoed 11 ¥~,f:':'s otel Issues New lliotls 2t It ~ew"g'" n New IOws ew lows S2 AMEX LEADERS NEW YORK (AP) -Sales, • P.m T~sd~ ~r Ct endA~. ""di.~-Ot ·,~·'l'~ ~uesd~V or~ce ~nd net change of the 10 mosl eclfve New York Stock E•ch•nGe active American Stock Exchange lnues, l u u u , tr ading netl onall v at ~~;,:c. "'""~,~r~unM·~~£m~ ~;:~.. f~:m: 11)!' ~ Has~o j!' _21/• PenhECP , 7, 4''h -2v. Wen11Lab8 • ~ -~ ~!"•Cote s 'ltt' n! + :~ NY Time~ ; 7 'I• -3 !!'"Y CP ' • + •• Lorimar Tet n , i ~ -V;i USnXdec'o'r '·i'' S ~ AlzaCp s 2 • f ~ -1~ He lell~ l l!);4 -~ ~m~·.~~ i~: 2~:2 _3,,. Ptliilp= , i: : n~ =2~ 1 GoLo QuorEs lnll Bnknot ™· l -1h r~~~pre~s 1 . 4; IJ,_• =~~ ~~~~~ s ' : i,.. +jy. ~t« , I , !.., ~ Dow JoNES AVERAGES METALS QUOTES NEW YORK (API -Sl>OI no11t.t1ou. met• P'ICe9 Tve.dey A~ • 50 50 c.n1a pet oound NV Come• IJC>Ot mon111 olo9ed Mon Coppet • &4...e& centa • oound. U S O..tlnallona CottPeJ • 68 40 cents pet pound N'r Coma• IJC>Ol month etoMd Mon LA.d. 22·2• C*lll. pound Zilla • , ,_.. cen11 •pound deff-ecs Tin $3 4680 (met• .. Weell compoene prloe pet lb I lltnot S$ 090 pet ounc:. Hendy a Hllfmen ......., • $$ 02, .,., troy ovooe. NY Coma• IPOI mot>lh <:'OMd Mon -the-counter N A Nam. itvtnLT ..chm tl>Ok s MCI Lotus Apple<: r. 1, 1, J: , +Jl,"1 -"' -1 ~. s2eo 00-u eo oo per 1a 111 nMI< H.w v°"' ~ $4;)7 ()().."~ 00 dC>mWllC ~Glletll troy ounoe N v HBO ylnH s f,'fu~~m • 14~ -,,. -17·32 thz, rutton down shirt, our f\nczst. oil cx:ilon ocfbn:i cloth shirt, ~ fbr ~ b,t Cndorl of f\bwOr~ ~ rmi.lgd t.!91knd ""1th epl1t yoM conSiructAon f:ir ult..unotcz.f\tanciccmbt m wh1to., bluz. QCN, pmk. ytl 1o.v nr.vpott brioch 1414 fOd'\IOll t!)Jond , 71V 6'tll !010 ~vil\agl. IOOl~bl-.d ,2lY200-3l73 poeoc:i&M 52~90.Ah l&lli44"4 ,8181~ 9~3 men um~ fh \Oto9. ~rday lO toe&.~ NXm ti>~ • Nationals' clear a.001inance on the line Clem ens.Gooden get starter ·s roles t onight in 57th All-Star duel - HOUSTON (AP)-The names arc new. but the story ts the same at the 1986 A11- Star Game: American l..eaiue sluggers apjnst National Leaaue pitchers. And tonight's meetina features a dif- ferent twist -the Astrodome -the worst hitter's park in the big lea1ues. The game, 10 be televised by ABC. wall start at 5:35. after Vice President Georae Bush throws out the first ball. It is a sellout, with more than 45,000 fans expected. The AL will be trying to win its first game at an NL park since 1962 at Wngley Field. In the last 14 years. the Al's lone v1c1ory came againsl a learn managed by Herzog, 1n 1983. .. It seems like every year I predict a Home runs are tough to come by in Houston HOUSTON (AP) -Jose Canseco, Wally Joyner and Jesse Barfield have been hatting balls oul of American League stadiums all season. How- ever. they ha ven't played at the Astrodome. "I heard this was a tough ballpark 10 hat a ball out of. I found out i1's true,.. CanS«o said after taking baning practice Monday. one day before the All-Star Game. Canseco leads the maJor leagues with 23 home runs. and has home field, the Oakland Coliseum. as not considered a h1ner's paradise victory for jhe American Leaauc and I've ~n wro~ every year but one." AL Manaaer Dick Howser uid. "So it's hard for me to predict what as aoma to happen. This is a good lineup." "I had heard it was a tough place for home runs," Oakland's Jose Canseco, a rookie whose 23 homers lead the major lcaaues, said after batt1 n1 practice Monday. "And I found out it was true. "I thought the ball would be a lit lie more lively. I fou nd out it's kind of dead." That was never more evident than the last time the All-Star Game was at the Astrodomc. In 1968. an AL hneup featur- ing Harmon K.Jllebrew, Carl Yastrzemska and Frank Howard was held to three hits in a 1-0 loss. Since then, the fences have been moved in. The distances down the lines arc now 10 feet closer at 330 feet, and the rest of the perimeter has been pulled an about eight feet, to 400 an straightaway center field. Even so, fewer home runs are hat in the Astrodome than any other major-league park., even wtth increastd homer totals throuahout the m.;c>rs this ICaJOO, "Those 10 feet mijht help me," Angels rookie Wally Joyner, who has 20 homers, said. Joyner, the firsuookie elected to start an AU-Star Game since fans resumed choos- ing the team in 1970, joins an AL club that also boa ts J~sc Barfield and Lance Pamsh, both with 21 homers, and Jam Pre5ley, with 18. · Glenn Davis is the only NL player with 20. Overall, the AL players have outhomered their counterparts 266-192. The NL. however, has faced such muscle before. The counter has always been patching, and the result has been a 36-I 9-1 edge, includin' 13 victories in the past 14 games. Fastbalhng Dwight Gooden of the New York Mets. working with sax days rest. wall start for the NL. "I think he's the best pitcher 1n baseball," NL Manager Whitey Herzoa said. Los Angeles' Fernando Valenzuela and But, as the A's rookie outfielder quickly found out, no stadi um 1s less of a homer haven than the >\strodome. generall} regarded as lhe worst ballpark for hiners espec1all~ sluggers Getting ready for 57th All-Star Game his screwball or Houston's Mike ScotL probably will follow. Gooden threw two ICOtt 1nninp in has previous Al,..Star outin,, while Valenzuela has not allowed a run in 41'> inninas th rouah fo llt pme1. "I won't worry about facin§ Gooden until tomorrow," Joyner said. '1 want to have 24 hours to enjoy myself before I worry about battina apinst him." Boston's Roaer Clemens, lcad1n1 the majon with I S victories and topp1n1 the AL in ERA and strikeouts, will oppose Gooden. He will be pitchin& after aoing nine 1nmnp on Saturday. "I hope two days' mt as enough for my arm. I don't know 1fl'U go the full three." he said. 'Tm not goinJ to 10 over any scouting reports or anything. I'm just going to throw." Scrcwballer Ted H11ucra of Milwaukee and knuckJeballing Charlie Hough of the Texas Rangers are expected to follow Clemens. ,, ___ _ "[thought the ball would be a ltnle more hvely," Canseco !>atd. "I found out it's kind of dead ... Pan1cipating 1n a home-run derby Monday, Canseco hat onl} one ball over the fence in St'< swings The one he did 11. however. went down the left-field line into the second deck. about 70 feet off the ground. A worker (upper left) uaea a fan to cool cab~e patch dancen durlq a practice eeuion for tonight • game. Cardinal• manager Whitey Herzog wu in ~ aplrlta durl.ng a workout, u well u three American ue All- Stan -eo.ton '•Roger Clemen•. flanked by Detroit catch- er Lance Parrt.ah and Tau pitcher Charlie Boagh. Ancel Wally Joyner, meanwhile. looks o•er Rickey Hendenon•a bat (lower rlgbt) durln& Monday'• preparation•. Prior to th e 1985 season, thc-Astros moved in the fences. The} were moved in I 0 feet down the lines -to 330 feet -and about eight feet around the penmeter. with center field now 400 feet away. The closer fences helped the Astros top the I 00-homer mark last season for the first time an eight }Cars Their under-I 00 streak was the longest current one of its kind "Maybe 11 would ~an easier place to hit homers if they hung u fence from the roof." Canseco said This season. the Astros ha"e hit 25 home run'> at home and 44 on the road. Their opponents have con- nected 28 timcs at the Astrodome and 35 in other parks. Joyner. the Angels' rookie first ua~man who will stan for the AL. hit four balls O\er the fence an nine swings dunng Monday's home-run derb} His total led the Amcncan League. which lost to the NL ti-7 New York Mets outfielder Darryl Straw- (Pleue .ee HOMERS/83) VOLLEYBALL U.S. gets off right, Bulgaria falls in 3 From Staff u d AP reports MOSCOW -The U.S. Men's VolleybaJI Team, which features three Orange Coast Area standouts. opened volleyball competition Mon- day at the Goodwall Games in Moscow with a I 5-8. IS-9. 15-10 wan over Bulpna Amencan middle blocker Steve Timmons from Newport Beach leads the Amencan conungent, which in- cludes former Laguna Beach High setter Dusty Dvorak and Bill Yardley, an outside hitter from Newpon Beach . Timmons. a product of Newpon Harbor High. was a member of the gold medal wanning American team at the 1984 Olympics in Los Angeles and was named the Olympic Most Valuable Player He was a 1wo-ume collqiate All- Amencan at USC and was a member of the the 1980 Trojan squad which captured the NCAA Championship. Timmons was aJso the nation's Pla)'cr of the Year in 1984 Dvorak. aJso a USC graduate. was a four-11me All-Amencan for the Tro- Jans and was the Most Valuable Player in the 1980 NC AA. Cham- pionships. Dvorak was the starung setter on Olympic teams of 1980 (which didn't compete due to the U.S boycott) and 1984 The former An1st was also named the Oul\tandang Sener at the 1985 World Cup 1n Japan. Yardley. also a Harbor High prod- uct. was a two-ume collcg.iatc .\11- Amencan with the Trojans and has been named first team All-CIVA for the last three years The preliminary round-robin match was the Amencan team'\ first 'itep to what 1s e'<pectcd to~ another showdown with the So' 1et L n1on for the Gold medal The U.S. team handed the So\1ets their first tournament loss since the 1976 Montreal Olympics at the World Cup last vear Eagles become Owls Eatancla Blah •a Erle Dom and Doq Miller have both accepted track and field acholanhipa with the Owl• at R.lce Unlvenity in Houa- ton. Dom la a two-time CIF champ in the bJCh jum.f with a be9t of 6 -9 , u wel aa a atate flnallat in the the long jump (23 -4 l,AJ ). Mlller vaulted US-6 to tie for aec- ond at the atate flnala. im- proving on ht• penonal beat by two feet from hla Junior to aenior aeaaon ln hef ping ht• E&Clea teammates to the Sea View Leaaue title. Joyner surprising Joyner Erle Dom Doag Miller Angels still seeking identity Despite t h eir lead. they really haven't put it all together By KEN PETERS ..,._... ....... When the :\ngels "'-Cit'. nipping nt the Texas Rangers· ht•el'> in tht· ..\mem·an League We,t nut long ago Rnan Downana spoke what ma~ prove to ~ prophetac word'i "Although we'rt' up thc.-re 1n the stand1n~ we're 'it11l a team 1n c;('3rch of an 1dent1t}." the Angels' outfieldC'r '31d "Wc.-'vC' hcen a patchwork team hccnu'IC of 1n1unc,. pan1rularl\ tn our ANALYSIS pitchers But when ""e get e\ervtxxh hack . " >\'I the 1986 baschall '\Cason hit the halfway point. the Angels recenth had gotten t""o kc} pla}e~ t'lal k - ~tarter John C andclana and rehe\eT J)onn1e Moore >\nd , de~p11c being "patchwork" tor much of the fir-;1 half of th<." u1mpa1gn. they pla)ed well enough to hold a 11 •-game kad over the upstart Ranger., going into the A.II-Star hrcak. The \Ouna Ranger... who fin1'ihed in the \\ l'\l cellar la\I 'ICa'IOn with a ti2-QQ record that lcfi thrm 2X1 • p.nme<> ha'k nl tht• ll1\ 1\1on winning Kan'ia'i ( 1ty Ro}al'i, have been one su~me in the race thus far 1n 1986 Kan~c; C'11y. which JU'il last week c:nded an I I-game losing streak that was the longest 1n club history, ha hcen the other surpnse The defend- ing World &nes champion Royals are a distant 8'"' games off the Angels' pace AlthOUfh the ( h1cago White Sox have ralhed since Jim Frcgo 1 re- placed 1he fired Tony LaRu~sa as manaacr Inst month nd have pulled to w1th1n 711) games of the Angel'i, the Wco;t race down the 'it~tc h mn> he a dud hctw~n the 'eteran .\ngt'l'i and the 'nuthf ul Range~. "(1et1ang < andelan;i and '1n.ut• hac-k \hould mak<' tor .in 1nl<'fl'\t1ng (Pleaee 1ee ANGELS/83) He has 20 hom ers d espite claiming a 's ingles' swing HOl \TO'\< .\Pl-fhl' .\mencan League. hoping 10 shake the Nauonal League\ \tranglehold on the .\II-Star Garn<.". has two rnok1e'i an the .\ngel<,' Wall y Jo.,,ner and Oakland's Jose Canseco "ho ha' c the powC'r to reach the distant >\\trodome fences Jo\ ncr "ho becamC' the first rookie 10 be'ekctC'd tn th<." fan'> to \tan an .\11- Star Game U\('d h1\ seem1ngl> efTon- less swing to htt four homers 1n Monda\·.-. home run-h1111ng contest "I'm ·JU'it a single'> h111er reail}." Joyner ..aid 'But someumes m} singles turn into homer<i " Joyner had .:-!O "single<;" that left the ballpark and 72 RRI' tor the .\ngclc, before thr hreak tor toda\ ·., >\II-Star Game "Mv po"'-cr <;urpnsc'> me · Jo\ner said "I guc<,c, m} txxh final!\ kept all the strength l'"c been tr)1ng 10 put in 1t I've t>cen lifting weight~ s1ncC' I was at Bnaham Young. "I don't ti'\-to hit home run' I'd "3) 15 homers would be a vear for me If I don't hit another homer or ha'e another RBI I've had a good \'Car .. Joyner. who will 'itart at first base. said he's ha\ ing fun meeting all tht• stars he has heard ahout all his hfe "I'm a fan and I'll get to mC<'l a lot ofthese&U}\ "Joyner'i31d "lha,ean advantaae O\er the &\cr.igl' fan 'itnlC' I'll ~ at first ha'iC' .. Joyner. with a followi ng which claims to be from thC' tic:taonal amusement park of "\\all} 'World · uad he t\ a little 'itunncd h' ht\ populnntv · "I don't 1Pl1nl.. 1 even look hkl' ,1 <1upcr'ltar I'm h3ld1na. you know · the: 24-ycar old Jo) nrr ..aid Wally Joyner One of J1l) ner''i h1ggC'\I tan' " 'l'teran Reggie Jackson ""ho h11' behind him in the lineup "Reggi<." ha'i g1Hn me a Int ot grl'31 ad\lce." JO\nerc;a1d 'He'\ tx·cn a hag help to me 1 The~ were 'iOmC' C'Yehrov..c, ra1..ct1 when the .\ngels rC'lea~d Ro<l ( .ire" a perennial .\11-c;tar. to make.-room lnr lo) ner on the roster Joyner said JackS<ln told him .. 'Ju'it ~ )OU~ll JU'il he \\alh fo\ner Don't "'-OrT) ahout an\ thing C'l'it' It wa\ a great p1c1. e ol ·'lh 1n• " C an<;<"CO an outfieldl'r with ~ \ homers and 78 KR!<. ~11d fo)ncr 1<. a "'mart and 'imnoth" h1t1l'r 'HC''ll he the t)pc "ho l an hit homer11 and \till h11 tor a good J\Cr3&C' l .1n<,('1 I) \;IHI .. , k "ll "'-'run 10 "'-'atlh · lo~nl'I "'d he lan onh dream ol h1111ng lht• ha II a' tar a'< .tn\l'< 1111ot'' · I 1.an t keep up wnh the gu) and I don t C\en If) .. Jo}ner said "M} goal " not 10 lead the league in homer'>. Just look at me. Do I look hke a homers h111cr''" ( an~co who hit one in the \Cat~ durtntt thc homer rnntest was named 10 thl' .\mcman league team a' a rc'iCr\ l' Jo, nl'r and C an..et'n are the onl\ true rookie<. in the 57th ·\11-Sta·r Ciame Therl· are ~4 first-time \II-• ~tar. here C ano,eco ..aid he thanks he l an handk the pre,,urc.· of th<." 4'urround- 1ng'> "It tx)thercd ml' that Ian~ expcc-ted ml' tn hit J homa ncr. ume I came to h.u but I thin!.. l"\e learned to handle that prl''i\urc no"" · ( Jn\t't.O • ..a id 'Tm not going to let the prt'<i'iure · h.imp•.'r rm ah1ht\ " .Jin m·r and ( an<.ern \Std the\ -'\.\t·n·n 't awarr thl' Nat annal l eaguc had \\On I' ol tht la'>I 14 game\ :-...<'" that'' \.\hal the .\mC'man league ne«l'i."' \atd ~n..a' C II\·., C1corge B~tt "'-hO"'-On't pla\ ht-cause ol in1ur). "two '0ung powC'r h1Uer'i "ho aren ·1 hothcn.·d hy all that m- l.llll'd National league m\'\t1qul · It ;ill <;eems 100 ca~' for thl' tlr'it- ' ear J1.l\ ner Te.rni matC' \11kt· \\111put11 thr" \.\J\ .;ltc·, prohahl~ thinko; 11' ea'iy," Will ..aid "b en. thing he''> touched ha\ turned to gold 1h1'i season He's o c,k~ h11h. hC' {lrnhabl} think'i ~ing fllCkC'd for the .\II "I tar team comec; \.\ llh II " \\111. one of ~<i lir'il vear All·"lta~ who will pla' m tonight\ game tn thr .\'itroJome can tell him othtrw1"C It means more to a fUY who's been around." Witt q1d. "l ve been wa1th· ing the~ pme for c,1i1: y~ar'i wl\h1n1 1 rould havr bttn picked \\< htn I wa11 11 wa" a rthef that I bad done enou~ to make an All-Star team •• \ - m Qfllnge Coat OAILV PILOT/ TU91tday, July 15, 1988 Mets• Invitational: Don't wait for the fat lady IJ llEN W Al.UlR ,, ............ lllci.r:maai~numbt'rappear daily 1n a local iabk>td. Their doscst challenaer is Mont~al. which JU t learned thtlt 11\jured patcher Joe Hesketh will~ lo-,t for the year. ANALYSIS now saluted by "cunafo caJls," with the player 11eppan1 out of the duaout to adtnowlcd&e the crowd. Opposana teams don't seem to like tl. but Mets Manqcr Dave Johnson answm: too bad. again look1na sharp an the fie.Id. The Mets have also avoided any m&Jor mJunCS, althouah some have said Cancr'1 shaky knee• could be a problem. Yet, to sh<>!" ju t how thm~ have aonc for the Mets th!i season. roolue backup catcher f.d Hearn as h1tt1ng over 300 T bty top th Nallonal Lcquc an p1tchmg •t!d bJtU"I-The) att healthy. d~p and play ••lh I confidence that some ~Y borders on lfT9PnCC. Philadelphia '" third. playana under SOO and t 71h _.mes behind t. Lou1&, which held off the Met la~t )'car and then came w1th1n 1wo outs of wmnina the World Serie'i, as in tilth place. 24 games back. "The) ·ve 101 I 0 gu Y' "ho deserve to be on the All-Star teurn," C. ardanah Min taer Whitey Herzo& said of the Mets. who sent five to the m1dseason spectacle "That 'how'> you the kind of year they're having ·· ahe Bia Four of Dwtght Ooodcn, Std Fernandez. Ron Dathna and Bob Ojeda each can wan 20 games, or which one ma&ht get the Cy Young Award "This IS New York City," he said "It's the only way to aet the crowd to quiet down." The fans are equaJly cxcated by scrappy second baseman Wally Backman and center fielder Len Dykstra, both platoon players. They are each batting over .:no, as is rookie Kevm Mi tchell, who has played six different pos1t1ons. Almost cvcrythtnj has worked for New York 1nce 1t moved into a first-place tac on April 22 and then took over the top spot for aood the next dav The New York Mets arc le d1na the NL East by 13 pmcs, the largC$t margin ever held at the All.SW break 1ointt d1vts1onal pla¥ began in 1969. And many they thank they wall keep t\lJlnana away .. My ObJcctivc as to keep them from rcsuna on their laureh." says patching coach Mel Stottlemyre. "I feel we've bad the type ofhnlfwe worked on in sprina training." says.outfielder George Foster. Most impressive about the Mets 1s not the size of their bulge -larger margans have ~n overcome tn shorter ume - or their moa.ac numbcr(66). but how the~ got where tht'> arc The lefty-righ1 y bullpen tandem of Jesse Orosco and Roger McDowell have done well, pan of the rcaJOn New York's longest losina streak has been only thr~ games. Catcher Gary Carter leads the league 1n RBI. Rlght fielder Darryl Citrawbcrry has hit near 300 with power. as ha\ a rejuvenated third baseman Ra> Kni&ht Asked where he would hkc to sec improve- ment. Johnson mentioned All-Star first baseman Keath Hernandez. Alona the way the Mets have ripped off wanning streaks of 11. 8, 7 (twice)and 6aam.c1. They went into the All·Star break by swcep!na a four-pme scne~ from Atlanta. pummeling the Braves by a cumulauve score of 28-2. The Mets, who won more pmcs than any team in lhc mllJors the pa!>t two '>easons but dad not win a champ1on~h1p. could not hll\ c hoped for much more After a Mets'' 1ctory-1he1r 59-25 rernrd 1-. the best an the maJor leagues -1t 1!> rouune to hear them an!>wering question-:. arout whether All Mets home runs ill 'hea 'itad1um arc "I would lake to sec ham pack up a b11 Other than that, we're OK," Johnson sa1d. Johnson didn't mention that Hernandez. who ha'I struggling recently. as batting over .280 and About the only trouble New York has had this year 1s with Montreal. which has won four of the ~1x games between the team!> It's not a bum rap, despite hard times life's not all bad From AP dJ1pa&cbe1 LOS ANGELES -Eugene Fe1nas has L..v..:I spent his hfe sleeping an parks. II\ 1ng on the ... streets of Skid Row, panhandling for food. His left arm is paralyzed and he has cancer. Despite all that. his hean belongs to the Dodger'I His fnends took him out to Dodger Stadium last week to sec a game. To ha~ ~urprisc, the) also arranged for ham to meet Dodger Manager Tommy l...a'>orda "I ust can't believe at, .. FeJ nas said .. A man who slept an a park tor 15 )ears get\ to meet Tomm> Lasorda .. After his parents were killed 1n a car accident when he v.a'> 17 FcJnas spent most of hi\ Ilk wandering from place to place He's h1tchh1ked across the 4X continental states. "l".c met a lot of wondc:rtul people on the road." he ..aid He has spent a lcw 'ihon stints an Jai l for begging A\ li:w LuoTda )ear. ago he was robbed The culpnt took his onl} possession a handkef(h1ef Fe1nas has canc:er, an inoperable tumor m hi\ stomach that has cauc;cd ham to lose 100 pound<; oH'r the past fe.,.. months. leaving him a hollow 130 pound' He has deetded to forego an) chcmothrrap) and ha<. become an 1n~ 1ted gue-;t of the ( athohc Worker\ community His 1llncss has robbed him of h1'i appe111e for food and punk~ w.h1eh have long been a hobb} "'-!onethclt'S\ at n4 F Cjnas remain\ upbeat something that link' 111111 In the alwa~s opumt\lll Dodger skipper The l\\O agrt·l·d h11v. important laughter and friendship are 1n life Jnd looking on the bright \tdt of things Quote of the day .. Hov. can Don Rngt•r\ take a hn ofcocaint• alter Len Bia' died., How doc'> that happen'1 It happem becau\C wt· all think 'A-e're unique We all ha\c th1~ d1r,t•a\e called term ma I uniqueness" - Nev. Orlcan-:. ~atnl'i no\t' tatkle Tony Elliott's perception of \' h\ drug-; retain their a11rac:t1on despite thr oh' IUU'> risk'> Rams greet Goebel at practice The Ram'> opened a week of dnll!. at Ram\ Par~ an Anaheim tor rookies and free agents \.1onda) but JU\I three of their r,ekc11ons 1n the recen t "JFL drafi were on hand The three the onl) dr.ift picks who'\C signed nmtracts \\llh Lu~ \ngele'> so far. are Sl'<lh-round ,election L \ nn W1ll1ams. a running back out of Kansas; tal~k Han·k Goebel, a '>t'"enth-round selection from · ('al 1a1c Fulknon (out of Corona del Mar High School). and and Chui Schwanke. a running back from South Dakota (Vermillion) who was an I Ith-round ~·ho tee Among tho~c draft picks unsigned are the Rams' top three choice!> -fif\t-rounder Mike Schad. a tackle from Queens Unl\ers1t) 1n ( anada: second-round pick Tom Newben) a guard from Wasconsm-LaCrosse and quanerback Hugh Millen. a third-round choice lrom the Unl\ers1t} of 'Washington Rams Coach John Robinson. e'pressing dt'>- pleasure that most of tht• players drafted weren't on hand said· "( ena1nl) I'm disappointed This as their '-"CCk. and it's a negaliH' for them not to be here. and ult1matel). it's a ncga11 ve fur us." Three holding out on Cowboys fllOL''iAN D OA !I.. \ Mar~ Y. alcn\ un hold and the other l\\O holdout~ v.cre ~1111 holding out on the Dalla\ ( U\\ bm s <\1 onda} a'> ncgo11at1ons lnnllnucd -'><>rt 111 M1kt· ~ht·rrard and ht\ agent ha\Cn't talked to the < O\\OO~' 1n a \\et·k Darr~I (lack and his agent '-"Crc !>thc:duk'd to mn·t "'11h tt•am rcpre!>Cn lati ve) this week -ma' IX' .\nd 'Walen\ late drpend!> on what the) do "It's the 'amc i,talu' 11'5 been. although 1f )OU can rnnt1nuc tn talk. that\ lint·." !.aid Joe Baile>· the NH . t'lub'c, '1cl' prr<;1dcn1 ol adm1n1'\tratwn who 1\ in d1arg1: 111 nego11a11n11. tonlr<ll l' Lakers slate two for Forum I"' C 1 l EV. I >O £> -r he Los .\ngeles Lakers "di pla\ 'ii'-nh1h111on game\, 1ndud1ng three '-"Ith the ( htcago Bull'> and tw.o \\Ith the Nl'\\ 'urk J<..n1t k\ pnorto the I Y!!6-l 987 Na11ondl Basketball .\ssoc1at1un !>Ca)on. thl' dub announced Monda\ The Lakers ""Ill pla) two pre..ca\on game<. at tht• r orum They open prc-.ea\on pla> against Chicago Ull Oct 10 and will play the Kn1e ks on Oct 12 Their final four exh1b1t1on game) will be on the road The) will pla> 1n C:h1cago1rn Oct 17 and 18 ht-lore tra,ehng to New. York to pla~ the "-nKk'> 1n Madl\un ~uare (Jarden on Oct 21 I os -\ngele~ will clme out the e'h1h1t1on !>Cil\Un 1n Phoenix in a game with thl' "iun\ on Ott ~4 U. S. stays in contention Canada falls to Americans in World Basketball. 77-65 ()\If DO. '>pain 1 \Pt -Tht• I nned ~tate'>. 11' l hamp1on'>h1p hope\ \taggt:rl·d h~ .in upset lo\\ tu \rgen11na. remained 1n tonlt·nt1on for the final berth 10 thl medal round of the\.\ nrld Hasketball ( hamp1on\h1p\ h\ tkfl·a11ng \anada "7.fl'i '\fonda\ l 'nbcaten 't ugml.n1.i routed itah 102-7n to tltnlh one of lhl' tw.o champ1on.,hip '>pol\ or(·n In team'> 1n tht' ( h 1t•do regional f ht' I n1ted )lit le\ 1..:an t: latm the olhl•r ""Ith a '1cton h\l'r 't ugo\la\la 1on1gh1 \n \mrrn .111 loss hnv..e,l'r v.nuld clt:ar thc \l.;J\ tor \rgt•ntin.1 111 ad,ancr \\1th a 1rton <J\Cf Ital\ \rgl'1tt1n,1 lx·ut 1 hin.1 •n.so un \fondd\ The medal r0und ht·1un' in Madrid fhur,d.1 \ In the other rrg1onJI ht•1ng pla~l·d .11 Barle.:lona thl ~o-.1et L n1on and Rra11 I d1nched <;pots in the medal round. The So' 1cl\ then 1gnmg ""orld t hamp1on\ bedt \pain 8H·l:O while BrJz1I dumrlt:d f<,rael 9U-75 fhc .\mencan'> coming ull th1: 74.7() up!>Ct lo'>s to .\rgenttna Sunda) n1ghl hounced hack against ( anada tx·h1nd the 1ns1dr pla~ of< harln \m11h of P11tsburgh and thl' <•Uts1de shooting ol \inc f..ar of \n1una Thr l n11ed <itale'i rat~d \11 J J(J-0 lead agatn\t c anada and ne..,er 1ra1kd r ht· c ;inad1ans who failed w 'tore in thl' fir'>I fi"t m1n11ll'\ of pl,I\ got no closer than lour prnnt'> thcrcaftcr Kerr tame off tht· hrnth to h11 lour ofsC\en thre1: pc11n1 \hot\ and fln1<,h1:d \\1th I~ potnl\ Smith used hi\ 1m1dl' n111' C'> tn col It•< 1 Ix p111n1' and Derrick Mc Ke\ ol \l.iharm1 addt·d I) ( cnH r f>a, 1d K11h1n,1111 tll N;"' fouled out m1d\\a\ through the '>ewnd hJlf '-'llh onh three p-01nts and thrr~ rt·bound\ hul .\rmon (11l11.1n1 ol "'e-.·ada-l...as Vegas took up 1hc \lat~ v..11h 11 p<•tnl\ .111d nine rebounds Thr detcn\t• 'hut dr1\\n < anada'<, h1gh--;c11nng gucHd\. 1nduding -.1.11 IJ' I 11ano "'ho finished \\llh 11 point\ f ornard Dann' \kJtLhl·r v..ho pla)ed collcg1a1el) at Duke. led h1~ team \\tlh Ill point<. .------OSCEOLA MOUNTAIN CAMP -----. Au1usl 2 9 U60 Mtmbm St 70 Non·Memben Coed, 9 11 Years d!Pd ·n ttiP l>f'out1tu w•ldl'rnP I ·~" ;an B~rnardono Mounld1n~ Ba!l1.1!'! flat; RP rea!oon Ar"a <1mp Osceola otters l' n tPd1tJ • Piiing \lJl!OundPd by ponP '·•~sand 1oll1ng tprra1n (a(h wrr P"' hP> n a aL1n w th fl 9 other camper~ .ind ;•at' {Pt fP•P.lvPS pl,11ty of .,PfS(in~I ~.,,,,,IOfl lrom hi\ hf'I 1ra1nPd YMCA COtJn'.~ Ir An 1dral P•PP11ence for the t'J11fl~Pr amc1er Boy and 111rls ;llol,. will Ind this lo bP onr ol th~ mrJsl mPmorabl• "•PPriPn(P\ ot their hvrs • ACTIVfTIES INClW£ • CanOPonR . Cratt~. Sports . Swimming . f1\h1n11 . ArCl\Pry . Hrir\~\hOPS . rr1sbet Golf • Natw Study • c~molirP Pr<1~rdmS Note· This year we're 11clods11 'FRH 8 I 10 camp picture. •MAflM>TH ADY£NTIJI£ -"Ay 20-26 $215 Memben · $22~ Non-Membm Coed, Gudes 7 9 [•ti'-' P"rP Ma mm Ill d 1' u nr•P' ~.,., tiPI '" lnr udf'd ,~ !r p a·P 2 OAY~ HORS[ BAU Rl[)1N(, r •1nl1 t•sh•n~ Jntl stops 1• Ra1nt.ow falls Sol.1.i Spring~ a... P st P1te Hi>l C:rtj)~ a'ld ttP Mammolll Lt~P~ l ho \ ep I r mo~I P!)pular !tops' •Wtflt WATER RAHING Au1111l 10 11 $260 MembHs $270 Non·Members Coed Gudes g 11 Join J~ JI'\ lflf' Ktamatt R1vPr or N ,rthPP ~fof.,rnta tor j rhrolhna. action packed day\ nl runn1n2 th~ r 1(11d~ Pt, tess1onat rivPr ~u1des lead• u\ on a 10111nry throuv.h th~ ma1e\tic l'l.lf P1 . and vall~y~ ot thP mo~I b1•dulilu1 '•vPr ri California On 'h' 11ay up antl bM • "~ II bi· ~mo1np: al nme "' Nl\t't"n c~11•01n1a \ mri~• p1CIUll'\llU~ ;tall' o~·~ aid bf!arh11 •AQUATIC AOvtNJl.lf Auavil 18 13 SllS Mtmbtn Sl4S Non Membtfs Coed. Gudes 7 9 :amp ~t ~aut lu St: Jlhtand bf'd< hPS lrom N,.11oort Jo Sdll 0.f'&O [zper•tnlt e1c1tin~ walPr ac11v1t1r~ \uth a\ snor -thng suiting 00011" bo.irdinR. anrt body sur• ~R Spiond <1 day di Sta World Awa~f'n la thr ~ound\ of lhf' surf ~nd relax around thP campf11t .n thf' \un \rt~ n~,, ttu• 1i1 f'An NEWPORT COSTA MESA YMCA •vosouc I SEQUOIA KINGS CANY°" Aurust 24 . 31 Sl SO Members USS Non·Members Cotd, Grades 7 . 9 r 1plorP the ~rr·~I· L ~.tulv I ( aiforma ~ mast POPUiar national parks ro11c11 lh11 .kJM Mu11 l1a11 and lake a step batk 1n lrm,. I P•l)Pr PmP naturP s l1MSI Camp among the rpd11roods and !hP Slll'Jm\ ·,urround,112 Yosemite. Sequoia mil Kings Caryon V \ t ti-I' raR1ng wiltPrtalfs and massive 11r1woor1 mw~~ It• \ ~ tr p PVl'ft(lnl' will love• •f AT!*R I KIO CAMP Aucust 7 . JO Dads I Kid,, Gradts 1 . 6 l~plor11 flod1P Gho\tuwn \w1m in !hi' Hot CrPek. v1s1t Devil's Po• t P11, .,nfl h~h 011 mount~1n str,.am~ wh1IP camp1nR al Rnr k CrPf'k 811ng your ll'l'PPP IPnt or •ton tPl'pl'f' c1nd en toy I~~ la•~ 00~1n~ 1ou1 own food t~Pnine cc1mpl1rts a11d mornrn~ h.tD~I ~" ,\1on~ 'O~ethPr T 11p le.if1~r~ Jim .ind lad1 J, B.,om •rAhll Y CAlll' Aufuil 1 4 SlO Ntht 6 Food Brina lh, wlloit fam•lv to thr buulilul 'YMCA H1ah S1r111 Rc1v C~mp nur Mammoth Why not 111eet your Mammoth Hor~Pbdf k ridinR camper of his htr way home' REGISTER TODA YI 2300 UfilViiiffy DrlY9 Newport 81 I eta 842-9900 U.S. Open playoff to Geddes U.S. wins three gold medals KETTERING. Ohio -Jane Geddes n ~hot a I -under-par 71 to defeat Sally Little b> two strokes in an 18-hole playoff Monday for the U.S. Womcn·s Open golf championship at the NCR Country Club. • MOSCOW -American wrestlers captured three gold medals at the Good wall Games Monday. while ov1ct gymnasts swept the medals an all-round compe11t1on. aptn shuttin~ out a d1sappo1nt1ng Amencan team. The victory. worth $50,000, was the 26-year-old (1eddes' first as a professional. The fifth playoff 1n the 41 -year history of the tournament was the first as an amateur or professional for the former Flonda State University golfer. John Smnh. Dave Schull1 and Bruce Baumpnner each defeated a Soviet opponent 1n their gold-medal matches. boosung the Ameman medal count to 99, 34 gold. · But the Soviets took i.e..,c:n wrestling golds L1ttl.e, with 14 LPGA victones in a 16-year career, shot a final-round 73 and collected $25,000. Monday. widenmg their lead an the medals race with a total of 145. 59 gold. . Smith defeated Kha1en l!>aev 6-3 in the 136-pound class. despite compla1n1ng of a bad call tn the second period when he scrambled out of bounds. There were three tics and three lead changes dunng the 18-hole head-to-head match over NCR's 6.243- > ard. par-72 layout. Geddes. who faced a three·shot deficit on the front nine, took the lead for good with a birdie on the 14th hole and saw her advantage go to two strokes when Ltttle bog1ed the 15th "They have the home-coun advantage." Smith said of the So..,1ets. who are hosting the anau,uraJ Goodwill Games. "I accepted 11 and tned not to let at get me down.·· Geddes, who took up the game at the relata,cl) advanced age of 17, took her first lead when she rolled an a IQ.foot putt on the second hole. But she ~eyed the ne"t hole. and Little went on a tear w11h birdies on the founh, fifth and sixth holes to take a thrcc-strokt' advantage. Schultz and Baumgartner were both gold medalists 1n the 1984 Olympics. Schultz rallied from a 2-0 deficit to down Adlan Varaev 4·2 in the 163-pound cla'is Baumgartner ~o~ed the final point with 1ust 22 \econd\ remaanmg. edging out Da vid Gobedzh1'ih\1h 1n the 186-pound match. The score ended in 4-4 and Baumgartner won on cntena. NBC official denies pressures the other two networks dtd carher. lht c II• J\iEW YORK -A~ his counterparts at ti] pre'>tdent of NBC Sports test11ied Monda) Baumganner said he wa<i looking forward to meeun~ Gobcdzh1sh' iii again in the 1986 world champ1onsh1ps to be held in Audapest. Hungal) in October that thr NFL never pressured him 10 den) the l ~FL a contract for the fall and said the denial was ba'>ed purC'I) on the network's bu<>aness cons1derat1ons .\nhur Watson. a 30-)ear veteran of NBC who has headed th e sports department since 1979. was the first w11ness of what may be the last week of the NFL'r, defrn,c 1n the USFL., $1.69 b1ll1on antitrust ~u lt Television, radio TELEVISION \l\o 1cst1f> mg Monday was Robert Pannc,, prt·\ldent of the "IFL Green Ba) Packer\ The JUf) al'io heard a depos111on and \aw a' 1deotapc ol the late John Ba\\Cll former ow ncrolthe l <ifL ram pa Ba} Bandtt'i, "'ho annbuted his league'<. financial problems to mismanagement Noon -GOODW ILL GAMES Boiung men's vollc)hall. men's g}mna'lllCS. men'<. ba<ikrtball (from Spain I ) achting () hour'>. dcla\ed). (hannd 5 '5 pm -BASEBALL ..\ll·Star pre-game \ho\\. Channel 7 5 35 pm -BASEBALL. \II-Star game Imm Houston ( hanncl 7 NCAA hits Bradley University 7 p.m -GOODWILL GAMES 80'\ing men's and women's figure ~kaung. men's g)mna'it1cs (3 hourc,), ( hannel 5 PE:ORI.\. Ill -Bradlc) 1 n1\emt) m w.a\ penah1ed Monda} b} the NC .\A for reeru1ting v1ola11ons and unethical con· 11 ~O p.m -GOODWILL GAMES . .\ rernp of lht• da} \e'en ts. ( hannel 5 RADIO duet bv head basketball coach Dack Veri,ac:c: who promptl) '>tgned a one-year contract that \Chool officials announced would be his last. 5 pm. -BASEBALL .\II-Star game. from Houston. KNX (1070) The NCA.\ sanctions bar Bradle) from competing in po\tseason pla> and ofT-<:ampus recru1ttng for ne'<I -.eason onl~. although the \chool offic1all) was placed un probauon for two -.car'> No tele\ls1on sanctions w.ere imposed. WEDNESDAY 'S RADIO Noon -GOODW ILL GAMES· Boxing. men's 'olleyball men's and women's tennis. womcn·s team handball. Channel 5. Garrison, Berenda top Bk runners \ppro"<1ma1el~ 2.000 runners com· peted 1n Sunda>'s Bastalle Day 8k Run. which t>cgan at the Hotel \.1 enden 1n Newport Beach. Tht· top finisher wa~ Tracey var· mon "'•lh a time of 22:46, while the ltr'il woman across 1he finish li ne was \u\an Bcrenda \\ho recorded a 26 03 dolk1ng Bas~ DIV lk Run (In Htwo«f lktcll) MEN'S OVERALL I Tr•tev G•rr son 71 4', 2 Ttrrv COllOO, 1) 4 3 Jo~r Konll!ilh 13 10 4 ll•(n Brow111wroer 23 47 S Gerv Tullle, )4 04 6 Joev C.omtz 74 12 1 Seen fYtns 24 21 I Atlrt<I \l•ou••n 24 39 9 Jim N•iiel 24 40, 10 Loul' PonQ!I )4 44 WOMEN'S OVERALL I ~uun Berendo. 16 03, 1 Roovn Root, 26 Jt, J Cerol ICeller 16 S9 4 Ktllv 8tbcock, 27;00, S MlchtliP AuDIJChPt\. 28 16. 6 Bobbi• Shloo.r. 18 21 1 Ct•lr l'e11 18 S6, 8 Slectv O'He,., ?9 06, 9 H•ro1tnP Welle", 79 21 10 Terri Gc>o<1rt1u, "37 CORPORATE DIVISION (IOI> ''"" rumen• comblnt<I l\nWI l I "' o rioer 1i 00 MALE AGE GROU~S U e~d u"der -I Golie S.ncMz ?I II IS II -I Ra ,, Serr11os 1• S6 19·24 -I Trecev Garr \0" n •6 lS· 1'1 -I JOlln Ko,,1n11h 13 io lO 34 1 "'"'V Cotton. 2 4 lS·lt i Gerv Tutt·• )4 04 40·44 -I L•rrv Alnoell•"· 1S 04, CS 49 -I Brian Fernff. 272' SO·S9 -I Jim Arm•nlfou• 2' 36 60·end ·over -I Larrv B1 nutl01 l I i 1 ll'EMALE AGE GROU~S 14 and·under -i Senora Htrnen<ltt, 3•.44. IS 18 1 Laura Doering, lO 4S, 19 24 -I. Cl1lre Ft 1I 71 S6 2S 29 -i Su\ln Btrtn<11, 16 03, J0-]4 i Dtbor1111 8rezll 32 06. 3S·3' -i Terri GOO<lrH u 2'131 >I0·'4 -I Herottnt Wt lltr1, 1',. 4S·O - 1 TPll!rP\I Ron 34 37 so Sf - i w 11rne Mtddoc> 34 23 60-eno over I 0 11ne Fr.11 '1 lS RUFFELL'S UPHOLSTERY INC. .... , ...... Ctttf1 ""' 1m UllOl ltn .. COSTA IW-141-lm ar otor roble11s dynamometw hN ~ ,..,., ...... cemr.a TRl·TECH MARINI INC. Coat• M••• 646 6911 '" .... " ... ,.,, ... the st~o re s interiors .......... ..,. ~ ""°"' 11-' JO'i'Cf CAIOl ...... ~ 1eoeto ca -n~J 114 t.t] m• ..._ -~------....__ _......_._ Slam-n-jam tourney features blue chips Five-day basketball tournament for preps is u nderway at UCLA WESTWOOD -fhc third annual lss) Washington Slam-n-1am lnv11a- 11onal. an ofTspnng to the 51am-n-Jam league for prep ba'iketball teams. 1s sci fora fi,c-da) run at l < L \.beginning toda) o\mong the .:!M-team lield. an ad d1t1on to Orange Count) entncs, arc 1geams from 1he Bahama\. Buffalo Oregon. Kentuck) M1ssoun. Seattle and New York Ci ty "All these team'i are loaded with potential Di v1son I college talent. 'iO the local prep basketball fans are 1n for some ver; compet1t1 ve entertain· ment," said Washington "This as another opportunit} for our ver; talented Sou them C ahforn1a pla)ers to measure 1hctr talent against ~me of the natton''i premier prep talent Our youngster\ ha'c been playing all spring and summer. so the) 're read)." Washmgton an11 c1pates over 200 college scouts to stop by for the tourney. which includes 12 games a day for the fir'lt three days. six per s1tr on the l f( LA campus Among the Orange ( oast area standouts pan1c1pat1ng are Manna'<, Mark Georgeson. Mater De1's Le Ron Eiits and Kevin Rembcn and Ocean View's Rack) Butler on the Sou1h Coast ent l). u well as Adam Keefe and Vance Brya n of Woodbridge on the Orange County entry. Other 'outhem C"ahforn1a 'it.ind· outs include Chns Mills, J D. ( 1rec11 and Sean Higgins e>f Fairfax Ooug Meeks of Crenshaw, Tank C'oll1n 'i of Pomona. David Wh itmore of ~t Bernards. Jame\ ~osc' of ~rra Duane <. ooper of Lakewood and Keh an V.ilhams of Verhum De1 Other Orange ( ounty \landout' 1nclud~ Make GofT <Maanoha) and Nick Maru~1ch (Serv1te) on Pm Juniors. Richard Lucas (Katella) an(I Tony Smalle) (')c:rv1tc) on S11J)('r 'itar-.., and Jefl Herdman (M1'ist0n V1eJf.>I on Ventura Among the out~1dc tnlcnt arc 6·K E:.nc McDonou~ from San f ran- c1..co, 7-1 Ronnie Rei!. from Monte Va'ita of < upenano, 6-8 Marcellu' Wnght of Mount fk'lln 1n r>envrr. fl.R Lock'lle) ( olhr from l\derly of thr R~harna' 3nd guard \tan Suuon of < l,1\ Haah 10 I <'"npton Krnlu('k't ~ullon I\ the \On ol Kentutk) ( oach Eddie '>unon Tickets are S5 for IM and over. S l for ht~h sthool students with an l.D and$. for children under 12 * TODAY'S SCHEDULE MAln Gvm i 0 m ~u•~ COH I y' !>outh 8•v ) 20 om -Orin~ Cour>lv vs 8 uH110 J 40 S.n FrenclKo v1 Si n Fern1 r>do Vellev Som -~eoon "' Co.,.,010" 610 -\11nlur1 vs Pro Jut'•or 1 ~ -Lo' A"91'fl v1 v ei.nc •• 9 o m -Mid Ve ••v •1 Metro N«1tl C>ym i om -WvominQ o RocllfiV• 110 -Metro "' Northern Cel ) 40 JV llll'N ~ 0 m -Wt11UOI 81tHf\ vs Pn•OI.,. 6 20 om -Frt•no v1 S.emt 1 ~ -Mlu ourl o Suoeo111r1 lluflelo v' Norther" C11 WIONU DAY'S SCHIOULE MAln Gvm I om -Rockll'll o !>outh Co.11 110 -Sen Ftrn111<1<> Vellt v v' Ke111uov J 40 -Or1"9f Coun1v v\ NorlP\trn C•t S om P•..C.ne v' Of't90n 610 • Mid \ltl .. V "' 81Jffllo 1 ~ -Vtnlure vs Frttno 9 om -LO\ Anotles v1 Suoen11rs H.,,,. Gvm I 0 m -WvOmc>fl9 0 Soulll 8.v 210 -Sen Fr•ncl"o v\ Vlclorre )>I()-JV GI~ S om -WHl\l<le 81trer, "' Como1on 6 20 -Vlt1or11 v' Vtt\tur• 1 40 Sea111e vs Pro Junior 9 om -Mln ourl "'' ll•ll•m1n THUlltSDAY'S SCHEDULI MAii! Gvm I om So\.1111 C.o." YI Wvomlng 2 20 -Mln our1 vs Velencl• l 40 -Sen Fr•ncltco v1 Ktniuch S om Oregon "' W1$11l<M 81utrs • 20 Vtn•u•• v \ S.ettle 1 40 -LOI All9tle\ VI 8•11•ml\ 9 om M•d VJ!lfv vs Ne><lhern C• N«1tl0vm 1 om -So\.1111 Bev v1 Rocklhll 2 20 -88'1tmt\ vs Suo.rite " 3 40 -Sen rernenoo \lellev v\ \11c1oro~ $ om Comolon n P1HMll• 610 -Pro Junior vs FrKnO 1 40 V•t.lltle v1 Su~ri11r\ 9 om Or1n11t Co1.1n1v vs Mtlro P'RIDAY'I SCHIDUL.E Mtlll Chm l 40 -Pool C winner vi Pool B winn.r \om POOi D wlnMf v' Pool f w1nn.r 6 20 111-•<I v 11 tv v' Dt•not County 1 40 -LO' A"1X! .. I "' Mluour N"1tl Oym 6 JO -Matto "' l vff•lo '.o ll•n1mu "' V•le<>co• SATURDAY'S SCHIOULI Mtlll Ovm 10 ~ m u m1l1n11\ ii 10 t m s•m1t1"•" 11 40 et m -c on•nlellon 1 o "' lhlrd ol•t • l 40 rh1molon•~lo ~l.S PMI A M•d Vl loev lvfftlO Norlh•rn Cel Mttto O<e'Ot CO\ifllv J>ooi 8 -\0011> Cou 1 Rocfl.fl"' Wv<>mong ~th ••v POOi C-llitnhKllY Sen F .. ". llO VU•• \all f"rt M 'to ViclMlt POOi o--0t99(KI, P1~ W"ll\•0. ll•llffl Como•Ofl POOi Ventur• r r1tno s..11 .. Jl•o '""'kif P!)OI t LO\ "-"' Min...., 8t~m•\ V1' •"< a s,,,,... "•'l I ,. I ANGELS ••• .-.... .. ~ bm&I,··. Downhtt said. ..,.o ~nk that we vc come all ttU1 way withoUt a kft-h.lnded 1ta11er Caoddaria'.1 aoina to Win ut a t01°oi' u~mes:• •• ebavulotofthiapaoindor 1.&1 th.It -.. want to keep •01'1."° aaad 1' sluger R • .. _.. ~ ICUon. e"' ,.., aood pitchina and cSe--fCMc and timely hitaina. •• The Anaets have aotien a boo5t from the rapid cmttarnce or rookie fi~~ bueman Wally Joyner, who's hitt1n1 around .313 with 20 homm and 72 run! batted in, a record for an Anael rookie. Joyner, 24, was the first rookie ever voted to a ttartinc position on the All· St.auquad. Entcnnf the break be had at I~ one RBI in 0 straiaht aames. equahna the club record 1et by Fred Lynn in 1974. However, An&els Manascr Gene Mauch, whose club led by six pmes at ~e All-Star break last year only to f~1sh one pme back of lhe Royals wd: "l~m not &oina to'aet carri;I away this tame. All we want is to play better an the second half than we did last ear." tle ~a~. wi~h Manacer Bobby VaJent.ane s fatth an youna pitchers Jose Guzman, Bobby Watt and Ed Coma beina amply rewarded, have been at or near the top of the West the entire first half. "I'm not really surprucd at the way we've played," Valentine said. •• ... If anything, I'm a little surpnscd by some of the other teams in the division. Kansas City's going to play the rest of the season. They're capable of putting a strina of Jlmes toacther. 'A lot of Kansas Caty observers say they're right where they want to be this time of year. They're not a front- runnini type of club. "California's had good per- formances out of 1he1r veterans. and they •ot a real shot an the arm with the addiuon of Wally Joyner." Altbouah the Royals seem to be fading. Valentme's obscrvauon about their being a second-half club might prove true apm. "Our tustory is that of a team that plays best when our backs are to the wall," Hal McRae. the Royals' desig- nated hmer. said. rttalhng when Kansas Oty rallied from 3-1 deficits last year to win both the AL title and the World Scnes. Royals Manager Dick Howser saad he feels confident that. when October rolls around. his club will be in contention. "We'll be there," he said. "We'll get our p1tch1ng straightened out." HOMERS ... P'n>m Bl berry hit four to lead the Nat1onal League Joyner said the Astrodome 1s not the place where he would like 10 ma le his li ving "I hear it's real tough to get one out of here," Joyner. who has 20 homers. said. "I think those extra 10 feet the) moved the fenct<s in helped me " Barfield. with 21 homers for Tor· onto, saw ~veral of his long dnves fall short on the warning track "The ball came!I. sort or:· he said. shaJong his head Some say there 1s a simple solu11on to solving the home-run drought - tum off the air cond1t1oning. Players say the air density inside the Astrodome 1s h1$h . e~cep1 when the a1r-condiuoning 1s off. When 1t 1s hot inside. the balls carry well. "This 1s a pitcher's park. 1t always has been." Houston pitcher Make Scott. a member of the National League All-Star staff, sa)'s "You can throw a lot more stnkcs here You don't have to be ac, fine." El ROLL #OW "for the right start In life" HAWTHORNE CHRISTIAN SCHOOL ALL DAY KINDERGA RTEN Kindergarten thru 8th FAU SEMESTER STARTS SEPT. Ith • Door to Door Transportation Where Possible • Reasonable Tuition • Arithmetic. Reading, Spelllng, wtth Phonic Emphasized • Before & After School Care for Students of Working Parente (8:30 am-6:30 pm) A PRIVATE SCHOOL OF 04STINCTION FOUNDED IN 1H2 IN fMITlll YAU.IY 11Ulll•llllT (11•) 111-1111 Who would have tabbed Giants, Astros in West? But theret eyare at Al -Star brea • l-21n the NL West By MlCllA£L A. LUTZ ,,,.,......., The San Francisco Gaaots and the Houston Astros arc the last teams anyoue expected to be battlina for first place at the All-Star brak i1' the National lea&ue West Division race. But at midseason. the two teams arc locked in a senaw chase while the Los Anaeles Dodsers, hobbled by injuries, arc in last pl.ace, far fro m their perennial leadership role. San Diqo is the nearest challenscr at the mid-point of the ICaSOn followed by Cincinnati and Atlanta. The G iants, comina off or one of their worst seasons ever. are now talking pennant. San Francisco's triumph Sunday over Pittsburah, coupled with Hous- ton's loss to Philadelphia, put the Giants one game ahead of the Astros an the National League West and aa ve them undisputed possession of first place at the All-Star break for the first time since 1978, a year in which they eventually finished third. "We're ~oing to win this thinJ.." San Francisco All-Star pitcher Make Krukow said ... ff people think we're JUSt a fluke and take us li&htly, that's good. I hope they take us Ughtly the whole year." Astros rookie Manager Hal Lanier S&Jd fast starts by both the Astros and G iants have been keys to the first half of the West Division race. "Our club hadn't gotten off to Jood stans in several years and the Giants were coming off a bad year (I 00 losses) so it was good for both of us." Lanier said ... We both needed early success." The Astros pitching staff has been the backbone of the Astros' charge. led by All-Star Make Scott. who leads the league in strikeouts. and All-Star reliever Dave Smith, a mong the league leaders in saves. He's not an All-Star. but reliever Charlie Kerfeld docs have the numbers at 6-1 and a Alisa doesn't 1.79 £RA. Bob Knepper, I().. 7, and Nolan Ryan, despite an elbow injury, also have contributed to the team's pitcll- 1n1_ succes. Offensively, Kevin Bus. who wu bittina .246 at the All·Star break last year, has been the team's m<>fl oonsistent hitter.z. batliAI .304. Second year 11rst baseman Olcnn Davis leads the Jeaaue with 20 home runs, gjvina the Astro their lona awaited power hitter. Bass and Davis were named to the All.Star team. The AsttOI also have prospered with thestro~-armed manqinastyle Lanier brou t with him from SL Louis, where e learned his m~J techniques from Whitey Herzog. "I've heard they've welcomed the change," Lanier said. "t told them an ANALYSIS spring training that I was different from what they'd have in the past. "Some/layers need a kick in the pants an some need a pat on thet back. l can do both." The G iants were 16 pmes off the pace at the All-Star break last year but first year General Mana,er Al Rosen has molded together a winning uniL "We have a lot of no-names who are JUSt doing everythina that has to be done on a daily basis in order to win ball games," Rosen said. Rosen says Robby Thompson, who got the second base starting job when Manny Trillo was traded. is the league s best rookie so far this season. Wall Oark, another rookie, per- formed well at first base before he was tnJured June 3. Rosen also praised third baseman Chns Brown. who 1s hilting .338. "There's no doubt in my mind that Chns Brown 1s the best third baseman 1n the National League," Rosen said. "I think he'sgomgtogoonand have a tremendous career and be a very potent force. the type of player who will change ballgames.·· The Giants also arc getting outstanding performances from two former Astros. outfielder Jeffrey know it yet, but she's depending on you. Actually, she's depending on all of us to brighten her future by providing a dependable source of reasonably priced electricity. · To meet the challenge, we at Southern California Edison want to remind our customers about the importance of using energy wisely. ........... ~·.a11 .. n•for otaata• aur, 1p111maa. Leonard and pitcher Milce LaCou. 9.3, The Oiants p1tch11111tafl' bas been amona the leque leaders in com· bined ca med run averaae this season. The ul,jury epidemic that has S1ruck the Dodaen this season, has moved Manaaer T ommy usorda to talk of miracle finishes. "l told them (has team) about the 191 4 Miracle Brave,, what the)' accomplished," Lasorda said. "l told them about the 1951 Miracle at Coopn's Bluff. ··1 told them that an 1983 we pined 10 games an 11 days apinst the Braves. It's been done before and it could be done ap.in. It 's a maner of how bad do they want ll." The Dodgers may not have enou&h healthy playen. They lost outfielder Pedro Guerrero before the start of the season and over the past two weeks, five started have been sidelined with various injuries including Bill Madlock, Mike Scioscia, Mike Marshall and Greg Brock. Enos Cabell surveyed the Dodgers' mJury list and observed. "We're a glorified AAA club. We're only six games out (now eight) and there arc hardly any regulars plavina." Cmcmnat1 has stru&&Jed in the first half of the season. but Manascr Pete Rose thinks the Reds are about ready to challenge .. No question. we're a contender m the West,·· Rose said. "Our best ball as ahead of us. You can see we're coming. By now, we're not trying to tum 1t around. we've already turned 11 around." lnJunesand off-performances have slowed the Reds. Mano Soto has languished on Lhe inJ_ury hst with a). 7 record and 3. 97 ERA. Ted Power. who finished last season with 27 saves. has one save this season and a 5.40 ERA. Pitching (Clem en s) has en oonus for team picked fifth 8)' DA VI! O'BA8.A ,,, .......... Two years aco the Detroit Tigers 'IWnt 30aamesover .SOOat the start of the season and lneied to the Amcn- can Laaue East title en route t0 the Wot1d ~fies championship. .. St.anioa a year 35-S wu some- thana almost unbelievable and I doubt you'll sec that apin," Man.qc.r John McNamara of the Boston Red Soa said .Last sprinf an lookina ahead to the 1986 campaiin. Althouah they 1ot off to a fallenna tart with an 11·8 record 1n April. the Red Sox appear to have taken a page from Detroit's 1984 book as they .ANALYSIS enJOY a Co~fortable scven-pme lead over the New York Yankees in the division race at the AU-Star break. Without worrying about what their nvals are domg, the Red Sox have gradually improved their record while threatening to go 30 games over .500. 'Tm very happy with our pos.- 1t1on." McNamara said entering the All-Star break. Picked in most spnna polls to repeat last year's fif\h-placc finish, Boston has been a whoppana surpnsc an McNamara's second season. The Red Sox have survived key tnJunes. while their chief dtvision nvals -defending champion Tor- onto. the Yankees. the Tigers and the Baltimore Onoles have fal tered. "Pitching, JUSl one word, pitching. that's the reason we're m first place," McNamara said. "We've had outstanding cons1stency, not only from our starters but also from the bullpen. You need all the inpe<S1ents to win. of course, but the improve- ment on this club definitely 1s the pitching." Roger Clemens, who underwent Joe .._..to ... ._.._ an,,_..•.,1at1ae~ shoulder 'uratr>' last A'-1pst, came back as the ace of the staff. rollina otI t •consecutive victories before I~ two decuion1. Dennis .. Oil Cao Boyd -smpended for leavina the club when he was not selected for the All-Star team -chipped in wtth I I victones. Jn the bu.llpen, which bad only 29 saves in l 98S, Bob Stanley returned to form after finger surgery last September. Stanley had 14 saves io his first 19 opportunt.aties as well as a 5-2 record. The big naht-handcr had plenJy of help from veteran Steve Crawford and lef\-bandet Joe Sa.mbito, who won a job a5 a free agent after betng released by Houston and the New York Mets last year. Sambito, whose career appeared ended by an arm anJury suffered an 1982, had nine • saves an has first 14 opportunities. "Havana a healthy Roger Clemens, Bob Stanley and Joe Sambito bu made a btg difference." McNamara .. said "And we can't forget the job Sammy Stewart did for us until he Col • hurt. Roaer and Oil Can have kept us from go1n1 mto any prolonged losini streaks (no more than three pmes) Wlth help from the bullpen often. "Naturally, the senous mjuries i ufTered by Bruc:.c Hurst and Al Nipper. along with Stewart, have hurt. But we've shown we have more depth in our pitching, too ... • Last year we helped more than 160 ,000 custom- ers find ways to save on their electric bills . Th is year we'd like to help you . For information about our free Home Energy Sur· veys and other energy and n1oney saving programs, call Edison's Conservation Action Line toll-free at 1-800-952-5CX52. By using energy wisely. we can make things better for Alisa and all th e other Alisa.~ to come. Thanks for your help Together we can brighten the future . .,.rt.I Southern Cahfornaa Edison , ---~ ''1 R·111fHl ~ . ' • • ....... L••--ITAMCalls ~L...­ .. fTDNW • L Pct. • " .SS2 ., 41 $11 • .. M5 • • .4SS ,, 11 ..,, 17 ii ..,. ,. S6 .J?t llAST DIVWOM S6 ,, . " .. " .. •l '1 ., (J .. •l •i T .. n~ Al-Ster GwM al Houttoll. n w ..... ¥'•0-No ..,,. tcMdulld n..•Y'•~ TOtOlllO •t ...... " CNc:Mo ., ....,. voni, n Taxu at Oatroll, n iwnr.ota al laltlmor•, n OnWnc1 et IC.enM• Clrv n 9oalefl al IMttte. n ...._., L~ W•l'T OtVIWN 1 t 10 IOI.\ 13 141'\ San Frencli.co Hout ton w .. ,, L l"C1. 40 so Ge I ,, SJ4 kn Dleoo Attenla Cincinnati ~ •S ., '3 Sit 3 " •17 ' 40 40 u 416 6 4 •SS • •AJT DIVISION S9 2S '6 38 ,, 43 36 ... 36 so lS SO T ... Y'a Game Atl·Slar Game at Hou1IM, n W...._V", Games No 9a1M1 loCMctula<I T'llund9V"I Ga..-a ~ •t St Loula, n S.n Fr•nel.co •I Cl'llc.90 Atlanta at Montr .. t, n San Dleoo •t Pitt~ n ~ •t Clnclnnell, n ,._ VOl'll al Houston n JovrtM eur1etof> Dowlllne Jadlson Hendflctl Grlefl Pettis Wllfono Jones O.Clncn Scnof1elcl Narron Boone How•ll T9tal1 Aftllll ·~ ( TilrMltlll S6'MllV'I Geme I •ATTlNG •• It H H• ~ " '°' 20 153 22 '6 J 2'7 SS IS 10 m 37 ... 9 ,... ,. (J • 157 20 " s m 4' n 1 ''° " " 1 m • st • Zl2 ~ .. 10 236 37 SA 1 4S ' 10 I 757 25 S4 J 6' 17 14 1 2'7l "5 nt M l"TTCHING 1(12 SAi 13 '" 11''> '" 23 •19 ,, .i2 2• ' ···~· n 313 17 301 ,, 216 32 179 2S 1'2 17 161 JO 1S9 1S 1SS Jl 2S1 •7 244 n m Im .. "' ll 21' 411 .VI 11" H ea SO W·LE•A Ca l\O .. arla 11 ' I) 6 9 7 0 2 91 Witt IS2 IJJ '6 124 9-7 JOI McCH~lll 137l1 113 49 111 IO·S J l? Flnlev 16 16 10 11 I O l 37 CQ(t>ell 43 , H '' 23 2 1 3 SA Forst" 11 .14 1l n • 1 349 Moo<t 2SA 17 11 19 t 3 316 FlacMr II 18 8 I 0 0 •13 Sutton IOS• 100 19 I> l • S • 3A Rornan1c1< 101 , 116 •1 l8 s I s 31 COOi< 9' , •4 8 6 o 2 9 36 T .... I ns~. ,.. 214 Sil ... ,, 4.2' S.vfl Moort I (Mbfll 8 F Hier • Mo'1 Al·Srar acic>earances AME.RICAN LEAGUE II Brooks ROO•"W<I lb Ba·• ,., ·•t T9CI Wl~•em\ Of 80\IO~ .. Al IC •1 ,,. ol 0.troll M10,e .. Menflt ot Ne"' <for• IS VOQ· 8e<r• c Ntw Yor• Roo Carew 1b·71:1 C• Mrfln 14 Cari Y•\trttm\k• lb of ao1•0t'l 13 ,....,,. Fo• 11> Cr11c•oo 11 R9991e J•cll>On of Cei NY Oe• ll Joe DIM•OV•O. ol Ntw vor• Hermon Klr1tbr•"' It> lb ot M1nn·wasn 10 Lui\ AD•fiC tO U Bell BO\ Chi ' Rockv Cofevno of Cle Der 11\C F'rtd Lvnn. ot Bo\ ·Cal • George 8rtft, lt> K•n1u C·•v 8111 Olclllv c New York Bol>l>v Doerr 21> 8011on C•rllon F11k c Bo• Chi Biil FtH!>an c Detroll Joe Gorc!<>rl 2b Cit NY Mtnnlt M1no10 of C111 C~ 1 Joe Cronin, u Bo\ Wnh J1rnm1e Foo lo lo Bo\ Pto C.eorge Ke1t lb Bail Bo\ Dt• 11;.t n Kellner )b C>t••'•"O He r.ev Kuenn " OI C>e·Dtl Fr11\k Me 1~. lb Bo\ton Roger Mer I Of KC NY M1c1<ev Vernon lt> 80\ C•e iNn" Ee rlv Wynl\ o Ctii C f ' J·m Bunning o Oetro1t Dorn D1Meoo•o of Boston Lerrv Doov ot Coevt•eno Whiltv Fore! o New YO"~ Jim Freoo\• n Ca•·LA Lou Gtflrlg I b New York Cn•rtev Gt hronger 2b Dttro•I BOl>l>v Grich 2b B•ll Ce Elston How1re1 c Ntw Vor• Celfl\n Hunter D KC NY O•• Thurma n Mun\Ofl c New Yor• T onv Ollva of Mlnntsola BoDDV R1charc!ton. 1b New York v ern Steo11en1. "· Bo1 StL s Earl Averill of, CHlv•l•nc! Eerl Ballev. c, M lnneM>t• euoov Bell. 31>, Cit Teu' Lov Bouc!rHu. u , Cievelenc! 8tft Camo•nerl\, n . Oe• Texe\ NOf"m Cash, ID, O.trolt Bot> Faller , p C1e ve111no Leflv Gomer o New Yor• Boo Jonnson. of B<>• PM wu" Sherm LOll•r c C hie ego Greig Nelflt\ )b, New York H•I N_hOIJ.., o OtlrO•' Jim Pa lme< o B•ll•more VIC Power lb, C ·t IC C Jim Rice of 80\ton F'r•nk Rooinson. ol B•ll Ce Pete Runnet1 11> Bo1I0<1 BiQ Skowrof' lb New Yor• Rue!Y YoO It> Bo\ 0.t NATIONAL LEAGUE 14 Wiiiie MaVI of NYC. \F' NYM St•n M1a 1a1 It> ot !>I l Ou•\ n Henrv A•ron ol Atl·M 1 lS Pele ROM ID 1b lo of C1n Pr11 14 ltOOtrto Clemente ot Pltht>vrvh u Erni. B•t11U It> u Cluuoo " J~ny Bet1ch c (1nclnn•t1 II Mel 011, of N•w YOf'lt 10 Ken 8 over. 31> St LOUii 8•1>41 11ermen, 1b Brklvn (,,I Eekll• Mal ...... , 31> Mllw•ukH Joe Medwl<:lt , of B1o.1vn NV '" Enot Sleuolller of St L0\11• ' Orl•n<lo Cel>90• lb SF StL \ttv• G•rvev lb LA·SO JOMllY Mlrt lb NY•SIL Joe Motoen 111 Cln•HO\J Rte! Sc~•IW'\f, lb, Mii Stl • Del Crendalf c MllwavkM OOft OrYMla.. •• LO\ Anoelel l)lck c;.roet, n , Pttr SIL Ju.If' M4ollcllel, •• Sen Fr•!IC•KO lil'M w .. •MM. u . lrOOklyn ,..,. 5-1\to, )t> ClllCaoc> /Wiie SCM11d1 >t> ""'141~1• Tom S.av« • Cln NY Joa Tone. c. 11> 30 At•·MH•SfL 1 Stnol!Y ~--·· c llfl, Ctn 11'9111 Pttt ltov C•IN*lalt, c.. •1001t1Yn OatY Carlar, c.. Montreo1 De,_. C~. "· C1nc11tnat1 .. N\9l.,...al, "· ..,llO>urllfl TMY flWltt, 1.-Jb. CIMlllMti CMie ~. of, llllVTl·NV WtfrM SMlln, a, lo$•Mll WI*' tarvat. Of, ..,lllbuftll ,.,.., V••10M, u· , •lllYTI '"' ,__ ___________ --·----., All-Star scoreboard TOTAL I 1981-1981J I 1971-1980 1:1:········ I 1961-1970 (2 In 1962) 1::1:········· 1961-1960 ******** (2 eaci\ In 1959, 1960! AL 1941-1950 * * (no game In 1945) AL I 1933-1940 I:: I *** • Ewtll Blac11well, o. Clnclnnall Roo Ctv. lb, LOl A!!VMI Wel~er COOP« c, NY·SIL Bot> Glb,on P. SI LWll (,II HOOOH. It>. BrOOklVn Oon Ktn1nger. n . Chke90 l'ren~ McCormick, lb, Cln·Ph1 w1111e McCovev lb San Fr•nclKD !=ran~ RObln\On, ID·of Cincinnati Jac~1t Robinson, 7b·of. 8roolllvn Bill Whtie lb St LOUii &• •v W11t1•m1 ot Chlcal'Q Maurv w1u, " Lo\ Anoele1 s Larrv Sowa n P1>1tadltfohle LOU BrtX• ot !>I LOUI' Sttvt C•• •o<' " Phi SIL Bot> E 11101 t lD ot 8o1 Pill Georoe Fo"tr ot C•nc:innatl C.eoov Har1,,.11 c. Ch•Cal'O Car• Hu~ P Ntw Yorlt ll•IDh K ,,,., Of C h1·P1tt Ern.e Lom1>aro c. 8o1·C1n NY Marlv MartC)(I •• St LOIJ•I A• (>1ver ID·ol Mon P•tt Rol>•n llol>ff"fl o Pn1leclt'Dh•• Re99•e Smtih of L_. StL Bucflv Welte" o C•r> P"· Al·Stan stattstl<s AMERICAN LEAGUE STARTERS AB R H Hit RBI AVG W nf1t ld N Y Henoerson N Y Puc•f'" Mtn l'~rreNleJ Tor JeCODv (If Me!l·"O'V N V Murr-av 8a1 P•Hlfv Sea l/\lhoft I( C C•~ 191 4 7' 11 S9 249 Flnt .. M 341 SS IO'I 10 11 31J Second ane 314 SJ 86 11 JI 26S Thlrc!a.H 300 S6 109 Sllort1too 317 ., 91 13 ., 197 Ou"'81c! 10? SI 10 13 S6 2l2 lS1 '3 100 IS SI 714 ll2 6S 119 l6 •9 lll llESERVES Cet<h« 7SJ n 61 lnfktden 173 SA lit • 313 4' h II lll ., 130 ,, ,., )I u 11 >'6 SA 97 11 )1) 37 90 10 36 )16 so 261 6J 3'1 S1 ?9• M 110 Sl 719 ~· e • .-Ch• Berl~ Tor CensKo Oe• Mo1eDv Tor ~ice Bo' AHe Bet C1em1tns Bs Witt, A,_, Scllrom, c~ HernnOJ Ot Higuera, Mt lltghlt, NV HOIJOl'I Tew ll1 SO IOS 12 1~ se " 11 ~ S1 93 7l JAi Sl 96 ll lSO S6 111 9 Pttcti.r\ SJ 11' 6S 1ff 11 11• " 117 60 l34 G W L Sv H aa SO l!RA 39 ) ) 23 37 l8 .0 1 " 11 IS 2 0 '7 lS 1'6 HI 19 ' 1 o uJ " m l oe 19 10 2 0 112 JO SA 4 11 41 4·4 II 61 10 S1 l II 19 10 1 o no •s 11 s 116 )9 6. 19 •9 2• ., 166 " 9-• 0 ,. lJ 60 ))8 NATIONAL LEAGUE STARTERS All It H Hit Aal AVG CatcMr Carter N y 274 SI 10 16 6~ 7SS Finl S.19 Hernenc!ez. N Y 306 ., ., 6 )I ,., S.Cend ••M Sa ndt>trg C ht 331 13 92 8 •S 717 Tllk'O a eM 102 SI 86 19 l>6 21~ Sl'i«tltoo 182 l7 19 0 71 280 Ov~ Str•w~rrv NY Murc>hV All Gwvr>n S 0 7S~ •7 16 1J <I& /V8 171 SI 18 U l6 UJ 1•J S9 111 I '.Ill 141 RESEAVI:) Ceto..r1 JOC' t /J 11 M 2c~ 71t IS 1>7 7 ?'I 14 I lnfitlde" Broo~l Mo Brown !> F Ci 0 fv•s 110u S.•. 0°"990 714 •1 9A I' .... l)J 769 16 H I IS 338 HS •8 18 10 60 111 lJl 41 101 • 79 121 Ouffielden Beu Hov C Oev ' Sf Park'' C c Re1ntts Mo,, )?1 4) ~· I J 16 104 791 H II> 9 SS 19' US '6 ~• It SS 181 117 s 104 6 ll lll Pllc;htn G W L Sv H BB SO ERA Fral'rr, ( '" 41 l 4 14 ti 78 49 717 Sco1• HOo, n 9 6 0 I" •l 167 1 ?'I Srn11r t1.,,.. 10 I 6 IJ H 13 27 1t l Velentuel• IY 11 6 0 111 SO 134 ) 0 I Rtardn Mn j~ 6 ' 70 tA ti t6 ) n FfrndJ N ; 11 t2 1 0 H S7 103 761 C.oOdn N V 11 10 ' 0 106 44 101 7 II Rewttv p,., 10 11 S 0 14t 47 66 196 R"O<ltn PI It 9 S 0 106 43 91 2 47 IC r1;• w ~ F 10 II S 0 116 19 9S J II Al -Star Game hlstwv 1931 Amtr ran ' 7 193•-Arnt r•can 9 7 19lS-A"'t' •La~ ' 1 1936-Net,or e • 3 1937-Am!'• ,,.,, 9·3 938-Ne• onel • I 19~Arntr•cen ]•1 19.0--"fat O<l•I 4·0 190-A,.,er can 1 S 190.-Amer•c•n. J 1 l94)-4me< tea" S· l 190 Nat Of\el 1 I 194S-No Q•"'9 lf<l&-Ameroc.n 12 0 19'1 Ametrican 1 I 194t-Ame<~n. S•1 1949-A,.,.rlCan. 11·7 l9Sj)-Ne11one1, 4· l 19S 1-Netlonal I l 19S1-Nellonal l 1 1953-Nallonal S· I lt~Amarlc.en 11 9 19Ss-N•tlonal, 6 S 195.)-Netlonal, 1 3 1957-Amer ican, •· S 19St-A"'9rlcan. • · l 1959-Nellonel. S·A 1959-Am«kan. S·J l9~•1lonal, S·J 196'>-Natlt>nat • 0 1961 N•t1onel S • 1961 Tied I 1 ••I" 1967-Net•onal l 1 196?-Amt r•C•n 9 • 1963-Netiona \ l 1'M-Nat10,,e1 7 • l96S-Net1one1 6 S l9U.-N•t•ona 7 1 1967-Netlonei 7 1 l96f-Net1onet 1 0 196t-N•l•O,,el 9 ) 197~Nellon• s • 1971-A,,_ir•n 6 • 1972-N•flone 4 l 197)-Neflon•I 1 I lt7-Nehonal 1 7 197S-Nationel 6 I 1976-N•flon•I I I 1977-H•llon•I 1 S 1971-Nelionel I l 1979-Netlonal I ~ 19'0-Nelional • 2 '"' N•t1onet S • 1M2-N•flon•I ' I ltll-Aml't1r •n n 1 lM4-N•t1on•I l t. lftS-N1t1001I 6 I IN•tlon•I L•111111• Hl•c!' Mrl" JS 11 I) Al·Star Gamo r~ordi IATTINO Met'"'"" • -Ted W•lltam\ IO\IOn .-1,. lt"' Mett ""' 4 -JM N\41dwi0 SI Loutl NL 1931 ftd w 1111em1 lo1tot1 1t'6. C •" Vutrt•n"'"' Bo' tC)f'I A.L 1'70 f 11 1nn1ng1I MMIT"'111 .. M'I 10 'feel Wii11•m•. Botion 4l '"' MMIHtmtRllM 1 -A•-• Ve~n lltttt~Of\ NL lt•l ftel w m1am1 8o\f()ll AL lt'6 At llOUO'I Ci.v•f'd Al 1'~ Wfll•t McCoYeY Sall l'rer1e1sco NL ,,., <;e rv Cer1., Monlrtal "IL 19t1 MMIRYM .. ..._111 S -Teel Wt••am\ ~Ion AL 19'6 Al Ito'•" Cltv ... n<I AL, ltS. Mett St..-i .. '" -w .. Man. Sen ll'renclKO NL ,..., MMt C.IMM S...._ TMY 00v•. Mltll\HO!a AL 1~1 "1TCHINO MftfllhlM 1 AflN H•mmalter :\e n F r11<1<ls•o NL Ul l .. LITTLE LIAGU• ALL-STARS Meter DMslon DISTIUCT 62 TOUllNAM•NT Area I (el l"aunta.111 V ... y leu1ll LL fWanl and -frMWeV) """*"'' ~ Fountain V•llev Nofll'I 4, Seavlew 3 TMIV'I 0- S;JO 0 m -OcMn View v• Founteln V•ll•V Sou!l'I (IOstr tllmlneledl WeclftetdaV'• Goalne S JO om -Huntington Valley v1 Fountain "•"8¥ North ThurtclaY'• c.m. S JO pm -OcH n Vltw Founteln V•llev !>outn wll\Mf VI S..vlew Araa2 l •• Mer1na l"arti, N~ a.adll IE-.. _, Gntlwlll MefldlV"I Sc.re Stenlon 10 Rot>lnwOOCI 3 IR00tnwooo •Um•naledl TMIY'• ~IM s JO pm -WHlmln11..-VI Cvorfll Feder•I WMlleSdeV"t ~eme Nont IC".OUled Tl'lundaV'I Game S JO om -Stenton v' Wttrmlnster Cvoreu I' e<19r el loser INOTE Tournamenl contlnu" through J uly 11 or 2?1 Junior Division DISTRICT 61 TOuttNAMENT (•t Feunteln Velev Hltfll MaMllY'• kw• ~•un11n11t0<1 Vallev 10 Ocean View 10 (t,,rouvh 6 , 1nn1no' lo t>t conflfl\Jtd 1ooev et J·301 TacleY'I Gema ~ om S.evlew vs Hunllnvton ValMIV Ocu n V1tw wln~r Wed!MSdaV"I Game S om -We11rntnster vs tOO•V'\ winner !NOTE Another 11•me win t>e ot.aved Trtur1 O•~ 1f r>tc•u•rv I Sentor OIVIUon DISTRICT '1 TO\MNAMaNT (11 JtlllftMll Jr. Hltll\. WastrNmtwl I Ectw•rdl •ftd Trellis a1'Mtsl Merldev's Seen ec .. ~ v •• 2 S..view 1 (Seeview thm1Mledl TildeV'I Game ~ Pm Fountain Valle,-YI Oct•n V•t* W~Y'I ~me ~ pm -Wetlm1n11er VI IC)(l•Ont ' • .,,,,., !NOTE Anothe< oame w1• t>t l>lavfHl T"u" CS.v •I l"KH,arv MEH'S BASKETBALL Wor1d CM~tos l•I OY!Mo, ~In) UNIT£DSTAT£S -Ameker l·• 0·0 2, IC Smn~ 7 8 l S 7, McKev S·9 S·8 IS, C Smlr" 8 1• 2 l 18 Rot>ln1on l·J H 3, Booues l·J 1·1 • Kerr S 10 1·7 lS, Etllott 1-10·01. Gllllem S·7 1 4 l1 T 01111, 79 S9 IS·7' 77 CANADA -S•mm1 1·• 0·0 S, Pesquele 1·6 O O l Kezenow'"' 4 10 O· I 9. Triano 3·1 •·• 11, l/Y111,er 0 6 • • 4 KttHV-0-1 1·2 I. Munger 1·4 • • 6 Hal<h 1 I> l-l 7 Meagher 6·8 6·1 l9 Tot•ll 19 SS n 6 6S H•1ft.ni-U~11td Sta les JI. C.,,ad• 16 TMtt oo·n• goe"-S1mms, Pesqueltt l(uenows• l r el\O Mt•Ohe<. Ktfr • FOUlec! out No<'t RPbounds-Un1tec! StelH 77 !GIMlam 9J Conooe 7'I 1 Noltttr 121 Anllll-Unltto Slllfl • Bov"'' Ame•e< K Smith MclCtY ll. Ceo1e1a I I~ ezenow1kll Total fOUfl-Unllecl S••'"' 71 C8"a0a lO Misc. Goocrw• Garnes (•I Melaw) MEN'S VOLLSYIALL US lltt Butoarie lS·I, lS·t , IS· 10 Sov•tl Union Otf Br•tll, 1S·9, 1S·6, IS·l (ZIKhO\IOY&~·e c!ti Jeoan, lO·IS, •·IS. lS·ll. " 11 16 " MEN'S TEAM HANDBALL UnittO ~181H CW! 1ce1end, 22·19 WOMEN'S TEAM HANDBALL O~nm&r• def Unllltd Sl1!1s, 23 n Deep ... ftlMnt 0 00•1 L.ctr., -S boats, m •"91..-1 10S r.err1 >Cl• 14 bonllo. • vellowl•ll, 1 llellbul, 41 r • beu S4S Mild ban. 1'~ madltr'el NtwNl't Lendllle -S t>oall 10. el\lllars '2 O•"•'""• n t>onllo. 1 ....itowtail . .,. c:allco ban 1is ••nd t>an 160 mec.t<aral, 1 tc.Uk>ln, S •001.,11 Dene Wiien -I ooat1, I) 1 ano .. r1 513 t>as.a, a be rr e( ud4I S t>onito 4 l'lall!IVI, IO rneckorel, • 'MH'O\llted 6 \(UIOln rMftdllY'• tnnsecftem u.H•ALL ~u..ue OE TROIT TIOEltS-SloMct Jim SlalOll, ollcller !.ent Jollrl Pl«la, ollel'ltf. to Na"'Yllle ot ,,,. 4me<lun AnCKl1llon. N•1'11111~ PITTSa u RGH Pl .. ATEs-<.tlled llO • .,,y Jones ollcf'lar. lfom 11ewan of IN Peclrk Cout l Hll..e ~' 111"1 s.u..-. olld'ler. to H•w•h SAN FRAH{IS(.0 OIANT'~ 0811 Gleoden outfl•IW, on a ?O-dllv r8'1obllttallOll l"OO'nALL ......... , ..... WMIM NEW <>l'Ll!ANS MINT~.,,., I I .... ., Jr, Tom Mltflno •nd Carmaft Piccone rac>lonat \COUii 'T 1.0UIS CAROINALS-Sientd Jtft TVPOtt, Clei.nllYe end Af'"ffd 10 lf'"ml Willl lby l rown offtnalv• u-n HOaCaY ............. "~ NEW YOlllK lllAHGCltJ-Ntme<I P,,i. £1001•10 YIU .... ttldenl •nd 99Mf'al ~ end stoned 111m to e tllrM ·ra•r contreet Anncwncecl 11\af Ina conlract of Crate Patric• v1u Otttlden• •ftd ~""~•' mall•-· •OIJld not ti. rtnt#9CI OC Fair handicap . on..~"* <• LM _... ... C.....l ,..,.....,... . ..,... .... .,.... ............ PinthA1A OUMtt•ttoasal '"" •Aetl. 11t Y.,._ IV-.. SUDO Tlnt • ..,., oiill alld UP 0.lmlfte Pra t) 1Cl9 I •twroate o..i. (L4'#11) CO ID t TnMA* Wtll1t llllulal 112 ) Arnie laOv (~001•> ID • Tiie '""' 1....o.r c"9ullnl1 m 1n S COMl'Mlllarv IH11111) (J) 1n 6 Swltl IMk• Clciwwal 1n 1 Oen "'°"' (Wtllta) ltt I lllt Tiit YIU (Garcia) ID ....... t Mlclnlllhl ftollcV (P8\ll!Nl Ul l It 10 lllooer YOUlllO (Oldtf~Mll) 122 II SMk• Im LOOM (l.twlal <tl 1~ 12 Hld9 u.-(HUl'lfl (t) l It THI •tNO LIAO.• (Ml Should Ila II\ control of 11111 llelcl tram Ille &181'1·..,,. th& Qtlt, ARNI• HIV CJ-I) Lone OYWdul IOr Wlllnlne effort, Mt~'' "9llt llWeJ IWtSS •AMK•A ( 4· 11 Saldot'l'I • PoOr tHort ltf' ""' lllld l'WllY .. rna 1 cMell LONOSt40T ltlVl•1tDAL£ OKIE SICOMO llACa :uo YMdL PurM W,700 AllOwtllCt TllrM ..,._ old flllaL I Harrltft Go (Llllftam) llt 2 PIY Lindi (Oerelal 122 3 TI!lnlllno ltlc:ll (Huft!) Ht • Think LAntv I l..ldlev > 11' S 8veoM• IFIOfnl 122 6 Slf-Mlm\ttcl (Cwdoul 12'2 , EHY •• Misty (~) m • Dallca .. '--<Iv (06dtflctlM"l in t St•r Crfll..i (Mll(Jltl) in 10 Malle An AoPMrenot <lr~11 122 •VOONIS (4•11 ltac.nt dalm mav CIUka.lv De return.lne dlvtdendl tontol'lt, ••NA M•llMAID (5·21 C-'sJenl record for this flltV 10 CS.le, slrOl\9 COftf"*'; ,,.y UNDA (J·I) LHdl"9 QVarlatl'lor'M tr•INr Pl9cea l'lla tlOck war• ll'lav art cornpallll,.. LONGSHOT· DELI CATE LADY THOltOUOH .. 1!0$ THIRD •AC• 6'-'11 lurtonGs. Pune. s.S,500. ThrM vee" old end uo maidens. Ctalmlno ~le.. $12,SOO l For9td ~v (Scoll) 1n 2 Kiii (Peorota) 11S J NIP Uo (l(Hntl) llS 4 Quick Brlgacll IGarrldOI I lS S Muv R•oldo ll"ell..-sonl 1 IS 6 Artola (Slbllltl 122 7 Movie Maller (Bladt) 11110 I (;Olclln Dellver-v (C••tal\Olll 11S 9 Sll111111'1ot s.m <L.IPl'laml In 10 Huttle A O.nce (Ff'"ntndnl 115 NM..._. 1 l Bright Tta. (Greblt) 1?2 11 F19UI'• Ilsa Trkk (lratwall) a 117 OOLD•N 01uv••v (1·11 u..o "8rd ll'lrOUllhoul In toOd effort, .. rn1 the c.11; SLINGSHOT SAM 14·11 Felled H tevorlt•, Llol\am 10 rlcll lonlfll'll, MOVIS MAKSR (l ·ll Snoutcl H rn • ll'lare with r-1 of lasl 900d effort LONGSHOT MUV RAPIOO FOUlltTH ltACI! 6 IUl'loncll Purta Sl,000 ThrM YHf\ old •n<I vo Ctalmlno Price '9·7 000 I Hes A 5ola11'1 (Sltlllll) l 16 1 Turoo Ruler (lllac:kl a Ill 3 llerrera1 Oust (Enr1que1) 116 4 Chrlt'I Lad (R•mlrerJ 116 S Patriotic '"*'" fDouola1I 116 6 11111or1aoor <Ce\l•nonl 116 1£11Y TUllEll •11' us .t.117 l1S 11110 "' 11110 11S llS ln SlXTM ••ca.'"""°'*·~ ... M,000 Two Yffl Old meldell Iii*. Claimll\9 ltrlc.t· s 1',000 l ,...,,,_. (Ptdro11) Ill t L.Aw-ter Love (EKOOW'I Ill ' Me11.lmum Profit (Enrlovell I 1' • ltlQtlnCv Siar (Ca11anon1 111 S Quebs Dtl19ttl (Sll>llte l I 1' 6 5"11"'9 SU«ns <Douvtt•I 11' 7 T•booal (G•rrldol 111 • Ovnitwart (Crowden 11113 t D•rk OvlCl'llH (Orlac>a) 11' OUAIU OIUOHT 14· II Slaa<IY worlll at Callenla for lhls flltv, In taDlt>le hands for debut; ••GINCV STA.• (3·11 Showed llllle e9eln11 """"IQU9htr, drOPt to tofttr tonl9'\l, •••KING SUCCHS (6·1) Ludly Miiie 1111'1 from qvldl rntre, flltl • IOcMI LOHGSHOT· TAIOOSE SaV•NTN ltACa. 16 mlltl ~M 57.jQO. TllrH .... ,. Old •n<I UCI fllliet end mar•• Clalmln\I Price-16,250 1 Clau Pet CEnrlQutt) 116 1 Certelnlv Can Flv (P90rotal 116 3 Frigid Tlrnt (l'•rnlrel) 11' 4 PrM rranoe IOllvarfll 11' S Cartooean Sollll I ICastenonl IOf 6 Golden Cout (Bt.c.111 .t 111 7 Ro.cl To ltolft llamrNrlnol x 111 • _,.. e .. m (Cllnlf'oal x 104 PlllU•ANGS (Ml Wll ......, 111..i .. 11er ,..., .,_,.. i..111 c•.11a111W: ltM•IMUt anval· 1nia el ... wtreJ CLASS NT (4•11 Sl'laro C.!laflte lnv•der Is t oul of 10 tl'll1 VMI' with flyt lrlPS 10 the ,.lnntt s clrde, OOLD•N COUL 16· ll Hal never raced this cl'IH O enc! Hit n!Gt wtlof11 edge with epprenttc. C0tev Black, LONGSHOT FRIGID TIME aeetnlf •ACa ' tunlf*, ., tw.. ,..,_Old tlld-.-mu..,.~-""' .. ....... I ~ WllOttn ( .. IM) HS I T ..... l/'INT.IM .. lllt (hltOf'I •:~ I Diii i I'll ..... ("9it0fl) 1UJ • AMt*' ll'l'llla <C:,.._..,I m I TMlfv -.V <'*-'> • l'WV ~Ill (lan'VMrfnol •I• , ...... ~ (PatterWI) m m • &tar ....., (Oll'W.,•) l IS t DIMll CSIOlll) 10 Olf\llatnaft 06'I (C.•t111011l CO llS MM ..... 11 I,...,.. Too (0r*8) 12 111tldll"ht"8rt1Homtr C"9ttenonl m m IS Dofl t ~ (CHlallOll) (!) m 14 ~~=.~~S·ll ''""from Im lf'eWCI ....,.. ...... 1r6'lbllcl "'*"· ..-d to Nlftdll 1t11 ... I; ....,_10 TOO (f-21 ~ In for .... tonlofll, facM ...... and 119ur• ""' -to beet " ablt IO dftW lnl DtlMNIJ 0. (4-1) Addt bllnlltn IOl\lofll and dfOR noldl. LOHO· $HOT TOOOV .OV NWfN •AC• 1 1116 11'\ilH. Pl.WM' U.JOO Thret ....,. lid allCI VII Claln'llM Price U,oot I Notlw ..... (0rte941l Ht 2 Quad\& IOv ( i.rnmarlnol • 111 3 Allatalr !Entkauld lit • Trutl A a.tier (hfltneourll U6 s Nclrtlllwn ~ C~•bltl ~ 6 Olcktn11 lot !C.tlallOll) l I• 7 Prlftc.t Of W«dl (SCOll) • OWncll* ~ Daall (ll8fftltw•l '" t Hltfl Victory (ai.Q) •111 Al.UT.,_ (5-tl '°"C»d 1111 H<'e and held well Ill IH lt.ff\18ftClt ~ no woDllm; DtAMONDJ Ille. OtlA" <••ll Wll bl haril lo den¥ If ~ l'lllnft! VP front• c#8ble Md lt'ainacl ll1t ""1Y c°"'"Mnl c:ondlllOf181', NAT1V9 PILL 16-11 HM aln croaM<I "" olo«ie INN "'' •-.,._, LONOSHOT. QUACKS'S IOV TWNTH ••C• 6 turlOlln l'UrM: $10,jOO. TllrM ,,..,. Old •nd VII tl•lft 8lld martt Clalmlno jlly'ic.t' SIU·tl0,500 1 5-b Jef <C.•l•llOll) 114 2 ClaH of WJA (~OU) 11S S ~ land True (l.lr:>Mml 109 4 !leHnl P1rll (Slbllll) 116 S Huttle MV l utlle ( lladl) •Ill ' ~tn' Nvmon (Cl"1tfo1) x 111 7 Siar IWI (8 reawetl) 11111,• I Walken L.odV {l(ffMI) I WA.LKllt'I LAOV (S•2) w on .. mudl 11'11 best -1lml1ar fleld. wrp lralner "" P4aQld 11111 lllt't blClt In toOd ioot to r-t; swa•e .t•T (3-1) QI.tick anollOl'I lo N in POSltlon lf'Ol'l ltlt rel!, C.st•non l'laYlne llM meet, HUITL.I MY IUSTLa 1'·11 Could be Iha llltPlr, tits fondnftt for tlllt ovel LOHGSHOT ST AR ISL! IL•VSNTH ••c• 1' mllts.. Purse· '7,500 ThrM VMrl cMd and VO. Oelmlnt Prka' 16,150 1 °'*"•' Wav 1c-.11non) 116 2 Cettlc EKle IFarnanoe1I 11' ) Mt Elba {0.rrlOol 11' 4 111 J\llnPlft ...,. ( Enr1Qut1 > 11• S Sire.-~ale (Sterll"91 xlOil ' Etolno ICrud 116 1 Hoatradomul IBiaeJ<I a 111 C•LTIC SAka 13-1) Droos otf Mllkl eflorl, f'9ur" to be rloht off • Jeetnl ~ NOSTi. AOAMUS 14· II V.ll welotlt Dfffll IO- l\i91\I. eirllt aame i.at H loo c~; MT. aLIA 110-11 Mull dig dMP to recommend, could bl t>Ox car winner LOHGSHOT IT'S JUMPIH' BEAR aHT llT PREARRANGE (71h llacel l"IUC• l'LAY HUSTLE MY BUSTLE (10!11 R•c•I •-HOtnOIH eDPf'tl\llce IOCkev Orange County Fair results oranet eountv Fair MONDAY'S RESULTS (71t\ fll U·•• mh1tc1 ,,_,.,,., OUA•TEtt~SH l'IRST RAC•. 3SO nrd1 AJ>! To Ooo fLAICllevl Fl\rlno Pa"am !Florfll Actm•nlllr•lor IDl<ltrlck.-nl Time 017 6S 11.0 ~20 320 10 40 340 260 At.o Ran Two Notes Marcus E •1><eu, Dual Tu(llOcl'\arllt Clev $upef110411 wrenol..-1 T oucn. VICtorv H•!ICI Hondo Rat>tl Scraleht<I '11"9 Tlltff, Cut N Run C.ofl• Poire v wr •noltr Too U EXACT A U 61 pale! '" 60 SECOND ltACe '70 v•rd, CH COI RIMr (OidriC.llHnl Noth•"91 FrH IPevltntl MOn11•ur L• Rue 1Eowaro11 T1,.,. O-•S .. ''° ~.o uo 600 420 340 Also ••n J•mte On A Cnarlotte\ Buo So S<.tnnv Comeon Tom A·Mlleouohtovo Scr•t<htc! Anolnled Ont U IXACTA 17 S) oalcl JIOl 00 A·Enlry THOltOUGHIREDS THlttD lllAC•. 6 ' IUl'IOl\cll Purse is.soc Uo Tiit Pole ILIDMml 10 20 4 60 3 :10 MOl'H (Cett•non) '00 2-90 L1llle Tvr•nl f Petter1on1 J 00 Tlmall70 AllO Ran Mef\hell Tow,,, Fallne1lan Dalllam Sure Nalurel Clarlon Swell. Lucllv Merk Scretch41c! Turn To Erin, Ttlrlo Muv ll•Pldo, lrO<I lmoul.e, Prince Amt>arl U eXACTA f9 11 Peld l lltOO l'OUttTH RACI. 6 lurlonOi MIUlon KllMI 1s1..-11ng Jr I SlersP81! fBrlnktrhotf) lttO•I Brown IL•mt>trt) 990 S.O •OO uo 390 360 Time l 11 I At5o Ren Aoacne Dewn, Glernour Pun Mew'1 TICIOI Bert Ctlf\JO\Jl, Merk'' B•lcO<IV Crezv Kav, P•ula's D1JCM11 Scratclled· Mlc!nfQl'lt Mv,11c Olmeog10' world Gokl Clarion. Prl"nahc L•dY l'll'TH RACE. 6 tur10nQ1 Lull's St•r (Grable I t IO BrHll Ovl Tiit Wint 1Ferf\•ne1411 ) EH1tr~l11tectlon (Gom.z> Time 1.12 • coo JOO 3.0 J.0 s 20 Allo lten Go B•Dv O•mH Cu\ DOit Oar-Fellh SCratC1'8<1 Wll\ter Hldt•wav s.s EXACTA (I ·11 paid sn 00 Go Bet>v WH dll-fHle<I end Ola c;.O fllfll SIXTH RACS. 6 flll'IOl\Ol Porele's Min (Scotti Melen .. ·, Jov !Ceslenon> Netura! FIO..,. IBlaekl Time 1.11 • 10 IO c 00 160 360 2 60 1.0 AIM> ••n Pl-• Hoo. H•lchtl ~n. Les Almac!las, Tenacious Sono, Tllomull• Cinco SCratclll<I lli.&1 America Pure Heel, For Mv Susan. SllOe SllOe B•t>v. Merlon1 DtH m, Tl\ A La dy IS IXACTA ll·Jl oald l'200 SIVENTH RACE. 6 turlongi Annoveo IEnrl-11 1S60 120 •60 DuchtH Baff fMunMll) 13 10 s to Rui. The Sun (Braswell) 9 60 Tlmt l 12 2 Al\o Ran· Ferrenlore, A Beller Tomorrow. Fentullc soen, Kum On Oarlln Doll\ Comoa nlon Screrchac! TM Borne SI•• U UCACTA (5-11 oald SSOOOO EIGHTH RACE. 6 turlOnQ\ K•v To PromlM (Cest•nonl Flc!c!lt Of GOl<t (OOIJolHI Oh Marie IOl'teoe I 190 •60 J40 1020 HO J 60 Time 1110 At.o It•,,. Cullom Tl'loulllllt, Soldier 1 Hooe. Ml Brier Str .. m, CHlss ~nonHltd, Sllele QuMn, PallHl's Annie. Scr•ICl'llCI FOi KB. F•n Excursion. SllgrttlY S11tr11 Le Fllrt. Ql.t•tt'9an' Doll..- U EXACTA (HI Nie! 11M 00 NINTH RACa. 6 fur100g$ CodV't Chane. IBfKlll Rlghttutv So !Ori-) Orama1lc Entr•nc• IEscooarl Time I 11 ' •to 360 310 l lO JOO 7 00 Also Ren Jutlnal. SMr1<1e o....<, In The Gtorv Tonv'1 Lifter Hooetul Cltm. Denov Cout'I Crv1lal 1 Chant Scretehed Enlrv Dav $2 l"tCK SAX 12· l+S+ ll MIO 11,56-4 . .a with 11 winners with (flYe llC>rUsl Total Pleil SI• c•rrvover POOi l17 110 60 TENTH RAC•. 6 lu<IOnQ\ Qwlltv J•l ISlbtlltl Flvlno LHIOl\S !Pedr'OI•) NO<"lhtrn Provider IP•llonl Time 1100 390 160 140 300 760 l 20 Al\O Ren Calat>Otloa 111Qh Netur•I, Lucio.¥ Snowtf\ S<relCht<I F•ll Fiver ,, DAIL y ooueLE II· II Peld 110 IO U l!XACTA 11·1> peld S19 SO l!L.IVENTM llACE. 1 1116 miles Tal>IJtar IFerneno.11 e.oo • oo l 60 Feue t>llllv Sfuctv (Sterllno. Jr ) 16 60 6.20 Celtic Werrlor !Gllllg•nl S 10 Tl,.,. 14' I AltO It•"· Jove's Sailor, Emar•ld Cut. Jerome Prelrlt, Et Jet>et, Pi.nu-Pidro S<r•IClled Nont IS I XACTA (4·11 Pelc! sne so A ttenc!•nct t,06S Hollyw~od Park entries WedneMSBV'• ..,.,,..., (Ulld e4 •7·deY lhor~ mMtlftal Finl l"as~ l II.ti\. l'IRST RACI! 6 lurlOl\Q1 Pur,. Sl4,000 Meldenl """ vHr Olc!I •n<I uo Clelm1r>0 Price l50,·MS.OOO 1 C•1• Moftty IMCCerronl 114 'l Peli De¥ IMl1•> l 14 3 1ro1h Zuni IDougl•U l 14 • F1111'1I0<1elltv IHernendal) 11' s L••dlnQ L•n IToro) I u 6 GN!en• IOl'teoel 114 1 D•ncer'' Rt0trd1 !Steven" l l• SeCONO IUC•. 6 furlong\ PurH \12,000 ThrH veer 0101 enc! uo Cl•lmlng Price S 10,000 I T usc•n I( nlol11 I Ortell•) 111 2 Petrov fSo!ol 117 3 Miiter Slrlc!e ICeat•t>Onl 111 ' Ru1ln11 Po1lll0<1 (VaHlntU41tal 171 S Jacert IMeHI 117 6 ErnHI Klno (Crowc!erl • 112 7 CnucklK•lor fCl1nerotl w I u I Domln•nl Roni (8 lackl x 112 THIRD ltACI . S't> flJ(lon91 P\H"1t l 1',000 Maidens !wo v••rs Ol<t Ctalmln9 Prtce J50,- S4S,000 l Trooo111trt (Mo1a) Ill 2 Blue Atlit<I (Ollv•re1I l ll J Earerf tLlonaml l ll c D•rbv Cllfcfl ISIDllltl I It S I Ol<t Bergeln (Solo) 116 6 Bold N Coot fVei.nzut1•1 111 7 Arlrt11.1 (Gernc!ol 116 I P•stll•l (Ortt0•l 111 ' NelUl'•I Deel ICHl•nonl l ll 10 Oecooe 1s1evenu Ill 11 Cool Ta•ker IMCCa rrOl!I 111 FOUttTH RACE 6 lurlonQI PurM II• 000 Meloan 1rtrM ve•r Olds anO 1.11> Cl•1m1ng Pric• lSO ·MS.000 1 RHO Mv LIDS 1v11en1utlel 11' 2 P 8 \ ChOlca (M<H•rgueJ I 1' 3 lrlsJI Ju1l1ce fFurlonGJ 111 4 Lucky Advocate ISolol 114 S 80l<t LH<lar IBrlnktrholti 110 6 Steadfutne11 (Sltven\I I 1' 1 Fir\1 Commano !Dtlah0\J11ev•I 11' 8 Power Forwerd f Mor• I I IC Flll'TH lllACE. 16 ml~ turf Puf\e Ul,000 Fllllet •nd m•rH tl!rH VHf\ OIO enc! \JD Allowence 1 Meretave (Torol 116 2 Rlverttt• fS1even1) I It 3 Plum Ta1tv (McCiirronl 116 4 Tanya'' ROOltrto ILll>fl•ml 116 S Mecll• Girl IPlncn ) 122 6 ~II D•wn fVeltflwele) 116 SIXTH RACI. 6 lurlOl\g1 Purse S 12 000 Melo.rtl lhrH YHfl ol<I •nd lJI> l><ec! In C•llt Ctelmln11 Price '31, sn,ooo 1 Stc>tenerlan !McC•rron) 2 Jumo1no J•fllln 1s1ev11111 J WtH TOl<t (Toro) 4 Neme OI TM G•me IVelefl1ueleJ s Que Vo (HarMne1411) 6 Tlarr• Dl1tente (Ollv•rH I 7 (;Olden Sl>ruc:• llllKkl • Buc:t'• Brollltr Joa IKaenell 9 My Percant•98 IPlnclYI 10 1111t:>lr.O Too l0r1eo.tl 11 Brotlme Dov ISll>llHll m 17 Cllaroot IOelal'IOU1taY8l 171 114 "' 11' m 110 ... 109 114 m ll• '" , .. Al ........ 13 Denche I S•t>•li.l 111 IC Cove ()I S.ni.ere IGerrlc!ol IS Eleven Aw•v IBlaclll 111 16 Troy·, Agitator fMtzel SIVIHTH RACI!. 6 furlon9\ Put\e Malden lhr" veer olel1 •nd 1.11> I Throw HOn'l9 IStevenU 7 Z•m1>e1I P•u 1Blac1'1 l MonCl•nlle (LIOlleml • Miocene tStioemakerl S Norouln (McCarrO<ll 6 Peruvl1n lllecll (Val9t1tutlel 1 Troublt T (Solo) I Outer Llmltt IHloueral EIGHTH •AC•. 1 mile turl P1Jrlt Tl1rff vHr 0101 •nc! uo Allowal\ct I Siu• Rezor ISl•ven'I 7 Prince True IMcC•rronl J Ellele ISllOemaktr) 4 Luc:llv N Green (Orleo.tl s POIY Test fl>elal'loun•v•I 6 Floellno Rfttr'V• IV•ltfltutl•) 7 11eoernonv ITorol t Sie r Video IPlncevl 11• lie • 109 IU tll 000 114 • '°' m 114 II• 114 l U in 1.0.000 lU 11S llS 1 It 111 117 llS 117 NINTH RACI . l'"t milt\ Pune l IS,000 TrtrH v .. r olds •n<I uo CH1lm1ng Price s 16 '1• 000 I Marcil ~ (Ofl"•l 1 Treve1 !Camoesl 3 Wl'lldbev T .. c Gell•nt Minded (Petttftonl s LIQhlhtw•vllOfme IHl9uere1 • Ster Malerlat (M\Jnol) 1 Boo\tar ISteven\I HMMl\OIH •e>t>rtnllce IOCktv "• 116 "' ,,. 116 Jl•lOt Cordero' s return one Cards r u nner he's sure to remember spurns USFL NFW YORK (AP) -Angel Cor- dero Jr. was back where he wanled to be. Riding at Belmont Park and winning. The popular jockey returned after four months and wa aboard two heavily backed favorites Sunday, 1ncludma Gulch in the $67,700 Tre- mont Stakes for 2-year-olds. "l was JUSt itad lo &ct back to hfe and compete apin l'm a normal pe™>n aaam. No more crutches., no more pcopk fcclina sorry for me," ~id the 43-year-old Cordero, one of the nation's top mien He had sufTe~ a lac:erated hver and fractured bone 1n his left tea 1n a mishap at Aqueduct on March 8 when he wa trampled by ho~ follow1na a pill. "I'm tired. I need O~)'gen," C'or- dero u1d wilh smile aOer rid1na I'm Your Roy to a l'-.-lena1h lnumph 1n the \t'cond race. h1\ fint Gulch scored by 31/z lengths over latc<losina Shawkht Won, eqllahng the best Tremont time since Tra ck Barron won the stakes in 1983 -I: I 0 2-5 on a muddy track. "I've heard a lot of welcomes," Cordero s.·ud af\er comina onto the track for the fi"'t time end hca.nna the crowd of 18, I 08 loudly chccnna and JCCnna. "but I've never heard any· th1na like tt M)' knees wcrt shak.ina." After the Tremont, Cordero s~ud, "I was tired, but I was less ncrvou<1. Goins two-for-two for my comeback is a yeat fcclina It's• \pcc1•l day for me. He said he hoped 10 nde four hor~s today at Belmont. but added, "I'm hkc a hof"IC. I have lo~ how I pull up af\er today's race ." Cordt'ro has hi\ ••ah•~ on h1' I 0th stnu&ht nd10J tttle for the mttt1na at Sara1op, which nam July lO PHOENIX (AP) -Veteran Sl. Lou is Cardinals runmng back Stump Muchell has rejected a con1rac1 offer from the Arizona Outlaws of the United States Football Leaauc Ari- 1ona Outlaws and wdl re-sign instead with lhe NFL's Cardm1ls, his aaent said Harold Lewu said Monday that Mitchell's heart was m St Louis and that was the rtason he planned to s11n o threc-~r S 1.S mil hon dollar oon· tract with lhe Cardinals on Tuctday Mitchell and Lcwts had met for three hours on Monday wilh OutlaW1 acneral manaer 8111 Tatham - "I told them 1f that's wha1 the wanl, toaobackloSt. Lows, wcdonY. hold a arudac." Tat.ham &a1d, Tatham saad the Cardinals called Mitchell 1n Phoenix and aaJ't'Cd 10 match Aruona's offer ofS 1.1 milhon lo S 1.4 m1lhon for three ycan 1 1 TV Lis r1Nt1\ --------- ''TIIE FUNNIEST MOVIE SO FAR THIS YEAR ." -PIOPLI, ""'"''"""" -NOW PLAYING --NOW PLAYING - & TOflO 1-s-t.· ~I SllO QAllD8I Ol'OY'l ._.._ _, • LAHAll'IA AWCI-...,, Ht Oil) .... , .. -,----.......... ..... ...... .... ....... ...,.. :=.--T==°' T=' ..... ...,,,,. .... ,.., --r--..-................. ~ ............ . .............. ..... ,. ..... ..... ........ ,~...... T"""'°" .._. ... C-._•u•• ..... ~t.-,... .. ,.,.., ....,,. 11'1•' '-·-=:-..-l.:==I MATTHEW BRODERICK ,. •• ,.EDllm! _JrSJIPlr FERRIS BUELi ER'S DAY OFF -Jott Siettl. AIC·TV ~ TOMCRUl- ~~=ri1m>nn GlJfraF OM man's •truU'e to take it easy. it{ A ,AllAMOUNT ,.CTUM '.ft: POl3~ : '· : ~.· PG4t A PARAMOUNJ PIDUR( A • ~ -·--.. -·-.. ~. NOW PLAYING ·-· ·-'ElWSIO ... .. ~ '•"' •"llh . ... , .... •1> ..... n 1l60 COIU •&A llfWPOllf lltACN OMllll lo·-~~ lo-.,os-...... .,_,,.,. ~ .. ... ...... .... l""'>oa l'" -......., ... 01eo u.t n!>l .. -.... . ........ :. ... • C811•.._.,, --.. -.. • llllA • LAtUU llllU •l1MT•1,_ ... , ;~r•"'•' M·~ .. .... ,.,. ...... .. .. ....... ·-· -...~ 9'u Plu~ (o"u •Ot. 'So , . ., ..... ._ ... -. .. ~19 ~lt I*''" .... • -TllllfOll HAOI 'M 66' m:ma .. .,., .... ,, .... , ... ... , ... ,.,. .., __ 10 ... a, Cft>~t• • U •MOA AIWlfllf 1'1<·"< • .......... O< .. ., .,, .. .. ...._.....,.. Cf'•lrt .. , 0110 P...-lo: 11 Y .. QI it' l.00 .............. "' • 111¥111( AMMt TUCll llOUY l'fDIOITOM QUtM TOP OUN~u1 ltll WJ ta» ••• ••» llOUY ITU90 -""""' NOOftlCll PIUll IUILLIR'I DAY OfPc ... u1 1ti.» WI ............ le.JI .-ollT ....,..IU Y C8YITAl RUNNING ICARID Ill , .............. 1 ... LAKEWO 0 c~n'•• Sou1h !11 )Jilt tH1/f1ollY N Dtl AMI IOlllf W...IA ww.111 LIOAl U.Oll IN I It.at WI tau .. ,. •••t IOONl'f ........ ,lllO IACK TO ICHOOL 1,..u1 ,,,. Mt Mt wt .... " ... DOUY ITlllO W DI VTTOtWTTI MIOU.I RUTHUU nc>Pll C11 IMI WI ...... ._,., .. ANAHEIM 11Hl17! HHJ\m" 1 nun fm ~nsouoe> ..... 1 'lt'ntrN· JOfl OUN ,,..,., ILUI cm Ill ll08NIY ........ la IACK TO ICHOOL 1,..111 p/'1( llll PIHll IUILLll'I DAT 0" ,._,JI NITT'f IN """' ~ 111 ORANGE --'MllWllll CLUI ,AllAIMM .,._,,. PtD LIKI UI 1N1 fa• .. CKl/Oo .. •\olyl5'18111 ·-[ .. _1ttt"1J_'_'....._'] IJX'ii'-oiiiiOl" DOUY HflJO .. ,. llCCa-..mll ,.,. ... WAn IJD l'&IT n N Ill 111111 kl ltlt OCX-IY ITillO .,._, ot vno.· .. Tn MIOUI IUM..DI Nl>Nilll U•• llla» •••Wt IM I- DO\IT 1'1110 MATTMCW llOOlllCK PIHll IUILLll'S DAY Off 1,..111 ,,_..Mt 4tM .... Mt 11 .. 011004IY HINlllllLLT CIYITAl lUNNINO SCAHD (11 hit ...... , .... ••11 TOM ClUIH TOfl OUN (,..UI It.to MJ t1U 7'40 1 ... 110 TlOUIU IN LITTLI CHINA IN-UI 111 Nt .... t•• It.SS BUENA PARK !fl•l121 ltJl/laoHI' W ti heft CH n 'ICM IHll IN AU ~Fl<S etMOllY .-a RUNNING ICMID 111 Wiii OUYS CI) DNMY DIVTTO RUTHUll "°'11 Ill DOWN AND OUT IN llVIRL T HILU 1111 llO ftOUIU IN Lmll CHINA f"olal Y1Alt Of TMI 1Mt.oc>N111 lo HABRA .. ~~". :1 . . ~-""° ltUT'HlDI PIOP\I l(MMMCM .. -.TllW OOUY ITllllO -~~ CLUI ,AaAIKSl l"l-Ul 1IM "" .. I ... u 1•• DOltY lft1tlO toe lOW'I AIOUT LAil NIGHT Ill h M 4•11 ... l•M 11 ... DOUT tnHO -m tlllfOllllllU -• LIOAL IAOLH CN I l1JO 4:00 .. ,. t a4t 10.U DOI.IT ITIHO NINCI UNDtl THI 04111Y MOON , ... u, • ... ,,,. •:OO ... t , .... DAVID IOWll LAIYllNTH !POI ltl41 J.H S· .. 11H I- IOINH WM.UAM1 CLUI ,AltADlll '"'Ill IPIH LUCI UI !NI ~ lllWICCMM> KAii.Aft KID ,AltT II IN! CllOllltOADI Ill PIUll IUILUlt'I DAY Of P f"-111 -nl OlmT IOCllC 1'*111 .,...., ....... f'tK. IACK TO ICHOOl .,._,., PIX salndor neu feta pacemater BAR ELONA. petn (AP) - Salvidor Dali, 'he 12-year-old J)lntlh urreah t peinltf, wu re.. covcnna Monday 11\tt ur>dcqoina ILU'ltt)' to in1tan 1 peQntnen1 peccmaket' h. UJ'ltOn.. J D C&tlol Oan:-ia Sanmiauel, said. He said Dali l\ltftted bean flih.lre undar and wa ru hed to a Barco-looa chn1c. Dali Uvcs 1n F11uera , 43 miles nonh of Barttlona. "A truly exhllaratlnlt masterpl :z, -OIPWlll1+-, QIC-TV, LOe AlfO&l.a CWB PARADISE fllC ""'-'Wlkwt )oull rw'l!r '4>t11ic1- no lllllll .. .,. ho" hunl Hill I '1 . •• ...... , Hiil P&ll tsl~9'3 UA MOVIS I El TIU Sl).9500 EDWMDS Cl TORO lllTlllTll IUOI 141-0311 mwMDS IUfTMTOll LA mua 523-1'11 l'ACflC GA TEWAT tlml i30361 l'ACR~DR-lf 11&111 634-2553 STiil cm coon <a&n•1;?*3U''3J,) OJ 4 n~.v:i~~:::J S CLU8 PAllADISa w.lt ~THE (f'Q-IJ) Al ( 12:30) GREAT MOUSE (2 45) !I 00 7 :30 &. t ·U DCT'l:CTIVa (G) (12 45) 12 :u1 s :10 '>:OS t ·oo nRRIS ~LL.EltS OAYCWP,.._1~ SHOWS A'f (l·OO) Cl 15)5 307 0 10 OS K.ARA1'1[ llUD II C"I) (12 U) (2 lSI 4 :5!1 7 IS & t )5 TOP GUN IN) SHOWS AT (12:35) (2·55) S IS 7:35 &. ' SS WlllWID na.JtlS EDWMDS CIOIA WCST WllTWID na-36,l l'ACR llWAY lt Da-11 u lllU (213) Hl-06" AMC f AH>fl SQUM£ -CINE-fl OONE- SnAKERS ARE BACK STADIUm tJ Ill 1111 l\flll!t N1t• S!fbm PtlllMCE_ UNOS. THE s CHaRRY llOOlll ~I I) Alto WlldCAIU I") .... ~TMC GRCATMCIUS& ..ncnv•••> l'lut Off But (~0) 0 .. 111 •owl• LA9YRINTH C"lt l'lut l'olt•rt•lll II l1'0·13) (lUTHL&SS flll[~ f") '9u11 Oown 6 Out In ••••rty Hilh (A) Or91ory Hlnu RUMM•O SCARED fR) Al•O W IH Guys (A lhlph Macchio KAltA 1'1[ KID 11 IN) Plus Qulcktllv•r (l>G) ING UNDER THE TONIGHT! AT1:30P.M. THOROUGHBRED RACING NIGHT1Y, MON.-SAT., THRU JULY 21 JOIN US FOR AN MNING OF EXCmMENTI • l 0 Actton Pocked Races • Elegant Oming at Competitive Prices • ExotK Wagering: Exoc1os •Perfect Six • Do1ty Double • Plenty of Porl<lng IT'S PARTY TIME AT THE RACES! Group discounts available Schedule your party now Phone 714-995-1234 213-431-1 36 1 ~~~ ORANGE COUNTY MCING MIR 4961 KotelloAve LDsAlomrtos 714/995-1234·213/431 1361 -------- 0'8tne9 c... DAILY N.0Tnu1 ••· J1t111 ti. edwards BRIS TOl 540· 7444 .. ... ·.·)I ........... _..,, .. ..,,,.._,A AM.I ... •••-'-- • ,.. DGLft rrDEI .. •••• SCMD" (I) IHI. ZllS, 4 II 61S,t • t•Jt rm:r: "Ultll fl( ClllUT IOOI" (PC·ll) 12. z .•. '· •• 10 Mmlllf'f Pm• "'IYC.O Ill" I >I, l:JI, UO 1 JO. t.• lie.I~ OCUY SnllO "ClUI PAUllSI" (K-13) I, l. S. 1, I. 1t:45 edwards CINEMA C ENfER 979-4141 "ARBOR Ill VO A •DAM' Mt SA VfllOE CfNTf II COSTA MES• SUI fl HI "UlfttlTI" (PC) 1·15, l:IS, 5:15 1>1,t>I llODlll IWIDflUI "IACa TO SCllOOl" 11:00. 2·00 •• « Ho. a;oo. io-oo <K u1 •mo llODOICll FOllS lllllll'S NY Off" (PC· U) l 4S, 4:11, I IS. I JO. It ll lafflOIT 196 RlY a.mil ttt··n-111111111:c SCAlll" Cl) 12: .. NS. 4'45. 1•. "' ...... ·uua. U1Ur CN) IAlt:H .... lllml. UTIU cml" (K-U) ltlS. t lS. HS 115, ... ltll mlllln.-S "llDllH WIO" (I) US. J:JI. ~ UI. It-LS .,. .... ,lllU emcnr (C) 1us, 1.-.us , .. ·~ l:.Zt .... ..... "UIYmlr (PC) l:te. HI, 5:11 1-.1:11 • WCI ICllf 111181 ~.-.rt 'WTll.W p(lft.(" (I) 1.l. s. 7, •• '"' ... auMIS "CUI 'MAIW" (K-ll) 12 4$ 2:45. us us.au 1us •mo_.. "ftlltS llWll'S .. , Ofr' (K-ll) I IS. l >I. S 4$, I• I IS ,., ...... "IAUT( lit h" (PC) I JO lSI US. I JO IUll llOl l&i "UOUT WT 11c11r· (I) Ult. HS. S-00 7:31. t.S unu CNA" (PC-ll) 1t•. 21s •• 1•,ttl IHS ... , .. ., 'UCAl UCUS" (PC) It-JO l IS Sft llS tile ... auMIS DOm S10l0 "CUI PUAllW' (H-ll) IJO,i' .. SJ0,1>1.tJI g•IWl&W "SMIT ctlClfT" (PC) .... 1~15 "NlTOCOST r M-Ul UI a lM "UffT WT llCIT' (I) ll'I'-l:JI. 4 4S 1••H .... Uidi llfitr z •.•.•. 11'.lt (PC-lJ) .. .. Tl[ CllllT .... 1no. ue. a:• <"-Ill MmmY POltllCS "P$TCIO UI" (I) ll IS, US, 4 IS He He. lo-tO Ul"4 IMCCllO "Ulln QI U" (PC) I JO. J-45, .... a1s 1ut DA•-'UlntlTI" (PC) "' JJO SJ0.1 JO t>I • '1tmS llll1D'1 .. , lfr' (Pt.11. I-ti. J 1'-i JO, 1!6, lt:ll Nl-fA "Ulln 111 r (PC) II 4'-I M, 4'tl, 'JS ..... Id Ill tll. ltll -11) as \ Or8nge eo-1 DAILY PILOT I TUMd11Y, July 15 19ee Wedaftday,Jalyll .. I AIUES(March 21-Apnl 19): lnfonnat1on wh1C'h had bttn "block<'d w1I now ht frcc-Oowmg. This works to your advaniaae and po s1ble profit Empha,sjs also on populanty, social activity. anv1tauon for vacatton or holiday tra\·el. Their lives really lived inf ast lane THE OLD HIDDEN-QUEEN TKJCK Neither vulnerable. South deals. TAURUS (Apnl 2~May 20): St.and tall in face of possible threat ot litigation. Position 1s strong 1f you arc aware of fine pnnt. license and tn\ requirements. [mphas1s also on public relauons. partner..h1p mamagc Watch Scorpio GEMINI (M a) :? I June 20). Job gets done. contacts are made with those who share your concern\. ideals. Spot- liJht on communication. wnting. a~1h- 1y to art1cul&te concepts tn entertaining, 1nfonn3t1 vr manntr Virgo pla)s l..e\. role. SYDNEY 0MARR CANCER (June 21-Jul) 22) Man) of \Our .. btst" quah11es surge to forc.·- lronl. i\1tent1on centers around family. home. !>ecuritv. commun1cat1on with ~oung persons· & read) for changl' tra'l-el. vanet) and possible ··senous .. fl1na11on LEO (Juh 23-.\ug 22) Clandes11nt' mceung relates to romance. crcall' l' l'ndea \ors. seeret agreement. You'll lt'am more about real estate. possible bu tiding project. in, e'itment opponun1t1C's Member of opposite sex 1s drawn tO \OU • VIRGO ( .\ug. 23-Sept 2:'). Focus on tnps. \ 1s1ts. added respons1bilm Rela11onsh1p that had been monbund will nov. he alive and kicking. Kno"' II prt'pare accordtngl) hnanc:1al p1cturt' bnghter than ongtnally ant1c1patcd. LIBRA (Sept 2 '-0c:t 22)· 1 ou'll locate an1ck that had been lost. m1ss1ng M stolen. A.ccent on financial status. pa) ments. lolll'c11ons. a~1ltty to 1ncrcai.e income There 1s wide market tor ~our talents. products. Anes play~ rok. SCORPIO (Oct 2 l-11.Jo, 211 [ mpham on element ofsurpnse. )ou'll gl'I thance for new stan and opponunll) to correct recent error You'll get ll> hean of mailers" here romanct• is concerned Timing. Judgment will be on target SAGITTARIUS tNo\.. 2:?-Del· 211. lntu111on nngs true. )OU learn h) teaching. famil> reunion h1ghhgh1s srrnano lndn 1dual close to )OU conlidc'> 'health problem .. Emphasis also on c;el'Unt~. home long-range prospell'> \quanan pla~s role CAPRICORN (Dec 22.Jan I~> )ou need not JUmp at ftr\I olkr l'opulant~ increases )Ou'll be 1n\1ted lo auend prC'st1g1ous S<X'1al affa1r F.mphac;1s on wardrobe charm chansma. special appeal AQUARIUS !Jan 20-Feb I ~J: lnd1v1dual in pos111on ot authortt) '>l'l"k'> , our guidance and apprO\ al Rclate facts as the) C'x1s1. point out area\" h1d1 ,m 'ulnl'rable to sclf-dcc:ep11on Pl CES !Feb 14.'.1arth 20> l>thc deep tor 1nforma11on. mot1\l'' Jrl\ c\ f mphas11e dctt'llne work C\trascnsof) pcrccpuon. In a world a~ fast-~ced as ours, 1t 1s tncky to come up W11h the faste4't man or ""oman in ll \ fnend of mine has a contender He says the fastest ~rson he has ever seen is the kid tn lhe car wash who. in the 43 seconds 11 takes for your car 10 come otTthe convr> or bell and for ~ou 10 get in 1t. accomplishes I he follov.ing. •Om.'l't'> \our three mirrors sky- ward •Changt's the pos111on of the car scat •Locks )Our \\1ndow \fnt!> in an open pos111on •\tans \our windshield wipers •Tumson ~ourdirect1onal signals. •( hanges your radio dial 10 a <.il·rman-speaktng station v. 11h com- munt!>I new!> bulletins. When l asked htm what was so amazing about that. he said ... This 1s the ~me kid who minutes before said hl' kncv. nothin~ about foreign cars <1nd took IO minutes 10 fi~ure out v. here to put the gas no221e · That's prctt} last. but I ha'l' a kv. t:ntnes of m\ ov..n I had a cleamng woman once who moH·d with the speed ofbureaucrac) Hnv.cver. let me carelesslv throw av.a\ an important piece ofj,aper in nl\ v.astebaskel and she would grab 11 hl..e 11 v.as timed to go off. racC' past thl· t·ontamcr 1n the garage and often run four-minute miles to catrh up "'1th the garhagc truck to spel'd ll on 1t\ v.a) out ol the ('tl\ \not her one I'd recommend tor the IN' 111 w1~ a child nf """" "h11 JI the age of 2 would go into th<." bathroom and 'ihut thr door. ln a scant three minutes. mind you. this huk pt·rson would empty a 30-gallon hot "atcr tank. permapaint tht' walls v. 1th lipstick. unroll the 1011t't 11c;sue. stuff a small appliance down the lint trap. feed Alka-Seltzers to the toilet. pull a towt'I bar out of the wall. melt two bars of~oap. eat the head otTa rubber duck and drown the Tidy Bowl man Hl· could not zip his own panl'I up Come 10 think of 11. the tastes• person I e\er saw wa!> a waitress I encountered nght after tile binh ol m\ lirstchtld I hadn'tbecnoutofthe hou~ in four months a nd m> bcc;t friend and I were going 10 have a nicl'. long. leisurely lunch. She came to tht· tabk and said. ..Dnnk? Wanta order'}" and v.as back in three minutes wtth the dnnk and the food She bu med m)' h~ with the pot as she refilled m) coffee cup. dropped the check in m} lap as she-replaced thl· top 1ablcclo1h and made change It v.as all O\l'r in 20 minutes. \he told us she had 10 gC't read) for the luncheon .. ru\h • NOaTB tK548 Q KJ 10 8 I 5 oea •Q WF.81' •AQ987t CV Z EAST •J 102 CV AQ974 0 975 • 107 5 O J2 •&32 SOUTH •Vold CV 3 0 AKQ1084 •AKJ984 The bidding· South Weal 1 0 l. 6• Pus Paaa Pue North Eut 2 CV 2 + & 0 Pus Opt.•ning lead. Two o f \:' To reap the full benefit of our sage advice, cover the South and We11t hands before deciding how you would conduct the defense from the East chair. Your partner leads the two of hearts ls there a legitimate hne to defeat the contract? Your partner's opening lead marks declarer with a heart. From t he bidding. you can a.<isume that declarer 1s 6-6 in t he minors, al- though 6-5-1 ·I with the ace of spad es 1s a remote possibility. In ei- ther case, you can forget about your s ide scoring a spade tnck to defeat the contract And if your side can win a club trick. declarer 1s ~ prime candidate for the funny farm. CHARLES GOREN OMAR SHARIFF There is one legitimate chance to defeat the contract. It partner's three trumps are headed by the 10, you can win the opening lead and return a heart to promote a dla· mond trick ror your side. Is there a way to improve the odds? Yes. if declarer gets careless, and you might be able to lull him into a false sense of security. The initial step in your campaign is to win the first m ck with the ace! That can't cost-there Is nothing useful declarer can discard on the king of hearts. Now return the seven of hearts If partner has the ten of dia· monds, your ltttle bit of deception will have done no harm-the con- tract is going down no matter what. But if the cards Ile as in the diagram. declarer might not realize the necessity of trumping high, and partner will get to overrurf for the setting trick. Most rapists are 'friends' of their victims T:~:~:~' s«:~JUµ-~~~s· ------lllltell t.y CU.Y I 'Ou.AN WOID .... DE.\R .\""~ L.\\JDf-RS .\ tnl'nd 1)1 mtnl' n1nlided 1n mt• \e~terda' and I am 111 a \talc ot -.hod, \ \OUng· man 'ht· knt" tool.. her lor J ride. turned 1111 onto ,1 JJrk mJd Jnd raped her '°lhl had ticen llUt v.11h him three or t11ur time' in the flJ\I \l'\l'rJI v.erl..s I ht:re "'ii' noromanu \ht \,11d The\ >H're JU'll platonic lnl'nlJ\ \nd thl·n h1\ tl·mhlt• thing happt•m·d \ht tc1ld me that ahoul ,., ~rlt'nt 1.11 rJrt'' 1ha1 onur an: rerix·trated ti\ ml·n "ho Jrl' knov. n to thl'tr ll llOH I 1.1.a, amJ1l'd \h idea til a 1 <1p1'1t had ah\ a~' heen \c>me shallov.) :igure v.hCl 1umpt•d from hehind a t•v\h or out of an alle\, or d1mhed through a hedroom "indov. It ne' l'r ''H'urn·J tu me that a fnt•ncJ lnuld Ix· .1 rapl\t Pka\l' .\nn It'll n1l Jnll other'> v.ho ·t•ac.l \our column v.hal v.-omen can Jo to nrotl'll them'>chl'' against 1h1., r 1dt•ou' thing I am -\IORTlflfD I' \11 \ \11 DEAR MIAMI: Date lor acquaint· ancel rarx-i1 far more common than most people think. Coral Cole, a psychotherapist at tbe Julian Center, a women's counseling clinic In In· dlanapolis, said. "Because women are naturally more inclined to trust an acquaintance, the) are even more vulnerable to date rape." According lo the studies I have seen. about 80 percent of date rapes occur lo tbe man's borne or apart- ment. and Invariably, there bas been some drinking or use of drugs It follows that a woman wbo goes to a man's living quarters and drinks or d~s drugs wltb· him is definitely at risk. ft is wise to stay away from men wbo show little respect for women, use vulgar language, take physical liberties such as forcing klssei> and rough hugging. And beware of men with short tempers wbo slap faces and twist arms. According to the authorities, date rapists tend to follow a specific pattern. Tbe would·be rapist seeks out a woman who is passive or timid. He may put bis band on her knef' or her thigh 10 lest for a reaction. If be is not rebuffed be gets tbe impression that she l\'111 not resist further advances. Her passivity laMls ber an easy target. There is wide disagreement as to whether a woman should a ttempt to flee, scream, claw and fight back, or beg for mercy and try to talk her assailant out of It. I agree with tbe experts wbo say it is best to holler, kick and try a knee to tbe groin, or a heel to the instep, unless, of course, the rapist bas a gun or a knife If a rape bas been committed It is euentlal that il be reported to the police Immediately. The woman should not bathe or throw away ber clothing. Even If there Is no lmmedl· ate wish lo prosecute, the evidence should be a matter of record la case she changes ber mind. Unfortunately, too many women are afraid to tell anyone for fear they will M accused of having led the man on. Victims of rape must get counsel· ================---=========;i l.ng at once. It is imperative that they contact a ra~ crisis center. (Tbe ANN LANDERS police can guide them.I The assault on the psyche Is as great as the assault on the body. The ordeal must be discussed In detail as soon after · 1be event as possible In order to rid oneselr of guilt feelings, fear and rage There are several self-help groups for rape victims. When they get toge ther and discuss their night· marlsb experiences they give one another tremendous emotional sup- port. They no longer feel alone. I arge all females who read this Cespeclally the high risk group, between the ages of 17 and 25 I to pay close attention to what I baH 1Hitten. It could save your ~8011) 0 Reorro"O• lenera of the four Krombled wordt be- low to form fovr slmple wordt I· trip FI I t I RUTTO I . 1 1 I I t . t I B A V E 0 I ! Granny was always doing 1----.-,s~,-....,__,r.---1 "_' needlepoint. As a gift. she hand· . . . _ _ . ed a email plaque to my uncle who hed quit smoking· "A Born .-----------. Again --·· .r-1 ..... ~-E,-, V-..1~-...Sl _s_, ~1 0 Complete '"e t.uc~·e qvo•ed . . _ . . . bv f.Jhng .n tile m+u+no wo•dt . .___.__.____.__.....__.___. you develop from ttep No 3 below & PP NT NUMBERED EI '(RS IN SQUARES 2 4 , ' €) •, CllAMSH lETTfl!SI f -.)P ANSWE~ • I I I I I I I I •• Ml Int ..,.., and dlscamn.d -ctw6t !tom ~., retllil w u1:19t .. .,..,.,. Wu pntt'l ..,ted •t Ill r~· Pfl(tUl tfhdl lht ft-••t l8l'IMl1y olf•td by cal.,t • II IMftJ ,., .. , .... ltOll>d "" '"""'' QUM. mu All> ASSOIUWJfTS Alf lllTCD so II.UV fl' SALE EFFECTIVE JULY 16. 1986 PARKING LDT ~AL! Love at first sight? Most say it's bunk TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 1 Unadorned 5 Fastener Slang 53 Milk source 57 Glower 58 Set free .. ,. ... \\ ~ ,., I ... . tu ~i I • • . , .. ' I ll1rt\-'•" nut of evt·n 100 srcm nup<, in the l 1ntled Sta·ll''> \a} thn tx·lil'\C 1n lc)\e at lir\t 'itght. he(.tU\C 11 happt·ncd to them That ' qu11c ;1 man). a third plu\ \.1on·. hm\t'\Cr-.t7int'\Cr\-100-'>a\. nn t hn · \l' no I c: ' pt' n c n ct• d t IH' plwn11ml·non \«> don·1 bu~ 1t In "h1ch group would you c:atcgon1l' \our\clf' II comt'c; up because a chc:nl ·""' our Lo\e and War man" J')o\lt1on 1n tht'I matter Prone ~ hrn hor,p11al<, compete w11h one Jnotht•r lor J'):Jt1cnts. the) don t cut uiw. thl·~ Jdd serv1Ce\ So !>&~ re'>t'Jn:ht'f\ Ho<,p11al care thn con- dudc ,., one ot the few arena\ nut l''lntu.111\ made cheaper h\ hvl'h )ll I\ illl' l'nlt'rJ')rt\(' on \••<trlt'CI l>ra1>H' Ho•I• '°l\'I rt:lilrtl'\ Ml' not a happ\ lot \t .... k,l\t \ou can \3\ as much tor hall ol l ! them That rrniponaon n:cl'nll\. told 1------------------1 t----,,--------------1 potl\tl'r'> ag<11n th<.'\ ~•shed the\ d I goni: into anotht'r hnc o l worl.. SAVE $102 Swine Set ..... s77 ........... -. . ... ·~·-, ........... ""' --.,... • I •\~ ••• ..... '. \ •• l"" !MW' ..... ,., .... SAVE 65% Cofh111M1' 7·in ~'~:~·s24 SAVE s30 Two Step l1dckl :~~NU s19 \1Jn~ a polar hear ha\ nl''t'r \l I 11>1 1 on lanJ I) \\ h1lh .\ml'ncan pre.,1dc·n1 '<ml I ht· l n1ted \tate\ ha\ mul h 10 olkr thl' third world war'"' \ Hl' wa'ln't president thc.-n hut 111 1---------------1 ,..-::.~-------------,1 nnl' 'pecch about third world roun tm·., in IQ7 Ci Ronald Rra1nn '>II -- SAVE 60%-80% Rol·Up Shades ,:: ".. .. . s2 ~;.: .. ,,.. ... s4 ~:.:.~ .... _s7 :;.:.t'..:... ti SAW£ IO\ "' All 8llll>S In SlOCll SAVE 60% L"hs' Dress s.n.'s·-· ·". ... ._ .. -........ .... .,.. .............. ~ ..... .. ..-.. ..,. "",...... ~-----....... -- SAVE 59% to 64% ladies' Pleated Pants s711 1, sgu .......... '· ,..., ... ._. ........... -""" -.... _._. m "'r>ol..c n 1 Ill' 11 nw~ () ~hat'<. lhl' Oldest r\\I hl;lll ll dl\1mkr dl'\Cnhcd in an) l1tl'l,1tuu·" \ I >cprc'><,ton 1) \\hat t"o lam<lU'> v.nh'r' V.l'tl' b11rn the \clml' 'f<'.tr .\he I 1n,oln "'·" h111 n·• ---------........ ·\ \lfrcd l urd I t'nn"\011 and Orin di Skirt (....-~­... ......... " _, .. [ d~'lr \lien PrK: n:o;earch rt'\l',11\ In 11\114 ~hl·n <:ir<:u\ handlt'r' nwH·c1 ekphant<. around the countr~ \C:11\ ago they learned H w.1!1 '-'llc-1 111 anchor an l'kphant with a l'h;11n of i.-.--------"1 c;,1r.1w than \.\Ith c1 chain ol \lcl'I No l'ha1n v.a' \lrnng rnou11h 111 hold tht' b1(l bc:a .. t. 1111 \h1t'd "1olcntl) \ \trav. t ha1n n<'' rr gut 11\ attcntton Hut the dank.mit nl a 111c1<1l l ha1n 'nrnrt1ml'\ stirtll·d 11 I) \\1th on1· 1•,1 cp1111n .111~1r11h 11 1 L.M. Bo YD m1gra11n~ h1rd' lh ~hat's thl' l \U.'P- lion' •\ '.1J~dl.1n penguin~ Thn w1m. 1 'p thl 1.11J\I\ nt \outh .\mcnla < •l'111tr.1t11>n' of dam digger'> along the u1un1n ' Pacific heache'> ha\.c.- hel·n 'l't•1ng .1 c;1gh1 in recent ware; thn d nn rr <,n·n before -A<:1an •rut11f.rant'> along the t1ddand\ gaiht•ring \l.';1\.\ecd to cat <) I hnl-tounhc. of all thl' cut llt1v.-cr' ~old an thl· llmted Statcs. l'\C read are grown out~1de the lJ n11ed Sta tee. \\-hcrc'l ·\ \11111h •\mt•nca. rnostl) 9 Exfollate 14 Yankee abbr 15 Wine city 16 A Ford 17 Epistle 18 Clod 19 Firearm 20 Waste 22 Poor rhymer 24 Fell 26 Sacred song 27 Dusk times 29 Wife abbr 30 Denver lime abbr 33 Separation 37 Much loved 38 Come about 39 Interrogate 40 -Hawkins 41 Noose 42 Lucidly 44 Within pref 45 On behall of 46 Vehemence 47 Pamphlet 49 Cigarette 2 3 I) llov. man' 'wl>crc in that one earl\ fl.In~ of gold miner.; who died in 14 l)(·ath 'v alll'\ lo cam 11 the name·' \ T V.l'nt,· went tn. 18 came OUI. In thJI narncular group. But numcrou~ othc r'> 1n d1nerent parties al<K> died 17 20 \\hen telling a ht'. a person"• \.OICC ICnlh to n\C That'\ what those \OICC 24 print l'\pen\ look for. they sa) when lhn JnalHr taped dcpos1t1onc; I hl' \l nt\ limg .tgo lame up \\Ith an 33 .tnl 1rnl v..ord for a magic spell that lrlJlc:\ an 1llu'lmn ol bc:aut)' v..hen· no 38 heaut\ c\l'>l'> fhc word 1!> "g.lamor ·· I ~'"''Ult\ 10 lhl' l ln1ted \tJtl'" 4 1 .innuall\ outnumbn all the-othl·r l.IV.\Ull\ \\Orld'-"ltlt' It 1' the red-haired 1ndl\1dual who' mmt ltkcl> to hccomc bald Or \(1 rl'port the mcd1n1I CO\mctologl\I\ \nl\ Jh\.t' wd.l\ oulnumllt'r .111 lht• human'> v.hoc\.l'r li\t'd 58 59 Now Thailand 61 Actor Ladd 62 Cruel look 63 Ten 6.t Apportion 65 Signs ol sorrow 66 Plant ovule 67 Yacht area DOWN 1 Music groups 2 Love in Napoll 3 Prelend 4 Primps 5 Harridan 6 Very wet 7 Crouch 8 Hookah user 9 Leaf parts 10 Light refract or 11 om he<b 12 Insects 13 Smirk 21 Disunite 23 Hiilside lake I <ilC' lour fol ll't'na1.wr\ I hrt'l' v.111 t::6:-:2:-1r--t--+--+-- \la) 1:11 l. M. BoJd rolomaht '" • 25 Next to Jen 28 Flights of steps 30 Asian ot old 31 Jib 32 Three.spot 33 Welfare 34 Image 35 Kiitie 36 Adherent 37 Post office Item 40 Narratives 10 42 Bakery unit 43 Jan piece 45 Young hens 47 Examiner 48 Shon time 50 Whiter 51 Clio's kin 52 Start again 53 Apply powder S4 -Hethaway 55 Wiiiow 56 Ranch animal 60 Slander 11 12 13 -- , TBB FAlllLY CIRCUS by Bii Keane wsettle it yourselves! I am NOT a referee!" BIG GEORGE ~ J - . .r ·' -· -· . _,, ~' / "I don't know whether It's such a hot Idea, George." MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson DENNIS THE MENACE "Phlll Mr. Snyder Is laying new floor tlle and he wants to tell you something!" PEANUTS 1 JlJS T FOUND OVT SOMETHING SIR .. T~AT ISN'T A 80VS' CAMP ACROSS ~E LAKE . IT'S A ''SURVIVAL CAMP '' GARFIELD THEY TEACM l(IDS 140W TO EAT 8065 AND CROSS A RIVER ON A ROPE ... POOR (MUCK . I CAN JUST IMA61NE MIM TRVIN6 TO CROSS A RIVER ON A ROPE .. I WONDER HOW ~E'S DOIN6 . by Hank Ketcham by Charles M. Schulz 5 NIF=F. I'M ALLERGIC TO SOM( TMING AROONO HE.RE. I WONPER IF IT'5 '70 G5 '? SNIFF.' TUMBLEWEEDS DRABBLE ROSE IS ROSE by Tom K. Ryan so I eo~ lJIJY A Y0-'1:) "t) FU!f'l..ACE 1lif: ONf I USEP FOR 11S 1t>MIJ!,'TO'JE. ~----. by Kevin Fagan by Pat Brady BLOOll COUit ,, U.S. ACRES FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE ~ '/roft. DAD Go\"'Q '? ON A Cf\~E~IP JUDGE PARKER THERE WILL 6E [).6.YS WHEN YOU COME ro v1srr KIM THAT SHE YI/ILL APPEAR PERFECTLY FINE BUT THEN SUDDENLY SHE WILL.. APPEAR CON· FUSED AGITATED OR DEPRESSED .. ?ERHAPS DAN6 EROUS 'TO HERSELF ANO OTHERS' FUNKY WINKERBEAN (NHA'1' A BUNCJI OF WEENIES!.' DOONESBURY by Jim Davia by Lynn Johnston by Tom Batiuk by Garry Trudeau -' 81 Oc'9nge Coast DAIL V PILOT I Tueeday, July 15, 1988 CALL 642-5678 IF CALLING FROM NORTH ORANGE IF CALLING FROM SOUTH ORANGE COLDWeLL BANl(eRU Ul•l•E , 1110,000 ' HM"9flly ocean and bay I viewa from the kitchen, family room and <*:ti of this t>Mutllully upgracs.d I 3 BA condo In gal• guar6ed arH l~IOIO 759-9100 --~----- ( .f '"' .••• ,•. '·'' .. • .. let U1 Ht1, y .. Sell y ,., Prepertrl C111 Cl111lflt4 I 642-5678 for information & surprisingly low cost. ..... INTO CLIFF llAYEI 3 or 4 Bdrma, 5 bsltll, lg country kite lam. room many xtru Immaculate cond. Term1 negotlable. 500 Signal Ad 642-9282 SAVINGS The Daily Pilat hos a new way to turn your Hidden T reosures into CASH J with o $7.60 Classified Ad f: $-, 60 or $5.60 with \ TI • prepayment ~ 4 Lines-7 Days- $7.60 No chonv•• In copy or conc•lloflon. Pr vo•• port1r only No Commerc1ol, Real Estole o r Employ- nt"'n' /I h rti,.,r 1\ no price l1m1t to what you con advertise II f(.) 1 n,.,.IJ •o , .. 11 your car boat, couch, high choir or ony 1.Jnu\r I fl\f'•chond"e coll the Doily Pilot Classified staff or v" 642-5678 ~~------------~-------PHONf r I• SI A If /IP AO f)i 1 ..4 llf' ttUlt"rt1111 AMT fN(lQ~f(J ·• •• .,. Y'l!iA nr M ("' ' ' 458 F ftll ,. .lt•••Vf'~ h t•r y• ~ •• .tr•• tr ~t11lf•<. ()f I''" to .11rl1l11lfv p.111rrnNI h•p I •111 t1t'I t1f ;:> ;It 1'11.Js fll•tl~prf• 11t fltrt• ICl ~1/I'<; I A I l ' _mo_re _______ 4IA 2'it8A, '°'m dine, fam Ea1t9ld• 1p1clou1 2Br LAUU WHEELER rm. 2300 1/1, greienbelt 1~8•. clOMd gar•~ NMr poOl S1700tmo Oahwsh<, patio. no 1>911 Aeel10f 720-7432 A'll lmlNld 646-2280 c f s T R A , SAIL INTO SAVINGS 4 lines, $760 sseO 7 days... with pre0~ayment Private Petty ONLY. No RMI Ealala, Cotnmetclal, or Help W1nted. •Al, •AT 6 .. , WATm .a.. Ul•A~ Tll •AaAGUllllT fl ..... I on TOa. Aleo lend on I buy TO.. 110,000 up to JUMBO'S. Otl DennlaOn A19oC. ITS-7311. fOlfl) ADS ARE FREE Cal: 141 ... l. tertcal po.ltlon for mature ~owr 40. s dya Wiii. & IBM exper $7/tw Al or Lourey Ml 4222 lltl llTIT PIT Bklq)g exp pref 25-30 hrt. 250 Ogte St. CM eao.&4e3 ' > POR5CHl AUOI CHFVROt.fT K .. M•I Q..ll111 s. .... s.1 .. 10 \ 810 * Onlnge COMt DAILY PILOT I n..day, Juty 16, 1988 T HfODORl ROBINS JORO •• \" • •N ., I • {' (1 •';. ~I . .a. ·,.:: , lj 1 sounrcoUNTY VOLKSWAGEN • lSUZU W pa NUC mncl NUC 11011C1 PmJC 9l)1lC( ·-..... AO••rr cw '"' tu-Mll&.m~ ,.... ............. ..... fll _.._Oil MAU 0# &.NC> Wb'i\a ._. ............. ,. -, .,_ _, .... .... .,...., ~ MLI MllWT" MOM1•rro. ...,.. " .. ~ on • ..... • ......, _.. f'C)n nnrr:urw , :.:u ..!'~::.:.~: ,.,.~.~ ~ ~: :..:: :as• z:::: lE)~l.N::?~ I ... A-119-.,. .,,.. 0... a CMlb• IHTwaT l*T W'I AM MC) ........ C9'r<loult-...... ...... • ~ In .. ._... Oo1in of ~lllOtt • ~ • •lllGI iftTOA~ Mlllla,.._~°" .................. .. I ....... ol ~ tlar l vcc-.taor Tt111tff et 0# LAND Ofl flOMaAID ~. ~·· 19M ........ .._.). 1 .. Ooualvol ~ lblltlll ... T° ....... ., ... LAND ,AT~,.~~" Pr'tor to ~ ................ .. 1 In .................. Gllrtlln o.111 d TNM .. flOfliiOH. UlWIU.'t' C)I. .... 111900MnlCW W II ................. tll- of MITH WAU<IJlt CO. _..., ~ NmU C. M'Z. ~-ID Al POU.OW8: Mii lftOlcft tlllll CIMlllll .... _, .._ • = ,AUl.tto.,Dt : t a.,..llW\. ......... TRACT ... W,ORT a......_.__....,,, .. •t CMICM -' # Nolollll.......,G!Mnfllll M1112. ttlf •ll•••it H!IGHT8 , LOT J~1 atydirour......Vt111rln• ,.,. !'•Hatar H I 11e w•...., • ... • No. 11m, In 80C* 14010. 'MIDIL 1"AllffOIWNUN ••• .e lie~-... " 1 .. _.. a :;::..~~= :=. ':'C:.,..~~ ~~,=~D.J: r..~ ~ +-:.._~~ .. I OClllAii_.,,, of ... lu-~Md~'° OG.LAH€0U8 """• M-IAI. ft? t Ill ...... 1 ~~r.:::: ===: ~.~Gl .. :.=:::.=1~ :.!.!.:.-.."'r•J.-~lllilllll BU IC K oll'°9 ol LaMe ii. T~ 21, ttM M lrW"'"9'll No. NO C&.AMI • MADI to 1TIO, .....,,., of lie ...... , ... ... fer• ~. 14114 .,.,... •11M04, al Oflcllm ... HfRflH THAT we AN Al-LabGr Codi of h ... ., •• n~.~.. . .... .. llwd., ..... 100I, ~ oorOI of M6d County, .. 8'0HnS TO THI 1NW ~ lie Olly Could • 0 0 It ..... ..... I Olb. CA. •tAOI. County°' under Md ~ to ..... TMiCT Of' LAHD Al oe. of fie Qty of~ V""'1 .................. -Loe ,.,_._ ..... al C... Died at TIWI _. II pulllo ICMm> lfil THe 0"80IW. Ml b1 1-*Mon edaoeed -. D EAL E R fomle,, ill the rflM. tlle Md auction tor CMh, tawt\11 LANO PATINT OR GIWr, the PN\ ... IO tioUl'ty ,. Of • ... • ,. 1 t 1 111 • • .,...,_of Mid 1t9c 111111 8' mon.y ot ttle IJnllled S..... NETHER DO Wli IUUI A "llOl9torMdlO'llftor1YP9 111$111~ a ....... ,.... the 11me of o.eti Ind el 0. of Ameflca, e CMNer'I NeW LANO 'A TDrr NOA A of ..tlw OJ nl«IMnAo ,_.., .. -. r la ....... ttgflt. '*9Indir-...1t1111 Qflecll p1y1ble to Mid NI W L AND ,ATINT Medaclto_,...._ ................ ..... IN ORANGE COUNTY tn. ...... of.-.1111111111 TNIMe cnwnoru.._..or ~ OVA AlllOH-11e .. o.noh~, a.trM ..._ ,. .. :::::.:.o:.-::: ::'*a:~~:': ;:"' ~~=y c: ~ =·==:.-= =e.~r:.::.=..::: ot In Mdltlon to 1Nt of Mid of flederttl ~ Ind io.tl ICAIPTIOH OF POR'TIOH ~ Mlileon.. ..... ,. t 1 We Otter * uu 11, et ttie time ot .aoc.tatlon dom1eied In tNe °' LANO. Th• Contractor •h•ll ......._ ,_.. ..a _.. IANeW Car Sales dMtt't. In end to .. the ow---.t Ole main enuw-THE FlUHQ °' THIS ~-c=o. tuefl ~ .......... -...... •U,~ C"r Sales t.in Ami ~ ettuMtd to Arel ~ nu. In-flOAVfl' OF TITLI tHAU. •l"llqlUhdbyfle 'A 1 p 1 1.a1 •• .,.. ~ " In City of Na9pol1 IMat\. llnllCe ~ IOceMd et N£ITHEJlll DENY ~ W... LAtl)Ot COd9 of 1119 Stale of -e • ' 0 ..... •Service County °' Orwlge. St.11118 °' t 14 £.-AM stt.c. In the IHOE lWON AH'( AIOHT. c.lfomla. end 1111111 ............ -.......... •leasmo • CellfotnM. ~ o.. c:ttyaf8an .. AM.~ PNVflEGE OA IMMUHm a oonhotor'• oeitlllaM9,.. ........ 1,111 011 e 1 • .artbtd • tcllow9. to wit: e1t thet rigl'lt, title end OF AN't' OTHEA Al· getd1nt Mid ~IMlloit -........ .,.. ..... •Excellent f 1oanc1ng Loi " o1 av11dM.Mln of 1n-.. oonW)'ed to end SIGNE(:(S) To AHY OTHIA ~ n. .... L":u.. ........ ._. ·m---'llER ' 8Iodt "A", EMI ~. now held by" under Mid l'ORTION(S) OF LAND tor IMll f\a1lwr requer... t). MllP •. "• It Of Mii-Oeed ofTN9t lnlhtl)tOpef1y COVE.RED BY THE FPAE· ll.lboontrtQtora to ~ c-.... ,_. OllllanecM ..... ot Oninge lltueted In MIMI County Ind SAID LANO PAT'l!:NT OA ptOYtde tuefl ~18Mton The neme Md eddlw ot County In the ofb of Vie Stet• daecr'lbed • Loe 42 al ORAHT. lneur1lnCl9 tor .. al ttle _. fie oour1 le: (El nombre 'I QDO©fil County Atcotder ot .., Trec1. No llt82,•lfl0wn on $lNOE THE FOAESAIO contrtetort'emplo ..... n. dlreodondeleoorte•~Or-1 County I !NIP~ In 8ooll 406, LAHO PA TEN'T HAS 8E.EH contrectOtt end IUbcontt9I> anoe County Munlclpel r110N OOllWllOI~ known P~ 47 10 50 ~ DUEL Y RECORDED AT THE tori IMll lumWI tN 0tty I CC>Ur1, C4ntfll ~ 100 :ie2& Harbor 8MI II: t06 &It EdQewetei Av-MltcelllMOUI Mac>e. ,... ~u OF LANO MAN-C«tlflcat• Of Will¥W of CMo c.n.. OrM w.... 'c M 979 2500 enue. Newpot1 e-oi. Cal-QOl'dl of Orenge County, AO~MEN OF THE Of, 1ubro0•tlon, under th• Senta Ana, CA 92101. · · fornle Cllltomi.. PA OF THE 11\+s terme of lht WOtlltt'1 oom-The neme, ~ end Terme ot ... Calh In 11w-EXCEPT I NO THE RE0 TEAIOA OF THE UNITED peneetlon lneurenoa. ~ numbs at pleln- NABERS 1u1 money Of the UNted FAOM ALL r9ll'lelnlnQ Oii, ol 8TATE8 IN WASHINOTON No bid .. be OOlllldaoed tlfl"I ettomeo,. OJ 1*1nt1ff S..... on...._ Ten per oen1 rtgf\11, "*-Ill. rn1nerta, DC , THIS Af'FIOAVrT OF W-." II made on Che of. wtttiout et1 ettomeiy, i.: (S Voyager lands after 111 hours M OJAVE (AP) -The ai rplane Voyqcr i.ndcd at dawn today, more than 111 houn after it took o ff' in an ·~• record-blukiq endurance mp1 that was a prelude to an un.refUeled round·IM-•or1d tn Sep tember. Pilot Dick Rutan sk i mmed most of the runway before the Voyqu .ny settled onto the around a~ 6:37 a.m. . . Orpnizcn said the I PJ>fOXlm ateJy 1 J ,600-mile fliaht, if ~rt.ificd by a national flyina orpnautio n, would break a 1962 tte.o~ for • distance fliah t around a closed COUJ'1('. That record of 1 J ,337 miles wu set ID 1962 by Alt Force Capt Bill Stevenson ID an Air Force S.S2HjeL D uring the V oyager's 1pproach . the crew or a chase plaM ~Pt tellina Rutan he was a linle biah for the landm1. Bua Rutan radtocd bade 1ha1 he wasn 't goina to go around apin because he and co-piJ01 Jeana Yeaeer d1dn 't want to spend any more u m e in the plane: Rutan and Yeqerhadtostay 10 theexpenmental planeun u l 11 was wheeled into the hangar and weiahed for cen1ftcatjon of the d1staooc record. It was nearly half an hour before Rutan touched has nght foot down to the 000!,t. at 7:07 a.m., followed by his co-pilot They were taken t~ a nearby o m cc for medical exams, and both were doused with cb1rnpagne dunna a short colcbrauon. The two pilots were clearly fatigued at a post-fhahl news conference, durina which Yeager collapSed into the anns of a nl$ht sur&eon m oments after com menting about the constant enaine noise ahoard th e craf\. .. Our heads an: still in kind of a roar."' she said. Dr. George Jutila. the flight surgeon, said Yeager suffered from simple faugue. She was qu1cldy revived ms1dc a hangar .. I wasworkinJ very hard," Rutan said ofh1~ land.mg. "W e cam e 1n a lmle high and a little fast... the reaction of the p ilot was a h tlle sJow," he said, referring to h im self. Rutan said that despite the length of the 01ght there was always <><>m cthina to do and little idle time. CADILLAC of mmourrt bid to be de-mlnetel rtofltl, Mtur81 gee. TIT L E SE R VE S TH E flclel ~ torm ~ nomtn, le dlrlcdon y el ,.,_ Po9ltecS wtttl bid netur• gee rtgntl Ind otr. PURPOSE OHL y A. TO UP· by 1M City end i. made In tnero dt ltlefono d•I M · 11 I 8'0totottwltobelnwrlt· hydrocerbonl by what-DATE THE FORESAID 1ceord1noe with th• ebogedodel~o I er vows appea LARGEST SELECTION 1ng end w111 be recelWd et __. neme known met LANO PATENT INTO OUR provtlloM of tNe Nota end del ct.mendant• que no j ol late ITIOdel, IOw mltMge the •fONNld offloe It llry may tit wttllln or under Mid NAMES. SUBJECT ONL y the ptopoeel ~ 1*'°9 ebogedo, •); Aooer'I AHO TRYING HAROCR TO Bf = 1 •SALES ·SERVICE •PARTS ·LEASING CadNiecelnOrange time -'l• the tint pvbll-lend, wtthou1 ~. the TO THE LIMITATIONS and condlttonl tel '°'111 a Dlb 1 Lew COrpotatton, CountytS.uetodayt Cllltlon rw.of end ~ right to drill or u.e the-, 8TATEO HEREIN;8 TOUP· underSectlon2 ofthe~ Attn· 'a.oroe L. Rooerl: a fter 11• fe sentence I ·O·l 100 date of..._ ,_Of the upper 500 .... of DA TE THE ABOVE L.EOAL· b tlone Eacti ~ muet 171 t1 8-dl BMS.. Suit. • a... .. on .,.. .. b.-Mid lend • ,.........., In Ly OESCRl8EO PAOPEA'TY be ~ In eoootdenoe 103, Huntington 9Mdl, CA t ARC[\ I IN~l N HJll• JN IHf Wt '. O• ' EVOY MOOCl & COl._ CALL TODAY SOUTH \OUNl Y IH.'1' Rf ACH BL V[) •nm r 1Nl, • L 1N BE AC~· 171 -ll 842-2000 ' VOLVO '85 WAGON Xlnt body, runa WlfY good. new ttr•. $750. Cell 497-7009 2900 H#bQr ~. 0.ted tHt hi cley Of ~. Deed trom W~ TO BE OURS AS AH ''AL0 wlttl ilPPbb6e 9tate ...._ 192647 (714) l47-«M t COSTA MESA 1Ne 1 Limited P.tnenfllp, r. LODIUM FREEHOLD TO Pureuant to ClllfOfnlt DATE: (FecfMI) APfll 30 &..Me L T ........ Ats QOl'ded JUM 30. 1971 In HAVE AND TO HOLD FOR Oownment COd9 8ecUon tMe CADILLAC ·ee Coupe de ......, .. l.Mr ............ 800ll 127311. Pegt 1170 of OURSELVES FOREVER 4590. the oontrKtor .. be ......,. .......... c--. VIiie. orig owner. lo.dad "' Ille ...... "' .... .,._. Offlclll Aeoord AN 0 Ev E R IN FEE trttltled to post tppfOYed ., ,...,. Ponl, Deplltr axln't cond, rune or-fl dlM, Tit (t11) ...-n Tiie 11rMt add'911 Of SIMPLE " eeourtti. with the City OI.,.. Publiehed Of.nge Co.I S1200obo !MIM350. Publlhed Oninoe CoMt lothtl' oommon ~ MEMORANDUM OF llPPf°* nn.nc:tel ln9trlv-OellyPlloCJun.24.M t .e. Delly Pt1ot ~ 14, 15, 21, of Mid property puri>orted CASE0 LAW ON RIGHTS. tlon In Otder to flew ttle City 15, tMe '70 COUPE OE VIUE, xtnt tNe to tit 84 Montblo. IMne, PRIVILEGES ANO IM· ,..._ IUndt rwtelned by T237 cond./diapendable, OM MT2t2 CA '9tUNITIES the City to lnture P«· ---------owner, 3e,OOO Ot1g. ml. Seid .... _. be made (RIGHTS: ll\lnerWll, ~ & ~ of the cont111et. rtllJC fl)TIC( S2500 080. te0-30e t Nil.JC NOTICE I wtth0u1 oownant or war-oM; PFUVILEGES, ngntt of PleM, ~ttone, end rtnty, exprwe ot Implied,. WIY. IMMUNITIES •tect· olftclll pt'opoul tonne to be K -'72dC':._~~IAC, Medi. A·I. IC -•to title. pc111111on or en-ment1 & tax•) UMd fOf blddlnO C#I be 00-MOTICI CW 4 r •-uiop, ell e6ec., air, ACTITtoUI .,_.. cumbrenote to lltlefy thl 1 A PATENT OF LAND IS talned ortty at IN offtoe of ocaaoLunoM CW good rubber, SHO. U.ITAT'lmNT lunpeld beMr1oe due on ttie THE HIGHEST EVIDENCE thlCltyEnolr'-,OtyH• ,~ &45-0302 Tht folcMtng ~.,..,note ot note1 MClnd by OF TITLE ANO IS CON-Coet of Mid Plerll end Public noftoe II heretly CAD ~ '1'. Must NII. doing ~ •: A) Weet· Ilk! Deed of TNlt, to wtt CLUSIVE AS AGAINST THE Speclflcellonl le 16 00, In-given thet Kenneth H Cert Hellttl Ne(wort(, B) 1611.183.82, pilll the follow.. GOVERNMENT AND ALL c:M11ng tu It the blOder ,. ~etllln. Ger.id G WtllC>ecfl, lmmac:. new tlrM & paint, WtttCert Dlntll Progr11m1; Ing tetlmeted eotta. ex-CLAIMING UNDER .JUN~ qu.t1 thlt the P\ar\t end Ernell C Brown, end loeded, U ,000 orig C) W•tCare VIiion Str· lptntM Ind lidvMOM It the PATENTS OR TITLES. U.S. Speciflcatlonl be llt'll by Chrlltoph« Oolan, "" .. ml .... S7500. &42-3818 VIOie: end 0) WMtCere time of the lnltlel pvbllcatlon v STONE. 2 US 525, t7 L Ed mall. the melllng Ind llen6-tofote d04ng buelneel under _ ..... 1 111.,_ Preecr1ptlon Catd 8eMcee. of lhl• Hotlce of Sale 785 Iino c:n.roee 111a11 be 12.00. the flc:t"IOue """ name Ind VOLVO '79 DL Wag. IH -· ... ~ 2tOO Soutti Br1etol, 8ulcllng 11.009.00. 2 THE PATENT ALON£ Heither the COit ot the~ ...,.. of Nttllln, Wt61btoh a 4tpd/Od ale, loeded & USED CARS I TRUCKS C, SYlte 107, eo.t1 Mell.. MOT'a TO PASSES LAND FROM THE end SpedllceUont nor IN &rown. et 850 Town 0.... u<*lent cond, 85,000 ml COME IN OR CALL FOR Clllfomie t2e2e "'°""''" 0...... US TO THE ORANTEE eoet of malling end handling DrM. SYltt 800, City Of S5900 obo ~~ 1 flll Ufl&IUL Wttteer., c.itfomll OOf· YOU AM IN DEFAULT ANO NOTHING PASSES A w4R tit refunded Cotti Meta. County of Or· VOLVO 79 O.LILLO p orallon, 2900 South UNDER A DEED Of TRUST, PERFECT mLE TO PUBLIC The City,__ the rtght enge, S111e of Cellfomla, did -.. -Brll1ol, Bulldlng c. &Ille DATED MAY 111, 11181, UN-LANDS BUT A PATENT to rejeet tny or 1111 bldl. on tM 3tl1 dey of May, Ste Weg, 4dr llr, power, -H•-.u 107·108, Colt• Mela. Cell-LESS YOU TAKE ACTION WILCOX V JACKSON, 13 l"'P MoCltrMloft, CltJ t884, by mutuel coneent, OC1'<19r, 52K ha COWf 18211 BEACH BLVD fornle 92926 TO PROTECT YOUR PROP· PETER US 498. tO LED 2M Caerti llf ttle at, of t--dlMotw the Mid pertner.hlp Sof595obo 824-3050 HUNTINGTON8EACH Thl9 bulln-. It con-ERTY.rT MAYBESOLDAT 3 TRANSFER BY t.en V...,,c.MOf• andttnnlnltet,_re6etklnl VOLVO '80 2e2C 84J ... J Mf..111 1 duc\ed by. 1 oorporetlon A PUBLIC SALE IF YOU PATENTEE TITLE AND 0.tld June, 198e M perlntr1 therein I WtetCare Benent S•· NEED AN EXPlANATlON RIGHTS OF SONAFIDE Publlthed OrlnQI Cotiet Sald~ln lN !utute (Bertone) 24.000 mt CHEVY '79 Monza Hetm. YICH . Inc;. Lu ry A Of THE NATURE OF THE PURCHASER FROM OlllyPtlotJuly 15 19&e .... be conducted t1f l(er)o Mldoma uNd. better ~. bllt, 54K ml. II.Illy ShNklev. CNlnnAn PROCEEDING AGAINST p ATEN TEE w I LL BE T25e '*" H Nattcln, Gerlkl 0 then new Fully l<>ededl loaded. s 1700 obo Oyt TIM ttetement ..... flled YOU. YOU SHOULD CON-PROTECTED u.s v DE-Wlilbech Ind aw'lmtophlr LOS ANGELES (AP) -The only FBI agent ever convicted of spying told a judge who sentenced him to two life terms p lus 50 years in pnson that he never mean t to harm his country. but the JUdge said he should never cnJOY freedom aga1D. "I believe you arc gomg to 1-Cntencc me as af I committed these cnmcs," former agent Richard W . Miller told U.S. 01'1tnct Judge David Kenyon at h ts scn tenClng M onday. "I did no t commit them .... I shall conunuc to assert my innocence with an appcaJ that I h ope will result in a new and fair trial." The JUdJC. w ho described M iller as a tormented man ungrateful for the blessings life gave h im, said M iller's rnmc was ~ severe he ~hould never agam k.now the JOYS of freedom In addition to imposing th e maximum po'l'ltblc sentence, Kenyon imposed the maximum fine of $60,000. Miller, the portly, bu m blin' FBI agen t whose lack.Juster 20..ycar government career ended with has arrest m 1984. broke the !ulence he ma1nt.amcd through his trial as he stepped to a lectern in the packed, hushed courtroom and addressed the Judge. "I never intended to inju re this countf) or benefit the Soviet L n1on," Miller said . "M y conduct was of no damatte to this country." Panelurgesrefor1nsto solve insurance crisis 536-3&4e 754. 11112 Ev 536--0572 wttti the County Cltt11 of Of. TACT A LAWYER BELL. 1915, 74 WASH 573, flllllC fl)TlC[ Oolan, wtlO wll1 pay end dll- VW tlMl:J er-cab. neW iange County on July 2. tNe F'IQT AmNCAJlt Tm.I 13-4 P 474 FROM 43 USCS it K MIO etwge ell tt.bltltlee end By tbe Ass~l1ted Preu paint & Int. 912 POt'IChe CORVETTE '79. black, "11111 ... UR•NCI COWAlf't, 1 15 N 44 <Seba o1the11m1 and r90eMt 1u1omatlc. mlfrOf T 0 top Pubtl9hed Ofange Coel1 C ...... ~ _... 4 AN ASS IO NEE NOllCE M .. inonM peyabte to Ole •no II'• • bHutlful k>eded. SOK ml 19300 Delly Piiot M 15, 22, 29, IMcft. ,..,....,_. Ofllolr, WHETHER HE SE THE DIATlt M llrm dautc &75-7896 obo PP 536-3907 Augiat 5, 1eM 114 lalt ,._a.._.,....._ FIRST. SECOND OR THIRO ~ IHILTON FUfUler notlol II ,._eby VW 197SSCIROCCO CORVETTE '85, IOmi, T2e2 ::J,~ a701 (N) ~~~~J~o~:~~LTt~~ -:: :.:~~=-~._.,,not":~~ Auna ~Oo ~ r~:t lmmec cono. mutt tell. PUBl.JC fl>TICl 0.1ed July 1, t98e NONE OF THE ORIGINAL HTATr MO. Atl*4 ttill dey on. for any o.,..._ Aaklng 171 PP Call 831 .... 98 Oyt, Publlehed Ofenge Coeet I RIGHTS. PRIVILEGES OR !21 all '*"!:.. ~. g1llon Incurred by the vw '9-4 Bug o...ic Xlnt Evee 731°7523 ---!~-.. Dally Piiot Jufy 8. 15, 22. IMMUNITIES OF THE ORIG-er..., tor• ...... conllngent otherl In,.... own""""· or In cond Io mla rebtt ang. nu .. _ .. ,..,.,. -198e INAL ORANTOR OF THE credhore, end peBonl wtlO the nwne of IN firm lltt\t pl, brkl, rnenynu p11 FORD ·e7 Must Fut~. MAim STATDmN'f T2S3 LANDPATEHT (A)THEU S mey be otllrtw4M ln1tre11ed 0.ted 11 ~ Beectt, St750 OBO ~ new brk• ' mo<• 289-The lolkJwtng pereont.,.. CONSTITUTION MAN· In IM wtfl end/or eetll• ot Callfomla, tNI "'d cSay 0( VS.auto Smopged Sac dOlng butlnett .. TMl --lt'lllr'lTll'C OATESINART 1,SECT 10 ANNE SHELTON AKA Junt23,1Me vw '87 BUG rttd., 11odt, $1395 Ge0-3081 Ananc:lel ANOall•, 171 r~ ""''~ . No ,,,,, •h•l1 Piii ANNE J. SHELTON 8Ycheltet. NilfNr. Aeldl. blegelbrn. gete meny F-ORD '8'4 Mu11eng GT Rodlelt• St., eo.te Mele, K lliGI any or L-lfnpelf1ng the A P91lllon hu betn flled Ctl"f'11e a Younger At• compllmenll Mutt Mii I Arn . CA 92929 Mottoe et.... Obligltlon1 of Conlr1Ct1 .. & by SECURITY P.ACIFIC NA· lorneyt I tO Ne~porl S32501nego 543-9799 V8, S apd, H<>91 /Im T ..... M Leelco. 171 "-'r tll (B) EQUAL RIGHTS, PRIV~ TIONAL BANK (FORMERLY Cerlt• °'1Y.. 10tti Floor. cau, iclnl cond, muet Mii Rodlell• S1 .. Cott• Mela. "'::t.... .... LEOES ANO IMMUNITIES SECURITY-FIRST NA· ~ BMc:h. Celltomll VW '89 Con...ertible Bug S8500 OBO 850-5857 CA 112e29 No A t323e0 A R E F U R T H E R TlONAL BANI<) In the Su-9~ Summer lunl Red, •Int FORD '9-4 TOPAZ. Tllke Thie bu1lnM1 11 con· In the ~ Cour1 of PROTECTED BY THE 14th Couperlor Court of Oranges .,..... C • ._ cond wllo ml $3960 . ducted by .,, lndMckJel the Stete of Cllltomla IOf AMENDMENT OF THE US nty requettlng ttlll SE· Publtlhed 0r.ngt Cou1 675-2018 . over P • Y m • n t •' r .... M. LAlllo tri. County of Of-, I CONSTITUTION WHICH CURl'rY PACIFIC NA· Dally Pilot Juty t~. t98e b•nkruplc;y end bed TNI l tlt""'"t WU filed In the Mitt• of-,-;; Eat•t• MANDATES: "nof lflall Illy TIONAL BANK be ewolntld T293 VW '89 CONV New red credit OK 751·3230 wttll lhe County Clerlt of Of· of FRED VESCIO 0.0..MCI Stete nor deny to WIY I*· u per90nel r9P'-Tt!Ne l--------- pelnt/llrH rune ~d. FORD EXP .82 Afr hooll· enoe County on July 2. tNe Notice 11 heretlYglven lflet '°"within lta )"'1edlctlon the 10 ld'mtnl1t• the •tlle of P\llJC fl)TlC( $3300/obo d-t17s-ee 0, up Good cond ition ..................... 0ninoe"~~ the unowllgoed -411 Mii 11 equ1I protection of Ill• IMT~t ...,111\ 1 H7S-0970. Cerol St500 OBO 840-0aM .. ....,..._, itv 16. ....,_, Privet• ... to IM~ !awe . " ... on requu • NOnc. VW 70 ,..__ "'·-I tt "~-Delly Ptlot July 1 . 22. 29, lend belt bidder b ........ t 5 IN FEDERAL COURTS arthoflty to ldmlnllt• thl lf1'TINQ..,. . ..,.. .. per...,., •Int 1 91' ....,.... Auguet 5. tNe conflnnatlon of ~Su~ THE PATENT IS HELD TO letltt under the lndeptns N011cehthlrtby0fwenttwlt I running cond, near new FORD MUSTANG '79 Snr1 T290 p9l'1or Court, on Of •ttllf tri. BE THE FOUNDATION OF 6ent Admlnlltrtllon Of ~ ttit Board of Trwt._ of the I motor treni. 11450 l>ee1 Sten~o. new mega, rune flt8.lC NOTICE t81hcSayofJuly. t91Ml.1ttri.,TITLE AT LAW· FENN V 111,:',,::lng on,,,. ,_,11ton Huntington 8Hch Union ot1er_497· 1597 good. need• tell th•. bra, office of Jene! Lund. 505 HOLMES, 21Howwd 481 wtll be held JuLY 30 High SdlOOI Dlatric:lt wlll ,., VW ·11 Su,._ "'~le ........_ S1200/obo •241-8410 ., ~ C"" Pattcwey w "'•--9 IN CASES OF EJECT· on • ~...aed bide for ~ .....,.. ...., r--. " -· c';' "'2•• • 71 4·'.,"vo4--33 ..... 99' I MENT WHERE rue QUE" 198e et 9 30 A M In Dept 1()11111 rebullt engine, exit fllemiout IUmNSU ... .. vvo ..... TION 's w 0 .. :'. • """~ No 3 II 700 Civic Cent• Ing RUBBISH °'8PO L lnSld• 4 out amttm cue MAim ITAT'llmNT refer '" tnqulOM 10 Fred I H """" ~L Oft .... W•t Stnt• Ant CA SERVICE ~Ing ot equel 11800 ObO 545-52•7 The I~ pereont .... v.ao. 5813 Horrell Rd . TITLE. THE PATEHT OF 92702 . to the epeclflc:atlOnl on fie YW'l2 111 Rune good S 1500 obo 540-3238 doing bualnell 11 JR In-Otyton, Chlo 4S426 (578) THE GOVERNMENT IS UN-IF YOU OBJECT 1 IM In lhe offloe of Mid 0Wtt1Ct. ¥991mente. 1836 Wtimler 183?-9737, County of Of. ASSAILABLE: SANFORD V o Bide 1h1ll be elH rly IF8, Cott• Mau. CA mai enoe. Stet• of Callfomll, Ill SANFORO, 139 us 842. 36 L =~~~,,.=~i = 111trked "RUBBISH DIS· LOS A.NGELES -Double-d1g11 premium hike\ have put hab1ht} insurance beyond the reach of many 'ltatc agencies and businesses, and the Legislature should conunuc reforms begun by Propos1t1on 51 to case the cns1s, the Little H oovcrComm1ss1on said Monday. In a report tttled "The Liability Cnsis m the State of C'ahfornia," the watchdog t0mm1ss1on noted that the cost of commercial general liability 1Murancc rose by an average of 81 percent in 1985 The rcpon, which 1hc comm1ss1on developed over the past seven months, was subm itted to Cio\. George Dcukmej1an and released at a news conferen~ here. "When you have nursery homes that can't get 1Dsurance, when you have foster homes that can 't get insurance. when you have hospitals that can't gel m~urance. you have a cnsis." commission C hairman "lathan Sha~ll said Ballot rejectlon brings lawsult LOS ANGELES -0)mmon Cause ofCah forn1a and supponers of a campaign reform 1nit1at1ve that failed to qualify for the Novem ber h:illo t are su1Dg lhe slate over the way signatures on 1D1ttat1vc ~t1hons .m· \t'nfied The lobby group and C'.ahfom1ans 10 L1m1t Campaign ~pend1Dg allege hundreds of thousands of quahfied voters' signatures routtnely are rtJected bcc.ausc some county registrars fail to check t hem thoroughly "It really 1s a disturbing problem to think that so many people arc losmg the effects ofthe1r vote simply because somebody is too lazy or too rushed to look up their address." said attorney Fred Woochcr of the Center for Law and the Public Interest, a Los Angelcs- based non,profit law firm. Registrars m Los Angeles and Orange counties have disputed the findmgs. saymg the} take every precaution to determine 1f a signature is valid before ruling 11 o ut. Ger.id N. Jaoobeon. 1748 thl ~::a Ind lnterwt of Ed 290. hetflnn uA ttete WYUI ...... POSAL SERVICE 0 BID K1ngMm Wey FUlerton CA Mid 11 tht time ot 7 IMMUNITI FROM COL· ........ ~ .,,.. ,~ ""' 184 t" add~ to: Alyn ~ • • death end 1111hengn1. 1m. LATERALAn AcKeYcm. r· °'""wrm'":e; E ~.Pun:tlMlnCIM~ Insurance hlkes thwart foster homes Pege Rani!. 1300 Adal'M. llld lnl•Mt thll the tetate COUNTY, STATE OA FED-t::" ,:!,~hey court 1 1ger. Hunt= ltMch It 18, Cottt M.... CA of Mid deCMMCI llu ec· ERAL GOVERNMENT COL· -mey be In=-~ H'llfl Del1ttl;t, 112e29 qulrld Oy e>pet•tlon of 11w or LINS V BARTLETT. 44 Cll your inomey or ort11own AV9t1Ue, Thi• bulllnetl II eon-10lher#IM Oll'tlf lhlll Of In 1371 WEBBER v PERE IF YOU ARE A CREDITOR n BHOll, CA YW 'l2 YU ducted by 00 1*1'-• lddltlon 10 11111 of Mid ~ MARQUETTE BIOOM CO. Of 1 contingent creditor of end reoetved et Of I 7 PASSENGER $1000 Gereld N ~ oeued et thtJlmeofdeeth 82 Mloh 828, 30 NW 489; the...__.,,__.. ftle 00 p.m., ~. ' Thie n.tem.nt -llled In and to all lhe oertlln reei SUROE'T v DOE. 24 Mitt ..___.,, Y°'-' muet Ne, et Whld't time AFTER &PM 87~ t35 MERCURY Mon11c:tl '78 wttti tM County C1tr11 ot Or· proper1y lltutlld In City of 118. PITTSMONT COPPER your c;lelm with tM court °' blda wtl1 be put>- 1/W 73 CONVERTIBLE fully equip orig owner I 111ge County on July 2. tNe Otr6en Orove County of COPPER CO v VANINA, 71 ~~et:!:::,:.:.:; opened end reed In YellOW blk/blk 201< on I S 1100 9-42-1&<>2 or "'uel Ofenoe. Stet• of Callfomlt., Mons 44, 227 P 49, OREEN v ,,,. coun wttllln f()U( monttll Rm 3e 1 ,,_ rt>« ang new lop/ 831·8250 Publllhed Orenge CoM1 partlcularty ci.crtbec:I u '°'" BARKER. 47 Neb 934 trom the dete of nr.t II-trltlll '-*"Veld palntllntltlre1 need• 1 -----Daffy Pltot Juty IS. 22. 29, Iowa, IO-wtl "WE CERTIFY UNDER IUanoe of let1er1 u Pl'ovlded per10d of 48 da)'I "'" Irani work,' 1 3000 OLDSMOBILE '81 Cutt ... Auguat 5, t98e Loi 35 ol Tr8Ct No t730, PEN.ALTY OF PERJURY In Section 700 of the epeclfled forthe,.. OB O 87._5781 Supreme alr,cnilte Wire T291 i ut11ownon1M1'>r-ded THAT THE FOREO~l.HG 18 Probltl Coo. ol Ctlllomle bide _ wtleelt $2500 Mike In 800ll 52. Ptge1 25 end 27 TRUE & CORRECT WIL0 Tiie ti for nu clllml w4ll B<Mird of Truet- VISALIA -An inability to find hab1hty insurance has forced some Cahfom1a foster parents to stop acceptmg new foster child placements. "This 1s not a protest or a power play," president of the state Foster Parents Association. Susan Gamb1n1, said Monday at a pre'ls conference 1n Visal ia. •·we JU St can ·1 afford the risk of rnnng for foster children." It was not 1mmed1atcly k.nown how many of the '>tale's 13.000 to 14,000 foster homes Joined in the moratonum. "Wc'rt' forced mto the freeze m order to protect our homes and fam1hes," said foster parent Nancy Mackey While 'IUtts against foster homes are relatively rare. "we need 10 be covered, JUSI hke for fires and car accidents," she ~aid fW •1t ~ d•Yt 759. t305 PlllJC fl)TIC( ol Mlec*teneoua MllC)I, ,.. LIAM C CITTELL, AS· not !':ire p;: 10 fOIK he to6e jl.tdge Of the DI ..... no rtdlo, rune eYee84H731 1(-cor,:.~,~~k~ ~~~E~~:EE:.~o~Zi montll1lromtri.e111eofthe ,..::~°'.':': Acld f umes lnrjure 50 l n Los AndeJ·~ good seo<> &~ 79' PONTIAC '78 Grand Sefart '9CTTTIOUe .,._.. u 10192 Edgewood Line HUTCHENS ASSIGNEE ~ t\Ollce 1~ or .. bldi end to & . "'° vw BUS '64 Wegon Fulty equip, o<I MAim ITA~ Gtrden Grove. CA . STATE OF· CALIFORNIA, YO MAY EXAMINE the ~ u.r.. LOS ANGELES -Sulfunc acid fumes from a leak.mg tank at a Rune oo<>d. S760tOBO cond, molling rTlU91 Mii. The fonowtng Ptf*>M.,.. Tenn• of Nit eun In '--COUNTY OF LOS AN· ~ ~1C>~~he1nC:::.1!r: ~-Unocal plant injured at least 50 people and forced the evacuation of Paul 545-8035 I 548-7061, tit 8pm d 0 I rig 0 u 1 In... • • l\JI money of tM United OE LES I u tM ,,__-... d r M HEAVENLYHOST.4-0llCor-IStetee Oii eonnrmetlon of SU BSCRIBED AND upon-:',:t:ic_::orm:.= • I 01cns o homes onday evening. H azardou!i air kept ~opk from A1tM De8Mtic 00 PONTIAC '9-4 Fiero SE. t• Clroll. Corone c1e1 Mw, Nie. or pan cun and be!-SWORN TO BEFORE ME, 111,.1°' or '"""' the 11 July , Ne return mg home for at least two hours after the (i p m leak at the harbor, red. 90rf, em/Im cw CA 92825 lllCA ~by not• .. THIS 3 DAY OF JULY, t988 · ...,..... b6ltf'9d Orenge Coel1 I t 20 I th f d d F AMC PACER '77 Xlt cond. tt•eo 111K ml, loll more. Nancy lngmen 409Cot1• cured by Mortgege or Tn..c CRUZ ENRIQUEZ. NOTARY =~Of I the .:,~or-°! Juty 16 22 1Me area pan mi cs sou 0 owntown. <i.'ll lf'C Ocpartmcnt IMS> e eno 11.1to. rblt mini cond $7800 Wlld)'t cin:te. Ootone d4.1 Mtt c... DMcl on 111e ~oC*t'I '° PUBLIC OF THE STATE OF •" °'· .... ...... · · T257 spokesman Jim Wells. Mo~t of the mJuncs conwacd of ,kin throat and cetb. new 1tereo CUI 478-0831, 45&s1705 Hm fomll 92925 told Ttrtperoentohmounl CALIFORNIA (OFFICIAL~~~ ~a:.~;:, eye 1mtatJOn!.. lhep tlcln1. gd tires, run1 l THUNDERBIRD 1995 Jay J Oroee, 2001 Ytc:flt bid lo be depoeited wltti bid SEAL) eo..t Ing tll•I you dellrt ..,_., PlllJC N011C£ 1---------~-----------------gr-eat, s 1200, 780--0918 G d d I I Mlildllef NewpOft Btectl I Bid• Of offer• lo be In Wl'tt· Pubfflhed Orenoe notlOI Of ,...._ nllng 0( II\ ... _ o o con t on CalltOt,,.e 92eeo · Ing In<! wlll be rteelYtld It o.lly Piiot July 15 ttee ,.. r~"r-~COURT J/M CLICK ~~~204~~0BO Call Thlt bu11n .. 1 It eon-11tie1loreuldoffloe •t eny · T2se=.i:v.::.~otthl ~ n.aTAft ._.,. _ _. DrATH Nor1c£s AUDI/ RENAULT ouetld by • gtneral pen. time 111• the tint publls t1ont or IOOOUl'lte mentioned ~ ,._ nu1-. THUNDERBIRD '83 Turbo nere111p cetlon hereof and bllfcw. •-.,.. MnllC[ In Secilon l200 and l200 Sot 0.-tJIM DMed . .Jun 20 tW JEEP cpe, 1.-e over ~ti ~J Groat d111 of NII r-.r\I""' tri.c.Htomll Prot>eteCode HeMJ T ..._., If . • " Bankf\IPlcy & bed Cfedlt 1111-11 ... Ned ,,O.ted tNI Il l City of .My, Ctn cw '°"" M. Tl9\&, ua.. en::-~ .J~U E ~ "' ·.,_. ..... ,...;; WORTHY IRVINE AUTO CENTER 714-951-3144 800-428-7 485 OK 751s3no w11h tri. County Clert! ot Or· 1,,99 .., ..._~.......,.. ., --.- enge County on JUfy 2, IM& j Jtnet LunO. At1otney et '~~O:..~ '1., Loe CA 11111 Kl. For ~ ot ~A Hol'f, Inc., Att......., PEARL N WORTH V ' "'*" Lew. 505 City P~ w.. Publt Orenoe Coeet ._, -·-· ....... ___. J Nit.JC fl>TlC( ~~_,:72;o:j ~CC!':': t:O~ ~--Dally Piiot .Mt 16• 19• 22 MO.At-11 t.w, t600t !. ~ ~away uly 13, IC~ ~ 5, 111841 . • . IOf Fred veecto' ~ NOTICE 18 HERESY gl"9n 11188 ~· OflODI~ =-~· Le ....... CA 1986· age 88 Pioneer ...._etn.. T25t l tr•torwtmWll ~ thltthe()tyCitr11otthe()ty ,..,,...,.. NNIMCWIMm Putllllheid OrWIOI Coeel resident of Hunt .., ,._.., .i.-L.und of Fountain Vdey. Cell-Nil.JC fl)TlC( (CO 117t) Daly Plot JIMle 24, J41;f t, 8, 1ngton Bf'ach and P.sillo .... "' PlllUC fl)TlCl PublllNCI Orenge co.et loml•. .. ~ IMlled R!AS. MA"Y JUN! 18, 1Me Santa Ana area 76 Ct' I .. OtJly Pflot ~ •. 9. t5. tHI Pf~ untn Ole "°"' of IC.,., OSKI, peiftttcM•..1... ~ '™ years Preceded '" 8Mw 31•1 .•• (ha. ..... u ,.,C. ..... ) • IC --TW2411 to A.M. on Fr1dey. Jufy ..WONS petition~ IN~ d"'ath by h· ....... _ d <>' ,... -'9CTTn0Ue ...,_.. 25, 19M, for the IJltenelon (CfTAcio.t ~AL) Court fOf an order "" ununn • Exoeltent cond. Y«Y IO'llll Notloe 11 ~ g1....n by MAm ITA,.....,. rtaJC fl)11C( of tlle 9lue A111um AY9ftUe NOTICE TO D£nHOAHT petitioner'• ,,.,. "8JC lll)J1C( Conrad Worthy tnd mt. 30K ml Uktno 1ri. und•llOned riwd 1 ~ The lolotMng Ptf'IOnl ere S... et Euclld St,_ In IOs (Avteo 1 ~) YAt-fYA A A Y JUNE ton, Bn.it'f' W<>rthy St2,500 87S-13S3 lit: .... of Ille foilo'Mng. doing ~ -PHSC STATE OF CALIFORNIA) oordenoe wfttl the"'-end GHAl'AAI Ind OOE.8 t '° 10 ()Sf(I to MAAY JUNE Survived by •on, ---ICffb«I oollat.,... .. be F'lnelldll, 2082 &u.1"-1 COVHT'Y CW OMHCl£) • ~ttonl YOU A IEIHG ~O L. BUICK '73 Opel Ma11ta. gd l*<I •t ltle l'lour °' t0-00 c.rtt• Ortw lrvlnt CA AnlDAVJT Propotllle ..,.. be ~ IY PlAINTIFF (A Ud. .... )AofREO tNe .. MAim STA~ ' Roland Worthy. 7 Interior, enrf. l~ggege o'clocll A M • on tM 21M!\ 927 t5 cw TtT\.I anted under Meled 00"9' demendendo) ROLAND lntereeted In the The flolowtrlO per'IOftt .. 1 grandchildren, Kan.'n rack, gd tranepo cat, bUt deyof Juty 1llM.et 6t7t-I Ponderou HomH of Wf, THI UN OE A end lflelt be ~ KALAYJIAN ANO MIL~O ltted INlt19r IP-doing .....,._• ~ Rabin and Lynn~ ndl wortc S600 M 1·5e' t Nlcolu Or SM *· ...... Southern Ctllfomla •• Celt-SIGNED8. WILLIAM c CIT by one Of the fomw Of bid KALAYJIAH '*°"' ttll9 Court 81 $303 fWbof ~. ... w h Trt-ed port IMcfl County Of Qr. fornl• corporltlon 2012 TELL. JEANEHI! A Cll· ••• MCUrlty required by , ...... CMDDM on AUOUIT "· M.eo.. ...... CAnat ' ort y way of BUIQ( 'It SKYlAAK enoe. St1.te'of CellfiorNa, 8u1lnt t l Center Drive. TELL THO M A·S Section tO of IN 8pecM-DAY8........ flll ~ 3, M X..T A.S., i11001po1..S, I Long ~ach, Ju lie .IClnt oond toeded S2900 1178 ~ 4.lt4 S/4 !MM. CA 1127 t& H u Tc H ( N s . I l 1 N 0 c:a1lonl Al Pl'~ 8'ltlll .. ...--,.. .. .. • ~ ~ II Celbnle OOtpollllof\ am Jones of F1onda, Erk 08 0 ~~~Xtl•O :r1et1':~A~. IL8U ~::~on· :;~r:~ ~r P~L ::.rn::fr::"rn:.i": r.:-,..,, 1H .. ~w:; ~=a. =fo:::e and John Worthy of Thlt nottoe 11 ~ lruo• PonderoH HomH of ttROPEATY COMMONLY ~ eo •to be In lN A..._.,._. ... _. oauea," MY· wtty the t2t2t Fallbrook, Connd ............... OOrdanoe wttfl tMproytlK)I• 8outhern c.tfomle. John I. KNOWN AS. 2221 SANTA hendl of tr. City °"'* et ........... ,.. ,.. ,,,.. cNnge °' IWIW Thie buelnW " oon-and Willlam Worthy ofs.ct1onM04.8ubdMmr1 .Jetw.Sr V10e P1~& ANA AVl!NU!. COSTA ,_°"'°' In tM City Hll,.,...... i.11111 11 ....ti.. be gr.nted. dUct.adtlf'•~ of Gar~rville. CA TURN (31 of the Uniform Corn-~ MUA,CALlf'OAHIA,HEN· t0200 Slater AY9nlle, on°' "'.......,...., .._ 1 ,.. TKafll<>AD€MO >e T A I, 1Mof'por1tad, Mrs Worthy 18 at.o T HEM IMtdlfCodtottheStalle of Thia • .......,. .. fled 8Y~THATWI AM befor"I !hit"°"'...., At .... -1......... altNt orct.10 Tom ~.,,....... ·-" b t\ ~ wttt1 IN County a.ti of Or· A881G TO A LANO the ~ IN II tlldt ..... O. ~ In Thia ........,. .. ._, survlv~ Y 11 8"'&t INTO OAfU);.Myl, itM lf'IOI County on Jvne ti, ttATDIT 0-. OfllANT 8AH r--.d ,... be pubMoty • ,_ e. MIC•,.. COMO...,lllot, wttfl ._Courtl)'QnofOI'·· &randchtldn-n Fam MONEY a...,..-c. ---. 1.,. .JOAOUl'f GRANT 1500, °' opened..::..~~!.!" 1 •• 1 •• • .... ,.. _, """ of pwll '"91 County •J41;fI.1t11 lly rt'quewt In Utu of ~--......, ... ~I ,,,,,. WHICHAC(RTl"EOCOPY ..,"7 ........... ,.._ .. _,.. ........... -... j)l'inMdln CJNnOe ,.,..I"'-do ··--....... ttwouQ" tM Cla ... ltled•! ATIDM, Ir.,_........ PutllW!ed Or.nge CoeM ti AnACHID Hl!A!TO. oer. end IN publo -~ ....... llMM9 Md ,,.. CellforNa, once 1 ~ er.,.. 009lll ""Wf'ta, Nluvu.~ UI:" ~ Onnge COM Daly P110t Mt I , ti. 22, WHICH HAI 1RN l8IU£D "'1ad to be DtWt 11 the "'7 .-, M "*-..... fOUt -..CCI t?M ~ lllot ~ 11, 22. II, aent tn Juverufo Di.- 10972 Furlong Dnve, Santa Ana, C A 92705 Servt~ will be held, 1'hunday, July 17, 10 00 AM at Peek f'atruly C.olorual Fu- neral Home, 7801 Bolsa Ave W est- minster Dlr('!Cted by Peek Family Colonl&J Funeral H ome 893-3525 0~39.9~9 ............... o.1YPlotJ4Jl;ft&.1•..T21fi ,... 244 ~~1~rT~ :,.~:uon ot u 1d ~..,...""'.. ,;.o,::~• A110u111•.1MC1 Tlll l bftH F oundation ----------------------------...:. ' I , COMPLETE RACING COVERAGE 2s.; TUF.SDAY, JUL\' 15, 1986 Newport CenterexpansionOK'd Tentative approv by NB City Council - prompts foes to seek referendum vote and 1t1ll dotted with open acrea&t· Office towera. a larae \heater com- plex, three tepUate residential U'ICtl and a battery of restaurants where a ps station once stood are includ1n1 an the $300 million buildina plan. By STEVE MARBLE Of ... Ollt ......... A major expansion of Newport Center was tentatively approved late Monday by the Newport Beach City Council. The straw vote concluded nearly a decade of effort by the Irvine Co. to Cycling record set By PAUL ARCHIPLEY Of .. DllllJ ........ A cross-country bicyclist shattered the world rccord Monday when he rode from HuntJngton Beach to Atlantic Caty in eiJ}ll days. nine hours and 47 minutes. Pete Penseyrcs ofFallbrook. crossed the finish hoe at lhe Golden Nugget Hotel al 6:47 PDT, wd race spokeswoman Kathleen Burke. The previous record of nine days. two hours and six minutes was set in 1985 by Jon Boyer who did commentary for ABC Sports coverage of this year's race. Penscyres took the lead from favontc Mike Secrest on the second day of the "Race Across AMerica" and held It the rest of the way. Secrest dropped out Satur- day after hitting a J?Olholc and falling off his bike.He was talcen to a nearby hospital and treated and released. but had lost too much ttme to re-enter the 3.107-mile contest.· (Plea.e eee CYCLIST/ A2) Coast A Fairview Developmen- tal Center administrator has filed an appeal over her dlsmlssal./ A3 California The only FBI agent con- victed of espionage gets two llfe terms./ AS Nation NASA predicts the next space shuttle launch wlll beln 1988./M Sports Roger Clemens and Dwight Gooden are to- night's starters at the 57th All-Star Game./81 INDEX Advice and Games Bulletin Board Business Classlfled Comics Death Notices Entertainment Opinion Police log Public Notices Sports Television Weather B6 A3 A7-10 B8-10 B7 B10 BS A6 A3 810 81-4 85 A2 1ee:ure pennisaion to complete the circular business and retail center. But foes of the plaJluid they would try to overturn the council action by seekina a referendum election. Tbe development scheme will add more than 1.5 million ~uarc feet of retail and commercial budding to the circular center, which is 20 years old A day-care center (or employees' children and nearby residents as well as a ni&btclub for teen-qen also art bein& considered. As a tradeoff, the Irvine Co. has ~ to bankroll more than $40 million worth of road improvements, sncludina the construction of a new °""' .... ,.......,°""' ........... Slippery character aita ride at new Wlld Rl•en park. Park rides open with big splash It's hke being shot from a squirt gun. Atop a five-story h11J, human ammunition is loaded feet-first 10to a padded fiberglass tube. With a gentle nudae on the shoulder, the rider 1s sent sliding down the pipe with gravity and a st~y stream of water accelerating lhe slippery descent. Less than five seconds later. the business end of the barrel spits out the swim-suited daredevil -ltfS flyi ng, mouth gaping, eyes bulging and adrenalin pumpin~. With such thnlls, Wild Rivers, Orange County's only water-theme amusement park. has wasted little ttme in attracting visitors since open- ing on the Fourth of July weekend. On a recent weekday afternoon. 3.000 visitors -·nearly all of \hem teen-agers -were tinina up for nearly 30 minutes at some rides for a chance to charge down padded fiberaJass slides into a pool of cool water. The rides have jungle safan-in-spa~ names like Bombay Blasters, Nairobi Express, Cobras. Pythons. Serengeti Surf Hill and Congo River Rapids. You get the idea. Located at the former Laon Coun· try site off Irvine Center Dnve tn Lquna Hills, Wild Rivers 1s some- thina like a pant pool party. Everyone walks about tn wet swim suits, lining up for rides, eattng at the ROBERT HYNDMAN Focu s ON THE NEws snack bars or JUSt working on a tan. Mike Hathaway and Matt Mitchell. both 14, took a brcalc from their snow cones to discuss what it is about Wild Rivers that keeps them coming back day after day. BeStdes their summer season passes-$49.95 each -the pair said rides ltke Bombay Blasters made 11 worth the bus tnp from Orange. "It's pretty radicaJ because you can't really see where you're goin~ .. Hathaway said of lhe cannon-hke water ride "It's also pretty fast and you don't get tired of 1t," Mitchell said. Other teen favorites were the Congo River Rapids, Sweitzer Falls and Serengeti Surf Hill where seven lanes of downhill slides offer an impromptu race course for visitors Main attractions arc arranged on a (Pleue .ee WILD/ A3) Five council races open By G. Jeanette Avtat 0...,,... c.tN• • • ,, C ounc1I race~ an five Orange Coast cities aot off to a quick <itart Monday As of late nfiemoon. Huntanaton Beach had 10 possible contenders -the most-picktna up candidate papers and Fountain Valley had the least at three. Monday marked the first day of four weeks set as1de for rcsadenu to file their officiaJ. candidate's papers. The fill "f period will close AuJ: 8, but wtll be extended to Aua. 13 1 an incumbent dccidn not to run in the Nov. 4 election In Huntanaton Reach. four teat arc up for arabs bcc.ause the incumbents have already scr\'cd the maximum, •~o terms allowed. Aocordina to the city clerk'' nflict", 10 people have taken out papen with the 1ntt"nt of fihnit. They art Sherwood Bailey. Robert Crawfis John Erskine. Timothy Khnk, Elame Kraft, Tom LlvengOoct. Thomas Mays. Richard Rowe, Donald Troy. and Norma Vander Molen. No further information was yet available on the filers Costa Mesa has two ~ats open on the city council Arlene Schafer. r«ently ht red as executive director of the Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce said she will not Sttk re-election and Mayor Nonna Hcrtzot has not yet announced Thus far, Orville Amburacy. owner of Ambursey'a Elcanc and former communicattOM direc- tor for the city. ha filed., satd city clerk Eileen Phinney Thrtt others -Peter F. Buffa. city planner, Charlene A Johnson. president of Lon's Kitchen and Bnan K Thenot. prc!otdent of Mt y's of Dallas -have taken out papen. Fountain Valley has thrtt SC'lt!o up for for a votr 1n (Pl M eee CITY /A2) bapway through \he arassy htll south of Corona dcl Mar. Pelican HiU Road to run north from Pacific Coast Hiahway, would serve as a shortcut around Corona dcl Mar, where residents and shop. owners have Iona complained about traffic congestion Critics, lhou&h, point out that the new road eventually must be con- structed 10 order for the Irvine Co. to open up the coastal area between Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach. The development firm plans to build homes, offacc bwld1np and hotels 1n the area. One of the road improvements would include widen1n1 of MacArthur Boulevard to SJX lanes, a move some residents cl&Jm will transform the street into a freeway. The 'Irvine Co., which developed and owns \he center, has \lied for almost a decade to sew up approval for expandina lhc shopping and business bub. An eJtpansion plan was dumped by the development firm 1n 1982 when anaery citizens rote u9 in protea IAd pthetod ~ulh aapatum '° put the Newport CenteT plan to a voce. TM election wu c:aace&ed wben tbe development plan was killed. Some of the same raidcou. bavc apin voWed to la~ncb ac:amP9:1P. to tum blek expan,ion, ~n& ~t the ioause in traftjc Will be ID- tolcrabic NC'Wport CentC"r is lhe 1.arKt:st and. arsuably, the most successful buli- (Pleue-Clt!fTSJl/ A2) Court declares. Sumner is Democratic nominee Commissioner: 40th District· s ballots 'of mysterious origin' won't alter tally By PAUL ARCHIPLEY Of .. ~ .... ...., Wnte-in candidate Bruce Sumner became the Democratic nominee in the 40th Congressional Distnct Mon- day following a fatled attempt by former winner An Hoffmann to block ccnification by the Registrar of Voters. Both candidates, their attorneys and a courtroom full of supporters attended a Santa Ana Supenor Court hearing where Hoffmann sought a temporary restraining order and to- ~unction on grounds of ballot tamper- ing and voter fraud. Hoffmann attorney Robert Levy argued \hat the wide d1spanty be- tween official precinct returns that gave the victory to Hoffmann and recount totals that put Sumner over the top todicated voters throughout the 40th District had been cJjscn- francb1sed. "Ocarly lhe difference between the onginal canvass (by precinct workers) and the present results arc due to newly round baJlots," Levy told court Comm1ss1oner Ronald Bauer. "In addiuon. there arc massive irregularities. "To allowcertificat1on 1n the midst of \his failure of due process n&hts of the citizeos would be an insult to the citizenry." Attorney Frank Barbaro. who headed Sumner's successful recount (Pleue eee SUllllfER/ A2) Bruce Sam.Der Freeway funding pushed QC Transportation Commission wants new authority put to vote in-November By USA MAHONEY Of ... O..,,.......,. Orange County residents may be asked to vote on another transpor- tatton tax measure tn November - the second tn JUSt over two years. The Oran~e County Transpor- tation Comm1ss1on. authors oflhc 111- fated Propos1t1on A, wi ll press for a ballot measure to allow the formation of a countyw1de freeway aut honty that would be financed through tax incremen1s. much ltke a redevelop- ment agency Unlike the failed Propostt1on A. which sought to raise S5.4 b1ll1on through a penn)' increase 1n county sales ta\ the trceway authont} would not raise taxes. And money collected would not be used to finance new freewa~s but to improve and main tam ex1sttn& ones. comm1ss1on spokesman Tom For- tune said. Commission attorney Clayton Parker said he thought the measure could be implemented by a maJOrtty of Orange County voters wtthout enabling state legislation. Commission Executive Director Stan Oftehe set $25 m1 llton a year as the goal of the proposed authonty. That would be m add1t1on to state and federal highway aid the county already receives. Outgoing comm1ss1on ( ha1rman James Roosevelt UO\·Cth:d thc free- Visitations were worse than bites By ROBERT BARKER Of .... Dttltt l'llot ..... Bill and Ten Macm1lltan had their quota of creeping. rrawhng things 1n their Huntington Beach apanmcnt 8111. 26. a Gencral Telephone Co employee. was tl)1ng to ~leep in on his last da)' of vacauon Monda\i ~hen he heard his wife scream that a snake was in the clo..ct Macm1lltan figured that somehow the repule muo;t ha\C come from the apanment downstairs because the tenant is a son of a pet store owner. he 'latd "I ~ent down to chew him 9ut and found (the tenant was out but) the glass~s door was broken I called the pohceand they came to 1n,est1gate. They found an alligator to about two feet of water in the bathtub "I called the landlad) nnd told her 1t was either him or the rcpuleo; .. Macm1ll1an !!atd hts w1fr ventured across the boa con~tnc1or when <ihe reached down 10 pick up one ofh1s <ihtn'I to wash "\<;far a\ I'm concerned .. he 'laid. "e\.ef)' snake ts a rattle •make "I went to get m) neighbor and we stuck a shovcl 1n there and the snake wrapped 1tscll rt'al light around the handle "But I can't figure out how in tht' hell a snake wound up m my clo~t I aue'l!I 1t could have crawled up through the hea ung vent. .. Macmtlhan said he can lauah about 1l now "But my httle girl ( 71'1-month-0ld fan ya) could have crawled 1n there and the boa con'ltnctor could have wrapped around her neck 1 was not too overl) thnlled" Count) ~n1mal Control Officer E.D nook took the reptiles 10 an animal car'\" center to Anaheim. way financi ng plan before hand.in& the ga\iel lO Harriett Wieder OD Monday Ounna has post-Proposition A tenure. Roosevelt led the way in scckma innovauve methods of pay- ing for transportation tmprovcments. He even persuaded the oom- m1ss1on to explore the politically touchy poss1b1hty of a constituuo?IJ amendment to siphon automotive sales tues from the state's general fund into transportation coffers. Fa1hng to find allies for that. Roosevelt said Monday that com- m1ss1one~ .. should tailor our ai>- proach more for our county." With the formatton of an Orange County Freeway Authonty. "I be- lieve we can create a new agency that can add new lanes to our freeways without add1na new taxes." be saud. In 198•. voters overwhelmingly (Pleue eee PREEW AT I A2) 0.., ..................... Gfef Hickman. an mstructor for thr RegionaJ Occupation Proaram animal cart pro&ram. ~•d the boa constnctor wa'i onl) about 3 feet Iona hut probably wouldn't have tnJun:d anyonr "bcc'.au~ It WISJU lt I baby," Animal Control ofQcer abowa reptile fOGDd ln Huntington Beacb aputmcnt'batbtab But the ca1man, a tropteal relative to thr alhptor and a meml:lcr of the C'rocod1lham. fam1h. aC<'ordtn& to Hickman. wa'i a d1flercnt stor) "It was an agrrc;o;1vt lmlr hugarr I had a real ' inte~tina time 1ett1n1 tt out of lhe truck.. lt d1dn 't bite me hut It wasn't for la \.of tf')tna.." The crraturc ,, callC'd a spectaelcd ca1man. Hid.man ~td, hcc" u 1t hu a hl&h n bct-.e-tn the cye<i that look ltkr e eala"'IC1 • • • l I. ... I) c e • a Orange CO.C DAIL V PILOT I T~. July 15. 1818 Zschau courts GOP votes, gets $5,000atfundraiser By PA.UL ARCBl.PLBY .,. ............. Vowina to leiiio the political oeo&er from Alan Cranston in his quest for the U.S. Senate Co~n Ed Z.Cbau courted ~IC County Ro. publicans Moida whose sentiments distinctly lean ri t of center. Zscbau mi cd with supporten durina a funcl.rai!ler at the Santa Ana Country Oub in Costa Mesa. and picked up a SS.000 check from the L1ocoln Club for hJS troubles. He said be was pleased, however. by his 1C1COnd-place showina that pmcred 22 percent of the vote. The 46-year-old millionaire also was buoyed by a ahow of auppon from the party, includioJ an election niabt endorsement by Herschenso~o and wt week's endorsement 10 Sacramento by Vice-President Georie Bush. An adept fund-ratser, Z.schau rose from obscurity in the primary wtth a well-crafted, S3 million media cam· paip. He said be ex~ts to spend as much as S 10 million in the tlClC apinst Cransto=n a skilled fund-rai1tt in his own t. Sometimes at with President R~·s policies, Zschau prailcd the president's emphasis on free enterprise with aovemment support. "Alan Cranston, on the other hand, puts bis faith in aovemment p~ grams. He practices the politics of the pest," be said. The Sihcon Valley entrepreneur vowed be would succeed where Republican predecessors failed by retaining Republican votes and win· ning over independents. "In the past. Alan Cranston has gouen 20 perttnt to 30 percent of the Republican vote ... Zschau said. "This ume he won·t. Fair-goers head for new record at gate "We're gomg to seize the poht1cal center with strong Republican sup- port as well as mdependent support. "We have a message that appeals across the political spectrum. and to yo ung and old. of hope. of opportuni- ty. ofa future." A two-term congressman con· s1dered to be a moderate, Zschau ma) feel he'll have to work particularly hard m Orange County where 55 percent of the voters favored con- servative Bruce Herschensohn 1n the June primary. A pattern is emergJnJ that ind1ca~es the Orange County Fair may be on us way to a record run in 1986 as crowds continued to flock to the Costa Mcu fairgrounds Monday, said spokeswoman Jill Lloyd. By 6 p.m .• more than 14,000 had passed through the turnstiles. nearly 5.000 more than in 1985, she said. And Sunday's attendance of 49.128 set an all-time record for a Sunday and was nearly I 0.000 more visitors than last year. Whtie auendancc was up, prob- lems were down. Arrests on Sunday towlcd 27, six less than in 1985. All arrests were for possession of alcohol by a minor, Lloyd said. Crowds filled up the fairground arenas Monday to enjoy headliners Sha Na Na and the laser hght musical. Animal lovers were trea1Cd to a new brood Monday when a sovlgave b1rtft to a litter of I 0 piglets. The fair is open from noon to midni~t weekdays and from IOa.m. to mtdmght weekends. It runs through July 20. CITY COUNCIL CONTENDERS SIGN UP ••. From Al "lo\ ember. Mayor Fred Voss announced his mtenuon to run agam. but incumbents Ben Nielsen and James Neal ha\e not yet filed. In addition to Voss. Robert Hoxsie and John Thompson Jr. have also taken out papers. said city derk Evelyn McClendon There are three Laguna Beach Cn y Council scats open Dan Kenney and Rolx'rt Gentry. both environ men· 1ahsts su pported b} the Village Laguna and memlx'rs of 1he Laguna Beach Greenbelt, have announced they will ..eek re-election. Bobbie Minkin has said she will not run again Lida P Lenne}. a 19-year resident of Laguna Beach and former teacher at Top of the World Elementary '>chool. is running for a spot on the council. Maggie Brown \lteggs, a wnter for the local newspaper Tides and Times. ha!> taken out papers, and Ricley Slater. a maintenence worker for the Village Mercado and the Orange Count y r ransil DlSlnc t nus station 1n town. hai. said he will ~k office In Ne .... port Beach seats for four of the city's seven l11sm c1s are pending Council candidates represent J1stncts but are elected at large. In D1snct I (Balboa) incumbent Donald Strauss filed as has Planning ( omm1ss1on Chairman James "Buv Person. In D1stnct 3 I '\iewport He1ght'i ) incumbent Councilwoman Evelyn Hart has announced she will run but no one else has yet filed Councilwoman Jackie Heather from Dtstnct 4 north 'Jewport) hao; o;a1d -.he "'111 not run and no one has 0.-, ..... ,......, Dewld ........ "vCl applied In D1stnc1 ti Korona del Mar). incumbent ( ouncilman 8111 .\gee has announced he will not run \.1lchael Lapin. attorne) Pat Michaels radio station ll''ner and Y. ilham Monroe. publisher ha1,e all thrown their hats in the race Coeta Mesa City Clerk Eileen Phinney checb papen of Orrille Amburgey, the flnt to Ole for city council elecdon. FREEWAY TAX MEASURE PROPOSED ... From Al rcJeCted Propoi.1t1on .\ despite a heav11\ financed t'flort to convince 1hem the ..measure "'as 'ital. Ob- 'cn crs concluded that counl) res1· dents were unw1ll1ng to tax them- \Clves Skept1c1-.m aboul the need for three nl'"' tree.,., a:-~ and a rapid rail S)Stem 1ha1 .... ould be paid lor "'Ith the penn)' 1.1' also appeared 10 he a contnbutmg tacwr tons defea1 Rome .. elt's bramchild harbor!. none ufthose hab1lit1es but It could be .matkeJ b) agencies that don't want 10 g1 "e up tax mone) To succeed m November the t:omm1ss1on will ha ve to work toward 1 count\ v.1de "consensus that trans· CYCLIST ... From Al While Penseyres final!) earned an opportunity to relax after averagin$ JUSt two hours of sleep per night m the non- stop race. 16 other riders still had mlles to go before they slept In second place Monday night was Lon Haldeman of llhno1s who wa<; 2.851 miles into the race More than 100 miles behind him was Matt Beerer of Hunt- ington Beach And facing more than 1,100 miles of nd1ng Monday was Dan Wesolow<>k 1 of Isla Vista, Cahf. who continued to main- tain his hold on last place. Pcnseyrcs won S6,500 from McDonald's for h1'i first-place finish . "which will pay for the food he ate going across the rnuntrv .. Burke \aid. She ·was quick 10 praise McDonald's however. whi ch "'as the onh spon<.or to offer a purse The hamburRer giant offered a total ot $15.000 in pnze money ~~~~~E Daily Pilat MAIN OFFICE ll() ;'11•1 a., SI C.0.la Mnll " poriauon 1s a top pnont)," Fortune said. "I think that 1here would have to be ~ome cooperation or understanding developed 1f those agencies that would lose money were not to defeat 11 at the polls ... he said l nder tax increment financing. a ~o' ernment a$ency 1dentafies an area 1n need of rev1tahzat1on then sets up an agency to oversee a redevelopment plan. Planned improvements are usually paid for through the sale of bonds. which are repaid through tax incre- ments. Increments are created by estab- hshmg a base year for propert} taxes that freezes tax income to c111es. school d1stnc:ts. wa1cr distncts and other spec:1al agencies at the base year level. Any "aluat1nn O\Cr the base amount 1s thannelcd to the re- de"elopment agcnl \ in this case the freewa)' authonl\ The comm1ss1on will ha ve to act qu1ckl> to get thl' measure on the November ballot Commission appro,al must be received w1th1n 1wo "'eeks to put the mailer before 1he count}' Board of uperv1so rs before 1hc >\ug. 8 cutoff date for filing ballot measures. For- tune o;a1d Cranston asks for Contra deal probe WASHINGTON (AP) -Sen Alan Cranston, D-Calif.. responding to reports the admm1strat1on plans 10 resume direct military and pohucal control over anu-government rebels in Nicaragua. called on Congress to 1nvest1gate the Admm1strat1on's rela- t1onsh1p with the U.S -backed in· surgency. ''This could be a rerun of Viet· nam:· Cranston told a news con- ference. "First Amencan mone} then Amencan advisers. then Amen- can control of the war. then Amencan troops." Cranston's call came in the wake of press reports that the admm1strat1on will take over responsibility for managing the military operations of the Contra rebels fighting Nicaragua's Sand1msta government Accord10g to the reports. the C IA wtll resume direct day-t<Hiay supcr- v1s1on of the rcblels. and the State Department will set overall policy U.S. military personnel wilt ?.ISO be WE'RE L1 ST£NING playing a more ac:uve role 1n the guerrilla campaign to overthrow the leftist Nicaraguan government. The House last month approved SI 00 m1lhon m mostly m1htary aid to the Contras. The rebel aid. attached to a military construction appropria- tions bill, still needs approval by the Senate. where Sen. John Kerry, D~ Mass 1s expected to lead a filibuster against 1t ( B~ ~reported Monday night that ~pit~ a two-year ban on US. aid to the Contras. retired Air Force general Richard Secord, who still does work for the Pentagon, purcha5C'd short take-off and landing planes for the Nicaraguan rebels. CBS obtained the registrauon form for one of the planes. dated July 26. 1984, signed by Secord The planes. which can talte off in as little as 125 feet . were purchased from Maule Air, of Moultne. Ga .. accord- ing to CBS. Dall1 Piiot Deflnry It Queranteed Ma a"d<t'M &• 1~60 ea.11 Uf'ta C• 97tl1tl C-190-11'2 54118 ~ & .OOIOf>al tl'2 4l,1 Justcall 642-6086 MOOO.y·FrtOay II yO<i * '101 11a.. you. ~~ b• 5 30 p m e .. t>ef0<t 7 p .,.. 111<1 yOU< COPY W'4f 0. CopyrOQfll •<183 0.•'91 C.0.11 Pvt>i.th.ng Compen, No ,_. 110''" itoultrt l'°"' ..;.'°' .. ' m,111e< O' a~rt ... ,.,.,,,. r.,..,, "'•Y oa '90'~4'<1 .. •"OtJ• te>to'.:·• ~ ~ o• t<>PV''ll"' - S.Cond ,_ P<>O•• Cl•" ,. ...~ .. t. • .,. .. ti.IP& ·••..001 SvO.C•oC'O" °' UI" .. s• ;~ "'<"''"'• ..,. ..,., s1 oo ,.,.,...,...., YOL 79. NO. 1• What do you hke about the Datly Pllot? What don't you hke' CaJI the number above and your messaae wlll be recorded, transcnbed and de- livered to the appropnate cdJtor . The same 24-hour answenna scrvt~ may be used to record letters to the editor on any topic Contnbutors to our utters column mu~t include th~1r name and telephone number for verification Tells us what'' on your mind -e<l <:etvtr.Nly ancl $undey II '°" do -•«..... fOVI C.CIP• l>l' I a m U O.IO'e 10 • "' .no .,..,.. OO('y o.-e<eo Clrcufatlon T~e "'"' • ~Court, ""' ..,..... ~~,...,... ..... Low clouds give way to fair skies U.S. Tempe ~ a 11 ... o.-. .., 11 """Yootr(!ll; .. • ........... i.._,,...,... Mol1Glll,Va. ., " lllp.m Oll ..... 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Nlgt>t and --.iow_. _.,. ~:.. 72 41 _. .... lntiO the~ cM"'O .. 52 IN~"::"',_,.=-= 8atw> Fwoc> 113 83 dey '*· a.di In IN F1egillafl .. 12 uppet 80l 10 mld-10e. Low. In .,,. ::r: GrMtF ... 81 41 50e lo mlcMOa. Vt/l/ctt hlgtlt In Illa Gr-iioro.N C te 71 IOt to low toe. o-night kiwi In tlla Herttotd 12 11 ~ 50e to mkl-tOa. ......,. 11 41 HonollAu to 76 Smog Report ~ 11 75 ~ to a • kldlei-* 13 70 Polutanl 9'andttd lndell (pm)' 0-100 ...._.... .. 12 OQOCI. 100-200 ~ '°' ........ ,,.,,_. 80 55 ..... lOC).300 .,,,,...,. lor ... ~City II 75 30CMOO ...,..... Fnl flOUt9 • LaeVegaa 103 13 lode(•pel~ ~-~ Ulllt RO«* .. n dey°l&tt ..... Menljlhll te 19 MleoTll 8Mcll 17 7t Coellal --······--········-····· .. •· 42.al Mllwtluk• 17 58 lnMnd <>ranee County ••• -····-·····-42-"'2 Mpl9-$t,.., IO IO ~Loa~--·····•2-t2 .. ltli4nlllld 100 Eweu .. ,_ t02 i..-..... .. ~=--.. 81 P-Aobltl IS ~IMI .. ~City n ~-.. ...,_ .. Sanl*go 7t hnf'rWldllco .. 9ell'8 ...,..,.,. 15 Stockton IO ""'*v~ " llanll<Nr IOI ~ .. Big ... 12 ~ "' 70 ~QI)' 78 L'°"8 8-:fl .. ,,..,,.... 93 MonroM .. ......... 12 ......., f7 ....... IOI ~...,, 74 om.to .. ......... .. ..._... .. hrl..,,_dlno .. Sano.a.... .. LAI ,, 51 10 • 1$ u 56 .. 57 51 57 .. 14 51 113 a 73 .. 41 71 12 II 12 ... 51 12 51 13 83 80 51 51 It u Surf report Tides TOOAY Flr91 low •SI Lift. :::t' IOw 4·43 p,m ....... ., 12::01 Lift l:liLm. 1o:a6 Lm 5:341p.m 11 " .. 12 12 ... 1t IO 11 .. ,.., -.. ... 11 a• 01 11 u u SUMNE~ DECLARED NOMINEE ..• From Al challenge, argued HofTmann's com· plaint was full of allegations that lacked any direct evidence. Bauer said he wasn't .. astonished" that most new votes found in a recount would go to a wnte-in candidate. because vote tabulating machines would have accurately counted all of the ballots for a listed candidate. "The court notes there 1s an ongoing process for challenges m the recount," Bauer added. ··we don't see any defect in that pr<>ttss." Bauer also said the actual number of ballots of "mysterious ongin" wouldn't change the outcome. Following the hearing. Sumner expressed his readiness to begin campaigning against Congressman Robert Badham. 'Tm the Democratic nominee," Sumner said. "I hope people will see I can give th.e same type of vigorous represcntatton 1n Congress as we showed against the LaRouche people." Sumner agreed that the disparities in the three counts showed election procedures were flawed. He said the use of volunteers and temporary help could be expected to generate dis.- crcPC'.ncies. and suuestcd improved traming would improve the system. uvy said the battle wasn't over. He was prepared to initiate a "vote contest." which would require the courts to analyze aJI challenged votes m the 40th 01stnct Democratic pnmary. "In the end I think the elcct1on will be thrown out, .. uvy said. The ongoing battle for the nomi- nation began after Hoffmann, a supporter of political maverick Lyn- don LaRouche. became the only candidate to file. Sumner, chairman of the Orange County Democratic Party. an- nounced his long shot wnte-m cam· pai$f1 to stop Hoffmann's nom1- na11on . On election day, unofficial returns pve the victory to Sumner. Follow- ing tabulation of official returns from the district's 705 precincts, Hoff- mann was declared the winner. Sumner asked for a recount and payed SSOO per day over 16 days of hand counting. When completed on Friday, Sumner again became the winner. Because his challenge was su~ ful. the county will repay Sumner the S8.000 cost of the recount. CENTER ••• From Al ness and commercial center aJooa the county's coast. Over the ycan it has lured businesses out of Los Angeles but has recently been in a scramble with other centers like South Coast Plaza and Town Center in Costa Mesa for tenants. E! ,